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RFC1195 - Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and dual environments

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Working Group R. Callon

Request for Comments: 1195 Digital Equipment Corporation

December 1990

Use of OSI IS-IS for Routing in TCP/IP and Dual Environments

Status of this Memo

This RFCspecifies a protocol on the IAB Standards Track for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. 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.

This RFCis available in both postscript and text versions. Where

possible, use of the postscript version is recommended. For example,

this text version may have figures which are less informative or

missing.

Abstract

This RFCspecifies an integrated routing protocol, based on the OSI

Intra-Domain IS-IS Routing Protocol, which may be used as an interior

gateway protocol (IGP) to support TCP/IP as well as OSI. This allows

a single routing protocol to be used to support pure IP environments,

pure OSI environments, and dual environments. This specification was

developed by the IS-IS working group of the Internet Engineering Task

Force.

The OSI IS-IS protocol has reached a mature state, and is ready for

implementation and operational use. The most recent version of the

OSI IS-IS protocol is contained in ISO DP 10589 [1]. The proposed

standard for using IS-IS for support of TCP/IP will therefore make

use of this version (with a minor bug correction, as discussed in

Annex B). We eXPect that future versions of this proposed standard

will upgrade to the final International Standard version of IS-IS

when available.

Comments should be sent to "isis@merit.edu".

Contents

1 IntrodUCtion: Overview of the Protocol

1.1 What the Integrated IS-IS offers

1.2 Overview of the ISO IS-IS Protocol

1.3 Overview of the Integrated IS-IS

1.4 Support of Mixed Routing Domains

1.5 Advantages of Using Integrated IS-IS

2 Symbols and Abbreviations

3 Subnetwork Independent Functions

3.1 Exchange of Routing Information

3.2 Hierarchical Abbreviation of IP Reachability Information

3.3 Addressing Routers in IS-IS Packets

3.4 External Links

3.5 Type of Service Routing

3.6 Multiple LSPs and SNPs

3.7 IP-Only Operation

3.8 Encapsulation

3.9 Authentication

3.10 Order of Preference of Routes / Dijkstra Computation

4 Subnetwork Dependent Functions

4.1 Link Demultiplexing

4.2 Multiple IP Addresses per Interface

4.3 LANs, Designated Routers, and Pseudonodes

4.4 Maintaining Router Adjacencies

4.5 Forwarding to Incompatible Routers

5 Structure and Encoding of PDUs

5.1 Overview of IS-IS PDUs

5.2 Overview of IP-Specific Information for IS-IS

5.3 Encoding of IP-Specific Fields in IS-IS PDUs

6 Security Considerations

7 Author's Address

8 References

A Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information

A.1 Inter-Domain Information Type

A.2 Encoding

B Encoding of Sequence Number Packets

B.1 Level 1 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

B.2 Level 2 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

B.3 Level 1 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

B.4 Level 2 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

C Dijkstra Calculation and Forwarding

C.1 SPF Algorithm for IP and Dual Use

C.2 Forwarding of IP packets

D Use of the Authentication Field

D.1 Authentication Field in IS-IS packets

D.2 Authentication Type 1 - Simple PassWord

E Interaction of the Integrated IS-IS with Brouters

E.1 The Problem

E.2 Possible Solutions

Figures

1 ISO Hierarchical Address Structure

2 An Example

3 Encoding of Variable Length Fields

1 Introduction: Overview of the Protocol

The TCP/IP protocol suite has been growing in importance as a multi-

vendor communications architecture. With the anticipated emergence of

OSI, we expect coexistence of TCP/IP and OSI to continue for an

extended period of time. There is a critical need for routers to

support both IP traffic and OSI traffic in parallel.

There are two main methods that are available for routing protocols

to support dual OSI and IP routers. One method, known as "Ships in

the Night", makes use of completely independent routing protocols for

each of the two protocol suites. This specification presents an

alternate approach, which makes use of a single integrated protocol

for interior routing (i.e., for calculating routes within a routing

domain) for both protocol suites.

This integrated protocol design is based on the OSI Intra-domain IS-

IS routing protocol [1], with IP-specific functions added. This RFC

is considered a companion to the OSI IS-IS Routing spec, and will

only describe the required additional features.

By supporting both IP and OSI traffic, this integrated protocol

design supports traffic to IP hosts, OSI end systems, and dual end

systems. This approach is "integrated" in the sense that the IS-IS

protocol can be used to support pure-IP environments, pure-OSI

environments, and dual environments. In addition, this approach

allows interconnection of dual (IP and OSI) routing domains with

other dual domains, with IP-only domains, and with OSI-only domains.

The protocol specified here is based on the work of the IETF IS-IS

working group.

1.1 What the Integrated IS-IS offers

The integrated IS-IS provides a single routing protocol which will

simultaneously provide an efficient routing protocol for TCP/IP, and

for OSI. This design makes use of the OSI IS-IS routing protocol,

augmented with IP-specific information. This design provides explicit

support for IP subnetting, variable subnet masks, TOS-based routing,

and external routing. There is provision for authentication

information, including the use of passwords or other mechanisms. The

precise form of authentication mechanisms (other than passwords) is

outside of the scope of this document.

Both OSI and IP packets are forwarded "as is" -- i.e., they are

transmitted directly over the underlying link layer services without

the need for mutual encapsulation. The integrated IS-IS is a dynamic

routing protocol, based on the SPF (Dijkstra) routing algorithm.

The protocol described in this specification allows for mixing of

IP-only, OSI-only, and dual (IP and OSI) routers, as defined below.

An IP-only IS-IS router (or "IP-only" router) is defined to be a

router which: (i) Uses IS-IS as the routing protocol for IP, as

specified in this report; and (ii) Does not otherwise support OSI

protocols. For example, such routers would not be able to forward OSI

CLNP packets.

An OSI-only router is defined to be a router which uses IS-IS as the

routing protocol for OSI, as specified in [1]. Generally, OSI-only

routers may be expected to conform to OSI standards, and may be

implemented independent of this specification.

A dual IS-IS router (or "dual" router) is defined to be a router

which uses IS-IS as a single integrated routing protocol for both IP

and OSI, as specified in this report.

This approach does not change the way that IP packets are handled.

IP-only and dual routers are required to conform to the requirements

of Internet Gateways [4]. The integrated IS-IS protocol described in

this report outlines an Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) which will

provide routing within a TCP/IP routing domain (i.e., autonomous

system). Other ASPects of router functionality (e.g., operation of

ICMP, ARP, EGP, etc.) are not affected by this proposal.

Similarly, this approach does not change the way that OSI packets are

handled. There will be no change at all to the contents nor to the

handling of ISO 8473 Data packets and Error Reports, nor to ISO 9542

Redirects and ES Hellos. ISO 9542 IS Hellos transmitted on LANs are

similarly unchanged. ISO 9542 IS Hellos transmitted on point-to-point

links are unchanged except for the addition of IP-related

information. Similarly, other OSI packets (specifically those

involved in the IS-IS intra-domain routing protocol) remain unchanged

except for the addition of IP-related information.

This approach makes use of the existing IS-IS packets, with IP-

specific fields added. Specifically: (i) authentication information

may be added to all IS-IS packets; (ii) the protocols supported by

each router, as well as each router's IP addresses, are specified in

ISO 9542 IS Hello, IS-IS Hello and Link State Packets; (iii)

internally reachable IP addresses are specified in all Link State

Packets; and (iv) externally reachable IP addresses, and external

routing protocol information, may be specified in level 2 Link State

Packets. The detailed encoding and interpretation of this in

formation is specified in sections 3, 4, and 5 of this RFC.

The protocol described in this report may be used to provide routing

in an IP-only routing domain, in which all routers are IP-only.

Similarly, this protocol may be used to provide routing in a pure

dual domain, in which all routers are dual. Finally, this protocol

may be used to provide routing in a mixed domain, in which some

routers are IP-only, some routers are OSI-only, and some routers are

dual. The specific topological restrictions which apply in this

latter case are described in detail in section 1.4 ("Support of Mixed

Routing Domains"). The use of IS-IS for support of pure OSI domains

is specified in [1].

This protocol specification does not constrain which network

management protocol(s) may be used to manage IS-IS-based routers.

Management information bases (MIBs) for managing IP-only, OSI-only,

and dual routers, compatible with CMIP, CMOT, and/or SNMP, are the

subject of a separate, companion document [8].

1.2 Overview of the ISO IS-IS Protocol

The IS-IS Routing Protocol has been developed in ISO to provide

routing for pure OSI environments. In particular, IS-IS is designed

to work in conjunction with ISO 8473 (The ISO Connectionless Network

Layer Protocol [2]), and ISO 9542 (The ISO End System to Intermediate

System Protocol [3]). This section briefly describes the manner in

which IS-IS is used to support pure OSI environments. Enhancements

for support of IP and dual environments are specified elsewhere in

this report.

In IS-IS, the network is partitioned into "routing domains". The

boundaries of routing domains are defined by network management, by

setting some links to be "exterior links". If a link is marked as

"exterior", no IS-IS routing messages are sent on that link.

Currently, ISO does not have a standard for inter-domain routing

(i.e., for routing between separate autonomous routing domains).

Instead, manual configuration is used. The link is statically

configured with the set of address prefixes reachable via that link,

and with the method by which they can be reached (such as the DTE

address to be dialed to reach that address, or the fact that the DTE

address should be extracted from the IDP portion of the ISO address).

OSI IS-IS routing makes use of two-level hierarchical routing. A

routing domain is partitioned into areas. Level 1 routers know the

topology in their area, including all routers and end systems in

their area. However, level 1 routers do not know the identity of

routers or destinations outside of their area. Level 1 routers

forward all traffic for destinations outside of their area to a level

2 router in their area. Similarly, level 2 routers know the level 2

topology, and know which addresses are reachable via each level 2

router. However, level 2 routers do not need to know the topology

within any level 1 area, except to the extent that a level 2 router

may also be a level 1 router within a single area. Only level 2

routers can exchange data packets or routing information directly

with external routers located outside of the routing domains.

+----------------------+-------------------------------+

IDP DSP

+----------------------+-------------------------------+

. . .

. . .

. . .

+-----+----------------+----------+--------------+-----+

AFI IDI HO-DSP ID SEL

+-----+----------------+----------+--------------+-----+

Figure 1 - ISO Hierarchical Address Structure

As illustrated in figure 1, ISO addresses are subdivided into the

Initial Domain Part (IDP), and the Domain Specific Part (DSP). The

IDP is the part which is standardized by ISO, and specifies the

format and authority responsible for assigning the rest of the

address. The DSP is assigned by whatever addressing authority is

specified by the IDP. The DSP is further subdivided into a "High

Order Part of DSP" (HO-DSP), a system identifier (ID), and an NSAP

selector (SEL). The HO-DSP may use any format desired by the

authority which is identified by the IDP. Together, the combination

of [IDP, HO-DSP] identify both the routing domain and the area within

the routing domain. The combination of [IDP,HO-DSP] may therefore be

referred to as the "Area Address".

Usually, all nodes in an area have the same area address. However,

sometimes an area might have multiple addresses. Motivations for

allowing this are:

- It might be desirable to change the address of an area. The most

graceful way of changing an area from having address A to having

address B is to first allow it to have both addresses A and B, and

then after all nodes in the area have been modified to recognize

both addresses, then one by one the nodes can be modified to

"forget" address A.

- It might be desirable to merge areas A and B into one area. The

method for accomplishing this is to, one by one, add knowledge of

address B into the A partition, and similarly add knowledge of

address A into the B partition.

- It might be desirable to partition an area C into two areas, A

and B (where "A" might equal "C", in which case this example

becomes one of removing a portion of an area). This would be

accomplished by first introducing knowledge of address A into

the appropriate nodes (those destined to become area A), and

knowledge of address B into the appropriate nodes, and then one

by one removing knowledge of address C.

Since OSI addressing explicitly identifies the area, it is very easy

for level 1 routers to identify packets going to destinations outside

of their area, which need to be forwarded to level 2 routers.

In IS-IS, there are two types of routers:

- Level 1 intermediate systems -- these nodes route based on the ID

portion of the ISO address. They route within an area. They

recognize, based on the destination address in a packet, whether

the destination is within the area. If so, they route towards

the destination. If not, they route to the nearest level 2 router.

- Level 2 intermediate systems -- these nodes route based on the area

address (i.e., on the combination of [IDP, HO-DSP]). They route

towards areas, without regard to the internal structure of an area.

A level 2 IS may also be a level 1 IS in one area.

A level 1 router will have the area portion of its address manually

configured. It will refuse to become a neighbor with a node whose

area addresses do not overlap its area addresses. However, if level 1

router has area addresses A, B, and C, and a neighbor has area

addresses B and D, then the level 1 router will accept the other node

as a neighbor.

A level 2 router will accept another level 2 router as a neighbor,

regardless of area address. However, if the area addresses do not

overlap, the link would be considered by both routers to be "level 2

only", and only level 2 LSPs would flow on the link. External links

(to other routing domains) must be from level 2 routers.

IS-IS provides an optional partition repair function. In the unlikely

case that a level 1 area become partitioned, this function, if

implemented, allows the partition to be repaired via use of level 2

routes.

IS-IS requires that the set of level 2 routers be connected. Should

the level 2 backbone become partitioned, there is no provision for

use of level 1 links to repair a level 2 partition.

In unusual cases, a single level 2 router may lose connectivity to

the level 2 backbone. In this case the level 2 router will indicate

in its level 1 LSPs that it is not "attached", thereby allowing level

1 routers in the area to route traffic for outside of the domain to a

different level 2 router. Level 1 routers therefore route traffic to

destinations outside of their area only to level 2 routers which

indicate in their level 1 LSPs that they are "attached".

An end system may autoconfigure the area portion of its address by

extracting the area portion of a neighboring router's address. If

this is the case, then an endnode will always accept a router as a

neighbor. Since the standard does not specify that the end system

MUST autoconfigure its area address, an end system may be configured

with an area address. In this case the end system would ignore router

neighbors with non-matching area addresses.

Special treatment is necessary for broadcast subnetworks, such as

LANs. This solves two sets of issues: (i) In the absence of special

treatment, each router on the subnetwork would announce a link to

every other router on the subnetwork, resulting in n-squared links

reported; (ii) Again, in the absence of special treatment, each

router on the LAN would report the same identical list of end systems

on the LAN, resulting in substantial duplication.

These problems are avoided by use of a "pseudonode", which represents

the LAN. Each router on the LAN reports that it has a link to the

pseudonode (rather than reporting a link to every other router on the

LAN). One of the routers on the LAN is elected "designated router".

The designated router then sends out an LSP on behalf of the

pseudonode, reporting links to all of the routers on the LAN. This

reduces the potential n-squared links to n links. In addition, only

the pseudonode LSP includes the list of end systems on the LAN,

thereby eliminating the potential duplication (for further

information on designated routers and pseudonodes, see [1]).

The IS-IS provides for optional Quality of Service (QOS) routing,

based on throughput (the default metric), delay, expense, or residual

error probability. This is described in greater detail in section

3.5, and in [1].

1.3 Overview of the Integrated IS-IS

The integrated IS-IS allows a single routing protocol to be used to

route both IP and OSI packets. This implies that the same two-level

hierarchy will be used for both IP and OSI routing. Each area will be

specified to be either IP-only (only IP traffic can be routed in that

particular area), OSI-only (only OSI traffic can be routed in that

area), or dual (both IP and OSI traffic can be routed in the area).

This proposal does not allow for partial overlap of OSI and IP areas.

For example, if one area is OSI-only, and an other area is IP-only,

then it is not permissible to have some routers be in both areas.

Similarly, a single backbone is used for the routing domain. There is

no provision for independent OSI and IP backbones.

Similarly, within an IP-only or dual area, the amount of knowledge

maintained by routers about specific IP destinations will be as

similar as possible as for OSI. For example, IP-capable level 1

routers will maintain the topology within the area, and will be able

to route directly to IP destinations within the area. However, IP-

capable level 1 routers will not maintain information about

destinations outside of the area. Just as in normal OSI routing,

traffic to destinations outside of the area will be forwarded to the

nearest level 2 router. Since IP routes to subnets, rather than to

specific end systems, IP routers will not need to keep nor distribute

lists of IP host identifiers (note that routes to hosts can be

announced by using a subnet mask of all ones).

The IP address structure allows networks to be partitioned into

subnets, and allows subnets to be recursively subdivided into smaller

subnets. However, it is undesireable to require any specific

relationship between IP subnet addresses and IS-IS areas. For

example, in many cases, the dual routers may be installed into

existing environments, which already have assigned IP and/or OSI

addresses. In addition, even if IP addresses are not already pre-

assigned, the address limitations of IP constrain what addresses may

be assigned. We therefore will not require any specific relationship

between IP addresses and the area structure. The IP addresses can be

assigned completely independently of the OSI addresses and IS-IS area

structure. As will be described in section 3.2 ("Hierarchical

Abbreviation of IP Reachability Information"), greater efficiency and

scaling of the routing algorithm can be achieved if there is some

correspondence between the IP address assignment structure and the

area structure.

Within an area, level 1 routers exchange link state packets which

identify the IP addresses reachable by each router. Specifically,

zero or more [IP address, subnet mask, metric] combinations may be

included in each Link State Packet. Each level 1 router is manually

configured with the [IP address, subnet mask, metric] combinations

which are reachable on each interface. A level 1 router routes as

follows:

- If a specified destination address matches an [IP address, subnet

mask, metric] reachable within the area, the packet is routed via

level 1 routing.

- If a specified destination address does not match any [IP address,

subnet mask, metric] combination listed as reachable within the

area, the packet is routed towards the nearest level 2 router.

Flexible use of the limited IP address space is important in order to

cope with the anticipated growth of IP environments. Thus an area

(and by implication a routing domain) may simultaneously make use of

a variety of different address masks for different subnets in the

area (or domain). Generally, if a specified destination address

matches more than one [IP address, subnet mask] pair, the more

specific address is the one routed towards (the one with more "1"

bits in the mask -- this is known as "best match" routing).

Level 2 routers include in their level 2 LSPs a complete list of [IP

address, subnet mask, metric] specifying all IP addresses reachable

in their area. As described in section 3, this information may be

oBTained from a combination of the level 1 LSPs (obtained from level

1 routers in the same area), and/or by manual configuration. In

addition, Level 2 routers may report external reachability

information, corresponding to addresses which can be reached via

routers in other routing domains (autonomous systems)

Default routes may be announced by use of a subnet mask containing

all zeroes. Default routes should be used with great care, since they

can result in "black holes". Default routes are permitted only at

level 2 as external routes (i.e., included in the "IP External

Reachability Information" field, as explained in sections 3 and 5).

Default routes are not permitted at level 1.

The integrated IS-IS provides optional Type of Service (TOS) routing,

through use of the QOS feature from IS-IS.

1.4 Support of Mixed Routing Domains

The integrated IS-IS proposal specifically allows for three types of

routing domains:

- Pure IP

- Pure OSI

- Dual

In a pure IP routing domain, all routers must be IP-capable. IP-only

routers may be freely mixed with dual routers. Some fields

specifically related to OSI operation may be included by dual

routers, and will be ignored by IP-only routers. Only IP traffic will

be routed in an pure IP domain. Any OSI traffic may be discarded

(except for the IS-IS packets necessary for operation of the routing

protocol).

In a pure OSI routing domain, all routers must be OSI-capable. OSI-

only routers may be freely mixed with dual routers. Some fields

specifically related to IP operation may be included by dual routers,

and will be ignored by OSI-only routers. Only OSI traffic will be

routed in a pure OSI domain. Any IP traffic may be discarded.

In a dual routing domain, IP-only, OSI-only, and dual routers may be

mixed on a per-area basis. Specifically, each area may itself be

defined to be pure IP, pure OSI, or dual.

In a pure IP area within a dual domain, IP-only and dual routers may

be freely mixed. Only IP traffic can be routed by level 1 routing

within a pure-IP area.

In a pure-OSI area within a dual domain, OSI-only and dual routers

may be freely mixed. Only OSI traffic can be routed by level 1

routing within a pure OSI area.

In a dual area within a dual routing domain only dual routers may be

used. Both IP and OSI traffic can be routed within a dual area.

Within a dual domain, if both IP and OSI traffic are to be routed

between areas then all level 2 routers must be dual.

1.5 Advantages of Using Integrated IS-IS

Use of the integrated IS-IS protocol, as a single protocol for

routing both IP and OSI packets in a dual environment, has

significant advantages over using separate protocols for

independently routing IP and OSI traffic.

An alternative approach is known as "Ships In the Night" (S.I.N.).

With the S.I.N. approach, completely separate routing protocols are

used for IP and for OSI. For example, OSPF [5] may be used for

routing IP traffic, and IS-IS [1] may be used for routing OSI

traffic. With S.I.N., the two routing protocols operate more or less

independently. However, dual routers will need to implement both

routing protocols, and therefore there will be some degree of

competition for resources.

Note that S.I.N. and the integrated IS-IS approach are not really

completely separate options. In particular, if the integrated IS-IS

is used within a routing domain for routing of IP and OSI traffic, it

is still possible to use other independent routing protocols for

routing other protocol suites.

In the future, optional extensions to IS-IS may be defined for

routing other common protocol suites. However, such future options

are outside of the scope of this document. This section will compare

integrated IS-IS and S.I.N. for routing of IP and OSI only.

A primary advantage of the integrated IS-IS relates to the network

management effort required. Since the integrated IS-IS provides a

single routing protocol, within a single coordinated routing domain

using a single backbone, this implies that there is less information

to configure. This combined with a single coordinated MIB simplifies

network management.

Note that the operation of two routing protocols with the S.I.N.

approach are not really independent, since they must share common

resources. However, with the integrated IS-IS, the interactions are

explicit, whereas with S.I.N., the interactions are implicit. Since

the interactions are explicit, again it may be easier to manage and

debug dual routers.

Another advantage of the integrated IS-IS is that, since it requires

only one routing protocol, it uses fewer resources. In particular,

less implementation resources are needed (since only one protocol

needs to be implemented), less CPU and memory resources are used in

the router (since only one protocol needs to be run), and less

network resources are used (since only one set of routing packets

need to be transmitted). Primarily this translates into a financial

savings, since each of these three types of resources cost money.

This implies that dual routers based on the integrated IS-IS should

be less expensive to purchase and operate than dual routers based on

S.I.N.

Note that the operation of two routing protocols with the S.I.N.

approach are not really independent, since they must share common

resources. For example, if one routing protocol becomes unstable and

starts to use excessive resources, the other protocol is likely to

suffer. A bug in one protocol could crash the other. However, with

the integrated IS-IS, the interactions are explicit and are defined

into the protocol and software interactions. With S.I.N., the

interactions are implicit.

The use of a single integrated routing protocol similarly reduces the

likely frequency of software upgrades. Specifically, if you have two

different routing protocols in your router, then you have to upgrade

the software any time EITHER of the protocols change. If you make use

of a single integrated routing protocol, then software changes are

still likely to be needed, but less frequently.

Finally, routing protocols have significant real time requirements.

In IS-IS, these real time requirements have been explicitly

specified. In other routing protocols, these requirements are

implicit. However, in all routing protocols, there are real time

guarantees which must be met in order to ensure correct operation. In

general, it is difficult enough to ensure compliance with real time

requirements in the implementation of a single real time system. With

S.I.N., implementation of two semi-independent real-time protocols in

a single device makes this more difficult.

Note that both integrated IS-IS and S.I.N. allow for independence of

external routes (for traffic from/to outside of the routing domain),

and allow for independent assignment of OSI and TCP/IP addresses.

2 Symbols and Abbreviations

AA Administrative Authority

(a three octet field in the GOSIP version 2.0 NSAP

address format)

AFI Authority and Format Identifier

(the first octet of all OSI NSAP addresses -- identifies

format of the rest of the address)

CLNP Connection-Less Network Protocol

(ISO 8473, the OSI connectionless network layer protocol

-- very similar to IP)

DFI DSP Format Identifier

(a one octet field in the GOSIP version 2.0 NSAP address

format)

ES End System

(The OSI term for a host)

ES-IS End System to Intermediate System Routeing Exchange

Protocol (ISO 9542 -- OSI protocol between routers

and end systems)

ICD International Code Designator

(ISO standard for identifying organizations)

IP Internetwork Protocol

(an Internet Standard Network Layer Protocol)

IS Intermediate System

(The OSI term for a router)

IS-IS Intermediate System to Intermediate System Routeing

Exchange Protocol

(the ISO protocol for routing within a single

routing domain)

IS-IS Hello An Hello packet defined by the IS-IS protocol

(a type of packet used by the IS-IS protocol)

ISH An Hello packet defined by ISO 9542 (ES-IS protocol).

(not the same as IS-IS Hello)

ISO International Organization for Standardization

(an international body which is authorized to write

standards of many kinds)

LSP Link State Packet

(a type of packet used by the IS-IS protocol)

NLPID Network Layer Protocol ID

(A one-octet field identifying a network layer protocol)

NSAP Network Service Access Point

(a conceptual interface point at which the network

service is made available)

SEL NSAP Selector

(the last octet of NSAP addresses, also called NSEL)

OSI Open Systems Interconnection

(an international standard protocol architecture)

RD Routing Domain

(the set of routers and end systems using a single

instance of a routing protocol such as IS-IS)

SNPA Subnetwork Point of Attachment

(a conceptual interface at which a subnetwork service

is provided)

TCP Transmission Control Protocol

(an Internet Standard Transport Layer Protocol)

TCP/IP The protocol suite based on TCP, IP, and related

protocols (the Internet standard protocol

architecture)

3 Subnetwork Independent Functions

3.1 Exchange of Routing Information

The exchange of routing information between routers makes use of the

normal routing packet exchange as defined in the OSI IS-IS routing

spec, with additional IP-specific information added to the IS-IS

routing packets.

The IS-IS protocol provides for the inclusion of variable length

fields in all IS-IS packets. These fields are encoded using a "Code,

Length, Value" triplet, where the code and length are encoded in one

octet each, and the value has the length specified (from 0 to 254

octets). IS-IS requires that: "Any codes in a received PDU that are

not recognised are ignored and passed through unchanged". This

requirement applies to all routers implementing IS-IS, including

OSI-only, IP-only, and dual routers. This allows IP-specific

information to be encoded in a manner which OSI-only routers will

ignore, and also allows OSI-specific information to be encoded in a

manner which IP-only routers will ignore.

IP-capable (i.e., all IP-only and dual) routers need to know what

network layer protocols are supported by other routers in their area.

This information is made available by inclusion of a "protocols

supported" field in all IS-IS Hello and Link State Packets. This

field makes use of the NLPID (Network Layer Protocol Identifier),

which is a one-octet value assigned by ISO to identify network level

protocols. NLPID values have been assigned to ISO 8473 and to IP.

IP-capable routers need to know the IP address of the adjacent

interface of neighboring routers. This is required for sending ICMP

redirects (when an IP-capable router sends an ICMP redirect to a

host, it must include the IP address of the appropriate interface of

the correct next-hop router). This information is made available by

inclusion of the IP interface address in the IS-IS Hello packets.

Specifically, each IS-IS Hello packet contains the IP address(es) of

the interface over which the Hello is transmitted. The IS-IS allows

multiple IP addresses to be assigned to each physical interface.

In some cases, it will be useful for IP-capable routers to be able to

determine an IP address(es) of all other routers at their level

(i.e., for level 1 routers: all other routers in their area; for

level 2 routers: all other level 2 routers in the routing domain).

This is useful whenever an IP packet is to be sent to a router, such

as for encapsulation or for transmission of network management

packets. This information is made available by inclusion of IP

address in LSPs. Specifically, each IS-IS LSP includes one or more IP

addresses of the router which transmits the LSP. An IP-capable router

is required to include at least one of its IP addresses in its LSPs,

and may optionally include several or all of its IP addresses. Where

a single router operates as both a level 1 and a level 2 router, it

is required to include the same IP address(es) in its level 1 and

level 2 LSPs.

IP-capable routers need to know, for any given IP destination

address, the correct route to that destination. Specifically, level 1

routers need to know what IP addresses are reachable from each level

1 router in their area. In addition, level 1 routers need to find

level 2 routers (for traffic to IP addresses outside of their area).

Level 2 routers need to know what IP addresses are reachable

internally (either directly, or via level 1 routing) from other level

2 routers, and what addresses are reachable externally from other

level 2 routers. All of this information is made available by

inclusion of IP reachable address information in the Link State

Packets.

Internal (within the routing domain) and external (outside the

domain) reachability information is announced separately in level 2

LSPs. Reachable IP addresses include a default metric, and may

include multiple TOS-specific metrics. In general, for external

routes, metrics may be of type "internal" (i.e., directly comparable

with internal metrics) or of type "external" (i.e., not comparable

with the internal metric). A route using internal metrics (i.e.,

either announced as "IP internal reachability information", or

announced as "IP external reachability information" with an internal

metric) is always preferred to a route using external metrics (i.e.,

announced as "IP external reachability information", with an external

metric).

The detailed encoding of the IP-specific information included in

routing packets is provided in section 5 (Structure and Encoding of

PDUs).

3.2 Hierarchical Abbreviation of IP Reachability Information

Level 2 routers include in their level 2 LSPs a list of all [IP

address, subnet mask, metric] combinations reachable in their area.

In general, this information may be determined from the level 1 LSPs

from all routers in the area. If we ignore resource constraints, then

it would be permissible for a level 2 router to simply duplicate all

[IP address, subnet mask, metric] entries from all level 1 routers in

its area (with appropriate metric adjustment), for inclusion in its

level 2 LSP. However, in order for hierarchical routing to scale to

large routing domain sizes, it is highly desired to abbreviate the

reachable address information.

This is accomplished by manual configuration of summary addresses.

Each level 2 router may be configured with one or more [IP address,

subnet mask, metric] entries for announcement in their level 2 LSPs.

The set of reachable addresses obtained from level 1 LSPs is compared

with the configured reachable addresses. Redundant information

obtained from level 1 LSPs is not included in level 2 LSPs. Generally

it is expected that the level 2 configured information will specify

more inclusive addresses (corresponding to a subnet mask with fewer

bits set to 1). This will therefore allow one configured

address/submask pair (or a small number of such pairs) to

hierarchically supercede the information corresponding to multiple

entries in level 1 LSPs.

The manually configured addresses are included in level 2 LSPs only

if they correspond to at least one address which is reachable in the

area. For manually configured level 2 addresses, the associated

metric values to announce in level 2 LSPs are also manually

configured. The configured addresses will supercede reachable address

entries from level 1 LSPs based only on the IP address and subnet

mask -- metric values are not considered when determining if a given

configured address supercedes an address obtained from a level 1 LSP.

Any address obtained from a level 1 LSP which is not superceded by

the manually configured information is included in the level 2 LSPs.

In this case, the metric value announced in the level 2 LSPs is

calculated from the sum of the metric value announced in the

corresponding level 1 LSP, plus the distance from the level 2 router

to the appropriate level 1 router. Note: If this sum results in a

metric value greater than 63 (the maximum value that can be reported

in level 2 LSPs), then the value 63 must be used. Delay, expense, and

error metrics (i.e., those TOS metrics other than the default metric)

will be included only if (i) the level 2 router supports the specific

TOS; (ii) the path from the level 2 router to the appropropriate

level 1 router is made up of links which support the specific TOS;

and (iii) the level 1 router which can reach the address directly

also supports the specific TOS for this route, as indicated in its

level 1 LSP.

In general, the same [IP address, subnet mask] pair may be announced

in level 1 LSPs sent by multiple level 1 routers in the same area. In

this case (assuming the entry is not superceded by a manually

configured entry), then only one such entry shall be included in the

level 2 LSP. The metric value(s) announced in level 2 LSPs correspond

to the minimum of the metric value(s) that would be calculated for

each of the level 1 LSP entries.

A level 2 router will have IP addresses which are directly reachable

via its own interfaces. For purposes of inclusion of IP reachable

address information in level 2 LSPs, these "directly reachable"

addresses are treated exactly the same as addresses received in level

1 LSPs.

Manually configured addresses may hierarchically supercede multiple

level 1 reachable address entries. However, there may be some IP

addresses which match the manually configured addresses, but which

are not reachable via level 1 routing. If a level 2 router receives

an IP packet whose IP address matches a manually configured address

which it is including in its level 2 LSP, but which is not reachable

via level 1 routing in the area, then the packet must be discarded.

In this case, an error report may be returned (as specified in RFC

1009), with the reason for discard specifying destination

unreachable.

Figure 2 - An Example Routing Domain (not shown)

An example is illustrated in figure 2. Suppose that the network

number for the entire routing domain is 17 (a class A network).

Suppose each area is assigned a subnet number consisting of the next

8 bits. The area may be further subdivided by assigning the next

eight bits to each LAN in the area, giving each a 24 bit subnet mask

(counting the network and subnet fields). Finally 8 bits are left for

the host field. Suppose that for a particular area (given subnet

number 17.133) there are a number of IP capable level 1 routers

announcing (in the special IP entry in their level 1 LSPs) subnets

17.133.5, 17.133.43, and 17.133.57.

Suppose that in this example, in order to save space in level 2 LSPs,

the level 2 routers in this area are configured to announce subnet

17.133. Only this one address needs to be announced in level 2 LSPs.

Thus if an IP packet comes along for an address in subnet 17.133.5,

17.133.43 or 17.133.57, then other level 2 routers, in other areas,

will know to pass the traffic to this area.

The inclusion of 17.133 in level 2 LSPs means that the three subnet

addresses starting with 17.133 do not all have to be listed

separately in level 2 LSPs.

If any traffic comes along that is for an unreachable address such as

17.133.124.7, then level 2 routers in other areas in this particular

domain will think that this area can handle this traffic, will

forward traffic to level 2 routers in this area, which will have to

discard this traffic.

Suppose that subnet number 17.133.125 was actually reachable via some

other area, such as the lower right hand area. In this case, the

level 2 router in the left area would be announcing (in its level 2

LSPs according to manually configured information) reachability to

subnet 17.133. However, the level 2 router in the lower right area

would be announcing (in its level 2 LSPs according to information

taken from its received level 1 LSPs), reachability to subnet

17.133.125. Due to the use of best match routing, this works

correctly. All traffic from other areas destined to subnet 17.133.125

would be sent to the level 2 router in the lower right area, and all

other traffic to subnet 17.133 (i.e., traffic to any IP address

starting with 17.133, but not starting with 17.133.125) would be sent

to the level 2 router in the leftmost area.

3.3 Addressing Routers in IS-IS Packets

The IS-IS packet formats explicitly require that OSI-style addresses

of routers appear in the IS-IS packets. For example, these addresses

are used to determine area membership of routers. It is therefore

necessary for all routers making use of the IS-IS protocol to have

OSI style addresses assigned. For IP-only routers, these addresses

will be used only in the operation of the IS-IS protocol, and are not

used for any other purpose (such as the operation of EGP, ICMP, or

other TCP/IP protocols).

For OSI-only and dual routers, assignment of NSAP addresses is

straight forward, but is outside of the scope of this specification.

Address assignment mechanisms are being set up by standards bodies

which allow globally unique OSI NSAP addresses to be assigned. All

OSI-only and dual routers may therefore make use of normal OSI

addresses in the operation of the IS-IS protocol.

For IP-only routers, there are two ways in which NSAP addresses may

be obtained for use with the IS-IS protocol.

1) For those environments in which OSI is being used, or in which it

is anticipated that OSI will be used in the future, it is

permissible to obtain NSAP address assignments in the normal

manner, assign normal NSAP addresses to IP-only routers, and use

these addresses in the operation of IS-IS. This approach is

recommended even for pure IP routing domains, as it will simplify

future migration from IP-only to dual operation.

2) In some cases, routers may have only TCP/IP addresses, and it may

be undesireable to have to go through the normal mechanisms for

assignment of NSAP addresses. Instead, an alternate mechanim is

provided below for algorithmically generating a valid OSI style

address from existing IP address and autonomous system number

assignments.

Where desired, for IP-only routers, for use in IS-IS packet formats

only, OSI-style addresses (compatible with the USA GOSIP version 2.0

NSAP address format [9]) may be derived as follows:

AFI 1 octet value "47" (specifies ICD format)

ICD 2 octet value "00 05" (specifies Internet/Gosip)

DFI 1 octet value "xx"

AA 3 octets value "xx xx xx" (specifies special

IP-only use of NSAPs)

Reserved 2 octets must be "00 00"

RD 2 octets contains autonomous system number

Area 2 octets must be assigned as described below

ID 6 octets must be assigned as described below

SEL 1 octet used as described below

The AFI value of "47" and the ICD value of "00 05" specifies the

Gosip Version 2.0 addressing format. The DFI number of "xx" and the

AA of "xx xx xx" specify that this special NSAP address format is

being used, solely for IS-IS packet formats in an IP-only

environment. The reserved field must contain "00 00", as specified in

GOSIP version 2.0.

The routing domain field contains the Autonomous System number.

Strictly speaking, this is not necessary, since the IS-IS packets are

exchanged within a single AS only. However, inclusion of the AS

number in this address format will ensure correct operation in the

event that routers from separate routing domains/ASs are incorrectly

placed on the same link. The AS number in this context is used only

for definition of unique NSAP addresses, and does not imply any

coupling with exterior routing protocols.

The Area field must be assigned by the authority responsible for the

routing domain, such that each area in the routing domain must have a

unique Area value.

The ID must be assigned by the authority responsible for the routing

domain. The ID must be assigned such that every router in the routing

domain has a unique value. It is recommended that one of the

following methods is used:

1)use a unique IEEE 802 48 bit station ID

2)use the value hex "02 00" prepended to an IP address of the router.

IEEE 802 addresses, if used, must appear in IEEE canonical format.

Since the IEEE 802 station IDs are assigned to be globally unique,

use of these values clearly assures uniqueness in the area. Also, all

assigned IEEE 802 station IDs have the global/local bit set to zero.

Prepending the indicated pattern to the front of the IP address

therefore assures that format (2) illustrated above cannot produce

addresses which collide with format (1). Finally, to the extent that

IP addresses are also globally unique, format (2) will produce unique

IDs for routers.

The indicated hex value is specified in IEEE 802 canonical form [10].

In IEEE 802 addresses, the multicast bit is the least significant bit

of the first byte. The global/local bit is the next least significant

bit of the first byte. The indicated prefix therefore sets the

global/local bit to 1, and all other bits in the first two octets to

0.

Note that within an area, whether ISO addresses are configured into

the routers through ISO address assignment, or whether the ISO-style

address is generated directly from the AS number and IP address, all

routers within an area must have the same high order part of address

(AFI, ICD, DFI, AA, RD, and Area). This ISO-style address is used in

IS-IS Hello messages and is the basis by which routers recognize

whether neighbor nodes are in or out of their area.

3.4 External Links

External connectivity (i.e., communications with routers outside of

the routing domain) is done only by level 2 routers. The ISO version

of IS-IS allows external OSI routes to be reported as "reachable

address prefixes" in level 2 LSPs. The integrated IS-IS also allows

external IP reachable addresses (i.e., IP addresses reachable via

inter-domain routing) to be reported in level 2 LSPs in the "IP

external reachability information" field. External OSI and external

IP routes are handled independently.

The routes announced in IP external reachability information entries

include all routes to outside of the routing domain. This includes

routes learned from OSPF, EGP, RIP, or any other external protocol.

External routes may make use of "internal" or "external" metrics.

Internal metrics are comparable with the metrics used for internal

routes. Thus in choosing between an internal route, and an external

route using internal metrics, the metric values may be directly

compared. In contrast, external metrics cannot be directly compared

with internal metrics. Any route defined solely using internal

metrics is always preferred to any route defined using external

metrics. When an external route using external metrics must be used,

the lowest value of the external metric is preferred regardless of

the internal cost to reach the appropriate exit point.

It is useful, in the operation of external routing protocols, to

provide a mechanism for border routers (i.e., routers in the same

routing domain, which have the ability to route externally to other

domains) to determine each other's existence, and to exchange

external information (in a form understood only by the border routers

themselves). This is made possible by inclusion of "inter-domain

routing protocol information" fields in level 2 LSPs. The inter-

domain routing protocol information field is not included in

pseudonode LSPs.

In general there may be multiple types of external inter-domain

routing protocol information exchanged between border routers. The

IS-IS therefore specifies that each occurance of the inter-domain

routing protocol information field include a "type" field, which

indicates the type of inter-domain routing protocol information

enclosed. Values to be used in the type field will be specified in

future versions of the "Assigned Numbers" RFC. Initial values for

this field are specified in Annex A of this specification.

Information contained in the inter-domain routing protocol

information field will be carried in level 2 LSPs, and will therefore

need to be stored by all level 2 routers in the domain. However, only

those level 2 routers which are directly involved in external routing

will use this information. In designing the use of this field, it is

important to carefully consider the implications that this may have

on storage requirements in level 2 routers (including those level 2

routers which are not directly involved in external routing).

The protocols used to exchange routing information directly between

border routers, and external routers (in other routing domains /

autonomous systems) are outside of the scope of this specification.

3.5 Type of Service Routing

The integrated IS-IS protocol provides IP Type of Service (TOS)

routing, through use of the Quality of Service (QOS) feature of IS-

IS. This allows for routing on the basis of throughput (the default

metric), delay, expense, or residual error probability. Note than any

particular packet may be routed on the basis of any one of these four

metrics. Routing on the basis of general combinations of metrics is

not supported.

The support for TOS/QOS is optional. If a particular packet calls for

a specific TOS, and the correct path from the source to destination

is made up of routers all of which support that particular TOS, then

the packet will be routed on the optimal path. However, if there is

no path from the source to destination made up of routers which

support that particular type of service, then the packet will be

forwarded using the default metric instead. This allows for TOS

service in those environments where it is needed, while still

providing acceptable service in the case where an unsupported TOS is

requested.

NOTE - IP does not have a cost TOS. There is therefore no mapping of

IP TOS metrics which corresponds to the minimum cost metric.

The IP TOS field is mapped onto the four available metrics as

follows:

Bits 0-2 (Precedence): This field does not affect the route, but

rather may affect other aspects of packet

forwarding.

Bits 3 (Delay), 4 (Throughput) and 5 (Reliability):

000 (all normal) Use default metric

100 (low delay) Use delay metric

010 (high throughput) Use default metric

001 (high reliabiity) Use reliability metric

other Use default metric

3.6 Multiple LSPs and SNPs

In some cases, IS-IS packets (specifically Link State Packets and

Complete Sequence Number Packets) may be too large to fit into one

packet. The OSI IS-IS [1] allows for LSPs and CSNPs to be split into

multiple packets. This is independent of ISO 8473 segmentation, and

is also independent of IP fragmentation. Use of independent multiple

packets has the advantages (with respect to segmentation or

fragmentation) that: (i) when information in the IS-IS changes, only

those packets effected need to be re-issued; (ii) when a single

packet is received, it can be processed without the need to receive

all other packets of the same type from the same router before

beginning processing.

The Integrated IS-IS makes use of the same multiple packet function,

as defined in [1]. IP-specific fields in IS-IS packets may be split

across multiple packets. As specified in section 5 ("Structure and

Encoding of PDUs"), some of the IP-specific fields (those which may

be fairly long) may be split into several occurences of the same

field, thereby allowing splitting of the fields across different

packets.

Multiple LSPs from the same router are distinguished by LSP number.

Generally, most variable length fields may occur in an LSP with any

LSP number. Some specific variable length fields may be required to

occur in LSP number 0. Except where explicitly stated otherwise, when

an IS-IS router issues multiple LSPs, the IP-specific fields may

occur in an LSP with any LSP number.

Complete Sequence Number Packets may be split into multiple packets,

with the range to which each packet applies explicitly reported in

the packet. Partial Sequence Number Packets are inherently partial,

and so can easily be split into multiple packets if this is

necessary. Again, where applicable, IP-specific fields may occur in

any SNP.

3.7 IP-Only Operation

For IP-only routers, the format for IS-IS packets remains unchanged.

However, there are some variable length fields from the IS-IS packets

that can be omitted. Specifically:

IS-IS Hello Packets:

- no change

IS-IS Link State Packets:

- the "End Systems Neighbours" entries are omitted

- the "Prefix Neighbours" entries are omitted

IS-IS Sequence Number Packets:

- no change

3.8 Encapsulation

Future versions of the Integated IS-IS may specify optional

encapsulation mechanisms for partition repair, and for forwarding

packets through incompatible routers (i.e., for forwarding OSI

packets through IP-only routers, and forwarding IP packets through

OSI-only routers). The details of encapsulation and decapsulation are

for further study. Routers complying with the Integrated IS-IS are

not required to implement encapsulation nor decapsulation.

3.9 Authentication

The authentication field allows each IS-IS packet to contain

information used to authenticate the originator and/or contents of

the packet. The authentication information contained in each packet

is used to authenticate the entire packet, including OSI and IP

parts. If a packet is received which contains invalid authentication

information, then the entire packet is discarded. If an LSP or SNP is

split into multiple packets (as described in section 3.6), then each

is authenticated independently.

Use of the authentication field is optional. Routers are not required

to be able to interpret authentication information. As with other

fields in the integrated IS-IS, if a router does not implement

authentication then it will ignore any authentication field that may

be present in an IS-IS packet.

Annex D specifies a proposed use of the authentication field.

3.10 Order of Preference of Routes / Dijkstra Computation

We define the term "IP reachability entry" to mean the combination of

the [IP address, subnet mask]. The Dijkstra calculation must

calculate routes to each distinct IP reachability entry. For the

Dijkstra calculation, each IP reachability entry can be treated in

much the same manner as an OSI end system. Naturally, each IP

reachability entry is treated as distinct from any OSI end systems

which may also be reachable in the same area or routing domain.

For any particular IP reachability entry, this is the same as another

entry if and only if: (i) the subnet masks are identical; and (ii)

for each bit in the subnet mask which has the value "1", the IP

address is identical. This can easily be tested by zeroing those bits

in the IP address which correspond to a zero bit in the mask, and

then treating the entry as a 64 bit quantity, and testing for

equality between different 64 bit quantities. The actual calculation

of routes to IP reachability entries is therefore no more complex

than calculation of routes to OSI end systems (except for the

replacement of a 48-bit test with a 64-bit test).

The Dijkstra computation does not take into consideration whether a

router is IP-only, OSI-only, or dual. The topological restrictions

specified in section 1.4 ensure that IP packets will only be sent via

IP-capable routers, and OSI packets will only be sent via OSI-capable

routers.

The Integrated IS-IS prefers routes within the area (via level 1

routing) whenever possible. If level 2 routes must be used, then

routes within the routing domain (specifically, those routes using

internal metrics) are prefered to routes outside of the routing

domain (using external metrics).

The Integrated IS-IS protocol makes use of "best match" routing of IP

packets. This implies that a particular destination address may match

more than one entry in the forwarding database. If a particular IP

packet has a destination address which matches two different IP

reachability entries, then the entry who's mask contains the most "1"

bits is preferred.

IP packets whose destination is a router are routed the same way as

any other IP packet, by forwarding first to the appropriate subnet,

and then forwarding on that subnet to the destination host (which

just happens to be a router in this case). In particular, the IP

forwarding database does not contain explicit routes to the

individual "IP interface addresses" listed by each router in its LSP.

However, host routes (routes with a subnet mask of all ones) may of

course be included in the IP reachability entries, and will be

handled in the same manner as other IP reachability entries.

In order to ensure correct interoperation of different router

implementations, it is necessary to specify the order of preference

of possible routes. For OSI destinations, this is outside of the

scope of this report. For IP destinations, this is specified in

section 3.10.1 and 3.10.2 below. Annex C specifies a detailed

Dijkstra calculation and forwarding algorithm which is compatible

with the order of preference of routes specified here.

With IS-IS, if a route to a given destination is advertised, or a

link between routers is advertised, then metric values associated

with some or all of the specified TOS metric types may be associated

with that destination or link. However, the default metric must

always be available. Normally this ensures that if a route using any

TOS metric is available, then a route using the default metric will

also be available. The only exception to this is where the

corresponding route using the default metric has a total cost (within

the area, or within the level 2 backbone) greater than MaxPathMetric.

In determining the route to a particular destination for a specified

TOS, only routes using either the requested TOS metric, or the

default TOS metric, are considered.

3.10.1 Order of Preference of Routes In Level 1 Routing

If a given destination is reachable within an area via a route using

either the requested TOS or the default TOS, then the IS-IS will

always make use of a path within the area (via level 1 routing),

regardless of whether an alternate path exists outside of the area

(via level 2 routing). In this case, routes within the area are

selected as follows:

1) Amongst routes in the area, if the specified destination

address matches more than one [IP address, subnet mask] pair,

then the more specific address match (the one with more "1"

bits in the mask) is prefered.

2) Amongst routes in the area to equally specific address

matches, routes on which the requested TOS (if any) is

supported are always prefered to routes on which the

requested TOS is not supported.

3) Amongst routes in the area of the same TOS to equally

specific address matches, the shortest routes are prefered.

For determination of the shortest path, if a route on which

the specified TOS is supported is available, then the

specified TOS metric is used, otherwise the default metric

is used. Amongst routes of equal cost, load splitting may

be performed as specified in [1].

For a level 1 only router (i.e., a router which does not take part in

level 2 routing, or a level 2 router which is not "attached"), if a

given destination is not reachable within an area, level 1 routing

will always route to a level 2 router as follows:

1) Amongst routes in the area to attached level 2 routers,

routes on which the requested TOS (if any) is supported

are always prefered to routes on which the requested TOS

is not supported.

2) Amongst routes in the area of the same TOS to attached

level 2 routers, the shortest routes are prefered. For

determination of the shortest path, if a route on which

the specified TOS is supported is available, then the

specified TOS metric is used, otherwise the default

metric is used. Amongst routes of equal cost,

loadsplitting may be performed as specified in [1].

3.10.2 Order of Preference of Routes in Level 2 Routing

For those level 2 routers which also take part in level 1 routing,

routes learned via level 1 routing, using either the requested TOS or

the default TOS, are always prefered to routes learned through level

2 routing. For destinations which are not reachable via level 1

routing, or for level 2 only routers (routers which do not take part

in level 1 routing), then level 2 routes are selected as follows:

1) Routes using internal metrics only are always preferred

to routes using external metrics.

2) If a route using internal metrics only is available:

a) If the specified destination address matches more

than one [IP address, subnet mask] pair, then the more

specific address match (i.e., the largest number of

"1"s present in the subnet mask) is prefered.

b) Amongst routes with equally specific address matches

(i.e., an equal number of "1"s present in the subnet

mask), routes on which the requested TOS (if any) is

supported are always preferred to routes on which the

requested TOS is not supported.

c) Amongst routes of the same TOS with an equally specific

address matches, the shortest path is prefered. For

determination of the shortest path, if a route on which

the specified TOS is supported is available, then the

specified TOS metric is used, otherwise the default

metric is used. Amongst routes of equal cost,

loadsplitting may be performed as specified in [1].

NOTE: Internal routes (routes to destinations announced

in the "IP Internal Reachability Information" field),

and external routes using internal metrics (routes to

destinations announced in the "IP External Reachability

Information" field, with a metric of type "internal")

are treated identically for the purpose of the order of

preference of routes, and the Dijkstra calculation.

3) If a route using internal metrics only is not available,

but a route using external metrics is available:

a) If the specified destination address matches more than

one [IP address, subnet mask] pair, then the more

specific address match is prefered.

NOTE: For external routes, the subnet mask will normally

correspond precisely to the network number. This implies

that this test will always discover equal length matching

strings. However, this test is included to allow future

migration to more general handling of external addresses.

b) Amongst routes with equally specific matches, routes on

which the requested TOS (if any) is supported are always

preferred to routes on which the requested TOS is not

supported. NOTE: for external routes, the route is

considered to support the requested TOS only if the

internal route to the appropriate border router

supports the requested TOS, and the external route

reported by the border router also supports the

requested TOS.

c) Amongst routes of the same TOS with an equal length

matching address string, the shortest path is prefered.

For determination of the shortest path:

(i) Routes with a smaller announced external metric

are always prefered.

(ii) Amongst routes with an equal external metric,

routes with a shorter internal metric are prefered.

Amongst routes of equal cost, loadsplitting may be

performed as specified in [1].

For level 2 routers which are announcing manually configured summary

addresses in their level 2 LSPs, in some cases there will exist IP

addresses which match the manually configured addresses, but which do

not match any addresses which are actually reachable via level 1

routing in the area. Generally, packets to such addresses are handled

according to the following rules:

1) If the specified destination is reachable via level 1 routing,

then according to the order of preference of routes specified

above, the packet will be delivered via level 1 routing.

2) If the specified destination is not reachable via level 1 routing,

but is reachable via 2 routing, and there are other level 2

routers which offer more desireable routes according to the

rules specified above (for example a route with a more specific

match, or a route with an equally specific match which supports

the correct TOS), then level 2 routing will forward the packet

according to the more desireable route.

3) If the specified destination is not reachable via level 1 routing,

and the manually configured summary address advertised by this

router (the router which has received the packet and is trying

to forward it) represents the most desireable route, then the

destination is unreachable and the packet must be discarded.

4 Subnetwork Dependent Functions

4.1 Link Demultiplexing

Dual routers may receive a combination of OSI packets, and IP

packets. It is necessary for the dual routers to be able to clearly

and unambiguously distinguish the two protocol suites.

This problem is not unique to the integrated IS-IS routing protocol.

In fact, this problem will occur in any multi-protocol environment.

This problem is currently being worked on independently, and is

outside of the scope of this specification.

In general, the link type is a configuration parameter. For example,

whether to use PPP, HDLC, or some other point-to-point protocol over

a point-to-point link would be configured. For any particular link

type, a method must be defined for encapsulation of both OSI and IP

packets. Definition of such methods for common link types is outside

of the scope of this specification.

IP packets are encapsulated directly over the underlying link layer

service, using the normal method for transmssion of IP packets over

each type of link. Similarly OSI packets are encapsulated directly

over the underlying link layer service, using the normal method for

transmission of OSI packets over each type of link. Finally, note

that IS-IS packets are encapsulated using the normal method for

transmission of OSI packets over any particular link type. This

implies that all IS-IS routers, including IP-only routers, must be

able to receive IS-IS packets using the normal encapsulation for OSI

packets.

4.2 Multiple IP Addresses per Interface

The integrated IS-IS allows each router to have multiple IP addresses

for each physical interface, up to the maximum number which may be

contained in a single "IP Interface Address" field (i.e., up to a

maximum of 63 addresses per interface). For example, where there are

two logical subnets on the same LAN, the interface may have two IP

addresses, one corresponding to each logical subnet. Each IS-IS Hello

packet contains a list of IP addresses associated with the physical

interface over which the Hello is transmitted.

It is permissible to implement routers which conform to the

Integrated IS-IS specification which restrict the number of IP

addresses per interface. However, IP-capable routers must be able to

interact correctly with other routers which assign multiple IP

addresses per physical interface (up to the maximum of 63 addresses

per interface).

Where appropriate (for example, in some cases on point-to-point

links), some interfaces may have no IP addresses assigned. In this

case, the IS-IS Hello transmitted on that interface may omit the IP

Interface Address field, or may include the IP Interface Address

field with zero entries.

4.3 LANs, Designated Routers, and Pseudonodes

The maintenance of designated routers and pseudonodes is specified in

[1], and is not changed by this proposal. In the case that IP-only

and dual routers (or OSI-only and dual routers) are mixed on the same

LAN in a pure IP area (or a pure OSI area, respectively), any router

on the LAN may be elected designated router.

However, there is a fundamental difference in the way that OSI and

TCP/IP deal with LANs, and other broadcast subnetworks.

With OSI, the use of the ES-IS protocol (ISO 9542) allows the end

systems and routers to automatically determine their connectivity,

thereby allowing all end systems on the LAN to potentially route via

any of the routers on the LAN.

In contract, TCP/IP explictly assigns subnet identifiers to each

local area network. In some cases, a single physical LAN could have

multiple subnet identifiers assigned to it. In this case, end systems

(hosts) which have an address on one logical subnet are explicitly

precluded from sending IP packets directly to a router whose address

places it on a different logical subnet. Each router is manually

configured to know which subnets it can reach on each interface. In

the case that there are multiple logical subnets on the same LAN,

each router can only exchange IP packets with those end systems which

are on the same logical subnet. This implies that it is not

sufficient for the pseudonode LSP to announce all subnets on the LAN

(i.e., all [IP address, subnet mask] pairs reachable on the LAN).

It is therefore necessary for each router to announce in its LSPs

those subnets which it can reach on each interface, including

interfaces to broadcast subnetworks such as LANs. The pseudonode LSP

does not specify the IP addresses which are reachable on the LAN

(i.e., does not contain the the IP reachability field).

As specified elsewhere (see the forthcoming update to the

"Requirements of IP Gateways" [4]), routers may send ICMP redirects

only if: (i) the IP packet is being forwarded over the same physical

interface over which it arrived; and (ii) the source address of the

forwarded IP packet, the IP address of this router's interface (as

indicated by the source address of the ICMP redirect), and the IP

address of the router to which the packet is being redirected (again,

as indicated in the ICMP redirect) are all on the same IP subnet.

4.4 Maintaining Router Adjacencies

The IS-IS determines whether an adjacency is to be established

between two routers using means which are independent of the IP

interface addresses of the routers. Where multiple logical subnets

occur on the same physical LAN, this potentially allows adjacencies

to be brought up between two routers which share physical

connectivity to each other, but which don't have a logical subnet in

common. IP-capable IS-IS routers therefore must be able to forward IP

packets over existing adjacencies to routers with which they share

physical connectivity, even when the IP address of the adjacent

interface of the neighboring router is on a different logical IP

subnet.

For point-to-point links, IS-IS requires exchange of ISO 9542 ISHs,

as the first step in establishing the link between routers. All IS-IS

routers are therefore required to transmit and receive ISO 9542 ISH

packets on point-to-point links.

The "protocols supported" field (defined in section 5 below) must be

present in all IS-IS Hello packets sent by dual and IP-only routers.

If this field is missing, then it is assumed that the packet was

transmitted by an OSI-only router. Similarly, those 9542 ISHs sent

over point-to-point links, where there is (or may be) another IS-IS

router at the other end of the point-to-point link, must also

contains the "protocols supported" field. Note that if this field is

mistakenly sent in a 9542 ISH where there is an ordinary OSI-only End

System at the other end of the link, then (in accordance to ISO 9542)

the End System is required to ignore the field and interpret the ISH

correctly. It is therefore safe to always include this field in ISHs

sent over point-to-point links.

Dual routers must operate in a dual fashion on every link in the

routing domain over which they are running IS-IS. Thus, the value of

the "protocols supported" field must be identical on every link

(i.e., for any one router running IS-IS, all of the Hellos and LSPs

transmitted by it must contain the same "protocols supported"

values).

4.5 Forwarding to Incompatible Routers

There may be times when a dual router has to forward an IP packet to

an OSI-only router, or forward an OSI packet to an IP-only router. In

this case the packet must be discarded. An error report may be

transmitted, in accordance with the IP or ISO 8473 specification

(respectively). The reason for discard specified in the error report

should specify "destination host unreachable" (for IP), or

"destination unreachable" (for OSI).

Similarly, due to errors, in some cases an IP-only router may have to

forward an IP packet to an OSI-only router. Again, the packet must be

discarded, as specified above. This may only occur if IP-only and

OSI-only routers occur in the same area, which is a configuration

error.

5 Structure and Encoding of PDUs

This clause describes the additional packet fields for use of the ISO

IS-IS Intra-Domain Routing protocol in pure IP and dual environments.

Specifically, the same packet types are used as in IS-IS [1], and all

fixed fields remain the same. Additional variable length fields are

defined in this section.

5.1 Overview of IS-IS PDUs

The packets used in IS-IS routing protocol fall into three main

classes: (i) Hello Packets; (ii) Link State Packets (LSPs); and (iii)

Sequence Number Packets (SNPs).

Hello packets are used to initialize and maintain adjacencies between

neighboring routers. There are three types of IS-IS Hello packets:

(i) "Level 1 LAN IS to IS Hello PDUs" are used by level 1 routers on

broadcast LANs. (ii) "Level 2 LAN IS to IS Hello PDUs" are used by

level 2 routers on broadcast LANs. (iii) "Point-to-Point IS to IS

Hello PDUs" are used on non-broadcast media, such as point-to-point

links, or general topology subnetworks.

On point-to-point links, the exchange of ISO 9542 ISHs (intermediate

system Hellos) is used to initialize the link, and to allow each

router to know if there is a router on the other end of the link,

before IS-IS Hellos are exchanged. All routers implementing IS-IS

(whether IP-only, OSI-only, or dual), if they have any interfaces on

point-to-point links, must therefore be able to transmit ISO 9542

ISHs on their point-to-point links.

Link State Packets (LSPs) are used to exchange link state

information. There are two types of LSPs: (i) "Level 1 Link State

PDUs" are transmitted by level 1 routers. (ii) "Level 2 Link State

PDUs" are transmitted by level 2 routers. Note that level 2 routers

will, in most cases, also be level 1 routers, and will therefore

transmit both sorts of LSPs.

Sequence number PDUs are used to ensure that neighboring routers have

the same notion of what is the most recent LSP from each other

router. The sequence number PDUs therefore serve a similar function

to acknowledgement packets, but allow more efficient operation. There

are four types of sequence number packets: (i) "Level 1 Complete

Sequence Numbers PDU"; (ii) "Level 2 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU";

(iii) "Level 1 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU"; and (iv) "Level 2

Partial Sequence Numbers PDU". A partial sequence number packet lists

the most recent sequence number of one or more LSPs, and operates

much like an acknowlegement. A partial sequence number packet differs

from an conventional acknowledgement in the sense that it may

acknowlege multiple LSPs at once, and in the sense that it may act as

a request for information. A complete sequence number packet contains

the most recent sequence number of all LSPs in the database. A

complete sequence number packet may therefore be used to ensure

synchronization of the database between adjacent routers either

periodically, or when a link first comes up.

5.2 Overview of IP-Specific Information for IS-IS

There are six new fields defined for the Integrated IS-IS: (i)

"Protocols Supported"; (ii) "IP Interface Address"; (iii)

"Authentication Information"; (iv) "IP Internal Reachability

Information"; (v) "IP External Reachability Information"; and (vi)

"Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information".

The "Protocols Supported" field identifies the protocols which are

supported by each router. This field must be included in all IS-IS

Hello packets and all LSPs with LSP number 0 transmitted by IP-

capable routers. If this field is not included in an IS-IS Hello

packet or an LSP with LSP number 0, it may be assumed that the packet

was transmitted by an OSI-only router. The "Protocols Supported"

field must also be included in ISO 9542 ISHs send by IP-capable

routers over point-to-point links to other IS-IS routers.

The "IP Interface Address" is included in all IS-IS Hello packets and

LSPs transmitted by IP-only and dual routers. In the Hello packets,

this field occurs once only, and contains the IP address(es) of the

interface on which the Hello packet is transmitted (up to a maximum

of 63 IP addresses on each interface). If an IS-IS Hello is

transmitted over an interface which does not have an IP address

assigned, then this field may be omitted, or may be included with

zero entries. In Link State Packets, this field contains a list of

one or more IP addresses corresponding to one or more interfaces of

the router which originates the LSP. Each IP-capable router must

include this field in its LSPs. This field may occur multiple times

in an LSP, and may occur in an LSP with any LSP number.

The "Authentication Information" field is optional in all IS-IS PDUs.

If used, it contains information used to authenticate the packet. All

IS-IS packets (including 9542 IS Hellos) may be authenticated by use

of this field.

The "IP Internal Reachability Information" field may be present in

all LSPs transmitted by IP-capable routers. If present, it identifies

a list of zero or more [IP address, subnet mask, metrics] reachable

by the router which originates the LSP. Each entry must contain a

default metric, and may contain delay, expense, and error metrics. If

an IP-capable router does not directly reach any IP addresses, then

it may omit this field, or may include the field with zero [IP

address, subnet mask, metrics] entries. If included in level 1 LSPs,

this field includes only entries directly reachable by the router

which originates the LSP, via one of its interfaces. If included in

level 2 LSPs, this field includes only entries reachable by the

router which originates the LSP, either via one of its interfaces, or

indirectly via level 1 routing. This field may occur multiple times

in an LSP, and may occur in an LSP with any LSP number.

The "IP External Reachability Information" field may be present in

level 2 LSPs transmitted by level 2 IP-capable routers. If present,

it identifies a list of zero or more [IP address, subnet mask,

metrics] entries reachable by the router which originates the level 2

LSP. Each entry must contain a default metric, and may contain delay,

expense, and error metrics. Each entry may contain metrics of type

"internal", or of type "external". If a level 2 router does not have

any external routes (via neighboring routers in other routing

domains), when it may omit this field, or may include the field with

zero entries. This field includes only entries reachable by the

router which originates the LSP, via a direct link to an external

router. This field may occur multiple times in a level 2 LSP, and may

occur in an LSP with any LSP number.

The "Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information" field may be present

in level 2 LSPs transmitted by level 2 IP-capable routers. This field

is transmitted for the convenience of the external routing protocol,

and is not used by the IS-IS. For example, this may be used to allow

border routers to find each other. This field may occur multiple

times in a level 2 LSP, and may occur in an LSP with any LSP number.

The DP 10589 version of the OSI IS-IS does not currently allow

addition of TLV-encoded variable length fields to Sequence Number

Packets. However, this is being corrected in future versions of

10589. In addition, this is expected to be the only correction to

future versions of 10589 that is not backward-compatible with the DP

version. The Integrated IS-IS therefore makes use of a corrected

version of DP 10589, such that the encoding of SNPs has been fixed.

The correct encoding of sequence number packets (as is expected to

appear in future versions of ISO 10589) is given in Annex B of this

specification.

All IP-specific information is encoded in IS-IS packets as variable

length fields. All variable length fields in IS-IS are encoded as

follows:

No. of Octets

+---------------------------+

CODE 1

+---------------------------+

LENGTH 1

+---------------------------+

VALUE LENGTH

+---------------------------+

Figure 3 - Encoding of Variable Length Fields

Any codes in a received PDU that are not recognised shall be ignored

and, for those packets which are forwarded (specifically Link State

Packets), passed on unchanged.

In general, an IS-IS PDU may contain multiple variable length fields,

some of which contain OSI-specific information (specified in [1]) and

some of which contain IP-specific information (specified below).

Except where explicitly stated otherwise, these variable length

fields may occur in any order.

5.3 Encoding of IP-Specific Fields in IS-IS PDUs

This section specifies the detailed encoding of all IP-specific

fields in IS-IS PDUs. Where a particular field may be present in more

than one type of PDU, the field is repeated for each type of PDU to

which it applies.

Bit and octet numbering is the same as in [1]. In particular, octets

in a PDU are numbered starting from 1, in increasing order. Bits in

an octet are numbered from 1 to 8, where bit 1 is the least

significant bit and is pictured on the right. When consecutive octets

are used to represent a number, the lower octet number has the most

significant value.

5.3.1 Level 1 LAN IS to IS Hello PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per

protocol supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for

each supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+---------------------------+

NLPID 1

+---------------------------+

: :

: :

---------------------------

NLPID 1

+---------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 IP Interface Address -- the IP address(es) of the interface

corresponding to the SNPA over which this PDU is to be transmitted.

x CODE - 132

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (four octets per address).

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS - 4 octet IP Address of the Interface.

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate the

PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field.

x VALUE - TBD.

5.3.2 Level 2 LAN IS to IS Hello PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per protocol

supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for each

supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 IP Interface Address -- The IP address(es) of the interface

corresponding to the SNPA over which this PDU is to be transmitted.

x CODE - 132

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (four octets per address).

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS - 4 octet IP Address of the Interface.

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.3 Point-to-Point IS to IS Hello PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per protocol

supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for each

supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 IP Interface Address -- The IP address(es) of the interface

corresponding to the SNPA over which this PDU is to be transmitted.

x CODE - 132

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (four octets per address).

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS - 4 octet IP Address of the Interface.

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.4 Level 1 Link State PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying.

This must appear once in LSP number 0.

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per protocol

supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for each

supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 IP Interface Addresses -- The IP addresss of one or more interfaces

corresponding to the SNPAs enabled on this Intermediate system

(i.e., one or more IP addresses of this router).

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with

any LSP number.

x CODE - 132

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (four octets per address).

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS - 4 octet IP Address

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

7 IP Internal Reachability Information -- IP addresses within the

routing domain reachable directly via one or more interfaces on

this Intermediate system.

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with any

LSP number. However, this field must not appear in pseudonode LSPs.

x CODE - 128.

x LENGTH - a multiple of 12.

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

DEFAULT METRIC is the value of the default metric for the link

to the listed neighbor. Bit 8 of this field is reserved, and

must be set to zero on tranmission and ignored on reception.

Bit 7 of this field (marked I/E) indicates the metric type

(internal or external) for all four TOS metrics, and must be

set to zero indicating internal metrics.

DELAY METRIC is the value of the delay metric for the link to the

listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it shall

set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is unsupported.

Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set to zero on

transmission and ignored on reception.

EXPENSE METRIC is the value of the expense metric for the link to

the listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it

shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is

unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set to

zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

ERROR METRIC is the value of the error metric for the link to

the listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it

shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is

unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set

to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

IP ADDRESS is a 4-octet Internet address

SUBNET MASK is a 4 octet IP subnet mask.

5.3.5 Level 2 Link State PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying.

This must appear once in LSP number 0.

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per

protocol supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for

each supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 IP Interface Addresses -- The IP addresss of one or more interfaces

corresponding to the SNPAs enabled on this Intermediate system

(i.e., one or more IP addresses of this router).

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with

any LSP number. Where a router is both a level 1 and level 2 router,

it must include the same IP addresses in its level 1 and level 2 LSPs.

x CODE - 132

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (four octets per address).

x VALUE-

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS - 4 octet IP Address

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

7 IP Internal Reachability Information -- IP addresses within the

routing domain reachable directly via one or more interfaces on

this Intermediate system.

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with

any LSP number. However, this field must not appear in pseudonode

LSPs.

x CODE - 128.

x LENGTH - a multiple of 12.

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

DEFAULT METRIC is the value of the default metric for the link

to the listed neighbor. Bit 8 of this field is reserved, and must

be set to zero on transmission and ignored on reception. Bit 7

of this field indicates the metric type (internal or external)

for all four TOS metrics, and must be set to zero indicating

internal metrics.

DELAY METRIC is the value of the delay metric for the link to

the listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it

shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is

unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set

to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

EXPENSE METRIC is the value of the expense metric for the link to

the listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it

shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is

unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set

to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

ERROR METRIC is the value of the error metric for the link to the

listed neighbor. If this IS does not support this metric it shall

set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is unsupported.

Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set to zero on

transmission and ignored on reception.

IP ADDRESS is a 4-octet Internet address

SUBNET MASK is a 4 octet IP subnet mask.

7 IP External Reachability Information -- IP addresses outside the

routing domain reachable via interfaces on this Intermediate

system.

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with

any LSP number. However, this field must not appear in pseudonode LSPs.

x CODE - 130.

x LENGTH - a multiple of 12.

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

0 I/E DEFAULT METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R DELAY METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R EXPENSE METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

S R ERROR METRIC 1

+----------------------------+

IP ADDRESS 4

+----------------------------+

SUBNET MASK 4

+----------------------------+

DEFAULT METRIC is the value of the default metric for the

path to the listed IP addresses. Bit 8 of this field is

reserved, and must be set to zero on transmission and ignored

on reception. Bit 7 of this field indicates the metric type

(internal or external) for all four TOS metrics, and may be

set to zero indicating internal metrics, or may be set to 1

indicating external metrics.

DELAY METRIC is the value of the delay metric for the path

to the listed IP addresses. If this IS does not support this

metric it shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric

is unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be

set to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

EXPENSE METRIC is the value of the expense metric for the link

to the listed IP addresses. If this IS does not support this

metric it shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric

is unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be

set to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

ERROR METRIC is the value of the error metric for the link to

the listed IP addresses. If this IS does not support this metric

it shall set the bit "S" to 1 to indicate that the metric is

unsupported. Bit 7 of this field is reserved, and must be set to

zero on transmission and ignored on reception.

IP ADDRESS is a 4-octet Internet address

SUBNET MASK is a 4 octet IP subnet mask

7 Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information -- Inter-domain routing

protocol information carried transparently through level 2 for

the convenience of any Inter-Domain protocol that may be running

in the boundary ISs.

This is permitted to appear multiple times, and in an LSP with

any LSP number.

x CODE - 131.

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+-------------------------------+

Inter-Domain Information Type 1

+-------------------------------+

External Information VARIABLE

+-------------------------------+

INTER-DOMAIN INFORMATION TYPE indicates the type of the

external information which is encoded in the field.

EXTERNAL INFORMATION contains inter-domain routing protocol

information, and is passed transparently by the IS-IS protocol.

5.3.6 Level 1 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.7 Level 2 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.8 Level 1 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.9 Level 2 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

5.3.10 ISO 9542 ISH PDU

- Additional codes for IP support are:

7 Protocols Supported -- the set Network Layer Protocol Identifiers

for Network Layer protocols that this Intermediate System is

capable of relaying.

This appears in ISO 9542 ISH PDUs transmitted on point-to-point

links.

x CODE - 129

x LENGTH - total length of the value field (one octet per

protocol supported).

x VALUE - one octet NLPID (as assigned by ISO/TR 9577) for

each supported data protocol.

No. of Octets

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

: :

: :

+----------------------------+

NLPID 1

+----------------------------+

NLPID - ISO/TR 9577 registered Network Layer Protocol Identifier.

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE - TBD

6 Security Considerations

The integrated IS-IS has a provision for carrying authentication

information in all IS-IS packets. This is extensible to multiple

authentication mechanisms. However, currently the only defined

mechanism is a simple password, transmitted in the clear without

encryption (see Annex D). The use of a simple password does not

provide useful protection against intentional misbehavior. Rather,

this should be thought of as a weak protection against accidental

errors such as accidental mis-configuration. Definition of other

authentication mechanisms is beyond the scope of this document.

Other aspects of security are not discussed in this document.

7 Author's Address

Ross Callon

Digital Equipment Corporation

550 King Street, LKG 1-2/A19

Littleton, MA 01460-1289

508-486-5009

8 References

[1] "Intermediate System to Intermediate System Intra-Domain

Routeing Exchange Protocol for use in Conjunction with the

Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-mode Network Service

(ISO 8473)", ISO DP 10589, February 1990.

[2] "Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-Mode Network

Service", ISO 8473, March 1987.

[3] "End System to Intermediate System Routeing Exchange Protocol

for Use in Conjunction with the Protocol for Providing the

Connectionless-Mode Network Service (ISO 8473)", ISO 9542,

March 1988.

[4] Braden,R., and Postel,J., "Requirements for Internet Gateways",

RFC1009, June 1987.

[5] Moy,J., "The OSPF Specification", RFC1131, October 1989.

[6] Postel,J., "Internetwork Protocol", RFC791, September 1981.

[7] Postel,J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", RFC792,

September 1981.

[8] "MIB for Use with the Extended OSI IS-IS in TCP/IP and Dual

Environments", forthcoming.

[9] GOSIP Advanced Requirements Group, "Government Open Systems

Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) Version 2.0 [Final Text]",

Federal Information Processing Standard, U.S. Department of

Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology,

Gaithersburg, MD, October 1990.

[10] "Standard for Local Area Networks and Metropolitan Area

Networks: Overview and Architecture of Network Standards",

IEEE Standard 802.1a-1990.

Annex A

Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information

This annex specifies the contents and encoding of the Inter-Domain

Routing Protocol Information (IDRPI) field. This annex is an integral

part of the Integrated IS-IS specification. However, it is expected

that this annex may be augmented or superceded by future efforts

outside of the scope of the IS-IS specification.

A.1 Inter-Domain Information Type

As specified in sections 3.4 and 5.3, the IDRPI field consists of a

one-octet inter-domain information type field, plus a variable

external information field. This section specifies initial values for

the inter-domain information type field. Other values for inter-

domain information type will be assigned and maintained in future

versions of the "Assigned Numbers" RFC.

The following types have been assigned:

Type = 0 reserved

Type = 1 local (uses routing-domain specific format)

Type = 2 AS Number Tag

Type = 1 indicates that the inter-domain routing protocol information

uses a format which is local to the routing domain.

Type = 2 indicates that the inter-domain routing protocol information

includes autonomous system information used to tag IP external

reachability information. In this case the inter-domain routing

protocol information entry must include a single AS number, which is

used to tag all subsequent External IP Reachability entries until the

end of the LSP, or until the next occurence of the Inter-Domain

Routing Protocol Information field.

A.2 Encoding

As specified in section 5.3.5, the IDPRI entry is encoded as a

variable length field, as follows:

x CODE - 131

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+-------------------------------+

Inter-Domain Information Type 1

+-------------------------------+

External Information VARIABLE

+-------------------------------+

INTER-DOMAIN INFORMATION TYPE indicates the type of the

external information which is encoded in the field.

EXTERNAL INFORMATION contains inter-domain routing protocol

information, and is passed transparently by the IS-IS protocol.

The Inter-domain information type field indicates the type of

information which is contained in the external information field, as

follow:

Type = 0 is reserved (must not be sent, and must be ignored on receipt).

Type = 1 indicates that the external information field contains

information which follows a locally specified format.

Type = 2 indicates that the external information field contains an

autonomous system number tag, to be applied to subsequent IP external

reachability information entries. In this case, this "inter-domain

routing protocol information" entry must contain precisely one 2

octet AS number. The AS tag is associated with subsequent IP External

Reachability entries, until the end of the LSP, or until the next

occurence of the Inter-Domain Routing Protocol Information field.

In this case, the VALUE contains the following:

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+---------------------------------+

Inter-Domain Information Type=2 1

+---------------------------------+

Autonomous System Number 2

+---------------------------------+

Annex B

Encoding of Sequence Number Packets

The Integrated IS-IS protocol defined in this specification makes use

of the ISO Draft Proposed standard for Intra-domain routing (ISO DP

10589 [1]) as the base routing protocol, upon which IP support may be

added.

However, DP 10589 contains a bug regarding encoding of the variable

length fields in Sequence Number Packets. In particular, DP 10589

encodes the variable length fields in SNPs in a manner which is not

flexible (additional variable length fields cannot be defined for

sequence number packets), and which is inconsistent with the encoding

of the variable length fields in all other IS-IS and ES-IS packets.

The encoding of the variable length fields in SNPs is expected to be

fixed in future versions of 10589. Also, this bug represents the only

expected change to 10589 which cannot be made backward compatible

with existing DP 10589 implementations. For these reasons, the

current version of the Integrated IS-IS will use the anticipated

future encoding of the variable length part of the SNPs. This should

allow future versions of this specification to be compatible with

implementations based on this specification.

This annex specifies the encoding of SNPs, as amended to fix the

encoding of variable length fields. This annex is an integral part of

the Integrated IS-IS specification.

The encoding of SNPs for OSI-only use is shown in this section. For

IP-only or Integrated use, the additional variable length fields

specified in sections 5.3.6 through 5.3.9 are also applicable to

SNPs.

B.1 Level 1 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

INTRA-DOMAIN ROUTEING 1

PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH INDICATOR 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXT 1

+--------------------------------+

RESERVED 1

+--------------------------------+

R R R TYPE 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION 1

+--------------------------------+

ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

USER ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

PDU LENGTH 2

+--------------------------------+

SOURCE ID 7

+--------------------------------+

START LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

END LSP ID 8

+================================+====================

VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS VARIABLE

+--------------------------------+

- INTRADOMAIN ROUTEING PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR - architectural constant

- LENGTH INDICATOR - Header Length in octets (33.)

- VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXTENSION - 1

- RESERVED - transmitted as 0, ignored on receipt

- TYPE (bits 1 through 5) - 24. Note bits 6, 7 and 8 are Reserved,

which means they are transmitted as 0 and ignored on receipt.

- VERSION - 1

- ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- USER ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- PDU LENGTH - Entire Length of this PDU, in octets, including header

- SOURCE ID - 7 octet ID of Intermediate System (with zero Circuit ID)

generating this Sequence Numbers PDU.

- START LSP ID - 8 octet ID of first LSP in the range covered by this

Complete Sequence Numbers PDU.

- END LSP ID - 8 octet ID of last LSP in the range covered by this

Complete Sequence Numbers PDU.

- VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS - fields of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

CODE 1

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH 1

+--------------------------------+

VALUE LENGTH

+--------------------------------+

Any codes in a received CSNP that are not recognised are ignored.

Currently defined codes are:

7 LSP Entries -- This may appear multiple times. The option fields,

if they appear more than once, shall appear sorted into ascending

LSPID order.

x CODE - 9

x LENGTH - total length of the value field.

x VALUE - a list of LSP entries of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

: :

: :

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

7 REMAINING LIFETIME - Remaining Lifetime of LSP.

7 LSP ID - 8 octet ID of the LSP to which this entry refers.

7 LSP SEQ NUMBER - Sequence number of LSP.

7 CHECKSUM - Checksum reported in LSP.

The entries shall be sorted into ascending LSPID order (the LSP

number octet of the LSPID is the least significant octet).

B.2 Level 2 Complete Sequence Numbers PDU

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

INTRA-DOMAIN ROUTEING 1

PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH INDICATOR 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXT 1

+--------------------------------+

RESERVED 1

+--------------------------------+

R R R TYPE 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION 1

+--------------------------------+

ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

USER ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

PDU LENGTH 2

+--------------------------------+

SOURCE ID 7

+--------------------------------+

START LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

END LSP ID 8

+================================+====================

VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS VARIABLE

+--------------------------------+

- INTRADOMAIN ROUTEING PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR - architectural constant

- LENGTH INDICATOR - Header Length in octets (33.)

- VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXTENSION - 1

- RESERVED - transmitted as 0, ignored on receipt

- TYPE (bits 1 through 5) - 25. Note bits 6, 7 and 8 are Reserved,

which means they are transmitted as 0 and ignored on receipt.

- VERSION - 1

- ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- USER ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- PDU LENGTH - Entire Length of this PDU, in octets, including header

- SOURCE ID - 7 octet ID of Intermediate System (with zero Circuit ID)

generating this Sequence Numbers PDU.

- START LSP ID - 8 octet ID of first LSP in the range covered by this

Complete Sequence Numbers PDU.

- END LSP ID - 8 octet ID of last LSP in the range covered by this

Complete Sequence Numbers PDU.

- VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS - fields of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

CODE 1

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH 1

+--------------------------------+

VALUE LENGTH

+--------------------------------+

Any codes in a received CSNP that are not recognised are ignored.

Currently defined codes are:

7 LSP Entries -- this may appear multiple times. The option fields,

if they appear more than once, shall appear sorted into ascending

LSPID order.

x CODE - 9

x LENGTH - total length of the value field.

x VALUE - a list of LSP entries of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

: :

: :

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

7 REMAINING LIFETIME - Remaining Lifetime of LSP.

7 LSP ID - 8 octet ID of the LSP to which this entry refers.

7 LSP SEQ NUMBER - Sequence number of LSP.

7 CHECKSUM - Checksum reported in LSP.

The entries shall be sorted into ascending LSPID order (the LSP

number octet of the LSPID is the least significant octet).

B.3 Level 1 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

INTRA-DOMAIN ROUTEING 1

PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH INDICATOR 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXT 1

+--------------------------------+

RESERVED 1

+--------------------------------+

R R R TYPE 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION 1

+--------------------------------+

ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

USER ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

PDU LENGTH 2

+--------------------------------+

SOURCE ID 7

+================================+====================

VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS VARIABLE

+--------------------------------+

- INTRADOMAIN ROUTEING PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR - architectural constant

- LENGTH INDICATOR - Header Length in octets (17.)

- VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXTENSION - 1

- RESERVED - transmitted as 0, ignored on receipt

- TYPE (bits 1 through 5) 26. Note bits 6, 7 and 8 are Reserved,

which means they are transmitted as 0 and ignored on receipt.

- VERSION - 1

- ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- USER ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- PDU LENGTH - Entire Length of this PDU, in octets, including header

- SOURCE ID - 7 octet ID of Intermediate system (with zero Circuit ID)

generating this Sequence Numbers PDU.

- VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS - fields of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

CODE 1

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH 1

+--------------------------------+

VALUE LENGTH

+--------------------------------+

Any codes in a received PSNP that are not recognised are ignored.

Currently defined codes are:

7 LSP Entries - this may appear multiple times. The option fields,

if they appear more than once, shall appear sorted into ascending

LSPID order.

x CODE - 9

x LENGTH - total length of the value field.

x VALUE - a list of LSP entries of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

: :

: :

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

7 REMAINING LIFETIME - Remaining Lifetime of LSP.

7 LSP ID - 8 octet ID of the LSP to which this entry refers.

7 LSP SEQ NUMBER - Sequence number of LSP.

7 CHECKSUM - Checksum reported in LSP.

The entries shall be sorted into ascending LSPID order (the LSP number

octet of the LSPID is the least significant octet).

B.4 Level 2 Partial Sequence Numbers PDU

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

INTRA-DOMAIN ROUTEING 1

PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH INDICATOR 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXT 1

+--------------------------------+

RESERVED 1

+--------------------------------+

R R R TYPE 1

+--------------------------------+

VERSION 1

+--------------------------------+

ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

USER ECO 1

+--------------------------------+

PDU LENGTH 2

+--------------------------------+

SOURCE ID 7

+================================+====================

VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS VARIABLE

+--------------------------------+

- INTRADOMAIN ROUTEING PROTOCOL DISCRIMINATOR - architectural constant

- LENGTH INDICATOR - Header Length in octets (17.)

- VERSION/PROTOCOL ID EXTENSION - 1

- RESERVED - transmitted as 0, ignored on receipt

- TYPE (bits 1 through 5) - 27. Note bits 6, 7 and 8 are Reserved,

which means they are transmitted as 0 and ignored on receipt.

- VERSION - 1

- ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- USER ECO - transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt

- PDU LENGTH - Entire Length of this PDU, in octets, including header

- SOURCE ID - 7 octet ID of Intermediate system (with zero Circuit ID)

generating this Sequence Numbers PDU.

- VARIABLE LENGTH FIELDS - fields of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

CODE 1

+--------------------------------+

LENGTH 1

+--------------------------------+

VALUE LENGTH

+--------------------------------+

Any codes in a received PSNP that are not recognised are ignored.

Currently defined codes are:

7 LSP Entries -- this may appear multiple times. The option fields,

if they appear more than once, shall appear sorted into ascending

LSPID order.

x CODE - 9

x LENGTH - total length of the value field.

x VALUE - a list of LSP entries of the form:

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

: :

: :

+--------------------------------+

REMAINING LIFETIME 2

+--------------------------------+

LSP ID 8

+--------------------------------+

LSP SEQ NUMBER 4

+--------------------------------+

CHECKSUM 2

+--------------------------------+

7 REMAINING LIFETIME - Remaining Lifetime of LSP.

7 LSP ID - 8 octet ID of the LSP to which this entry refers.

7 LSP SEQ NUMBER -Sequence number of LSP.

7 CHECKSUM - Checksum reported in LSP.

The entries shall be sorted into ascending LSPID order (the LSP

number octet of the LSPID is the least significant octet).

Annex C

Dijkstra Calculation and Forwarding

Annex C.2 of ISO DP 10589 [1] specifies the SPF (Dikskstra) algorithm

for calculating routes with the IS-IS routing protocol. This annex

specifies modifications to the SPF algorithm for supporting IP and

dual routing, and specifies a compatible method for forwarding IP

packets. This will result in an order of preference of routes which

is compatible with that specified in section 3.10.

This annex is included for informational purposes.

C.1 SPF Algorithm for IP and Dual Use

This section specifies an SPF Algorithm for calculating routes with

the IS-IS routing protocol, for support of both TCP/IP and OSI. This

is based on an extention to the algorithm specified in annex C.2 of

ISO DP 10589 [1].

An algorithm invented by Dijkstra known as shortest path first (SPF)

is used as the basis for the route calculation. It has a

computational complexity of the square of the number of nodes, which

can be decreased to the number of links in the domain times the log

of the number of nodes for sparse networks (networks which are not

highly connected).

A number of additional optimizations are possible:

1) If the routing metric is defined over a small finite field (as in

this standard), the factor of log n may be removed by using data

structures which maintain a separate list of systems for each value

of the metric rather than sorting the systems by logical distance.

2) Updates can be performed incrementally without requiring a complete

recalculation. However, a full update must be done periodically to

ensure recovery from data corruption, and studies suggest that with

a very small number of link changes (perhaps 2) the expected

computation complexity of the incremental update exceeds the

complete recalculation. Thus, this annex specifies the algorithm

only for the full update.

3) If only End System LSP information has changed, it is not necessary

to re-compute the entire Dijkstra tree. If the proper data

structures are used, End Systems (including IP reachability

entries) may be attached and detached as leaves of the tree and

their forwarding information base entries altered as appropriate.

The original SPF algorithm does not support load splitting over

multiple paths. The algorithm in this annex does permit load

splitting by identifying a set of equal cost paths to each

destination rather than a single least cost path.

C.1.1 Databases

PATHS -- This represents an acyclic directed graph of shortest paths

from the system S performing the calculation. It is stored as a set

of triples of the form <N,d(N),{Adj(N)}>, where:

N is a system identifier. In the level 1 algorithm, N is a

6 octet ID for OSI end systems, a 7 octet ID for routers, or

an 8 octet IP Internal Reachability Information entry. For a

router which is not a pseudonode, it is the 6 octet system ID,

with a 0 appended octet. For a pseudonode it is a true 7 octet

quantity, comprised of the 6 octet Designated Intermediate

System ID and the extra octet assigned by the Destinated Router.

The IP Internal Reachability Information entries consist of a

4 octet IP address plus a 4 octet subnet mask, and will always

be a leaf, i.e., "End System" in PATHS.

In the level 2 algorithm, N is either a 7 octet router or

pseudonode ID (as in the level 1 algorithm); a variable

length OSI address prefix; an 8 octet IP Internal Reachability

Information Entry, or an 8 octet IP External Reachability

Information entry. The variable length OSI address prefixes,

and 8 octet IP Reachability Information entries will always

be a leaf, i.e., "End System" in PATHS. As above, the IP

Reachability Information entries consist of an [IP address,

subnet mask] combination.

d(N) is N's distance from S (i.e., the total metric value

from N to S).

{Adj(N)} is a set of valid adjacencies that S may use for

forwarding to N.

When a system is placed on PATHS, the path(s) designated by its

position in the graph is guaranteed to be a shortest path.

TENT -- This is a list of triples of the form <N,d(N),{Adj(N)}>,

where N, d(N), and {Adj(N)} are as defined above for PATHS.

TENT can intuitively be thought of as a tentative placement

of a system in PATHS. In other words, the triple <N,x,{A}>

in TENT means that if N were placed in PATHS, d(N) would be x,

but N cannot be placed on PATHS until is is guaranteed that

no path shorter than x exists.

Similarly, the triple <N,x,{A,B}> in TENT means that if N

were placed in PATHS, then d(N) would be x via either

adjacency A or B.

Note: It is suggested that the implementation maintain the database

TENT as a set of list of triples of the form <*,Dist,*>, sorted by

distance Dist. In addition, it is necessary to be able to process

those systems which are pseudonodes before any non-pseudonodes at the

same distance Dist.

The 8 octet system identifiers which specify IP reachability entries

must always be distinguishable from other system identifiers. As

specified in section 3.10, two IP reachability entries which differ

only in the subnet mask are still considered to be separate, and will

therefore have distinct system identifiers N. The SPF algorithm will

therefore calculate routes to each such entry, and the correct entry

will be selected in the forwarding process.

C.1.2 Use of Metrics in the SPF Algorithm

Internal metrics are not comparable to external metrics. For external

routes (routes to destinations outside of the routing domain), the

cost d(N) of the path from N to S may include both internal and

external metrics. d(N) may therefore be maintained as a two-

dimensioned vector quantity (specifying internal and external metric

values).

d(N) is initialized to [internal metric = 0, external metric = 0].

In incrementing d(N) by 1, if the internal metric value is less than

the maximum value MaxPathMetric, then the internal metric value is

incremented by one and the external metric value left unchanged; if

the internal metric value is equal to the maximum value

MaxPathMetric, then the internal metric value is set to 0 and the

external metric value is incremented by 1. Note that this can be

implemented in a straightforward manner by maintaining the external

metric as the high order bits of the distance.

In the code of the algorithm below, the current path length is held

in the variable "tentlength". This variable is a two-dimensional

quantity tentlength=[internal metric, external metric], and is used

for comparing the current path length with d(N) as described above.

Tentlength is incremented in the same manner as d(N).

C.1.3 Overview of the Algorithm

The basic algorithm, which builds PATHS from scratch, starts out by

putting the system doing the computation on PATHS (no shorter path to

SELF can possibly exist). TENT is then pre-loaded from the local

adjacency database.

Note that a system is not placed on PATHS unless no shorter path to

that system exists. When a system N is placed on PATHS, the path to

each neighbor M of N, through N, is examined, as the path to N plus

the link from N to M. If <M,*,*> is in PATHS, this new path will be

longer, and thus ignored.

If <M,*,*> is in TENT, and the new path is shorter, the old entry is

removed from TENT and the new path is placed in TENT. If the new path

is the same length as the one in TENT, then the set of potential

adjacencies {Adj(M)} is set to the union of the old set (in TENT) and

the new set {Adj(N)}. If M is not in TENT, then the path is added to

TENT.

Next the algorithm finds the triple <N,x,{Adj(N)}> in TENT, with

minimal x. Note: This is done efficiently because of the optimization

described above. When the list of triples for distance Dist is

exhausted, the algorithm then increments Dist until it finds a list

with a triple of the form <*,Dist,*>.

N is placed in PATHS. We know that no path to N can be shorter than x

at this point because all paths through systems already in PATHS have

already been considered, and paths through systems in TENT still have

to be greater than x because x is minimal in TENT.

When TENT is empty, PATHS is complete.

Note that external metrics can only occur in "IP External

Reachability Information" entries, which correspond to a leaf (i.e.,

End System in PATHS). Any route utilizing an entry with an external

metric will always be considered to be less desireable than any entry

which uses an internal metric. This implies that in the addition of

systems to PATHS, all systems reachable via internal routes are

always added before any system reachable via external routes.

C.1.4 The Algorithm

The Decision Process Algorithm must be run once for each supported

routing metric (i.e., for each supported Type of Service). A level 1

router runs the algorithm using the level 1 LSP database to compute

level 1 paths (for those level 1 routers which are not level 2

routers, this includes the path to the nearest attached level 2

router). Level 2 routers also separately run the algorithm using the

level 2 LSP database to compute level 2 paths. IP-capable level 2

routers must keep level 2 internal IP routes separate from level 2

external IP routes.

Note that this implies that routers which are both level 1 and level

2 routers, and which support all four routing metrics, must run the

SPF algorithm 8 times (assuming partition repair is not implemented).

If this system is a Level 2 Router which supports the partition

repair optional function the Decision Process algorithm for computing

Level 1 paths must be run twice for the default metric. This first

execution is done to determine which of the area's

manualAreaAddresses are reachable in this partition, and to elect a

Partition Designated Level 2 Router for the partition. The partition

Designated Level 2 Router will determine if the area is partitioned

and will create virtual Level 1 links to the other Partition

Designated Level 2 Routers in the area in order to repair the Level 1

partition. This is further described in section 7.2.10 of [1].

The SPF algorithm specified here will calculate routes for both OSI

and IP. In particular, routes are calculated to all system

identifiers N, where N may specify an OSI End System, the OSI address

of a router, or an IP reachability entry. In computing the forwarding

database, it is an implementation specific issue whether the IP

forwarding database is kept separately from the OSI forwarding

database. Where appropriate, this annex will refer separately to

entries in these two forwarding data bases. This is not meant to

preclude any specific implementation method.

OSI and IP use separate mechanisms to determine whether a packet is

in the area (in particular, OSI makes use of area addresses, and IP

determines that a destination is not in an area by looking in the

level 1 forwarding database and determining that no entry exists for

that destination within the area). The route to the nearest level 2

router will result in separate entries in the forwarding database for

OSI and IP. For IP, the route to the nearest attached level 2 router

may be entered in the forwarding database as a default route (i.e., a

route with a subnet mask of all 0).

One approach would be to put the results of each Dijkstra algorithm

in a separate forwarding database. For a router which supports both

level 1 and level 2 routing (including level 2 internal and level 2

external routes), and which supports all four types of service, this

would result in twelve separate forwarding databases for IP.

Implementations may choose to minimize the number of forwarding

databases by combining the information from the multiple Dijkstra

calculations into a single database per supported TOS. This is

discussed in section C.2 below.

The SPF algorithm specified in section C.2.3 of [1] is amended to

appear as follows:

Step 0: Initialize TENT and PATHS to empty. Initialize tentlength to

[internalmetric=0, externalmetric=0].

(tentlength is the pathlength of elements in TENT that we are

examining.)

1) Add <SELF,0,W> to PATHS, where W is a special value indicating

traffic to SELF is passed up to internal processes (rather than

forwarded).

2) Now pre-load TENT with the local adjacency database (Each

entry made to TENT must be marked as being either an End System

or a router to enable the check at the end of Step 2 to be made

correctly - Note that each local IP reachability entry is

included as an adjacency, and is marked as being an End System).

For each adjacency Adj(N) (including level 1 OSI Manual

Adjacencies, or level 2 OSI enabled reachable addresses, and

IP reachability entries) on enabled circuits, to system N of

SELF in state "Up" compute:

d(N) = cost of the parent circuit of the adjacency (N),

obtained from metric.k , where k = one of {default metric,

delay metric, monetary metric, error metric}

Adj(N) = the adjacency number of the adjacency to N

3) If a triple <N,x,{Adj(M)}> is in TENT, then:

If x = d(N), then {Adj(M)} <--- {Adj(M)} U {Adj(N)}.

4) If N is a router or an OSI End System entry, and there are now

more adjacencies in {Adj(M)} than maximumPathSplits, then remove

excess adjacencies as described in Clause 7.2.7 of [1]. If N

is an IP Reachability Entry, then excess adjacencies may be

removed as desired. This will not effect the correctness of

routing, but may eliminate the determinism for IP routes (i.e.,

IP packets still follow optimal routes within an area, but

where multiple equally good routes exist, will not necessarily

follow precisely the route that any one particular router

would have anticipated).

5) If x < d(N), do nothing.

6) If x > d(N), remove <N,x,{Adj(M)}> from TENT and add the triple

<N,d(N),{Adj(N)}>.

7) If no triple <N,x,{Adj(M)}> is in TENT, then add <N,d(N),{Adj(N)}>

to TENT.

8) Now add systems to which the local router does not have adjacencies,

but which are mentioned in neighboring pseudonode LSPs. The

adjacency for such systems is set to that of the designated router.

Note that this does not include IP reachability entries from

neighboring pseudonode LSPs. In particular, the pseudonode LSPs

do not include IP reachability entries.

9) For all broadcast circuits in state "On", find the pseudonode

LSP for that circuit (specifically, the LSP with number zero and

with the first 7 octets of LSPID equal to LnCircuitID for that

circuit, where n is 1 (for level 1 routing) or 2 (level 2

routing)). If it is present, for all the neighbors N reported in

all the LSPs of this pseudonode which do not exist in TENT add

an entry <N,d(N),{Adj(N)}> to TENT, where:

d(N) = metric.k of the circuit.

Adj(N) = the adjacency number of the adjacency to the DR.

10) Go to Step 2.

Step 1: Examine the zeroeth link state PDU of P, the system just

placed on PATHS (i.e., the LSP with the same first 7 octets of LSPID

as P, and LSP number zero).

1) If this LSP is present, and the "Infinite Hippity Cost" bit is

clear, then for each LSP of P (i.e., all LSPs with the same

first 7 octets of LSPID and P, irrespective of the value of

LSP number) compute:

dist(P,N) = d(P) + metric.k(P,N)

for each neighbor N (both End System and router) of the system P. If

the "Infinite Hippity Cost" bit is set, only consider the End System

neighbors of the system P. Note that the End Systems neighbors of the

system P includes IP reachable address entries included in the LSPs

from system P. Here, d(P) is the second element of the triple

<P,d(P),{Adj(P)}>

and metric.k(P,N) is the cost of the link from P to N as reported in

P's link state PDU.

2) If dist(P,N) > MaxPathMetric, then do nothing.

3) If <N,d(N),{Adj(N)}> is in PATHS, then do nothing.

Note: d(N) must be less than dist(P,N), or else N would not

have been put into PATHS. An additional sanity check may be

done here to ensure that d(N) is in fact less than dist(P,N)

4) If a triple <N,x,{Adj(N)}> is in TENT, then:

a) If x = dist(P,N), then {Adj(N)} <-- {Adj(N)} U {Adj(P)}.

b) If N is a router or an OSI end system, and there are now more

adjacencies in {Adj(N)} than maximumPath Splits, then remove

excess adjacencies, as described in clause 7.2.7 of [1]. For

IP Reachability Entries, excess adjacencies may be removed as

desired. This will not effect the correctness of routing, but

may eliminate the determinism for IP routes (i.e., IP packets

will still follow optimal routes within an area, but where

multiple equally good routes exist, will not necessarily follow

precisely the route that any one particular router would have

anticipated).

c) if x < dist(P,N), do nothing.

d) if x > dist(P,N), remove <N,x,{Adj(N)}> from TENT, and add

<N,dist(P,N),{Adj(P)}>

5) if no triple <N,x,{Adj(N)}> is in TENT, then add

<N,dist(P,N),{Adj(P)}> to TENT.

Step 2: If TENT is empty, stop. Else:

1) Find the element <P,x,{Adj(P)}>, with minimal x as follows:

a) If an element <*,tentlength,*> remains in TENT in the list for

tentlength, choose that element. If there are more than one

elements in the list for tentlength, choose one of the elements

(if any) for a system which is a pseudonode in preference to one

for a non-pseudonode. If there are no more elements in the list

for tentlength, increment tentlength and repeat Step 2.

b) Remove <P,tentlength,{Adj(P)}> from TENT.

c) Add <P,d(P),{Adj(P)}> to PATHS.

d) If this is the Level 2 Decision Process running, and the system

just added to PATHS listed itself as Partition Designated Level 2

Intermediate system, then additionally add <AREA.P,d(P),{Adj(P)}>

to PATHS, where AREA.P is the Network Entity Title of the other

end of the Virtual Link, obtained by taking the first AREA

listed in P's LSP and appending P's ID.

e) If the system just added to PATHS was an end system, go to

step 2. Else go to Step 1.

NOTE - In the level 2 context, the "End Systems" are the set of

Reachable Address Prefixes (for OSI), the set of Area Addresses with

zero cost (again, for OSI), plus the set of IP reachability entries

(including both internal and external).

C.2 Forwarding of IP packets

The SPF algorithm specified in section C.1 may be used to calculate

(logically) separate IP forwarding tables for each type of service,

and for level 1, level 2 internal, and level 2 external routes.

Section C.2.1 describes how to forward IP packets, based on these

multiple forwarding databases. Section C.2.2 describes how the

multiple forwarding databases can be combined into a single

forwarding database per supported TOS.

C.2.1 Basic Method for Forwarding IP packets

For level 1-only routers:

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 1 forwarding table for the specified TOS.

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 1 forwarding table for the default TOS.

- If default TOS resulted in more specific entry, forward according

to default TOS.

- If equally specific entries found, or specified TOS resulted in

more specific entry, forward according to specified TOS

- If no entry was found (which includes no default route entry), then

destination is unreachable.

Note: For level 1 only routers, the route to the nearest attached

level 2 router will be entered into the forwarding database as a

default route (i.e., a route with a subnet mask which is all 0). Thus

this last event (no entry found) can occur only if there is no

attached level 2 router reachable in the area.

For routers which are both level 1 and level 2 routers:

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 1 forwarding table for the specified TOS.

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 1 forwarding table for the default TOS.

- If default TOS resulted in more specific entry (i.e., more bits in

the subnet mask take the value 1), forward according to default TOS.

- If equally specific entries found, or specified TOS resulted in

more specific entry, forward according to specified TOS

- If no entry found:

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 2 internal forwarding table for the specified TOS.

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 2 internal forwarding table for the default TOS.

- If default TOS resulted in more specific entry, forward according

to default TOS.

- If equally specific entries found, or specified TOS resulted in

more specific entry, forward according to specified TOS

- If no entry found:

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 2 external forwarding table for the specified TOS.

- Determine if the IP destination address matches any entry in the

level 2 external forwarding table for the default TOS.

- If default TOS resulted in more specific entry, forward according

to default TOS.

- If equally specific entries found, or specified TOS resulted in

more specific entry, forward according to specified TOS

- If no entry is found, then destination is unreachable

For level 2-only routers, the above algorithm can be used, except

since there is no level 1 forwarding database, the corresponding

steps can be skipped.

As discussed in section 3.10.2, for level 2 routers which are

announcing manually configured summary addresses in their level 2

LSPs, in some cases there will exist IP addresses which match the

manually configured addresses, but which do not match any addresses

which are reachable via level 1 routing in the area. Packets to such

addresses are handled according to the rules specified in section

3.10.2. This may be accomplished by adding the manually configured

[IP address, subnet mask] entry to the level 2 forwarding database

(for the appropriate TOS), with a special "next hop" address which

specifies that packets for which this entry is selected are to be

discarded. This will work correctly because more desireable entries

(such as delivering the packet via level 1 routing to the correct

destination, or a more specific level 2 route) will automatically

take precedence according to the forwarding rules specified above.

Less desireable routes (such as using a level 2 external route to the

"default route" entry) are not possible because other level 2 routers

will believe the summary addresses advertised by this router.

C.2.2 Reduction of IP Forwarding Databases

The multiple forwarding databases used in the basic forwarding method

in section C.2.1 can be reduced, by combining the multiple databases

into one database for each supported TOS.

For reduction of IP forwarding databases, it is assumed that for any

two overlapping address entries, either the entries are identical, or

one range contains the other. In other words, for any two [IP

address, subnet mask] entries A and B, if there is at least one IP

address which matches both entries, then either: (i) the two entries

are identical; or (ii) entry A contains entry B (i.e., any IP address

which matches entry B also matches entry A); or (iii) entry B

contains entry A (any IP address which matches entry A also matches

entry B).

Non-contiguous subnet masks can be configured to violate this

assumption. For example, consider the two entries:

- A=[address="01010101 00000101 00000000 00000000",

mask="11111111 00001111 00000000 00000000"]

- B=[address="01010101 01010000 00000000 00000000",

mask="11111111 11110000 00000000 00000000"]

In this case neither entry contains the other. Specifically;

- there are IP addresses which match both A and B (e.g.,

"01010101 01010101 xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx"),

- there are IP addresses which match A but not B (e.g.,

"01010101 11110101 xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx")

- there are IP addresses which match B but not A (e.g.,

"01010101 01011111 xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx").

The reduction of the multiple forwarding databases for each TOS to a

single database for each TOS is based on the use of "best match"

routing, combined with reduction of the entries placed in the

forwarding database in order to eliminate entries which are not to be

selected (based on the order of preference of routes specified in

section 3.10). The specific algorithm for creation of the IP

forwarding database can be described as follows:

1) Make use of the the Dijkstra algorithm described in section C.1 to

create separate forwarding databases for each supported TOS for

level 1 routes, level 2 internal routes, and level 2 external

routes. (Note that each entry in the forwarding database will

specify an [IP address, subnet mask] combination, as well as the

next hop router for IP packets which match that entry).

2) For each level 1 route entry which has been placed in the level 1

IP forwarding database for a specific TOS, copy that entry into

the overall IP forwarding database for that TOS.

3) For each route entry X which has been placed in the level 2 internal

IP forwarding database for a specific TOS, search for overlapping

entries in the level 1 IP forwarding database for the specific TOS,

and also for the default TOS:

a) If there is any overlapping entry Y in the level 1 forwarding

database (for the specfic TOS, or for the default TOS) such

that either (i) Y contains X; or (ii) Y is identically specific

to X; then ignore entry X.

b) Otherwise, copy entry X into the overall IP forwarding database

for the specific TOS.

4) For each route entry X which has been placed in the level 2

external IP forwarding database for a specific TOS, search for

overlapping entries in the level 1 IP forwarding database for

the specific TOS, and for the default TOS, and the level 2

internal IP forwarding database for the specific TOS, and for

the default TOS.

a) If there is an overlapping entry Y such that either (i) Y

contains X; or (ii) Y is identically specific to X; then

ignore entry X.

b) Otherwise, copy entry X into the overall IP forwarding database

for the specific TOS.

This method will result in one forwarding database for each supported

TOS. The forwarding of packets can then be simplified to be as follows:

1) For IP packets which map to the default TOS metric (or to an

unsupported TOS metric), search the default TOS forwarding

database and select the entry which has the most specific match.

Forward the packet accordingly.

2) For packets which map to a specific (non-default) TOS metric,

search the specific TOS forwarding database and select the entry

j which has the most specific match. Also search the default TOS

forwarding database and select the entry k which has the most

specific match. Forward the packet as follows:

a) If k is more specific than j, forward according to entry k

b) If j and k are equally specific, forward according to entry j

c) If j is more specific than k, forward according to entry j

Annex D

Use of the Authentication Field

The use of the Authentication field is outside of the scope of this

specification. However, there is a urgent need for simple error

detection/authentication mechanisms (such as a simple password) to

protect against certain types of errors. This annex therefore

proposes a possible use of this field.

This annex is included for informational purposes.

D.1 Authentication Field in IS-IS packets

All IS-IS packets may optionally include the authentication field, as

described in sections 3.9 and 5 of this specification. As described

in section 5, the authentication field is encoded as a (Code, Length,

Value) triplet. This annex proposes that the contents of the Value

field consist of a one octet "Authentication Type" field, plus a

variable length "Authentication Information" field. A specific value

of the "Authentication Type" is assigned to passwords, transmitted in

the clear without encryption. The authentication field is encoded as

follows:

7 Authentication Information -- Information used to authenticate

the PDU

x CODE - 133

x LENGTH - total length of the value field

x VALUE -

No. of Octets

+--------------------------------+

Authentication Type 1

+--------------------------------+

Authentication Information VARIABLE

+--------------------------------+

The Authentication Type is assigned as follows:

Type = 0 reserved

Type = 1 simple password

Type > 1 reserved

D.2 Authentication Type 1 - Simple Password

Using this authentication type, a variable length password is passed

in the clear (i.e., not encrypted) in the Authentication Information

field.

WARNING: The use of a simple password does not provide useful

protection against intentional misbehavior. In particular, since the

password is transmitted in the clear without encryption, it is easy

for a hostile system to intercept the passwords, and to transmit

authenticated packets. The use of simple passwords should be

considered only as a weak protection against accidental errors such

as accidental misconfiguration.

The password shall be configured on a per-link, per-area, and per-

domain basis. Specifically, when this form of authentication is used:

- IS-IS Hello and 9542 IS Hello packets shall contain the

per-link password

- Level 1 Link State Packets shall contain the per-area password

- Level 2 Link State Packets shall contain the per-domain password

- Level 1 Sequence Number Packets shall contain the per-area password

- Level 2 Sequence Number Packets shall contain the per-domain

password

Also, each of these three passwords shall be configured with: (i)

"Transmit Password", whose value is a single password, and (ii)

"Receive Passwords", whose value is a set of passwords. The transmit

password value is always transmitted. However, any password contained

in the receive password set will be accepted on receipt. This method

allows the graceful changing of passwords without temporary loss of

connectivity.

For example, consider the case that an area has the configured area

password "OLDAREAPASSWORD". In this case, the per-area transmit

password value is set to OLDAREAPASSWORD, and the per-area receive

password value is set to {OLDAREAPASSWORD}. Suppose that it is

desired to change the per-area password to "NEWERPASSWORD". The

first step would be to manually configure all of the routers in the

area to set the per-area receive password value to {OLDAREAPASSWORD,

NEWERPASSWORD}. When this step is complete, then all routers in the

area will still be using the old password OLDAREAPASSWORD in their

level 1 LSPs and SNPs. However, they will also accept the alternate

password NEWERPASSWORD. The second step would be to configure the

routers in the area to set the per-area transmit password to

NEWERPASSWORD. When the second step is complete, then all routers

will be using the new value of the per-area password, but will accept

the old value as well. Finally, the third step is to change all

routers in the area to have the per-area receive password set to

{NEWERPASSWORD}.

By configuring transmit and receive values for the passwords in this

manner, it is possible to maintain continuous correct operation. For

example, in the middle of the second step in the above example, some

of the routers in the area will be transmitting level 1 LSPs and SNPs

using the old password OLDAREAPASSWORD, and some will be transmitting

level 1 LSPs and SNPs using the new password NEWERPASSWORD. However,

during the second step of the transition all routers in the area will

accept level 1 LSPs and SNPs using either password.

Annex E

Interaction of the Integrated IS-IS with Brouters

A "brouter" is a device which operates an both a bridge and a router.

One possible type of brouter acts as a router for IP traffic, and

acts as a bridge for all other types of traffic.

Depending upon the manner in which a brouter is implemented, and

depending upon the network topology, there is an obscure bug which

can result from the interaction of the Integrated IS-IS protocol, and

brouters. This appendix gives an example of the bug, and proposes a

simple correction to the operation of brouters to correct the

problem.

This annex is included for informational purposes.

E.1 The Problem

Suppose that we have a brouter which treats IP packets as if it were

a normal IP router, and which treats all other packets as if it is a

bridge.

Suppose that two routers "X" and "Y" (which implement the integrated

IS-IS protocol), two Ethernets, and a brouter B are all connected as

follows:

+----+---+ +----+---+

Router Router

X Y

+----+---+ +----+---+

-----+------------+- -+------------+----

+-+-----+-+

Brouter

B

+---------+

Here suppose that X and Y are running the Integrated IS-IS protocol,

and are both level 1 routers in the same area. Thus X and Y send IS-

IS Hello packets on the LAN. These Hello packets are received and

forwarded by the brouter (using normal bridge functions). Similarly,

X and Y receive each other's IS-IS LSP packets. In this way, it

appears to the Brouter that X and Y are exchanging OSI packets, and

so they are forwarded using normal bridge functions. It appears to X

and Y as if they are on the same LAN, and so they learn each others

48-bit Ethernet addresses and exchange routing information.

Now, suppose that X receives an IP packet, which it needs to forward

via Y. Since X thinks that it and Y are on the same Ethernet, it just

forwards the IP packet directly, using normal Ethernet encapsulation

and using the 48-bit Ethernet address of Y as the destination address

in the Ethernet header. Brouter B, when thinking as a bridge says:

"this is an IP packet, I don't forward this as a bridge". Brouter B,

when thinking like an IP router says: "this is an IP packet, I know

how to forward IP packets. However, this is sent to an Ethernet

address which is not me, thus I will ignore it". The result is that

the IP packet does not get forwarded.

This problem relates directly to the fact that X and Y are exchanging

OSI packets to determine the connectivity of the path between them,

but then are trying to send IP packets over the path. Also, there is

a device between X and Y on the path which treats OSI and IP packets

differently.

Also note that this problem can also occur in more complex

topologies, whenever a brouter is treating OSI and IP packets in a

fundamentally different manner.

E.2 Possible Solutions

E.2.1 More Sophisticated Brouter

One solution is that brouter B needs to be a little more

sophisticated. In particular, it needs to use the following rules:

- For packets which are not IP packets, act as a bridge (this is the

same as before).

- For IP packets sent to an Ethernet broadcast or multicast address,

act as an IP router (this is also the same as before).

- For IP packets sent to my own Ethernet 48-bit address(es), act as

an IP router (this is also the same as before).

- For IP packets sent to a single station 48-bit address which is not

one of my addresses, act at a bridge (THIS IS NEW).

With this change, the IP packet transmitted from X to Y is forwarded

by the brouter, acting as a bridge. This allows the Brouter and the

multiprotocol routers to interoperate properly.

E.2.2 Dual Router / Brouter

An alternate solution would be for the Brouter to route both OSI and

IP equally. If the Brouter used the integrated IS-IS for this

purpose, then it could be part of the same routing domain and

interoperate like any other dual router (except for the ability to

bridge other protocol suites). If it used other protocols for

routing OSI and IP, then it would need to be part of another routing

domain, and could interoperate with integrated IS-IS routers like any

other external router.

 
 
 
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