Network Working Group                                         J. Solomon
Request for Comments: 2290                                      Motorola
Updates: 2002                                                   S. Glass
Category: Standards Track                                   FTP Software
                                                          February 1998


            Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option for PPP IPCP

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  Mobile IP [RFC 2002] defines media-independent procedures by which a
  Mobile Node can maintain existing transport and application-layer
  connections despite changing its point-of-attachment to the Internet
  and without changing its IP address.  PPP [RFC 1661] provides a
  standard method for transporting multi-protocol packets over point-
  to-point links.  As currently specified, Mobile IP Foreign Agents
  which support Mobile Node connections via PPP can do so only by first
  assigning unique addresses to those Mobile Nodes, defeating one of
  the primary advantages of Foreign Agents.  This documents corrects
  this problem by defining the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option to the
  Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP) [RFC 1332].  Using this
  option, two peers can communicate their support for Mobile IP during
  the IPCP phase of PPP.  Familiarity with Mobile IP [RFC 2002], IPCP
  [RFC 1332], and PPP [RFC 1661] is assumed.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
      1.1. Specification Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
      1.2. Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
      1.3. Problem Statement  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
      1.4. Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
  2. Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
      2.1. Option Format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
      2.2. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7



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      2.3. High-Level Requirements for Non-Mobile-Nodes . . . . . .   7
      2.4. High-Level Requirements for Mobile Nodes . . . . . . . .   8
      2.5. Detailed Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
      2.6. Example Scenarios  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
  3. Additional Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
      3.1. Other IPCP Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
      3.2. Move Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
  4. Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
  5. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
  6. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
  7. Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
  8. Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17

1. Introduction

  Mobile IP [RFC 2002] defines protocols and procedures by which
  packets can be routed to a mobile node, regardless of its current
  point-of-attachment to the Internet, and without changing its IP
  address.  Mobile IP is designed to run over any type of media and any
  type of data link-layer.  However, the interaction between Mobile IP
  and PPP is currently underspecified and generally results in an
  inappropriate application of Mobile IP when mobile nodes connect to
  the Internet via PPP.

  This document defines proper interaction between a mobile node [RFC
  2002] and a peer through which the mobile node connects to the
  Internet using PPP.  This requires the definition of a new option for
  IPCP [RFC 1332], named the "Mobile-IPv4" Configuration Option, which
  is defined in this document.  The mobile node and the peer use this
  option to negotiate the appropriate use of Mobile IP over the PPP
  link.

  The Mobile-IPv4 option defined in this document is intended to work
  in conjunction with the existing IP-Address option [RFC 1332].

1.1. Specification Language

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.

1.2. Terminology

  This document uses the following terms as defined in [RFC 2002]:







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     Mobile Node

        A host or router that changes its point-of-attachment from one
        link to another.  A mobile node may change its location without
        changing its IP address; it may continue to communicate with
        other Internet nodes at any location using its (permanent)
        home, IP address, assuming link-layer connectivity is available
        at its current location.

     Home Agent

        A router with at least one interface on a mobile node's home
        link.  A home agent intercepts packets destined to a mobile
        node's home address and tunnels them to the mobile node's
        care-of address when the mobile node is connected to a foreign
        link.  A mobile node informs its home agent of its current
        care-of address through an authenticated registration protocol
        defined by Mobile IP.

     Foreign Agent

        A router with at least one interface on a mobile node's
        (current) foreign link.  When a mobile node uses a foreign
        agent's care-of address, the foreign agent detunnels and
        delivers packets to the mobile node that were tunneled by the
        mobile node's home agent.  A foreign agent might also serve as
        a default router for packets sent by a registered mobile node.

     Peer

        The PPP peer of a mobile node.  The mobile node's peer might
        support home agent functionality, foreign agent functionality,
        both, or neither.

1.3. Problem Statement

  In Mobile IP, packets sent to a mobile node's home address are routed
  first to the mobile node's home agent, a router on the mobile node's
  home link which intercepts packets sent to the home address.  The
  home agent then tunnels such packets to the mobile node's care-of
  address, where the packets are extracted from the tunnel and
  delivered to the mobile node.  There are two types of care-of
  addresses:








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  Co-located Care-of Address

     An address temporarily assigned to a mobile node itself.  In this
     case, the mobile node is the exit-point of the tunnel and
     decapsulates packets encapsulated for delivery by its home agent.
     A Co-located Care-of Address may be used by exactly one mobile
     node at any point in time.

  Foreign Agent Care-of Address

     An address of a foreign agent that has at least one interface on a
     mobile node's visited, foreign link.  In this case, the foreign
     agent decapsulates packets that have been tunneled by the home
     agent and delivers them to the mobile node over the visited link.
     A Foreign Agent Care-of Address may be used simultaneously by many
     mobile nodes at any point in time.

  In Appendix B, Mobile IP [RFC 2002] currently specifies only the
  following with respect to PPP:

     "The Point-to-Point-Protocol (PPP) [RFC 1661] and its Internet
     Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP) [RFC 1332], negotiates [sic] the
     use of IP addresses.

     "The mobile node SHOULD first attempt to specify its home address,
     so that if the mobile node is attaching to its home [link], the
     unrouted link will function correctly.  When the home address is
     not accepted by the peer, but a transient IP address is
     dynamically assigned to the mobile node, and the mobile node is
     capable of supporting a co-located care-of address, the mobile
     node MAY register that address as a co-located care-of address.
     When the peer specifies its own IP address, that address MUST NOT
     be assumed to be a foreign agent care-of address or the IP address
     of a home agent."

  Inspection of this text reveals that there is currently no way for
  the mobile node to use a foreign agent care-of address, without first
  being assigned a unique IP address, even if the peer also supports
  foreign agent functionality.  The reason for this can be seen by
  walking through the IPCP negotiation:

   1. A mobile node connects to a peer via PPP and proposes its home
      address in an IPCP Configure-Request containing the IP-Address
      option.  In this scenario, we assume that the mobile node is
      connecting to some foreign link.






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   2. The peer has no way of knowing whether this Configure-Request was
      received from: (a) a mobile node proposing its home address; or
      (b) a conventional node proposing some topologically non-routable
      address.  In this case, the peer must (conservatively) send a
      Configure-Nak of the IP-Address option supplying a topologically
      appropriate address for use by the node at the other end of the
      PPP link.

   3. The mobile node, in turn, has no way of knowing whether this
      Configure-Nak was received because the peer is a foreign agent
      being conservative, or because the peer does not implement Mobile
      IP at all.  Therefore, the mobile node must (conservatively)
      assume that the peer does not implement Mobile IP and continue
      the negotiation of an IP address in IPCP, after which point the
      mobile node can use the assigned address as a co-located care-of
      address.

  Here we observe that, even if the mobile node's peer is a foreign
  agent and sends an Agent Advertisement to the mobile node after IPCP
  reaches the Opened state, the mobile node will still have negotiated
  a routable address in step 3, which it is likely already using as a
  co-located care-of address.  This defeats the purpose of foreign
  agent care-of addresses, which are designed to be shared by multiple
  mobile nodes and to eliminate the need to assign a unique address to
  each mobile node.

1.4. Requirements

  The purpose of this document is to specify the behavior of both ends
  of the PPP link when one or more of the PPP peers supports Mobile IP.
  Specifically, the design of the option and protocol defined in this
  document is based upon the following requirements:

   1. The option and protocol described in this document must be
      backwards compatible with conventional nodes and their potential
      peers which do not implement this option nor any Mobile IP
      functionality.

   2. The option and protocol described in this document must
      accommodate a variety of scenarios, minimally those provided in
      the examples of Section 2.6.

   3. The option and protocol described in this document must not
      duplicate any functionality already defined in other IPCP
      options; specifically, the IP-Address option.






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   4. A unique address must not be assigned to a mobile node unless
      absolutely necessary.  Specifically, no such address is assigned
      to a mobile node that connects via PPP to its home link or a
      mobile node that connects via PPP to a foreign agent (and uses
      that foreign agent's care-of address).

2. Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option

  This section defines the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option and
  provides several examples of its use.

2.1. Option Format

  The Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option for IPCP is defined as follows:

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |    Length     |         Mobile Node's ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
        ...  Home Address         |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

      Type

     4 (Mobile-IPv4)

  Length

     6 (The length of this entire extension in bytes)

  Mobile Node's Home Address

     In a Configure-Request, the IP home address of the mobile node
     sending this Configuration Option, otherwise the (unmodified) IP
     home address of the mobile node when sent in a Configure-Ack or
     Configure-Reject. Configure-Nak'ing this option is undefined and
     MUST NOT be sent by implementations complying with this version of
     the specification.  This field MUST NOT be zero.

  Default Value

     The Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option defaults to the sending
     mobile node's home address.

  In describing the operation of the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option
  (in conjunction with the IP-Address Configuration Option), we use the
  following abbreviations:



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     PPP Message Types:
         Request = Configure-Request
          Reject = Configure-Reject
             Ack = Configure-Ack
             Nak = Configure-Nak

     IPCP Configuration Options:
           MIPv4 = Mobile-IPv4
              IP = IP-Address

     IP addresses:
         a.b.c.d = some non-zero IP address
         w.x.y.z = some non-zero IP address other than a.b.c.d
            home = a mobile node's IP Home address
             coa = an IP Care-Of Address
               0 = the all-zeroes IP address (0.0.0.0)

2.2. Overview

  The Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option is designed to be used in
  conjunction with the IP-Address Configuration Option.  For the
  convenience of implementors, the detailed description in section 2.5
  includes all possible combinations of these two options that might be
  sent by a PPP peer during IPCP.  Along with each possibility is a
  description of how the receiver should interpret the contents as well
  as a suggested course of action.

2.3. High-Level Requirements for Non-Mobile-Nodes

  A node that is not performing mobile node functionality (such as
  non-Mobile-IP-aware nodes as well as nodes performing only home agent
  functionality, foreign agent functionality, or both) MUST NOT include
  a Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option within any Configure-Request
  message.  As per [RFC 1332], such a node SHOULD send a Configure-
  Request containing an IP-Address Configuration Option in which the
  IP-Address field is set to a non-zero IP address that the node has
  assigned to one of its interfaces.  If an explicit IP address has
  been assigned to the node's PPP interface then this address SHOULD be
  sent in preference to any of the node's other addresses.

  A node MUST NOT send a Configure-Nak containing a Mobile-IPv4
  Configuration Option.  Doing so is currently "undefined" and might
  cause interoperability problems when a useful meaning for Configure-
  Nak is ultimately defined for the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option.
  A node that sends a Configure-Ack containing a Mobile-IPv4
  Configuration Option SHOULD send an Agent Advertisement [RFC 2002]
  immediately upon IPCP for that link entering the Opened state.




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2.4. High-Level Requirements for Mobile Nodes

  A mobile node SHOULD begin its IPCP negotiation by sending the
  Configure-Request described in either item #1 or item #4 in Section
  2.5.  The mobile node MAY begin its negotiation with one of the other
  numbered items in Section 2.5 under extenuating circumstances.

  A mobile node that receives a Configure-Ack containing a Mobile-IPv4
  Configuration Option MUST receive an Agent Advertisement, possibly in
  response to an Agent Solicitation, before sending a Registration
  Request [RFC 2002] if that mobile node is connecting to a foreign
  link.  This is because the peer might be a foreign agent that
  enforces a policy which requires a mobile node to register with that
  foreign agent even if the mobile node is using a co-located care-of
  address.  A mobile node need not wait for such an advertisement if it
  connects to its home link.  See item 7a in section 2.5 for one way in
  which a mobile node can determine if it has connected to its home
  link.  Another way is by receiving an explicit notification of this
  fact from its peer, such as receipt of the messages in items 1b, 2c,
  and 3a in section 2.5.

  A mobile node that receives a Configure-Reject containing a Mobile-
  IPv4 Configuration Option SHOULD fall back to IPCP negotiation using
  the IP-Address option [RFC 1332].  A mobile node SHOULD begin this
  negotiation with Request(IP=home) or Request(IP=0), depending on
  whether or not the mobile node is connecting to its home link,
  respectively.  A mobile node MAY make this determination by
  inspection of an IP-Address option contained within a Configure-
  Request sent by its peer.  If the prefix of the peer's stated IP-
  address is equal to the prefix of the mobile node's home address,
  then the mobile node MAY conclude that it is connecting to its home
  link.  Otherwise, if the mobile node is connecting to a foreign link,
  then the mobile node SHOULD send Request(IP=0) since its peer might
  have no means for assigning addresses other than IPCP.  This
  specification therefore updates this behavior as described in [RFC
  2002], the latter of which recommends that a mobile node begin IP-
  Address negotiation with Request(IP=Home) under all circumstances.

  A peer that is performing neither home agent nor foreign agent
  functionality SHOULD send a Reject in response to any Request
  received from its peer that contains a Mobile-IPv4 Configuration
  Option.

2.5. Detailed Description

  The numbered items below show all possible combinations of Mobile-
  IPv4 and IP-Address Configuration Options that a mobile node (or a
  conventional node) might send to its peer.  Mobile nodes SHOULD begin



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  their IPCP negotiation with item #1 or item #4 depending on whether
  they prefer a co-located or a foreign agent care-of address
  respectively.  The lettered items list the possible legal responses
  that a peer might send to the mobile node (or conventional node) in
  response to the numbered Request.

  In each case, an interpretation is defined and a suggested course of
  action is provided.  Finally, it is believed that the presentation
  below has the advantages of conciseness and precision in comparison
  to an equivalent presentation in "prose form."

   1. Request(IP=0,MIPv4=home) means "I prefer a co-located care-of
      address to a foreign agent care-of address."  Peer MUST respond
      with one of the following:

       a. Nak(IP=coa) means "use coa as your co-located care-of
          address".  Goto 2.
       b. Nak(IP=home) means "you're at home and don't need a care-of
          address".  Goto 3.
       c. Reject(IP=0) means "I cannot assign a co-located care-of
          address but you're welcome to use me as a foreign agent".
          Goto 4.
       d. Reject(MIPv4=home) means "I do not implement the Mobile-IPv4
          option".  If the peer also sent Request(IP=address) and the
          prefix of the peer's assigned address is equal to that of the
          mobile node's home address, then goto 6 with a.b.c.d=home;
          otherwise, goto 5.
       e. Reject(IP=0,MIPv4=home) means "use the default".  Goto 7.

       => Ack(IP=0, ...), Nak(MIPv4=any, ...) MUST NOT be sent.

   2. Request(IP=coa,MIPv4=home) means "I want to use coa as my co-
      located care-of address."  Peer MUST respond with one of the
      following:

       a. Ack(IP=coa,MIPv4=home) means "ok, use coa as your co-located
          care-of address; be sure to wait for an advertisement."
          Opened.
       b. Nak(IP=alternate-coa) means "no, use alternate-coa as your
          co-located care-of address".  Goto 2.
       c. Nak(IP=home) means "you're at home and don't need a co-
          located care-of address".  Goto 3.
       d. Reject(IP=coa) means "coa is not a useful value for a co-
          located care-of address on this link and I cannot assign a
          useful one (or I will not negotiate the IP-Address option) --
          you may use me as a foreign agent".  Goto 4.





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       e. Reject(MIPv4=home) means "I do not implement the Mobile-IPv4
          option".  If the peer also sent Request(IP=address) and the
          prefix of the peer's address is equal to that of the mobile
          node's home address, then goto 6 with a.b.c.d=home;
          otherwise, goto 5.
       f. Reject(IP=coa,MIPv4=home) means "use the default".  Goto 7.

       => Nak(MIPv4=any, ...) MUST NOT be sent.

   3. Request(IP=home,MIPv4=home) means "I think I'm at home but if I'm
      wrong then I prefer a co-located care-of address to a foreign
      agent care-of address."  Peer MUST respond with one of the
      following:

       a. Ack(IP=home,MIPv4=home) means "yes, you're at home".  Opened.
       b. Nak(IP=coa) means "you're not at home, use coa as your co-
          located care-of address".  Goto 2.
       c. Reject(IP=home) means "you're not at home and I cannot assign
          a co-located care-of address (or I will not negotiate the
          IP-Address option) -- you may use me as a foreign agent".
          Goto 4.
       d. Reject(MIPv4=home) means "I do not implement the Mobile-IPv4
          option".  If the peer also sent Request(IP=address) and the
          prefix of the peer's address is equal to that of the mobile
          node's home address, then goto 6 with a.b.c.d=home;
          otherwise, goto 5.
       e. Reject(IP=home,MIPv4=home) means "use the default".  Goto 7.

       => Nak(MIPv4=any, ...) MUST NOT be sent.

   4. Request(MIPv4=home) means "I want to run Mobile IP over this link
      and I don't want a co-located care-of address." Peer MUST respond
      with one of the following:

       a. Ack(MIPv4=home) means "ok, wait for an advertisement to
          figure out where you are."  Opened.
       b. Reject(MIPv4=home) means "I do not implement the Mobile-IPv4
          option".  If the peer also sent Request(IP=address) and the
          prefix of the peer's address is equal to that of the mobile
          node's home address, then goto 6 with a.b.c.d=home;
          otherwise, goto 5.

       => Nak(MIPv4=any, ...) MUST NOT be sent.

   5. Request(IP=0) means "Please assign an address/co-located-care-
      of-address".  Peer MUST respond with one of the following:





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       a. Nak(IP=a.b.c.d) means "use a.b.c.d as your address/co-
          located-care-of-address".  Goto 6.
       b. Reject(IP=0) means "I cannot assign an address (for the
          Mobile Node to use as a co-located-care-of-address), or I do
          not implement the IP-Address option".  Goto 7.

       => Ack(IP=0) MUST NOT be sent and historically means "I don't
          know your address either".  Opened.  An implementation MUST
          NOT use 0 as its IP address upon receiving Ack(IP=0) but MAY
          use some other, non-zero, interface address for packets sent
          on its PPP interface.

   6. Request(IP=a.b.c.d) means "I want to use a.b.c.d as my
      address/home-address/co-located-care-of-address".  Peer MUST
      respond with one of the following:

       a. Ack(IP=a.b.c.d) means "ok, a.b.c.d is your address/home-
          address/co-located-care-of-address".  Opened.
       b. Nak(IP=w.x.y.z) means "no, use w.x.y.z as your address/home-
          address/co-located-care-of-address".  Goto 6.
       c. Reject(IP=a.b.c.d) means "a.b.c.d is a bad address to use,
          but I cannot give you a good one" or "I do not implement the
          IP-Address option".  Goto 7.

   7. Request() means "I want to use the default".  Peer MUST respond
      with one of the following:

       a. Ack() means "ok, use the default".  Opened.

          In this case the mobile node will use the "default" values of
          the IP-Address option (no address configured by IPCP) and the
          Mobile-IPv4 option (the mobile node's IP home address).  The
          mobile node SHOULD send Agent Solicitations to see if there
          are any agents present on the current link. (Note that the
          current "link" might also include a shared medium if the
          mobile node's PPP peer is a bridge.)  If an agent is present
          and the mobile node receives an Agent Advertisement, then the
          mobile node employs its move-detection algorithm(s) and
          registers accordingly.

          In any case, if the mobile node's peer supplied an IP-Address
          option containing a non-zero value within an IPCP Configure-
          Request, the mobile node MAY use this address to determine
          whether or not it is connected to its home link.  This can be
          accomplished by comparing the stated IP address with the
          mobile node's home address under the prefix-length associated
          with the home link.  If the mobile node is connected to its
          home link then it SHOULD de-register with its home agent.



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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


          Otherwise, the mobile node MAY attempt to obtain a
          topologically routable address through any of its supported
          means (e.g., DHCP, manual configuration, etc.)  for use as a
          co-located care-of address.  If the mobile node is successful
          in obtaining such an address then it SHOULD register this
          address with its home agent.

       => Nak(IP=0) MUST NOT be sent.  Goto 6.

       => Nak() MUST NOT be sent.

       => Reject() MUST NOT be sent.

2.6. Example Scenarios

  This section illustrates the use of the option and protocol as
  defined in the previous sections.  In the examples which follow, a
  Configure-Request sent by a mobile node and the response generated by
  the peer are shown on the same line.  The number and letter to the
  left of each request/response refer to the numbered and lettered
  items in Section 2.5.

   A. A mobile node prefers a co-located care-of address and the peer
      is a foreign agent that is capable of assigning such an address:

      (1)(a) Request(IP=0,MIPv4=Home) / Nak(IP=coa)
      (2)(a) Request(IP=coa,MIPv4=Home) / Ack(IP=coa,MIPv4=Home)

        - Mobile node waits to receive an Agent Advertisement.
        - If (Advertisement has R-bit set) then
            Mobile node registers using co-located care-of address via
            the foreign agent;
          else
            Mobile node registers using co-located care-of address
            directly with its home agent.

   B. A mobile node prefers a co-located care-of address and the peer
      is a foreign agent that cannot assign a co-located care-of
      address (e.g., it has no pool of addresses from which to allocate
      for the purpose of assignment):

      (1)(c) Request(IP=0,MIPv4=Home) / Reject(IP=0)
      (4)(a) Request(MIPv4=Home) / Ack(MIPv4=Home)

        - IPCP completes.
        - Mobile node waits to receive an Agent Advertisement.
        - Mobile node registers using the peer's foreign agent care-of
          address with its home agent.



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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


   C. A mobile node prefers a co-located care-of address and the peer
      determines that the mobile node's home address is such that the
      mobile node is connecting to its home link:

      (1)(b) Request(IP=0,MIPv4=Home) / Nak(IP=Home)
      (3)(a) Request(IP=Home,MIPv4=Home) / Ack(IP=Home,MIPv4=Home)

        - IPCP completes.
        - Mobile node de-registers with its home agent.

   D. A mobile node prefers a foreign agent care-of address and the
      peer is a foreign agent which finds this state of affairs
      satisfactory:

      (4)(a) Request(MIPv4=Home) / Ack(MIPv4=Home)

        - IPCP completes.
        - Mobile node waits to receive an Agent Advertisement.
        - Mobile node registers using the peer's foreign agent care-of
          or de-registers at home, depending on the values in the Agent
          Advertisement.

   E. A mobile node prefers a co-located care-of address and the peer
      does not implement the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option.  The
      peer is, however, capable of assigning dynamic addresses:

      (1)(d) Request(IP=0,MIPv4=Home) / Reject(MIPv4=Home)
      (5)(a) Request(IP=0) / Nak(IP=a.b.c.d)
      (6)(a) Request(IP=a.b.c.d) / Ack(IP=a.b.c.d)

        - IPCP completes.
        - Mobile node registers using a.b.c.d as a co-located care-of
          address with its home agent.

   F. A mobile node prefers a co-located care-of address and the peer
      does not implement the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option. The peer
      is not capable of assigning dynamic addresses:

      (1)(e) Request(IP=0,MIPv4=Home) / Reject(IP=0,MIPv4=Home)
      (7)(a) Request() / Ack()

        - IPCP completes.
        - Mobile node sends an Agent Solicitation and/or attempts to
          obtain a co-located care-of address via means outside IPCP
          (e.g., DHCP or manual configuration), or it gives up.






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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


3. Additional Requirements

3.1. Other IPCP Options

  A mobile node MUST NOT include the deprecated IP-Addresses option in
  any Configure-Request that contains a Mobile-IPv4 option, an IP-
  Address option, or both.

  Conversely, the mobile node MAY include an IP-Compression-Protocol
  option and any other options that do not involve the negotiation of
  IP addresses.

  If a mobile node and a foreign agent or a home agent agree in IPCP to
  use Van Jacobson Header Compression [RFC 1144], then the mobile node
  MUST NOT set the 'V' bit in its ensuing Mobile IP Registration
  Request [RFC 2002].  If the PPP peer entities are utilizing VJ header
  compression there is no gain for the mobile ip entities to do so, and
  requesting this option is likely to cause confusion.

3.2. Move Detection

  Mobile nodes that connect via PPP MUST correctly implement PPP's
  IPCP, since movement by the mobile node will likely change its PPP
  peer.  Specifically, mobile nodes MUST be prepared to renegotiate
  IPCP at any time, including, the renegotiation of the IP-Address
  Configuration Option and the Mobile-IPv4 Configuration Option
  described in this document.  As per [RFC 1661], a mobile node in the
  Opened state MUST renegotiate IPCP upon receiving an IPCP Configure-
  Request from its peer.

  Also note that certain wireless links can employ handoff and proxying
  mechanisms that would not necessarily require bringing down a PPP
  link but would indeed require a mobile node to register with a new
  foreign agent.  Therefore, mobile nodes which connect to an agent via
  PPP MUST employ their move detection algorithms (see section 2.4.2 in
  [RFC 2002]) and register whenever they detect a change in
  connectivity.

  Specifically, a mobile node that fails to receive an Agent
  Advertisement within the Lifetime advertised by its current foreign
  agent, MUST assume that it has lost contact with that foreign agent
  (see Section 2.4.2.1, [RFC 2002]).  If, in the mean time, the mobile
  node has received Agent Advertisements from another foreign agent,
  the mobile node SHOULD immediately register with that foreign agent
  upon timing out with its current foreign agent.






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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


  Likewise, a mobile node that implements move detection based upon the
  Prefix-Length Extension MUST compare the prefix of any advertising
  agents with that of its current foreign agent (see Section 2.4.2.2,
  [RFC 2002]).  If such a mobile node receives an Agent Advertisement
  from a foreign agent specifying a different prefix than that of its
  current foreign agent, then the mobile node that employs this method
  of move detection MUST register with that new foreign agent.

  A mobile node MAY treat PPP link-establishment as a sufficient reason
  to proceed with a new Mobile IP registration.  Section 2 defines the
  circumstances under which mobile nodes MUST wait for an Agent
  Advertisement before registering.  Accordingly, foreign agents and
  home agents SHOULD send an Agent Advertisement over a PPP link
  immediately after IPCP for that link enters the Opened state.

4. Security Considerations

  This document introduces no known security threats over and above
  those facing any node on the Internet that either connects via PPP or
  implements Mobile IP or both.  Specifically, service providers should
  use cryptographically strong authentication (e.g., CHAP [RFC 1994])
  to prevent theft-of-service.  Additionally, users requiring
  confidentiality should use PPP link encryption [RFC 1968], IP-layer
  encryption [RFC 1827], or application-layer encryption, depending
  upon their individual requirements.  Finally, Mobile IP
  authentication [RFC 2002] protects against trivial denial-of-service
  attacks that could otherwise be waged against a mobile node and its
  home agent.

5. References

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

  [RFC 1144] Jacobson, V., "Compressing TCP/IP Headers for Low-Speed
     Serial Links", RFC 1144, January 1990.

  [RFC 1332] McGregor, G., "The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol
     (IPCP)," RFC 1332, May 1992.

  [RFC 1661] Simpson, W., Editor, "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
     for the Transmission of Multi-protocol Datagrams over Point-to-
     Point Links", STD 51, RFC 1661, July 1994.

  [RFC 1827] Atkinson, R., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
     RFC 1827, August 1995.





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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


  [RFC 1994] Simpson, W., "PPP Challenge Handshake Authentication
     Protocol (CHAP)", RFC 1994, August 1996.

  [RFC 1968] Meyer, G., "The PPP Encryption Control Protocol (ECP)",
     RFC 1968, June 1996.

  [RFC 2002] Perkins, C., Editor, "IP Mobility Support", RFC 2002,
     October 1996.

6. Acknowledgments

  The design of this protocol and option were inspired by an earlier
  submission by B. Patel and C. Perkins, then of IBM, in a now expired
  internet draft.  Also, some of William Simpson's text was copied
  verbatim from [RFC 1661] in order to ensure consistency of
  terminology and specification.  The same goes for some of Charlie
  Perkins' definitions, and other relavent text, from [RFC 2002].

  Tim Wilson and Chris Stanaway (Motorola) contributed significantly to
  the design of this Configuration Option and protocol specification.
  Special thanks to Vernon Schryver (SGI), Craig Fox (Cisco), Karl Fox
  (Ascend), and John Bray (FTP) for their helpful suggestions,
  comments, and patience.

7. Authors' Addresses

  Jim Solomon
  Motorola, Inc.
  1301 E. Algonquin Rd. - Rm 2240
  Schaumburg, IL  60196

  Phone:  +1-847-576-2753
  Fax:    +1-847-576-3240
  EMail:  [email protected]


  Steven Glass
  FTP Software, Inc.
  2 High Street
  North Andover, MA  01845

  Phone:  +1-508-685-4000
  Fax:    +1-508-684-6105
  EMail:  [email protected]







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RFC 2290            Mobile-IPv4 Option for PPP IPCP        February 1998


8.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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