Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                     J. Chroboczek
Request for Comments: 8966             IRIF, University of Paris-Diderot
Obsoletes: 6126, 7557                                        D. Schinazi
Category: Standards Track                                     Google LLC
ISSN: 2070-1721                                             January 2021


                      The Babel Routing Protocol

Abstract

  Babel is a loop-avoiding, distance-vector routing protocol that is
  robust and efficient both in ordinary wired networks and in wireless
  mesh networks.  This document describes the Babel routing protocol
  and obsoletes RFC 6126 and RFC 7557.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8966.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
    1.1.  Features
    1.2.  Limitations
    1.3.  Specification of Requirements
  2.  Conceptual Description of the Protocol
    2.1.  Costs, Metrics, and Neighbourship
    2.2.  The Bellman-Ford Algorithm
    2.3.  Transient Loops in Bellman-Ford
    2.4.  Feasibility Conditions
    2.5.  Solving Starvation: Sequencing Routes
    2.6.  Requests
    2.7.  Multiple Routers
    2.8.  Overlapping Prefixes
  3.  Protocol Operation
    3.1.  Message Transmission and Reception
    3.2.  Data Structures
    3.3.  Acknowledgments and Acknowledgment Requests
    3.4.  Neighbour Acquisition
    3.5.  Routing Table Maintenance
    3.6.  Route Selection
    3.7.  Sending Updates
    3.8.  Explicit Requests
  4.  Protocol Encoding
    4.1.  Data Types
    4.2.  Packet Format
    4.3.  TLV Format
    4.4.  Sub-TLV Format
    4.5.  Parser State and Encoding of Updates
    4.6.  Details of Specific TLVs
    4.7.  Details of specific sub-TLVs
  5.  IANA Considerations
  6.  Security Considerations
  7.  References
    7.1.  Normative References
    7.2.  Informative References
  Appendix A.  Cost and Metric Computation
    A.1.  Maintaining Hello History
    A.2.  Cost Computation
    A.3.  Route Selection and Hysteresis
  Appendix B.  Protocol Parameters
  Appendix C.  Route Filtering
  Appendix D.  Considerations for Protocol Extensions
  Appendix E.  Stub Implementations
  Appendix F.  Compatibility with Previous Versions
  Acknowledgments
  Authors' Addresses

1.  Introduction

  Babel is a loop-avoiding distance-vector routing protocol that is
  designed to be robust and efficient both in networks using prefix-
  based routing and in networks using flat routing ("mesh networks"),
  and both in relatively stable wired networks and in highly dynamic
  wireless networks.  This document describes the Babel routing
  protocol and obsoletes [RFC6126] and [RFC7557].

1.1.  Features

  The main property that makes Babel suitable for unstable networks is
  that, unlike naive distance-vector routing protocols [RIP], it
  strongly limits the frequency and duration of routing pathologies
  such as routing loops and black-holes during reconvergence.  Even
  after a mobility event is detected, a Babel network usually remains
  loop-free.  Babel then quickly reconverges to a configuration that
  preserves the loop-freedom and connectedness of the network, but is
  not necessarily optimal; in many cases, this operation requires no
  packet exchanges at all.  Babel then slowly converges, in a time on
  the scale of minutes, to an optimal configuration.  This is achieved
  by using sequenced routes, a technique pioneered by Destination-
  Sequenced Distance-Vector routing [DSDV].

  More precisely, Babel has the following properties:

  *  when every prefix is originated by at most one router, Babel never
     suffers from routing loops;

  *  when a single prefix is originated by multiple routers, Babel may
     occasionally create a transient routing loop for this particular
     prefix; this loop disappears in time proportional to the loop's
     diameter, and never again (up to an arbitrary garbage-collection
     (GC) time) will the routers involved participate in a routing loop
     for the same prefix;

  *  assuming bounded packet loss rates, any routing black-holes that
     may appear after a mobility event are corrected in a time at most
     proportional to the network's diameter.

  Babel has provisions for link quality estimation and for fairly
  arbitrary metrics.  When configured suitably, Babel can implement
  shortest-path routing, or it may use a metric based, for example, on
  measured packet loss.

  Babel nodes will successfully establish an association even when they
  are configured with different parameters.  For example, a mobile node
  that is low on battery may choose to use larger time constants (hello
  and update intervals, etc.) than a node that has access to wall
  power.  Conversely, a node that detects high levels of mobility may
  choose to use smaller time constants.  The ability to build such
  heterogeneous networks makes Babel particularly adapted to the
  unmanaged or wireless environment.

  Finally, Babel is a hybrid routing protocol, in the sense that it can
  carry routes for multiple network-layer protocols (IPv4 and IPv6),
  regardless of which protocol the Babel packets are themselves being
  carried over.

1.2.  Limitations

  Babel has two limitations that make it unsuitable for use in some
  environments.  First, Babel relies on periodic routing table updates
  rather than using a reliable transport; hence, in large, stable
  networks it generates more traffic than protocols that only send
  updates when the network topology changes.  In such networks,
  protocols such as OSPF [OSPF], IS-IS [IS-IS], or the Enhanced
  Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) [EIGRP] might be more
  suitable.

  Second, unless the second algorithm described in Section 3.5.4 is
  implemented, Babel does impose a hold time when a prefix is
  retracted.  While this hold time does not apply to the exact prefix
  being retracted, and hence does not prevent fast reconvergence should
  it become available again, it does apply to any shorter prefix that
  covers it.  This may make those implementations of Babel that do not
  implement the optional algorithm described in Section 3.5.4
  unsuitable for use in networks that implement automatic prefix
  aggregation.

1.3.  Specification of Requirements

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
  BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
  capitals, as shown here.

2.  Conceptual Description of the Protocol

  Babel is a loop-avoiding distance-vector protocol: it is based on the
  Bellman-Ford algorithm, just like the venerable RIP [RIP], but
  includes a number of refinements that either prevent loop formation
  altogether, or ensure that a loop disappears in a timely manner and
  doesn't form again.

  Conceptually, Bellman-Ford is executed in parallel for every source
  of routing information (destination of data traffic).  In the
  following discussion, we fix a source S; the reader will recall that
  the same algorithm is executed for all sources.

2.1.  Costs, Metrics, and Neighbourship

  For every pair of neighbouring nodes A and B, Babel computes an
  abstract value known as the cost of the link from A to B, written
  C(A, B).  Given a route between any two (not necessarily
  neighbouring) nodes, the metric of the route is the sum of the costs
  of all the links along the route.  The goal of the routing algorithm
  is to compute, for every source S, the tree of routes of lowest
  metric to S.

  Costs and metrics need not be integers.  In general, they can be
  values in any algebra that satisfies two fairly general conditions
  (Section 3.5.2).

  A Babel node periodically sends Hello messages to all of its
  neighbours; it also periodically sends an IHU ("I Heard You") message
  to every neighbour from which it has recently heard a Hello.  From
  the information derived from Hello and IHU messages received from its
  neighbour B, a node A computes the cost C(A, B) of the link from A to
  B.

2.2.  The Bellman-Ford Algorithm

  Every node A maintains two pieces of data: its estimated distance to
  S, written D(A), and its next-hop router to S, written NH(A).
  Initially, D(S) = 0, D(A) is infinite, and NH(A) is undefined.

  Periodically, every node B sends to all of its neighbours a route
  update, a message containing D(B).  When a neighbour A of B receives
  the route update, it checks whether B is its selected next hop; if
  that is the case, then NH(A) is set to B, and D(A) is set to C(A, B)
  + D(B).  If that is not the case, then A compares C(A, B) + D(B) to
  its current value of D(A).  If that value is smaller, meaning that
  the received update advertises a route that is better than the
  currently selected route, then NH(A) is set to B, and D(A) is set to
  C(A, B) + D(B).

  A number of refinements to this algorithm are possible, and are used
  by Babel.  In particular, convergence speed may be increased by
  sending unscheduled "triggered updates" whenever a major change in
  the topology is detected, in addition to the regular, scheduled
  updates.  Additionally, a node may maintain a number of alternate
  routes, which are being advertised by neighbours other than its
  selected neighbour, and which can be used immediately if the selected
  route were to fail.

2.3.  Transient Loops in Bellman-Ford

  It is well known that a naive application of Bellman-Ford to
  distributed routing can cause transient loops after a topology
  change.  Consider for example the following topology:

           B
        1 /|
     1   / |
  S --- A  |1
         \ |
        1 \|
           C

  After convergence, D(B) = D(C) = 2, with NH(B) = NH(C) = A.

  Suppose now that the link between S and A fails:

           B
        1 /|
         / |
  S     A  |1
         \ |
        1 \|
           C

  When it detects the failure of the link, A switches its next hop to B
  (which is still advertising a route to S with metric 2), and
  advertises a metric equal to 3, and then advertises a new route with
  metric 3.  This process of nodes changing selected neighbours and
  increasing their metric continues until the advertised metric reaches
  "infinity", a value larger than all the metrics that the routing
  protocol is able to carry.

2.4.  Feasibility Conditions

  Bellman-Ford is a very robust algorithm: its convergence properties
  are preserved when routers delay route acquisition or when they
  discard some updates.  Babel routers discard received route
  announcements unless they can prove that accepting them cannot
  possibly cause a routing loop.

  More formally, we define a condition over route announcements, known
  as the "feasibility condition", that guarantees the absence of
  routing loops whenever all routers ignore route updates that do not
  satisfy the feasibility condition.  In effect, this makes Bellman-
  Ford into a family of routing algorithms, parameterised by the
  feasibility condition.

  Many different feasibility conditions are possible.  For example, BGP
  can be modelled as being a distance-vector protocol with a (rather
  drastic) feasibility condition: a routing update is only accepted
  when the receiving node's AS number is not included in the update's
  AS_PATH attribute (note that BGP's feasibility condition does not
  ensure the absence of transient "micro-loops" during reconvergence).

  Another simple feasibility condition, used in the Destination-
  Sequenced Distance-Vector (DSDV) routing protocol [DSDV] and in the
  Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV) protocol [RFC3561], stems
  from the following observation: a routing loop can only arise after a
  router has switched to a route with a larger metric than the route
  that it had previously selected.  Hence, one may define that a route
  is feasible when its metric at the local node would be no larger than
  the metric of the currently selected route, i.e., an announcement
  carrying a metric D(B) is accepted by A when C(A, B) + D(B) <= D(A).
  If all routers obey this constraint, then the metric at every router
  is nonincreasing, and the following invariant is always preserved: if
  A has selected B as its next hop, then D(B) < D(A), which implies
  that the forwarding graph is loop-free.

  Babel uses a slightly more refined feasibility condition, derived
  from EIGRP [DUAL].  Given a router A, define the feasibility distance
  of A, written FD(A), as the smallest metric that A has ever
  advertised for S to any of its neighbours.  An update sent by a
  neighbour B of A is feasible when the metric D(B) advertised by B is
  strictly smaller than A's feasibility distance, i.e., when D(B) <
  FD(A).

  It is easy to see that this latter condition is no more restrictive
  than DSDV-feasibility.  Suppose that node A obeys DSDV-feasibility;
  then D(A) is nonincreasing, hence at all times D(A) <= FD(A).
  Suppose now that A receives a DSDV-feasible update that advertises a
  metric D(B).  Since the update is DSDV-feasible, C(A, B) + D(B) <=
  D(A), hence D(B) < D(A), and since D(A) <= FD(A), D(B) < FD(A).

  To see that it is strictly less restrictive, consider the following
  diagram, where A has selected the route through B, and D(A) = FD(A) =
  2.  Since D(C) = 1 < FD(A), the alternate route through C is feasible
  for A, although its metric C(A, C) + D(C) = 5 is larger than that of
  the currently selected route:

     B
  1 / \ 1
   /   \
  S     A
   \   /
  1 \ / 4
     C

  To show that this feasibility condition still guarantees loop-
  freedom, recall that at the time when A accepts an update from B, the
  metric D(B) announced by B is no smaller than FD(B); since it is
  smaller than FD(A), at that point in time FD(B) < FD(A).  Since this
  property is preserved when A sends updates and also when it picks a
  different next hop, it remains true at all times, which ensures that
  the forwarding graph has no loops.

2.5.  Solving Starvation: Sequencing Routes

  Obviously, the feasibility conditions defined above cause starvation
  when a router runs out of feasible routes.  Consider the following
  diagram, where both A and B have selected the direct route to S:

     A
  1 /|        D(A) = 1
   / |       FD(A) = 1
  S  |1
   \ |        D(B) = 2
  2 \|       FD(B) = 2
     B

  Suppose now that the link between A and S breaks:

     A
     |
     |       FD(A) = 1
  S  |1
   \ |        D(B) = 2
  2 \|       FD(B) = 2
     B

  The only route available from A to S, the one that goes through B, is
  not feasible: A suffers from spurious starvation.  At that point, the
  whole subtree suffering from starvation must be reset, which is
  essentially what EIGRP does when it performs a global synchronisation
  of all the routers in the starving subtree (the "active" phase of
  EIGRP).

  Babel reacts to starvation in a less drastic manner, by using
  sequenced routes, a technique introduced by DSDV and adopted by AODV.
  In addition to a metric, every route carries a sequence number, a
  nondecreasing integer that is propagated unchanged through the
  network and is only ever incremented by the source; a pair (s, m),
  where s is a sequence number and m a metric, is called a distance.

  A received update is feasible when either it is more recent than the
  feasibility distance maintained by the receiving node, or it is
  equally recent and the metric is strictly smaller.  More formally, if
  FD(A) = (s, m), then an update carrying the distance (s', m') is
  feasible when either s' > s, or s = s' and m' < m.

  Assuming the sequence number of S is 137, the diagram above becomes:

     A
     |
     |       FD(A) = (137, 1)
  S  |1
   \ |        D(B) = (137, 2)
  2 \|       FD(B) = (137, 2)
     B

  After S increases its sequence number, and the new sequence number is
  propagated to B, we have:

     A
     |
     |       FD(A) = (137, 1)
  S  |1
   \ |        D(B) = (138, 2)
  2 \|       FD(B) = (138, 2)
     B

  at which point the route through B becomes feasible again.

  Note that while sequence numbers are used for determining
  feasibility, they are not used in route selection: a node ignores the
  sequence number when selecting the best route to a given destination
  (Section 3.6).  Doing otherwise would cause route oscillation while a
  sequence number propagates through the network, and might even cause
  persistent black-holes with some exotic metrics.

2.6.  Requests

  In DSDV, the sequence number of a source is increased periodically.
  A route becomes feasible again after the source increases its
  sequence number, and the new sequence number is propagated through
  the network, which may, in general, require a significant amount of
  time.

  Babel takes a different approach.  When a node detects that it is
  suffering from a potentially spurious starvation, it sends an
  explicit request to the source for a new sequence number.  This
  request is forwarded hop by hop to the source, with no regard to the
  feasibility condition.  Upon receiving the request, the source
  increases its sequence number and broadcasts an update, which is
  forwarded to the requesting node.

  Note that after a change in network topology not all such requests
  will, in general, reach the source, as some will be sent over links
  that are now broken.  However, if the network is still connected,
  then at least one among the nodes suffering from spurious starvation
  has an (unfeasible) route to the source; hence, in the absence of
  packet loss, at least one such request will reach the source.
  (Resending requests a small number of times compensates for packet
  loss.)

  Since requests are forwarded with no regard to the feasibility
  condition, they may, in general, be caught in a forwarding loop; this
  is avoided by having nodes perform duplicate detection for the
  requests that they forward.

2.7.  Multiple Routers

  The above discussion assumes that each prefix is originated by a
  single router.  In real networks, however, it is often necessary to
  have a single prefix originated by multiple routers: for example, the
  default route will be originated by all of the edge routers of a
  routing domain.

  Since synchronising sequence numbers between distinct routers is
  problematic, Babel treats routes for the same prefix as distinct
  entities when they are originated by different routers: every route
  announcement carries the router-id of its originating router, and
  feasibility distances are not maintained per prefix, but per source,
  where a source is a pair of a router-id and a prefix.  In effect,
  Babel guarantees loop-freedom for the forwarding graph to every
  source; since the union of multiple acyclic graphs is not in general
  acyclic, Babel does not in general guarantee loop-freedom when a
  prefix is originated by multiple routers, but any loops will be
  broken in a time at most proportional to the diameter of the loop --
  as soon as an update has "gone around" the routing loop.

  Consider for example the following topology, where A has selected the
  default route through S, and B has selected the one through S':

             1     1     1
  ::/0 -- S --- A --- B --- S' -- ::/0

  Suppose that both default routes fail at the same time; then nothing
  prevents A from switching to B, and B simultaneously switching to A.
  However, as soon as A has successfully advertised the new route to B,
  the route through A will become unfeasible for B.  Conversely, as
  soon as B will have advertised the route through A, the route through
  B will become unfeasible for A.

  In effect, the routing loop disappears at the latest when routing
  information has gone around the loop.  Since this process can be
  delayed by lost packets, Babel makes certain efforts to ensure that
  updates are sent reliably after a router-id change (Section 3.7.2).

  Additionally, after the routers have advertised the two routes, both
  sources will be in their source tables, which will prevent them from
  ever again participating in a routing loop involving routes from S
  and S' (up to the source GC time, which, available memory permitting,
  can be set to arbitrarily large values).

2.8.  Overlapping Prefixes

  In the above discussion, we have assumed that all prefixes are
  disjoint, as is the case in flat ("mesh") routing.  In practice,
  however, prefixes may overlap: for example, the default route
  overlaps with all of the routes present in the network.

  After a route fails, it is not correct in general to switch to a
  route that subsumes the failed route.  Consider for example the
  following configuration:

             1     1
  ::/0 -- A --- B --- C

  Suppose that node C fails.  If B forwards packets destined to C by
  following the default route, a routing loop will form, and persist
  until A learns of B's retraction of the direct route to C.  B avoids
  this pitfall by installing an "unreachable" route after a route is
  retracted; this route is maintained until it can be guaranteed that
  the former route has been retracted by all of B's neighbours
  (Section 3.5.4).

3.  Protocol Operation

  Every Babel speaker is assigned a router-id, which is an arbitrary
  string of 8 octets that is assumed unique across the routing domain.
  For example, router-ids could be assigned randomly, or they could be
  derived from a link-layer address.  (The protocol encoding is
  slightly more compact when router-ids are assigned in the same manner
  as the IPv6 layer assigns host IDs; see the definition of the "R"
  flag in Section 4.6.9.)

3.1.  Message Transmission and Reception

  Babel protocol packets are sent in the body of a UDP datagram (as
  described in Section 4).  Each Babel packet consists of zero or more
  TLVs.  Most TLVs may contain sub-TLVs.

  Babel's control traffic can be carried indifferently over IPv6 or
  over IPv4, and prefixes of either address family can be announced
  over either protocol.  Thus, there are at least two natural
  deployment models: using IPv6 exclusively for all control traffic, or
  running two distinct protocol instances, one for each address family.
  The exclusive use of IPv6 for all control traffic is RECOMMENDED,
  since using both protocols at the same time doubles the amount of
  traffic devoted to neighbour discovery and link quality estimation.

  The source address of a Babel packet is always a unicast address,
  link-local in the case of IPv6.  Babel packets may be sent to a well-
  known (link-local) multicast address or to a (link-local) unicast
  address.  In normal operation, a Babel speaker sends both multicast
  and unicast packets to its neighbours.

  With the exception of acknowledgments, all Babel TLVs can be sent to
  either unicast or multicast addresses, and their semantics does not
  depend on whether the destination is a unicast or a multicast
  address.  Hence, a Babel speaker does not need to determine the
  destination address of a packet that it receives in order to
  interpret it.

  A moderate amount of jitter may be applied to packets sent by a Babel
  speaker: outgoing TLVs are buffered and SHOULD be sent with a random
  delay.  This is done for two purposes: it avoids synchronisation of
  multiple Babel speakers across a network [JITTER], and it allows for
  the aggregation of multiple TLVs into a single packet.

  The maximum amount of delay a TLV can be subjected to depends on the
  TLV.  When the protocol description specifies that a TLV is urgent
  (as in Section 3.7.2 and Section 3.8.1), then the TLV MUST be sent
  within a short time known as the urgent timeout (see Appendix B for
  recommended values).  When the TLV is governed by a timeout
  explicitly included in a previous TLV, such as in the case of
  Acknowledgments (Section 4.6.4), Updates (Section 3.7), and IHUs
  (Section 3.4.2), then the TLV MUST be sent early enough to meet the
  explicit deadline (with a small margin to allow for propagation
  delays).  In all other cases, the TLV SHOULD be sent out within one-
  half of the Multicast Hello interval.

  In order to avoid packet drops (either at the sender or at the
  receiver), a delay SHOULD be introduced between successive packets
  sent out on the same interface, within the constraints of the
  previous paragraph.  Note, however, that such packet pacing might
  impair the ability of some link layers (e.g., IEEE 802.11
  [IEEE802.11]) to perform packet aggregation.

3.2.  Data Structures

  In this section, we describe the data structures that every Babel
  speaker maintains.  This description is conceptual: a Babel speaker
  may use different data structures as long as the resulting protocol
  is the same as the one described in this document.  For example,
  rather than maintaining a single table containing both selected and
  unselected (fallback) routes, as described in Section 3.2.6, an
  actual implementation would probably use two tables, one with
  selected routes and one with fallback routes.

3.2.1.  Sequence Number Arithmetic

  Sequence numbers (seqnos) appear in a number of Babel data
  structures, and they are interpreted as integers modulo 2^(16).  For
  the purposes of this document, arithmetic on sequence numbers is
  defined as follows.

  Given a seqno s and a non-negative integer n, the sum of s and n is
  defined by the following:

     s + n (modulo 2^(16)) = (s + n) MOD 2^(16)

  or, equivalently,

     s + n (modulo 2^(16)) = (s + n) AND 65535

  where MOD is the modulo operation yielding a non-negative integer,
  and AND is the bitwise conjunction operation.

  Given two sequence numbers s and s', the relation s is less than s'
  (s < s') is defined by the following:

     s < s' (modulo 2^(16)) when 0 < ((s' - s) MOD 2^(16)) < 32768

  or, equivalently,

     s < s' (modulo 2^(16)) when s /= s' and ((s' - s) AND 32768) = 0.

3.2.2.  Node Sequence Number

  A node's sequence number is a 16-bit integer that is included in
  route updates sent for routes originated by this node.

  A node increments its sequence number (modulo 2^(16)) whenever it
  receives a request for a new sequence number (Section 3.8.1.2).  A
  node SHOULD NOT increment its sequence number (seqno) spontaneously,
  since increasing seqnos makes it less likely that other nodes will
  have feasible alternate routes when their selected routes fail.

3.2.3.  The Interface Table

  The interface table contains the list of interfaces on which the node
  speaks the Babel protocol.  Every interface table entry contains the
  interface's outgoing Multicast Hello seqno, a 16-bit integer that is
  sent with each Multicast Hello TLV on this interface and is
  incremented (modulo 2^(16)) whenever a Multicast Hello is sent.
  (Note that an interface's Multicast Hello seqno is unrelated to the
  node's seqno.)

  There are two timers associated with each interface table entry.  The
  periodic multicast hello timer governs the sending of scheduled
  Multicast Hello and IHU packets (Section 3.4).  The periodic Update
  timer governs the sending of periodic route updates (Section 3.7.1).
  See Appendix B for suggested time constants.

3.2.4.  The Neighbour Table

  The neighbour table contains the list of all neighbouring interfaces
  from which a Babel packet has been recently received.  The neighbour
  table is indexed by pairs of the form (interface, address), and every
  neighbour table entry contains the following data:

  *  the local node's interface over which this neighbour is reachable;

  *  the address of the neighbouring interface;

  *  a history of recently received Multicast Hello packets from this
     neighbour; this can, for example, be a sequence of n bits, for
     some small value n, indicating which of the n hellos most recently
     sent by this neighbour have been received by the local node;

  *  a history of recently received Unicast Hello packets from this
     neighbour;

  *  the "transmission cost" value from the last IHU packet received
     from this neighbour, or FFFF hexadecimal (infinity) if the IHU
     hold timer for this neighbour has expired;

  *  the expected incoming Multicast Hello sequence number for this
     neighbour, an integer modulo 2^(16).

  *  the expected incoming Unicast Hello sequence number for this
     neighbour, an integer modulo 2^(16).

  *  the outgoing Unicast Hello sequence number for this neighbour, an
     integer modulo 2^(16) that is sent with each Unicast Hello TLV to
     this neighbour and is incremented (modulo 2^(16)) whenever a
     Unicast Hello is sent.  (Note that the outgoing Unicast Hello
     seqno for a neighbour is distinct from the interface's outgoing
     Multicast Hello seqno.)

  There are three timers associated with each neighbour entry -- the
  multicast hello timer, which is set to the interval value carried by
  scheduled Multicast Hello TLVs sent by this neighbour, the unicast
  hello timer, which is set to the interval value carried by scheduled
  Unicast Hello TLVs, and the IHU timer, which is set to a small
  multiple of the interval carried in IHU TLVs (see "IHU Hold time" in
  Appendix B for suggested values).

  Note that the neighbour table is indexed by IP addresses, not by
  router-ids: neighbourship is a relationship between interfaces, not
  between nodes.  Therefore, two nodes with multiple interfaces can
  participate in multiple neighbourship relationships, a situation that
  can notably arise when wireless nodes with multiple radios are
  involved.

3.2.5.  The Source Table

  The source table is used to record feasibility distances.  It is
  indexed by triples of the form (prefix, plen, router-id), and every
  source table entry contains the following data:

  *  the prefix (prefix, plen), where plen is the prefix length in
     bits, that this entry applies to;

  *  the router-id of a router originating this prefix;

  *  a pair (seqno, metric), this source's feasibility distance.

  There is one timer associated with each entry in the source table --
  the source garbage-collection timer.  It is initialised to a time on
  the order of minutes and reset as specified in Section 3.7.3.

3.2.6.  The Route Table

  The route table contains the routes known to this node.  It is
  indexed by triples of the form (prefix, plen, neighbour), and every
  route table entry contains the following data:

  *  the source (prefix, plen, router-id) for which this route is
     advertised;

  *  the neighbour (an entry in the neighbour table) that advertised
     this route;

  *  the metric with which this route was advertised by the neighbour,
     or FFFF hexadecimal (infinity) for a recently retracted route;

  *  the sequence number with which this route was advertised;

  *  the next-hop address of this route;

  *  a boolean flag indicating whether this route is selected, i.e.,
     whether it is currently being used for forwarding and is being
     advertised.

  There is one timer associated with each route table entry -- the
  route expiry timer.  It is initialised and reset as specified in
  Section 3.5.3.

  Note that there are two distinct (seqno, metric) pairs associated
  with each route: the route's distance, which is stored in the route
  table, and the feasibility distance, which is stored in the source
  table and shared between all routes with the same source.

3.2.7.  The Table of Pending Seqno Requests

  The table of pending seqno requests contains a list of seqno requests
  that the local node has sent (either because they have been
  originated locally, or because they were forwarded) and to which no
  reply has been received yet.  This table is indexed by triples of the
  form (prefix, plen, router-id), and every entry in this table
  contains the following data:

  *  the prefix, plen, router-id, and seqno being requested;

  *  the neighbour, if any, on behalf of which we are forwarding this
     request;

  *  a small integer indicating the number of times that this request
     will be resent if it remains unsatisfied.

  There is one timer associated with each pending seqno request; it
  governs both the resending of requests and their expiry.

3.3.  Acknowledgments and Acknowledgment Requests

  A Babel speaker may request that a neighbour receiving a given packet
  reply with an explicit acknowledgment within a given time.  While the
  use of acknowledgment requests is optional, every Babel speaker MUST
  be able to reply to such a request.

  An acknowledgment MUST be sent to a unicast destination.  On the
  other hand, acknowledgment requests may be sent to either unicast or
  multicast destinations, in which case they request an acknowledgment
  from all of the receiving nodes.

  When to request acknowledgments is a matter of local policy; the
  simplest strategy is to never request acknowledgments and to rely on
  periodic updates to ensure that any reachable routes are eventually
  propagated throughout the routing domain.  In order to improve
  convergence speed and to reduce the amount of control traffic,
  acknowledgment requests MAY be used in order to reliably send urgent
  updates (Section 3.7.2) and retractions (Section 3.5.4), especially
  when the number of neighbours on a given interface is small.  Since
  Babel is designed to deal gracefully with packet loss on unreliable
  media, sending all packets with acknowledgment requests is not
  necessary and NOT RECOMMENDED, as the acknowledgments cause
  additional traffic and may force additional Address Resolution
  Protocol (ARP) or Neighbour Discovery (ND) exchanges.

3.4.  Neighbour Acquisition

  Neighbour acquisition is the process by which a Babel node discovers
  the set of neighbours heard over each of its interfaces and
  ascertains bidirectional reachability.  On unreliable media,
  neighbour acquisition additionally provides some statistics that may
  be useful for link quality computation.

  Before it can exchange routing information with a neighbour, a Babel
  node MUST create an entry for that neighbour in the neighbour table.
  When to do that is implementation-specific; suitable strategies
  include creating an entry when any Babel packet is received, or
  creating an entry when a Hello TLV is parsed.  Similarly, in order to
  conserve system resources, an implementation SHOULD discard an entry
  when it has been unused for long enough; suitable strategies include
  dropping the neighbour after a timeout, and dropping a neighbour when
  the associated Hello histories become empty (see Appendix A.2).

3.4.1.  Reverse Reachability Detection

  Every Babel node sends Hello TLVs to its neighbours, at regular or
  irregular intervals, to indicate that it is alive.  Each Hello TLV
  carries an increasing (modulo 2^(16)) sequence number and an upper
  bound on the time interval until the next Hello of the same type (see
  below).  If the time interval is set to 0, then the Hello TLV does
  not establish a new promise: the deadline carried by the previous
  Hello of the same type still applies to the next Hello (if the most
  recent scheduled Hello of the right kind was received at time t0 and
  carried interval i, then the previous promise of sending another
  Hello before time t0 + i still holds).  We say that a Hello is
  "scheduled" if it carries a nonzero interval, and "unscheduled"
  otherwise.

  There are two kinds of Hellos: Multicast Hellos, which use a per-
  interface Hello counter (the Multicast Hello seqno), and Unicast
  Hellos, which use a per-neighbour counter (the Unicast Hello seqno).
  A Multicast Hello with a given seqno MUST be sent to all neighbours
  on a given interface, either by sending it to a multicast address or
  by sending it to one unicast address per neighbour (hence, the term
  "Multicast Hello" is a slight misnomer).  A Unicast Hello carrying a
  given seqno should normally be sent to just one neighbour (over
  unicast), since the sequence numbers of different neighbours are not
  in general synchronised.

  Multicast Hellos sent over multicast can be used for neighbour
  discovery; hence, a node SHOULD send periodic (scheduled) Multicast
  Hellos unless neighbour discovery is performed by means outside of
  the Babel protocol.  A node MAY send Unicast Hellos or unscheduled
  Hellos of either kind for any reason, such as reducing the amount of
  multicast traffic or improving reliability on link technologies with
  poor support for link-layer multicast.

  A node MAY send a scheduled Hello ahead of time.  A node MAY change
  its scheduled Hello interval.  The Hello interval MAY be decreased at
  any time; it MAY be increased immediately before sending a Hello TLV,
  but SHOULD NOT be increased at other times.  (Equivalently, a node
  SHOULD send a scheduled Hello immediately after increasing its Hello
  interval.)

  How to deal with received Hello TLVs and what statistics to maintain
  are considered local implementation matters; typically, a node will
  maintain some sort of history of recently received Hellos.  An
  example of a suitable algorithm is described in Appendix A.1.

  After receiving a Hello, or determining that it has missed one, the
  node recomputes the association's cost (Section 3.4.3) and runs the
  route selection procedure (Section 3.6).

3.4.2.  Bidirectional Reachability Detection

  In order to establish bidirectional reachability, every node sends
  periodic IHU ("I Heard You") TLVs to each of its neighbours.  Since
  IHUs carry an explicit interval value, they MAY be sent less often
  than Hellos in order to reduce the amount of routing traffic in dense
  networks; in particular, they SHOULD be sent less often than Hellos
  over links with little packet loss.  While IHUs are conceptually
  unicast, they MAY be sent to a multicast address in order to avoid an
  ARP or Neighbour Discovery exchange and to aggregate multiple IHUs
  into a single packet.

  In addition to the periodic IHUs, a node MAY, at any time, send an
  unscheduled IHU packet.  It MAY also, at any time, decrease its IHU
  interval, and it MAY increase its IHU interval immediately before
  sending an IHU, but SHOULD NOT increase it at any other time.
  (Equivalently, a node SHOULD send an extra IHU immediately after
  increasing its Hello interval.)

  Every IHU TLV contains two pieces of data: the link's rxcost
  (reception cost) from the sender's perspective, used by the neighbour
  for computing link costs (Section 3.4.3), and the interval between
  periodic IHU packets.  A node receiving an IHU sets the value of the
  txcost (transmission cost) maintained in the neighbour table to the
  value contained in the IHU, and resets the IHU timer associated to
  this neighbour to a small multiple of the interval value received in
  the IHU (see "IHU Hold time" in Appendix B for suggested values).
  When a neighbour's IHU timer expires, the neighbour's txcost is set
  to infinity.

  After updating a neighbour's txcost, the receiving node recomputes
  the neighbour's cost (Section 3.4.3) and runs the route selection
  procedure (Section 3.6).

3.4.3.  Cost Computation

  A neighbourship association's link cost is computed from the values
  maintained in the neighbour table: the statistics kept in the
  neighbour table about the reception of Hellos, and the txcost
  computed from received IHU packets.

  For every neighbour, a Babel node computes a value known as this
  neighbour's rxcost.  This value is usually derived from the Hello
  history, which may be combined with other data, such as statistics
  maintained by the link layer.  The rxcost is sent to a neighbour in
  each IHU.

  Since nodes do not necessarily send periodic Unicast Hellos but do
  usually send periodic Multicast Hellos (Section 3.4.1), a node SHOULD
  use an algorithm that yields a finite rxcost when only Multicast
  Hellos are received, unless interoperability with nodes that only
  send Multicast Hellos is not required.

  How the txcost and rxcost are combined in order to compute a link's
  cost is a matter of local policy; as far as Babel's correctness is
  concerned, only the following conditions MUST be satisfied:

  *  the cost is strictly positive;

  *  if no Hello TLVs of either kind were received recently, then the
     cost is infinite;

  *  if the txcost is infinite, then the cost is infinite.

  See Appendix A.2 for RECOMMENDED strategies for computing a link's
  cost.

3.5.  Routing Table Maintenance

  Conceptually, a Babel update is a quintuple (prefix, plen, router-id,
  seqno, metric), where (prefix, plen) is the prefix for which a route
  is being advertised, router-id is the router-id of the router
  originating this update, seqno is a nondecreasing (modulo 2^(16))
  integer that carries the originating router seqno, and metric is the
  announced metric.

  Before being accepted, an update is checked against the feasibility
  condition (Section 3.5.1), which ensures that the route does not
  create a routing loop.  If the feasibility condition is not
  satisfied, the update is either ignored or prevents the route from
  being selected, as described in Section 3.5.3.  If the feasibility
  condition is satisfied, then the update cannot possibly cause a
  routing loop.

3.5.1.  The Feasibility Condition

  The feasibility condition is applied to all received updates.  The
  feasibility condition compares the metric in the received update with
  the metrics of the updates previously sent by the receiving node;
  updates that fail the feasibility condition, and therefore have
  metrics large enough to cause a routing loop, are either ignored or
  prevent the resulting route from being selected.

  A feasibility distance is a pair (seqno, metric), where seqno is an
  integer modulo 2^(16) and metric is a positive integer.  Feasibility
  distances are compared lexicographically, with the first component
  inverted: we say that a distance (seqno, metric) is strictly better
  than a distance (seqno', metric'), written

     (seqno, metric) < (seqno', metric')

  when

     seqno > seqno' or (seqno = seqno' and metric < metric')

  where sequence numbers are compared modulo 2^(16).

  Given a source (prefix, plen, router-id), a node's feasibility
  distance for this source is the minimum, according to the ordering
  defined above, of the distances of all the finite updates ever sent
  by this particular node for the prefix (prefix, plen) and the given
  router-id.  Feasibility distances are maintained in the source table,
  the exact procedure is given in Section 3.7.3.

  A received update is feasible when either it is a retraction (its
  metric is FFFF hexadecimal), or the advertised distance is strictly
  better, in the sense defined above, than the feasibility distance for
  the corresponding source.  More precisely, a route advertisement
  carrying the quintuple (prefix, plen, router-id, seqno, metric) is
  feasible if one of the following conditions holds:

  *  metric is infinite; or

  *  no entry exists in the source table indexed by (prefix, plen,
     router-id); or

  *  an entry (prefix, plen, router-id, seqno', metric') exists in the
     source table, and either

     -  seqno' < seqno or

     -  seqno = seqno' and metric < metric'.

  Note that the feasibility condition considers the metric advertised
  by the neighbour, not the route's metric; hence, a fluctuation in a
  neighbour's cost cannot render a selected route unfeasible.  Note
  further that retractions (updates with infinite metric) are always
  feasible, since they cannot possibly cause a routing loop.

3.5.2.  Metric Computation

  A route's metric is computed from the metric advertised by the
  neighbour and the neighbour's link cost.  Just like cost computation,
  metric computation is considered a local policy matter; as far as
  Babel is concerned, the function M(c, m) used for computing a metric
  from a locally computed link cost c and the metric m advertised by a
  neighbour MUST only satisfy the following conditions:

  *  if c is infinite, then M(c, m) is infinite;

  *  M is strictly monotonic: M(c, m) > m.

  Additionally, the metric SHOULD satisfy the following condition:

  *  M is left-distributive: if m <= m', then M(c, m) <= M(c, m').

  While strict monotonicity is essential to the integrity of the
  network (persistent routing loops may arise if it is not satisfied),
  left-distributivity is not: if it is not satisfied, Babel will still
  converge to a loop-free configuration, but might not reach a global
  optimum (in fact, a global optimum may not even exist).

  The conditions above are easily satisfied by using the additive
  metric, i.e., by defining M(c, m) = c + m.  Since the additive metric
  is useful with a large range of cost computation strategies, it is
  the RECOMMENDED default.  See also Appendix C, which describes a
  technique that makes it possible to tweak the values of individual
  metrics without running the risk of creating routing loops.

3.5.3.  Route Acquisition

  When a Babel node receives an update (prefix, plen, router-id, seqno,
  metric) from a neighbour neigh, it checks whether it already has a
  route table entry indexed by (prefix, plen, neigh).

  If no such entry exists:

  *  if the update is unfeasible, it MAY be ignored;

  *  if the metric is infinite (the update is a retraction of a route
     we do not know about), the update is ignored;

  *  otherwise, a new entry is created in the route table, indexed by
     (prefix, plen, neigh), with source equal to (prefix, plen, router-
     id), seqno equal to seqno, and an advertised metric equal to the
     metric carried by the update.

  If such an entry exists:

  *  if the entry is currently selected, the update is unfeasible, and
     the router-id of the update is equal to the router-id of the
     entry, then the update MAY be ignored;

  *  otherwise, the entry's sequence number, advertised metric, metric,
     and router-id are updated, and if the advertised metric is not
     infinite, the route's expiry timer is reset to a small multiple of
     the interval value included in the update (see "Route Expiry time"
     in Appendix B for suggested values).  If the update is unfeasible,
     then the (now unfeasible) entry MUST be immediately unselected.
     If the update caused the router-id of the entry to change, an
     update (possibly a retraction) MUST be sent in a timely manner as
     described in Section 3.7.2.

  Note that the route table may contain unfeasible routes, either
  because they were created by an unfeasible update or due to a metric
  fluctuation.  Such routes are never selected, since they are not
  known to be loop-free.  Should all the feasible routes become
  unusable, however, the unfeasible routes can be made feasible and
  therefore possible to select by sending requests along them (see
  Section 3.8.2).

  When a route's expiry timer triggers, the behaviour depends on
  whether the route's metric is finite.  If the metric is finite, it is
  set to infinity and the expiry timer is reset.  If the metric is
  already infinite, the route is flushed from the route table.

  After the route table is updated, the route selection procedure
  (Section 3.6) is run.

3.5.4.  Hold Time

  When a prefix P is retracted (because all routes are unfeasible or
  have an infinite metric, whether due to the expiry timer or for other
  reasons), and a shorter prefix P' that covers P is reachable, P'
  cannot in general be used for routing packets destined to P without
  running the risk of creating a routing loop (Section 2.8).

  To avoid this issue, whenever a prefix P is retracted, a route table
  entry with infinite metric is maintained as described in
  Section 3.5.3.  As long as this entry is maintained, packets destined
  to an address within P MUST NOT be forwarded by following a route for
  a shorter prefix.  This entry is removed as soon as a finite-metric
  update for prefix P is received and the resulting route selected.  If
  no such update is forthcoming, the infinite metric entry SHOULD be
  maintained at least until it is guaranteed that no neighbour has
  selected the current node as next hop for prefix P.  This can be
  achieved by either:

  *  waiting until the route's expiry timer has expired
     (Section 3.5.3); or

  *  sending a retraction with an acknowledgment request (Section 3.3)
     to every reachable neighbour that has not explicitly retracted
     prefix P, and waiting for all acknowledgments.

  The former option is simpler and ensures that, at that point, any
  routes for prefix P pointing at the current node have expired.
  However, since the expiry time can be as high as a few minutes, doing
  that prevents automatic aggregation by creating spurious black-holes
  for aggregated routes.  The latter option is RECOMMENDED as it
  dramatically reduces the time for which a prefix is unreachable in
  the presence of aggregated routes.

3.6.  Route Selection

  Route selection is the process by which a single route for a given
  prefix is selected to be used for forwarding packets and to be re-
  advertised to a node's neighbours.

  Babel is designed to allow flexible route selection policies.  As far
  as the algorithm's correctness is concerned, the route selection
  policy MUST only satisfy the following properties:

  *  a route with infinite metric (a retracted route) is never
     selected;

  *  an unfeasible route is never selected.

  Babel nodes using different route selection strategies will
  interoperate and will not create routing loops as long as these two
  properties hold.

  Route selection MUST NOT take seqnos into account: a route MUST NOT
  be preferred just because it carries a higher (more recent) seqno.
  Doing otherwise would cause route oscillation while a new seqno
  propagates across the network, and might create persistent black-
  holes if the metric being used is not left-distributive
  (Section 3.5.2).

  The obvious route selection strategy is to pick, for every
  destination, the feasible route with minimal metric.  When all
  metrics are stable, this approach ensures convergence to a tree of
  shortest paths (assuming that the metric is left-distributive, see
  Section 3.5.2).  There are two reasons, however, why this strategy
  may lead to instability in the presence of continuously varying
  metrics.  First, if two parallel routes oscillate around a common
  value, then the smallest metric strategy will keep switching between
  the two.  Second, the selection of a route increases congestion along
  it, which might increase packet loss, which in turn could cause its
  metric to increase; this kind of feedback loop is prone to causing
  persistent oscillations.

  In order to limit these kinds of instabilities, a route selection
  strategy SHOULD include some form of hysteresis, i.e., be sensitive
  to a route's history: the strategy should only switch from the
  currently selected route to a different route if the latter has been
  consistently good for some period of time.  A RECOMMENDED hysteresis
  algorithm is given in Appendix A.3.

  After the route selection procedure is run, triggered updates
  (Section 3.7.2) and requests (Section 3.8.2) are sent.

3.7.  Sending Updates

  A Babel speaker advertises to its neighbours its set of selected
  routes.  Normally, this is done by sending one or more multicast
  packets containing Update TLVs on all of its connected interfaces;
  however, on link technologies where multicast is significantly more
  expensive than unicast, a node MAY choose to send multiple copies of
  updates in unicast packets, especially when the number of neighbours
  is small.

  Additionally, in order to ensure that any black-holes are reliably
  cleared in a timely manner, a Babel node may send retractions
  (updates with an infinite metric) for any recently retracted
  prefixes.

  If an update is for a route injected into the Babel domain by the
  local node (e.g., it carries the address of a local interface, the
  prefix of a directly attached network, or a prefix redistributed from
  a different routing protocol), the router-id is set to the local
  node's router-id, the metric is set to some arbitrary finite value
  (typically 0), and the seqno is set to the local router's sequence
  number.

  If an update is for a route learnt from another Babel speaker, the
  router-id and sequence number are copied from the route table entry,
  and the metric is computed as specified in Section 3.5.2.

3.7.1.  Periodic Updates

  Every Babel speaker MUST advertise each of its selected routes on
  every interface, at least once every Update interval.  Since Babel
  doesn't suffer from routing loops (there is no "counting to
  infinity") and relies heavily on triggered updates (Section 3.7.2),
  this full dump only needs to happen infrequently (see Appendix B for
  suggested intervals).

3.7.2.  Triggered Updates

  In addition to periodic routing updates, a Babel speaker sends
  unscheduled, or triggered, updates in order to inform its neighbours
  of a significant change in the network topology.

  A change of router-id for the selected route to a given prefix may be
  indicative of a routing loop in formation; hence, whenever it changes
  the selected router-id for a given destination, a node MUST send an
  update as an urgent TLV (as defined in Section 3.1).  Additionally,
  it SHOULD make a reasonable attempt at ensuring that all reachable
  neighbours receive this update.

  There are two strategies for ensuring that.  If the number of
  neighbours is small, then it is reasonable to send the update
  together with an acknowledgment request; the update is resent until
  all neighbours have acknowledged the packet, up to some number of
  times.  If the number of neighbours is large, however, requesting
  acknowledgments from all of them might cause a non-negligible amount
  of network traffic; in that case, it may be preferable to simply
  repeat the update some reasonable number of times (say, 3 for
  wireless and 2 for wired links).  The number of copies MUST NOT
  exceed 5, and the copies SHOULD be separated by a small delay, as
  described in Section 3.1.

  A route retraction is somewhat less worrying: if the route retraction
  doesn't reach all neighbours, a black-hole might be created, which,
  unlike a routing loop, does not endanger the integrity of the
  network.  When a route is retracted, a node SHOULD send a triggered
  update and SHOULD make a reasonable attempt at ensuring that all
  neighbours receive this retraction.

  Finally, a node MAY send a triggered update when the metric for a
  given prefix changes in a significant manner, due to a received
  update, because a link's cost has changed or because a different next
  hop has been selected.  A node SHOULD NOT send triggered updates for
  other reasons, such as when there is a minor fluctuation in a route's
  metric, when the selected next hop changes without inducing a
  significant change to the route's metric, or to propagate a new
  sequence number (except to satisfy a request, as specified in
  Section 3.8).

3.7.3.  Maintaining Feasibility Distances

  Before sending an update (prefix, plen, router-id, seqno, metric)
  with finite metric (i.e., not a route retraction), a Babel node
  updates the feasibility distance maintained in the source table.
  This is done as follows.

  If no entry indexed by (prefix, plen, router-id) exists in the source
  table, then one is created with value (prefix, plen, router-id,
  seqno, metric).

  If an entry (prefix, plen, router-id, seqno', metric') exists, then
  it is updated as follows:

  *  if seqno > seqno', then seqno' := seqno, metric' := metric;

  *  if seqno = seqno' and metric' > metric, then metric' := metric;

  *  otherwise, nothing needs to be done.

  The garbage-collection timer for the entry is then reset.  Note that
  the feasibility distance is not updated and the garbage-collection
  timer is not reset when a retraction (an update with infinite metric)
  is sent.

  When the garbage-collection timer expires, the entry is removed from
  the source table.

3.7.4.  Split Horizon

  When running over a transitive, symmetric link technology, e.g., a
  point-to-point link or a wired LAN technology such as Ethernet, a
  Babel node SHOULD use an optimisation known as split horizon.  When
  split horizon is used on a given interface, a routing update for
  prefix P is not sent on the particular interface over which the
  selected route towards prefix P was learnt.

  Split horizon SHOULD NOT be applied to an interface unless the
  interface is known to be symmetric and transitive; in particular,
  split horizon is not applicable to decentralised wireless link
  technologies (e.g., IEEE 802.11 in ad hoc mode) when routing updates
  are sent over multicast.

3.8.  Explicit Requests

  In normal operation, a node's route table is populated by the regular
  and triggered updates sent by its neighbours.  Under some
  circumstances, however, a node sends explicit requests in order to
  cause a resynchronisation with the source after a mobility event or
  to prevent a route from spuriously expiring.

  The Babel protocol provides two kinds of explicit requests: route
  requests, which simply request an update for a given prefix, and
  seqno requests, which request an update for a given prefix with a
  specific sequence number.  The former are never forwarded; the latter
  are forwarded if they cannot be satisfied by the receiver.

3.8.1.  Handling Requests

  Upon receiving a request, a node either forwards the request or sends
  an update in reply to the request, as described in the following
  sections.  If this causes an update to be sent, the update is either
  sent to a multicast address on the interface on which the request was
  received, or to the unicast address of the neighbour that sent the
  request.

  The exact behaviour is different for route requests and seqno
  requests.

3.8.1.1.  Route Requests

  When a node receives a route request for a given prefix, it checks
  its route table for a selected route to this exact prefix.  If such a
  route exists, it MUST send an update (over unicast or over
  multicast); if such a route does not exist, it MUST send a retraction
  for that prefix.

  When a node receives a wildcard route request, it SHOULD send a full
  route table dump.  Full route dumps SHOULD be rate-limited,
  especially if they are sent over multicast.

3.8.1.2.  Seqno Requests

  When a node receives a seqno request for a given router-id and
  sequence number, it checks whether its route table contains a
  selected entry for that prefix.  If a selected route for the given
  prefix exists and has finite metric, and either the router-ids are
  different or the router-ids are equal and the entry's sequence number
  is no smaller (modulo 2^(16)) than the requested sequence number, the
  node MUST send an update for the given prefix.  If the router-ids
  match, but the requested seqno is larger (modulo 2^(16)) than the
  route entry's, the node compares the router-id against its own
  router-id.  If the router-id is its own, then it increases its
  sequence number by 1 (modulo 2^(16)) and sends an update.  A node
  MUST NOT increase its sequence number by more than 1 in reaction to a
  single seqno request.

  Otherwise, if the requested router-id is not its own, the received
  node consults the Hop Count field of the request.  If the hop count
  is 2 or more, and the node is advertising the prefix to its
  neighbours, the node selects a neighbour to forward the request to as
  follows:

  *  if the node has one or more feasible routes towards the requested
     prefix with a next hop that is not the requesting node, then the
     node MUST forward the request to the next hop of one such route;

  *  otherwise, if the node has one or more (not feasible) routes to
     the requested prefix with a next hop that is not the requesting
     node, then the node SHOULD forward the request to the next hop of
     one such route.

  In order to actually forward the request, the node decrements the hop
  count and sends the request in a unicast packet destined to the
  selected neighbour.  The forwarded request SHOULD be sent as an
  urgent TLV (as defined in Section 3.1).

  A node SHOULD maintain a list of recently forwarded seqno requests
  and forward the reply (an update with a seqno sufficiently large to
  satisfy the request) as an urgent TLV (as defined in Section 3.1).  A
  node SHOULD compare every incoming seqno request against its list of
  recently forwarded seqno requests and avoid forwarding the request if
  it is redundant (i.e., if the node has recently sent a request with
  the same prefix, router-id, and a seqno that is not smaller modulo
  2^(16)).

  Since the request-forwarding mechanism does not necessarily obey the
  feasibility condition, it may get caught in routing loops; hence,
  requests carry a hop count to limit the time during which they remain
  in the network.  However, since requests are only ever forwarded as
  unicast packets, the initial hop count need not be kept particularly
  low, and performing an expanding horizon search is not necessary.  A
  single request MUST NOT be duplicated: it MUST NOT be forwarded to a
  multicast address, and it MUST NOT be forwarded to multiple
  neighbours.  However, if a seqno request is resent by its originator,
  the subsequent copies may be forwarded to a different neighbour than
  the initial one.

3.8.2.  Sending Requests

  A Babel node MAY send a route or seqno request at any time to a
  multicast or a unicast address; there is only one case when
  originating requests is required (Section 3.8.2.1).

3.8.2.1.  Avoiding Starvation

  When a route is retracted or expires, a Babel node usually switches
  to another feasible route for the same prefix.  It may be the case,
  however, that no such routes are available.

  A node that has lost all feasible routes to a given destination but
  still has unexpired unfeasible routes to that destination MUST send a
  seqno request; if it doesn't have any such routes, it MAY still send
  a seqno request.  The router-id of the request is set to the router-
  id of the route that it has just lost, and the requested seqno is the
  value contained in the source table plus 1.  The request carries a
  hop count, which is used as a last-resort mechanism to ensure that it
  eventually vanishes from the network; it MAY be set to any value that
  is larger than the diameter of the network (64 is a suitable default
  value).

  If the node has any (unfeasible) routes to the requested destination,
  then it MUST send the request to at least one of the next-hop
  neighbours that advertised these routes, and SHOULD send it to all of
  them; in any case, it MAY send the request to any other neighbours,
  whether they advertise a route to the requested destination or not.
  A simple implementation strategy is therefore to unconditionally
  multicast the request over all interfaces.

  Similar requests will be sent by other nodes that are affected by the
  route's loss.  If the network is still connected, and assuming no
  packet loss, then at least one of these requests will be forwarded to
  the source, resulting in a route being advertised with a new sequence
  number.  (Due to duplicate suppression, only a small number of such
  requests are expected to actually reach the source.)

  In order to compensate for packet loss, a node SHOULD repeat such a
  request a small number of times if no route becomes feasible within a
  short time (see "Request timeout" in Appendix B for suggested
  values).  In the presence of heavy packet loss, however, all such
  requests might be lost; in that case, the mechanism in the next
  section will eventually ensure that a new seqno is received.

3.8.2.2.  Dealing with Unfeasible Updates

  When a route's metric increases, a node might receive an unfeasible
  update for a route that it has currently selected.  As specified in
  Section 3.5.1, the receiving node will either ignore the update or
  unselect the route.

  In order to keep routes from spuriously expiring because they have
  become unfeasible, a node SHOULD send a unicast seqno request when it
  receives an unfeasible update for a route that is currently selected.
  The requested sequence number is computed from the source table as in
  Section 3.8.2.1.

  Additionally, since metric computation does not necessarily coincide
  with the delay in propagating updates, a node might receive an
  unfeasible update from a currently unselected neighbour that is
  preferable to the currently selected route (e.g., because it has a
  much smaller metric); in that case, the node SHOULD send a unicast
  seqno request to the neighbour that advertised the preferable update.

3.8.2.3.  Preventing Routes from Expiring

  In normal operation, a route's expiry timer never triggers: since a
  route's hold time is computed from an explicit interval included in
  Update TLVs, a new update (possibly a retraction) should arrive in
  time to prevent a route from expiring.

  In the presence of packet loss, however, it may be the case that no
  update is successfully received for an extended period of time,
  causing a route to expire.  In order to avoid such spurious expiry,
  shortly before a selected route expires, a Babel node SHOULD send a
  unicast route request to the neighbour that advertised this route;
  since nodes always send either updates or retractions in response to
  non-wildcard route requests (Section 3.8.1.1), this will usually
  result in the route being either refreshed or retracted.

4.  Protocol Encoding

  A Babel packet MUST be sent as the body of a UDP datagram, with
  network-layer hop count set to 1, destined to a well-known multicast
  address or to a unicast address, over IPv4 or IPv6; in the case of
  IPv6, these addresses are link-local.  Both the source and
  destination UDP port are set to a well-known port number.  A Babel
  packet MUST be silently ignored unless its source address is either a
  link-local IPv6 address or an IPv4 address belonging to the local
  network, and its source port is the well-known Babel port.  It MAY be
  silently ignored if its destination address is a global IPv6 address.

  In order to minimise the number of packets being sent while avoiding
  lower-layer fragmentation, a Babel node SHOULD maximise the size of
  the packets it sends, up to the outgoing interface's MTU adjusted for
  lower-layer headers (28 octets for UDP over IPv4, 48 octets for UDP
  over IPv6).  It MUST NOT send packets larger than the attached
  interface's MTU adjusted for lower-layer headers or 512 octets,
  whichever is larger, but not exceeding 2^(16) - 1 adjusted for lower-
  layer headers.  Every Babel speaker MUST be able to receive packets
  that are as large as any attached interface's MTU adjusted for lower-
  layer headers or 512 octets, whichever is larger.  Babel packets MUST
  NOT be sent in IPv6 jumbograms [RFC2675].

4.1.  Data Types

4.1.1.  Representation of Integers

  All multi-octet fields that represent integers are encoded with the
  most significant octet first (in Big-Endian format [IEN137], also
  called network order).  The base protocol only carries unsigned
  values; if an extension needs to carry signed values, it will need to
  specify their encoding (e.g., two's complement).

4.1.2.  Interval

  Relative times are carried as 16-bit values specifying a number of
  centiseconds (hundredths of a second).  This allows times up to
  roughly 11 minutes with a granularity of 10 ms, which should cover
  all reasonable applications of Babel (see also Appendix B).

4.1.3.  Router-Id

  A router-id is an arbitrary 8-octet value.  A router-id MUST NOT
  consist of either all binary zeroes (0000000000000000 hexadecimal) or
  all binary ones (FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF hexadecimal).

4.1.4.  Address

  Since the bulk of the protocol is taken by addresses, multiple ways
  of encoding addresses are defined.  Additionally, within Update TLVs
  a common subnet prefix may be omitted when multiple addresses are
  sent in a single packet -- this is known as address compression
  (Section 4.6.9).

  Address encodings (AEs):

  AE 0:     Wildcard address.  The value is 0 octets long.

  AE 1:     IPv4 address.  Compression is allowed.  4 octets or less.

  AE 2:     IPv6 address.  Compression is allowed.  16 octets or less.

  AE 3:     Link-local IPv6 address.  Compression is not allowed.  The
            value is 8 octets long, a prefix of fe80::/64 is implied.

  The address family associated with an address encoding is either IPv4
  or IPv6: it is undefined for AE 0, IPv4 for AE 1, and IPv6 for AEs 2
  and 3.

4.1.5.  Prefixes

  A network prefix is encoded just like a network address, but it is
  stored in the smallest number of octets that are enough to hold the
  significant bits (up to the prefix length).

4.2.  Packet Format

  A Babel packet consists of a 4-octet header, followed by a sequence
  of TLVs (the packet body), optionally followed by a second sequence
  of TLVs (the packet trailer).  The format is designed to be
  extensible; see Appendix D for extensibility considerations.

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Magic     |    Version    |        Body length            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |          Packet Body...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
  |         Packet Trailer...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Fields:

  Magic     The arbitrary but carefully chosen value 42 (decimal);
            packets with a first octet different from 42 MUST be
            silently ignored.

  Version   This document specifies version 2 of the Babel protocol.
            Packets with a second octet different from 2 MUST be
            silently ignored.

  Body length  The length in octets of the body following the packet
            header (excluding the Magic, Version, and Body length
            fields, and excluding the packet trailer).

  Packet Body  The packet body; a sequence of TLVs.

  Packet Trailer  The packet trailer; another sequence of TLVs.

  The packet body and trailer are both sequences of TLVs.  The packet
  body is the normal place to store TLVs; the packet trailer only
  contains specialised TLVs that do not need to be protected by
  cryptographic security mechanisms.  When parsing the trailer, the
  receiver MUST ignore any TLV unless its definition explicitly states
  that it is allowed to appear there.  Among the TLVs defined in this
  document, only Pad1 and PadN are allowed in the trailer; since these
  TLVs are ignored in any case, an implementation MAY silently ignore
  the packet trailer without even parsing it, unless it implements at
  least one protocol extension that defines TLVs that are allowed to
  appear in the trailer.

4.3.  TLV Format

  With the exception of Pad1, all TLVs have the following structure:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |    Length     |     Payload...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Fields:

  Type      The type of the TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Payload   The TLV payload, which consists of a body and, for selected
            TLV types, an optional list of sub-TLVs.

  TLVs with an unknown type value MUST be silently ignored.

4.4.  Sub-TLV Format

  Every TLV carries an explicit length in its header; however, most
  TLVs are self-terminating, in the sense that it is possible to
  determine the length of the body without reference to the explicit
  Length field.  If a TLV has a self-terminating format, then the space
  between the natural size of the TLV and the size announced in the
  Length field may be used to store a sequence of sub-TLVs.

  Sub-TLVs have the same structure as TLVs.  With the exception of
  Pad1, all TLVs have the following structure:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |    Length     |     Body...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Fields:

  Type      The type of the sub-TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Body      The sub-TLV body, the interpretation of which depends on
            both the type of the sub-TLV and the type of the TLV within
            which it is embedded.

  The most significant bit of the sub-TLV type (the bit with value 80
  hexadecimal), is called the mandatory bit; in other words, sub-TLV
  types 128 through 255 have the mandatory bit set.  This bit indicates
  how to handle unknown sub-TLVs.  If the mandatory bit is not set,
  then an unknown sub-TLV MUST be silently ignored, and the rest of the
  TLV is processed normally.  If the mandatory bit is set, then the
  whole enclosing TLV MUST be silently ignored (except for updating the
  parser state by a Router-Id, Next Hop, or Update TLV, as described in
  the next section).

4.5.  Parser State and Encoding of Updates

  In a large network, the bulk of Babel traffic consists of route
  updates; hence, some care has been given to encoding them
  efficiently.  The data conceptually contained in an update
  (Section 3.5) is split into three pieces:

  *  the prefix, seqno, and metric are contained in the Update TLV
     itself (Section 4.6.9);

  *  the router-id is taken from the Router-Id TLV that precedes the
     Update TLV and may be shared among multiple Update TLVs
     (Section 4.6.7);

  *  the next hop is taken either from the source address of the
     network-layer packet that contains the Babel packet or from an
     explicit Next Hop TLV (Section 4.6.8).

  In addition to the above, an Update TLV can omit a prefix of the
  prefix being announced, which is then extracted from the preceding
  Update TLV in the same address family (IPv4 or IPv6).  Finally, as a
  special optimisation for the case when a router-id coincides with the
  interface-id part of an IPv6 address, the Router-Id TLV itself may be
  omitted, and the router-id is derived from the low-order bits of the
  advertised prefix (Section 4.6.9).

  In order to implement these compression techniques, Babel uses a
  stateful parser: a TLV may refer to data from a previous TLV.  The
  parser state consists of the following pieces of data:

  *  for each address encoding that allows compression, the current
     default prefix: this is undefined at the start of the packet and
     is updated by each Update TLV with the Prefix flag set
     (Section 4.6.9);

  *  for each address family (IPv4 or IPv6), the current next hop: this
     is the source address of the enclosing packet for the matching
     address family at the start of a packet, and it is updated by each
     Next Hop TLV (Section 4.6.8);

  *  the current router-id: this is undefined at the start of the
     packet, and it is updated by each Router-Id TLV (Section 4.6.7)
     and by each Update TLV with Router-Id flag set.

  Since the parser state must be identical across implementations, it
  is updated before checking for mandatory sub-TLVs: parsing a TLV MUST
  update the parser state even if the TLV is otherwise ignored due to
  an unknown mandatory sub-TLV or for any other reason.

  None of the TLVs that modify the parser state are allowed in the
  packet trailer; hence, an implementation may choose to use a
  dedicated stateless parser to parse the packet trailer.

4.6.  Details of Specific TLVs

4.6.1.  Pad1

   0
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |   Type = 0    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 0 to indicate a Pad1 TLV.

  This TLV is silently ignored on reception.  It is allowed in the
  packet trailer.

4.6.2.  PadN

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 1   |    Length     |      MBZ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 1 to indicate a PadN TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  MBZ       Must be zero, set to 0 on transmission.

  This TLV is silently ignored on reception.  It is allowed in the
  packet trailer.

4.6.3.  Acknowledgment Request

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 2   |    Length     |          Reserved             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |             Opaque            |          Interval             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  This TLV requests that the receiver send an Acknowledgment TLV within
  the number of centiseconds specified by the Interval field.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 2 to indicate an Acknowledgment Request TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Reserved  Sent as 0 and MUST be ignored on reception.

  Opaque    An arbitrary value that will be echoed in the receiver's
            Acknowledgment TLV.

  Interval  A time interval in centiseconds after which the sender will
            assume that this packet has been lost.  This MUST NOT be 0.
            The receiver MUST send an Acknowledgment TLV before this
            time has elapsed (with a margin allowing for propagation
            time).

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.4.  Acknowledgment

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 3   |    Length     |           Opaque              |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  This TLV is sent by a node upon receiving an Acknowledgment Request
  TLV.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 3 to indicate an Acknowledgment TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Opaque    Set to the Opaque value of the Acknowledgment Request that
            prompted this Acknowledgment.

  Since Opaque values are not globally unique, this TLV MUST be sent to
  a unicast address.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.5.  Hello

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 4   |    Length     |            Flags              |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |            Seqno              |          Interval             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  This TLV is used for neighbour discovery and for determining a
  neighbour's reception cost.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 4 to indicate a Hello TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Flags     The individual bits of this field specify special handling
            of this TLV (see below).

  Seqno     If the Unicast flag is set, this is the value of the
            sending node's outgoing Unicast Hello seqno for this
            neighbour.  Otherwise, it is the sending node's outgoing
            Multicast Hello seqno for this interface.

  Interval  If nonzero, this is an upper bound, expressed in
            centiseconds, on the time after which the sending node will
            send a new scheduled Hello TLV with the same setting of the
            Unicast flag.  If this is 0, then this Hello represents an
            unscheduled Hello and doesn't carry any new information
            about times at which Hellos are sent.

  The Flags field is interpreted as follows:

   0                   1
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |U|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|X|
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  U (Unicast) flag (8000 hexadecimal):  if set, then this Hello
            represents a Unicast Hello, otherwise it represents a
            Multicast Hello;

  X:        all other bits MUST be sent as 0 and silently ignored on
            reception.

  Every time a Hello is sent, the corresponding seqno counter MUST be
  incremented.  Since there is a single seqno counter for all the
  Multicast Hellos sent by a given node over a given interface, if the
  Unicast flag is not set, this TLV MUST be sent to all neighbours on
  this link, which can be achieved by sending to a multicast
  destination or by sending multiple packets to the unicast addresses
  of all reachable neighbours.  Conversely, if the Unicast flag is set,
  this TLV MUST be sent to a single neighbour, which can achieved by
  sending to a unicast destination.  In order to avoid large
  discontinuities in link quality, multiple Hello TLVs SHOULD NOT be
  sent in the same packet.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.6.  IHU

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 5   |    Length     |       AE      |    Reserved   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |            Rxcost             |          Interval             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |       Address...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  An IHU ("I Heard You") TLV is used for confirming bidirectional
  reachability and carrying a link's transmission cost.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 5 to indicate an IHU TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  AE        The encoding of the Address field.  This should be 1 or 3
            in most cases.  As an optimisation, it MAY be 0 if the TLV
            is sent to a unicast address, if the association is over a
            point-to-point link, or when bidirectional reachability is
            ascertained by means outside of the Babel protocol.

  Reserved  Sent as 0 and MUST be ignored on reception.

  Rxcost    The rxcost according to the sending node of the interface
            whose address is specified in the Address field.  The value
            FFFF hexadecimal (infinity) indicates that this interface
            is unreachable.

  Interval  An upper bound, expressed in centiseconds, on the time
            after which the sending node will send a new IHU; this MUST
            NOT be 0.  The receiving node will use this value in order
            to compute a hold time for this symmetric association.

  Address   The address of the destination node, in the format
            specified by the AE field.  Address compression is not
            allowed.

  Conceptually, an IHU is destined to a single neighbour.  However, IHU
  TLVs contain an explicit destination address, and MAY be sent to a
  multicast address, as this allows aggregation of IHUs destined to
  distinct neighbours into a single packet and avoids the need for an
  ARP or Neighbour Discovery exchange when a neighbour is not being
  used for data traffic.

  IHU TLVs with an unknown value in the AE field MUST be silently
  ignored.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.7.  Router-Id

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 6   |    Length     |          Reserved             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                                                               |
  +                           Router-Id                           +
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  A Router-Id TLV establishes a router-id that is implied by subsequent
  Update TLVs, as described in Section 4.5.  This TLV sets the router-
  id even if it is otherwise ignored due to an unknown mandatory sub-
  TLV.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 6 to indicate a Router-Id TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  Reserved  Sent as 0 and MUST be ignored on reception.

  Router-Id  The router-id for routes advertised in subsequent Update
            TLVs.  This MUST NOT consist of all zeroes or all ones.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.8.  Next Hop

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 7   |    Length     |      AE       |   Reserved    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |       Next hop...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  A Next Hop TLV establishes a next-hop address for a given address
  family (IPv4 or IPv6) that is implied in subsequent Update TLVs, as
  described in Section 4.5.  This TLV sets up the next hop for
  subsequent Update TLVs even if it is otherwise ignored due to an
  unknown mandatory sub-TLV.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 7 to indicate a Next Hop TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  AE        The encoding of the Address field.  This SHOULD be 1 (IPv4)
            or 3 (link-local IPv6), and MUST NOT be 0.

  Reserved  Sent as 0 and MUST be ignored on reception.

  Next hop  The next-hop address advertised by subsequent Update TLVs
            for this address family.

  When the address family matches the network-layer protocol over which
  this packet is transported, a Next Hop TLV is not needed: in the
  absence of a Next Hop TLV in a given address family, the next-hop
  address is taken to be the source address of the packet.

  Next Hop TLVs with an unknown value for the AE field MUST be silently
  ignored.

  This TLV is self-terminating, and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.9.  Update

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 8   |    Length     |       AE      |    Flags      |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Plen      |    Omitted    |            Interval           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |             Seqno             |            Metric             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      Prefix...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  An Update TLV advertises or retracts a route.  As an optimisation, it
  can optionally have the side effect of establishing a new implied
  router-id and a new default prefix, as described in Section 4.5.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 8 to indicate an Update TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  AE        The encoding of the Prefix field.

  Flags     The individual bits of this field specify special handling
            of this TLV (see below).

  Plen      The length in bits of the advertised prefix.  If AE is 3
            (link-local IPv6), the Omitted field MUST be 0.

  Omitted   The number of octets that have been omitted at the
            beginning of the advertised prefix and that should be taken
            from a preceding Update TLV in the same address family with
            the Prefix flag set.

  Interval  An upper bound, expressed in centiseconds, on the time
            after which the sending node will send a new update for
            this prefix.  This MUST NOT be 0.  The receiving node will
            use this value to compute a hold time for the route table
            entry.  The value FFFF hexadecimal (infinity) expresses
            that this announcement will not be repeated unless a
            request is received (Section 3.8.2.3).

  Seqno     The originator's sequence number for this update.

  Metric    The sender's metric for this route.  The value FFFF
            hexadecimal (infinity) means that this is a route
            retraction.

  Prefix    The prefix being advertised.  This field's size is
            (Plen/8 - Omitted) rounded upwards.

  The Flags field is interpreted as follows:

   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |P|R|X|X|X|X|X|X|
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  P (Prefix) flag (80 hexadecimal):  if set, then this Update TLV
            establishes a new default prefix for subsequent Update TLVs
            with a matching address encoding within the same packet,
            even if this TLV is otherwise ignored due to an unknown
            mandatory sub-TLV;

  R (Router-Id) flag (40 hexadecimal):  if set, then this TLV
            establishes a new default router-id for this TLV and
            subsequent Update TLVs in the same packet, even if this TLV
            is otherwise ignored due to an unknown mandatory sub-TLV.
            This router-id is computed from the first address of the
            advertised prefix as follows:

            *  if the length of the address is 8 octets or more, then
               the new router-id is taken from the 8 last octets of the
               address;

            *  if the length of the address is smaller than 8 octets,
               then the new router-id consists of the required number
               of zero octets followed by the address, i.e., the
               address is stored on the right of the router-id.  For
               example, for an IPv4 address, the router-id consists of
               4 octets of zeroes followed by the IPv4 address.

  X:        all other bits MUST be sent as 0 and silently ignored on
            reception.

  The prefix being advertised by an Update TLV is computed as follows:

  *  the first Omitted octets of the prefix are taken from the previous
     Update TLV with the Prefix flag set and the same address encoding,
     even if it was ignored due to an unknown mandatory sub-TLV; if the
     Omitted field is not zero and there is no such TLV, then this
     Update MUST be ignored;

  *  the next (Plen/8 - Omitted) rounded upwards octets are taken from
     the Prefix field;

  *  if Plen is not a multiple of 8, then any bits beyond Plen (i.e.,
     the low-order (8 - Plen MOD 8) bits of the last octet) are
     cleared;

  *  the remaining octets are set to 0.

  If the Metric field is finite, the router-id of the originating node
  for this announcement is taken from the prefix advertised by this
  Update if the Router-Id flag is set, computed as described above.
  Otherwise, it is taken either from the preceding Router-Id TLV, or
  the preceding Update TLV with the Router-Id flag set, whichever comes
  last, even if that TLV is otherwise ignored due to an unknown
  mandatory sub-TLV; if there is no suitable TLV, then this update is
  ignored.

  The next-hop address for this update is taken from the last preceding
  Next Hop TLV with a matching address family (IPv4 or IPv6) in the
  same packet even if it was otherwise ignored due to an unknown
  mandatory sub-TLV; if no such TLV exists, it is taken from the
  network-layer source address of this packet if it belongs to the same
  address family as the prefix being announced; otherwise, this Update
  MUST be ignored.

  If the metric field is FFFF hexadecimal, this TLV specifies a
  retraction.  In that case, the router-id, next hop, and seqno are not
  used.  AE MAY then be 0, in which case this Update retracts all of
  the routes previously advertised by the sending interface.  If the
  metric is finite, AE MUST NOT be 0; Update TLVs with finite metric
  and AE equal to 0 MUST be ignored.  If the metric is infinite and AE
  is 0, Plen and Omitted MUST both be 0; Update TLVs that do not
  satisfy this requirement MUST be ignored.

  Update TLVs with an unknown value in the AE field MUST be silently
  ignored.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.10.  Route Request

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 9   |    Length     |      AE       |     Plen      |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      Prefix...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  A Route Request TLV prompts the receiver to send an update for a
  given prefix, or a full route table dump.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 9 to indicate a Route Request TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  AE        The encoding of the Prefix field.  The value 0 specifies
            that this is a request for a full route table dump (a
            wildcard request).

  Plen      The length in bits of the requested prefix.

  Prefix    The prefix being requested.  This field's size is Plen/8
            rounded upwards.

  A Request TLV prompts the receiver to send an update message
  (possibly a retraction) for the prefix specified by the AE, Plen, and
  Prefix fields, or a full dump of its route table if AE is 0 (in which
  case Plen must be 0 and Prefix is of length 0).  A Request TLV with
  AE set to 0 and Plen not set to 0 MUST be ignored.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.6.11.  Seqno Request

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 10  |    Length     |      AE       |    Plen       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |             Seqno             |  Hop Count    |   Reserved    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                                                               |
  +                          Router-Id                            +
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |   Prefix...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  A Seqno Request TLV prompts the receiver to send an Update for a
  given prefix with a given sequence number, or to forward the request
  further if it cannot be satisfied locally.

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 10 to indicate a Seqno Request TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  AE        The encoding of the Prefix field.  This MUST NOT be 0.

  Plen      The length in bits of the requested prefix.

  Seqno     The sequence number that is being requested.

  Hop Count  The maximum number of times that this TLV may be
            forwarded, plus 1.  This MUST NOT be 0.

  Reserved  Sent as 0 and MUST be ignored on reception.

  Router-Id  The Router-Id that is being requested.  This MUST NOT
            consist of all zeroes or all ones.

  Prefix    The prefix being requested.  This field's size is Plen/8
            rounded upwards.

  A Seqno Request TLV prompts the receiving node to send a finite-
  metric Update for the prefix specified by the AE, Plen, and Prefix
  fields, with either a router-id different from what is specified by
  the Router-Id field, or a Seqno no less (modulo 2^(16)) than what is
  specified by the Seqno field.  If this request cannot be satisfied
  locally, then it is forwarded according to the rules set out in
  Section 3.8.1.2.

  While a Seqno Request MAY be sent to a multicast address, it MUST NOT
  be forwarded to a multicast address and MUST NOT be forwarded to more
  than one neighbour.  A request MUST NOT be forwarded if its Hop Count
  field is 1.

  This TLV is self-terminating and allows sub-TLVs.

4.7.  Details of specific sub-TLVs

4.7.1.  Pad1

   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |   Type = 0    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 0 to indicate a Pad1 sub-TLV.

  This sub-TLV is silently ignored on reception.  It is allowed within
  any TLV that allows sub-TLVs.

4.7.2.  PadN

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Type = 1   |    Length     |      MBZ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Fields:

  Type      Set to 1 to indicate a PadN sub-TLV.

  Length    The length of the body in octets, exclusive of the Type and
            Length fields.

  MBZ       Must be zero, set to 0 on transmission.

  This sub-TLV is silently ignored on reception.  It is allowed within
  any TLV that allows sub-TLVs.

5.  IANA Considerations

  IANA has registered the UDP port number 6696, called "babel", for use
  by the Babel protocol.

  IANA has registered the IPv6 multicast group ff02::1:6 and the IPv4
  multicast group 224.0.0.111 for use by the Babel protocol.

  IANA has created a registry called "Babel TLV Types".  The allocation
  policy for this registry is Specification Required [RFC8126] for
  Types 0-223 and Experimental Use for Types 224-254.  The values in
  this registry are as follows:

   +=========+==========================================+===========+
   | Type    | Name                                     | Reference |
   +=========+==========================================+===========+
   | 0       | Pad1                                     | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 1       | PadN                                     | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 2       | Acknowledgment Request                   | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 3       | Acknowledgment                           | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 4       | Hello                                    | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 5       | IHU                                      | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 6       | Router-Id                                | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 7       | Next Hop                                 | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 8       | Update                                   | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 9       | Route Request                            | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 10      | Seqno Request                            | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 11      | TS/PC                                    | [RFC7298] |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 12      | HMAC                                     | [RFC7298] |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 13      | Reserved                                 |           |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 14      | Reserved                                 |           |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 15      | Reserved                                 |           |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 224-254 | Reserved for Experimental Use            | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+
   | 255     | Reserved for expansion of the type space | RFC 8966  |
   +---------+------------------------------------------+-----------+

                                Table 1

  IANA has created a registry called "Babel Sub-TLV Types".  The
  allocation policy for this registry is Specification Required for
  Types 0-111 and 128-239, and Experimental Use for Types 112-126 and
  240-254.  The values in this registry are as follows:

     +=========+===============================+===================+
     | Type    | Name                          | Reference         |
     +=========+===============================+===================+
     | 0       | Pad1                          | RFC 8966          |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 1       | PadN                          | RFC 8966          |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 2       | Diversity                     | [BABEL-DIVERSITY] |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 3       | Timestamp                     | [BABEL-RTT]       |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 4-111   | Unassigned                    |                   |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 112-126 | Reserved for Experimental Use | RFC 8966          |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 127     | Reserved for expansion of the | RFC 8966          |
     |         | type space                    |                   |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 128     | Source Prefix                 | [BABEL-SS]        |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 129-239 | Unassigned                    |                   |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 240-254 | Reserved for Experimental Use | RFC 8966          |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+
     | 255     | Reserved for expansion of the | RFC 8966          |
     |         | type space                    |                   |
     +---------+-------------------------------+-------------------+

                                 Table 2

  IANA has created a registry called "Babel Address Encodings".  The
  allocation policy for this registry is Specification Required for
  Address Encodings (AEs) 0-223, and Experimental Use for AEs 224-254.
  The values in this registry are as follows:

    +=========+========================================+===========+
    | AE      | Name                                   | Reference |
    +=========+========================================+===========+
    | 0       | Wildcard address                       | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 1       | IPv4 address                           | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 2       | IPv6 address                           | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 3       | Link-local IPv6 address                | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 4-223   | Unassigned                             |           |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 224-254 | Reserved for Experimental Use          | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+
    | 255     | Reserved for expansion of the AE space | RFC 8966  |
    +---------+----------------------------------------+-----------+

                                Table 3

  IANA has renamed the registry called "Babel Flags Values" to "Babel
  Update Flags Values".  The allocation policy for this registry is
  Specification Required.  The values in this registry are as follows:

                 +=====+===================+===========+
                 | Bit | Name              | Reference |
                 +=====+===================+===========+
                 | 0   | Default prefix    | RFC 8966  |
                 +-----+-------------------+-----------+
                 | 1   | Default router-id | RFC 8966  |
                 +-----+-------------------+-----------+
                 | 2-7 | Unassigned        |           |
                 +-----+-------------------+-----------+

                                 Table 4

  IANA has created a new registry called "Babel Hello Flags Values".
  The allocation policy for this registry is Specification Required.
  The initial values in this registry are as follows:

                    +======+============+===========+
                    | Bit  | Name       | Reference |
                    +======+============+===========+
                    | 0    | Unicast    | RFC 8966  |
                    +------+------------+-----------+
                    | 1-15 | Unassigned |           |
                    +------+------------+-----------+

                                 Table 5

  IANA has replaced all references to RFCs 6126 and 7557 in all of the
  registries mentioned above with references to this document.

6.  Security Considerations

  As defined in this document, Babel is a completely insecure protocol.
  Without additional security mechanisms, Babel trusts any information
  it receives in plaintext UDP datagrams and acts on it.  An attacker
  that is present on the local network can impact Babel operation in a
  variety of ways; for example they can:

  *  spoof a Babel packet, and redirect traffic by announcing a route
     with a smaller metric, a larger sequence number, or a longer
     prefix;

  *  spoof a malformed packet, which could cause an insufficiently
     robust implementation to crash or interfere with the rest of the
     network;

  *  replay a previously captured Babel packet, which could cause
     traffic to be redirected, black-holed, or otherwise interfere with
     the network.

  When carried over IPv6, Babel packets are ignored unless they are
  sent from a link-local IPv6 address; since routers don't forward
  link-local IPv6 packets, this mitigates the attacks outlined above by
  restricting them to on-link attackers.  No such natural protection
  exists when Babel packets are carried over IPv4, which is one of the
  reasons why it is recommended to deploy Babel over IPv6
  (Section 3.1).

  It is usually difficult to ensure that packets arriving at a Babel
  node are trusted, even in the case where the local link is believed
  to be secure.  For that reason, it is RECOMMENDED that all Babel
  traffic be protected by an application-layer cryptographic protocol.
  There are currently two suitable mechanisms, which implement
  different trade-offs between implementation simplicity and security:

  *  Babel over DTLS [RFC8968] runs the majority of Babel traffic over
     DTLS and leverages DTLS to authenticate nodes and provide
     confidentiality and integrity protection;

  *  MAC authentication [RFC8967] appends a message authentication code
     (MAC) to every Babel packet to prove that it originated at a node
     that knows a shared secret, and includes sufficient additional
     information to prove that the packet is fresh (not replayed).

  Both mechanisms enable nodes to ignore packets generated by attackers
  without the proper credentials.  They also ensure integrity of
  messages and prevent message replay.  While Babel-DTLS supports
  asymmetric keying and ensures confidentiality, Babel-MAC has a much
  more limited scope (see Sections 1.1, 1.2, and 7 of [RFC8967]).
  Since Babel-MAC is simpler and more lightweight, it is recommended in
  preference to Babel-DTLS in deployments where its limitations are
  acceptable, i.e., when symmetric keying is sufficient and where the
  routing information is not considered confidential.

  Every implementation of Babel SHOULD implement BABEL-MAC.

  One should be aware that the information that a mobile Babel node
  announces to the whole routing domain is sufficient to determine the
  mobile node's physical location with reasonable precision, which
  might cause privacy concerns even if the control traffic is protected
  from unauthenticated attackers by a cryptographic mechanism such as
  Babel-DTLS.  This issue may be mitigated somewhat by using randomly
  chosen router-ids and randomly chosen IP addresses, and changing them
  often enough.

7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC793]   Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,
             RFC 793, DOI 10.17487/RFC0793, September 1981,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc793>.

  [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
             Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
             RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.

  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

  [RFC8967]  Dô, C., Kolodziejak, W., and J. Chroboczek, "MAC
             Authentication for the Babel Routing Protocol", RFC 8967,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8967, January 2021,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8967>.

7.2.  Informative References

  [BABEL-DIVERSITY]
             Chroboczek, J., "Diversity Routing for the Babel Routing
             Protocol", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-
             chroboczek-babel-diversity-routing-01, 15 February 2016,
             <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-chroboczek-babel-
             diversity-routing-01>.

  [BABEL-RTT]
             Jonglez, B. and J. Chroboczek, "Delay-based Metric
             Extension for the Babel Routing Protocol", Work in
             Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-babel-rtt-extension-
             00, 26 April 2019, <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-
             ietf-babel-rtt-extension-00>.

  [BABEL-SS] Boutier, M. and J. Chroboczek, "Source-Specific Routing in
             Babel", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-
             babel-source-specific-07, 28 October 2020,
             <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-babel-source-
             specific-07>.

  [DSDV]     Perkins, C. and P. Bhagwat, "Highly dynamic Destination-
             Sequenced Distance-Vector routing (DSDV) for mobile
             computers", ACM SIGCOMM '94: Proceedings of the conference
             on Communications architectures, protocols and
             applications, 234-244, DOI 10.1145/190314.190336, October
             1994, <https://doi.org/10.1145/190314.190336>.

  [DUAL]     Garcia Luna Aceves, J. J., "Loop-free routing using
             diffusing computations", IEEE/ACM Transactions on
             Networking, 1:1, DOI 10.1109/90.222913, February 1993,
             <https://doi.org/10.1109/90.222913>.

  [EIGRP]    Albrightson, B., Garcia Luna Aceves, J. J., and J. Boyle,
             "EIGRP -- a Fast Routing Protocol Based on Distance
             Vectors", Proc. Networld/Interop 94, 1994.

  [ETX]      De Couto, D., Aguayo, D., Bicket, J., and R. Morris, "A
             high-throughput path metric for multi-hop wireless
             networks", MobiCom '03: Proceedings of the 9th annual
             international conference on Mobile computing and
             networking, 134-146, DOI 10.1145/938985.939000, September
             2003, <https://doi.org/10.1145/938985.939000>.

  [IEEE802.11]
             IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Information technology--
             Telecommunications and information exchange between
             systems Local and metropolitan area networks--Specific
             requirements Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control
             (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications",
             IEEE 802.11-2012, DOI 10.1109/ieeestd.2012.6178212, April
             2012, <https://doi.org/10.1109/ieeestd.2012.6178212>.

  [IEN137]   Cohen, D., "On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace", IEN 137, 1
             April 1980.

  [IS-IS]    International Organization for Standardization,
             "Information technology -- Telecommunications and
             information exchange between systems -- Intermediate
             System to Intermediate System intra-domain routeing
             information exchange protocol for use in conjunction with
             the protocol for providing the connectionless-mode network
             service (ISO 8473)", ISO/IEC 10589:2002, 2002.

  [JITTER]   Floyd, S. and V. Jacobson, "The Synchronization of
             Periodic Routing Messages", IEEE/ACM Transactions on
             Networking, 2, 2, 122-136, DOI 10.1109/90.298431, April
             1994, <https://doi.org/10.1109/90.298431>.

  [OSPF]     Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", STD 54, RFC 2328,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2328, April 1998,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2328>.

  [PACKETBB] Clausen, T., Dearlove, C., Dean, J., and C. Adjih,
             "Generalized Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET) Packet/Message
             Format", RFC 5444, DOI 10.17487/RFC5444, February 2009,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5444>.

  [RFC2675]  Borman, D., Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "IPv6 Jumbograms",
             RFC 2675, DOI 10.17487/RFC2675, August 1999,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2675>.

  [RFC3561]  Perkins, C., Belding-Royer, E., and S. Das, "Ad hoc On-
             Demand Distance Vector (AODV) Routing", RFC 3561,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC3561, July 2003,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3561>.

  [RFC6126]  Chroboczek, J., "The Babel Routing Protocol", RFC 6126,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6126, April 2011,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6126>.

  [RFC7298]  Ovsienko, D., "Babel Hashed Message Authentication Code
             (HMAC) Cryptographic Authentication", RFC 7298,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7298, July 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7298>.

  [RFC7557]  Chroboczek, J., "Extension Mechanism for the Babel Routing
             Protocol", RFC 7557, DOI 10.17487/RFC7557, May 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7557>.

  [RFC8968]  Décimo, A., Schinazi, D., and J. Chroboczek, "Babel
             Routing Protocol over Datagram Transport Layer Security",
             RFC 8968, DOI 10.17487/RFC8968, January 2021,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8968>.

  [RIP]      Malkin, G., "RIP Version 2", STD 56, RFC 2453,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2453, November 1998,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2453>.

Appendix A.  Cost and Metric Computation

  The strategy for computing link costs and route metrics is a local
  matter; Babel itself only requires that it comply with the conditions
  given in Section 3.4.3 and Section 3.5.2.  Different nodes may use
  different strategies in a single network and may use different
  strategies on different interface types.  This section describes a
  set of strategies that have been found to work well in actual
  networks.

  In summary, a node maintains per-neighbour statistics about the last
  16 received Hello TLVs of each kind (Appendix A.1), it computes costs
  by using the 2-out-of-3 strategy (Appendix A.2.1) on wired links and
  Expected Transmission Cost (ETX) (Appendix A.2.2) on wireless links.
  It uses an additive algebra for metric computation (Section 3.5.2).

A.1.  Maintaining Hello History

  For each neighbour, a node maintains two sets of Hello history, one
  for each kind of Hello, and an expected sequence number, one for
  Multicast and one for Unicast Hellos.  Each Hello history is a vector
  of 16 bits, where a 1 value represents a received Hello, and a 0
  value a missed Hello.  For each kind of Hello, the expected sequence
  number, written ne, is the sequence number that is expected to be
  carried by the next received Hello from this neighbour.

  Whenever it receives a Hello packet of a given kind from a neighbour,
  a node compares the received sequence number nr for that kind of
  Hello with its expected sequence number ne.  Depending on the outcome
  of this comparison, one of the following actions is taken:

  *  if the two differ by more than 16 (modulo 2^(16)), then the
     sending node has probably rebooted and lost its sequence number;
     the whole associated neighbour table entry is flushed and a new
     one is created;

  *  otherwise, if the received nr is smaller (modulo 2^(16)) than the
     expected sequence number ne, then the sending node has increased
     its Hello interval without our noticing; the receiving node
     removes the last (ne - nr) entries from this neighbour's Hello
     history (we "undo history");

  *  otherwise, if nr is larger (modulo 2^(16)) than ne, then the
     sending node has decreased its Hello interval, and some Hellos
     were lost; the receiving node adds (nr - ne) 0 bits to the Hello
     history (we "fast-forward").

  The receiving node then appends a 1 bit to the Hello history and sets
  ne to (nr + 1).  If the Interval field of the received Hello is not
  zero, it resets the neighbour's hello timer to 1.5 times the
  advertised Interval (the extra margin allows for delay due to
  jitter).

  Whenever either hello timer associated with a neighbour expires, the
  local node adds a 0 bit to the corresponding Hello history, and
  increments the expected Hello number.  If both Hello histories are
  empty (they contain 0 bits only), the neighbour entry is flushed;
  otherwise, the relevant hello timer is reset to the value advertised
  in the last Hello of that kind received from this neighbour (no extra
  margin is necessary in this case, since jitter was already taken into
  account when computing the timeout that has just expired).

A.2.  Cost Computation

  This section describes two algorithms suitable for computing costs
  (Section 3.4.3) based on Hello history.  Appendix A.2.1 applies to
  wired links and Appendix A.2.2 to wireless links.  RECOMMENDED
  default values of the parameters that appear in these algorithms are
  given in Appendix B.

A.2.1.  k-out-of-j

  K-out-of-j link sensing is suitable for wired links that are either
  up, in which case they only occasionally drop a packet, or down, in
  which case they drop all packets.

  The k-out-of-j strategy is parameterised by two small integers k and
  j, such that 0 < k <= j, and the nominal link cost, a constant C >=
  1.  A node keeps a history of the last j hellos; if k or more of
  those have been correctly received, the link is assumed to be up, and
  the rxcost is set to C; otherwise, the link is assumed to be down,
  and the rxcost is set to infinity.

  Since Babel supports two kinds of Hellos, a Babel node performs k-
  out-of-j twice for each neighbour, once on the Unicast Hello history
  and once on the Multicast Hello history.  If either of the instances
  of k-out-of-j indicates that the link is up, then the link is assumed
  to be up, and the rxcost is set to C; if both instances indicate that
  the link is down, then the link is assumed to be down, and the rxcost
  is set to infinity.  In other words, the resulting rxcost is the
  minimum of the rxcosts yielded by the two instances of k-out-of-j
  link sensing.

  The cost of a link performing k-out-of-j link sensing is defined as
  follows:

  *  cost = FFFF hexadecimal if rxcost = FFFF hexadecimal;

  *  cost = txcost otherwise.

A.2.2.  ETX

  Unlike wired links which are bimodal (either up or down), wireless
  links exhibit continuous variation of the link quality.  Naive
  application of hop-count routing in networks that use wireless links
  for transit tends to select long, lossy links in preference to
  shorter, lossless links, which can dramatically reduce throughput.
  For that reason, a routing protocol designed to support wireless
  links must perform some form of link quality estimation.

  The Expected Transmission Cost algorithm, or ETX [ETX], is a simple
  link quality estimation algorithm that is designed to work well with
  the IEEE 802.11 MAC [IEEE802.11].  By default, the IEEE 802.11 MAC
  performs Automatic Repeat Query (ARQ) and rate adaptation on unicast
  frames, but not on multicast frames, which are sent at a fixed rate
  with no ARQ; therefore, measuring the loss rate of multicast frames
  yields a useful estimate of a link's quality.

  A node performing ETX link quality estimation uses a neighbour's
  Multicast Hello history to compute an estimate, written beta, of the
  probability that a Hello TLV is successfully received.  Beta can be
  computed as the fraction of 1 bits within a small number (say, 6) of
  the most recent entries in the Multicast Hello history, or it can be
  an exponential average, or some combination of both approaches.  Let
  rxcost be 256/beta.

  Let alpha be MIN(1, 256/txcost), an estimate of the probability of
  successfully sending a Hello TLV.  The cost is then computed by

     cost = 256/(alpha * beta)

  or, equivalently,

     cost = (MAX(txcost, 256) * rxcost) / 256.

  Since the IEEE 802.11 MAC performs ARQ on unicast frames, unicast
  frames do not provide a useful measure of link quality, and therefore
  ETX ignores the Unicast Hello history.  Thus, a node performing ETX
  link quality estimation will not route through neighbouring nodes
  unless they send periodic Multicast Hellos (possibly in addition to
  Unicast Hellos).

A.3.  Route Selection and Hysteresis

  Route selection (Section 3.6) is the process by which a node selects
  a single route among the routes that it has available towards a given
  destination.  With Babel, any route selection procedure that only
  ever chooses feasible routes with a finite metric will yield a set of
  loop-free routes; however, in the presence of continuously variable
  metrics such as ETX (Appendix A.2.2), a naive route selection
  procedure might lead to persistent oscillations.  Such oscillations
  can be limited or avoided altogether by implementing hysteresis
  within the route selection algorithm, i.e., by making the route
  selection algorithm sensitive to a route's history.  Any reasonable
  hysteresis algorithm should yield good results; the following
  algorithm is simple to implement and has been successfully deployed
  in a variety of environments.

  For every route R, in addition to the route's metric m(R), maintain a
  smoothed version of m(R) written ms(R) (we RECOMMEND computing ms(R)
  as an exponentially smoothed average (see Section 3.7 of [RFC793]) of
  m(R) with a time constant equal to the Hello interval multiplied by a
  small number such as 3).  If no route to a given destination is
  selected, then select the route with the smallest metric, ignoring
  the smoothed metric.  If a route R is selected, then switch to a
  route R' only when both m(R') < m(R) and ms(R') < ms(R).

  Intuitively, the smoothed metric is a long-term estimate of the
  quality of a route.  The algorithm above works by only switching
  routes when both the instantaneous and the long-term estimates of the
  route's quality indicate that switching is profitable.

Appendix B.  Protocol Parameters

  The choice of time constants is a trade-off between fast detection of
  mobility events and protocol overhead.  Two instances of Babel
  running with different time constants will interoperate, although the
  resulting worst-case convergence time will be dictated by the slower
  of the two.

  The Hello interval is the most important time constant: an outage or
  a mobility event is detected within 1.5 to 3.5 Hello intervals.  Due
  to Babel's use of a redundant route table, and due to its reliance on
  triggered updates and explicit requests, the Update interval has
  little influence on the time needed to reconverge after an outage: in
  practice, it only has a significant effect on the time needed to
  acquire new routes after a mobility event.  While the protocol allows
  intervals as low as 10 ms, such low values would cause significant
  amounts of protocol traffic for little practical benefit.

  The following values have been found to work well in a variety of
  environments and are therefore RECOMMENDED default values:

  Multicast Hello interval:  4 seconds.

  Unicast Hello interval:  infinite (no Unicast Hellos are sent).

  Link cost:  estimated using ETX on wireless links; 2-out-of-3 with
            C=96 on wired links.

  IHU interval:  the advertised IHU interval is always 3 times the
            Multicast Hello interval.  IHUs are actually sent with each
            Hello on lossy links (as determined from the Hello
            history), but only with every third Multicast Hello on
            lossless links.

  Update interval:  4 times the Multicast Hello interval.

  IHU Hold time:  3.5 times the advertised IHU interval.

  Route Expiry time:  3.5 times the advertised update interval.

  Request timeout:  initially 2 seconds, doubled every time a request
            is resent, up to a maximum of three times.

  Urgent timeout:  0.2 seconds.

  Source GC time:  3 minutes.

Appendix C.  Route Filtering

  Route filtering is a procedure where an instance of a routing
  protocol either discards some of the routes announced by its
  neighbours or learns them with a metric that is higher than what
  would be expected.  Like all distance-vector protocols, Babel has the
  ability to apply arbitrary filtering to the routes it learns, and
  implementations of Babel that apply different sets of filtering rules
  will interoperate without causing routing loops.  The protocol's
  ability to perform route filtering is a consequence of the latitude
  given in Section 3.5.2: Babel can use any metric that is strictly
  monotonic, including one that assigns an infinite metric to a
  selected subset of routes.  (See also Section 3.8.1, where requests
  for nonexistent routes are treated in the same way as requests for
  routes with infinite metric.)

  It is not in general correct to learn a route with a metric smaller
  than the one it was announced with, or to replace a route's
  destination prefix with a more specific (longer) one.  Doing either
  of these may cause persistent routing loops.

  Route filtering is a useful tool, since it allows fine-grained tuning
  of the routing decisions made by the routing protocol.  Accordingly,
  some implementations of Babel implement a rich configuration language
  that allows applying filtering to sets of routes defined, for
  example, by incoming interface and destination prefix.

  In order to limit the consequences of misconfiguration, Babel
  implementations provide a reasonable set of default filtering rules
  even when they don't allow configuration of filtering by the user.
  At a minimum, they discard routes with a destination prefix in
  fe80::/64, ff00::/8, 127.0.0.1/32, 0.0.0.0/32, and 224.0.0.0/8.

Appendix D.  Considerations for Protocol Extensions

  Babel is an extensible protocol, and this document defines a number
  of mechanisms that can be used to extend the protocol in a backwards
  compatible manner:

  *  increasing the version number in the packet header;

  *  defining new TLVs;

  *  defining new sub-TLVs (with or without the mandatory bit set);

  *  defining new AEs;

  *  using the packet trailer.

  This appendix is intended to guide designers of protocol extensions
  in choosing a particular encoding.

  The version number in the Babel header should only be increased if
  the new version is not backwards compatible with the original
  protocol.

  In many cases, an extension could be implemented either by defining a
  new TLV or by adding a new sub-TLV to an existing TLV.  For example,
  an extension whose purpose is to attach additional data to route
  updates can be implemented either by creating a new "enriched" Update
  TLV, by adding a nonmandatory sub-TLV to the Update TLV, or by adding
  a mandatory sub-TLV.

  The various encodings are treated differently by implementations that
  do not understand the extension.  In the case of a new TLV or of a
  sub-TLV with the mandatory bit set, the whole TLV is ignored by
  implementations that do not implement the extension, while in the
  case of a nonmandatory sub-TLV, the TLV is parsed and acted upon, and
  only the unknown sub-TLV is silently ignored.  Therefore, a
  nonmandatory sub-TLV should be used by extensions that extend the
  Update in a compatible manner (the extension data may be silently
  ignored), while a mandatory sub-TLV or a new TLV must be used by
  extensions that make incompatible extensions to the meaning of the
  TLV (the whole TLV must be thrown away if the extension data is not
  understood).

  Experience shows that the need for additional data tends to crop up
  in the most unexpected places.  Hence, it is recommended that
  extensions that define new TLVs should make them self-terminating and
  allow attaching sub-TLVs to them.

  Adding a new AE is essentially equivalent to adding a new TLV: Update
  TLVs with an unknown AE are ignored, just like unknown TLVs.
  However, adding a new AE is more involved than adding a new TLV,
  since it creates a new set of compression state.  Additionally, since
  the Next Hop TLV creates state specific to a given address family, as
  opposed to a given AE, a new AE for a previously defined address
  family must not be used in the Next Hop TLV if backwards
  compatibility is required.  A similar issue arises with Update TLVs
  with unknown AEs establishing a new router-id (due to the Router-Id
  flag being set).  Therefore, defining new AEs must be done with care
  if compatibility with unextended implementations is required.

  The packet trailer is intended to carry cryptographic signatures that
  only cover the packet body; storing the cryptographic signatures in
  the packet trailer avoids clearing the signature before computing a
  hash of the packet body, and makes it possible to check a
  cryptographic signature before running the full, stateful TLV parser.
  Hence, only TLVs that don't need to be protected by cryptographic
  security protocols should be allowed in the packet trailer.  Any such
  TLVs should be easy to parse and, in particular, should not require
  stateful parsing.

Appendix E.  Stub Implementations

  Babel is a fairly economic protocol.  Updates take between 12 and 40
  octets per destination, depending on the address family and how
  successful compression is; in a dual-stack flat network, an average
  of less than 24 octets per update is typical.  The route table
  occupies about 35 octets per IPv6 entry.  To put these values into
  perspective, a single full-size Ethernet frame can carry some 65
  route updates, and a megabyte of memory can contain a 20,000-entry
  route table and the associated source table.

  Babel is also a reasonably simple protocol.  One complete
  implementation consists of less than 12,000 lines of C code, and it
  compiles to less than 120 KB of text on a 32-bit CISC architecture;
  about half of this figure is due to protocol extensions and user-
  interface code.

  Nonetheless, in some very constrained environments, such as PDAs,
  microwave ovens, or abacuses, it may be desirable to have subset
  implementations of the protocol.

  There are many different definitions of a stub router, but for the
  needs of this section, a stub implementation of Babel is one that
  announces one or more directly attached prefixes into a Babel network
  but doesn't re-announce any routes that it has learnt from its
  neighbours, and always prefers the direct route to a directly
  attached prefix to a route learnt over the Babel protocol, even when
  the prefixes are the same.  It may either maintain a full routing
  table or simply select a default gateway through any one of its
  neighbours that announces a default route.  Since a stub
  implementation never forwards packets except from or to a directly
  attached link, it cannot possibly participate in a routing loop, and
  hence it need not evaluate the feasibility condition or maintain a
  source table.

  No matter how primitive, a stub implementation must parse sub-TLVs
  attached to any TLVs that it understands and check the mandatory bit.
  It must answer acknowledgment requests and must participate in the
  Hello/IHU protocol.  It must also be able to reply to seqno requests
  for routes that it announces, and it should be able to reply to route
  requests.

  Experience shows that an IPv6-only stub implementation of Babel can
  be written in less than 1,000 lines of C code and compile to 13 KB of
  text on 32-bit CISC architecture.

Appendix F.  Compatibility with Previous Versions

  The protocol defined in this document is a successor to the protocol
  defined in [RFC6126] and [RFC7557].  While the two protocols are not
  entirely compatible, the new protocol has been designed so that it
  can be deployed in existing RFC 6126 networks without requiring a
  flag day.

  There are three optional features that make this protocol
  incompatible with its predecessor.  First of all, RFC 6126 did not
  define Unicast Hellos (Section 3.4.1), and an implementation of RFC
  6126 will misinterpret a Unicast Hello for a Multicast one; since the
  sequence number space of Unicast Hellos is distinct from the sequence
  number space of Multicast Hellos, sending a Unicast Hello to an
  implementation of RFC 6126 will confuse its link quality estimator.
  Second, RFC 6126 did not define unscheduled Hellos, and an
  implementation of RFC 6126 will mis-parse Hellos with an interval
  equal to 0.  Finally, RFC 7557 did not define mandatory sub-TLVs
  (Section 4.4), and thus an implementation of RFCs 6126 and 7557 will
  not correctly ignore a TLV that carries an unknown mandatory sub-TLV;
  depending on the sub-TLV, this might cause routing pathologies.

  An implementation of this specification that never sends Unicast or
  unscheduled Hellos and doesn't implement any extensions that use
  mandatory sub-TLVs is safe to deploy in a network in which some nodes
  implement the protocol described in RFCs 6126 and 7557.

  Two changes need to be made to an implementation of RFCs 6126 and
  7557 so that it can safely interoperate in all cases with
  implementations of this protocol.  First, it needs to be modified
  either to ignore or to process Unicast and unscheduled Hellos.
  Second, it needs to be modified to parse sub-TLVs of all the TLVs
  that it understands and that allow sub-TLVs, and to ignore the TLV if
  an unknown mandatory sub-TLV is found.  It is not necessary to parse
  unknown TLVs, as these are ignored in any case.

  There are other changes, but these are not of a nature to prevent
  interoperability:

  *  the conditions on route acquisition (Section 3.5.3) have been
     relaxed;

  *  route selection should no longer use the route's sequence number
     (Section 3.6);

  *  the format of the packet trailer has been defined (Section 4.2);

  *  router-ids with a value of all-zeros or all-ones have been
     forbidden (Section 4.1.3);

  *  the compression state is now specific to an address family rather
     than an address encoding (Section 4.5);

  *  packet pacing is now recommended (Section 3.1).

Acknowledgments

  A number of people have contributed text and ideas to this
  specification.  The authors are particularly indebted to Matthieu
  Boutier, Gwendoline Chouasne, Margaret Cullen, Donald Eastlake, Toke
  Høiland-Jørgensen, Benjamin Kaduk, Joao Sobrinho, and Martin
  Vigoureux.  The previous version of this specification [RFC6126]
  greatly benefited from the input of Joel Halpern.  The address
  compression technique was inspired by [PACKETBB].

Authors' Addresses

  Juliusz Chroboczek
  IRIF, University of Paris-Diderot
  Case 7014
  75205 Paris CEDEX 13
  France

  Email: [email protected]


  David Schinazi
  Google LLC
  1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
  Mountain View, California 94043
  United States of America

  Email: [email protected]