Network Working Group                              G. Montenegro, Editor
Request for Comments: 2344                        Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                       May 1998


                   Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP

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 uses tunneling from the home agent to the mobile node's
  care-of address, but rarely in the reverse direction.  Usually, a
  mobile node sends its packets through a router on the foreign
  network, and assumes that routing is independent of source address.
  When this assumption is not true, it is convenient to establish a
  topologically correct reverse tunnel from the care-of address to the
  home agent.

  This document proposes backwards-compatible extensions to Mobile IP
  in order to support topologically correct reverse tunnels.  This
  document does not attempt to solve the problems posed by firewalls
  located between the home agent and the mobile node's care-of address.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ................................................   2
  1.1. Terminology ...............................................   3
  1.2. Assumptions ...............................................   4
  1.3. Justification .............................................   4
  2. Overview ....................................................   4
  3. New Packet Formats ..........................................   5
  3.1. Mobility Agent Advertisement Extension ....................   5
  3.2. Registration Request ......................................   5
  3.3. Encapsulating Delivery Style Extension ....................   6
  3.4. New Registration Reply Codes ..............................   7
  4. Changes in Protocol Behavior ................................   8
  4.1. Mobile Node Considerations ................................   8



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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


  4.1.1. Sending Registration Requests to the Foreign Agent ......   8
  4.1.2. Receiving Registration Replies from the Foreign Agent ...   9
  4.2. Foreign Agent Considerations ..............................   9
  4.2.1. Receiving Registration Requests from the Mobile Node ...   10
  4.2.2. Relaying Registration Requests to the Home Agent .......   10
  4.3. Home Agent Considerations ................................   10
  4.3.1. Receiving Registration Requests from the Foreign Agent .   11
  4.3.2. Sending Registration Replies to the Foreign Agent ......   11
  5. Mobile Node to Foreign Agent Delivery Styles ...............   12
  5.1. Direct Delivery Style ....................................   12
  5.1.1. Packet Processing ......................................   12
  5.1.2. Packet Header Format and Fields ........................   12
  5.2. Encapsulating Delivery Style .............................   13
  5.2.1 Packet Processing .......................................   13
  5.2.2. Packet Header Format and Fields ........................   14
  5.3. Support for Broadcast and Multicast Datagrams ............   15
  5.4. Selective Reverse Tunneling ..............................   15
  6. Security Considerations ....................................   16
  6.1. Reverse-tunnel Hijacking and Denial-of-Service Attacks ...   16
  6.2. Ingress Filtering ........................................   17
  7. Acknowledgements ...........................................   17
  References ....................................................   17
  Editor and Chair Addresses ....................................   18
  Full Copyright Statement ......................................   19

1. Introduction

  Section 1.3 of the Mobile IP specification [1] lists the following
  assumption:

     It is assumed that IP unicast datagrams are routed based on the
     destination address in the datagram header (i.e., not by source
     address).

  Because of security concerns (for example, IP spoofing attacks), and
  in accordance with RFC 2267 [8] and CERT [3] advisories to this
  effect, routers that break this assumption are increasingly more
  common.

  In the presence of such routers, the source and destination IP
  address in a packet must be topologically correct. The forward tunnel
  complies with this, as its endpoints (home agent address and care-of
  address) are properly assigned addresses for their respective
  locations. On the other hand, the source IP address of a packet
  transmitted by the mobile node does not correspond to the network
  prefix from where it emanates.

  This document discusses topologically correct reverse tunnels.



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  Mobile IP does dictate the use of reverse tunnels in the context of
  multicast datagram routing and mobile routers. However, the source IP
  address is set to the mobile node's home address, so these tunnels
  are not topologically correct.

  Notice that there are several uses for reverse tunnels regardless of
  their topological correctness:

     - Mobile routers: reverse tunnels obviate the need for recursive
       tunneling [1].

     - Multicast: reverse tunnels enable a mobile node away from home
       to (1) join multicast groups in its home network, and (2)
       transmit multicast packets such that they emanate from its home
       network [1].

     - The TTL of packets sent by the mobile node (for example, when
       sending packets to other hosts in its home network) may be so
       low that they might expire before reaching their destination.  A
       reverse tunnel solves the problem as it represents a TTL
       decrement of one [5].

1.1. Terminology

  The discussion below uses terms defined in the Mobile IP
  specification.  Additionally, it uses the following terms:

     Forward Tunnel

        A tunnel that shuttles packets towards the mobile node. It
        starts at the home agent, and ends at the mobile node's care-of
        address.

     Reverse Tunnel

        A tunnel that starts at the mobile node's care-of address and
        terminates at the home agent.

  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 [9].










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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


1.2. Assumptions

  Mobility is constrained to a common IP address space (that is, the
  routing fabric between, say, the mobile node and the home agent is
  not partitioned into a "private" and a "public" network).

  This document does not attempt to solve the firewall traversal
  problem. Rather, it assumes one of the following is true:

     - There are no intervening firewalls along the path of the
       tunneled packets.

     - Any intervening firewalls share the security association
       necessary to process any authentication [6] or encryption [7]
       headers which may have been added to the tunneled packets.

  The reverse tunnels considered here are symmetric, that is, they use
  the same configuration (encapsulation method, IP address endpoints)
  as the forward tunnel. IP in IP encapsulation [2] is assumed unless
  stated otherwise.

  Route optimization [4] introduces forward tunnels initiated at a
  correspondent host.  Since a mobile node may not know if the
  correspondent host can decapsulate packets, reverse tunnels in that
  context are not discussed here.

1.3. Justification

  Why not let the mobile node itself initiate the tunnel to the home
  agent?  This is indeed what it should do if it is already operating
  with a topologically correct co-located care-of address.

  However, one of the primary objectives of the Mobile IP specification
  is not to require this mode of operation.

  The mechanisms outlined in this document are primarily intended for
  use by mobile nodes that rely on the foreign agent for forward tunnel
  support. It is desirable to continue supporting these mobile nodes,
  even in the presence of filtering routers.

2. Overview

  A mobile node arrives at a foreign network, listens for agent
  advertisements and selects a foreign agent that supports reverse
  tunnels.  It requests this service when it registers through the
  selected foreign agent.  At this time, and depending on how the





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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


  mobile node wishes to deliver packets to the foreign agent, it also
  requests either the Direct or the Encapsulating Delivery Style
  (section 5).

  In the Direct Delivery Style, the mobile node designates the foreign
  agent as its default router and proceeds to send packets directly to
  the foreign agent, that is, without encapsulation.  The foreign agent
  intercepts them, and tunnels them to the home agent.

  In the Encapsulating Delivery Style, the mobile node encapsulates all
  its outgoing packets to the foreign agent.  The foreign agent
  decapsulates and re-tunnels them to the home agent, using the foreign
  agent's care-of address as the entry-point of this new tunnel.

3. New Packet Formats

3.1. Mobility Agent Advertisement Extension

   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     |        Sequence Number        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |           Lifetime            |R|B|H|F|M|G|V|T|  reserved     |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                  zero or more Care-of Addresses               |
  |                              ...                              |

  The only change to the Mobility Agent Advertisement Extension [1] is
  the additional 'T' bit:

     T        Agent offers reverse tunneling service.

  A foreign agent that sets the 'T' bit MUST support the two delivery
  styles currently supported: Direct and Encapsulating Delivery Style
  (section 5).

  Using this information, a mobile node is able to choose a foreign
  agent that supports reverse tunnels. Notice that if a mobile node
  does not understand this bit, it simply ignores it as per [1].

3.2. Registration Request

  Reverse tunneling support is added directly into the Registration
  Request by using one of the "rsvd" bits.  If a foreign or home agent
  that does not support reverse tunnels receives a request with the 'T'
  bit set, the Registration Request fails. This results in a
  registration denial (failure codes are specified in section 3.4).



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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


  Most home agents would not object to providing reverse tunnel
  support, because they "SHOULD be able to decapsulate and further
  deliver packets addressed to themselves, sent by a mobile node" [1].
  In the case of topologically correct reverse tunnels, the packets are
  not sent by the mobile node as distinguished by its home address.
  Rather, the outermost (encapsulating) IP source address on such
  datagrams is the care-of address of the mobile node.  Nevertheless,
  home agents  probably already support the required decapsulation and
  further forwarding.

  In Registration Requests sent by a mobile node, the Time to Live
  field in the IP header MUST be set to 255.  This limits a denial of
  service attack in which malicious hosts send false Registration
  Requests (see Section 6).

   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      |S|B|D|M|G|V|T|-|          Lifetime             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Home Address                         |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                           Home Agent                          |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Care-of Address                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                         Identification                        |
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  | Extensions ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  The only change to the Registration Request packet is the additional
  'T' bit:

     T        If the 'T' bit is set, the mobile node asks its home
              agent to accept a reverse tunnel from the care-of
              address. Mobile nodes using a foreign agent care-of
              address ask the foreign agent to reverse-tunnel its
              packets.

3.3. Encapsulating Delivery Style Extension

  The Encapsulating Delivery Style Extension MAY be included by the
  mobile node in registration requests to further specify reverse
  tunneling behavior. It is expected to be used only by the foreign
  agent.  Accordingly, the foreign agent MUST consume this extension
  (that is, it must not relay it to the home agent or include it in



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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


  replies to the mobile node).  As per Section 3.6.1.3 of [1], the
  mobile node MUST include the Encapsulating Delivery Style Extension
  after the Mobile-Home Authentication Extension, and before the
  Mobile-Foreign Authentication Extension, if present.

  The Encapsulating Delivery Style Extension MUST NOT be included if
  the 'T' bit is not set in the Registration Request.

  If this extension is absent, Direct Delivery is assumed.
  Encapsulation is done according to what was negotiated for the
  forward tunnel (that is, IP in IP is assumed unless specified
  otherwise). For more details on the delivery styles, please refer to
  section 5.

   0                   1
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |     Length    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     Type

       130

     Length

       0

3.4. New Registration Reply Codes

  Foreign and home agent registration replies MUST convey if the
  reverse tunnel request failed.  These new reply codes are defined:

     Service denied by the foreign agent:

     74 requested reverse tunnel unavailable
     75 reverse tunnel is mandatory and 'T' bit not set
     76 mobile node too distant

  and

     Service denied by the home agent:

     137 requested reverse tunnel unavailable
     138 reverse tunnel is mandatory and 'T' bit not set
     139 requested encapsulation unavailable





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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


  In response to a Registration Request with the 'T' bit set, mobile
  nodes may receive (and MUST accept) code 70 (poorly formed request)
  from foreign agents and code 134 (poorly formed request) from home
  agents. However, foreign and home agents that support reverse
  tunneling MUST use codes 74 and 137, respectively.

  Absence of the 'T' bit in a Registration Request MAY elicit denials
  with codes 75 and 138 at the foreign agent and the home agent,
  respectively.

  Forward and reverse tunnels are symmetric, that is, both are able to
  use the same tunneling options negotiated at registration.  This
  implies that the home agent MUST deny registrations if an unsupported
  form of tunneling is requested (code 139).  Notice that Mobile IP [1]
  already defines the analogous failure code 72 for use by the foreign
  agent.

4. Changes in Protocol Behavior

  Unless otherwise specified, behavior specified by Mobile IP [1] is
  assumed. In particular, if any two entities share a mobility security
  association, they MUST use the appropriate Authentication Extension
  (Mobile-Foreign, Foreign-Home or Mobile-Home Authentication
  Extension) when exchanging registration protocol datagrams. The
  Mobile-Home Authentication Extension MUST always be present.

  Reverse tunneling imposes additional protocol processing requirements
  on mobile entities.  Differences in protocol behavior with respect to
  Mobile IP [1] are specified in the subsequent sections.

4.1. Mobile Node Considerations

  This section describes how the mobile node handles registrations that
  request a reverse tunnel.

4.1.1. Sending Registration Requests to the Foreign Agent

  In addition to the considerations in [1], a mobile node sets the 'T'
  bit in its Registration Request to petition a reverse tunnel.

  The mobile node MUST set the TTL field of the IP header to 255. This
  is meant to limit the reverse tunnel hijacking attack (Section 6).

  The mobile node MAY optionally include an Encapsulating Delivery
  Style Extension.






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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


4.1.2. Receiving Registration Replies from the Foreign Agent

  Possible valid responses are:

     - A registration denial issued by either the home agent or the
       foreign agent:

        a. The mobile node follows the error checking guidelines in
           [1], and depending on the reply code, MAY try modifying the
           registration request (for example, by eliminating the
           request for alternate forms of encapsulation), and issuing a
           new registration.

        b. Depending on the reply code, the mobile node MAY try
           zeroing the 'T' bit, eliminating the Encapsulating Delivery
           Style Extension (if one was present), and issuing a new
           registration. Notice that after doing so the registration
           may succeed, but due to the lack of a reverse tunnel data
           transfer may not be possible.

     - The home agent returns a Registration Reply indicating that the
       service will be provided.

  In this last case, the mobile node has succeeded in establishing a
  reverse tunnel between its care-of address and its home agent.  If
  the mobile node is operating with a co-located care-of address, it
  MAY encapsulate outgoing data such that the destination address of
  the outer header is the home agent. This ability to selectively
  reverse-tunnel packets is discussed further in section 5.4.

  If the care-of address belongs to a separate foreign agent, the
  mobile node MUST employ whatever delivery style was requested (Direct
  or Encapsulating) and proceed as specified in section 5.

  A successful registration reply is an assurance that both the foreign
  agent and the home agent support whatever alternate forms of
  encapsulation (other than IP in IP) were requested. Accordingly, the
  mobile node MAY use them at its discretion.

4.2. Foreign Agent Considerations

  This section describes how the foreign agent handles registrations
  that request a reverse tunnel.








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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


4.2.1. Receiving Registration Requests from the Mobile Node

  A foreign agent that receives a Registration Request with the 'T' bit
  set processes the packet as specified in the Mobile IP specification
  [1], and determines whether it can accomodate the forward tunnel
  request. If it cannot, it returns an appropriate code. In particular,
  if the foreign agent is unable to support the requested form of
  encapsulation it MUST return code 72.

  The foreign agent MAY reject Registration Requests without the 'T'
  bit set by denying them with code 75 (reverse tunnel is mandatory and
  'T' bit not set).

  The foreign agent MUST verify that the TTL field of the IP header is
  set to 255. Otherwise, it MUST reject the registration with code 76
  (mobile node too distant). The foreign agent MUST limit the rate at
  which it sends these registration replies to a maximum of one per
  second.

  As a last check, the foreign agent verifies that it can support a
  reverse tunnel with the same configuration. If it cannot, it MUST
  return a Registration Reply denying the request with code 74
  (requested reverse tunnel unavailable).

4.2.2. Relaying Registration Requests to the Home Agent

  Otherwise, the foreign agent MUST relay the Registration Request to
  the home agent.

  Upon receipt of a Registration Reply that satisfies validity checks,
  the foreign agent MUST update its visitor list, including indication
  that this mobile node has been granted a reverse tunnel and the
  delivery style expected (section 5).

  While this visitor list entry is in effect, the foreign agent MUST
  process incoming traffic according to the delivery style, encapsulate
  it and tunnel it from the care-of address to the home agent's
  address.

4.3. Home Agent Considerations

  This section describes how the home agent handles registrations that
  request a reverse tunnel.








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4.3.1. Receiving Registration Requests from the Foreign Agent

  A home agent that receives a Registration Request with the 'T' bit
  set processes the packet as specified in the Mobile IP specification
  [1] and determines whether it can accomodate the forward tunnel
  request.  If it cannot, it returns an appropriate code. In
  particular, if the home agent is unable to support the requested form
  of encapsulation it MUST return code 139 (requested encapsulation
  unavailable).

  The home agent MAY reject registration requests without the 'T' bit
  set by denying them with code 138 (reverse tunnel is mandatory and '
  T' bit not set).

  As a last check, the home agent determines whether it can support a
  reverse tunnel with the same configuration as the forward tunnel. If
  it cannot, it MUST send back a registration denial with code 137
  (requested reverse tunnel unavailable).

  Upon receipt of a Registration Reply that satisfies validity checks,
  the home agent MUST update its mobility bindings list to indicate
  that this mobile node has been granted a reverse tunnel and the type
  of encapsulation expected.

4.3.2. Sending Registration Replies to the Foreign Agent

  In response to a valid Registration Request, a home agent MUST issue
  a Registration Reply to the mobile node.

  After a successful registration, the home agent may receive
  encapsulated packets addressed to itself. Decapsulating such packets
  and blindly injecting them into the network is a potential security
  weakness (section 6.1). Accordingly, the home agent MUST implement,
  and, by default, SHOULD enable the following check for encapsulated
  packets addressed to itself:

     The home agent searches for a mobility binding whose care-of
     address is the source of the outer header, and whose mobile node
     address is the source of the inner header.

  If no such binding is found, or if the packet uses an encapsulation
  mechanism that was not negotiated at registration the home agent MUST
  silently discard the packet and SHOULD log the event as a security
  exception.

  Home agents that terminate tunnels unrelated to Mobile IP (for
  example, multicast tunnels) MAY turn off the above check, but this
  practice is discouraged for the aforementioned reasons.



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  While the registration is in effect, a home agent MUST process each
  valid reverse tunneled packet (as determined by checks like the
  above) by decapsulating it, recovering the original packet, and then
  forwarding it on behalf of its sender (the mobile node) to the
  destination address (the correspondent host).

5. Mobile Node to Foreign Agent Delivery Styles

  This section specifies how the mobile node sends its data traffic via
  the foreign agent. In all cases, the mobile node learns the foreign
  agent's link-layer address from the link-layer header in the agent
  advertisement.

5.1. Direct Delivery Style

  This delivery mechanism is very simple to implement at the mobile
  node, and uses small (non-encapsulated) packets on the link between
  the mobile node and the foreign agent (potentially a very slow link).
  However, it only supports reverse-tunneling of unicast packets, and
  does not allow selective reverse tunneling (section 5.4).

5.1.1. Packet Processing

  The mobile node MUST designate the foreign agent as its default
  router. Not doing so will not guarantee encapsulation of all the
  mobile node's outgoing traffic, and defeats the purpose of the
  reverse tunnel. The foreign agent MUST:

     - detect packets sent by the mobile node, and

     - modify its forwarding function to encapsulate them before
       forwarding.

5.1.2. Packet Header Format and Fields

  This section shows the format of the packet headers used by the
  Direct Delivery style. The formats shown assume IP in IP
  encapsulation [2].

  Packet format received by the foreign agent (Direct Delivery Style):

      IP fields:
        Source Address = mobile node's home address Destination Address
        = correspondent host's address
      Upper Layer Protocol

  Packet format forwarded by the foreign agent (Direct Delivery Style):




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      IP fields (encapsulating header):
        Source Address = foreign agent's care-of address
        Destination Address = home agent's address
        Protocol field: 4 (IP in IP)
      IP fields (original header):
        Source Address = mobile node's home address
        Destination Address = correspondent host's address
      Upper Layer Protocol

  These fields of the encapsulating header MUST be chosen as follows:

     IP Source Address

        Copied from the Care-of Address field within the Registration
        Request.

     IP Destination Address

        Copied from the Home Agent field within the Registration
        Request.

     IP Protocol Field

        Default is 4 (IP in IP [2]), but other methods of encapsulation
        MAY be used as negotiated at registration time.

5.2. Encapsulating Delivery Style

  This mechanism requires that the mobile node implement encapsulation,
  and explicitly directs packets at the foreign agent by designating it
  as the destination address in a new outermost header.  Mobile nodes
  that wish to send either broadcast or multicast packets MUST use the
  Encapsulating Delivery Style.

5.2.1 Packet Processing

  The foreign agent does not modify its forwarding function.  Rather,
  it receives an encapsulated packet and after verifying that it was
  sent by the mobile node, it:

     - decapsulates to recover the inner packet,

     - re-encapsulates, and sends it to the home agent.

  If a foreign agent receives an un-encapsulated packet from a mobile
  node which had explicitly requested the Encapsulated Delivery Style,
  then the foreign agent MUST NOT reverse tunnel such a packet and
  rather MUST forward it using standard, IP routing mechanisms.



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5.2.2. Packet Header Format and Fields

  This section shows the format of the packet headers used by the
  Encapsulating Delivery style. The formats shown assume IP in IP
  encapsulation [2].

  Packet format received by the foreign agent (Encapsulating Delivery
  Style):

      IP fields (encapsulating header):
        Source Address = mobile node's home address
        Destination Address = foreign agent's address
        Protocol field: 4 (IP in IP)
      IP fields (original header):
        Source Address = mobile node's home address
        Destination Address = correspondent host's address
      Upper Layer Protocol

  The fields of the encapsulating IP header MUST be chosen as follows:

     IP Source Address

        The mobile node's home address.

     IP Destination Address

        The address of the agent as learned from the IP source address
        of the agent's most recent registration reply.

     IP Protocol Field

        Default is 4 (IP in IP [2]), but other methods of encapsulation
        MAY be used as negotiated at registration time.

  Packet format forwarded by the foreign agent (Encapsulating Delivery
  Style):

      IP fields (encapsulating header):
        Source Address = foreign agent's care-of address
        Destination Address = home agent's address
        Protocol field: 4 (IP in IP)
      IP fields (original header):
        Source Address = mobile node's home address
        Destination Address = correspondent host's address
      Upper Layer Protocol

  These fields of the encapsulating IP header MUST be chosen as
  follows:



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RFC 2344            Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             May 1998


     IP Source Address

        Copied from the Care-of Address field within the Registration
        Request.

     IP Destination Address

        Copied from the Home Agent field within the Registration
        Request.

     IP Protocol Field

        Default is 4 (IP in IP [2]), but other methods of encapsulation
        MAY be used as negotiated at registration time.

5.3. Support for Broadcast and Multicast Datagrams

  If a mobile node is operating with a co-located care-of address,
  broadcast and multicast datagrams are handled according to Sections
  4.3 and 4.4 of the Mobile IP specification [1]. Mobile nodes using a
  foreign agent care-of address MAY have their broadcast and multicast
  datagrams reverse-tunneled by the foreign agent.  However, any mobile
  nodes doing so MUST use the encapsulating delivery style.

  This delivers the datagram only to the foreign agent.  The latter
  decapsulates it and then processes it as any other packet from the
  mobile node, namely, by reverse tunneling it to the home agent.

5.4. Selective Reverse Tunneling

  Packets destined to local resources (for example, a nearby printer)
  might be unaffected by ingress filtering. A mobile node with a co-
  located care-of address MAY optimize delivery of these packets by not
  reverse tunneling them.  On the other hand, a mobile node using a
  foreign agent care-of address MAY use this selective reverse
  tunneling capability by requesting the Encapsulating Delivery Style,
  and following these guidelines:

     Packets NOT meant to be reversed tunneled:

        Sent using the Direct Delivery style. The foreign agent MUST
        process these packets as regular traffic:  they MAY be
        forwarded but MUST NOT be reverse tunneled to the home agent.








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     Packets meant to be reverse tunneled:

        Sent using the Encapsulating Delivery style. The foreign agent
        MUST process these packets as specified in section 5.2: they
        MUST be reverse tunneled to the home agent.

6. Security Considerations

  The extensions outlined in this document are subject to the security
  considerations outlined in the Mobile IP specification [1].
  Essentially, creation of both forward and reverse tunnels involves an
  authentication procedure, which reduces the risk for attack.

6.1. Reverse-tunnel Hijacking and Denial-of-Service Attacks

  Once the tunnel is set up, a malicious node could hijack it to inject
  packets into the network. Reverse tunnels might exacerbate this
  problem, because upon reaching the tunnel exit point packets are
  forwarded beyond the local network. This concern is also present in
  the Mobile IP specification, as it already dictates the use of
  reverse tunnels for certain applications.

  Unauthenticated exchanges involving the foreign agent allow a
  malicious node to pose as a valid mobile node and re-direct an
  existing reverse tunnel to another home agent, perhaps another
  malicious node. The best way to protect against these attacks is by
  employing the Mobile-Foreign and Foreign-Home Authentication
  Extensions defined in [1].

  If the necessary mobility security associations are not available,
  this document introduces a mechanism to reduce the range and
  effectiveness of the attacks. The mobile node MUST set to 255 the TTL
  value in the IP headers of Registration Requests sent to the foreign
  agent.  This prevents malicious nodes more than one hop away from
  posing as valid mobile nodes. Additional codes for use in
  registration denials make those attacks that do occur easier to
  track.

  With the goal of further reducing the attacks the Mobile IP Working
  Group considered other mechanisms involving the use of
  unauthenticated state. However, these introduce the possibilities of
  denial-of-service attacks.  The consensus was that this was too much
  of a trade-off for mechanisms that guarantee no more than weak (non-
  cryptographic) protection against attacks.







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6.2. Ingress Filtering

  There has been some concern regarding the long-term effectiveness of
  reverse-tunneling in the presence of ingress filtering. The
  conjecture is that network administrators will target reverse-
  tunneled packets (IP in IP encapsulated packets) for filtering. The
  ingress filtering recommendation spells out why this is not the case
  [8]:

     Tracking the source of an attack is simplified when the source is
     more likely to be "valid."

7. Acknowledgements

  The encapsulating style of delivery was proposed by Charlie Perkins.
  Jim Solomon has been instrumental in shaping this document into its
  present form.

References

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

  [2] Perkins, C., "IP Encapsulation within IP", RFC 2003, October
      1996.

  [3] Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT), "IP Spoofing Attacks
      and Hijacked Terminal Connections", CA-95:01, January 1995.
      Available via anonymous ftp from info.cert.org
      in/pub/cert_advisories.

  [4] Johnson, D., and C. Perkins, "Route Optimization in Mobile IP",
      Work in Progress.

  [5] Manuel Rodriguez, private communication, August 1995.

  [6] Atkinson, R., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 1826, August 1995.

  [7] Atkinson, R., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload", RFC 1827,
      August 1995.

  [8] Ferguson, P., and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering: Defeating
      Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source Address
      Spoofing", RFC 2267, January 1998.

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





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Editor and Chair Addresses

  Questions about this document may be directed at:

  Gabriel E. Montenegro
  Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  901 San Antonio Road
  Mailstop UMPK 15-214
  Mountain View, California 94303

  Voice:  +1-415-786-6288
  Fax:    +1-415-786-6445
  EMail: [email protected]

  The working group can be contacted via the current chairs:

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

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


  Erik Nordmark
  Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  901 San Antonio Road
  Mailstop UMPK17-202
  Mountain View, California 94303

  Voice:  +1-415-786-5166
  EMail: [email protected]

















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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
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  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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  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
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  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
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