Network Working Group                                          R. Draves
Request for Comments: 3484                            Microsoft Research
Category: Standards Track                                  February 2003


  Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)

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 (2003).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document describes two algorithms, for source address selection
  and for destination address selection.  The algorithms specify
  default behavior for all Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)
  implementations.  They do not override choices made by applications
  or upper-layer protocols, nor do they preclude the development of
  more advanced mechanisms for address selection.  The two algorithms
  share a common context, including an optional mechanism for allowing
  administrators to provide policy that can override the default
  behavior.  In dual stack implementations, the destination address
  selection algorithm can consider both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses -
  depending on the available source addresses, the algorithm might
  prefer IPv6 addresses over IPv4 addresses, or vice-versa.

  All IPv6 nodes, including both hosts and routers, must implement
  default address selection as defined in this specification.















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RFC 3484           Default Address Selection for IPv6      February 2003


Table of Contents

  1.    Introduction................................................2
        1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document.....................4
  2.    Context in Which the Algorithms Operate.....................4
        2.1.  Policy Table..........................................5
        2.2.  Common Prefix Length..................................6
  3.    Address Properties..........................................6
        3.1.  Scope Comparisons.....................................7
        3.2.  IPv4 Addresses and IPv4-Mapped Addresses..............7
        3.3.  Other IPv6 Addresses with Embedded IPv4 Addresses.....8
        3.4.  IPv6 Loopback Address and Other Format Prefixes.......8
        3.5.  Mobility Addresses....................................8
  4.    Candidate Source Addresses..................................8
  5.    Source Address Selection...................................10
  6.    Destination Address Selection..............................12
  7.    Interactions with Routing..................................14
  8.    Implementation Considerations..............................15
  9.    Security Considerations....................................15
  10.   Examples...................................................16
        10.1. Default Source Address Selection.....................16
        10.2. Default Destination Address Selection................17
        10.3. Configuring Preference for IPv6 or IPv4..............18
        10.4. Configuring Preference for Scoped Addresses..........19
        10.5. Configuring a Multi-Homed Site.......................19
  Normative References.............................................21
  Informative References...........................................22
  Acknowledgments..................................................23
  Author's Address.................................................23
  Full Copyright Statement.........................................24

1. Introduction

  The IPv6 addressing architecture [1] allows multiple unicast
  addresses to be assigned to interfaces.  These addresses may have
  different reachability scopes (link-local, site-local, or global).
  These addresses may also be "preferred" or "deprecated" [2].  Privacy
  considerations have introduced the concepts of "public addresses" and
  "temporary addresses" [3].  The mobility architecture introduces
  "home addresses" and "care-of addresses" [8].  In addition, multi-
  homing situations will result in more addresses per node.  For
  example, a node may have multiple interfaces, some of them tunnels or
  virtual interfaces, or a site may have multiple ISP attachments with
  a global prefix per ISP.

  The end result is that IPv6 implementations will very often be faced
  with multiple possible source and destination addresses when
  initiating communication.  It is desirable to have default



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  algorithms, common across all implementations, for selecting source
  and destination addresses so that developers and administrators can
  reason about and predict the behavior of their systems.

  Furthermore, dual or hybrid stack implementations, which support both
  IPv6 and IPv4, will very often need to choose between IPv6 and IPv4
  when initiating communication.  For example, when DNS name resolution
  yields both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses and the network protocol stack
  has available both IPv6 and IPv4 source addresses.  In such cases, a
  simple policy to always prefer IPv6 or always prefer IPv4 can produce
  poor behavior.  As one example, suppose a DNS name resolves to a
  global IPv6 address and a global IPv4 address.  If the node has
  assigned a global IPv6 address and a 169.254/16 auto-configured IPv4
  address [9], then IPv6 is the best choice for communication.  But if
  the node has assigned only a link-local IPv6 address and a global
  IPv4 address, then IPv4 is the best choice for communication.  The
  destination address selection algorithm solves this with a unified
  procedure for choosing among both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses.

  The algorithms in this document are specified as a set of rules that
  define a partial ordering on the set of addresses that are available
  for use.  In the case of source address selection, a node typically
  has multiple addresses assigned to its interfaces, and the source
  address ordering rules in section 5 define which address is the
  "best" one to use.  In the case of destination address selection, the
  DNS may return a set of addresses for a given name, and an
  application needs to decide which one to use first, and in what order
  to try others should the first one not be reachable.  The destination
  address ordering rules in section 6, when applied to the set of
  addresses returned by the DNS, provide such a recommended ordering.

  This document specifies source address selection and destination
  address selection separately, but using a common context so that
  together the two algorithms yield useful results.  The algorithms
  attempt to choose source and destination addresses of appropriate
  scope and configuration status (preferred or deprecated in the RFC
  2462 sense).  Furthermore, this document suggests a preferred method,
  longest matching prefix, for choosing among otherwise equivalent
  addresses in the absence of better information.

  This document also specifies policy hooks to allow administrative
  override of the default behavior.  For example, using these hooks an
  administrator can specify a preferred source prefix for use with a
  destination prefix, or prefer destination addresses with one prefix
  over addresses with another prefix.  These hooks give an
  administrator flexibility in dealing with some multi-homing and
  transition scenarios, but they are certainly not a panacea.




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  The selection rules specified in this document MUST NOT be construed
  to override an application or upper-layer's explicit choice of a
  legal destination or source address.

1.1. Conventions Used in This Document

  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 BCP 14, RFC 2119 [4].

2. Context in Which the Algorithms Operate

  Our context for address selection derives from the most common
  implementation architecture, which separates the choice of
  destination address from the choice of source address.  Consequently,
  we have two separate algorithms for these tasks.  The algorithms are
  designed to work well together and they share a mechanism for
  administrative policy override.

  In this implementation architecture, applications use APIs [10] like
  getaddrinfo() that return a list of addresses to the application.
  This list might contain both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses (sometimes
  represented as IPv4-mapped addresses).  The application then passes a
  destination address to the network stack with connect() or sendto().
  The application would then typically try the first address in the
  list, looping over the list of addresses until it finds a working
  address.  In any case, the network layer is never in a situation
  where it needs to choose a destination address from several
  alternatives.  The application might also specify a source address
  with bind(), but often the source address is left unspecified.
  Therefore the network layer does often choose a source address from
  several alternatives.

  As a consequence, we intend that implementations of getaddrinfo()
  will use the destination address selection algorithm specified here
  to sort the list of IPv6 and IPv4 addresses that they return.
  Separately, the IPv6 network layer will use the source address
  selection algorithm when an application or upper-layer has not
  specified a source address.  Application of this specification to
  source address selection in an IPv4 network layer may be possible but
  this is not explored further here.

  Well-behaved applications SHOULD iterate through the list of
  addresses returned from getaddrinfo() until they find a working
  address.






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  The algorithms use several criteria in making their decisions.  The
  combined effect is to prefer destination/source address pairs for
  which the two addresses are of equal scope or type, prefer smaller
  scopes over larger scopes for the destination address, prefer non-
  deprecated source addresses, avoid the use of transitional addresses
  when native addresses are available, and all else being equal prefer
  address pairs having the longest possible common prefix.  For source
  address selection, public addresses [3] are preferred over temporary
  addresses.  In mobile situations [8], home addresses are preferred
  over care-of addresses.  If an address is simultaneously a home
  address and a care-of address (indicating the mobile node is "at
  home" for that address), then the home/care-of address is preferred
  over addresses that are solely a home address or solely a care-of
  address.

  This specification optionally allows for the possibility of
  administrative configuration of policy that can override the default
  behavior of the algorithms.  The policy override takes the form of a
  configurable table that specifies precedence values and preferred
  source prefixes for destination prefixes.  If an implementation is
  not configurable, or if an implementation has not been configured,
  then the default policy table specified in this document SHOULD be
  used.

2.1. Policy Table

  The policy table is a longest-matching-prefix lookup table, much like
  a routing table.  Given an address A, a lookup in the policy table
  produces two values:  a precedence value Precedence(A) and a
  classification or label Label(A).

  The precedence value Precedence(A) is used for sorting destination
  addresses.  If Precedence(A) > Precedence(B), we say that address A
  has higher precedence than address B, meaning that our algorithm will
  prefer to sort destination address A before destination address B.

  The label value Label(A) allows for policies that prefer a particular
  source address prefix for use with a destination address prefix.  The
  algorithms prefer to use a source address S with a destination
  address D if Label(S) = Label(D).

  IPv6 implementations SHOULD support configurable address selection
  via a mechanism at least as powerful as the policy tables defined
  here.  Note that at the time of this writing there is only limited
  experience with the use of policies that select from a set of
  possible IPv6 addresses.  As more experience is gained, the
  recommended default policies may change.  Consequently it is
  important that implementations provide a way to change the default



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  policies as more experience is gained.  Sections 10.3 and 10.4
  provide examples of the kind of changes that might be needed.

  If an implementation is not configurable or has not been configured,
  then it SHOULD operate according to the algorithms specified here in
  conjunction with the following default policy table:

     Prefix        Precedence Label
     ::1/128               50     0
     ::/0                  40     1
     2002::/16             30     2
     ::/96                 20     3
     ::ffff:0:0/96         10     4

  One effect of the default policy table is to prefer using native
  source addresses with native destination addresses, 6to4 [5] source
  addresses with 6to4 destination addresses, and v4-compatible [1]
  source addresses with v4-compatible destination addresses.  Another
  effect of the default policy table is to prefer communication using
  IPv6 addresses to communication using IPv4 addresses, if matching
  source addresses are available.

  Policy table entries for scoped address prefixes MAY be qualified
  with an optional zone index.  If so, a prefix table entry only
  matches against an address during a lookup if the zone index also
  matches the address's zone index.

2.2. Common Prefix Length

  We define the common prefix length CommonPrefixLen(A, B) of two
  addresses A and B as the length of the longest prefix (looking at the
  most significant, or leftmost, bits) that the two addresses have in
  common.  It ranges from 0 to 128.

3. Address Properties

  In the rules given in later sections, addresses of different types
  (e.g., IPv4, IPv6, multicast and unicast) are compared against each
  other.  Some of these address types have properties that aren't
  directly comparable to each other.  For example, IPv6 unicast
  addresses can be "preferred" or "deprecated" [2], while IPv4
  addresses have no such notion.  To compare such addresses using the
  ordering rules (e.g., to use "preferred" addresses in preference to
  "deprecated" addresses), the following mappings are defined.







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3.1. Scope Comparisons

  Multicast destination addresses have a 4-bit scope field that
  controls the propagation of the multicast packet.  The IPv6
  addressing architecture defines scope field values for interface-
  local (0x1), link-local (0x2), subnet-local (0x3), admin-local (0x4),
  site-local (0x5), organization-local (0x8), and global (0xE)
  scopes [11].

  Use of the source address selection algorithm in the presence of
  multicast destination addresses requires the comparison of a unicast
  address scope with a multicast address scope.  We map unicast link-
  local to multicast link-local, unicast site-local to multicast site-
  local, and unicast global scope to multicast global scope.  For
  example, unicast site-local is equal to multicast site-local, which
  is smaller than multicast organization-local, which is smaller than
  unicast global, which is equal to multicast global.

  We write Scope(A) to mean the scope of address A.  For example, if A
  is a link-local unicast address and B is a site-local multicast
  address, then Scope(A) < Scope(B).

  This mapping implicitly conflates unicast site boundaries and
  multicast site boundaries [11].

3.2. IPv4 Addresses and IPv4-Mapped Addresses

  The destination address selection algorithm operates on both IPv6 and
  IPv4 addresses.  For this purpose, IPv4 addresses should be
  represented as IPv4-mapped addresses [1].  For example, to lookup the
  precedence or other attributes of an IPv4 address in the policy
  table, lookup the corresponding IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.

  IPv4 addresses are assigned scopes as follows.  IPv4 auto-
  configuration addresses [9], which have the prefix 169.254/16, are
  assigned link-local scope.  IPv4 private addresses [12], which have
  the prefixes 10/8, 172.16/12, and 192.168/16, are assigned site-local
  scope.  IPv4 loopback addresses [12, section 4.2.2.11], which have
  the prefix 127/8, are assigned link-local scope (analogously to the
  treatment of the IPv6 loopback address [11, section 4]).  Other IPv4
  addresses are assigned global scope.

  IPv4 addresses should be treated as having "preferred" (in the RFC
  2462 sense) configuration status.







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3.3. Other IPv6 Addresses with Embedded IPv4 Addresses

  IPv4-compatible addresses [1], IPv4-mapped [1], IPv4-translatable [6]
  and 6to4 addresses [5] contain an embedded IPv4 address.  For the
  purposes of this document, these addresses should be treated as
  having global scope.

  IPv4-compatible, IPv4-mapped, and IPv4-translatable addresses should
  be treated as having "preferred" (in the RFC 2462 sense)
  configuration status.

3.4. IPv6 Loopback Address and Other Format Prefixes

  The loopback address should be treated as having link-local scope
  [11, section 4] and "preferred" (in the RFC 2462 sense) configuration
  status.

  NSAP addresses and other addresses with as-yet-undefined format
  prefixes should be treated as having global scope and "preferred" (in
  the RFC 2462) configuration status.  Later standards may supersede
  this treatment.

3.5. Mobility Addresses

  Some nodes may support mobility using the concepts of a home address
  and a care-of address (for example see [8]). Conceptually, a home
  address is an IP address assigned to a mobile node and used as the
  permanent address of the mobile node. A care-of address is an IP
  address associated with a mobile node while visiting a foreign link.
  When a mobile node is on its home link, it may have an address that
  is simultaneously a home address and a care-of address.

  For the purposes of this document, it is sufficient to know whether
  or not one's own addresses are designated as home addresses or care-
  of addresses.  Whether or not an address should be designated a home
  address or care-of address is outside the scope of this document.

4. Candidate Source Addresses

  The source address selection algorithm uses the concept of a
  "candidate set" of potential source addresses for a given destination
  address.  The candidate set is the set of all addresses that could be
  used as a source address; the source address selection algorithm will
  pick an address out of that set.  We write CandidateSource(A) to
  denote the candidate set for the address A.






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  It is RECOMMENDED that the candidate source addresses be the set of
  unicast addresses assigned to the interface that will be used to send
  to the destination.  (The "outgoing" interface.)  On routers, the
  candidate set MAY include unicast addresses assigned to any interface
  that forwards packets, subject to the restrictions described below.

     Discussion:  The Neighbor Discovery Redirect mechanism [14]
     requires that routers verify that the source address of a packet
     identifies a neighbor before generating a Redirect, so it is
     advantageous for hosts to choose source addresses assigned to the
     outgoing interface.  Implementations that wish to support the use
     of global source addresses assigned to a loopback interface should
     behave as if the loopback interface originates and forwards the
     packet.

  In some cases the destination address may be qualified with a zone
  index or other information that will constrain the candidate set.

  For multicast and link-local destination addresses, the set of
  candidate source addresses MUST only include addresses assigned to
  interfaces belonging to the same link as the outgoing interface.

     Discussion:  The restriction for multicast destination addresses
     is necessary because currently-deployed multicast forwarding
     algorithms use Reverse Path Forwarding (RPF) checks.

  For site-local destination addresses, the set of candidate source
  addresses MUST only include addresses assigned to interfaces
  belonging to the same site as the outgoing interface.

  In any case, anycast addresses, multicast addresses, and the
  unspecified address MUST NOT be included in a candidate set.

  If an application or upper-layer specifies a source address that is
  not in the candidate set for the destination, then the network layer
  MUST treat this as an error.  The specified source address may
  influence the candidate set, by affecting the choice of outgoing
  interface.  If the application or upper-layer specifies a source
  address that is in the candidate set for the destination, then the
  network layer MUST respect that choice.  If the application or
  upper-layer does not specify a source address, then the network layer
  uses the source address selection algorithm specified in the next
  section.

  On IPv6-only nodes that support SIIT [6, especially section 5], if
  the destination address is an IPv4-mapped address then the candidate
  set MUST contain only IPv4-translatable addresses.  If the




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  destination address is not an IPv4-mapped address, then the candidate
  set MUST NOT contain IPv4-translatable addresses.

5. Source Address Selection

  The source address selection algorithm produces as output a single
  source address for use with a given destination address.  This
  algorithm only applies to IPv6 destination addresses, not IPv4
  addresses.

  The algorithm is specified here in terms of a list of pair-wise
  comparison rules that (for a given destination address D) imposes a
  "greater than" ordering on the addresses in the candidate set
  CandidateSource(D).  The address at the front of the list after the
  algorithm completes is the one the algorithm selects.

  Note that conceptually, a sort of the candidate set is being
  performed, where a set of rules define the ordering among addresses.
  But because the output of the algorithm is a single source address,
  an implementation need not actually sort the set; it need only
  identify the "maximum" value that ends up at the front of the sorted
  list.

  The ordering of the addresses in the candidate set is defined by a
  list of eight pair-wise comparison rules, with each rule placing a
  "greater than," "less than" or "equal to" ordering on two source
  addresses with respect to each other (and that rule).  In the case
  that a given rule produces a tie, i.e., provides an "equal to" result
  for the two addresses, the remaining rules are applied (in order) to
  just those addresses that are tied to break the tie.  Note that if a
  rule produces a single clear "winner" (or set of "winners" in the
  case of ties), those addresses not in the winning set can be
  discarded from further consideration, with subsequent rules applied
  only to the remaining addresses.  If the eight rules fail to choose a
  single address, some unspecified tie-breaker should be used.

  When comparing two addresses SA and SB from the candidate set, we say
  "prefer SA" to mean that SA is "greater than" SB, and similarly we
  say "prefer SB" to mean that SA is "less than" SB.

  Rule 1:  Prefer same address.
  If SA = D, then prefer SA.  Similarly, if SB = D, then prefer SB.

  Rule 2:  Prefer appropriate scope.
  If Scope(SA) < Scope(SB): If Scope(SA) < Scope(D), then prefer SB
  and otherwise prefer SA.  Similarly, if Scope(SB) < Scope(SA): If
  Scope(SB) < Scope(D), then prefer SA and otherwise prefer SB.




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  Rule 3:  Avoid deprecated addresses.
  The addresses SA and SB have the same scope.  If one of the two
  source addresses is "preferred" and one of them is "deprecated" (in
  the RFC 2462 sense), then prefer the one that is "preferred."

  Rule 4:  Prefer home addresses.
  If SA is simultaneously a home address and care-of address and SB is
  not, then prefer SA.  Similarly, if SB is simultaneously a home
  address and care-of address and SA is not, then prefer SB.
  If SA is just a home address and SB is just a care-of address, then
  prefer SA.  Similarly, if SB is just a home address and SA is just a
  care-of address, then prefer SB.

  Implementations should provide a mechanism allowing an application to
  reverse the sense of this preference and prefer care-of addresses
  over home addresses (e.g., via appropriate API extensions).  Use of
  the mechanism should only affect the selection rules for the invoking
  application.

  Rule 5:  Prefer outgoing interface.
  If SA is assigned to the interface that will be used to send to D
  and SB is assigned to a different interface, then prefer SA.
  Similarly, if SB is assigned to the interface that will be used to
  send to D and SA is assigned to a different interface, then prefer
  SB.

  Rule 6:  Prefer matching label.
  If Label(SA) = Label(D) and Label(SB) <> Label(D), then prefer SA.
  Similarly, if Label(SB) = Label(D) and Label(SA) <> Label(D), then
  prefer SB.

  Rule 7:  Prefer public addresses.
  If SA is a public address and SB is a temporary address, then prefer
  SA.  Similarly, if SB is a public address and SA is a temporary
  address, then prefer SB.

  Implementations MUST provide a mechanism allowing an application to
  reverse the sense of this preference and prefer temporary addresses
  over public addresses (e.g., via appropriate API extensions).  Use of
  the mechanism should only affect the selection rules for the invoking
  application. This rule avoids applications potentially failing due to
  the relatively short lifetime of temporary addresses or due to the
  possibility of the reverse lookup of a temporary address either
  failing or returning a randomized name.  Implementations for which
  privacy considerations outweigh these application compatibility
  concerns MAY reverse the sense of this rule and by default prefer
  temporary addresses over public addresses.




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  Rule 8:  Use longest matching prefix.
  If CommonPrefixLen(SA, D) > CommonPrefixLen(SB, D), then prefer SA.
  Similarly, if CommonPrefixLen(SB, D) > CommonPrefixLen(SA, D), then
  prefer SB.

  Rule 8 may be superseded if the implementation has other means of
  choosing among source addresses.  For example, if the implementation
  somehow knows which source address will result in the "best"
  communications performance.

  Rule 2 (prefer appropriate scope) MUST be implemented and given high
  priority because it can affect interoperability.

6. Destination Address Selection

  The destination address selection algorithm takes a list of
  destination addresses and sorts the addresses to produce a new list.
  It is specified here in terms of the pair-wise comparison of
  addresses DA and DB, where DA appears before DB in the original list.

  The algorithm sorts together both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses.  To find
  the attributes of an IPv4 address in the policy table, the IPv4
  address should be represented as an IPv4-mapped address.

  We write Source(D) to indicate the selected source address for a
  destination D.  For IPv6 addresses, the previous section specifies
  the source address selection algorithm.  Source address selection for
  IPv4 addresses is not specified in this document.

  We say that Source(D) is undefined if there is no source address
  available for destination D.  For IPv6 addresses, this is only the
  case if CandidateSource(D) is the empty set.

  The pair-wise comparison of destination addresses consists of ten
  rules, which should be applied in order.  If a rule determines a
  result, then the remaining rules are not relevant and should be
  ignored.  Subsequent rules act as tie-breakers for earlier rules.
  See the previous section for a lengthier description of how pair-wise
  comparison tie-breaker rules can be used to sort a list.

  Rule 1:  Avoid unusable destinations.
  If DB is known to be unreachable or if Source(DB) is undefined, then
  prefer DA.  Similarly, if DA is known to be unreachable or if
  Source(DA) is undefined, then prefer DB.

     Discussion:  An implementation may know that a particular
     destination is unreachable in several ways.  For example, the
     destination may be reached through a network interface that is



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     currently unplugged.  For example, the implementation may retain
     for some period of time information from Neighbor Unreachability
     Detection [14].  In any case, the determination of unreachability
     for the purposes of this rule is implementation-dependent.

  Rule 2:  Prefer matching scope.
  If Scope(DA) = Scope(Source(DA)) and Scope(DB) <> Scope(Source(DB)),
  then prefer DA.  Similarly, if Scope(DA) <> Scope(Source(DA)) and
  Scope(DB) = Scope(Source(DB)), then prefer DB.

  Rule 3:  Avoid deprecated addresses.
  If Source(DA) is deprecated and Source(DB) is not, then prefer DB.
  Similarly, if Source(DA) is not deprecated and Source(DB) is
  deprecated, then prefer DA.

  Rule 4:  Prefer home addresses.
  If Source(DA) is simultaneously a home address and care-of address
  and Source(DB) is not, then prefer DA.  Similarly, if Source(DB) is
  simultaneously a home address and care-of address and Source(DA) is
  not, then prefer DB.

  If Source(DA) is just a home address and Source(DB) is just a care-of
  address, then prefer DA.  Similarly, if Source(DA) is just a care-of
  address and Source(DB) is just a home address, then prefer DB.

  Rule 5:  Prefer matching label.
  If Label(Source(DA)) = Label(DA) and Label(Source(DB)) <> Label(DB),
  then prefer DA.  Similarly, if Label(Source(DA)) <> Label(DA) and
  Label(Source(DB)) = Label(DB), then prefer DB.

  Rule 6:  Prefer higher precedence.
  If Precedence(DA) > Precedence(DB), then prefer DA.  Similarly, if
  Precedence(DA) < Precedence(DB), then prefer DB.

  Rule 7:  Prefer native transport.
  If DA is reached via an encapsulating transition mechanism (e.g.,
  IPv6 in IPv4) and DB is not, then prefer DB.  Similarly, if DB
  is reached via encapsulation and DA is not, then prefer DA.

     Discussion:  6-over-4 [15], ISATAP [16], and configured tunnels
     [17] are examples of encapsulating transition mechanisms for which
     the destination address does not have a specific prefix and hence
     can not be assigned a lower precedence in the policy table.  An
     implementation MAY generalize this rule by using a concept of
     interface preference, and giving virtual interfaces (like the
     IPv6-in-IPv4 encapsulating interfaces) a lower preference than
     native interfaces (like ethernet interfaces).




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RFC 3484           Default Address Selection for IPv6      February 2003


  Rule 8:  Prefer smaller scope.
  If Scope(DA) < Scope(DB), then prefer DA.  Similarly, if Scope(DA) >
  Scope(DB), then prefer DB.

  Rule 9:  Use longest matching prefix.
  When DA and DB belong to the same address family (both are IPv6 or
  both are IPv4): If CommonPrefixLen(DA, Source(DA)) >
  CommonPrefixLen(DB, Source(DB)), then prefer DA.  Similarly, if
  CommonPrefixLen(DA, Source(DA)) < CommonPrefixLen(DB, Source(DB)),
  then prefer DB.

  Rule 10:  Otherwise, leave the order unchanged.
  If DA preceded DB in the original list, prefer DA.  Otherwise prefer
  DB.

  Rules 9 and 10 may be superseded if the implementation has other
  means of sorting destination addresses.  For example, if the
  implementation somehow knows which destination addresses will result
  in the "best" communications performance.

7. Interactions with Routing

  This specification of source address selection assumes that routing
  (more precisely, selecting an outgoing interface on a node with
  multiple interfaces) is done before source address selection.
  However, implementations may use source address considerations as a
  tiebreaker when choosing among otherwise equivalent routes.

  For example, suppose a node has interfaces on two different links,
  with both links having a working default router.  Both of the
  interfaces have preferred (in the RFC 2462 sense) global addresses.
  When sending to a global destination address, if there's no routing
  reason to prefer one interface over the other, then an implementation
  may preferentially choose the outgoing interface that will allow it
  to use the source address that shares a longer common prefix with the
  destination.

  Implementations may also use the choice of router to influence the
  choice of source address.  For example, suppose a host is on a link
  with two routers.  One router is advertising a global prefix A and
  the other router is advertising global prefix B.  Then when sending
  via the first router, the host may prefer source addresses with
  prefix A and when sending via the second router, prefer source
  addresses with prefix B.







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8. Implementation Considerations

  The destination address selection algorithm needs information about
  potential source addresses.  One possible implementation strategy is
  for getaddrinfo() to call down to the network layer with a list of
  destination addresses, sort the list in the network layer with full
  current knowledge of available source addresses, and return the
  sorted list to getaddrinfo().  This is simple and gives the best
  results but it introduces the overhead of another system call.  One
  way to reduce this overhead is to cache the sorted address list in
  the resolver, so that subsequent calls for the same name do not need
  to resort the list.

  Another implementation strategy is to call down to the network layer
  to retrieve source address information and then sort the list of
  addresses directly in the context of getaddrinfo().  To reduce
  overhead in this approach, the source address information can be
  cached, amortizing the overhead of retrieving it across multiple
  calls to getaddrinfo().  In this approach, the implementation may not
  have knowledge of the outgoing interface for each destination, so it
  MAY use a looser definition of the candidate set during destination
  address ordering.

  In any case, if the implementation uses cached and possibly stale
  information in its implementation of destination address selection,
  or if the ordering of a cached list of destination addresses is
  possibly stale, then it should ensure that the destination address
  ordering returned to the application is no more than one second out
  of date.  For example, an implementation might make a system call to
  check if any routing table entries or source address assignments that
  might affect these algorithms have changed.  Another strategy is to
  use an invalidation counter that is incremented whenever any
  underlying state is changed.  By caching the current invalidation
  counter value with derived state and then later comparing against the
  current value, the implementation could detect if the derived state
  is potentially stale.

9. Security Considerations

  This document has no direct impact on Internet infrastructure
  security.

  Note that most source address selection algorithms, including the one
  specified in this document, expose a potential privacy concern.  An
  unfriendly node can infer correlations among a target node's
  addresses by probing the target node with request packets that force
  the target host to choose its source address for the reply packets.
  (Perhaps because the request packets are sent to an anycast or



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  multicast address, or perhaps the upper-layer protocol chosen for the
  attack does not specify a particular source address for its reply
  packets.)  By using different addresses for itself, the unfriendly
  node can cause the target node to expose the target's own addresses.

10. Examples

  This section contains a number of examples, first of default behavior
  and then demonstrating the utility of policy table configuration.
  These examples are provided for illustrative purposes; they should
  not be construed as normative.

10.1. Default Source Address Selection

  The source address selection rules, in conjunction with the default
  policy table, produce the following behavior:

  Destination: 2001::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 3ffe::1 or fe80::1
  Result: 3ffe::1 (prefer appropriate scope)

  Destination: 2001::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: fe80::1 or fec0::1
  Result: fec0::1 (prefer appropriate scope)

  Destination: fec0::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: fe80::1 or 2001::1
  Result: 2001::1 (prefer appropriate scope)

  Destination: ff05::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: fe80::1 or fec0::1 or 2001::1
  Result: fec0::1 (prefer appropriate scope)

  Destination: 2001::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::1 (deprecated) or 2002::1
  Result: 2001::1 (prefer same address)

  Destination: fec0::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: fec0::2 (deprecated) or 2001::1
  Result: fec0::2 (prefer appropriate scope)

  Destination: 2001::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or 3ffe::2
  Result: 2001::2 (longest-matching-prefix)







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  Destination: 2001::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 (care-of address) or 3ffe::2
  (home address)
  Result: 3ffe::2 (prefer home address)

  Destination: 2002:836b:2179::1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 2002:836b:2179::d5e3:7953:13eb:22e8
  (temporary) or 2001::2
  Result: 2002:836b:2179::d5e3:7953:13eb:22e8 (prefer matching label)

  Destination: 2001::d5e3:0:0:1
  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or 2001::d5e3:7953:13eb:22e8
  (temporary)
  Result: 2001::2 (prefer public address)

10.2. Default Destination Address Selection

  The destination address selection rules, in conjunction with the
  default policy table and the source address selection rules, produce
  the following behavior:

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fe80::1 or 169.254.13.78
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 131.107.65.121
  Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then 131.107.65.121 (src
  169.254.13.78) (prefer matching scope)

  Candidate Source Addresses: fe80::1 or 131.107.65.117
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 131.107.65.121
  Result: 131.107.65.121 (src 131.107.65.117) then 2001::1 (src
  fe80::1) (prefer matching scope)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fe80::1 or 10.1.2.4
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 10.1.2.3
  Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then 10.1.2.3 (src 10.1.2.4) (prefer
  higher precedence)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fec0::2 or fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or fec0::1 or fe80::1
  Result: fe80::1 (src fe80::2) then fec0::1 (src fec0::2) then
  2001::1 (src 2001::2) (prefer smaller scope)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 (care-of address) or 3ffe::1
  (home address) or fec0::2 (care-of address) or fe80::2 (care-of
  address)
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or fec0::1
  Result: 2001:1 (src 3ffe::1) then fec0::1 (src fec0::2) (prefer home
  address)




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  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fec0::2 (deprecated) or
  fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or fec0::1
  Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then fec0::1 (src fec0::2) (avoid
  deprecated addresses)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or 3f44::2 or fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 3ffe::1
  Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then 3ffe::1 (src 3f44::2) (longest
  matching prefix)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2002:836b:4179::2 or fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2002:836b:4179::1 or 2001::1
  Result: 2002:836b:4179::1 (src 2002:836b:4179::2) then 2001::1 (src
  2002:836b:4179::2) (prefer matching label)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2002:836b:4179::2 or 2001::2 or fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2002:836b:4179::1 or 2001::1
  Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then 2002:836b:4179::1 (src
  2002:836b:4179::2) (prefer higher precedence)

10.3. Configuring Preference for IPv6 or IPv4

  The default policy table gives IPv6 addresses higher precedence than
  IPv4 addresses.  This means that applications will use IPv6 in
  preference to IPv4 when the two are equally suitable.  An
  administrator can change the policy table to prefer IPv4 addresses by
  giving the ::ffff:0.0.0.0/96 prefix a higher precedence:

     Prefix        Precedence Label
     ::1/128               50     0
     ::/0                  40     1
     2002::/16             30     2
     ::/96                 20     3
     ::ffff:0:0/96        100     4

  This change to the default policy table produces the following
  behavior:

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fe80::1 or 169.254.13.78
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 131.107.65.121
  Unchanged Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then 131.107.65.121 (src
  169.254.13.78) (prefer matching scope)

  Candidate Source Addresses: fe80::1 or 131.107.65.117
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 131.107.65.121
  Unchanged Result: 131.107.65.121 (src 131.107.65.117) then 2001::1
  (src fe80::1) (prefer matching scope)



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  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fe80::1 or 10.1.2.4
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or 10.1.2.3
  New Result: 10.1.2.3 (src 10.1.2.4) then 2001::1 (src 2001::2)
  (prefer higher precedence)

10.4. Configuring Preference for Scoped Addresses

  The destination address selection rules give preference to
  destinations of smaller scope.  For example, a site-local destination
  will be sorted before a global scope destination when the two are
  otherwise equally suitable.  An administrator can change the policy
  table to reverse this preference and sort global destinations before
  site-local destinations, and site-local destinations before link-
  local destinations:

     Prefix        Precedence Label
     ::1/128               50     0
     ::/0                  40     1
     fec0::/10             37     1
     fe80::/10             33     1
     2002::/16             30     2
     ::/96                 20     3
     ::ffff:0:0/96         10     4

  This change to the default policy table produces the following
  behavior:

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 or fec0::2 or fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or fec0::1 or fe80::1
  New Result: 2001::1 (src 2001::2) then fec0::1 (src fec0::2) then
  fe80::1 (src fe80::2) (prefer higher precedence)

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001::2 (deprecated) or fec0::2 or
  fe80::2
  Destination Address List: 2001::1 or fec0::1
  Unchanged Result: fec0::1 (src fec0::2) then 2001::1 (src 2001::2)
  (avoid deprecated addresses)

10.5. Configuring a Multi-Homed Site

  Consider a site A that has a business-critical relationship with
  another site B.  To support their business needs, the two sites have
  contracted for service with a special high-performance ISP.  This is
  in addition to the normal Internet connection that both sites have
  with different ISPs.  The high-performance ISP is expensive and the
  two sites wish to use it only for their business-critical traffic
  with each other.




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  Each site has two global prefixes, one from the high-performance ISP
  and one from their normal ISP.  Site A has prefix 2001:aaaa:aaaa::/48
  from the high-performance ISP and prefix 2007:0:aaaa::/48 from its
  normal ISP.  Site B has prefix 2001:bbbb:bbbb::/48 from the high-
  performance ISP and prefix 2007:0:bbbb::/48 from its normal ISP.  All
  hosts in both sites register two addresses in the DNS.

  The routing within both sites directs most traffic to the egress to
  the normal ISP, but the routing directs traffic sent to the other
  site's 2001 prefix to the egress to the high-performance ISP.  To
  prevent unintended use of their high-performance ISP connection, the
  two sites implement ingress filtering to discard traffic entering
  from the high-performance ISP that is not from the other site.

  The default policy table and address selection rules produce the
  following behavior:

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a or 2007:0:aaaa::a or
  fe80::a
  Destination Address List: 2001:bbbb:bbbb::b or 2007:0:bbbb::b
  Result: 2007:0:bbbb::b (src 2007:0:aaaa::a) then 2001:bbbb:bbbb::b
  (src 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a) (longest matching prefix)

  In other words, when a host in site A initiates a connection to a
  host in site B, the traffic does not take advantage of their
  connections to the high-performance ISP.  This is not their desired
  behavior.

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a or 2007:0:aaaa::a or
  fe80::a
  Destination Address List: 2001:cccc:cccc::c or 2006:cccc:cccc::c
  Result: 2001:cccc:cccc::c (src 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a) then
  2006:cccc:cccc::c (src 2007:0:aaaa::a) (longest matching prefix)

  In other words, when a host in site A initiates a connection to a
  host in some other site C, the reverse traffic may come back through
  the high-performance ISP.  Again, this is not their desired behavior.

  This predicament demonstrates the limitations of the longest-
  matching-prefix heuristic in multi-homed situations.

  However, the administrators of sites A and B can achieve their
  desired behavior via policy table configuration.  For example, they
  can use the following policy table:







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     Prefix              Precedence Label
     ::1                         50     0
     2001:aaaa:aaaa::/48         45     5
     2001:bbbb:bbbb::/48         45     5
     ::/0                        40     1
     2002::/16                   30     2
     ::/96                       20     3
     ::ffff:0:0/96               10     4

  This policy table produces the following behavior:

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a or 2007:0:aaaa::a or
  fe80::a
  Destination Address List: 2001:bbbb:bbbb::b or 2007:0:bbbb::b
  New Result: 2001:bbbb:bbbb::b (src 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a) then
  2007:0:bbbb::b (src 2007:0:aaaa::a) (prefer higher precedence)

  In other words, when a host in site A initiates a connection to a
  host in site B, the traffic uses the high-performance ISP as desired.

  Candidate Source Addresses: 2001:aaaa:aaaa::a or 2007:0:aaaa::a or
  fe80::a
  Destination Address List: 2001:cccc:cccc::c or 2006:cccc:cccc::c
  New Result: 2006:cccc:cccc::c (src 2007:0:aaaa::a) then
  2001:cccc:cccc::c (src 2007:0:aaaa::a) (longest matching prefix)

  In other words, when a host in site A initiates a connection to a
  host in some other site C, the traffic uses the normal ISP as
  desired.

Normative References

  [1]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
       Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

  [2]  Thompson, S. and T. Narten, "IPv6 Stateless Address
       Autoconfiguration", RFC 2462 , December 1998.

  [3]  Narten, T. and R. Draves, "Privacy Extensions for Stateless
       Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6", RFC 3041, January 2001.

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

  [5]  Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4
       Clouds", RFC 3056, February 2001.





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  [6]  Nordmark, E., "Stateless IP/ICMP Translation Algorithm (SIIT)",
       RFC 2765, February 2000.

Informative References

  [7]  Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3", BCP
       9, RFC 2026, October 1996.

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

  [9]  S. Cheshire, B. Aboba, "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-local
       Addresses", Work in Progress.

  [10] Gilligan, R., Thomson, S., Bound, J. and W. Stevens, "Basic
       Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6", RFC 2553, March 1999.

  [11] S. Deering et. al, "IP Version 6 Scoped Address Architecture",
       Work in Progress.

  [12] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G. and E.
       Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets", BCP 5, RFC
       1918, February 1996.

  [13] Baker, F, "Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers", RFC 1812,
       June 1995.

  [14] Narten, T. and E. Nordmark, and W. Simpson, "Neighbor Discovery
       for IP Version 6", RFC 2461, December 1998.

  [15] Carpenter, B. and C. Jung, "Transmission of IPv6 over IPv4
       Domains without Explicit Tunnels", RFC 2529, March 1999.

  [16] F. Templin et. al, "Intra-Site Automatic Tunnel Addressing
       Protocol (ISATAP)", Work in Progress.

  [17] Gilligan, R. and E. Nordmark, "Transition Mechanisms for IPv6
       Hosts and Routers", RFC 1933, April 1996.













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Acknowledgments

  The author would like to acknowledge the contributions of the IPng
  Working Group, particularly Marc Blanchet, Brian Carpenter, Matt
  Crawford, Alain Durand, Steve Deering, Robert Elz, Jun-ichiro itojun
  Hagino, Tony Hain, M.T. Hollinger, JINMEI Tatuya, Thomas Narten, Erik
  Nordmark, Ken Powell, Markku Savela, Pekka Savola, Hesham Soliman,
  Dave Thaler, Mauro Tortonesi, Ole Troan, and Stig Venaas.  In
  addition, the anonymous IESG reviewers had many great comments and
  suggestions for clarification.

Author's Address

  Richard Draves
  Microsoft Research
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052

  Phone: +1 425 706 2268
  EMail: [email protected]































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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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Acknowledgement

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



















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