DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



                     THE CRONUS VIRTUAL LOCAL NETWORK

                           William I. MacGregor
                             Daniel C. Tappan
                       Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc.

                              25 August 1982


     [The purpose of this note is to describe the CRONUS Virtual
     Local Network, especially the addressing related features.
     These features include a method for mapping between Internet
     Addresses and Local Network addresses.  This is a topic of
     current concern in the ARPA Internet community.  This note is
     intended to stimulate discussion.  This is not a specification
     of an Internet Standard.]




     1  Purpose and Scope


          This note defines the Cronus (1) Virtual Local Network

     (VLN), a facility which provides interhost message transport to

     the Cronus Distributed Operating System.  The VLN consists of a

     'client interface specification' and an 'implementation'; the

     client interface is expected to be available on every Cronus

     host.  Client processes can send and receive datagrams using

     specific, broadcast, or multicast addressing as defined in the

     interface specification.


     _______________
     (1) The Cronus Distributed Operating System is being designed  by
     Bolt  Beranek  and Newman Inc., as a component of the Distributed
     Systems Technology Program  sponsored  by  Rome  Air  Development
     Center.   This work is supported by the DOS Design/Implementation
     contract, F30602-81-C-0132.



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          From the viewpoint of other Cronus system software and

     application programs, the VLN stands in place of a direct

     interface to the physical local network (PLN).  This additional

     level of abstraction is defined to meet two major system

     objectives:

       *  COMPATIBILITY.  The VLN defines a communication facility
          which is compatible with the Internet Protocol (IP)
          developed by DARPA; by implication the VLN is compatible
          with higher-level protocols such as the Transmission Control
          Protocol (TCP) based on IP.

       *  SUBSTITUTABILITY.  Cronus software built above the VLN is
          dependent only upon the VLN interface and not its
          implementation.  It is possible to substitute one physical
          local network for another in the VLN implementation,
          provided that the VLN interface semantics are maintained.


          (This note assumes the reader is familiar with the concepts

     and terminology of the DARPA Internet Program; reference [6] is a

     compilation of the important protocol specifications and other

     documents.  Documents in [6] of special significance here are [5]

     and [4].)


          The compatibility goal is motivated by factors relating to

     the Cronus design and its development environment.  A large body

     of software has evolved, and continues to evolve, in the internet

     community fostered by DARPA.  For example, the compatibility goal



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     permits the Cronus design to assimilate existing software

     components providing electronic mail, remote terminal access, and

     file transfer in a straightforward manner.  In addition to the

     roles of such services in the Cronus system, they are needed as

     support for the design and development process.  The prototype

     Cronus cluster, called the Advanced Development Model (ADM), will

     be connected to the ARPANET, and it is important that the ADM

     conform to the standards and conventions of the DARPA internet

     community.


          The substitutability goal reflects the belief that different

     instances of the Cronus cluster will utilize different physical

     local networks.  Substitution may be desirable for reasons of

     cost, performance, or other properties of the physical local

     network such as mechanical and electrical ruggedness.  The

     existence of the VLN interface definition suggests a procedure

     for physical local network substitution, namely, re-

     implementation of the VLN interface on each Cronus host.  The

     implementations will be functionally equivalent but can be

     expected to differ along dimensions not specified by the VLN

     interface definition.  Since different physical local networks




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     are often quite similar, the task of "re-implementing" the VLN is

     probably much less difficult than building the first

     implementation; small modifications to an existing, exemplary

     implementation may suffice.


          The concepts of the Cronus VLN, and in particular the VLN

     implementation based on Ethernet described in Section 4, have

     significance beyond their application in the Cronus system.  Many

     organizations are now beginning to install local networks and

     immediately confront the compatibility issue.  For a number of

     universities, for example, the compatibility problem is precisely

     the interoperability of the Ethernet and the DARPA internet.

     Although perhaps less immediate, the substitutability issue will

     also be faced by other organizations as local network technology

     advances, and the transfer of existing system and application

     software to a new physical local network base becomes an economic

     necessity.


          Figure 1 shows the position of the VLN in the lowest layers

     of the Cronus protocol hierarchy.  The VLN interface

     specification given in the next section is actually a meta-

     specification, like the specifications of IP and TCP, in that the



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     programming details of the interface are host-dependent and

     unspecified.  The precise representation of the VLN data

     structures and operations can be expected to vary from machine to

     machine, but the functional capabilities of the interface are the

     same regardless of the host.






                                    .
                                    .
                   |                .                  |
                   |-----------------------------------|
                   | Transmission  |  User      |      |
                   | Control       |  Datagram  | ...  |
                   | Protocol      |  Protocol  |      |
                   |-----------------------------------|
                   |        Internet Protocol          |
                   |              (IP)                 |
                   |-----------------------------------|
                   |      Virtual Local Network        |
                   |             (VLN)                 |
                   |-----------------------------------|
                   |      Physical Local Network       |
                   |       (PLN, e.g. Ethernet)        |
                    -----------------------------------


                    Figure 1 . Cronus Protocol Layering



          The VLN is completely compatible with the Internet Protocol

     as defined in [5], i.e., no changes or extensions to IP are



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     required to implement IP above the VLN.  In fact, this was a

     requirement on the VLN design; a consequence was the timely

     completion of the VLN design and avoidance of the lengthy delays

     which often accompany attempts to change or extend a widely-

     accepted standard.


          The following sections define the VLN client interface and

     illustrate how the VLN implementation might be organized for an

     Ethernet PLN.






     2  The VLN-to-Client Interface


          The VLN layer provides a datagram transport service among

     hosts in a Cronus 'cluster', and between these hosts and other

     hosts in the DARPA internet.  The hosts belonging to a cluster

     are directly attached to the same physical local network, but the

     VLN hides the peculiarities of the PLN from other Cronus

     software.  Communication with hosts outside the cluster is

     achieved through some number of 'internet gateways', shown in

     Figure 2, connected to the cluster.  The VLN layer is responsible




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     for routing datagrams to a gateway if they are addressed to hosts

     outside the cluster, and for delivering incoming datagrams to the

     appropriate VLN host.  A VLN is viewed as a network in the

     internet, and thus has an internet network number.  (2)



























     _______________
     (2) The PLN could possess its own network number, different  from
     the  network  number  of  the  VLN  it implements, or the network
     numbers could be the same.  Different  numbers  would  complicate
     the  gateways  somewhat,  but  are  consistent  with  the VLN and
     internet models.




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                    to internet
                     network X
                         |
                         |
           -----       -----       -----       -----
          |host1|     |gtwyA|     |host2|     |host3|
           -----       -----       -----       -----
             |           |           |           |
         --------------------------------------------------
                 |           |           |           |
               -----       -----       -----       -----
              |host4|     |host5|     |gtwyB|     |host6|
               -----       -----       -----       -----
                                         |
                                         |
                                    to internet
                                     network Y


                Figure 2 . A Virtual Local Network Cluster



          The VLN interface will have one client process on each host,

     normally the host's IP implementation.  The one "client process"

     may, in fact, be composed of several host processes; but the VLN

     layer will not distinguish among them, i.e., it performs no

     multiplexing/demultiplexing function.  (3)
     _______________
     (3) In the  Cronus  system,  multiplexing/demultiplexing  of  the
     datagram  stream  will be performed above the IP level, primarily



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          The structure of messages which pass through the VLN

     interface between client processes and the VLN implementation is

     identical to the structure of internet datagrams constructed in

     accordance with the Internet Protocol.  Any representation for

     internet datagrams is also a satisfactory representation for VLN

     datagrams, and in practice this representation will vary from

     host to host.  The VLN definition merely asserts that there is

     ONE well-defined representation for internet datagrams, and thus

     VLN datagrams, on any host supporting the VLN interface.  The

     argument name "Datagram" in the VLN operation definitions below

     refers to this well-defined but host-dependent datagram

     representation.


          The VLN guarantees that a datagram of 576 or fewer octets

     (i.e., the Total Length field of its internet header is less than

     or equal to 576) can be transferred between any two VLN clients.

     Larger datagrams may be transferred between some client pairs.

     Clients should generally avoid sending datagrams exceeding 576

     octets unless there is clear need to do so, and the sender is

     certain that all hosts involved can process the outsize
     _______________
     in conjunction with Cronus object management.




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     datagrams.


          The representation of an VLN datagram is unconstrained by

     the VLN specification, and the VLN implementor has many

     reasonable alternatives.  Perhaps the simplest representation is

     a contiguous block of memory locations, either passed by

     reference or copied across the VLN-to-client interface.  It may

     be beneficial to represent a datagram as a linked list instead,

     however, in order to reduce the number of times datagram text is

     copied as the datagram passes through the protocol hierarchy at

     the sending and receiving hosts.  When a message is passing down

     (towards the physical layer) it is successively "wrapped" by the

     protocol layers.  Addition of the "wrapper"--header and trailer

     fields--can be done without copying the message text if the

     header and trailer can be linked into the message representation.

     In the particular, when an IP implementation is the client of the

     VLN layer a linked structure is also desirable to permit

     'reassembly' of datagrams (the merger of several 'fragment'

     datagrams into one larger datagram) inside the IP layer without

     copying data repeatedly.  If properly designed, one linked list

     structure can speed up both wrapping/unwrapping and datagram




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     reassembly in the IP layer.


          Although the structure of internet and VLN datagrams is

     identical, the VLN-to-client interface places its own

     interpretation on internet header fields, and differs from the

     IP-to-client interface in significant respects:

       1.  The VLN layer utilizes only the Source Address, Destination
           Address, Total Length, and Header Checksum fields in the
           internet datagram; other fields are accurately transmitted
           from the sending to the receiving client.

       2.  Internet datagram fragmentation and reassembly is not
           performed in the VLN layer, nor does the VLN layer
           implement any aspect of internet datagram option
           processing.

       3.  At the VLN interface, a special interpretation is placed
           upon the Destination Address in the internet header, which
           allows VLN broadcast and multicast addresses to be encoded
           in the internet address structure.

       4.  With high probability, duplicate delivery of datagrams sent
           between hosts on the same VLN does not occur.

       5.  Between two VLN clients S and R in the same Cronus cluster,
           the sequence of datagrams received by R is a subsequence of
           the sequence sent by S to R; a stronger sequencing property
           holds for broadcast and multicast addressing.











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     2.1  VLN Addressing


          In the DARPA internet an 'internet address' is defined to be

     a 32 bit quantity which is partitioned into two fields, a network

     number and a 'local address'.  VLN addresses share this basic

     structure, and are perceived by hosts outside the Cronus system

     as ordinary internet addresses.  A sender outside a Cronus

     cluster may direct an internet datagram into the cluster by

     specifying the VLN network number in the network number field of

     the destination address; senders in the cluster may transmit

     messages to internet hosts outside the cluster in a similar way.

     The VLN in a Cronus cluster, however, attaches special meaning to

     the local address field of a VLN address, as explained below.


          Each network in the internet community is assigned a

     'class', either A, B, or C, and a network number in its class.

     The partitioning of the 32 bit internet address into network

     number and local address fields is a function of the class of the

     network number, as follows:









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                              Width of            Width of
                            Network Number      Local Address

             Class A            7 bits             24 bits

             Class B           14 bits             16 bits

             Class C           21 bits              8 bits


                     Table 1. Internet Address Formats


     The bits not included in the network number or local address

     fields encode the network class, e.g., a 3 bit prefix of 110

     designates a class C address (see [4]).


          The interpretation of the local address field of an internet

     address is the responsibility of the network designated in the

     network number field.  In the ARPANET (a class A network, with

     network number 10) the local address refers to a specific

     physical host; this is the most common use of the local address

     field.  VLN addresses, in contrast, may refer to all hosts

     (broadcast) or groups of hosts (multicast) in a Cronus cluster,

     as well as specific hosts inside or outside of the Cluster.

     Specific, broadcast, and multicast addresses are all encoded in



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     the VLN local address field.  (4)


          The meaning of the local address field of a VLN address is

     defined in the table below.





             ADDRESS MODES         VLN LOCAL ADDRESS VALUES


             Specific Host             0     to  1,023

             Multicast                 1,024 to 65,534

             Broadcast                          65,535


                     Table 2. VLN Local Address Modes


     In order to represent the full range of specific, broadcast, and

     multicast addresses in the local address field, a VLN network

     should be either class A or class B.  If a VLN is a class A

     internet network, a VLN local address occupies the low-order 16

     bits of the 24 bit internet local address field, and the upper 8

     bits of the internet local address are zero.  If a VLN is a class
     _______________
     (4) The ability of hosts outside a  Cronus  cluster  to  transmit
     datagrams  with  VLN broadcast or multicast destination addresses
     into the cluster may be restricted by the cluster gateway(s), for
     reasons of system security.




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     B network, the internet local address field is fully utilized by

     the VLN local address.






     2.2  VLN Operations


          There are seven operations defined at the VLN interface and

     available to the VLN client on each host.  An implementation of

     the VLN interface has wide lattitude in the presentation of these

     operations to the client; for example, the operations may or may

     not return error codes.


          A VLN implementation may define the operations to occur

     synchronously or asynchronously with respect to the client's

     computation.  We expect that the ResetVLNInterface, MyVLNAddress,

     SendVLNDatagram, PurgeMAddresses, AttendMAddress, and

     IgnoreMAddress operations will usually be synchronous with

     respect to the client, but ReceiveVLNDatagram will usually be

     asynchronous, i.e., the client may initiate the operation,

     continue to compute, and at some later time be notified that a

     datagram is available.  (The alternatives to asynchronous




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     ReceiveVLNDatagram are A) a blocking receive operation; and B) a

     non-blocking but synchronous receive operation, which returns a

     failure code immediately if a datagram is not available.  Either

     alternative may satisfy particular requirements, but an

     asynchronous receive subsumes these and is more generally

     useful.) At a minimum, the client must have fully synchronous

     access to each of the operations; more elaborate mechanisms may

     be provided at the option of the VLN implementation.


     VLN OPERATIONS



         ResetVLNInterface

             The VLN layer for this host is reset (e.g., for the
             Ethernet VLN implementation the operation ClearVPMap is
             performed, and a frame of type "Cronus VLN" and subtype
             "Mapping Update" is broadcast; see Section 4.2).  This
             operation does not affect the set of attended VLN
             multicast addresses.

         function MyVLNAddress()

             Returns the specific VLN address of this host; this can
             always be done without communication with any other host.

         SendVLNDatagram(Datagram)

             When this operation completes, the VLN layer has copied
             the Datagram and it is either "in transmission" or
             "delivered", i.e., the transmitting process cannot assume
             that the message has been delivered when SendVLNDatagram



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             completes.

         ReceiveVLNDatagram(Datagram)

             When this operation completes, Datagram is a
             representation of a VLN datagram sent by a VLN client and
             not previously received by the client invoking
             ReceiveVLNDatagram.

         PurgeMAddresses()

             When this operation completes, no VLN multicast addresses
             are registered with the local VLN component.

         function AttendMAddress(MAddress)

             If this operation returns True then MAddress, which must
             be a VLN multicast address, is registered as an "alias"
             for this host, and messages addressed to MAddress by VLN
             clients will be delivered to the client on this host.

         IgnoreMAddress(MAddress)

             When this operation completes, MAddress is not registered
             as a multicast address for the client on this host.


          Whenever a Cronus host comes up, ResetVLNInterface and

     PurgeMAddresses are performed implicitly by the VLN layer before

     it will accept a request from the client or incoming traffic from

     the PLN.  They may also be invoked by the client during normal

     operation.  As described in Section 4.2 below, a VLN component

     may depend upon state information obtained dynamically from other

     hosts, and there is a possibility that incorrect information




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     might enter a component's state tables.  (This might happen, for

     example, if the PLN address of a Cronus host were changed but its

     VLN address preserved--the old VLN-to-PLN address mappings held

     by other hosts would then be incorrect.) A cautious VLN client

     could call ResetVLNInterface at periodic intervals (every hour,

     say) to force the VLN component to reconstitute its dynamic

     tables.


          A VLN component will place a limit on the number of

     multicast addresses to which it will simultaneously "attend"; if

     the client attempts to register more addresses than this,

     AttendMAddress will return False with no other effect.  The

     actual limit will vary among VLN components, but it will usually

     be between 10 and 100 multicast addresses.  Components may

     implement limits as large as the entire multicast address space

     (64,511 addresses).


          The VLN layer does not guarantee any minimum amount of

     buffering for datagrams, at either the sending or receiving

     host(s).  It does guarantee, however, that a SendVLNDatagram

     operation invoked by a VLN client will eventually complete; this

     implies that datagrams may be lost if buffering is insufficient



                                    18








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     and receiving clients are too slow.  The VLN layer will do its

     best to discard packets for this reason very infrequently.






     2.3  Reliability Guarantees


          Guarantees are never absolute--there is always some

     probability, however remote, that a catastrophe will occur and a

     promise be broken.  Nevertheless, the concept of a guarantee is

     still valuable, because the improbability of a catastrophic

     failure influences the design and cost of the recovery mechanisms

     needed to overcome it.  In this spirit, the word "guarantee" as

     used here implies only that the alternatives to correct function

     (i.e., catastrophic failures) are extremely rare events.


          The VLN does not attempt to guarantee reliable delivery of

     datagrams, nor does it provide negative acknowlegements of

     damaged or discarded datagrams.  It does guarantee that received

     datagrams are accurate representations of transmitted datagrams.


          The VLN also guarantees that datagrams will not "replicate"

     during transmission, i.e., for each intended receiver, a given



                                    19








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     datagram is received once or not at all.  (5)


          Between two VLN clients S and R in the same cluster, the

     sequence of datagrams received by R is a subsequence of the

     sequence sent by S to R, i.e., datagrams are received in order,

     possibly with omissions.


          A stronger sequencing property holds for broadcast and

     multicast transmissions.  If receivers R1 and R2 both receive

     broadcast or multicast datagrams D1 and D2, either they both

     receive D1 before D2, or they both receive D2 before D1.







     3  Desirable Characteristics of a Physical Local Network


          While it is conceivable that a VLN could be implemented on a

     long-haul or virtual-circuit-oriented PLN, these networks are

     generally ill-suited to the task.  The ARPANET, for example, does

     not support broadcast or multicast addressing modes, nor does it
     _______________
     (5) A protocol operating above the  VLN  layer  (e.g.,  TCP)  may
     employ  a  retransmission strategy; the VLN layer does nothing to
     filter duplicates arising in this way.




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     provide the VLN sequencing guarantees.  If the ARPANET were the

     base for a VLN implementation, broadcast and multicast would have

     to be constructed from specific addressing, and a network-wide

     synchronization mechanism would be required to implement the

     sequencing guarantees.  Although the compatibility and

     substitutability benefits might still be achieved, the

     implementation would be costly, and performance poor.


          A good implementation base for a Cronus VLN would be a

     high-bandwidth local network with all or most of these

     characteristics:

       1.  The ability to encapsulate a VLN datagram in a single PLN
           datagram.

       2.  An efficient broadcast addressing mode.

       3.  Natural resistance to datagram replication during
           transmission.

       4.  Sequencing guarantees like those of the VLN interface.

       5.  A strong error-detecting code (datagram checksum).

     Good candidates include Ethernet, the Flexible Intraconnect, and

     Pronet, among others.








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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     4  A VLN Implementation Based on Ethernet


          The Ethernet local network specification is the result of a

     collaborative effort by Digital Equipment Corp., Intel Corp., and

     Xerox Corp.  The Version 1.0 specification [3] was released in

     September, 1980. Useful background information on the Ethernet

     internetworking model is supplied in [2].


          The Ethernet VLN implementation begins with the assumption,

     in accordance with the model developed in [2], that the addresses

     of specific Ethernet hosts are arbitrary, 48 bit quantities, not

     under the control of DOS Design/Implementation Project.  The VLN

     implementation must, therefore, develop a strategy to map VLN

     addresses to specific Ethernet addresses.


          A second important assumption is that the VLN-address-to-

     Ethernet-address mapping should not be maintained manually in

     each VLN host.  Manual procedures are too cumbersome and error-

     prone when a local network may consist of hundreds of hosts, and

     hosts may join and leave the network frequently.  A protocol is

     described below which allows hosts to dynamically construct the

     mapping, beginning only with knowledge of their own VLN and




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     Ethernet host addresses.


          The succeeding sections discuss the VLN implementation based

     on the Ethernet PLN in detail, as designed for the Cronus

     prototype currently being assembled by Bolt Beranek and Newman,

     Inc.





     4.1  Datagram Encapsulation


          An internet datagram is encapsulated in an Ethernet frame by

     placing the internet datagram in the Ethernet frame data field,

     and setting the Ethernet type field to "DoD IP".


          To guarantee agreement by the sending and receiving VLN

     components on the ordering of internet datagram octets within an

     encapsulating Ethernet frame, the Ethernet octet ordering is

     required to be consistent with the IP octet ordering.

     Specifically, if IP(i) and IP(j) are internet datagram octets and

     i<j, and EF(k) and EF(l) are the Ethernet frame octets which

     represent IP(i) and IP(j) once encapsulated, then k<l.  Bit






                                    23








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     orderings within octets must also be consistent. (6)







     4.2  VLN Specific Addressing Mode


          Each VLN component maintains a virtual-to-physical address

     map (the VPMap) which translates a 32 bit specific VLN host

     address (7) in this cluster to a 48 bit Ethernet address.  (8)

     The VPMap data structure and the operations on it can be

     efficiently implemented using standard hashing techniques.  Only

     three operations defined on the VPMap are discussed in this note:

     ClearVPMap, TranslateVtoP, and StoreVPPair.


          Each host has an Ethernet host address (EHA) to which its

     controller will respond, determined by Xerox and the controller

     manufacturer (see Section 4.5.2).  At host initialization time,
     _______________
     (6) See [1] for a lively discussion of the problems arising  from
     the failure of communicants to agree upon consistent orderings.
     (7) Since the high-order 22 bits of the address are constant  for
     all  specific  host addresses in a cluster, only the low-order 10
     bits of the address are significant.
     (8) The least significant bit of the first octet of the  Ethernet
     address  is  always 0, since these are not broadcast or multicast
     addresses.




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824





      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
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                     Destination Address                       |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | Destination Address (contd.)  |        Source Address         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                   Source Address (contd.)                     |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |      Type  ("DoD IP")         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                                     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                                     |Version|  IHL  |Type of Service|
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |        Total Length           |        Identification         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |Flags|     Fragment Offset     |  Time to Live |    Protocol   |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |       Header Checksum         |         Source Address        |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |    Source Address (contd.)    |      Destination Address      |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     | Destination Address (contd.)  |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                                     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                                     |                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +
     .                                                               .
     .                            Data                               .
     .                                                               .
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |                     Frame Check Sequence                      |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                Table 3. An Encapsulated Internet Datagram



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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     the local VLN component establishes a second host address, the

     multicast host address (MHA), constructed from the host's VLN

     address.  Represented as a sequence of octets in hexadecimal, the

     MHA has the form:



              A  B  C  D  E  F

             09-00-08-00-hh-hh

     A is the first octet transmitted, and F the last.  The two octets

     E and F contain the host local address:



                 E         F

             000000hh  hhhhhhhh
                   ^          ^
                  MSB        LSB


          When the VLN client invokes SendVLNDatagram to send a

     specifically addressed datagram, the local VLN component

     encapsulates the datagram in an Ethernet frame and transmits it

     without delay.  The Source Address in the Ethernet frame is the

     EHA of the sending host.  The Ethernet Destination Address is

     formed from the destination VLN address in the datagram, and is

     either:




                                    26








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



         - the EHA of the destination host, if the TranslateVtoP
           operation on the VPMap succeeds,

       or

         - the MHA formed from the host number in the destination VLN
           address, as described above.


          When a VLN component receives an Ethernet frame with type

     "DoD IP", it decapsulates the internet datagram and delivers it

     to its client.  If the frame was addressed to the EHA of the

     receiving host, no further action is taken, but if the frame was

     addressed to the MHA of the receiving host the VLN component will

     broadcast an update for the VPMaps of the other hosts.  This will

     permit the other hosts to use the EHA of this host for future

     traffic.  The type field of the Ethernet frame containing the

     update is "Cronus VLN", and the format of the data octets in the

     frame is:




      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
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |   Subtype ("Mapping Update")  |        Host VLN Address       |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |   Host VLN Address (contd.)   |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     When a local VLN component receives an Ethernet frame with type



                                    27








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     "Cronus VLN" and subtype "Mapping Update", it performs a

     StoreVPPair operation using the Ethernet Source Address field and

     the host VLN address sent as frame data.


          This multicast mechanism could be extended to perform other

     address mapping functions, for example, to discover the addresses

     of a cluster's gateways.  Suppose all gateways register the same

     Multicast Gateway Address (MGA, analogous to MHA) with their

     Ethernet controllers; the MGA then becomes a "logical name" for

     the gateway function in a Cronus cluster.  If a host needs to

     send a datagram out of the cluster and doesn't know what specific

     gateway address to use, the host can multicast the datagram to

     all gateways by sending to MGA.  One or more of the gateways can

     forward the datagram, and transmit a "Gateway Mapping Update"

     (containing the gateway's specific Ethernet address) back to the

     originating host.  Specific gateway addresses could be cached in

     a structure similar to the VPMap, keyed to the destination

     network number. (9)

     _______________
     (9) Because the Cronus Advanced Development  Model  will  contain
     only  one  gateway,  a  simpler  mechanism  will  be  implemented
     initially; the specific Ethernet address of the gateway  will  be
     "well-known" to all VLN components.




                                    28








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



          The approach just outlined suggests that all knowledge of

     the existence and connectivity of gateways would be isolated in

     the VLN layer of cluster hosts.  Other mechanisms, e.g., based on

     the ICMP component of the Internet Protocol, could be used

     instead to disseminate information about gateways to cluster

     hosts (see [7]).  These would require, however, specific Ethernet

     addresses to be visible above the VLN layer, a situation the

     current design avoids.






     4.3  VLN Broadcast and Multicast Addressing Modes


          A VLN datagram will be transmitted in broadcast mode if the

     argument to SendVLNDatagram specifies the VLN broadcast address

     (local address = 65,535, decimal) as the destination.  Broadcast

     is implemented in the most straightforward way:  the VLN datagram

     is encapsulated in an Ethernet frame with type "DoD IP", and the

     frame destination address is set to the Ethernet broadcast

     address.  The receiving VLN component merely decapsulates and

     delivers the VLN datagram.





                                    29








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



          The implementation of the VLN multicast addressing mode is

     more complex, for several reasons.  Typically, each VLN host will

     define a constant called Max_Attended, equal to the maximum

     number of VLN multicast addresses which can be simultaneously

     "attended" by this host.  Max_Attended should not be a function

     of the particular Ethernet controller(s) the host may be using,

     but only of the software resources (buffer space and processor

     time) that the host dedicates to VLN multicast processing.  The

     protocol below permits a host to attend any number of VLN

     multicast addresses, from 0 to 64,511 (the entire VLN multicast

     address space), independent of the controller in use.


          Understanding of the VLN multicast protocol requires some

     knowledge of the behavior of existing Ethernet controllers.  The

     Ethernet specification does not specify whether a controller must

     perform multicast address recognition, or if it does, how many

     multicast addresses it must be prepared to recognize.  As a

     result Ethernet controller designs vary widely in their behavior.

     For example, the 3COM Model 3C400 controller follows the first

     pattern and performs no multicast address recognition, instead

     passing all multicast frames to the host for further processing.




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     The Intel Model iSBC 550 controller permits the host to register

     a maximum of 8 multicast addresses with the controller, and the

     Interlan Model NM10 controller permits a maximum of 63 registered

     addresses.


          It would be possible to implement the VLN multicast mode

     using only the Ethernet broadcast mechanism.  This would imply,

     however, that every VLN host would receive and process every VLN

     multicast, often only to discard the datagram because it is

     misaddressed.  More efficient operation is possible if at least

     some Ethernet multicast addresses are used, since Ethernet

     controllers with multicast recognition can discard misaddressed

     frames more rapidly than their hosts, reducing both the processor

     time and buffer space demands upon the host.


          The protocol specified below satisfies the design

     constraints and is especially simple.


          A VLN-wide constant, Min_Attendable, is equal to the

     smallest number of Ethernet multicast addresses that can be

     simultaneously attended by any host in the VLN, or 64,511,

     whichever is smaller.  A network composed of hosts with the Intel




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     and Interlan controllers mentioned above, for example, would have

     Min_Attendable equal to 7; (10) a network composed only of hosts

     with 3COM Model 3C400 controllers would have Min_Attendable equal

     to 64,511, since the controller itself does not restrict the

     number of Ethernet multicast addresses to which a host may

     attend.  (11)


          The local address field of a VLN multicast address can be

     represented in two octets, in hexadecimal:


            mm-mm


     From Table 1, mm-mm considered as a decimal integer M is in the

     range 1,024 to 65,534.  When SendVLNDatagram is invoked with a

     VLN multicast datagram, there are two cases:

       1.  (M - 1,023) <= Min_Attendable.  In this case, the datagram
           is encapsulated in a "DoD IP" Ethernet frame, and multicast
           with the Ethernet address

                   09-00-08-00-mm-mm

           A VLN component which attends VLN multicast addresses in
     _______________
     (10) Min_Attendable is 7, rather than 8,  because  one  multicast
     slot  in  the  controller must be reserved for the host's MHA, as
     described in Section 4.2.
     (11) For the Cronus Advanced Development Model, Min_Attendable is
     currently defined to be 60.




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



           this range should receive Ethernet multicast addresses in
           this format, if necessary by registering the addresses with
           its Ethernet controller.

       2.  (M - 1,023) > Min_Attendable.  The datagram is encapsulated
           in a "DoD IP" Ethernet frame, and transmitted to the
           Ethernet broadcast address.  A VLN component which attends
           VLN multicast addresses in this range must receive all
           broadcast frames, and filter them on the basis of frame
           type and VLN destination address (found in the IP
           destination address field).


          There are two drawbacks to this protocol that might induce a

     more complex design:  1) because Min_Attendable is the "lowest

     common denominator" for the ability of Ethernet controllers to

     recognize multicast addresses, some controller capabilities may

     be wasted; 2) small VLN addresses (less than Max_Attendable +

     1,024) will probably be handled more efficiently than large VLN

     multicast addresses.  The second factor complicates the

     assignment of VLN multicast addresses to functions, since the

     particular assignment affects multicast performance.














                                    33








     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     4.4  Reliability Guarantees


          Delivered datagrams are accurate copies of transmitted

     datagrams because VLN components do not deliver incoming

     datagrams with invalid Frame Check Sequences.  The 32 bit CRC

     error detecting code applied to Ethernet frames is very powerful,

     and the probability of an undetected error occuring "on the wire"

     is very small.  The probability of an error being introduced

     before the checksum is computed or after it is checked is

     comparable to the probability of an error in a disk subsystem

     before a write operation or after a read; often, but not always,

     it can be ignored.


          Datagram duplication does not occur because the VLN layer

     does not perform datagram retransmissions, the primary source of

     duplicates in other networks.  Ethernet controllers do perform

     retransmission as a result of "collisions" on the channel, but

     the "collision enforcement" or "jam" assures that no controller

     receives a valid frame if a collision occurs.


          The sequencing guarantees hold because mutually exclusive

     access to the transmission medium defines a total ordering on




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     Ethernet transmissions, and because a VLN component buffers all

     datagrams in FIFO order, if it buffers more than one datagram.






     4.5  Use of Assigned Numbers


          On a philosophical note, protocols such as IP and TCP exist

     to provide communication services to extensible sets of clients;

     new clients and usages continue to emerge over the life of a

     protocol.  Because a protocol implementation must have some

     unambiguous knowledge of the "names" of the clients, sockets,

     hosts, networks, etc., with which it interacts, a need arises for

     the continuing administration of the 'assigned numbers' related

     to the protocol.  Typically the organization which declares a

     protocol to be a standard also becomes the administrator for its

     assigned numbers.  The organization will designate an office to

     assign numbers to the clients, sockets, hosts, networks, etc.,

     that emerge over time.  The office will also prepare lists of

     number assignments that are distributed to protocol users; the

     reference [4] is a list of this kind.





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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



          There are three organizations responsible for number

     assignment related to the Ethernet-based VLN implementation:

     DARPA, Xerox, and the DOS Design/Implementation Project; their

     respective roles are described below.





     4.5.1  DARPA


          DARPA administers the internet network number and internet

     protocol number assignments.  The Ethernet-based VLN

     implementation does not involve DARPA assigned numbers, but any

     particular 'instance' of a Cronus VLN is expected to have a class

     A or B internet network number assigned by DARPA.  For example,

     the prototype Cronus system (the Advanced Development Model)

     being constructed at Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc., has class B

     network number 128.011.xxx.xxx.


          Protocols built above the VLN will make use of other DARPA

     assigned numbers, e.g., the Cronus object-operation protocol

     requires an internet protocol number.







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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     4.5.2  The Xerox Ethernet Address Administration Office


          The Ethernet Address Administration Office at Xerox Corp.

     administers Ethernet specific and multicast address assignments,

     and Ethernet frame type assignments.


          It is the intent of the Xerox internetworking model that

     every Ethernet host have a distinct specific address, and that

     the address space be large enough to accomodate a very large

     population of inexpensive hosts (e.g., personal workstations).

     They have therefore chosen to delegate the authority to assign

     specific addresses to the manufacturers of Ethernet controllers,

     by granting them large blocks of addresses on request.

     Manufacturers are expected to assign specific addresses from

     these blocks densely, e.g., sequentially, one per controller, and

     to consume all of them before requesting another block.


          The preceding paragraph explains the Xerox address

     assignment policy not because the DOS Design/Implementation

     Project intends to manufacture Ethernet controllers (!), but

     because Xerox has chosen to couple the assignment of specific and

     multicast Ethernet addresses.  An assigned block is defined by a




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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



     23-bit constant, which specifies the contents of the first three

     octets of an Ethernet address, except for the broadcast/multicast

     bit (the least significant bit of the first octet).  The

     possessor of an assigned block thus has in hand 2**24 specific

     addresses and 2**24 multicast addresses, to parcel out as

     necessary.


          The block assigned for use in the Cronus system is defined

     by the octets 08-00-08 (hex).  The specific addresses in this

     block range from 08-00-08-00-00-00 to 08-00-08-FF-FF-FF (hex),

     and the multicast addresses range from 09-00-08-00-00-00 to 09-

     00-08-FF-FF-FF (hex).  Only a fraction of the multicast addresses

     are actually utilized, as explained in Sections 4.2 and 4.3.


          The Ethernet Address Administration Office has designated a

     public frame type, "DoD IP", 08-00 (hex), to be used for

     encapsulated internet protocol datagrams.  The Ethernet VLN

     implementation uses this frame type exclusively for datagram

     encapsulation. In addition, the Cronus system uses two private

     Ethernet frame types, assigned by the Ethernet Address

     Administration Office:





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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824





             NAME             TYPE

             Cronus VLN       80-03
             Cronus Direct    80-04

     (The use of the "Cronus Direct" frame type is not described in

     this note.)


          The same Ethernet address and frame type assignments will be

     used by every instance of a Cronus VLN; no further assignments

     from the Ethernet Address Administration Office are anticipated.






     4.5.3  The DOS Design/Implementation Project


          The DOS Design/Implementation Project assumes responsibility

     for the assignment of subtypes of the Ethernet frame type "Cronus

     VLN".  No assignments of subtypes for purposes unrelated to the

     Cronus system design are expected, nor are assignments to other

     organizations.  The subtypes currently assigned are:









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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824





             NAME                 SUBTYPE

             Mapping Update       00-01







































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     DOS-26 Rev A                                Virtual Local Network
     RFC 824



                                REFERENCES


     [1]
         "On holy wars and a plea for peace," Danny Cohen, Computer,
         V 14 N 10, October 1981, pp. 48-54.

     [2]
         "48-bit absolute internet and Ethernet host numbers," Yogen
         K. Dalal and Robert S. Printis, Proc. of the 7th Data
         Communications Symposium, October 1981.

     [3]
         "The Ethernet:  a local area network, data link layer and
         physical layer specifications," Digital Equipment Corp., Intel
         Corp., and Xerox Corp., Version 1.0, September 1980.

     [4]
         "Assigned numbers," Jon Postel, RFC 790, USC/Information
         Sciences Institute, September 1981.

     [5]
         "Internet Protocol - DARPA internet program protocol
         specification," Jon Postel, ed., RFC 791, USC/Information
         Sciences Institute, September 1981.

     [6]
         "Internet protocol transition workbook," Network Information
         Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, March 1982.

     [7]
         "IP - Local Area Network Addressing Issues," Robert Gurwitz
         and Robert Hinden, Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc., (draft)
         August 1982.










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