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- Network Working Group C. Shue
- Request for Comments: 1240 Open Software Foundation
- W. Haggerty
- Wang Laboratories, Inc.
- K. Dobbins
- Cabletron Systems, Inc.
- June 1991
-
-
- OSI Connectionless Transport Services on top of UDP
- Version: 1
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This document describes a protocol for running OSI Connectionless
- service on UDP. This RFC specifies an IAB standards track protocol
- for the Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions
- for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "IAB
- Official Protocol Standards" for the standardization state and status
- of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- 1. Introduction and Philosophy
-
- The Internet community has a well-developed, mature set of layered
- transport and network protocols, which are quite successful in
- offering both connection-oriented (TCP) and connectionless (UDP)
- transport services over connectionless network services (IP) to end-
- users. Many popular network applications have been built directly on
- top of the TCP and UDP over the past decade. These have helped the
- Internet services and protocols to become widely-spread de facto
- standards. In the past few years, the ISO and CCITT have defined a
- well-architected set of upper layer standards which include
- connection-oriented and connectionless session, presentation, and
- application layer services and protocols. These OSI upper layer
- standards offer valuable services to application developers (e.g.,
- dialogue control, transfer syntax, peer authentication, directory
- services, etc.) which are not currently offered by the TCP/IP
- standards.
-
- As indicated in RFC 1006, it is desirable to offer the OSI upper
- layer services directly in the Internet without disrupting existing
- facilities. This permits a more graceful convergence and transition
- strategy from IP-based networks to OSI-based networks in the future.
- Using the approach of RFC 1006, this memo specifies how to offer OSI
- connectionless transport service using the User Datagram Protocol
- (UDP) [RFC768] of the TCP/IP suite.
-
- We will define a Transport Service Access Point (TSAP) which appears
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- to be identical to the services and interfaces defined in ISO 8072
- and its Addendum 1, but we will in fact implement the ISO T-UNIT-DATA
- protocol on top of UDP. By this means, OSI TPDU's can be delivered
- across the Internet network, and OSI connectionless upper layers can
- operate fully without knowledge of the fact that they are running on
- top of UDP/IP. In essence, the OSI T-UNIT-DATA service will use UDP
- as its connectionless network service provider.
-
- 2. Motivation
-
- The primary motivation for the standard described in this memo is to
- facilitate the process of gaining experience with OSI connectionless
- upper layers protocols, i.e., S-UNIT-DATA [ISO9548], P-UNIT-DATA
- [ISO9576] and A-UNIT-DATA [ISO10035], and connectionless transport
- protocol T-UNIT-DATA [ISO8602].
-
- Though many OSI standard applications such as X.400 and FTAM are
- connection-oriented, it is recognized in the OSI reference model
- [ISO7498/AD1] as well as in practice that the connectionless-mode
- operations are appropriate for certain distributed application
- classes and environments. The following connectionless application
- classes were identified by ISO SC21/WG6 [ISOSC21/WG6 N184]:
-
- - Request-Response Applications
- - Broadcast/Multicast
- - Inward Data Collection
- - Migratory/Unreliable Processes
-
- Among them, the "request/response" client-server application class is
- the most prominent one, which is gaining popularity and importance.
- It is observed that the connection setup and tear-down protocol
- exchanges and complex connection-oriented protocol machines become
- unnecessary overheads for a simple request/response exchange between
- a client application and a server application, especially in reliable
- communications environments such as LAN and ISDN. The OSI
- connectionless upper layers are thought to be highly effective and
- efficient, both in time and space, for the distributed application
- classes mentioned above.
-
- The stability, maturity and wide availability of UDP/IP are ideal for
- providing solid connectionless transport services independent of
- actual implementations.
-
- 3. The Model
-
- The [ISO 8072/AD1] standard describes the OSI connectionless
- transport services definition. The [ISO 8602] standard describes the
- OSI connectionless transport protocols. A defining characteristic of
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- transport connectionless-mode transmission is the independent nature
- of each invocation of the connectionless transport service.
-
- The OSI transport service definition describes the services offered
- by the TS-provider and the interfaces used to access those services.
- It also describes the services required. This memo focuses on how
- UDP [RFC 768] can be used to offer the required services and provide
- the interfaces.
-
-
- The following is the model:
-
-
- +-----------+ +-----------+
- | TS-user | | TS-user |
- +-----------+ +-----------+
- | |
- |CLTS interface |
- |[ISO 8072/AD1] |
- | |
- _________________________________________________________________
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | +-----------+ UD TPDU +-----------+ |
- | | TS-peer | <-----------------------> | TS-peer | |
- | +-----------+ +-----------+ |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | |UDP interface [RFC 768] | |
- | | | |
- | +-----------+ UDP datagram +-----------+ |
- | | UDP | <-----------------------> | UDP | |
- | +-----------+ (UD TPDU encapsulated) +-----------+ |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- | |
- | |
- | TS-provider |
- |_________________________________________________________________|
-
-
- The following abbreviations are used:
-
-
- CLTS Connectionless Transport
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- TS Transport Services (implies connectionless transport
- service in this memo)
-
- TSAP Transport Service Access Point
-
- TS-peer a process which implements the mapping of CLTS
- protocols onto the UDP interface as described by
- this memo
-
- TS-user a process using the services of a TS-provider
-
- TS-provider the abstraction of the totality of those entities
- which provide the overall service between the two
- TS-users
-
- UD TPDU Unit Data TPDU (Transport Protocol Data Unit)
-
- Each TS-user gains access to the TS-provider at a TSAP. The two TS-
- users can communicate with each other using a connectionless
- transport provided that there is pre-arranged knowledge about each
- other (e.g., protocol version, formats, options, ... etc.), since
- there is no negotiation before data transfer. In the above diagram
- one TS-user passes a message to the TS-provider, and the peer TS-user
- receives the message from the TS-provider. The interactions between
- TS-user and TS-provider are described by connectionless TS
- primitives.
-
- All aspects of [ISO 8072/AD1] are supported in this memo with one
- exception: QOS (Quality of Service) parameter, which is left for
- future study.
-
- The OSI standards do not specify the format of a TSAP selector.
- Neither does this memo. However, implementors should consult the
- GOSIP 1.0 specification [GOSIP88/FIPS146] for an interpretation of
- this parameter, wherein the TSAP selector consists of two octets and
- a value of (binary) 1 identifies the service interface between OSI
- transport layer and session layer.
-
- 4. The Primitives
-
- This RFC assumes that UDP [RFC768] offers the following service
- primitives:
-
- send datagram - datagram is sent to the IP address/destination
- port
-
- read datagram - datagram is read from UDP
-
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- Data can only be read from a receive port after the port has been
- created. This is a local matter.
-
- This memo reserves the use of UDP port 102 for the use of
- applications which realize the CLTS over UDP. However as with RFC
- 1006, other port values may be used by prior agreement (e.g., through
- use of the OSI Directory).
-
- This RFC describes how to use these services to emulate the following
- connectionless-mode network service primitives, which are required by
- [ISO8602]:
-
- N-UNIT-DATA.REQUEST - A NS-user requests unit data to be sent
-
- N-UNIT-DATA.INDICATION - A NS-user is notified that unit data
- can be read from the NSAP
-
- The mapping between the UDP service primitives and the service
- primitives expected by the connectionless transport peer entity are
- quite straightforward:
-
- connectionless network service UDP
- ------------------------------ ---
-
- N-UNIT-DATA.REQUEST send datagram
-
- N-UNIT-DATA.INDICATION read datagram
-
-
- The parameter mapping is:
-
- connectionless network service UDP
- ------------------------------ ---
-
- Source address source IP address from
- calling TS-address
-
- Destination address destination IP address from
- called TS-address
-
- Quality of service (ignored)
-
- NS-user data UD TPDU constructed from T-UNIT-DATA
-
- When the T-UNIT-DATA.REQUEST primitive is issued, the TS-peer
- constructs a UD TPDU and sends it as a single datagram to the desired
- IP address using UDP.
-
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- When UDP indicates that a datagram has been received, a UD TPDU is
- read from UDP, and a T-UNIT-DATA.INDICATION primitive is generated.
-
- 5. Packet Format
-
- The following is the UD TPDU structure which is encapsulated in UDP
- data field:
-
- 1 2 3 m m+1 n
- +--------------------------------------------------+
- | LI | UD | Variable Part | User Data |
- | | 01000000 | | |
- +--------------------------------------------------+
-
- LI (octet 1) - the length of the header including parameters, but
- excluding the LI and user data, with a maximum
- value of 254
-
- UD (octet 2) - the type of TPDU
-
- Variable Part (octets 3 to m) - the source and destination TSAP id's
- Parameter code: source TSAP 11000001
- destination TSAP 11000010
- Parameter length: the length of the parameter, not including
- the parameter code or length fields, with a
- maximum value of 254
- Parameter value: source or destination T-selector
-
- The optional checksum parameter is not required in the
- variable part since the UDP checksum field in the UDP header
- already performs the checking.
-
- User Data (octets m+1 to n) - all the data of the TSDU.
-
- The maximum NS-user data allowed in the OSI connectionless network
- service is 64,512 octets. This limit is further constrained by the
- lesser maximum datagram size supported by the two communicating UDP
- peers, which should be known by a priori agreement.
-
- 6. Conclusion
-
- There is a general trend towards support of the OSI protocol suite in
- the Internet. This direction is being fostered by the Internet
- Activities Board (IAB) and its Internet Engineering Task Force, and
- by the Federal Networking Council. By offering an OSI connectionless
- transport service on top of the Internet, this RFC will allow future
- applications to use the OSI connectionless upper-layer services,
- which are required to be conformant to the OSI upper layer
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 6]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- architecture. Currently, T-UNIT-DATA, S-UNIT-DATA, P-UNIT-DATA, and
- A-UNIT-DATA have reached International Standard (IS). As
- applications based on OSI connectionless services become widely
- available and OSI lower-layer service is widely implemented in the
- Internet, the underlying UDP/IP services can be simply replaced with
- the OSI lower layers.
-
- 7. Acknowledgements
-
- Marshall T. Rose of PSI, Inc., provided many valuable comments and
- corrections.
-
- 8. References
-
- [GOSIP88] U.S. Department of Commerce/National Bureau of Standards,
- [FIPS146] "Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile (GOSIP)",
- August 1988.
-
- [ISO7498/AD1] ISO, "International Standard 7498 - Information
- Processing Systems - OSI: Basic Reference Model
- Addendum 1: Connectionless-mode Transmission",
- May 1986.
-
- [ISO8072] ISO, "International Standard 8072 - Information Processing
- Systems - OSI: Transport Service Definition", June 1984.
-
- [ISO8072/AD1] ISO, "International Standard 8072 - Information
- Processing Systems - OSI: Transport Service Definition
- Addendum 1: Connectionless-mode Transmission",
- December 1986.
-
- [ISO8602] ISO, "International Standard 8602 - Information Processing
- Systems - OSI: Connectionless Transport Protocol
- Specification", December 1986.
-
- [ISO9548] ISO, "International Standard 9548 - Information Processing
- Systems - OSI: Connectionless Session Protocol
- Specification", April 1989.
-
- [ISO9576] ISO, "Draft International Standard 9576 - Information
- Processing Systems - OSI: Connectionless Presentation
- Protocol Specification", April 1989.
-
- [ISO10035] ISO, "Draft International Standard 10035 - Information
- Processing Systems - OSI: Connectionless ACSE Protocol
- Specification", April 1989.
-
- [ISOSC21/WG6 N184] ISO SC21 WG6, "Justification for Connectionless
-
-
-
- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1240 OSI on top of UDP June 1991
-
-
- Services in the Upper Layers", June 1986.
-
- [RFC768] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", RFC 768,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.
-
- [RFC791] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", RFC 791,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.
-
- [RFC1006] Rose, M., and D. Cass, "ISO Transport Service on top of
- the TCP - Version 3", RFC 1006, Northrop Research and
- Technology Center, May 1987.
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- Authors' Addresses
-
-
- Chikong Shue
- Open Software Foundation, Inc.
- 11 Cambridge Center
- Cambridge, MA 02142
-
- Phone: (617) 621-8972
- EMail: chi@osf.org
-
-
- William Haggerty
- Wang Laboratories, Inc.
- 1 Industrial Ave
- Lowell, MA 01851
-
- Phone: (508) 967-3403
- EMail: bill@comm.wang.com
-
-
- Kurt Dobbins
- Cabletron, Inc.
- 35 Industrial Way
- Rochester, NH 03867
-
- Phone: (603) 332-9400
-
-
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- Shue, Haggerty & Dobbins [Page 8]
-