On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 3:47 AM, Suresh Krishnan <suresh.krishnan@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Thanks to everyone who commented during the IETF Last Call of draft-ietf-6man-rfc2460bis-08. The IETF last call discussion for this draft was mainly focused around the text in Section 4 that discusses the handling of extension headers. The biggest concern raised was that the current text is ambiguous on whether header insertion is allowed on intermediate nodes or not. There were some people arguing that an explicit prohibition is not necessary as the text is already clear, while others believed that explicitly listing the prohibitions will minimize any misunderstandings in the future. There was also a small number of people who wanted to explicitly allow header insertion and describe how to do it, but this was clearly out of scope for this draft (but may be in scope for future work in 6man). Overall, no one argued against the fact that the intent of the text in RFC2460 was to forbid insertion of extension headers on any other node but the source of the packet. The only argument made against adding clarifying text was that the text was already clear. Given this, I believe there is consensus to add explicit text about header insertion into the draft before it progresses further. I have discussed this with the editor and the document shepherd and would like to propose the following text change. > > OLD (from -08): > > The insertion of Extension Headers by any node other than the source > of the packet causes serious problems. Two examples include breaking > the integrity checks provided by the Authentication Header Integrity > [RFC4302], and breaking Path MTU Discovery which can result in ICMP > error messages being sent to the source of the packet that did not > insert the header, rather than the node that inserted the header. > > One approach to avoid these problems is to encapsulate the packet > using another IPv6 header and including the additional extension > header after the first IPv6 header, for example, as defined in > [RFC2473] > > With one exception, extension headers are not processed by any node > along a packet's delivery path, until the packet reaches the node (or > each of the set of nodes, in the case of multicast) identified in the > Destination Address field of the IPv6 header... > > NEW: > > With one exception, extension headers are not examined, processed, > inserted, or deleted by any node along a packet's delivery path, > until the packet reaches the node (or each of the set of nodes, in > the case of multicast) identified in the Destination Address field of > the IPv6 header... I have some concerns with how that sentence AND the following note comes together: " With one exception, extension headers are not examined, processed, inserted, or deleted by any node along a packet's delivery path, until the packet reaches the node (or each of the set of nodes, in the case of multicast) identified in the Destination Address field of the IPv6 header. Note: If an intermediate forwarding node examines an extension header for any reason, it must do so in accordance with the provisions of [RFC7045]. " I'm afraid that the lack of the normative language strikes back.. If 'are not examined" is to be interpreted as RFC2119 'MUST NOT', then the following note conflicts with that statement. 'A node MUST NOT examine EHs but if it does it must do it as per RFC7045' - it is extremely controversial. If ''are not examined" is to be read as RFC2119 'SHOULD NOT' then I have a very good news for those who would still like to insert/delete EHs: they can do it as long as they have "valid reasons in particular circumstances when the particular behavior is acceptable or even useful, but the full implications should be understood and the case carefully weighed before implementing any behavior described with this label.". But from today's presentation I've got an impression that the intention of this text was actually to prohibit EH insertion (the sildes say 'no one argued against the fact that the intent of the text in RFC2460 was to forbid insertion of extension headers on any other node but the source of the packet.). So to summarize: the proposed text either explicitly prohibits the examination (and then it contradicts the next sentence and we need to do smth with the note and RFC7045) OR it allows EH insertion - it depends how the text is interpreted. -- SY, Jen Linkova aka Furry