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[ssm] Protocol Action: 'Source-Specific Multicast for IP' to Proposed Standard
The IESG has approved the following document:
- 'Source-Specific Multicast for IP '
<draft-ietf-ssm-arch-07.txt> as a Proposed Standard
This document is the product of the Source-Specific Multicast Working Group.
The IESG contact persons are Alex Zinin and Bill Fenner.
A URL of this Internet-Draft is:
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-ssm-arch-07.txt
Technical Summary
IP addresses in the 232/8 (232.0.0.0 to 232.255.255.255) range are
designated as source-specific multicast (SSM) destination addresses and
are reserved for use by source-specific applications and protocols. For
IP version 6 (IPv6), the address prefix FF3x::/32 is reserved for
source-specific multicast use. This document defines an extension to
the Internet network service that applies to datagrams sent to SSM
addresses and defines the host and router requirements to support this
extension.
Working Group Summary
The document has gone through an extensive discussion in the WG. That
includes IPR-related concerns. The rough consensus within the WG was
to move forward with the technology even in the presense of IPR claims.
Protocol Quality
The specification has been reviewed for IESG by Alex Zinin. There are
a number of interoperable implementations of this technology.
RFC-Editor Note:
Section 7.2, para 1:
OLD:
For existing implementations of (the now superseded by [IPSECbis])
RFC2401 IPsec, there are a few caveats relate to SSM. They are listed
here. In RFC2401 IPsec, the source address is not used as part of the
key in the SAD lookup. As a result, two senders that happen to use the
same SSM destination address and the same Security Parameter Index will
"collide" in the SAD at any host that is receiving both channels. that
each sender uses a unique destination address or SPI.
NEW:
For existing implementations of (the now superseded by [IPSECbis])
RFC2401 IPsec, there are a few caveats relate to SSM. They are listed
here. In RFC2401 IPsec, the source address is not used as part of the
key in the SAD lookup. As a result, two senders that happen to use the
same SSM destination address and the same Security Parameter Index will
"collide" in the SAD at any host that is receiving both channels. Because
the channel addresses and SPIs are both allocated autonomously by
the senders, there is no reasonable means to ensure that each sender uses
a unique destination address or SPI.
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