Network Working Group                                      R. Pazhyannur
Request for Comments: 3153                                        I. Ali
Category: Standards Track                                       Motorola
                                                                 C. Fox
                                                          Cisco Systems
                                                            August 2001


                          PPP Multiplexing

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 (2001).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document describes a method to reduce the PPP (Point-to-Point
  Protocol) framing overhead used to transport small packets over slow
  links.

1. Description

  The method, PPP Multiplexing, sends multiple PPP encapsulated packets
  in a single PPP frame.  As a result, the PPP overhead per packet is
  reduced.  PPP encapsulation (for example with PPP in HDLC framing)
  adds several bytes of overhead: a HDLC flag (at least one to separate
  adjacent packets), the Address (0xFF) and Control (0x03) field bytes,
  a two byte PPP Protocol ID, and the two byte CRC field.  Even with
  the Address and Control Fields negotiated off and the PPP Protocol ID
  compressed, each PPP encapsulated frame will include four bytes of
  overhead.  When PPP frames are tunneled, as in L2TP [1], the L2TP
  overhead per PPP frame is significant.

  The key idea is to concatenate multiple PPP encapsulated frames into
  a single PPP multiplexed frame by inserting a delimiter before the
  beginning of each frame.  The description of the delimiters is
  provided in Subsection 1.1.  The delimiters are used by the
  demultiplexor to separate the PPP frames within the multiplexed
  frame.  Each PPP encapsulated frame within the multiplexed frame is
  called a PPP subframe.



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RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


  During the NCP negotiation phase of PPP, a receiver can offer to
  receive multiplexed frames using the PPP Mux Control Protocol
  (PPPMuxCP), as described in Section 2.  Once PPPMuxCP has been
  negotiated, the transmitter may choose which PPP frames to multiplex.
  Frames should not be re-ordered by either the transmitter or receiver
  regardless of whether they arrive as part of the PPP multiplexed
  frame or by themselves.

  The scheme proposed is similar to the concatenated framing option
  [2].  The key differences are that PPP multiplexing is more efficient
  and that it allows concatenation of variable sized frames.  This is
  unlike concatenated framing which restricts all frames to be of fixed
  length.

  As with any concatenation scheme, the implementer has to consider the
  tradeoff between increased delay for multiplexing/demultiplexing and
  reduced packet overhead as the length of the multiplexed frame
  increases.

  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 [7].

1.1. Payload Format

  The format of the complete PPP frame along with multiple subframes
  for PPP in HDLC-like framing [3] is shown in Figure 1.  Note that
  regardless of the order in which individual bits are transmitted,
  i.e., LSB first or MSB first, the PFF bit will be seen to be the MSB
  of a byte that contains both the PFF and the subframe length field.

  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |       +P|L|     +       +     +   +P|L|     +       +     +     |
  |  PPP/ +F|X|Len1 +  PPP  +     +   +F|X|LenN +  PPP  +     +     |
  |  HDLC +F|T|     + Prot. +Info1+ ~ +F|T|     + Prot. +InfoN+ CRC |
  | Header+ | |     + Field1+     +   + | |     +FieldN +     +     |
  | (2-5) +  (1-2 ) + (0-2) +     +   +  (1-2)  + (0-2) +     + (2) |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

            Figure 1. Multiplexing subframes in a PPP frame.

  PPP Header:
       The PPP header contains the PPP Protocol Field for a PPP
       Multiplexed Frame (0x0059).  The PPP header compression
       options (ACFC and PFC) may be negotiated during LCP and
       could thus affect the format of this header.





Pazhyannur, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


  Length Field:

    The length field consists of three subfields:

     1. Protocol Field Flag (PFF):

        The PFF refers to the most significant bit of the first byte of
        each subframe.  This one bit field indicates whether the PPP
        Protocol ID of the subframe follows the subframe length field.
        For the first subframe, the PFF bit could be set to zero if the
        PPP protocol ID of the first subframe is equal to the default
        PID value negotiated in PPPMuxCP.  PFF = 1 indicates that the
        protocol field is present (and follows the length field) for
        this subframe.  PFF = 0 indicates that the protocol field is
        absent for this subframe.  If PFF = 0 then the PPP Protocol ID
        is the same as that of the preceding subframe with PFF = 1, or
        it is equal to default PID value of the PPPMuxCP Option for the
        first subframe.  The transmitter is not obligated to remove the
        PPP Protocol ID for any subframe.

     2. Length Extension (LXT)

        This one bit field indicates whether the length field is one
        byte or two bytes long.  If the LXT bit is set, then the length
        field is two bytes long (a PFF bit, a length extension bit, and
        14 bits of sub-frame length).  If the LXT bit is cleared, then
        the length field is one byte long (a PFF bit, a length
        extension bit, and 6 bits of sub-frame length).

     3. Sub-frame Length (LEN):

        This is the length of the subframe in bytes not including the
        length field.  However, it does include the PPP Protocol ID if
        present (i.e., if PFF = 1).  If the length of the subframe is
        less than 64 bytes (less than or equal to 63 bytes), LXT is set
        to zero and the last six bits of the length field is the
        subframe length.  If the length of the subframe is greater than
        63 bytes, LXT is set to one and the last 14 bits of the length
        field is the length of the subframe.  The maximum length of a
        subframe is 16,383 bytes.  PPP packets larger than 16,383 bytes
        will need to be sent in their own PPP frame.  A transmitter is
        not required to multiplex all frames smaller than 16,383 bytes.
        It may chose to only multiplex frames smaller than a
        configurable size into a PPP multiplexed frame.







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RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


  Protocol Field:

     This field contains the Protocol Field value for the subframe.
     This field is optional.  If PFF = 1 for a subframe, the protocol
     field is present in the subframe, otherwise it is inferred at the
     receiver.

     The receiver MUST support Protocol-Field-Compression (PFC) one or
     two bytes long.  The transmitter SHOULD compress PPP Protocol IDs
     in this field that have an upper byte of zero (i.e., Protocol IDs
     from 0x21 thru 0xFD).  This Protocol Field Compression in each PPP
     subframe is not related to the negotiation of PFC during LCP
     negotiation which affects the length of PPP Multiplexed Frame
     Protocol ID.

  Information Field:

     This field contains the actual packet being encapsulated. Any
     frame may be included here with the exception of LCP Configure
     Request, ACK, NAK and Reject frames and PPP Multiplexed frames.
     If LCP is renegotiated then PPP Multiplexing MUST be disabled
     until the PPP Mux Control Protocol is negotiated.

1.2 Transmitter procedure

  A simple implementation of the transmitter is provided.  During the
  transmission of a multiplexed PPP frame, the transmitter has a state
  variable, Last_PID, which is used to hold the most recent value of
  protocol field in a subframe with PFF=1.  At the start of the
  multiplexing process, Last_PID is set equal to the default PID value
  negotiated in PPPMuxCP.  Also, a user configurable parameter, maximum
  subframe length (MAX_SF_LEN), is used to determine the maximum size
  of a PPP frame which can be multiplexed.  The value of MAX_SF_LEN
  should be less or equal to the minimum of MRU-2(maximum size of
  length field) and 16,383 (14 bits).

  After transmitting a PPP frame (multiplexed or not) on the channel,
  the PPP multiplexing logic looks at the buffers that hold the PPP
  frames to be transmitted.  In case there are multiple frames, the PPP
  multiplexing logic checks if the length of the first frame in the
  buffer is less than or equal to MAX_SF_LEN bytes.  If so, the
  transmitter starts compiling a multiplexed PPP frame with the
  protocol field value corresponding to PPP Multiplexed Frame (0x59).
  For each subframe, the test for deciding to prepend the protocol
  field to a subframe is to compare the protocol field value of the
  subframe to Last_PID.  If they are equal, PFF is set to 0 and the
  protocol field is deleted.  If not, PFF is set to 1, the protocol
  field is included, after PFC, in the subframe and Last_PID is set to



Pazhyannur, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


  the protocol field value of the current subframe.  The stopping
  criteria in the concatenation process are (i) when the length of the
  next subframe is greater than MAX_SF_LEN bytes or (ii) the length of
  the entire PPP frame by including the new subframe exceeds the
  maximum receive unit (MRU) parameter negotiated during LCP [4], or
  (iii) there are no more subframes to concatenate.

  Implementers may choose additionally to implement using timers.  In
  such a case a timeout in addition to the conditions stated above is
  used as a stopping criteria of the multiplexing process.  Moreover,
  it may be desirable to limit the maximum size of a multiplexed packet
  to be considerably smaller than MRU for reasons of multiplexing
  latency and packet error considerations.

1.3 Receiver procedure

  If a multiplexed frame, i.e., a frame with Protocol field value equal
  to PPP Multiplexed Frame (0x0059), is received, the frame is
  demultiplexed in order using the following input demultiplexing
  logic.  Similar to a transmitter, the receiver has a state variable
  called Last_rcvd_PID, which is the value of the protocol field in the
  most recently demultiplexed subframe with PFF=1.  Last_rcvd_PID is
  initialized to default PID value negotiated by PPPMuxCP.  If PFF=0
  for a subframe, Last_rcvd_PID is appended to the beginning of the
  subframe before handing the subframe, as determined by the length
  field, to the PPP logic.  If PFF=1 for a subframe, Last_rcvd_PID is
  set to this value and the subframe, as determined by the length
  field, is passed to PPP logic.  The remainder of the frame is
  returned to the demultiplexor.  Each succeeding subframe is processed
  similarly.  This processing is complete when the remainder of the
  frame is empty, or when the size field of a subframe exceeds the
  amount of data remaining in a packet.  In the latter case, there is
  an error either in the length field of the last subframe or in the
  length field of one of the previous subframes.  In either case the
  last subframe must be dropped by the demultiplexing logic.

  It is illegal to put a multiplexed frame within a multiplexed frame.

2. PPP Network Control Protocol for PPP Multiplexing (PPPMuxCP)

  A receiver will offer its ability to received multiplexed frames by
  negotiating NCP for PPP multiplexing, PPPMuxCP.  The protocol field
  value for a PPPMuxCP frames is 0x8059.  PPPMuxCP is similar to other
  NCPs such as IPCP [6].  A transmitter may not send a multiplexed
  frame unless the peer has offered to receive multiplexed frames.
  Support of multiplexed frame reception is negotiated in each
  direction independently.  Successful negotiation of PPPMuxCP does not
  obligate a peer to transmit multiplexed frames.



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RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


  As part of the PPPMuxCP negotiation, a 'default PID' option is always
  negotiated.  This enables the transmitter to transmit the first
  subframe of a PPP multiplexed frame without a PID (PFF=0), thus
  resulting in a saving of one or two bytes.  Note that the negotiation
  of default PID does not require the transmitter to send the first
  subframe with PFF=0 even if doing so would optimize the transmission.
  And, as always, the option (and thus the default PID) is negotiated
  by the receiver, i.e., the receiver will interpret a received PPPmux
  packet using the default PID it offered.

  LCP frames MUST NOT be sent in Multiplexed frames. The only option in
  PPPMuxCP is the negotiation of Default PID and is shown below

   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 = 1    |   Length = 4  |        Default PID            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

               Figure 2. Default PID option for PPPMuxCP

3. Interaction with PPP Multilink (MP) Protocol

  PPP multiplexed frame option is negotiated by an NCP.  LCP is
  negotiated over each member link of a multilink bundle and not on the
  bundle itself [5].  Thus in case of MP, PPPmux cannot be negotiated
  for individual links, but only for the bundle.

  Hence, on the transmitter side PPP multiplexing always occurs before
  multilink PPP encapsulation.  On a link, an MP header (if present)
  MUST be outside of a PPPmux header (if present).  Multilink frames
  must not be sent in Multiplexed frames.

4. Interaction with CCP and ECP

  PPP multiplexing must be performed below (after) any bundle-level CCP
  and/or ECP, and above (before) MP and any per-link CCP and/or ECP.
  Thus,  to negotiate the hypothetical transmit path sequence CCP ->
  PPPMux -> ECP, the bundle-level version of CCP (80fd) and the per-
  link version of ECP (8055) are negotiated along with the PPPMux
  Option.

  An implementation that cannot perform PPPMux above CCP or ECP MUST
  issue Protocol-Reject for the per-link forms of CCP and ECP if PPPMux
  has been negotiated.






Pazhyannur, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


5. Security Considerations

  This document does not impose additional security considerations
  beyond those that apply to PPP and header-compression schemes over
  PPP.

6. Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to thank contributors on the PPPext mailing
  list, especially James Carlson, for valuable inputs to this document.

7. References

  [1] Townsley, W., Valencia, A., Rubens, A., Pall, G., Zorn, G. and B.
      Palter, "Layer Two Tunneling Protocol "L2TP"", RFC 2661, August
      1999.

  [2] Simpson, W., Ed., "PPP LCP extensions", RFC 1570, January, 1994.

  [3] Simpson, W., Ed., "PPP in HDLC-like Framing", STD 51, RFC 1662,
      July 1994.

  [4] Simpson, W., Ed., "The Point-To-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD 51,
      RFC 1661, July 1994.

  [5] Sklower, K., Lloyd, B., McGregor, G., Carr, D., and T. Coradetti,
      "The PPP Multilink Protocol (MP)", RFC 1990, August 1996.

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

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


















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RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


8. Author's Addresses

  Rajesh Pazhyannur
  Motorola, Network Solutions Sector
  1501, W. Shure Drive
  Arlington Heights, IL 60004

  Phone: (847) 632-4524
  EMail: [email protected]


  Irfan Ali
  Motorola, Network Solutions Sector
  1501, W. Shure Drive
  Arlington Heights, IL 60004

  Phone: (847) 632-3281
  EMail: [email protected]


  Craig Fox
  Cisco Systems
  170 W. Tasman Street
  San Jose, CA 95134

  Phone: (408) 526-6296
  EMail: [email protected]
























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RFC 3153                    PPP Multiplexing                 August 2001


Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

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



















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