📄 rfc919.txt
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RFC 919 October 1984
Broadcasting Internet Datagrams
6. Gateways and Broadcasts
Most of the complexity in supporting broadcasts lies in gateways. If
a gateway receives a directed broadcast for a network to which it is
not connected, it simply forwards it using the usual mechanism.
Otherwise, it must do some additional work.
When a gateway receives a local broadcast datagram, there are several
things it might have to do with it. The situation is unambiguous,
but without due care it is possible to create infinite loops.
The appropriate action to take on receipt of a broadcast datagram
depends on several things: the subnet it was received on, the
destination network, and the addresses of the gateway.
- The primary rule for avoiding loops is "never broadcast a
datagram on the hardware network it was received on". It is not
sufficient simply to avoid repeating datagrams that a gateway
has heard from itself; this still allows loops if there are
several gateways on a hardware network.
- If the datagram is received on the hardware network to which it
is addressed, then it should not be forwarded. However, the
gateway should consider itself to be a destination of the
datagram (for example, it might be a routing table update.)
- Otherwise, if the datagram is addressed to a hardware network to
which the gateway is connected, it should be sent as a (data
link layer) broadcast on that network. Again, the gateway
should consider itself a destination of the datagram.
- Otherwise, the gateway should use its normal routing procedure
to choose a subsequent gateway, and send the datagram along to
it.
7. Broadcast IP Addressing - Proposed Standards
If different IP implementations are to be compatible, there must be a
distinguished number to denote "all hosts".
Since the local network layer can always map an IP address into data
link layer address, the choice of an IP "broadcast host number" is
somewhat arbitrary. For simplicity, it should be one not likely to
be assigned to a real host. The number whose bits are all ones has
this property; this assignment was first proposed in [6]. In the few
cases where a host has been assigned an address with a host-number
part of all ones, it does not seem onerous to require renumbering.
Mogul [Page 5]
RFC 919 October 1984
Broadcasting Internet Datagrams
The address 255.255.255.255 denotes a broadcast on a local hardware
network, which must not be forwarded. This address may be used, for
example, by hosts that do not know their network number and are
asking some server for it.
Thus, a host on net 36, for example, may:
- broadcast to all of its immediate neighbors by using
255.255.255.255
- broadcast to all of net 36 by using 36.255.255.255
(Note that unless the network has been broken up into subnets, these
two methods have identical effects.)
If the use of "all ones" in a field of an IP address means
"broadcast", using "all zeros" could be viewed as meaning
"unspecified". There is probably no reason for such addresses to
appear anywhere but as the source address of an ICMP Information
Request datagram. However, as a notational convention, we refer to
networks (as opposed to hosts) by using addresses with zero fields.
For example, 36.0.0.0 means "network number 36" while 36.255.255.255
means "all hosts on network number 36".
7.1. ARP Servers and Broadcasts
The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) described in [12] can, if
incorrectly implemented, cause problems when broadcasts are used
on a network where not all hosts share an understanding of what a
broadcast address is. The temptation exists to modify the ARP
server so that it provides the mapping between an IP broadcast
address and the hardware broadcast address.
This temptation must be resisted. An ARP server should never
respond to a request whose target is a broadcast address. Such a
request can only come from a host that does not recognize the
broadcast address as such, and so honoring it would almost
certainly lead to a forwarding loop. If there are N such hosts on
the physical network that do not recognize this address as a
broadcast, then a datagram sent with a Time-To-Live of T could
potentially give rise to T**N spurious re-broadcasts.
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RFC 919 October 1984
Broadcasting Internet Datagrams
8. References
1. David Reeves Boggs. Internet Broadcasting. Ph.D. Th., Stanford
University, January 1982.
2. D.D. Clark, K.T. Pogran, and D.P. Reed. "An Introduction to
Local Area Networks". Proc. IEEE 66, 11, pp1497-1516, 1978.
3. Yogan Kantilal Dalal. Broadcast Protocols in Packet Switched
Computer Networks. Ph.D. Th., Stanford University, April 1977.
4. Yogan K. Dalal and Robert M. Metcalfe. "Reverse Path Forwarding
of Broadcast Packets". Comm. ACM 21, 12, pp1040-1048, December
1978.
5. The Ethernet, A Local Area Network: Data Link Layer and Physical
Layer Specifications. Version 1.0, Digital Equipment
Corporation, Intel, Xerox, September 1980.
6. Robert Gurwitz and Robert Hinden. IP - Local Area Network
Addressing Issues. IEN-212, Bolt Beranek and Newman, September
1982.
7. R.M. Metcalfe and D.R. Boggs. "Ethernet: Distributed Packet
Switching for Local Computer Networks". Comm. ACM 19, 7,
pp395-404, July 1976. Also CSL-75-7, Xerox Palo Alto Research
Center, reprinted in CSL-80-2.
8. Jeffrey Mogul. Internet Subnets. RFC-917, Stanford University,
October 1984.
9. Jeffrey Mogul. Broadcasting Internet Packets in the Presence of
Subnets. RFC-922, Stanford University, October 1984.
10. David A. Moon. Chaosnet. A.I. Memo 628, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, June
1981.
11. William W. Plummer. Internet Broadcast Protocols. IEN-10, Bolt
Beranek and Newman, March 1977.
12. David Plummer. An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol.
RFC-826, Symbolics, September 1982.
13. Jon Postel. Internet Protocol. RFC 791, ISI, September 1981.
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RFC 919 October 1984
Broadcasting Internet Datagrams
14. David W. Wall. Mechanisms for Broadcast and Selective
Broadcast. Ph.D. Th., Stanford University, June 1980.
15. David W. Wall and Susan S. Owicki. Center-based Broadcasting.
Computer Systems Lab Technical Report TR189, Stanford
University, June 1980.
Mogul [Page 8]
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