Network Working Group                                          D. Black
Request for Comments: 2983                              EMC Corporation
Category: Informational                                    October 2000


                 Differentiated Services and Tunnels

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

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

Abstract

  This document considers the interaction of Differentiated Services
  (diffserv) (RFC 2474, RFC 2475) with IP tunnels of various forms.
  The discussion of tunnels in the diffserv architecture (RFC 2475)
  provides insufficient guidance to tunnel designers and implementers.
  This document describes two conceptual models for the interaction of
  diffserv with Internet Protocol (IP) tunnels and employs them to
  explore the resulting configurations and combinations of
  functionality.  An important consideration is how and where it is
  appropriate to perform diffserv traffic conditioning in the presence
  of tunnel encapsulation and decapsulation.  A few simple mechanisms
  are also proposed that limit the complexity that tunnels would
  otherwise add to the diffserv traffic conditioning model.  Security
  considerations for IPSec tunnels limit the possible functionality in
  some circumstances.

1. Conventions used in this document

  An IP tunnel encapsulates IP traffic in another IP header as it
  passes through the tunnel; the presence of these two IP headers is a
  defining characteristic of IP tunnels, although there may be
  additional headers inserted between the two IP headers.  The inner IP
  header is that of the original traffic; an outer IP header is
  attached and detached at tunnel endpoints.  In general, intermediate
  network nodes between tunnel endpoints operate solely on the outer IP
  header, and hence diffserv-capable intermediate nodes access and
  modify only the DSCP field in the outer IP header.  The terms
  "tunnel" and "IP tunnel" are used interchangeably in this document.
  For simplicity, this document does not consider tunnels other than IP
  tunnels (i.e., for which there is no encapsulating IP header), such



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  as MPLS paths and "tunnels" formed by encapsulation in layer 2 (link)
  headers, although the conceptual models and approach described here
  may be useful in understanding the interaction of diffserv with such
  tunnels.

  This analysis considers tunnels to be unidirectional; bi-directional
  tunnels are considered to be composed of two unidirectional tunnels
  carrying traffic in opposite directions between the same tunnel
  endpoints.  A tunnel consists of an ingress where traffic enters the
  tunnel and is encapsulated by the addition of the outer IP header, an
  egress where traffic exits the tunnel and is decapsulated by the
  removal of the outer IP header, and intermediate nodes through which
  tunneled traffic passes between the ingress and egress.  This
  document does not make any assumptions about routing and forwarding
  of tunnel traffic, and in particular assumes neither the presence nor
  the absence of route pinning in any form.

2. Diffserv and Tunnels Overview

  Tunnels range in complexity from simple IP-in-IP tunnels [RFC 2003]
  to more complex multi-protocol tunnels, such as IP in PPP in L2TP in
  IPSec transport mode [RFC 1661, RFC 2401, RFC 2661].  The most
  general tunnel configuration is one in which the tunnel is not end-
  to-end, i.e., the ingress and egress nodes are not the source and
  destination nodes for traffic carried by the tunnel; such a tunnel
  may carry traffic with multiple sources and destinations.  If the
  ingress node is the end-to-end source of all traffic in the tunnel,
  the result is a simplified configuration to which much of the
  analysis and guidance in this document are applicable, and likewise
  if the egress node is the end-to-end destination.

  A primary concern for differentiated services is the use of the
  Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) in the IP header [RFC 2474,
  RFC 2475].  The diffserv architecture permits intermediate nodes to
  examine and change the value of the DSCP, which may result in the
  DSCP value in the outer IP header being modified between tunnel
  ingress and egress.  When a tunnel is not end-to-end, there are
  circumstances in which it may be desirable to propagate the DSCP
  and/or some of the information that it contains to the outer IP
  header on ingress and/or back to inner IP header on egress.  The
  current situation facing tunnel implementers is that [RFC 2475]
  offers incomplete guidance.  Guideline G.7 in Section 3 is an
  example, as some PHB specifications have followed it by explicitly
  specifying the PHBs that may be used in the outer IP header for
  tunneled traffic.  This is overly restrictive; for example, if a
  specification requires that the same PHB be used in both the inner
  and outer IP headers, traffic conforming to that specification cannot
  be tunneled across domains or networks that do not support that PHB.



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  A more flexible approach that should be used instead is to describe
  the behavioral properties of a PHB that are important to preserve
  when traffic is tunneled and allow the outer IP header to be marked
  in any fashion that is sufficient to preserve those properties.

  This document proposes an approach in which traffic conditioning is
  performed in series with tunnel ingress or egress processing, rather
  than in parallel.  This approach does not create any additional paths
  that transmit information across a tunnel endpoint, as all diffserv
  information is contained in the DSCPs in the IP headers.  The IPSec
  architecture [RFC 2401] requires that this be the case to preserve
  security properties at the egress of IPSec tunnels, but this approach
  also avoids complicating diffserv traffic conditioning blocks by
  introducing out-of-band inputs.  A consequence of this approach is
  that the last sentence of Guideline G.7 in Section 3 of [RFC 2475]
  becomes moot because there are no tunnel egress diffserv components
  that have access to both the inner and outer DSCPs.

  An additional advantage of this traffic conditioning approach is that
  it places no additional restrictions on the positioning of diffserv
  domain boundaries with respect to traffic conditioning and tunnel
  encapsulation/decapsulation components.  An interesting class of
  configurations involves a diffserv domain boundary that passes
  through (i.e., divides) a network node; such a boundary can be split
  to create a DMZ-like region between the domains that contains the
  tunnel encapsulation or decapsulation processing.  Diffserv traffic
  conditioning is not appropriate for such a DMZ-like region, as
  traffic conditioning is part of the operation and management of
  diffserv domains.

3. Conceptual Models for Diffserv Tunnels

  This analysis introduces two conceptual traffic conditioning models
  for IP tunnels based on an initial discussion that assumes a fully
  diffserv-capable network.  Configurations in which this is not the
  case are taken up in Section 3.2.

3.1 Conceptual Models for Fully DS-capable Configurations

  The first conceptual model is a uniform model that views IP tunnels
  as artifacts of the end to end path from a traffic conditioning
  standpoint; tunnels may be necessary mechanisms to get traffic to its
  destination(s), but have no significant impact on traffic
  conditioning.  In this model, any packet has exactly one DS Field
  that is used for traffic conditioning at any point, namely the DS
  Field in the outermost IP header; any others are ignored.
  Implementations of this model copy the DSCP value to the outer IP
  header at encapsulation and copy the outer header's DSCP value to the



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  inner IP header at decapsulation.  Use of this model allows IP
  tunnels to be configured without regard to diffserv domain boundaries
  because diffserv traffic conditioning functionality is not impacted
  by the presence of IP tunnels.

  The second conceptual model is a pipe model that views an IP tunnel
  as hiding the nodes between its ingress and egress so that they do
  not participate fully in traffic conditioning.  In this model, a
  tunnel egress node uses traffic conditioning information conveyed
  from the tunnel ingress by the DSCP value in the inner header, and
  ignores (i.e., discards) the DSCP value in the outer header.  The
  pipe model cannot completely hide traffic conditioning within the
  tunnel, as the effects of dropping and shaping at intermediate tunnel
  nodes may be visible at the tunnel egress and beyond.

  The pipe model has traffic conditioning consequences when the ingress
  and egress nodes are in different diffserv domains.  In such a
  situation, the egress node must perform traffic conditioning to
  ensure that the traffic exiting the tunnel has DSCP values acceptable
  to the egress diffserv domain (see Section 6 of the diffserv
  architecture [RFC 2475]).  An inter-domain TCA (Traffic Conditioning
  Agreement) between the diffserv domains containing the tunnel ingress
  and egress nodes may be used to reduce or eliminate egress traffic
  conditioning.  Complete elimination of egress traffic conditioning
  requires that the diffserv domains at ingress and egress have
  compatible service provisioning policies for the tunneled traffic and
  support all of the PHB groups and DSCP values used for that traffic
  in a consistent fashion.  Examples of this situation are provided by
  some virtual private network tunnels; it may be useful to view such
  tunnels as linking the diffserv domains at their endpoints into a
  diffserv region by making the tunnel endpoints virtually contiguous
  even though they may be physically separated by intermediate network
  nodes.

  The pipe model is also appropriate for situations in which the DSCP
  itself carries information through the tunnel.  For example, if
  transit between two domains is obtained via a path that uses the EF
  PHB [RFC 2598], the drop precedence information in the AF PHB DSCP
  values [RFC 2597] will be lost unless something is done to preserve
  it; an IP tunnel is one possible preservation mechanism.  A path that
  crosses one or more non-diffserv domains between its DS-capable
  endpoints may experience a similar information loss phenomenon if a
  tunnel is not used due to the limited set of DSCP codepoints that are
  compatible with such domains.







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3.2 Considerations for Partially DS-capable Configurations

  If only the tunnel egress node is DS-capable, [RFC 2475] requires the
  egress node to perform any edge traffic conditioning needed by the
  diffserv domain for tunneled traffic entering from outside the
  domain.  If the egress node would not otherwise be a DS edge node,
  one way to meet this requirement is to perform edge traffic
  conditioning at an appropriate upstream DS edge node within the
  tunnel, and copy the DSCP value from the outer IP header to the inner
  IP header as part of tunnel decapsulation processing; this applies
  the uniform model to the portion of the tunnel within the egress
  node's diffserv domain.  A second alternative is to discard the outer
  DSCP value as part of decapsulation processing, reducing the
  resulting traffic conditioning problem and requirements to those of
  an ordinary DS ingress node.  This applies the pipe model to the
  portion of the tunnel within the egress node's diffserv domain and
  hence the adjacent upstream node for DSCP marking purposes is the
  tunnel ingress node, rather than the immediately upstream
  intermediate tunnel node.

  If only the tunnel ingress node is DS-capable, [RFC 2475] requires
  that traffic emerging from the tunnel be compatible with the network
  at the tunnel egress.  If tunnel decapsulation processing discards
  the outer header's DSCP value without changing the inner header's
  DSCP value, the DS-capable tunnel ingress node is obligated to set
  the inner header's DSCP to a value compatible with the network at the
  tunnel egress.  The value 0 (DSCP of 000000) is used for this purpose
  by a number of existing tunnel implementations.  If the egress
  network implements IP precedence as specified in [RFC 791], then some
  or all of the eight class selector DSCP codepoints defined in [RFC
  2474] may be usable.  DSCP codepoints other than the class selectors
  are not generally suitable for this purpose, as correct operation
  would usually require diffserv functionality at the DS-incapable
  tunnel egress node.

4. Ingress Functionality

  As described in Section 3 above, this analysis is based on an
  approach in which diffserv functionality and/or out-of-band
  communication paths are not placed in parallel with tunnel
  encapsulation processing.  This allows three possible locations for
  traffic conditioning with respect to tunnel encapsulation processing,
  as shown in the following diagram that depicts the flow of IP headers
  through tunnel encapsulation:







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                                       +--------- [2 - Outer] -->>
                                      /
                                     /
  >>---- [1 - Before] -------- Encapsulate ------ [3 - Inner] -->>

  Traffic conditioning at [1 - Before] is logically separate from the
  tunnel, as it is not impacted by the presence of tunnel
  encapsulation, and hence should be allowed by tunnel designs and
  specifications.  Traffic conditioning at [2 - Outer] may interact
  with tunnel protocols that are sensitive to packet reordering; such
  tunnels may need to limit the functionality at [2 - Outer] as
  discussed further in Section 5.1.  In the absence of reordering
  sensitivity, no additional restrictions should be necessary, although
  traffic conditioning at [2 - Outer] may be responsible for remarking
  traffic to be compatible with the next diffserv domain that the
  tunneled traffic enters.

  In contrast, the [3 - Inner] location is difficult to utilize for
  traffic conditioning because it requires functionality that reaches
  inside the packet to operate on the inner IP header.  This is
  impossible for IPSec tunnels and any other tunnels that are encrypted
  or employ cryptographic integrity checks.  Hence traffic conditioning
  at [3 - Inner] can often only be performed as part of tunnel
  encapsulation processing, complicating both the encapsulation and
  traffic conditioning implementations.  In many cases, the desired
  functionality can be achieved via a combination of traffic
  conditioners in the other two locations, both of which can be
  specified and implemented independently of tunnel encapsulation.

  An exception for which traffic conditioning functionality is
  necessary at [3 - Inner] occurs when the DS-incapable tunnel egress
  discards the outer IP header as part of decapsulation processing, and
  hence the DSCP in the inner IP header must be compatible with the
  egress network.  Setting the inner DSCP to 0 as part of encapsulation
  addresses most of these cases, and the class selector DCSP codepoint
  values are also useful for this purpose, as they are valid for
  networks that support IP precedence [RFC 791].

  The following table summarizes the achievable relationships among the
  before (B), outer (O), and inner (I) DSCP values and the
  corresponding locations of traffic conditioning logic.










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  Relationship       Traffic Conditioning Location(s)
  ------------       --------------------------------
  B  = I  = O        No traffic conditioning required
  B != I  = O        [1 - Before]
  B  = I != O        [2 - Outer]
  B  = O != I        Limited support as part of encapsulation:
                       I can be set to 000000 or possibly one of
                       the class selector code points.
  B != I != O        Some combination of the above three scenarios.

  A combination of [1 - Before] and [2 - Outer] is applicable to many
  cases covered by the last two lines of the table, and may be
  preferable to deploying functionality at [3 - Inner].  Traffic
  conditioning may still be required for purposes such as rate and
  burst control even if DSCP values are not changed.

4.1 Ingress DSCP Selection and Reordering

  It may be necessary or desirable to limit the DS behavior aggregates
  that utilize an IP tunnel that is sensitive to packet reordering
  within the tunnel.  The diffserv architecture allows packets to be
  reordered when they belong to behavior aggregates among which
  reordering is permitted; for example, reordering is allowed among
  behavior aggregates marked with different Class Selector DSCPs [RFC
  2474].  IPSec [RFC 2401] and L2TP [RFC 2661] provide examples of
  tunnels that are sensitive to packet reordering.  If IPSec's anti-
  replay support is configured, audit events are generated in response
  to packet reordering that exceeds certain levels, with the audit
  events indicating potential security issues.  L2TP can be configured
  to restore the ingress ordering of packets at tunnel egress, not only
  undoing any differentiation based on reordering within the tunnel,
  but also negatively impacting the traffic (e.g., by increasing
  latency).  The uniform model cannot be completely applied to such
  tunnels, as arbitrary mixing of traffic from different behavior
  aggregates can cause these undesirable interactions.

  The simplest method of avoiding undesirable interactions of
  reordering with reordering-sensitive tunnel protocols and features is
  not to employ the reordering-sensitive protocols or features, but
  this is often not desirable or even possible.  When such protocols or
  features are used, interactions can be avoided by ensuring that the
  aggregated flows through the tunnel are marked at [2 - Outer] to
  constitute a single ordered aggregate (i.e., the PHBs used share an
  ordering constraint that prevents packets from being reordered).
  Tunnel protocol specifications should indicate both whether and under
  what circumstances a tunnel should be restricted to a single ordered
  aggregate as well as the consequences of deviating from that
  restriction.  For the IPSec and L2TP examples discussed above, the



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  specifications should restrict each tunnel to a single ordered
  aggregate when protocol features sensitive to reordering are
  configured, and may adopt the approach of restricting all tunnels in
  order to avoid unexpected consequences of changes in protocol
  features or composition of tunneled traffic.  Diffserv
  implementations should not attempt to look within such tunnels to
  provide reordering-based differentiation to the encapsulated
  microflows.  If reordering-based differentiation is desired within
  such tunnels, multiple parallel tunnels between the same endpoints
  should be used.  This enables reordering among packets in different
  tunnels to coexist with an absence of packet reordering within each
  individual tunnel.  For IPSec and related security protocols, there
  is no cryptographic advantage to using a single tunnel for multiple
  ordered aggregates rather than multiple tunnels because any traffic
  analysis made possible by the use of multiple tunnels can also be
  performed based on the DSCPs in the outer headers of traffic in a
  single tunnel.  In general, the additional resources required to
  support multiple tunnels (e.g., cryptographic contexts), and the
  impact of multiple tunnels on network management should be considered
  in determining whether and where to deploy them.

4.2 Tunnel Selection

  The behavioral characteristics of a tunnel are an important
  consideration in determining what traffic should utilize the tunnel.
  This involves the service provisioning policies of all the
  participating domains, not just the PHBs and DSCPs marked on the
  traffic at [2 - Outer].  For example, while it is in general a bad
  idea to tunnel EF PHB traffic via a Default PHB tunnel, this can be
  acceptable if the EF traffic is the only traffic that utilizes the
  tunnel, and the tunnel is provisioned in a fashion adequate to
  preserve the behavioral characteristics required by the EF PHB.

  Service provisioning policies are responsible for preventing
  mismatches such as forwarding EF traffic via an inadequately
  provisioned Default tunnel.  When multiple parallel tunnels with
  different behavioral characteristics are available, service
  provisioning policies are responsible for determining which flows
  should use which tunnels.  Among the possibilities is a coarse
  version of the uniform tunnel model in which the inner DSCP value is
  used to select a tunnel that will forward the traffic using a
  behavioral aggregate that is compatible with the traffic's PHB.

5. Egress Functionality

  As described in Section 3 above, this analysis is based on an
  approach in which diffserv functionality and/or out-of-band
  communication paths are not placed in parallel with tunnel



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  encapsulation processing.  This allows three possible locations for
  traffic conditioners with respect to tunnel decapsulation processing,
  as shown in the following diagram that depicts the flow of IP headers
  through tunnel decapsulation:

  >>----[5 - Outer]-------------+
                                 \
                                  \
  >>----[4 - Inner] --------- Decapsulate ---- [6 - After] -->>

  Traffic conditioning at [5 - Outer] and [6 - After] is logically
  separate from the tunnel, as it is not impacted by the presence of
  tunnel decapsulation.  Tunnel designs and specifications should allow
  diffserv traffic conditioning at these locations. Such conditioning
  can be viewed as independent of the tunnel, i.e., [5 - Outer] is
  traffic conditioning that takes place prior to tunnel egress, and
  [6 - After] is traffic conditioning that takes place after egress
  decapsulation.  An important exception is that the configuration of a
  tunnel (e.g., the absence of traffic conditioning at tunnel ingress)
  and/or the diffserv domains involved may require that all traffic
  exiting a tunnel pass through diffserv traffic conditioning to
  fulfill the diffserv edge node traffic conditioning responsibilities
  of the tunnel egress node.  Tunnel designers are strongly encouraged
  to include the ability to require that all traffic exiting a tunnel
  pass through diffserv traffic conditioning in order to ensure that
  traffic exiting the node is compatible with the egress node's
  diffserv domain.

  In contrast, the [4 - Inner] location is difficult to employ for
  traffic conditioning because it requires reaching inside the packet
  to operate on the inner IP header.  Unlike the [3 - Inner] case for
  encapsulation, there is no need for functionality to be performed at
  [4- Inner], as diffserv traffic conditioning can be appended to the
  tunnel decapsulation (i.e., performed at [6 - After]).

5.1 Egress DSCP Selection

  The elimination of parallel functionality and data paths from
  decapsulation causes a potential loss of information.  As shown in
  the above diagram, decapsulation combines and reduces two DSCP values
  to one DSCP value, losing information in the most general case, even
  if arbitrary functionality is allowed.  Beyond this, allowing
  arbitrary functionality poses a structural problem, namely that the
  DSCP value from the outer IP header would have to be presented as an
  out-of-band input to the traffic conditioning block at [6 - After],
  complicating the traffic conditioning model.





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  To avoid such complications, the simpler approach of statically
  selecting either the inner or outer DSCP value at decapsulation is
  recommended, leaving the full generality of traffic conditioning
  functionality to be implemented at [5 - Outer] and/or [6 - After].
  Tunnels should support static selection of one or the other DSCP
  value at tunnel egress.  The rationale for this approach is usually
  only one of the two DSCP values contains useful information.  The
  conceptual model for the tunnel provides a strong indication of which
  one contains useful information; the outer DSCP value usually
  contains the useful information for tunnels based on the uniform
  model, and the inner DSCP value usually contains the useful
  information for tunnels based on the pipe model.  IPSec tunnels are
  usually based on the pipe model, and for security reasons are
  currently required to select the inner DSCP value; they should not be
  configured to select the outer DSCP value in the absence of an
  adequate security analysis of the resulting risks and implications.

5.2 Egress DSCP Selection Case Study

  As a sanity check on the egress DSCP selection approach proposed
  above, this subsection considers a situation in which a more complex
  approach might be required.  Statically choosing a single DSCP value
  may not work well when both DSCPs are carrying information that is
  relevant to traffic conditioning.

  As an example, consider a situation in which different AF groups [RFC
  2597] are used by the two domains at the tunnel endpoints, and there
  is an intermediate domain along the tunnel using RFC 791 IP
  precedences that is transited by setting the DSCP to zero.  This
  situation is shown in the following IP header flow diagram where I is
  the tunnel ingress node, E is the tunnel egress node and the vertical
  lines are domain boundaries.  The node at the left-hand vertical line
  sets the DSCP in the outer header to 0 in order to obtain
  compatibility with the middle domain:

                       |                   |
                 +-----|-------------------|------+
                /      |                   |       \
  >>-----------I-------|-------------------|--------E---------->>
                       |                   |
     Ingress DS Domain        RFC 791         Egress DS domain
                           IP Precedence
                               Domain

  In this situation, the DS edge node for the egress domain (i.e., the
  node at the right-hand vertical line) can select the appropriate AF
  group (e.g., via an MF classifier), but cannot reconstruct the drop
  precedence information that was removed from the outer header when it



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  transited the RFC 791 domain (although it can construct new
  information via metering and marking).  The original drop precedence
  information is preserved in the inner IP header's DSCP, and could be
  combined at the tunnel egress with the AF class selection
  communicated via the outer IP header's DSCP.  The marginal benefit of
  being able to reuse the original drop precedence information as
  opposed to constructing new drop precedence markings does not justify
  the additional complexity introduced into tunnel egress traffic
  conditioners by making both DSCP values available to traffic
  conditioning at [6 - After].

6.  Diffserv and Protocol Translators

  A related issue involves protocol translators, including those
  employing the Stateless IP/ICMP Translation Algorithm [RFC 2765].
  These translators are not tunnels because they do not add or remove a
  second IP header to/from packets (e.g., in contrast to IPv6 over IPv4
  tunnels [RFC 1933]) and hence do not raise concerns of information
  propagation between inner and outer IP headers.  The primary
  interaction between translators and diffserv is that the translation
  boundary is likely to also be a diffserv domain boundary (e.g., the
  IPv4 and IPv6 domains may have different policies for traffic
  conditioning and DSCP usage), and hence such translators should allow
  the insertion of diffserv edge node processing (including traffic
  conditioning) both before and after the translation processing.

7. Security Considerations

  The security considerations for the diffserv architecture discussed
  in [RFC 2474, RFC 2475] apply when tunnels are present.  One of the
  requirements is that a tunnel egress node in the interior of a
  diffserv domain is the DS ingress node for traffic exiting the
  tunnel, and is responsible for performing appropriate traffic
  conditioning.  The primary security implication is that the traffic
  conditioning is responsible for dealing with theft- and denial-of-
  service threats posed to the diffserv domain by traffic exiting from
  the tunnel.  The IPSec architecture [RFC 2401] places a further
  restriction on tunnel egress processing; the outer header is to be
  discarded unless the properties of the traffic conditioning to be
  applied are known and have been adequately analyzed for security
  vulnerabilities.  This includes both the [5 - Outer] and [6 - After]
  traffic conditioning blocks on the tunnel egress node, if present,
  and may involve traffic conditioning performed by an upstream DS-edge
  node that is the DS domain ingress node for the encapsulated tunneled
  traffic.






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8. References

  [RFC 791]  Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791, September
             1981.

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

  [RFC 1933] Gilligan, R. and E. Nordmark, "Transition Mechanisms for
             IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 1933, April 1996.

  [RFC 2003] Perkins, C., "IP Encapsulation within IP", RFC 2003,
             October 1996.

  [RFC 2401] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the
             Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [RFC 2474] Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F. and D. Black,
             "Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS
             Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers", RFC 2474, December
             1998.

  [RFC 2475] Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.
             and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
             Services", RFC 2475, December 1998.

  [RFC 2597] Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W. and J. Wroclawski,
             "Assured Forwarding PHB Group", RFC 2597. June 1999.

  [RFC 2598] Jacobson, V., Nichols, K. and K. Poduri, "An Expedited
             Forwarding PHB", RFC 2598, June 1999.

  [RFC 2661] Townsley, W., Valencia, A., Rubens, A., Pall, G., Zorn, G.
             and B. Palter. "Layer Two Tunneling Protocol "L2TP"", RFC
             2661, August 1999.

  [RFC 2765] Nordmark, E., "Stateless IP/ICMP Translation Algorithm
             (SIIT)", RFC 2765, February 2000.













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9. Acknowledgments

  Some of this material is based on discussions with Brian Carpenter,
  and in particular his presentation on this topic to the diffserv WG
  during the summer 1999 IETF meeting in Oslo.  Credit is also due to a
  number of people working on tunnel specifications who have discovered
  limitations of the diffserv architecture [RFC 2475] in the area of
  tunnels.  Their patience with the time it has taken to address this
  set of issues is greatly appreciated.  Finally, this material has
  benefited from discussions within the diffserv WG, both in meetings
  and on the mailing list -- the contributions of participants in those
  discussions are gratefully acknowledged.

10. Author's Address

  David L. Black
  EMC Corporation
  42 South St.
  Hopkinton, MA   01748

  Phone: +1 (508) 435-1000 x75140
  EMail: [email protected]





























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RFC 2983                  Diffserv and Tunnels              October 2000


11.  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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