Network Working Group                                         W. Simpson
Request for Comments: 1973                                    Daydreamer
Category: Standards Track                                      June 1996


                          PPP in Frame Relay



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

  The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) [1] provides a standard method for
  transporting multi-protocol datagrams over point-to-point links.

  This document describes the use of Frame Relay for framing PPP
  encapsulated packets.


Applicability

  This specification is intended for those implementations which desire
  to use facilities which are defined for PPP, such as the Link Control






















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RFC 1973                     PPP in Frame Relay                June 1996


  Protocol, Network-layer Control Protocols, authentication, and
  compression.  These capabilities require a point-to-point
  relationship between peers, and are not designed for multi-point or
  multi-access environments.


Table of Contents


    1.     Introduction ..........................................    1

    2.     Physical Layer Requirements ...........................    1

    3.     The Data Link Layer ...................................    2
       3.1       Frame Format ....................................    2
       3.2       Modification of the Basic Frame .................    3

    4.     In-Band Protocol Demultiplexing .......................    4

    5.     Out-of-Band signaling .................................    5

    6.     Configuration Details .................................    5

    SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS ......................................    7

    REFERENCES ...................................................    7

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .............................................    7

    CHAIR'S ADDRESS ..............................................    8

    AUTHOR'S ADDRESS .............................................    8



















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RFC 1973                     PPP in Frame Relay                June 1996



1.  Introduction

  Frame Relay [2] is a relative newcomer to the serial link community.
  Like X.25, the protocol was designed to provide virtual circuits for
  connections between stations attached to the same Frame Relay
  network.  The improvement over X.25 is that Q.922 is restricted to
  delivery of packets, and dispenses with sequencing and flow control,
  simplifying the service immensely.

  PPP uses ISO 3309 HDLC as a basis for its framing [3].

  When Frame Relay is configured as a point-to-point circuit, PPP can
  use Frame Relay as a framing mechanism, ignoring its other features.
  This is equivalent to the technique used to carry SNAP headers over
  Frame Relay [4].

  At one time, it had been hoped that PPP in HDLC-like frames and Frame
  Relay would co-exist on the same links.  Unfortunately, the Q.922
  method for expanding the address from 1 to 2 to 4 octets is not
  indistinguishable from the ISO 3309 method, due to the structure of
  its Data Link Connection Identifier (DLCI) subfields.  Co-existance
  is precluded.



2.  Physical Layer Requirements

  PPP treats Frame Relay framing as a bit-synchronous link.  The link
  MUST be full-duplex, but MAY be either dedicated (permanent) or
  switched.

  Interface Format

     PPP presents an octet interface to the physical layer.  There is
     no provision for sub-octets to be supplied or accepted.

  Transmission Rate

     PPP does not impose any restrictions regarding transmission rate,
     other than that of the particular Frame Relay interface.

  Control Signals

     Implementation of Frame Relay requires the provision of control
     signals, which indicate when the link has become connected or
     disconnected.  These in turn provide the Up and Down events to the
     LCP state machine.



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     Because PPP does not normally require the use of control signals,
     the failure of such signals MUST NOT affect correct operation of
     PPP.  Implications are discussed in [2].

  Encoding

     The definition of various encodings is the responsibility of the
     DTE/DCE equipment in use, and is outside the scope of this
     specification.

     While PPP will operate without regard to the underlying
     representation of the bit stream, Frame Relay requires NRZ
     encoding.



3.  The Data Link Layer

  This specification uses the principles, terminology, and frame
  structure described in "Multiprotocol Interconnect over Frame Relay"
  [4].

  The purpose of this specification is not to document what is already
  standardized in [4].  Instead, this document attempts to give a
  concise summary and point out specific options and features used by
  PPP.



3.1.  Frame Format

  As described in [4], Q.922 header address and control fields are
  combined with the Network Layer Protocol Identifier (NLPID), which
  identifies the encapsulation which follows.  The fields are
  transmitted from left to right.

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |  Flag (0x7e)  |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |         Q.922 Address         |    Control    |  NLPID(0xcf)  |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |         PPP Protocol          |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  The PPP Protocol field and the following Information and Padding
  fields are described in the Point-to-Point Protocol Encapsulation



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  [1].



3.2.  Modification of the Basic Frame

  The Link Control Protocol can negotiate modifications to the basic
  frame structure.  However, modified frames will always be clearly
  distinguishable from standard frames.

  Address-and-Control-Field-Compression

     Because the Address and Control field values are not constant, and
     are modified as the frame is transported by the network switching
     fabric, Address-and-Control-Field-Compression MUST NOT be
     negotiated.

  Protocol-Field-Compression

     Note that unlike PPP in HDLC-like framing, the Frame Relay framing
     does not align the Information field on a 32-bit boundary.
     Alignment to a 32-bit boundary occurs when the NLPID is removed
     and the Protocol field is compressed to a single octet.  When this
     improves throughput, Protocol-Field-Compression SHOULD be
     negotiated.


























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4.  In-Band Protocol Demultiplexing

  The PPP NLPID (CF hex) and PPP Protocol fields easily distinguish the
  PPP encapsulation from the other NLPID encapsulations described in
  [4].

  The joining of the PPP and NLPID number space has an added advantage,
  in that the LCP Protocol-Reject can be used to indicate NLPIDs that
  are not recognized.  This can eliminate "black-holes" that occur when
  traffic is not supported.

  For those network-layer protocols which have no PPP Protocol
  assignment, or which have not yet been implemented under the PPP
  encapsulation, or which have not been successfully negotiated by a
  PPP NCP, another method of encapsulation defined under [4] SHOULD be
  used.

  Currently, there are no conflicts between NLPID and PPP Protocol
  values.  If a future implementation is configured to send a NLPID
  value which is the same as a compressed Protocol field, that Protocol
  field MUST NOT be sent compressed.

  On reception, the first octet following the header is examined.  If
  the octet is zero, it MUST be assumed that the packet is formatted
  according to [4].

  PPP encapsulated packets always have a non-zero octet following the
  header.  If the octet is not the PPP NLPID value (CF hex), and
  Protocol-Field-Compression is enabled, and the associated NCP has
  been negotiated, then it is expected to be a compressed PPP Protocol
  value.  Otherwise, it MUST be assumed that the packet is formatted
  according to [4].

  The Protocol field value 0x00cf is not allowed (reserved) to avoid
  ambiguity when Protocol-Field-Compression is enabled.  The value MAY
  be treated as a PPP Protocol that indicates that another PPP Protocol
  packet follows.

  Initial LCP packets contain the sequence cf-c0-21 following the
  header.  When a LCP Configure-Request packet is received and
  recognized, the PPP link enters Link Establishment phase.

  The accidental connection of a link to feed a multipoint network (or
  multicast group) SHOULD result in a misconfiguration indication.
  This can be detected by multiple responses to the LCP Configure-
  Request with the same Identifier, coming from different framing
  addresses.  Some implementations might be physically unable to either
  log or report such information.



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  Once PPP has entered the Link Establishment phase, packets with other
  NLPID values MUST NOT be sent, and on receipt such packets MUST be
  silently discarded, until the PPP link enters the Network-Layer
  Protocol phase.

  Once PPP has entered the Network-Layer Protocol phase, and
  successfully negotiated a particular NCP for a PPP Protocol, if a
  frame arrives using another equivalent data encapsulation defined in
  [4], the PPP Link MUST re-enter Link Establishment phase and send a
  new LCP Configure-Request.  This prevents "black-holes" that occur
  when the peer loses state.

  An implementation which requires PPP link configuration, and other
  PPP negotiated features (such as authentication), MAY enter
  Termination phase when configuration fails.  Otherwise, when the
  Configure-Request sender reaches the Max-Configure limit, it MUST
  fall back to send only frames encapsulated according to [4].



5.  Out-of-Band signaling

  There is no generally agreed method of out-of-band signalling.  Until
  such a method is universally available, an implementation MUST use
  In-Band Protocol Demultiplexing for both Permanent and Switched
  Virtual Circuits.



6.  Configuration Details

  The following Configuration Options are recommended:

     Magic Number
     Protocol Field Compression

  The standard LCP configuration defaults apply to Frame Relay links,
  except Maximum-Receive-Unit (MRU).

  To ensure interoperability with existing Frame Relay implementations,
  the initial MRU is 1600 octets [4].  This only affects the minimum
  required buffer space available for receiving packets, not the size
  of packets sent.

  The typical network feeding the link is likely to have a MRU of
  either 1500, or 2048 or greater.  To avoid fragmentation, the
  Maximum-Transmission-Unit (MTU) at the network layer SHOULD NOT
  exceed 1500, unless a peer MRU of 2048 or greater is specifically



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RFC 1973                     PPP in Frame Relay                June 1996


  negotiated.

  Some Frame Relay switches are only capable of 262 octet frames.  It
  is not recommended that anyone deploy or use a switch which is
  capable of less than 1600 octet frames.  However, PPP implementations
  MUST be configurable to limit the size of LCP packets which are sent
  to 259 octets (which leaves room for the NLPID and Protocol fields),
  until LCP negotiation is complete.

  XID negotiation is not required to be supported for links which are
  capable of PPP negotiation.

  Inverse ARP is not required to be supported for PPP links.  That
  function is provided by PPP NCP negotiation.





































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RFC 1973                     PPP in Frame Relay                June 1996


Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.



References

  [1]   Simpson, W., Editor, "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD
        51, RFC 1661, July 1994.

  [2]   CCITT Recommendation Q.922, "ISDN Data Link Layer Specification
        for Frame Mode Bearer Services", International Telegraph and
        Telephone Consultative Committee, 1992.

  [3]   Simpson, W., Editor, "PPP in HDLC-like Framing", STD 51,
        RFC 1662, July 1994.

  [4]   Bradley, T.,  Brown, C., and A. Malis, "Multiprotocol
        Interconnect over Frame Relay", RFC 1490, July 1993.

  [5]   ISO/IEC TR 9577:1990(E), "Information technology -
        Telecommunications and Information exchange between systems -
        Protocol Identification in the network layer", 1990-10-15.



Acknowledgments

  This design was inspired by the paper "Parameter Negotiation for the
  Multiprotocol Interconnect", Keith Sklower and Clifford Frost,
  University of California, Berkeley, 1992, unpublished.



















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RFC 1973                     PPP in Frame Relay                June 1996


Chair's Address

  The working group can be contacted via the current chair:

     Karl Fox
     Ascend Communications
     3518 Riverside Drive, Suite 101
     Columbus, Ohio 43221

     EMail: [email protected]



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 protected]
         [email protected] (preferred)


























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