Network Working Group                                         S. Bradner
Request for Comments: 1752                            Harvard University
Category: Standards Track                                      A. Mankin
                                                                    ISI
                                                           January 1995


        The Recommendation for the IP Next Generation Protocol

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  This document presents the recommendation of the IPng Area Directors
  on what should be used to replace the current version of the Internet
  Protocol.  This recommendation was accepted by the Internet
  Engineering Steering Group (IESG).

Table of Contents

  1.        Summary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
  2.        Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
  3.        A Direction for IPng . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
  4.        IPng Area. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  5.        ALE Working Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    5.1     ALE Projections. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    5.2     Routing Table Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    5.3     Address Assignment Policy Recommendations. . . . . . . .  8
  6.        IPng Technical Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    6.1     The IPng Technical Criteria document . . . . . . . . . .  9
  7.        IPng Proposals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
    7.1     CATNIP. . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
    7.2     SIPP. . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
    7.3     TUBA. . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  8.        IPng Proposal Reviews. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    8.1     CATNIP Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    8.2     SIPP Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
    8.3     TUBA Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
    8.4     Summary of Proposal Reviews. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
  9.        A Revised Proposal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
  10        Assumptions .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    10.1    Criteria Document and Timing of Recommendation . . . . . 18



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    10.2    Address Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
  11.       IPng Recommendation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    11.1    IPng Criteria Document and IPng. . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    11.2    IPv6. . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
  12.       IPv6 Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
    12.1    IPv6 Header Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
    12.2    Extension Headers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
    12.2.1  Hop-by-Hop Option Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
    12.2.2  IPv6 Header Options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
    12.2.3  Routing Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
    12.2.4  Fragment Header. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
    12.2.5  Authentication Header. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
    12.2.6  Privacy Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
    12.2.7  End-to-End Option Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
  13.       IPng Working Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
  14.       IPng Reviewer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
  15.       Address Autoconfiguration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
  16.       Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
    16.1    Transition - Short Term. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
    16.2    Transition - Long Term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
  17.       Other Address Families . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
  18.       Impact on Other IETF Standards . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
  19.       Impact on non-IETF standards and on products . . . . . . 39
  20.       APIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
  21.       Future of the IPng Area and Working Groups . . . . . . . 40
  22.       Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
  23.       Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

  Appendix A    Summary of Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
  Appendix B    IPng Area Directorate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
  Appendix C    Documents Referred to the IPng Working Groups. . . . 46
  Appendix D    IPng Proposal Overviews. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
  Appendix E    RFC 1550 White Papers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
  Appendix F    Additional References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
  Appendix G    Acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

1. Summary

  The IETF started its effort to select a successor to IPv4 in late
  1990 when projections indicated that the Internet address space would
  become an increasingly limiting resource.  Several parallel efforts
  then started exploring ways to resolve these address limitations
  while at the same time providing additional functionality.  The IETF
  formed the IPng Area in late 1993 to investigate the various
  proposals and recommend how to proceed.  We developed an IPng
  technical criteria document and evaluated the various proposals
  against it.  All were found wanting to some degree.  After this
  evaluation, a revised proposal was offered by one of the working



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  groups that resolved many of the problems in the previous proposals.
  The IPng Area Directors recommend that the IETF designate this
  revised proposal as the IPng and focus its energy on bringing a set
  of documents defining the IPng to Proposed Standard status with all
  deliberate speed.

  This protocol recommendation includes a simplified header with a
  hierarchical address structure that permits rigorous route
  aggregation and is also large enough to meet the needs of the
  Internet for the foreseeable future. The protocol also includes
  packet-level authentication and encryption along with plug and play
  autoconfiguration.  The design changes the way IP header options are
  encoded to increase the flexibility of introducing new options in the
  future while improving performance. It also includes the ability to
  label traffic flows.

  Specific recommendations include:

  * current address assignment policies are adequate
  * there is no current need to reclaim underutilized assigned network
    numbers
  * there is no current need to renumber major portions of the Internet
  * CIDR-style assignments of parts of unassigned Class A address space
    should be considered
  * "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP) Spec. (128 bit ver)"
    [Deering94b] be adopted as the basis for IPng
  * the documents listed in Appendix C be the foundation of the IPng
    effort
  * an IPng Working Group be formed, chaired by Steve Deering and Ross
    Callon
  * Robert Hinden be the document editor for the IPng effort
  * an IPng Reviewer be appointed and that Dave Clark be the reviewer
  * an Address Autoconfiguration Working Group be formed, chaired by
    Dave Katz and Sue Thomson
  * an IPng Transition Working Group be formed, chaired by Bob Gilligan
    and TBA
  * the Transition and Coexistence Including Testing Working Group be
    chartered
  * recommendations about the use of non-IPv6 addresses in IPv6
    environments and IPv6 addresses in non-IPv6 environments be
    developed
  * the IESG commission a review of all IETF standards documents for
    IPng implications
  * the IESG task current IETF working groups to take IPng into account
  * the IESG charter new working groups where needed to revise old
    standards documents
  * Informational RFCs be solicited or developed describing a few
    specific IPng APIs



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  * the IPng Area and Area Directorate continue until main documents
    are offered as Proposed Standards in late 1994
  * support for the Authentication Header be required
  * support for a specific authentication algorithm be required
  * support for the Privacy Header be required
  * support for a specific privacy algorithm be required
  * an "IPng framework for firewalls" be developed

2. Background

  Even the most farseeing of the developers of TCP/IP in the early
  1980s did not imagine the dilemma of scale that the Internet faces
  today.  1987 estimates projected a need to address as many as 100,000
  networks at some vague point in the future. [Callon87]  We will reach
  that mark by 1996.  There are many realistic projections of many
  millions of interconnected networks in the not too distant future.
  [Vecchi94, Taylor94]

  Further, even though the current 32 bit IPv4 address structure can
  enumerate over 4 billion hosts on as many as 16.7 million networks,
  the actual address assignment efficiency is far less than that, even
  on a theoretical basis. [Huitema94]  This inefficiency is exacerbated
  by the granularity of assignments using Class A, B and C addresses.

  In August 1990 during the Vancouver IETF meeting, Frank Solensky,
  Phill Gross and Sue Hares projected that the current rate of
  assignment would exhaust the Class B space by March of 1994.

  The then obvious remedy of assigning multiple Class C addresses in
  place of Class B addresses introduced its own problem by further
  expanding the size of the routing tables in the backbone routers
  already growing at an alarming rate.

  We faced the dilemma of choosing between accepting either limiting
  the rate of growth and ultimate size of the Internet, or disrupting
  the network by changing to new techniques or technologies.

  The IETF formed the Routing and Addressing (ROAD) group in November
  1991 at the Santa Fe IETF meeting to explore this dilemma and guide
  the IETF on the issues.  The ROAD group reported their work in March
  1992 at the San Diego IETF meeting.  [Gross92]  The impact of the
  recommendations ranged from "immediate" to "long term" and included
  adopting the CIDR route aggregation proposal [Fuller93] for reducing
  the rate of routing table growth and recommending a call for
  proposals "to form working groups to explore separate approaches for
  bigger Internet addresses."





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  In the late spring of 1992 the IAB issued "IP version 7" [IAB92],
  concurring in the ROAD group's endorsement of CIDR and also
  recommending "an immediate IETF effort to prepare a detailed and
  organizational plan for using CLNP as the basis for IPv7." After
  spirited discussion, the IETF decided to reject the IAB's
  recommendation and issue the call for  proposals recommended by the
  ROAD group.  This call was issued in July 1992 at the Boston IETF
  meeting and a number of working groups were formed in response

  During the July 1993 Amsterdam IETF meeting an IPng (IP Next
  Generation) Decision Process (ipdecide) BOF was held.  This BOF "was
  intended to help re-focus attention on the very important topic of
  making a decision between the candidates for IPng. The BOF focused on
  the issues of who should take the lead in making the recommendation
  to the community and what criteria should be used to reach the
  recommendation." [Carpen93]

3. A Direction for IPng

  In September 1993 Phill Gross, chair of the IESG issued "A Direction
  for IPng".  [Gross94]  In this memo he summarized the results of the
  ipdecide BOF and open IESG plenary in Amsterdam.

  * The IETF needs to move toward closure on IPng.
  * The IESG has the responsibility for developing an IPng
    recommendation for the Internet community.
  * The procedures of the recommendation-making process should be open
    and published well in advance by the IESG.
  * As part of this process, the IPng WGs may be given new milestones
    and other guidance to aid the IESG.
  * There should be ample opportunity for community comment prior to
    final IESG recommendation.

  The memo also announced "a temporary, ad hoc, 'area' to deal
  specifically with IPng issues."  Phill asked two of the current IESG
  members, Allison Mankin (Transport Services Area) and Scott Bradner
  (Operational Requirements Area), to act as Directors for the new
  area. The Area Directors were given a specific charge on how to
  investigate the various IPng proposals and how to base their
  recommendation to the IETF.  It was also requested that a specific
  recommendation be made.

  * Establish an IPng directorate.
  * Ensure that a completely open process is followed.
  * Develop an understanding of the level of urgency and the time
    constraints imposed by the rate of address assignment and rate of
    growth in the routing tables.
  * Recommend the adoption of assignment policy changes if warranted.



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  * Define the scope of the IPng effort based on the understanding of
    the time constraints.
  * Develop a clear and concise set of technical requirements and
    decision criteria for IPng.
  * Develop a recommendation about which of the current IPng candidates
    to accept, if any.

4. IPng Area

  After the IPng Area was formed, we recruited a directorate. (Appendix
  B) The members of the directorate were chosen both for their general
  and specific technical expertise.  The individuals were then asked to
  have their management authorize this participation in the process and
  confirm that they understood the IETF process.

  We took great care to ensure the inclusion of a wide spectrum of
  knowledge. The directors are experts in security, routing, the needs
  of large users, end system manufacturers, Unix and non-Unix
  platforms, router manufacturers, theoretical researchers, protocol
  architecture, and the operating regional, national, and international
  networks.  Additionally, several members of the directorate were
  deeply involved in each of the IPng proposal working groups.

  The directorate functions as a direction-setting and preliminary
  review body as requested by the charge to the area.  The directorate
  engages in biweekly conference calls, participates in an internal
  mailing list and corresponds actively on the Big-Internet mailing
  list. The directorate held open meetings during the March 1994
  Seattle and July 1994 Toronto IETF meetings as well as two additional
  multi-day retreats.  To ensure that the IPng process was as open as
  possible, we took minutes during these meetings and then published
  them. Additionally, we placed the archives of the internal IPng
  mailing list on an anonymous ftp site. (Hsdndev.harvard.edu:
  pub/ipng.)

5. ALE Working Group

  We needed a reasonable estimate of the time remaining before we
  exhausted the IPv4 address space in order to determine the scope of
  the IPng effort.  If the time remaining was about the same needed to
  deploy a replacement, then we would have select the IPng which would
  only fix the address limitations since we would not have enough time
  to develop any other features.  If more time seemed available, we
  could consider additional improvements.

  The IETF formed an Address Lifetime Expectations (ALE) Working Group
  in 1993 "to develop an estimate for the remaining lifetime of the
  IPv4 address space based on currently known and available



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  technologies." [Solens93a]  Tony Li of Cisco Systems and Frank
  Solensky of FTP Software are the co-chairs.  The IETF also charged
  the working group to consider if developing more stringent address
  allocation and utilization policies might provide more time for the
  transition.

5.1 ALE Projections

  The ALE Working Group met during the November 1993 Houston,
  [Solens93b] March 1994 Seattle [Bos93] and July 1994 Toronto
  [Solens94] IETF meetings.  They projected at the Seattle meeting,
  later confirmed at the Toronto meeting that, using the current
  allocation statistics, the Internet would exhaust the IPv4 address
  space between 2005 and 2011.

  Some members of the ipv4-ale and big-internet mailing lists called
  into question the reliability of this projection.  It has been
  criticized as both too optimistic and as too pessimistic.

  Some people pointed out that this type of projection makes an
  assumption of no paradigm shifts in IP usage.  If someone were to
  develop a new 'killer application', (for example cable-TV set top
  boxes.)  The resultant rise in the demand for IP addresses could make
  this an over-estimate of the time available.

  There may also be a problem with the data used to make the
  projection.  The InterNIC allocates IP addresses in large chunks to
  regional Network Information Centers (NICs) and network providers.
  The NICs and the providers then re-allocate addresses to their
  customers.  The ALE projections used the InterNIC assignments without
  regard to the actual rate of assignment of addresses to the end
  users.  They did the projection this way since the accuracy of the
  data seems quite a bit higher.  While using this once-removed data
  may add a level of over-estimation since it assumes the rate of large
  block allocation will continue, this may not be the case.

  These factors reduce the reliability of the ALE estimates but, in
  general, they seem to indicate enough time remaining in the IPv4
  address space to consider adding features in an IPng besides just
  expanding the address size even when considering time required for
  development, testing, and deployment.

5.2 Routing Table Size

  Another issue in Internet scaling is the increasing size of the
  routing tables required in the backbone routers.  Adopting the CIDR
  block address assignment and aggregating routes reduced the size of
  the tables for awhile but they are now expanding again. Providers now



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  need to more aggressively advertise their routes only in aggregates.
  Providers must also advise their new customers to renumber their
  networks in the best interest of the entire Internet community.

  The problem of exhausting the IPv4 address space may be moot if this
  issue is ignored and if routers cannot be found that can keep up with
  the table size growth.  Before implementing CIDR the backbone routing
  table was growing at a rate about 1.5 times as fast as memory
  technology.

  We should also note that even though IPng addresses are designed with
  aggregation in mind switching to IPng will not solve the routing
  table size problem unless the addresses are assigned rigorously to
  maximize the affect of such aggregation.  This efficient advertising
  of routes can be maintained since IPng includes address
  autoconfiguration mechanisms to allow easy renumbering if a customer
  decides to switch providers.  Customers who receive service from more
  than one provider may limit the ultimate efficiency of any route
  aggregation. [Rekhter94]

5.3 Address Assignment Policy Recommendations

  The IESG Chair charged the IPng Area to consider recommending more
  stringent assignment policies, reclaiming some addresses already
  assigned, or making a serious effort to renumber significant portions
  of the Internet. [Gross94]

  The IPng Area Directors endorse the current address assignment
  policies in view of the ALE projections.  We do not feel that anyone
  should take specific efforts to reclaim underutilized addresses
  already assigned or to renumber forcefully major portions of the
  Internet.  We do however feel that we should all encourage network
  service providers to assist new customers in renumbering their
  networks to conform to the provider's CIDR assignments.

  The ALE Working Group recommends that we consider assigning CIDR-type
  address blocks out of the unassigned Class A address space.  The IPng
  Area Directors concur with this recommendation.

6. IPng Technical Requirements

  The IESG provided an outline in RFC 1380 [Gross92] of the type of
  criteria we should use to determine the suitability of an IPng
  proposal.  The IETF further refined this understanding of the
  appropriate criteria with the recommendations of a Selection Criteria
  BOF held during the November 1992 IETF meeting in Washington D.C.
  [Almqu92]  We felt we needed to get additional input for determining
  the requirements and issued a call for white papers. [Bradner93] This



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  call, issued as RFC 1550, intended to reach both inside and outside
  the traditional IETF constituency to get the broadest possible
  understanding of the requirements for a data networking protocol with
  the broadest possible application.

  We received twenty one white papers in response to the RFC 1550
  solicitation. ( Appendix E)  We received responses from the
  industries that many feel will be the major providers of data
  networking services in the future; the cable TV industry [Vecchi94],
  the cellular industry [Taylor94], and the electric power industry
  [Skelton94].  In addition, we received papers that dealt with
  military applications [Adam94, Syming94, Green94], ATM [Brazd94],
  mobility [Simpson94], accounting [Brown94], routing [Estrin94a,
  Chiappa94], security [Adam94, Bell94b, Brit94, Green94, Vecchi94,
  Flei94], large corporate networking [Britt94, Fleisch94], transition
  [Carpen94a, Heager94], market acceptance [Curran94, Britt94], host
  implementations [Bound94], as well as a number of other issues.
  [Bello94a, Clark94, Ghisel94]

  These white papers, a Next Generation Requirements (ngreq) BOF
  (chaired by Jon Crowcroft and Frank Kastenholz) held during the March
  1994 Seattle IETF meeting, discussions within the IPng Area
  Directorate and considerable discussion on the big-internet mailing
  list were all used by Frank Kastenholz and Craig Partridge in
  revising their earlier criteria draft [Kasten92] to produce
  "Technical Criteria for Choosing IP The Next Generation (IPng)."
  [Kasten94]  This document is the "clear and concise set of technical
  requirements and decision criteria for IPng" called for in the charge
  from the IESG Chair.  We used this document as the basic guideline
  while evaluating the IPng proposals.

6.1 The IPng Technical Criteria document

  The criteria described in this document include: (from Kasten94)

  * complete specification - The proposal must completely describe the
    proposed protocol.  We must select an IPng by referencing specific
    documents, not to future work.
  * architectural simplicity - The IP-layer protocol should be as
    simple as possible with functions located elsewhere that are more
    appropriately performed at protocol layers other than the IP layer.
  * scale - The IPng Protocol must allow identifying and addressing at
    least 10**9 leaf-networks (and preferably much more)
  * topological flexibility - The routing architecture and protocols
    ofIPng must allow for many different network topologies.  They must
    not assume that the network's physical structure is a tree.
  * performance - A state of the art, commercial grade router must be
    able to process and forward IPng traffic at speeds capable of fully



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    utilizing common, commercially available, high-speed media at the
    time.
  * robust service - The network service and its associated routing and
    control protocols must be robust.
  * transition -  The protocol must have a straightforward transition
    plan from IPv4.
  * media independence -  The protocol must work across an internetwork
    of many different LAN, MAN, and WAN media, with individual link
    speeds ranging from a ones-of-bits per second to hundreds of
    gigabits per second.
  * datagram service - The protocol must support an unreliable datagram
    delivery service.
  * configuration ease -  The protocol must permit easy and largely
    distributed configuration and operation. Automatic configuration of
    hosts and routers is required.
  * security - IPng must provide a secure network layer.
  * unique names - IPng must assign unique names to all IP-Layer
    objects in the global, ubiquitous, Internet.  These names may or
    may not have any location, topology, or routing significance.
  * access to standards -  The protocols that define IPng and its
    associated protocols should be as freely available and
    redistributable as the IPv4 and related RFCs.  There must be no
    specification-related licensing fees for implementing or selling
    IPng software.
  * multicast support - The protocol must support both unicast and
    multicast packet transmission.   Dynamic and automatic routing of
    multicasts is also required.
  * extensibility -  The protocol must be extensible; it must be able
    to evolve to meet the future service needs of the Internet. This
    evolution must be achievable without requiring network-wide
    software upgrades.
  * service classes - The protocol must allow network devices to
    associate packets with particular service classes and provide them
    with the  services specified by those classes.
  * mobility - The protocol must support mobile hosts, networks and
    internetworks.
  * control protocol - The protocol must include elementary support for
    testing and debugging networks. (e.g., ping and traceroute)
  * tunneling support -  IPng must allow users to build private
    internetworks on top of the basic Internet Infrastructure.  Both
    private IP-based internetworks and private non-IP-based (e.g., CLNP
    or AppleTalk) internetworks must be supported.









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7. IPng Proposals

  By the time that the IPng Area was formed, the IETF had already aimed
  a considerable amount of IETF effort at solving the addressing and
  routing problems of the Internet.  Several proposals had been made
  and some of these reached the level of having a working group
  chartered.  A number of these groups subsequently merged forming
  groups with a larger consensus.  These efforts represented different
  views on the issues which confront us and sought to optimize
  different aspects of the possible solutions.

  By February 1992 the Internet community developed four separate
  proposals for IPng [Gross92], "CNAT" [Callon92a], "IP Encaps"
  [Hinden92a], "Nimrod" [Chiappa91], and "Simple CLNP" [Callon92b].  By
  December 1992 three more proposals followed; "The P Internet
  Protocol" (PIP) [Tsuchiya92], "The Simple Internet Protocol" (SIP)
  [Deering92] and "TP/IX" [Ullmann93]. After the March 1992 San Diego
  IETF meeting "Simple CLNP" evolved into "TCP and UDP with Bigger
  Addresses" (TUBA) [Callon92c] and "IP Encaps" evolved into "IP
  Address Encapsulation" (IPAE) [Hinden92b].

  By November 1993, IPAE merged with SIP while still maintaining the
  name SIP. This group then merged with PIP and the resulting working
  group called themselves "Simple Internet Protocol Plus" (SIPP).  At
  the same time the TP/IX Working Group changed its name to "Common
  Architecture for the Internet" (CATNIP).

  None of these proposals were wrong nor were others right.  All of the
  proposals would work in some ways providing a path to overcome the
  obstacles we face as the Internet expands. The task of the IPng Area
  was to ensure that the IETF understand the offered proposals, learn
  from the proposals and provide a recommendation on what path best
  resolves the basic issues while providing the best foundation upon
  which to build for the future.

  The IPng Area evaluated three IPng proposals as they were described
  in their RFC 1550 white papers: CATNIP [McGovern94] , SIPP
  [Hinden94a] and TUBA. [Ford94a]. The IESG viewed Nimrod as too much
  of a research project for consideration as an IPng candidate.  Since
  Nimrod represents one possible future Internet routing strategy we
  solicited a paper describing any requirements Nimrod would put on an
  IPng to add to the requirements process. [Chiappa94]

7.1 CATNIP

  "Common Architecture for the Internet (CATNIP) was conceived as a
  convergence protocol. CATNIP integrates CLNP, IP, and IPX. The CATNIP
  design provides for any of the transport layer protocols in use, for



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  example TP4, CLTP, TCP, UDP, IPX and SPX, to run over any of the
  network layer protocol formats: CLNP, IP (version 4), IPX, and
  CATNIP.  With some attention paid to details, it is possible for a
  transport layer protocol (such as TCP) to operate properly with one
  end system using one network layer (e.g., IP version 4) and the other
  using some other network protocol, such as CLNP." [McGovern94]

  "The objective is to provide common ground between the Internet, OSI,
  and the Novell protocols, as well as to advance the Internet
  technology to the scale and performance of the next generation of
  internetwork technology."

  "CATNIP supports OSI Network Service Access Point (NSAP) format
  addresses.  It also uses cache handles to provide both rapid
  identification of the next hop in high performance routing as well as
  abbreviation of the network header by permitting the addresses to be
  omitted when a valid cache handle is available. The fixed part of the
  network layer header carries the cache handles." [Sukonnik94]

7.2 SIPP

  "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP) is a new version of IP which is
  designed to be an evolutionary step from IPv4.  It is a natural
  increment to IPv4.  It was not a design goal to take a radical step
  away from IPv4.  Functions which work in IPv4 were kept in SIPP.
  Functions which didn't work were removed. It can be installed as a
  normal software upgrade in internet devices and is interoperable with
  the current IPv4.  Its deployment strategy was designed to not have
  any 'flag' days.  SIPP is designed to run well on high performance
  networks (e.g., ATM) and at the same time is still efficient for low
  bandwidth networks (e.g., wireless).  In addition, it provides a
  platform for new internet functionality that will be required in the
  near future." [Hinden94b]

  "SIPP increases the IP address size from 32 bits to 64 bits, to
  support more levels of addressing hierarchy and a much greater number
  of addressable nodes.  SIPP addressing can be further extended, in
  units of 64 bits, by a facility equivalent to IPv4's Loose Source and
  Record Route option, in combination with a new address type called
  'cluster addresses' which identify topological regions rather than
  individual nodes."

  "SIPP changes in the way IP header options are encoded allows for
  more efficient forwarding, less stringent limits on the length of
  options, and greater flexibility for introducing new options in the
  future. A new capability is added to enable the labeling of packets
  belonging to particular traffic 'flows' for which the sender requests
  special handling, such as non-default quality of service or 'real-



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  time' service." [Hinden94a]

7.3 TUBA

  "The TCP/UDP Over CLNP-Addressed Networks (TUBA) proposal seeks to
  minimize the risk associated with migration to a new IP address
  space. In addition, this proposal is motivated by the requirement to
  allow the Internet to scale, which implies use of Internet
  applications in a very large ubiquitous worldwide Internet. It is
  therefore proposed that existing Internet transport and application
  protocols continue to operate unchanged, except for the replacement
  of 32-bit IP addresses with larger addresses.  TUBA does not mean
  having to move over to OSI completely. It would mean only replacing
  IP with CLNP. TCP, UDP, and the traditional TCP/IP applications would
  run on top of CLNP." [Callon92c]

  "The TUBA effort will expand the ability to route Internet packets by
  using addresses which support more hierarchy than the current
  Internet Protocol (IP) address space. TUBA specifies the continued
  use of Internet transport protocols, in particular TCP and UDP, but
  specifies their encapsulation in ISO 8473 (CLNP) packets.  This will
  allow the continued use of Internet application protocols such as
  FTP, SMTP, TELNET, etc.   TUBA seeks to upgrade the current system by
  a transition from the use of IPv4 to ISO/IEC 8473 (CLNP) and the
  corresponding large Network Service Access Point (NSAP) address
  space." [Knopper94]

  "The TUBA proposal makes use of a simple long-term migration proposal
  based on a gradual update of Internet Hosts (to run Internet
  applications over CLNP) and DNS servers (to return larger addresses).
  This proposal requires routers to be updated to support forwarding of
  CLNP (in addition to IP). However, this proposal does not require
  encapsulation nor translation of packets nor address mapping. IP
  addresses and NSAP addresses may be assigned and used independently
  during the migration period. Routing and forwarding of IP and CLNP
  packets may be done independently." ([Callon92c]

8. IPng Proposal Reviews

  The IPng Directorate discussed and reviewed the candidate proposals
  during its biweekly teleconferences and through its mailing list.  In
  addition, members of the Big-Internet mailing list discussed many of
  the aspects of the proposals, particularly when the Area Directors
  posted several specific questions to stimulate discussion. [Big]

  The directorate members were requested to each evaluate the proposals
  in preparation for a two day retreat held near Chicago on May 19th
  and 20th 1994.  The retreat opened with a roundtable airing of the



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  views of each of the participants, including the Area Directors, the
  Directorate and a number of guests invited by the working group
  chairs for each for the proposals. [Knopper94b]  We will publish
  these reviews as well as a more detailed compendium review of each of
  the proposals as companion memos.

  The following table summarizes each of the three proposals reviewed
  against the requirements in the IPng Criteria document.  They do not
  necessarily reflect the views of the Area Directors.  "Yes" means the
  reviewers mainly felt the proposal met the specific criterion.  "No"
  means the reviewers mainly felt the proposal did not meet the
  criterion.  "Mixed" means that the reviewers had mixed reviews with
  none dominating. "Unknown" means that the reviewers mainly felt the
  documentation did not address the criterion.

                          CATNIP          SIPP            TUBA
                          ------          ----            ----
  complete spec           no              yes             mostly
  simplicity              no              no              no
  scale                   yes             yes             yes
  topological flex        yes             yes             yes
  performance             mixed           mixed           mixed
  robust service          mixed           mixed           yes
  transition              mixed           no              mixed
  media indepdnt          yes             yes             yes
  datagram                yes             yes             yes
  config. ease            unknown         mixed           mixed
  security                unknown         mixed           mixed
  unique names            mixed           mixed           mixed
  access to stds          yes             yes             mixed
  multicast               unknown         yes             mixed
  extensibility           unknown         mixed           mixed
  service classes         unknown         yes             mixed
  mobility                unknown         mixed           mixed
  control proto           unknown         yes             mixed
  tunneling               unknown         yes             mixed

8.1 CATNIP Reviews

  All the reviewers felt that CATNIP is not completely specified.
  However, many of the ideas in CATNIP are innovative and a number of
  reviewers felt CATNIP shows the best vision of all of the proposals.
  The use of Network Service Attachment Point Addresses (NSAPs) is well
  thought out and the routing handles are innovative.

  While the goal of uniting three major protocol families, IP, ISO-CLNP
  and Novell IPX is laudable our consensus was that the developers had
  not developed detailed enough plans to support realizing that goal.



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  The plans they do describe suffer from the complexity of trying to be
  the union of a number of existing network protocols.  Some reviewers
  felt that CATNIP is basically maps IPv4, IPX, and SIPP addresses into
  NSAPs and, as such, does not deal with the routing problems of the
  current and future Internet.

  Additionally the reviewers felt that CATNIP has poor support for
  multicasting and mobility and does not specifically deal with such
  important topics as security and autoconfiguration.

8.2 SIPP Reviews

  Most of the reviewers, including those predisposed to other
  proposals, felt as one reviewer put it, that SIPP is an
  "aesthetically beautiful protocol well tailored to compactly satisfy
  today's known network requirements."  The SIPP Working Group has been
  the most dynamic over the last year, producing a myriad of
  documentation detailing almost all of the aspects necessary to
  produce a complete protocol description.

  The biggest problem the reviewers had with SIPP was with IPAE, SIPP's
  transition plan.  The overwhelming feeling was that IPAE is fatally
  flawed and could not be made to work reliably in an operational
  Internet.

  There was significant disagreement about the adequacy of the SIPP 64
  bit address size.  Although you can enumerate 10**15 end nodes in 64
  bits people have different views about how much inefficiency real-
  world routing plans introduce. [Huitema94]  The majority felt that 64
  bit addresses do not provide adequate space for the hierarchy
  required to meet the needs of the future Internet. In addition since
  no one has any experience with extended addressing and routing
  concepts of the type proposed in SIPP, the reviewers generally felt
  quite uncomfortable with this methodology.  The reviewers also felt
  that the design introduces some significant security issues.

  A number of reviewers felt that SIPP did not address the routing
  issue in any useful way.  In particular, there has been no serious
  attempt made at developing ways to abstract topology information or
  to aggregate information about areas of the network.

  Finally, most of the reviewers questioned the level of complexity in
  the SIPP autoconfiguration plans as well as in SIPP in general, other
  than the header itself.







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8.3 TUBA Reviews

  The reviewers generally felt that the most important thing that TUBA
  has offers is that it is based on CLNP and there is significant
  deployment of CLNP-capable routers throughout the Internet.  There
  was considerably less agreement that there was significant deployment
  of CLNP-capable hosts or actual networks running CLNP.  Another
  strong positive for TUBA is the potential for convergence of ISO and
  IETF networking standards.  A number of reviewers pointed out that,
  if TUBA were to be based on a changed CLNP then the advantage of an
  existing deployed infrastructure would be lost and that the
  convergence potential would be reduced.

  A number of aspects of CLNP were felt to be a problem by the
  reviewers including the inefficiencies introduced by the lack of any
  particular word alignment of the header fields, CLNP source route,
  the lack of a flow ID field, the lack of a protocol ID field, and the
  use of CLNP error messages in TUBA. The CLNP packet format or
  procedures would have to be modified to resolve at least some of
  these issues.

  There seems to be a profound disagreement within the TUBA community
  over the question of the ability of the IETF to modify the CLNP
  standards.  In our presentation in Houston we said that we felt that
  "clone and run" was a legitimate process.  This is also what the IAB
  proposed in "IP version 7". [IAB92]  The TUBA community has not
  reached consensus that this view is reasonable.  While many,
  including a number of the CLNP document authors, are adamant that
  this is not an issue and the IETF can make modifications to the base
  standards, many others are just as adamant that the standards can
  only be changed through the ISO standards process.  Since the
  overwhelming feeling within the IETF is that the IETF must 'own' the
  standards on which it is basing its future, this disagreement within
  the TUBA community was disquieting.

  For a number of reasons, unfortunately including prejudice in a few
  cases, the reviews of the TUBA proposals were much more mixed than
  for SIPP or CATNIP. Clearly TUBA meets the requirements for the
  ability to scale to large numbers of hosts, supports flexible
  topologies, is media independent and is a datagram protocol.  To the
  reviewers, it was less clear that TUBA met the other IPng
  requirements and these views varied widely.

  There was also disagreement over the advisability of using NSAPs for
  routing given the wide variety of NSAP allocation plans.  The
  Internet would have to restrict the use of NSAPs to those which are
  allocated with the actual underlying network topology in mind if the
  required degree of aggregation of routing information is to be



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  achieved.

8.4 Summary of Proposal Reviews

  To summarize, significant problems were seen in all three of the
  proposals. The feeling was that, to one degree or another, both SIPP
  and TUBA would work in the Internet context but each exhibited its
  own problems.  Some of these problems would have to be rectified
  before either one would be ready to replace IPv4, much less be the
  vehicle to carry the Internet into the future.  Other problems could
  be addressed over time.  CATNIP was felt to be too incomplete to be
  considered.

9. A Revised Proposal

  As mentioned above, there was considerable discussion of the
  strengths and weaknesses of the various IPng proposals during the
  IPng 'BigTen' retreat on May 19th and 20th 1994. [Knopper94b]  After
  this retreat Steve Deering and Paul Francis, two of the co-chairs of
  the SIPP Working Group, sent a message to the sipp mailing list
  detailing the discussions at the retreat and proposing some changes
  in SIPP. [Deering94a]

  The message noted "The recurring (and unsurprising) concerns about
  SIPP were:

  (1) complexity/manageability/feasibility of IPAE, and

  (2) adequacy/correctness/limitations of SIPP's addressing and routing
      model, especially the use of loose source routing to accomplish
      'extended addressing'".

  They "proposed to address these concerns by changing SIPP as follows:

  * Change address size from 8 bytes to 16 bytes (fixed-length).

  * Specify optional use of serverless autoconfiguration of the 16-byte
    address by using IEEE 802 address as the low-order ("node ID")
    part.

  * For higher-layer protocols that use internet-layer addresses as
    part of connection identifiers (e.g., TCP), require that they use
    the entire 16-byte addresses.

  * Do *not* use Route Header for extended addressing."






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  After considerable discussion on the sipp and big-internet mailing
  lists about these proposed changes, the SIPP working group published
  a revised version of SIPP [Deering94b], a new addressing architecture
  [Francis94], and a simplified transition mechanism [Gillig94a].
  These were submitted to the IPng Directorate for their consideration.

  This proposal represents a synthesis of multiple IETF efforts with
  much of the basic protocol coming from the SIPP effort, the
  autoconfiguration and transition portions influenced by TUBA, the
  addressing structure is based on the CIDR work and the routing header
  evolving out of the SDRP deliberations.

10. Assumptions

10.1 Criteria Document and Timing of Recommendation

  In making the following recommendations we are making two assumptions
  of community consensus; that the IPng criteria document represents
  the reasonable set of requirements for an IPng, and that a specific
  recommendation should be made now and that from this point on the
  IETF should proceed with a single IPng effort.

  As described above, the IPng Technical Criteria document [Kasten94]
  was developed in a open manner and was the topic of extensive
  discussions on a number of mailing lists.  We believe that there is a
  strong consensus that this document accurately reflects the
  community's set of technical requirements which an IPng should be
  able to meet.

  A prime topic of discussion on the big-internet mailing list this
  spring as well as during the open IPng directorate meeting in
  Seattle, was the need to make a specific IPng recommendation at this
  time.  Some people felt that additional research would help resolve
  some of the issues that are currently unresolved.  While others
  argued that selecting a single protocol to work on would clarify the
  picture for the community, focus the resources of the IETF on
  finalizing its details, and, since the argument that there were open
  research items could be made at any point in history, there might
  never be a 'right' time.

  Our reading of the community is that there is a consensus that a
  specific recommendation should be made now.  This is consistent with
  the views expressed during the ipdecide BOF in Amsterdam [Gross94]
  and in some of the RFC 1550 white papers [Carpen94a].

  There is no particular reason to think that the basic recommendation
  would be significantly different if we waited for another six months
  or a year.  Clearly some details which are currently unresolved could



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  be filled in if the recommendation were to be delayed, but the
  current fragmentation of the IETF's energies limits the efficiency of
  this type of detail resolution. Concentrating the resources of the
  IETF behind a single effort seems to us to be a more efficient way to
  proceed.

10.2 Address Length

  One of the most hotly discussed aspects of the IPng design
  possibilities was address size and format.  During the IPng process
  four distinct views were expressed about these issues:

  1. The view that 8 bytes of address are enough to meet the current
     and future needs of the Internet (squaring the size of the IP
     address space).  More would waste bandwidth, promote inefficient
     assignment, and cause problems in some networks (such as mobiles
     and other low speed links).

  2. The view that 16 bytes is about right.  That length supports easy
     auto-configuration as well as organizations with complex internal
     routing topologies in conjunction with the global routing topology
     now and well into the future.

  3. The view that 20 byte OSI NSAPs should be used in the interests of
     global harmonization.

  4. The view that variable length addresses which might be smaller or
     larger than 16 bytes should be used to embrace all the above
     options and more, so that the size of the address could be
     adjusted to the demands of the particular environment, and to
     ensure the ability to meet any future networking requirements.

  Good technical and engineering arguments were made for and against
  all of these views. Unanimity was not achieved, but we feel that a
  clear majority view emerged that the use of 16 byte fixed length
  addresses was the best compromise between efficiency, functionality,
  flexibility, and global applicability. [Mankin94]

11. IPng Recommendation

  After a great deal of discussion in many forums and with the
  consensus of the IPng Directorate, we recommend that the protocol
  described in "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP) Spec. (128 bit
  ver)" [Deering94b] be adopted as the basis for IPng, the next
  generation of the Internet Protocol.  We also recommend that the
  other documents listed in Appendix C be adopted as the basis of
  specific features of this protocol.




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  This proposal resolves most of the perceived problems, particularly
  in the areas of addressing, routing, transition and address
  autoconfiguration.  It includes the broad base of the SIPP proposal
  effort, flexible address autoconfiguration features, and a merged
  transition strategy.  We believe that it meets the requirements
  outlined in the IPng Criteria document and provides the framework to
  fully meet the needs of the greater Internet community for the
  foreseeable future.

11.1 IPng Criteria Document and IPng

  A detailed review of how IPng meets the requirements set down in the
  IPng Criteria document [Kasten94] will soon be published.  Following
  is our feelings about the extent to which IPng is responsive to the
  criteria.

  * complete specification - the base specifications for IPng are
    complete but transition and address autoconfiguration do remain to
    be finalized
  * architectural simplicity - the protocol is simple, easy to explain
    and uses well established paradigms
  * scale - an address size of 128 bits easily meets the need to
    address 10**9 networks even in the face of the inherent
    inefficiency of address allocation for efficient routing
  * topological flexibility - the IPng design places no constraints on
    network topology except for the limit of 255 hops
  * performance - the simplicity of processing, the alignment of the
    fields in the headers, and the elimination of the header checksum
    will allow for high performance handling of IPng data streams
  * robust service - IPng includes no inhibitors to robust service and
    the addition of packet-level authentication allows the securing of
    control and routing protocols without having to have separate
    procedures
  * transition - the IPng transition plan is simple and realistically
    covers the transition methods that will be present in the
    marketplace
  * media independence - IPng retains IPv4's media independence, it may
    be possible to make use of IPng's Flow Label in some connection-
    oriented media such as ATM
  * datagram service - IPng preserves datagram service as its basic
    operational mode, it is possible that the use of path MTU discovery
    will complicate the use of datagrams in some cases
  * configuration ease - IPng will have easy and flexible address
    autoconfiguration which will support a wide variety of environments
    from nodes on an isolated network to nodes deep in a complex
    internet
  * security - IPng includes specific mechanisms for authentication and
    encryption at the internetwork layer; the security features do rely



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    on the presence of a yet to be defined key management system
  * unique names - IPng addresses may be used as globally unique names
    although they do have topological significance
  * access to standards - all of the IPng standards will be published
    as RFCs with unlimited distribution
  * multicast support - IPng specifically includes multicast support
  * extensibility - the use of extension headers and an expandable
    header option feature will allow the introduction of new features
    into IPng when needed in a way that minimizes the disruption of the
    existing network
  * service classes - the IPng header includes a Flow Label which may
    be used to differentiate requested service classes
  * mobility - the proposed IPv4 mobility functions will work with IPng
  * control protocol - IPng includes the familiar IPv4 control protocol
    features
  * tunneling support - encapsulation of IPng or other protocols within
    IPng is a basic capability described in the IPng specifications

11.2 IPv6

  The IANA has assigned version number 6 to IPng.  The protocol itself
  will be called IPv6.

  The remainder of this memo is used to describe IPv6 and its features.
  This description is an overview snapshot.  The standards documents
  themselves should be referenced for definitive specifications.  We
  also make a number of specific recommendations concerning the details
  of the proposed protocol, the procedures required to complete the
  definition of the protocol, and the IETF working groups we feel are
  necessary to accomplish the task.

12. IPv6 Overview

  IPv6 is a new version of the Internet Protocol, it has been designed
  as an evolutionary, rather than revolutionary, step from IPv4.
  Functions which are generally seen as working in IPv4 were kept in
  IPv6.  Functions which don't work or are infrequently used were
  removed or made optional.  A few new features were added where the
  functionality was felt to be necessary.

  The important features of IPv6 include: [Hinden94c]

  * expanded addressing and routing capabilities - The IP address size
    is increased from 32 bits to 128 bits providing support for a much
    greater number of addressable nodes, more levels of addressing
    hierarchy, and simpler auto-configuration of addresses.





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    The scaleability of multicast routing is improved by adding a
    "scope" field to multicast addresses.

    A new type of address, called a "cluster address" is defined to
    identify topological regions rather than individual nodes.  The use
    of cluster addresses in conjunction with the IPv6 source route
    capability allows nodes additional control over the path their
    traffic takes.

  * simplified header format - Some IPv4 header fields have been
    dropped or made optional to reduce the common-case processing cost
    of packet handling and to keep the bandwidth overhead of the IPv6
    header as low as possible in spite of the increased size of the
    addresses.  Even though the IPv6 addresses are four time longer
    than the IPv4 addresses, the IPv6 header is only twice the size of
    the IPv4 header.

  * support for extension headers and options - IPv6 options are placed
    in separate headers that are located in the packet between the IPv6
    header and the transport-layer header.  Since most IPv6 option
    headers are not examined or processed by any router along a
    packet's delivery path until it arrives at its final destination,
    this organization facilitates a major improvement in router
    performance for packets containing options.  Another improvement is
    that unlike IPv4, IPv6 options can be of arbitrary length and not
    limited to 40 bytes. This feature plus the manner in which they are
    processed, permits IPv6 options to be used for functions which were
    not practical in IPv4.

    A key extensibility feature of IPv6 is the ability to encode,
    within an option, the action which a router or host should perform
    if the option is unknown. This permits the incremental deployment
    of additional functionality into an operational network with a
    minimal danger of disruption.

  * support for authentication and privacy - IPv6 includes the
    definition of an extension which provides support for
    authentication and data integrity. This extension is included as a
    basic element of IPv6 and support for it will be required in all
    implementations.

    IPv6 also includes the definition of an extension to support
    confidentiality by means of encryption.  Support for this extension
    will be strongly encouraged in all implementations.







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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  * support for autoconfiguration - IPv6 supports multiple forms of
    autoconfiguration, from "plug and play" configuration of node
    addresses on an isolated network to the full-featured facilities
    offered by DHCP.

  * support for source routes - IPv6 includes an extended function
    source routing header designed to support the Source Demand Routing
    Protocol (SDRP). The purpose of SDRP is to support source-initiated
    selection of routes to complement the route selection provided by
    existing routing protocols for both inter-domain and intra-domain
    routes. [Estrin94b]

  * simple and flexible transition from IPv4 - The IPv6 transition plan
    is aimed at meeting four basic requirements: [Gillig94a]

    - Incremental upgrade.  Existing installed IPv4 hosts and routers
      may be upgraded to IPv6 at any time without being dependent on
      any other hosts or routers being upgraded.
    - Incremental deployment.  New IPv6 hosts and routers can be
      installed at any time without any prerequisites.
    - Easy Addressing.  When existing installed IPv4 hosts or routers
      are upgraded to IPv6, they may continue to use their existing
      address.  They do not need to be assigned new addresses.
    - Low start-up costs.  Little or no preparation work is needed in
      order to upgrade existing IPv4 systems to IPv6, or to deploy new
      IPv6 systems.

  * quality of service capabilities - A new capability is added to
    enable the labeling of packets belonging to particular traffic
    "flows" for which the sender has requested special handling, such
    as non-default quality of service or "real-time" service.




















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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


12.1 IPv6 Header Format

  The IPv6 header, although longer than the IPv4 header, is
  considerably simplified.  A number of functions that were in the IPv4
  header have been relocated in extension headers or dropped.
  [Deering94b]

  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |Version|                       Flow Label                      |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |         Payload Length        |  Next Header  |   Hop Limit   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                                                               |
  +                                                               +
  |                                                               |
  +                         Source Address                        +
  |                                                               |
  +                                                               +
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                                                               |
  +                                                               +
  |                                                               |
  +                      Destination Address                      +
  |                                                               |
  +                                                               +
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  * Version - Internet Protocol version number. IPng has been assigned
    version number 6. (4-bit field)

  * Flow Label - This field may be used by a host to label those
    packets for which it is requesting special handling by routers
    within a network, such as non-default quality of service or "real-
    time" service. (28-bit field)

  * Payload Length - Length of the remainder of the packet following
    the IPv6 header, in octets. To permit payloads of greater than 64K
    bytes, if the value in this field is 0 the actual packet length
    will be found in an Hop-by-Hop option. (16-bit unsigned integer)

  * Next Header - Identifies the type of header immediately following
    the IPv6 header.  The Next Header field uses the same values as the
    IPv4 Protocol field (8-bit selector field)






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  * Hop Limit - Used to limit the impact of routing loops. The Hop
    Limit field is decremented by 1 by each node that forwards the
    packet.  The packet is discarded if Hop Limit is decremented to
    zero. (8-bit unsigned integer)

  * Source Address - An address of the initial sender of the packet.
    (128 bit field)

  * Destination Address - An address of the intended recipient of the
    packet (possibly not the ultimate recipient, if an optional Routing
    Header is present). (128 bit field)

12.2 Extension Headers

  In IPv6, optional internet-layer information is encoded in separate
  headers that may be placed between the IPv6 header and the
  transport-layer header in a packet.  There are a small number of such
  extension headers, each identified by a distinct Next Header value.
  [From a number of the documents listed in Appendix C.]

  12.2.1 Hop-by-Hop Option Header

     The Hop-by-Hop Options header is used to carry optional
     information that must be examined by every node along a packet's
     delivery path.  The Hop-by-Hop Options header is identified by a
     Next Header value of 0 in the IPv6 header, and has the following
     format:

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Next Header  |  Hdr Ext Len  |                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +
     |                                                               |
     .                                                               .
     .                            Options                            .
     .                                                               .
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     * Next Header - Identifies the type of header immediately
       following the Hop-by-Hop Options header.  Uses the same values
       as the IPv4 Protocol field. (8-bit selector)

     * Hdr Ext Len - Length of the Hop-by-Hop Options header in 8-octet
       units, not including the first 8 octets. (8-bit unsigned
       integer)






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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


     * Options - Contains one or more TLV-encoded options. (Variable-
       length field, of length such that the complete Hop-by-Hop
       Options header is an integer multiple of 8 octets long.)

  12.2.2 IPv6 Header Options

     Two of the currently-defined extension headers -- the Hop-by-Hop
     Options header and the End-to-End Options header -- may carry a
     variable number of Type-Length-Value (TLV) encoded "options", of
     the following format:

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- - - - - - - - -
     |  Option Type  |  Opt Data Len |  Option Data
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- - - - - - - - -

     * Option Type - identifier of the type of option (8-bit field)

     * Opt Data Len - Length of the Option Data field of this option,
       in octets. (8-bit unsigned integer)

     * Option Data - Option-Type-specific data. (Variable-length field)

     The Option Type identifiers are internally encoded such that their
     highest-order two bits specify the action that must be taken if
     the processing IPv6 node does not recognize the Option Type:

     00 - skip over this option and continue processing the header
     01 - discard the packet
     10 - discard the packet and send an ICMP Unrecognized Type message
           to the packet's Source Address, pointing to the unrecognized
           Option Type
     11 - undefined.

     In the case of Hop-by-Hop options only, the third-highest-order
     bit of the Option Type specifies whether or not the Option Data of
     this option shall be included in the integrity assurance
     computation performed when an Authentication header is present.
     Option data that changes en route must be excluded from that
     computation.












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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  12.2.3 Routing Header

     The Routing header is used by an IPv6 source to list one or more
     intermediate nodes (or topological clusters) to be "visited" on
     the way to a packet's destination.  This particular form of the
     Routing Header is designed to support SDRP. [Estrin94b]

     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
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | Next Header   |Routing Type=1 |M|F| Reserved   | SrcRouteLen  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | NextHopPtr    |            Strict/Loose Bit Mask              |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     .                                                               .
     .                         Source Route                          .
     .                                                               .
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     * Next Header - Identifies the type of header immediately
       following the Routing Header.  Uses the same values as the IPv4
       Protocol field. (8-bit selector)

     * Routing Type - Indicates the type of routing supported by this
       header.  Value must be 1.

     * MRE flag - Must Report Errors. If this bit is set to 1, and a
       router can not further forward a packet (with an incompletely
       traversed source route), as specified in the Source Route, the
       router must generate an ICMP error message. If this bit is set
       to 0, and a router can not further forward a packet (with an
       incompletely traversed source route), as specified in the Source
       Route, the router should not generate an ICMP error message.

     * F flag -  Failure of Source Route Behavior.  If this bit it set
       to 1, it indicates that if a router can not further forward a
       packet (with an incompletely traversed source route), as
       specified in the Source Route, the router must set the value of
       the Next Hop Pointer field to the value of the Source Route
       Length field, so that the subsequent forwarding will be based
       solely on the destination address. If this bit is set to 0, it
       indicates that if a router can not further forward a packet
       (with an incompletely traversed source route), as specified in
       the Source Route, the router must discard the packet.





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     * Reserved - Initialized to zero for transmission; ignored on
       reception.

     * SrcRouteLen - Source Route Length - Number of source route
       elements/hops in the SDRP Routing header.  Length of SDRP
       routing header can be calculated from this value (length =
       SrcRouteLen * 16 + 8) This field may not exceed a value of 24.
       (8 bit unsigned integer)

     * NextHopPtr - Next Hop Pointer- Index of next element/hop to be
       processed; initialized to 0 to point to first element/hop in the
       source route.  When Next Hop Pointer is equal to Source Route
       Length then the Source Route is completed.  (8 bit unsigned
       integer)

     * Strict/Loose Bit Mask - The Strict/Loose Bit Mask is used when
       making a forwarding decision. If the value of the Next Hop
       Pointer field is N, and the N-th bit in the Strict/Loose Bit
       Mask field is set to 1, it indicates that the next hop is a
       Strict Source Route Hop. If this bit is set to 0, it indicates
       that the next hop is a Loose Source Route Hop. (24 bit
       bitpattern)

     * Source Route - A list of IPv6 addresses indicating the path that
       this packet should follow.  A Source Route can contain an
       arbitrary intermix of unicast and cluster addresses. (integral
       multiple of 128 bits)

  12.2.4 Fragment Header

     The Fragment header is used by an IPv6 source to send payloads
     larger than would fit in the path MTU to their destinations.
     (Note: unlike IPv4, fragmentation in IPv6 is performed only by
     source nodes, not by routers along a packet's delivery path)  The
     Fragment header is identified by a Next Header value of 44 in the
     immediately preceding header, and has the following format:


     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Next Header  |   Reserved    |      Fragment Offset    |Res|M|
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                         Identification                        |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     * Next Header - Identifies the type of header immediately
       following the Fragment header.  Uses the same values as the IPv4
       Protocol field. (8 bit selector)




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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


     * Reserved, Res - Initialized to zero for transmission; ignored on
       reception.

     * Fragment Offset - The offset, in 8-octet units, of the following
       payload, relative to the start of the original, unfragmented
       payload. (13-bit unsigned integer)

     * M flag - 1 = more fragments; 0 = last fragment.

     * Identification - A value assigned to the original payload that
       is different than that of any other fragmented payload sent
       recently with the same IPv6 Source Address, IPv6 Destination
       Address, and Fragment Next Header value.  (If a Routing header
       is present, the IPv6 Destination Address is that of the final
       destination.)  The Identification value is carried in the
       Fragment header of all of the original payload's fragments, and
       is used by the destination to identify all fragments belonging
       to the same original payload.  (32 bit field)

  12.2.5 Authentication Header

     The Authentication header is used to provide authentication and
     integrity assurance for IPv6 packets.  Non-repudiation may be
     provided by an authentication algorithm used with the
     Authentication header, but it is not provided with all
     authentication algorithms that might be used with this header.
     The Authentication header is identified by a Next Header value of
     51 in the immediately preceding header, and has the following
     format:

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Next Header  | Auth Data Len |            Reserved           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                     Security Association ID                   |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     .                                                               .
     .                      Authentication Data                      .
     .                                                               .
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     * Next Header - Identifies the type of header immediately
       following the Authentication header.  Uses the same values as
       the IPv4 Protocol field. (8-bit selector)

     * Auth Data Len - Length of the Authentication Data field in 8-
       octet units. (8-bit unsigned integer)



Bradner & Mankin                                               [Page 29]

RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


     * Reserved - Initialized to zero for transmission; ignored on
       reception.

     * Security Assoc. ID - When combined with the IPv6 Source Address,
       identifies to the receiver(s) the pre-established security
       association to which this packet belongs. (32 bit field)

     * Authentication Data -   Algorithm-specific information required
       to authenticate the source of the packet and assure its
       integrity, as specified for the pre-established security
       association. (Variable-length field, an integer multiple of 8
       octets long.)

  12.2.6 Privacy Header

     The Privacy Header seeks to provide confidentiality and integrity
     by encrypting data to be protected and placing the encrypted data
     in the data portion of the Privacy Header.  Either a transport-
     layer (e.g., UDP or TCP) frame may be encrypted or an entire IPv6
     datagram may be encrypted, depending on the user's security
     requirements.  This encapsulating approach is necessary to provide
     confidentiality for the entire original datagram.  If present, the
     Privacy Header is always the last non-encrypted field in a packet.

     The Privacy Header works between hosts, between a host and a
     security gateway, or between security gateways.  This support for
     security gateways permits trustworthy networks to exist without
     the performance  and monetary costs of security, while providing
     security for traffic transiting untrustworthy network segments.

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |             Security Association Identifier (SAID)            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     .                    Initialization Vector                      .
     |                                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  Next Header* |   Length*   |          Reserved*              |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                                               |
     |                       Protected Data*     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                                           |     trailer*      |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                                                            *encrypted






Bradner & Mankin                                               [Page 30]

RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


     * Security Association Identifier (SAID) - Identifies the security
       association for this datagram.  If no security association has
       been established, the value of this field shall be 0x0000.  A
       security  association is normally one-way. An authenticated
       communications session between two hosts will normally have two
       SAIDs in use (one in each direction).  The receiving host uses
       the combination of SAID value and originating address to
       distinguish the correct association. (32 bit value)

     * Initialization Vector -  This field is optional and its value
       depends on the SAID in use.  For example, the field may contain
       cryptographic synchronization data for a block oriented
       encryption algorithm. It may also be used to contain a
       cryptographic initialization vector.  A Privacy Header
       implementation will normally use the SAID value to determine
       whether this field is present and, if it is, the field's size
       and use. (presence and length dependent on SAID)

     * Next Header - encrypted - Identifies the type of header
       immediately following the Privacy header.  Uses the same values
       as the IPv4 Protocol field. (8 bit selector)

     * Reserved - encrypted - Ignored on reception.

     * Length - encrypted - Length of the Privacy Header in 8-octet
       units, not including the first 8 octets. (8-bit unsigned
       integer)

     * Protected Data - encrypted -  This field may contain an entire
       encapsulated IPv6 datagram, including the IPv6 header, a
       sequence of zero or more IPv6 options, and a transport-layer
       payload, or it may just be a sequence of zero or more IPv6
       options followed by a transport-layer payload.  (variable
       length)

     * trailer (Algorithm-dependent Trailer) - encrypted - A field
       present to support some algorithms which need to have padding
       (e.g., to a full cryptographic block size for block-oriented
       encryption algorithms) or for storage of authentication data for
       use with a encryption algorithm that provides confidentiality
       without authentication.  It is present only when the algorithm
       in use requires such a field. (presence and length dependent on
       SAID)








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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  12.2.7 End-to-End Option Header

     The End-to-End Options header is used to carry optional
     information that needs to be examined only by a packet's
     destination node(s).  The End-to-End Options header is identified
     by a Next Header value of TBD in the immediately preceding header,
     and has the same format as the Hop-by-Hop Option Header except for
     the ability to exclude an option from the authentication integrity
     assurance computation.

13. IPng Working Group

  We recommend that a new IPng Working Group be formed to produce
  specifications for the core functionality of the IPv6 protocol suite.
  The working group will carry out the recommendations of the IPng Area
  Directors as outlined at the July 1994 IETF and in this memo.  We
  recommend that this working group be chaired by Steve Deering of
  Xerox PARC and Ross Callon of Wellfleet.

  The primary task of the working group is to produce a set of
  documents that define the basic functions, interactions, assumptions,
  and packet formats for IPv6.  We recommend that Robert Hinden of Sun
  Microsystems be the editor for these documents.  The documents listed
  in Appendix C will be used by the working group to form the basis of
  the final document set.

  The work of the IPng Working Group includes:

  * complete the IPv6 overview document
  * complete the IPv6 detailed operational specification
  * complete the IPv6 Addressing Architecture specification
  * produce specifications for IPv6 encapsulations over various media
  * complete specifications for the support of packets larger than 64KB
  * complete specifications of the DNS enhancements required to support
    IPv6
  * complete specification of ICMP, IGMP and router discovery for
    support of IPv6.
  * complete specification of path MTU discovery for IPv6
  * complete specifications of IPv6 in IPv6 tunneling
  * complete the suggested address format and assignment plan
  * coordinate with the Address Autoconfiguration Working Group
  * coordinate with the NGTRANS and TACIT Working Groups
  * complete specifications of authentication and privacy support
    headers







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  The working group should also consider a few selected enhancements
  including:

  * consider ways to compress the IPv6 header in the contexts of native
    IPv6, multiple IPv6 packets in a flow, and encapsulated IPv6
  * consider specifying support for a larger minimum MTU

14. IPng Reviewer

  Currently it is the task of the IPng Area Directors, the IPng
  Directorate and the chairs of the proposed ipng working group to
  coordinate the activities of the many parallel efforts currently
  directed towards different aspects of IPng.  While this is possible
  and currently seems to be working well it can not be maintained over
  the long run because, among other reasons, the IPng Area will be
  dissolved eventually and its Directorate disbanded.  It will also
  become much more difficult as IPng related activities start up in
  other IETF areas.

  We recommend that an IPng Reviewer be appointed to be specifically
  responsible for ensuring that a consistent view of IPv6 is maintained
  across the related working groups.  We feel that this function is
  required due to the complex nature of the interactions between the
  parts of the IPng effort and due to the distribution of the IPng
  related work amongst a number of IETF areas.  We recommend that Dave
  Clark of MIT be offered this appointment.

  This would be a long-term task involving the review of on-going
  activities. The aim is not for the IPng Reviewer to make
  architectural decisions since that is the work of the various working
  groups, the IAB, and the IETF as a whole.. The aim is to spot gaps or
  misunderstandings before they reach the point where functionality or
  interworkability is threatened.

15. Address Autoconfiguration

  As data networks become more complex the need to be able to bypass at
  least some of the complexity and move towards "plug and play" becomes
  ever more acute.  The user can not be expected to be able to
  understand the details of the network architecture or know how to
  configure the network software in their host.  In the ideal case, a
  user should be able to unpack a new computer, plug it into the local
  network and "just" have it work without requiring the entering of any
  special information.  Security concerns may restrict the ability to
  offer this level of transparent address autoconfiguration in some
  environments but the mechanisms must be in place to support whatever
  level of automation which the local environment feels comfortable
  with.



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  The basic requirement of "plug and play" operation is that a host
  must be able to acquire an address dynamically, either when attaching
  to a network for the first time or when the host needs to be
  readdressed because the host moved or because the identity of the
  network has changed.  There are many other functions required to
  support a full "plug and play" environment. [Berk94] Most of these
  must be addressed outside of the IPv6 Area but a focused effort to
  define a host address autoconfiguration protocol is part of the IPv6
  process.

  We recommend that a new Address Autoconfiguration Working Group
  (addrconf) be formed with Dave Katz of Cisco Systems and Sue Thomson
  of Bellcore as co-chairs. The purpose of this working group is to
  design and specify a protocol for allocating addresses dynamically to
  IPv6 hosts.  The address configuration protocol must be suitable for
  a wide range of network topologies, from a simple isolated network to
  a sophisticated globally connected network. It should also allow for
  varying levels of administrative control, from completely automated
  operation to very tight oversight.

  The scope of this working group is to propose a host address
  autoconfiguration protocol which supports the full range of
  topological and administrative environments in which IPv6 will be
  used.  It is the intention that, together with IPv6 system discovery,
  the address autoconfiguration protocol will provide the minimal
  bootstrapping information necessary to enable hosts to acquire
  further configuration information (such as that provided by DHCP in
  IPv4). The scope does not include router configuration or any other
  host configuration functions. However, it is within the scope of the
  working group to investigate and document the interactions between
  this work and related functions including system discovery, DNS
  autoregistration, service discovery, and broader host configuration
  issues, to facilitate the smooth integration of these functions.
  [Katz94a]

  The working group is expected to complete its work around the end of
  1994 and disband at that time.  The group will use "IPv6 Address
  Autoconfiguration Architecture" [Katz94b] draft document as the basis
  of their work.

16. Transition

  The transition of the Internet from IPv4 to IPv6 has to meet two
  separate needs.  There is a short term need to define specific
  technologies and methods to transition IPv4 networks, including the
  Internet, into IPv6 networks and an IPv6 Internet.  There is also a
  long term need to do broad-based operational planning for transition,
  including developing methods to allow decentralized migration



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  strategies, understanding the ramifications of a long period of
  coexistence when both protocols are part of the basic infrastructure,
  developing an understanding of the type and scope of architectural
  and interoperability testing that will be required to ensure a
  reliable and manageable Internet in the future.

16.1 Transition - Short Term

  Any IPng transition plan must take into account the realities of what
  types of devices vendors will build and network managers will deploy.
  The IPng transition plan must define the procedures required to
  successfully implement the functions which vendors will be likely to
  include in their devices.  This is the case even if there are good
  arguments to recommend against a particular function, header
  translation for example.  If products will exist it is better to have
  them interoperate than not.

  We recommend that a new IPng Transition (NGTRANS) Working Group be
  formed with Bob Gilligan of Sun Microsystems and xxx of yyy as co-
  chairs to design the mechanisms and procedures to support the
  transition of the Internet from IPv4 to IPv6 and to give advice on
  what procedures and techniques are preferred.

  The work of the group will fall into three areas:

  * Define the processes by which the Internet will make the transition
    from IPv4 to IPv6.  As part of this effort, the group will produce
    a document explaining to the general Internet community what
    mechanisms will be employed in the transition, how the transition
    will work, the assumptions about infrastructure deployment inherent
    in the operation of these mechanisms, and the types of
    functionality that applications developers will be able to assume
    as the protocol mix changes over time.
  * Define and specify the mandatory and optional mechanisms that
    vendors should implement in hosts, routers, and other components of
    the Internet in order for the transition to be carried out. Dual-
    stack, encapsulation and header translation mechanisms must all be
    defined, as well as the interaction between hosts using different
    combinations of these mechanisms.  The specifications produced will
    be used by people implementing these IPv6 systems.
  * Articulate a concrete operational plan for the Internet to make the
    transition from IPv4 to IPv6.  The result of this work will be a
    transition plan for the Internet that network operators and
    Internet subscribers can execute.
                                                            [Gillig94c]






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  The working group is expected to complete its work around the end of
  1994 and disband at that time.  The group will use the "Simple SIPP
  Transition (SST)" [Gilig94a] overview document as the starting point
  for its work.

16.2 Transition - Long Term

  There are a number of transition related topics in addition to
  defining the specific IPv4 to IPv6 mechanisms and their deployment,
  operation and interaction.  The ramifications and procedures of
  migrating to a new technology or to a new version of an existing
  technology must be fully understood.

  We recommend that the Transition and Coexistence Including Testing
  (TACIT) Working Group, which was started a few months ago, explore
  some of the basic issues associated with the deployment of new
  technology into an established Internet.  The TACIT Working Group
  will focus on the generic issues of transition and will not limit
  itself to the upcoming transition to IPv6 because, over time,
  enhancements to IPv6 (IPv6ng) will be developed and accepted.  At
  that point they will need to be deployed into the then existing
  Internet.  The TACIT Working Group will be more operationally
  oriented than the NGTRANS Working Group and will continue well into
  the actual IPv6 transition.

  The main areas of exploration are:

  * Make the transition from a currently deployed protocol to a new
    protocol while accommodating heterogeneity and decentralized
    management.
  * Since it is often difficult or impossible to replace all legacy
    systems or software, it is important to understand the
    characteristics and operation of a long period of coexistence
    between a new protocol and the existing protocol.
  * The Internet must now be considered a utility.  We are far removed
    from a time when a new technology could be deployed to see if it
    would work in large scale situations.  Rigorous architectural and
    interoperability testing must be part of the predeployment phase of
    any proposed software for the Internet. Testing the scaling up
    behaviors and robustness of a new protocol will offer particular
    challenges. The WG should determine if there are lessons to be
    learned from:  OSPF, BGP4 and CIDR Deployment, the AppleTalk 1 to 2
    transition, DECnet Phase 4 to Phase 5 planning and transition,
    among others.







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  The TACIT Working Group will explore each of these facets of the
  deployment of new technology and develop a number of documents to
  help guide users and managers of affected data networks and provide
  to the IETF:

  * Detailed descriptions of problem areas in transition and
    coexistence, both predicted, based on lessons learned, and observed
    as the IPv6 process progresses.
  * Recommendations for specific testing procedures.
  * Recommendations for coexistence operations procedures
  * Recommendations for the smoothing of decentralized transition
    planning.
                                                        [Huston94]

17. Other Address Families

  There are many environments in which there are one or more network
  protocols already deployed or where a significant planning effort has
  been undertaken to create a comprehensive network addressing plan. In
  such cases there may be a temptation to integrate IPv6 into the
  environment by making use of an existing addressing plan to define
  all or part of the IPv6 addresses.  The advantage of doing this is
  that it permits unified management of address space among multiple
  protocol families.  The use of common addresses can help facilitate
  transition from other protocols to IPv6.

  If the existing addresses are globally unique and assigned with
  regard to network topology this may be a reasonable idea.  The IETF
  should work with other organizations to develop algorithms that could
  be used to map addresses between IPv6 and other environments.  The
  goal for any such mapping must be to provide an unambiguous 1 to 1
  map between individual addresses.

  Suggestions have been made to develop mapping algorithms for Novell
  IPX addresses, some types of OSI NSAPs, E164 addresses and SNA
  addresses.  Each of these possibilities should be carefully examined
  to ensure that use of such an algorithm solves more problems than it
  creates.  In some cases it may be better to recommend either that a
  native IPng addressing plan be developed instead, or that an IPv6
  address be used within the non-IP environment. [Carpen94b]

  We recommend that, in conjunction with other organizations,
  recommendations about the use of non-IPv6 addresses in IPv6
  environments and IPv6 addresses in non-IPv6 environments be
  developed.






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18. Impact on Other IETF Standards

  Many current IETF standards are affected by IPv6.  At least 27 of the
  current 51 full Internet Standards must be revised for IPv6, along
  with at least 6 of the 20 Draft Standards and at least 25 of the 130
  Proposed Standards. [Postel94]

  In some cases the revisions consist of simple changes to the text,
  for example, in a number of RFCs an IP address is referred to in
  passing as a "32 bit IP address" even though IP addresses are not
  directly used in the protocol being defined.  All of the standards
  track documents will have to be checked to see if they contain such
  references.

  In most of the rest of the cases revisions to the protocols,
  including packet formats, will be required.  In many of these cases
  the address is just being carried as a data element and a revised
  format with a larger field for the address will have no effect on the
  functional paradigm.

  In the remaining cases some facet of the operation of the protocol
  will be changed as a result of IPv6.  For example, the security and
  source route mechanisms are fundamentally changed from IPv4 with
  IPv6.  Protocols and applications that relied on the IPv4
  functionality will have to be redesigned or rethought to use the
  equivalent function in IPv6.

  In a few cases this opportunity should be used to determine if some
  of the RFCs should be moved to historic, for example EGP [Mills84]
  and IP over ARCNET. [Provan91]

  The base IPng Working Group will address some of these, existing IETF
  working groups can work on others, while new working groups must be
  formed to deal with a few of them. The IPng Working Group will be
  responsible for defining new versions of ICMP, ARP/RARP, and UDP.  It
  will also review RFC 1639, "FTP Operation Over Big Address Records
  (FOOBAR)" [Piscit94] and RFC 1191 "Path MTU Discovery" [Mogul90]

  Existing working groups will examine revisions for some of the
  routing protocols: RIPv2, IS-IS, IDRP and SDRP.  A new working group
  may be required for OSPF.

  The existing DHCP Working Group may be able to revise DHCP and
  examine BOOTP.







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  A TCPng Working Group will be formed soon, and new working groups
  will have to be formed to deal with standards such as SNMP, DNS, NTP,
  NETbios, OSI over TCP, Host Requirements, and Kerberos as well as
  reviewing most of the RFCs that define IP usage over various media.

  In addition to the standards track RFCs mentioned above there are
  many Informational and Experimental RFCs which would be affected as
  well as numerous Internet Drafts (and those standards track RFCs that
  we missed).

  We recommend that the IESG commission a review of all standards track
  RFCs to ensure that a full list of affected documents is compiled. We
  recommend that the IESG charge current IETF working groups with the
  task of understanding the impact of IPv6 on their proposals and,
  where appropriate, revise the documents to include support for IPv6.

  We recommend that the IESG charter new working groups where required
  to revise other standards RFCs.

19. Impact on non-IETF standards and on products

  Many products and user applications which rely on the size or
  structure of IPv4 addresses will need to be modified to work with
  IPv6.  While the IETF can facilitate an investigation of the impacts
  of IPv6 on non-IETF standards and products, the primary
  responsibility for doing so resides in the other standards bodies and
  the vendors.

  Examples of non-IETF standards that are effected by IPv6 include the
  POSIX standards, Open Software Foundation's DCE and DME, X-Open, Sun
  ONC, the Andrew File System and MIT's Kerberos.  Most products that
  provide specialized network security including firewall-type devices
  are among those that must be extended to support IPv6.

20. APIs

  It is traditional to state that the IETF does not "do" APIs.  While
  there are many reasons for this, the one most commonly referenced is
  that there are too many environments where TCP/IP is used, too many
  different operating systems, programming languages, and platforms.
  The feeling is that the IETF should not get involved in attempting to
  define a language and operating system independent interface in the
  face of such complexity.

  We feel that this historical tendency for the IETF to avoid dealing
  with APIs should be reexamined in the case of IPv6.  We feel that in
  a few specific cases the prevalence of a particular type of API is
  such that  a single common solution for the modifications made



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  necessary by IPv6 should be documented.

  We recommend that Informational RFCs be solicited or developed for
  these few cases.  In particular, the Berkeley-style sockets
  interface, the UNIX TLI and XTI interfaces, and the WINSOCK
  interfaces should be targeted.  A draft document exists which could
  be developed into the sockets API description. [Gillig94b]

21. Future of the IPng Area and Working Groups

  In our presentation at the Houston IETF meeting we stated that the
  existing IPng proposal working groups would not be forced to close
  down after the recommendation was made.  Each of them has been
  working on technologies that may have applications in addition to
  their IPng proposal and these technologies should not be lost.

  Since the Toronto IETF meeting the existing IPng working groups have
  been returned to the Internet Area.  The group members may decide to
  close down the working groups or to continue some of their efforts.
  The charters of the working groups must be revised if they choose to
  continue since they would no longer be proposing an IPng candidate.

  In Toronto the chairs of the SIPP Working Group requested that the
  SIPP Working Group be concluded.  The chairs of the TUBA Working
  Group requested that the TUBA working group be understood to be in
  hiatus until a number of the documents in process were completed, at
  which time they would request that the working group be concluded.

  We recommend that the IPng Area and its Directorate continue until
  the basic documents have entered the standards track in late 1994 or
  early 1995 and that after such time the area be dissolved and those
  IPng Area working groups still active be moved to their normal IETF
  areas.

22. Security Considerations

  The security of the Internet has long been questioned.  It has been
  the topic of much press coverage, many conferences and workshops.
  Almost all of this attention has been negative, pointing out the many
  places where the level of possible security is far less than that
  deemed necessary for the current and future uses of the Internet. A
  number of the RFC 1550 White Papers specifically pointed out the
  requirement to improve the level of security available [Adam94,
  Bell94b, Brit94, Green94, Vecchi94, Flei94] as does "Realizing the
  Information Future". [Nat94]






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  In February of 1994, the IAB convened a workshop on security in the
  Internet architecture.  The report of this workshop [IAB94] includes
  an exploration of many of the security problem areas and makes a
  number of recommendations to improve the level of security that the
  Internet offers its users.

  We feel that an improvement in the basic level of security in the
  Internet is vital to its continued success.  Users must be able to
  assume that their exchanges are safe from tampering, diversion and
  exposure.  Organizations that wish to use the Internet to conduct
  business must be able to have a high level of confidence in the
  identity of their correspondents and in the security of their
  communications.  The goal is to provide strong protection as a matter
  of course throughout the Internet.

  As the IAB report points out, many of the necessary tools are not a
  function of the internetworking layer of the protocol.  These higher
  level tools could make use of strong security features in the
  internetworking layer if they were present. While we expect that
  there will be a number of special high-level security packages
  available for specific Internet constituencies, support for basic
  packet-level authentication will provide for the adoption of a much
  needed, widespread, security infrastructure throughout the Internet.

  It is best to separate the support for authentication from the
  support for encryption.  One should be able to use the two functions
  independently.  There are some applications in which authentication
  of a corespondent is sufficient and others where the data exchanged
  must be kept private.

  It is our recommendation that IPv6 support packet authentication as a
  basic and required function.  Applications should be able to rely on
  support for this feature in every IPv6 implementation.  Support for a
  specific authentication algorithm should also be mandated while
  support for additional algorithms should be optional.

  Thus we recommend that support for the Authentication Header be
  required in all compliant IPv6 implementations.

  We recommend that support for a specific authentication algorithm be
  required.  The specific algorithm should be determined by the time
  the IPv6 documents are offered as Proposed Standards.

  We recommend that support for the Privacy Header be required in IPv6
  implementations.






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  We recommend that support for a privacy authentication algorithm be
  required. The specific algorithm should be determined by the time the
  IPv6 documents are offered as Proposed Standards.

  Clearly, a key management infrastructure will be required in order to
  enable the use of the authentication and encryption headers.
  However, defining such an infrastructure is outside the scope of the
  IPv6 effort.  We do note that there are on-going IETF activities in
  this area. The IPv6 transition working groups must coordinate with
  these activities.

  Just as clearly, the use of authentication and encryption may add to
  the cost and impact the performance of systems but the more secure
  infrastructure is worth the penalty.  Whatever penalty there is
  should also decrease in time with improved software and hardware
  assistance.

  The use of firewalls is increasing on the Internet.  We hope that the
  presence of the authentication and privacy features in IPv6 will
  reduce the need for firewalls, but we do understand that they will
  continue to be used for the foreseeable future.  In this light, we
  feel that clear guidance should be given to the developers of
  firewalls on the best ways to design and configure them when working
  in an IPv6 environment.

  We recommend that an "IPv6 framework for firewalls" be developed.
  This framework should explore the ways in which the Authentication
  Header can be used to strengthen firewall technology and detail how
  the IPv6 packet should be analyzed by a firewall.

  Some aspects of security require additional study.  For example, it
  has been pointed out [Vecchi94] that, even in non-military
  situations, there are places where procedures to thwart traffic
  analysis will be required.  This could be done by the use of
  encrypted encapsulation, but this and other similar requirements must
  be addressed on an on-going basis by the Security Area of the IETF.
  The design of IPv6 must be flexible enough to support the later
  addition of such security features.

  We believe that IPv6 with its inherent security features will provide
  the foundation upon which the Internet can continue to expand its
  functionality and user base.









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23. Authors' Addresses

  Scott Bradner
  Harvard University
  10 Ware St.
  Cambridge, MA 02138

  Phone: +1 617 495 3864
  EMail: [email protected]


  Allison Mankin
  USC/Information Sciences Institute
  4350 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 400
  Arlington, VA 22303

  Phone: +1 703-807-0132
  EMail: [email protected]

































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Appendix A - Summary of Recommendations

  5.3 Address Assignment Policy Recommendations
     changes in address assignment policies are not recommended
     reclamation of underutilized assigned addresses is not currently
        recommended
     efforts to renumber significant portions of the Internet are not
        currently recommended
     recommend consideration of assigning CIDR-type address blocks out
        of unassigned Class A addressees
  11. IPng Recommendation
     recommend that "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP) Spec. (128
        bit ver)" [Deering94b] be adopted as the basis for IPng
     recommend that the documents listed in Appendix C be the basis of
        IPng
  13. IPng Working Group
     recommend that an IPng Working Group be formed, chaired by Steve
        Deering and Ross Callon
     recommend that Robert Hinden be the document editor for the IPng
        effort
  14. IPng Reviewer
     recommend that an IPng Reviewer be appointed and that Dave Clark
        be that reviewer
  15. Address Autoconfiguration
     recommend that an Address Autoconfiguration Working Group be
        formed, chaired by Dave Katz and Sue Thomson
  16.1 Transition - Short Term
     recommend that an IPng Transition Working Group be formed, chaired
        by Bob Gilligan and TBA
  16.2 Transition - Long Term
     recommend that the Transition and Coexistence Including Testing
        Working Group be chartered
  17. Other Address Families
     recommend that recommendations about the use of non-IPv6 addresses
        in IPv6 environments and IPv6 addresses in non-IPv6
        environments be developed
  18. Impact on Other IETF Standards
     recommend the IESG commission a review of all standards track RFCs
     recommend the IESG charge current IETF working groups with the
        task of understanding the impact of IPng on their proposals
        and, where appropriate, revise the documents to include support
        for IPng
     recommend the IESG charter new working groups where required to
        revise other standards RFCs
  20. APIs
     recommend that Informational RFCs be developed or solicited for a
        few of the common APIs




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  21. Future of the IPng Area and Working Groups
     recommend that the IPng Area and Area Directorate continue until
        main documents are offered as Proposed Standards in late 1994
  22. Security Considerations
     recommend that support for the Authentication Header be required
     recommend that support for a specific authentication algorithm be
        required
     recommend that support for the Privacy Header be required
     recommend that support for a specific privacy algorithm be
        required
     recommend that an "IPng framework for firewalls" be developed

Appendix B - IPng Area Directorate

  J. Allard - Microsoft           <[email protected]>
  Steve Bellovin  - AT&T          <[email protected]>
  Jim Bound  - Digital            <[email protected]>
  Ross Callon  - Wellfleet        <[email protected]>
  Brian Carpenter  - CERN         <[email protected]>
  Dave Clark  - MIT               <[email protected] >
  John Curran  - NEARNET          <[email protected]>
  Steve Deering  - Xerox          <[email protected]>
  Dino Farinacci  - Cisco         <[email protected]>
  Paul Francis - NTT              <[email protected]>
  Eric Fleischmann  - Boeing      <[email protected]>
  Mark Knopper - Ameritech        <[email protected]>
  Greg Minshall  - Novell         <[email protected]>
  Rob Ullmann - Lotus             <[email protected]>
  Lixia Zhang  - Xerox            <[email protected]>

  Daniel Karrenberg of RIPE joined the Directorate when it was formed
  but had to withdraw due to the demands of his day job.

  Since the Toronto IETF meeting Paul Francis has resigned from the
  Directorate to pursue other interests.  Robert Hinden of Sun
  Microsystems and Yakov Rekhter of IBM joined.















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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


Appendix C - Documents Referred to the IPng Working Groups

  [Deering94b] Deering, S., "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP) Spec.
     (128 bit ver)", Work in Progress.

  [Francis94] Francis, P., "SIPP Addressing Architecture", Work in
     Progress.

  [Rekhter94] Rekhter, Y., and T. Li, "An Architecture for IPv6 Unicast
     Address Allocation", Work in Progress.

  [Gillig94a] Gilligan, R., "Simple SIPP Transition (SST) Overview",
     Work in Progress.

  [Gillig94b] Gilligan, R., Govindan, R., Thomson, S., and J. Bound,
     "SIPP Program Interfaces for BSD Systems", Work in Progress.

  [Atkins94a] Atkinson, R., "SIPP Security Architecture", Work in
     Progress.

  [Atkins94b] Atkinson, R., "SIPP Authentication Header", Work in
     Progress.

  [Ford94b] Ford, P., Li, T., and Y. Rekhter, "SDRP Routing Header for
     SIPP-16", Work in Progress.

  [Hinden94c] Hinden, R., "IP Next Generation Overview", Work in
     Progress.

Appendix D - IPng Proposal Overviews

  [Ford94a] Ford, P., and M. Knopper, "TUBA as IPng: A White Paper",
     Work in Progress.

  [Hinden94a] Hinden, R., "Simple Internet Protocol Plus White Paper",
     RFC 1710, Sun Microsystems, October 1994.

  [McGovern94] McGovern, M., and R. Ullmann, "CATNIP: Common
     Architecture for the Internet", RFC 1707, Sunspot Graphics, Lotus
     Development Corp., October 1994.











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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


Appendix E - RFC 1550 White Papers

  [Adam94] Adamson, B., "Tactical Radio Frequency Communication
     Requirements for IPng", RFC 1677, NRL, August 1994.

  [Bello94a] Bellovin, S., "On Many Addresses per Host", RFC 1681, AT&T
     Bell Laboratories, August 1994.

  [Bello94b] Bellovin, S., "Security Concerns for IPng", RFC 1675, AT&T
     Bell Laboratories, August 1994.

  [Bound94] Bound, J., "IPng BSD Host Implementation Analysis", RFC
     1682, Digital Equipment Corporation, August 1994.

  [Brazd94] Brazdziunas, C., "IPng Support for ATM Services", RFC 1680,
     Bellcore, August 1994.

  [Britt94] Britton, E., and J. Tavs, "IPng Requirements of Large
     Corporate Networks", RFC 1678, IBM, August 1994.

  [Brownl94] Brownlee, J., "Accounting Requirements for IPng", RFC
     1672, University of Auckland, August 1994.

  [Carpen94a] Carpenter, B., "IPng White Paper on Transition and Other
     Considerations", RFC 1671, CERN, August 1994.

  [Chiappa94] Chiappa, N., "IPng Technical Requirements Of the Nimrod
     Routing and Addressing Architecture", RFC 1753, December 1994.

  [Clark94] Clark, R., Ammar, M., and K. Calvert, "Multiprotocol
     Interoperability In IPng", RFC 1683, Georgia Institute of
     Technology, August 1994.

  [Curran94] Curran, J., "Market Viability as a IPng Criteria", RFC
     1669, BBN, August 1994.

  [Estrin94a] Estrin, D., Li, T., and Y. Rekhter, "Unified Routing
     Requirements for IPng", RFC 1668, USC, cisco Systems, IBM, August
     1994.

  [Fleisch94] Fleischman, E., "A Large Corporate User's View of IPng",
     RFC 1687, Boeing Computer Services, August 1994.

  [Green94] Green, D., Irey, P., Marlow, D., and K. O'Donoghue, "HPN
     Working Group Input to the IPng Requirements Solicitation", RFC
     1679, NSWC-DD, August 1994.





Bradner & Mankin                                               [Page 47]

RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  [Ghisel94] Ghiselli, A., Salomoni, D., and C. Vistoli, "INFN
     Requirements for an IPng", RFC 1676, INFN/CNAF, August 1994.

  [Heager94] Heagerty, D., "Input to IPng Engineering Considerations",
     RFC 1670, CERN, August 1994.

  [Simpson94] Simpson, W. "IPng Mobility Considerations", RFC 1688,
     Daydreamer, August 1994.

  [Skelton94] Skelton, R., "Electric Power Research Institute Comments
     on IPng", RFC 1673, EPRI, August 1994.

  [Syming94] Symington, S., Wood, D., and J. Pullen, "Modeling and
     Simulation Requirements for IPng", RFC 1667, MITRE, George Mason
     University, August 1994.

  [Taylor94] Taylor, M., "A Cellular Industry View of IPng", RFC 1674,
     CDPD Consortium, August 1994.

  [Vecchi94] Vecchi, M., "IPng Requirements: A Cable Television
     Industry Viewpoint", RFC 1686, Time Warner Cable, August 1994.

Appendix F - Additional References

  [Almqu92] Almquist, P., "Minutes of the Selection Criteria BOF",
     Washington DC IETF, November 1992, (ietf/nov92/select-minutes-
     92nov.txt).

  [Berkow94] Berkowitz, H., "IPng and Related Plug-and-Play Issues and
     Requirements", Work in Progress, September 1994.

  [Bos94] Bos, E. J., "Minutes of the Address Lifetime Expectations BOF
     (ALE)", Seattle IETF, March 1994, (ietf/ale/ale-minutes-
     94mar.txt).

  [Big] Archives of the big-internet mailing list, on munnari.oz.au in
     big-internet/list-archives.

  [Bradner93] Bradner, S., and A. Mankin, "IP: Next Generation (IPng)
     White Paper Solicitation", RFC 1550, Harvard University, NRL,
     December 1993.

  [Callon87] Callon, R., "A Proposal for a Next Generation Internet
     Protocol", Proposal to X3S3, December 1987.

  [Callon92a] Callon, R., "CNAT", Work in Progress.

  [Callon92b] Callon, R., "Simple CLNP", Work in Progress.



Bradner & Mankin                                               [Page 48]

RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  [Callon92c] Callon, R., "TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA), A
     Simple Proposal for Internet Addressing and Routing", RFC 1347,
     DEC, June 1992.

  [Carpen93] Carpenter, B. and T. Dixon, "Minutes of the IPng Decision
     Process BOF (IPDECIDE)", /ietf/93jul/ipdecide-minutes-93jul.txt,
     August 1993.

  [Carpen94b] Carpenter, B, and J. Bound, "Recommendations for OSI NSAP
     usage in IPv6", Work in Progress.

  [Chiappa91]  Chiappa, J., "A New IP Routing and Addressing
     Architecture", Work in Progress.

  [Clark91] Clark, D., Chapin, L., Cerf, V., Braden, R., and R. Hobby,
     "Towards the Future Internet Architecture", RFC 1287, MIT, BBN,
     CNRI, ISI, UC Davis, December 1991.

  [Deering92] Deering, S., "The Simple Internet Protocol", Big-Internet
     mailing list, 22 Sept. 1992.

  [Deering94a] Deering, S., and P. Francis, Message to sipp mailing
     list, 31 May 1994.

  [Estrin94b] Estrin, D., Zappala, D., Li, T., Rekhter, Y., and K.
     Varadhan, "Source Demand Routing: Packet Format and Forwarding
     Specification (Version 1)" Work in Progress.

  [Fuller93] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J., and K. Varadhan, "Classless
     Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation
     Strategy", RFC 1519, BARRNet, cisco Systems, MERIT, OARnet,
     September 1993.

  [Gillig94c] Gilligan, B., "IPng Transition (ngtrans)", Work in
     Progress.

  [Gross92} Gross, P., and P. Almquist, "IESG Deliberations on Routing
     and Addressing", RFC 1380, ANS, Stanford University, November
     1992.

  [Gross94] Gross, P. "A Direction for IPng", RFC 1719, MCI, December
     1994.

  [Hinden92a] Hinden, R., "New Scheme for Internet Routing and
     Addressing (ENCAPS)", Work in Progress.

  [Hinden94b] Hinden, R., Deering, S., and P. Francis, "Simple Internet
     Protocol Plus", Working Group Charter, April 1994.



Bradner & Mankin                                               [Page 49]

RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  [Hinden92b] Hinden, R., and D. Crocker, "A Proposal for IP Address
     Encapsulation (IPAE): A Compatible version of IP with Large
     Addresses", Work in Progress.

  [Huston94] Huston, G., and A. Bansal, draft charter for the
     "Transition and Coexistence Including Testing (TACIT) Working
     Group, June 1994.

  [Huitema93] Huitema, C., "IAB Recommendations for an Intermediate
     Strategy to Address the Issue of Scaling", RFC 1481, INRIA, July
     1993.

  [Huitema94] Huitema, C., "The H ratio for address assignment
     efficiency", RFC 1715, INRIA, October 1994.

  [IAB92] Internet Architecture Board, "IP Version 7", Work in
     Progress.

  [IAB94] Braden, R., Clark, D., Crocker, S., and C. Huitema, "Report
     of IAB Workshop on Security in the Internet Architecture -
     February 8-10, 1994", RFC 1636, USC/Informaiton Sciences
     Institute, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, Trusted
     Information Systems, Inc., INRIA, IAB Chair, June 1994.

  [Kasten92] Kastenholz, F, and C. Partridge, "IPv7 Technical
     Criteria", Work in Progress.

  [Kasten94] Partridge, C., and F. Kastenholz, "Technical Criteria for
     Choosing IP: The Next Generation (IPng)", RFC 1726, BBN Systems
     and Technologies, FTP Software, December 1994.

  [Knopper94a] Knopper, M., and P. Ford, "TCP/UDP Over CLNP-Addressed
     Networks (TUBA)", Working Group Charter, January 1994.

  [Knopper94b] Knopper, M., and D. Piscitello, "Minutes of the BigTen
     IPng Retreat, May 19 & 20 1994".

  [Leiner93] Leiner, B., and Y. Rekhter, "The MultiProtocol Internet",
     RFC 1560, USRA, IBM, December 1993.

  [Mankin94] Mankin, A., and S. Bradner, message to big-internet, tuba,
     sipp, catnip and ietf mailing lists, 7 July 1994.

  [Mills84] Mills, D. "Exterior Gateway Protocol Formal Specification",
     RFC 904, UDEL, April 1984.

  [Mogul90] Mogul, J., and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery", RFC 1191,
     DECWRL, Stanford University, November 1990.



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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


  [Nat94] National Research Council, "Realizing the Information Future:
     The Internet and Beyond", National Academy Press, 1994.

  [Piscit94] Piscitello, D., "FTP Operation Over Big Address Records
     (FOOBAR)", RFC 1639, Core Competence, June 1994.

  [Provan91] Provan, D., "Transmitting IP Traffic over ARCNET
     Networks", RFC 1051, Novell, February 1991.

  [Postel94] Postel, J., Editor, "Internet Official Protocol
     Standards", RFC 1720, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November
     1994.

  [Solens93a] Solensky, F., and T. Li, "Charter for the Address
     Lifetime Expectations Working Group", FTP Software, Cisco Systems,
     November 1993.

  [Solens93b] Solensky, F., "Minutes of the Address Lifetime
     Expectations BOF (ALE)", Houston IETF, November 1993,
     (ietf/ale/ale-minutes-93nov.txt).

  [Solens94] Solensky, F., "Minutes of the Address Lifetime
     Expectations BOF (ALE)", Toronto IETF, July 1994, (ietf/ale/ale-
     minutes-94jul.txt).

  [Sukonnik94] Sukonnik, V., "Common Architecture for Next-Generation
     IP (catnip), Working Group Charter, April 1994.

  [Tsuchiya92] Tsuchiya, P., "The 'P' Internet Protocol", Work in
     Progress.

  [Ullmann93] Ullmann, R., "TP/IX: The Next Internet", RFC 1475,
     Process Software Corporation, June 1993.


















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RFC 1752                Recommendation for IPng             January 1995


Appendix G - Acknowledgments

  Reaching this stage of the recommendation would not have been even
  vaguely possible without the efforts of many people.  In particular,
  the work of IPng Directorate (listed in Appendix B), Frank Kastenholz
  and Craig Partridge (the authors of the Criteria document) along with
  Jon Crowcroft (who co-chaired the ngreq BOF) was critical.  The work
  and cooperation of the chairs, members and document authors of the
  three IPng proposal working groups, the ALE working group and the
  TACIT working group laid the groundwork upon which this
  recommendation sits.

  We would also like to thank the many people who took the time to
  respond to RFC1550 and who provided the broad understanding of the
  many requirements of data networking that any proposal for an IPng
  must address.

  The members of the IESG, the IAB, and the always active participants
  in the various mailing lists provided us with many insights into the
  issues we faced.

  Many other individuals gave us sometimes spirited but always useful
  counsel during this process.  They include (in no particular order)
  Radia Perlman, Noel Chiappa, Peter Ford, Dave Crocker, Tony Li, Dave
  Piscitello, Vint Cerf and Dan Lynch.

  Thanks to David Williams and Cheryl Chapman who took on the
  occasionally impossible task of ensuring that what is written here
  resembles English to some degree.

  To all of the many people mentioned above and those we have skipped
  in our forgetfulness, thank you for making this task doable.



















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