Network Working Group                                         W. Simpson
Request for Comments: 1688                                    Daydreamer
Category: Informational                                      August 1994


                     IPng Mobility Considerations

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  This document was submitted to the IPng Area in response to RFC 1550.
  Publication of this document does not imply acceptance by the IPng
  Area of any ideas expressed within.  Comments should be submitted to
  the [email protected] mailing list.  This RFC specifies
  criteria related to mobility for consideration in design and
  selection of the Next Generation of IP.

Table of Contents

  1.     Introduction ..........................................    2
  2.     Addressing ............................................    2
     2.1       Ownership .......................................    2
     2.2       Topology ........................................    3
     2.3       Manufacturer ....................................    3
     2.4       Numbering .......................................    3
     2.5       Configuration ...................................    3
  3.     Communication .........................................    3
     3.1       Topological Changes .............................    4
     3.2       Routing Updates .................................    4
     3.3       Path Optimization ...............................    5
     3.4       At Home .........................................    5
     3.5       Away From Home ..................................    5
  4.     Security ..............................................    5
     4.1       Authentication ..................................    5
     4.2       Anonymity .......................................    6
     4.3       Location Privacy ................................    6
     4.4       Content Privacy .................................    6
  5.     Bandwidth .............................................    6
     5.1       Administrative Messages .........................    7
     5.2       Response Time ...................................    7
     5.3       Header Prediction ...............................    8
  6.     Processing ............................................    8
     6.1       Fixed Location ..................................    8



Simpson                                                         [Page 1]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


     6.2       Simple Fields ...................................    9
     6.3       Simple Tests ....................................    9
     6.4       Type, Length, Value .............................    9
  Acknowledgements .............................................    9
  Security Considerations ......................................    9
  Author's Address .............................................    9

1.  Introduction

  Current versions of the Internet Protocol make an implicit assumption
  that a node's point of attachment remains fixed.  Datagrams are sent
  to a node based on the location information contained in the node's
  IP address.

  If a node moves while keeping its IP address unchanged, its IP
  network number will not reflect its new point of attachment.  The
  routing protocols will not be able to route datagrams to it
  correctly.

  A number of considerations arise for routing these datagrams to a
  Mobile Node.

2.  Addressing

  Each Mobile Node must have at least one Home-Address which identifies
  it to other nodes.  This Home-Address must be globally unique.

2.1.  Ownership

  The presence of ownership information in the Home-Address would be
  beneficial.  A Mobile Node will be assigned a Home-Address by the
  organization that owns the machine, and will be able to use that
  Home-Address regardless of the current point of attachment.

  The ownership information must be organized in such a fashion to
  facilitate "inverse" lookup in the Domain Name Service, and other
  future services.

  Ownership information could be used by other nodes to ascertain the
  current topological location of the Mobile Node.

  Ownership information could also be used for generation of accounting
  records.








Simpson                                                         [Page 2]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


2.2.  Topology

  There is no requirement that the Home-Address contain topological
  information.  Indeed, by the very nature of mobility, any such
  topological information is irrelevant.

  Topological information in the Home-Address must not hinder mobility,
  whether by prevention of relocation, or by wasting bandwidth or
  processing efficiency.

2.3.  Manufacturer

  There is no requirement that the Home-Address contain manufacturer
  information.

  Manufacturer information in the Home-Address must not hinder
  mobility, whether by prevention of relocation, or by wasting
  bandwidth or processing efficiency.

2.4.  Numbering

  The number of mobile nodes is expected to be constrained by the
  population of users within the lifetime of the IPng protocol.  The
  maximum world-wide sustainable population is estimated as 16e9,
  although during the lifetime of IPng the population is not expected
  to exceed 8e9.

  Each user is assumed to be mobile, and to have a maximum combined
  personal mobile and home network(s) on the order of 4e3 nodes.

  The expectation is that only 46 bits will be needed to densely number
  all mobile and home nodes.

  The size of addressing elements is also constrained by bandwidth
  efficiency and processing efficiency, as described later.

2.5.  Configuration

  Since the typical user would be unlikely to be aware of or willing
  and able to maintain 4e3 nodes, the assignment of Home-Addresses must
  be automatically configurable.  Registration of the nodes must be
  dynamic and transparent to the user, both at home and away from home.

3.  Communication

  A Mobile Node must continue to be capable of communicating directly
  with other nodes which do not implement mobility functions.




Simpson                                                         [Page 3]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


  No protocol enhancements are required in hosts or routers that are
  not serving any of the mobility functions.  Similarly, no additional
  protocols are needed by a router (that is not acting as a Home Agent
  or a Foreign Agent) to route datagrams to or from a Mobile Node.

  A Mobile Node using its Home-Address must be able to communicate with
  other nodes after having been disconnected from the Internet, and
  then reconnected at a different point of attachment.

  A Mobile Node using its Home-Address must be able to communicate with
  other nodes while roaming between different points of attachment,
  without loss of transport connections.

3.1.  Topological Changes

  In order that transport connections be maintained while roaming,
  topological changes must not affect transport connections.

  For correspondent nodes which do not implement mobility functions,
  topological changes should not be communicated to the correspondent.

  For correspondent nodes which implement mobility functions, the
  correspondent should be capable of determining topological changes.

  Topological change information must be capable of insertion and
  removal by routers in the datagram path, as well as by the
  correspondent and Mobile Node.

3.2.  Routing Updates

  Mobile Nodes are expected to be able to change their point of
  attachment no more frequently than once per second.

  Changes in topology which occur more frequently must be handled at
  the link layer transparently to the internetwork layer.  It is
  further noted that engineering margins may require the link layer to
  handle all changes at a frequency in the neighborhood of 10 seconds.

  Changes in topology which occur less frequently must be immediately
  reflected in the mobility updates.  This may preclude the use of the
  Domain Name Service as the repository of mobility topological
  information.

  It must be noted that global routing updates do not operate at this
  frequency.  As old topological information may be obsoleted faster
  than global routing updates, access to the repository of mobility
  topological information must be independent of prior topological
  information.



Simpson                                                         [Page 4]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


  The mobility specific repository should use ownership information in
  the Home-Address for access to the repository.

3.3.  Path Optimization

  Optimization of the path from a correspondent to a mobile node is not
  required.  However, such optimization is desirable.

  For correspondent nodes which implement mobility functions, the
  correspondent should be capable of determining the optimal path.

  The optimization mechanism is also constrained by security, bandwidth
  efficiency and processing efficiency, as described later.

3.4.  At Home

  Mobile Nodes do not require special "virtual" home network addresses.
  The assumption that extra addresses or multiple routers are available
  is unwarranted in small networks.

  Mobile Nodes must operate without special assistance from routers in
  order to communicate directly with other nodes on the home subnetwork
  link.

3.5.  Away From Home

  When a router is present, and the correspondent does not implement
  mobility functions, the router must be capable of redirecting the
  correspondent to communicate directly with the Mobile Node.

  When no router is present, Mobile Nodes must be capable of
  communicating directly with other nodes on the same link.

  Mobility must not create an environment which is less secure than the
  current Internet.

  Changes in topology must not affect internode security mechanisms.

4.  Security

4.1.  Authentication

  Mobility registration messages must be authenticated between the home
  topological repository and Mobile Node.

  When the correspondent implements mobility functions, redirection or
  path optimization must be authenticated between the correspondent and
  Mobile Node.



Simpson                                                         [Page 5]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


4.2.  Anonymity

  The capability to attach to a foreign administrative domain without
  the awareness of the foreign administration is not prohibited.
  However, any mobility mechanism must provide the ability to prevent
  such attachment.

4.3.  Location Privacy

  The capability to attach to a foreign administrative domain without
  the awareness of correspondents is not prohibited.  However, any
  mobility mechanism must provide the ability for the home
  administration to trace the current path to the point of attachment.

4.4.  Content Privacy

  Security mechanisms which provide content privacy must not obscure or
  have a dependency on the topological location of Mobile Nodes.

5.  Bandwidth

  Mobility must operate in the current link environment, and must not
  be dependent on bandwidth improvements.  The Mobile Node's directly
  attached link is likely to be bandwidth limited.

  In particular, radio frequency spectrum is already a scarce
  commodity.  Higher bandwidth links are likely to continue to be
  scarce in the mobile environment.

  Current applications of mobility using radio links include HF links
  which are subject to serious fading and noise constraints, VHF and
  UHF line of sight radio between ships or field sites, and UHF
  Satellite Communications links.

  The HF radio bandwidth is fixed at 1200 or 2400 bps by international
  treaty, statute, and custom, and is not likely to change.

  The European standard for cellular radio is 2400 bps GSM.

  The most prevalent deployed analog cellular and land-line modulation
  used by mobile nodes is 2400 bps.

  Current digital cellular deployment is 19,200 bps CDPD shared among
  many users.  At early installations, under light loads, effective FTP
  throughput has been observed as low as 200 bps.

  Future digital cellular deployment is 9,600 and 14,400 bps CDMA,
  which is shared between voice and data on a per user basis.



Simpson                                                         [Page 6]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


  Effective FTP throughput has been measured as low as 7,200 bps.

  Future Personal Communications Services (PCS) will also have
  relatively little bandwidth.  In industrialized nations, the
  bandwidth available to each user is constrained by the density of
  deployment, and is commensurate with planned digital cellular
  deployment.

  It appears likely that satellite-based PCS will be widely deployed
  for basic telephony communications in many newly-industrialized and
  lesser-developed countries.  There is already significant PCS
  interest in East and SouthEast Asia, India, and South America.

  Van Jacobson header prediction is widely used, and essential to
  making the use of such links viable.

5.1.  Administrative Messages

  The number of administrative mobility messages sent or received by
  the Mobile Node must be limited to as few as possible.  In order to
  meet the frequency requirement of changing point of attachment once
  per second, registration of changes must not require more than a
  single request and reply.

  The size of administrative mobility messages must be kept as short as
  possible.  In order to meet the frequency requirement of changing
  point of attachment once per second, the registration messages must
  not total more than 120 bytes for a complete transaction, including
  link and internet headers.

5.2.  Response Time

  For most mobile links in current use, the typical TCP/IPv4 datagram
  overhead of 40 bytes is too large to maintain an acceptable typing
  response of 200 milliseconds round trip time.

  Therefore, the criteria for IPng mobility is that the response time
  not be perceptably worse than IPv4.

  This allows no more than 6 bytes of additional overhead per datagram
  to be added by IPng.

     This was a primary concern in the design of mobility forwarding
     headers.  Larger headers were rejected outright, and negotiation
     is provided for smaller headers than the default method.
     Topological headers are removed by the Foreign Agent prior to
     datagram transmission over the slower link to the Mobile Node,
     which also aids header prediction, as described below.



Simpson                                                         [Page 7]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


5.3.  Header Prediction

  Header prediction can be useful in reducing bandwidth usage on
  multiple related datagrams.  It requires a point-to-point peer
  relationship between nodes, so that a header history can be
  maintained between the peers.

  Header prediction is less effective in mobile environments, as the
  header history is lost each time a Mobile Node changes its point of
  attachment.  The new Foreign Agent will not have the same history as
  the previous Agent.

  In order for header prediction to operate successfully, changing
  topological information must be removed from datagram overhead prior
  to transmission of the datagram on any final hop's directly attached
  link.  This applies to both the Mobile Node peering with a Foreign
  Agent, and also the final link to a Correspondent.  Otherwise, header
  prediction cannot be relied upon to improve bandwidth utilization on
  low-speed Mobile and Correspondent links.

  Since the changing topological information cannot be removed in the
  forwarding path of the datagram, header prediction will also be
  affected at any other pair of routers in the datagram path.  Each
  time that a Mobile Node moves, the topological portion of the header
  will change, and header history used at those routers will be
  updated.  Unless topological information is limited to as few headers
  as possible, this may render header prediction ineffective as more
  Mobile Nodes are deployed.

6.  Processing

  Mobility must operate in the current processor environment, and must
  not be dependent on hardware improvements.

  Common hardware implementations of Mobile Nodes include lower speed
  processors, and highly integrated components.  These are not readily
  upgradable.

  The most prevalent mobile platform is a low speed i86, i286 or i386.

  The most common ASIC processor is a low speed i186.

6.1.  Fixed Location

  The processing limitations require that datagram header fields which
  are frequently examined by Mobile Nodes, or used for datagram
  forwarding to or from Mobile Nodes, are in a fixed location and do
  not require lengths and offsets.



Simpson                                                         [Page 8]

RFC 1688                     IPng Mobility                   August 1994


     Varied number of fields was explicitly rejected in the design of
     mobility registration and forwarding headers.

6.2.  Simple Fields

  The processing limitations require that datagram header fields which
  are frequently examined by Mobile Nodes, or used for datagram
  forwarding to or from Mobile Nodes, are simple and fixed size.

     Varied length of fields was explicitly rejected in the design of
     mobility forwarding headers.

6.3.  Simple Tests

  Because the most prevalent processors are "little-endian", while
  network protocols are in practice "big-endian", the field processing
  must primarily use simple equality tests, rather than variable shifts
  and prefix matches.

6.4.  Type, Length, Value

  Fields which are not frequently examined, whether due to infrequent
  transmission or content that is not relevant in every message, must
  be of the Type, Length, Value format.

Acknowledgements

  This compilation is primarily based on the work in progress of the
  IETF Mobile IP Working Group.

Security Considerations

  Security issues are discussed in section 4.

Author's Address

  Questions about this memo can also be directed to:

  William Allen Simpson
  Daydreamer
  Computer Systems Consulting Services
  1384 Fontaine
  Madison Heights, Michigan  48071

  EMail: [email protected] or
         [email protected]





Simpson                                                         [Page 9]