Network Working Group                                           J. Kempf
Request for Comments: 3132                              Sun Microsystems
Category: Informational                                        June 2001


      Dormant Mode Host Alerting ("IP Paging") Problem Statement

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This memo describes paging, assesses the need for IP paging, and
  presents a list of recommendations for Seamoby charter items
  regarding work on paging.  The results are specifically directed
  toward the task undertaken by the design team, and are not meant to
  be the definitive word on paging for all time, nor to be binding on
  Seamoby or other working groups, should the situation with regard to
  IP mobility protocols or radio link support undergo a major change.

1.0 Introduction

  The IESG has requested that the Seamoby Working Group develop a
  problem statement about the need for additional protocol work to
  support alerting of dormant mode mobile hosts, commonly known as IP
  paging, for seamless IP mobility.  The paging design team interpreted
  this as direction to examine whether location of a mobile node in
  power saving mode can be supported by the existing Mobile IPv4 and
  Mobile IPv6 protocols given existing radio link protocols.

  Many existing radio link protocols and mobile systems support
  location of and radio link establishment with mobile nodes that are
  in power saving mode and hence are not actively listening for
  delivery of IP packets all the time or are not listening on the radio
  channels normally associated with delivering IP traffic to mobile
  nodes.  This alerting functionality allows mobile nodes to reduce
  power consumption and decreases signaling load on the network for
  tracking mobiles that are not actively participating in IP packet
  generation or reception.





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RFC 3132      Dormant Mode Host Alerting Problem Statement     June 2001


  When a mobile is in low power consumption mode, special steps need to
  be taken to locate the mobile and alert it.  These steps differ
  depending on the radio link, but the generic name for this process is
  paging, a term that is commonly used in cellular telephony.

  In this document, after some initial definitions and material related
  to more clearly explaining what paging is, we assess the need for
  paging in existing IP mobility protocols (namely Mobile IP [1] [2]).
  We then develop a list of work items for the Seamoby working group
  related to this need.  Note that the discussion in this document and
  the conclusions regarding work items are directed toward existing IP
  mobility protocols and existing radio link protocols.  Should a major
  change occur in radio link support or the available IP mobility
  protocols, such as the introduction of a micromobility protocol for
  IP, the issues examined in this document may need to be revisited.

2.0 Definitions

  The following definitions are relevant with respect to clarifying the
  paging functionality:

     Dormant Mode - A state in which the mobile restricts its ability
     to receive normal IP traffic by reducing monitoring of radio
     channels.  This allows the mobile to save power and reduces
     signaling load on the network.

     Time-slotted Dormant Mode - A dormant mode implementation in which
     the mobile alternates between periods of not listening for any
     radio traffic and listening for traffic.  Time-slotted dormant
     mode implementations are typically synchronized with the network
     so the network can deliver traffic to the mobile during listening
     periods.  Additionally, the mobile may be restricted to listening
     on specific signaling channels that, according to current
     practice, are not typically used to carry IP traffic.

     Paging - As a consequence of a mobile-bound packet destined for a
     mobile currently in dormant mode, signaling by the network through
     radio access points directed to locating the mobile and alerting
     it to establish a last hop connection.  This messaging is in
     addition to simply delivering the packet to the mobile, i.e., last
     hop routing of packets is NOT considered to be paging.

     Paging Area - Collection of radio access points that are signaled
     to locate a dormant mode mobile node.  A paging area does not
     necessarily correspond to an IP subnet.  A dormant mode mobile
     node may be required to signal to the network when it crosses a
     paging area boundary, in order that the network can maintain a
     rough idea of where the mobile is located.



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     Paging Channel - A radio channel dedicated to signaling dormant
     mode mobiles for paging purposes.  By current practice, the
     protocol used on a paging channel is usually dictated by the radio
     link protocol, although some paging protocols have provision for
     carrying arbitrary traffic (and thus could potentially be used to
     carry IP).

     Traffic Channel - The radio channel on which IP traffic to an
     active mobile is typically sent.  This channel is used by a mobile
     that is actively sending and receiving IP traffic, and is not
     continuously active in a dormant mode mobile.  For some radio link
     protocols, this may be the only channel available.

     Paging Area Registrations - Signaling from a dormant mode mobile
     node to the network when the mobile node crosses a paging area
     boundary to establish the mobile node's presence in the new paging
     area.

3.0 Discussion of Paging

  Dormant mode is advantageous to a mobile node and the network for the
  following reasons:

     - Power savings.  By reducing the amount of time the mobile is
     required to listen to the radio interface, the drain on the mobile
     node's battery is reduced.

     - Reduced signaling for location tracking.  By requiring the
     mobile to only signal when it crosses a paging area boundary
     rather than when it switches between radio access points, the
     amount of signaling for tracking the mobile is reduced because
     paging areas typically contain many radio access points.

  In existing radio link protocols, there is a clear distinction
  between those protocols that support dormant mode only and those that
  support dormant mode with paging.  Radio link protocols that do not
  support paging have no paging areas, no dedicated paging channel, and
  no radio link protocol specifically directed towards locating a
  dormant mode mobile, while radio link protocols that do support
  paging have these features.  Although generalizations always run the
  risk of being contradicted by specific exceptions, the following
  comparison of existing radio link protocol support for these two
  cases may be instructive.








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3.1 Dormant Mode Support Only

  In radio link protocols that only support dormant mode, a dormant
  mode mobile node typically operates in time slotted mode and there is
  only one radio channel available, namely the traffic channel.  The
  mobile node periodically wakes up, and, synchronously, the radio
  access point in the network with which the mobile node is associated
  delivers any IP packets that have arrived while the mobile node was
  asleep.  Radio access points are required to buffer incoming packets
  for dormant mode mobiles; exactly how many packets and how long they
  are buffered are implementation dependent.

  If the mobile node happens to move out of range of the access point
  with which it was associated, while it is in dormant mode, it
  discovers this when it awakens and reassociates with a new access
  point.  The new access point then contacts the old access point over
  the wired backbone, the old access point sends any buffered packets,
  and the new access point delivers them to the mobile.

  Radio link protocols with dormant mode support only are typically
  wireless LAN protocols in unlicensed spectrum in which the mobile
  node is not charged for using a traffic channel, and hence there is
  no need for conserving spectrum usage.

3.2 Dormant Mode with Paging Support

  In radio link protocols with support for paging, the radio link
  typically supports more than one channel.  A dormant mode mobile node
  may operate in time slotted mode, periodically waking up to listen to
  the paging channel, or it may simply listen to the paging channel
  continuously.  The important point is that the mobile does not listen
  to nor transmit on a traffic channel while in dormant mode.

  The radio access points are grouped into paging areas, and the radio
  link protocol supports periodic signaling between the mobile and the
  network only when the mobile crosses a paging area boundary, for the
  purpose of giving the network a rough idea of the mobile's location
  (paging area registrations).  Some deployments of paging do not even
  use paging area registrations.  They use heuristics to determine
  where the mobile is located when a packet arrives, in which case, no
  signaling is required while the mobile is in dormant mode.

  An incoming packet is directed to the paging area where the mobile
  last reported, or the paging area is determined by heuristics.  The
  network performs a radio link page by sending out a signal on the
  paging channel.  The signal may be repeated until the mobile answers
  or a timeout occurs.  In the former case, the packet is delivered, in
  the latter, the mobile is assumed to be unreachable.



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  Radio link protocols with paging support tend to be in licensed
  spectrum where the network operator has an interest in reducing the
  amount of signaling over traffic channels.  Such reduction frees
  traffic channel spectrum for revenue-producing use, and avoids
  charging the customer for signaling overhead.

4.0 Is IP Paging Necessary?

  In this section, we consider whether IP paging support is necessary.
  We first consider radio link protocols that have no support for
  paging.  We then examine radio link protocols that have paging
  support.  As discussed in the introduction, the focus is on whether
  the existing IETF mobility protocol, namely Mobile IP, requires
  enhancement.  We also briefly discuss the relationship between paging
  and a potential future micromobility protocol.

4.1 IP Paging for Dormant Mode Only Radio Links

  One possible justification for IP paging is for radio links that do
  not support paging.  The reasoning is that an IP paging protocol
  could allow location of a dormant mode mobile in radio networks that
  do not support paging in the radio protocol.

  An important point to keep in mind when considering this possibility
  is that, for radio links that do support paging, paging is typically
  used to locate mobiles for which the network has a rough idea of
  where the mobile is located.  More specifically, in order to conserve
  signaling between the network and the mobile and to reduce power
  drain on the mobile, the mobile only updates the network about its
  location when it crosses a paging area boundary (if even then), which
  is far less frequent than when it crosses a radio access point
  boundary.  If IP paging is to be of any use to radio link protocols
  that do not support paging, it must also be the case that it allows
  the network to maintain a rough idea of where the mobile is,
  otherwise, the amount of signaling involved in tracking the mobile
  and power drain on the mobile is not reduced.

  However, as the description in the previous section indicates, for
  radio links without paging support, the network always has an *exact*
  idea of where the mobile is located.  When the mobile moves into
  range of a new radio access point, it re-registers with the access
  point in that cell allowing the new access point to contact the old
  and deliver any buffered traffic.  Additionally, the new access point
  at that time may choose to deliver a foreign agent advertisement (for
  Mobile IPv4) or router advertisement (for Mobile IPv6) to the mobile
  if the mobile node has changed subnets, so that the mobile can
  perform Mobile IP re-registration in order to make sure its IP
  routing is current.  There is absolutely no ambiguity in the mobile's



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  location as far as the network is concerned, and so the network can
  continue to route packets to the mobile node while the mobile is in
  dormant mode with assurance (modulo buffer overflows and timeouts at
  the radio access point) that the packets will be delivered to the
  mobile the next time it wakes up from dormant mode.

  As a consequence, IP paging provides no advantages for radio link
  protocols in which the radio link does not have support for paging.

4.2 IP Paging for Radio Links with Paging Support

  In radio links that do support paging, there are two cases to
  consider: networks of radio links having a homogeneous radio
  technology and networks of radio links having heterogeneous radio
  technologies.  We examine whether Mobile IP can support dormant mode
  location for both these cases.

4.2.1 Homogeneous Technology Networks

  For homogeneous technology networks, the primary issue is whether
  signaling involved in Mobile IP is enough to provide support for
  locating dormant mode mobile nodes.  Subnets constitute the unit of
  signaling for presence in IP.  When a mobile node moves from one
  subnet to another, Mobile IP signaling is required to change the
  mobile's care-of address.  This signaling establishes the mobile's
  presence in the new subnet.  Paging areas constitute the unit of
  signaling for dormant mode mobile presence at the radio level.
  Paging area registrations or heuristics are used to establish a
  dormant mode mobile's presence in a particular paging area.

  If paging area registrations can always serve to trigger Mobile IP
  registrations, there is no need for an IP paging protocol because the
  network (specifically the home or hierarchical agent) will always
  have an up-to-date picture of where the mobile is and can always
  route packets to the mobile.  The key determining factor with regard
  to whether paging area registrations can be used in this fashion is
  how subnets are mapped into paging areas.  If it is always possible
  to map the two such that a paging area registration can serve as a
  transport for a Mobile IP registration, or some other technique (such
  as network assisted handoff [3] [4]) can be used to transfer the
  Mobile IP registration, then no IP paging protocol is needed.

  In general, the mapping between paging areas and subnets can be
  arbitrary, but we consider initially a smooth subset relationship, in
  which paging areas are subsets of subnets or vice versa.  Network
  topologies in which one subnet is split between two or more paging
  areas are therefore eliminated.  The restriction is arbitrary, but by




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  starting here, we can discover whether additional work is needed.  We
  also consider a case where paging area registrations in the radio
  layer protocol are always done.  This is also optimistic.

  There are three cases:

     1) The topological boundaries of the paging area and subnet are
        identical.

     2) Multiple paging areas are part of the same subnet.

     3) Multiple subnets are part of the same paging area.

     Each case is considered in the following subsections.

4.2.1.1 Subnet and Paging Area Boundaries Identical

  In the case where radio paging areas map one to one onto IP subnets
  (and hence Mobile IPv4 foreign agents or IPv6 access routers), it is
  possible to use radio link paging together with Mobile IP handoff
  techniques for the network to track the mobile's location.  If the
  paging area update protocol supports sending arbitrary packet data
  over the paging channel, the access router or foreign agent can send
  a router advertisement or foreign agent advertisement to the mobile
  as part of the signal that the mobile has entered the new paging
  area, and the mobile can send a Mobile IP registration as part of the
  paging area update.  For other cases, enhancements to Mobile IP
  network-assisted handoff techniques can allow the network to track
  the mobile as it moves from paging area (== subnet) to paging area.
  Other uses of the Mobile IP registration protocol are also possible
  depending on the level of paging support for packet data.  As a
  consequence, the home or hierarchical agent has complete knowledge of
  routes to the mobile and can route packets to the foreign agent or
  access router.  Radio layer paging may be needed at the foreign agent
  or access router in order to re-establish a traffic channel with the
  mobile, but no IP paging is required.

4.2.1.2 Multiple Paging Areas Map into One Subnet

  The case where multiple radio paging areas map to a single IP subnet
  is the same as above, with the exception that the last hop Mobile
  IPv4 foreign agent or IPv6 access router for the subnet performs
  paging in multiple paging areas to locate the mobile.








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4.2.1.3 Multiple Subnets Map into One Paging Area

  In the case where a single radio paging area maps onto multiple IP
  subnets, it is not possible to directly use Mobile IP handoff between
  last hop access routers or foreign agents to track the mobile's
  location as it moves, because the mobile does not signal its location
  when it changes subnets.  Within the set of subnets that span the
  paging area, the mobile's movement is invisible to the L2 paging
  system, so a packet delivered to the mobile's last known location may
  result in a page that is answered in a different subnet.

  Consider the following example.  Suppose we have a network in which
  there are two paging areas, PA(1) and PA(2).  Within each, there are
  many subnets.  Consider a mobile that moves from PA(1) to PA(2), and
  enters PA(2) at subnet X.  Using the paging area registration, it
  signals the network that it has moved, and suppose that the paging
  area registration contains a Mobile IP registration.  The agent
  handling the L2 paging protocol sends the registration to the
  home/hierarchical agent (or perhaps it simply gets routed).  The
  home/hierarchical agent now knows that the mobile has a CoA in subnet
  X, as does the mobile.  After the mobile has completed the paging
  area registration/Mobile IP registration, it goes back to sleep.

  But the mobile does not stop in subnet X, it keeps moving while in
  dormant mode, when it is doing no signaling (L2, mobile IP or other)
  to the network.  It moves from subnet X where it originally entered
  the paging area clear to the other side of the paging area, in a
  completely different subnet, subnet Y.

  Suppose a packet comes into the home/hierarchical agent for this
  mobile.  Because the home/hierarchical agent believes the mobile is
  in subnet X, it sends the packet to the access router or foreign
  agent for subnet X.  The packet gets to the access router or foreign
  agent, and the access router or foreign agent performs a radio page
  for the mobile in subnet X.  Since the mobile isn't in subnet X, it
  wakes up in subnet Y because the radio page propagates throughout the
  paging area.  It does a mobile IP re-registration because it sees
  that it is in a new subnet, but the packet at the access router or
  foreign agent in subnet X can't get to the mobile.

  Without any further support, the access router or foreign agent in
  subnet X drops the packet.  The only way to get the packet to the
  mobile node from the access router or foreign agent is for the mobile
  node to send a binding update to the access router or foreign agent
  when it wakes up in the new subnet.  Once the access router or
  foreign agent has the new binding, it can forward the packet.  Some
  smooth handoff techniques depend on sending binding updates to
  foreign agents [5], so arranging for the mobile node to send a



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  binding update would be possible.  In IPv6, it becomes less
  attractive because of the need for security on the binding update.
  In either case, the result would be yet more Mobile IP signaling
  before the packet could be delivered, increasing the amount of
  latency experienced by the mobile.

  While it may be possible with enhancements to Mobile IP to handle the
  case, the enhancements would probably introduce more latency and
  signaling into the initial connection between the mobile and the
  network when the mobile awakes from dormant mode.  An IP paging
  protocol between the home or hierarchical agent and a paging agent in
  the paging area would serve to reduce the amount of latency involved
  in delivering the initial packet.  With IP paging, the arrival of the
  packet at the home/hierarchical agent results in an IP page to a
  paging agent in the last reported paging area.  The paging agent
  performs an L2 page to the mobile.  The mobile answers the page with
  a mobile IP registration to the home/hierarchical agent and the
  home/hierarchical agent sends the packet.  The home/hierarchical
  agent and the mobile already have a security association, so there is
  no need to negotiate one, and buffering of the first packet and any
  further incoming packets prior to the mobile IP registration is
  handled by the home/hierarchical agent rather than a router at the
  edge, so the edge routers can be simpler.  Finally, the
  home/hierarchical agent can start routing to the mobile as soon as
  the registration comes in.

4.1.2.4 More Complex Homogeneous Network Cases

  Up until now, the discussion has not identified any case where the
  problem of locating and delivering the first packet to a dormant mode
  mobile could not be handled by Mobile IP with enhancements.  IP
  paging serves as a promising optimization in the multiple subnets to
  single paging area case, but in principle additional Mobile IP
  signaling (potentially lots in the case of IPv6 if a security
  association is needed) could handle the problem.  However, the
  examples examined in the above sections are really best-case.  In
  practice, the mapping of subnets to paging areas is likely to be far
  less clear cut, and the use of paging area registrations far less
  common than has been assumed in these cases.

  Requiring network operators to make paging areas and subnets conform
  to a subset relationship that would allow mobile IP signaling to do
  double duty as paging area updates is unrealistic.  In practice,
  paging areas often overlap and there is often not even a clear subset
  relationship between paging areas themselves.  Some radio protocols,
  such as wCDMA [6], allow different mobile terminals in the same
  geographical area to have different paging area identifiers.  Working
  through each case and trying to identify whether Mobile IP needs



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  enhancement would probably result in a much more complex result than
  having a simple IP paging protocol that allows a home/hierarchical
  agent to notify an L2 agent in the paging area when a new packet
  comes in.

  Finally, requiring operators to always turn on paging area
  registrations is unacceptable, and using Mobile IP registrations
  won't work if paging area registrations are not done.  The above
  description is ideal with regard to signaling between the mobile node
  in dormant mode and the network.  Anecdotal evidence indicates that
  most operators do not turn on paging area registrations, they use
  heuristics to determine where to page for the mobile.  If the
  operator does not turn on paging area registrations, there is no way
  for the mobile to report its position when it changes paging area,
  hence no L2 vehicle for potential dormant mode use of Mobile IP.

4.2.2 Heterogeneous Technology Networks

  In a network composed of links with multiple technologies, the
  problems identified above become multiplied.  Using Mobile IP becomes
  even more cumbersome, because the subnet to which the initial packet
  is delivered, besides not being in the same subnet on which the
  dormant mode mobile is located, may be on a radio network which the
  user would actually not prefer to use in their current location.
  This could happen, for example, if the mobile moved inside a building
  and radio coverage on one interface became weak or nonexistent, or if
  the user had a choice of a cheaper or higher bandwidth connection.
  The mobile may actually no longer be listening or reachable on the
  paging channel of the old network, so when the old access router or
  foreign agent pages on the old radio network, the mobile, which is
  now listening only for pages on the new network, may not answer, even
  though it is reachable on the new network.  Arranging for pages in
  multiple radio networks is a possibility, but without an L3 paging
  protocol to abstract away from the L2 details, the details of each L2
  protocol must be handled separately.

  A paging protocol that unifies paging across multiple radio
  technologies therefore looks attractive.  There may be commonalities
  in the corresponding radio paging protocols that allow a mapping to
  be established between the radio protocols and an abstract IP paging
  protocol.  For example, assume we have a common paging area
  identifier defined at the IP layer that is mapped to each radio
  paging protocol by the access points.  An IP paging message
  containing the identifier is sent to multiple access points, where
  the appropriate radio paging message is sent based on the particular
  technology implemented by the access points.  The results are then
  returned by the radio paging responses, mapped back into IP by the
  access points, and delivered back to the origin of the page.



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  An additional case to consider is when a single subnet consists of
  multiple radio access technologies.  A wireless access point usually
  provides L2 bridge behavior to the wired link with which it is
  connected.  If two access points with incompatible technologies and
  non-overlapping cells are connected to the same subnet, a mobile node
  with interfaces to both technologies would need paging from both
  technologies.  If reachability can be established simply by ARP or
  neighbor discovery, no IP paging is needed.  However, note that ARP
  or neighbor discovery requires that a functional traffic channel be
  available to the mobile, since these protocols are typically
  implemented for wired networks in which a single channel exists on
  which all IP traffic is delivered.  If the mobile is currently in the
  sleep phase of a time-slotted dormant mode, or if it is listening to
  a paging channel it will fail to respond to these requests.  In this
  case, some means of triggering a radio page from IP is necessary to
  find the mobile.  Modifying ARP or neighbor discovery to utilize a
  paging channel if available is a possible, if somewhat messy,
  alternative, but a dedicated location protocol may be somewhat
  cleaner.

4.3 Paging and Micromobility

  If the Seamoby Working Group decides that an IP micromobility
  protocol is necessary, then the above analysis is no longer complete.
  A micromobility protocol may require some type of paging support.
  The design team does not want to include any further discussion of
  paging and micromobility at this point, because it is not clear
  whether micromobility will be pursued by Seamoby and hence such
  discussion would be premature.

5.0 What Exactly is the Problem?

  While the above analysis has identified situations in which location
  of a mobile in dormant mode may require some action at the IP layer,
  it is important keep in mind what the problem is.  The problem to be
  solved is the location of a mobile node because it has moved while in
  dormant mode.  IP paging is one solution to the problem, there may be
  others.

6.0 Recommendations

  The design group recommends the following charter items for Seamboy:

     1) Since the design group has identified several network
        deployment scenarios where existing Mobile IP technology cannot
        find a mobile in dormant mode, protocol work is necessary to
        define a way for the network to find a mobile that is currently
        in dormant mode.



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     2) The work defined above should be pursued in a way that is
        maximally consistent with Mobile IP and other existing IETF
        protocols.  The work should also generate recommendations about
        how to achieve the best match between existing radio paging
        protocols and IP.

     3) If the Seamoby working group decides to pursue a micromobility
        protocol that requires paging, the Seamoby group should
        undertake the design of a new paging protocol within the
        context of that work.

     4) There is some evidence that cellular operators' deployments of
        paging are highly variable, and may, in fact, be suboptimal in
        many cases with respect to supporting IP.  The Seamoby working
        group should write a BCP which explains how to perform IP
        subnet to paging area mapping and which techniques to use when,
        so network designers in wireless networks have a guide when
        they are setting up their networks.

7.0 Acknowledgements

        The editor would like to thank the Seamoby paging design team
        for helping formulate the first draft of the document.  Jari
        Malinen contributed text to Section 4.2. Hesham Soliman, Karim
        El-Malki, and Behcet Sarikaya contributed critical commentary
        on the first draft, which was important in sharpening the
        reasoning about what can and can't be expected in the absence
        of radio layer paging support and how Mobile IP might be used
        to support dormant mode location.






















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RFC 3132      Dormant Mode Host Alerting Problem Statement     June 2001


8.0 References

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

  [2]  Johnson, D., and C. Perkins, "Mobility Support in IPv6", Work in
       Progress.

  [3]  El Malki, K. et. al., "Low Latency Handoff in Mobile IPv4", Work
       in Progress.

  [4]  Tsirtsis, G., Editor, "Fast Handovers for Mobile IPv6", Work in
       Progress.

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

  [6]  Holma, H. and A. Toskala, "WCDMA for UMTS: Radio Access for
       Third Generation Mobile Communication", John Wiley and Sons, New
       York, 2000.

9.0  Editor's Address

  James Kempf
  Sun Labs California
  Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  901 San Antonio Rd., UMPK15-214
  Palo Alto, CA, 94303
  USA

  Phone: +1 650 786 5890
  Fax:   +1 650 786 6445
  EMail: [email protected]


















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RFC 3132      Dormant Mode Host Alerting Problem Statement     June 2001


10.0  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001).  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.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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