One document matched: draft-ietf-sigtran-mdtp-05.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-sigtran-mdtp-04.txt
Network Working Group R. R. Stewart
INTERNET-DRAFT Q. Xie
Motorola
S. Hussain
C. Sharp
Cisco
H. J. Schwarzbauer
Siemens
T. Taylor
Nortel Networks
I. Rytina
Ericsson
expires in six months June 2, 1999
MULTI_NETWORK DATAGRAM TRANSMISSION PROTOCOL
<draft-ietf-sigtran-mdtp-05.txt>
Status of This Memo
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.
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 Internet Draft discusses a new protocol, namely the Multi-network
Datagram Transmission Protocol (MDTP), that is intended to provide
fault-tolerant reliable data transfer between communicating entities
over IP networks [1].
MDTP is proposed as an application-level protocol that is designed to
support redundant networks and transparent fault management. MDTP also
provides timing control and configuration flexibilities to meet the
stringent timing requirements often found in telephony signaling
protocols. The motivation of developing MDTP is to support
Internet-based high reliability applications such as signaling and
call control for Internet telephony.
Stewart, et al [Page 1]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Introduction.......................................................3
1.1 Terminology......................................................3
1.2 Design Requirements of MDTP......................................4
1.3 Interface to MDTP................................................5
2. MDTP Datagram Format...............................................5
2.1 MDTP Common Header Field Descriptions............................6
2.2 MDTP Control Parameter Part Definitions..........................7
2.3 MDTP Data Part Definitions......................................11
3. Endpoint Association Initialization...............................12
3.1 Initiation Message and Tag Lock.................................12
3.2 Tag Unlock and TSN Initialization...............................13
3.3 Datagram Processing during Tag Lock ............................14
3.4 An Example of Association Initialization .......................14
3.5 Other Initiation Issues.........................................15
3.5.1 Selection of Tag Value......................................15
3.5.2 Initiation from behind a NAT................................15
3.5.3 Initialization Collision....................................16
3.5.4 Association Re-initialization...............................16
4. Transfer User Datagram............................................16
4.1 Timer Management Rules..........................................17
4.1.1 T3-send Timer Adjustment with RTT...........................18
4.2 Multihoming Rotation............................................18
4.2.1 Remote Multihoming Rotation.................................18
4.2.2 Local Multihoming Rotation..................................19
4.3 Stream Sequence Number..........................................19
4.4 Ordered and Un-ordered Delivery.................................19
4.5 Report Missing Datagrams........................................20
4.6 Range Check on TSN .............................................21
4.7 Advisory Ack Request............................................21
5 Congestion Controls...............................................22
5.1 Send with Window Control........................................22
5.1.1 Window Length Adjustment....................................23
5.2 Send Timer Back-off at Re-transmission..........................24
6. Network Management................................................25
6.1 Failure Detection in Redundant Networks.........................25
6.2 RTT Measurement.................................................26
6.3 Network Heart Beat .............................................26
7. Termination of Association........................................27
7.1 Graceful Shutdown of an Association.............................28
8. Stream Operations.................................................29
8.1 Stream Initiation...............................................29
8.2 Stream Termination..............................................29
8.3 Other Issues with Stream Operations.............................30
9. Interface with Upper Layer........................................30
10. Suggested MDTP Timer and Protocol Parameter Values................34
11. Acknowledgments...................................................34
12. Authors' Addresses................................................34
13. References........................................................35
Stewart, et al [Page 2]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
1. Introduction
This Internet Draft discusses a new protocol, namely the Multi-network
Datagram Transmission Protocol (MDTP). The intention of developing
MDTP is to provide a fault-tolerant, real-time reliable data transfer
mechanism between communicating endpoints over IP networks [1].
MDTP is proposed as an application-level protocol that is designed to
support redundant networks and transparent fault management. MDTP also
provides timing control and configuration flexibilities to meet the
stringent timing requirements often found in telephony signaling
protocols. The motivation of developing MDTP is to support
Internet-based high reliability applications such as signaling and
call control for Internet telephony.
MDTP is also designed to be scalable in order to support different
signaling transport requirements for different interfaces to a
telephony network.
For example, the transportation of signaling protocols such as ISDN
PRI may not require redundant networks, and hence only a subset of
MDTP will need to be implemented. On the other hand, redundant
networks may be mandated when transporting SS7 signaling messages
amongst different components in a carrier-grade telephony core
network. In such cases, the transparent support for redundant
networks, load sharing, and fault management defined in MDTP become
essential.
Many of the fundamental concepts that have made TCP such a useful
protocol are reused in MDTP, and some of the advantages of UDP are
also merged into the design.
1.1 Terminology
The following terms are defined and used in this document:
- Redundant networks:
An endpoint may be able to transmit or receive on more than one IP
address/UDP port. RFC 1122 refers to this as multihoming. This
constitutes a redundant local network (for MDTP) relative to the
endpoint. MDTP makes no attempt to assure routing diversity within
the internet connecting two endpoints. Each endpoint attempts to
send to its peer endpoint using all the IP addresses and UDP ports
its peer has open (within the constraints of any application
specified restrictions). The choice of which local socket to send
upon is an implementation detail (it is possible only one socket is
available and bound to all of the local networks to which the machine is
connected). The O/S also will play a role in the multihoming/redundancy.
MDTP attempts a best effort at spreading the traffic across a
Stewart, et al [Page 3]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
destination's available interfaces. It is assumed by MDTP that the
network (if fault tolerance is desired) is engineered for diversity
and MDTP's best effort will play only a small role in that diversity.
- Endpoint:
Representation of the logical point where MDTP datagrams can be sent
to or received from. Moreover, an MDTP endpoint shall be defined as
a set of IP address/port combinations in order to support redundant
networks. For example, an endpoint on a multi-homed host connected
with N IP networks can be represented as:
[IP addr1/port1,
...
IP addrN/portN]
where the port numbers or IP addresses may not be unique, but their
combinations shall be guaranteed to be unique by the underneath IP
networks.
- Association:
Representation of an ongoing communication channel between two MDTP
endpoints.
- Stream:
Defines a sub-channel within an association. Datagrams sent through
a stream shall be reliably transmitted and delivered independent to
datagrams from other streams.
Each stream shall be identified by a stream number that is unique
within the association. Stream 0xffff is reserved and shall not be
used.
1.2 Design Requirements of MDTP
The following are some of the design requirements of MDTP to
make MDTP capable of supporting real-time call control environments
that may employ redundant networks:
A) High communication fan-out: an endpoint may need to be in
simultaneous communication with hundreds or thousands of endpoints
performing various call processing functions. These endpoints may
be codec converters, SS7 to IP translation applications, or, in the
case of mobile networks, data selector and combiner applications.
B) Stringent timer control: an endpoint needs to have a very fine
control over the timing for delivering a datagram. The timing
should be easily adjusted depending on the message type and the
destination. For example, after a few seconds of non-delivery the
call which the message is about may not exist anymore.
Stewart, et al [Page 4]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
C) Support multiple network paths: an endpoint communicating with a peer
should be able to take advantage of the multiple network paths and
multihoming in a transparent way. Therefore, the protocol must
be able to take advantage of local multi-homed hosts and remote
multi-homed hosts to provide resilient data delivery. This means
that the application or upper layer protocols need not to be involved
in the network fault management. Instead, when network failure occurs
MDTP should be able to automatically transmit out-bound datagrams to an
alternate destination network interface (if one exists) without
intervention from the application.
D) Reliable transport: datagrams might be lost or discarded while
traveling in the IP network towards the destination. The protocol
must handle the re-transmission of lost messages in an autonomous
way without any intervention from the upper layer. Also, sometimes
datagrams may arrive in duplicate copies, in such cases MDTP must
be able to detect and remove the duplicates automatically.
E) Support both ordered and un-ordered delivery: MDTP must support
both ordered and un-ordered delivery. In the case of ordered
delivery, the receiver shall detect out-of-order datagrams and
re-order them before dispatching them to the upper layer. In the
un-ordered case, received datagrams shall be dispatched without any
effort of re-ordering.
F) Support stream sequencing: on the demand of the upper layer
protocols or applications, MDTP should be able to support sequenced
delivery with regard to each individual stream, i.e., the delay caused
by the loss and retransmission of a datagram should be isolated to
only the stream to which the datagram belongs. This is particularly
important in some call control applications, where a loss of a
message should only affect the call whom the message belongs to.
1.3 Interface to MDTP
The application programs or upper layer protocols interface with MDTP
through a set of primitives (see section 9).
Towards the IP networks, it is assumed that UDP is used for the
transport layer. No special interfaces or changes are assumed within
UDP or at the UDP/MDTP interface. MDTP maintains its own queuing and
endpoint association. When MDTP runs on a router or on a
gateway-enabled host, it will place no special constraints on the
lower layer protocol implementations other than those described in the
Router Requirements and Host Requirements RFCs.
2. MDTP Datagram Format
A MDTP datagram consists of a common header and possibly a control
parameter part, a data part, or both.
Stewart, et al [Page 5]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
MDTP Datagram Format
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| MDTP Protocol Identifier | Vers |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|C/D| Msg Type | Reserved | Data Size |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
\ \
/ Control Parameter Part /
\ \
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
\ \
/ Data Part /
\ \
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Note: integers in the header of MDTP datagrams MUST be transmitted in
network byte-order.
Note: when both the control part and data part are present in an MDTP
datagram, the control part MUST be processed first.
2.1 MDTP Common Header Field Descriptions
MDTP Protocol Identifier: 28 bits
This shall be a fixed value of 0xf787307. The receiver shall
always verify this Protocol Identifier before it proceeds any
further in interpreting the header fields.
Version: 4 bits
This field represents the version number of the MDTP protocol,
and shall be set to 0x3.
C/D Bits: 2 bits
This field indicates whether the Message Type and Data Size fields
are filled in the present datagram:
00 - reserved, shall not be used. The receiver shall silently
discard any datagram with C/D bits set to 00.
01 - Data Size only
10 - Message Type only
11 - Message Type and Data Size
Message Type: 6 bits
This shall indicate the type of control message. Its value is valid
only when the C/D bits are set to either "10" or "11". Otherwise it
Stewart, et al [Page 6]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
shall be set to 0x0 and ignored by the receiver.
Message Type determines whether the control part is present in
the current datagram.
The value of Message Type is defined as the follows:
0x0 - reserved and shall not be used
0x1 - Initiation
0x2 - Initiation Ack
0x3 - Extended Data Ack
0x4 - Advisory Ack Request
0x5 - Window-up
0x6 - Window-up Ack
0x7 - RTT-request
0x8 - RTT-ack
0x9 - Abort
0xa - Graceful Shutdown
0xb - Graceful Shutdown Ack
0xc - Stream Initiation
0xd - Stream Initiation Ack
0xe - Stream Termination
0xf - Stream Termination Ack
0x10 to 0x3f - reserved and shall not be used
Reserved: 8 bits
These bits are reserved for future use. The sender shall always
set these bits to '0', and the receiver shall ignore there
values.
Data Size: 16 bits
This value represents, in number of octets, the size of the user
data present in the Data Part of the current datagram. Its value
is only valid when C/D bits are set to either "01" or "11".
Otherwise it shall be set to 0x0 and ignored by the receiver.
2.2 MDTP Control Parameter Part Definitions
This section defines whether a control parameter part is present for
each message type, and its format if a control parameter part is
present.
2.2.1 Initiation (0x1) and Initiation Ack (0x2):
The parameter field of the Initiation and Initiation Ack messages
shall carry two initiation Tags, the maximum window length and the
sender's local network information. Note that the endpoint MAY
be multi-homed.
Stewart, et al [Page 7]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
The following defines the parameter format for carrying N IPv4
Network addresses (other network address formats can be carried by
setting the size and type fields accordingly):
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Tag Value 1 (Seen) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Tag Value 2 (Send) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Max Window Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Number of Networks = N |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Size of address=8 | Type of Address=2 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| IP Address of Network 1 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Port # 1 | Padding = 0 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
/ /
\ ... \
/ /
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Size of address=8 | Type of Address=2 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| IP Address of Network N |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Port # N | Padding = 0 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
If there is any implementation-specific data needed to be
exchanged at the setup of the association, it should be appended
to the end of the above data structure. The format of the
implementation-specific data should follow "Size/Type/Data Field"
format as defined above. In case an endpoint does not support the
implementation-specific data received, it shall ignore the
additional fields.
2.2.2 Extended Data Ack (0x3):
The parameter field contains 0 or more gap reports and the
highest transmission sequence number (TSN) received.
Stewart, et al [Page 8]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Number of Gaps = N |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Gap #1 Start TSN |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Gap #1 End TSN |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
/ /
\ ... \
/ /
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Gap #N Start TSN |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Gap #N End TSN |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Last TSN Seen |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.3 Advisory Ack Request (0x4):
No parameter field.
2.2.4 Window-up (0x5):
No parameter field.
2.2.5 Window-up Ack (0x6):
Same as that of Extended Data Ack.
2.2.6 RTT-request (0x7) and RTT-ack (0x8):
The parameter field shall contain the time value that is used for
RTT calculation (see section 6.2), and optionally an
acknowledgment Seen value.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Time Value 1 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Time Value 2 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| 0x0 or TSN Seen |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.7 Abort (0x9):
The Abort message shall carry the initiation Tag of the
destination endpoint as a measure of security.
Stewart, et al [Page 9]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Init-Tag |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.8 Graceful Shutdown (0xa):
The destination endpoint initiation Tag shall be carried as a
measure of security.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Init-Tag |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| TSN Seen |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.9 Graceful Shutdown Ack (0xb):
Same as that of Abort.
2.2.10 Stream Initiation (0xc):
The parameter field shall contain the initiation Tag of the
destination endpoint (see section 3.1), the Stream Identifier,
and the Initial Sequence Number of this stream. Also, there shall
be a "Size of Stream Info" and "Stream Information" fields that
may contain an opaque user data structure specific to the stream
being opened. The "Stream Information" field should be padded with
'0's to 32 bit word boundary before transmission.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Init-Tag |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Stream Identifier | Reserved (set to 0) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Size of Stream Info = N |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
/ /
\ Stream Information (N octets) \
/ /
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.11 Stream Initiation Ack (0xd):
The parameter field shall contain the Stream Identifier.
Stewart, et al [Page 10]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Stream Identifier | Reserved (set to 0) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.12 Stream Termination (0xe):
The parameter field shall contain the initiation Tag value (see
section 3.1) and the Stream Identification
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Init-Tag |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Stream Identifier | Reserved (set to 0) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
2.2.13 Stream Termination Ack (0xf):
Same has that of Stream Initiation Ack.
2.3 MDTP Data Part Definitions
The following format shall be used for MDTP datagram Data Part:
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| TSN Seen |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| TSN Send |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Stream Identifier N | Sequence Number n |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
\ \
/ User Data (seq n of Stream N) /
\ \
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
TSN Seen: 32 bits
This is a piggy-backed acknowledgment, indicating the reception
of datagrams up to this TSN.
TSN Send: 32 bits
This value represents the TSN of the user data carried in this
datagram.
Stewart, et al [Page 11]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Stream Number: 16 bits
Identify the stream to which the following user date belongs.
Sequence Number: 16 bits
This value presents the sequence number of the following user
data within the stream.
Sequence number 0x0 indicates that the following user data shall
be treated as un-ordered, and shall be dispatched to the upper
layer by the receiver without any attempt of re-ordering.
User Data: variable length
This is the payload user data. The size of the user data shall
be specified in the Data Size field. The implementation may
optionally have some '0' padded at the end of User Data field.
3. Endpoint Association Initialization
Before the first data transmission can take place from one endpoint
("A") to another endpoint ("Z"), the two endpoints must complete an
initialization process in order to set up an association between them.
The upper layer may explicitly request MDTP to initialize an
association to an endpoint, or implicitly open the association by
sending the first datagram to that endpoint on stream 0.
Once the association is established, the global stream, i.e., stream
0, is automatically open and ready for datagram transmission. Other
streams must be explicitly opened before data transmission can occur.
A tag-and-lock mechanism must be employed during the initialization
in order to guard against security attacks as well as erroneous
datagrams.
3.1 Initiation Message and Tag Lock
The initialization process consists of the following steps (assuming
that MDTP endpoint "A" tries to set up an association with MDTP
endpoint "Z"):
A) "A" shall first send an Initiation message to "Z", with Tag Seen
field set to 0x0 and Tag Send field set to Tag_A, where Tag_A shall
be a random number in the range of 0x80000000 to 0xffffffff (see
3.1.4 for Tag value selection), and enter the Tag-lock mode.
B) "Z" shall respond immediately with an Initiation Ack message, with
Seen set to Tag_A and Send set to Tag_Z (same range as Tag_A), and
enter the Tag-lock-new mode.
Stewart, et al [Page 12]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
At this point, "Z" is ready to send user datagrams to "A" in stream
0. And upon the reception of the above Initiation Ack from "Z", "A"
also becomes ready to send user datagrams to "Z" in stream 0.
Note: user data in other streams can not be sent until the
respective streams are opened.
C) "Z" shall leave Tag-lock-new mode and enter Tag-lock mode only if a
user datagram has been sent out from "Z" to "A".
Note: to guard against "man in the middle" attacks, a limit should
be imposed on the number of associations in the Tag-lock-new mode
at any given endpoint; whenever that limit is reached, any further
association Initiations received by the endpoint shall be silently
discarded. Also, a timer shall be used on each association that is
in the Tag-lock-new mode; at the expiration of that timer, that
association shall be shutdown by the endpoint.
Note: no user data shall be carried in both the Initiation and
Initiation Ack messages, i.e., the C/D bits must be set to 10.
Note: both side must exchange their local network information and
their maximal window length in the Initiation and Initiation Ack
messages.
3.2 Tag Unlock and TSN Initialization
The first user datagram transmitted by "A" to "Z" shall have the TSN
Seen value set to Tag_Z in the Data Part (see 2.3).
Similarly, the first user datagram transmitted by "Z" to "A" shall
have the TSN Seen value set to Tag_A.
The reception of this first datagram with user data and with the
correct Tag value in the TSN Seen field from its peer shall unlock the
Tag and cause the endpoint to leave the Tag-lock or Tag-lock-new mode.
The receiver shall immediately send back an Extended Data Ack to
acknowledge the reception of this first user datagram.
The TSN Send value carried in this first datagram with user data shall
be used to establish the initial TSN of this peer, i.e., the sender of
this datagram.
To strengthen the security, this initial TSN shall be randomly
selected from the range between 0x1 and 0x7fffffff by the sender, by
means such as those suggested in RFC 1750 [9].
Note: if there exists any un-acked datagram(s) when an endpoint is to
send its first user datagram to its peer, the endpoint MUST send a
stand-alone Extended Data Ack to acknowledge the un-acked datagram(s)
it has received from that peer before it sends out its first user
datagram. This is because the TSN Seen field in the first out-bound
Stewart, et al [Page 13]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
user datagram can not be used as a TSN ack, instead it is used to
carried the peer's Tag.
3.3 Datagram Processing during Tag Lock
In Tag-lock or Tag-lock-new mode, an endpoint shall silently discard
any user datagrams from the peer endpoint that does not carried the
correct Tag value.
However, if there is a control part present in a discarded user
datagram (i.e., C/D = 0x11), the endpoint shall always process the
control part even when the data part is being discarded.
If another Initiation from "A" is received by "Z" after "Z" sent out
its Initiation Ack, "Z" shall respond to this second Initiation by
re-sending the Initiation Ack if the Tag Send field of this second
Initiation has the same value as that of the original Initiation.
Otherwise, "Z" shall respond by sending an Initiation of its own, with
Tag Send field set to Tag_Z, so as to elicit an Initiation Ack from
"A".
3.4 An Example of Association Initialization
In the following example, "A" initiates the association first and then
sends a user datagram to "Z", then "Z" sends two user datagrams
sometimes later:
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{app sets association with Z}
Initiation(C/D = 10)
[Tag Seen=0,Tag Send=Tag_A
& net addr info] --------\
(Start T1-init timer) \
(Enter Tag_A-lock mode) \---->Initiation Ack(C/D = 10)
[Tag Seen=Tag_A,Tag Send=Tag_Z
/---- & net addr info]
/ (Enter Tag_Z-lock-new mode)
(Cancel T1-init timer)<-------/
{app sends 1st user data; strm 0}
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=Tag_Z,Send=init TSN-A
Strm=0,Seq=1,
& user data] -------\
(Start T3-send timer) \
\---->(Leave Tag_Z-lock-new mode)
------Ext Data Ack(C/D = 10)
/ [Gap=0,TSN Seen=init TSN-A]
(Cancel T3-send timer) <-----/
..
Stewart, et al [Page 14]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
..
{app sends 2 datagrams;strm 0}
/---- U-data(C/D = 01)
/ [Seen=Tag_A,Send=init TSN-Z
(Leave Tag_A-lock mode) <----/ Strm=0,Seq=1,
(Start T2-receive timer) & user data 1]
/---- U-data(C/D = 01)
/ [Seen=init TSN-A,
/ Send=init TSN-Z +1,
<---/ Strm=0,Seq=1,
& user data 2]
If T1-init timer expires at "A" after the Initiation is sent, the same
Initiation message with the same Tag_A value shall be retransmitted and
the timer restarted. This shall be repeated Max.Init.Retransmit times
before "A" considers "Z" unreachable and optionally reports the
failure.
3.5 Other Initiation Issues
3.5.1 Selection of Tag Value
Tag values should be selected from the range of 0x80000000 to
0xffffffff. It is very important that the Tag value be randomized to
guard against "man in the middle" and "sequence number" attacks. It is
suggested that RFC 1750 [9] be used for the Tag randomization.
3.5.2 Initiation from behind a NAT
When a NAT is present between two endpoints, the endpoint that is
behind the NAT, i.e., one that does not have a publicly available
network address, shall take one of the following options:
A) Indicate that it has only one network by setting the 'Number of
networks' field in the Initiation message to 0. This will make the
endpoint that receives this Initiation message to consider the sender
as only having that one address. This method can be used for a dynamic
NAT, but any multihoming configuration at the endpoint that is behind
the NAT will not be visible to its peer, and thus not be taken
advantage of.
B) Indicate all of its networks in the Initiation by specifying all
the actual IP addresses and ports that the NAT will substitute for the
endpoint. This method requires that the endpoint behind the NAT must
have pre-knowledge of all the IP addresses and ports that the NAT will
assign.
Stewart, et al [Page 15]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
3.5.3 Initialization Collision
If two endpoints attempt to initialize an association with each other
at about the same instance, a collision will occur. As a result, each
side will receive an Initiation datagram from the other side after it
transmitted its own. In such a case, both sides shall send an
Initiation Ack datagram to the other side using the procedure
described above.
3.5.4 Association Re-initialization
An endpoint shall be allowed to re-initialize an established
association with the other endpoint.
Once an endpoint has left the Tag-lock or Tag-lock-new mode of the
previous association initialization process, it shall treat any new
Initiation message from its peer as a re-initialization event.
During a re-initialization, both endpoint shall follow the same
procedure as defined in section 3.1. And a new Init-Tag must be used
by the endpoint that receives the Initiation message if it has already
left the previous Tag-lock or Tag-lock-new mode.
4. Transfer User Datagram
The receiver of a user datagram shall always acknowledge the reception
to the sender of the datagram. Normally, delayed acknowledgment shall
be used. The delay shall be controlled by a T2-receive timer.
At the expiration of T2-receive timer, if there is out-bound user data,
the ack should be piggy-backed on the data part of the out-bound user
datagram, occupying the TSN Seen field (see section 2.3). Otherwise, a
stand-alone Extended Data Ack shall be used to carry the
acknowledgment.
When Extended Data Ack is used, the sender shall fill the Last TSN
Seen field to indicate the highest TSN Send number it has received
from the peer. Any detected gaps must also be reported
(see section 4.5).
The following example illustrates both stand-alone and piggy-backed
acknowledgments:
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App sends 3 messages in strm 0}
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=7,Strm=0,Seq=3]--------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=8,Strm=0,Seq=4]-------->
Stewart, et al [Page 16]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=9,Strm=0,Seq=5]-------->
...
{Timer T2 expires}
/--------- Extended Data Ack(C/D=10)
/ [Gap=0,Seen=9]
(cancel T3-send timer) <----/
...
...
{App sends 1 message; strm 0}
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=10,Strm=0,Seq=6]-------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
...
{App sends 1 message; strm 1}
(cancel T2-receive timer)
/------ U-Data (C/D=01)
/ [Seen=10,Send=6,Strm=1,Seq=2]
/ (Start T3-send timer)
(cancel T3-send timer) <------/
(Start T2-receive timer)
..
{Timer T2 Expires}
Extended Data Ack(C/D=10)
[Gap=0,Seen=6]----------------------> (cancel T3-send timer)
4.1 Timer Management Rules
The the following rules shall be used to manage the timers during
normal datagram transfer, unless otherwise stated for some special
cases:
A) When a user datagram is received, the endpoint shall start a
T2-receive timer if no T2-receive timer is currently running. Upon
the expiration of the T2-receive timer, the endpoint shall
acknowledge to the sender all the un-acked user datagrams it has
received.
B) When a user datagram is sent out, the sending endpoint shall start
a T3-send timer if no T3-send timer is currently running.
If the T2-receive timer is running, the endpoint shall first stop
the T2 timer, piggy-back an ack (or Extended Data Ack) unto the
out-bound datagram, and then start a T3-send timer.
If the T3-send timer expires, the endpoint shall follow the rules
described in 4.6 for possible re-transmission of the un-acked
datagrams.
Moreover, whenever the T3-send timer is started the RTT estimate
last calculated for that remote network address should be added to
the base T3-send timer value (see sections 6.2 and 6.3 for RTT).
Stewart, et al [Page 17]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
C) When all outstanding datagrams are acknowledged, the T3-send timer
shall be stopped if one is still running.
D) If an endpoint has a T3-send timer running and receives a partial
acknowledgment (one that acknowledges some of the outstanding
datagrams) then the endpoint shall restart the T3-send timer.
The following example shows the use of various timers.
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App sends 2 messages; strm 0}
U-Data (C/D=01)
[Seen=5,Send=7,Strm=0,Seq=3] ---------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
U-Data (C/D=01) {App sends 1 message; strm 1}
[Seen=5,Send=8,Strm=0,Seq=4] -\ /-- (cancel T2-receive timer)
\ / U-Data (C/D=01)
\ / [Seen=7,Send=6,Strm=1,Seq=2]
\ (Start T3-send timer)
/ \
(Re-start T3-send timer) <-------/ \
(Start T2-receive timer) \
... -> (Start T2-receive timer)
...
{T2-receive timer expires}
Extended Data Ack(C/D=10)
[Gap=0,Seen=6] -----------------------> (Cancel T3-send timer)
..
{T2-receive timer expires}
(Cancel T3-send timer) <---------------- Extended Data Ack(C/D=10)
[Gap=0,Seen=8]
4.1.1 T3-send Timer Adjustment with RTT
If the RTT measurement is available to a remote IP address, the sender
shall adjust the T3-send timer each time when sending datagrams to
that IP address. The calculation and adjustment of the timer should
follow the method described in [4]. RTT measurement shall be tracked
for each destination IP address if the remote host is multi-homed.
MDTP defines three methods to obtain RTT measurements, see sections
4.7, 6.2, and 6.3.
4.2 Multihoming Rotation
4.2.1 Remote Multihoming Rotation
When an endpoint is transmitting to a remote multi-homed endpoint, the
transmitting endpoint shall rotate between destination IP addresses.
Every time the application transmits a datagram, MDTP MUST keep track
of the remote IP address to which it sent the datagram in the MDTP
Stewart, et al [Page 18]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
protocol variable 'last.sent.intf'. MDTP should rotate each send in a
round robin fashion amongst all available destination IP addresses on
the remote multi-homed host and should update the protocol variable
'last.sent.intf' to indicate which destination IP address it last
used.
If possible, acks should be transmitted to the same IP address from
which the acked messages were received. When acknowledging multiple
messages, this may not be possible. In the latter case, MDTP SHOULD
rotate the transmission of acknowledgments to all remote IP addresses.
The MDTP implementation MUST allow an application to override this
rotation by specifying the destination IP address to which to send a
datagram. The implementation must also provide an interface to add
and remove a remote IP address from rotation eligibility.
4.2.2 Local Multihoming Rotation
As discussed in section 3.3.4 of RFC 1122, an endpoint MAY rotate
transmitted messages amongst all local network interfaces by
specifying the local IP address and UDP port or it may allow the
networking protocol to decide which local IP address (and network
interface) to use to transmit a datagram..
If possible, acks should be transmitted from the same IP address over
which the acked messages were received. When acknowledging multiple
messages, this may not be possible. In the latter case, MDTP SHOULD
rotate the transmission of acknowledgments from all configured IP
address/port pairs.
4.3 Stream Sequence Number
The datagram stream sequence number shall always be set to 1 when the
stream is opened.
Also, when the stream sequence number reaches the value 0xffff the
next sequence number shall be set to 1. Sequence number '0' has
special meaning (see section 4.4) and shall not be used in normal
sequence number rotation..
4.4 Ordered and Un-ordered Delivery
Normally, the receiver shall ensure the user datagrams within any
given stream be delivered to the upper layer according to the order of
their stream sequence number. If there are datagram arrived out of
order of their stream sequence number, the receiver must hold the
received datagrams from delivery until they are re-ordered.
However, a sender can set the stream sequence number of a user
datagram to 0, to indicate that no ordering shall be performed on that
datagram within that stream. Upon the reception of the datagram, the
Stewart, et al [Page 19]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
receiver must by-pass the ordering mechanism and immediately delivery
the datagram to the upper layer.
This provides an effective way to transmit "out-of-band" data in any
given stream. Also, a stream can be used as an "un-ordered" stream by
simply setting the stream sequence number of each out-bound user
datagram to 0.
4.5 Report Missing Datagrams
MDTP uses a receiver-based retransmission policy, where the sender
attempts to elicit from the receiver information on the missing
datagrams before the retransmission.
If a receiver detects holes in the received user datagram sequence (by
examining TSN Send numbers), an Extended Data Ack with gap reports
shall be sent back to inform the sender so that the missing datagrams
can be re-transmitted.
Multiple gaps can be indicated in one single Extended Data Ack.
If there is out-bound user data, the endpoint shall piggy-back the
Extended Data Ack with the user data in the same MDTP datagram, by
setting the C/D bits to '11'. And the TSN Seen field in the data part
shall not be used, i.e., the sender shall set the field to 0x0 and the
receiver shall ignore it.
The following example shows the use of gap report in an Extended Data
Ack.
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App sends 3 messages; strm 0}
U-Data (C/D=01)
[Seen=3,Send=6,Strm=0,Seq=2]-------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
U-Data (C/D=01)
[Seen=3,Send=7,Strm=0,Seq=3]-----X (lost)
U-Data (C/D=01)
[Seen=3,Send=8,Strm=0,Seq=4]-------> (A gap detected in data)
..
{T2-receive timer expires}
/------ Extended Data Ack (C/D = 10)
/ [Gap=1,Strt=7,End=7,Seen=8]
(Prepare retransmission) <----/
In this example, when "Z" receives the third datagram from "A" it
realizes that a gap exists in the received data. At the expiration of
T2-receive timer, "Z" sends an Extended Data Ack with a gap report to
"A" to indicate the missing datagram. Note that the Start and End
fields in the gap report specify the edges of the gap, i.e., the TSN
Stewart, et al [Page 20]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
numbers between Start and End are missing.
When the peer endpoint is multi-homed, the Extended Data Ack should be
sent out to the destination IP address specified in the MDTP protocol
variable 'last.good.intf'. The value of 'last.good.intf' is always
updated to point to the source IP address from which the last datagram
from the peer endpoint arrived.
4.6 Range Check on TSN
For security reasons, the receiver must check the range of the TSN
Send value in each received user datagrams.
Assume that the highest TSN received from a peer is T and the maximal
window length of the same peer is W (exchanged during association
initiation, see section 3.1). When the next user datagram arrives from
this peer, the receiver shall silently discard the datagram if the TSN
Send value carried in the datagram is greater than T+W (calculation
rounds up at 0x7fffffff to 0x1).
4.7 Advisory Ack Request
An endpoint may use Advisory Ack Requests to improve bandwidth
utilization.
The endpoint should send an Advisory Ack Request to its peer when it
reaches half of its current window length, and also when it detects
that the next send will reach the full window length (see section 5.1
for window control).
Upon the reception of an Advisory Ack Request, when it is not under
flow control condition the peer endpoint should immediately
acknowledge all the datagrams it has received but not yet
acknowledged, and then cancel the T2-receive timer if one is still
running. Otherwise, the peer endpoint shall take no action and ignore
the Advisory Ack Request.
The following shows an example of using Advisory Ack Request:
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App sends 3 messages; strm 0}
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=7,Strm=0,Seq=3]-------------> (Start T2-recv timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=8,Strm=0,Seq=4]----------->
Stewart, et al [Page 21]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
{detects window half full, use Advisory Ack Req}
Adv Ack Request(C/D=11)
[Seen=5,Send=9,Strm=0,Seq=5]------\
\
\----> (cancel T2-receive timer)
<---------------- Extended Data Ack(C/D=10)
[Gap=0,Seen=9]
An endpoint sending an Advisory Ack Request may also use this request
for its RTT calculation. The sending endpoint may note the time mark
when sending the datagram with the Advisory Ack Request. When the
peer endpoint responds with an Extended Data Ack, the sender of the
Advisory Ack Request may use the time mark of the arriving Extend Data
Ack and the stored time mark to calculate the RTT as defined in
[4]. However, the sender of the Advisory Ack Request shall abandon the
RTT calculation if more datagrams are sent to its peer and no Extended
Data Ack is received.
5 Congestion Controls
Several different mechanisms shall be used jointly to achieve
congestion control in MDTP. These mechanisms are always used in regard
to the association, not a individual stream.
5.1 Send with Window Control
The sending endpoint shall use a transmission window to control the
number of outstanding datagrams, i.e., datagrams that have been sent,
but yet to be acknowledged. The length of the window is defined as the
maximal number of outstanding datagrams a sending endpoint can
allow. This length is adjusted dynamically, depending on the current
number of successful transmissions as well as the number of lost
datagrams or retransmissions.
When the number of outstanding datagrams reaches the current window
length, the endpoint shall still accept send requests from its upper
layer, but shall transmit no more datagrams until some or all of the
outstanding datagrams are acknowledged. The endpoint may also elect
to queue only a specified number of datagram when the window is full.
When this maximal number of queued datagrams is reached the endpoint
shall return an error to its upper layer.
Moreover, when the window length is reached, the next send request
from the upper layer will trigger a Window-up message to be
transmitted. Upon receiving this Window-up the receiver must respond
with a Window-up Ack, as illustrated by the following example
(assuming current window length is 3):
Stewart, et al [Page 22]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App sends 3 messages, strm 0}
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=7,Strm=0,Seq=3]--------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=8,Strm=0,Seq=4]-------->
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=9,Strm=0,Seq=5]-------->
{App sends a new message, strm 1}
(queue new message and send Win-up)
Window-up(C/D = 10) ---------------> (cancel T2-recv timer)
/---- Window-up Ack(C/D = 10)
/ [Gap=0,Seen=9]
(Cancel T3-send timer) <--------/
U-Data(C/D = 01)
[Seen=5,Send=10,Strm=1,Seq=2]-------> (Start T2-receive timer)
(Start T3-send timer)
In the above example, after the transmission of the first three
datagrams, "A" reached its window length. The next message from the
user triggered a Window-up that was sent to "Z". The Window-up shall
contain no user data. In response, "Z" cancelled timer T2 and
immediately sent a Window-up Ack. The arrival of this Window-up Ack
effectively resolved all the outstanding datagrams at "A", thus
allowing "A" to send out the next datagram.
5.1.1 Window Length Adjustment
The window length shall be initially set to 2, and shall then be
dynamically adjusted based on datagram loss and acknowledgment.
If the current window length is less than or equal to 4, every time
the number of consecutive outstanding datagrams acknowledged in a
single ack is equal to or greater than half the current window length,
the sender's window length shall be raised by 1, until it reaches
'Max.Outstanding.dg'(which should be a user configurable parameter).
If the current window length is greater than 4, every time the number
of consecutive outstanding datagrams acknowledged in a single ack is
equal to or greater than 4, the sender's window length shall be raised
by 1, until it reaches 'Max.Outstanding.dg'.
In the following circumstances, the sender's window length shall be
decreased. However, when the window length reaches 2 it shall not be
decreased any further.
The peer endpoint may report reception gaps which may correspond to
multiple datagram losses (indicated by an Extended Data Ack or
Stewart, et al [Page 23]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Window-up Ack). If between 1 to 3 datagrams are lost, the window
length shall be decreased by 1. If between 4 to 7 datagrams are lost,
the window length shall be decreased by 2. If 8 or more datagrams are
lost, the window length shall be decreased by 4.
Any time a Window Up is sent to the receiving endpoint the sender's
window length shall be decreased by 1. Also, if a timeout forces a
retransmission the sender's window length shall be reduced to half of
its currently value.
The following table summarizes these rules:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
duplicate ack received by sender | Adjust down by 4
-----------------------------------------------------------------
8 or more datagrams lost | Adjust down by 4
-----------------------------------------------------------------
4 to 7 datagrams lost | Adjust down by 2
-----------------------------------------------------------------
1 to 3 datagrams lost | Adjust down by 1
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Timeout forced retransmission | Adjust down by 1/2 of the
| current window.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Window up sent | Adjust down by 1
-----------------------------------------------------------------
4 or more consecutive datagrams | Adjust up by 1
acknowledged (window length > 4) |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
1/2 Window length or more acked | Adjust up by 1
(window length <=4) |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
5.2 Send Timer Back-off at Re-transmission
Whenever a T3-send timer expires, the endpoint shall re-transmit the
un-acked datagram that has the highest TSN Send value in that and
re-start the T3-send timer, unless:
A) If the current window length is reached, a Window-up message shall
be sent out (see section 5.1), or
B) If the current window length is not reached and there is still user
data pending for transmission, a new datagram with user data shall
be sent out and T3-send timer shall be restarted.
When the T3-send timer is re-started at a retransmission, the length
of the timer shall be doubled from its previous value. Also, the
latest estimated RTT value for that network should be added to the new
timer value. The following shows the calculation of T3-send timer
value, where 'TL3-default' is a configurable protocol parameter.
Stewart, et al [Page 24]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
<at normal transmission>
1. TL3-value = 'TL3-default'
2. T3-send = TL3-value + RTT
<at re-transmissions>
1. TL3-value = TL3-value * 2
2. T3-send = TL3-value + RTT
The T3-send timer at the sender shall be restored to its default value
when a datagram is received from the peer endpoint.
The total number of consecutive re-transmissions to all destination IP
addresses in an association shall be recorded. If this value exceeds
the limit defined in 'Max.Retransmit', the sending endpoint shall
consider the peer endpoint unreachable and shall stop transmitting any
more data to it. The sending endpoint MAY report the failure to the
upper layer, including all datagrams in its out-bound buffer which
have not been acknowledged. Whenever a datagram is received from a
peer endpoint the total number of retransmissions shall be cleared.
6. Network Management
6.1 Failure Detection in Redundant Networks
When the peer endpoint is multi-homed, the re-transmission of a
datagram should be attempted to the destination IP address specified
in the MDTP protocol variable 'last.good.intf'. The value of
'last.good.intf' is always updated to point to the source IP address
from which the last datagram from the peer endpoint arrived.
The number of consecutive T3-send timeout events is also recorded in
a variable 'retran.count' for each destination IP address. This count
should be incremented when a T3-send time-out event occurs for that
destination IP address. Every time a datagram is received from a peer
endpoint, the receiving endpoint shall reset to 0 the 'retran.count'
corresponding to the source IP address .
If the value in 'retran.count' exceeds half of the value of the
protocol parameter 'Max.Retransmit', the destination IP address shall
be reported to the upper layer as out-of-service and shall be removed
from eligibility for rotation. When re-transmitting a datagram, the
re-transmission should use 'last.good.intf' as the preferred
destination IP address to which to re-transmit, unless 'last.good.intf'
points to the destination IP address on which the original T3-send
time-out event occurred.
In the event that a datagram is received from an IP address that has
been reported as out-of-service, the 'retran.count' shall be cleared
as specified above, the destination IP address shall be reported as
in-service to the upper layer, and the destination IP address shall be
considered valid for rotation.
Stewart, et al [Page 25]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
6.2 RTT Measurement
On occasions an endpoint of an association may need to perform an RTT
measurement of the network (or one of the redundant networks) between
itself and its peer.
RTT-request and RTT-ack messages shall be used to perform the RTT
measurement. In the messages, two 32 bit long opaque integers are used
in the control parameter field to carry the time value.
At the request of its upper layer, an endpoint shall initiate an RTT
measurement by sending an RTT-request (to a specific network if
redundant networks exist). The sender shall also place in Time value 1
and Time value 2 the value of the current time mark.
Upon the reception of this RTT-request message, the recipient shall
immediately respond with a RTT-ack to the sender (over the same
network on which the RTT-request arrives if the recipient is
multi-homed), with the time mark carried in the original RTT-request
copied into its own Time value fields.
Upon the reception of this reply, the sender shall use the time mark
in the reply RTT-ack to calculate the RTT (to the specific destination
IP address if redundant networks exist) as defined in [4].
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{RTT - Request Now=x.y}
RTT-request (C/D=10)
[Time-value1=x,
Time-value2=y,
Seen=81] ----------------------->
/------- RTT-ack (C/D=10)
/ [Time-value1=x,
/ Time-value2=y,
/ Seen=3]
(Endpoint A uses <----------/
x.y to calculate RTT)
6.3 Network Heart Beat
At the request of its upper layer, an endpoint shall enable heart beat
to a specific peer with which it has an established association.
The RTT-request message defined in section 2.2 shall be used as
the heart beat while the RTT-ack shall be used as the heart beat
response.
After having heart beat enabled, the endpoint shall transmit a heart
beat to that specific peer and start a T5-heartBeat timer. The peer
shall immediately respond to the heart beat in the same manner as the
RTT measurement procedure described in section 6.2. This response, as
well as the new RTT measurement, shall be stored by the endpoint.
Stewart, et al [Page 26]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
When the T5-heartBeat timer expires, the endpoint shall first check if
the previous heart beat has been responded to (on the same network it
was sent in the case of multi-homed hosts). If not, the destination IP
address to which the last heart beat was sent shall have the
'retran.count' incremented and checked following the rules described
in section 6.1. Then, the endpoint shall send another heart beat and
re-start the T5-heartBeat timer.
In the case where one or both endpoints are multi-homed, the sending of
Heart beats shall follow the network rotation rules outlined in
section 4.2.
If, before the expiration of T5-heartBeat timer, a datagram is
received by the endpoint, the T5-heartBeat timer shall be stopped and
the appropriate T2-receive timer shall be started. In other words, the
T5-heartBeat timer has the lower precedence than the T2-receive timer.
When there are no datagrams to send and no other timers are running,
the T5-heartBeat timer shall be started and the above procedure shall
continue.
The suggested interval for T5-heartBeat timer is 4000 ms, and may be
dynamically adjusted by adding the current RTT measurement if it is
available.
7. Termination of Association
Before an endpoint terminates itself, it shall send an Abort message
to each of its peer endpoints in all existing associations. The Abort
shall be sent without requiring an acknowledgment from the peer
endpoint. However, the sender of the Abort message MUST fill in the
peer's Init-Tag.
When the peer endpoint receives the Abort, after verifying the Tag,
the peer shall remove the sender from its record, and optionally
report the termination of the sender to its upper layer. However if
the Tag sent with the Abort message is incorrect, the peer must
silently discard the Abort message.
The following shows an example of the termination of Endpoint A:
Endpoint A
{App indicates termination}
Abort (C/D = 10)
[Tag-X] --------------------------------> to Endpoint X
Abort (C/D = 10)
[Tag-Y] --------------------------------> to Endpoint Y
Abort (C/D = 10)
[Tag-Z] --------------------------------> to Endpoint Z
Stewart, et al [Page 27]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
7.1 Graceful Shutdown of an Association
An endpoint in an association may decide to "graceful shutdown" the
association without completely closing it down. With graceful
shutdown, both endpoints shall remove any record and pending datagrams
associated with the association. Further communications between the
two endpoints can be resumed by going through a re-initialization
procedure (see section 3.5.4).
A Graceful Shutdown message shall be sent to the peer endpoint of the
association, and the peer shall send back an acknowledgment. Note
that it shall be the responsibility of the endpoint that sends the
Graceful Shutdown message to assure that all the outstanding datagrams
from its side have been resolved before it initiates the graceful
shutdown procedure.
In the Graceful Shutdown message, the sender shall indicate the
highest TSN Seen it has received from the peer, as well as the
Init-Tag of the peer.
Upon the reception of the Graceful Shutdown, the peer shall first
verify that Tag value contained in the Graceful Shutdown message is
valid. If the Tag is invalid, the message must be silently discarded.
The peer then shall verify, by checking the Seen numbers from the
Graceful Shutdown message, that all the out-bound datagrams have
reached the destination. Otherwise, the peer shall re-transmit all
lost datagrams.
After sending the Graceful Shutdown, if the endpoint receives any new
user datagram it shall immediately respond with an Extended Data Ack
and re-start its T3-send timer.
The peer shall send a Graceful Shutdown Ack when all the outstanding
datagrams are acknowledged, then start a T4-shutdown timer. The
endpoint, after receiving the Graceful Shutdown Ack, must also
validate the Tag value contained in the message. If it does not match
the Tag value that unlocked the association, the message should be
silently discarded.
The following sequence shows an example of Graceful Shutdown:
Endpoint A Endpoint X
{App indicates graceful shutdown}
Graceful Shutdown (C/D=10)
[Tag-X, Seen=10] ---------------------> (all datagrams resolved)
(start T3-send timer) /-------- Graceful Shutdown Ack (C/D=10)
/ [Tag-A]
/ (start T4-shutdown timer)
(cancel T3-send timer) <------/ ...
(clean-up the association) (T4-shutdown expires)
(clean-up the association)
Stewart, et al [Page 28]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Both endpoints shall reject any new data request from their upper layers
while the graceful shutdown procedure is in progress.
8. Stream Operations
8.1 Stream Initiation
An MDTP association between the two endpoints must be established
before any stream operation.
Except for the global stream (i.e, stream id 0), a stream shall be
initiated (opened) by the sender before any datagrams can be sent in
that stream. When a stream is no longer used, it shall be terminated
(closed) by the user. Moreover, both sides of the association shall be
able to initiate or terminate streams independently.
The sender initiates a stream by sending a Stream Initiation. In
addition to specifying the Stream Identifier, the sender must set the
Init-Tag field of the Stream Initiation to the Tag value of the peer
endpoint.
The sender shall also attach the stream-specific data, if any (usually
provided by the upper layer), with the Stream Initiation. Otherwise,
the Size of Stream Info shall be set to 0x0.
Then, the sender shall start a T3-send timer. If the T3-send timer
expires, the sender shall re-transmit the Stream Initiation.
Upon the reception of the Stream Initiation, the peer must first
verify that the correct Tag value is carried in the Init-Tag field of
the Stream Initiation. If so, the peer shall respond immediately with
a Stream Initiation Ack. Otherwise, the peer must silently discard the
Stream Initiation.
The following example shows the opening of stream 5 by "A":
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App Initiates stream 5}
Stream Initiation (C/D=10)
[Tag=Tag-Z,Strm=5] ----------------->
(Start T3-send timer)
(Cancel T3-send timer) <----------------- Stream Initiation Ack
(C/D=10) [Strm=5]
8.2 Stream Termination
An endpoint shall be allowed to terminate one of its streams by
sending a Stream Termination to the other side.
The same Tag verification process used for stream initiation shall
be applied to stream termination.
Stewart, et al [Page 29]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
The peer shall send a Stream Termination Ack in response to the Stream
Termination.
The following example shows the termination of stream 5 by "A":
Endpoint A Endpoint Z
{App closes stream 5}
Stream Termination (C/D=10)
[Tag=Tag-Z,Strm=5] ------------------->
(Start T3-send timer)
(Cancel T3-send timer) <------------------ Stream Termination Ack
(C/D=10) [Strm=5]
Received datagrams associated with a terminated stream shall be
silently discarded. It is up to the endpoint to assure that all
outstanding user datagrams in the stream are acknowledged before the
stream termination.
8.3 Other Issues with Stream Operations
When an association is re-initialized (see section 3.5.4), all existing
streams within that association will be automatically terminated.
The receiver shall silently discard any datagrams associated with a
stream which has not yet been opened or has already been terminated.
9. Interface with Upper Layer
The upper layer protocols (ULP) shall request for services by passing
primitives to MDTP and shall receive notifications from MDTP for
various events.
The primitives and notifications described in this section should be
used as a guideline for implementing MDTP.
A) Init.MDTP primitive
This primitive allows MDTP to initialize its internal data structures
and allocate necessary resources for setting up its operation
environment. Note that once MDTP is initialized, ULP can communicate
directly with any other endpoints without re-invoking this primitive.
Mandatory attributes:
None.
Optional attributes:
The following types of attributes may be passed along with
the primitive:
Stewart, et al [Page 30]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
o Timer selection and its operation syntax -- to indicate to MDTP
an alternative timer the MDTP should use for its operation.
o Initial MDTP operation mode;
o IP port number, if ULP wants it to be specified;
B) Init.Association
This primitive allows the upper layer to initiate an association to a
specific peer endpoint. The peer endpoint shall be specified by one of
the IP address/port pairs which define the endpoint (see section 1.1).
Mandatory attributes:
o associationID - specified as one of the IP address/port pairs of
the peer endpoint with which the association is to be established.
Optional attributes:
o eligibleNetList - a list of destination IP address/port pairs that
the peer endpoint is allowed to use in its network rotation. By
default, all destination IP address/port pairs on the peer are
available.
C) Term.Association
Terminating an association.
Mandatory attributes:
o associationID - specified as one of the IP address/port pairs of
the peer endpoint with which the association is to be terminated.
Optional attributes:
None.
D) Send.Data primitive
This is the main method to send datagrams via MDTP.
Mandatory attributes:
o data - This is the payload ULP wants to transmit;
o size - The size of the payload in number of octets;
o associationID - One of the IP address/port pair of the peer endpoint.
Note that the actual destination address sent to will be determined
by MDTP due to the network rotation, unless the current mode
prohibits MDTP network rotation; in such a case the datagram will
be sent to the IP address/port specified by associationID.
Optional attributes:
o mode-flags - This indicates a new MDTP operation mode, taking effect
immediately including the current datagram send;
Stewart, et al [Page 31]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
o context - optional information that will be carried in the
Send.Failure notification to the ULP if the transportation of
this datagram fails.
o streamID - to indicate which stream to send the data on. By
default, the global stream will be used.
E) Receive.Data primitive
This primitive shall return the first datagram in the MDTP in-queue to
ULP, if there is one available. It may, depending on the specific
implementation, also return other informations such as the sender's
address, whether there are more datagrams available for retrieval,
etc. The behavior is undefined if no datagram is available when this
primitive is invoked.
Mandatory attributes:
o buffer - the memory location indicated by the ULP to store the
received datagram and other information.
Optional attributes:
None.
F) Data.Arrive notification
MDTP shall invoke this notification on the ULP when a datagram is
successfully received and ready for retrieval.
G) Send.Failure notification
If a datagram can not be delivered MDTP shall invoke this notification
on the ULP.
The following may be optionally be passed with the notification:
o data - the location ULP can find the un-delivered datagram.
o context - optional information associated with this datagram (see
D).
H) Network.Status.Change notification
When a endpoint-id is marked down (e.g., when MDTP detects a failure),
or marked up (e.g., when MDTP detects a recovery), MDTP shall
invoke this notification on the ULP.
The following shall be passed with the notification:
o endpoint-id - This indicates the IP address/port of the
peer endpoint affected by the change;
o new-status - This indicates the new status.
Stewart, et al [Page 32]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
I) Communication.Up notification
This notification is used when MDTP becomes ready to send or receive
datagrams, or when a lost communication to an endpoint is restored.
The following shall be passed with the notification:
o status - This indicates what type of event that has occurred;
o associationID - An IP address/port to identify the peer endpoint;
J) Communication.Lost notification
When MDTP loses communication to an endpoint completely or detects
that the endpoint has performed a abort or graceful shutdown
operation, it shall invoke this notification on the ULP.
The following shall be passed with the notification:
o status - This indicates what type of event that has occurred;
o associationID - An IP address/port number to identify the peer
endpoint;
o packets-enqueue - The number and location of un-sent datagrams
still holding by MDTP;
o last-acked - the sequence number last acked by that peer endpoint;
o last-sent - the sequence number last sent to that peer endpoint;
K) Change.Network.Rotation primitive
When the upper layer wants to inform MDTP to make a specific network
eligible or ineligible for in network rotation, the upper layer will send
this primitive to MDTP.
Mandatory attributes:
o action - This indicates if the network is to be made eligible or
ineligible for network rotation.
o network-id - This is the IP address/port of the peer endpoint to
be added or removed from network rotation consideration.
L) Open.Stream primitive
This should be used by the upper layer to open a new stream.
Mandatory attributes:
o associationID - One of the IP address/port to identify the peer
endpoint of the association to which the stream is to be opened. An
association must have existed at the time of stream open.
Optional attributes:
streamInfo - The upper layer should use this field to pass any
stream-specific data to the other endpoint of the association.
Stewart, et al [Page 33]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Returned attributes:
o The stream number that is opened.
M) Close.Stream primitive
This shall be used by the upper layer to request to close a stream.
Mandatory attributes:
o associationID - One of the IP address/port to identify the peer
endpoint of the association to which the stream is to be closed.
o stream number - The stream number to identify the stream to be
closed (this should be the number returned by the Stream.Open
primitive on this stream).
10. Suggested MDTP Timer and Protocol Parameter Values
The following are suggested timer values for MDTP:
T1-init Timer - 160 ms
T2-receive Timer - 20 ms
T3-send Timer - 160 ms (TL3-default)
T4-shutdown Timer - 300 ms
T5-heartBeat timer - 4000 ms (TL5-default)
The following protocol parameters are recommended:
Max.Outstanding.dg - 20 messages
Max.Retransmit - 10 attempts
Max.Init.Retransmit - 8 attempts
Min.Mcast.Time.To.Reset - 5 seconds
Num.Of.Mcast.Reset.Msg - 5 messages
11. Acknowledgments
The authors wish to thank Brian Wyld, A. Sankar, Henry Houh, Gary
Lehecka, Ken Morneault, Lyndon Ong, Greg Sidebottom and others for
their very valuable comments.
12. Authors' Addresses
Randall R. Stewart Tel: +1-847-632-7438
Cellular Infrastructure Group EMail: stewrtrs@cig.mot.com
Motorola, Inc.
1475 W. Shure Drive, #2C-6
Arlington Heights, IL 60004
USA
Stewart, et al [Page 34]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
Qiaobing Xie Tel: +1-847-632-3028
Cellular Infrastructure Group EMail: xieqb@cig.mot.com
Motorola, Inc.
1501 W. Shure Drive, #2309
Arlington Heights, IL 60004
USA
Suheel Hussain Tel: +1-919-472-2312
Cisco Systems Inc. EMail:ssh@cisco.com
7025 Kit Creek Road
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
Chip Sharp Tel: +1-919-851-2085
Cisco Systems Inc. EMail:chsharp@cisco.com
7025 Kit Creek Road
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
Hanns Juergen Schwarzbauer Tel: +49-89-722-24236
SIEMENS AG
Hofmannstr. 51
81359 Munich, Germany
EMail: HannsJuergen.Schwarzbauer@icn.siemens.de
Tom Taylor Tel: +1-613-736-0961
Nortel Networks EMail:taylor@nortelnetworks.com
1852 Lorraine Ave.
Ottawa Ontario Canada
K1H6Z8
Ian Rytina Tel:
Ericsson Australia EMail:ian.rytina@ericsson.com
37/360 Elizabeth Street
Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia
13. References
[1] Postel, J. (ed.), "Internet Protocol - DARPA Internet Program
Protocol Specification", RFC 791, USC/Information Sciences Institute,
September 1981.
[2] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", RFC 768, USC/Information Sciences
Institute, August 1980.
[3] Postel, J. (ed.), "Transmission Control Protocol", RFC 793, USC/
Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.
[4] Jacobson V., "Congestion Avoidance and Control", Proceedings of
SIGCOMM '88, pp 314-329, August 1988.
[5] Seth, T., etc. "Performance Requirements for Signaling in Internet
Telephony", Internet-Draft <draft-seth-sigtran-req-00.txt>, May 1999.
Stewart, et al [Page 35]
Internet Draft Multi-network Datagram Transmission Protocol June 1999
[6] Rytina, I., "Framework for Generic Common Signaling Transport
Protocol", draft-rytina-sigtran-generic-framework-00.txt>, Feb. 1999.
[7] Ashworth, J., "The Naming of Hosts", RFC 2100, April 1997.
[8] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet hosts - Application and
Support", RFC 1122, October 1989.
[9] Eastlake 3rd, D., Crocker, S., and Schiller, J., "Randomness
Recommendations for Security", December 1994.
This Internet Draft expires in 6 months from June 1999.
Stewart, et al [Page 36]
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-24 11:02:39 |