Network Working Group                                         M. Handley
Request for Comments: 2776                                         ACIRI
Category: Standards Track                                      D. Thaler
                                                              Microsoft
                                                             R. Kermode
                                                               Motorola
                                                          February 2000


          Multicast-Scope Zone Announcement Protocol (MZAP)

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 (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document defines a protocol, the Multicast-Scope Zone
  Announcement Protocol (MZAP), for discovering the multicast
  administrative scope zones that are relevant at a particular
  location.  MZAP also provides mechanisms whereby common
  misconfigurations of administrative scope zones can be discovered.

Table of Contents

  1 Introduction ................................................  2
  2 Terminology .................................................  4
  3 Overview ....................................................  5
  3.1 Scope Nesting .............................................  6
  3.2 Other Messages ............................................  7
  3.3 Zone IDs ..................................................  7
  4 Detecting Router Misconfigurations ..........................  8
  4.1 Detecting non-convex scope zones ..........................  8
  4.2 Detecting leaky boundaries for non-local scopes ...........  9
  4.3 Detecting a leaky Local Scope zone ........................ 10
  4.4 Detecting conflicting scope zones ......................... 10
  5 Packet Formats .............................................. 11
  5.1 Zone Announcement Message ................................. 14
  5.2 Zone Limit Exceeded (ZLE) ................................. 15
  5.3 Zone Convexity Message .................................... 15



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RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  5.4 Not-Inside Message ........................................ 16
  6 Message Processing Rules .................................... 17
  6.1 Internal entities listening to MZAP messages .............. 17
  6.2 Sending ZAMs .............................................. 18
  6.3 Receiving ZAMs ............................................ 18
  6.4 Sending ZLEs .............................................. 20
  6.5 Receiving ZLEs ............................................ 20
  6.6 Sending ZCMs .............................................. 21
  6.7 Receiving ZCMs ............................................ 21
  6.8 Sending NIMs .............................................. 21
  6.9 Receiving NIMs ............................................ 22
  7 Constants ................................................... 22
  8 Security Considerations ..................................... 23
  9 Acknowledgements ............................................ 24
  10 References ................................................. 25
  11 Authors' Addresses ......................................... 26
  12 Full Copyright Statement ................................... 27

1.  Introduction

  The use of administratively-scoped IP multicast, as defined in RFC
  2365 [1], allows packets to be addressed to a specific range of
  multicast addresses (e.g., 239.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255 for IPv4)
  such that the packets will not cross configured administrative
  boundaries, and also allows such addresses to be locally assigned and
  hence are not required to be unique across administrative boundaries.
  This property of logical naming both allows for address reuse, as
  well as provides the capability for infrastructure services such as
  address allocation, session advertisement, and service location to
  use well-known addresses which are guaranteed to have local
  significance within every organization.

  The range of administratively-scoped addresses can be subdivided by
  administrators so that multiple levels of administrative boundaries
  can be simultaneously supported.  As a result, a "multicast scope" is
  defined as a particular range of addresses which has been given some
  topological meaning.

  To support such usage, a router at an administrative boundary is
  configured with one or more per-interface filters, or "multicast
  scope boundaries".  Having such a boundary on an interface means that
  it will not forward packets matching a configured range of multicast
  addresses in either direction on the interface.

  A specific area of the network topology which is within a boundary
  for a given scope is known as a "multicast scope zone".  Since the
  same ranges can be reused within disjoint areas of the network, there
  may be many "multicast scope zones" for any given multicast scope.  A



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  scope zone may have zero or more textual names (in different
  languages) for the scope, for human convenience.  For example, if the
  range 239.192/14 were assigned to span an entire corporate network,
  it might be given (internally) the name "BigCo Private Scope".

  Administrative scope zones may be of any size, and a particular host
  may be within many administrative scope zones (for different scopes,
  i.e., for non-overlapping ranges of addresses) of various sizes, as
  long as scope zones that intersect topologically do not intersect in
  address range.

  Applications and services are interested in various aspects of the
  scopes within which they reside:

  o  Applications which present users with a choice of which scope in
     which to operate (e.g., when creating a new session, whether it is
     to be confined to a corporate intranet, or whether it should go
     out over the public Internet) are interested in the textual names
     which have significance to users.

  o  Services which use "relative" multicast addresses (as defined in
     [1]) in every scope are interested in the range of addresses used
     by each scope, so that they can apply a constant offset and
     compute which address to use in each scope.

  o  Address allocators are interested in the address range, and
     whether they are allowed to allocate addresses within the entire
     range or not.

  o  Some applications and services may also be interested in the
     nesting relationships among scopes.  For example, knowledge of the
     nesting relationships can be used to perform "expanding-scope"
     searches in a similar, but better behaved, manner to the well-
     known expanding ring search where the TTL of a query is steadily
     increased until a replier can be found.  Studies have also shown
     that nested scopes can be useful in localizing multicast repair
     traffic [8].

  Two barriers currently make administrative scoping difficult to
  deploy and use:

  o  Applications have no way to dynamically discover information on
     scopes that are relevant to them.  This makes it difficult to use
     administrative scope zones, and hence reduces the incentive to
     deploy them.






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  o  Misconfiguration is easy.  It is difficult to detect scope zones
     that have been configured so as to not be convex (the shortest
     path between two nodes within the zone passes outside the zone),
     or to leak (one or more boundary routers were not configured
     correctly), or to intersect in both area and address range.

  These two barriers are addressed by this document.  In particular,
  this document defines the Multicast Scope Zone Announcement Protocol
  (MZAP) which allows an entity to learn what scope zones it is within.
  Typically servers will cache the information learned from MZAP and
  can then provide this information to applications in a timely fashion
  upon request using other means, e.g., via MADCAP [9].  MZAP also
  provides diagnostic information to the boundary routers themselves
  that enables misconfigured scope zones to be detected.

2.  Terminology

  The "Local Scope" is defined in RFC 2365 [1] and represents the
  smallest administrative scope larger than link-local, and the
  associated address range is defined as 239.255.0.0 to 239.255.255.255
  inclusive (for IPv4, FF03::/16 for IPv6).  RFC 2365 specifies:

     "239.255.0.0/16 is defined to be the IPv4 Local Scope.  The Local
     Scope is the minimal enclosing scope, and hence is not further
     divisible. Although the exact extent of a Local Scope is site
     dependent, locally scoped regions must obey certain topological
     constraints. In particular, a Local Scope must not span any other
     scope boundary. Further, a Local Scope must be completely
     contained within or equal to any larger scope. In the event that
     scope regions overlap in area, the area of overlap must be in its
     own Local Scope.  This implies that any scope boundary is also a
     boundary for the Local Scope."

  A multicast scope Zone Boundary Router (ZBR) is a router that is
  configured with a boundary for a particular multicast scope on one or
  more of its interfaces.  Any interface that is configured with a
  boundary for any administrative scope zone MUST also have a boundary
  for the Local Scope zone, as described above.

  Such routers SHOULD be configured so that the router itself is within
  the scope zone.  This is shown in Figure 1(a), where router A is
  inside the scope zone and has the boundary configuration.









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         ............                     ................
        .            .   +B+-->          .                *B+-->
       .              . /               .                / .
      .                *               .                +   .
      .          <---+A*---+C+->       .          <---+A+---*C+->
      .              + .               .              +     .
      .             /  .               .             /      .
       . zone X  <--  .                 . zone X  <--      .
        ..............                   ..................

       A,B,C - routers    * - boundary interface    + - interface

      (a) Correct zone boundary         (b) Incorrect zone boundary

         Figure 1: Administrative scope zone boundary placement

  It is possible for the first router outside the scope zone to be
  configured with the boundary, as illustrated in Figure 1(b) where
  routers B and C are outside the zone and have the boundary
  configuration, whereas A does not, but this is NOT RECOMMENDED.  This
  rule does not apply for Local Scope boundaries, but applies for all
  other boundary routers.

  We next define the term "Zone ID" to mean the lowest IP address used
  by any ZBR for a particular zone for sourcing MZAP messages into that
  scope zone.  The combination of this IP address and the first
  multicast address in the scope range serve to uniquely identify the
  scope zone.  Each ZBR listens for messages from other ZBRs for the
  same boundary, and can determine the Zone ID based on the source
  addresses seen.  The Zone ID may change over time as ZBRs come up and
  down.

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [2].

  Constants used by this protocol are shown as [NAME-OF-CONSTANT], and
  summarized in section 7.

3.  Overview

  When a ZBR is configured correctly, it can deduce which side of the
  boundary is inside the scope zone and which side is outside it.

  Such a ZBR then sends periodic Zone Announcement Messages (ZAMs) for
  each zone for which it is configured as a boundary into that scope
  zone, containing information on the scope zone's address range, Zone
  ID, and textual names.  These messages are multicast to the well-



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RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  known address [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP] in the Local Scope, and are relayed
  across Local Scope boundaries into all Local Scope zones within the
  scope zone referred to by the ZAM message, as shown in Figure 2.

   ###########################
   # Zone1      =      Zone2 #    ##### = large scope zone boundary
   *E-----+--->A*-----+-x    #
   #      |     =     v      #    ===== = Local Scope boundaries
   #      |     ======*===*==#
   #      |     =     B   F  #    ----> = path of ZAM originated by E
  G*<-----+--->C*->   |   ^  #
   #      v     =   <-+---+  #    ABCDE = ZBRs
   #      D     =      Zone3 #
   #######*###################        * = boundary interface

                  Figure 2: ZAM Flooding Example

  Any entity can thus listen on a single well-known group address and
  learn about all scopes in which it resides.

3.1.  Scope Nesting

  MZAP also provides the ability to discover the nesting relationships
  between scope zones.  Two zones are nested if one is comprised of a
  subset of the routers in the other, as shown in Figure 3.

    +-----------+       +-----------+      +-------------+
    | Zone 1    |       | Zone 3    |      | Zone 5      |
    |   +------+|       |    +------+      |    .........|..
    |   |Zone 2||       |    |Zone 4|      |    : Zone 6 | :
    |   +--A---+|       |    C      |      |    D        | :
    +-----------+       +----+--B---+      +--------E----+ :
                                                :..........:

  (a) "Contained"    (b) "Common Border"  (c) "Overlap"
       Zone 2 nests       Zone 4 nests         Zones 5 and 6
       inside Zone 1      inside Zone 3        do not nest

                  Figure 3: Zone nesting examples

  A ZBR cannot independently determine whether one zone is nested
  inside another.  However, it can determine that one zone does NOT
  nest inside another.  For example, in Figure 3:

  o  ZBR A will pass ZAMs for zone 1 but will prevent ZAMs from zone 2
     from leaving zone 2.  When ZBR A first receives a ZAM for zone 1,
     it then knows that zone 1 does not nest within zone 2, but it
     cannot, however, determine whether zone 2 nests within zone 1.



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  o  ZBR B acts as ZBR for both zones 3 and 4, and hence cannot
     determine if one is nested inside the other.  However, ZBR C can
     determine that zone 3 does not nest inside zone 4 when it receives
     a ZAM for zone 3, since it is a ZBR for zone 4 but not zone 3.

  o  ZBR D only acts as ZBR zone 6 and not 5, hence ZBR D can deduce
     that zone 5 does not nest inside zone 6 upon hearing a ZAM for
     zone 5.  Similarly, ZBR E only acts as ZBR zone 5 and not 6, hence
     ZBR E can deduce that zone 6 does not nest inside zone 5 upon
     hearing a ZAM for zone 6.

  The fact that ZBRs can determine that one zone does not nest inside
  another, but not that a zone does nest inside another, means that
  nesting must be determined in a distributed fashion.  This is done by
  sending Not-Inside Messages (NIMs) which express the fact that a zone
  X is not inside a zone Y.  Such messages are sent to the well-known
  [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP] and are thus seen by the same entities listening
  to ZAM messages (e.g., MADCAP servers).  Such entities can then
  determine the nesting relationship between two scopes based on a
  sustained absence of any evidence to the contrary.

3.2.  Other Messages

  Two other message types, Zone Convexity Messages (ZCMs) and Zone
  Limit Exceeded (ZLE) messages, are used only by routers, and enable
  them to compare their configurations for consistency and detect
  misconfigurations.  These messages are sent to MZAP's relative
  address within the scope range associated with the scope zone to
  which they refer, and hence are typically not seen by entities other
  than routers.  Their use in detecting specific misconfiguration
  scenarios will be covered in the next section.

  Packet formats for all messages are described in Section 5.

3.3.  Zone IDs

  When a boundary router first starts up, it uses its lowest IP address
  which it considers to be inside a given zone, and which is routable
  everywhere within the zone (for example, not a link-local address),
  as the Zone ID for that zone.  It then schedules ZCM (and ZAM)
  messages to be sent in the future (it does not send them
  immediately).  When a ZCM is received for the given scope, the sender
  is added to the local list of ZBRs (including itself) for that scope,
  and the Zone ID is updated to be the lowest IP address in the list.
  Entries in the list are eventually timed out if no further messages
  are received from that ZBR, such that the Zone ID will converge to
  the lowest address of any active ZBR for the scope.




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  Note that the sender of ZAM messages MUST NOT be used in this way.
  This is because the procedure for detecting a leaky Local scope
  described in Section 4.3 below relies on two disjoint zones for the
  same scope range having different Zone IDs.  If ZAMs are used to
  compute Zone IDs, then ZAMs leaking across a Local Scope boundary
  will cause the two zones to converge to the same Zone ID.

4.  Detecting Router Misconfigurations

  In this section, we cover how to detect various error conditions.  If
  any error is detected, the router should attempt to alert a network
  administrator to the nature of the misconfiguration.  The means to do
  this lies outside the scope of MZAP.

4.1.  Detecting non-convex scope zones

  Zone Convexity Messages (ZCMs) are used by routers to detect non-
  convex administrative scope zones, which are one possible
  misconfiguration.  Non-convex scope zones can cause problems for
  applications since a receiver may never see administratively-scoped
  packets from a sender within the same scope zone, since packets
  travelling between them may be dropped at the boundary.

  In the example illustrated in Figure 4, the path between B and D goes
  outside the scope (through A and E).  Here, Router B and Router C
  send ZCMs within a given scope zone for which they each have a
  boundary, with each reporting the other boundary routers of the zone
  from which they have heard.  In Figure 4, Router D cannot see Router
  B's messages, but can see C's report of B, and so can conclude the
  zone is not convex.

   #####*####========
   #    B   #       =         ##### = non-convex scope boundary
   #    |->A*       =
   #    |   #       =         ===== = other scope boundaries
   #    |   ####*####
   #    |       E   #         ----> = path of B's ZCM
   #    v          D*
   #    C           #             * = boundary interface
   #####*############

               Figure 4: Non-convexity detection









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  Non-convex scope zones can be detected via three methods:

  (1) If a ZBR is listed in ZCMs received, but the next-hop interface
      (according to the multicast RIB) towards that ZBR is outside the
      scope zone,

  (2) If a ZBR is listed in ZCMs received, but no ZCM is received from
      that ZBR for [ZCM-HOLDTIME] seconds, as illustrated in Figure 4,
      or

  (3) ZAM messages can also be used in a manner similar to that for
      ZCMs in (1) above, as follows: if a ZAM is received from a ZBR on
      an interface inside a given scope zone, and the next-hop
      interface (according to the multicast RIB) towards that ZBR is
      outside the scope zone.

  Zone Convexity Messages MAY also be sent and received by correctly
  configured ordinary hosts within a scope region, which may be a
  useful diagnostic facility that does not require privileged access.

4.2.  Detecting leaky boundaries for non-local scopes

  A "leaky" boundary is one which logically has a "hole" due to some
  router not having a boundary applied on an interface where one ought
  to exist.  Hence, the boundary does not completely surround a piece
  of the network, resulting in scoped data leaking outside.

  Leaky scope boundaries can be detected via two methods:

  (1) If it receives ZAMs originating inside the scope boundary on an
      interface that points outside the zone boundary.  Such a ZAM
      message must have escaped the zone through a leak, and flooded
      back around behind the boundary.  This is illustrated in Figure
      5.

       =============#####*########
       = Zone1      #    A Zone2 #       C   = misconfigured router
       =      +---->*E   v       #
       =      |     #    B       #     ##### = leaky scope boundary
       =======*=====#====*=======#
       =      D     #    |       #     ===== = other scope boundaries
       =      ^-----*C<--+       #
       = Zone4      #      Zone3 #     ----> = path of ZAMs
       =============##############

                       Figure 5: ZAM Leaking





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  (2) If a Zone Length Exceeded (ZLE) message is received.  The ZAM
      packet also contains a Zones Traveled Limit.  If the number of
      Local Scope zones traversed becomes equal to the Zones Traveled
      Limit, a ZLE message is generated (the suppression mechanism for
      preventing implosion is described later in the Processing Rules
      section).  ZLEs detect leaks where packets do not return to
      another part of the same scope zone, but instead reach other
      Local Scope zones far away from the ZAM originator.

  In either case, the misconfigured router will be either the message
  origin, or one of the routers in the ZBR path list which is included
  in the message received (or perhaps a router on the path between two
  such ZBRs which ought to have been a ZBR itself).

4.3.  Detecting a leaky Local Scope zone

  A local scope is leaky if a router has an administrative scope
  boundary on some interface, but does not have a Local Scope boundary
  on that interface as specified in RFC 2365.  This can be detected via
  the following method:

  o  If a ZAM for a given scope is received by a ZBR which is a
     boundary for that scope, it compares the Origin's Scope Zone ID in
     the ZAM with its own Zone ID for the given scope.  If the two do
     not match, this is evidence of a misconfiguration.  Since a
     temporary mismatch may result immediately after a recent change in
     the reachability of the lowest-addressed ZBR, misconfiguration
     should be assumed only if the mismatch is persistent.

  The exact location of the problem can be found by doing an mtrace [5]
  from the router detecting the problem, back to the ZAM origin, for
  any group within the address range identified by the ZAM.  The router
  at fault will be the one reporting that a boundary was reached.

4.4.  Detecting conflicting scope zones

  Conflicting address ranges can be detected via the following method:

  o  If a ZBR receives a ZAM for a given scope, and the included start
     and end addresses overlap with, but are not identical to, the
     start and end addresses of a locally-configured scope.

  Conflicting scope names can be detected via the following method:

  o  If a ZBR is configured with a textual name for a given scope and
     language, and it receives a ZAM or ZCM with a name for the same
     scope and language, but the scope names do not match.




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  Detecting either type of conflict above indicates that either the
  local router or the router originating the message is misconfigured.
  Configuration tools SHOULD strip white space from the beginning and
  end of each name to avoid accidental misconfiguration.

5.  Packet Formats

  All MZAP messages are sent over UDP, with a destination port of
  [MZAP-PORT] and an IPv4 TTL or IPv6 Hop Limit of 255.

  When sending an MZAP message referring to a given scope zone, a ZBR
  MUST use a source address which will have significance everywhere
  within the scope zone to which the message refers.  For example,
  link-local addresses MUST NOT be used.

  The common MZAP message header (which follows the UDP header), is
  shown below:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Version    |B|    PTYPE    |Address Family |   NameCount   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Message Origin                         |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Zone ID Address                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                       Zone Start Address                      |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Zone End Address                       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  | Encoded Zone Name-1 (variable length)                         |
  +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                               |     . . .                     |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |  . . .        | Encoded Zone Name-N (variable length)         |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                               |     Padding (if needed)       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Version:
     The version defined in this document is version 0.









Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  "Big" scope bit (B):
     If clear, indicates that the addresses in the scoped range are not
     subdividable, and that address allocators may utilize the entire
     range.  If set, address allocators should not use the entire
     range, but should learn an appropriate sub-range via another
     mechanism (e.g., AAP [7]).

  Packet Type (PTYPE):
     The packet types defined in this document are:
        0: Zone Announcement Message (ZAM)
        1: Zone Limit Exceeded (ZLE)
        2: Zone Convexity Message (ZCM)
        3: Not-Inside Message (NIM)

  Address Family:
     The IANA-assigned address family number [10,11] identifying the
     address family for all addresses in the packet.  The families
     defined for IP are:
        1: IPv4
        2: IPv6

  Name Count:
     The number of encoded zone name blocks in this packet.  The count
     may be zero.

  Zone Start Address: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6)
     This gives the start address for the scope zone boundary.  For
     example, if the zone is a boundary for 239.1.0.0 to 239.1.0.255,
     then Zone Start Address is 239.1.0.0.

  Zone End Address: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6)
     This gives the ending address for the scope zone boundary.  For
     example, if the zone is a boundary for 239.1.0.0 to 239.1.0.255,
     then Zone End Address is 239.1.0.255.

  Message Origin: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6)
     This gives the IP address of the interface that originated the
     message.

  Zone ID Address: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6)
     This gives the lowest IP address of a boundary router that has
     been observed in the zone originating the message.  Together with
     Zone Start Address and Zone End Address, it forms a unique ID for
     the zone.  Note that this ID is usually different from the ID of
     the Local Scope zone in which the origin resides.






Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  Encoded Zone Name:
     +--------------------+
     |D| Reserved (7 bits)|
     +--------------------+
     | LangLen (1 byte)   |
     +--------------------+-----------+
     | Language Tag (variable size)   |
     +--------------------+-----------+
     | NameLen (1 byte)   |
     +--------------------+-----------+
     | Zone Name (variable size)      |
     +--------------------------------+

     The first byte contains flags, of which only the high bit is
     defined.  The other bits are reserved (sent as 0, ignored on
     receipt).

  "Default Language" (D) bit:
     If set, indicates a preference that the name in the following
     language should be used if no name is available in a desired
     language.

  Language tag length (LangLen): 1 byte
     The length, in bytes, of the language tag.

  Language Tag: (variable size)
     The language tag, such as "en-US", indicating the language of the
     zone name.  Language tags are described in [6].

  Name Len:
     The length, in bytes, of the Zone Name field.  The length MUST NOT
     be zero.

  Zone Name: multiple of 8 bits
     The Zone Name is an ISO 10646 character string in UTF-8 encoding
     [4] indicating the name given to the scope zone (eg: "ISI-West
     Site").  It should be relatively short and MUST be less than 256
     bytes in length.  White space SHOULD be stripped from the
     beginning and end of each name before encoding, to avoid
     accidental conflicts.

  Padding (if needed):
     The end of the MZAP header is padded with null bytes until it is
     4-byte aligned.







Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


5.1.  Zone Announcement Message

  A Zone Announcement Message has PTYPE=0, and is periodically sent by
  a ZBR for each scope for which it is a boundary, EXCEPT:

  o  the Local Scope

  o  the Link-local scope

  The format of a Zone Announcement Message is shown below:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                              MZAP Header
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      ZT       |     ZTL       |           Hold Time           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address 0                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Router Address 1                       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address 1                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                               .....
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Router Address N                       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address N                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  The fields are defined as follows:

  Zones Traveled (ZT): 8 bits
     This gives the number of Local Zone IDs contained in this message
     path.

  Zones Traveled Limit (ZTL): 8 bits
     This gives the limit on number of local zones that the packet can
     traverse before it MUST be dropped.  A value of 0 indicates that
     no limit exists.

  Hold Time:
     The time, in seconds, after which the receiver should assume the
     scope no longer exists, if no subsequent ZAM is received.  This
     should be set to [ZAM-HOLDTIME].





Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  Zone Path: multiple of 64 bits (IPv4) or 256 bits (IPv6)
     The zone path is a list of Local Zone ID Addresses (the Zone ID
     Address of a local zone) through which the ZAM has passed, and IP
     addresses of the router that forwarded the packet.  The origin
     router fills in the "Local Zone ID Address 0" field when sending
     the ZAM.  Every Local Scope router that forwards the ZAM across a
     Local Scope boundary MUST add the Local Zone ID Address of the
     local zone that the packet of the zone into which the message is
     being forwarded, and its own IP address to the end of this list,
     and increment ZT accordingly.  The zone path is empty which the
     ZAM is first sent.

5.2.  Zone Limit Exceeded (ZLE)

  The format of a ZLE is shown below:
   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                              MZAP Header
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      ZT       |     ZTL       |         Hold Time             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address 0                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Router Address 1                       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address 1                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                               .....
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Router Address N                       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Local Zone ID Address N                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  All fields are copied from the ZAM, except PTYPE which is set to one.

5.3.  Zone Convexity Message

  A Zone Announcement Message has PTYPE=2, and is periodically sent by
  a ZBR for each scope for which it is a boundary (except the Link-
  local scope).  Note that ZCM's ARE sent in the Local Scope.

  Unlike Zone Announcement Messages which are sent to the [MZAP-LOCAL-
  GROUP], Zone Convexity Messages are sent to the [ZCM-RELATIVE-GROUP]
  in the scope zone itself.  The format of a ZCM is shown below:





Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                              MZAP Header
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     ZNUM      |  unused       |           Hold Time           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          ZBR Address 1                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                               .....
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          ZBR Address N                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  The fields are as follows:

  Number of ZBR addresses (ZNUM): 8 bits
     This field gives the number of ZBR Addresses contained in this
     message.

  Hold Time:
     The time, in seconds, after which the receiver should assume the
     sender is no longer reachable, if no subsequent ZCM is received.
     This should be set to [ZCM-HOLDTIME].

  ZBR Address: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6)
     These fields give the addresses of the other ZBRs from which the
     Message Origin ZBR has received ZCMs but whose hold time has not
     expired.  The router should include all such addresses which fit
     in the packet, preferring those which it has not included recently
     if all do not fit.

5.4.  Not-Inside Message

  A Not-Inside Message (NIM) has PTYPE=3, and is periodically sent by a
  ZBR which knows that a scope X does not nest within another scope Y
  ("X not inside Y"):

  The format of a Not-Inside Message is shown below:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                              MZAP Header
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                  Not-Inside Zone Start Address                |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+




Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  The fields are as follows:

  MZAP Header:  Header fields identifying the scope X.  The Name Count
     may be 0.

  Not-Inside Zone Start Address: 32 bits (IPv4) or 128 bits (IPv6) This
     gives the start address for the scope Y.

6.  Message Processing Rules

6.1.  Internal entities listening to MZAP messages

  Any host or application may join the [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP] to listen for
  Zone Announcement Messages to build up a list of the scope zones that
  are relevant locally, and for Not-Inside Messages if it wishes to
  learn nesting information.  However, listening to such messages is
  not the recommended method for regular applications to discover this
  information.  These applications will normally query a local
  Multicast Address Allocation Server (MAAS) [3], which in turn listens
  to Zone Announcement Messages and Not-Inside Messages to maintain
  scope information, and can be queried by clients via MADCAP messages.

  An entity (including a MAAS) lacking any such information can only
  assume that it is within the Global Scope, and the Local Scope, both
  of which have well-known address ranges defined in [1].

  An internal entity (e.g., an MAAS) receiving a ZAM will parse the
  information that is relevant to it, such as the address range, and
  the names.  An address allocator receiving such information MUST also
  use the "B" bit to determine whether it can add the address range to
  the set of ranges from which it may allocate addresses (specifically,
  it may add them only if the bit is zero).  Even if the bit is zero,
  an MAAS SHOULD still store the range information so that clients who
  use relative- addresses can still obtain the ranges by requesting
  them from the MAAS.

  An internal entity (e.g., an MAAS) should assume that X nests within
  Y if:

  a) it first heard ZAMs for both X and Y at least [NIM-HOLDTIME]
     seconds ago, AND

  b) it has not heard a NIM indicating that "X not inside Y" for at
     least [NIM-HOLDTIME] seconds.







Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


6.2.  Sending ZAMs

  Each ZBR should send a Zone Announcement Message for each scope zone
  for which it is a boundary every [ZAM-INTERVAL] seconds, +/- 30% of
  [ZAM-INTERVAL] each time to avoid message synchronisation.

  The ZAM packet also contains a Zones Traveled Limit (ZTL).  If the
  number of Local Zone IDs in the ZAM path becomes equal to the Zones
  Traveled Limit, the packet will be dropped.  The ZTL field is set
  when the packet is first sent, and defaults to 32, but can be set to
  a lower value if a network administrator knows the expected size of
  the zone.

6.3.  Receiving ZAMs

  When a ZBR receives a ZAM for some scope zone X, it uses the
  following rules.

  If the local ZBR does NOT have any configuration for scope X:

  (1) Check to see if the included start and end addresses overlap
      with, but are not identical to, the start and end addresses of
      any locally-configured scope Y, and if so, signal an address
      range conflict to a local administrator.

  (2) Create a local "X not inside" state entry, if such an entry does
      not already exist.  The ZBR then restarts the entry's timer at
      [ZAM-HOLDTIME].  Existence of this state indicates that the ZBR
      knows that X does not nest inside any scope for which it is a
      boundary.  If the entry's timer expires (because no more ZAMs for
      X are heard for [ZAM-HOLDTIME]), the entry is deleted.

  If the local ZBR does have configuration for scope X:

  (1) If the ZAM originated from OUTSIDE the scope (i.e., received over
      a boundary interface for scope X):

     a) If the Scope Zone ID in the ZAM matches the ZBR's own Scope
        Zone ID, then signal a leaky scope misconfiguration.

     b) Drop the ZAM (perform no further processing below).  For
        example, router G in Figure 2 will not forward the ZAM.  This
        rule is primarily a safety measure, since the placement of G in
        Figure 2 is not a recommended configuration, as discussed
        earlier.






Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  2) If the ZAM originated from INSIDE the scope:

     a) If the next-hop interface (according to the multicast RIB)
        towards the Origin is outside the scope zone, then signal a
        non- convexity problem.

     b) If the Origin's Scope Zone ID in the ZAM does not match the
        Scope Zone ID kept by the local ZBR, and this mismatch
        continues to occur, then signal a possible leaky scope warning.

     c) For each textual name in the ZAM, see if a name for the same
        scope and language is locally-configured; if so, but the scope
        names do not match, signal a scope name conflict to a local
        administrator.

     d) If the ZAM was received on an interface which is NOT a Local
        Scope boundary, and the last Local Zone ID Address in the path
        list is 0, the ZBR fills in the Local Zone ID Address of the
        local zone from which the ZAM was received.

  If a ZAM for the same scope (as identified by the origin Zone ID and
  first multicast address) was received in the last [ZAM-DUP-TIME]
  seconds, the ZAM is then discarded.  Otherwise, the ZAM is cached for
  at least [ZAM-DUP-TIME] seconds.  For example, when router C in
  Figure 2 receives the ZAM via B, it will not be forwarded, since it
  has just forwarded the ZAM from E.

  The Zones Travelled count in the message is then incremented, and if
  the updated count is equal to or greater than the ZTL field, schedule
  a ZLE to be sent as described in the next subsection and perform no
  further processing below.

  If the Zone ID of the Local Scope zone in which the ZBR resides is
  not already in the ZAM's path list, then the ZAM is immediately re-
  originated within the Local Scope zone.  It adds its own address and
  the Zone ID of the Local Scope zone into which the message is being
  forwarded to the ZAM path list before doing so.  A ZBR receiving a
  ZAM with a non-null path list MUST NOT forward that ZAM back into a
  Local Scope zone that is contained in the path list.  For example, in
  Figure 2, router F, which did not get the ZAM via A due to packet
  loss, will not forward the ZAM from B back into Zone 2 since the path
  list has { (E,1), (A,2), (B,3) } and hence Zone 2 already appears.

  In addition, the ZBR re-originates the ZAM out each interface with a
  Local Scope boundary (except that it is not sent back out the
  interface over which it was received, nor is it sent into any local
  scope zone whose ID is known and appears in the path list).  In each
  such ZAM re-originated, the ZBR adds its own IP address to the path



Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


  list, as well as the Zone ID Address of the Local Scope Zone into
  which the ZAM is being sent, or 0 if the ID is unknown.  (For
  example, if the other end of a point-to-point link also has a
  boundary on the interface, then the link has no Local Scope Zone ID.)

6.4.  Sending ZLEs

  This packet is sent by a local-zone boundary router that would have
  exceeded the Zone Traveled Limit if it had forwarded a ZAM packet.
  To avoid ZLE implosion, ZLEs are multicast with a random delay and
  suppressed by other ZLEs.  It is only scheduled if at least [ZLE-
  MIN-INTERVAL] seconds have elapsed since it previously sent a ZLE to
  any destination.  To schedule a ZLE, the router sets a random delay
  timer within the interval [ZLE-SUPPRESSION-INTERVAL], and listens to
  the [MZAP-RELATIVE-GROUP] within the included scope for other ZLEs.
  If any are received before the random delay timer expires, the timer
  is cleared and the ZLE is not sent.  If the timer expires, the router
  sends a ZLE to the [MZAP-RELATIVE-GROUP] within the indicated scope.

  The method used to choose a random delay (T) is as follows:

    Choose a random value X from the uniform random interval [0:1]
    Let C = 256
    Set T = [ZLE-SUPPRESSION-INTERVAL] log( C*X + 1) / log(C)

  This equation results in an exponential random distribution which
  ensures that close to one ZBR will respond.  Using a purely uniform
  distribution would begin to exhibit scaling problems as the number of
  ZBRs rose.  Since ZLEs are only suppressed if a duplicate ZLE arrives
  before the time chosen, two routers choosing delays which differ by
  an amount less than the propagation delay between them will both send
  messages, consuming excess bandwidth.  Hence it is desirable to
  minimize the number of routers choosing a delay close to the lowest
  delay chosen, and an exponential distribution is suitable for this
  purpose.

  A router SHOULD NOT send more than one Zone Limit Exceeded message
  every [ZLE-MIN-INTERVAL] regardless of destination.

6.5.  Receiving ZLEs

  When a router receives a ZLE, it performs the following actions:

  (1) If the router has a duplicate ZLE message scheduled to be sent,
      it unschedules its own message so another one will not be sent.

  (2) If the ZLE contains the router's own address in the Origin field,
      it signals a leaky scope misconfiguration.



Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


6.6.  Sending ZCMs

  Each ZBR should send a Zone Convexity Message (ZCM) for each scope
  zone for which it is a boundary every [ZCM-INTERVAL] seconds, +/- 30%
  of [ZCM-INTERVAL] each time to avoid message synchronisation.

  ZCMs are sent to the [ZCM-RELATIVE-GROUP] in the scoped range itself.
  (For example, if the scope range is 239.1.0.0 to 239.1.0.255, then
  these messages should be sent to 239.1.0.252.)  As these are not
  Locally-Scoped packets, they are simply multicast across the scope
  zone itself, and require no path to be built up, nor any special
  processing by intermediate Local Scope ZBRs.

6.7.  Receiving ZCMs

  When a ZCM is received for a given scope X, on an interface which is
  inside the scope, it follows the rules below:

  (1) The Origin is added to the local list of ZBRs (including itself)
      for that scope, and the Zone ID is updated to be the lowest IP
      address in the list.  The new entry is scheduled to be timed out
      after [ZCM-HOLDTIME] if no further messages are received from
      that ZBR, so that the Zone ID will converge to the lowest address
      of any active ZBR for the scope.

  (2) If a ZBR is listed in ZCMs received, but the next-hop interface
      (according to the multicast RIB) towards that ZBR is outside the
      scope zone, or if no ZCM is received from that ZBR for [ZCM-
      HOLDTIME] seconds, as in the example in Figure 4, then signal a
      non-convexity problem.

  (3) For each textual name in the ZCM, see if a name for the same
      scope and language is locally-configured; if so, but the scope
      names do not match, signal a scope name conflict to a local
      administrator.

6.8.  Sending NIMs

  Periodically, for each scope zone Y for which it is a boundary, a
  router originates a Not-Inside Message (NIM) for each "X not inside"
  entry it has created when receiving ZAMs.  Like a ZAM, this message
  is multicast to the address [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP] from one of its
  interfaces inside Y.

  Each ZBR should send such a Not-Inside Message every [NIM-INTERVAL]
  seconds, +/- 30% of [NIM-INTERVAL] to avoid message synchronization.





Handley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 2776                          MZAP                     February 2000


6.9.  Receiving NIMs

  When a ZBR receives a NIM saying that "X is not inside Y", it is
  forwarded, unmodified, in a manner similar to ZAMs:

  (1) If the NIM was received on an interface with a boundary for
      either X or Y, the NIM is discarded.

  (2) Unlike ZAMs, if the NIM was not received on the interface towards
      the message origin (according to the Multicast RIB), the NIM is
      discarded.

  (3) If a NIM for the same X and Y (where each is identified by its
      first multicast address) was received in the last [ZAM-DUP-TIME]
      seconds, the NIM is not forwarded.

  (4) Otherwise, the NIM is cached for at least [ZAM-DUP-TIME] seconds.

  (5) The ZBR then re-originates the NIM (i.e., with the original UDP
      payload) into each local scope zone in which it has interfaces,
      except that it is not sent back into the local scope zone from
      which the message was received, nor is it sent out any interface
      with a boundary for either X or Y.

7.  Constants

  [MZAP-PORT]:  The well-known UDP port to which all MZAP messages are
  sent.  Value: 2106.

  [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP]:  The well-known group in the Local Scope to which
  ZAMs are sent.  All Multicast Address Allocation servers and Zone
  Boundary Routers listen to this group.  Value: 239.255.255.252 for
  IPv4.

  [ZCM-RELATIVE-GROUP]:  The relative group in each scope zone, to
  which ZCMs are sent.  A Zone Boundary Router listens to the relative
  group in each scope for which it is a boundary.  Value: (last IP
  address in scope range) - 3.  For example, in the Local Scope, the
  relative group is the same as the [MZAP-LOCAL-GROUP] address.

  [ZAM-INTERVAL]:  The interval at which a Zone Boundary Router
  originates Zone Announcement Messages.  Default value: 600 seconds
  (10 minutes).

  [ZAM-HOLDTIME]:  The holdtime to include in a ZAM.  This SHOULD be
  set to at least 3 * [ZAM-INTERVAL].  Default value: 1860 seconds (31
  minutes).




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  [ZAM-DUP-TIME]:  The time interval after forwarding a ZAM, during
  which ZAMs for the same scope will not be forwarded.  Default value:
  30 seconds.

  [ZCM-INTERVAL]:  The interval at which a Zone Boundary Router
  originates Zone Convexity Messages.  Default value: 600 seconds (10
  minutes).

  [ZCM-HOLDTIME]:  The holdtime to include in a ZCM.  This SHOULD be
  set to at least 3 * [ZCM-INTERVAL].  Default value: 1860 seconds (31
  minutes).

  [ZLE-SUPPRESSION-INTERVAL]:  The interval over which to choose a
  random delay before sending a ZLE message.  Default value: 300
  seconds (5 minutes).

  [ZLE-MIN-INTERVAL]:  The minimum interval between sending ZLE
  messages, regardless of destination.  Default value: 300 seconds (5
  minutes).

  [NIM-INTERVAL]:  The interval at which a Zone Boundary Router
  originates Not-Inside Messages.  Default value: 1800 seconds (30
  minutes).

  [NIM-HOLDTIME]:   The holdtime to include the state within a NIM.
  This SHOULD be set to at least 3 * [NIM-INTERVAL]. Default value:
  5460 (91 minutes)

8.  Security Considerations

  While unauthorized reading of MZAP messages is relatively innocuous
  (so encryption is generally not an issue), accepting unauthenticated
  MZAP messages can be problematic.  Authentication of MZAP messages
  can be provided by using the IPsec Authentication Header (AH) [12].

  In the case of ZCMs and ZLEs, an attacker can cause false logging of
  convexity and leakage problems.  It is likely that is would be purely
  an annoyance, and not cause any significant problem.  (Such messages
  could be authenticated, but since they may be sent within large
  scopes, the receiver may not be able to authenticate a non-malicious
  sender.)

  ZAMs and NIMs, on the other hand, are sent within the Local Scope,
  where assuming a security relationship between senders and receivers
  is more practical.






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  In the case of NIMs, accepting unauthenticated messages can cause the
  false cancellation of nesting relationships.  This would cause a
  section of the hierarchy of zones to flatten.  Such a flattening
  would lessen the efficiency benefits afforded by the hierarchy but
  would not cause it to become unusable.

  Accepting unauthenticated ZAM messages, however, could cause
  applications to believe that a scope zone exists when it does not.
  If these were believed, then applications may choose to use this
  non-existent administrative scope for their uses.  Such applications
  would be able to communicate successfully, but would be unaware that
  their traffic may be traveling further than they expected.  As a
  result, any application accepting unauthenticated ZAMs MUST only take
  scope names as a guideline, and SHOULD assume that their traffic sent
  to non-local scope zones might travel anywhere.  The confidentiality
  of such traffic CANNOT be assumed from the fact that it was sent to a
  scoped address that was discovered using MZAP.

  In addition, ZAMs are used to inform Multicast Address Allocation
  Servers (MAASs) of names and address ranges of scopes, and accepting
  unauthenticated ZAMs could result in false names being presented to
  users, and in wrong addresses being allocated to users.  To counter
  this, MAAS's authenticate ZAMs as follows:

  (1) A ZBR signs all ZAMs it originates (using an AH).

  (2) A ZBR signs a ZAM it relays if and only if it can authenticate
      the previous sender.  A ZBR MUST still forward un-authenticated
      ZAMs (to provide leak detection), but should propagate an
      authenticated ZAM even if an un-authenticated one was received
      with the last [ZAM-DUP-TIME] seconds.

  (3) A MAAS SHOULD be configured with the public key of the local zone
      in which it resides.  A MAAS thus configured SHOULD ignore an
      unauthenticated ZAM if an authenticated one for the same scope
      has been received, and MAY ignore all unauthenticated ZAMs.

9.  Acknowledgements

  This document is a product of the MBone Deployment Working Group,
  whose members provided many helpful comments and suggestions, Van
  Jacobson provided some of the original ideas that led to this
  protocol.  The Multicast Address Allocation Working Group also
  provided useful feedback regarding scope names and interactions with
  applications.






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10.  References

  [1]  Meyer, D., "Administratively Scoped IP Multicast", BCP 23, RFC
       2365, July 1998.

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

  [3]  Thaler, D., Handley, M. and D. Estrin, "The Internet Multicast
       Address Allocation Architecture", Work in Progress.

  [4]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", RFC
       2279, January 1998.

  [5]  Fenner, W. and S. Casner, "A `traceroute' facility for IP
       Multicast", Work in Progress.

  [6]  Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of Languages", RFC
       1766, March 1995.

  [7]  Handley, M. and S. Hanna.  "Multicast Address Allocation
       Protocol (AAP)", Work in Progress.

  [8]  Kermode, R. "Scoped Hybrid Automatic Repeat reQuest with Forward
       Error Correction (SHARQFEC)", ACM SIGCOMM 98, September 1998,
       Vancouver, Canada.

  [9]  Hanna, S., Patel, B., and M. Shah.  "Multicast Address Dynamic
       Client Allocation Protocol (MADCAP)", RFC 2730, December 1999.

  [10] Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2, RFC 1700,
       October 1994.

  [11] IANA, "Address Family Numbers", http://www.isi.edu/in-
       notes/iana/assignments/address-family-numbers

  [12] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Authentication Header", RFC 2402,
       November 1998.













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11.  Authors' Addresses

  Mark Handley
  AT&T Center for Internet Research at ICSI
  1947 Center St, Suite 600
  Berkely, CA 94704
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  David Thaler
  Microsoft
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Roger Kermode
  Motorola Australian Research Centre
  12 Lord St,
  Botany, NSW 2019
  Australia

  EMail: [email protected]
























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12.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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