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📄 rfc2491.txt

📁 著名的RFC文档,其中有一些文档是已经翻译成中文的的.
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   across site boundaries.)   The last hop router SHALL resolve the NHRP Request from mapping   information contained in its neighbor cache for the interface on   which the specified target is reachable. If there is no appropriate   entry in the Neighbor cache, or the destination is currently   considered unreachable, the last hop router SHALL perform Neighbor   Discovery on the local interface, and build the NHRP Reply from the   resulting answer. (Note, in the case where the NHRP Request   originated due to flow detection, there must already be a hop-by-hopArmitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 12]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 1999   flow of packets going through the last hop router towards the target.   In this typical case the Neighbor cache will already have the desired   information.)   The NHRP Reply is propagated back to the source of the NHRP Request,   using a hop-by-hop path as it would for normal NHRP.   If the discovery process was triggered through flow detection at the   originating router, the return of the NHRP Reply results in the   following events:      A Redirect is constructed using the IPv6/NBMA mapping carried in      the NHRP Reply.      The Redirect is unicast to the IP packet flow's source (using the      VC on which the flow is arriving at the router, if it is a bi-      directional pt-pt VC).      Any Redirect message sent by a router MUST conform to all the      rules described in [7] so that the packet is properly validated by      the receiving host.  Specifically, if the target of the resulting      short-cut is the destination host then the ICMP Target Address      MUST be the same as the ICMP Destination Address in the original      message.  If the target of the short-cut is an egress router then      the ICMP Target Address MUST be a Link Local address of the egress      router that is unique to the NBMA cloud to which the router's NBMA      interface is attached.      Also note that egress routers may subsequently redirect the source      host. To do so, the Link Local ICMP Source Address of the Redirect      message MUST be the same as the Link Local ICMP Target Address of      the original Redirect message.   Note that the router constructing the NHRP Reply does so using the   NBMA address returned by the target host when the target host first   accepted the flow of IP traffic. This retains a useful feature of   Neighbor Discovery - destination interface load sharing.   Upon receipt of a NHRP NAK reply or error indication for a flow-   triggered shortcut attempt, no indication is sent to the source of   the flow.3.2.3.1  NHRP/ND packet translation rules.   The following translation rules are meant to augment the packet   format specification in section 5 of the NHRP specification [8],   covering those packet fields specifically utilized by the IPv6/NBMA   architecture.Armitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 13]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 1999   NHRP messages are constructed and sent according to the rules in [8].   The value of the NBMA technology specific fields such as ar$afn,   ar$pro.type, ar$pro.snap and link layer address format are defined in   NBMA-specific companion documents. Source, destination or client   protocol addresses in the common header or CIE of a NHRP message are   always IPv6 addresses of length 16.   When constructing an host-triggered NHRP resolution request in   response to a Neighbor Solicitation:      The ar$hopcnt field MUST be smaller than the shortcut limit value      specified in the shortcut limit option included in the triggering      NS message. This ensures that hosts have control over the reach of      their shortcut request. Note that the shortcut limit given in the      option is relative to the requesting host, thus the requirement of      ar$hopcnt being smaller than the given shortcut limit.      The Flags field in the common header of the NHRP resolution      request SHOULD have the Q and S bits set.      The U bit SHOULD be set.  NBMA and protocol source addresses are      those of the router constructing the request.      The target address from the NS message is used as the NHRP      destination protocol address.  A CIE SHALL NOT be specified.   When constructing a NHRP resolution request as a result of flow   detection, the choice of values is configuration dependent.   A NHRP resolution reply is build according to the rules in [8].      For each CIE returned, the holding time is 10 minutes.      The MTU may be 0 or a value specified in the NBMA-specific      companion document.   A successful NHRP resolution reply for a host-triggered shortcut   attempt is translated into an IPv6 Redirect message as follows:   IP Fields:      Source Address            The link-local address assigned to the router's interface            from which this message is sent.      Destination Address            IPv6 Source Address of the triggering NS      Hop Limit            255Armitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 14]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 1999   ICMP Fields:      Target Address            NHRP Client Protocol Address      Destination Address            Target of triggering NS (this is equivalent to the NHRP            Destination Protocol Address)      Target link-layer address            NHRP Client NBMA Address   All NHRP extensions currently defined in [8] have no effect on   NHRP/ND translation and MAY be used in NHRP messages for IPv6.3.2.3.2  NHRP Purge rules.   Purges are generated by NHRP when changes are detected that   invalidate a previously issued NHRP Reply (this may include topology   changes, or a target host going down or changing identity). Any IPv6   shortcut previously established on the basis of newly purged   information SHOULD be torn down.   Routers SHALL keep track of NHRP cache entries for which they have   issued Neighbor Advertisements or Router Redirects. If a NHRP Purge   is received that invalidates information previously issued to local   host, the router SHALL issue a Router Redirect specifying the router   itself as the new best next-hop for the affected IPv6 target.   Routers SHALL keep track of Neighbor cache entries that have   previously been used to generate an NHRP Reply. The expiry of any   such Neighbor cache entry SHALL result in a NHRP Purge being sent   towards the router that originally requested the NHRP Reply.3.3. Neighbor Unreachability Detection.   Neighbor Solicitations sent for the purposes of Neighbor   Unreachability Detection (NUD) are unicast to the Neighbor in   question, using the VC that is already open to that Neighbor. This   suggests that as far as NUD is concerned, the Transient Neighbor is   indistinguishable from an On-LL Neighbor.3.4. Duplicate Address Detection.   Duplicate Address Detection is only required within the link-local   scope, which in this case is the LL-local scope. Transient Neighbors   are outside the scope of the LL. No particular interaction is   required between the mechanism for establishing shortcuts and the   mechanism for detection of duplicate link local addresses.Armitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 15]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 19994 Node Operation Concepts.   This section describes node operations for performing basic functions   (such as sending and receiving data) on a Logical Link.  The   application of these basic functions to the operation of the various   IPv6 protocols such as Neighbor Discovery is described in Appendix A.   The majority of this section applies only to NBMA networks when used   to provide point to point and point to multipoint SVCs.  Section 7   discusses the case where the NBMA network is being used to supply   only point to point PVCs.4.1.Connecting to a Logical Link.   Before a node can send or receive IPv6 datagrams its underlying   IPv6/NBMA interface(s) must first join a Logical Link.   An IPv6/NBMA driver SHALL establish a pt-pt VC to the MARS associated   with its Logical Link, and register as a Cluster Member [5].  The   node's IPv6/NBMA interface will then be a member of the LL, have a   Cluster Member ID (CMI) assigned, and can begin supporting IPv6 and   IPv6 ND operations.   If the node is a host or router starting up it SHALL issue a single   group MARS_JOIN for the following groups:      - Its derived Solicited-node address(es) with link-local scope.      - The All-nodes address with link-local scope.      - Other configured multicast groups with at least link-local        scope.   If the node is a router it SHALL additionally issue:      - A single group MARS_JOIN for the All-routers address with        link-local scope.      - A block MARS_JOIN for the range(s) of IPv6 multicast addresses        (with greater than link-local scope) for which promiscuous        reception is required.   The encapsulation mechanism for, and key field values of, MARS   control messages SHALL be defined in companion documents specific to   particular NBMA network technologies.4.2 Joining a Multicast Group.   This section describes the node's behavior when it gets a   JoinLocalGroup request from the IPv6 Layer. The details of how this   behavior is achieved are going to be implementation specific.Armitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 16]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 1999   If a JoinLocalGroup for a node-local address is received, the   IPv6/NBMA driver SHALL return success indication to the caller and   take no additional action. (Packets sent to node-local addresses   never reach the IPv6/NBMA driver.)   If a JoinLocalGroup is received for an address with greater than   node-local scope, the IPv6/NBMA driver SHALL send an appropriate   single group MARS_JOIN request to register this address with the   MARS.4.3. Leaving a Multicast Group.   This section describes the node's behavior when it gets a   LeaveLocalGroup request from the IPv6 Layer. The details of how this   behavior is achieved are going to be implementation specific.   If a LeaveLocalGroup for a node-local address is received, the   IPv6/NBMA driver SHALL return success indication to the caller and   take no additional action. (Packets sent to node-local addresses   never reach the IPv6/NBMA driver.)   If a LeaveLocalGroup is received for an address with greater than   node-local scope, the IPv6/NBMA driver SHALL send an appropriate   single group MARS_LEAVE request to deregister this address with the   MARS.4.4.  Sending Data.   Separate processing and encapsulation rules apply for outbound   unicast and multicast packets.4.4.1. Sending Unicast Data.   The IP level 'next hop' for each outbound unicast IPv6 packet is used   to identify a pt-pt VC on which to forward the packet.      For NBMA networks where LLC/SNAP encapsulation is typically used      (e.g. ATM or SMDS), the IPv6 packet SHALL be encapsulated with the      following LLC/SNAP header and sent over the VC.         [0xAA-AA-03][0x00-00-00][0x86-DD][IPv6 packet]             (LLC)       (OUI)     (PID)      For NBMA networks that do not use LLC/SNAP encapsulation, an      alternative rule SHALL be specified in the NBMA-specific companion      document.Armitage, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 17]RFC 2491                IPv6 over NBMA networks             January 1999   If no pt-pt VC exists for the next hop address for the packet, the   node SHALL place a call to set up a VC to the next hop destination.   Any time the IPv6/NBMA driver receives a unicast packet for   transmission the IPv6 layer will already have determined the link-   layer (NBMA) address of the next hop.  Thus, the information needed   to place the NBMA call to the next hop will be available.   The sending node SHOULD queue the packet that triggered the call   request, and send it when the call is established.   If the call to the next hop destination node fails the sending node   SHALL discard the packet that triggered the call setup.  Persistent   failure to create a VC to the next hop destination will be detected   and handled at the IPv6 Network Layer through NUD.   At this time no rules are specified for mapping outbound packets to   VCs using anything more than the packet's destination address.4.4.2. Sending Multicast Data.   The IP level 'next hop' for each outbound multicast IPv6 packet is   used to identify a pt-pt or pt-mpt VC on which to forward the packet.      For NBMA networks where LLC/SNAP encapsulation is typically used      (e.g. ATM or SMDS), multicast packets SHALL be encapsulated in the      following manner:         [0xAA-AA-03][0x00-00-5E][0x00-01][pkt$cmi][0x86DD][IPv6         packet]             (LLC)       (OUI)     (PID)    (mars encaps)         The IPv6/NBMA driver's Cluster Member ID SHALL be copied into

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