Internet-Draft Routers Verses Hosts; Devices Verses Fun May 2022
Smith Expires 6 November 2022 [Page]
Workgroup:
Internet Engineering Task Force
Internet-Draft:
draft-smith-ietf-routers-vs-hosts-01
Published:
Intended Status:
Informational
Expires:
Author:
M.R. Smith

Routers Verses Hosts; Devices Verses Functions

Abstract

This memo discusses the differences between routers verses hosts, as devices verses functions. It then discusses Internet Protocol architectural considerations and consequences based on these differences and definitions.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on 6 November 2022.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

This memo discusses the differences between routers verses hosts, as devices verses functions. It then discusses Internet Protocol architectural considerations and consequences based on these differences and definitions.

2. Routers verses Hosts

2.1. Router verses Host Functions

[RFC8200] defines an IPv6 node, and two types of IPv6 nodes:

Although "node" is described as a device, and most people will think of a "device" as a physical, well, device, "host" and "router" are really functional definitions, indicating the goal and type of processing that is to be performed on the IPv6 packet by the node.

Stephen Deering, one of the co-designers of IPv6 [RFC8200], has described routers in functional terms in other RFCs. For example, in [RFC1075], a "router" is described as:

Or, in [RFC1256] (the likely origin of IPv6 Router Advertisements), a router is defined as:

The definition of the word "device" doesn't actually require a device to be physical [DICTIONARY REF, VW DEFEAT DEVICE].

In this memo we will consider routers and hosts as functions before considering routers and hosts as physical devices.

2.1.1. Routing Function Goal

As per the [RFC8200] definition, the goal of the routing function is to forward an IPv6 packet towards an IPv6 node that explicitly holds the packet's destination address. This forwarding function is limited to the fixed portion of the IPv6 header, so that it can be performed as simply, and therefore as fast as possible. Simpler operations on a packet can better facilitate faster and cheaper implementations, both in software and in fixed or limited function hardware.

The simplicity of forwarding based on just the IPv6 fixed header, and the ignorance of the packet's payload, allows the network to be upper layer transport protocol, and application protocol and payload agnostic. Deploying new transport layer protocols and applications should be as simple as implementing and deploying them only on the IPv6 nodes that send and receive those packets to and from the network - the hosts. The network itself should not need any changes or upgrades to support new transport protocols and application protocols.

This network agnosticity to new transport layer protocols and new application protocols is also known as network transparency [TRANSPARENCY RFCs].

Limiting forwarding to the IPv6 fixed header allows the packet's payload and many of its Extension Headers to be encrypted, excepting the encryption function Extension Header or headers themselves. While on the network, outside of the sending and receiving hosts, the encrypted Extension Headers and payload look like a bunch of random bits. For the Extension Headers after the encrypton header, and the packet payload - meaning the majority of the contents of the packet, encryption is enforcing the network transparency that should already exist without it.

2.1.2. Only Hosts Hold IPv6 Addresses

If the goal of the routing function is to forward packets "not explicitly addressed to itself", and a host is "any node that is not a router", then it means that all IPv6 nodes that hold IPv6 addresses are hosts.

Or rather, IPv6 addresses are only assigned to hosts. IPv6 addresses are always host addresses.

This also means only hosts originate packets, and only hosts receive packets. Routers only forward packets.

Remember, these host and router definitions are functional, not router or host physical "device" definitions, and also remember that a "device" isn't actually required to be a physical thing.

Routers and hosts as physical devices are discussed later.

2.1.3. Host Function Goal

The goal of the host function is to process the IPv6 packet in depth, beyond the IPv6 fixed header, when the packet arrives at the host holding the destination address specified in the packet.

The type of processing to be performed is specified by the IPv6 packet's fixed header next header field, optional Extension Headers, and then subsequent transport layer header (an Extension Header too, as it falls within the Extension Header number space), transport layer protocol options, and application payload information.

If a number of the packet's Extension Headers and its payload has been encrypted, then the receiving host holding the destination address needs to have the encryption key required to decrypt them.

Host processing of packets could be more generally thought of as packet payload processing. The packet has a fixed header who's main purpose is to have the packet delivered to its destination - the host holding the packet's destination address. Processing of the packet's payload beyond fixed header then occurs at that destination.

2.1.4. Demarcation Point

There is a clear demarcation point between when a packet is being processed for the purpose of routing or forwarding, and when the packet is then processed in more depth for host processing. That demarcation point is specifically identified by the packet's destination address, and the pivot from the packet being routed or forwarded to the packet being host processed occurs when the packet has been forwarded to an IPv6 host that holds the packet's destination address.

Conceptually, while the packet is being forwarded by the network towards the packet's destination address, the packet can be imagined to be travelling horizontally across the network. When the packet arrives at the host holding the packet's destination address, the packet can be imagined to pivot 90 degrees to travelling in vertical direction, for deeper packet and therefore host processing, as it travels up the host's protocol stack for further local network, transport and application layer processing.

The contiguous span of interconnected IPv6 nodes, where forwarding occurs (meaning the nodes are IPv6 routers), could be described as the "forwarding domain" of a packet, with the forwarding domain bounded by the hosts identified by the forwarded packets' source and destination addresses.

2.1.5. The Physical Postal System

The communications model the Internet Protocols follows is very close to that of the physical postal mail and package distribution systems.

The postal system doesn't care about or inspect what is inside of the envelopes or packages (a synonym of packets) that are submitted to it to be delivered. The only goal is to to deliver the envelope, package or packet from the source address to the destination address on the outside of the container.

The postal system is transparent to the contents of the envelope, package or packets it is asked to deliver. Whether a envelope carries a large value financial check (cheque), or a package is carrying 1 kilogram of gold is not visible to the postal system. Delivery occurs regardless, usually dependent on weight. Lead or gold costs the same to transport.

Once the envelope, package or packet arrives at the specified destination address, it is then open and its contents (payload) are "processed" by the receiver identified by the destination address.

Payload encryption isn't commonly used to ensure that envelopes and packages are opened "mid-flight", preserving payload transparency. However, this transparency is instead enforced by very strong laws with harsh pentalities against unauthorised opening of envelopes and packets (e.g. in Australia, the penalty is 2 to 5 years in jail [REF]). (Postcards are an interesting case - clearly the payload is visible to the postal system, since they're not enclosed in an enverlope. However, that's known and expected by the sender. Postcards could have their payload text encrypted by the sender.)

[IEN5] "SPECIFICATION OF INTERNET TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROGRAM - TCP - (Version 2)" clearly links the Internet Protocol architecture to the postal system by saying that "The TCP acts in many ways like a postal service since it provides a way for processes to exchange letters with each other.", and by using the term "letter" to describe messages between processes that are using TCP. Note that this was before the Internet Protocol was split off from TCP in [IENxx] (which became known as TCP/IP), so the term "TCP" is implicitly applying to IP.

The Internet communications model is not new, it is really just an electronic version of the 2500 year old postal system [REF]. Postal envelopes, packages and packets are analogs of Internet Protocol packets. What processing should happen where in the Internet and, in packet forwarding in general, can be strongly guided by the history and evolution of the physical postal system.

2.1.6. Dumb Network, Smart Hosts

The term "Dumb network, smart hosts" [Huitema] has been used to summarise the fundamental model of the Internet protocols. Hosts do smart (and complex) packet processing, the network does dumb (and therefore fast) packet processing (i.e., forwarding).

One of the very significant advantages of this model is that it has allowed the Internet to better scale. Since the paths across the Internet (between the smart hosts at the edge) are dumb, more paths across the Internet can be more easily added.

By intentionally pushing complexity to the many smart hosts at the edge, the model facilitates horizontal scaling by distributing application load across multiple destination hosts if the application architecture can support it. New capacity can be added without having to replace existing capacity.

Multipath transport layer protocols [MPTCP] that distribute application traffic across multiple dumb paths via sets of source and destination IP addresses have also been facilitated. They can increase application traffic throughput as well as availability, because they can survive either host's n-1 attachments to the network failing.

Finally, incremental upgrades of features available to users is provided by the model, by limiting upgrades to the only the involved hosts. Upgrades to the Internet are not required to support new applications or new transport layer protocols. [INTERNET TRANSPARENCY]

This "dumb network, smart hosts" model also describes the physical postal system model. The benefits are the same. The contents of an envelope, package or (physical) packet can change, as they have in the past 2500 years, as can the processing at the destination, yet the postal distribution network does not have to be changed, as long as the delivery addresses remain consistent.

The dumber the network, and the smarter the ends (hosts, postal destinations), the better off their end-users are.

2.1.7. Hop by Hop "Network" Processing

While a packet travels from its original source host towards its final destination host, it may need more than just simple IPv6 routing or forwarding. Processing may need to occur at certain points on the path beyond the fixed IPv6 header used for forwarding.

By the [RFC8200] definitions, and the previous discussion, more than simple and fast forwarding processing of packets is host processing. (In fact, packet filtering/ACLs while forwarding, beyond the fixed IPv6 header, is also host processing, because it involves more than simple and fast forwarding based on the fixed IPv6 header.)

So when a packet travels across a network, and at certain way points, is host processed, rather than just simply fast forwarded, those way points should be identified and encoded in the packet's destination address field as the packet follows its path from its original source towards and to its final destination. Along that path, the packet destination address moves the packet out its current forwarding domain for more complex host processing. Once the more complex host processing has occurred, the packet is sent back into a new instance of a forwarding domain for delivery to the new next hop, now identified by the packet's newly replaced destination address.

This hop by hop processing path across the network from the original packet source host to the final packet destination consists of a set of separate forwarding domains, delimited by intermediate hosts.

2.1.8. An Example - The Routing Header

Per [RFC8200], "The Routing header is used by an IPv6 source to list one or more intermediate nodes to be visited on the way to a packet's destination."

The intermediate nodes are identified by a list of IPv6 destination addresses. Consequently, going by the [RFC8200] router and host definitions, a Routing Header is listing a set of hosts to visit on a path towards the final host, also identified by an IPv6 destination address.

2.1.9. A Counter Example - The Hop By Hop Options Header

The Hop-by-Hop Options Header "is used to carry optional information that may be examined and processed by every node along a packet's delivery path. The Hop-by-Hop Options header is identified by a Next Header value of 0 in the IPv6 header ..."

The information to be processed at each hop, encoded in the Hop-by-Hop Options Header, is beyond the fixed header of the packet, and the processing involved is beyond the purpose of forwarding and delivering the packet to the packet's destination address.

This is host or packet payload processing beyond the fixed IPv6 header. Yet it is not normally occurring at an IPv6 node, or rather host, that holds the packet's destination address.

[RFC2460] required all routers to look for the Hop-by-Hop options header, and to process it if present. [RFC8200] loosened this requirement because high performance IPv6 forwarding implementations were purely forwarding on a packet's destination address. Router implementations weren't looking past the IPv6 fixed header.

2.1.10. Theory Verses Practice - Routers and Hosts As Physical Devices

It is common for many, if not all people in networking to imagine a "router" or a "host" as a physical device, with physical attributes that are typical of the function being performed by and that suit the common use of the device.

2.1.10.1. Router Devices

A typical "router" device will normally have multiple physical network interfaces to attach to links that it will route or forward packets between. With exception to most small router devices intended to be used in residential networks, a typical router device will have physical options to be mounted in an electronic equipment 19 inch rack. It will have status and other LEDs, and perhaps a small LCD display, to show information relevant to being a router device. It may have other interfaces or ports allowing a screen and keyboard to be attached, however permanent attachment of a screen and keyboard is not intended. It is not an end-user oriented device.

Not only will this router device forward packets, it will also accept packets destined to IPv6 addresses assigned to its interfaces, or emit packets using those interface addresses as source addresses. These packets will contain various upper layer protocol payloads, most carried in transport and application layer protocols, such as ICMPv6, OSPFv3, Multiprotocol BGP, SNMP, SSH and HTTPS. These packets will be carrying information for the purpose of the operation of the forwarding function (ICMPv6, OSPFv3, MP-BGP), monitoring (SNMP), and device management (TELNET, SSH, HTTPS).

Going by the [RFC8200] host and router definitions, this router device is performing both router and host functions. It is router forwarding packets not addressed to itself, and host processing packets that are addressed to itself (or sent from itself). The physical form of being a router device is hiding the combination of IPv6 router and host functions it is performing concurrently.

(In theory a device could be designed to just forward packets, and not perform any host packet processing functions. It would have to acquire forwarding function information via some mechanism that doesn't involve host processing of packets. Has such a device ever existed, either in IPv4 or IPv6? It wouldn't need any IPv6 (or IPv4) addresses, because it doesn't host process any packets; it only forwards them. It would never be the original source or final destination of any IPv6 (or IPv4) packets at all. The moment it has an IPv4 or IPv6 address, it is performing host packet processing. If it has ever existed, perhaps it loaded its forwarding information from 8 inch floppy disk?)

2.1.10.2. Host Devices

It would be typical for people to imagine a host device as some form of computer that can be directly interacted with by humans, and runs applications that are directly used by humans. These imagined host devices would probably resemble a desktop or laptop personal computer, or perhaps a mini or mainframe computer with end-user terminals attached.

It would also be typical to imagine that these host devices have a single point of attachment to the network. However, it is possible that a host device has multiple network interfaces, attaching it multiple times to the same network, or possibly to different networks. The motivation for a host to be network attached multiply is either performance, redundancy or both. These types of hosts are known as "multi-homed" in IETF documents.

2.1.10.3. Fast Path verses Slow Path

The routing or forwarding function is "fast path", because processing while a packet is being forwarded is simple, based on the fixed IPv6 header.

If packets, while travelling across the network, need to be processed in more depth than is required for forwarding, at certain way points, then as discussed, the processing that is occurring on the packet is host processing. Since this is not fast path processing, then it is cleary "slow path" processing.

2.2. Contrary Examples

2.2.1. BGP Route Servers and Route Reflectors

When a router as a device, from a router vendor, is used as a BGP route server or route reflector, is it still a "router"?

As a device, it looks like one, and was primarily designed to forward packets. However, when used as a BGP route server or route reflector it is only processing packets that are from or to IPv6 addresses that are held by the device, containing upper layer protocols like BGP, OSPF, SNMP and SSH.

Functionally, going by [RFC8200] definitions, this router device is purely an IPv6 host. It never "forwards IPv6 packets not explicitly addressed to itself".

2.2.2. Commodity PCs as Routers

Commodity personal computers (PCs) can be used as a router. With appropriate operating software and configuration, a PC can "forward[s] IPv6 packets not explicitly addressed to itself". These packets will be forwarded between different physical or logical interfaces residing within the PC.

Of course a PC doesn't resemble a traditional router as a device. A PC is acting as a router because of software and configuration.

A PC acting as a router can be more discreet than a whole of device role. Some interfaces can be "forwarding interfaces", meaning they accept packets "not explicitly addressed to itself" and attempt to forward them.

Other interfaces in the PC may not accept packets "not explicitly addressed to itself", and drop them. The interface will only accept packets for which host processing is to occur.

2.3. Routers holding IPv6 Addresses

If a packet source or destination address identifies a "router", it is really identifying the host function, or control plane, that resides within the router as a device.

2.4. Forwarding verses Non-Forwarding Interfaces

Whether or not a device is a router is more discrete than whether the device as a whole is nominated as a "router" or a "host".

Whether or not to forward a received packet is property or attribute of an IPv6 enabled interface; if the interface accepts a packet that does not have a Destination Address that matches that assigned to the interface, then the device will act as a router for that packet, by then submitting the packet to the device's route table. The interace is known as a "forwarding interface".

Another interface on the same device might drop packets that have a Destination Address that doesn't match the interface's address. This type of interface could be described as a "host interface".

3. HBH Function Encoding

4. Additional HBH Information

5. Host Requested

6. Network Imposed

7. Method

8. Analysis

9. Security Considerations

10. Acknowledgements

Review and comments were provided by YOUR NAME HERE!

This memo was prepared using the xml2rfc tool.

11. Change Log [RFC Editor please remove]

draft-smith-ietf-routers-vs-hosts-00, initial version, 2022-05-03

draft-smith-ietf-routers-vs-hosts-01, 2022-05-04

12. Informative References

[RFC1075]
Waitzman, D., Partridge, C., and S. Deering, "Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol", RFC 1075, DOI 10.17487/RFC1075, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1075>.
[RFC1256]
Deering, S., Ed., "ICMP Router Discovery Messages", RFC 1256, DOI 10.17487/RFC1256, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1256>.
[RFC2460]
Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, DOI 10.17487/RFC2460, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2460>.
[RFC8200]
Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification", STD 86, RFC 8200, DOI 10.17487/RFC8200, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8200>.

Author's Address

Mark Smith
PO BOX 521
HEIDELBERG VIC 3084
Australia