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- Network Working Group K. Sollins
- Request For Comments: 1350 MIT
- STD: 33 July 1992
- Obsoletes: RFC 783
-
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- THE TFTP PROTOCOL (REVISION 2)
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- 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.
-
- Summary
-
- TFTP is a very simple protocol used to transfer files. It is from
- this that its name comes, Trivial File Transfer Protocol or TFTP.
- Each nonterminal packet is acknowledged separately. This document
- describes the protocol and its types of packets. The document also
- explains the reasons behind some of the design decisions.
-
- Acknowlegements
-
- The protocol was originally designed by Noel Chiappa, and was
- redesigned by him, Bob Baldwin and Dave Clark, with comments from
- Steve Szymanski. The current revision of the document includes
- modifications stemming from discussions with and suggestions from
- Larry Allen, Noel Chiappa, Dave Clark, Geoff Cooper, Mike Greenwald,
- Liza Martin, David Reed, Craig Milo Rogers (of USC-ISI), Kathy
- Yellick, and the author. The acknowledgement and retransmission
- scheme was inspired by TCP, and the error mechanism was suggested by
- PARC's EFTP abort message.
-
- The May, 1992 revision to fix the "Sorcerer's Apprentice" protocol
- bug [4] and other minor document problems was done by Noel Chiappa.
-
- This research was supported by the Advanced Research Projects Agency
- of the Department of Defense and was monitored by the Office of Naval
- Research under contract number N00014-75-C-0661.
-
- 1. Purpose
-
- TFTP is a simple protocol to transfer files, and therefore was named
- the Trivial File Transfer Protocol or TFTP. It has been implemented
- on top of the Internet User Datagram protocol (UDP or Datagram) [2]
-
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- so it may be used to move files between machines on different
- networks implementing UDP. (This should not exclude the possibility
- of implementing TFTP on top of other datagram protocols.) It is
- designed to be small and easy to implement. Therefore, it lacks most
- of the features of a regular FTP. The only thing it can do is read
- and write files (or mail) from/to a remote server. It cannot list
- directories, and currently has no provisions for user authentication.
- In common with other Internet protocols, it passes 8 bit bytes of
- data.
-
- Three modes of transfer are currently supported: netascii (This is
- ascii as defined in "USA Standard Code for Information Interchange"
- [1] with the modifications specified in "Telnet Protocol
- Specification" [3].) Note that it is 8 bit ascii. The term
- "netascii" will be used throughout this document to mean this
- particular version of ascii.); octet (This replaces the "binary" mode
- of previous versions of this document.) raw 8 bit bytes; mail,
- netascii characters sent to a user rather than a file. (The mail
- mode is obsolete and should not be implemented or used.) Additional
- modes can be defined by pairs of cooperating hosts.
-
- Reference [4] (section 4.2) should be consulted for further valuable
- directives and suggestions on TFTP.
-
- 2. Overview of the Protocol
-
- Any transfer begins with a request to read or write a file, which
- also serves to request a connection. If the server grants the
- request, the connection is opened and the file is sent in fixed
- length blocks of 512 bytes. Each data packet contains one block of
- data, and must be acknowledged by an acknowledgment packet before the
- next packet can be sent. A data packet of less than 512 bytes
- signals termination of a transfer. If a packet gets lost in the
- network, the intended recipient will timeout and may retransmit his
- last packet (which may be data or an acknowledgment), thus causing
- the sender of the lost packet to retransmit that lost packet. The
- sender has to keep just one packet on hand for retransmission, since
- the lock step acknowledgment guarantees that all older packets have
- been received. Notice that both machines involved in a transfer are
- considered senders and receivers. One sends data and receives
- acknowledgments, the other sends acknowledgments and receives data.
-
- Most errors cause termination of the connection. An error is
- signalled by sending an error packet. This packet is not
- acknowledged, and not retransmitted (i.e., a TFTP server or user may
- terminate after sending an error message), so the other end of the
- connection may not get it. Therefore timeouts are used to detect
- such a termination when the error packet has been lost. Errors are
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- caused by three types of events: not being able to satisfy the
- request (e.g., file not found, access violation, or no such user),
- receiving a packet which cannot be explained by a delay or
- duplication in the network (e.g., an incorrectly formed packet), and
- losing access to a necessary resource (e.g., disk full or access
- denied during a transfer).
-
- TFTP recognizes only one error condition that does not cause
- termination, the source port of a received packet being incorrect.
- In this case, an error packet is sent to the originating host.
-
- This protocol is very restrictive, in order to simplify
- implementation. For example, the fixed length blocks make allocation
- straight forward, and the lock step acknowledgement provides flow
- control and eliminates the need to reorder incoming data packets.
-
- 3. Relation to other Protocols
-
- As mentioned TFTP is designed to be implemented on top of the
- Datagram protocol (UDP). Since Datagram is implemented on the
- Internet protocol, packets will have an Internet header, a Datagram
- header, and a TFTP header. Additionally, the packets may have a
- header (LNI, ARPA header, etc.) to allow them through the local
- transport medium. As shown in Figure 3-1, the order of the contents
- of a packet will be: local medium header, if used, Internet header,
- Datagram header, TFTP header, followed by the remainder of the TFTP
- packet. (This may or may not be data depending on the type of packet
- as specified in the TFTP header.) TFTP does not specify any of the
- values in the Internet header. On the other hand, the source and
- destination port fields of the Datagram header (its format is given
- in the appendix) are used by TFTP and the length field reflects the
- size of the TFTP packet. The transfer identifiers (TID's) used by
- TFTP are passed to the Datagram layer to be used as ports; therefore
- they must be between 0 and 65,535. The initialization of TID's is
- discussed in the section on initial connection protocol.
-
- The TFTP header consists of a 2 byte opcode field which indicates
- the packet's type (e.g., DATA, ERROR, etc.) These opcodes and the
- formats of the various types of packets are discussed further in the
- section on TFTP packets.
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- ---------------------------------------------------
- | Local Medium | Internet | Datagram | TFTP |
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Figure 3-1: Order of Headers
-
-
- 4. Initial Connection Protocol
-
- A transfer is established by sending a request (WRQ to write onto a
- foreign file system, or RRQ to read from it), and receiving a
- positive reply, an acknowledgment packet for write, or the first data
- packet for read. In general an acknowledgment packet will contain
- the block number of the data packet being acknowledged. Each data
- packet has associated with it a block number; block numbers are
- consecutive and begin with one. Since the positive response to a
- write request is an acknowledgment packet, in this special case the
- block number will be zero. (Normally, since an acknowledgment packet
- is acknowledging a data packet, the acknowledgment packet will
- contain the block number of the data packet being acknowledged.) If
- the reply is an error packet, then the request has been denied.
-
- In order to create a connection, each end of the connection chooses a
- TID for itself, to be used for the duration of that connection. The
- TID's chosen for a connection should be randomly chosen, so that the
- probability that the same number is chosen twice in immediate
- succession is very low. Every packet has associated with it the two
- TID's of the ends of the connection, the source TID and the
- destination TID. These TID's are handed to the supporting UDP (or
- other datagram protocol) as the source and destination ports. A
- requesting host chooses its source TID as described above, and sends
- its initial request to the known TID 69 decimal (105 octal) on the
- serving host. The response to the request, under normal operation,
- uses a TID chosen by the server as its source TID and the TID chosen
- for the previous message by the requestor as its destination TID.
- The two chosen TID's are then used for the remainder of the transfer.
-
- As an example, the following shows the steps used to establish a
- connection to write a file. Note that WRQ, ACK, and DATA are the
- names of the write request, acknowledgment, and data types of packets
- respectively. The appendix contains a similar example for reading a
- file.
-
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- 1. Host A sends a "WRQ" to host B with source= A's TID,
- destination= 69.
-
- 2. Host B sends a "ACK" (with block number= 0) to host A with
- source= B's TID, destination= A's TID.
-
- At this point the connection has been established and the first data
- packet can be sent by Host A with a sequence number of 1. In the
- next step, and in all succeeding steps, the hosts should make sure
- that the source TID matches the value that was agreed on in steps 1
- and 2. If a source TID does not match, the packet should be
- discarded as erroneously sent from somewhere else. An error packet
- should be sent to the source of the incorrect packet, while not
- disturbing the transfer. This can be done only if the TFTP in fact
- receives a packet with an incorrect TID. If the supporting protocols
- do not allow it, this particular error condition will not arise.
-
- The following example demonstrates a correct operation of the
- protocol in which the above situation can occur. Host A sends a
- request to host B. Somewhere in the network, the request packet is
- duplicated, and as a result two acknowledgments are returned to host
- A, with different TID's chosen on host B in response to the two
- requests. When the first response arrives, host A continues the
- connection. When the second response to the request arrives, it
- should be rejected, but there is no reason to terminate the first
- connection. Therefore, if different TID's are chosen for the two
- connections on host B and host A checks the source TID's of the
- messages it receives, the first connection can be maintained while
- the second is rejected by returning an error packet.
-
- 5. TFTP Packets
-
- TFTP supports five types of packets, all of which have been mentioned
- above:
-
- opcode operation
- 1 Read request (RRQ)
- 2 Write request (WRQ)
- 3 Data (DATA)
- 4 Acknowledgment (ACK)
- 5 Error (ERROR)
-
- The TFTP header of a packet contains the opcode associated with
- that packet.
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- 2 bytes string 1 byte string 1 byte
- ------------------------------------------------
- | Opcode | Filename | 0 | Mode | 0 |
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- Figure 5-1: RRQ/WRQ packet
-
-
- RRQ and WRQ packets (opcodes 1 and 2 respectively) have the format
- shown in Figure 5-1. The file name is a sequence of bytes in
- netascii terminated by a zero byte. The mode field contains the
- string "netascii", "octet", or "mail" (or any combination of upper
- and lower case, such as "NETASCII", NetAscii", etc.) in netascii
- indicating the three modes defined in the protocol. A host which
- receives netascii mode data must translate the data to its own
- format. Octet mode is used to transfer a file that is in the 8-bit
- format of the machine from which the file is being transferred. It
- is assumed that each type of machine has a single 8-bit format that
- is more common, and that that format is chosen. For example, on a
- DEC-20, a 36 bit machine, this is four 8-bit bytes to a word with
- four bits of breakage. If a host receives a octet file and then
- returns it, the returned file must be identical to the original.
- Mail mode uses the name of a mail recipient in place of a file and
- must begin with a WRQ. Otherwise it is identical to netascii mode.
- The mail recipient string should be of the form "username" or
- "username@hostname". If the second form is used, it allows the
- option of mail forwarding by a relay computer.
-
- The discussion above assumes that both the sender and recipient are
- operating in the same mode, but there is no reason that this has to
- be the case. For example, one might build a storage server. There
- is no reason that such a machine needs to translate netascii into its
- own form of text. Rather, the sender might send files in netascii,
- but the storage server might simply store them without translation in
- 8-bit format. Another such situation is a problem that currently
- exists on DEC-20 systems. Neither netascii nor octet accesses all
- the bits in a word. One might create a special mode for such a
- machine which read all the bits in a word, but in which the receiver
- stored the information in 8-bit format. When such a file is
- retrieved from the storage site, it must be restored to its original
- form to be useful, so the reverse mode must also be implemented. The
- user site will have to remember some information to achieve this. In
- both of these examples, the request packets would specify octet mode
- to the foreign host, but the local host would be in some other mode.
- No such machine or application specific modes have been specified in
- TFTP, but one would be compatible with this specification.
-
- It is also possible to define other modes for cooperating pairs of
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- hosts, although this must be done with care. There is no requirement
- that any other hosts implement these. There is no central authority
- that will define these modes or assign them names.
-
-
- 2 bytes 2 bytes n bytes
- ----------------------------------
- | Opcode | Block # | Data |
- ----------------------------------
-
- Figure 5-2: DATA packet
-
-
- Data is actually transferred in DATA packets depicted in Figure 5-2.
- DATA packets (opcode = 3) have a block number and data field. The
- block numbers on data packets begin with one and increase by one for
- each new block of data. This restriction allows the program to use a
- single number to discriminate between new packets and duplicates.
- The data field is from zero to 512 bytes long. If it is 512 bytes
- long, the block is not the last block of data; if it is from zero to
- 511 bytes long, it signals the end of the transfer. (See the section
- on Normal Termination for details.)
-
- All packets other than duplicate ACK's and those used for
- termination are acknowledged unless a timeout occurs [4]. Sending a
- DATA packet is an acknowledgment for the first ACK packet of the
- previous DATA packet. The WRQ and DATA packets are acknowledged by
- ACK or ERROR packets, while RRQ
-
-
- 2 bytes 2 bytes
- ---------------------
- | Opcode | Block # |
- ---------------------
-
- Figure 5-3: ACK packet
-
-
- and ACK packets are acknowledged by DATA or ERROR packets. Figure
- 5-3 depicts an ACK packet; the opcode is 4. The block number in
- an ACK echoes the block number of the DATA packet being
- acknowledged. A WRQ is acknowledged with an ACK packet having a
- block number of zero.
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- 2 bytes 2 bytes string 1 byte
- -----------------------------------------
- | Opcode | ErrorCode | ErrMsg | 0 |
- -----------------------------------------
-
- Figure 5-4: ERROR packet
-
-
- An ERROR packet (opcode 5) takes the form depicted in Figure 5-4. An
- ERROR packet can be the acknowledgment of any other type of packet.
- The error code is an integer indicating the nature of the error. A
- table of values and meanings is given in the appendix. (Note that
- several error codes have been added to this version of this
- document.) The error message is intended for human consumption, and
- should be in netascii. Like all other strings, it is terminated with
- a zero byte.
-
- 6. Normal Termination
-
- The end of a transfer is marked by a DATA packet that contains
- between 0 and 511 bytes of data (i.e., Datagram length < 516). This
- packet is acknowledged by an ACK packet like all other DATA packets.
- The host acknowledging the final DATA packet may terminate its side
- of the connection on sending the final ACK. On the other hand,
- dallying is encouraged. This means that the host sending the final
- ACK will wait for a while before terminating in order to retransmit
- the final ACK if it has been lost. The acknowledger will know that
- the ACK has been lost if it receives the final DATA packet again.
- The host sending the last DATA must retransmit it until the packet is
- acknowledged or the sending host times out. If the response is an
- ACK, the transmission was completed successfully. If the sender of
- the data times out and is not prepared to retransmit any more, the
- transfer may still have been completed successfully, after which the
- acknowledger or network may have experienced a problem. It is also
- possible in this case that the transfer was unsuccessful. In any
- case, the connection has been closed.
-
- 7. Premature Termination
-
- If a request can not be granted, or some error occurs during the
- transfer, then an ERROR packet (opcode 5) is sent. This is only a
- courtesy since it will not be retransmitted or acknowledged, so it
- may never be received. Timeouts must also be used to detect errors.
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- I. Appendix
-
- Order of Headers
-
- 2 bytes
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- | Local Medium | Internet | Datagram | TFTP Opcode |
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
- TFTP Formats
-
- Type Op # Format without header
-
- 2 bytes string 1 byte string 1 byte
- -----------------------------------------------
- RRQ/ | 01/02 | Filename | 0 | Mode | 0 |
- WRQ -----------------------------------------------
- 2 bytes 2 bytes n bytes
- ---------------------------------
- DATA | 03 | Block # | Data |
- ---------------------------------
- 2 bytes 2 bytes
- -------------------
- ACK | 04 | Block # |
- --------------------
- 2 bytes 2 bytes string 1 byte
- ----------------------------------------
- ERROR | 05 | ErrorCode | ErrMsg | 0 |
- ----------------------------------------
-
- Initial Connection Protocol for reading a file
-
- 1. Host A sends a "RRQ" to host B with source= A's TID,
- destination= 69.
-
- 2. Host B sends a "DATA" (with block number= 1) to host A with
- source= B's TID, destination= A's TID.
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- Error Codes
-
- Value Meaning
-
- 0 Not defined, see error message (if any).
- 1 File not found.
- 2 Access violation.
- 3 Disk full or allocation exceeded.
- 4 Illegal TFTP operation.
- 5 Unknown transfer ID.
- 6 File already exists.
- 7 No such user.
-
- Internet User Datagram Header [2]
-
- (This has been included only for convenience. TFTP need not be
- implemented on top of the Internet User Datagram Protocol.)
-
- Format
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Source Port | Destination Port |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Length | Checksum |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Values of Fields
-
-
- Source Port Picked by originator of packet.
-
- Dest. Port Picked by destination machine (69 for RRQ or WRQ).
-
- Length Number of bytes in UDP packet, including UDP header.
-
- Checksum Reference 2 describes rules for computing checksum.
- (The implementor of this should be sure that the
- correct algorithm is used here.)
- Field contains zero if unused.
-
- Note: TFTP passes transfer identifiers (TID's) to the Internet User
- Datagram protocol to be used as the source and destination ports.
-
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- References
-
- [1] USA Standard Code for Information Interchange, USASI X3.4-1968.
-
- [2] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol," RFC 768, USC/Information
- Sciences Institute, 28 August 1980.
-
- [3] Postel, J., "Telnet Protocol Specification," RFC 764,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, June, 1980.
-
- [4] Braden, R., Editor, "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
- Application and Support", RFC 1123, USC/Information Sciences
- Institute, October 1989.
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Since TFTP includes no login or access control mechanisms, care must
- be taken in the rights granted to a TFTP server process so as not to
- violate the security of the server hosts file system. TFTP is often
- installed with controls such that only files that have public read
- access are available via TFTP and writing files via TFTP is
- disallowed.
-
- Author's Address
-
- Karen R. Sollins
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Laboratory for Computer Science
- 545 Technology Square
- Cambridge, MA 02139-1986
-
- Phone: (617) 253-6006
-
- EMail: SOLLINS@LCS.MIT.EDU
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