Network Working Group                                           G. Gross
Request for Comments: 2364                           Lucent Technologies
Category: Standards Track                                      M. Kaycee
                                                               Paradyne
                                                                 A. Lin
                                                        Shasta Networks
                                                               A. Malis
                                                  Ascend Communications
                                                            J. Stephens
                                                         Cayman Systems
                                                              July 1998


                            PPP Over AAL5

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.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

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 ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (AAL5) for
  framing PPP encapsulated packets.

Applicability

  This specification is intended for those implementations which desire
  to use the facilities which are defined for PPP, such as the Link
  Control Protocol, Network-layer Control Protocols, authentication,
  and compression.  These capabilities require a point-to-point
  relationship between the peers, and are not designed for the multi-
  point relationships which are available in ATM and other multi-access
  environments.







Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


1. Introduction

  ATM AAL5 protocol is designed to provide virtual connections between
  end stations attached to the same network.  These connections offer a
  packet delivery service that includes error detection, but does not
  do error correction.

  Most existing implementations of PPP use ISO 3309 HDLC as a basis for
  their framing [3].

  When an ATM network is configured with point-to-point connections,
  PPP can use AAL5 as a framing mechanism.

2. Conventions

  The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD,
  SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL, when they appear in this
  document, are to be interpreted as described in [10].

3. AAL5 Layer Service Interface

  The PPP layer treats the underlying ATM AAL5 layer service as a bit-
  synchronous point-to-point link.  In this context, the PPP link
  corresponds to an ATM AAL5 virtual connection.  The virtual
  connection MUST be full-duplex, point to point, and it MAY be either
  dedicated (i.e. permanent, set up by provisioning) or switched (set
  up on demand).  In addition, the PPP/AAL5 service interface boundary
  MUST meet the following requirements:

       Interface Format - The PPP/AAL5 layer boundary presents an octet
       service interface to the AAL5 layer.  There is no provision for
       sub-octets to be supplied or accepted.

       Transmission Rate - The PPP layer does not impose any
       restrictions regarding transmission rate or the underlying ATM
       layer traffic descriptor parameters.

       Control Signals - The AAL5 layer MUST provide control signals to
       the PPP layer which indicate when the virtual connection link
       has become connected or disconnected.  These provide the "Up"
       and

       "Down" events to the LCP state machine [1] within the PPP layer.








Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


4. Multi-Protocol Encapsulation

  This specification uses the principles, terminology, and frame
  structure described in "Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM
  Adaptation Layer 5" [4].

  The purpose of this specification is not to document what is already
  standardized in [4], but to specify how the mechanisms described in
  [4] are to be used to map PPP onto an AAL5-based  ATM network.
  Section 1 within [4] defines the two mechanisms for identifying the
  Protocol Data Unit (PDU) payload field's protocol type: virtual
  circuit based multiplexing, and Logical Link Control (LLC)
  encapsulation.  In the former technique, the payload's protocol type
  is implicitly agreed to by the end points for each virtual circuit
  using provisioning or control plane procedures.  When using the LLC
  encapsulation technique, the payload's protocol type is explicitly
  identified on a per PDU basis by an in-band LLC header, followed by
  the payload data.

  When transporting a PPP payload over AAL5, an implementation:

       1. MUST support virtual circuit multiplexed PPP payloads as
       described in section 5 below by mutual configuration or
       negotiation of both end points.  This technique is referred to
       as "VC-multiplexed PPP".

       2. MUST support LLC encapsulated PPP payloads on PVCs as
       described in section 6 below by mutual configuration or
       negotiation of both end points.  This technique is referred to
       as "LLC encapsulated PPP".

       3. For SVC set up, an implementation MUST negotiate using the
       Q.2931 [9] Annex C procedure, encoding the Broadband Lower Layer
       Interface (B-LLI) information element to signal either VC-
       multiplexed PPP or LLC encapsulated PPP.  The details of this
       control plane procedure are described in section 7.

  If an implementation is connecting through a Frame Relay/ATM FRF.8
  [7] service inter-working unit to an RFC 1973 [6] end point, then it
  MUST use LLC encapsulated PPP payloads.  Frame Relay/ATM FRF.8
  inter-working units are exempted from the requirement to support VC-
  multiplexed PPP.  This exemption allows the FR/ATM IWU to remain
  compliant with FRF.8 when the PPP over AAL5 end point is inter-
  operating with an RFC 1973 end point.







Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


5. Virtual Circuit Multiplexed PPP Over AAL5

  The AAL5 PDU format is shown in figure 1:

                       AAL5 CPCS-PDU Format
                 +-------------------------------+
                 |             .                 |
                 |             .                 |
                 |        CPCS-PDU Payload       |
                 |     up to 2^16 - 1 octets)    |
                 |             .                 |
                 +-------------------------------+
                 |      PAD ( 0 - 47 octets)     |
                 +-------------------------------+ -------
                 |       CPCS-UU (1 octet )      |    ^
                 +-------------------------------+    |
                 |         CPI (1 octet )        |    |
                 +-------------------------------+CPCS-PDU Trailer
                 |        Length (2 octets)      |    |
                 +-------------------------------|    |
                 |         CRC (4 octets)        |    V
                 +-------------------------------+ -------
                                  Figure 1

  The Common Part Convergence Sub-layer (CPCS)-PDU Payload field
  contains user information up to 2^16 - 1 octets.

  The PAD field pads the CPCS-PDU to fit exactly into the ATM cells
  such that the last 48 octet cell payload created by the SAR sublayer
  will have the CPCS-PDU Trailer right justified in the cell.

  The CPCS-UU (User-to-User indication) field is used to transparently
  transfer CPCS user to user information.  The field has no function
  under the multi-protocol ATM encapsulation described in this memo and
  can be set to any value.

  The CPI (Common Part Indicator) field aligns the CPCS-PDU trailer to
  64 bits.  Possible additional functions are for further study in
  ITU-T.  When only the 64 bit alignment function is used, this field
  shall be coded as 0x00.

  The Length field indicates the length, in octets, of the Payload
  field.  The maximum value for the Length field is 65535 octets.  A
  Length field coded as 0x00 is used for the abort function.

  The CRC field protects the entire CPCS-PDU except the CRC field
  itself.




Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


  A VC-multiplexed PPP frame SHALL constitute the CPCS-PDU payload and
  is defined as:

              +-------------+-------------+---------+
              | Protocol ID | Information | Padding |
              |  8/16 bits  |             |         |
              +-------------+-------------+---------+
                               Figure 2

  Each of these fields are specifically defined in [1].

6. LLC Encapsulated PPP Over AAL5

  LLC encapsulated PPP over AAL5 is the alternative technique to VC-
  multiplexed PPP over AAL5.

  The AAL5 CPCS-PDU payload  field is encoded as shown in figure 3.
  The pertinent fields in that diagram are:

       1. LLC header: 2 bytes encoded to specify a source SAP and
       destination SAP of routed OSI PDU (values 0xFE 0xFE), followed
       by an Un-numbered Information (UI) frame type (value 0x03).

       2. Network Layer Protocol IDentifier (NLPID) representing PPP,
       (value 0xCF).

       3. the PPP protocol identifier field, which can be either 1 or 2
       octets long.  See reference [1].

       4. followed by the PPP information field as per Figure 2.





















Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


                 +-------------------------+ --------
                 |  Destination SAP (0xFE) |     ^
                 +-------------------------+     |
                 |  Source SAP (0xFE)      | LLC header
                 +-------------------------+     |
                 |  Frame Type = UI (0x03) |     V
                 +-------------------------+ --------
                 |  NLPID = PPP (0xCF)     |
                 +-------------------------+ --------
                 |   Protocol Identifier   |     ^
                 |     (8 or 16 bits)      |     |
                 +-------------------------+ PPP payload
                 |          .              |     |
                 |          .              |     |
                 |  PPP information field  |     |
                 |          .              |     |
                 |          .              |     |
                 +-------------------------+     |
                 |        padding          |     V
                 +-------------------------+ --------
                 |  PAD ( 0 - 47 octets)   |
                 +-------------------------+ --------
                 |  CPCS-UU (1 octet )     |     ^
                 +-------------------------+     |
                 |    CPI (1 octet )       |     |
                 +-------------------------+CPCS-PDU Trailer
                 |   Length (2 octets)     |     |
                 +-------------------------|     |
                 |    CRC (4 octets)       |     V
                 +-------------------------+ --------


                            Figure 3

  The end points MAY be bi-laterally provisioned to send other LLC-
  encapsulated protocols besides PPP across the same virtual
  connection.  However, they MUST NOT send packets belonging to any
  protocol that has an active NCP within the PPP session.
  Implementations SHOULD do packet scheduling that minimizes the
  performance impact on the quality of service commitments associated
  with both the LLC-encapsulated PPP and non-PPP protocol flows.

7. Out-Of-Band Control Plane Signaling

  When originating a switched virtual circuit AAL5 connection, the
  caller MUST request in the SETUP message either VC-multiplexed PPP,
  LLC-encapsulated PPP, or else both VC-multiplexed and LLC-
  encapsulated PPP.  When a caller is offering both techniques, the two



Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


  B-LLI IEs are encoded within a Broadband Repeat Indicator IE in the
  order of their preference.  The called implementation MUST be able to
  accept an incoming call that offers LLC-encapsulated PPP in the
  caller's request.  The called implementation MUST reject a call set
  up request that only offers an encapsulation that it does not
  support.  Implementations originating a call offering both protocol
  encapsulation techniques MUST be able to negotiate the use of LLC-
  encapsulated PPP.

  When originating a virtual circuit multiplexed call that is to carry
  a PPP payload, the ITU Q.2931 [9] B-LLI element user information
  layer 3 protocol field is encoded to select ISO/IEC TR 9577 [5] in
  octet 7.  The extension octets specify an IPI value of PPP (0xCF).
  By definition, the first bytes of the AAL5 frame's payload field will
  always contain a PPP header followed by a packet.

  When originating an LLC encapsulated call that is to carry a PPP
  payload, the ITU Q.2931 B-LLI element user information layer 2
  protocol field is encoded to select LAN Logical Link Control
  (ISO/IEC8802-2) in octet 6.  See RFC 1755 [8] appendix A for an
  example.  By definition, the first bytes of the AAL5 frame's payload
  field will contain an LLC header, followed by a NLPID and the PPP
  payload.

8. Detection And Recovery From Unsolicited PPP Encapsulation Transitions

  When the virtual connection loses state, the PPP encapsulation
  technique may uni-laterally and unexpectedly change across such
  transitions.  Detection and recovery procedures are defined for the
  following state transitions:

       VC-multiplexed PPP changing to LLC encapsulated PPP

       LLC encapsulated PPP changing to VC-multiplexed PPP

  When LLC-encapsulated PPP is being used, the inital 6 octets of the
  LCP packets contain the sequence: fe-fe-03-cf-c0-21.  This sequence
  constitutes the first 6 octets of the AAL5 frame.  In the case of
  VC-multiplexed PPP, initial LCP packets contain the sequence c0-21.
  This sequence constitutes the first 2 octets of an AAL5 frame.  When
  a LCP Configure-Request packet is received and recognized, the PPP
  link enters Link Establishment 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 an alternate but equivalent data encapsulation as
  defined in [4], then the PPP Link MUST:




Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


       For a SVC, immediately clear the call with the cause value 111,
       "protocol error, unspecified".

       For a PVC: tear down the active NCPs, SHOULD generate an error
       message, enter the Termination state, and silently drop all
       received packets.

  These policies prevent "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 state when configuration fails.

9. LCP Configuration Options

  The Magic Number LCP configuration option is RECOMMENDED, and the
  Protocol Field Compression (PFC) option is NOT RECOMMENDED.  An
  implementation MUST NOT request any of the following options, and
  MUST reject a request for such an option:

       Field Check Sequence (FCS) Alternatives,

       Address-and-Control-Field-Compression (ACFC),

       Asynchronous-Control-Character-Map (ACCM)

  The Maximum-Receive-Unit (MRU) option MUST NOT be negotiated to a
  larger size than the maximum CPCS-SDU size specified in the
  associated direction for the virtual connection's traffic contract.

  When viewed peer to peer, a PPP link may be bridged over multiple
  physical layer sections.  For each such AAL5 section, the LCP framing
  options MUST be actively negotiated by the bridging convertors
  independently of the LCP framing options in use by other physical
  layer sections.

  Implementation Note:
       When an ATM AAL5 PVC is in the "Stopped" state, it is
       RECOMMENDED that the implementation wait for Configure-Requests.
       See the implementation option in reference [1] section 4.2, the
       "Stopped State" sub-section.

10. Security Considerations

  Generally, ATM networks are virtual circuit based, and security is
  implicit in the public data networking service provider's
  administration of Permanent Virtual Circuits (PVCs) between the
  network boundaries.  The probability of a security breach caused by
  mis-routed ATM cells is considered to be negligible.



Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


  When a public ATM network supports Switched Virtual Circuits, the
  protocol model becomes analogous to traditional voice band modem dial
  up over the Public Telephone Switched Network (PTSN).  The same
  PAP/CHAP authentication protocols that are already widely in use for
  Internet dial up access are leveraged.  As a consequence, PPP over
  AAL5 security is at parity with those practices already established
  by the existing Internet infrastructure.

  Those applications that require stronger security are encouraged to
  use authentication headers, or encrypted payloads, and/or ATM-layer
  security services.

  When using LLC-encapsulated PPP over a virtual connection, an end
  point can not assume that the PPP session authentication and related
  security mechanisms also secure the other LLC encapsulated flows on
  that same virtual connection.

11. Acknowledgments

  This design is based on work performed in ADSL Forum's Packet Mode
  Working Group.  It is inspired by  "PPP in Frame Relay", RFC 1973, by
  William Simpson.  Special thanks to Phil Rakity of Flowpoint, Tim
  Kwok of Microsoft, and David Allan of Nortel for their constructive
  review and commentary.

12. References

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

  [2]   The ATM Forum, "Frame based User-to-Network Interface (FUNI)
        Specification v2", af-saa-0088.000, May 1997.

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

  [4]   Heinanen, J., "Multiprotocol Interconnect over AAL5", RFC 1483,
        July 1993.

  [5]   ISO/IEC DTR 9577.2, "Information technology -
        Telecommunications and Information exchange between systems -
        Protocol Identification in the network layer", 1995-08-16.

  [6]   Simpson, W., "PPP in Frame Relay", RFC 1973, June 1996.

  [7]   The Frame Relay Forum, "Frame Relay/ATM PVC Service Inter-
        working Implementation Agreement", FRF.8, April 1995.




Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


  [8]   Perez, M., Liaw, F., Mankin, A., Hoffman, E., Grossman, D., and
        A. Malis, "ATM Signaling Support for IP over ATM", RFC 1755,
        February 1995.

  [9]   International Telecommunication Union, "Broadband Integrated
        Service Digital Network (B-ISDN) Digital Subscriber Signaling
        System No.2 (DSS2) User Network Interface Layer 3 Specification
        for Basic Call/Connection Control", ITU-T Recommendation
        Q.2931, (International Telecommunication Union: Geneva, 2/95)

  [10]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
        Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

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]

Authors' Addresses

  Questions about this memo can also be directed to:

  George Gross
  Lucent Technologies, Inc
  184 Liberty Corner Road
  Warren, NJ 07059

  Phone:   +1.908.580.4589
  EMail: [email protected]


  Manu Kaycee
  Paradyne Corporation
  21 Bear Meadow Road
  Londonderry, NH 03053-2168

  Phone: +1.603.434.6088
  EMail: [email protected]







Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


  Arthur Lin
  Shasta Networks Inc.
  249 Humboldt Court
  Sunnyvale, CA 94089-1300

  Phone: +1.408.747.5051
  EMail: [email protected]


  Andrew Malis
  Ascend Communications, Inc.
  1 Robbins Road
  Westford, MA 01886

  Phone: +1.978.952.7414
  EMail: [email protected]


  John Stephens
  Cayman Systems, Inc.
  100 Maple Street
  Stoneham, MA 02180

  Phone: +1.617.279.1101
  EMail: [email protected]


























Gross, et. al.              Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2364                     PPP Over AAL5                     July 1998


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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