Shim6 Implementation Report : LinShim6
draft-barre-shim6-impl-01
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Abstract
 LinShim6 is an implementation of the Shim6 and REAP protocols, 
	on the Linux platform. This draft provides a description of 
	the architecture and describes the current state of our 
	implementation. 
	The level of support of each protocol feature is detailed.
	Protocol conformance is evaluated against the main drafts.
      
Table of Contents
1. 
Introduction
2. 
General architecture
    2.1. 
Kernel patch
    2.2. 
LinShim6 daemon
        2.2.1. 
Random number generation
        2.2.2. 
HBA/CGA support
    2.3. 
Locator updates
    2.4. 
Context removal
3. 
RFC 2119 evaluation
    3.1. 
Checks common to all control messages
    3.2. 
I1 Message
    3.3. 
R1 Message
    3.4. 
I2 Message
    3.5. 
R2 Message
    3.6. 
R1bis, I2bis
    3.7. 
Update Request(UR)/Acknowledgement(UA) messages
    3.8. 
Keepalive and Probe Messages
    3.9. 
Keepalive Timeout Option
    3.10. 
Error messages
    3.11. 
Message Options
    3.12. 
Payload data
    3.13. 
General requirements of the Shim6 draft
    3.14. 
General requirements of the REAP draft
4. 
Protocol conformance by feature
5. 
Conclusion and further work
6. 
Acknowledgments
7. 
References
§ 
Authors' Addresses
§ 
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements
1. 
Introduction
 The Shim6 protocol  [I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.) has been
	designed 
	to add multihoming capabilities
	to IPv6, while avoiding the drawbacks of current IPv4 multihoming
	practice (prefix announcements in BGP), and giving more
	control to the end host (through locator selection).
      
 Together with the Shim6 protocol, the working group has
	designed a failure detection mechanism, called REAP 
	[I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑failure‑detection] (Arkko, J. and I. van Beijnum, “Failure Detection and Locator Pair Exploration Protocol for  	    IPv6 Multihoming,” Jun 2008.), that allows hosts to
	detect and recover from failures, thanks to a combination of 
	traffic monitoring and active probing.
 Implementing such new protocols is crucial to allow tracking 
	errors or
	weaknesses in the overall design, as well as evaluating
	protocol behaviour in the real world. We developped  
	an implementation of Shim6 and REAP, available from
	http://inl.info.ucl.ac.be/LinShim6. 
	LinShim6 has been used to evaluate the performance of REAP 
	path exploration 
      	[BARRE07] (Barré, S. and O. Bonaventure, “Improved Path Exploration in shim6-based Multihoming,” Aug 2007.).
 This draft is aimed at describing the challenges of a proper 
	integration of Shim6 in a protocol stack while preserving its 
	efficiency. 
	LinShim6 supports
	the base Shim6 protocol
	(negotiation and address rewriting) as well as failure detection
	and recovery (REAP). To our knowledge LinShim6 is also the first 
	publicly available implementation that supports both the HBA
	and CGA mechanisms for securing the locator set exchange
	(the CGA/HBA code is derived mostly from the 
	DoCoMo SEND project). 
In this draft, we present a detailed report of the supported
	parts of the protocol, in terms of the terminology defined in
	section 2 of 	[I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.). 
	Some non critical features for the current application of LinShim6
	have not been implemented yet. 
	They will be added as soon as a need for them arises. 
	For instance, the Forked Instance Identifier is only useful if 
	a socket API is implemented (such as the API defined in 
	[I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑multihome‑shim‑api] (Komu, M., Bagnulo, M., Slavov, K., and S. Sugimoto, “Socket Application Program Interface (API) for Multihoming  	    Shim,” Jul 2007.)). 
	The Locator Preference Option or the
	Keepalive Timeout option may only be used if the corresponding 
	tuning capability is provided, either by the user or by an automated 
	technique. 
Other features will be supported in a future version of the 
	implementation. These are detailed in Section 4 (Protocol conformance by feature).
      
	This draft describes version 0.8 of LinShim6.
      
2. 
General architecture
The LinShim6 implementation is composed of two parts. First, a kernel
	patch adds 
	support for shim6 negotiation trigger, 
	address rewriting and failure detection. Second, a daemon is responsible
	for the management of the Shim6 control plane (negotiation, 
	path exploration). The kernel communicates with the user space 
	daemon through the Netlink interface
	[RFC3549] (Salim, J., Khosravi, H.,  Kleen, A., and A.  Kuznetsov, “Linux Netlink as an IP Services Protocol,” Jul 2003.). 
Hereafter we briefly describe the kernel and user level part
	of LinShim6. A more extensive description can be found in 
	[BARRE07b] (Barré, S. and O. Bonaventure, “Implementing SHIM6 using the Linux XFRM framework,” Dec 2007.)
	or [BARRE08] (Barré, S., “LinShim6 - Implementation of the Shim6 protocol,” Feb 2008.).
      
2.1. 
Kernel patch
The negotiation trigger makes use of the NF_IP6_LOCAL_IN and 
	  NF_IP6_LOCAL_OUT netfilter hooks to listen to the packets 
	  travelling through the networking stack. A Shim6 negotiation is 
	  triggered when either 2 KB of data have been seen for a given 
	  address pair or the flow exists for one minute. Those values
	  have been chosen through observation of netflow traces,
	  showing that more than 80% of the observed traffic last
	  less than 1 minute, and also 80% is less than 2 KB in size.
	  This default heuristic thus appeared as a reasonable
	  discriminator to avoid starting a Shim6 negotiation when it
	  is not needed. Currently the value are not configurable,
	  unless the C file is modified (shim6_pkt_listener.c). This
	  will be changed in the future.
	
Address rewriting is implemented as an extension to the XFRM
	  framework, originally designed for IPsec [KANDA04] (Kanda, M., Miyazawa, K., and H. Esaki, “USAGI IPv6 IPsec development for Linux,” Jan 2004.).
	  The XFRM framework allows for dynamically adding a new sublayer in
	  the Networking stack for some flows, according to a policy. Examples 
	  of already defined sublayers are the AH sublayer 
	  (Authentication Header) or the ESP sublayer (Encapsulating Security 
	  Payload). Similarly, we define a new sublayer for Shim6. The policies 
	  responsible for
	  directing packets to this new module are communicated from the daemon
	  to the kernel through Netlink, when a change in the locators is 
	  needed or a new Shim6 context is created. For outgoing packets, the
	  policy takes the form of a matching rule with the ULIDs
	  (Upper Layer IDentifiers, defined in 
	  [I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.)). 
	  For incoming 
	  packets that do not have the Shim6 extension header, the same kind of
	  matching rule is used. We also defined a matching rule based on the 
	  context tag, in order to be able to demultiplex tagged incoming 
	  packets.
	
Failure detection is performed inside the kernel for efficiency 
	  reasons: a timer must be started or stopped for each incoming or
	  outgoing packet. We maintain REAP failure detection
	  timers inside the XFRM states, so that the daemon is
	  notified (through Netlink) when a keepalive must be sent or
	  an exploration is to be started.
	
2.2. 
LinShim6 daemon
The daemon continuously listens to three types 
	  of 
	  events. First, Shim6 and REAP control messages are received through 
	  a raw socket.
	  Second, Netlink messages provide information from the kernel, for 
	  example whether a context must be created, a keepalive must be sent 
	  or 
	  an exploration must be started. Finally, messages can be received 
	  through a pipe where the other threads may write commands. Four
	  threads are currently defined:
	  
- Main thread: Maintains all the critical states.
 
- XFRM: Listens to the XFRM events from the kernel. 
	      Currently only the state expiry event is used. It is
	      generated when a kernel context has seen no traffic during
	      more than 10 minutes. The result is that the daemon deletes 
	      the corresponding association.
 
- Timer: It maintains a timer queue and wakes up when any timer
	      expires. On expiration of any timer, it requests the main thread 
	      to run the corresponding handling function.
 
- Information server: A simple telnet server that provides a
	      convenient interface to the daemon. The server can be accessed 
	      with the shim6c tool. 
 
	
2.2.1. 
Random number generation
 We generate random numbers based on the Linux random()
	  function, with a seed taken from /dev/random when the daemon
	  starts, and every 1000 generation.
	  
2.2.2. 
HBA/CGA support
The user is able to set HBA and CGA parameters thanks to
	    a configuration file. A tool (cgatool), derived from the
	    DoCoMo SEND project, allows for manual generation of CGA
	    keys, CGA addresses and HBA addresses. Four types of
	    addresses can coexist in an end-system: unsecured, HBA,
	    CGA and
	    CGA-compatible HBA. It is up to the applications to decide
	    which address is used as ULID for a given communication. If
	    the application chooses the unspecified source address, then
	    the kernel applies RFC3484[RFC3484] (Draves, R., “Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol 	  version 6 (IPv6),” Feb 2003.) rules
	    to pick a suitable source address from the available set.
	    When performing the locator set exchange, LinShim6 decides
	    what locators to use in the local locator set based on the
	    ULID type:
	    
- Unsecured address: the local ULID is neither a CGA
	      nor an HBA. LinShim6 decides that the locator set is
	      made of only the ULID, because it would be impossible
	      for the peer to check the validity of the other
	      locators.
 
- HBA address: the local ULID is an HBA (not
	      CGA-compatible): LinShim6 sends all the addresses that are in
	      the same HBA set and are currently available in the
	      system. For example if an HBA set is configured to
	      gather four prefixes, but the host only receives Router
	      Advertisements for two of them, only the corresponding
	      two addresses are announced to the peer. If later other
	      addresses become reachable, they are announced through
	      an Update Request.
 
- CGA address: since a signature is used to
	      authenticate a locator set, any locator can be put in
	      the set. LinShim6 behaviour is then to advertise all
	      available locators in the system.
 
- CGA-compatible HBA address: LinShim6 also sends all
	      available locators to the peer. The only difference with
	      pure CGA addresses is that the subset of addresses
	      belonging to the same HBA set as the ULID are verified
	      with HBA rather than included in the signature, thus
	      leading to a faster verification process.
	      
 
	  
2.3. 
Locator updates
	  During the lifetime of a Shim6 context, locators may appear
	  or disappear. If a new locator becomes available in the
	  system, 
	  all peers
	  are updated (except if the new address cannot be added to
	  some of the contexts, according to the rules described in
	  Section 2.2.2 (HBA/CGA support)). As required by 
	  [I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.), the new locator
	  starts being actually part of a Shim6 context only when the
	  new locator set has been aknowledged by the peer.
	  On the other hand, when a locator disappears, it is
	  immediately removed from all contexts and a locator update
	  is sent to the peer. It does not make sense to wait for the
	  acknowledgement in that case, since the locator is not
	  reachable anymore. Moreover, if the removed locator is
	  current for any context (that is, actually used for sending
	  packets), a REAP path exploration is triggered.
	
2.4. 
Context removal
As mentioned in the previous section, a context is removed
	  upon reception of an XFRM event from the kernel, 
	  indicating that no traffic
	  has been seen for that context during 
	  at least 10 minutes. 
	  The daemon then 
	  cleans up all data related to the expired
	  context, both in the daemon and in the kernel. 
	  Shim6 kernel state is also cleaned everytime the daemon is 
	  started to avoid inconsistency.
In the future, we will also check if no opened socked is
	  using the context before removing it. This will avoid the
	  current possibility that a context gets stalled, if it remains
	  idle during more than 10 minutes and then tries to send data again.
	
3. 
RFC 2119 evaluation
In this section we detail the conformance of the LinShim6 
	implementation in terms of the RFC2119 [RFC2119] (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” Mar 1997.)
	terminology. Additionally, we define hereafter the keywords
	that are used to describe the level of support for the
	different features.
	
- YES: The feature is fully supported.
 
- 
	    FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED: if a MUST is followed by 
	    "FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED",
	    this means that the MUST makes sense only if the feature
	    exists. That 
	    is, the implementation is still compliant 
	    but does not implement the
	    particular feature. Currently unsupported features are:
	    
-  R1bis: this message is defined to allow the recovery
		of a context, when one endpoint has dropped the context while
		the other endpoint is still using it. Support for this
		will probably be added soon. When
		[I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.) specifies to send a R1bis
		message, we currently ignore the message supposed to
		trigger the sending of the R1bis.
 
-  Error messages: used to inform the peer about what went
		wrong. Support for this may be added in a later version. 
		Note that because error messages are currently not
		supported, we also do not take
		into account the C (critical) bit. 
 
-  IPsec: the design of LinShim6 is based on the XFRM
		architecture in the kernel. The same architecture is used by
		IPsec, thus a small adaptation (if any) of LinShim6 
		should allow it
		to work well together with IPsec. However, we have not yet
		tested such an interaction.
 
-  FII (Forked Instance Identifier): the FII is defined in 
		[I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.) as a way to fork Shim6
		contexts, so that several contexts may share the same ULID
		pair, and are distinguished thanks to an integer called
		the FII. This has interest only if a socket API is
		implemented, so that applications may choose a context
		rather than another to send packets (which allows
		selecting a different set of locators). There is no short
		term plan to support this. 
 
-  ULID pair option: it is defined to allow performing
		context negotiation with a locator pair that differs from
		the ULID pair. This may be useful for example if non
		routable ULIDs are used. There is no short term plan to
		support this, because non-routable ULIDs are not (yet ?)
		deployed in the current Internet.
 
-  Keepalive Timeout Option: allows an endpoint to inform
		its peer about its Send Timeout value. Since we use the
		default value for the Send Timeout, there is no need to
		support that option currently. There is no short term plan
		to suport this option.
 
	
	  
 
- 
	    NO: Unsupported optional features are simply followed by NO.
	  
 
- 
	    CONFIGURABLE: The feature is supported, but requires
	    manual configuration from the user for correct behaviour.
	  
 
- 
	    PARTIAL SUPPORT: The feature is partially supported, that
	    is, the requirement in verified in some cases, but not
	    all. In that case we point to a section that gives more
	    details on the behaviour.	   
	  
 
      
3.1. 
Checks common to all control messages
A host MUST silently discard any received control message that does
	  not statisfy all of the following validity checks:
	  
- The Shim header length field is verified against the length of 
	      the IPv6 packet to make sure that the shim message doesn't claim 
	      to end past the end of the IPv6 packet: YES 
	      (Checked in the kernel)
 
- the checksum is correct: YES (Checked in the kernel)
 
- Neither the
	      IPv6 destination field nor the IPv6 source field is a multicast
	      address nor the unspecified address: YES 
	      (Checked in the kernel)
 
	
3.2. 
I1 Message
	  
- The Reserved1 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The R field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- When another instance of an existent
              context with the same ULID pair is being created, a
              Forked Instance Identifier option MUST be included to
              distinguish this new instance from the existent one:
	      FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (FII)
 
- The I1 message MUST include the ULID pair: YES (always in the 
	      IPv6 header)
 
- A host MUST silently discard any received I1 message that does
	      not statisfy all of the following validity checks: 
	      
- Hdr Ext Len field at least 1: YES 
 
- If the ULID pair option is present, the host verifies that
		  the locator of the Initiator is included in Ls(peer): 
		  FEATURE NO SUPPORTED (ULID pair option)
 
	    
 
	
3.3. 
R1 Message
	  
- The Reserved1 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The Reserved2 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The Responder Validator Option MUST be included: YES
 
- A host MUST silently discard any received R1 message that does
	      not statisfy all of the following validity checks: 
	      
- Hdr Ext Len field at least 1: YES 
 
- the host
		  looks for an existing context which matches the Initiator 
		  Nonce and where the locators are contained in Ls(peer) and 
		  Ls(local), respectively.  If no such context is found, then 
		  the R1 message is
		  silently discarded: YES
 
- If the context found using the above rules is not in I1-SENT
		  state, the R1 message is silently discarded: YES
 
	    
 
	
3.4. 
I2 Message
	  
- The Reserved1 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The R field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The Reserved2 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The Responder Validator Option MUST be included: YES
 
- The Responder Validator Option MUST be generated
              copying the Responder Validator option received in the
              R1 message: YES
 
- When the IPv6 source and destination addresses in the
              IPv6 header do not match the ULID pair, the ULID-pair option
              MUST be included: FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (ULID pair option)
 
- When another instance of an existent
              context with the same ULID pair is being created, a
              Forked Instance Identifier option MUST be included to
              distinguish this new instance from the existent one:
	      FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (FII)
 
- When the Locator List Option
              is sent, the necessary HBA/CGA information for
              verifying the locator list MUST also be included: YES 
	      (Only CGAs are used currently)
 
- The CGA PDS option MUST be included when the locator list is 
	      included: YES.
 
- The CGA Signature option MUST be included when some of the
	      locators in the list use CGA (and not HBA) for verification: YES
	      (All locators use CGA currently)
 
-  If the initiator does not receive an R2 message after 
	      I2_TIMEOUT 
	      time after sending an I2 message it MAY retransmit the
	      I2 
	      message, 
	      using binary exponential backoff and randomized timers: YES
 
- In the case that the
	      initiator decides not to retransmit I2 messages or in
	      the case 
	      that
	      the initiator still does not recieve an R2 message after
	      retransmitting I2 messages I2_RETRIES_MAX times, the initiator 
	      SHOULD	    
	      fall back to retransmitting the I1 message: YES
 
- A host MUST silently discard any received I2 message that does
	      not statisfy all of the following validity checks: 
	      
- Hdr Ext Len field at least 2: YES 
 
- The responder nonce is a recent one. Nonces that are no older
		  than VALIDATOR_MIN_LIFETIME SHOULD be considered recent: YES
		
 
- the Responder Validator option matches
		  the validator the host would have computed for the ULID, 
		  locators,
		  responder nonce, initiator nonce and FII: YES
 
-  If a CGA Parameter Data Structure (PDS) is included in the 
		  message, then the host MUST verify if the actual PDS contained 
		  in the message corresponds to the ULID(peer): YES
 
- If the state is I1-SENT, then the host verifies if the source
		  locator is included in Ls(peer) or, it is included in the 
		  Locator
		  List contained in the I2 message and the HBA/CGA verification 
		  for
		  this specific locator is successful: YES
 
	    
 
- If a host is in I1-SENT state, receives an I2 message and all
	      the above checks are successful, then it MUST send a R2 message 
	      back: YES 
 
	
3.5. 
R2 Message
	  
- The Reserved1 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The R field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- When the Locator List Option
              is sent, the necessary HBA/CGA information for
              verifying the locator list MUST also be included: YES 
	      (Only CGAs are used currently)
 
- Before an R2 message is sent, the host MUST look for a possible
	      context confusion: YES (this is verified at I2/R2 reception)
 
- A host MUST silently discard any received R2 message that does
	      not statisfy all of the following validity checks: 
	      
- Hdr Ext Len field at least 1: YES 
 
- the host
		  looks for an existing context which matches the Initiator 
		  Nonce and where the locators are contained in Ls(peer) and 
		  Ls(local), respectively.  If no such context is found, then 
		  the R2 message is
		  silently dropped: YES
 
-  If state is I1-SENT, I2-SENT or I2BIS-SENT and a CGA 
		  Parameter Data Structure (PDS) is included in the 
		  message, then the host MUST verify if the actual PDS contained 
		  in the message corresponds to the ULID(peer): YES
 
	    
 
-  Before the host completes the R2 processing it MUST look for a
	      possible context confusion: YES
 
	
3.6. 
R1bis, I2bis
Those messages are not supported yet. They are 
	  ignored on receipt.
3.7. 
Update Request(UR)/Acknowledgement(UA) messages
	  
- The Reserved1 field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The R field MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- A host MUST silently discard any received UR/UA message that does
	      not statisfy all of the following validity checks: 
	      
- Hdr Ext Len field at least 1: YES 
 
- the host
		  looks for an existing context whose CT(local)
		  matches the context tag. If no such context is
		  found, it sends a R1bis message: FEATURE NOT
		  SUPPORTED (R1bis) 
 
- Since context tags can be reused, the host MUST
		  verify that 
		  the IPv6
		  source address field is part of Ls(peer) and that the IPv6
		  destination address field is part of Ls(local).  
		  In this case the
		  host MUST send a R1bis message, 
		  and otherwise ignore the UR/UA message: FEATURE NOT
		  SUPPORTED (R1bis) 
 
-  UR only: If a CGA 
		  Parameter Data Structure (PDS) is included in the 
		  message, then the host MUST verify if the actual PDS 
		  contained 
		  in the message corresponds to the ULID(peer): YES
 
	    
 
	
3.8. 
Keepalive and Probe Messages
	  
- The Type field must be 66 for a keepalive, 67 for a probe: YES 
	    
 
- The Reserved1 and Reserved2 fields
	      MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- The R bit MUST be ignored on receipt: YES
 
- A keepalive MAY contain options: NO (no option is currently 
	      defined)
 
- The first set of sent probe fields of a probe message
	      pertains to the
	      currently sent probe message and MUST be present: YES
 
- This value SHOULD be generated using a random number generator
	      that is known to have good randomness properties as outlined in
	      RFC 4086: YES
 
- If
	      the host is using a non-default Send Timeout value, it SHOULD
	      communicate this value as a Keepalive Timeout value to the 
	      peer: NO
 
- When sending a Probe message, the State field MUST be set
	      to a value that matches the conceptual state of the sender after
	      sending the Probe: YES
 
	
3.9. 
Keepalive Timeout Option
FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED
3.10. 
Error messages
FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED
3.11. 
Message Options
	  
- The length field MUST NOT include the padding: YES
 
- Any added padding bytes MUST be zeroed by the sender: YES
 
- The values of the padding bytes SHOULD NOT be checked by the 
	      receiver: YES
 
- If C=1 and the option is not recognized by the receiver,
	      then the host SHOULD send back a Shim6 error message 
	      with Error Code=1, with the Pointer referencing the first octet
	      in the Option Type field: FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (error
	      messages) 
 
- If C=1 and the option is not recognized by the receiver,
	      then the rest of the message MUST NOT be processed: YES
 
- Locator Preferences: Any element definition of length greater 
	      than 3 MUST be defined so that the first three bytes agree the 
	      definition given in the draft: YES (we do not define longer 
	      element fields)
 
- The Reserved2 field of the ULID pair option MUST be ignored on 
	      receipt: FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (ULID pair option)
 
- If the verification method in the Locator List option is not
	      supported by the host, or if the verification method is not
	      consistent with the CGA Parameter Data Structure, then the host 
	      MUST ignore the
	      Locator List and the message in which it is contained: YES
 
- If the verification method in the Locator List option is not
	      supported by the host, or if the verification method is not
	      consistent with the CGA Parameter Data Structure, then the host 
	      SHOULD generate a Shim6 Error message with Error Code=2, with the 
	      Pointer referencing the octet in the Verification method that was
	      found inconsistent: FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (Error messages)
 
	
3.12. 
Payload data
	  
- The insertion of the Shim6 extension header in payload packets 
	      MUST NOT cause any recalculation of the ULP
	      checksums: YES
 
- When receiving a packet with a context tag that does
	      not match any
	      context, the receiver SHOULD generate a R1bis message:
	      FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (R1bis)
 
- If payload data is received with a context tag that matches with 
	      a context in state I2-SENT or I2BIS-SENT, the host resp. sends 
	      back a I2 or I2bis and proceeds to process the message:
	      NO (the message is processed only for an ESTABLISHED state)
 
	
3.13. 
General requirements of the Shim6 draft
	  
- The I1, I2 and I2bis messages MUST contain the ULID pair, either
	      in the IPv6 header or in a ULID pair option: YES (During 
	      negotiation the locators are always the identifiers, thus the 
	      ULID pair option is not needed.)
 
- The context tag MUST be unique for each context: YES
 
- At least 30 bits of the context tag MUST be populated
	      by 
	      random or 
	      pseudo-random bits: YES (all 47 bits are pseudo-random)
 
- The host SHOULD randomly cycle through the unstructured tag name 
	      space: YES
 
- The HBA/CGA
	      verification SHOULD be performed by the host before the host
	      acknowledges the new locator, by sending an Update Acknowledgement
	      message, or an R2 message: YES 
 
- Before a host can use a locator (different from the ULID) as the
	      destination locator it MUST perform the HBA/CGA
	      verification if 
	      this
	      was not performed before upon the reception of the locator set:
	      YES (Checked by the daemon upon reception)
 
-  Before a host can use a locator (different from the ULID) as the
	      destination locator, it MUST verify that the ULID is
	      indeed 
	      present 
	      at that locator.  This verification is performed by
	      doing a 
	      return-
	      routability test as part of the Probe sub-protocol: YES
 
- I2, I2bis and R2 messages MUST include a sufficiently
	      large set 
	      of
	      locators in a Locator List option that the peer can determine 
	      whether
	      or not two contexts have the same host as the peer by comparing if
	      there is any common locators in Ls(peer): CONFIGURABLE
	      (see Section 2.2.2 (HBA/CGA support))
	    
 
- In case of context confusion detection 
	      ([I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.)),
	      the old context which used the context tag MUST be 
	      removed: YES
 
- An implementation MAY re-create a context to replace the one that
	      was removed because of confusion detection: NO (it is not
	      automatically re-created, but it can be negotiated again
	      if the 
	      ULP 
	      sends a sufficient
	      amount of traffic for the heuristic to trigger a context 
	      establishment)
 
- It is RECOMMENDED that hosts do not tear down the context
	      when they know that there is some upper layer protocol that might 
	      use
	      the context: PARTIAL SUPPORT 
	      (see Section 2.4 (Context removal))
 
- The minimum acceptable key length for public keys used in the 
	      generation of CGAs SHOULD be 1024 bits: YES
 
- in case that IPsec is implemented as
	      Bump-In-The-Wire (BITW), either the shim MUST be disabled, or the
	      shim MUST also be implemented as Bump-In-The-Wire, in order to
	      satisfy the requirement that IPsec is layered above the shim: 
	      CONFIGURABLE (disable LinShim6 to use a BITW IPsec device)
	    
 
- 
	       If a shim6 node has some protected and some unprotected 
	       interfaces for the purposes of IPsec, then it MUST
	       treat 
	       the locator
	       sets for the protected and unprotected interfaces as
	       separate 
	       locator
	       sets and not intermix them: FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED (IPsec).
	    
 
	
3.14. 
General requirements of the REAP draft
	  
- Available addresses are discovered and monitored
	      through 
	      mechanisms
	      outside the scope of SHIM6.SHIM6 implementations MUST be able to
	      employ information provided by IPv6 Neighbor Discovery,
	      Address Autoconfiguration, and DHCP 
	      (when DHCP is
	      implemented).  This information includes the availability of a new
	      address and status changes of existing addresses (such as when an
	      address becomes invalid): PARTIAL SUPPORT (Address discovery is 
	      performed using all mechanisms available in the kernel, but 
	      not monitored later)
 
-  Locally operational addresses are discovered and
	      monitored 
	      through
	      mechanisms outside the SHIM6 protocol.SHIM6
	      implementations 
	      MUST be
	      able to employ information provided from Neighbor Unreachability
	      Detection: NO
 
-  Locally operational addresses are discovered and monitored
	      through
	      mechanisms outside the SHIM6 protocol. Implementations MAY also 
	      employ additional,
	      link layer specific mechanisms: NO
 
- SHIM6 implementations MUST support the discovery of operational
	      address pairs through the use of explicit rechability tests and
	      Forced Bidirectional Communication (FBD), described later in this
	      specification: YES
 
- In addition, implementations MAY employ the following
	      additional mechanisms:
	      
- Positive feedback from upper layer protocols: NO
 
- Negative feedback from upper layer protocols: NO
 
- ICMP error messages: NO
 
	    
 
- After the reception of a data packet from the peer, 
	      REAP keepalive	
	      packets SHOULD continue to be sent at the Keepalive Interval
	      until either a data packet in the SHIM6 context has been sent
	      to the peer or the Keepalive Timeout expires: YES
 
- Upon changing to a new address pair, the network path traversed 
	      most
	      likely has changed, thus the ULP SHOULD be informed: NO
 
- Out of the set of possible candidate address pairs, nodes SHOULD
	      attempt to test through all of them until an operational pair is
	      found, and retrying the process as is necessary: YES
 
- All nodes
	      MUST perform the exploration process sequentially and with 
	      exponential 
	      back-off: YES
 
- The externally observable behaviour of an
	      implementation MUST conform to the REAP state machine: YES
 
- Unprotected
	      indications from other parts of the protocol stack SHOULD NOT be 
	      taken as a proof of connectivity 
	      problems: YES
 
	  
4. 
Protocol conformance by feature
	In the following list we make a division of the Shim6 specification into
	several features, in order to easily identify which of them are supported
	and which are not.
	
- Context forking: No (Only useful if an API exists)
 
- Context recovery: Not yet
 
- Locator preferences option: Not yet
 
- Locator list updates: YES
 
- Cryptographically Generated Addresses: YES
 
- Hash Based Addresses: YES
 
- Failure detection and recovery: YES
 
- Context confusion detection ([I‑D.ietf‑shim6‑proto] (Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” Feb 2008.)
	  sec. 7.6): YES
 
- Handling of ICMP error messages: Not yet 
 
- Keepalive Timeout Option: Not yet
 
      
5. 
Conclusion and further work
This draft describes the current state of the LinShim6
	implementation, version 0.8.
	It uses a heuristic to decide whether to trigger a Shim6 negotiation, 
	and it is able to monitor the state of the communication thanks to the 
	REAP state machine. It has been shown to successfully support the switch
	to an alternative locator pair, and it is the first known
	Shim6 implementation that supports HBA and CGA. 
	LinShim6 is still under development. We aim at 
	finally providing the complete set of features.
	In the near future we will work on context recovery and error
	messages. Other missing features seem to have
	a lower priority and are left for later.
      
 We have established an exhaustive listing of supported and
      unsupported elements of the protocols, which appears as making
      much easier to verify the level of support and security of the protocol.
      
6. 
Acknowledgments
Sébastien Barré is supported by a grant from FRIA (Fonds
	pour la Formation à la Recherche dans l’Industrie et
	dans l’Agriculture, rue d’Egmont 5 - 1000 Bruxelles,
	Belgium).
John Ronan reviewed this document and provided comments. He also spent
	many hours testing the code in many different scenarios, giving valuable
	feedback and helping in several tricky bug fixes. His help has been very
	invaluable to improve LinShim6 overall stability.
Matthijs Mekking has written a wireshark patch for Shim6, that has been
	very helpful in testing the implementation, and also used LinShim6
	himself and provided feedback.
The CGA/HBA support, cgad and cgatool benefitted from much
      code from the DoCoMo SEND implementaion, the clarity of the
      code made extension and adaptation for LinShim6 very
      effective.
Francis Dupont has written the very first known
	implementation of HBA. Although we have written a second one based
	on DoCoMo SEND project, Francis Dupont's work, and especially his
	test suite, has been used to validate our HBA module.
Other people has helped getting things better by comments, bug reports,
	or discussions: Lu Junxiu, Sazzadur Rahman, Iljitsch van Beijnum,
	Marcelo Bagnulo, James Swan, Shinta Sugimoto, Masahide Nakamura, the 
	INL team.
7. References
| [I-D.ietf-shim6-proto] | 
Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, “Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim Protocol for IPv6,” draft-ietf-shim6-proto-10 (work in progress), Feb 2008. | 
| [I-D.ietf-shim6-failure-detection] | 
Arkko, J. and I. van Beijnum, “Failure Detection and Locator Pair Exploration Protocol for 
	    IPv6 Multihoming,” draft-ietf-shim6-failure-detection-13 (work in progress), Jun 2008. | 
| [I-D.ietf-shim6-multihome-shim-api] | 
Komu, M., Bagnulo, M., Slavov, K., and S. Sugimoto, “Socket Application Program Interface (API) for Multihoming 
	    Shim,” draft-ietf-shim6-multihome-shim-api-03 (work in progress), Jul 2007. | 
| [RFC2119] | 
Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” RFC 2119, Mar 1997. | 
| [RFC3484] | 
Draves, R., “Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol
	  version 6 (IPv6),” RFC 3484, Feb 2003. | 
| [RFC3549] | 
Salim, J., Khosravi, H.,  Kleen, A., and A.  Kuznetsov, “Linux Netlink as an IP Services Protocol,” RFC 3549, Jul 2003. | 
| [KANDA04] | 
Kanda, M., Miyazawa, K., and H. Esaki, “USAGI IPv6 IPsec development for Linux,” in International Symposium on Applications
				       and the Internet,  pp. 159-163, Jan 2004. | 
| [BARRE07] | 
Barré, S. and O. Bonaventure, “Improved Path Exploration in shim6-based Multihoming,” in SIGCOMM 2007 Workshop "IPv6 and the Future of the Internet", Kyoto, Japan, Aug 2007. | 
| [BARRE07b] | 
Barré, S. and O. Bonaventure, “Implementing SHIM6 using the Linux XFRM framework,” in Routing In Next Generation workshop,
				     Madrid, Spain, Dec 2007. | 
| [BARRE08] | 
Barré, S., “LinShim6 - Implementation of the Shim6 protocol,” Feb 2008. | 
Authors' Addresses
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