lpwan Working Group A. Minaburo
Internet-Draft Acklio
Intended status: Informational L. Toutain
Expires: June 25, 2018 IMT-Atlantique
C. Gomez
Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya
December 22, 2017
LPWAN Static Context Header Compression (SCHC) and fragmentation for
IPv6 and UDP
draft-ietf-lpwan-ipv6-static-context-hc-09
Abstract
This document describes a header compression scheme and fragmentation
functionality for very low bandwidth networks. These techniques are
specially tailored for Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN).
The Static Context Header Compression (SCHC) offers a great level of
flexibility when processing the header fields. SCHC compression is
based on a common static context stored in a LPWAN device and in the
network. Static context means that the stored information does not
change during packet transmission. The context describes the field
values and keeps information that will not be transmitted through the
constrained network.
SCHC must be used for LPWAN networks because it avoids complex
resynchronization mechanisms, which are incompatible with LPWAN
characteristics. And also, because with SCHC, in most cases IPv6/UDP
headers can be reduced to a small identifier called Rule ID. Even
though, sometimes, a SCHC compressed packet will not fit in one L2
PDU, and the SCHC fragmentation protocol defined in this document may
be used.
This document describes the SCHC compression/decompression framework
and applies it to IPv6/UDP headers. This document also specifies a
fragmentation and reassembly mechanism that is used to support the
IPv6 MTU requirement over LPWAN technologies. Fragmentation is
mandatory for IPv6 datagrams that, after SCHC compression or when it
has not been possible to apply such compression, still exceed the L2
maximum payload size. Similar solutions for other protocols such as
CoAP will be described in separate documents.
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Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on June 25, 2018.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. LPWAN Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Static Context Header Compression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.1. SCHC Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.2. Rule ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.3. Packet processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.4. Matching operators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.5. Compression Decompression Actions (CDA) . . . . . . . . . 12
4.5.1. not-sent CDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.5.2. value-sent CDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.5.3. mapping-sent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.5.4. LSB CDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.5.5. DEViid, APPiid CDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
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4.5.6. Compute-* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5. Fragmentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.1. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.2. Functionalities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.3. Delivery Reliability options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.4. Fragmentation Frame Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.4.1. Fragment format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.4.2. ACK format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.4.3. All-1 and All-0 formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.4.4. Abort formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5.5. Baseline mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5.5.1. No ACK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.5.2. The Window modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5.5.3. Bitmap Optimization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
5.6. Supporting multiple window sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
5.7. Downlink fragment transmission . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
6. Padding management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
7. SCHC Compression for IPv6 and UDP headers . . . . . . . . . . 33
7.1. IPv6 version field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
7.2. IPv6 Traffic class field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
7.3. Flow label field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
7.4. Payload Length field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
7.5. Next Header field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
7.6. Hop Limit field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
7.7. IPv6 addresses fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
7.7.1. IPv6 source and destination prefixes . . . . . . . . 35
7.7.2. IPv6 source and destination IID . . . . . . . . . . . 35
7.8. IPv6 extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
7.9. UDP source and destination port . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
7.10. UDP length field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
7.11. UDP Checksum field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
8. Security considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
8.1. Security considerations for header compression . . . . . 37
8.2. Security considerations for fragmentation . . . . . . . . 37
9. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Appendix A. SCHC Compression Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Appendix B. Fragmentation Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Appendix C. Fragmentation State Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Appendix D. Allocation of Rule IDs for fragmentation . . . . . . 55
Appendix E. Note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
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1. Introduction
Header compression is mandatory to efficiently bring Internet
connectivity to the node within a LPWAN network. Some LPWAN networks
properties can be exploited to get an efficient header compression:
o Topology is star-oriented; therefore, all the packets follow the
same path. For the needs of this draft, the architecture can be
summarized to Devices (Dev) exchanging information with LPWAN
Application Server (App) through a Network Gateway (NGW).
o Traffic flows are mostly known in advance since devices embed
built-in applications. Contrary to computers or smartphones, new
applications cannot be easily installed.
The Static Context Header Compression (SCHC) is defined for this
environment. SCHC uses a context where header information is kept in
the header format order. This context is static (the values of the
header fields do not change over time) avoiding complex
resynchronization mechanisms, incompatible with LPWAN
characteristics. In most of the cases, IPv6/UDP headers are reduced
to a small context identifier.
The SCHC header compression mechanism is independent of the specific
LPWAN technology over which it will be used.
LPWAN technologies are also characterized, among others, by a very
reduced data unit and/or payload size [I-D.ietf-lpwan-overview].
However, some of these technologies do not support layer two
fragmentation, therefore the only option for them to support the IPv6
MTU requirement of 1280 bytes [RFC2460] is the use of a fragmentation
protocol at the adaptation layer below IPv6. This draft defines also
a fragmentation functionality to support the IPv6 MTU requirement
over LPWAN technologies. Such functionality has been designed under
the assumption that data unit reordering will not happen between the
entity performing fragmentation and the entity performing reassembly.
2. LPWAN Architecture
LPWAN technologies have similar architectures but different
terminology. We can identify different types of entities in a
typical LPWAN network, see Figure 1:
o Devices (Dev) are the end-devices or hosts (e.g. sensors,
actuators, etc.). There can be a high density of devices per radio
gateway.
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o The Radio Gateway (RGW), which is the end point of the constrained
link.
o The Network Gateway (NGW) is the interconnection node between the
Radio Gateway and the Internet.
o LPWAN-AAA Server, which controls the user authentication and the
applications.
o Application Server (App)
+------+
() () () | |LPWAN-|
() () () () / \ +---------+ | AAA |
() () () () () () / \=====| ^ |===|Server| +-----------+
() () () | | <--|--> | +------+ |APPLICATION|
() () () () / \==========| v |=============| (App) |
() () () / \ +---------+ +-----------+
Dev Radio Gateways NGW
Figure 1: LPWAN Architecture
3. Terminology
This section defines the terminology and acronyms used in this
document.
o All-0. Fragment format for the last frame of a window.
o All-1. Fragment format for the last frame of a packet.
o All-0 empty. Fragment format without payload for requesting the
Bitmap when the Retransmission Timer expires in a window that is
not the last one for a fragmented packet transmission.
o All-1 empty. Fragment format without payload for requesting the
Bitmap when the Retransmission Timer expires in the last window.
o App: LPWAN Application. An application sending/receiving IPv6
packets to/from the Device.
o APP-IID: Application Interface Identifier. Second part of the
IPv6 address to identify the application interface
o Bi: Bidirectional, a rule entry that applies in both directions.
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o C: Checked bit. Used in an acknowledgment (ACK) header to
determine when the MIC is correct (1) or not (0).
o CDA: Compression/Decompression Action. An action that is
performed for both functionalities to compress a header field or
to recover its original value in the decompression phase.
o Context: A set of rules used to compress/decompress headers
o Dev: Device. A Node connected to the LPWAN. A Dev may implement
SCHC.
o Dev-IID: Device Interface Identifier. Second part of the IPv6
address to identify the device interface
o DI: Direction Indicator is a differentiator for matching in order
to be able to have different values for both sides.
o DTag: Datagram Tag is a fragmentation header field that is set to
the same value for all fragments carrying the same IPv6 datagram.
o Dw: Down Link direction for compression, from SCHC C/D to Dev
o FCN: Fragment Compressed Number is a fragmentation header field
that carries an efficient representation of a larger-sized
fragment number.
o FID: Field Identifier is an index to describe the header fields in
the Rule
o FL: Field Length is a value to identify if the field is fixed or
variable length.
o FP: Field Position is a value that is used to identify each
instance a field appears in the header.
o IID: Interface Identifier. See the IPv6 addressing architecture
[RFC7136]
o Inactivity Timer. A timer to end the fragmentation state machine
when there is an error and there is no possibility to continue an
on-going fragmented packet transmission.
o MIC: Message Integrity Check. A fragmentation header field
computed over an IPv6 packet before fragmentation, used for error
detection after IPv6 packet reassembly.
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o MO: Matching Operator. An operator used to match a value
contained in a header field with a value contained in a Rule.
o Retransmission Timer. A timer used by the fragment sender during
an on-going fragmented packet transmission to detect possible link
errors when waiting for a possible incoming ACK.
o Rule: A set of header field values.
o Rule entry: A row in the rule that describes a header field.
o Rule ID: An identifier for a rule, SCHC C/D, and Dev share the
same Rule ID for a specific flow. A set of Rule IDs are used to
support fragmentation functionality.
o SCHC C/D: Static Context Header Compression Compressor/
Decompressor. A process in the network to achieve compression/
decompressing headers. SCHC C/D uses SCHC rules to perform
compression and decompression.
o TV: Target value. A value contained in the Rule that will be
matched with the value of a header field.
o Up: Up Link direction for compression, from Dev to SCHC C/D.
o W: Window bit. A fragment header field used in Window mode (see
section 5), which carries the same value for all fragments of a
window.
o Window: A subset of the fragments needed to carry a packet (see
section 5)
4. Static Context Header Compression
Static Context Header Compression (SCHC) avoids context
synchronization, which is the most bandwidth-consuming operation in
other header compression mechanisms such as RoHC [RFC5795]. Based on
the fact that the nature of data flows is highly predictable in LPWAN
networks, some static contexts may be stored on the Device (Dev).
The contexts must be stored in both ends, and it can either be
learned by a provisioning protocol or by out of band means or it can
be pre-provisioned, etc. The way the context is learned on both
sides are out of the scope of this document.
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Dev App
+--------------+ +--------------+
|APP1 APP2 APP3| |APP1 APP2 APP3|
| | | |
| UDP | | UDP |
| IPv6 | | IPv6 |
| | | |
| SCHC C/D | | |
| (context) | | |
+-------+------+ +-------+------+
| +--+ +----+ +---------+ .
+~~ |RG| === |NGW | === |SCHC C/D |... Internet ..
+--+ +----+ |(context)|
+---------+
Figure 2: Architecture
Figure 2 represents the architecture for compression/decompression,
it is based on [I-D.ietf-lpwan-overview] terminology. The Device is
sending applications flows using IPv6 or IPv6/UDP protocols. These
flows are compressed by a Static Context Header Compression
Compressor/Decompressor (SCHC C/D) to reduce headers size. The
resulting information is sent to a layer two (L2) frame to a LPWAN
Radio Network (RG) which forwards the frame to a Network Gateway
(NGW). The NGW sends the data to an SCHC C/D for decompression which
shares the same rules with the Dev. The SCHC C/D can be located on
the Network Gateway (NGW) or in another place as long as a tunnel is
established between the NGW and the SCHC C/D. The SCHC C/D in both
sides must share the same set of Rules. After decompression, the
packet can be sent on the Internet to one or several LPWAN
Application Servers (App).
The SCHC C/D process is bidirectional, so the same principles can be
applied in the other direction.
4.1. SCHC Rules
The main idea of the SCHC compression scheme is to send the Rule id
to the other end instead of sending known field values. This Rule id
identifies a rule that matches as much as possible the original
packet values. When a value is known by both ends, it is not
necessary to send it through the LPWAN network.
The context contains a list of rules (cf. Figure 3). Each Rule
contains itself a list of fields descriptions composed of a field
identifier (FID), a field length (FL), a field position (FP), a
direction indicator (DI), a target value (TV), a matching operator
(MO) and a Compression/Decompression Action (CDA).
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/-----------------------------------------------------------------\
| Rule N |
/-----------------------------------------------------------------\|
| Rule i ||
/-----------------------------------------------------------------\||
| (FID) Rule 1 |||
|+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
||Field 1|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act||||
|+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
||Field 2|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act||||
|+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
||... |..|..|..| ... | ... | ... ||||
|+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+||/
||Field N|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act|||
|+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|/
| |
\-----------------------------------------------------------------/
Figure 3: Compression/Decompression Context
The Rule does not describe the original packet format which must be
known from the compressor/decompressor. The rule just describes the
compression/decompression behavior for the header fields. In the
rule, the description of the header field should be performed in the
format packet order.
The Rule also describes the compressed header fields which are
transmitted regarding their position in the rule which is used for
data serialization on the compressor side and data deserialization on
the decompressor side.
The Context describes the header fields and its values with the
following entries:
o A Field ID (FID) is a unique value to define the header field.
o A Field Length (FL) is the length of the field that can be of
fixed length as in IPv6 or UDP headers or variable length as in
CoAP options. Fixed length fields shall be represented by its
actual value in bits. Variable length fields shall be represented
by a function or a variable.
o A Field Position (FP) indicating if several instances of the field
exist in the headers which one is targeted. The default position
is 1
o A direction indicator (DI) indicating the packet direction. Three
values are possible:
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* UPLINK (Up) when the field or the value is only present in
packets sent by the Dev to the App,
* DOWNLINK (Dw) when the field or the value is only present in
packet sent from the App to the Dev and
* BIDIRECTIONAL (Bi) when the field or the value is present
either upstream or downstream.
o A Target Value (TV) is the value used to make the comparison with
the packet header field. The Target Value can be of any type
(integer, strings, etc.). For instance, it can be a single value
or a more complex structure (array, list, etc.), such as a JSON or
a CBOR structure.
o A Matching Operator (MO) is the operator used to make the
comparison between the Field Value and the Target Value. The
Matching Operator may require some parameters. MO is only used
during the compression phase.
o A Compression Decompression Action (CDA) is used to describe the
compression and the decompression process. The CDA may require
some parameters, CDA are used in both compression and
decompression phases.
4.2. Rule ID
Rule IDs are sent between both compression/decompression elements.
The size of the Rule ID is not specified in this document, it is
implementation-specific and can vary regarding the LPWAN technology,
the number of flows, among others.
Some values in the Rule ID space are reserved for other
functionalities than header compression as fragmentation. (See
Section 5).
Rule IDs are specific to a Dev. Two Devs may use the same Rule ID for
different header compression. To identify the correct Rule ID, the
SCHC C/D needs to combine the Rule ID with the Dev L2 identifier to
find the appropriate Rule.
4.3. Packet processing
The compression/decompression process follows several steps:
o compression Rule selection: The goal is to identify which Rule(s)
will be used to compress the packet's headers. When doing
compression in the NGW side the SCHC C/D needs to find the correct
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Rule to be used by identifying its Dev-ID and the Rule-ID. In the
Dev, only the Rule-ID may be used. The next step is to choose the
fields by their direction, using the direction indicator (DI), so
the fields that do not correspond to the appropriated DI will be
excluded. Next, then the fields are identified according to their
field identifier (FID) and field position (FP). If the field
position does not correspond, then the Rule is not used and the
SCHC take next Rule. Once the DI and the FP correspond to the
header information, each field's value is then compared to the
corresponding target value (TV) stored in the Rule for that
specific field using the matching operator (MO). If all the
fields in the packet's header satisfy all the matching operators
(MOs) of a Rule (i.e. all results are True), the fields of the
header are then processed according to the Compression/
Decompression Actions (CDAs) and a compressed header is obtained.
Otherwise, the next rule is tested. If no eligible rule is found,
then the header must be sent without compression, in which case
the fragmentation process must be required.
o sending: The Rule ID is sent to the other end followed by the
information resulting from the compression of header fields,
directly followed by the payload. The product of field
compression is sent in the order expressed in the Rule for the
matching fields. The way the Rule ID is sent depends on the
specific LPWAN layer two technology and will be specified in a
specific document and is out of the scope of this document. For
example, it can be either included in a Layer 2 header or sent in
the first byte of the L2 payload. (Cf. Figure 4).
o decompression: In both directions, the receiver identifies the
sender through its device-id (e.g. MAC address) and selects the
appropriate Rule through the Rule ID. This Rule gives the
compressed header format and associates these values to the header
fields. It applies the CDA action to reconstruct the original
header fields. The CDA application order can be different from
the order given by the Rule. For instance, Compute-* may be
applied at the end, after all the other CDAs.
If after using SCHC compression and adding the payload to the L2
frame the datagram is not multiple of 8 bits, padding may be used.
+--- ... --+-------------- ... --------------+-----------+--...--+
| Rule ID |Compressed Hdr Fields information| payload |padding|
+--- ... --+-------------- ... --------------+-----------+--...--+
Figure 4: LPWAN Compressed Format Packet
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4.4. Matching operators
Matching Operators (MOs) are functions used by both SCHC C/D
endpoints involved in the header compression/decompression. They are
not typed and can be applied indifferently to integer, string or any
other data type. The result of the operation can either be True or
False. MOs are defined as follows:
o equal: A field value in a packet matches with a TV in a Rule if
they are equal.
o ignore: No check is done between a field value in a packet and a
TV in the Rule. The result of the matching is always true.
o MSB(length): A matching is obtained if the most significant bits
of the length field value bits of the header are equal to the TV
in the rule. The MSB Matching Operator needs a parameter,
indicating the number of bits, to proceed to the matching.
o match-mapping: The goal of mapping-sent is to reduce the size of a
field by allocating a shorter value. The Target Value contains a
list of values. Each value is identified by a short ID (or
index). This operator matches if a field value is equal to one of
those target values.
4.5. Compression Decompression Actions (CDA)
The Compression Decompression Action (CDA) describes the actions
taken during the compression of headers fields, and inversely, the
action taken by the decompressor to restore the original value.
/--------------------+-------------+----------------------------\
| Action | Compression | Decompression |
| | | |
+--------------------+-------------+----------------------------+
|not-sent |elided |use value stored in ctxt |
|value-sent |send |build from received value |
|mapping-sent |send index |value from index on a table |
|LSB(length) |send LSB |TV OR received value |
|compute-length |elided |compute length |
|compute-checksum |elided |compute UDP checksum |
|Deviid |elided |build IID from L2 Dev addr |
|Appiid |elided |build IID from L2 App addr |
\--------------------+-------------+----------------------------/
Figure 5: Compression and Decompression Functions
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Figure 5 summarizes the basics functions defined to compress and
decompress a field. The first column gives the action's name. The
second and third columns outline the compression/decompression
behavior.
Compression is done in the rule order and compressed values are sent
in that order in the compressed message. The receiver must be able
to find the size of each compressed field which can be given by the
rule or may be sent with the compressed header.
If the field is identified as being variable, then its size must be
sent first using the following coding:
o If the size is between 0 and 14 bytes it is sent using 4 bits.
o For values between 15 and 255, the first 4 bits sent are set to 1
and the size is sent using 8 bits.
o For higher value, the first 12 bits are set to 1 and the size is
sent on 2 bytes.
4.5.1. not-sent CDA
The not-sent function is generally used when the field value is
specified in the rule and therefore known by the both Compressor and
Decompressor. This action is generally used with the "equal" MO. If
MO is "ignore", there is a risk to have a decompressed field value
different from the compressed field.
The compressor does not send any value in the compressed header for
the field on which compression is applied.
The decompressor restores the field value with the target value
stored in the matched rule.
4.5.2. value-sent CDA
The value-sent action is generally used when the field value is not
known by both Compressor and Decompressor. The value is sent in the
compressed message header. Both Compressor and Decompressor must
know the size of the field, either implicitly (the size is known by
both sides) or explicitly in the compressed header field by
indicating the length. This function is generally used with the
"ignore" MO.
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4.5.3. mapping-sent
The mapping-sent is used to send a smaller index associated with the
list of values in the Target Value. This function is used together
with the "match-mapping" MO.
The compressor looks on the TV to find the field value and send the
corresponding index. The decompressor uses this index to restore the
field value.
The number of bits sent is the minimal size for coding all the
possible indexes.
4.5.4. LSB CDA
LSB action is used to avoid sending the known part of the packet
field header to the other end. This action is used together with the
"MSB" MO. A length can be specified in the rule to indicate how many
bits have to be sent. If the length is not specified, the number of
bits sent is the field length minus the bits' length specified in the
MSB MO.
The compressor sends the "length" Least Significant Bits. The
decompressor combines the value received with the Target Value.
If this action is made on a variable length field, the remaining size
in byte has to be sent before.
4.5.5. DEViid, APPiid CDA
These functions are used to process respectively the Dev and the App
Interface Identifiers (Deviid and Appiid) of the IPv6 addresses.
Appiid CDA is less common since current LPWAN technologies frames
contain a single address.
The IID value may be computed from the Device ID present in the Layer
2 header. The computation is specific for each LPWAN technology and
may depend on the Device ID size.
In the downstream direction, these CDA may be used to determine the
L2 addresses used by the LPWAN.
4.5.6. Compute-*
These classes of functions are used by the decompressor to compute
the compressed field value based on received information. Compressed
fields are elided during compression and reconstructed during
decompression.
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o compute-length: compute the length assigned to this field. For
instance, regarding the field ID, this CDA may be used to compute
IPv6 length or UDP length.
o compute-checksum: compute a checksum from the information already
received by the SCHC C/D. This field may be used to compute UDP
checksum.
5. Fragmentation
5.1. Overview
In LPWAN technologies, the L2 data unit size typically varies from
tens to hundreds of bytes. If after applying SCHC header compression
or when SCHC header compression is not possible the entire IPv6
datagram fits within a single L2 data unit, the fragmentation
mechanism is not used and the packet is sent. Otherwise, the
datagram SHALL be broken into fragments.
LPWAN technologies impose some strict limitations on traffic, (e.g.)
devices are sleeping most of the time and may receive data during a
short period of time after transmission to preserve battery. To
adapt the SCHC fragmentation to the capabilities of LPWAN
technologies, it is desirable to enable optional fragment
retransmission and to allow a gradation of fragment delivery
reliability. This document does not make any decision with regard to
which fragment delivery reliability option(s) will be used over a
specific LPWAN technology.
An important consideration is that LPWAN networks typically follow a
the star topology, and therefore data unit reordering is not expected
in such networks. This specification assumes that reordering will
not happen between the entity performing fragmentation and the entity
performing reassembly. This assumption allows to reduce complexity
and overhead of the fragmentation mechanism.
5.2. Functionalities
This subsection describes the different fields in the fragmentation
header frames (see the related formats in Section 5.4), as well as
the tools that are used to enable the fragmentation functionalities
defined in this document, and the different reliability options
supported.
o Rule ID. The Rule ID is present in the fragment header and in the
ACK header format. The Rule ID in a fragment header is used to
identify that a fragment is being carried, the fragmentation
delivery reliability option used and it may indicate the window
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size in use (if any). The Rule ID in the fragmentation header
also allows to interleave non-fragmented IPv6 datagrams with
fragments that carry a larger IPv6 datagram. The Rule ID in an
ACK allows to identify that the message is an ACK.
o Fragment Compressed Number (FCN). The FCN is included in all
fragments. This field can be understood as a truncated, efficient
representation of a larger-sized fragment number, and does not
carry an absolute fragment number. There are two FCN reserved
values that are used for controlling the fragmentation process, as
described next. The FCN value with all the bits equal to 1 (All-
1) denotes the last fragment of a packet. And the FCN value with
all the bits equal to 0 (All-0) denotes the last fragment of a
window (when such window is not the last one of the packet) in any
window mode or the fragments in No ACK mode. The rest of the FCN
values are assigned in a sequential and decreasing order, which
has the purpose to avoid possible ambiguity for the receiver that
might arise under certain conditions. In the fragments, this
field is an unsigned integer, with a size of N bits. In the No
ACK mode it is set to 1 bit (N=1). For the other reliability
options, it is recommended to use a number of bits (N) equal to or
greater than 3. Nevertheless, the apropriate value will be
defined in the corresponding technology documents. The FCN MUST
be set sequentially decreasing from the highest FCN in the window
(which will be used for the first fragment), and MUST wrap from 0
back to the highest FCN in the window.
For windows that are not the last one from a fragmented packet,
the FCN for the last fragment in such windows is an All-0. This
indicates that the window is finished and communication proceeds
according to the reliability option in use. The FCN for the last
fragment in the last window is an All-1. It is also important to
note that, for No ACK mode or N=1, the last fragment of the packet
will carry a FCN equal to 1, while all previous fragments will
carry a FCN of 0.
o Datagram Tag (DTag). The DTag field, if present, is set to the
same value for all fragments carrying the same IPv6 datagram.
This field allows to interleave fragments that correspond to
different IPv6 datagrams. In the fragment formats the size of the
DTag field is T bits, which may be set to a value greater than or
equal to 0 bits. DTag MUST be set sequentially increasing from 0
to 2^T - 1, and MUST wrap back from 2^T - 1 to 0. In the ACK
format, DTag carries the same value as the DTag field in the
fragments for which this ACK is intended.
o W (window): W is a 1-bit field. This field carries the same value
for all fragments of a window, and it is complemented for the next
window. The initial value for this field is 0. In the ACK
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format, this field also has a size of 1 bit. In all ACKs, the W
bit carries the same value as the W bit carried by the fragments
whose reception is being positively or negatively acknowledged by
the ACK.
o Message Integrity Check (MIC). This field, which has a size of M
bits, is computed by the sender over the complete packet (i.e. a
SCHC compressed or an uncompressed IPv6 packet) before
fragmentation. The MIC allows the receiver to check errors in the
reassembled packet, while it also enables compressing the UDP
checksum by use of SCHC compression. The CRC32 as 0xEDB88320 is
recommended as the default algorithm for computing the MIC.
Nevertheless, other algorithm MAY be mandated in the corresponding
technology documents (e.g. technology-specific profiles).
o C (MIC checked): C is a 1-bit field. This field is used in the
ACK format packets to report the outcome of the MIC check, i.e.
whether the reassembled packet was correctly received or not.
o Retransmission Timer. It is used by a fragment sender after the
transmission of a window to detect a transmission error of the ACK
corresponding to this window. Depending on the reliability
option, it will lead to a request for an ACK retransmission on
ACK-Always or it will trigger the next window on ACK-on-error.
The dureation of this timer is not defined in this document and
must be defined in the corresponding technology documents (e.g.
technology-specific profiles).
o Inactivity Timer. This timer is used by a fragment receiver to
detect when there is a problem in the transmission of fragments
and the receiver does not get any fragment during a period of time
or a number of packets in a period of time. When this happens, an
Abort message needs to be sent. Initially, and each time a
fragment is received the timer is reinitialized. The duration of
this timer is not defined in this document and must be defined in
the specific technology document (e.g. technology-specific
profiles).
o Attempts. It is a counter used to request a missing ACK, and in
consequence to determine when an Abort is needed, because there
are recurrent fragment transmission errors, whose maximum value is
MAX_ACK_REQUESTS. The default value of MAX_ACK_REQUESTS is not
stated in this document, and it is expected to be defined in other
documents (e.g. technology- specific profiles). The Attempts
counter is defined per window, it will be initialized each time a
new window is used.
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o Bitmap. The Bitmap is a sequence of bits carried in an ACK for a
given window. Each bit in the Bitmap corresponds to a fragment of
the current window, and provides feedback on whether the fragment
has been received or not. The right-most position on the Bitmap
is used to report whether the All-0 or All-1 fragments have been
received or not. Feedback for a fragment with the highest FCN
value is provided by the left-most position in the Bitmap. In the
Bitmap, a bit set to 1 indicates that the corresponding FCN
fragment has been correctly sent and received. However, the
sending format of the Bitmap will be truncated until a byte
boundary where the last error is given. However, when all the
Bitmap is transmitted, it may be truncated, see more details in
Section 5.5.3
o Abort. In case of error or when the Inactivity timer expires or
MAX_ACK_REQUESTS is reached the sender or the receiver may use the
Abort frames. When the receiver needs to abort the on-going
fragmented packet transmission, it uses the ACK Abort format
packet with all the bits set to 1. When the sender needs to abort
the transmission it will use the All-1 Abort format, this fragment
is not acked.
o Padding (P). Padding will be used to align the last byte of a
fragment with a byte boundary. The number of bits used for
padding is not defined and depends on the size of the Rule ID,
DTag and FCN fields, and on the layer two payload size.
5.3. Delivery Reliability options
This specification defines the following three fragment delivery
reliability options:
o No ACK. No ACK is the simplest fragment delivery reliability
option. The receiver does not generate overhead in the form of
acknowledgments (ACKs). However, this option does not enhance
delivery reliability beyond that offered by the underlying LPWAN
technology. In the No ACK option, the receiver MUST NOT issue
ACKs.
o Window mode - ACK always (ACK-Always).
The ACK-always option provides flow control. In addition, this
option is able to handle long bursts of lost fragments, since
detection of such events can be done before the end of the IPv6
packet transmission, as long as the window size is short enough.
However, such benefit comes at the expense of ACK use. In ACK-
always, an ACK is transmitted by the fragment receiver after a
window of fragments has been sent. A window of fragments is a
subset of the full set of fragments needed to carry an IPv6
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packet. In this mode, the ACK informs the sender about received
and/or missed fragments from the window of fragments. Upon
receipt of an ACK that informs about any lost fragments, the
sender retransmits the lost fragments. When an ACK is not
received by the fragment sender, the latter sends an ACK request
using the All-1 empty fragment.
The maximum number of ACK requests is MAX_ACK_REQUESTS.
o Window mode - ACK-on-error (ACK-on-error). The ACK-on-error
option is suitable for links offering relatively low L2 data unit
loss probability. This option reduces the number of ACKs
transmitted by the fragment receiver. This may be especially
beneficial in asymmetric scenarios, e.g. where fragmented data are
sent uplink and the underlying LPWAN technology downlink capacity
or message rate is lower than the uplink one.
In ACK-on-error, an ACK is transmitted by the fragment receiver
after a window of fragments have been sent, only if at least one
of the fragments in the window has been lost. In this mode, the
ACK informs the sender about received and/or missed fragments from
the window of fragments. Upon receipt of an ACK that informs
about any lost fragments, the sender retransmits the lost
fragments. However, if an ACK is lost, the sender assumes that
all fragments covered by the ACK have been successfully delivered,
and the receiver will abort the on-going fragmented packet
transmission. One exception to this behavior is in the last
window, where the receiver MUST transmit an ACK, even if all the
fragments in the last window have been correctly received.
The same reliability option MUST be used for all fragments of a
packet. It is up to implementers and/or representatives of the
underlying LPWAN technology to decide which reliability option to use
and whether the same reliability option applies to all IPv6 packets
or not. Note that the reliability option to be used is not
necessarily tied to the particular characteristics of the underlying
L2 LPWAN technology (e.g. the No ACK reliability option may be used
on top of an L2 LPWAN technology with symmetric characteristics for
uplink and downlink).
This document does not make any decision as to which fragment
delivery reliability option(s) are supported by a specific LPWAN
technology.
Examples of the different reliability options described are provided
in Appendix B.
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5.4. Fragmentation Frame Formats
This section defines the fragment format, the All-0 and All-1 frame
formats, the ACK format and the Abort frame formats.
5.4.1. Fragment format
A fragment comprises a fragment header, a fragment payload, and
Padding bits (if any). A fragment conforms to the format shown in
Figure 6. The fragment payload carries a subset of either a SCHC
header or an IPv6 header or the original IPv6 packet data payload. A
fragment is the payload in the L2 protocol data unit (PDU).
+-----------------+-----------------------+---------+
| Fragment Header | Fragment payload | padding |
+-----------------+-----------------------+---------+
Figure 6: Fragment format.
In the No ACK option, fragments except the last one SHALL contain the
format as defined in Figure 7. The total size of the fragment header
is R bits.
<------------ R ---------->
<--T--> <--N-->
+-- ... --+- ... -+- ... -+---...---+-+
| Rule ID | DTag | FCN | payload |P|
+-- ... --+- ... -+- ... -+---...---+-+
Figure 7: Fragment Format for Fragments except the Last One, No ACK
option
In any of the Window mode options, fragments except the last one
SHALL contain the fragmentation format as defined in Figure 8. The
total size of the fragment header in this format is R bits. .
<------------ R ---------->
<--T--> 1 <--N-->
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---...---+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| FCN | payload |P|
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---...---+-+
Figure 8: Fragment Format for Fragments except the Last One, Window
mode
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5.4.2. ACK format
The format of an ACK that acknowledges a window that is not the last
one (denoted as ALL-0 window) is shown in Figure 9.
<-------- R ------->
<- T -> 1
+---- ... --+-... -+-+----- ... ---+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| Bitmap | (no payload)
+---- ... --+-... -+-+----- ... ---+
Figure 9: ACK format for All-0 windows
To acknowledge the last window of a packet (denoted as All-1 window),
a C bit (i.e. MIC checked) following the W bit is set to 1 to
indicate that the MIC check computed by the receiver matches the MIC
present in the All-1 fragment. If the MIC check fails, the C bit is
set to 0 and the Bitmap for the All-1 window follows.
<-------- R -------> <- byte boundary ->
<- T -> 1 1
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W|1| (MIC correct)
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+------- ... -------+
| Rule ID | DTag |W|0| Bitmap | (MIC Incorrect)
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+------- ... -------+
C
Figure 10: Format of an ACK for All-1 windows
5.4.3. All-1 and All-0 formats
The All-0 format is used for the last fragment of a window that is
not the last window of the packet.
<------------ R ------------>
<- T -> 1 <- N ->
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+--- ... ---+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| 0..0 | payload |
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+--- ... ---+
Figure 11: All-0 fragment format
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The All-0 empty fragment format is used by a sender to request an ACK
in ACK-Always mode
<------------ R ------------>
<- T -> 1 <- N ->
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| 0..0 | (no payload)
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+
Figure 12: All-0 empty fragment format
In the No ACK option, the last fragment of an IPv6 datagram SHALL
contain a fragment header that conforms to the format shown in
Figure 13. The total size of this fragment header is R+M bits.
<------------- R ---------->
<- T -> <-N-><----- M ----->
+---- ... ---+- ... -+-----+---- ... ----+---...---+
| Rule ID | DTag | 1 | MIC | payload |
+---- ... ---+- ... -+-----+---- ... ----+---...---+
Figure 13: All-1 Fragment Format for the Last Fragment, No ACK option
In any of the Window modes, the last fragment of an IPv6 datagram
SHALL contain a fragment header that conforms to the format shown in
Figure 14. The total size of the fragment header in this format is
R+M bits.
<------------ R ------------>
<- T -> 1 <- N -> <---- M ----->
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---- ... ----+---...---+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| 11..1 | MIC | payload |
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---- ... ----+---...---+
(FCN)
Figure 14: All-1 Fragment Format for the Last Fragment, Window mode
In either ACK-Always or ACK-on-error, in order to request a
retransmission of the ACK for the All-1 window, the fragment sender
uses the format shown in Figure 15. The total size of the fragment
header in this format is R+M bits.
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<------------ R ------------>
<- T -> 1 <- N -> <---- M ----->
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---- ... ----+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| 1..1 | MIC | (no payload)
+-- ... --+- ... -+-+- ... -+---- ... ----+
Figure 15: All-1 for Retries format, also called All-1 empty
The values for R, N, T and M are not specified in this document, and
have to be determined in other documents (e.g. technology-specific
profile documents).
5.4.4. Abort formats
The All-1 Abort and the ACK abort messages have the following
formats.
<------ byte boundary ------><--- 1 byte --->
+--- ... ---+- ... -+-+-...-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| FCN | FF | (no MIC & no payload)
+--- ... ---+- ... -+-+-...-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 16: All-1 Abort format
<------ byte boundary -----><--- 1 byte --->
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W| 1..1| FF |
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 17: ACK Abort format
5.5. Baseline mechanism
The fragment receiver needs to identify all the fragments that belong
to a given IPv6 datagram. To this end, the receiver SHALL use:
o The sender's L2 source address (if present),
o The destination's L2 address (if present),
o Rule ID and
o DTag (the latter, if present).
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Then, the fragment receiver may determine the fragment delivery
reliability option that is used for this fragment based on the Rule
ID field in that fragment.
Upon receipt of a link fragment, the receiver starts constructing the
original unfragmented packet. It uses the FCN and the order of
arrival of each fragment to determine the location of the individual
fragments within the original unfragmented packet. A fragment
payload may carry bytes from a SCHC compressed IPv6 header, an
uncompressed IPv6 header or an IPv6 datagram data payload. An
unfragmented packet could be a SCHC compressed or an uncompressed
IPv6 packet (header and data). For example, the receiver may place
the fragment payload within a payload datagram reassembly buffer at
the location determined from: the FCN, the arrival order of the
fragments, and the fragment payload sizes. In Window mode, the
fragment receiver also uses the W bit in the received fragments.
Note that the size of the original, unfragmented packet cannot be
determined from fragmentation headers.
Fragmentation functionality uses the FCN value, which has a length of
N bits. The All-1 and All-0 FCN values are used to control the
fragmentation transmission. The FCN will be assigned sequentially in
a decreasing order starting from 2^N-2, i.e. the highest possible FCN
value depending on the FCN number of bits, but excluding the All-1
value. In all modes, the last fragment of a packet must contains a
MIC which is used to check if there are errors or missing fragments,
and must use the corresponding All-1 fragment format. Also note
that, a fragment with an All-0 format is considered the last fragment
of the current window.
If the recipient receives the last fragment of a datagram (All-1), it
checks for the integrity of the reassembled datagram, based on the
MIC received. In No ACK, if the integrity check indicates that the
reassembled datagram does not match the original datagram (prior to
fragmentation), the reassembled datagram MUST be discarded. In
Window mode, a MIC check is also performed by the fragment receiver
after reception of each subsequent fragment retransmitted after the
first MIC check.
5.5.1. No ACK
In the No ACK mode there is no feedback communication from the
fragment receiver. The sender will send the fragments of a packet
until the last one without any possibility to know if errors or a
losses have occurred. As in this mode there is not a need to
identify specific fragments a one-bit FCN is used, therefore FCN
All-0 will be used in all fragments except the last one. The latter
will carry an All-1 FCN and will also carry the MIC. The receiver
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will wait for fragments and will set the Inactivity timer. The No
ACK mode will use the MIC contained in the last fragment to check
error. When the Inactivity Timer expires or when the MIC check
indicates that the reassembled packet does not match the original
one, the receiver will release all resources allocated to reassembly
of the packet. The initial value of the Inactivity Timer will be
determined based on the characteristics of the underlying LPWAN
technology and will be defined in other documents (e.g. technology-
specific profile documents).
5.5.2. The Window modes
In Window modes, a jumping window protocol uses two windows
alternatively, identified as 0 and 1. A fragment with all FCN bits
set to 0 (i.e. an All-0 fragment) indicates that the window is over
(i.e. the fragment is the last one of the window) and allows to
switch from one window to the next one. The All-1 FCN in a fragment
indicates that it is the last fragment of the packet being
transmitted and therefore there will not be another window for the
packet.
The Window mode offers two different reliability option modes: ACK-
on-error and ACK-always.
5.5.2.1. ACK-Always
In ACK-Always, the sender sends fragments by using the two-jumping
window procedure. A delay between each fragment can be added to
respect regulation rules or constraints imposed by the applications.
Each time a fragment is sent, the FCN is decreased by one. When the
FCN reaches value 0 and there are more fragments to be sent, an All-0
fragment is sent and the Retransmission Timer is set. The sender
waits for an ACK to know if transmission errors have occurred. Then,
the receiver sends an ACK reporting whether any fragments have been
lost or not by setting the corresponding bits in the Bitmap,
otherwise, an ACK without Bitmap will be sent, allowing transmission
of a new window. When the last fragment of the packet is sent, an
All-1 fragment (which includes a MIC) is used. In that case, the
sender sets the Retransmission Timer to wait for the ACK
corresponding to the last window. During this period, the sender
starts listening to the radio and starts the Retransmission Timer,
which needs to be dimensioned based on the received window available
for the LPWAN technology in use. If the Retransmission Timer
expires, an empty All-0 (or an empty All-1 if the last fragment has
been sent) fragment is sent to ask the receiver to resend its ACK.
The window number is not changed.
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When the sender receives an ACK, it checks the W bit carried by the
ACK. Any ACK carrying an unexpected W bit is discarded. If the W
bit value of the received ACK is correct, the sender analyzes the
received Bitmap. If all the fragments sent during the window have
been well received, and if at least one more fragment needs to be
sent, the sender moves its sending window to the next window value
and sends the next fragments. If no more fragments have to be sent,
then the fragmented packet transmission is finished.
However, if one or more fragments have not been received as per the
ACK (i.e. the corresponding bits are not set in the Bitmap) then the
sender resends the missing fragments. When all missing fragments
have been retransmitted, the sender starts the Retransmission Timer
(even if an All-0 or an All-1 has not been sent during the
retransmission) and waits for an ACK. Upon receipt of the ACK, if
one or more fragments have not yet been received, the counter
Attempts is increased and the sender resends the missing fragments
again. When Attempts reaches MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the sender aborts the
on-going fragmented packet transmission by sending an Abort message
and releases any resources for transmission of the packet. The
sender also aborts an on-going fragmented packet transmission when a
failed MIC check is reported by the receiver.
On the other hand, at the beginning, the receiver side expects to
receive window 0. Any fragment received but not belonging to the
current window is discarded. All fragments belonging to the correct
window are accepted, and the actual fragment number managed by the
receiver is computed based on the FCN value. The receiver prepares
the Bitmap to report the correctly received and the missing fragments
for the current window. After each fragment is received the receiver
initializes the Inactivity timer, if the Inactivity Timer expires the
transmission is aborted.
When an All-0 fragment is received, it indicates that all the
fragments have been sent in the current window. Since the sender is
not obliged to always send a full window, some fragment number not
set in the receiver memory may not correspond to losses. The
receiver sends the corresponding ACK, the Inactivity Timer is set and
the transmission of the next window by the sender can start.
If an All-0 fragment has been received and all fragments of the
current window have also been received, the receiver then expects a
new Window and waits for the next fragment. Upon receipt of a
fragment, if the window value has not changed, the received fragments
are part of a retransmission. A receiver that has already received a
fragment should discard it, otherwise, it updates the Bitmap. If all
the bits of the Bitmap are set to one, the receiver may send an ACK
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without waiting for an All-0 fragment and the Inactivity Timer is
initialized.
On the other hand, if the window value of the next received fragment
is set to the next expected window value, this means that the sender
has received a correct Bitmap reporting that all fragments have been
received. The receiver then updates the value of the next expected
window.
If the receiver receives an All-0 fragment, the sender may send one
or more fragments per window. Otherwise, some fragments in the
window have been lost.
When an All-1 fragment is received, it indicates that the last
fragment of the packet has been sent. Since the last window is not
always full, the MIC will be used to detect if all fragments of the
packet have been received. A correct MIC indicates the end of the
transmission but the receiver must stay alive for an Inactivity Timer
period to answer to any empty All-1 fragments the sender may send if
ACKs sent by the receiver are lost. If the MIC is incorrect, some
fragments have been lost. The receiver sends the ACK regardless of
successful fragmented packet reception or not, the Inactitivity Timer
is set. In case of an incorrect MIC, the receiver waits for
fragments belonging to the same window. After MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the
receiver will abort the on-going fragmented packet transmission. The
receiver also Aborts upon Inactivity Timer expiration.
5.5.2.2. ACK-on-error
The ACK-on-error sender is similar to ACK-Always, the main difference
being that in ACK-on-error the ACK is not sent at the end of each
window but only when at least one fragment of the current window has
been lost (with the exception of the last window, see next
paragraph). In Ack-on-error, the Retransmission Timer expiration
will be considered as a positive acknowledgment. The Retransmission
Timer is set when sending an All-0 or an All-1 fragment. When the
All-1 fragment has been sent, then the on-going fragmented packet
transmission fragmentation is finished and the sender waits for the
last ACK. At the receiver side, when the All-1 fragment is sent and
the MIC check indicates successful packet reception, an ACK is also
sent to confirm the end of a correct transmission. If the
Retransmission Timer expires, an All-1 empty request for the last ACK
MUST be sent by the sender to complete the fragmented packet
transmission.
If the sender receives an ACK, it checks the window value. ACKs with
an unexpected window number are discarded. If the window number on
the received Bitmap is correct, the sender verifies if the receiver
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has received all fragments of the current window. When at least one
fragment has been lost, the counter Attempts is increased by one and
the sender resends the missing fragments again. When Attempts
reaches MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the sender sends an Abort message and
releases all resources for the on-going fragmented packet
transmission. When the retransmission of missing fragments is
finished, the sender starts listening for an ACK (even if an All-0 or
an All-1 has not been sent during the retransmission) and initializes
and starts the Retransmission Timer. After sending an All-1
fragment, the sender listens for an ACK, initializes Attempts, and
initializes and starts the Retransmission Timer. If the
Retransmission Timer expires, Attempts is increased by one and an
empty All-1 fragment is sent to request the ACK for the last window.
If Attempts reaches MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the on-going fragmented packet
transmission is aborted.
Unlike the sender, the receiver for ACK-on-error has a larger amount
of differences compared with ACK-Always. First, an ACK is not sent
unless there is a lost fragment or an unexpected behavior (with the
exception of the last window, where an ACK is always sent regardless
of fragment losses or not). The receiver starts by expecting
fragments from window 0 and maintains the information regarding which
fragments it receives. After receiving a fragment, the Inactivity
Timer is set, if no fragment has been received and the Inactivity
Timer expires the transmission is aborted.
Any fragment not belonging to the current window is discarded. The
actual fragment number is computed based on the FCN value. When an
All-0 fragment is received and all fragments have been received, the
receiver updates the expected window value.
If an All-0 fragment is received, even if another fragment is
missing, all fragments from the current window have been sent. Since
the sender is not obligated to send a full window, a fragment number
not used may not necessarily correspond to losses. As the receiver
does not know if the missing fragments are lost or not, it sends an
ACK and reinitialises the Inactivity Timer.
On the other hand, after receiving an All-0 fragment, the receiver
expects a new window and waits for the next fragment.
If the window value of the next fragment has not changed, the
received fragment is a retransmission. A receiver that has already
received a fragment should discard it. If all fragments of a window
(that is not the last one) have been received, the receiver does not
send an ACK. While the receiver waits for the next window and if the
window value is set to the next value, and if an All-1 fragment with
the next value window arrived the receiver aborts the on-going
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fragmented packet transmission, and it drops the fragments of the
aborted packet transmission.
If the receiver receives an All-1 fragment, this means that the
transmission should be finished. If the MIC is incorrect some
fragments have been lost. Regardless of fragment losses, the
receiver sends an ACK and initializes the Inactivity Timer.
Reception of an All-1 fragment indicates the last fragment of the
packet has been sent. Since the last window is not always full, the
MIC will be used to detect if all fragments of the window have been
received. A correct MIC check indicates the end of the fragmented
packet transmission. An ACK is sent by the fragment receiver. In
case of an incorrect MIC, the receiver waits for fragments belonging
to the same window or the expiration of the Inactivity Timer. The
latter will lead the receiver to abort the on-going fragmented packet
transmission.
5.5.3. Bitmap Optimization
The Bitmap is transmitted by a receiver as part of the ACK format
when there are some missing fragments in a window. An ACK message
may introduce padding at the end to align transmitted data to a byte
boundary. The first byte boundary includes one or more complete
bytes, depending on the size of Rule ID and DTag.
Note that the ACK sent in response to an All-1 fragment includes the
C bit. Therefore, the window size and thus the Bitmap size need to
be determined taking into account the available space in the layer
two frame payload, where there will be 1 bit less for an ACK sent in
response to an All-1 fragment than in other ACKs.
<---- Bitmap bits ---->
| Rule ID | DTag |W|C|0|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|
|--- byte boundary ----| 1 byte next | 1 byte next |
Figure 18: Bitmap
The Bitmap, when transmitted, MUST be optimized in size to reduce the
resulting frame size. The right-most bytes with all Bitmap bits set
to 1 MUST NOT be transmitted. As the receiver knows the Bitmap size,
it can reconstruct the original Bitmap without this optimization. In
the example Figure 19, the last 2 bytes of the Bitmap shown in
Figure 18 comprise all bits set to 1, therefore, the last 2 bytes of
the Bitmap are not sent.
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In the last window, when checked bit C value is 1, it means that the
received MIC matches the one computed by the receiver, and thus the
Bitmap is not sent. Otherwise, the Bitmap needs to be sent after the
C bit. Note that the introduction of a C bit may force to reduce the
number of fragments in a window to allow the bitmap to fit in a
frame.
<------- R ------->
<- T -> 1
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W|1|0|
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+
|---- byte boundary -----|
Figure 19: Bitmap transmitted fragment format
Figure 20 shows an example of an ACK (for N=3), where the Bitmap
indicates that the second and the fifth fragments have not been
correctly received.
<------ R ------>6 5 4 3 2 1 0 (*)
<- T -> 1
| Rule ID | DTag |W|1|0|1|1|0|1|all-0|padding| Bitmap (before tx)
|--- byte boundary ----| 1 byte next |
(*)=(FCN values indicating the order)
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W|1|0|1|1|0|1|1|P| transmitted Bitmap
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|--- byte boundary ----| 1 byte next |
Figure 20: Example of a Bitmap before transmission, and the
transmitted one, in any window except the last one, for N=3
Figure 21 shows an example of an ACK (for N=3), where the Bitmap
indicates that the MIC check has failed but there are no missing
fragments.
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<------- R -------> 6 5 4 3 2 1 7 (*)
<- T -> 1 1
| Rule ID | DTag |W|0|1|1|1|1|1|1|1|padding| Bitmap (before tx)
|---- byte boundary ----| 1 byte next | 1 byte next |
C
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+
| Rule ID | DTag |W|0|1| transmitted Bitmap
+---- ... --+-... -+-+-+-+
|---- byte boundary -----|
(*) = (FCN values indicating the order)
Figure 21: Example of the Bitmap in Window mode for the last window,
for N=3)
5.6. Supporting multiple window sizes
For ACK-Always or ACK-on-error, implementers may opt to support a
single window size or multiple window sizes. The latter, when
feasible, may provide performance optimizations. For example, a
large window size may be used for packets that need to be carried by
a large number of fragments. However, when the number of fragments
required to carry a packet is low, a smaller window size, and thus a
shorter Bitmap, may be sufficient to provide feedback on all
fragments. If multiple window sizes are supported, the Rule ID may
be used to signal the window size in use for a specific packet
transmission.
Note that the same window size MUST be used for the transmission of
all fragments that belong to a packet.
5.7. Downlink fragment transmission
In some LPWAN technologies, as part of energy-saving techniques,
downlink transmission is only possible immediately after an uplink
transmission. In order to avoid potentially high delay for
fragmented datagram transmission in the downlink, the fragment
receiver MAY perform an uplink transmission as soon as possible after
reception of a fragment that is not the last one. Such uplink
transmission may be triggered by the L2 (e.g. an L2 ACK sent in
response to a fragment encapsulated in a L2 frame that requires an L2
ACK) or it may be triggered from an upper layer.
For fragmented packet transmission in the downlink, and when ACK
Always is used, the fragment receiver MAY support timer-based ACK
retransmission. In this mechanism, the fragment receiver initializes
and starts a timer (the Inactivity Timer is used) after the
transmission of an ACK, except when the ACK is sent in response to
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the last fragment of a packet (All-1 fragment). In the latter case,
the fragment receiver does not start a timer after transmission of
the ACK.
If, after transmission of an ACK that is not an All-1 fragment, and
before expiration of the corresponding Inactivity timer, the fragment
receiver receives a fragment that belongs to the current window (e.g.
a missing fragment from the current window) or to the next window,
the Inactivity timer for the ACK is stopped. However, if the
Inactivity timer expires, the ACK is resent and the Inactivity timer
is reinitialized and restarted.
The default initial value for the Inactivity timer, as well as the
maximum number of retries for a specific ACK, denoted
MAX_ACK_RETRIES, are not defined in this document, and need to be
defined in other documents (e.g. technology-specific profiles). The
initial value of the Inactivity timer is expected to be greater than
that of the Retransmission timer, in order to make sure that a
(buffered) fragment to be retransmitted can find an opportunity for
that transmission.
When the fragment sender transmits the All-1 fragment, it initializes
and starts its retransmission timer to a long value (e.g. several
times the initial Inactivity timer). If an ACK is received before
expiration of this timer, the fragment sender retransmits any lost
fragments reported by the ACK, or if the ACK confirms successful
reception of all fragments of the last window, transmission of the
fragmented packet ends. If the timer expires, and no ACK has been
received since the start of the timer, the fragment sender assumes
that the All-1 fragment has been successfully received (and possibly,
the last ACK has been lost: this mechanism assumes that the
retransmission timer for the All-1 fragment is long enough to allow
several ACK retries if the All-1 fragment has not been received by
the fragment receiver, and it also assumes that it is unlikely that
several ACKs become all lost).
6. Padding management
SCHC header, either for compression, fragmentation or acknowledgment
does not preserve byte alignment. Since most of the LPWAN network
technologies payload is expressed in an integer number of bytes; the
sender will introduce at the end some padding bits while the receiver
must be able to eliminate them.
The algorithm for padding bit elimination for compressed or
fragmented frames is simple. Based on the following principle: * The
SCHC header is not aligned on a byte boundary, but its size in bits
is given by the rule.
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o The data size is variable, but always a multiple of 8 bits.
o Padding bits MUST never exceed 7 bits.
In that case, a receiver after decoding the SCHC header, must take
the maximum multiple of 8 bits as data. The remaining bits are
padding bits.
7. SCHC Compression for IPv6 and UDP headers
This section lists the different IPv6 and UDP header fields and how
they can be compressed.
7.1. IPv6 version field
This field always holds the same value. Therefore, the TV is 6, the
MO is "equal" and the "CDA "not-sent".
7.2. IPv6 Traffic class field
If the DiffServ field identified by the rest of the rule does not
vary and is known by both sides, the TV should contain this well-
known value, the MO should be "equal" and the CDA must be "not-sent.
If the DiffServ field identified by the rest of the rule varies over
time or is not known by both sides, then there are two possibilities
depending on the variability of the value: The first one is to do not
compressed the field and sends the original value. In the second,
where the values can be computed by sending only the LSB bits:
o TV is not set to any value, MO is set to "ignore" and CDA is set
to "value-sent"
o TV contains a stable value, MO is MSB(X) and CDA is set to LSB
7.3. Flow label field
If the Flow Label field identified by the rest of the rule does not
vary and is known by both sides, the TV should contain this well-
known value, the MO should be "equal" and the CDA should be "not-
sent".
If the Flow Label field identified by the rest of the rule varies
during time or is not known by both sides, there are two
possibilities depending on the variability of the value: The first
one is without compression and then the value is sent. In the
second, only part of the value is sent and the decompressor needs to
compute the original value:
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o TV is not set, MO is set to "ignore" and CDA is set to "value-
sent"
o TV contains a stable value, MO is MSB(X) and CDA is set to LSB
7.4. Payload Length field
If the LPWAN technology does not add padding, this field can be
elided for the transmission on the LPWAN network. The SCHC C/D
recomputes the original payload length value. The TV is not set, the
MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is "compute-IPv6-length".
If the payload length needs to be sent and does not need to be coded
in 16 bits, the TV can be set to 0x0000, the MO set to "MSB (16-s)"
and the CDA to "LSB". The 's' parameter depends on the expected
maximum packet length.
In other cases, the payload length field must be sent and the CDA is
replaced by "value-sent".
7.5. Next Header field
If the Next Header field identified by the rest of the rule does not
vary and is known by both sides, the TV should contain this Next
Header value, the MO should be "equal" and the CDA should be "not-
sent".
If the Next Header field identified by the rest of the rule varies
during time or is not known by both sides, then TV is not set, MO is
set to "ignore" and CDA is set to "value-sent". A matching-list may
also be used.
7.6. Hop Limit field
The End System is generally a device and does not forward packets.
Therefore, the Hop Limit value is constant. So, the TV is set with a
default value, the MO is set to "equal" and the CDA is set to "not-
sent".
Otherwise the value is sent on the LPWAN: TV is not set, MO is set to
ignore and CDA is set to "value-sent".
Note that the field behavior differs in upstream and downstream. In
upstream, since there is no IP forwarding between the Dev and the
SCHC C/D, the value is relatively constant. On the other hand, the
downstream value depends of Internet routing and may change more
frequently. One solution could be to use the Direction Indicator
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(DI) to distinguish both directions to elide the field in the
upstream direction and send the value in the downstream direction.
7.7. IPv6 addresses fields
As in 6LoWPAN [RFC4944], IPv6 addresses are splitted into two 64-bit
long fields; one for the prefix and one for the Interface Identifier
(IID). These fields should be compressed. To allow a single rule,
these values are identified by their role (DEV or APP) and not by
their position in the frame (source or destination). The SCHC C/D
must be aware of the traffic direction (upstream, downstream) to
select the appropriate field.
7.7.1. IPv6 source and destination prefixes
Both ends must be synchronized with the appropriate prefixes. For a
specific flow, the source and destination prefixes can be unique and
stored in the context. It can be either a link-local prefix or a
global prefix. In that case, the TV for the source and destination
prefixes contain the values, the MO is set to "equal" and the CDA is
set to "not-sent".
In case the rule allows several prefixes, mapping-list must be used.
The different prefixes are listed in the TV associated with a short
ID. The MO is set to "match-mapping" and the CDA is set to "mapping-
sent".
Otherwise the TV contains the prefix, the MO is set to "equal" and
the CDA is set to "value-sent".
7.7.2. IPv6 source and destination IID
If the DEV or APP IID are based on an LPWAN address, then the IID can
be reconstructed with information coming from the LPWAN header. In
that case, the TV is not set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA
is set to "DEViid" or "APPiid". Note that the LPWAN technology is
generally carrying a single device identifier corresponding to the
DEV. The SCHC C/D may also not be aware of these values.
If the DEV address has a static value that is not derived from an
IEEE EUI-64, then TV contains the actual Dev address value, the MO
operator is set to "equal" and the CDA is set to "not-sent".
If several IIDs are possible, then the TV contains the list of
possible IIDs, the MO is set to "match-mapping" and the CDA is set to
"mapping-sent".
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Otherwise the value variation of the IID may be reduced to few bytes.
In that case, the TV is set to the stable part of the IID, the MO is
set to "MSB" and the CDA is set to "LSB".
Finally, the IID can be sent on the LPWAN. In that case, the TV is
not set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set to "value-
sent".
7.8. IPv6 extensions
No extension rules are currently defined. They can be based on the
MOs and CDAs described above.
7.9. UDP source and destination port
To allow a single rule, the UDP port values are identified by their
role (DEV or APP) and not by their position in the frame (source or
destination). The SCHC C/D must be aware of the traffic direction
(upstream, downstream) to select the appropriate field. The
following rules apply for DEV and APP port numbers.
If both ends know the port number, it can be elided. The TV contains
the port number, the MO is set to "equal" and the CDA is set to "not-
sent".
If the port variation is on few bits, the TV contains the stable part
of the port number, the MO is set to "MSB" and the CDA is set to
"LSB".
If some well-known values are used, the TV can contain the list of
these values, the MO is set to "match-mapping" and the CDA is set to
"mapping-sent".
Otherwise the port numbers are sent on the LPWAN. The TV is not set,
the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set to "value-sent".
7.10. UDP length field
If the LPWAN technology does not introduce padding, the UDP length
can be computed from the received data. In that case, the TV is not
set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set to "compute-UDP-
length".
If the payload is small, the TV can be set to 0x0000, the MO set to
"MSB" and the CDA to "LSB".
On other cases, the length must be sent and the CDA is replaced by
"value-sent".
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7.11. UDP Checksum field
IPv6 mandates a checksum in the protocol above IP. Nevertheless, if
a more efficient mechanism such as L2 CRC or MIC is carried by or
over the L2 (such as in the LPWAN fragmentation process (see
Section 5)), the UDP checksum transmission can be avoided. In that
case, the TV is not set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set
to "compute-UDP-checksum".
In other cases, the checksum must be explicitly sent. The TV is not
set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDF is set to "value-sent".
8. Security considerations
8.1. Security considerations for header compression
A malicious header compression could cause the reconstruction of a
wrong packet that does not match with the original one, such
corruption may be detected with end-to-end authentication and
integrity mechanisms. Denial of Service may be produced but its
arise other security problems that may be solved with or without
header compression.
8.2. Security considerations for fragmentation
This subsection describes potential attacks to LPWAN fragmentation
and suggests possible countermeasures.
A node can perform a buffer reservation attack by sending a first
fragment to a target. Then, the receiver will reserve buffer space
for the IPv6 packet. Other incoming fragmented packets will be
dropped while the reassembly buffer is occupied during the reassembly
timeout. Once that timeout expires, the attacker can repeat the same
procedure, and iterate, thus creating a denial of service attack.
The (low) cost to mount this attack is linear with the number of
buffers at the target node. However, the cost for an attacker can be
increased if individual fragments of multiple packets can be stored
in the reassembly buffer. To further increase the attack cost, the
reassembly buffer can be splitted into fragment-sized buffer slots.
Once a packet is complete, it is processed normally. If buffer
overload occurs, a receiver can discard packets based on the sender
behavior, which may help identify which fragments have been sent by
an attacker.
In another type of attack, the malicious node is required to have
overhearing capabilities. If an attacker can overhear a fragment, it
can send a spoofed duplicate (e.g. with random payload) to the
destination. If the LPWAN technology does not support suitable
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protection (e.g. source authentication and frame counters to prevent
replay attacks), a receiver cannot distinguish legitimate from
spoofed fragments. Therefore, the original IPv6 packet will be
considered corrupt and will be dropped. To protect resource-
constrained nodes from this attack, it has been proposed to establish
a binding among the fragments to be transmitted by a node, by
applying content-chaining to the different fragments, based on
cryptographic hash functionality. The aim of this technique is to
allow a receiver to identify illegitimate fragments.
Further attacks may involve sending overlapped fragments (i.e.
comprising some overlapping parts of the original IPv6 datagram).
Implementers should make sure that the correct operation is not
affected by such event.
In Window mode - ACK on error, a malicious node may force a fragment
sender to resend a fragment a number of times, with the aim to
increase consumption of the fragment sender's resources. To this
end, the malicious node may repeatedly send a fake ACK to the
fragment sender, with a Bitmap that reports that one or more
fragments have been lost. In order to mitigate this possible attack,
MAX_FRAG_RETRIES may be set to a safe value which allows to limit the
maximum damage of the attack to an acceptable extent. However, note
that a high setting for MAX_FRAG_RETRIES benefits fragment delivery
reliability, therefore the trade-off needs to be carefully
considered.
9. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Dominique Barthel, Carsten Bormann, Philippe Clavier,
Eduardo Ingles Sanchez, Arunprabhu Kandasamy, Sergio Lopez Bernal,
Antony Markovski, Alexander Pelov, Pascal Thubert, Juan Carlos Zuniga
and Diego Dujovne for useful design consideration and comments.
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[RFC2460] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
(IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, DOI 10.17487/RFC2460,
December 1998, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2460>.
[RFC4944] Montenegro, G., Kushalnagar, N., Hui, J., and D. Culler,
"Transmission of IPv6 Packets over IEEE 802.15.4
Networks", RFC 4944, DOI 10.17487/RFC4944, September 2007,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4944>.
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[RFC5795] Sandlund, K., Pelletier, G., and L-E. Jonsson, "The RObust
Header Compression (ROHC) Framework", RFC 5795,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5795, March 2010,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5795>.
[RFC7136] Carpenter, B. and S. Jiang, "Significance of IPv6
Interface Identifiers", RFC 7136, DOI 10.17487/RFC7136,
February 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7136>.
10.2. Informative References
[I-D.ietf-lpwan-overview]
Farrell, S., "LPWAN Overview", draft-ietf-lpwan-
overview-07 (work in progress), October 2017.
Appendix A. SCHC Compression Examples
This section gives some scenarios of the compression mechanism for
IPv6/UDP. The goal is to illustrate the SCHC behavior.
The most common case using the mechanisms defined in this document
will be a LPWAN Dev that embeds some applications running over CoAP.
In this example, three flows are considered. The first flow is for
the device management based on CoAP using Link Local IPv6 addresses
and UDP ports 123 and 124 for Dev and App, respectively. The second
flow will be a CoAP server for measurements done by the Device (using
ports 5683) and Global IPv6 Address prefixes alpha::IID/64 to
beta::1/64. The last flow is for legacy applications using different
ports numbers, the destination IPv6 address prefix is gamma::1/64.
Figure 22 presents the protocol stack for this Device. IPv6 and UDP
are represented with dotted lines since these protocols are
compressed on the radio link.
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Management Data
+----------+---------+---------+
| CoAP | CoAP | legacy |
+----||----+---||----+---||----+
. UDP . UDP | UDP |
................................
. IPv6 . IPv6 . IPv6 .
+------------------------------+
| SCHC Header compression |
| and fragmentation |
+------------------------------+
| LPWAN L2 technologies |
+------------------------------+
DEV or NGW
Figure 22: Simplified Protocol Stack for LP-WAN
Note that in some LPWAN technologies, only the Devs have a device ID.
Therefore, when such technologies are used, it is necessary to define
statically an IID for the Link Local address for the SCHC C/D.
Rule 0
+----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
| Field |FL|FP|DI| Value | Match | Comp Decomp|| Sent |
| | | | | | Opera. | Action ||[bits]|
+----------------+--+--+--+---------+---------------------++------+
|IPv6 version |4 |1 |Bi|6 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DiffServ |8 |1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Hop Limit |8 |1 |Bi|255 | ignore | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DEVprefix |64|1 |Bi|FE80::/64| equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DEViid |64|1 |Bi| | ignore | DEViid || |
|IPv6 APPprefix |64|1 |Bi|FE80::/64| equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 APPiid |64|1 |Bi|::1 | equal | not-sent || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
|UDP DEVport |16|1 |Bi|123 | equal | not-sent || |
|UDP APPport |16|1 |Bi|124 | equal | not-sent || |
|UDP Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|UDP checksum |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-chk || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
Rule 1
+----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
| Field |FL|FP|DI| Value | Match | Action || Sent |
| | | | | | Opera. | Action ||[bits]|
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+----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
|IPv6 version |4 |1 |Bi|6 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DiffServ |8 |1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Hop Limit |8 |1 |Bi|255 | ignore | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DEVprefix |64|1 |Bi|[alpha/64, match- |mapping-sent|| [1] |
| | | | |fe80::/64] mapping| || |
|IPv6 DEViid |64|1 |Bi| | ignore | DEViid || |
|IPv6 APPprefix |64|1 |Bi|[beta/64,| match- |mapping-sent|| [2] |
| | | | |alpha/64,| mapping| || |
| | | | |fe80::64]| | || |
|IPv6 APPiid |64|1 |Bi|::1000 | equal | not-sent || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
|UDP DEVport |16|1 |Bi|5683 | equal | not-sent || |
|UDP APPport |16|1 |Bi|5683 | equal | not-sent || |
|UDP Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|UDP checksum |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-chk || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
Rule 2
+----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
| Field |FL|FP|DI| Value | Match | Action || Sent |
| | | | | | Opera. | Action ||[bits]|
+----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+-------------++------+
|IPv6 version |4 |1 |Bi|6 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DiffServ |8 |1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Hop Limit |8 |1 |Up|255 | ignore | not-sent || |
|IPv6 Hop Limit |8 |1 |Dw| | ignore | value-sent || [8] |
|IPv6 DEVprefix |64|1 |Bi|alpha/64 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 DEViid |64|1 |Bi| | ignore | DEViid || |
|IPv6 APPprefix |64|1 |Bi|gamma/64 | equal | not-sent || |
|IPv6 APPiid |64|1 |Bi|::1000 | equal | not-sent || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
|UDP DEVport |16|1 |Bi|8720 | MSB(12)| LSB(4) || [4] |
|UDP APPport |16|1 |Bi|8720 | MSB(12)| LSB(4) || [4] |
|UDP Length |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-length|| |
|UDP checksum |16|1 |Bi| | ignore | comp-chk || |
+================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
Figure 23: Context rules
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All the fields described in the three rules depicted on Figure 23 are
present in the IPv6 and UDP headers. The DEViid-DID value is found
in the L2 header.
The second and third rules use global addresses. The way the Dev
learns the prefix is not in the scope of the document.
The third rule compresses port numbers to 4 bits.
Appendix B. Fragmentation Examples
This section provides examples of different fragment delivery
reliability options possible on the basis of this specification.
Figure 24 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
11 fragments in the No ACK option. Where FCN is always 1 bit.
Sender Receiver
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=0-------->|
|-------FCN=1-------->|MIC checked =>
Figure 24: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
the No ACK option
Figure 25 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
11 fragments in ACK-on-error, for N=3, without losses.
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Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=0----->|
(no ACK)
|-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=7----->|MIC checked =>
|<---- ACK, W=1 ------|
Figure 25: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-on-error, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, without losses.
Figure 26 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
11 fragments ACK-on-error, for N=3, with three losses.
Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
|-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->| 7
|-----W=0, FCN=1----->| /
|-----W=0, FCN=0----->| 6543210
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|Bitmap:1101011
|-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
(no ACK)
|-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=4--X-->|
|-----W=1, FCN=7----->|MIC checked
|<-----ACK, W=1-------|C=0 Bitmap:1100001
|-----W=1, FCN=4----->|MIC checked =>
|<---- ACK, W=1 ------|
Figure 26: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-on-error, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, three losses.
Figure 27 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
11 fragments in ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, without
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losses. Note: in Window mode, an additional bit will be needed to
number windows.
Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=0----->|
|<-----ACK, W=0-------| Bitmap:1111111
|-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=7----->|MIC checked =>
|<-----ACK, W=1-------| C=1 no Bitmap
(End)
Figure 27: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, no losses.
Figure 28 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
11 fragments in ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three
losses.
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Sender Receiver
|-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=4--X-->|
|-----W=1, FCN=3----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=2--X-->| 7
|-----W=1, FCN=1----->| /
|-----W=1, FCN=0----->| 6543210
|<-----ACK, W=1-------|Bitmap:1101011
|-----W=1, FCN=4----->|
|-----W=1, FCN=2----->|
|<-----ACK, W=1-------|Bitmap:
|-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
|-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
|-----W=0, FCN=7----->|MIC checked
|<-----ACK, W=0-------| C= 0 Bitmap:11000001
|-----W=0, FCN=4----->|MIC checked =>
|<-----ACK, W=0-------| C= 1 no Bitmap
(End)
Figure 28: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-Always, for N=3, and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three losses.
Figure 29 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs 6
fragments in ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three
losses, and only one retry is needed for each lost fragment. Note
that, since a single window is needed for transmission of the IPv6
packet in this case, the example illustrates behavior when losses
happen in the last window.
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Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, CFN=6----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=5----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=4--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=3--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=2--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=7----->|MIC checked
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C= 0 Bitmap:1100001
|-----W=0, CFN=4----->|MIC checked: failed
|-----W=0, CFN=3----->|MIC checked: failed
|-----W=0, CFN=2----->|MIC checked: success
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C=1 no Bitmap
(End)
Figure 29: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-Always, for N=3, and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three losses, and only
one retry is needed for each lost fragment.
Figure 30 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs 6
fragments in ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three
losses, and the second ACK is lost. Note that, since a single window
is needed for transmission of the IPv6 packet in this case, the
example illustrates behavior when losses happen in the last window.
Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, CFN=6----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=5----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=4--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=3--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=2--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=7----->|MIC checked
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C=0 Bitmap:1100001
|-----W=0, CFN=4----->|MIC checked: wrong
|-----W=0, CFN=3----->|MIC checked: wrong
|-----W=0, CFN=2----->|MIC checked: right
| X---ACK, W=0-------|C= 1 no Bitmap
timeout | |
|-----W=0, CFN=7----->|
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C= 1 no Bitmap
(End)
Figure 30: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-Always, for N=3, and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three losses, and the
second ACK is lost.
Figure 31 illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs 6
fragments in ACK-Always, for N=3 and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three
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losses, and one retransmitted fragment is lost. Note that, since a
single window is needed for transmission of the IPv6 packet in this
case, the example illustrates behavior when losses happen in the last
window.
Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, CFN=6----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=5----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=4--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=3--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=2--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=7----->|MIC checked
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C=0 Bitmap:1100001
|-----W=0, CFN=4----->|MIC checked: wrong
|-----W=0, CFN=3----->|MIC checked: wrong
|-----W=0, CFN=2--X-->|
timeout| |
|-----W=0, CFN=7----->|All-0 empty
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C=0 Bitmap: 1111101
|-----W=0, CFN=2----->|MIC checked: right
|<-----ACK, W=0-------|C=1 no Bitmap
(End)
Figure 31: Transmission of an IPv6 packet carried by 11 fragments in
ACK-Always, for N=3, and MAX_WIND_FCN=6, with three losses, and one
retransmitted fragment is lost.
Appendix C illustrates the transmission of an IPv6 packet that needs
28 fragments in ACK-Always, for N=5 and MAX_WIND_FCN=23, with two
losses. Note that MAX_WIND_FCN=23 may be useful when the maximum
possible Bitmap size, considering the maximum lower layer technology
payload size and the value of R, is 3 bytes. Note also that the FCN
of the last fragment of the packet is the one with FCN=31 (i.e.
FCN=2^N-1 for N=5, or equivalently, all FCN bits set to 1).
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Sender Receiver
|-----W=0, CFN=23----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=22----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=21--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=20----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=19----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=18----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=17----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=16----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=15----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=14----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=13----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=12----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=11----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=10--X-->|
|-----W=0, CFN=9 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=8 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=7 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=6 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=5 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=4 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=3 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=2 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=1 ----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=0 ----->|
| |lcl-Bitmap:110111111111101111111111
|<------ACK, W=0-------| Bitmap:1101111111111011
|-----W=0, CFN=21----->|
|-----W=0, CFN=10----->|
|<------ACK, W=0-------|no Bitmap
|-----W=1, CFN=23----->|
|-----W=1, CFN=22----->|
|-----W=1, CFN=21----->|
|-----W=1, CFN=31----->|MIC checked =>
|<------ACK, W=1-------|no Bitmap
(End)
Appendix C. Fragmentation State Machines
The fragmentation state machines of the sender and the receiver in
the different reliability options are next in the following figures:
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+===========+
+------------+ Init |
| FCN=0 +===========+
| No Window
| No Bitmap
| +-------+
| +========+==+ | More Fragments
| | | <--+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+--------> | Send | send Fragment (FCN=0)
+===+=======+
| last fragment
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~
| FCN = 1
v send fragment+MIC
+============+
| END |
+============+
Figure 32: Sender State Machine for the No ACK Mode
+------+ Not All-1
+==========+=+ | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| + <--+ set Inactivity Timer
| RCV Frag +-------+
+=+===+======+ |All-1 &
All-1 & | | |MIC correct
MIC wrong | |Inactivity |
| |Timer Exp. |
v | |
+==========++ | v
| Error |<-+ +========+==+
+===========+ | END |
+===========+
Figure 33: Receiver State Machine for the No ACK Mode
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+=======+
| INIT | FCN!=0 & more frags
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+======++ +--+ send Window + frag(FCN)
W=0 | | | FCN-
Clear local Bitmap | | v set local Bitmap
FCN=max value | ++==+========+
+> | |
+---------------------> | SEND |
| +==+=====+===+
| FCN==0 & more frags | | last frag
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| set local-Bitmap | | set local-Bitmap
| send wnd + frag(all-0) | | send wnd+frag(all-1)+MIC
| set Retrans_Timer | | set Retrans_Timer
| | |
|Recv_wnd == wnd & | |
|Lcl_Bitmap==recv_Bitmap& | | +------------------------+
|more frag | | |local-Bitmap!=rcv-Bitmap|
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | ~~~~~~~~~ |
|Stop Retrans_Timer | | | Attemp++ v
|clear local_Bitmap v v | +======++
|window=next_window +====+=====+==+==+ |Resend |
+---------------------+ | |Missing|
+----+ Wait | |Frag |
not expected wnd | | Bitmap | +======++
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +--->+ +-+Retrans_Timer Exp |
discard frag +==+=+===+=+===+=+ |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | | ^ ^ |reSend(empty)All-* |
| | | | | |Set Retrans_Timer |
MIC_bit==1 & | | | | +---+Attemp++ |
Recv_window==window & | | | +---------------------------+
Lcl_Bitmap==recv_Bitmap &| | | all missing frag sent
no more frag| | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| | | Set Retrans_Timer
Stop Retrans_Timer| | |
+=============+ | | |
| END +<--------+ | | Attemp > MAX_ACK_REQUESTS
+=============+ | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All-1 Window | v Send Abort
~~~~~~~~~~~~ | +=+===========+
MIC_bit ==0 & +>| ERROR |
Lcl_Bitmap==recv_Bitmap +=============+
Figure 34: Sender State Machine for the ACK Always Mode
Not All- & w=expected +---+ +---+w = Not expected
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Set local_Bitmap(FCN) | v v |discard
++===+===+===+=+
+---------------------+ Rcv +--->* ABORT
| +------------------+ Window |
| | +=====+==+=====+
| | All-0 & w=expect | ^ w =next & not-All
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)| |expected = next window
| | send local_Bitmap | |Clear local_Bitmap
| | | |
| | w=expct & not-All | |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| | set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)+-+ | | +--+ w=next & All-0
| | if lcl_Bitmap full | | | | | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | send lcl_Bitmap | | | | | | expct = nxt wnd
| | v | v v v |
| | w=expct & All-1 +=+=+=+==+=++ | Clear lcl_Bitmap
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~ +->+ Wait +<+ set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)
| | discard +--| Next | send lcl_Bitmap
| | All-0 +---------+ Window +--->* ABORT
| | ~~~~~ +-------->+========+=++
| | snd lcl_bm All-1 & w=next| | All-1 & w=nxt
| | & MIC wrong| | & MIC right
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | set local_Bitmap(FCN)| |set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)
| | send local_Bitmap| |send local_Bitmap
| | | +----------------------+
| |All-1 & w=expct | |
| |& MIC wrong v +---+ w=expctd & |
| |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +====+=====+ | MIC wrong |
| |set local_Bitmap(FCN) | +<+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |send local_Bitmap | Wait End | set lcl_btmp(FCN)|
| +--------------------->+ +--->* ABORT |
| +===+====+=+-+ All-1&MIC wrong|
| | ^ | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| | +---+ send lcl_btmp |
| w=expected & MIC right| | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| +-+ Not All-1 |
| set local_Bitmap(FCN)| | | ~~~~~~~~~ |
| send local_Bitmap| | | discard |
| | | | |
|All-1 & w=expctd & MIC right | | | +-+ All-1 |
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ v | v | v ~~~~~~~~~ |
|set local_Bitmap(FCN) +=+=+=+=+=++Send lcl_btmp |
|send local_Bitmap | | |
+-------------------------->+ END +<---------------+
++==+======+
--->* ABORT
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~~~~~~~
Inactivity_Timer = expires
When DWN_Link
IF Inactivity_Timer expires
Send DWL Request
Attemp++
Figure 35: Receiver State Machine for the ACK Always Mode
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+=======+
| |
| INIT |
| | FCN!=0 & more frags
+======++ +--+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
W=0 | | | send Window + frag(FCN)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | FCN-
Clear local Bitmap | | v set local Bitmap
FCN=max value | ++=============+
+> | |
| SEND |
+-------------------------> | |
| ++=====+=======+
| FCN==0 & more frags| |last frag
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| set local-Bitmap| |set local-Bitmap
| send wnd + frag(all-0)| |send wnd+frag(all-1)+MIC
| set Retrans_Timer| |set Retrans_Timer
| | |
|Retrans_Timer expires & | | local-Bitmap!=rcv-Bitmap
|more fragments | | +-----------------+
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|stop Retrans_Timer | | | Attemp++ |
|clear local-Bitmap v v | v
|window = next window +=====+=====+==+==+ +====+====+
+----------------------+ + | Resend |
+--------------------->+ Wait Bitmap | | Missing |
| +-- + | | Frag |
| not expected wnd | ++=+===+===+===+==+ +======+==+
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ^ | | | ^ |
| discard frag +----+ | | | +-------------------+
| | | | all missing frag sent
|Retrans_Timer expires & | | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| No more Frag | | | Set Retrans_Timer
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | |
| Stop Retrans_Timer | | |
| Send ALL-1-empty | | |
+-------------------------+ | |
| |
Local_Bitmap==Recv_Bitmap| |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| |Attemp > MAX_ACK_REQUESTS
+=========+Stop Retrans_Timer | |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| END +<------------------+ v Send Abort
+=========+ +=+=========+
| ERROR |
+===========+
Figure 36: Sender State Machine for the ACK on error Mode
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Not All- & w=expected +---+ +---+w = Not expected
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Set local_Bitmap(FCN) | v v |discard
++===+===+===+=+
+-----------------------+ +--+ All-0 & full
| ABORT *<---+ Rcv Window | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~
| +--------------------+ +<-+ w =next
| | +===+===+======+ clear lcl_Bitmap
| | | ^
| | All-0 & w=expect| |w=expct & not-All & full
| | & no_full Bitmap| |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| |clear lcl_Bitmap; w =nxt
| | send local_Bitmap| |
| | | | +========+
| | | | +---------->+ |
| | | | |w=next | Error/ |
| | | | |~~~~~~~~ | Abort |
| | | | |Send abort ++=======+
| | v | | ^ w=expct
| | All-0 +=+===+==+======+ | & all-1
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~<---+ Wait +------+ ~~~~~~~
| | send lcl_btmp | Next Window | Send abort
| | +=======+===+==++
| | All-1 & w=next & MIC wrong | | +---->* ABORT
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | +----------------+
| | set local_Bitmap(FCN) | All-1 & w=next|
| | send local_Bitmap | & MIC right|
| | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| | | set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)|
| |All-1 & w=expect & MIC wrong | |
| |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | +-+ All-1 |
| |set local_Bitmap(FCN) v | v ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |send local_Bitmap +=======+==+===+ snd lcl_btmp|
| +--------------------->+ Wait End +-+ |
| +=====+=+===+=+ | w=expct & |
| w=expected & MIC right | | ^ | MIC wrong |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | +---+ ~~~~~~~~~ |
| set local_Bitmap(FCN) | | set lcl_Bitmap(FCN)|
| | | |
|All-1 & w=expected & MIC right | +-->* ABORT |
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ v |
|set local_Bitmap(FCN) +=+==========+ |
+---------------------------->+ END +<----------+
+============+
--->* Only Uplink
ABORT
~~~~~~~~
Inactivity_Timer = expires
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Figure 37: Receiver State Machine for the ACK on error Mode
Appendix D. Allocation of Rule IDs for fragmentation
A set of Rule IDs are allocated to support different aspects of
fragmentation functionality as per this document. The allocation of
IDs is to be defined in other documents. The set MAY include:
o one ID or a subset of IDs to identify a fragment as well as its
reliability option and its window size, if multiple of these are
supported.
o one ID to identify the ACK message.
o one ID to identify the Abort message as per Section 9.8.
Appendix E. Note
Carles Gomez has been funded in part by the Spanish Government
(Ministerio de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte) through the Jose
Castillejo grant CAS15/00336, and by the ERDF and the Spanish
Government through project TEC2016-79988-P. Part of his contribution
to this work has been carried out during his stay as a visiting
scholar at the Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge.
Authors' Addresses
Ana Minaburo
Acklio
2bis rue de la Chataigneraie
35510 Cesson-Sevigne Cedex
France
Email: ana@ackl.io
Laurent Toutain
IMT-Atlantique
2 rue de la Chataigneraie
CS 17607
35576 Cesson-Sevigne Cedex
France
Email: Laurent.Toutain@imt-atlantique.fr
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Carles Gomez
Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya
C/Esteve Terradas, 7
08860 Castelldefels
Spain
Email: carlesgo@entel.upc.edu
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