One document matched: draft-ietf-ipfix-protocol-05.txt

Differences from draft-ietf-ipfix-protocol-04.txt


   IPFIX working group                                                  
   Internet Draft                               EDITOR:      B. Claise 
   draft-ietf-ipfix-protocol-05.txt                       Cisco Systems 
   Expires: February 2005                                   August 2004 
                                                                        
                                                                        
    
    
    
                       IPFIX Protocol Specification  
 
                                      
    
 Status of this Memo 
  
   By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any 
   applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware 
   have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes 
   aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of RFC 3668.  
    
   This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with 
   all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.  
    
   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering 
   Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that 
   other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
   Drafts.  Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of 
   six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsolete by other 
   documents at any time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts 
   as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in 
   progress." 
     
   The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at 
   http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt  
   The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at 
   http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html 
    
 Abstract 
  
   This document specifies the IPFIX protocol that provides network 
   operators with access to IP flow information.  In order to export 
   IP flow information to the IPFIX collecting process, a common method 
   of representing the flow data and a standard means of communicating 
   them from an exporter to a collector is required.  This document 
   describes how the IPFIX flow record data, options record data and 

 
 
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   templates are carried over a congestion-aware transport protocol 
   from an IPFIX exporting process to an IPFIX collecting process. 
    
 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 RFC 2119. 
    
 Table of Contents 
  
     1. Points of Discussion.........................................3 
     2. Introduction.................................................6 
      2.1 IPFIX Documents Overview...................................6 
     3. Terminology..................................................7 
      3.1 Terminology Summary Table.................................11 
     4. Criteria for Flow Expiration and Export.....................12 
      4.1 Flow Expiration...........................................12 
      4.2 Flow Export...............................................13 
     5. Transport Protocol..........................................13 
      5.1 Transport Compliance and Transport Usage..................13 
      5.2 TCP.......................................................14 
      5.3 SCTP......................................................14 
     5.3.1   Congestion Avoidance...................................14 
     5.3.2   Reliability............................................14 
     5.3.3   MTU....................................................14 
     5.3.4   Exporting Process......................................15 
     5.3.4.1  Association...........................................15 
     5.3.4.2  Source ID.............................................15 
     5.3.4.3  Stream................................................15 
     5.3.4.4  Template..............................................16 
     5.3.5   Collecting Process.....................................16 
     5.3.6   Failover...............................................17 
      5.4 UDP.......................................................17 
     5.4.1   Congestion Avoidance...................................17 
     5.4.2   Reliability............................................17 
     5.4.3   MTU....................................................18 
     5.4.4   Port Numbers...........................................18 
     5.4.5   Exporting Process......................................18 
     5.4.5.1  Template..............................................18 
     5.4.6   Collecting Process.....................................18 
     5.4.7   Failover...............................................19 
     6. Message Layout..............................................19 
     7. IPFIX Message Format........................................21 
      7.1 Header Format.............................................21 
      7.2 Field Type Format.........................................22 
      7.3 Template Set..............................................23 
 
 
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      7.4 Data Set..................................................25 
      7.5 Options Template Set......................................27 
     7.5.1   Scope..................................................27 
     7.5.2   Options Template Set Format............................28 
     7.5.3   Options Data Record Format.............................30 
     8. Specific Reporting Requirements.............................32 
      8.1 The Metering Process Statistics Option Template...........32 
     9. Export Packet "Export Time" Computation and Flow Record Time33 
      9.1 Microsecond Precision.....................................33 
      9.2 Millisecond Precision.....................................34 
      9.3 Nanosecond Precision......................................34 
      9.4 Multiple Precisions.......................................35 
     10. Linkage with the Information Model.........................35 
      10.1 Boolean..................................................35 
      10.2 Byte.....................................................35 
      10.3 UnsignedByte.............................................35 
      10.4 Short....................................................35 
      10.5 Reduced Size Encoding of Integer Types...................36 
     11. Variable Length Information Element........................36 
     12. Template Management........................................37 
     13. The Collecting Process's Side..............................39 
     14. Security Considerations....................................40 
      14.1 IPsec Usage..............................................41 
     14.1.1  Selectors..............................................41 
     14.1.2  Mode...................................................41 
     14.1.3  Key Management.........................................42 
     14.1.4  Security Policy........................................42 
     14.1.5  Authentication.........................................42 
     14.1.6  Availability...........................................42 
      14.2 TLS Usage................................................42 
      14.3 Protection against DoS attacks...........................42 
      14.4 When IPsec or TLS is not an option.......................43 
      14.5 Logging an IPFIX Attack..................................44 
     15. IANA Considerations........................................44 
     16. Examples...................................................44 
      16.1 Message Header Example...................................45 
      16.2 Template Set Example.....................................45 
      16.3 Data Set Example.........................................46 
      16.4 Options Template Set Example.............................47 
      16.5 Data Set with Options Data Records Example...............48 
     17. References.................................................48 
      17.1 Normative References.....................................48 
      17.2 Informative References...................................49 
     18. Acknowledgments............................................50 
      
 1.     Points of Discussion 
    


 
 
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   This section covers the open issues, still to be resolved/updated in 
   this draft.  Note that the issues starting with PROTO-31 have been 
   added to this draft version.  
    
   PROTO-4: TCP section not yet covered.  Starting point: draft-leinen-
   ipfix-tcp-00.txt. Ideally the same structure as SCTP and UDP should 
   be preserved.   
    
   PROTO-21: Do we need to define some mandatory content of the 
   metering process statistics option template? 
       - Maurizio suggested text on the mailing list 
       - proposal after IETF60: look at what is required in [IPFIX-
   REQ], and come up with a minimum set of data types. 
   Note: the ipfixOption is not yet defined in the [IPFIX-INFO]; needed 
   for the metering process statistics  
    
   PROTO-23: Finalize the time details. The time-related Information 
   Elements are not defined in [IPFIX-INFO] 
     
   PROTO-24: Section 11 "Linkage with the information model" must be 
   completed with types used in [IPFIX-INFO] 
     
   PROTO-25: The section "Template Management" and "The Collecting 
   Process's Side" will have to updated according to the transport 
   protocol. 
       - For example, the point 2 of the section "Template Management". 
         Remark: the template management will vary with TCP, SCTP,   
         etc... 
         Must have both sections updated: transport updated and  
         template management sections (BTW, this is the same for the  
         failover section). 
       - From Deri's draft: On the other hand as a probe can send flows 
       to several collectors (e.g. in round-robin or as a reflector) it 
       must keep track of per-collector templates transmission. This 
       means that if collector X reconnects, the probe must send the 
       template only to this collector and not to all collectors. 
        
     PROPOSAL, after IETF60: treat UDP as the exception, in the template 
     subsection of the UDP transport protocol. 
    

 
 
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   PROTO-26: IANA considerations section to be updated. Consensus from 
   IETF60 + notion of security. Nevil wrote the section already. 
    
   PROTO-30: review the requirements draft to see what we miss, once 
   it's an I-RFC 
    
   New Issue 
    
   PROTO-31 The "Sequence Number" and "Source ID" treatment in case of 
   multiple streams in SCTP is not well described. For example, in case 
   the Templates are sent to one stream and the flow records to another 
   one, what should the "Sequence Number"? What should the collector 
   do? See David Moore's post   

   PROTO-32 Correct this issue below 

     The Collecting Process SHOULD verify that the received IPFIX 
     Messages inside one stream do not have differing SID values and 
     silently discard any data that does NOT match the initial value.  

     The Exporting Process SHOULD NOT transmit messages inside one 
     stream with multiple SID values. The correlated Flow Records are 
     then treated like a normal export Flow. 

   PROTO-33: correct the next paragraphs: silently? reset the 
   connection? log an error? should the exporting process be allowed to 
   sent multiple SID per stream. 

        The Collecting Process SHOULD verify that the received IPFIX 
        Messages inside one stream do not have differing SID values and 
        silently discard any data that does NOT match the initial 
        value.  

        The Exporting Process SHOULD NOT transmit messages inside one 
        stream with multiple SID values. The correlated Flow Records 
        are then treated like a normal export Flow. 
   PROTO-34: Need a security expert to review the security section: 
   [TBD] in the security section, [EDITOR'S NOTE: the security section 
   may need be adapted to the revised transport section], [XXX-
   REFERENCE] and [XXX-SCTP-BLIND-SPOOFING-REFERENCE] not defined 
    
   PROTO-35: make sure the definitions match between [IPFIX-ARCH] and 
   [IPFIX-PROTO] 
    
 
 
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   PROTO-36: Insert an Enterprise Specific Information Element example. 
   For scope and non scope. 
   PROTO-37: Review the Options Template example once the Source ID is 
   defined as an information element 

    
 2.     Introduction 
    
   A data network with IP traffic, primarily consists of IP Flows 
   passing through the network elements of the network.  It is often 
   interesting, useful or even a requirement to have access to 
   information about these flows that pass through the network elements 
   for administrative or other purposes.  The IPFIX collecting process 
   should be able to receive the flow information passing through 
   multiple network elements within the data network.  This requires 
   uniformity in the method of representing the flow information and 
   the means of communicating the flows from the network elements to 
   the collection point.  This document specifies the protocol to 
   achieve these aforementioned requirements.  This document specifies 
   in detail the representation of different flows, the additional data 
   required for flow interpretation, packet format, transport 
   mechanisms used, security concerns, etc. 
    
 2.1      IPFIX Documents Overview 
    
   The IPFIX protocol provides network administrators with access to IP 
   flow information.  The architecture for the export of measured IP 
   flow information out of an IPFIX exporting process to a collecting 
   process is defined in [IPFIX-ARCH], per the requirements defined in 
   [IPFIX-REQ].  [IPFIX-PROTO] specifies how IPFIX flow record data, 
   options record data, and templates are carried via a congestion-
   aware transport protocol from IPFIX exporting process to IPFIX 
   collecting process.  IPFIX has a formal description of IPFIX 
   information elements (fields), their name, type and additional 
   semantic information, as specified in [IPFIX-INFO].  Finally [IPFIX-
   AS] describes what type of applications can use the IPFIX protocol 
   and how they can use the information provided.  It furthermore shows 
   how the IPFIX framework relates to other architectures and 
   frameworks.  
    




 
 
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 3.    Terminology 
 
   The definitions of the basic terms like IP Traffic Flow, Exporting 
   Process, Collecting Process, Observation Points, etc. are 
   semantically identical with that found in the IPFIX requirements 
   document [IPFIX-REQ].  Some of the terms have been expanded for more 
   clarity when defining the protocol.  Additional terms required for 
   the protocol has also been defined.  Definitions in this document 
   and in [IPFIX-ARCH] are equivalent, except that definitions which 
   are only relevant to the IPFIX protocol only appear here.  Should 
   there be any apparent discrepancy in definitions between these two 
   documents, the definitions defined in this document take precedence. 
    
   The terminology summary table in Section 3.1 gives a quick overview 
   of the relationships between some of the different terms defined. 
  
 Observation Point 
 
   The Observation Point is a location in the network where IP packets 
   can be observed.  Examples are a line to which a probe is attached, 
   a shared medium such as an Ethernet-based LAN, a single port of a 
   router, or a set of interfaces (physical or logical) of a router.   
    
   Note that one Observation Point may be a superset of several 
   other Observation Points.  For example, one Observation Point can be 
   an entire line card.  This would be the superset of the 
   individual Observation Points at the line card's interfaces.  
 
 Observation Domain 
 
   The set of Observation Points, which is the largest aggregatable set 
   of Flow information at the Metering Process is termed an Observation 
   Domain.  Each Observation Domain presents itself as a unique ID (its 
   Source ID, SID) to the Collecting Process for identifying the IPFIX 
   Messages it generates. 
    
   For example, a router line card composed of several interfaces with 
   each interface being an Observation Point.  Every Observation Point 
   is associated with an Observation Domain. 
    
 IP Traffic Flow or Flow 
 


 
 
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   There are several definitions of the term 'flow' being used by the 
   Internet community.   Within the context of IPFIX we use the 
   following one: 
    
   A flow is defined as a set of IP packets passing an Observation 
   Point in the network during a certain time interval.  All packets 
   belonging to a particular flow have a set of common properties.  
   Each property is defined as the result of applying a function to the 
   values of: 
    
      1. one or more packet header field (e.g. destination IP address),    
      transport header field (e.g. destination port number), or  
      application header field (e.g. RTP header fields [RFC1889]) 
    
      2. one or more characteristics of the packet itself (e.g. number  
      of MPLS labels, etc...) 
    
      3. one or more of fields derived from packet treatment (e.g. next  
      hop IP address, the output interface, etc...) 
    
   A packet is defined to belong to a flow if it completely satisfies 
   all the defined properties of the flow. 
    
   This definition covers the range from a flow containing all packets 
   observed at a network interface to a flow consisting of just a 
   single packet between two applications.  It includes packets 
   selected by a sampling mechanism. 
 
 Flow Key 
  
   Each of the fields which belong to 
   1. Packet header (e.g. destination IP address) 
   2. Property of the packet itself (e.g. packet length) 
   3. Derived from packet treatment (e.g. AS number) 
   which is used to define a Flow is termed a Flow Key. 
    
 Flow Record 
 
   A Flow Record contains information about a specific Flow that was 
   observed at an Observation Point.  A Flow Record contains measured 
   properties of the Flow (e.g. the total number of bytes of all 
   packets of the Flow) and usually characteristic properties of the 
   Flow (e.g. source IP address).  
 
 
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 Metering Process 
 
   The Metering Process generates Flow Records.  Input to the process 
   are packet headers observed at an Observation Point and packet 
   treatment at the Observation Point, for example the selected output 
   interface. 
    
   The Metering Process consists of a set of functions that includes 
   packet header capturing, timestamping, sampling, classifying, and 
   maintaining Flow Records. 
    
   The maintenance of Flow Records may include creating new records, 
   updating existing ones, computing Flow statistics, deriving further 
   Flow properties, detecting Flow expiration, passing Flow Records to 
   the Exporting Process, and deleting Flow Records. 
    
 Exporting Process 
 
   The Exporting Process sends Flow Records to one or more Collecting 
   Processes.  The Flow Records are generated by one or more Metering 
   Processes. 
    
 IPFIX Device 
    
   A device hosting at least an Observation Point, a Metering Process 
   and an Exporting Process.  Typically, corresponding Observation 
   Point(s), Metering Process(es) and Exporting Process(es) are co-
   located at this device, for example at a router. 
    
 Exporter 
    
   The device which hosts an Exporting Process. 
    
 Collecting Process 
 
   The Collecting Process receives Flow Records from one or more 
   Exporting Processes.  The Collecting Process might store received 
   Flow Records or further process them, but these actions are out of 
   the scope of this document. 
    
 Collector 
 
 
 
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   The device which hosts one or more Collecting Processes. 
    
 Template 
 
   Template is an ordered sequence of pairs (<type,length>), used to 
   completely identify the structure and semantics of a particular 
   information that needs to be communicated from the IPFIX Device to 
   the Collector.  Each template is uniquely identifiable by some means 
   (e.g. by using a Template ID). 
    
 IPFIX Message 
 
   An IPFIX Message is a message originating at the Exporting Process 
   that carries the IPFIX records of this Exporting Process and whose 
   destination is the Collecting Process.  An IPFIX Message is 
   encapsulated within a transport layer header. 
    
 Message Header 
 
   The Message Header is the first part of an IPFIX Message, which 
   provides basic information about the message such as the IPFIX 
   version, length of the message, message sequence number, etc. 
    
 Template Record 
 
   A Template Record defines the structure and interpretation of fields 
   in a Flow Data Record. 
    
 Flow Data Record 
 
   A Flow Data Record is a data record that contains values of the Flow 
   parameters corresponding to a Template Record.  
    
 Options Template Record 
 
   An Options Template Record defines the structure and interpretation 
   of fields in an Options Data Record, including defining how to scope 
   the applicability of the Options Data Record. 
    
 Options Data Record 
   The Options Data Record is a data record that contains values and 
   scope information of the Flow measurement parameters, corresponding 
   to an Options Template Record. 
 
 
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 Set 
 
   Set is a generic term for a collection of records that have a 
   similar structure.  In an IPFIX Message, one or more Sets follow the 
   Message Header. 
    
   There are three different types of Sets: Template Set, Options 
   Template Set, and Data Set.  
     
 Template Set 
 
   A Template Set is a collection of one or more Template Records that 
   have been grouped together in an IPFIX Message.  
     
 Options Template Set 
 
   An Options Template Set is a collection of one or more Options 
   Template Records that have been grouped together in an IPFIX 
   Message. 
    
 Data Set 
 
   A Data Set is one or more records, of the same type, that are 
   grouped together in an IPFIX Message.  Each record is either a Flow 
   Data Record or an Options Data Record previously defined by a 
   Template Record or an Options Template Record. 
    
 Information Element 
    
   An Information Element is a protocol and encoding independent 
   description of an attribute which may appear in an IPFIX Flow 
   Record.  The IPFIX information model [IPFIX-INFO] defines the base 
   set of Information Elements for IPFIX.  The type associated with an 
   Information Element indicates constraints on what it may contain and 
   also determine the valid encoding mechanisms for use in IPFIX. 
 
 3.1      Terminology Summary Table 
 
    +------------------+---------------------------------------------+ 
    |                  |                    Contents                 | 
    |                  +--------------------+------------------------+ 
    |       Set        | Template  Record   |      data record       | 
 
 
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    +------------------+--------------------+------------------------+ 
    |                  |                    |  Flow Data Record(s)   | 
    |   Data Set       |          /         |          or            | 
    |                  |                    | Options Data Record(s) | 
    +------------------+--------------------+------------------------+ 
    |   Template Set   | Template Record(s) |           /            | 
    +------------------+--------------------+------------------------+ 
    | Options Template | Options Template   |           /            | 
    |       Set        | Record(s)          |                        | 
    +------------------+--------------------+------------------------+ 
 
      Figure A: Terminology Summary Table 
    
   A Data Set is composed of an Options Data Record(s) or Flow Data 
   Record(s).  No Template Record is included.  A Template Record 
   defines the Flow Data Record, and an Options Template Record defines 
   the Options Data Record.  
    
   A Template Set is composed of Template Record(s).  No Flow or 
   Options Data Record is included. 
     
   An Options Template Set is composed of Options Template Record(s).  
   No Flow or Options Data Record is included.  
 
 4.     Criteria for Flow Expiration and Export  
    
 4.1      Flow Expiration 
     
   A Flow is considered as expired under the following conditions:  
    
   1. If the Metering Process can detect the end of a Flow.  For 
   example, if the FIN or RST bit is detected in a TCP 
   [TCP] connection.  
    
   2. If no packets belonging to the Flow have been observed for a 
   certain period of time.  This time period should be configurable at 
   the Metering Process.  Note that if the time period is set to 0, the 
   Metering Process will create a Flow for every single packet 
   observed. 
    
   3. If the Metering Process experiences internal constraints, a Flow 
   may be expired forcibly.  For example, counters wrapping or low 
   memory. 

 
 
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 4.2      Flow Export 
    
   The Exporting Process decides when and whether to export an expired 
   Flow.  A Flow can be exported because it expired due to the reasons 
   mentioned in Flow Expiration section.  For example: the Exporting 
   Process exports a portion of the expired Flows every 'x' seconds.  
    
   For long-lasting Flows, the Exporting Process should export the Flow 
   Records on a regular basis or based on some export policy.  This 
   periodicity or export policy should be configurable at the Metering 
   Process. 
 
 5.     Transport Protocol 
    
   The IPFIX Protocol Specification has been designed to be transport 
   protocol independent.  Note that the Exporter can export to multiple 
   Collecting Processes, using independent transport protocols. 
    
 5.1      Transport Compliance and Transport Usage 
 
   We need to differentiate between what must be implemented (so that 
   operators can interoperably deploy compliant implementations from 
   different vendors) and what should or could be used in various 
   operational environments. We must also make sure that ALL 
   implementations can operate in a congestion-aware and congestion 
   avoiding mode. 
    
   SCTP [RFC2960] and SCTP-PR [RFC3758] MUST be implemented by all 
   compliant implementations.  UDP [UDP] MAY also be implemented by 
   compliant implementations.  TCP [TCP] MAY also be implemented by 
   compliant implementations.  
    
   SCTP-PR SHOULD be used in deployments where Exporters and Collectors 
   are communicating over links which are susceptible to congestion.  
   SCTP-PR is capable of providing any required degree of reliability. 
    
   TCP MAY be used in deployments where Exporters and Collectors 
   communicate over links which are susceptible to congestion, but 
   SCTP-PR is preferred, due to its ability to limit back pressure on 
   Exporters and its message versus stream orientation.  
    


 
 
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   UDP MAY be used although it is not a congestion aware protocol.  
   However, the IPFIX traffic between Exporter and Collector MUST 
   remain wholly within the administrative domains of the operators. 
    
 5.2     TCP 
    
   EDITOR NOTE: to be completed.  A good starting point is draft-
   leinen-ipfix-tcp-00.txt.  TCP [TCP]  
    
 5.3      SCTP 
 
   This section describes how IPFIX can be transported over SCTP 
   [RFC2960] using the PR-SCTP [RFC3758] extension.    

 5.3.1   Congestion Avoidance 
    
   The SCTP transport protocol provides the required level of 
   congestion avoidance by design. 

 5.3.2   Reliability 
 
   The SCTP transport protocol is by default reliable, but has the 
   capability to operate in unreliable and partially reliable modes 
   [RFC3758]. 
    
   Using reliable SCTP streams (referred to hereafter as "streams") for 
   the IPFIX export is not in itself a guarantee that all data records 
   are delivered.  If there is congestion on the link from the 
   Exporting Process to the Collecting Process, or if a significant 
   number of retransmissions are required, the send queues on the 
   Exporting Process may fill up: the Exporting Process MAY either 
   suspend export or discard IPFIX Messages.  If data records are 
   discarded the sequence numbers used for export MUST reflect the loss 
   of data.   

 5.3.3   MTU 
 
   SCTP provides the required IPFIX Message fragmentation service based 
   on path MTU discovery. 





 
 
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 5.3.4   Exporting Process 

 5.3.4.1 Association 
 
   The Exporting Process MUST create at least one association 
   (connection "bundle" in SCTP terminology) to the Collecting Process. 
    
   However, the Exporting Process MAY create more than one association. 
   The Collecting Process MUST NOT initiate the connection.   

 5.3.4.2 Source ID 
  
   The IPFIX Message MUST contain a Message Header, which includes a 
   Source ID (SID).  The Exporting Process uses the SID to uniquely 
   identify to the Collecting Process the Observation Domain that 
   metered the Flows. 

 5.3.4.3 Stream 
 
   An Exporting Process MUST request at least two outbound streams per 
   association.  The first stream (referred to as stream zero in the 
   rest of this document), is used to send the Template Set and the 
   Options Template Set.  Stream zero MUST be fully reliable.  Data 
   Sets MUST NOT be sent on stream zero. 
    
   Depending on the application requirement, the Exporting Process 
   selects the mode (unreliable, partially reliable, or fully reliable 
   mode) of the stream, used to send the Data Sets.  Unreliable mode 
   MAY be used where the application does not require reliable 
   transmission and the use of a retransmission queue is impractical. 
    
   An Exporter MAY use multiple streams to export Data Sets, in some 
   cases different applications will have different requirements in 
   terms of reliability.  In such a case, the Observation Domain MUST 
   use the same SID value on all of the multiple streams it uses.  Data 
   Sets from multiple Observation Domains MUST NOT be transmitted over 
   the same stream; the Collecting Process should however verify that 
   the SID values are the expected values.   
    
   When Data Sets are exported over a partially reliable stream, they 
   SHOULD be marked for retransmission as long as there is room in the 
   SCTP send queues.  However during times of congestion or other 

 
 
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   retransmission events, if the queue overflows, the oldest data 
   record that has been transmitted and marked as partially reliable 
   should be freed and marked to be skipped per the PR-SCTP [RFC3758] 
   specification.  The freed buffer space should then be re-used for 
   the new Data Sets being exported.   

 5.3.4.4 Template 
 
   Templates Sets and Option Template Sets MUST be sent on stream zero 
   with full reliability. 
    
   New Template Records SHOULD be transmitted as soon as they are 
   created on the Metering Process, and preferably before any 
   associated Flow and Options Data Record is transmitted.  The 
   Collecting Process SHOULD accept Flow and Options Data Records 
   without the associated Template Record. 

 5.3.5   Collecting Process 
 
   The Collecting Process SHOULD listen for a new association request 
   from the Exporting Process.  The Exporting Process will request a 
   number of streams to use for export.  A Collecting Process MUST 
   support at least two inbound streams per association.  An Exporting 
   Process and Collecting Process MAY ask for and support more than two 
   streams. 
    
   The Collecting Process SHOULD verify that the received IPFIX 
   Messages inside one stream do not have differing SID values and 
   silently discard any data that does NOT match the initial value.   
   The Exporting Process SHOULD NOT transmit messages inside one stream 
   with multiple SID values.  The correlated Flow Records are then 
   treated like a normal export Flow. 
    
   If the Collecting Process receives a malformed IPFIX Message, it 
   MUST reset the SCTP association, discard the message and log the 
   error.   
     
   When an SCTP association is closed, the Collecting Process MUST 
   discard all templates received over that association and stop 
   decoding IPFIX Messages that use those templates. 



 
 
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 5.3.6   Failover 
 
   If the Collecting Process does not acknowledge the attempt by the 
   Exporting Process to establish an association it will retry using 
   the SCTP exponential backoff feature.  The Exporter MAY log an alarm 
   if the time to establish the association exceeds a specified 
   threshold. 
    
   If Collecting Process failover is supported by the Exporting Process 
   a second SCTP association MAY be opened in advance. 
    
 5.4      UDP 
    
   This section describes how IPFIX can be transported over UDP  
   [RFC768] 

 5.4.1   Congestion Avoidance  
     
   UDP has no integral congestion avoidance mechanism.  Its use  
   over congestion sensitive network paths is therefore deprecated.   
   UDP MAY be used in deployments where Exporters and Collectors  
   always communicate over dedicated links which are not susceptible  
   to congestion.   

 5.4.2   Reliability  
    
   UDP is not a reliable transport protocol, and cannot guarantee  
   delivery of messages.  IPFIX Messages sent from the Exporting  
   Process to the Collecting Process using UDP may therefore be lost.   
   UDP MUST NOT be used unless the application can tolerate some  
   loss of Messages. 
    
   The Collecting Process could deduce the loss and reordering of IPFIX 
   Messages by looking at the discontinuities in the IPFIX Message 
   sequence number.  These conditions SHOULD be logged. 
    
   Templates sent from the Exporting Process to the Collecting  
   Process using UDP as a transport MUST be resent at regular  
   intervals in case previous copies were lost.  Implementations  
   MAY send templates using a reliable transport protocol, and  
   send IPFIX Flow and Option Data Records using UDP as the  
   transport protocol. 

 
 
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 5.4.3   MTU 
    
   The maximum size of exported messages MUST be configured such that  
   the total packet size does not exceed the path MTU.   

 5.4.4   Port Numbers 
    
   The UDP destination port is set by manual configuration at both  
   Exporting Process and Collecting Process.   
    
   The UDP source port is allocated from the dynamic and/or  
   private ports space.   

 5.4.5   Exporting Process 
    
   The Exporting Process MAY duplicate the IPFIX Message  
   to the several Collecting Process.   

 5.4.5.1 Template 
    
   If sent using UDP as the transport protocol, Template Sets  
   and Option Template Sets MUST be re-sent at regular intervals.  How 
   frequently these Options Data Records are exported is configurable.   
   New Template Records SHOULD be transmitted as soon as they are  
   created on the Metering Process, and before any associated Data  
   Record is transmitted.  The Collecting Process SHOULD accept  
   Flow and Options Data Records without the associated Template 
   Record. 

 5.4.6   Collecting Process 
    
   If the Collecting Process receives an IPFIX Message that it cannot  
   decode, it MUST discard the message and log the error.   
    
   The Collecting Process MUST associate a lifetime with each  
   Template received via UDP.  If the template is not refreshed by the  
   Exporting Process before that lifetime has expired, the  
   Collecting Process MUST discard the Template.  The Collecting  
   Process MUST NOT decode Flow or Option Data Records which  
   have an expired Template.   



 
 
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 5.4.7   Failover 
    
   Because UDP is not a connection oriented protocol, the Exporting 
   Process is unable to determine from the transport protocol that the 
   Collecting Process is no longer able to receive the IFPIX Messages.  
   Therefore, it can not invoke a failover mechanism.  However, the 
   Exporting Process MAY duplicate the IPFIX Message to several 
   Collecting Processes. 
    
 6.     Message Layout 
    
   An IPFIX Message consists of a Message Header followed by one or 
   more Sets.  The Sets can be any of the possible three types: 
   Template, Data, or Options Template.   
    
   The format of the IPFIX Message is shown in Figure B. 
    
   +--------+-------------------------------------------+ 
   |        | +----------+ +---------+ +----------+     | 
   |Message | | Template | |  Data   | | Options  |     | 
   | Header | |   Set    | |   Set   | | Template | ... | 
   |        | |          | |         | |    Set   |     | 
   |        | +----------+ +---------+ +----------+     | 
   +--------+-------------------------------------------+ 
    
      Figure B: IPFIX Message format 
 
   A Set ID is used to distinguish the different types of Sets.  Set 
   IDs lower than 256 are reserved for special Sets, such as the 
   Template Set (ID 2) and the Options Template Set (ID 3).  The Data 
   Sets have a Set ID greater than 255.  The Set ID value of 0 and 1 
   are not used for historical reasons [NETFLOW9]. 
    
   The format of the Template, Data, and Options Template Sets will be 
   discussed later in this document.  The Exporter MUST code all binary 
   integers of the Message Header and the different Sets in network 
   byte order (also known as the big-endian byte ordering). 
    
   Following are some examples of IPFIX Messages: 
    
   1. An IPFIX Message consisting of interleaved Template, Data, and 
   Options Template Sets-A newly created Template is exported as soon 
   as possible.  So if there is already an IPFIX Message with a Data 
 
 
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   Set that is being prepared for export, the Template and Option Sets 
   are also interleaved with this information, subject to availability 
   of space. 
    
   +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ 
   |        | +----------+ +---------+     +-----------+ +---------+ | 
   |Message | | Template | | Data    |     | Options   | | Data    | | 
   | Header | | Set      | | Set     | ... | Template  | | Set     | | 
   |        | |          | |         |     | Set       | |         | | 
   |        | +----------+ +---------+     +-----------+ +---------+ | 
   +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+  
    
      Figure C: IPFIX Message example 1 
    
   2. An IPFIX Message consisting entirely of Data Sets-After the 
   appropriate Template Records have been defined and transmitted to 
   the Collecting Process, the majority of IPFIX Messages consist 
   solely of Data Sets.   
    
   +--------+----------------------------------------------+ 
   |        | +---------+     +---------+      +---------+ | 
   |Message | | Data    | ... | Data    | ...  | Data    | | 
   | Header | | Set     | ... | Set     | ...  | Set     | | 
   |        | +---------+     +---------+      +---------+ | 
   +--------+----------------------------------------------+   
    
      Figure D: IPFIX Message example 2 
 
   3. An IPFIX Message consisting entirely of Template and Options 
   Template Sets-When UDP is used as the transport protocol, Templates 
   Sets and Option Template Sets MUST be sent periodically to help 
   ensure that the Collecting Process has the correct Template Records 
   and Options Template Records when the corresponding Flow Data 
   Records are received.   
    
   +--------+-------------------------------------------------+ 
   |        | +----------+     +----------+      +----------+ | 
   |Message | | Template |     | Template |      | Options  | | 
   | Header | | Set      | ... | Set      | ...  | Template | | 
   |        | |          |     |          |      | Set      | | 
   |        | +----------+     +----------+      +----------+ | 
   +--------+-------------------------------------------------+ 
    
 
 
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      Figure E: IPFIX Message example 3 
    
    
 7.     IPFIX Message Format 
    
 7.1      Header Format 
    
   The format of the IPFIX Message Header format is shown in Figure F. 
    
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Version Number          |            Length             | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                           Export Time                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                       Sequence Number                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          Source ID                            | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
      Figure F: IPFIX Message Header format 
    
   Message Header Field Descriptions  
    
   Version 
           Version of Flow Record format exported in this message.  The 
           value of this field is 0x000a for the current version. 
            
   Length 
           Total Length is the length of the IPFIX Message, measured in 
           octets, including message Header and Set(s). 
             
   Export Time 
           Time in seconds since 0000 UTC 1970, at which the Export 
           Packet leaves the Exporter. 
            
   Sequence Number 
           Incremental sequence counter of all IPFIX Messages sent from 
           the current Observation Domain by the Exporting Process.  
           This value SHOULD be used by the Collecting Process to 
           identify whether any IPFIX Messages have been missed. 
            

 
 
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   Source ID 
           A 32-bit value that identifies the Exporter Process 
           Observation Domain.  Collecting Process SHOULD use the 
           combination of the source IP address and the Source ID field 
           to separate different export streams originating from the 
           same Exporting Process. 
            
 7.2      Field Type Format 
            
   Vendors need the ability to define proprietary Information Elements, 
   because, for example, they are delivering pre-standards product, or 
   the Information Element is in some way commercially sensitive.  This 
   section describes the Field Type format for both IETF specified 
   Information Elements [IPFIX-INFO] and Vendor Specified Information 
   Elements, both the Template Set and the Option Template Set.   
    
   The Field Ids used to identify Information Elements are represented 
   by the Field Type.  When the Enterprise Field Type bit is set to 0, 
   the corresponding Field Type will report an IETF specified 
   Information Elements.  When the Enterprise Field Type bit is set to 
   1, the corresponding Field Type will report a Vendor Specified 
   Information Element.  
    
   The Field Type format is shown in Figure G. 
     
       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  
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
       |E|      Field Type             |        Field Length           |  
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
       |                      Enterprise Number                        |  
       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      
          Figure G: Field Type format 
      
        Where: 
      
       E  
          Enterprise Field Type.  If this bit is zero, the Field Type  
          identifies an IETF specified Information Element, and the  
          four octet Enterprise Number field MUST NOT be present.  If  
          this bit is one, the Field Type identifies a Vendor Specified  
          Information Element, and the Enterprise Number filed MUST be  
 
 
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          present.   
      
      Field Type  
         A numeric value that represents the type of the field.  Refer    
         to [IPFIX-INFO].   
    
      Field Length  
         The length of the corresponding Field Type, in bytes.  Refer    
         to [IPFIX-INFO].   
    
      Enterprise Number  
         IANA enterprise number [PEN] of the authority defining the  
         Field Type in this Template Record. 
            
 7.3      Template Set 
    
   One of the essential elements in the IPFIX format is the Template 
   Set.  Templates greatly enhance the flexibility of the Flow Record 
   format because they allow the Collecting Process to process Flow 
   Records without necessarily knowing the interpretation of all the 
   data in the Flow Record.  A Template Set MAY exclusively contain 
   IETF defined Field Types.  A Template Set MAY contain Vendor 
   Specified Information Elements from one or more vendors.   
    
   The format of the Template Set is shown in Figure H.   
    
       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  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |          Set ID = 2           |          Length               |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |      Template ID 256          |         Field Count           |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type 1           |         Field Length 1        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |                    Enterprise Number  1.1                     |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type 2           |         Field Length 2        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |             ...               |              ...              |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type N           |         Field Length N        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   
 
 
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      |                    Enterprise Number  1.N                     | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |      Template ID 257          |         Field Count           |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type 1           |         Field Length 1        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type 2           |         Field Length 2        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |                    Enterprise Number  2.2                     | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |             ...               |              ...              |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Field Type M           |         Field Length M        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |                    Enterprise Number  2.M                     | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |                          Padding (opt)                        | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
      Figure H: Template Set Format 
    
   The Template Set Field Definitions are as follows: 
    
     Set ID 
           Set ID value of 2 is reserved for the Template Set. 
 
     Length 
           Total length of this Set.  Because an individual Template 
           Set MAY contain multiple Template Records, the Length value 
           MUST be used to determine the position of the next Set 
           record, which could be any type of Set.  Length is the sum 
           of the lengths of the Set ID, the Length itself, and all 
           Template Records within this Set. 
            
     Template ID 
           Each of the newly generated Template Records is given a 
           unique Template ID.  This uniqueness is local to the 
           Observation Domain that generated the Template ID.       
           Template IDs 0-255 are reserved for Template Sets, Options 
           Sets, and other reserved Sets yet to be created.  Template 
           IDs of Data Sets are numbered from 256 to 65535. 
            
     Field Count 
 
 
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           Number of fields in this Template Record.  Because a 
           Template Set usually contains multiple Template Records, 
           this field allows the Collecting Process to determine the 
           end of the current Template Record and the start of the 
           next. 
            
     Field Type 
           A numeric value that represents the type of the field.  
           Refer to [IPFIX-INFO]. 
               
     Field Length 
           The length of the corresponding Field Type, in bytes.  Refer 
           to [IPFIX-INFO]. 
            
      Enterprise Number  
           IANA enterprise number [PEN] of the authority defining the  
           Field Type. 
      
      Padding  
           The Exporting Process MAY insert some padding bytes, so that 
           the subsequent Set starts at an aligned boundary.  Padding 
           MUST be composed of zero (0) bytes.  The padding length MUST 
           be shorter than any allowable Template Record in this 
           Template Set.  It is important to note that the Length field 
           includes the padding bits.  Because Template Sets are always 
           4-byte aligned by definition padding is only needed in case 
           of other alignments e.g. on 8-byte boundaries. 
            
   The Set ID value of 0 and 1 are not used for historical reasons 
   [NETFLOW9]. 
    
 7.4      Data Set 
    
   The format of the Data Set is shown in Figure I. 
    
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Set ID = Template ID        |          Length               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 1 - Field Value 1    |   Record 1 - Field Value 2    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 1 - Field Value 3    |             ...               | 
 
 
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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 2 - Field Value 1    |   Record 2 - Field Value 2    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 2 - Field Value 3    |             ...               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 3 - Field Value 1    |             ...               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |              ...              |        Padding (opt)          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   
    
      Figure I: Data Set Format 
    
   Note that not all Field Values do necessarily have a length of 16 
   bit. 
    
   Data Set Field Descriptions are as follows: 
    
   Set ID = Template ID 
           Each Data Set is associated with a Set ID.  The Set ID maps 
           to a (previously generated) Template ID.  The Collecting 
           Process MUST use the Set ID to find the corresponding 
           Template Record and decode the Flow Records from the Set. 
            
   Length 
           The length of this Set.   
           Length is the sum total of lengths of Set ID, Length itself, 
           all Flow Records within this Set, and the padding bytes, if 
           any. 
                  
   Record N - Field Value M 
           The remainder of the Data Set is a collection of Flow Data 
           Record(s), each containing a set of Field Types and values.  
           The Type and Length of the fields have been previously 
           defined in the Template Record referenced by the Set ID or 
           Template ID. 
            
   Padding  
           The Exporting Process MAY insert some padding bytes, so that 
           the subsequent Set starts at an aligned boundary.  Padding 
           MUST be composed of zero (0) bytes.  The padding length MUST 
           be shorter than any allowable Flow Data Record in this Data 
           Set.  It is important to note that the Length field includes 
           the padding bits. 
 
 
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   Interpretation of the Data Set format can be done only if the 
   Template Set corresponding to the Template ID is available at the 
   Collecting Process.    
    
 7.5      Options Template Set 
    
   The Options Template Record (and its corresponding Options Data 
   Record) is used to supply information about the Metering Process 
   configuration or Metering Process specific data, rather than 
   supplying information about IP Flows. 
    
   For example, the Options Template Set can report the sample rate of 
   a specific interface, if sampling is supported, along with the 
   sampling method used.   
    

 7.5.1   Scope 
    
   The Options Template Set gives the Exporter the ability to provide 
   additional information to the Collector which would not be possible 
   with only Flow Records. The scope, which is only available in the 
   Options Template Set, gives the context of the reported Information 
   Elements.  One Options Template Set example is the "Metering Process 
   statistics", which reports the statistics for the Observation 
   Domain, which is defined as the scope.  Another example is the 
   "Template configuration", which reports the configuration sampling 
   parameter(s) for the template, which is defined as the scope.   
    
   Multiple scope fields MAY be present in the Options Template Set, 
   in which, the composite scope is the combination of the scopes. 
   For example, if the two scopes are defined as "cache" and 
   "template", the combined scope is this template in this cache.  The 
   order of the scope, as defined in the Options Template Set, is in 
   this case irrelevant. However, if the order of the scopes fields in 
   the Option Template Set is relevant, the order of the scope fields 
   MUST be used.  For example, if the first scope defines the filtering 
   function, while the second scope defines the sampling function, the 
   order of the scope is important. Applying first the sampling 
   function, followed by the filtering function, would lead to 
   potential different Flow Records than applying first the filtering 
   function, followed by the filtering function.  In this case, the 

 
 
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   Collector deduces the function order by looking at the order of the 
   scope in the Options Template Set.  
    
   Finally, note that the scope length MAY NOT be null 

 7.5.2   Options Template Set Format 
    
   An Options Template MAY exclusively contain IETF defined Field 
   Types.  An Options Template MAY contain Vendor Specified Information 
   Elements from multiple vendors.  An Options Template MAY contain 
   IETF defined Field Types and Vendor Specified Information Elements. 
    
   The format of the Options Template Set is shown in Figure J.   
    
       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  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |          Set ID = 3           |          Length               |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |         Template ID           |      Option Scope Length      |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |        Option Length          |      Scope 1 Field Type       |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |     Scope 1 Field Length      |      Scope 2 Field Type       |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |     Scope 2 Field Length      |             ...               |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |            ...                |      Scope N Field Type       | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |     Scope N Field Length      |         Scope N ...           |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |    ... Enterprise Number      |      Option 1 Field Type      |       
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |    Option 1 Field Length      |           Option 1 ...        |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |    ... Enterprise Number      |              ...              |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |             ...               |       Option M Field Type     |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
      |     Option M Field Length     |         Padding (opt)         |  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
    

 
 
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      Figure J: Option Template Set Format 
    
   The Options Template Set Field Definitions are as follows: 
    
   Set ID = 3 
           A Set ID value of 3 is reserved for the Options Template. 
    
   Length 
           Total length of this Set, including the padding bytes, if 
           any.  Each Options Template Set MAY contain multiple Options 
           Template Records.  Thus, the Length value MUST be used to 
           determine the position of the next Set record, which could 
           be either a Template Set or Data Set.                 
           Length is the sum total of lengths of Set ID, the Length 
           itself, and all Options Template Records within this Set 
           Template ID. 
    
   Template ID 
           Template ID of this Options Template.  This value is greater 
           than 255. 
     
   Option Scope Length 
           The length in bytes of any Scope fields definition contained 
           in the Options Template Record (The use of "Scope" is 
           described below).   
    
   Option Length 
           The length (in bytes) of any options field definitions 
           contained in this Options Template Record. 
    
   Scope Field Type 
           A numeric value that represents the type of the field.  
           Refer to [IPFIX-INFO]. 
            
   Scope Field Length 
           The length (in bytes) of the Scope field, as it would appear 
           in an Options Data Record. 
            
   Scope N Enterprise Number  
           IANA enterprise number [PEN] of the authority defining  
           Scope N Field Type. This is 4 bytes long. 
    
   Option Field Type 
 
 
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           A numeric value that represents the type of field.  Refer to 
           [IPFIX-INFO]. 
            
   Option Field Length 
           The length of the corresponding Option Field Type, in bytes.  
           Refer to [IPFIX-INFO]. 
            
    Option M Enterprise Number  
           IANA enterprise number [PEN] of the authority defining the 
           Option M Field Type. This is 4 bytes long. 
            
   Padding  
           The Exporting Process MAY insert some padding bytes, so that 
           the subsequent Set starts at an aligned boundary.  Padding 
           MUST be composed of zero (0) bytes.  The padding length MUST 
           be shorter than any allowable Options Template Record in 
           this Options Template Set.  It is important to note that the 
           Length field includes the padding bits. 
    
   The Set ID value of 0 and 1 are not used for historical reasons 
   [NETFLOW9]. 

 7.5.3   Options Data Record Format 
    
   The Options Data Records are sent in Data Sets. 
    
   The format of the Data Set, containing Options Data Records, is 
   shown in Figure K.   
    
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |      Set ID = Template ID     |          Length               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 1 - Scope 1 Value    |   Record 1 - Scope 2 Value    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |              ...              |Record 1 - Option Field 1 Value| 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |Record 1 - Option Field 2 Value|             ...               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 2 - Scope 1 Value    |   Record 2 - Scope 2 Value    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |              ...              |Record 2 - Option Field 1 Value| 
 
 
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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |Record 2 - Option Field 2 Value|             ...               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Record 3 - Scope 1 Value    |   Record 3 - Scope 2 Value    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |              ...              |Record 3 - Option Field 1 Value| 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |Record 3 - Option Field 2 Value|             ...               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |              ...              |         Padding (opt)         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
      Figure K: Data Set format, containing Options Data Records  
    
   Options Data Records of the Data Set Field Descriptions  
    
   Set ID = Template ID 
           A Set ID precedes each group of Options Data Records within 
           a Data Set.  The Set ID maps to a previously generated 
           Template ID corresponding to this Options Template Record.  
           The Collecting Process MUST use the Set ID to map the 
           appropriate type and length to any field values that follow. 
            
   Length 
           The length of this Set.    
           Length is the sum of the lengths of the Set ID, Length 
           itself, all the Options Data Records within this Set, and 
           the padding bytes, if any. 
            
   Record N - Option Field M Value 
           The remainder of the Data Set is a collection of Flow 
           Records, each containing a set of Scope and Field Values.  
           The type and length of the fields were previously defined in 
           the Options Template Record referenced by the Set ID or 
           Template ID. 
            
   Padding  
           The Exporting Process MAY insert some padding bytes, so that 
           the subsequent Set starts at an aligned boundary.  Padding 
           MUST be composed of zero (0) bytes.  The padding length MUST 
           be shorter than any allowable Options Data Record in this 
           Data Set.  It is important to note that the Length field 
           includes the padding bits. 
 
 
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   The Data Set format can be interpreted only if the Options Template 
   Set corresponding to the Template ID is available at the Collecting 
   Process. 
    
 8.     Specific Reporting Requirements 
    
   Some specific Options Templates and Options Templates Records are 
   necessary to provide extra information about the Flow Records and 
   about the Metering Process.   
    
   The ipfixOption Field [IPFIX-INFO], always included in these 
   specific Options Templates, defines the type of information sent in 
   the Option Template / Option Template Record pair.  For example, if 
   the ipfixOption [IPFIX-INFO] value is METER_STATS, then the Option 
   Template will specify information about the Metering Process 
   statistics.  The ipfixOption [IPFIX-INFO] MUST always be the first 
   Information Element in the Option Template so that the Collector can 
   quickly determine whether or not a specific Option Template is 
   described.  And if the ipfixOption [IPFIX-INFO] is present, which 
   specific Option Template type it defines. 
     
   The minimum set of Information Elements is always specified in these 
   Specific IPFIX Options Templates.  Nevertheless, extra Information 
   Elements MAY be used in these specific Options Templates.   
    
 8.1      The Metering Process Statistics Option Template 
 
   The Metering Process Statistics Option Template defines the Metering 
   Process Statistics with the export of the following Information 
   Elements [IPFIX-INFO]: 
       ipfixOption             The value MUST be METER_STATS 
       observationDomain       Source ID 
       lostFlows               Flows not exported due to resource   
                               starvation 
       lostFlowsPackets         Packets in the lost Flows 
       lostFlowsBytes          Bytes in the lost Flows  
       droppedPacketCount      Packets dropped by Metering Process  
                           at the Observation Point 
   droppedByteCount        Bytes dropped by Metering Process at the  
                                Observation Domain 
        time;                   When this record was generated 
    
 
 
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   The minimum set of Information Element in the Metering Process 
   Statistics Option Template is: ipfixOption, observationDomain, 
   lostFlows, time 
 
 9.     Export Packet "Export Time" Computation and Flow Record Time 
    
 9.1      Microsecond Precision 
    
   For a Data Set with Flow Records requiring microsecond precision, 
   the Export Packet "Export Time" field MUST be calculated so that 
   each Flow Records flowStartUsec [IPFIX-INFO] and flowEndUsec [IPFIX-
   INFO] would contain a 32 bit signed microsecond offset from the 
   "Export Time" base timestamp.  Hereafter some pseudo code to 
   calculate the Export Time in one pass, which would return an 
   absolute duration of 35 minutes for all Flow Records contained in 
   the Data Set.  Flow Records MUST be exported in different Export 
   Packet if the absolute duration can not fit in those 35 minutes. 
    
   //  pseudo code for microsecond offset in IPFIX encoded Flow 
   Records. 
   // 
    
      struct flow{ 
         uint32  tv_sec; 
         uint32  tv_usec; 
         uint32  numbytes; 
         ...  // other Information Elements... 
      }; 
    
      struct flow flowtable [MAX_TABLE_SIZE]; 
      int lastflowindex = -1; 
    
      writeflows() { 
         if (lastflowindex < 0) return; 
         // simply take the second field from the first available flow 
   // and make this the base time for this collection of flows.  uint32  
   base_sec = flowtable[0].tv_sec; 
         writeheaderToSocket(base_sec); // put 32-bit second value in 
   header 
         for (int i=0; i<=lastflowindex; i++){ 
            int32 offset = (flowtable[i].tv_sec - base_sec) * 1000000 + 
   flowtable[i].tv_usec; 


 
 
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            writeint32ToSocket(offset);  // put the 32-bit time offset 
   in the record. 
            // write other Information Elements... 
         } 
      } 
    
   A two pass approach calculation for the optimum (center) "Export 
   Time" base timestamp would allow an absolute duration of 71 minutes 
   for all Flow Records contained in the Data Set.  The two pass 
   approach MAY be used.   
    
   The "Export Time" base timestamp calculation requires that at the 
   Export Packet exporting time the Exporting Process MUST run down the 
   list of Flow Records in the Data Set message and adjust the Flow 
   start and Flow end timestamps. 
    
 9.2      Millisecond Precision 
    
   For a Data Set with Flow Records requiring a millisecond precision, 
   the same principles as in section 10.1 "Microsecond Precision" will 
   be used.   
    
   The only difference will be that the Flow start and the Flow end 
   SHOULD now be represented respectively by the flowStartMsec [IPFIX-
   INFO] and flowEndMsec [IPFIX-INFO].  As a consequence of the 
   millisecond precision, the absolute duration of all Flow Records is 
   now of about 49 days.  The Export Header "Export Time" base time 
   SHOULD be calculated with the algorithm described in the Section 
   10.1 "Microsecond Precision".  In order to reduce the load on the 
   Exporter, the Export Header "Export Time" MAY be the time in seconds 
   since 0000 UTC 1970 at which the Export Packet leaves the Exporter 
   and not the calculated optimum value anymore as described in section 
   10.1 "Microsecond Precision". 
    
   Alternatively, for a Data Set with Flow Records requiring a 
   millisecond precision, the microsecond mechanism as described in 
   section 10.1 MAY be used as such.  The Flow Record MAY use the 
   flowStartUsec [IPFIX-INFO] and flowEndUsec [IPFIX-INFO] rounded at a 
   millisecond precision.   
    
 9.3      Nanosecond Precision 
    

 
 
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   For a Data Set with Flow Records requiring a nanosecond precision, 
   all Flow Records will contain Flow start flowStartNsec [IPFIX-INFO] 
   and flowEndNsec [IPFIX-INFO].  The Export Header "Export Time" will 
   be of no use on the Collector side in this case as the flowStartNsec 
   [IPFIX-INFO] and flowEndNsec [IPFIX-INFO] both have a nanosecond 
   precision already.  Both flowStartNsec [IPFIX-INFO] and flowEndNsec 
   [IPFIX-INFO] use the NTP time format which is represented as a 64-
   bit value which contains a 32-bit specification of seconds since 
   1900 and a 32-bit "fraction" field.   Refer to the NTP 
   specification, RFC1305, section 3.1 "Data Formats". 
    
 9.4      Multiple Precisions 
     
   When Flow Records requiring different precisions must be exported, 
   the Exporting Process SHOULD split the Flow Records in different 
   Data Set according to the precision:  millisecond, microsecond or 
   nanosecond. 
    
 10.      Linkage with the Information Model 
 
   The information model associates each IPFIX Information Element with 
   a well defined type, such as hexBinary, long, unsignedInt, etc. 
   This document defines how fields of a given type are encoded. 
    
 10.1       Boolean 
 
   A boolean field shall be encoded in a single byte with the value of 
   0 indicating false and any other value indicating true. 
    
 10.2       Byte 
 
   A byte value shall be encoded as a single byte representing a value 
   between -128 and 127.  The value is represented in two's complement 
   notation.   
    
 10.3       UnsignedByte 
 
   An unsigned byte value shall be encoded as a single byte 
   representing a value between 0 and 255. 
    
 10.4       Short 
 


 
 
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   A short is a 16-bit datum that encodes an integer in the range [-
   32768,32767].  The short is represented in two's complement 
   notation. 
    
 10.5       Reduced Size Encoding of Integer Types 
 
   Information Elements containing integer types in the information 
   model MAY be encoded using fewer bytes than those implied by their 
   type in the information model definition [IPFIX-INFO], based on the 
   assumption that the smaller type is sufficient to carry any value 
   the Exporter may need to deliver.  This reduces the network 
   bandwidth requirement between the Exporter and the Collector.  Note 
   that the Information Elements definition [IPFIX-INFO] will always 
   define the maximum encoding size. 
    
   For instance the information model [IPFIX-INFO] defines byteCount as 
   an unsignedLong type, which would require 64-bits.   However if the 
   Exporter will never locally encounter the need to send a value 
   larger than 4294967295, it may chose to send the value instead as an 
   unsignedInt.  For example, a core router would require an 
   unsignedLong byteCount while an unsignedInt might be sufficient for 
   an access router. 
    
   This behavior is indicated by the Exporter by specifying a type size 
   smaller than that associated with the assigned type of the field.  
   In the example above the Exporter would place a length of 4 versus 8 
   in the template. 
    
   If reduced sizing is used, it MUST be applied only to following 
   integer types: unsignedLong, long, unsignedInt, int, unsignedShort, 
   short.  In each case the downcasting MUST be to a smaller integer 
   type.  The same signed versus unsigned properties MUST be preserved. 
   Specifically unsignedLong may be downcast to unsignedInt, 
   unsignedShort or unsignedByte.  A long may be downcast to an int, a 
   short or a byte.  The other downcasts follow the same pattern. 
    
 11.      Variable Length Information Element 
 
   The IPFIX template mechanism is optimized for fixed length 
   Information Elements [IPFIX-INFO].  Where an Information Element has 
   a variable length the following mechanism MUST used to carry the 
   length information, for both the IETF and proprietary Information 
   Elements. 

 
 
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   In the Template Set the length is recorded as 65535.  This reserved 
   length value notifies the Collecting Process that length of the 
   Information Element will be carried in the Information Element 
   content itself. 
    
   In most cases the length of the Information Element will be less 
   than 256 bytes.  The following length encoding mechanism optimizes 
   the overhead of carrying the Information Element length in this 
   majority case. 
    
   If the length of the Information Element is less than 255 bytes, the 
   length is carried in the first byte of the Information Element, as 
   shown on Figure L. 
       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 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      | Length (< 255)|          Information element                  | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |                      ... continuing as needed                 | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
     Figure L: Variable Length Information Element (length < 255 bytes) 
    
   If the length of the Information Element is greater or equal than 
   256 bytes, the first byte of the Information Element is 255, and the 
   length is carried in the second and third bytes of the Information 
   Element, as shown in Figure M. 
       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 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |      255      |        Length (256 to 65535)       |   IE     | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |                      ... continuing as needed                 | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
      Figure M: Variable Length Information Element  
               (length 256 to 65535) bytes 
    
 12.      Template Management 
 
   Flow Data Records that correspond to a Template Record MAY appear in 
   the same and/or subsequent IPFIX Messages.  The Template Record is 
 
 
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   not necessarily carried in every IPFIX Message.  As such, the 
   Collecting Process MUST store the Template Record to interpret the 
   corresponding Flow Data Records that are received in subsequent data 
   messages. 
    
   A Collecting Process that receives IPFIX Messages from several 
   Observation Domains from the same Exporter MUST be aware that the 
   uniqueness of the Template ID is not guaranteed across Observation 
   Domains. 
    
   The Template IDs must remain constant for the life of the Metering 
   Process and the Exporting Process.  If the Exporting Process or the 
   Metering Process restarts for any reason, all information about 
   Templates will be lost and new Template IDs will be created.  
   Template IDs are thus not guaranteed to be consistent across an 
   Exporting Process or Metering Process restart. 
            
   If the measurement parameters change, a new Template ID SHOULD be 
   initiated and used. Examples of the measurement changes are: a new 
   sampling rate, a new flow expiration process, a new filtering 
   definitions, etc... A newly created Template Record is assigned an 
   unused Template ID by the Exporter.  If the template configuration 
   is changed, the current Template ID is abandoned and SHOULD NOT be 
   reused.  If a Collecting Process should receive a new definition for 
   an already existing Template ID, it MUST discard the previous 
   template definition and use the new one. 
    
   If a configured Template Record on the Exporting Process is deleted, 
   and re-configured with exactly the same parameters, the same 
   Template ID COULD be reused. 
    
   The Exporting Process sends the Template Set and Options Template 
   Set under the following conditions: 
    
    1. After a Metering Process restarts, the Exporting Process MUST 
       NOT send any Data Set without sending the corresponding Template 
       Set and the required Options Template Set in a previous message 
       or including it in the same IPFIX Message.  It MAY transmit the 
       Template Set and Options Template Set, without any Data Sets, in 
       advance to help ensure that the Collector will have the correct 
       Template Record before receiving the first Flow or Options Data 
       Record. 
     
 
 
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    2. In the event of configuration changes, the Exporting Process 
       SHOULD send the new template definitions at an accelerated rate.  
       In such a case, it MAY transmit the changed Template Record(s) 
       and Options Template Record(s), without any data, in advance to 
       help ensure that the Collector will have the correct template 
       information before receiving the first data. 
     
    3. If the Template Records and Options Template Records are sent 
       using a transport protocol that is not fully reliable they MUST 
       be refreshed on a regular basis by the Exporting Process which 
       MUST re-send all the Template Records and Options Template 
       Records to the Collecting Process. 
     
 13.      The Collecting Process's Side 
    
   The Collecting Process receives Template Records from the Exporting 
   Process, normally before receiving Flow Data Records (or Options 
   Data Records).  The Flow Data Records (or Options Data Records) can 
   then be decoded and stored locally on the devices.  If the Template 
   Records have not been received at the time Flow Data Records (or 
   Options Data Records) are received, the Collecting Process SHOULD 
   store the Flow Data Records (or Options Data Records) and decode 
   them after the Template Records are received.  A Collecting Process 
   device MUST NOT assume that the Data Set and the associated Template 
   Set (or Options Template Set) are exported in the same IPFIX 
   Message. 
    
   The Collecting Process MUST NOT assume that one and only one 
   Template Set is present in an IPFIX Message.   
    
   The life of a template at the Collecting Process is limited to a 
   fixed refresh timeout.  Templates not refreshed from the Exporting 
   Process within the timeout are expired at the Collecting Process.  
   The Collecting Process MUST NOT attempt to decode the Flow or 
   Options Data Records with an expired Template.  At any given time 
   the Collecting Process SHOULD maintain the following for all the 
   current Template Records and Options Template Records: <Exporting 
   Process, Observation Domain, Template ID, Template Definition, Last 
   Received> 
   Note that the Observation Domain is identified by the Source ID 
   field from the IPFIX Message. 
    

 
 
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   Template IDs are unique per Exporting Process and per Observation 
   Domain. 
    
   If the Collecting Process receives a new Template Record (for 
   example, in the case of an Exporter restart) it MUST immediately 
   override the existing Template Record. 
    
   The Collecting Process MUST note the Field ID of any Information 
   Element that it does not understand and MAY discard the Information 
   Element from the Flow Record.  The Collecting Process MUST note the 
   size and position of any Vendor Specified Information Element that 
   it does not understand and discard the Information Element from the 
   Flow Record. 
    
   The Collector MUST accept padding in the Data Set and Options 
   Template Set, which means for the Flow Data Records, the Options 
   Data Records and the Template Records. 
   Refer to the terminology summary table in Section 3.1. 
    
   The IPFIX protocol has a sequence number field in the Export Header 
   which increases with each IPFIX Message.  A Collector may detect out 
   of sequence, dropped, or duplicate messages by tracking the sequence 
   number.  A collector SHOULD provide a logging mechanism for tracking 
   out of sequence messages.  Such out of sequence messages may be due 
   to congestion on the network link between the Exporter and 
   Collector, Collector resource exhaustion where it can not process 
   the IPFIX Messages at their arrival rate, Exporter resource 
   exhaustion where it can not transmit messages at their creation 
   rate, out of order packet reception, duplicate packet reception, an 
   Exporting Process reset, or an attacker injecting false messages. 
    
 14.      Security Considerations 
 
   Because IPFIX can be used to collect billing information and network 
   forensics, confusing or blinding IPFIX must be seen as a prime  
   objective during a sophisticated network attack.   
    
   If an attacker is in a position to inject false messages into an 
   IPFIX Message stream this will allow them to send forged Flow Data 
   Records, Options Data Records, or Templates.  Forged Templates may 
   impair the Collectors ability to process any further Flow Records.  
   Forged Flow Records would have a direct effect on the application 
   using the Flows, for example a billing system may generate incorrect 
 
 
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   billing information.  Forged options may be able to alter the 
   meaning of Flow Records, for example if the sample rate is changed.   
    
   The IPFIX Messages themselves may contain information of value to an 
   attacker, and thus care must be taken to confine their visibility to 
   authorized users.   
    
   IPFIX Messages can be secured using IPsec.  Alternatively if IPFIX 
   runs on top of SCTP or TCP, TLS [TLS] can be used. 
    
 14.1       IPsec Usage 
    
   To secure messages between the Exporter and the Collector an IPFIX 
   implementation MAY use IPsec.  To ensure interworking between 
   Exporters and Collectors from different vendors, the following IPsec 
   profile MUST be supported.  This profile is derived from [USEIPSEC]. 

 14.1.1  Selectors 
    
   IPFIX runs between manually configured pairs of hosts on the 
   following transport ports (TBD).  The appropriate selector would be 
   Exporter-Collector pairs and port number.   
    
   Note that, if the Exporter is a router, a non-interface ("loopback") 
   address should be used.    

 14.1.2  Mode 
    
   IPsec MUST be run in transport mode.  The AH and ESP MUST be 
   supported by an IPFIX implementation of IPsec.   
    
   The Authentication Header (AH) [RFC2402] MUST be used if 
   authentication is required.  The Security Protocol (ESP) [RFC2406] 
   must be used if there is a threat to the IPFIX Message content, or 
   if that content is confidential.   
    
   Normally in situations where the ESP was required the AH would also 
   be required.  If ESP only is used, the sender's IP address MUST be 
   checked against the IP address asserted in the key management 
   exchange. 




 
 
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 14.1.3  Key Management 
    
   In many networks, manual key management will be sufficient, and this 
   reduces the complexity of the Exporter, albeit at a cost of greater 
   configuration complexity.  Manual key management MUST be supported.  
   If a replay attack is considered likely, an automated key management 
   such as IKE [IKE] key management system SHOULD be used.   

 14.1.4  Security Policy 
 
   Connections should be accepted only from the designated peer. 

 14.1.5  Authentication 
 
   Given the number of IPFIX capable Exporters that are likely to be 
   deployed by large ISPs, there will be circumstances where shared key 
   mechanisms are not adequate.  Where an automated key management 
   system is used, certificate-based IKE SHOULD be supported.    

 14.1.6  Availability 
    
   It is accepted that IPsec will not be universally available in IPFIX 
   Exporters, and that where it is available, there may be issues of 
   throughput, which may itself raise security issues.  In such 
   circumstances the other security measures described in this document 
   provide some threat mitigation.   
    
 14.2       TLS Usage 
     
   The IPFIX Exporter initiating a connection acts as a TLS client 
   according to [TLS], and an IPFIX Collector that accepts a connection 
   acts as a TLS server.  If mutual authentication is required the 
   IPFIX Device acting as TLS server MUST request a certificate from 
   the IPFIX Device acting as TLS client, and the IPFIX Device acting 
   as TLS client MUST be prepared to supply a certificate on request. 
    
 14.3       Protection against DoS attacks 
    
   An attacker may directly mount a DoS attack by generating large 
   amounts of traffic.   If TCP is used for transport, then the Flow to 
   the Collector would back off due to congestion and eventually stall, 
   blinding the IPFIX system.  An attack could then proceed without 
   further observation.  SCTP-PR will have a different pathology under 
 
 
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   such an attack.  Stale data at the head of the queue will get 
   flushed giving some visibility of the attack.  In case of UDP, IPFIX 
   would reduce to some sort of sampling, meaning that some forensics 
   may be left.   
    
   To avoid blinding of the IPFIX system some mechanism for service 
   differentiation can be used to prioritize IPFIX traffic over user 
   traffic.  An alternative is to use a dedicated network for the 
   transport of IPFIX Messages.  By sending the IPFIX Messages over a 
   dedicated network, IPFIX Message loss induced by user traffic 
   congestion is minimized.  However an attacker may trigger the 
   generation of excessive IPFIX Messages, and to avoid information 
   loss during such an attack the IPFIX network must be adequately 
   sized. 
    
 14.4       When IPsec or TLS is not an option 
    
   The use of IPsec or TLS might not be an option because of 
   performance issues. 
    
   Without IPsec or TLS an IPFIX entity has no means to authenticate an 
   IPFIX entity other than the Source IP address.  Useful protection is 
   gained by allocating Exporter and Collector IP addresses from ranges 
   that are excluded from use by user traffic and preventing spoofing 
   attacks by proper ingress filtering.  Where large numbers of 
   Exporters, proxies and Collectors are used in a network, it may be 
   tempting for the administrator to not impose source IP address 
   restrictions but this leaves a proxy or Collector open to the 
   reception of invalid information.  Using an open proxy or Collector 
   is therefore discouraged.   
    
   If IP address spoofing can not be prevented some level of protection 
   against an insertion attack is required.  With a modern 
   implementation of TCP with good ISN randomization [XXX-REFERENCE] or 
   SCTP insertion such attacks are difficult without the ability to 
   snoop the packet Flow [XXX-SCTP-BLIND-SPOOFING-REFERENCE].  UDP is 
   vulnerable to insertion attacks, however, randomization of the IPFIX 
   sequence number might mitigate this problem.  In all these cases, 
   the sequence number space is relatively small giving only limited 
   protection.  Therefore a 64 bit cookie [L2TPv3] SHOULD be included 
   as an element within all messages.   
    

 
 
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   The use of a dedicated network prevents IPFIX Messages from being 
   inspected by an attacker. 
    
 14.5       Logging an IPFIX Attack 
 
   A Collector may detect problems by tracking the IPFIX sequence 
   number and therefore SHOULD provide a logging mechanism for tracking 
   out of sequence messages.  Such out of sequence messages may not 
   only be caused by network congestion or Exporter/Collector resource 
   exhaustion but also by an attacker injecting false messages.   
    
   Note that an attacker may be able to exploit the behavior of the 
   Collector when it receives an out of sequence message.  For example 
   a Collector that simply reset the expected sequence number upon 
   receipt of a later message would easily be temporarily blinded by 
   deliberately injecting messages with a much larger sequence number.   
    
   [EDITOR NOTE: the security section may need be adapted to the 
   revised transport section]   
    
 15.      IANA Considerations 
    
   IANA will need to set up a registry of Field Types, scope and option 
   codepoints. The Set ID will not be administered by IANA.  
    
   In compiling the registry of Field Types IANA must set asside a 
   range value for vendor use.  It is proposed that the range 
   <0..32767> be administered by IANA for IETF defined IEs, and that 
   the range <32768..65535> be allocated for private use by vendors.   
    
   Similarly the scope and option codepoints need to be split between 
   IANA administered and private ranges. 
    
 16.      Examples 
    
   Let's consider the example of an IPFIX Message composed of a  
   Template Set, a Data Set (which contains three Flow Data Records), 
   an Options Template Set and a Data Set (which contains 2 Options 
   Data Records).   
    
   IPFIX Message: 
    
   +--------+---------------------------------------------. . . 

 
 
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   |        | +--------------+ +-----------------------+  
   |Message | | Template     | | Data                  |  
   | Header | | Set          | | Set                   |   . . . 
   |        | | (1 Template) | | (3 Flow Data Records) |  
   |        | +--------------+ +-----------------------+  
   +--------+---------------------------------------------. . . 
 
        . . .+-------------------------------------------------+ 
             +------------------+ +--------------------------+ | 
             | Options          | | Data                     | | 
        . . .| Template Set     | | Set                      | | 
             | (1 Template)     | | (2 Options Data Records) | | 
             +------------------+ +--------------------------+ | 
        . . .--------------------------------------------------+ 
    
 16.1       Message Header Example 
    
   The Message Header is composed of: 
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |     Version = 0x000a          |         Length = 152          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          Export Time                          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                       Sequence Number                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                           Source ID                           | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
 16.2       Template Set Example 
    
   We want to report the following Field Types: 
   - The source IP address (IPv4), so the length is 4 
   - The destination IP address (IPv4), so the length is 4 
   - The next-hop IP address (IPv4), so the length is 4 
   - The number of bytes of the Flow 
   - The number of packets of the Flow 
    
   Therefore, the Template Set will be composed of the following: 
    
    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 

 
 
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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |         Set ID = 2            |      Length = 28 bytes        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Template ID 256         |       Field Count = 5         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |     IP_SRC_ADDR = 0x0008      |       Field Length = 4        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |     IP_DST_ADDR = 0x000C      |       Field Length = 4        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |     IP_NEXT_HOP = 0x000F      |       Field Length = 4        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       IN_PKTS = 0x0002        |       Field Length = 4        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       IN_BYTES = 0x0001       |       Field Length = 4        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
 16.3       Data Set Example 
 
   In this example, we report the following three Flow Records: 
   Src IP addr. | Dst IP addr.  | Next Hop addr. | Packet | Bytes  
                |               |                | Number | Number 
   ------------------------------------------------------------------ 
   192.168.1.12 | 192.168.2.254 | 192.168.1.1    | 5009   | 5344385 
   192.168.1.27 | 192.168.2.23  | 192.168.1.2    | 748    | 388934 
   192.168.1.56 | 192.168.2.65  | 192.168.1.3    | 5      | 6534 
    
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |          Set ID = 256         |          Length = 64          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.12                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.2.254                        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.1                          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                             5009                              | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                            5344385                            |  
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.27                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
 
 
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                   IPFIX Protocol Specification            August 2004 
 
 
   |                          192.168.2.23                         |  
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.2                          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                              748                              | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                             388934                            | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.56                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.2.65                         | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          192.168.1.3                          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                               5                               | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                              6534                             | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
   Note that padding is not necessary in this example. 
    
 16.4       Options Template Set Example 
    
   Per line card (the router being composed of two line cards), we want 
   to report the following Field Types: 
      - Total number of IPFIX Messages 
      - Total number of exported Flows  
   Each line card is characterized by an unique Observation Domain, 
   represented by the unique Source ID Information Elements [IPFIX-
   INFO]. As a consequence, the Scope Field is the Source ID 
   Information Element. 
    
   The format of the Options Template Set is as follows: 
    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 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |         Set ID = 3            |          Length = 24          | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Template ID 257         |    Option Scope Length = 4    | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Option Length = 8       |        Source ID = TBD        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |   Scope 1 Field Length = 4    |    TOTAL_EXP_PKTS_SENT = 41   | 
 
 
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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Field Length = 4        |     TOTAL_FLOWS_EXP = 42      | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |       Field Length = 4        |           Padding             | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
 16.5       Data Set with Options Data Records Example 
    
   In this example, we report the following two Options Data Records: 
   Line Card ID             | IPFIX Message   | Exported Flow Records 
   ------------------------------------------------------------------ 
   Line Card 1 (SourceID=1) | 345             | 10201     
   Line Card 2 (SourceID=2) | 690             | 20402 
    
   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  
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
    |      Set ID = 257             |         Length = 20           |  
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
    |                               1                               | 
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    |             345               |            10201              | 
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
    |                               2                               |  
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
    |             690               |            20402              |  
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
 17.     References 
    
 17.1       Normative References 
    
   [IPFIX-ARCH] Sadasivan, G, Brownlee, N. "Architecture Model for IP 
   Flow Information Export" draft-ietf-ipfix-arch-02.txt", October 2003 
    
   [IPFIX-INFO] Calato, P, Meyer, J, Quittek, J, "Information Model for 
   IP Flow Information Export" draft-ietf-ipfix-info-02, November 2003 
    
   [IPFIX-AS] Zseby, T, Boschi, E, Penno, R, Brownlee, N, Claise, B, 
   "IPFIX Applicability", draft-ietf-ipfix-as-02.txt, July 2004  
    
   [UDP]  Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol" RFC 768, August 1980 
    

 
 
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   [TCP]  "TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL DARPA INTERNET PROGRAM 
   PROTOCOL SPECIFICATION" RFC 793, September 1981 
    
   [RFC1889] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., Jacobson, V., 
   "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", RFC 1889, 
   January 1996 
    
   [RFC2402] Kent, S., Atkinson, R., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 
   2402, November 1998  
    
   [RFC2406] Kent, S., Atkinson, R., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload 
   (ESP)", RFC 2406, November 1998  
    
   [RFC2960] Stewart, R. (ed.) "Stream Control Transmission Protocol", 
   RFC 2960, October 2000 
    
   [RFC3758] Stewart, R., Ramalho, M., Xie, Q., Tuexen, M., Conrad, P.  
   "Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) Partial Reliability 
   Extension", RFC 3758, May 2004 
 
 17.2       Informative References 
 
   [IPFIX-REQ] Quittek, J, Zseby, T, Claise, B, Zander, S,  
   "Requirements for IP Flow Information Export" draft-ietf-ipfix-reqs-
   15.txt, June 2003 
    
   [IPFIX-AS] Zseby, T, Penno, R, Brownlee, N, Claise, B, "IPFIX 
   Applicability", draft-ietf-ipfix-as-01.txt, October 2003      
              
   [IPFIX-EVAL] Leinen, S, "Evaluation of Candidate Protocols for IP 
   Flow Information Export (IPFIX)", draft-leinen-ipfix-eval-contrib-
   02.txt, January 2003 
    
   [NETFLOW9] Claise, B, et al "Cisco Systems NetFlow Services Export 
   Version 9", draft-claise-netflow-9-07.txt, December 2003 
    
   [PEN] IANA Private Enterprise Numbers registry 
         http://www.iana.org/assignments/enterprise-numbers  
    
   [USEIPSEC] S. Bellovin, Guidelines for Mandating the Use of IPsec,  
              draft-bellovin-useipsec-02.txt, October 2003, work  
              in progress.  

 
 
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   [IKE]      Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange  
              (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998. 
    
   [TLS]      Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version  
              1.0", RFC 2246, January 1999. 
    
   [L2TPv3]   J. Lau et al. Layer Two Tunneling Protocol (Version 3)  
              draft-ietf-l2tpext-l2tp-base-11.txt, October 2003, work  
              in progress.  
    
   [XXX-REFERENCE]  
    
   [XXX-SCTP-BLIND-SPOOFING-REFERENCE] 
 
 18.      Acknowledgments 
    
   We would like to thank the following persons: Juergen Quittek for 
   the coordination job; Nevil Brownlee and Dave Plonka for the 
   thorough reviews; Randall Stewart and Peter Lei for their SCTP 
   expertise;  Martin Djernaes for the first essay on the SCTP section; 
   Sebastian Zander, Jeff Meyer, Maurizio Molina, Carter Bullard, Tal 
   Givoly, and many more, for the technical feedback. 
    
 Authors Addresses 
 
   Benoit Claise 
   Cisco Systems 
   De Kleetlaan 6a b1 
   1831 Diegem 
   Belgium 
   Phone: +32 2 704 5622 
   E-mail: bclaise@cisco.com 
 
   Stewart Bryant 
   Cisco Systems, Inc. 
   250, Longwater, 
   Green Park, 
   Reading, RG2 6GB, 
   United Kingdom 
   Phone: +44 (0)20 8824-8828             
   Email: stbryant@cisco.com 
    

 
 
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                   IPFIX Protocol Specification            August 2004 
 
 
   Ganesh Sadasivan 
   Cisco Systems, Inc. 
   170 W. Tasman Dr. 
   San Jose, CA 95134 
   USA 
   Phone: +1 (408) 527-0251 
   Email: gsadasiv@cisco.com 
    
   Mark Fullmer 
   OARnet 
   2455 North Star Rd. 
   Columbus, Ohio 43221 
   Phone: +1 (614) 728-8100 
   Email: maf@eng.oar.net 
    
   Reinaldo Penno 
   Nortel Networks 
   2305 Mission College Blvd 
   Santa Clara, CA 95054 
   Phone: +1 408.565.3023 
   Email: rpenno@nortelnetworks.com 
    
   Paul Calato  
   Riverstone Networks, Inc.  
   5200 Great America Parkway  
   Santa Clara, CA 95054  USA  
   Phone:  +1 (603) 557-6913  
   Email: calato@riverstonenet.com 

















 
 
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