IP Storage Working Group Charles Monia
INTERNET DRAFT Rod Mullendore
Expires July 2002 Josh Tseng
<draft-ietf-ips-ifcp-09.txt> Nishan Systems
Franco Travostino
Nortel Networks
David Robinson
Sun Microsystems
Wayland Jeong
Troika Networks
Rory Bolt
Quantum/ATL
Mark Edwards
Eurologic
January 2002
iFCP - A Protocol for Internet Fibre Channel Storage Networking
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of RFC 2026 [RFC2026].
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of
six months and may be updated, replaced, or 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."
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.
Comments
Comments should be sent to the ips mailing list (ips@ece.cmu.edu)
or to the author(s).
Monia, et al. Standards Track [Page 1]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Status of this Memo...................................................1
Comments..............................................................1
1. Abstract.....................................................4
2. About This Document..........................................4
2.1 Conventions used in this document............................4
2.2 Purpose of this document.....................................4
3. iFCP Introduction............................................4
3.1 Definitions..................................................5
4. Fibre Channel Communication Concepts.........................7
4.1 The Fibre Channel Network....................................7
4.2 Fabric Topologies............................................8
4.2.1 Switched Fibre Channel Fabrics...............................9
4.2.2 Mixed Fibre Channel Fabric..................................10
4.3 Fibre Channel Layers and Link Services......................11
4.3.1 Fabric-Supplied Link Services...............................12
4.4 Fibre Channel Nodes.........................................12
4.5 Fibre Channel Device Discovery..............................13
4.6 Fibre Channel Information Elements..........................13
4.7 Fibre Channel Frame Format..................................14
4.7.1 N_PORT Address Model........................................14
4.8 Fibre Channel Transport Services............................15
4.9 Login Processes.............................................16
5. The iFCP Network Model......................................16
5.1 Fibre Channel Fabric Topologies Supported by iFCP...........18
5.2 iFCP Transport Services.....................................18
5.2.1 Fibre Channel Transport Services Supported by iFCP..........18
5.3 iFCP Device Discovery and Configuration Management..........19
5.4 iFCP Fabric Properties......................................19
5.4.1 Address Transparency........................................20
5.4.2 Configuration Scalability...................................20
5.4.3 Fault Tolerance.............................................20
5.5 The iFCP N_PORT Address Model...............................21
5.5.1 Operation in Address Transparent Mode.......................22
5.5.2 Operation in Address Translation Mode.......................23
5.5.3 Address Translation.........................................24
6. iFCP Protocol...............................................27
6.1 Overview....................................................27
6.1.1 iFCP Transport Services.....................................27
6.1.2 iFCP Support for Link Services..............................28
6.2 TCP Stream Transport of iFCP Frames.........................29
6.2.1 iFCP Session Model..........................................29
6.2.2 iFCP Session Management.....................................29
6.2.3 Terminating an N_PORT Login Session.........................34
6.3 IANA Considerations.........................................35
6.4 Encapsulation of Fibre Channel Frames.......................35
6.4.1 Encapsulation Header Format.................................36
6.4.2 SOF and EOF Delimiter Fields................................39
6.4.3 Frame Encapsulation.........................................40
6.4.4 Frame De-encapsulation......................................40
7. TCP Session Control Messages................................41
7.1 Connection Bind (CBIND).....................................43
7.2 Unbind Connection (UNBIND)..................................46
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 2]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
7.3 LTEST -- Test Connection Liveness...........................48
8. Fibre Channel Link Services.................................49
8.1 Special Link Service Messages...............................50
8.2 Link Services Requiring Payload Address Translation.........52
8.3 Fibre Channel Link Services Processed by iFCP...............54
8.3.1 Special Extended Link Services..............................55
8.3.2 Special FC-4 Link Services..................................68
8.4 FLOGI Service Parameters Supported by an iFCP Gateway.......70
9. iFCP Error Detection........................................72
9.1 Overview....................................................72
9.2 Stale Frame Prevention......................................72
9.2.1 Enforcing R_A_TOV Limits....................................73
10. Fabric Services Supported by an iFCP implementation.........75
10.1 F_PORT Server...............................................75
10.2 Fabric Controller...........................................75
10.3 Directory/Name Server.......................................75
10.4 Broadcast Server............................................76
10.4.1 Establishing the Broadcast Configuration....................76
10.4.2 Broadcast Session Management................................77
11. iFCP Security...............................................78
11.1 Overview....................................................78
11.2 iFCP Security Operating Requirements........................78
11.2.1 Context.....................................................78
11.2.2 Security Threats............................................78
11.2.3 Interoperability Requirements with Security Gateways........79
11.2.4 Statically and Dynamically Assigned IP Addresses............79
11.2.5 Authentication Requirements.................................79
11.2.6 Confidentiality Requirements................................80
11.2.7 Rekeying Requirements.......................................80
11.2.8 Usage Requirements..........................................80
11.2.9 iSNS Role...................................................80
11.3 iFCP Security Design........................................80
11.3.1 Enabling Technologies.......................................80
11.3.2 Use of IKE and IPsec........................................82
11.3.3 Signatures and Certificate-based authentication.............84
11.4 iSNS and iFCP Security......................................84
11.5 Use of iSNS to Distribute Security Policy...................85
11.6 Minimal Security Policy for an iFCP gateway.................86
12. Quality of Service Considerations...........................86
12.1 Minimal requirements........................................86
12.2 High-assurance..............................................86
13. Author's Addresses..........................................88
14. References..................................................89
14.1 Normative...................................................89
14.2 Non-Normative...............................................90
A. iFCP Support for Fibre Channel Link Services................92
A.1 Basic Link Services.........................................92
A.2 Link Services Processed Transparently.......................92
A.3 iFCP-Processed Link Services................................93
Full Copyright Statement.............................................96
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 3]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
1. Abstract
This document specifies an architecture and gateway-to-gateway
protocol for the implementation of Fibre Channel fabric
functionality on a network in which TCP/IP switching and routing
elements replace Fibre Channel components. The protocol enables the
attachment of Fibre Channel devices to an IP network by supporting
the fabric services required by such devices.
2. About This Document
2.1 Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in
this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC-2119
[RFC2119].
All frame formats are in big endian network byte order.
2.2 Purpose of this document
This is a standards-track document, which specifies a protocol for
the implementation of Fibre Channel transport services on a TCP/IP
network. Some portions of this document contain material from
standards controlled by NCITS T10 and T11. This material is
included here for informational purposes only. The authoritative
information is given in the appropriate NCITS standards document.
The authoritative portions of this document specify the mapping of
standards-compliant fibre Channelprotocol implementations to
TCP/IP. This mapping includes sections of this document which
describe the "iFCP Protocol" (see section 6).
3. iFCP Introduction
iFCP is a gateway-to-gateway protocol, which provides Fibre Channel
fabric services to Fibre Channel devices over a TCP/IP network.
iFCP uses TCP to provide congestion control, error detection and
recovery. iFCP's primary objective is to allow interconnection and
networking of existing Fibre Channel devices at wire speeds over an
IP network.
The protocol and method of frame address translation described in
this document permit the attachment of Fibre Channel storage
devices to an IP-based fabric by means of transparent gateways.
The protocol achieves this transparency by allowing normal Fibre
Channel frame traffic to pass through the gateway directly, with
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 4]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
provisions, where necessary, for intercepting and emulating the
fabric services required by a Fibre Channel device.
3.1 Definitions
Terms needed to clarify the concepts presented in this document are
presented here.
Locally Attached Device - With respect to a gateway, a Fibre
Channel device accessed through the Fibre Channel fabric to
which the gateway is attached.
Remotely Attached Device - With respect to a gateway, a Fibre
Channel device accessed from the gateway by means of the
iFCP protocol.
Address-translation mode û A mode of gateway operation in which the
scope of N_PORT fabric addresses for locally attached
devices are local to the iFCP gateway.
Address-transparent mode û A mode of gateway operation in which the
scope of N_PORT fabric addresses for all Fibre Channel
devices are unique to the bounded iFCP fabric to which the
gateway belongs.
Gateway Region û The portion of the iFCP storage network accessed
through an iFCP gateway. Fibre Channel devices in the
region consist of all Fibre Channel devices locally
attached to the gateway.
Unbounded iFCP Fabric - The union of two or more gateway regions
configured to interoperate together in address-translation
mode.
Bounded iFCP Fabric û The union of two or more gateway regions
configured to interoperate together in address-transparent
mode.
Fibre Channel Device - An entity implementing the functionality
accessed through an FC-4 application protocol.
Fibre Channel Node - A collection of one or more N_Ports controlled
by a level above the FC-2 layer. A node is attached to a
Fibre Channel fabric by means of the N_PORT interface
described in [FC-FS].
Fibre Channel Network - A native Fibre Channel fabric and all
attached Fibre Channel nodes.
Fabric - The components of a network that provide the transport
services defined in [FC-FS]. A fabric may be implemented in
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 5]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
the IP framework by means of the architecture and protocols
discussed in this document.
Fabric Port - The interface through which an N_PORT accesses a
Fibre Channel fabric. The type of fabric port depends on
the Fibre Channel fabric topology. In this specification,
all fabric port interfaces are considered to be
functionally equivalent.
FC-2 - The Fibre Channel transport services layer described in [FC-
FS].
FC-4 - The Fibre Channel application layer. This layer is
functionally equivalent to the TCP/IP application layer.
iFCP Portal - An entity representing the point at which a logical
or physical iFCP device is attached to the IP network. The
network address of the iFCP portal consists of the IP
address and TCP port number.
N_PORT - An iFCP or Fibre Channel entity representing the interface
to Fibre Channel device functionality. This interface
implements the Fibre Channel N_PORT semantics specified in
[FC-FS]. Fibre Channel defines several variants of this
interface that depend on the Fibre Channel fabric topology.
As used in this document, the term applies equally to all
variants.
N_PORT fabric address - The address of an N_PORT within the Fibre
Channel fabric.
N_PORT ID -- The address of a locally attached N_PORT within a
gateway region. N_PORT I/Ds are assigned in accordance
with the Fibre Channel rules for address assignment
specified in [FC-FS].
N_PORT Alias -- The N_PORT address assigned by a gateway to
represent a remote N_PORT accessed via the iFCP protocol.
When routing frame traffic in address translation mode, the
gateway automatically converts N_PORT aliases to N_PORT
network addresses and vice versa.
N_PORT Network Address - The address of an N_PORT in the iFCP
fabric. This address consists of the IP address and TCP
port number of the iFCP Portal and the N_PORT ID of the
locally attached Fibre Channel device.
F_PORT - The interface used by an N_PORT to access Fibre Channel
switched fabric functionality.
iFCP - The protocol discussed in this document.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 6]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Logical iFCP Device - The abstraction representing a single Fibre
Channel device as it appears on an iFCP network.
iSNS - The server functionality and IP protocol which provides
storage name services in an iFCP network. Fibre Channel
Name services are implemented by an iSNS name server as
described in [ISNS].
N_PORT Session - An association created when two N_PORTS have
executed a PLOGI operation. It is comprised of the N_PORTs
and TCP connection that carries traffic between them.
iFCP Frame - A Fibre Channel frame encapsulated in accordance with
the Common Encapsulation Specification [ENCAP] and this
specification.
Port Login (PLOGI) - The Fibre Channel Extended Link Service (ELS)
that establishes an N_PORT login session through the
exchange of identification and operation parameters between
an originating N_PORT and a responding N_PORT.
DOMAIN_ID û The value contained in the high-order byte of a 24-bit
N_PORT Fibre Channel address.
4. Fibre Channel Communication Concepts
Fibre Channel is a frame-based, serial technology designed for
peer-to-peer communication between devices at gigabit speeds and
with low overhead and latency.
This section contains a discussion of the Fibre Channel concepts
that form the basis for the iFCP network architecture and protocol
described in this document. Readers familiar with this material may
skip to section 5.
Material presented in this section is drawn from the following T11
specifications:
-- The Fibre Channel Framing and Signaling Interface, [FC-FS]
-- Fibre Channel Switch Fabric -2, [FC-SW2]
-- Fibre Channel Generic Services, [FC-GS3]
-- Fibre Channel Fabric Loop Attachment, [FC-FLA]
The reader will find an in-depth treatment of the technology in
[KEMCMP] and [KEMALP].
4.1 The Fibre Channel Network
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 7]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
The fundamental entity in Fibre Channel is the Fibre Channel
network. Unlike a layered network architecture, a Fibre Channel
network is largely specified by functional elements and the
interfaces between them. As shown in Figure 1, these consist, in
part, of the following:
a) N_PORTs -- The end points for Fibre Channel traffic. In the FC
standards, N_PORT interfaces have several variants, depending on
the topology of the fabric to which they are attached. As used
in this specification, the term applies to any one of the
variants.
b) FC Devices û The Fibre Channel devices to which the N_PORTs
provide access.
c) Fabric Ports -û The interface within a fabric that provides Fibre
Channel attachment for an N_PORT. The types of fabric port
depend on the fabric topology and are discussed in section 4.2.
d) The fabric infrastructure for carrying frame traffic between
N_PORTs.
e) Within a switched or mixed fabric (see section 4.2), a set of
auxiliary servers, including a name server for device discovery
and network address resolution. The types of service depend on
the network topology.
+--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +--------+
| FC | | FC | | FC | | FC |
| Device | | Device |<-------->| Device | | Device |
|........| |........| |........| |........|
| N_PORT | | N_PORT | | N_PORT | | N_PORT |
+---+----+ +----+---+ +----+---+ +----+---+
| | | |
+---+----+ +----+---+ +----+---+ +----+---+
| Fabric | | Fabric | | Fabric | | Fabric |
| Port | | Port | | Port | | Port |
+========+===+========+==========+========+==+========+
| Fabric |
| & |
| Fabric Services |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
Figure 1 -- A Fibre Channel Network
The following sections describe Fibre Channel fabric topologies and
give an overview of the Fibre Channel communications model.
4.2 Fabric Topologies
The principal Fibre Channel fabric topologies consist of the
following:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 8]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
a) Arbitrated Loop -- A series of N_PORTs connected together in
daisy-chain fashion. Data transmission between N_PORTs
requires arbitration for control of the loop in a manner
similar to a token ring network.
b) Switched Fabric -- A fabric consisting of switching elements,
as described in section 4.2.1.
c) Mixed Fabric -- A fabric consisting of switches and "fabric-
attached" loops. A description can be found in [FC-FLA].
Depending on the topology, the N_PORT and fabric port variants
through which a Fibre Channel device is attached to the network may
be one of the following:
Fabric Topology Fabric Port Type N_PORT Variant
--------------- ---------------- --------------
Loop L_PORT NL_PORT
Switched F_PORT N_PORT
Mixed FL_PORT NL_PORT
F_PORT N_PORT
The differences in each N_PORT variant and its corresponding fabric
port are confined to the interactions between them. To an external
N_PORT, all fabric ports are transparent and all remote N_PORTs are
functionally identical.
4.2.1 Switched Fibre Channel Fabrics
An example of a multi-switch Fibre Channel fabric is shown below.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 9]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+----------+ +----------+
| FC | | FC |
| Device | | Device |
|..........| |..........|
| N_PORT |<........>| N_PORT |
+----+-----+ +-----+----+
| |
+----+-----+ +-----+----+
| F_PORT | | F_PORT |
==========+==========+==========+==========+==============
| FC | | FC |
| Switch | | Switch |
+----------+ +----------+ Fibre Channel
|Inter- | |Inter- | Fabric
|Switch | |Switch |
|Interface | |Interface |
+-----+----+ +-----+----+
| |
| |
+-----+----+----------+-----+----+
|Inter- | |Inter- |
|Switch | |Switch |
|Interface | |Interface |
+----------+ +----------+
| FC Switch |
| |
+--------------------------------+
Figure 2 -- Multi-Switch Fibre Channel Fabric
The interface between switch elements is either proprietary or the
standards-compliant E_PORT interface described by the FC-SW2
specification, [FC-SW2].
4.2.2 Mixed Fibre Channel Fabric
A mixed fabric contains one or more arbitrated loops connected to a
switched fabric as shown in Figure 3.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 10]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+----------+ +----------+ +---------+
| FC | | FC | | FC |
| Device | | Device | | Device |
|..........| |..........| |.........|
| N_PORT |<........>| NL_PORT +---+ NL_PORT |
+----+-----+ +-----+----+ +----+----+
| | FC Loop |
+----+-----+ +-----+----+ |
| F_PORT | | FL_PORT +--------+
| | | |
==========+==========+==========+==========+==============
| FC | | FC |
| Switch | | Switch |
+----------+ +----------+
|Inter- | |Inter- |
|Switch | |Switch |
|Interface | |Interface |
+-----+----+ +-----+----+
| |
| |
+-----+----+----------+-----+----+
|Inter- | |Inter- |
|Switch | |Switch |
|Interface | |Interface |
+----------+ +----------+
| FC Switch |
| |
+--------------------------------+
Figure 3 -- Mixed Fibre Channel Fabric
As noted previously, the protocol for communications between peer
N_PORTs is independent of the fabric topology, N_PORT variant and
type of fabric port to which an N_PORT is attached.
4.3 Fibre Channel Layers and Link Services
Fibre channel consists of the following layers:
FC-0 -- The interface to the physical media,
FC-1 û- The encoding and decoding of data and out-of-band physical
link control information for transmission over the physical media,
FC-2 û- The transfer of frames, sequences and Exchanges comprising
protocol information units.
FC-3 û- Common Services,
FC-4 û- Application protocols, such as FCP, the Fibre Channel SCSI
protocol.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 11]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
In addition to the layers defined above, Fibre Channel defines a
set of auxiliary operations, some of which are implemented within
the transport layer fabric, called link services. These are
required to manage the Fibre Channel environment, establish
communications with other devices, retrieve error information,
perform error recovery and other similar services. Some link
services are executed by the N_PORT. Others are implemented
internally within the fabric. These internal services are
described in the next section.
4.3.1 Fabric-Supplied Link Services
Servers internal to a switched fabric handle certain classes of
Link Service requests and service-specific commands. The servers
appear as N_PORTs located at the 'well-known' N_PORT fabric
addresses specified in [FC-FS]. Service requests use the standard
Fibre Channel mechanisms for N_PORT-to-N_PORT communications.
All switched fabrics must provide the following services:
Fabric F_PORT server û Services an N_PORT request to access the
fabric for communications.
Fabric Controller -- Provides state change information to inform
other FC devices when an N_PORT exits or enters the fabric (see
section 4.5).
Directory/Name Server û Allows N_PORTs to register information
in a database, retrieve information about other N_PORTs and
discover other devices as described in section 4.5.
A switched fabric may also implement the following optional
services:
Broadcast Address/Server û- Transmits single-frame, class 3
sequences to all N_PORTs.
Time Server û- Intended for the management of fabric-wide
expiration timers or elapsed time values and is not intended for
precise time synchronization.
Management Server û Collects and reports management information,
such as link usage, error statistics, link quality and similar
items.
Quality of Service Facilitator û Performs fabric-wide bandwidth
and latency management.
4.4 Fibre Channel Nodes
A Fibre Channel node has one or more fabric-attached N_PORTs. The
node and its N_PORTs have the following associated identifiers:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 12]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
a) A world-wide unique identifier for the node,
b) A world-wide unique identifier for each N_PORT associated with
the nodee,
c) For each N_PORT attached to a fabric, a 24-bit fabric-unique
address having the properties defined in section 4.7.1. The
fabric address is the address to which frames are sent.
Each world-wide unique identifier is a 64-bit binary quantity
having the format defined in [FC-FS].
4.5 Fibre Channel Device Discovery
In a switched or mixed fabric, fibre channel devices and changes in
the device configuration may be discovered by means of services
provided by the Fibre Channel Name Server and Fabric Controller.
The Name Server provides registration and query services that allow
a Fibre Channel device to register its presence on the fabric and
discover the existence of other devices. For example, one type of
query obtains the fabric address of an N_PORT from its 64-bit
world-wide unique name. The full set of supported Fibre Channel
Name Server queries is specified in [FC-GS3].
The Fabric Controller complements the static discovery capabilities
provided by the Name Server through a service that dynamically
alerts a Fibre Channel device whenever an N_PORT is added or
removed from the configuration. A Fibre Channel device receives
these notifications by subscribing to the service as specified in
[FC-FS].
4.6 Fibre Channel Information Elements
The fundamental element of information in Fibre Channel is the
frame. A frame consists of a fixed header and up to 2112 bytes of
payload having the structure described in section 4.7. The maximum
frame size that may be transmitted between a pair of Fibre Channel
devices is negotiable up to the payload limit, based on the size of
the frame buffers in each Fibre Channel device and the path MTU
supported by the fabric.
Operations involving the transfer of information between N_PORT
pairs are performed through 'Exchanges'. In an Exchange,
information is transferred in one or more ordered series of frames
referred to as Sequences.
Within this framework, an upper layer protocol is defined in terms
of transactions carried by Exchanges. Each transaction, in turn,
consists of protocol information units, each of which is carried by
an individual Sequence within an Exchange.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 13]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
4.7 Fibre Channel Frame Format
A Fibre Channel frame consists of a header, payload and 32-bit CRC
bracketed by SOF and EOF delimiters. The header contains the
control information necessary to route frames between N_PORTs and
manage Exchanges and Sequences. The following diagram gives a
highly simplified view of the frame.
+-----------------------------+
| Start-of-frame Delimiter |
+-----+-----------------------+<----+
| | Destination N_PORT | |
| | Fabric Address (D_ID) | |
| | (24-bits) | |
+-----+-----------------------+ 24-byte
| | Source N_PORT | Frame
| | Fabric Address (S_ID) | Header
| | (24 bits) | |
+-----+-----------------------+ |
| Control information for | |
| frame type, Exchange | |
| management, IU | |
| segmentation and | |
| re-assembly | |
+-----------------------------+<----+
| |
| Frame payload |
| (0 û 2112 bytes) |
| |
| |
| |
+-----------------------------+
| CRC |
+-----------------------------+
| End-of-Frame Delimiter |
+-----------------------------+
Figure 4 -- Fibre Channel Frame Format
The source and destination N_PORT fabric addresses embedded in the
S_ID and D_ID fields represent the physical MAC addresses of
originating and receiving N_PORTs.
4.7.1 N_PORT Address Model
N_PORT fabric addresses are 24-bit values having the following
format defined by the Fibre Channel specification [FC-FS]:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 14]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Bit 23 16 15 8 7 0
+-----------+------------+----------+
| Domain ID | Area ID | Port ID |
+-----------+------------+----------+
Figure 5 -- Fibre Channel Address Format
A Fibre Channel device acquires an address when it logs into the
fabric. Such addresses are volatile and subject to change based on
modifications in the fabric configuration.
In a Fibre Channel fabric, each switch element has a unique Domain
I/D assigned by the principal switch. The value of the Domain I/D
ranges from 1 to 239 (0xEF). Each switch element, in turn,
administers a block of addresses divided into area and port IDs. An
N_PORT connected to a F_PORT receives a unique fabric address
consisting of the switchÆs Domain I/D concatenated with switch-
assigned area and port I/Ds.
A loop-attached NL_PORT (see Figure 3) obtains the Port ID
component of its address during the loop initialization process
described in [FC-AL2]. The area and domain I/Ds are supplied by the
fabric when the FLOGI is executed.
4.8 Fibre Channel Transport Services
N_PORTs communicate by means of the following classes of service
specified in the Fibre Channel standard ([FC-FS]):
Class 1 û A dedicated physical circuit connecting two N_PORTs.
Class 2 û A frame-multiplexed connection with end-to-end flow
control and delivery confirmation.
Class 3 û A frame-multiplexed connection with no provisions for
end-to-end flow control or delivery confirmation.
Class 4 - A connection-oriented service, based on a virtual circuit
model, providing confirmed delivery with bandwidth and latency
guarantees.
Class 6 - A reliable multicast service derived from class 1.
Class 2 and class 3 are the predominant services supported by
deployed Fibre Channel storage and clustering systems.
Class 3 service is similar to UDP or IP datagram service. Fibre
channel storage devices using this class of service rely on the ULP
implementation to detect and recover from transient device and
transport errors.
For class 2 and class 3 service, the Fibre Channel fabric is not
required to provide in-order delivery of frames unless explicitly
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 15]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
requested by the frame originator (and supported by the fabric). If
ordered delivery is not in effect, it is the responsibility of the
frame recipient to reconstruct the order in which frames were sent
based on information in the frame header.
4.9 Login Processes
The Login processes are the means whereby an N_PORT establishes the
operating environment necessary to communicate with the fabric,
other N_PORTs and ULP implementations accessed via the N_PORT.
Three login operations are supported:
a) Fabric Login (FLOGI) -- An operation whereby the N_PORT
registers its presence on the fabric, obtains fabric
parameters, such as classes of service supported, and receives
its N_PORT address,
b) Port Login (PLOGI) -- An operation by which an N_PORT
establishes communication with another N_PORT.
c) Process Login (PRLOGI) -- An operation which establishes the
process-to-process communications associated with a specific
FC-4 ULP -- such as FCP-2, the Fibre Channel SCSI mapping.
Since N_PORT addresses are volatile, an N_PORT originating a login
(PLOGI) operation executes a Name Server query to discover the
Fibre Channel address of the remote device. A common query type
involves use of the world-wide unique name of an N_PORT to obtain
the 24-bit N_PORT Fibre Channel address to which the PLOGI request
is sent.
5. The iFCP Network Model
The iFCP protocol enables the implementation of Fibre Channel mixed
or switched fabric functionality on an IP network in which IP
components and technology replace the Fibre Channel switching and
routing infrastructure described in section 4.2.
The example of Figure 6 shows a Fibre Channel fabric with attached
devices. These access the fabric through an N_PORT interface
connected to a Fabric Port whose behavior is specified in [FC-FS].
In this case, the N_PORT and Fabric Port represent any of the
variants described in section 4.2.
Within the Fibre Channel device domain, fabric-addressable entities
consist of other N_PORTs and devices internal to the fabric that
perform the fabric services defined in [FC-GS3].
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 16]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Fibre Channel Network
+--------+ +--------+
| FC | | FC |
| Device | | Device |
|........| |........| Fibre Channel
| N_PORT |<......>| N_PORT | Device Domain
+---+----+ +----+---+ ^
| | |
+---+----+ +----+---+ |
| Fabric | | Fabric | |
| Port | | Port | |
==========+========+========+========+==============
| Fabric & | |
| Fabric Services | v
| | Fibre Channel
+--------------------------+ Fabric Domain
Figure 6 -- A Fibre Channel Fabric
Gateway Region Gateway Region
+--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +--------+
| FC | | FC | | FC | | FC |
| Device | | Device | Fibre | Device | | Device | Fibre
|........| |........| Channel |........| |........| Channel
| N_PORT | | N_PORT |<.........>| N_PORT | | N_PORT | Device
+---+----+ +---+----+ Traffic +----+---+ +----+---+ Domain
| | | | ^
+---+----+ +---+----+ +----+---+ +----+---+ |
| Fabric | | Fabric | | Fabric | | Fabric | |
| Port | | Port | | Port | | Port | |
=+========+==+========+===========+========+==+========+==========
| iFCP Layer |<--------->| iFCP Layer | |
|....................| ^ |....................| |
| iFCP Portal | | | iFCP Portal | v
+--------+-----------+ | +----------+---------+ IP
iFCP|Gateway Control iFCP|Gateway Network
| Data |
| |
| |
|<------Encapsulated Frames------->|
| +------------------+ |
| | | |
+------+ IP Network +--------+
| |
+------------------+
Figure 7 -- An iFCP Fabric
Figure 7 shows an implementation of an equivalent iFCP fabric
consisting of two gateways, each in control of a single gateway
region.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 17]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Each iFCP gateway contains two standards-compliant fibre channel
ports and an iFCP Portal for attachment to the IP network. Fibre
Channel devices in the region are those locally connected to the
iFCP fabric through the gateway fabric ports.
Looking into the fabric port, the gateway appears as a Fibre
Channel switch element. At this interface, remote N_PORTs are
presented as fabric-attached devices. Conversely, on the IP network
side, the gateway presents each locally connected N_PORT as a
logical Fibre Channel device.
5.1 Fibre Channel Fabric Topologies Supported by iFCP
A property of this architecture, not shown in the examples, is that
the Fibre Channel fabric configuration and topology within the
gateway region are invisible to the IP network and other gateway
regions. That is, the topology in the gateway region, whether it
is loop- or switch-based, is hidden from the IP network and from
other gateway regions. As a result, support for specific FC fabric
topologies becomes a gateway implementation issue. In such cases,
the gateway may implement any standards-compliant Fibre Channel
interface by incorporating the functionality required to present
locally attached N_PORTs as logical iFCP devices.
5.2 iFCP Transport Services
N_PORT to N_PORT communications that traverse a TCP/IP network
require the intervention of the iFCP layer within the gateway. This
consists of the following operations:
a) Execution of the frame addressing and mapping functions
described in section 5.5.
b) Execution of fabric-supplied link services addressed to one of
the well-known Fibre Channel N_PORT addresses.
c) Encapsulation of Fibre Channel frames for injection into the
TCP/IP network and de-encapsulation of Fibre Channel frames
received from the TCP/IP network.
d) Establishment of an N_PORT login session in response to a PLOGI
directed to a remote device.
The following sections discuss the frame addressing mechanism and
the way in which it is used to achieve communications transparency
between N_PORTs.
5.2.1 Fibre Channel Transport Services Supported by iFCP
An iFCP fabric supports Class 2 and Class 3 Fibre Channel transport
services as specified in [FC-FS]. An iFCP fabric does not support
class 4, class 6 or the Class 1 (dedicated connection) service. An
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 18]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
N_PORT discovers the classes of transport services supported by the
fabric during fabric login.
5.3 iFCP Device Discovery and Configuration Management
An iFCP implementation performs device discovery and iFCP fabric
management. through the Internet Storage Name Service defined in
[ISNS]. Access to an iSNS server is required to perform the
following functions:
a) Emulation of the services provided by the Fibre Channel name
server described in section 4.3.1, including a mechanism for
asynchronously notifying an N_PORT of changes in the iFCP fabric
configuration,
b) Aggregation of gateways into iFCP fabrics for interoperation,
c) Segmentation of an iFCP fabric into Fibre Channel zones through
the definition and management of device discovery scopes,
referred to as 'discovery domains',
d) Storage and distribution of security policies as described in
section 11.2.9.
e) Implementation of the Fibre Channel broadcast mechanism.
5.4 iFCP Fabric Properties
A collection of iFCP gateways may be configured for interoperation
as either a bounded or unbounded iFCP fabric.
Gateways in a bounded iFCP fabric operate in address transparent
mode as described in section 5.5.1. In this mode, the scope of a
Fibre Channel N_PORT address is fabric-wide and is derived from
domain I/Ds issued by the iSNS server from a common pool. As
discussed below, the maximum number of domain I/Ds allowed by Fibre
Channel limits the configuration of a bounded iFCP fabric.
Gateways in an unbounded iFCP fabric operate in address translation
mode as described in section 5.5.2. In this mode, the scope of an
N_PORT address is local to a gateway region. For Fibre Channel
traffic between regions, the translation of frame-embedded N_PORT
addresses is performed by the gateway. As discussed below, an
unbounded iFCP fabric may have any number of switch elements and
gateways.
All iFCP gateways MUST support unbounded iFCP fabrics. Support for
bounded iFCP fabrics is OPTIONAL.
The decision to support bounded iFCP fabrics in a gateway
implementation depends on the address transparency, configuration
scalability, and fault tolerance considerations discussed below.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 19]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
5.4.1 Address Transparency
Although iFCP gateways in an unbounded fabric will convert N_PORT
addresses in the frame header and payload of standard link service
messages, a gateway cannot convert such addresses in the payload of
vendor- or user-specific Fibre Channel frame traffic.
Consequently, while both bounded and unbounded iFCP fabrics support
the standards-compliant FC-4 protocols and link services used by
mainstream Fibre Channel applications, a bounded iFCP fabric may
also support vendor- or user-specific protocol and link service
implementations that carry N_PORT I/Ds in the frame payload.
5.4.2 Configuration Scalability
The scalability limits of a bounded fabric configuration are a
consequence of the Fibre Channel address allocation policy
previously discussed. As noted, a bounded iFCP fabric using this
address allocation scheme is limited to a combined total of 238
gateways and Fibre Channel switch elements. As the system expands,
the network may grow to include many switch elements and gateways,
each of which controls a small number of devices. In this case,
the limitation in switch and gateway count may become a barrier to
extending and fully integrating the storage network.
Since N_PORT Fibre Channel addresses in an unbounded iFCP fabric
are not fabric-wide, there are no architectural limits on the
number of iFCP gateways, Fibre Channel devices and switch elements
that may be internetworked. In exchange for improved scalability,
however, implementations must consider the incremental overhead of
address conversion as well as the address transparency issues
discussed in section 5.4.1.
5.4.3 Fault Tolerance
In an unbounded iFCP fabric, limiting the scope of an N_PORT
address to a gateway region reduces the likelihood that
reassignment of domain I/Ds caused by a disruption in one gateway
region will cascade to others.
In addition, a bounded iFCP fabric has an increased dependency on
the iSNS server, which must act as the central address assignment
authority. If connectivity with the server is lost, new DOMAIN_ID
values cannot be automatically allocated as gateways and Fibre
Channel switch elements are added to the fabric.
Finally, adding a gateway to a bounded fabric is more likely to
disrupt the operation of all devices in the gateway region along
with those already in the fabric as new, fabric-wide N_PORT
addresses are assigned. Furthermore, before the new gateway can be
merged, its iSNS server must be slaved to the iSNS server in the
bounded fabric to centralize the issuance of domain I/Ds.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 20]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
In contrast, adding a new gateway to an unbounded iFCP fabric can
be done non-disruptively and requires only that new gateway's iSNS
server import client attributes from the other iSNS servers.
5.5 The iFCP N_PORT Address Model
This section discusses iFCP extensions to the Fibre Channel
addressing model of section 4.7.1, which are required for the
transparent routing of frames between locally and remotely attached
N_PORTs.
In the iFCP protocol, an N_PORT is represented by the following
addresses:
a) A 24-bit N_PORT I/D. The Fibre Channel N_PORT address of a
locally attached device. Depending on the gateway addressing
mode, the scope is either local to a region or fabric-wide. In
either mode, communications between N_PORTs in the same gateway
region use the N_PORT I/D.
b) A 24-bit N_PORT alias. An address assigned by a gateway
operating in address translation mode to identify a remotely
attached N_PORT. Frame traffic is directed to a remotely
attached N_PORT by means of the N_PORT alias.
c) An N_PORT network address. A tuple consisting of the gateway IP
address, TCP port number and N_PORT I/D. The N_PORT network
address identifies the source and destination N_PORTs for Fibre
Channel traffic on the IP network.
To provide transparent communications between remote and local
N_PORTs, a gateway in address translation mode maintains an
association between the remote N_PORT alias and the remote device's
N_PORT network address. To establish this association the iFCP
gateway assigns and manages Fibre Channel N_PORT fabric addresses
as described in the following paragraphs.
In an iFCP fabric, the iFCP gateway performs the address assignment
and frame routing functions of an FC switch element. Unlike an FC
switch, however, an iFCP gateway must also direct frames to
external devices attached to remote gateways on the IP network.
In order to be transparent to FC devices, the gateway must deliver
such frames using only the 24-bit destination address in the frame
header. By exploiting its control of address allocation and access
to frame traffic entering or leaving the gateway region, it is able
to achieve the necessary transparency.
N_PORT addresses within a gateway region may be allocated in one of
two ways:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 21]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
a) Address Translation Mode û A mode of N_PORT address assignment
in which the scope of an N_PORT address is unique to the gateway
region. The address of a remote device is represented in that
gateway region by its gateway assigned N_PORT alias.
b) Address Transparent Mode û A mode of N_PORT address assignment
in which the scope of an N_PORT address is unique across the set
of gateway regions comprising a bounded iFCP fabric.
In address transparent mode, gateways within a bounded fabric
cooperate in the assignment of addresses to locally attached
N_PORTs. Each gateway in control of a region is responsible for
obtaining and distributing unique domain I/Ds from the address
assignment authority as described in section 5.5.1.1. Consequently,
within the scope of a bounded fabric, the address of each N_PORT is
unique. For that reason, gateway-assigned aliases are not required
to represent remote N_PORTs.
All iFCP implementations MUST support operation in address
translation mode. Implementation of address transparent mode is
OPTIONAL but MUST be provided if bounded iFCP fabric configurations
are to be supported.
The mode of gateway operation is settable in an implementation-
specific manner. The implementation MUST NOT allow the mode to be
changed after the gateway begins processing fibre channel frame
traffic.
5.5.1 Operation in Address Transparent Mode
The following considerations and requirements apply to this mode of
operation:
a) iFCP gateways in address transparent mode will not interoperate
with iFCP gateways that are not in transparent mode.
b) When interoperating with locally attached Fibre Channel switch
elements, each iFCP gateway MUST assume control of DOMAIN_ID
assignments in accordance with the appropriate Fibre Channel
standard or vendor-specific protocol specification. As
described in section 5.5.1.1, DOMAIN_ID values assigned to FC
switches in attached fabrics must be issued by the iSNS server.
c) When operating in address transparent Mode, no Fibre Channel
address translation SHALL take place.
The process for establishing the TCP/IP context associated with an
N_PORT login session in this mode is similar to that specified for
address translation mode (section 5.5.2).
5.5.1.1 Transparent Mode Domain I/D Management
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 22]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
As described above, each gateway and Fibre Channel switch in a
bounded iFCP fabric MUST have a unique domain I/D. In a gateway
region containing Fibre Channel switch elements, each element
obtains a domain I/D by querying the principal switch as described
in [FC-SW2]-- \* MERGEFORMAT in this case the iFCP gateway itself.
The gateway in turn may obtain domain I/Ds on demand from the iSNS
name server acting as the central address allocation authority . In
effect, the iSNS server assumes the role of master switch for the
bounded fabric. In that case, the iSNS database contains:
a) The definition for one or more bounded iFCP fabrics,
b) For each bounded fabric, a world-wide unique name identifying
each gateway in the fabric. A gateway in address transparent
mode MUST reside in one and only one bounded fabric.
In its role as principle switch, an iFCP gateway in address
transparent mode SHALL obtain domain I/Ds for use in the gateway
region by issuing the appropriate iSNS query using its world-wide
name.
5.5.1.2 Incompatibility with Address Translation Mode
iFCP gateways in address transparent mode SHALL NOT originate or
accept frames that do not have the TRN bit set to one in the iFCP
flags field of the encapsulation header (see section 6.4.1). The
iFCP gateway SHALL immediately terminate all N_PORT login sessions
with the iFCP gateway from which it receives such frames.
5.5.2 Operation in Address Translation Mode
This section describes the process for managing the assignment of
addresses within a gateway region, including the modification of FC
frame addresses embedded in the frame header for frames sent and
received from remotely attached N_PORTs.
As described in section 5.5, the scope of N_PORT addresses in this
mode is local to the gateway region. A principal switch within the
gateway region, possibly the iFCP gateway itself, oversees the
assignment of such addresses in accordance with the rules specified
in [FC-FS] and [FC-FLA].
The assignment of N_PORT addresses to locally attached devices is
controlled by the switch element to which the device is connected.
When a remotely attached N_PORT is accessed, the gateway assigns a
locally significant N_PORT alias. This alias is used in place of
the N_PORT I/D assigned by the remote gateway. To perform address
conversion and enable the appropriate routing, the gateway
maintains a table mapping N_PORT aliases to the appropriate TCP/IP
connection context and N_PORT ID of all remotely accessed N_PORTs.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 23]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
The means by which translation table entries are created and
updated are described in section 5.5.3.
5.5.3 Address Translation
This section describes how address translation SHALL be performed
by a gateway operating in address translation mode. For descriptive
purposes, the gateway is assumed to maintain a table containing one
entry for each remotely attached N_PORT as shown in Figure 8.
+--------------------------------+
| Network Address of Remote |
| Gateway |
+--------------------------------+
| N_PORT I/D of Remote N_PORT |
+--------------------------------+
| N_PORT Alias |
+--------------------------------+
| N_PORT World-wide Unique Name |
+--------------------------------+
Figure 8 -- Address Translation Table Entry for Remote N_PORT
Each entry contains the following information:
Network Address of Remote Gateway -- IP address and TCP port
number of the gateway to which the remote device is attached.
N_PORT I/D -- N_PORT address assigned to the remote device by
the remote iFCP gateway.
N_PORT Alias -- N_PORT address assigned to the remote device by
the 'local' iFCP gateway.
N_PORT World-wide Unique Name -- 64-bit N_PORT world wide name
as specified in [FC-FS].
An iFCP gateway SHALL have one and only one entry for each remotely
attached N_PORT it accesses. If an entry does not exist, one SHALL
be built in response to one of the following transactions:
a) A Fibre Channel Name Server request issued by a locally-attached
N_PORTs as part of Fibre Channel device discovery (see section
4.5) or,
b) An N_PORT PLOGI request received from the remote Fibre Channel
device (see section 8.3.1.7).
An iFCP gateway SHALL convert each Fibre Channel Name Server
request to an iSNS server query. Information returned in response
to the query includes the IP address, TCP port number, N_PORT ID
and N_PORT world wide unique name for each remote device included
in the query response. After building the table entry containing
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 24]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
this information for a specific N_PORT, the iFCP layer SHALL create
and add the 24-bit N_PORT alias. This alias SHALL then be returned
to the local N_PORT as the Fibre Channel address of the remotely
attached device.
If a PLOGI is received from a remotely attached device and no
translation table entry exists for that device, an entry SHALL be
created using the following information:
a) The world-wide unique name of the N_PORT contained in the PLOGI
payload,
b) The IP address and TCP port number of the remote device obtained
from the TCP connection context,
c) The N_PORT I/D obtained from the S_ID field in the PLOGI frame
header.
The N_PORT alias SHALL then be assigned and used in address
translation as specified in section 5.5.2.
5.5.3.1.1 Updating an Address Translation
An address translation may become stale as the result of any event
that invalidates or triggers a change in the fabric-assigned N_PORT
network address of the remote device, such as a fabric
reconfiguration or the device's removal or replacement.
A collateral effect of such an event is that a Fibre Channel device
that has been added or whose N_PORT I/D has changed will have no
N_PORT login sessions. Consequently, frames directed to an N_PORT
as the result of a stale translation table entry will be rejected
or discarded by the receiving Fibre Channel device.
Once the originating N_PORT learns of the reconfiguration, usually
through the name server state change notification mechanism, the
normal name server lookup and PLOGI mechanisms needed to
reestablish the N_PORT login session will automatically purge such
stale translations from the gateway.
5.5.3.2 Frame Address Translation
For outbound frames, the gateway-resident address translation SHALL
be referenced to map the Destination N_PORT alias to the TCP
connection context and N_PORT ID assigned by the remote gateway.
The translation process for outbound frames is shown below.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 25]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Raw Fibre Channel Frame
+--------+-----------------------------------+ +--------------+
| | Destination N_PORT Alias |--->| Lookup TCP |
+--------+-----------------------------------+ | connection |
| | Source N_PORT ID | | context |
+--------------------------------------------+ | and N_PORT ID|
| | +------+-------+
| Control information, | | TCP
| Payload and FC CRC | | conn
| | | context
+--------------------------------------------+ | &
| N_PORT
| ID
|
After Address Translation and Encapsulation |
+--------------------------------------------+ |
| FC Encapsulation Header | |
+--------------------------------------------+ |
| SOF Delimiter Word | |
+============================================+ |
| | Destination N_PORT ID |<----------+
+--------+-----------------------------------+
| | Source N_PORT ID |
+--------+-----------------------------------+
| |
| Control information, Payload |
| and FC CRC |
+============================================+
| EOF Delimiter Word |
+--------------------------------------------+
Figure 9 -- Outbound Frame Address Translation
For inbound frames, a translation SHALL be performed to regenerate
the N_PORT alias from the TCP connection context and N_PORT ID
contained in Source N_PORT I/D field of theencapsulated FC frame.
The translation process for inbound frames is shown below.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 26]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Network Format of Inbound Frame
+--------------------------------------------+ TCP
| FC Encapsulation Header | Connection
+--------------------------------------------+ Context
| SOF Delimiter Word | |
+============================================+ V
| | Destination N_PORT ID | +---+----+
+--------+-----------------------------------+ | Lookup |
| | Source N_PORT ID |---->| Source |
+--------+-----------------------------------+ | N_PORT |
| | | Alias |
| Control information, Payload | +----+---+
| and FC CRC | | Source
+============================================+ | N_PORT
| EOF Delimiter Word | | Alias
+--------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
Frame after Address Translation and De-encapsulation |
+--------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | Destination N_PORT ID | |
+--------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | Source N_PORT Alias |<---------+
+--------+-----------------------------------+
| |
| Control information, Payload, |
| and FC CRC |
+--------------------------------------------+
Figure 10 -- Inbound Frame Address Translation
In both cases, the gateway MUST recalculate the FC CRC after
altering the frame contents.
5.5.3.3 Incompatibility with Address Transparent Mode
iFCP gateways in address translation mode SHALL NOT originate or
accept frames that have the TRN bit set to one in the iFCP flags
field of the encapsulation header. The iFCP gateway SHALL
immediately abort all iFCP sessions with the iFCP gateway from
which it receives such frames as described in section 6.2.3.2.
6. iFCP Protocol
6.1 Overview
6.1.1 iFCP Transport Services
The main function of the iFCP protocol layer is to transport Fibre
Channel frame images between locally and remotely attached N_PORTs.
When transporting frames to a remote N_PORT, the iFCP layer
encapsulates and routes the Fibre Channel frames comprising each
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 27]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Fibre Channel Information Unit via a predetermined TCP connection
for transport across the IP network.
When receiving Fibre Channel frame images from the IP network, the
iFCP layer de-encapsulates and delivers each frame to the
appropriate N_PORT.
The iFCP layer processes the following types of traffic:
a) FC-4 frame images associated with a Fibre Channel application
protocol.
b) FC-2 frames comprising Fibre Channel link service requests and
responses
c) Fibre Channel broadcast frames
d) iFCP control messages required to setup, manage or terminate an
iFCP session.
For FC-4 N_PORT traffic and most FC-2 messages the iFCP layer never
interprets the contents of the frame payload.
iFCP does interpret and process iFCP control messages and certain
link service messages as described in section 6.1.2
6.1.2 iFCP Support for Link Services
iFCP must intervene in the processing of those Fibre Channel link
service messages which contain N_PORT addresses in the message
payload or require other special handling, such as an N_PORT login
request (PLOGI).
In the former case, an iFCP gateway operating in address
translation mode MUST supplement the payload with additional
information that enables the receiving gateway to convert such
embedded N_PORT addresses to its frame of reference.
For out-bound Fibre Channel frames comprising such a link service,
the iFCP layer creates the supplemental information based on frame
content, modifies the frame payload, then transmits the resulting
Fibre Channel frame with supplemental data through the appropriate
TCP connection.
For incoming iFCP frames containing supplemented Fibre Channel link
service frames, iFCP interprets the frame, including any
supplemental information, modifies the frame content, and forwards
the resulting frame to the destination N_PORT for further
processing.
Section 8.1 describes the processing of these link service messages
in detail.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 28]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.2 TCP Stream Transport of iFCP Frames
6.2.1 iFCP Session Model
An iFCP session consists of the pair of N_PORTs comprising the
session endpoints joined by a single TCP/IP connection.
An N_PORT is identified by its network address consisting of:
a) The N_PORT I/D assigned by the gateway to which the N_PORT is
locally attached and
b) The iFCP Portal address, consisting of its IP address and TCP
port number.
Since only one iFCP session may exist between a pair of N_PORTs,
the iFCP session is uniquely identified by the network addresses of
the session end points.
TCP connections that may be used for iFCP sessions between pairs of
iFCP portals are either "bound" or "unbound". An unbound
connection is a TCP connection that is not actively supporting an
iFCP session. A gateway implementation MAY establish a pool of
unbound connections to reduce the session setup time. Such pre-
existing TCP connections between iFCP Portals remain unbound and
uncommitted until allocated to an iFCP session through a CBIND
message (see section 7.1).
When the iFCP layer detects a Port Login (PLOGI) message creating
an iFCP session between a pair of N_PORTs, it may select an
existing unbound TCP connection or establish a new TCP connection,
and send the CBIND message down that TCP connection. This
allocates the TCP connection to that PLOGI login session.
6.2.2 iFCP Session Management
This section describes the protocols for establishing and
terminating an N_PORT login session.
6.2.2.1 Creating an iFCP Session
An iFCP session may be in one of the following states:
a) OPEN -- The session state in which Fibre Channel frame images
may be sent and received.
b) OPEN PENDING -- The session state after a gateway has issued a
CBIND request but no response has yet been received. No Fibre
Channel frames may be sent.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 29]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
The gateway SHALL initiate the creation of an iFCP session in
response to a PLOGI ELS directed to a remote N_PORT from a locally
attached N_PORT as described in the following steps.
a) If no iFCP session exists, allocate a TCP connection to the
gateway to which the remote N_PORT is locally attached. An
implementation may use an existing connection in the Unbound
state or a new connection may be created and placed in the
Unbound state. The network address of the remote gateway is
obtained from the address translation table created as described
in section 5.5.3
b) If a connection cannot be allocated or created due to limited
resources, the gateway SHALL terminate the PLOGI with an LS_RJT
response. The Reason Code field in the LS_RJT message shall be
set to 0x09 (Unable to Perform Command Request) and the Reason
Explanation SHALL be set to 0x29 (Insufficient Resources to
Support Login).
c) If an iFCP session in the OPEN state already exists to the
remote N_PORT, the gateway SHALL forward the PLOGI ELS using the
existing session.
d) If the iFCP session does not exist, the gateway SHALL issue a
CBIND session control message (see section 7.1) and place the
session in the OPEN PENDING state.
e) If a CBIND response is returned with one of the following
statuses, the PLOGI shall be terminated with an LS_RJT message.
Depending on the CBIND failure status, the Reason Code and
Reason Explanation SHALL be set to the following values
specified in [FC-FS].
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 30]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
CBIND Failure LS_RJT Reason LS_RJT Reason Code
Status Code Explanation
------------- ------------- ------------------
Unspecified Unable to Perform No additional
Reason (16) Command Request explanation (0x00)
(0x09)
No Such Device Unable to Perform Invalid N_PORT Name
(17) Command Request (0x0D).
(0x09)
Lack of Unable to Perform Insufficient
Resources (19) Command Request Resources to Support
(0x09). Login (0x29).
Incompatible Unable to Perform No additional
address Command Request Explanation (0x00)
translation mode (0x09)
(20)
Incorrect iFCP Unable to Perform No additional
protocol version Command Request explanation (0x00)
number (21) (0x09)
f) A CBIND response with a CBIND STATUS of "N_PORT session already
exists" indicates that the remote gateway has concurrently
initiated a CBIND request to create an iFCP session between the
same pair of N_PORTs. The receiving gateway SHALL terminate this
attempt, return the connection to the Unbound state and prepare
to respond to an incoming CBIND request as described below.
The gateway receiving a CBIND request SHALL respond as follows:
a) If the receiver has a duplicate iFCP session in the OPEN PENDING
state, then the receiving gateway SHALL compare the Source Port
Name in the incoming CBIND payload with the Destination Port
Name.
b) If the Source Port Name is greater, the receiver SHALL issue a
CBIND response of "Success" and SHALL place the session in the
OPEN state.
c) If the Source Port Name is less, the receiver shall issue a
CBIND RESPONSE of Failed - N_PORT session already exists. The
state of the receiver-initiated iFCP session SHALL BE unchanged.
d) If there is no duplicate iFCP session, the receiving gateway
SHALL issue a CBIND response. If a status of Success is
returned, the receiving gateway SHALL create the iFCP session
and place it in the OPEN state.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 31]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.2.2.2 Monitoring iFCP Connectivity
During extended periods of inactivity, an iFCP session may be
terminated due to a hardware failure within the gateway or through
loss of TCP/IP connectivity. The latter may occur when the session
traverses a stateful intermediate device, such as a NAPT box or
firewall, that detects and purges connections it believes to be
idle.
To test session liveness, expedite the detection of connectivity
failures, and avoid spontaneous connection termination, an iFCP
gateway may maintain a low level of session activity and monitor
the session by requesting that the remote gateway periodically
transmit the LTEST message described in section 7.3. All iFCP
gateways SHALL support liveness testing as described in this
specification.
A gateway requests the LTEST heartbeat by specifying a non-zero
value for the LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL in the CBIND request or
response message as described in section 7.1. If both gateways
wish to monitor liveness, each must set the LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL
in the CBIND request or response.
Upon receiving such a request, the gateway providing the
connectivity probe SHALL transmit LTEST messages at the specified
interval. The first message SHALL be sent as soon as the iFCP
session enters the OPEN state. LTEST messages SHALL NOT be sent
when the iFCP session is not in the OPEN state.
An iFCP session SHALL be aborted as described in section 6.2.3.2
if:
a) The contents of the LTEST message are incorrect
b) An LTEST message is not received within twice the specified
interval or the iFCP session has been quiescent for longer than
twice the specified interval.
The gateway to receive the LTEST message SHALL measure the
interval for the first expected LTEST message from when the
session is placed in the OPEN state. Thereafter, the interval
SHALL be measured relative to the last LTEST message received.
To maximize liveness test coverage, LTEST messages SHOULD flow
through all the gateway components used to enter and retrieve Fibre
Channel frames from the IP network.
In addition to monitoring a session, information in the LTEST
message encapsulation header may also be used to compute an
estimate of network propagation delay as described in section
9.2.1. The propagation delay limit SHALL NOT be enforced however.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 32]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.2.2.3 Use of TCP Features and Settings
This section describes ground rules for the use of TCP features in
an iFCP session. The core TCP protocol is defined in [RFC793].
TCP implementation requirements and guidelines are specified in
[RFC1122].
+-----------+------------+--------------+------------+------------+
| Feature | Applicable | RFC | Peer-wise | Requirement|
| | RFCs | Status | agreement | Level |
| | | | required? | |
+===========+============+==============+============+============+
| Keep Alive| [RFC1122] | None | No | Should not |
| |(discussion)| | | use |
+-----------+------------+--------------+------------+------------+
| Tiny | [RFC896] | Standard | No | Should not |
| Segment | | | | use |
| Avoidance | | | | |
| (Nagle) | | | | |
+-----------+------------+--------------+------------+------------+
| Window | [RFC1323] | Proposed | No | Should use |
| Scale | | Standard | | |
+-----------+------------+--------------+------------+------------+
| Wrapped | [RFC1323] | Proposed | No | Should use |
| Sequence | | Standard | | |
| Protection| | | | |
| (PAWS) | | | | |
+-----------+------------+--------------+------------+------------+
Table 1 -- Usage of Optional TCP Features
The following sections describe these options in greater detail.
6.2.2.3.1 Keep Alive
Keep Alive speeds the detection and cleanup of dysfunctional TCP
connections by sending traffic when a connection would otherwise be
idle. The issues are discussed in [RFC1122].
In order to test the device more comprehensively, Fibre Channel
applications, such as storage, may implement an equivalent keep
alive function at the FC-4 level. For that reason and the
considerations described in [RFC1122], keep alive at the transport
layer should not be implemented.
6.2.2.3.2 'Tiny' Segment Avoidance (Nagle)
The Nagle algorithm described in [RFC896] is designed to avoid the
overhead of small segments by delaying transmission in order to
agglomerate transfer requests into a large segment. In iFCP, such
small transfers often contain I/O requests. Hence, the
transmission delay of the Nagle algorithm may decrease I/O
throughput. The Nagle algorithm should therefore not be used.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 33]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.2.2.3.3 Window Scale
Window scaling, as specified in [RFC1323], allows full utilization
of links with large bandwidth - delay products and should be
supported by an iFCP implementation.
6.2.2.3.4 Wrapped Sequence Protection (PAWS)
TCP segments are identified with 32-bit sequence numbers. In
networks with large bandwidth - delay products, it is possible for
more than one TCP segment with the same sequence number to be in
flight. In iFCP, receipt of such a sequence out of order may cause
out-of-order frame delivery or data corruption. Consequently, this
feature SHOULD be supported as described in [RFC1323].
6.2.3 Terminating an N_PORT Login Session
An N_PORT login session SHALL be terminated or aborted in response
to one of the following events:
a) An LS_RJT response is returned to the gateway that issued the
PLOGI ELS. The gateway SHALL forward the LS_RJT to the local
N_PORT and complete the session as described in section
6.2.3.1.
b) An ACC received from a remote device in response to a LOGO. The
gateway SHALL forward the ACC to the local N_PORT and complete
the session as described in section 6.2.3.1.
c) For an FC frame received from the IP network, a gateway detects
a CRC error in the encapsulation header. The gateway shall
abort the session as described in section 6.2.3.2.
d) The TCP connection associated with the login session fails for
any reason. The gateway detecting the failed connection shall
abort the session as described in section 6.2.3.2.
The disposition of the associated TCP connection is described in
sections 6.2.3.1 and 6.2.3.2
6.2.3.1 N_PORT Login Session Completion
An N_PORT login session is completed in response to a rejected
PLOGI request as described in section 6.2.3 or a successful LOGO
ELS.
The gateway receiving one of the above responses shall issue an
Unbind session control ELS as described in section 7.2.
In response to the Unbind message, either gateway may choose to
close the TCP connection or return it to a pool of unbound
connections.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 34]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.2.3.2 Aborting an N_PORT Login Session
An N_PORT login session SHALL be aborted if the TCP connection is
spontaneously terminated or whenever one of the following occurs:
a) An encapsulation error is detected as described in section
6.4.3.
b) The gateway receives an encapsulated frame from a gateway
operating in an incompatible address translation mode as
specified in section 5.5.3.3 or 5.5.1.2.
In any event, the TCP connection SHOULD be terminated with a
connection reset (RST). If the local N_PORT has logged in to the
remote N_PORT, the gateway SHALL send a LOGO to the local N_PORT.
6.3 IANA Considerations
The IANA-assigned port for iFCP traffic is port number 3420.
An iFCP Portal may initiate a connection using any TCP port number
consistent with its implementation of the TCP/IP stack, provided
each port number is unique. To prevent the receipt of stale data
associated with a previous connection using a given port number,
the provisions of [RFC1323], Appendix B SHOULD be observed.
6.4 Encapsulation of Fibre Channel Frames
This section describes the iFCP encapsulation of Fibre Channel
frames. The encapsulation is based on the common encapsulation
format defined in [ENCAP].
The format of an encapsulated frame is shown below:
+--------------------+
| Header |
+--------------------+-----+
| SOF | f |
+--------------------+ F r |
| FC frame content | C a |
+--------------------+ m |
| EOF | e |
+--------------------+-----+
Figure 11 -- Encapsulation Format
The encapsulation consists of a 7-word header, an SOF delimiter
word, the FC frame (including the Fibre Channel CRC), and an EOF
delimiter word. The header and delimiter formats are described in
the following sections. When operating in Address Translation mode,
(see section 5.5.2) the iFCP gateway must recalculate the Fibre
Channel CRC.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 35]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
6.4.1 Encapsulation Header Format
W|------------------------------Bit------------------------------|
o| |
r|3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |
d|1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
0| Protocol# | Version | -Protocol# | -Version |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
1| Reserved (must be zero) |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
2| LS_COMMAND | iFCP Flags | SOF | EOF |
+-----------+---+---------------+-----------+---+---------------+
3| Flags | Frame Length | -Flags | -Frame Length |
+-----------+-------------------+-----------+-------------------+
4| Time Stamp [integer] |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
5| Time Stamp [fraction] |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
6| CRC |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
Common Encapsulation Fields:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 36]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Protocol# IANA-assigned protocol number
identifying the protocol using the
encapsulation. For iFCP the value is
(/TBD/).
Version Encapsulation version
-Protocol# Ones complement of the protocol#
-Version Ones complement of the version
Flags Encapsulation flags (see 6.4.1.1)
Frame Length Contains the length of the entire FC
Encapsulated frame including the FC
Encapsulation Header and the FC frame
(including SOF and EOF words) in units
of 32-bit words.
-Flags Ones-complement of the Flags field.
-Frame Length Ones-complement of the Frame Length
field.
Time Stamp [integer] Integer component of the frame time
stamp in SNTP format [RFC2030].
Time Stamp Fractional component of the time stamp
[fraction] in SNTP format [RFC2030].
CRC Header CRC. MUST be valid for iFCP.
The time stamp fields are used to enforce the limit on the
lifetime of a Fibre Channel frame as described in section
9.2.1.
iFCP-specific fields:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 37]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
LS_COMMAND For a special link service ACC
response to be processed by iFCP, the
LS_COMMAND field SHALL contain bits 31
through 24 of the LS_COMMAND to which
the ACC applies. Otherwise the
LS_COMMAND field shall be set to zero.
iFCP Flags iFCP-specific flags (see below)
SOF Copy of the SOF delimiter encoding
(see section 6.4.2)
EOF Copy of the EOF delimiter encoding
(see section 6.4.2)
The iFCP flags word has the following format:
|------------------------Bit----------------------------|
| |
| 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 |
+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
| Reserved | SES | TRN | SPC |
+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
Figure 12 -- iFCP Flags Word
iFCP Flags:
SES 1 = Session control frame (TRN and SPC MUST be
0)
TRN 1 = Address transparent mode enabled
0 = Address translation mode enabled
SPC 1 = Frame is part of a link service message
requiring special processing by iFCP prior
to forwarding to the destination N_PORT.
6.4.1.1 Common Encapsulation Flags
The iFCP usage of the common encapsulation flags is shown below:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 38]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
|------------------------Bit--------------------------|
| |
| 31 30 29 28 27 26 |
+--------------------------------------------+--------+
| Reserved | CRCV |
+--------------------------------------------+--------+
For iFCP, the CRC field MUST be valid and CRCV MUST be set to one.
6.4.2 SOF and EOF Delimiter Fields
The format of the delimiter fields is shown below.
W|------------------------------Bit------------------------------|
o| |
r|3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |
d|1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
+---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
0| SOF | SOF | -SOF | -SOF |
+---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
1| |
+----- FC frame content -----+
| |
+---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
n| EOF | EOF | -EOF | -EOF |
+---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
Figure 13 -- FC Frame Encapsulation Format
SOF (bits 31-24 and bits 23-16 in word 0): iFCP uses the
following subset of the SOF fields described in [ENCAP].
+-------+----------+
| FC | |
| SOF | SOF Code |
+-------+----------+
| SOFi2 | 0x2D |
| SOFn2 | 0x35 |
| SOFi3 | 0x2E |
| SOFn3 | 0x36 |
+-------+----------+
Table 2-- Translation of FC SOF Values to SOF Field Contents
-SOF (bits 15-8 and 7-0 in word 0): The -SOF fields contain the
ones complement of the value in the SOF fields.
EOF (bits 31-24 and 23-16 in word n): iFCP uses the following
subset of EOF fields specified in [ENCAP].
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 39]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+-------+----------+
| FC | |
| EOF | EOF Code |
+-------+----------+
| EOFn | 0x41 |
| EOFt | 0x42 |
+-------+----------+
Table 3 -- Translation of FC EOF Values to EOF Field Contents
-EOF (bits 15-8 and 7-0 in word n): The -EOF fields contain the
one's complement of the value in the EOF fields.
iFCP implementations SHALL place a copy of the SOF and EOF
delimiter codes in the appropriate header fields.
6.4.3 Frame Encapsulation
A Fibre Channel Frame to be encapsulated MUST first be validated as
described in [FC-FS]. Any frames received from a locally attached
Fibre Channel device that do not pass the validity tests in [FC-FS]
SHALL be discarded by the gateway.
Frames types submitted for encapsulation and forwarding on the IP
network SHALL have one of the SOF delimiters in Table 2 and an EOF
delimiter from Table 3. Other valid frame types MUST be processed
internally by the gateway as specified in the appropriate Fibre
Channel specification.
Prior to submitting a frame for encapsulation, a gateway in address
translation mode SHALL replace the D_ID address, and, if processing
a special link service message requiring the inclusion of
supplemental data, SHALL format the frame payload and add the
supplemental information as specified in section 8.1. The gateway
SHALL then calculate a new FC CRC on the reformatted frame.
A gateway in address transparent mode MAY encapsulate and transmit
the frame image without recalculating the FC CRC.
The frame originator MUST then create and fill in the header and
the SOF and EOF delimiter words as specified above.
6.4.4 Frame De-encapsulation
The receiving gateway SHALL perform de-encapsulation as follows:
Upon receiving the encapsulated frame, the gateway SHALL check the
header CRC. If the header CRC is invalid, the gateway SHALL
terminate the N_PORT login session as described in section 6.2.3.2.
After validating the header CRC, the receiving gateway SHALL verify
the frame propagation delay as described in section 9.2.1. If the
propagation delay is too long, the frame SHALL be discarded.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 40]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Otherwise, the gateway SHALL check the SOF and EOF in the
encapsulation header. A frame SHALL be discarded if it has an SOF
code that is not in Table 2 or an EOF code that is not in Table 3.
The gateway shall then de-encapsulate the frame. If operating in
address translation mode, the gateway SHALL:
a) Check the FC CRC and discard the frame if the CRC is invalid.
b) Replace the S_ID with the N_PORT alias of the frame originator
c) If processing a special link service message, replace the frame
with a copy whose payload has been modified as specified in
section 8.1.
The de-encapsulated frame SHALL then be delivered to the N_PORT
specified in the D_ID field. If the frame contents have been
modified by the receiving gateway, a new FC CRC SHALL be
calculated.
7. TCP Session Control Messages
TCP session control messages are used to create and manage an iFCP
session as described in section 6.2.2. They are passed between peer
iFCP Portals and are only processed within the iFCP layer.
The message format is based on the Fibre Channel extended link
service message template shown below.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 41]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Word
31<Bits>24 23<---------------Bits------------------------->0
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
0| R_CTL | D_ID [0x00 00 00] |
|[Req = 0x22]| [Destination of extended link Service request] |
|[Rep = 0x23]| |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
1| CS_CTL | S_ID [0x00 00 00] |
| [0x0] | [Source of extended link service request] |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
2|TYPE [0x1] | F_CTL [0] |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
3|SEQ_ID | DF_CTL [0x00] | SEQ_CNT [0x00] |
|[0x0] | | |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
4| OX_ID [0x0000] | RX_ID_[0x0000] |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+
5| Parameter |
| [ 00 00 00 00 ] |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
6| LS_COMMAND |
| [Session Control Command Code] |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
7| |
.| Additional Session Control Parameters |
.| ( if any ) |
n| |
+=============================================================+
n| Fibre Channel CRC |
+| |
1+=============================================================+
Figure 14 -- Format of Session Control Message
The LS_COMMAND value for the response remains the same as that used
for the request.
The session control ELS frame is terminated with a Fibre Channel
CRC. The frame SHALL be encapsulated and de-encapsulated according
to the rules specified in section 6.4.
The encapsulation header for the link Service frame carrying a TCP
ELS message SHALL be set as follows:
Encapsulation Header Fields:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 42]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
LS_COMMAND 0
iFCP Flags SES = 1
TRN = 0
INT = 0
SOF code SOFi3 encoding (0x2E)
EOF code EOFt encoding (0x42)
The encapsulation time stamp words SHALL be set as described for
each message type.
The SOF and EOF delimiter words SHALL be set based on the SOF and
EOF codes specified above.
The following lists the session control messages and their
corresponding LS_COMMAND values.
Request LS_COMMAND Short Name iFCP Support
------- ---------- ---------- -----------
Connection Bind 0xE0 CBIND REQUIRED
Unbind Connection 0xE4 UNBIND REQUIRED
Test Connection Liveness 0xE5 LTEST Required
7.1 Connection Bind (CBIND)
As described in section 6.2.2.1, the CBIND message and response are
used to bind an N_PORT login session to a specific TCP connection
and establish an iFCP session. In the CBIND request message, the
source and destination N_Ports are identified by the N_PORT network
address (iFCP portal address and N_PORT ID). The time stamp words
in the encapsulation header shall be set to zero in the request and
response message frames.
The following shows the format of the CBIND request.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 43]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Byte 0 | Byte 1 | Byte 2 | Byte 3 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0xE0 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL | Addr Mode | iFCP Ver |
| | (Seconds) | | |
+------+-------------------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | USER INFO |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | |
+------+ SOURCE N_PORT NAME |
| 4 | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
| 5 | |
+------+ DESTINATION N_PORT NAME |
| 6 | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
Addr Mode: The addressing mode of the originating
gateway. 0 = Address Translation mode, 1 =
Address Transparent mode.
iFCP Ver: iFCP version number. SHALL be set to 1.
LIVENESS TEST If non-zero, requests that the receiving
INTERVAL: gateway transmit an LTEST message at the
specified interval in seconds.
USER INFO: Contains any data desired by the requestor.
This information MUST be echoed by the
recipient in the CBIND response message.
SOURCE N_PORT NAME: The World Wide Port Name (WWPN) of the
N_PORT locally attached to the gateway
originating the CBIND request.
DESTINATION N_PORT The World Wide Port Name (WWPN) of the
NAME: N_PORT locally attached to the gateway
receiving the CBIND request.
The following shows the format of the CBIND response.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 44]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Byte 0 | Byte 1 | Byte 2 | Byte 3 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0xE0 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL | Addr Mode | iFCP Ver |
| | (Seconds) | | |
+------+-------------------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | USER INFO |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | |
+------+ SOURCE N_PORT NAME |
| 4 | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
| 5 | |
+------+ DESTINATION N_PORT NAME |
| 6 | |
+------+-------------------------+----------------------+
| 7 | Reserved | CBIND Status |
+------+-------------------------+----------------------+
| 8 | Reserved | CONNECTION HANDLE |
+------+-------------------------+----------------------+
Total Length = 32
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 45]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Addr Mode: The address translation mode of the
responding gateway. 0 = Address
Translation mode, 1 = Address Transparent
mode.
iFCP Ver: iFCP version number. Shall be set to 1.
LIVENESS TEST If non-zero, requests that the gateway
INTERVAL: receiving the CBIND RESPONSE transmit an
LTEST message at the specified interval in
seconds.
USER INFO: Echoes the value received in the USER INFO
field of the CBIND request message.
SOURCE N_PORT NAME: Contains the World Wide Port Name (WWPN) of
the N_PORT locally attached to the gateway
issuing the CBIND request.
DESTINATION N_PORT Contains the World Wide Port Name (WWPN) of
NAME: the N_PORT locally attached to the gateway
issuing the CBIND response.
CBIND STATUS: Indicates success or failure of the CBIND
request. CBIND values are shown below.
CONNECTION HANDLE: Contains a value assigned by the gateway to
identify the connection. The connection
handle is required when issuing the UNBIND
request.
CBIND Status Description
------------ -----------
0 Successful û No other status
1 û 15 Reserved
16 Failed û Unspecified Reason
17 Failed û No such device
18 Failed û N_PORT session already exists
19 Failed û Lack of resources
20 Failed - Incompatible address translation mode
21 Failed - Incorrect protocol version number
Others Reserved
7.2 Unbind Connection (UNBIND)
UNBIND is used to release a bound TCP connection and return it to
the pool of unbound TCP connections. This message is transmitted
in the connection that is to be unbound. The time stamp words in
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 46]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
the encapsulation header shall be set to zero in the request and
response message frames.
The following is the format of the UNBIND request message.
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Byte 0 | Byte 1 | Byte 2 | Byte 3 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0xE4 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | USER INFO |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Reserved | CONNECTION HANDLE |
+------+------------+------------+----------------------+
| 3 | Reserved |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4 | Reserved |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
USER INFO Contains any data desired by the requestor.
This information MUST be echoed by the
recipient in the UNBIND response message.
CONNECTION HANDLE: Contains the gateway-assigned value from
the CBIND request.
The following shows the format of the UNBIND response message.
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Byte 0 | Byte 1 | Byte 2 | Byte 3 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0xE4 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | USER INFO |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Reserved | CONNECTION HANDLE |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | Reserved |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4 | Reserved |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 5 | Reserved | UNBIND STATUS |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 47]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
USER INFO Echoes the value received in the USER INFO
field of the UNBIND request message.
CONNECTION HANDLE: Echoes the CONNECTION HANDLE specified in
the UNBIND request message.
UNBIND STATUS: Indicates the success or failure of the
UNBIND request as follows:
Unbind Status Description
------------- -----------
0 Successful û No other status
1 û 15 Reserved
16 Failed û Unspecified Reason
18 Failed û Connection ID Invalid
Others Reserved
7.3 LTEST -- Test Connection Liveness
The LTEST message is sent at the interval specified in the CBIND
request or response payload. The LTEST encapsulation time stamp
SHALL be set as described in section 9.2.1 and may be used by the
receiver to compute an estimate of propagation delay. However, the
propagation delay limit SHALL NOT be enforced.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 48]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Byte 0 | Byte 1 | Byte 2 | Byte 3 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0xE5 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL | Reserved |
| | (Seconds) | |
+------+-------------------------+----------------------+
| 2 | COUNT |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | |
+------+ SOURCE N_PORT NAME |
| 4 | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
| 5 | |
+------+ DESTINATION N_PORT NAME |
| 6 | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
LIVENESS TEST Copy of the LIVENESS TEST INTERVAL
INTERVAL: specified in the CBIND request or reply
message.
COUNT: Monotonically increasing value, initialized
to 0 and incremented by one for each
successive LTEST message.
SOURCE N_PORT NAME: Contains a copy of the SOURCE N_PORT NAME
specified in the CBIND request.
DESTINATION N_PORT Contains a copy of the DESTINATION N_PORT
NAME: NAME specified in the CBIND request.
8. Fibre Channel Link Services
Link services provide a set of Fibre Channel functions that allow a
port to send control information or request another port to perform
a specific control function.
There are three types of link services:
a) Basic
b) Extended
c) ULP-specific (FC-4)
Each link service message (request and reply) is carried by a Fibre
Channel sequence, and can be segmented into multiple frames.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 49]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
The iFCP Layer is responsible for transporting link service
messages across the IP fabric. This includes mapping Link Service
messages appropriately from the domain of the Fibre Channel
transport to that of the IP network. This process may require
special processing and the inclusion of supplemental data by the
iFCP layer.
Each link service is processed according to one of the following
rules:
a) Transparent û The link service message and reply MUST be
transported to the receiving N_PORT by the iFCP gateway without
altering the message payload. The link service message and reply
are not processed by the iFCP implementation.
b) Special - Applies to a link service reply or request requiring
iFCP intervention before forwarding to the destination N_PORT.
Such messages may contain Fibre Channel addresses in the payload
or may require other special processing.
c) Rejected û When issued by a locally attached N_PORT, the
specified link service request MUST be rejected by the iFCP
implementation. The gateway SHALL respond to a rejected link
service message by returning an LS_RJT response with a Reason
Code of 0x0B (Command Not Supported) and a Reason Code
Explanation of 0x0 (No Additional Explanation).
This section describes the processing for special link services,
including the manner in which supplemental data is added to the
message payload.
Appendix A enumerates all link services and the iFCP processing
policy that applies to each.
8.1 Special Link Service Messages
Special link service messages require the intervention of the iFCP
layer before forwarding to the destination N_PORT. Such
intervention is required in order to:
a) Service any link service message which requires special
handling, such as a PLOGI.
b) In address translation mode only, service any link service
message which has an N_PORT address in the payload.
Such messages are transmitted in a Fibre Channel frame having the
format shown in Figure 15 for extended link services or Figure 16
for FC-4 link services.:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 50]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Word
31 24 23 0
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
0| R_CTL | D_ID |
|[Req = 0x22]|[Destination of extended link Service request] |
|[Rep = 0x23]| |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
1| CS_CTL | S_ID |
| | [Source of extended link service request] |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
2| TYPE | F_CTL |
| [0x01] | |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
3| SEQ_ID | DF_CTL | SEQ_CNT |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
4| OX_ID | RX_ID |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+
5| Parameter |
| [ 00 00 00 00 ] |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
6| LS_COMMAND |
| [Extended Link Service Command Code] |
+-------------==----------------------------------------------+
7| |
.| Additional Service Request Parameters |
.| ( if any ) |
n| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Figure 15 -- Format of an Extended Link Service Frame
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 51]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Word
31 24 23 0
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
0| R_CTL | D_ID |
|[Req = 0x32]| [Destination of FC-4 link Service request] |
|[Rep = 0x33]| |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
1| CS_CTL | S_ID |
| | [Source of FC-4 link service request] |
+------------+------------------------------------------------+
2| TYPE | F_CTL |
| (FC-4 | |
| specific) | |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
3| SEQ_ID | DF_CTL | SEQ_CNT |
+------------+------------------+-----------------------------+
4| OX_ID | RX_ID |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+
5| Parameter |
| [ 00 00 00 00 ] |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
6| LS_COMMAND |
| [FC-4 Link Service Command Code] |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
7| |
.| Additional Service Request Parameters |
.| ( if any ) |
n| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Figure 16 -- Format of an FC-4 Link Service Frame
8.2 Link Services Requiring Payload Address Translation
This section describes the handling for link service frames
containing N_PORT addresses in the frame payload. Such addresses
SHALL only be translated when the gateway is operating in address
translation mode. When operating in address transparent mode,
these addresses SHALL NOT be translated. In addition, such link
service messages SHALL NOT be sent as special frames unless other
processing by the iFCP layer is required.
Supplemental data includes information required by the receiving
gateway to convert an N_PORT address in the payload to an N_PORT
address in the receiving gatewayÆs address space. The following
rules define the manner in which such supplemental data is packaged
and referenced.
For an N_PORT address field, the gateway originating the frame MUST
set the value in the payload to identify the address translation
type as follows:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 52]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
0x00 00 01 û The gateway receiving the frame from the IP
network MUST replace the contents of the field with the N_PORT
alias of the frame originator. This translation type MUST be
used when the address to be converted is that of the source
N_PORT.
0x00 00 02 û The gateway receiving the frame from the IP
network MUST replace the contents of the field with the N_PORT
I/D of the destination N_PORT. This translation type MUST be
used when the address to be converted is that of the
destination N_PORT
0x00 00 03 û The gateway receiving the frame from the IP
network MUST reference the specified supplemental data to set
the field contents. The supplemental information is the 64-bit
world wide identifier of the N_PORT as set forth in the Fibre
Channel specification [FC-FS]. If not otherwise part of the
link service payload, this information MUST be appended in
accordance with the applicable link service description. Unless
specified otherwise, this translation type SHALL NOT be used if
the address to be converted corresponds to that of the frame
originator or recipient.
Since Fibre Channel addressing rules prohibit the assignment of
fabric addresses with a domain I/D of 0, the above codes will never
correspond to valid N_PORT fabric IDs.
For translation type 3, the receiving gateway SHALL obtain the
information needed to fill in the field in the link service frame
payload by converting the specified N_PORT world-wide identifier to
a gateway IP address and N_PORT ID. This information MUST be
obtained through a name server query. If the N_PORT is locally
attached, the gateway MUST fill in the field with the N_PORT ID.
If the N_PORT is remotely attached, the gateway MUST assign and
fill in the field with an N_PORT alias. If an N_PORT alias has
already been assigned, it MUST be reused.
In the event that the sending gateway cannot obtain the world wide
identifier of an N_PORT, or a receiving gateway cannot obtain the
IP address and N_PORT ID, the gateway detecting the error SHALL
terminate the request with an LS_RJT message as described in [FC-
FS]. The Reason Code SHALL be set to 0x07 (protocol error) and the
Reason Explanation SHALL be set to 0x1F (Invalid N_PORT
identifier).
Supplemental data is sent with the link service request or ACC
frames in one of the following ways:
a) By appending the necessary data to the end of the link service
frame.
b) By extending the sequence with additional frames.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 53]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
In the first case, a new frame SHALL be created whose length
includes the supplemental data. The procedure for extending the
link service sequence with additional frames is dependent on the
link service type.
After applying the supplemental data, the receiving gateway SHALL
forward the resulting link service frames to the destination N_PORT
with the supplemental information removed.
When the ACC response requires iFCP intervention, the receiving
gateway MUST act as a proxy for the originator, retaining the state
needed to process the response from the N_PORT to which the request
was directed.
8.3 Fibre Channel Link Services Processed by iFCP
The following Extended and FC-4 Link Service Messages must receive
special processing.
Extended Link Service Messages LS_COMMAND Mnemonic
------------------------------ ---------- --------
Abort Exchange 0x06 00 00 00 ABTX
Discover Address 0x52 00 00 00 ADISC
Discover Address Accept 0x02 00 00 00 ADISC ACC
FC Address Resolution Protocol 0x55 00 00 00 FARP-REPLY
Reply
FC Address Resolution Protocol 0x54 00 00 00 FARP-REQ
Request
Logout 0x05 00 00 00 LOGO
Port Login 0x30 00 00 00 PLOGI
Read Exchange Status Block 0x08 00 00 00 RES
Read Exchange Status Block 0x02 00 00 00 RES ACC
Accept
Read Link Error Status Block 0x0F 00 00 00 RLS
Read Sequence Status Block 0x09 00 00 00 RSS
Reinstate Recovery Qualifier 0x12 00 00 00 RRQ
Request Sequence Initiative 0x0A 00 00 00 RSI
Third Party Process Logout 0x24 00 00 00 TPRLO
Third Party Process Logout 0x02 00 00 00 TPRLO ACC
Accept
FC-4 Link Service Messages LS_COMMAND Mnemonic
-------------------------- ---------- --------
FCP Read Exchange Concise 0x13 00 00 00 REC
FCP Read Exchange Concise 0x02 00 00 00 REC ACC
Accept
Each encapsulated Fibre Channel frame that is part of a special
link service MUST have the SPC bit set to one in the iFCP FLAGS
field of the encapsulation header as specified in section 6.4.1.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 54]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Supplemental data (if any) MUST be appended as described in the
following section.
The formats of each special link service message, including
supplemental data where applicable, are shown in the following
sections. Each description shows the basic format, as specified in
the applicable FC standard, followed by supplemental data as shown
in the example below.
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | LS_COMMAND |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | |
| . | |
| . | Link Service Frame Payload |
| | |
| n | |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| n+1 | |
| . | Supplemental Data |
| . | (if any) |
| n+k | |
+======+================================================+
Figure 17 -- Special Link Service Frame Payload
8.3.1 Special Extended Link Services
The following sections define extended link services for which
special processing is required.
8.3.1.1 Abort Exchange (ABTX)
ELS Format:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x6 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | RRQ Status | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID of Tgt exchange | RX_ID of tgt exchange|
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-10 | Optional association header (32 bytes |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type (see (type 3 only)
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 55]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
------------------- section 8.2) ------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 N/A
S_ID
Other Special Processing:
None
8.3.1.2 Discover Address (ADISC)
Format of ADISC ELS:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x52 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Reserved | Hard address of ELS Originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2-3 | Port Name of Originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4-5 | Node Name of originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 6 | Rsvd | N_PORT I/D of ELS Originator |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type (see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------
-------------
N_PORT I/D of ELS 1 N/A
Originator
Other Special Processing:
The Hard Address of the ELS originator SHALL be set to 0.
8.3.1.3 Discover Address Accept (ADISC ACC)
Format of ADISC ACC ELS:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 56]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x20 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Reserved | Hard address of ELS Originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2-3 | Port Name of Originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4-5 | Node Name of originator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 6 | Rsvd | N_PORT I/D of ELS Originator |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type (see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------
------------
N_PORT I/D of ELS 1 N/A
Originator
Other Special Processing:
The Hard Address of the ELS originator SHALL be set to 0.
8.3.1.4 FC Address Resolution Protocol Reply (FARP-REPLY)
The FARP-REPLY ELS is used in conjunction with the FARP-REQ ELS
(see section 8.3.1.5) to perform the address resolution services
required by the FC-VI protocol [FC-VI] and the Fibre Channel
mapping of IP and ARP specified in RFC 2625 [RFC2625].
Format of FARP-REPLY ELS:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 57]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x55 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Match Addr | Requesting N_PORT Identifier |
| | Code Points| |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Responder | Responding N_PORT Identifier |
| | Action | |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-4 | Requesting N_PORT Port_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 5-6 | Requesting N_PORT Node_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 7-8 | Responding N_PORT Port_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 9-10 | Responding N_PORT Node_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 11-14| Requesting N_PORT IP Address |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 15-18| Responding N_PORT IP Address |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type (see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) -----------------
-------------
Requesting N_PORT 2 N/A
Identifier
Responding N_PORT 1 N/A
identifier
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.5 FC Address Resolution Protocol Request (FARP-REQ)
The FARP-REQ ELS is used to in conjunction with the FC-VI protocol
[FC-VI] and IP to FC mapping of RFC 2625 [RFC2625] to perform IP
and FC address resolution in an FC fabric. The FARP-REQ ELS is
usually directed to the fabric broadcast server at well-known
address 0xFF-FF-FF for retransmission to all attached N_PORTs.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 58]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Section 10.4 describes the iFCP implementation of FC broadcast
server functionality in an iFCP fabric.
Format of FARP_REQ ELS:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x54 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Match Addr | Requesting N_PORT Identifier |
| | Code Points| |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Responder | Responding N_PORT Identifier |
| | Action | |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-4 | Requesting N_PORT Port_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 5-6 | Requesting N_PORT Node_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 7-8 | Responding N_PORT Port_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 9-10 | Responding N_PORT Node_Name |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 11-14| Requesting N_PORT IP Address |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 15-18| Responding N_PORT IP Address |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type (see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) -----------------
-----------
Requesting N_PORT 3 Requesting N_PORT
Identifier Port Name
Responding N_PORT 3 Responding N_PORT
Identifier Port Name
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.6 Logout (LOGO)
ELS Format:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 59]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x5 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | N_PORT I/D being logged out |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2-3 | Port name of the LOGO originator (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
This ELS shall always be sent as an augmented ELS regardless of the
translation mode in effect.
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) --------------
-----------
N_PORT I/D Being 1 N/A
Logged Out
Other Special Processing:
See section 6.2.3.1.
8.3.1.7 Port Login (PLOGI) and PLOGI ACC
PLOGI provides the mechanism for establishing a login session
between two N_PORTs. In iFCP, a PLOGI request addressed to a
remotely attached N_PORT may trigger the creation of an iFCP
session, if one does not already exist. Otherwise, the PLOGI and
PLOGI ACC payloads MUST be passed transparently to the destination
N_PORT.
The PLOGI request and ACC response carry information identifying
the originating N_PORT, including specification of its capabilities
and limitations. If the destination N_PORT accepts the login
request, it sends an accept (an ACC frame with PLOGI payload),
specifying its capabilities and limitations. This exchange
establishes the operating environment for the two N_PORTs.
The following figure is duplicated from [FC-FS], and shows the
PLOGI message format for both request and accept (ACC) response. A
port will reject a PLOGI request by transmitting an LS_RJT message,
which contains no payload.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 60]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Byte
Offset
+----------------------------------+
0 | LS_COMMAND | 4 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
4 | COMMON SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
20 | PORT NAME | 8 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
28 | NODE NAME | 8 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
36 | CLASS 1 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
52 | CLASS 2 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
68 | CLASS 3 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
86 | CLASS 4 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
102 | VENDOR VERSION LEVEL | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
Total Length = 116 bytes
Figure 18 -- Format of PLOGI Request and ACC Payloads
Details on the above fields, including common and class-based
service parameters, can be found in [FC-FS].
8.3.1.8 Read Exchange Status Block (RES)
ELS Format:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x13 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-10 | Association header (may be optionally reqÆd) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 11-12| Port name of the Exchange Originator (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 61]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
S_ID Exchange Originator
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.9 Read Exchange Status Block Accept
Format of ELS Accept Response:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Acc = 0x02 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator N_PORT ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | Rsvd | Exchange Responder N_PORT ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4 | Exchange Status Bits |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 5 | Reserved |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 6ûn | Service Parameters and Sequence Statuses |
| | as described in [FCS] |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
|n+1- | Port name of the Exchange Originator (8 bytes) |
|n+2 | |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
|n+3- | Port name of the Exchange Responder (8 bytes) |
|n+4 | |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 62]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
N_PORT I/D Exchange Originator
Exchange Responder 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
N_PORT I/D Exchange Responder
When supplemental data is required, the ELS SHALL be extended by 4
words as shown above. If the translation type for the Exchange
Originator N_PORT I/D or the Exchange Responder N_PORT I/D is 1 or
2, the corresponding 8-byte port name SHALL be set to all zeros.
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.10 Read Link Error Status (RLS)
ELS Format:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x0F | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | N_PORT Identifier |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 2-3 | Port name of the N_PORT (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data (type
Address Translation Type(see 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
N_PORT Identifier 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the N_PORT
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.11 Read Sequence Status Block (RSS)
ELS Format:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 63]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x09 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | SEQ_ID | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 3-4 |Port name of the Exchange Originator (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
S_ID Exchange Originator
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.12 Reinstate Recovery Qualifier (RRQ)
ELS Format:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x12 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-10 | Association header (may be optionally reqÆd) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1 or 2 N/A
S_ID
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 64]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.13 Request Sequence Initiative (RSI)
ELS Format:
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x0A | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3-10 | Association header (may be optionally reqÆd) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1 or 2 N/A
S_ID
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.1.14 Third Party Process Logout (TPRLO)
TPRLO provides a mechanism for an N_PORT (third party) to remove
one or more process login sessions that exist between the
destination N_PORT and other N_PORTs specified in the command.
This command includes one or more TPRLO LOGOUT PARAMETER PAGEs,
each of which when combined with the destination N_PORT identifies
a process login to be terminated by the command.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 65]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15 - 0 |
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x24 | Page Length (0x10) | Payload Length |
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| 1 | TPRLO Logout Parameter Page 0 |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| 5 | TPRLO Logout Parameter Page 1 |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
....
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|(4*n)+1 | TPRLO Logout Parameter page n |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
Figure 19 -- Format of TPRLO ELS
Each TPRLO parameter page contains parameters identifying one or
more image pairs and may be associated with a single FC-4 protocol
type, common to all FC-4 protocol types between the specified image
pair, or global to all specified image pairs. The format of aTPRLO
page requiring address translation is shown in Figure 20.
Additional information on TPRLO can be found in [FC-FS].
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15-8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | TYPE Code | TYPE CODE | |
| | or | EXTENSION | TPRLO Flags |
| | Common SVC | | |
| | Parameters | | |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Third Party Process Associator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Responder Process Associator |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | Reserved | Third Party Originator N_PORT ID |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 4-5 | World Wide Name of Third Party Originator |
| | N_PORT |
+------+------------------------------------------------+
Figure 20 -- Format of an Augmented TPRLO Parameter Page
The TPRLO flags that affect the processing of the supplementedELS
are as follows:
Bit 12: Global Process logout. When set to one, this bit
indicates that all image pairs for all N_PORTs of the
specified FC-4 protocol shall be invalidated. When the
value of this bit is one, only one logout parameter page
is permitted in the TPRLO payload.
Bit 13: Third party Originator N_PORT Validity. When set to
one, this bit indicates that word 3, bits 23-00 (Third
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 66]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Party Originator N_PORT ID) are meaningful.
If bit 13 has a value of zero and bit 12 has a value of one in the
TPRLO flags field, then the ELS SHALL NOT be sent as a special ELS.
Otherwise the originating gateway SHALL process the ELS as follows:
a) The first word of the TPRLO payload SHALL NOT be modified.
b) Each TPRLO parameter page shall be extended by two words as
shown in Figure 20.
c) If word 0, bit 13 (Third Party Originator N_PORT I/D validity)
in the TPRLO flags field has a value of one, then the sender
shall place the world-wide port name of the fibre channel
device's N_PORT in the extension words. The N_PORT I/D SHALL be
set to 3. Otherwise, the contents of the extension words and
the Third Party Originator N_PORT ID SHALL be set to zero.
d) The ELS originator SHALL set the SPC bit in the encapsulation
header of each augmented frame comprising the ELS (see section
6.4.1).
e) If the ELS contains a single TPRLO parameter page, the
originator SHALL increase the frame length as necessary to
include the extended parameter page.
f) If the ELS to be augmented contains multiple TPRLO parameter
pages, the FC frames created to contain the augmented ELS
payload SHALL NOT exceed the maximum frame size that can be
accepted by the destination N_PORT.
Each Fibre Channel frame SHALL contain an integer number of
extended TPRLO parameter pages. The maximum number of extended
TPRLO parameter pages in a frame SHALL be limited to the number
that can be held without exceeding the above upper limit. New
frames resulting from the extension of the TPRLO pages to
include the supplemental data shall be created by extending the
SEQ_CNT in the Fibre Channel frame header. The SEQ_ID SHALL NOT
be modified.
The gateway receiving the augmented TPRLO ELS SHALL generate ELS
frames to be sent to the destination N_PORT by copying word 0 of
the ELS payload and processing each augmented parameter page as
follows:
a) If word 0, bit 13 has a value of one, create a parameter page by
copying words 0 through 2 of the augmented parameter page. The
Third Party Originator N_PORT I/D in word 3 shall be generated
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 67]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
by referencing the supplemental data as described in section
8.2.
b) If word 0, bit 13 has a value of zero, create a parameter page
by copying words 0 through 3 of the augmented parameter page.
The size of each frame to be sent to the destination N_PORT MUST
NOT exceed the maximum frame size that the destination N_PORT can
accept. The sequence identifier in each frame header SHALL be
copied from the augmented ELS and the sequence count shall be
monotonically increasing.
8.3.1.15 Third Party Logout Accept (TPRLO ACC)
The format of the TPRLO ACC frame is shown in Figure 21.
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15 - 0 |
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x2 | Page Length (0x10) | Payload Length |
+--------+------------+--------------------+----------------------+
| 1 | TPRLO Logout Parameter Page 0 |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| 5 | TPRLO Logout Parameter Page 1 |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
....
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
|(4*n)+1 | TPRLO Logout Parameter page n |
+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+
Figure 21 -- Format of TPRLO ACC ELS
The format of the parameter page and rules for parameter page
augmentation are as specified in section 8.3.1.14.
8.3.2 Special FC-4 Link Services
The following sections define FC-4 link services for which special
processing is required.
8.3.2.1 FC-4 Link Services defined by FCP
8.3.2.1.1 Read Exchange Concise (REC)
Link Service Request Format:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 68]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Cmd = 0x13 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator S_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 3-4 |Port name of the exchange originator (8 bytes) |
| | (present only for translation type 3) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
S_ID Exchange
Originator
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.3.2.1.2 Read Exchange Concise Accept (REC ACC)
Format of REC ACC Response:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 69]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| Word | Bits 31û24 | Bits 23û16 | Bits 15û8 | Bits 7-0 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 0 | Acc = 0x02 | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0x00 |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 1 | OX_ID | RX_ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 2 | Rsvd | Exchange Originator N_PORT ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 3 | Rsvd | Exchange Responder N_PORT ID |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 4 | Data Transfer Count |
+------+------------+------------+-----------+----------+
| 5 | Exchange Status |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 6-7 |Port name of the Exchange Originator (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
| 8-9 |Port name of the Exchange Responder (8 bytes) |
+======+============+============+===========+==========+
Fields Requiring Translation Supplemental Data
Address Translation Type(see (type 3 only)
------------------- section 8.2) ------------------
-----------
Exchange Originator 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
N_PORT I/D Exchange Originator
Exchange Responder 1, 2 or 3 Port Name of the
N_PORT I/D Exchange Responder
When supplemental data is required, the frame SHALL always be
extended by 4 words as shown above. If the translation type for
the Exchange Originator N_PORT I/D or the Exchange Responder N_PORT
I/D is 1 or 2, the corresponding 8-byte port name SHALL be set to
all zeros.
Other Special Processing:
None.
8.4 FLOGI Service Parameters Supported by an iFCP Gateway
The FLOGI ELS is issued by an N_PORT that wishes to access the
fabric transport services.
The format of the FLOGI request and FLOGI ACC payloads are
identical to the PLOGI request and ACC payloads described in
section 8.3.1.7. The figure in that section is duplicated below
for convenience.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 70]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Byte
Offset
+----------------------------------+
0 | LS_COMMAND | 4 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
4 | COMMON SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
20 | PORT NAME | 8 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
28 | NODE NAME | 8 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
36 | CLASS 1 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
52 | CLASS 2 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
68 | CLASS 3 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
86 | CLASS 4 SERVICE PARAMETERS | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
102 | VENDOR VERSION LEVEL | 16 Bytes
+----------------------------------+
Figure 22 -- FLOGI Request and ACC Payload Format
A full description of each parameter is given in [FC-FS].
This section tabulates the protocol-dependant service parameters
supported by a fabric port attached to an iFCP gateway.
The service parameters carried in the payload of an FLOGI extended
link service request MUST be set in accordance with
Table 4.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 71]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
+-----------------------------------------+---------------+
| | Fabric Login |
| Service Parameter | Class |
| +---+---+---+---+
| | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Class Validity | n | M | M | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Service Options | |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Intermix Mode | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Stacked Connect-Requests | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Sequential Delivery | n | M | M | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Dedicated Simplex | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Camp on | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Buffered Class 1 | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Priority | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Initiator/Recipient Control | |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
| Clock synchronization ELS capable | n | n | n | n |
+-----------------------------------------+---+---+---+---+
Table 4 -- FLOGI Service Parameter Settings
Notes:
1) "n" indicates a parameter or capability that is not
supported by the iFCP protocol.
2) "M" indicates an applicable parameter that MUST be
supported by an iFCP gateway.
9. iFCP Error Detection
9.1 Overview
[FC-FS] defines error detection and recovery procedures. These
Fibre Channel-defined mechanisms continue to be available in the
iFCP environment.
9.2 Stale Frame Prevention
Recovery from Fibre Channel protocol error conditions requires that
frames associated with a failed or aborted Exchange drain from the
fabric before Exchange resources can be safely reused.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 72]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Since a Fibre Channel fabric may not preserve frame order, there is
no deterministic way to purge such frames. Instead, the fabric
guarantees that frame the lifetime will not exceed a specific limit
(R_A_TOV).
R_A_TOV is defined in [FC-FS] as "the maximum transit time within a
fabric to guarantee that a lost frame will never emerge from the
fabric". For example, a value of 2 x R_A_TOV is the minimum time
that the originator of an ELS request or FC-4 link service request
must wait for the response to that request. The Fibre Channel
default value for R_A_TOV is 10 seconds.
An iFCP gateway SHALL actively enforce limits on R_A_TOV as
described in section 9.2.1.
9.2.1 Enforcing R_A_TOV Limits
The R_A_TOV limit on frame lifetimes SHALL be enforced by means of
the time stamp in the encapsulation header (see section 6.4.1) as
described in this section.
The budget for R_A_TOV SHOULD include allowances for the
propagation delay through the gateway regions of the sending and
receiving N_PORTs plus the propagation delay through the IP
network. This latter component is referred to in this
specification as IP_TOV.
IP_TOV should be set well below the value of R_A_TOV specified for
the iFCP fabric and should be stored in the iSNS server. IP_TOV
should be set to 50 percent of R_A_TOV.
The following paragraphs describe the requirements for
synchronizing gateway time bases and the rules for measuring and
enforcing propagation delay limits.
The protocol for synchronizing a gateway time base is SNTP
[RFC2030]. In order to insure that all gateways are time-aligned, a
gateway SHOULD obtain the address of an SNTP-compatible time server
via an iSNS query. If multiple time server addresses are returned
by the query, the servers must be synchronized and the gateway may
use any server in the list. Alternatively, the server may return a
multicast group address in support of operation in Anycast mode.
Implementation of Anycast mode is as specified in [RFC2030],
including the precautions defined in that document. Multicast mode
SHOULD NOT be used.
An SNTP server may use any one of the time reference sources listed
in [RFC2030]. The resolution of the time reference MUST be 125
milliseconds or better.
Stability of the SNTP server and gateway time bases should be 100
ppm or better.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 73]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
With regard to its time base, the gateway is in either the
Synchronized or Unsynchronized state. When in the Unsynchronized
state, the gateway SHALL:
a) Set the time stamp field to 0,0 for all outgoing frames
b) Ignore the time stamp field for all incoming frames.
When in the synchronized state, the gateway SHALL
a) Set the time stamp field for each outgoing frame in accordance
with the gateway's internal time base
b) Check the time stamp field of each incoming frame, following
validation of the encapsulation header CRC as described in
section 6.4.4.
c) If the incoming frame has a time stamp of 0,0, the receiving
gateway SHALL NOT test the frame to determine if it is stale.
d) If the incoming frame has a non-zero time stamp, the receiving
gateway SHALL compute the absolute value of the time in flight
and SHALL compare it against the value of IP_TOV specified for
the IP fabric.
e) If the result in step (d) exceeds IP_TOV, the encapsulated
frame shall be discarded. Otherwise, the frame shall be de-
encapsulated as described in section 6.4.4.
A gateway SHALL enter the Synchronized state upon receiving a
successful response to an SNTP query.
A gateway shall enter the Unsynchronized state:
a) Upon power up and before successful completion of an SNTP query
b) Whenever the gateway looses contact with the SNTP server such
that the gateway's time base may no longer be in alignment with
that of the SNTP server. The criterion for determining loss of
contact is implementation specific.
Following loss of contact, it is recommended that the gateway enter
the Unsynchronized state when the estimated time base drift
relative to the SNTP reference is greater than ten percent of the
IP_TOV limit. (Assuming all timers have an accuracy of 100 ppm and
IP_TOV equals 5 seconds, the maximum allowable loss of contact
duration would be about 42 minutes.)
In response to loss of synchronization, a gateway enforcing R_A_TOV
limits as described in this section should abort all N_PORT login
sessions as described in section 6.2.3.2.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 74]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
10. Fabric Services Supported by an iFCP implementation
An iFCP gateway implementation MUST support the following fabric
services:
N_PORT ID Value Description Section
--------------- ----------- -------
0xFF-FF-FE F_PORT Server 10.1
0xFF-FF-FD Fabric Controller 10.2
0xFF-FF-FC Directory/Name Server 10.3
In addition, an iFCP gateway MAY support the FC broadcast server
functionality described in section 10.4.
10.1 F_PORT Server
The F_PORT server SHALL support the FLOGI ELS as described in
section 8.4 as well as the following ELSs specified in [FC-FS]:
a) Request for fabric service parameters (FDISC),
b) Request for the link error status (RLS),
c) Read Fabric Timeout Values (RTV).
10.2 Fabric Controller
The Fabric Controller SHALL support the following ELSs as specified
in [FC-FS]:
a) State Change Notification (SCN),
b) Registered State Change Notification (RSCN),
c) State Change Registration (SCR).
10.3 Directory/Name Server
The Directory/Name server provides a registration service allowing
an N_PORT to record or query the database for information about
other N_PORTs. The services are defined in [FC-GS3]. The queries
are issued as FC-4 transactions using the FC-CT command transport
protocol specified in [FC-GS3].
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 75]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
In iFCP, name server requests are translated to the iSNS queries
defined in [ISNS]. The definitions of name server objects are
specified in [FC-GS3].
The name server SHALL support record and query operations for
directory subtype 0x02 (Name Server) and 0x03 (IP Address Server)
and MAY support the FC-4 specific services as defined in [FC-GS3].
10.4 Broadcast Server
Fibre Channel frames are broadcast throughout the fabric by
addressing them to the Fibre Channel broadcast server at well-known
Fibre Channel address 0xFF-FF-FF. The broadcast server then
replicates and delivers the frame to each attached N_PORT in all
zones to which the originating device belongs. Only class 3
(datagram) service is supported.
In an iFCP system, the Fibre Channel broadcast function is emulated
by means of a two-tier architecture comprised of the following
elements:
a) A local broadcast server residing in each iFCP gateway. The
local server distributes broadcast traffic within the gateway
region and forwards outgoing broadcast traffic to a global
server for distribution throughout the network.
b) A global broadcast server which re-distributes broadcast
traffic to the local server in each participating gateway.
c) An iSNS discovery domain defining the scope over which
broadcast traffic is propagated. The discovery domain is
populated with a global broadcast server and the set of local
servers it supports.
The local and global broadcast servers are logical iFCP devices
that communicate using the iFCP protocol. The servers have an
N_PORT Network Address consisting of an iFCP portal address and an
N_PORT I/D set to the well-known Fibre Channel address of the FC
broadcast server (0xff-ff-ff).
As noted above, an N_PORT originates a broadcast by directing frame
traffic to the Fibre Channel broadcast server. The gateway-resident
local server distributes a copy of the frame locally and forwards a
copy to the global server for redistribution to the local servers
on other gateways. The global server MUST NOT echo a broadcast
frame to the originating local server.
10.4.1 Establishing the Broadcast Configuration
The broadcast configuration is managed using facilities provided by
the iSNS server. Specifically:
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 76]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
a) An iSNS discovery domain is created and seeded with the network
address of the global broadcast server N_PORT. The global
server is identified as such by setting the appropriate N_PORT
entity attribute.
b) Using the management interface, each broadcast server is preset
with the identity of the broadcast domain.
During power up, each gateway SHALL invoke the iSNS service to
register its local broadcast server in the broadcast discovery
domain. After registration, the local server SHALL wait for the
global broadcast server to establish an iFCP session.
The global server SHALL register with the iSNS server as follows:
a) The server SHALL query the iSNS name server by attribute to
obtain the world-wide port name of the N_PORT pre-configured to
provide global broadcast services.
b) If the world-wide port name obtained above does not correspond
to that of the server issuing the query, the N_PORT SHALL NOT
perform global broadcast functions for N_PORTs in that discovery
domain.
c) Otherwise, the global server N_PORT shall register with the
discovery domain and query the iSNS server to identify all
currently-registered local servers.
d) The global broadcast server shall initiate an iFCP session with
each local broadcast server in the domain. When a new local
server registers, the global server SHALL receive a state change
notification and respond by initiating an iFCP session with the
newly added server. The gateway SHALL obtain these
notifications using the iSNS provisions for lossless delivery.
Upon receiving the CBIND request to initiate the iFCP session, the
local server SHALL record the world-wide port name and N_PORT
network address of the global server.
10.4.2 Broadcast Session Management
After the initial broadcast session is established, the local or
global broadcast server MAY choose to manage the session in one of
the following ways depending on resource requirements and the
anticipated level of broadcast traffic:
a) A server MAY keep the session open continuously. Since
broadcast sessions are often quiescent for long periods of
time, the server SHOULD monitor session connectivity as
described in section 6.2.2.2.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 77]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
b) A server MAY open the broadcast session on demand, only when
broadcast traffic is to be sent. If the session is reopened by
the global server, the local server SHALL replace the
previously recorded network address of the global broadcast
server.
11. iFCP Security
11.1 Overview
iFCP relies upon the IPSec protocol suite to provide data
confidentiality and authentication services and IKE as the key
management protocol. Section 11.2 describes the security
requirements arising from iFCPÆs operating environment while
Section 11.3 describes the resulting design choices, their
requirement levels, and how they apply to the iFCP protocol.
11.2 iFCP Security Operating Requirements
11.2.1 Context
iFCP is a protocol designed for use by gateway devices deployed in
enterprise data centers. Such environments typically have security
gateways designed to provide network security through isolation
from public networks. Furthermore, iFCP data may need to traverse
security gateways in order to support SAN-to-SAN connectivity
across public networks.
11.2.2 Security Threats
Communicating iFCP gateways are vulnerable to attacks. Examples of
attacks include attempts by an adversary to:
a) Acquire confidential data and identities by snooping data
packets.
b) Modify packets containing iFCP data and control messages.
c) Inject new packets into the iFCP session.
d) Hijack the TCP connection carrying the iFCP session.
e) Launch denial of service attacks against the iFCP gateway.
f) Disrupt security negotiation process.
g) Impersonate a legitimate security gateway.
h) Compromise communication with the iSNS server.
It is imperative to thwart these attacks, given that an iFCP
gateway is the last line of defense for a whole Fibre Channel
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 78]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
island, which may include several hosts and switches. To do so, the
iFCP protocol MUST define confidentiality, authentication,
integrity, and replay protection on a per-datagram basis. It also
MUST define a scalable approach to key management. Conformant
implementations of the iFCP protocol MAY use such definitions.
11.2.3 Interoperability Requirements with Security Gateways
Enterprise data center networks are considered mission-critical
facilities that must be isolated and protected from all possible
security threats. Such networks are usually protected by security
gateways, which at a minimum provide a shield against denial of
service attacks. The iFCP security architecture must be able to
leverage the protective services of the existing security
infrastructure, including firewall protection, NAT and NAPT
services, and IPSec VPN services available on existing security
gateways.
11.2.4 Statically and Dynamically Assigned IP Addresses
As iFCP gateways and switches are deployed within enterprise
networks, it is expected that, like most routers and switches,
gateway IP addresses will be statically assigned. Consequently,
IKE and IPSec features focused on supporting DHCP and other dynamic
IP address assignment capabilities for mobile hosts are not
strictly required. Since the iFCP protocol cannot rule out the use
of dynamically assigned IP addresses however, the security
definitions for the iFCP protocol shall not exhibit any
vulnerability in the case of dynamically assigned IP addresses
(e.g., via DHCP [RFC2131]).
11.2.5 Authentication Requirements
iFCP is a peer-to-peer protocol. iFCP sessions may be initiated by
either or both peer gateways. Consequently, bi-directional
authentication of peer gateways MUST be provided.
Fibre Channel, operating system and user identities are transparent
to the iFCP protocol. IKE and IPSec authentication used to protect
iFCP traffic shall be based upon the IP addresses of the
communicating peer gateways.
iFCP gateways shall use Discovery Domain information obtained from
the iSNS server [ISNS] to determine whether the initiating Fibre
Channel N_PORT should be allowed access to the target N_PORT.
N_PORT identities used in the Port Login (PLOGI) process shall be
considered authenticated provided the PLOGI request is received
from the remote gateway over a secure, IPSec-protected connection.
There is no requirement that the identities used in authentication
be kept confidential.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 79]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
11.2.6 Confidentiality Requirements
iFCP traffic may traverse insecure public networks, and therefore
implementations MUST have per-packet encryption capabilities to
provide confidentiality.
11.2.7 Rekeying Requirements
Due to the high data transfer rates and the amount of data
involved, an iFCP gateway implementation MUST support the
capability to rekey each phase 2 security association in time
intervals as often as every 25 seconds. The iFCP gateway MUST
provide the capability for forward secrecy in the rekeying process.
11.2.8 Usage Requirements
It must be possible for compliant iFCP implementations to
administratively disable any and all security mechanisms. It must
also be possible to apply different security requirements to
individual N_PORT login session. Implementations may elect to
expose such fine level of control through a management interface or
through interaction with the iSNS.
11.2.9 iSNS Role
iSNS [ISNS] is an invariant in all iFCP deployments. iFCP gateways
use iSNS for discovery services, and MAY use security policies
configured in the iSNS database as the basis for algorithm
negotiation in IKE. The iSNS specification defines mechanisms to
secure communication between an iFCP gateway and iSNS server(s).
Additionally, such specification indicates how elements of security
policy concerning individual iFCP sessions can be retrieved from
iSNS server(s).
11.3 iFCP Security Design
11.3.1 Enabling Technologies
Applicable technology from IPsec and IKE is defined in the
following suite of specifications:
[RFC2401] Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol
[RFC2402] IP Authentication Header
[RFC2404] The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 Within ESP and AH
[RFC2405] The ESP DES-CBC Cipher Algorithm With Explicit IV
[RFC2406] IP Encapsulating Security Payload
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 80]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
[RFC2407] The Internet IP Security Domain of Interpretation for
ISAKMP
[RFC2408] Internet Security Association and Key Management
Protocol (ISAKMP)
[RFC2409] The Internet Key Exchange (IKE)
[RFC2410] The NULL Encryption Algorithm and Its use with IPSEC
[RFC2451] The ESP CBC-Mode Cipher Algorithms
[RFC2709] Security Model with Tunnel-mode IPsec for NAT Domains
The implementation of IPsec and IKE is required according the
following guidelines.
Support for the IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) [RFC2406]
is MANDATORY to implement. As stated in [RFC2406], the following
authentication algorithms MUST be implemented:
a) HMAC with SHA1 [RFC2404]
b) NULL authentication
The Advanced Encryption Standard [AES] in CBC MAC mode with
Extended Cipher Block Chaining [XCBC] SHOULD be implemented.
The following encryption algorithms MUST be implemented:
a) NULL encryption [RFC2410]
b) 3DES in CBC mode [RFC2451]
AES counter mode encryption [AESCTR] SHOULD be implemented.
Implementation of DES in CBC mode [RFC2405] is OPTIONAL. It is
recommended that DES in CBC mode SHOULD NOT be used due to its
inherent weakness. It is in fact well known that DES is crackable
with modest computation resources, and so is inappropriate for use
in any iFCP deployment scenario requiring levels of security.
A conformant iFCP protocol implementation MUST implement IPsec ESP
[RFC2406] in tunnel mode [RFC2401]. If minimizing the size of IPsec
headers is a concern, transport mode should be supported. It shall
be noted that transport mode continues to have a MUST implement
requirement in those host scenarios where [RFC2401] makes it a MUST
(see Sections 3.3 and 4.1 of [RFC2401]).
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 81]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Regarding key management, iFCP implementations MUST support IKE
[RFC2409] for peer authentication, negotiation of security
associations, and key management, using the IPsec DOI. Manual
keying MUST NOT be used since it does not provide the necessary
keying support. According to [RFC2409], pre-shared secret key
authentication is MANDATORY to implement, whereas certificate-based
peer authentication using digital signatures MAY be implemented
(see section 11.3.3 regarding the use of certificates). [RFC2409]
defines the following requirement levels for IKE Modes:
Phase-1 Main Mode MUST be implemented
Phase-1 Aggressive Mode SHOULD be implemented
Phase-2 Quick Mode MUST be implemented
Phase-2 Quick Mode with key exchange payload MUST be implemented.
Phase-1 Main Mode SHOULD NOT be used in conjunction with pre-shared
keys, due to Main ModeÆs vulnerability to men-in-the-middle-
attackers when group pre-shared keys are used. iFCP therefore
requires that Aggressive Mode MUST be implemented as a valid
alternative to Main Mode.
Peer authentication using the public key encryption methods
outlined in sections 5.2 and 5.3 of [RFC2409] SHOULD NOT be used.
In all Phase 1 Modes, iFCP MUST use IP addresses as identities.
The Phase 2 Quick Mode exchanges used to negotiate protection for
the TCP connections used by iFCP MUST explicitly carry the Identity
Payload fields (IDci and IDcr). The DOI [RFC2407] provides for
several types of identification data. However, when used in
conformant iFCP security implementations, each ID Payload MUST
carry a single IP address and a single non-zero TCP port number,
and MUST NOT use the IP Subnet or IP Address Range formats. This
allows the Phase 2 security association to correspond to specific
TCP and iFCP connections.
11.3.2 Use of IKE and IPsec
Each IP address supporting iFCP communication shall be capable of
establishing one or more Phase-1 IKE Security Associations (SA) to
other IP addresses configured as peer iFCP gateways, using the IP
address as the identity. Such a security association may be
established at a gatewayÆs initialization time, or may be deferred
until the first TCP connection with security requirements is
established.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 82]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Unlike Phase-1 SAs, a Phase-2 SA maps to an individual TCP
connection. It protects the setup process of the underlying TCP
connection and all its subsequent TCP traffic. TCP connections
protected by the phase 2 SA are either in the unbound state, or are
bound to a specific N_PORT login session. The creation of an IKE
Phase-2 SA may be triggered by a policy rule supplied through a
management interface, or by N_PORT properties registered with the
iSNS server. Similarly, the use of Key Exchange payload in Quick
Mode for perfect forward secrecy may be dictated through a
management interface or by N_PORT properties registered with the
iSNS server. This specification allows multiple implementation
strategies, in which the establishment of an IKE Phase-2 SA occurs
at different times. Examples of implementation strategies include:
a) The definition of a unique security policy for all TCP
connections regardless of their bound or unbound state. Thus, an
unbound TCP connection can be bound to an N_PORT login session
without the need to incur a new IKE Phase-2 SA.
b) Multiple security policies for unbound TCP connections and
active N_PORT login sessions. In this case, an unbound TCP
connection becomes bound to an N_PORT login session after
establishing a new IKE Phase-2 SA matching the new security
policy for that N_PORT session.
c) The implementation does not support unbound connections. In this
case, a new IKE Phase-2 SA and TCP connection must be started
from scratch anytime a new N_PORT login session is created.
If the implementation does use unbound TCP connections, then an IKE
Phase-2 SA MUST protect each of such unbound connections.
As expected, the successful establishment of a IKE Phase-2 SA
results in the creation of two uni-directional IPsec SAs fully
qualified by the tuple <SPI, destination address, ESP>.
Should a TCP connection be torn down (as opposed to joining a pool
of unbound connections), the associated Phase-2 SA SHALL be
terminated upon expiration of the TIME WAIT timeout value
(according to [RFC793]).
Upon receiving a Phase 1 delete message, an iFCP implementation
SHALL tear down all the Phase 2 SAs spawned from that Phase 1 SA,
followed by the Phase 1 SA itself. Upon receiving a Phase 2 delete
message, iFCP implementations will behave according to the state of
the TCP connection protected by the SA in question. If the TCP
session was terminated (either via FINs or RSTs), then a Phase 2
delete message SHALL terminate the IPsec SAs and any state formerly
associated with that Phase 2 SA. If, however, the TCP session is
maintained, then a Phase 2 delete message shall trigger a new Quick
Mode exchange. To minimize the use of SA resources while the TCP
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 83]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
connection is idle, the creation of the security association may be
deferred until data is sent over the connection.
11.3.3 Signatures and Certificate-based authentication
Conformant iFCP implementations MAY support peer authentication via
digital signatures and X.509 certificates. When X.509 certificate
authentication is chosen within IKE, each iFCP gateway needs the
certificate credentials of each peering iFCP gateway in order to
establish a security association with that peer.
Certificate credentials used by iFCP gateways MUST be those of the
machine. Certificate credentials MAY be bound to the interface (IP
Address) of the iFCP gateway used for the iFCP session, or the
fabric WWN of the iFCP gateway itself. Since the value of a machine
certificate is inversely proportional to the ease with which an
attacker can obtain one under false pretenses, it is advisable that
the machine certificate enrollment process be strictly controlled.
For example, only administrators may have the ability to enroll a
machine with a machine certificate. User certificates SHOULD NOT be
used by iFCP gateways for establishment of SA's protecting iFCP
sessions.
If the gateway does not have the peer iFCP gateway's certificate
credentials, then it can obtain them by
a) Using the iSNS protocol to query for the peer gateway's
certificate(s) stored in a trusted iSNS server, or
b) Through use of the ISAKMP Certificate Request Payload (CRP)
[RFC2408] to request the certificate(s) directly from the peer
iFCP gateway.
When certificate chains are long enough, then IKE exchanges using
UDP as the underlying transport may yield IP fragments, which are
known to work poorly across some intervening routers, firewalls,
and NA(P)T boxes. As a result, the endpoints may be unable to
establish an IPsec security association. The solutions to this
problem are to send the end-entry machine certificate rather than
the chain, to reduce the size of the certificate chain, to use IKE
implementations over a reliable transport protocol (e.g., TCP)
assisted by Path MTU discovery and code against black-holing as in
[RFC2923], or to install network components that can properly
handle fragments.
IKE negotiators SHOULD check the pertinent Certificate Revocation
List (CRL) [RFC2408] before accepting a certificate for use in
IKE's authentication procedures.
11.4 iSNS and iFCP Security
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 84]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
iFCP is required to use iSNS for discovery and management services.
Consequently, the security of the iSNS protocol has an impact on
the security of iFCP gateways. In particular, the following
threats exist:
a) An attacker could alter iSNS protocol messages, so as to direct
iFCP gateways to establish connections with rogue peer devices,
or to weaken/eliminate IPSec protection for iFCP traffic.
b) An attacker could masquerade as the real iSNS server using false
iSNS heartbeat messages. This could cause iFCP gateways to use
rogue iSNS servers.
c) An attacker could gain knowledge about iFCP gateways by snooping
iSNS protocol messages. Such information could aid an attacker
in mounting a direct attack on iFCP gateways, such as a denial-
of-service attack or outright physical theft.
To address these threats, the following capabilities are required:
a) Unicast iSNS protocol messages need to have both confidentiality
and authentication support.
b) Multicast iSNS protocol messages such as the iSNS heartbeat
message need to have authentication support.
There is no requirement that the communicating identities in iSNS
protocol messages be kept confidential. Specifically, the identity
and location of the iSNS server shall not be considered
confidential.
However, in order to protect against an attacker masquerading as
the real iSNS server, the iSNS server MUST have the capability to
allow client gateways to authenticate broadcast or multicast
messages such as the iSNS heartbeat. The iSNS authentication block
(which is identical in format to the SLP authentication block) may
be used for this purpose. Note that the authentication block is
used only for iSNS broadcast or multicast messages, and SHOULD NOT
be used in unicast iSNS messages.
For protecting unicast iSNS protocol messages, iSNS servers MUST
support the ESP protocol in tunnel mode for iFCP client gateways.
11.5 Use of iSNS to Distribute Security Policy
Once communication between iFCP gateways and the iSNS server have
been secured through use of IPSec, the iFCP gateways have the
capability to discover the security settings that they need to use
to protect iFCP traffic. This provides a potential scaling
advantage over device-by-device configuration of individual
security policies for each iFCP gateway.
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 85]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
The iSNS server stores security settings for each iFCP gateway.
These security settings include use or non-use of IPSec, IKE, Main
Mode, Aggressive Mode, PFS, Pre-shared Key, and certificates. These
settings can be retrieved by peer iFCP gateways, who can then take
the appropriate action. For example, IKE may not be enabled for a
particular iFCP gateway. If a peer gateway can learn of this in
advance by consulting the iSNS server, it will not need to waste
time and resources attempting to initiate an IKE session with that
iFCP gateway.
Additionally, the iSNS server can store policies that are used for
ISAKMP phase 1 and phase 2 negotiations between iFCP gateways. The
ISAKMP payload format includes a series of one or more proposals
that the iFCP gateway will use when negotiating the appropriate
IPSec policy to use to protect iFCP traffic.
11.6 Minimal Security Policy for an iFCP gateway
An iFCP implementation MAY be able to administratively disable
security mechanisms for individual N_PORT login sessions. This
implies that IKE and IPsec security associations may not be
established for one or more of such sessions. A configuration of
this type may be accomplished through a management interface or
through attributes set in the iSNS server.
For most IP networks, it is inappropriate to assume physical
security, administrative security, and correct configuration of the
network and all attached nodes (a physically isolated network in a
test lab may be an exception). Therefore, authentication SHOULD be
used in order to provide a minimal assurance that connections have
initially been opened with the intended counterpart. The minimal
iFCP security policy thus only states that an iFCP gateway SHOULD
authenticate its iSNS server(s) as described in [ISNS].
12. Quality of Service Considerations
12.1 Minimal requirements
Conforming iFCP protocol implementations SHALL correctly
communicate gateway-to-gateway even across one or more intervening
best-effort IP regions. The timings with which such gateway-to
gateway communication is performed, however, will greatly depend
upon BER, packet losses, latency, and jitter experienced throughout
the best-effort IP regions. The higher these parameters, the higher
will be the gap measured between iFCP observed behaviors and
baseline iFCP behaviors (i.e., as produced by two iFCP gateways
directly connected to one another).
12.2 High-assurance
It is expected that many iFCP deployments will benefit from a high
degree of assurance regarding the behavior of intervening IP
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 86]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
regions, with resulting high-assurance on the overall end-to-end
path, as directly experienced by Fibre Channel applications. Such
assurance on the IP behaviors stems from the intervening IP regions
supporting standard Quality-of-Service (QoS) techniques, fully
complementary to iFCP, such as:
a) Congestion avoidance by over-provisioning of the network
b) Integrated Services [RFC1633] QoS
c) Differentiated Services [RFC2475] QoS
d) Multi-Protocol Label Switching [RFC3031].
One may load an MPLS forwarding equivalence class (FEC) with QoS
class significance, in addition to other considerations such as
protection and diversity for the given path. The complementarity
and compatibility of MPLS with Differentiated Services is
explored in [MPSLDS], wherein the PHB bits are copied to the EXP
bits of the MPLS shim header.
In the most general definition, two iFCP gateways are separated by
one or more independently managed IP regions, some of which
implement some of the QoS solutions mentioned above. A QoS-capable
IP region supports the negotiation and establishment of a service
contract specifying the forwarding service through the region. Such
contract and its negotiation rules are outside the scope of this
document. In the case of IP regions with DiffServ QoS, the reader
should refer to Service Level Specifications (SLS) and Traffic
Conditioning Specifications (TCS) (as defined in [DIFTERM]). Other
aspects of a service contract are expected to be non-technical and
thus outside of the IETF scope.
Due to the fact that Fibre Channel Class 2 and Class 3 do not
currently support fractional bandwidth guarantees, and that iFCP is
committed to supporting Fibre Channel semantics, it is impossible
for an iFCP gateway to autonomously infer bandwidth requirements
from streaming Fibre Channel traffic. Rather, the requirements on
bandwidth or other network parameters need to be administratively
set into an iFCP gateway, or into the entity that will actually
negotiate the forwarding service on the gateway's behalf. Depending
on the QoS techniques available, the stipulation of a forwarding
service may require interaction with network ancillary functions
such admission control and bandwidth brokers (via RSVP or other
signalling protocols that an IP region may accept).
The administrator of a iFCP gateway may negotiate a forwarding
service with IP region(s) for one, several, or all of an iFCP
gateway's TCP sessions used by an iFCP gateway. Alternately, this
responsibility may be delegated to a node downstream. Since one TCP
connection is dedicated to each N_PORT login session , the traffic
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 87]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
in an individual N_PORT to N_PORT session can be singled out by
iFCP-unaware network equipment as well.
To render the best emulation of Fibre Channel possible over IP, it
is anticipated that typical forwarding services will specify a
fixed amount of bandwidth, null losses, and, to a lesser degree of
relevance, low latency, and low jitter. For example, an IP region
using DiffServ QoS may support SLSs of this nature by applying EF
DSCPs to the iFCP traffic.
13. Author's Addresses
Charles Monia Franco Travostino
Rod Mullendore Director, Content
Josh Tseng Internetworking Lab,
Nortel Networks
Nishan Systems 3 Federal Street
3850 North First Street Billerica, MA 01821
San Jose, CA 95134 Phone: 978-288-7708
Phone: 408-519-3986 Email:
Email: travos@nortelnetworks.com
cmonia@nishansystems.com
David Robinson Wayland Jeong
Sun Microsystems Troika Networks
Senior Staff Engineer Vice President, Hardware
M/S UNWK16-301 Engineering
901 San Antonio Road 2829 Townsgate Road Suite
Palo Alto, CA 94303-4900 200
Phone: 510-936-2337 Westlake Village, CA 91361
Email: Phone: 805-370-2614
David.Robinson@sun.com Email:
wayland@troikanetworks.com
Rory Bolt Mark Edwards
Quantum/ATL Senior Systems Architect
Director, System Design Eurologic Development, Ltd.
101 Innovation Drive 4th Floor, Howard House
Irvine, CA 92612 Queens Ave, UK. BS8 1SD
Phone: 949-856-7760 Phone: +44 (0)117 930 9600
Email: rbolt@atlp.com Email:
medwards@eurologic.com
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 88]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
14. References
14.1 Normative
[RFC2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997
[FC-FS] dpANS X3.XXX-200X, "Fibre Channel Framing and Signaling
Interface", Revision 1.5, NCITS Project 1331-D, February
2001
[FC-SW2] dpANS X3.XXX-2000X, "Fibre Channel Switch Fabric -2 (FC-
SW2)", revision 5.2, NCITS Project 1305-D, May 2001
[FC-GS3] dpANS X3.XXX-200X, "Fibre Channel Generic Services -3 (FC-
GS3)", revision 7.01, NCITS Project 1356-D, November 2000
[RFC793] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", RFC 793,
September, 1981
[ENCAP] Weber, et-al., "FC Frame Encapsulation", draft-ietf-ips-
fcencapsulation-01.txt, May 2001
[ISNS] Tseng, J., et-al., "iSNS Internet Storage Name Service",
draft-ietf-ips-04.txt, July 2001
[RFC791] Postel, J., RFC 791, "The Internet Protocol", September
1981
[RFC2401] Kent, S., Atkinson, R., RFC 2401, "Security Architecture
for the Internet Protocol", November 1998
[RFC2402] Kent, S., Atkinson, R., RFC 2402, "IP Authentication
Header", November 1998
[RFC2404] Glenn, R., Madson, C., "The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 Within
ESP and AH", RFC 2404, November 1998
[RFC2406] Kent, S., Atkinson, R., RFC 2406, "Encapsulating Security
Protocol", November 1998
[RFC2407] Piper, D., RFC 2407, " The Internet IP Security Domain of
Interpretation for ISAKMP", November 1998
[RFC2408] Maughan, D., Schertler, M., Schneider, M., Turner, J.,
RFC 2408, "Internet Security Association and Key Management
Protocol (ISAKMP)" November 1998
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 89]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
[RFC2409] D. Harkins, D. Carrel, RFC 2409, "The Internet Key
Exchange (IKE)", November 1998
[RFC2410] Glenn, R., Kent, S., "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and
Its use with IPSEC", RFC 2410, November 1998
[RFC2451] Adams, R., Pereira, R., "The ESP CBC-Mode Cipher
Algorithms", RFC 2451, November 1998
[RFC2404] Glenn, R., Madson, C., "The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 Within
ESP and AH", RFC 2404, November 1998
[RFC2410] Glenn, R., Kent, S., "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and
Its use with IPSEC", RFC 2410, November 1998
[RFC2451] Adams, R., Pereira, R., "The ESP CBC-Mode Cipher
Algorithms", RFC 2451, November 1998
14.2 Non-Normative
[KEMCMP] Kembel, R., "Fibre Channel, A Comprehensive Introduction",
Northwest Learning Associates Inc., 2000, ISBN 0-931836-84-
0
[KEMAbLP] Kembel, R., "The Fibre Channel Consultant, Arbitrated
Loop", Robert W. Kembel, Northwest Learning Associates,
2000, ISBN 0-931836-84-0
[FC-AL2] dpANS X3.XXX-199X, "Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop (FC-AL-
2)", revision 7.0, NCITS Project 1133D, April 1999
[RFC896] Nagel, J., "Congestion Control in IP/TCP Networks", RFC
896, January 1984
[RFC2625] Rajagopal, M., et-al., RFC 2625, "IP and ARP over Fibre
Channel", June 1999
[RFC2131] Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC
2131, March 1997
[RFC2405] Doraswamy, N., Madson, C., "The ESP DES-CBC Cipher
Algorithm With Explicit IV" RFC 2405, November 1998
[RFC2030] Mills, D., RFC 2030, "Simple Network Time Protocol
(SNTP)" Version 4, October 1996
[RFC2709] Srisuresh, P., "Security Model with Tunnel-mode IPsec for
NAT Domains", RFC 2709, October 1999
[RFC2923] Lahey, K., "TCP Problems with Path MTU Discovery", RFC
2923, September 2000
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 90]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
[RFC1633] Braden, R., Clark, D. and S. Shenker, "Integrated
Services in the Internet Architecture: an Overview", RFC
1633, June 1994
[RFC2475] Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.
and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
Services", RFC 2475, December 1998
[FC-FLA] TR-20-199X, "Fibre Channel Fabric Loop Attachment (FC-
FLA)", revision 2.7, NCITS Project 1235-D, August 1997
[RFC1122] Braden, S., "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
Communication Layers", RFC 1122, October 1989
[RFC1323] Jacobsen, V., et-al., "TCP Extensions for High
Performance", RFC 1323, May, 1992
[AES] FIPS Publication XXX, "Advanced Encyption Standard (AES)",
Draft, 2001, Available from
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/drafts/dfips-AES.pdf
[XCBC] Black, J., Rogaway, P., "A Suggestion for Handling Arbitrary
Length Messages with the CBC MAC". Available from
http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/modes/proposedmodes/xcbc-
mac/xcbc-mac-spec.pdf
[AESCTR] Lipmaa, H., Rogaway, P., Wagner, D., "CTR-Mode
Encryption", 2001. Available from
http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/modes/proposedmodes/ctr/ctr
-spec.pdf
[RFC2405] Doraswamy, N., Madson, C., "The ESP DES-CBC Cipher
Algorithm With Explicit IV" RFC 2405, November 1998
[RFC3031] Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A. and Callon, R., "Multi-
Protocol Label Switching Architecture", RFC 3031, January
2001
[MPSLDS] F. Faucheur, L. Wu, B. Davie, S. Davari, P. Vaananen, R.
Krishnan, P. Cheval, J. Heinanen, "MPLS Support of
Differentiated Services", draft-ietf-mpls-diff-ext-09.txt,
April 2001.
[DIFTERM] Grossman, D., "New Terminology and Clarifications for
Diffserv", draft-ietf-diffserv-new-terms-07.txt, December
2001
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 91]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Appendix A
A. iFCP Support for Fibre Channel Link Services
For reference purposes, this appendix enumerates all the Fibre
Channel link services and the manner in which each shall be
processed by an iFCP implementation. The iFCP processing policies
are defined in section 8.
In the following sections, the name of a link service specific to a
particular FC-4 protocol is prefaced by a mnemonic identifying the
protocol.
A.1 Basic Link Services
The basic link services are shown in the following table.
Basic Link Services
Name Description iFCP Policy
---- ----------- ----------
ABTS Abort Sequence Transparent
BA_ACC Basic Accept Transparent
BA_RJT Basic Reject Transparent
NOP No Operation Transparent
PRMT Preempted Rejected
(Applies to
Class 1 only)
RMC Remove Connection Rejected
(Applies to
Class 1 only)
A.2 Link Services Processed Transparently
The following link service requests and responses MUST be processed
transparently as defined in section 8.
Link Services Processed Transparently
Name Description
---- -----------
ACC Accept
ADVC Advise Credit
CSR Clock Synchronization Request
CSU Clock Synchronization Update
ECHO Echo
ESTC Estimate Credit
ESTS Establish Streaming
FACT Fabric Activate Alias_ID
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 92]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
FAN Fabric Address Notification
FCP_RJT FCP FC-4 Link Service Reject
FCP SRR FCP Sequence Retransmission Request
FDACT Fabric Deactivate Alias_ID
FDISC Discover F_Port Service Parameters
FLOGI F_Port Login
GAID Get Alias_ID
LCLM Login Control List Management
LINIT Loop Initialize
LIRR Link Incident Record Registration
LPC Loop Port Control
LS_RJT Link Service Reject
LSTS Loop Status
NACT N_Port Activate Alias_ID
NDACT N_Port Deactivate Alias_ID
PDISC Discover N_Port Service Parameters
PRLI Process Login
PRLO Process Logout
QoSR Quality of Service Request
RCS Read Connection Status
RLIR Registered Link Incident Report
RNC Report Node Capability
RNFT Report Node FC-4 Types
RNID Request Node Identification Data
RPL Read Port List
RPS Read Port Status Block
RPSC Report Port Speed Capabilities
RSCN Registered State Change Notification
RTV Read Timeout Value
RVCS Read Virtual Circuit Status
SBRP Set Bit-error Reporting Parameters
SCL Scan Remote Loop
SCN State Change Notification
SCR State Change Registration
TEST Test
TPLS Test Process Login State
A.3 iFCP-Processed Link Services
The following extended and FC-4 link services are processed by the
iFCP implementation as described in the referenced section listed
in the table.
Special Link Services
Name Description Section
---- ----------- -------
ABTX Abort Exchange 8.3.1.1
ADISC Discover Address 8.3.1.2
ADISC ACC Discover Address Accept 8.3.1.3
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 93]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
FARP-REPLY Fibre Channel Address 8.3.1.4
Resolution Protocol Reply
FARP-REQ Fibre Channel Address 8.3.1.5
Resolution Protocol Request
LOGO N_PORT Logout 8.3.1.6
PLOGI Port Login 8.3.1.7
FCP REC FCP Read Exchange Concise 8.3.2.1.1
FCP REC ACC FCP Read Exchange Concise 8.3.2.1.2
Accept
RES Read Exchange Status Block 8.3.1.8
RES ACC Read Exchange Status Block 8.3.1.9
Accept
RLS Read Link Error Status Block 8.3.1.10
RRQ Reinstate Recovery Qualifier 8.3.1.12
RSI Request Sequence Initiative 8.3.1.13
RSS Read Sequence Status Block 8.3.1.11
TPRLO Third Party Process Logout 8.3.1.14
TPRLO ACC Third Party Process Logout 8.3.1.15
Accept
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 94]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 95]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Full Copyright Statement
"Copyright (C) The Internet Society, January 2002. All Rights
Reserved. This document and translations of it may be copied and
furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or
otherwise explain it or assist in its implmentation may be
prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part,
without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright
notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and
derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified
in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references
to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as
needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which
case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet
Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it
into languages other than English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on
an "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 96]
iFCP Revision 9 January 2002
Monia et-al. Standards Track [Page 97]