Network Working Group                                Smoot Carl-Mitchell
Request for Comments: 1027                     Texas Internet Consulting
                                                     John S. Quarterman
                                              Texas Internet Consulting
                                                           October 1987


          Using ARP to Implement Transparent Subnet Gateways


Status of this Memo

   This RFC describes the use of the Ethernet Address Resolution
   Protocol (ARP) by subnet gateways to permit hosts on the connected
   subnets to communicate without being aware of the existence of
   subnets, using the technique of "Proxy ARP" [6].  It is based on
   RFC-950 [1], RFC-922 [2], and RFC-826 [3] and is a restricted subset
   of the mechanism of RFC-925 [4].  Distribution of this memo is
   unlimited.

Acknowledgment

   The work described in this memo was performed while the authors were
   employed by the Computer Sciences Department of the University of
   Texas at Austin.

Introduction

   The purpose of this memo is to describe in detail the implementation
   of transparent subnet ARP gateways using the technique of Proxy ARP.
   The intent is to document this widely used technique.

1.  Motivation

   The Ethernet at the University of Texas at Austin is a large
   installation connecting over ten buildings.  It currently has more
   than one hundred hosts connected to it [5].  The size of the
   Ethernet and the amount of traffic it handles prohibit tying it
   together by use of repeaters.  The use of subnets provided an
   attractive alternative for separating the network into smaller
   distinct units.

   This is exactly the situation for which Internet subnets as
   described in RFC-950 are intended.  Unfortunately, many vendors had
   not yet implemented subnets, and it was not practical to modify the
   more than half a dozen different operating systems running on hosts
   on the local networks.




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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


   Therefore a method for hiding the existence of subnets from hosts
   was highly desirable.  Since all the local area networks supported
   ARP, an ARP-based method (commonly known as "Proxy ARP" or the "ARP
   hack") was chosen.  In this memo, whenever the term "subnet" occurs
   the "RFC-950 subnet method" is assumed.

2.  Design

2.1  Basic method

   On a network that supports ARP, when host A (the source) broadcasts
   an ARP request for the network address corresponding to the IP
   address of host B (the target), host B will recognize the IP address
   as its own and will send a point-to-point ARP reply.  Host A keeps
   the IP-to-network-address mapping found in the reply in a local
   cache and uses it for later communication with host B.

   If hosts A and B are on different physical networks, host B will not
   receive the ARP broadcast request from host A and cannot respond to
   it.  However, if the physical network of host A is connected by a
   gateway to the physical network of host B, the gateway will see the
   ARP request from host A.  Assuming that subnet numbers are made to
   correspond to physical networks, the gateway can also tell that the
   request is for a host that is on a different physical network from
   the requesting host.  The gateway can then respond for host B,
   saying that the network address for host B is that of the gateway
   itself.  Host A will see this reply, cache it, and send future IP
   packets for host B to the gateway.  The gateway will forward such
   packets to host B by the usual IP routing mechanisms.  The gateway
   is acting as an agent for host B, which is why this technique is
   called "Proxy ARP"; we will refer to this as a transparent subnet
   gateway or ARP subnet gateway.

   When host B replies to traffic from host A, the same algorithm
   happens in reverse: the gateway connected to the network of host B
   answers the request for the network address of host A, and host B
   then sends IP packets for host A to gateway.  The physical networks
   of host A and B need not be connected to the same gateway. All that
   is necessary is that the networks be reachable from the gateway.

   With this approach, all ARP subnet handling is done in the ARP
   subnet gateways.  No changes to the normal ARP protocol or routing
   need to be made to the source and target hosts.  From the host point
   of view, there are no subnets, and their physical networks are
   simply one big IP network.  If a host has an implementation of
   subnets, its network masks must be set to cover only the IP network
   number, excluding the subnet bits, for the system to work properly.




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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


2.2  Routing

   As part of the implementation of subnets, it is expected that the
   elements of routing tables will include network numbers including
   both the IP network number and the subnet bits, as specified by the
   subnet mask, where appropriate.  When an ARP request is seen, the
   ARP subnet gateway can determine whether it knows a route to the
   target host by looking in the ordinary routing table.  If attempts
   to reach foreign IP networks are eliminated early (see Sanity Checks
   below), only a request for an address on the local IP network will
   reach this point.  We will assume that the same network mask applies
   to every subnet of the same IP network.  The network mask of the
   network interface on which the ARP request arrived can then be
   applied to the target IP address to produce the network part to be
   looked up in the routing table.

   In 4.3BSD (and probably in other operating systems), a default route
   is possible.  This default route specifies an address to forward a
   packet to when no other route is found.  The default route must not
   be used when checking for a route to the target host of an ARP
   request.  If the default route were used, the check would always
   succeed.  But the host specified by the default route is unlikely to
   know about subnet routing (since it is usually an Internet gateway),
   and thus packets sent to it will probably be lost.  This special
   case in the routing lookup method is the only implementation change
   needed to the routing mechanism.

   If the network interfaces on which the request was received and
   through which the route to the target passes are the same, the
   gateway must not reply.  In this case, either the target host is on
   the same physical network as the gateway (and thus the host should
   reply for itself), or this gateway is not on the most direct path to
   the desired network, i.e., there is another gateway on the same
   physical network that is on a more direct path and the other gateway
   should respond.

   RFC-925 [4] describes a general mechanism for dynamic subnet routing
   using Proxy ARP and routing caches in the gateways.  Our technique
   is restricted subset of RFC-925, in which we use static subnet
   routes which are determined administratively.  As a result, our
   transparent subnet gateways require no new network routing table
   entries nor ARP cache entries; the only tables which are affected
   are the ARP caches in the host.

   In our implementation, routing loops are prevented by proper
   administration of the subnet routing tables in the gateways.





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2.3  Multiple gateways

   The simplest subnet organization to administer is a tree structure,
   which cannot have loops.  However, it may be desirable for
   reliability or traffic accommodation to have more than one gateway
   (or path) between two physical networks.  ARP subnet gateways may be
   used in such a situation:  a requesting host will use the first ARP
   response it receives, even if more than one gateway supplies one.
   This may even provide a rudimentary load balancing service, since if
   two gateways are otherwise similar, the one most lightly loaded is
   the more likely to reply first.

   More complex mechanisms could be built in the form of gateway-to-
   gateway protocols, and will no doubt become necessary in networks
   with large numbers of subnets and gateways, in the same way that
   gateway-to-gateway protocols are generally necessary among IP
   gateways.

2.4  Sanity checks

   Care must be taken by the network and gateway administrators to keep
   the network masks the same on all the subnet gateway machines.  The
   most common error is to set the network mask on a host without a
   subnet implementation to include the subnet number.  This causes the
   host to fail to attempt to send packets to hosts not on its local
   subnet.  Adjusting its routing tables will not help, since it will
   not know how to route to subnets.

   If the IP networks of the source and target hosts of an ARP request
   are different, an ARP subnet gateway implementation should not
   reply.  This is to prevent the ARP subnet gateway from being used to
   reach foreign IP networks and thus possibly bypass security checks
   provided by IP gateways.

   An ARP subnet gateway implementation must not reply if the physical
   networks of the source and target of an ARP request are the same.
   In this case, either the target host is presumably either on the
   same physical network as the source host and can answer for itself,
   or the target host lies in the same direction from the gateway as
   does the source host, and an ARP reply from the would cause a loop.

   An ARP request for a broadcast address must elicit no reply,
   regardless of the source address or physical networks involved.  If
   the gateway were to respond with an ARP reply in this situation, it
   would be inviting the original source to send actual traffic to a
   broadcast address.  This could result in the "Chernobyl effect"
   wherein every host on the network replies to such traffic, causing
   network "meltdown".



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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


2.5  Multiple logical subnets per physical network

   The most straightforward way to assign subnet numbers is one to one
   with physical networks.  There are, however, circumstances in which
   multiple logical subnets per physical network are quite useful.  One
   of the more common is when it is planned that a group of
   workstations will be put on their own physical network but the
   gateway to the new physical network needs to be tested first.  (A
   repeater might be used when the gateway was not usable).  If a rule
   of one subnet per physical network is enforced, the addresses of the
   workstations must be changed every time the gateway is tested.  If
   they may be assigned addresses using a new subnet number while they
   are still on the old physical network, no further address changes
   are needed.

   To permit multiple subnets per physical network, an ARP subnet
   gateway must use the physical network interface, not the subnet
   number to determine when to reply to an ARP request.  That is, it
   should send a proxy ARP reply only when the source network interface
   differs from the target network interface. In addition, appropriate
   routing table entries for these "phantom" subnets must be added to
   the subnet gateway routing tables.

2.6  Broadcast addresses

   There are two kinds of IP broadcast addresses:  main IP directed
   network broadcast and subnet broadcast.  An IP network broadcast
   address consists of the network number plus a well-known value in
   the rest (local part) of the address.  An IP subnet broadcast is
   similar, except both the IP network number and the subnet number
   bits are included.  RFC-922 standardized the use of all ones in the
   local part, but there were two conventions in use before that:  all
   ones and all zeros.  For example, 4.2BSD used all zeros, and 4.3BSD
   uses all ones.  Thus there are four kinds of IP directed broadcast
   addresses still currently in use on many networks.

   With transparent subnetting a subnet gateway must not issue an IP
   broadcast using the subnet broadcast address, e.g., 128.83.138.255.
   Hosts on the physical network that receive the broadcast will not
   understand such an address as a broadcast address, since they will
   not have subnets enabled (or will not have subnet implementations).
   In fact, 4.2BSD hosts (with or without subnet implementations) will
   instead treat an address with all ones in the local part as a
   specific host address and try to forward the packet.  Since there is
   no such target host, there will be no entry in the forwarding host's
   ARP tables and it will generate an ARP request for the target host.
   This presents the scenario (actually observed) of a 4.3BSD gateway
   running the rwho program, which broadcasts a packet once a minute,



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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


   causing every 4.2BSD host on the local physical network to generate
   an ARP request at the same time.  The same problem occurs with any
   subnet broadcast address, whether the local part is all zeros or all
   ones.

   Thus a subnet gateway in a network with hosts that do not understand
   subnets must take care not to use subnet broadcast addresses:
   instead it must use the IP network directed broadcast address
   instead.

   Finally, since many hosts running out-of-date software will still be
   using (and expecting) old-style all-zeros IP network broadcast
   addresses, the gateway must send its broadcast addresses out in that
   form, e.g., 128.83.0.0.  It might be safe to also send a duplicate
   packet with all ones in the local part, e.g., 128.83.255.255.  It is
   not clear whether the local network broadcast address of all ones,
   255.255.255.255, will cause ill effects, but it is very likely that
   it will not be recognized by many hosts that are running older
   software.

3.  Implementation in 4.3BSD

   Subnet gateways using ARP have been implemented by a number of
   different people.  The particular method described in this memo was
   first implemented in 4.2BSD on top of retrofitted beta-test 4.3BSD
   subnet code, and has since been reimplemented as an add-on to the
   distributed 4.3BSD sources.  The latter implementation is described
   here.

   Most of the new kernel code for the subnet ARP gatewaying function
   is in the generic Ethernet interface module, netinet/if_ether.c.  It
   consists of eight lines in in_arpinput that perform a couple of
   quick checks (to ensure that the facility is enabled on the source
   interface and that the source and target addresses are on different
   subnets), call a new routine, if_subarp, for further checks, and
   then build the ARP response if all checks succeed.  This code is
   only reached when an ARP request is received, and does nothing if
   the facility is not enabled on the source interface.  Thus
   performance of the gateway should be very little degraded by this
   addition.  (Performance of the requesting host should also be
   similar to the latter case, as the only difference there is between
   efficiency of the ARP cache and of the routing tables).

   The routine if_subarp (about sixty lines) ensures that the source
   and target addresses are on the same IP network and that the target
   address is none of the four kinds of directed broadcast address.  It
   then attempts to find a path to the target either by finding a
   network interface with the desired subnet or by looking in the



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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


   routing tables.  Even if a network interface is found that leads to
   the target, for a reply to be sent the ARP gateway must be enabled
   on that interface and the target and source interfaces must be
   different.

   The file netinet/route.c has a static routing entry structure
   definition added, and modifications of about eight lines are made to
   the main routing table lookup routine, rtalloc, to recognize a
   pointer to that structure (when passed by if_subarp) as a direction
   to not use the default route in this routing check.  The processor
   priority level (critical section protection) around the inner
   routing lookup check is changed to a higher value, as the routine
   may now be called from network interface interrupts as well as from
   the internal software interrupts that drive processing of IP and
   other high level protocols.  This raised processor priority could
   conceivably slow the whole kernel somewhat if there are many routing
   checks, but since the critical section is fast, the effect should be
   small.

   A key kernel modification is about fifteen lines added to the
   routine ip_output in netinet/ip_output.c.  It changes subnet
   broadcast addresses in packets originating at the gateway to IP
   network broadcast addresses so that hosts without subnet code (or
   with their network masks set to ignore subnets) will recognize them
   as broadcast addresses.  This section of code is only used if the
   ARP gateway is turned on for the outgoing interface, and only
   affects subnet broadcast addresses.

   A new routine, in_mainnetof, of about fifteen lines, is added to
   netinet/in.c to return the IP network number (without subnet number)
   from an IP address.  It is called from if_subarp and ip_output.

   Two kernel parameter files have one line added to each:  net/if.h
   has a definition of a bit in the network interface structure to
   indicate whether subnet ARP gateways are enabled, and netinet/in.h
   refers to in_mainnetof.

   In addition to these approximately 110 lines of kernel source
   additions, there is one user-level modification.  The source to the
   command ifconfig, which is used to set addresses and network masks
   of network interfaces, has four lines added to allow it to turn the
   subnet ARP gateway facility on or off, for each interface.  This is
   documented in eleven new lines in the manual entry for that command.








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RFC 1027          ARP and Transparent Subnet Gateways       October 1987


4.  Availability

   The 4.3BSD implementation is currently available by anonymous FTP
   (login anonymous, password guest) from sally.utexas.edu as
   pub/subarp, which is a 4.3BSD "diff -c" listing from the 4.3BSD
   sources that were distributed in September 1986.

   This implementation was not included in the 4.3BSD distribution
   proper because U.C. Berkeley CSRG thought that that would reduce the
   incentive for vendors to implement subnets per RFC-950.  The authors
   concur.  Nonetheless, there are circumstances in which the use of
   transparent subnet ARP gateways is indispensable.

References

  1.  Mogul, J., and J. Postel, "Internet Standard Subnetting
      Procedure", RFC-950, Stanford University and USC/Information
      Sciences Institute, August 1985.

  2.  Mogul, J., "Broadcasting Internet Datagrams in the Presence of
      Subnets", RFC-922, Computer Science Department, Stanford
      University, October 1984.

  3.  Plummer, D., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol or
      Converting Network Protocol Addresses to 48-bit Ethernet
      Addresses for Transmission on Ethernet Hardware", RFC-826,
      Symbolics, November 1982.

  4.  Postel, J., "Multi-LAN Address Resolution", RFC-925,
      USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1984.

  5.  Carl-Mitchell, S., and J. S. Quarterman, "Nameservers in a Campus
      Domain", SIGCUE Outlook, Vol.19, No.1/2, pp.78-88, ACM SIG
      Computer Uses in Education, P.O. Box 64145, Baltimore, MD 21264,
      Spring/Summer 1986.

  6.  Braden, R., and J. Postel, "Requirements for Internet Gateways",
      RFC-1009, USC/Information Sciences Institute, June 1987.













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