Network Working Group                                        S. Bellovin
Request for Comments: 1681                        AT&T Bell Laboratories
Category: Informational                                      August 1994


                      On Many Addresses per Host

Status of this Memo

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

Abstract

  This document was submitted to the IETF IPng area in response to RFC
  1550.  Publication of this document does not imply acceptance by the
  IPng area of any ideas expressed within.  Comments should be
  submitted to the [email protected] mailing list.

Overview and Rational

  Currently, most hosts have only one address.  With comparatively rare
  exceptions, hosts as hosts -- as opposed to hosts acting as routers
  or PPP servers -- are single-homed.  Our address space calculations
  reflect this; we are assuming that we can estimate the size of the
  address space by counting hosts.  But this may be a serious error.  I
  suggest that that model may -- and should -- change.

  For the ideas outlined below, I do not claim that multiple addresses
  per host is the only or even necessarily the best way to accomplish
  the goal.  I do claim that my ideas are at the very least plausible,
  and that I expect that many of them will be tried.

Encoding Services

  More and more often, services are being encoded in the host name.
  One can fetch files from ftp.research.att.com, look up an IP address
  on ns.uu.net, synchronize clocks from ntp.udel.edu, etc.  Should this
  practice be generalized to the IP address domain?

  In some cases it would be a very good idea.  Certain services need to
  be configured by IP address; they are either used when the DNS is
  being bootstrapped (such as in glue records and root server cache
  records), or when its unavailable (i.e., when booting after a power
  hit, and the local name servers are slower to reboot than their
  diskless clients.




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  Security is another reason, in some cases.  Address-based
  authentication is bad enough; relying on the name service adds
  another layer of risk.  An attacker can go after the DNS, in that
  case.  A risk-averse system manager might prefer to avoid the extra
  exposure, instead granting privileges (i.e., rlogin or NFS) by
  address instead of name.  But that, of course, leads to all the usual
  headaches when the location of the service changes.  If the address
  for the service could be held constant, there would be much more
  freedom to move it to another machine.  One way to do that is by
  assigning the serving host a secondary address.

  A related notion comes from the need to offer different views of a
  service from a single host.  For example, research.att.com has long
  offered two distinct FTP archives, with slightly different access
  policies.  It would be nice if both could live on the same machine,
  without asking the user community to learn new protocols or custom
  port numbers.

  Archie is an even better example.  There are three principal ways to
  use Archie:  use a special protocol, and hence a special application
  program, on a dedicated port and host that is probably named
  archie.foo.bar; telnet to archie.foo.bar and go through an extra and
  gratuitous login as archie, or telnet to some special port on
  archie.foo.bar.  The latter two are examples of using a standard
  protocol (telnet) to offer a different service.  Neither alternative
  is very convenient.

  It would be better if archie.foo.bar provided the Archie service,
  while host.foo.bar provided a login prompt.  Again -- an easy way to
  do this is to assign the host a separate IP address for its extra
  service.

  Note that there are security advantages here, too.  A firewall could
  be configured to allow access to the address associated with the
  Archie server, but not the other addresses on that host.  That would
  provide a high degree of safety, assuming, of course, that the other
  servers on that host were bound to its primary addresses, and not the
  exposed address.

  Another way to implement this concept would be to extend the DNS, to
  return port number information as well as IP addresses.  Thus,
  netlib.att.com might return 192.20.225.3/221.  But that would
  necessitate changing every FTP client program, a daunting task.

  We could also look on this as the extension of the MX concept.  MX
  records are very valuable, but they apply only to mail, and they
  don't supply port numbers.  Again, changing this would require
  massive client program changes.



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Accounting and Billing

  For better or worse, some parts of the Internet are moving towards
  usage-sensitive charging.  At least four charging schemes seem
  possible; doubtless, the marketeers in charge of such things can and
  will come up with more.

  The first is the traditional "pay as you go" approach.  Each host is
  responsible for its own packets.  Of course, that means that in a
  typical conversation, both parties pay -- and the providers of free
  FTP archives will end up paying dearly for their beneficence.  That
  leads to our second model:  caller pays.  Other people might want to
  make collect calls, much as is done on the telephone today.  Finally,
  there might be the equivalent of American "900" numbers:  the caller
  pays a premium to the server.

  This is not at all far-fetched; UUNET already has a 900 number for
  anonymous uucp clients.  No need to register in advance; just dial
  in, and let the phone company act as your agent.

  Given all these schemes, it is vital that the caller and recipient
  know in advance who will pay.  It is not acceptable for users to
  learn, only after the fact, that they have incurred a cost.  We could
  envision use of IP options, but again, that would preclude use of
  today's standard clients.

  It is not sufficient to present a message at connection time warning
  of the charges.  Many interactions do not provide a hook for user
  interaction.  And there are security concerns -- suppose that someone
  puts up a gopher server that redirects a caller to some pay-to-play
  address, without displaying the required warning.  A scam?  Sure --
  but it's already happened with the phone network, and I see no reason
  to think that the Internet will be far behind.

  My suggestion, of course, is to encode the charge algorithm in the
  destination address (and perhaps in the DNS name space as well).  The
  bits themselves would determine who pays.  Organizational border
  routers could implement policies on pay services; the anonymous
  workstations in a dorm computer lab wouldn't be allowed to call
  collect.

  An extension of this scheme would use a comparatively large number of
  bits, letting the address act not just as a policy indicator, but
  also as an index to a charge algorithm table.







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Addresses per User

  It may be useful to assign each user on a host a separate IP address,
  for the duration of the login session.  This has a number of
  advantages.

  The first ties in with the charging scheme given above.  Usage-
  sensitive accounting today is done by routers, and they have no
  notion of who is using the hosts.  If each user had a separate IP
  address, we could continue to gather the accounting data at the
  router.  The host would simply have to record the address
  assignments; billing could be done offline.

  Similarly, different classes of users could have different forms of
  addresses.  Those with hard-money accounts might have some bits set
  in the address that would allow for access to costly services.  The
  border routers could make this sort of distinction, using today's
  technology.

  An IP address per user also fits in well with encryption.  There is a
  lot of attention today focused on network-layer encryption.  But that
  provides host-level granularity of protection, which is sometimes
  insufficient.  Transport-layer encryptors provide finer-grained
  protection, but does the Internet need two different low-level
  encryption schemes?  If each user had a separate IP address -- and
  perhaps had it only on hosts that cared about such matters -- we
  could provide user-level protection and accounability, with the same
  infrastructure used to support host-level accountability.

Low-Grade Mobility

  There are several schemes under discussion for mobile IP hosts.
  These are aimed at a fairly general model of hosts moving anywhere.
  While that is important, there is also some need for limited
  mobility, within a subnet.  This could be used for load-balancing.  A
  mail relay that had just been asked to send a large message to a huge
  mailing list could offload some of its IP addresses to its peers.
  That would divert future incoming messages without invalidating
  thousands of cached MX records and their associated IP addresses.
  Similarly, servers for low-speed X terminals could reside on
  different physical machines, all the while not disturbing sessions in
  progress.

Merging Subnets

  There has long been some need to merge subnets.  Sometimes this is
  due to organizational changes; other times, people have installed
  bridges when routers would have been a more appropriate choice.  Some



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  hosts need to live on both logical networks at once, to avoid an
  extra hop through a router.  It would be useful to be able to assign
  them such addresses.

How Many Addresses Do We Need?

  Assuming that some of these ideas bear fruit, how many addresses do
  we need, per host?

  Most of these schemes are fairly cheap.  Few people would offer more
  than a handful of distinct service views per system.  But the
  address-per-user notion could be quite costly.  We also have to
  account for address mask assignment policies.  In many of today's
  networks, enough bits of host address have to be allocated to allow
  for the largest subnet in an organization.  Even if we assume that
  IPng's routing protocols will be smarter about such things, foresight
  in address allocation will be needed to allow headroom for some
  networks to grow, while still maintaining a contiguous netmask.  This
  in turn will contribute to sparse utilization of the address space.
  Accordingly, I recommend that we allow for 2^6, and perhaps as many
  as 2^8, extra addresses per host, to leave room for the ideas
  presented here.

  I should note that the idea of encoding the service in the transport
  address bears some relation to OSI's model.  That similarity should
  not, of course, invalidate the idea.

Acknowledgements

  Some of these ideas were derived from conversations with Matt Blaze.

Security Considerations

  Security issues are discussed throughout this memo.

Author's Address

  Steven M. Bellovin
  Software Engineering Research Department
  AT&T Bell Laboratories
  600 Mountain Avenue
  Murray Hill, NJ  07974, USA

  Phone: +1 908-582-5886
  Fax: +1 908-582-3063
  EMail:  [email protected]





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