Network Working Group                                          J. Postel
Request for Comments:  1042                                  J. Reynolds
                                                                    ISI
Obsoletes: RFC-948                                         February 1988



A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams over IEEE 802 Networks


Status of this Memo

  This RFC specifies a standard method of encapsulating the Internet
  Protocol (IP) [1] datagrams and Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) [2]
  requests and replies on IEEE 802 Networks.  This RFC specifies a
  protocol standard for the Internet community.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Acknowledgment

  This memo would not exist with out the very significant contributions
  of Drew Perkins of Carnegie Mellon University, Jacob Rekhter of the
  T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corporation, and Joseph Cimmino of
  the University of Maryland.

Introduction

  The goal of this specification is to allow compatible and
  interoperable implementations for transmitting IP datagrams and ARP
  requests and replies.  To achieve this it may be necessary in a few
  cases to limit the use that IP and ARP make of the capabilities of a
  particular IEEE 802 standard.

  The IEEE 802 specifications define a family of standards for Local
  Area Networks (LANs) that deal with the Physical and Data Link Layers
  as defined by the ISO Open System Interconnection Reference Model
  (ISO/OSI).  Several Physical Layer standards (802.3, 802.4, and
  802.5) [3,4,5] and one Data Link Layer Standard (802.2) [6] have been
  defined.  The IEEE Physical Layer standards specify the ISO/OSI
  Physical Layer and the Media Access Control Sublayer of the ISO/OSI
  Data Link Layer.  The 802.2 Data Link Layer standard specifies the
  Logical Link Control Sublayer of the ISO/OSI Data Link Layer.

  This memo describes the use of IP and ARP on the three types of
  networks.  At this time, it is not necessary that the use of IP and
  ARP be consistent across all three types of networks, only that it be
  consistent within each type.  This may change in the future as new
  IEEE 802 standards are defined and the existing standards are revised



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


  allowing for interoperability at the Data Link Layer.

  It is the goal of this memo to specify enough about the use of IP and
  ARP on each type of network to ensure that:

     (1) all equipment using IP or ARP on 802.3 networks will
     interoperate,

     (2) all equipment using IP or ARP on 802.4 networks will
     interoperate,

     (3) all equipment using IP or ARP on 802.5 networks will
     interoperate.

  Of course, the goal of IP is interoperability between computers
  attached to different networks, when those networks are
  interconnected via an IP gateway [8].  The use of IEEE 802.1
  compatible Transparent Bridges to allow interoperability across
  different networks is not fully described pending completion of that
  standard.

Description

  IEEE 802 networks may be used as IP networks of any class (A, B, or
  C).  These systems use two Link Service Access Point (LSAP) fields of
  the LLC header in much the same way the ARPANET uses the "link"
  field.  Further, there is an extension of the LLC header called the
  Sub-Network Access Protocol (SNAP).

  IP datagrams are sent on IEEE 802 networks encapsulated within the
  802.2 LLC and SNAP data link layers, and the 802.3, 802.4, or 802.5
  physical networks layers.  The SNAP is used with an Organization Code
  indicating that the following 16 bits specify the EtherType code (as
  listed in Assigned Numbers [7]).

  Normally, all communication is performed using 802.2 type 1
  communication.  Consenting systems on the same IEEE 802 network may
  use 802.2 type 2 communication after verifying that it is supported
  by both nodes.  This is accomplished using the 802.2 XID mechanism.
  However, type 1 communication is the recommended method at this time
  and must be supported by all implementations.  The rest of this
  specification assumes the use of type 1 communication.

  The IEEE 802 networks may have 16-bit or 48-bit physical addresses.
  This specification allows the use of either size of address within a
  given IEEE 802 network.

  Note that the 802.3 standard specifies a transmission rate of from 1



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


  to 20 megabit/second, the 802.4 standard specifies 1, 5, and 10
  megabit/second, and the 802.5 standard specifies 1 and 4
  megabit/second.  The typical transmission rates used are 10
  megabit/second for 802.3, 10 megabit/second for 802.4, and 4
  megabit/second for 802.5.  However, this specification for the
  transmission of IP Datagrams does not depend on the transmission
  rate.

Header Format
                                                                 Header

  ...--------+--------+--------+
             MAC Header        |                        802.{3/4/5} MAC
  ...--------+--------+--------+

  +--------+--------+--------+
  | DSAP=K1| SSAP=K1| Control|                                802.2 LLC
  +--------+--------+--------+

  +--------+--------+---------+--------+--------+
  |Protocol Id or Org Code =K2|    EtherType    |            802.2 SNAP
  +--------+--------+---------+--------+--------+

  The total length of the LLC Header and the SNAP header is 8-octets,
  making the 802.2 protocol overhead come out on an nice boundary.

  The K1 value is 170 (decimal).

  The K2 value is 0 (zero).

  The control value is 3 (Unnumbered Information).

Address Mappings

  The mapping of 32-bit Internet addresses to 16-bit or 48-bit IEEE 802
  addresses must be done via the dynamic discovery procedure of the
  Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) [2].

  Internet addresses are assigned arbitrarily on Internet networks.
  Each host's implementation must know its own Internet address and
  respond to Address Resolution requests appropriately.  It must also
  use ARP to translate Internet addresses to IEEE 802 addresses when
  needed.

  The ARP Details

     The ARP protocol has several fields that parameterize its use in
     any specific context [2].  These fields are:



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


        hrd     16 - bits       The Hardware Type Code
        pro     16 - bits       The Protocol Type Code
        hln      8 - bits       Octets in each hardware address
        pln      8 - bits       Octets in each protocol address
        op      16 - bits       Operation Code

     The hardware type code assigned for the IEEE 802 networks (of all
     kinds) is 6 (see [7] page 16).

     The protocol type code for IP is 2048 (see [7] page 14).

     The hardware address length is 2 for 16-bit IEEE 802 addresses, or
     6 for 48-bit IEEE 802 addresses.

     The protocol address length (for IP) is 4.

     The operation code is 1 for request and 2 for reply.

Broadcast Address

  The broadcast Internet address (the address on that network with a
  host part of all binary ones) should be mapped to the broadcast IEEE
  802 address (of all binary ones) (see [8] page 14).

Trailer Formats

  Some versions of Unix 4.x bsd use a different encapsulation method in
  order to get better network performance with the VAX virtual memory
  architecture.  Consenting systems on the same IEEE 802 network may
  use this format between themselves.  Details of the trailer
  encapsulation method may be found in [9].  However, all hosts must be
  able to communicate using the standard (non-trailer) method.

Byte Order

  As described in Appendix B of the Internet Protocol specification
  [1], the IP datagram is transmitted over IEEE 802 networks as a
  series of 8-bit bytes.  This byte transmission order has been called
  "big-endian" [11].

Maximum Transmission Unit

  The Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) differs on the different types of
  IEEE 802 networks.  In the following there are comments on the MTU
  for each type of IEEE 802 network.  However, on any particular
  network all hosts must use the same MTU.  In the following, the terms
  "maximum packet size" and "maximum transmission unit" are equivalent.




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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


Frame Format and MAC Level Issues

  For all hardware types

     IP datagrams and ARP requests and replies are transmitted in
     standard 802.2 LLC Type 1 Unnumbered Information format, control
     code 3, with the DSAP and the SSAP fields of the 802.2 header set
     to 170, the assigned global SAP value for SNAP [6].  The 24-bit
     Organization Code in the SNAP is zero, and the remaining 16 bits
     are the EtherType from Assigned Numbers [7] (IP = 2048, ARP =
     2054).

     IEEE 802 packets may have a minimum size restriction.  When
     necessary, the data field should be padded (with octets of zero)
     to meet the IEEE 802 minimum frame size requirements.  This
     padding is not part of the IP datagram and is not included in the
     total length field of the IP header.

     For compatibility (and common sense) the minimum packet size used
     with IP datagrams is 28 octets, which is 20 (minimum IP header) +
     8 (LLC+SNAP header) = 28 octets (not including the MAC header).

     The minimum packet size used with ARP is 24 octets, which is 20
     (ARP with 2 octet hardware addresses and 4 octet protocol
     addresses) + 8 (LLC+SNAP header) = 24 octets (not including the
     MAC header).

     In typical situations, the packet size used with ARP is 32 octets,
     which is 28 (ARP with 6 octet hardware addresses and 4 octet
     protocol addresses) + 8 (LLC+SNAP header) = 32 octets (not
     including the MAC header).

     IEEE 802 packets may have a maximum size restriction.
     Implementations are encouraged to support full-length packets.

     For compatibility purposes, the maximum packet size used with IP
     datagrams or ARP requests and replies must be consistent on a
     particular network.

     Gateway implementations must be prepared to accept full-length
     packets and fragment them when necessary.

     Host implementations should be prepared to accept full-length
     packets, however hosts must not send datagrams longer than 576
     octets unless they have explicit knowledge that the destination is
     prepared to accept them.  A host may communicate its size
     preference in TCP based applications via the TCP Maximum Segment
     Size option [10].



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


     Datagrams on IEEE 802 networks may be longer than the general
     Internet default maximum packet size of 576 octets.  Hosts
     connected to an IEEE 802 network should keep this in mind when
     sending datagrams to hosts not on the same IEEE 802 network.  It
     may be appropriate to send smaller datagrams to avoid unnecessary
     fragmentation at intermediate gateways.  Please see [10] for
     further information.

     IEEE 802.2 Details

        While not necessary for supporting IP and ARP, all
        implementations are required to support IEEE 802.2 standard
        Class I service.  This requires supporting Unnumbered
        Information (UI) Commands, eXchange IDentification (XID)
        Commands and Responses, and TEST link (TEST) Commands and
        Responses.

        When either an XID or a TEST command is received a response
        must be returned; with the Destination and Source addresses,
        and the DSAP and SSAP swapped.

        When responding to an XID or a TEST command the sense of the
        poll/final bit must be preserved.  That is, a command received
        with the poll/final bit reset must have the response returned
        with the poll/final bit reset and vice versa.

        The XID command or response has an LLC control field value of
        175 (decimal) if poll is off or 191 (decimal) if poll is on.
        (See Appendix on Numbers.)

        The TEST command or response has an LLC control field value of
        227 (decimal) if poll is off or 243 (decimal) if poll is on.
        (See Appendix on Numbers.)

        A command frame is identified with high order bit of the SSAP
        address reset.  Response frames have high order bit of the SSAP
        address set to one.

        XID response frames should include an 802.2 XID Information
        field of 129.1.0 indicating Class I (connectionless) service.
        (type 1).

        TEST response frames should echo the information field received
        in the corresponding TEST command frame.







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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


  For IEEE 802.3

     A particular implementation of an IEEE 802.3 Physical Layer is
     denoted using a three field notation.  The three fields are data
     rate in megabit/second, medium type, and maximum segment length in
     hundreds of meters.  One combination of of 802.3 parameters is
     10BASE5 which specifies a 10 megabit/second transmission rate,
     baseband medium, and 500 meter segments.  This correspondes to the
     specifications of the familiar "Ethernet" network.

     The MAC header contains 6 (2) octets of source address, 6 (2)
     octets of destination address, and 2 octets of length.  The MAC
     trailer contains 4 octets of Frame Check Sequence (FCS), for a
     total of 18 (10) octets.

     IEEE 802.3 networks have a minimum packet size that depends on the
     transmission rate.  For type 10BASE5 802.3 networks the minimum
     packet size is 64 octets.

     IEEE 802.3 networks have a maximum packet size which depends on
     the transmission rate.  For type 10BASE5 802.3 networks the
     maximum packet size is 1518 octets including all octets between
     the destination address and the FCS inclusive.

     This allows 1518 - 18 (MAC header+trailer) - 8 (LLC+SNAP header) =
     1492 for the IP datagram (including the IP header).  Note that
     1492 is not equal to 1500 which is the MTU for Ethernet networks.

  For IEEE 802.4

     The MAC header contains 1 octet of frame control, 6 (2) octets of
     source address, and 6 (2) octets of destination address.  The MAC
     trailer contains 4 octets of Frame Check Sequence (FCS), for a
     total of 17 (9) octets.

     IEEE 802.4 networks have no minimum packet size.

     IEEE 802.4 networks have a maximum packet size of 8191 octets
     including all octets between the frame control and the FCS
     inclusive.

     This allows 8191 - 17 (MAC header+trailer) - 8 (LLC+SNAP header) =
     8166 for the IP datagram (including the IP header).








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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


  For IEEE 802.5

     The current standard for token ring's, IEEE 802.5-1985, specifies
     the operation of single ring networks.  However, most
     implementations of 802.5 have added extensions for multi-ring
     networks using source-routing of packets at the MAC layer.  There
     is now a Draft Addendum to IEEE 802.5, "Enhancement for Multi-Ring
     Networks" which attempts to standardize these extensions.
     Unfortunately, the most recent draft (November 10, 1987) is still
     rapidly evolving.  More importantly, it differs significantly from
     the existing implementations.  Therefore, the existing
     implementations of 802.5 [13] are described but no attempt is made
     to specify any future standard.

     The MAC header contains 1 octet of access control, 1 octet of
     frame control, 6 (2) octets of source address, 6 (2) octets of
     destination address, and (for multi-ring networks) 0 to 18 octets
     of Routing Information Field (RIF).  The MAC trailer contains 4
     octets of FCS, for a total of 18 (10) to 36 (28) octets.  There is
     one additional octet of frame status after the FCS.

     Multi-Ring Extension Details

        The presence of a Routing Information Field is indicated by the
        Most Significant Bit (MSB) of the source address, called the
        Routing Information Indicator (RII).  If the RII equals zero, a
        RIF is not present.  If the RII equals 1, the RIF is present.
        Although the RII is indicated in the source address, it is not
        part of a stations MAC layer address.  In particular, the MSB
        of a destination address is the individual/group address
        indicator, and if set will cause such frames to be interpreted
        as multicasts.  Implementations should be careful to reset the
        RII to zero before passing source addresses to other protocol
        layers which may be confused by their presence.

        The RIF consists of a two-octet Routing Control (RC) field
        followed by 0 to 8 two-octet Route-Designator (RD) fields.  The
        RC for all-routes broadcast frames is formatted as follows:

                        0                   1
                        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                       |  B  |   LTH   |D|  LF |   r   |
                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                      Note that each tick mark represents one bit position.





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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


           B - Broadcast Indicators: 3 bits

              The Broadcast Indicators are used to indicate the routing
              desired for a particular frame.  A frame may be routed
              through a single specified route, through every distinct
              non-repeating route in a multi-ring network, or through a
              single route determined by a spanning tree algorithm such
              that the frame appears on every ring exactly once.  The
              values which may be used at this time are (in binary):

                 000 - Non-broadcast (specific route)
                 100 - All-routes broadcast (global broadcast)
                 110 - Single-route broadcast (limited broadcast)

              All other values are reserved for future use.

           LTH - Length: 5 bits

              The Length bits are used to indicate the length or the RI
              field, including the RC and RD fields.  Only even values
              between 2 and 30 inclusive are allowed.

           D - Direction Bit: 1 bit

              The D bit specifies the order of the RD fields.  If D
              equals 1, the routing-designator fields are specified in
              reverse order.

           LF - Largest Frame: 3 bits

              The LF bits specify the maximum MTU supported by all
              bridges along a specific route.  All multi-ring broadcast
              frames should be transmitted with a value at least as
              large as the supported MTU.  The values used are:

                      LF (binary)   MAC MTU      IP MTU

                          000          552         508
                          001         1064        1020
                          010         2088        2044
                          011         4136        4092
                          100         8232        8188

              All other values are reserved for future use.

              The receiver should compare the LF received with the MTU.
              If the LF is greater than or equal to the MTU then no
              action is taken; however, if the LF is less than the MTU



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


              the frame is rejected.

                 There are actually three possible actions if LF < MTU.
                 First is the one required for this specification
                 (reject the frame).  Second is to reduce the MTU for
                 all hosts to equal the LF.  And, third is to keep a
                 separate MTU per communicating host based on the
                 received LFs.

           r - reserved: 4 bits

              These bits are reserved for future use and must be set to
              0 by the transmitter and ignored by the receiver.

        It is not necessary for an implementation to interpret
        routing-designators.  Their format is left unspecified.
        Routing-designators should be transmitted exactly as received.

     IEEE 802.5 networks have no minimum packet size.

     IEEE 802.5 networks have a maximum packet size based on the
     maximum time a node may hold the token.  This time depends on many
     factors including the data signalling rate and the number of nodes
     on the ring.  The determination of maximum packet size becomes
     even more complex when multi-ring networks with bridges are
     considered.

     Given a token-holding time of 9 milliseconds and a 4
     megabit/second ring, the maximum packet size possible is 4508
     octets including all octets between the access control and the FCS
     inclusive.

     This allows 4508 - 36 (MAC header+trailer with 18 octet RIF) - 8
     (LLC+SNAP header) = 4464 for the IP datagram (including the IP
     header).

     However, some current implementations are known to limit packets
     to 2046 octets (allowing 2002 octets for IP).  It is recommended
     that all implementations support IP packets of at least 2002
     octets.

     By convention, source routing bridges used in multi-ring 802.5
     networks will not support packets larger than 8232 octets.  With a
     MAC header+trailer of 36 octets and the LLC+SNAP header of 8
     octets, the IP datagram (including IP header) may not exceed 8188
     octets.

     A source routing bridge linking two rings may be configured to



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


     limit the size of packets forwarded to 552 octets, with a MAC
     header+trailer of 36 octets and the LLC+SNAP of 8 octets, the IP
     datagram (including the IP header) may be limited to 508 octets.
     This is less that the default IP MTU of 576 octets, and may cause
     significant performance problems due to excessive datagram
     fragmentation.  An implementation is not required to support an
     MTU of less than 576 octets, although it is suggest that the MTU
     be a user-configurable parameter to allow for it.

     IEEE 802.5 networks support three different types of broadcasts.
     All-Stations broadcasts are sent with no RIF or with the Broadcast
     Indicators set to 0 and no Routing Designators, and are copied
     once by all stations on the local ring.  All-Routes broadcasts are
     sent with the corresponding Broadcast Indicators and result in
     multiple copies equal to the number of distinct non-repeating
     routes a packet may follow to a particular ring.  Single-Route
     broadcasts result in exactly one copy of a frame being received by
     all stations on the multi-ring network.

     The dynamic address discovery procedure is to broadcast an ARP
     request.  To limit the number of all rings broadcasts to a
     minimum, it is desirable (though not required) that an ARP request
     first be sent as an all-stations broadcast, without a Routing
     Information Field (RIF).  If the all-stations (local ring)
     broadcast is not supported or if the all-stations broadcast is
     unsuccessful after some reasonable time has elapsed, then send the
     ARP request as an all-routes or single-route broadcast with an
     empty RIF (no routing designators).  An all-routes broadcast is
     preferable since it yields an amount of fault tolerance.  In an
     environment with multiple redundant bridges, all-routes broadcast
     allows operation in spite of spanning-tree bridge failures.
     However, single-route broadcasts may be used if IP and ARP must
     use the same broadcast method.

     When an ARP request or reply is received, all implementations are
     required to understand frames with no RIF (local ring) and frames
     with an empty RIF (also from the local ring).  If the
     implementation supports multi-ring source routing, then a non-
     empty RIF is stored for future transmissions to the host
     originating the ARP request or reply.  If source routing is not
     supported them all packets with non-empty RIFs should be
     gracefully ignored.  This policy will allow all implementations in
     a single ring environment, to interoperate, whether or not they
     support the multi-ring extensions.

     It is possible that when sending an ARP request via an all-routes
     broadcast that multiple copies of the request will arrive at the
     destination as a result of the request being forwarded by several



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


     bridges.  However, these "copies" will have taken different routes
     so the contents of the RIF will differ.  An implementation of ARP
     in this context must determine which of these "copies" to use and
     to ignore the others.  There are three obvious and legal
     strategies: (1) take the first and ignore the rest (that is, once
     you have an entry in the ARP cache don't change it), (2) take the
     last, (that is, always up date the ARP cache with the latest ARP
     message), or (3) take the one with the shortest path, (that is,
     replace the ARP cache information with the latest ARP message data
     if it is a shorter route).  Since there is no problem of
     incompatibility for interworking of different implementations if
     different strategies are chosen, the choice is up to each
     implementor.  The recipient of the ARP request must send an ARP
     reply as a point to point message using the RIF information.

     The RIF information should be kept distinct from the ARP table.
     That is, there is, in principle, the ARP table to map from IP
     addresses to 802 48-bit addresses, and the RIF table to map from
     those to 802.5 source routes, if necessary.  In practical
     implementations it may be convenient to store the ARP and RIF
     information together.

        Storing the information together may speed up access to the
        information when it is used.  On the other hand, in a
        generalized implementation for all types of 802 networks a
        significant amount of memory might be wasted in an ARP cache if
        space for the RIF information were always reserved.

     IP broadcasts (datagrams with a IP broadcast address) must be sent
     as 802.5 single-route broadcasts.  Unlike ARP, all-routes
     broadcasts are not desirable for IP.  Receiving multiple copies of
     IP broadcasts would have undesirable effects on many protocols
     using IP.  As with ARP, when an IP packet is received, all
     implementations are required to understand frames with no RIF and
     frames with an empty RIF.

     Since current interface hardware allows only one group address,
     and since the functional addresses are not globally unique, IP and
     ARP do not use either of these features.  Further, in the IBM
     style 802.5 networks there are only 31 functional addresses
     available for user definition.

     IP precedence should not be mapped to 802.5 priority.  All IP and
     ARP packets should be sent at the default 802.5 priority.  The
     default priority is 3.

     After packet transmission, 802.5 provides frame not copied and
     address not recognized indicators.  Implementations may use these



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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


     indicators to provide some amount of error detection and
     correction.  If the frame not copied bit is set but the address
     not recognized bit is reset, receiver congestion has occurred.  It
     is suggested, though not required, that hosts should retransmit
     the offending packet a small number of times (4) or until
     congestion no longer occurs.  If the address not recognized bit is
     set, an implementation has 3 options: (1) ignore the error and
     throw the packet away, (2) return an ICMP destination unreachable
     message to the source, or (3) delete the ARP entry which was used
     to send this packet and send a new ARP request to the destination
     address.  The latter option is the preferred approach since it
     will allow graceful recovery from first hop bridge and router
     failures and changed hardware addresses.

Interoperation with Ethernet

  It is possible to use the Ethernet link level protocol [12] on the
  same physical cable with the IEEE 802.3 link level protocol.  A
  computer interfaced to a physical cable used in this way could
  potentially read both Ethernet and 802.3 packets from the network.
  If a computer does read both types of packets, it must keep track of
  which link protocol was used with each other computer on the network
  and use the proper link protocol when sending packets.

  One should note that in such an environment, link level broadcast
  packets will not reach all the computers attached to the network, but
  only those using the link level protocol used for the broadcast.

  Since it must be assumed that most computers will read and send using
  only one type of link protocol, it is recommended that if such an
  environment (a network with both link protocols) is necessary, an IP
  gateway be used as if there were two distinct networks.

  Note that the MTU for the Ethernet allows a 1500 octet IP datagram,
  with the MTU for the 802.3 network allows only a 1492 octet IP
  datagram.


Appendix on Numbers

  The IEEE likes to specify numbers in bit transmission order, or bit-
  wise little-endian order.  The Internet protocols are documented in
  byte-wise big-endian order.  This may cause some confusion about the
  proper values to use for numbers.  Here are the conversions for some
  numbers of interest.






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RFC 1042            IP and ARP on IEEE 802 Networks        February 1988


  Number          IEEE    IEEE            Internet        Internet
                  HEX     Binary          Binary          Decimal

  UI Op Code      C0      11000000        00000011          3
  SAP for SNAP    55      01010101        10101010        170
  XID             F5      11110101        10101111        175
  XID             FD      11111101        10111111        191
  TEST            C7      11000111        11100011        227
  TEST            CF      11001111        11110011        243
  Info            818000                                  129.1.0

References

  [1]   Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", RFC-791, USC/Information
        Sciences Institute, September 1981.

  [2]   Plummer, D., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol - or -
        Converting Network Protocol Addresses to 48.bit Ethernet
        Address for Transmission on Ethernet Hardware", RFC-826, MIT,
        November 1982.

  [3]   IEEE, "IEEE Standards for Local Area Networks: Carrier Sense
        Multiple Access with Collision Detection (CSMA/CD) Access
        Method and Physical Layer Specifications", IEEE, New York, New
        York, 1985.

  [4]   IEEE, "IEEE Standards for Local Area Networks: Token-Passing
        Bus Access Method and Physical Layer Specification", IEEE, New
        York, New York, 1985.

  [5]   IEEE, "IEEE Standards for Local Area Networks: Token Ring
        Access Method and Physical Layer Specifications", IEEE, New
        York, New York, 1985.

  [6]   IEEE, "IEEE Standards for Local Area Networks: Logical Link
        Control", IEEE, New York, New York, 1985.

  [7]   Reynolds, J.K., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", RFC-1010,
        USC/Information Sciences Institute, May 1987.

  [8]   Braden, R., and J. Postel, "Requirements for Internet
        Gateways", RFC-1009, USC/Information Sciences Institute, June
        1987.

  [9]   Leffler, S., and M. Karels, "Trailer Encapsulations", RFC-893,
        University of California at Berkeley, April 1984.

  [10]  Postel, J., "The TCP Maximum Segment Size Option and Related



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        Topics", RFC-879, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November
        1983.

  [11]  Cohen, D., "On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace", Computer, IEEE,
        October 1981.

  [12]  D-I-X, "The Ethernet - A Local Area Network: Data Link Layer
        and Physical Layer Specifications", Digital, Intel, and Xerox,
        November 1982.

  [13]  IBM, "Token-Ring Network Architecture Reference", Second
        Edition, SC30-3374-01, August 1987.







































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