Network Working Group                                           B. Aboba
Request for Comments: 4436                         Microsoft Corporation
Category: Standards Track                                     J. Carlson
                                                       Sun Microsystems
                                                            S. Cheshire
                                                         Apple Computer
                                                             March 2006


             Detecting Network Attachment in IPv4 (DNAv4)

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 (2006).

Abstract

  The time required to detect movement between networks and to obtain
  (or to continue to use) an IPv4 configuration may be significant as a
  fraction of the total handover latency in moving between points of
  attachment.  This document synthesizes, from experience in the
  deployment of hosts supporting ARP, DHCP, and IPv4 Link-Local
  addresses, a set of steps known as Detecting Network Attachment for
  IPv4 (DNAv4), in order to decrease the handover latency in moving
  between points of attachment.


















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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
     1.1. Applicability ..............................................2
     1.2. Requirements ...............................................5
     1.3. Terminology ................................................5
  2. Overview ........................................................6
     2.1. Reachability Test ..........................................8
          2.1.1. Packet Format .......................................9
     2.2. IPv4 Address Acquisition ..................................10
     2.3. IPv4 Link-Local Addresses .................................11
     2.4. Manually Assigned Addresses ...............................12
  3. Security Considerations ........................................12
  4. References .....................................................13
     4.1. Normative References ......................................13
     4.2. Informative References ....................................13
  5. Acknowledgements ...............................................14

1.  Introduction

  The time required to detect movement between networks and to obtain
  (or to continue to use) an operable IPv4 configuration may be
  significant as a fraction of the total handover latency in moving
  between points of attachment.

  This document synthesizes, from experience in the deployment of hosts
  supporting ARP [RFC826], DHCP [RFC2131], and IPv4 Link-Local
  addresses [RFC3927], a set of steps known as Detecting Network
  Attachment for IPv4 (DNAv4).  DNAv4 optimizes the (common) case of
  re-attachment to a network that one has been connected to previously
  by attempting to re-use a previous (but still valid) configuration,
  reducing the re-attachment time on LANs to a few milliseconds.  Since
  this procedure is dependent on the ARP protocol, it is not suitable
  for use on media that do not support ARP.

1.1.  Applicability

  DHCP is an effective and widely adopted mechanism for a host to
  obtain an IP address for use on a particular network link, or to
  re-validate a previously obtained address via DHCP's INIT-REBOOT
  mechanism [RFC2131].

  When obtaining a new address, DHCP specifies that the client SHOULD
  use ARP to verify that the offered address is not already in use.
  The process of address conflict detection [ACD] can take as much as
  seven seconds.  In principle, this time interval could be shortened,





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  with the obvious trade-off: the less time a host spends waiting to
  see if another host is already using its intended address, the
  greater the risk of inadvertent address conflicts.

  Where the client successfully re-validates a previously obtained
  address using the INIT-REBOOT mechanism, the DHCP specification does
  not require the client to perform address conflict detection, so this
  seven-second delay does not apply.  However, the DHCP server may be
  slow to respond or may be down and not responding at all, so hosts
  could benefit from having an alternative way to quickly determine
  that a previously obtained address is valid for use on this
  particular link.

  When the client moves between networks, the address re-validation
  attempt may be unsuccessful; a DHCPNAK may be received in response to
  a DHCPREQUEST, causing the client to restart the configuration
  process by moving to the INIT state.  If an address previously
  obtained on the new network is still operable, DNAv4 enables the host
  to confirm the new configuration quickly, bypassing restart of the
  configuration process and conflict detection.

  The alternative mechanism specified by this document applies when a
  host has a previously allocated DHCP address, which was not returned
  to the DHCP server via a DHCPRELEASE message, and which still has
  time remaining on its lease.  In this case, the host may determine
  whether it has re-attached to the logical link where this address is
  valid for use, by sending a unicast ARP Request packet to a router
  previously known for that link (or, in the case of a link with more
  than one router, by sending one or more unicast ARP Request packets
  to one or more of those routers).

  The use of unicast ARP has a number of benefits.  One benefit is that
  unicast packets impose less burden on the network than broadcast
  packets, particularly on 802.11 networks where broadcast packets may
  be sent at rates as low as 1 Mb/sec.  Another benefit is that if the
  host is not on the link it hoped to find itself on, a broadcast ARP
  Request could pollute the ARP caches of peers on that link.  When
  using private addresses [RFC1918], another device could be
  legitimately using the same address, and a broadcast ARP Request
  could disrupt its communications, causing TCP connections to be
  broken, and similar problems.  Also, using a unicast ARP packet
  addressed to the MAC address of the router the host is expecting to
  find means that if the host is not on the expected link there will be
  no device with that MAC address, and the ARP packet will harmlessly
  disappear into the void without doing any damage.






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  These issues that define the applicability of DNAv4 lead us to a
  number of conclusions:

     o  DNAv4 is a performance optimization.  Its purpose is to speed
        up a process that may require as much as a few hundred
        milliseconds (DHCP INIT-REBOOT), as well as to reduce multi-
        second conflict detection delays when a host changes networks.

     o  As a performance optimization, it must not sacrifice
        correctness.  In other words, false positives are not
        acceptable.  DNAv4 must not conclude that a host has returned
        to a previously visited link where it has an operable IP
        address if this is not in fact the case.

     o  As a performance optimization, false negatives are acceptable.
        It is not an absolute requirement that this optimization
        correctly recognize a previously visited link in all possible
        cases.  For example, if a router ignores unicast ARP Requests,
        then DNAv4 will not be able to detect that it has returned to
        the same link in the future.  This is acceptable because the
        host still operates correctly as it did without DNAv4, just
        without the performance benefit.  Users and network operators
        who desire the performance improvement offered by DNAv4 can
        upgrade their routers to support DNAv4.

     o  As a performance optimization, where DNAv4 fails to provide a
        benefit, it should add little or no delay compared to today's
        DHCP processing.  In practice, this implies that DHCP
        processing needs to proceed in parallel.  Waiting for DNAv4 to
        fail before beginning DHCP processing can greatly increase
        total processing time, the opposite of the desired effect.

     o  Trials are inexpensive.  DNAv4 performs its checks using small
        unicast packets.  An IPv4 ARP packet on Ethernet is just 42
        octets, including the Ethernet header.  This means that the
        cost of an unsuccessful attempt is small, whereas the cost of a
        missed opportunity (having the right address available as a
        candidate and choosing not to try it for some reason) is large.
        As a result, the best strategy is often to try all available
        candidate configurations, rather than try to determine which
        candidates, if any, may be correct for this link, based on
        heuristics or hints.  For a heuristic to offer the prospect of
        being a potentially useful way to eliminate inappropriate
        configurations from the candidate list, that heuristic has to
        (a) be fast and inexpensive to compute, as compared to sending
        a 42-octet unicast packet, and (b) have high probability of not
        falsely eliminating a candidate configuration that could be
        found to be the correct one.



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     o  Time is limited.  If DNAv4 is to be effective in enabling low
        latency handoffs, it needs to complete in less than 10 ms.
        This implies that any heuristic used to eliminate candidate
        configurations needs to take at most a few milliseconds to
        compute.  This does not leave much room for heuristics based on
        observation of link-layer or Internet-layer traffic.

1.2.  Requirements

  In this document, several words are used to signify the requirements
  of the specification.  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
  "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" [RFC2119].

1.3.  Terminology

  This document uses the following terms:

  ar$sha
     ARP packet field: Sender Hardware Address [RFC826].  The hardware
     (MAC) address of the originator of an ARP packet.

  ar$spa
     ARP packet field: Sender Protocol Address [RFC826].  For IP
     Address Resolution, this is the IPv4 address of the sender of the
     ARP packet.

  ar$tha
     ARP packet field: Target Hardware Address [RFC826].  The hardware
     (MAC) address of the target of an ARP packet.

  ar$tpa
     ARP packet field: Target Protocol Address [RFC826].  For IPv4
     Address Resolution, the IPv4 address for which one desires to know
     the hardware address.

  DHCP client
     A DHCP client or "client" is an Internet host using the Dynamic
     Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) [RFC2131] to obtain
     configuration parameters, such as a network address.

  DHCP server
     A DHCP server or "server" is an Internet host that returns
     configuration parameters to DHCP clients.






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  Link
     A communication facility or medium over which network nodes can
     communicate.  Each link is associated with a minimum of two
     endpoints.  Each link endpoint has a unique link-layer identifier.

  Link Down
     An event provided by the link layer that signifies a state change
     associated with the interface's no longer being capable of
     communicating data frames; transient periods of high frame loss
     are not sufficient.  DNAv4 does not utilize "Link Down"
     indications.

  Link Layer
     Conceptual layer of control or processing logic that is
     responsible for maintaining control of the data link.  The data
     link layer functions provide an interface between the higher-layer
     logic and the data link.  The link layer is the layer immediately
     below IP.

  Link Up
     An event provided by the link layer that signifies a state change
     associated with the interface's becoming capable of communicating
     data frames.

  Point of Attachment
     The link endpoint on the link to which the host is currently
     connected.

  Routable address
     In this specification, the term "routable address" refers to any
     unicast IPv4 address other than an IPv4 Link-Local address.  This
     includes private addresses as specified in "Address Allocation for
     Private Internets" [RFC1918].

  Operable address
     In this specification, the term "operable address" refers either
     to a static IPv4 address, or an address assigned via DHCPv4 that
     has not been returned to the DHCP server via a DHCP RELEASE
     message, and whose lease has not yet expired.

2.  Overview

  On connecting to a new point of attachment, the host responds to a
  "Link Up" indication from the link layer by carrying out the DNAv4
  procedure.

  For each network that it connects to, it is assumed that the host
  saves the following parameters to stable storage:



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  [1] The IPv4 and MAC address of one or more test nodes on the
      network.

  [2] The IPv4 configuration parameters, including the DHCP client
      identifier, assigned address, and lease expiration time.

  From the set of networks that have operable IPv4 addresses associated
  with them, the host selects a subset and attempts to confirm the
  configuration for each network, using the reachability test described
  in Section 2.1.

  For a particular network, the host SHOULD use the addresses of local
  routers (preferably default gateways) as its test nodes.  If more
  than one address is known, those addresses may be tested in parallel.
  In order to ensure configuration validity, the host SHOULD only
  configure routes for which the next hop address passes the
  reachability test.  Other routes SHOULD be re-learned.

  DNAv4 does not significantly increase the likelihood of an address
  conflict.  The reachability test is only carried out for a network
  when the host has previously completed conflict detection as
  recommended in Section 2.2 of the DHCP specification [RFC2131] and
  obtained an operable IPv4 configuration on that network.
  Restrictions on sending ARP Requests and Responses are described in
  Section 2.1.1.

  One case where DNAv4 does increase the likelihood of an address
  conflict is when:

     o  a DHCP server hands out an address lease,

     o  the host with that lease leaves the network,

     o  the DHCP server is power-cycled or crashes and is rebooted,

     o  the DHCP server, having failed to save leases to stable
        storage, assigns that same address to another host, and

     o  the first host returns and, having a still-valid lease with
        time remaining, proceeds to use its assigned address,
        conflicting with the new host that is now using that same
        address.

  While Section 4 of the DHCP specification [RFC2131] assumes that DHCP
  servers save their leases in persistent storage, almost no consumer-
  grade NAT gateway does so.  Short DHCP lease lifetimes can mitigate
  this risk, though this also limits the operable candidate
  configurations available for DNAv4 to try.



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2.1.  Reachability Test

  The host skips the reachability test for a network if any of the
  following conditions are true:

  [a] The host does not have an operable routable IPv4 address on that
      network.  In this case, the reachability test cannot confirm that
      the host has an operable routable IPv4 address, so completing the
      reachability test would serve no purpose.

  [b] The host does not know the addresses of any test nodes on that
      network.  In this case, insufficient information is available to
      carry out the reachability test.

  [c] If DHCP authentication [RFC3118] is configured.  The reachability
      test utilizes ARP, which is insecure.  Hosts that have been
      configured to attempt DHCP authentication SHOULD NOT utilize the
      reachability test.  Security issues are discussed in Section 4.

  [d] The contents of the DHCP Client Identifier option that the client
      used to obtain the candidate configuration is different from the
      DHCP Client Identifier option the client intends to present on
      the interface in question.  In this case, it is anticipated that
      a DHCP server would NAK any request made by the client to acquire
      or extend the candidate configuration, since the two interfaces
      are presenting differing identities.

  If the reachability test is successful, the host SHOULD continue to
  use the operable routable IPv4 address associated with the confirmed
  network, without needing to re-acquire it.  Once a valid reachability
  test response is received, validation is complete, and additional
  responses should be discarded.

  If a DHCPv4 client is operational, it is RECOMMENDED that the host
  attempt to obtain IPv4 configuration via DHCPv4 in parallel with the
  reachability tests, with the host using the first answer returned.
  This ensures that the DNAv4 procedure will not result in additional
  delay in the case where reachability tests fail, or where sending a
  DHCPREQUEST from the INIT-REBOOT state, as described in Section 3.2
  and 4.3.2 of the DHCP specification [RFC2131], completes more quickly
  than the reachability tests.

  In situations where both DNAv4 and DHCP are used on the same link, it
  is possible that the reachability test will complete successfully,
  and then DHCP will complete later with a different result.  If this
  happens, the implementation SHOULD abandon the reachability test





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  results and use the DHCP result instead, unless the address confirmed
  via the reachability test has been manually assigned (see Section
  2.4).

  Where the reachability test does not return an answer, this is
  typically because the host is not attached to the network whose
  configuration is being tested.  In such circumstances, there is
  typically little value in aggressively retransmitting reachability
  tests that do not elicit a response.

  Where DNAv4 and DHCP are tried in parallel, one strategy is to
  forsake reachability test retransmissions and to allow only the DHCP
  client to retransmit.  In order to reduce competition between DNAv4
  and DHCP retransmissions, a DNAv4 implementation that retransmits may
  utilize the retransmission strategy described in Section 4.1 of the
  DHCP specification [RFC2131], scheduling DNAv4 retransmissions
  between DHCP retransmissions.

  If a response is received to any reachability test or DHCP message,
  pending retransmissions are canceled.  It is RECOMMENDED that a DNAv4
  implementation retransmit no more than twice.  To provide damping in
  the case of spurious "Link Up" indications, it is RECOMMENDED that
  the DNAv4 procedure be carried out no more than once a second.

2.1.1.  Packet Format

  The reachability test is performed by sending a unicast ARP Request.
  The host MUST set the target protocol address (ar$tpa) to the IPv4
  address of the node being tested, and the sender protocol address
  field (ar$spa) to its own candidate IPv4 address.  The ARP Request
  MUST use the host MAC address as the source, and the test node MAC
  address as the destination.  The host includes its MAC address in the
  sender hardware address field (ar$sha) and sets the target hardware
  address field (ar$tha) to 0.

  If a valid ARP Reply is received, the MAC address in the sender
  hardware address field (ar$sha) in the ARP Reply is matched against
  the target hardware address field (ar$tpa) in the ARP Request, and
  the IPv4 address in the sender protocol address field (ar$spa) of the
  ARP Reply is matched against the target protocol address field
  (ar$tpa) in the ARP Request.  If a match is found, then the host
  continues to use that IPv4 address, subject to the lease re-
  acquisition and expiration behavior described in Section 4.4.5 of the
  DHCP specification [RFC2131].

  The risk of an address conflict is greatest when the host moves
  between private networks, since in this case the completion of
  conflict detection on the former network does not provide assurance



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  against an address conflict on the new network.  Until a host has
  confirmed the operability of its IPv4 configuration by receipt of a
  response to the reachability test, it SHOULD NOT respond to ARP
  Requests and SHOULD NOT broadcast ARP Requests containing its address
  within the sender protocol address field (ar$spa).

  Sending an ICMP Echo Request [RFC792] would not be an acceptable way
  of testing a candidate configuration, since sending any IP packet
  generally requires an ARP Request/Reply exchange and, as explained
  above, ARP packets may not be broadcast safely until after the
  candidate configuration has been confirmed.  Also, where a host moves
  from one private network to another, an ICMP Echo Request can result
  in an ICMP Echo Response even when the MAC address has changed, as
  long as the IPv4 address remains the same.  This can occur, for
  example, where a host moves from one home network using prefix
  192.168/16 to another one.  In addition, if the ping is sent with TTL
  > 1, then an ICMP Echo Response can be received from an off-link
  router.  As a result, if the MAC address of the test node is not
  checked, the host can mistakenly confirm attachment, potentially
  resulting in an address conflict.  As a result, sending an ICMP Echo
  Request SHOULD NOT be used as a substitute for the reachability test.

2.2.  IPv4 Address Acquisition

  If the host has an operable routable IPv4 address on one or more
  networks, and if DHCPv4 is enabled on the interface, the host SHOULD
  attempt to acquire an IPv4 configuration using DHCPv4, in parallel
  with one or more reachability tests.  This is accomplished by
  entering the INIT-REBOOT state and sending a DHCPREQUEST to the
  broadcast address, as specified in Section 4.4.2 of the DHCP
  specification [RFC2131].

  If the host does not have an operable routable IPv4 address on any
  network, the host enters the INIT state and sends a DHCPDISCOVER
  packet to the broadcast address, as described in Section 4.4.1 of the
  DHCP specification [RFC2131].  If the host supports the Rapid Commit
  Option [RFC4039], it is possible that the exchange can be shortened
  from a 4-message exchange to a 2-message exchange.

  If the host does not receive a response to a DHCPREQUEST or
  DHCPDISCOVER, then it retransmits as specified in Section 4.1 of the
  DHCP specification [RFC2131].

  As discussed in Section 4.4.4 of the DHCP specification [RFC2131], a
  host in INIT or REBOOTING state that knows the address of a DHCP
  server may use that address in the DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST rather
  than the IPv4 broadcast address.  In the INIT-REBOOT state, a
  DHCPREQUEST is sent to the broadcast address so that the host will



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  receive a response regardless of whether the previously configured
  IPv4 address is correct for the network to which it has connected.

  Sending a DHCPREQUEST to the unicast address in INIT-REBOOT state is
  not appropriate, since if the DHCP client has moved to another
  subnet, a DHCP server response cannot be routed back to the client
  since the DHCPREQUEST will bypass the DHCP relay and will contain an
  invalid source address.

2.3.  IPv4 Link-Local Addresses

  DNAv4 applies only to previously configured addresses that had some
  lease lifetime associated with them, during which lifetime the
  address may be legitimately regarded as being reserved for exclusive
  use by the assigned host.  DHCP-assigned addresses fit this
  description, but IPv4 Link-Local address [RFC3927] do not, since IPv4
  Link-Local addresses are not handed out by an authoritative server
  and do not come with any guaranteed usable lifetime.

  A host's claim on an IPv4 Link-Local address is valid only as long as
  that host remains connected to the link, actively defending against
  probes for its chosen address.  As soon as a host shuts down, sleeps,
  or otherwise disconnects from a link, it immediately relinquishes any
  claim it may have had on any IPv4 Link-Local address on that link.  A
  host wishing to reclaim a previously used IPv4 Link-Local address
  MUST perform the full probing and announcement process required by
  "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses" [RFC3927] and
  MUST NOT attempt to use DNAv4 as a shortcut to bypass that process.

  Where the host does not have an operable routable IPv4 address on any
  network, the host MAY configure an IPv4 Link-Local address prior to
  entering the INIT state and sending a DHCPDISCOVER packet, as
  described in Section 2.3 of the DHCP specification [RFC2131].  Where
  a host can confirm that it remains connected to a network on which it
  possesses an operable routable IPv4 address, that address should be
  used, and the IPv4 Link-Local address is deprecated, as noted in
  Section 1.9 of the IPv4 Link-Local specification [RFC3927].

  Where a host has an operable routable IPv4 address on one or more
  networks but the reachability test cannot confirm the configuration
  and the DHCPv4 client does not receive a response after employing the
  retransmission algorithm, Section 3.2 of the DHCP specification
  [RFC2131] states that the client MAY choose to use the previously
  allocated network address and configuration parameters for the
  remainder of the unexpired lease.






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2.4.  Manually Assigned Addresses

  An implementation may use DNAv4 to confirm the configuration of
  manually assigned addresses.  However, special consideration is
  required for this to produce reliable results, so it SHOULD NOT be
  enabled by default.

  For the purposes of DNAv4, manually assigned addresses may be treated
  as equivalent to DHCP-assigned addresses with an infinite lifetime.
  This does not significantly increase the probability of an address
  conflict as long as the manually assigned address is reserved by the
  DHCP server or is outside the scope of addresses assigned by a DHCP
  server.  However, where the manually assigned address is within an
  address scope utilized by a DHCP server, it is possible that the host
  will be unavailable when the DHCP server checks for a conflict prior
  to assigning the conflicting address.  In this case, a host utilizing
  DNAv4 could confirm an address that had been assigned to another
  host.

  Typically, an address is manually assigned on a network because a
  dynamically assigned address was not suitable for some reason.
  Therefore, where DNAv4 and DHCP are run in parallel and DNAv4
  confirms a manual configuration, it may be undesirable to allow this
  configuration to be overridden by DHCP, as described in Section 2.1.
  However, packet loss may cause the reachability test to fail while
  DHCP completes successfully, resulting in the host obtaining a
  dynamic address where a static address is desired.  In order to
  provide for reliable reconfirmation of manually assigned addresses,
  reachability tests for manual configurations require a more
  aggressive retransmission strategy than that detailed in Section 4.1
  of the DHCP specification [RFC2131].  For example, shorter
  retransmission intervals and more persistent retransmissions may be
  required.

3.  Security Considerations

  Detecting Network Attachment for IPv4 (DNAv4) is based on ARP and
  DHCP and inherits the security vulnerabilities of these two
  protocols.

  ARP [RFC826] traffic is not secured, so an attacker gaining access to
  the network can spoof a response to the reachability test described
  in Section 2.1, leading the querier to conclude falsely that it is
  attached to a network that it is not connected to.

  Similarly, where DHCPv4 traffic is not secured, an attacker could
  masquerade as a DHCPv4 server, in order to convince the host that it
  was attached to a particular network.  This and other threats



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  relating to DHCPv4 are described in "Authentication for DHCP
  Messages" [RFC3118].

  The effect of these attacks will typically be limited to denial of
  service, unless the host utilizes its IP configuration for other
  purposes, such as security configuration or location determination.
  For example, a host that disables its personal firewall based on
  evidence that it had attached to a home network could be compromised
  by spoofing of the DNAv4 reachability test.  In general, adjustment
  of the security configuration based on DNAv4 is NOT RECOMMENDED.

  Hosts that depend on secure IP configuration SHOULD NOT use DNAv4 but
  SHOULD instead utilize DHCP authentication [RFC3118], possibly in
  combination with the Rapid Commit Option [RFC4039].

4.  References

4.1.  Normative References

  [RFC826]  Plummer, D., "Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol: Or
            converting network protocol addresses to 48.bit Ethernet
            address for transmission on Ethernet hardware", STD 37, RFC
            826, November 1982.

  [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC2131] Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC 2131,
            March 1997.

4.2.  Informative References

  [ACD]     Cheshire, S., "IPv4 Address Conflict Detection", Work in
            Progress, July 2005.

  [RFC792]  Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", STD 5, RFC
            792, September 1981.

  [RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G.,
            and E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",
            BCP 5, RFC 1918, February 1996.

  [RFC3118] Droms, R. and W. Arbaugh, "Authentication for DHCP
            Messages", RFC 3118, June 2001.

  [RFC3927] Cheshire, S., Aboba, B., and E. Guttman, "Dynamic
            Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses", RFC 3927, May
            2005.



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  [RFC4039] Park, S., Kim, P., and B. Volz, "Rapid Commit Option for
            the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol version 4
            (DHCPv4)", RFC 4039, March 2005.

5.  Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to acknowledge Greg Daley of Monash
  University, Erik Guttman and Erik Nordmark of Sun Microsystems, Ralph
  Droms of Cisco Systems, Ted Lemon of Nominum, John Loughney of Nokia,
  Thomas Narten of IBM and David Hankins of ISC for contributions to
  this document.

Authors' Addresses

  Bernard Aboba
  Microsoft Corporation
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052

  Phone: +1 425 818 4011
  Fax:   +1 425 936 7329
  EMail: [email protected]


  James Carlson
  Sun Microsystems, Inc
  1 Network Drive
  Burlington, MA  01803-2757
  USA

  Phone: +1 781 442 2084
  Fax:   +1 781 442 1677
  EMail: [email protected]


  Stuart Cheshire
  Apple Computer, Inc.
  1 Infinite Loop
  Cupertino, California 95014, USA

  Phone: +1 408 974 3207
  EMail: [email protected]









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Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

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