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RFC1883 - Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group S. Deering, Xerox PARC

Request for Comments: 1883 R. Hinden, Ipsilon Networks

Category: Standards Track December 1995

Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6)

Specification

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

This document specifies version 6 of the Internet Protocol (IPv6),

also sometimes referred to as IP Next Generation or IPng.

Table of Contents

1. IntrodUCtion..................................................3

2. Terminology...................................................4

3. IPv6 Header Format............................................5

4. IPv6 Extension Headers........................................6

4.1 Extension Header Order...................................8

4.2 Options..................................................9

4.3 Hop-by-Hop Options Header...............................11

4.4 Routing Header..........................................13

4.5 Fragment Header.........................................19

4.6 Destination Options Header..............................24

4.7 No Next Header..........................................25

5. Packet Size Issues...........................................26

6. Flow Labels..................................................28

7. Priority.....................................................30

8. Upper-Layer Protocol Issues..................................31

8.1 Upper-Layer Checksums...................................31

8.2 Maximum Packet Lifetime.................................32

8.3 Maximum Upper-Layer Payload Size........................32

Appendix A. Formatting Guidelines for Options...................33

Security Considerations.........................................36

Acknowledgments.................................................36

Authors' Addresses..............................................36

References......................................................37

1. Introduction

IP version 6 (IPv6) is a new version of the Internet Protocol,

designed as a successor to IP version 4 (IPv4) [RFC-791]. The

changes from IPv4 to IPv6 fall primarily into the following

categories:

o EXPanded Addressing Capabilities

IPv6 increases the IP address size from 32 bits to 128 bits, to

support more levels of addressing hierarchy, a much greater

number of addressable nodes, and simpler auto-configuration of

addresses. The scalability of multicast routing is improved by

adding a "scope" field to multicast addresses. And a new type

of address called an "anycast address" is defined, used to send

a packet to any one of a group of nodes.

o Header Format Simplification

Some IPv4 header fields have been dropped or made optional, to

reduce the common-case processing cost of packet handling and

to limit the bandwidth cost of the IPv6 header.

o Improved Support for Extensions and Options

Changes in the way IP header options are encoded allows for

more efficient forwarding, less stringent limits on the length

of options, and greater flexibility for introducing new options

in the future.

o Flow Labeling Capability

A new capability is added to enable the labeling of packets

belonging to particular traffic "flows" for which the sender

requests special handling, such as non-default quality of

service or "real-time" service.

o Authentication and Privacy Capabilities

Extensions to support authentication, data integrity, and

(optional) data confidentiality are specified for IPv6.

This document specifies the basic IPv6 header and the initially-

defined IPv6 extension headers and options. It also discusses packet

size issues, the semantics of flow labels and priority, and the

effects of IPv6 on upper-layer protocols. The format and semantics

of IPv6 addresses are specified separately in [RFC-1884]. The IPv6

version of ICMP, which all IPv6 implementations are required to

include, is specified in [RFC-1885].

2. Terminology

node - a device that implements IPv6.

router - a node that forwards IPv6 packets not explicitly

addressed to itself. [See Note below].

host - any node that is not a router. [See Note below].

upper layer - a protocol layer immediately above IPv6. Examples are

transport protocols such as TCP and UDP, control

protocols such as ICMP, routing protocols such as OSPF,

and internet or lower-layer protocols being "tunneled"

over (i.e., encapsulated in) IPv6 such as IPX,

AppleTalk, or IPv6 itself.

link - a communication facility or medium over which nodes can

communicate at the link layer, i.e., the layer

immediately below IPv6. Examples are Ethernets (simple

or bridged); PPP links; X.25, Frame Relay, or ATM

networks; and internet (or higher) layer "tunnels",

such as tunnels over IPv4 or IPv6 itself.

neighbors - nodes attached to the same link.

interface - a node's attachment to a link.

address - an IPv6-layer identifier for an interface or a set of

interfaces.

packet - an IPv6 header plus payload.

link MTU - the maximum transmission unit, i.e., maximum packet

size in octets, that can be conveyed in one piece over

a link.

path MTU - the minimum link MTU of all the links in a path between

a source node and a destination node.

Note: it is possible, though unusual, for a device with multiple

interfaces to be configured to forward non-self-destined packets

arriving from some set (fewer than all) of its interfaces, and to

discard non-self-destined packets arriving from its other interfaces.

Such a device must obey the protocol requirements for routers when

receiving packets from, and interacting with neighbors over, the

former (forwarding) interfaces. It must obey the protocol

requirements for hosts when receiving packets from, and interacting

with neighbors over, the latter (non-forwarding) interfaces.

3. IPv6 Header Format

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

Version Prio. Flow Label

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

Payload Length Next Header Hop Limit

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

+ +

+ Source Address +

+ +

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

+ +

+ Destination Address +

+ +

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

Version 4-bit Internet Protocol version number = 6.

Prio. 4-bit priority value. See section 7.

Flow Label 24-bit flow label. See section 6.

Payload Length 16-bit unsigned integer. Length of payload,

i.e., the rest of the packet following the

IPv6 header, in octets. If zero, indicates that

the payload length is carried in a Jumbo Payload

hop-by-hop option.

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of header

immediately following the IPv6 header. Uses

the same values as the IPv4 Protocol field

[RFC-1700 et seq.].

Hop Limit 8-bit unsigned integer. Decremented by 1 by

each node that forwards the packet. The packet

is discarded if Hop Limit is decremented to

zero.

Source Address 128-bit address of the originator of the

packet. See [RFC-1884].

Destination Address 128-bit address of the intended recipient

of the packet (possibly not the ultimate

recipient, if a Routing header is present).

See [RFC-1884] and section 4.4.

4. IPv6 Extension Headers

In IPv6, optional internet-layer information is encoded in separate

headers that may be placed between the IPv6 header and the upper-

layer header in a packet. There are a small number of such extension

headers, each identified by a distinct Next Header value. As

illustrated in these examples, an IPv6 packet may carry zero, one, or

more extension headers, each identified by the Next Header field of

the preceding header:

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

IPv6 header TCP header + data

Next Header =

TCP

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

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

IPv6 header Routing header TCP header + data

Next Header = Next Header =

Routing TCP

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

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

IPv6 header Routing header Fragment header fragment of TCP

header + data

Next Header = Next Header = Next Header =

Routing Fragment TCP

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

With one exception, extension headers are not examined or processed

by any node along a packet's delivery path, until the packet reaches

the node (or each of the set of nodes, in the case of multicast)

identified in the Destination Address field of the IPv6 header.

There, normal demultiplexing on the Next Header field of the IPv6

header invokes the module to process the first extension header, or

the upper-layer header if no extension header is present. The

contents and semantics of each extension header determine whether or

not to proceed to the next header. Therefore, extension headers must

be processed strictly in the order they appear in the packet; a

receiver must not, for example, scan through a packet looking for a

particular kind of extension header and process that header prior to

processing all preceding ones.

The exception referred to in the preceding paragraph is the Hop-by-

Hop Options header, which carries information that must be examined

and processed by every node along a packet's delivery path, including

the source and destination nodes. The Hop-by-Hop Options header,

when present, must immediately follow the IPv6 header. Its presence

is indicated by the value zero in the Next Header field of the IPv6

header.

If, as a result of processing a header, a node is required to proceed

to the next header but the Next Header value in the current header is

unrecognized by the node, it should discard the packet and send an

ICMP Parameter Problem message to the source of the packet, with an

ICMP Code value of 2 ("unrecognized Next Header type encountered")

and the ICMP Pointer field containing the offset of the unrecognized

value within the original packet. The same action should be taken if

a node encounters a Next Header value of zero in any header other

than an IPv6 header.

Each extension header is an integer multiple of 8 octets long, in

order to retain 8-octet alignment for subsequent headers. Multi-

octet fields within each extension header are aligned on their

natural boundaries, i.e., fields of width n octets are placed at an

integer multiple of n octets from the start of the header, for n = 1,

2, 4, or 8.

A full implementation of IPv6 includes implementation of the

following extension headers:

Hop-by-Hop Options

Routing (Type 0)

Fragment

Destination Options

Authentication

Encapsulating Security Payload

The first four are specified in this document; the last two are

specified in [RFC-1826] and [RFC-1827], respectively.

4.1 Extension Header Order

When more than one extension header is used in the same packet, it is

recommended that those headers appear in the following order:

IPv6 header

Hop-by-Hop Options header

Destination Options header (note 1)

Routing header

Fragment header

Authentication header (note 2)

Encapsulating Security Payload header (note 2)

Destination Options header (note 3)

upper-layer header

note 1: for options to be processed by the first destination

that appears in the IPv6 Destination Address field

plus subsequent destinations listed in the Routing

header.

note 2: additional recommendations regarding the relative

order of the Authentication and Encapsulating

Security Payload headers are given in [RFC-1827].

note 3: for options to be processed only by the final

destination of the packet.

Each extension header should occur at most once, except for the

Destination Options header which should occur at most twice (once

before a Routing header and once before the upper-layer header).

If the upper-layer header is another IPv6 header (in the case of IPv6

being tunneled over or encapsulated in IPv6), it may be followed by

its own extensions headers, which are separately subject to the same

ordering recommendations.

If and when other extension headers are defined, their ordering

constraints relative to the above listed headers must be specified.

IPv6 nodes must accept and attempt to process extension headers in

any order and occurring any number of times in the same packet,

except for the Hop-by-Hop Options header which is restricted to

appear immediately after an IPv6 header only. Nonetheless, it is

strongly advised that sources of IPv6 packets adhere to the above

recommended order until and unless subsequent specifications revise

that recommendation.

4.2 Options

Two of the currently-defined extension headers -- the Hop-by-Hop

Options header and the Destination Options header -- carry a variable

number of type-length-value (TLV) encoded "options", of the following

format:

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

Option Type Opt Data Len Option Data

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

Option Type 8-bit identifier of the type of option.

Opt Data Len 8-bit unsigned integer. Length of the Option

Data field of this option, in octets.

Option Data Variable-length field. Option-Type-specific

data.

The sequence of options within a header must be processed strictly in

the order they appear in the header; a receiver must not, for

example, scan through the header looking for a particular kind of

option and process that option prior to processing all preceding

ones.

The Option Type identifiers are internally encoded such that their

highest-order two bits specify the action that must be taken if the

processing IPv6 node does not recognize the Option Type:

00 - skip over this option and continue processing the header.

01 - discard the packet.

10 - discard the packet and, regardless of whether or not the

packets's Destination Address was a multicast address, send

an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 2, message to the packet's

Source Address, pointing to the unrecognized Option Type.

11 - discard the packet and, only if the packet's Destination

Address was not a multicast address, send an ICMP Parameter

Problem, Code 2, message to the packet's Source Address,

pointing to the unrecognized Option Type.

The third-highest-order bit of the Option Type specifies whether or

not the Option Data of that option can change en-route to the

packet's final destination. When an Authentication header is present

in the packet, for any option whose data may change en-route, its

entire Option Data field must be treated as zero-valued octets when

computing or verifying the packet's authenticating value.

0 - Option Data does not change en-route

1 - Option Data may change en-route

Individual options may have specific alignment requirements, to

ensure that multi-octet values within Option Data fields fall on

natural boundaries. The alignment requirement of an option is

specified using the notation xn+y, meaning the Option Type must

appear at an integer multiple of x octets from the start of the

header, plus y octets. For example:

2n means any 2-octet offset from the start of the header.

8n+2 means any 8-octet offset from the start of the header,

plus 2 octets.

There are two padding options which are used when necessary to align

subsequent options and to pad out the containing header to a multiple

of 8 octets in length. These padding options must be recognized by

all IPv6 implementations:

Pad1 option (alignment requirement: none)

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

0

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

NOTE! the format of the Pad1 option is a special case -- it does

not have length and value fields.

The Pad1 option is used to insert one octet of padding into the

Options area of a header. If more than one octet of padding is

required, the PadN option, described next, should be used,

rather than multiple Pad1 options.

PadN option (alignment requirement: none)

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

1 Opt Data Len Option Data

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

The PadN option is used to insert two or more octets of padding

into the Options area of a header. For N octets of padding,

the Opt Data Len field contains the value N-2, and the Option

Data consists of N-2 zero-valued octets.

Appendix A contains formatting guidelines for designing new options.

4.3 Hop-by-Hop Options Header

The Hop-by-Hop Options header is used to carry optional information

that must be examined by every node along a packet's delivery path.

The Hop-by-Hop Options header is identified by a Next Header value of

0 in the IPv6 header, and has the following format:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len

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

. .

. Options .

. .

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

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of header

immediately following the Hop-by-Hop Options

header. Uses the same values as the IPv4

Protocol field [RFC-1700 et seq.].

Hdr Ext Len 8-bit unsigned integer. Length of the

Hop-by-Hop Options header in 8-octet units,

not including the first 8 octets.

Options Variable-length field, of length such that the

complete Hop-by-Hop Options header is an integer

multiple of 8 octets long. Contains one or

more TLV-encoded options, as described in

section 4.2.

In addition to the Pad1 and PadN options specified in section 4.2,

the following hop-by-hop option is defined:

Jumbo Payload option (alignment requirement: 4n + 2)

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

194 Opt Data Len=4

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

Jumbo Payload Length

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

The Jumbo Payload option is used to send IPv6 packets with

payloads longer than 65,535 octets. The Jumbo Payload Length is

the length of the packet in octets, excluding the IPv6 header but

including the Hop-by-Hop Options header; it must be greater than

65,535. If a packet is received with a Jumbo Payload option

containing a Jumbo Payload Length less than or equal to 65,535,

an ICMP Parameter Problem message, Code 0, should be sent to the

packet's source, pointing to the high-order octet of the invalid

Jumbo Payload Length field.

The Payload Length field in the IPv6 header must be set to zero

in every packet that carries the Jumbo Payload option. If a

packet is received with a valid Jumbo Payload option present and

a non-zero IPv6 Payload Length field, an ICMP Parameter Problem

message, Code 0, should be sent to the packet's source, pointing

to the Option Type field of the Jumbo Payload option.

The Jumbo Payload option must not be used in a packet that

carries a Fragment header. If a Fragment header is encountered

in a packet that contains a valid Jumbo Payload option, an ICMP

Parameter Problem message, Code 0, should be sent to the packet's

source, pointing to the first octet of the Fragment header.

An implementation that does not support the Jumbo Payload option

cannot have interfaces to links whose link MTU is greater than

65,575 (40 octets of IPv6 header plus 65,535 octets of payload).

4.4 Routing Header

The Routing header is used by an IPv6 source to list one or more

intermediate nodes to be "visited" on the way to a packet's

destination. This function is very similar to IPv4's Source Route

options. The Routing header is identified by a Next Header value of

43 in the immediately preceding header, and has the following format:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len Routing Type Segments Left

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

. .

. type-specific data .

. .

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

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of header

immediately following the Routing header.

Uses the same values as the IPv4 Protocol field

[RFC-1700 et seq.].

Hdr Ext Len 8-bit unsigned integer. Length of the

Routing header in 8-octet units, not including

the first 8 octets.

Routing Type 8-bit identifier of a particular Routing

header variant.

Segments Left 8-bit unsigned integer. Number of route

segments remaining, i.e., number of explicitly

listed intermediate nodes still to be visited

before reaching the final destination.

type-specific data Variable-length field, of format determined by

the Routing Type, and of length such that the

complete Routing header is an integer multiple

of 8 octets long.

If, while processing a received packet, a node encounters a Routing

header with an unrecognized Routing Type value, the required behavior

of the node depends on the value of the Segments Left field, as

follows:

If Segments Left is zero, the node must ignore the Routing header

and proceed to process the next header in the packet, whose type

is identified by the Next Header field in the Routing header.

If Segments Left is non-zero, the node must discard the packet and

send an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 0, message to the packet's

Source Address, pointing to the unrecognized Routing Type.

The Type 0 Routing header has the following format:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len Routing Type=0 Segments Left

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

Reserved Strict/Loose Bit Map

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

+ +

+ Address[1] +

+ +

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

+ +

+ Address[2] +

+ +

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

. . .

. . .

. . .

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

+ +

+ Address[n] +

+ +

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

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of header

immediately following the Routing header.

Uses the same values as the IPv4 Protocol field

[RFC-1700 et seq.].

Hdr Ext Len 8-bit unsigned integer. Length of the

Routing header in 8-octet units, not including

the first 8 octets. For the Type 0 Routing

header, Hdr Ext Len is equal to two times the

number of addresses in the header, and must

be an even number less than or equal to 46.

Routing Type 0.

Segments Left 8-bit unsigned integer. Number of route

segments remaining, i.e., number of explicitly

listed intermediate nodes still to be visited

before reaching the final destination.

Maximum legal value = 23.

Reserved 8-bit reserved field. Initialized to zero for

transmission; ignored on reception.

Strict/Loose Bit Map

24-bit bit-map, numbered 0 to 23, left-to-right.

Indicates, for each segment of the route, whether

or not the next destination address must be a

neighbor of the preceding address: 1 means strict

(must be a neighbor), 0 means loose (need not be

a neighbor).

Address[1..n] Vector of 128-bit addresses, numbered 1 to n.

Multicast addresses must not appear in a Routing header of Type 0, or

in the IPv6 Destination Address field of a packet carrying a Routing

header of Type 0.

If bit number 0 of the Strict/Loose Bit Map has value 1, the

Destination Address field of the IPv6 header in the original packet

must identify a neighbor of the originating node. If bit number 0

has value 0, the originator may use any legal, non-multicast address

as the initial Destination Address.

Bits numbered greater than n, where n is the number of addresses in

the Routing header, must be set to 0 by the originator and ignored by

receivers.

A Routing header is not examined or processed until it reaches the

node identified in the Destination Address field of the IPv6 header.

In that node, dispatching on the Next Header field of the immediately

preceding header causes the Routing header module to be invoked,

which, in the case of Routing Type 0, performs the following

algorithm:

if Segments Left = 0 {

proceed to process the next header in the packet, whose type is

identified by the Next Header field in the Routing header

}

else if Hdr Ext Len is odd or greater than 46 {

send an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 0, message to the Source

Address, pointing to the Hdr Ext Len field, and discard the

packet

}

else {

compute n, the number of addresses in the Routing header, by

dividing Hdr Ext Len by 2

if Segments Left is greater than n {

send an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 0, message to the Source

Address, pointing to the Segments Left field, and discard the

packet

}

else {

decrement Segments Left by 1;

compute i, the index of the next address to be visited in

the address vector, by suBTracting Segments Left from n

if Address [i] or the IPv6 Destination Address is multicast {

discard the packet

}

else {

swap the IPv6 Destination Address and Address[i]

if bit i of the Strict/Loose Bit map has value 1 and the

new Destination Address is not the address of a neighbor

of this node {

send an ICMP Destination Unreachable -- Not a Neighbor

message to the Source Address and discard the packet

}

else if the IPv6 Hop Limit is less than or equal to 1 {

send an ICMP Time Exceeded -- Hop Limit Exceeded in

Transit message to the Source Address and discard the

packet

}

else {

decrement the Hop Limit by 1

resubmit the packet to the IPv6 module for transmission

to the new destination

}

}

}

}

As an example of the effects of the above algorithm, consider the

case of a source node S sending a packet to destination node D, using

a Routing header to cause the packet to be routed via intermediate

nodes I1, I2, and I3. The values of the relevant IPv6 header and

Routing header fields on each segment of the delivery path would be

as follows:

As the packet travels from S to I1:

Source Address = S Hdr Ext Len = 6

Destination Address = I1 Segments Left = 3

Address[1] = I2

(if bit 0 of the Bit Map is 1, Address[2] = I3

S and I1 must be neighbors; Address[3] = D

this is checked by S)

As the packet travels from I1 to I2:

Source Address = S Hdr Ext Len = 6

Destination Address = I2 Segments Left = 2

Address[1] = I1

(if bit 1 of the Bit Map is 1, Address[2] = I3

I1 and I2 must be neighbors; Address[3] = D

this is checked by I1)

As the packet travels from I2 to I3:

Source Address = S Hdr Ext Len = 6

Destination Address = I3 Segments Left = 1

Address[1] = I1

(if bit 2 of the Bit Map is 1, Address[2] = I2

I2 and I3 must be neighbors; Address[3] = D

this is checked by I2)

As the packet travels from I3 to D:

Source Address = S Hdr Ext Len = 6

Destination Address = D Segments Left = 0

Address[1] = I1

(if bit 3 of the Bit Map is 1, Address[2] = I2

I3 and D must be neighbors; Address[3] = I3

this is checked by I3)

4.5 Fragment Header

The Fragment header is used by an IPv6 source to send packets larger

than would fit in the path MTU to their destinations. (Note: unlike

IPv4, fragmentation in IPv6 is performed only by source nodes, not by

routers along a packet's delivery path -- see section 5.) The

Fragment header is identified by a Next Header value of 44 in the

immediately preceding header, and has the following format:

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

Next Header Reserved Fragment Offset ResM

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

Identification

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

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the initial header

type of the Fragmentable Part of the original

packet (defined below). Uses the same values

as the IPv4 Protocol field [RFC-1700 et seq.].

Reserved 8-bit reserved field. Initialized to zero for

transmission; ignored on reception.

Fragment Offset 13-bit unsigned integer. The offset, in 8-octet

units, of the data following this header,

relative to the start of the Fragmentable Part

of the original packet.

Res 2-bit reserved field. Initialized to zero for

transmission; ignored on reception.

M flag 1 = more fragments; 0 = last fragment.

Identification 32 bits. See description below.

In order to send a packet that is too large to fit in the MTU of the

path to its destination, a source node may divide the packet into

fragments and send each fragment as a separate packet, to be

reassembled at the receiver.

For every packet that is to be fragmented, the source node generates

an Identification value. The Identification must be different than

that of any other fragmented packet sent recently* with the same

Source Address and Destination Address. If a Routing header is

present, the Destination Address of concern is that of the final

destination.

* "recently" means within the maximum likely lifetime of a packet,

including transit time from source to destination and time spent

awaiting reassembly with other fragments of the same packet.

However, it is not required that a source node know the maximum

packet lifetime. Rather, it is assumed that the requirement can

be met by maintaining the Identification value as a simple, 32-

bit, "wrap-around" counter, incremented each time a packet must

be fragmented. It is an implementation choice whether to

maintain a single counter for the node or multiple counters,

e.g., one for each of the node's possible source addresses, or

one for each active (source address, destination address)

combination.

The initial, large, unfragmented packet is referred to as the

"original packet", and it is considered to consist of two parts, as

illustrated:

original packet:

+------------------+----------------------//-----------------------+

Unfragmentable Fragmentable

Part Part

+------------------+----------------------//-----------------------+

The Unfragmentable Part consists of the IPv6 header plus any

extension headers that must be processed by nodes en route to the

destination, that is, all headers up to and including the Routing

header if present, else the Hop-by-Hop Options header if present,

else no extension headers.

The Fragmentable Part consists of the rest of the packet, that is,

any extension headers that need be processed only by the final

destination node(s), plus the upper-layer header and data.

The Fragmentable Part of the original packet is divided into

fragments, each, except possibly the last ("rightmost") one, being an

integer multiple of 8 octets long. The fragments are transmitted in

separate "fragment packets" as illustrated:

original packet:

+------------------+--------------+--------------+--//--+----------+

Unfragmentable first second last

Part fragment fragment .... fragment

+------------------+--------------+--------------+--//--+----------+

fragment packets:

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

Unfragmentable Fragment first

Part Header fragment

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

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

Unfragmentable Fragment second

Part Header fragment

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

o

o

o

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

Unfragmentable Fragment last

Part Header fragment

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

Each fragment packet is composed of:

(1) The Unfragmentable Part of the original packet, with the

Payload Length of the original IPv6 header changed to contain

the length of this fragment packet only (excluding the length

of the IPv6 header itself), and the Next Header field of the

last header of the Unfragmentable Part changed to 44.

(2) A Fragment header containing:

The Next Header value that identifies the first header of

the Fragmentable Part of the original packet.

A Fragment Offset containing the offset of the fragment,

in 8-octet units, relative to the start of the

Fragmentable Part of the original packet. The Fragment

Offset of the first ("leftmost") fragment is 0.

An M flag value of 0 if the fragment is the last

("rightmost") one, else an M flag value of 1.

The Identification value generated for the original

packet.

(3) The fragment itself.

The lengths of the fragments must be chosen such that the resulting

fragment packets fit within the MTU of the path to the packets'

destination(s).

At the destination, fragment packets are reassembled into their

original, unfragmented form, as illustrated:

reassembled original packet:

+------------------+----------------------//------------------------+

Unfragmentable Fragmentable

Part Part

+------------------+----------------------//------------------------+

The following rules govern reassembly:

An original packet is reassembled only from fragment packets that

have the same Source Address, Destination Address, and Fragment

Identification.

The Unfragmentable Part of the reassembled packet consists of all

headers up to, but not including, the Fragment header of the first

fragment packet (that is, the packet whose Fragment Offset is

zero), with the following two changes:

The Next Header field of the last header of the Unfragmentable

Part is obtained from the Next Header field of the first

fragment's Fragment header.

The Payload Length of the reassembled packet is computed from

the length of the Unfragmentable Part and the length and offset

of the last fragment. For example, a formula for computing the

Payload Length of the reassembled original packet is:

PL.orig = PL.first - FL.first - 8 + (8 * FO.last) + FL.last

where

PL.orig = Payload Length field of reassembled packet.

PL.first = Payload Length field of first fragment packet.

FL.first = length of fragment following Fragment header of

first fragment packet.

FO.last = Fragment Offset field of Fragment header of

last fragment packet.

FL.last = length of fragment following Fragment header of

last fragment packet.

The Fragmentable Part of the reassembled packet is constructed

from the fragments following the Fragment headers in each of the

fragment packets. The length of each fragment is computed by

subtracting from the packet's Payload Length the length of the

headers between the IPv6 header and fragment itself; its relative

position in Fragmentable Part is computed from its Fragment Offset

value.

The Fragment header is not present in the final, reassembled

packet.

The following error conditions may arise when reassembling fragmented

packets:

If insufficient fragments are received to complete reassembly of a

packet within 60 seconds of the reception of the first-arriving

fragment of that packet, reassembly of that packet must be

abandoned and all the fragments that have been received for that

packet must be discarded. If the first fragment (i.e., the one

with a Fragment Offset of zero) has been received, an ICMP Time

Exceeded -- Fragment Reassembly Time Exceeded message should be

sent to the source of that fragment.

If the length of a fragment, as derived from the fragment packet's

Payload Length field, is not a multiple of 8 octets and the M flag

of that fragment is 1, then that fragment must be discarded and an

ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 0, message should be sent to the

source of the fragment, pointing to the Payload Length field of

the fragment packet.

If the length and offset of a fragment are such that the Payload

Length of the packet reassembled from that fragment would exceed

65,535 octets, then that fragment must be discarded and an ICMP

Parameter Problem, Code 0, message should be sent to the source of

the fragment, pointing to the Fragment Offset field of the

fragment packet.

The following conditions are not expected to occur, but are not

considered errors if they do:

The number and content of the headers preceding the Fragment

header of different fragments of the same original packet may

differ. Whatever headers are present, preceding the Fragment

header in each fragment packet, are processed when the packets

arrive, prior to queueing the fragments for reassembly. Only

those headers in the Offset zero fragment packet are retained in

the reassembled packet.

The Next Header values in the Fragment headers of different

fragments of the same original packet may differ. Only the value

from the Offset zero fragment packet is used for reassembly.

4.6 Destination Options Header

The Destination Options header is used to carry optional information

that need be examined only by a packet's destination node(s). The

Destination Options header is identified by a Next Header value of 60

in the immediately preceding header, and has the following format:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len

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

. .

. Options .

. .

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

Next Header 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of header

immediately following the Destination Options

header. Uses the same values as the IPv4

Protocol field [RFC-1700 et seq.].

Hdr Ext Len 8-bit unsigned integer. Length of the

Destination Options header in 8-octet units,

not including the first 8 octets.

Options Variable-length field, of length such that the

complete Destination Options header is an

integer multiple of 8 octets long. Contains

one or more TLV-encoded options, as described

in section 4.2.

The only destination options defined in this document are the Pad1

and PadN options specified in section 4.2.

Note that there are two possible ways to encode optional destination

information in an IPv6 packet: either as an option in the Destination

Options header, or as a separate extension header. The Fragment

header and the Authentication header are examples of the latter

approach. Which approach can be used depends on what action is

desired of a destination node that does not understand the optional

information:

o if the desired action is for the destination node to discard

the packet and, only if the packet's Destination Address is not

a multicast address, send an ICMP Unrecognized Type message to

the packet's Source Address, then the information may be

encoded either as a separate header or as an option in the

Destination Options header whose Option Type has the value 11

in its highest-order two bits. The choice may depend on such

factors as which takes fewer octets, or which yields better

alignment or more efficient parsing.

o if any other action is desired, the information must be encoded

as an option in the Destination Options header whose Option

Type has the value 00, 01, or 10 in its highest-order two bits,

specifying the desired action (see section 4.2).

4.7 No Next Header

The value 59 in the Next Header field of an IPv6 header or any

extension header indicates that there is nothing following that

header. If the Payload Length field of the IPv6 header indicates the

presence of octets past the end of a header whose Next Header field

contains 59, those octets must be ignored, and passed on unchanged if

the packet is forwarded.

5. Packet Size Issues

IPv6 requires that every link in the internet have an MTU of 576

octets or greater. On any link that cannot convey a 576-octet packet

in one piece, link-specific fragmentation and reassembly must be

provided at a layer below IPv6.

From each link to which a node is directly attached, the node must

be able to accept packets as large as that link's MTU. Links that

have a configurable MTU (for example, PPP links [RFC-1661]) must be

configured to have an MTU of at least 576 octets; it is recommended

that a larger MTU be configured, to accommodate possible

encapsulations (i.e., tunneling) without incurring fragmentation.

It is strongly recommended that IPv6 nodes implement Path MTU

Discovery [RFC-1191], in order to discover and take advantage of

paths with MTU greater than 576 octets. However, a minimal IPv6

implementation (e.g., in a boot ROM) may simply restrict itself to

sending packets no larger than 576 octets, and omit implementation of

Path MTU Discovery.

In order to send a packet larger than a path's MTU, a node may use

the IPv6 Fragment header to fragment the packet at the source and

have it reassembled at the destination(s). However, the use of such

fragmentation is discouraged in any application that is able to

adjust its packets to fit the measured path MTU (i.e., down to 576

octets).

A node must be able to accept a fragmented packet that, after

reassembly, is as large as 1500 octets, including the IPv6 header. A

node is permitted to accept fragmented packets that reassemble to

more than 1500 octets. However, a node must not send fragments that

reassemble to a size greater than 1500 octets unless it has explicit

knowledge that the destination(s) can reassemble a packet of that

size.

In response to an IPv6 packet that is sent to an IPv4 destination

(i.e., a packet that undergoes translation from IPv6 to IPv4), the

originating IPv6 node may receive an ICMP Packet Too Big message

reporting a Next-Hop MTU less than 576. In that case, the IPv6 node

is not required to reduce the size of subsequent packets to less than

576, but must include a Fragment header in those packets so that the

IPv6-to-IPv4 translating router can obtain a suitable Identification

value to use in resulting IPv4 fragments. Note that this means the

payload may have to be reduced to 528 octets (576 minus 40 for the

IPv6 header and 8 for the Fragment header), and smaller still if

additional extension headers are used.

Note: Path MTU Discovery must be performed even in cases where a

host "thinks" a destination is attached to the same link as

itself.

Note: Unlike IPv4, it is unnecessary in IPv6 to set a "Don't

Fragment" flag in the packet header in order to perform Path MTU

Discovery; that is an implicit attribute of every IPv6 packet.

Also, those parts of the RFC-1191 procedures that involve use of

a table of MTU "plateaus" do not apply to IPv6, because the IPv6

version of the "Datagram Too Big" message always identifies the

exact MTU to be used.

6. Flow Labels

The 24-bit Flow Label field in the IPv6 header may be used by a

source to label those packets for which it requests special handling

by the IPv6 routers, such as non-default quality of service or

"real-time" service. This ASPect of IPv6 is, at the time of writing,

still experimental and subject to change as the requirements for flow

support in the Internet become clearer. Hosts or routers that do not

support the functions of the Flow Label field are required to set the

field to zero when originating a packet, pass the field on unchanged

when forwarding a packet, and ignore the field when receiving a

packet.

A flow is a sequence of packets sent from a particular source to a

particular (unicast or multicast) destination for which the source

desires special handling by the intervening routers. The nature of

that special handling might be conveyed to the routers by a control

protocol, such as a resource reservation protocol, or by information

within the flow's packets themselves, e.g., in a hop-by-hop option.

The details of such control protocols or options are beyond the scope

of this document.

There may be multiple active flows from a source to a destination, as

well as traffic that is not associated with any flow. A flow is

uniquely identified by the combination of a source address and a

non-zero flow label. Packets that do not belong to a flow carry a

flow label of zero.

A flow label is assigned to a flow by the flow's source node. New

flow labels must be chosen (pseudo-)randomly and uniformly from the

range 1 to FFFFFF hex. The purpose of the random allocation is to

make any set of bits within the Flow Label field suitable for use as

a hash key by routers, for looking up the state associated with the

flow.

All packets belonging to the same flow must be sent with the same

source address, destination address, priority, and flow label. If

any of those packets includes a Hop-by-Hop Options header, then they

all must be originated with the same Hop-by-Hop Options header

contents (excluding the Next Header field of the Hop-by-Hop Options

header). If any of those packets includes a Routing header, then

they all must be originated with the same contents in all extension

headers up to and including the Routing header (excluding the Next

Header field in the Routing header). The routers or destinations are

permitted, but not required, to verify that these conditions are

satisfied. If a violation is detected, it should be reported to the

source by an ICMP Parameter Problem message, Code 0, pointing to the

high-order octet of the Flow Label field (i.e., offset 1 within the

IPv6 packet).

Routers are free to "opportunistically" set up flow-handling state

for any flow, even when no explicit flow establishment information

has been provided to them via a control protocol, a hop-by-hop

option, or other means. For example, upon receiving a packet from a

particular source with an unknown, non-zero flow label, a router may

process its IPv6 header and any necessary extension headers as if the

flow label were zero. That processing would include determining the

next-hop interface, and possibly other actions, such as updating a

hop-by-hop option, advancing the pointer and addresses in a Routing

header, or deciding on how to queue the packet based on its Priority

field. The router may then choose to "remember" the results of those

processing steps and cache that information, using the source address

plus the flow label as the cache key. Subsequent packets with the

same source address and flow label may then be handled by referring

to the cached information rather than examining all those fields

that, according to the requirements of the previous paragraph, can be

assumed unchanged from the first packet seen in the flow.

Cached flow-handling state that is set up opportunistically, as

discussed in the preceding paragraph, must be discarded no more than

6 seconds after it is established, regardless of whether or not

packets of the same flow continue to arrive. If another packet with

the same source address and flow label arrives after the cached state

has been discarded, the packet undergoes full, normal processing (as

if its flow label were zero), which may result in the re-creation of

cached flow state for that flow.

The lifetime of flow-handling state that is set up explicitly, for

example by a control protocol or a hop-by-hop option, must be

specified as part of the specification of the explicit set-up

mechanism; it may exceed 6 seconds.

A source must not re-use a flow label for a new flow within the

lifetime of any flow-handling state that might have been established

for the prior use of that flow label. Since flow-handling state with

a lifetime of 6 seconds may be established opportunistically for any

flow, the minimum interval between the last packet of one flow and

the first packet of a new flow using the same flow label is 6

seconds. Flow labels used for explicitly set-up flows with longer

flow-state lifetimes must remain unused for those longer lifetimes

before being re-used for new flows.

When a node stops and restarts (e.g., as a result of a "crash"), it

must be careful not to use a flow label that it might have used for

an earlier flow whose lifetime may not have expired yet. This may be

accomplished by recording flow label usage on stable storage so that

it can be remembered across crashes, or by refraining from using any

flow labels until the maximum lifetime of any possible previously

established flows has expired (at least 6 seconds; more if explicit

flow set-up mechanisms with longer lifetimes might have been used).

If the minimum time for rebooting the node is known (often more than

6 seconds), that time can be deducted from the necessary waiting

period before starting to allocate flow labels.

There is no requirement that all, or even most, packets belong to

flows, i.e., carry non-zero flow labels. This observation is placed

here to remind protocol designers and implementors not to assume

otherwise. For example, it would be unwise to design a router whose

performance would be adequate only if most packets belonged to flows,

or to design a header compression scheme that only worked on packets

that belonged to flows.

7. Priority

The 4-bit Priority field in the IPv6 header enables a source to

identify the desired delivery priority of its packets, relative to

other packets from the same source. The Priority values are divided

into two ranges: Values 0 through 7 are used to specify the priority

of traffic for which the source is providing congestion control,

i.e., traffic that "backs off" in response to congestion, such as TCP

traffic. Values 8 through 15 are used to specify the priority of

traffic that does not back off in response to congestion, e.g.,

"real-time" packets being sent at a constant rate.

For congestion-controlled traffic, the following Priority values are

recommended for particular application categories:

0 - uncharacterized traffic

1 - "filler" traffic (e.g., netnews)

2 - unattended data transfer (e.g., email)

3 - (reserved)

4 - attended bulk transfer (e.g., FTP, NFS)

5 - (reserved)

6 - interactive traffic (e.g., telnet, X)

7 - internet control traffic (e.g., routing protocols, SNMP)

For non-congestion-controlled traffic, the lowest Priority value (8)

should be used for those packets that the sender is most willing to

have discarded under conditions of congestion (e.g., high-fidelity

video traffic), and the highest value (15) should be used for those

packets that the sender is least willing to have discarded (e.g.,

low-fidelity audio traffic). There is no relative ordering implied

between the congestion-controlled priorities and the non-congestion-

controlled priorities.

8. Upper-Layer Protocol Issues

8.1 Upper-Layer Checksums

Any transport or other upper-layer protocol that includes the

addresses from the IP header in its checksum computation must be

modified for use over IPv6, to include the 128-bit IPv6 addresses

instead of 32-bit IPv4 addresses. In particular, the following

illustration shows the TCP and UDP "pseudo-header" for IPv6:

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

+ +

+ Source Address +

+ +

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

+ +

+ Destination Address +

+ +

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

Payload Length

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

zero Next Header

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

o If the packet contains a Routing header, the Destination

Address used in the pseudo-header is that of the final

destination. At the originating node, that address will be in

the last element of the Routing header; at the recipient(s),

that address will be in the Destination Address field of the

IPv6 header.

o The Next Header value in the pseudo-header identifies the

upper-layer protocol (e.g., 6 for TCP, or 17 for UDP). It will

differ from the Next Header value in the IPv6 header if there

are extension headers between the IPv6 header and the upper-

layer header.

o The Payload Length used in the pseudo-header is the length of

the upper-layer packet, including the upper-layer header. It

will be less than the Payload Length in the IPv6 header (or in

the Jumbo Payload option) if there are extension headers

between the IPv6 header and the upper-layer header.

o Unlike IPv4, when UDP packets are originated by an IPv6 node,

the UDP checksum is not optional. That is, whenever

originating a UDP packet, an IPv6 node must compute a UDP

checksum over the packet and the pseudo-header, and, if that

computation yields a result of zero, it must be changed to hex

FFFF for placement in the UDP header. IPv6 receivers must

discard UDP packets containing a zero checksum, and should log

the error.

The IPv6 version of ICMP [RFC-1885] includes the above pseudo-header

in its checksum computation; this is a change from the IPv4 version

of ICMP, which does not include a pseudo-header in its checksum. The

reason for the change is to protect ICMP from misdelivery or

corruption of those fields of the IPv6 header on which it depends,

which, unlike IPv4, are not covered by an internet-layer checksum.

The Next Header field in the pseudo-header for ICMP contains the

value 58, which identifies the IPv6 version of ICMP.

8.2 Maximum Packet Lifetime

Unlike IPv4, IPv6 nodes are not required to enforce maximum packet

lifetime. That is the reason the IPv4 "Time to Live" field was

renamed "Hop Limit" in IPv6. In practice, very few, if any, IPv4

implementations conform to the requirement that they limit packet

lifetime, so this is not a change in practice. Any upper-layer

protocol that relies on the internet layer (whether IPv4 or IPv6) to

limit packet lifetime ought to be upgraded to provide its own

mechanisms for detecting and discarding obsolete packets.

8.3 Maximum Upper-Layer Payload Size

When computing the maximum payload size available for upper-layer

data, an upper-layer protocol must take into account the larger size

of the IPv6 header relative to the IPv4 header. For example, in

IPv4, TCP's MSS option is computed as the maximum packet size (a

default value or a value learned through Path MTU Discovery) minus 40

octets (20 octets for the minimum-length IPv4 header and 20 octets

for the minimum-length TCP header). When using TCP over IPv6, the

MSS must be computed as the maximum packet size minus 60 octets,

because the minimum-length IPv6 header (i.e., an IPv6 header with no

extension headers) is 20 octets longer than a minimum-length IPv4

header.

Appendix A. Formatting Guidelines for Options

This appendix gives some advice on how to lay out the fields when

designing new options to be used in the Hop-by-Hop Options header or

the Destination Options header, as described in section 4.2. These

guidelines are based on the following assumptions:

o One desirable feature is that any multi-octet fields within the

Option Data area of an option be aligned on their natural

boundaries, i.e., fields of width n octets should be placed at

an integer multiple of n octets from the start of the Hop-by-

Hop or Destination Options header, for n = 1, 2, 4, or 8.

o Another desirable feature is that the Hop-by-Hop or Destination

Options header take up as little space as possible, subject to

the requirement that the header be an integer multiple of 8

octets long.

o It may be assumed that, when either of the option-bearing

headers are present, they carry a very small number of options,

usually only one.

These assumptions suggest the following approach to laying out the

fields of an option: order the fields from smallest to largest, with

no interior padding, then derive the alignment requirement for the

entire option based on the alignment requirement of the largest field

(up to a maximum alignment of 8 octets). This approach is

illustrated in the following examples:

Example 1

If an option X required two data fields, one of length 8 octets and

one of length 4 octets, it would be laid out as follows:

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

Option Type=X Opt Data Len=12

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

4-octet field

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

+ 8-octet field +

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

Its alignment requirement is 8n+2, to ensure that the 8-octet field

starts at a multiple-of-8 offset from the start of the enclosing

header. A complete Hop-by-Hop or Destination Options header

containing this one option would look as follows:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len=1 Option Type=X Opt Data Len=12

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

4-octet field

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

+ 8-octet field +

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

Example 2

If an option Y required three data fields, one of length 4 octets,

one of length 2 octets, and one of length 1 octet, it would be laid

out as follows:

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

Option Type=Y

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

Opt Data Len=7 1-octet field 2-octet field

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

4-octet field

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

Its alignment requirement is 4n+3, to ensure that the 4-octet field

starts at a multiple-of-4 offset from the start of the enclosing

header. A complete Hop-by-Hop or Destination Options header

containing this one option would look as follows:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len=1 Pad1 Option=0 Option Type=Y

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

Opt Data Len=7 1-octet field 2-octet field

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

4-octet field

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

PadN Option=1 Opt Data Len=2 0 0

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

Example 3

A Hop-by-Hop or Destination Options header containing both options X

and Y from Examples 1 and 2 would have one of the two following

formats, depending on which option appeared first:

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len=3 Option Type=X Opt Data Len=12

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

4-octet field

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

+ 8-octet field +

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

PadN Option=1 Opt Data Len=1 0 Option Type=Y

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

Opt Data Len=7 1-octet field 2-octet field

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

4-octet field

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

PadN Option=1 Opt Data Len=2 0 0

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

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

Next Header Hdr Ext Len=3 Pad1 Option=0 Option Type=Y

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

Opt Data Len=7 1-octet field 2-octet field

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

4-octet field

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

PadN Option=1 Opt Data Len=4 0 0

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

0 0 Option Type=X Opt Data Len=12

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

4-octet field

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

+ 8-octet field +

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

Security Considerations

This document specifies that the IP Authentication Header [RFC-1826]

and the IP Encapsulating Security Payload [RFC-1827] be used with

IPv6, in conformance with the Security Architecture for the Internet

Protocol [RFC-1825].

Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the many helpful suggestions of

the members of the IPng working group, the End-to-End Protocols

research group, and the Internet Community At Large.

Authors' Addresses

Stephen E. Deering Robert M. Hinden

Xerox Palo Alto Research Center Ipsilon Networks, Inc.

3333 Coyote Hill Road 2191 E. Bayshore Road, Suite 100

Palo Alto, CA 94304 Palo Alto, CA 94303

USA USA

Phone: +1 415 812 4839 Phone: +1 415 846 4604

Fax: +1 415 812 4471 Fax: +1 415 855 1414

EMail: deering@parc.xerox.com EMail: hinden@ipsilon.com

References

[RFC-1825] Atkinson, R., "Security Architecture for the Internet

Protocol", RFC1825, Naval Research Laboratory, August

1995.

[RFC-1826] Atkinson, R., "IP Authentication Header", RFC1826,

Naval Research Laboratory, August 1995.

[RFC-1827] Atkinson, R., "IP Encapsulating Security Protocol

(ESP)", RFC1827, Naval Research Laboratory, August

1995.

[RFC-1885] Conta, A., and S. Deering, "Internet Control Message

Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6

(IPv6) Specification", RFC1885, Digital Equipment

Corporation, Xerox PARC, December 1995.

[RFC-1884] Hinden, R., and S. Deering, Editors, "IP Version 6

Addressing Architecture", RFC1884, Ipsilon Networks,

Xerox PARC, December 1995.

[RFC-1191] Mogul, J., and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery", RFC

1191, DECWRL, Stanford University, November 1990.

[RFC-791] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC791,

USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.

[RFC-1700] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2,

RFC1700, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October

1994.

[RFC-1661] Simpson, W., Editor, "The Point-to-Point Protocol

(PPP)", STD 51, RFC1661, Daydreamer, July 1994.

 
 
 
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