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Protocol Independent Multicast-Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification
draft-ietf-idmr-pim-sm-specv2-00

The information below is for an old version of the document that is already published as an RFC.
Document Type
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 2362.
Authors Van Jacobson , Liming Wei , Mark J. Handley , Ching-Gung Liu , Puneet Sharma , Dr. Steve E. Deering , Dr. Deborah Estrin , Dino Farinacci , Ahmed Helmy , Dave Thaler
Last updated 2020-01-21 (Latest revision 1997-09-11)
RFC stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
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draft-ietf-idmr-pim-sm-specv2-00
Network Working Group                             Deborah  Estrin  (USC)
Internet Draft                                  Dino Farinacci (CISCO)
                                                     Ahmed Helmy (USC)
                                                  David Thaler (UMICH)
                                                Steven Deering (XEROX)
                                                    Mark Handley (UCL)
                                                    Van Jacobson (LBL)
                                                   Chinggung Liu (USC)
                                                   Puneet Sharma (USC)
                                                    Liming Wei (CISCO) *

draft-ietf-idmr-pim-sm-specv2-00.txt                           September 9,1997

   Protocol  Independent  Multicast-Sparse   Mode   (PIM-SM):   Protocol
   Specification

   Status of This Memo

   This document is an Internet  Draft.   Internet  Drafts  are  working
   documents  of  the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas,
   and its Working Groups. (Note that other groups may  also  distribute
   working documents as Internet Drafts).

   Internet Drafts are draft  documents  valid  for  a  maximum  of  six
   months.  Internet  Drafts  may  be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by
   other documents at any time.  It is not appropriate to  use  Internet
   Drafts  as  reference  material  or  to  cite  them  other  than as a
   ``working'' draft'' or ``work in progress.''

   Please check the I-D abstract  listing  contained  in  each  Internet
   Draft  directory  to  learn  the  current status of this or any other
   Internet Draft.

[*] The author list has been reordered to reflect the involvement in
    detailed editorial work on this specification document.
    The first four authors are the primary editors and are listed
    alphabetically.
    The rest of the authors, also listed alphabetically, participated
    in all aspects of  the architectural and detailed design but
    managed to get away without hacking the latex!

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1 Introduction

   This  document  describes  a  protocol  for  efficiently  routing  to
   multicast   groups   that   may  span  wide-area  (and  inter-domain)
   internets.  We  refer  to  the  approach  as   Protocol   Independent
   Multicast--Sparse  Mode  (PIM-SM)  because it is not dependent on any
   particular unicast routing protocol, and because it  is  designed  to
   support  sparse  groups as defined in [1][2]. This document describes
   the protocol details. For the motivation  behind  the  design  and  a
   description  of  the  architecture, see [1][2]. Section  2 summarizes
   PIM-SM  operation.  It  describes  the  protocol   from   a   network
   perspective, in particular, how the participating routers interact to
   create and maintain  the  multicast  distribution  tree.  Section   3
   describes  PIM-SM  operations from the perspective of a single router
   implementing the protocol; this section constitutes the main body  of
   the  protocol  specification.  It  is  organized  according to PIM-SM
   message type; for each message type we  describe  its  contents,  its
   generation, and its processing.

   Sections  3.8 and  3.9 summarize the timers  and  flags  referred  to
   throughout this document. Section  4 provides packet format details.

   The most significant functional changes since the January '95 version
   involve  the  Rendezvous  Point-related mechanisms, several resulting
   simplifications to the protocol, and removal of the  PIM-DM  protocol
   details to a separate document [3] (for clarity).

2 PIM-SM Protocol Overview

   In  this  section  we  provide  an  overview  of  the   architectural
   components of PIM-SM.

   A router receives explicit Join/Prune messages from those neighboring
   routers  that have downstream group members. The router then forwards
   data packets addressed to a  multicast  group,  G,  only  onto  those
   interfaces  on which explicit joins have been received. Note that all
   routers mentioned in this document are assumed to be PIM-SM  capable,
   unless otherwise specified.

   A Designated Router (DR) sends periodic Join/Prune messages toward  a
   group-specific  Rendezvous Point (RP) for each group for which it has
   active members. Each router along the path toward  the  RP  builds  a
   wildcard  (any-source)  state  for  the  group  and  sends Join/Prune
   messages on toward the RP. We use the term  route entry to  refer  to
   the  state maintained in a router to represent the distribution tree.
   A route entry may include such fields  as  the  source  address,  the
   group   address,  the  incoming  interface  from  which  packets  are

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   accepted, the list of outgoing interfaces to which packets are  sent,
   timers, flag bits, etc. The wildcard route entry's incoming interface
   points  toward  the  RP;  the  outgoing  interfaces  point   to   the
   neighboring  downstream  routers  that  have sent Join/Prune messages
   toward the RP. This state creates a shared, RP-centered, distribution
   tree  that  reaches all group members. When a data source first sends
   to a group, its DR unicasts Register messages  to  the  RP  with  the
   source's  data packets encapsulated within. If the data rate is high,
   the RP can send source-specific Join/Prune messages back towards  the
   source  and  the  source's  data  packets  will  follow the resulting
   forwarding state and travel unencapsulated to the  RP.  Whether  they
   arrive  encapsulated  or  natively,  the  RP  forwards  the  source's
   decapsulated data packets  down  the  RP-centered  distribution  tree
   toward  group  members.  If  the  data rate warrants it, routers with
   local  receivers  can  join   a   source-specific,   shortest   path,
   distribution  tree, and prune this source's packets off of the shared
   RP-centered tree. For low data rate  sources,  neither  the  RP,  nor
   last-hop  routers  need join a source-specific shortest path tree and
   data packets can be delivered via the shared, RP-tree.

   The following subsections describe SM operation in  more  detail,  in
   particular, the control messages, and the actions they trigger.

2.1 Local hosts joining a group

   In order to join a multicast group, G, a host conveys its  membership
   information through the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP), as
   specified in [4][5], (see figure 1). From this point on we  refer  to
   such a host as a receiver, R, (or member) of the group G.

   Note that all figures used in this section are for  illustration  and
   are  not  intended to be complete. For complete and detailed protocol
   action see Section  3.

      [Figures are present only in the postscript version]
      Fig. 1  Example: how a receiver joins, and sets up shared tree

   When a DR (e.g., router A in figure 1) gets a  membership  indication
   from  IGMP for a new group, G, the DR looks up the associated RP. The
   DR creates a wildcard multicast route entry for the  group,  referred
   to  here  as  a (*,G) entry; if there is no more specific match for a
   particular source, the packet will be  forwarded  according  to  this
   entry.

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   The RP address is included in a special field in the route entry  and
   is  included  in  periodic upstream Join/Prune messages. The outgoing
   interface is set to that included in the IGMP  membership  indication
   for  the  new  member. The incoming interface is set to the interface
   used to send unicast packets to the RP.

   When there are no longer directly connected members  for  the  group,
   IGMP  notifies  the  DR.  If  the  DR  has  neither local members nor
   downstream receivers, the (*,G) state is deleted.

2.2 Establishing the RP-rooted shared tree

   Triggered by the (*,G) state, the DR  creates  a  Join/Prune  message
   with  the  RP  address in its join list and the the wildcard bit (WC-
   bit) and RP-tree bit (RPT-bit) set to 1. The  WC-bit  indicates  that
   any  source  may  match  and  be forwarded according to this entry if
   there is no longer match; the RPT-bit indicates  that  this  join  is
   being sent up the shared, RP-tree. The prune list is left empty. When
   the RPT-bit is set to 1 it indicates that the join is associated with
   the shared RP-tree and therefore the Join/Prune message is propagated
   along the RP-tree. When the WC-bit is set to 1 it indicates that  the
   address  is  an  RP  and  the  downstream receivers expect to receive
   packets from all sources via this (shared tree) path. The  term  RPT-
   bit  is used to refer to both the RPT-bit flags associated with route
   entries, and the RPT-bit  included  in  each  encoded  address  in  a
   Join/Prune message.

   Each upstream router creates or updates its multicast route entry for
   (*,G)  when it receives a Join/Prune with the RPT-bit and WC-bit set.
   The interface on which the Join/Prune message arrived is added to the
   list  of  outgoing  interfaces  (oifs) for (*,G). Based on this entry
   each upstream  router  between  the  receiver  and  the  RP  sends  a
   Join/Prune message in which the join list includes the RP. The packet
   payload   contains    Multicast-Address=G,    Join=RP,WC-bit,RPT-bit,
   Prune=NULL.

2.3 Hosts sending to a group

   When a host  starts  sending  multicast  data  packets  to  a  group,
   initially  its DR must deliver each packet to the RP for distribution
   down  the  RP-tree  (see  figure  2).  The  sender's   DR   initially
   encapsulates  each  data packet in a Register message and unicasts it
   to the RP for that group. The RP decapsulates each  Register  message
   and  forwards the enclosed data packet natively to downstream members
   on the shared RP-tree.

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                [Figures are present only in the postscript version]
                Fig. 2  Example: a host sending to a group

   If the data rate of the source warrants the use of a  source-specific
   shortest  path tree (SPT), the RP may construct a new multicast route
   entry that is specific to the source, hereafter referred to as  (S,G)
   state,  and send periodic Join/Prune messages toward the source. Note
   that over time, the rules for when to switch can be modified  without
   global  coordination.  When and if the RP does switch to the SPT, the
   routers between the source and the RP build and maintain (S,G)  state
   in response to these messages and send (S,G) messages upstream toward
   the source.

   The source's DR must stop encapsulating  data  packets  in  Registers
   when (and so long as) it receives Register-Stop messages from the RP.
   The RP triggers Register-Stop messages in response to  Registers,  if
   the  RP  has  no  downstream  receivers  for  the  group (or for that
   particular source), or if the RP has already joined  the  (S,G)  tree
   and  is  receiving  the  data  packets  natively.  Each  source's  DR
   maintains, per (S,G),  a  Register-Suppression-timer.  The  Register-
   Suppression-timer  is  started  by  the  Register-Stop  message; upon
   expiration, the source's DR resumes sending data packets to  the  RP,
   encapsulated in Register messages.

2.4 Switching from shared tree (RP-tree)  to  shortest  path  tree  (SP-
   tree)}

   A router with directly-connected members first joins the  shared  RP-
   tree.  The  router  can  switch to a source's shortest path tree (SP-
   tree) after receiving packets from that source over  the  shared  RP-
   tree. The recommended policy is to initiate the switch to the SP-tree
   after receiving  a  significant  number  of  data  packets  during  a
   specified  time  interval  from  a particular source. To realize this
   policy the router can monitor data packets from sources for which  it
   has   no  source-specific  multicast route entry and initiate such an
   entry when the data rate exceeds the configured threshold.  As  shown
   in figure 3, router `A' initiates a (S,G) state.

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        [Figures are present only in the postscript version]
     Fig. 3  Example: Switching from shared tree to shortest path tree

   When a (S,G) entry is activated (and  periodically  so  long  as  the
   state  exists),  a  Join/Prune  message  is sent upstream towards the
   source, S, with S in the join list. The payload  contains  Multicast-
   Address=G,  Join=S,  Prune=NULL. When the (S,G) entry is created, the
   outgoing interface list is copied from (*,G), i.e., all local  shared
   tree  branches  are replicated in the new shortest path tree. In this
   way when a data packet from S arrives and matches on this entry,  all
   receivers  will  continue  to receive the source's packets along this
   path. (In more complicated scenarios, other  entries  in  the  router
   have  to  be considered, as described in Section  3). Note that (S,G)
   state must be maintained in each last-hop router that is  responsible
   for  initiating and maintaining an SP-tree. Even when (*,G) and (S,G)
   overlap, both  states  are  needed  to  trigger  the  source-specific
   Join/Prune  messages.  (S,G)  state  is  kept  alive  by data packets
   arriving from that source. A timer, Entry-timer, is set for the (S,G)
   entry and this timer is restarted whenever data packets for (S,G) are
   forwarded out at least one oif,  or  Registers  are  sent.  When  the
   Entry-timer expires, the state is deleted. The last-hop router is the
   router  that  delivers  the  packets  to  their  ultimate  end-system
   destination.  This  is  the  router  that  monitors if there is group
   membership and joins or prunes the appropriate distribution trees  in
   response.  In  general  the  last-hop router is the Designated Router
   (DR) for the LAN. However, under various conditions described  later,
   a  parallel  router  connected  to  the same LAN may take over as the
   last-hop router in place of the DR.

   Only the RP and routers with local members can initiate switching  to
   the  SP-tree;  intermediate  routers  do  not. Consequently, last-hop
   routers create (S,G) state in  response  to  data  packets  from  the
   source,  S;  whereas  intermediate routers only create (S,G) state in
   response to Join/Prune messages from downstream that have  S  in  the
   Join list.

   The (S,G) entry is initialized with the SPT-bit  cleared,  indicating
   that  the  shortest  path  tree  branch from S has not yet been setup
   completely, and the router can  still  accept  packets  from  S  that
   arrive  on the (*,G) entry's indicated incoming interface (iif). Each
   PIM multicast entry has an associated  incoming  interface  on  which
   packets are expected to arrive.

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   When a router with a (S,G) entry and  a  cleared  SPT-bit  starts  to
   receive packets from the new source S on the iif for the (S,G) entry,
   and that iif differs from the (*,G) entry's iif, the router sets  the
   SPT-bit,  and  sends  a Join/Prune message towards the RP, indicating
   that the router no longer wants to receive packets  from  S  via  the
   shared RP-tree. The Join/Prune message sent towards the RP includes S
   in the prune list, with the RPT-bit set indicating that  S's  packets
   must  not  be  forwarded  down this branch of the shared tree. If the
   router receiving the Join/Prune message  has  (S,G)  state  (with  or
   without  the route entry's RPT-bit flag set), it deletes the arriving
   interface from the (S,G) oif list.  If  the  router  has  only  (*,G)
   state,  it  creates  an  entry  with  the  RPT-bit flag set to 1. For
   brevity we refer to an (S,G) entry that has the RPT-bit flag set to 1
   as  an  (S,G)RPT-bit  entry. This notational distinction is useful to
   point out the different actions taken for (S,G) entries depending  on
   the  setting of the RPT-bit flag. Note that a router can have no more
   than one active (S,G) entry for  any  particular  S  and  G,  at  any
   particular  time;  whether  the  RPT-bit flag is set or not. In other
   words, a router never has both an (S,G) and an (S,G)RPT-bit entry for
   the  same  S  and  G at the same time. The Join/Prune message payload
   contains Multicast-Address=G, Join=NULL, Prune=S,RPT-bit.

   A new receiver may join an existing RP-tree on which  source-specific
   prune  state has been established (e.g., because downstream receivers
   have switched to SP-trees). In this case  the  prune  state  must  be
   eradicated  upstream  of  the new receiver to bring all sources' data
   packets down to the  new  receiver.  Therefore,  when  a  (*,G)  Join
   arrives at a router that has any (Si,G)RPT-bit entries (i.e., entries
   that cause the router to send source-specific prunes toward the  RP),
   these  entries  must be updated upstream of the router so as to bring
   all sources' packets down to the new member. To accomplish this, each
   router  that receives a (*,G) Join/Prune message updates all existing
   (S,G)RPT-bit entries. The router may also trigger a (*,G)  Join/Prune
   message  upstream  to  cause  the  same  updating of RPT-bit settings
   upstream and pull down all active sources' packets. If  the  arriving
   (*,G)  join  has  some  sources  included in its prune list, then the
   corresponding (S,G)RPT-bit entries  are  left  unchanged  (i.e.,  the
   RPT-bit remains set and no oif is added).

2.5 Steady state maintenance of distribution tree (i.e., router state)}

   In the steady state each router sends  periodic  Join/Prune  messages
   for  each active PIM route entry; the Join/Prune messages are sent to
   the neighbor indicated in the corresponding entry. These messages are
   sent periodically to capture state, topology, and membership changes.
   A Join/Prune message is also sent on an  event-triggered  basis  each
   time  a new route entry is established for some new source (note that

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   some damping function may be applied, e.g., a short  delay  to  allow
   for  merging  of  new  Join  information). Join/Prune messages do not
   elicit any form of explicit acknowledgment; routers recover from lost
   packets using the periodic refresh mechanism.

2.6 Obtaining RP information

   To obtain the RP information, all routers within a PIM domain collect
   Bootstrap messages. Bootstrap messages are sent hop-by-hop within the
   domain; the  domain's  bootstrap  router  (BSR)  is  responsible  for
   originating  the  Bootstrap  messages. Bootstrap messages are used to
   carry out a dynamic BSR election when needed  and  to  distribute  RP
   information in steady state.

   A domain in this context is a contiguous  set  of  routers  that  all
   implement  PIM and are configured to operate within a common boundary
   defined by PIM Multicast Border Routers (PMBRs). PMBRs  connect  each
   PIM domain to the rest of the internet.

   Routers use a set of available RPs (called the RP-Set) distributed
   in  Bootstrap  messages  to  get  the proper Group to RP mapping. The
   following  paragraphs  summarize  the  mechanism;  details   of   the
   mechanism  may  be  found in Sections 3.6 and Appendix 6.2. A (small)
   set of routers, within a domain, are  configured  as  candidate  BSRs
   and,  through  a  simple election mechanism, a single BSR is selected
   for that domain. A set of routers within a domain are also configured
   as  candidate  RPs  (C-RPs); typically these will be the same routers
   that are configured as C-BSRs.  Candidate  RPs  periodically  unicast
   Candidate-RP-Advertisement  messages  (C-RP-Advs)  to the BSR of that
   domain. C-RP-Advs include the address of  the  advertising  C-RP,  as
   well as an optional group address and a mask length field, indicating
   the group prefix(es) for which the candidacy is advertised.  The  BSR
   then  includes  a set of these Candidate-RPs (the RP-Set), along with
   the  corresponding  group  prefixes,   in   Bootstrap   messages   it
   periodically  originates.  Bootstrap messages are distributed hop-by-
   hop throughout the domain.

   Routers receive and store Bootstrap messages originated by  the  BSR.
   When  a  DR  gets  a  membership  indication from IGMP for (or a data
   packet from) a directly connected host, for a group for which it  has
   no entry, the DR uses a hash function to map the group address to one
   of the C-RPs whose  Group-prefix  includes  the  group  (see  Section
   3.7).  The  DR  then  sends a Join/Prune message towards (or unicasts
   Registers to) that RP.

   The Bootstrap message indicates liveness of the RPs included therein.
   If an RP is included in the message, then it is tagged as `up' at the

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   routers; while RPs not included in the message are removed  from  the
   list of RPs over which the hash algorithm acts. Each router continues
   to use the contents of the most recently received  Bootstrap  message
   until it receives a new Bootstrap message.

   If a PIM domain partitions, each area separated from the old BSR will
   elect  its  own  BSR,  which will distribute an RP-Set containing RPs
   that are reachable within that partition. When the  partition  heals,
   another  election  will  occur automatically and only one of the BSRs
   will continue to send out Bootstrap messages. As is expected  at  the
   time  of  a  partition or healing, some disruption in packet delivery
   may occur. This time will be on the order of the region's  round-trip
   time and the bootstrap router timeout value.

2.7 Interoperation with dense mode  protocols such as DVMRP

   In order  to  interoperate  with  networks  that  run  dense-mode,
   broadcast and prune, protocols, such as DVMRP, all packets generated
   within a PIM-SM region must  be  pulled  out  to  that  region's  PIM
   Multicast  Border Routers (PMBRs) and injected (i.e., broadcast) into
   the DVMRP network. A PMBR is a router that sits at the boundary of  a
   PIM-SM domain and interoperates with other types of multicast routers
   such as those that run DVMRP.  Generally  a  PMBR  would  speak  both
   protocols  and  implement  interoperability functions not required by
   regular PIM routers. To support  interoperability,  a  special  entry
   type,  referred to as (*,*,RP), must be supported by all PIM routers.
   For this reason we include details about (*,*,RP) entry  handling  in
   this general PIM specification.

   A data packet will match on a (*,*,RP) entry  if  there  is  no  more
   specific  entry  (such  as  (S,G) or (*,G)) and the destination group
   address in the packet maps to the RP listed in the (*,*,RP) entry. In
   this  sense,  a  (*,*,RP)  entry represents an aggregation of all the
   groups that hash to that RP. PMBRs initialize (*,*,RP) state for each
   RP in the domain's RPset. The (*,*,RP) state causes the PMBRs to send
   (*,*,RP) Join/Prune messages toward each of the  active  RPs  in  the
   domain.  As a result distribution trees are built that carry all data
   packets originated within the PIM domain (and sent to the  RPs)  down
   to the PMBRs.

   PMBRs  are  also  responsible  for  delivering   externally-generated
   packets  to  routers within the PIM domain. To do so, PMBRs initially
   encapsulate externally-originated packets (i.e.,  received  on  DVMRP
   interfaces)   in   Register   messages   and   unicast  them  to  the
   corresponding RP within the PIM domain. The Register  message  has  a
   bit  indicating  that it was originated by a border router and the RP
   caches the originating PMBR's address in  the  route  entry  so  that
   duplicate   Registers  from  other  PMBRs  can  be  declined  with  a

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   Register-Stop message.

   All PIM routers must be capable  of  supporting  (*,*,RP)  state  and
   interpreting associated Join/Prune messages. We describe the handling
   of (*,*,RP) entries and messages throughout this  document;  however,
   detailed  PIM  Multicast  Border  Router  (PMBR)  functions  will  be
   specified in a separate  interoperability  document  (see  directory,
   http://catarina.usc.edu/pim/interop/).

2.8 Multicast data packet processing

   Data packets are processed in a manner  similar  to  other  multicast
   schemes.  A  router  first performs a longest match on the source and
   group address in the data packet. A (S,G) entry is matched  first  if
   one  exists;  a  (*,G)  entry  is matched otherwise. If neither state
   exists, then a (*,*,RP) entry match  is  attempted  as  follows:  the
   router  hashes  on  G to identify the RP for group G, and looks for a
   (*,*,RP) entry that has this RP address associated with it.  If  none
   of  the  above  exists,  then  the  packet  is dropped. If a state is
   matched, the router  compares  the  interface  on  which  the  packet
   arrived  to  the incoming interface field in the matched route entry.
   If the iif check fails the packet is dropped, otherwise the packet is
   forwarded to all interfaces listed in the outgoing interface list.

   Some special actions are needed to deliver packets continuously while
   switching  from the shared to shortest-path tree. In particular, when
   a (S,G) entry is matched, incoming packets are forwarded as follows:

        1    If the SPT-bit is set, then:

             1    if the incoming interface is the same  as  a  matching
                  (S,G)  iif, the packet is forwarded to the oif-list of
                  (S,G).

             2    if the incoming interface is different than a matching
                  (S,G) iif , the packet is discarded.

        2    If the SPT-bit is cleared, then:

             1    if the incoming interface is the same  as  a  matching
                  (S,G)  iif, the packet is forwarded to the oif-list of
                  (S,G). In addition, the SPT bit is set for that  entry

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                  if  the  incoming  interface differs from the incoming
                  interface of the (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry.

             2    if the incoming interface is different than a matching
                  (S,G)  iif, the incoming interface is tested against a
                  matching (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry. If the  iif  is  the
                  same  as  one of those, the packet is forwarded to the
                  oif-list of the matching entry.

             3    Otherwise the iif does not match any entry for  G  and
                  the packet is discarded.

        Data packets never trigger prunes.  However,  data  packets  may
        trigger  actions  that in turn trigger prunes. For example, when
        router  B in figure 3 decides to switch to SP-tree at step 3, it
        creates  a  (S,G) entry with SPT-bit set to 0. When data packets
        from S arrive at interface 2 of  B,  B sets  the  SPT-bit  to  1
        since  the  iif for (*,G) is different than that for (S,G). This
        triggers the sending of prunes towards the RP.

     2.9 Operation over Multi-access Networks

        This section describes  a  few  additional  protocol  mechanisms
        needed  to  operate  PIM  over multi-access networks: Designated
        Router election, Assert messages to resolve parallel paths,  and
        the  Join/Prune-Suppression-Timer to suppress redundant Joins on
        multi-access networks.

        Designated router election:

        When there are multiple  routers  connected  to  a  multi-access
        network, one of them must be chosen to operate as the designated
        router (DR) at any point in time.  The  DR  is  responsible  for
        sending  triggered  Join/Prune  and Register messages toward the
        RP.

        A simple designated router (DR) election mechanism is  used  for
        both  SM  and  traditional  IP  multicast  routing.  Neighboring
        routers send Hello messages to each other. The sender  with  the
        largest  network  layer  address  assumes  the  role of DR. Each
        router connected  to  the  multi-access  LAN  sends  the  Hellos
        periodically in order to adapt to changes in router status.

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        Parallel  paths  to  a  source  or  the  RP--Assert process:

        If a router receives a multicast datagram on a multi-access  LAN
        from  a source whose corresponding (S,G) outgoing interface list
        includes the interface  to  that  LAN,  the  packet  must  be  a
        duplicate.  In  this  case  a  single forwarder must be elected.
        Using Assert messages addressed to `224.0.0.13' (ALL-PIM-ROUTERS
        group)  on  the LAN, upstream routers can resolve which one will
        act as the forwarder. Downstream routers listen to  the  Asserts
        so  they know which one was elected, and therefore where to send
        subsequent Joins. Typically this is the same as  the  downstream
        router's  RPF  (Reverse Path Forwarding) neighbor; but there are
        circumstances where this might not be the case, e.g., when using
        multiple unicast routing protocols on that LAN. The RPF neighbor
        for a particular source (or RP) is the next-hop router to  which
        packets  are  forwarded  en  route  to  that source (or RP); and
        therefore is considered a good path via which to accept  packets
        from that source.

        The upstream router elected is the one  that  has  the  shortest
        distance  to the source. Therefore, when a packet is received on
        an outgoing interface a router sends an Assert  message  on  the
        multi-access  LAN  indicating  what  metric it uses to reach the
        source  of  the  data  packet.  The  router  with  the  smallest
        numerical  metric  (with  ties  broken  by highest address) will
        become the forwarder. All other upstream routers will delete the
        interface  from  their  outgoing  interface list. The downstream
        routers  also  do  the  comparison  in  case  the  forwarder  is
        different than the RPF neighbor.

        Associated with the metric is a metric preference value. This is
        provided  to  deal  with the case where the upstream routers may
        run different unicast routing protocols. The numerically smaller
        metric  preference is always preferred. The metric preference is
        treated as the high-order part of an assert  metric  comparison.
        Therefore,  a  metric  value can be compared with another metric
        value provided both metric preferences are the  same.  A  metric
        preference  can  be  assigned  per  unicast routing protocol and
        needs to be consistent  for  all  routers  on  the  multi-access
        network.

        Asserts are also needed for (*,G) entries since an  RP-Tree  and
        an  SP-Tree  for  the  same group may both cross the same multi-
        access network. When an assert is sent for a  (*,G)  entry,  the
        first  bit in the metric preference (RPT-bit) is always set to 1
        to indicate that this path corresponds to the RP tree, and  that
        the  match  must be done on (*,G) if it exists. Furthermore, the

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        RPT-bit is always cleared for metric preferences that  refer  to
        SP-tree  entries;  this  causes  an  SP-tree path to always look
        better than an RP-tree path. When the SP-tree and  RPtree  cross
        the  same  LAN,  this  mechanism  eliminates the duplicates that
        would otherwise be carried over the LAN.

        In case the packet, or the Assert message, matches  on  oif  for
        (*,*,RP) entry, a (*,G) entry is created, and asserts take place
        as if the matching state were (*,G).

        The DR may lose the (*,G) Assert process to  another  router  on
        the  LAN  if there are multiple paths to the RP through the LAN.
        From then on, the DR is no longer the last-hop router for  local
        receivers  and  removes  the  LAN  from  its (*,G) oif list. The
        winning router becomes the last-hop router  and  is  responsible
        for sending (*,G) join messages to the RP.

        Join/Prune suppression:

        Join/Prune suppression may  be  used  on  multi-access  LANs  to
        reduce  duplicate  control  message overhead; it is not required
        for correct performance of the protocol. If a Join/Prune message
        arrives  and  matches  on the incoming interface for an existing
        (S,G), (*,G), or (*,*,RP) route entry, and the Holdtime included
        in  the  Join/Prune  message is greater than the recipient's own
        [Join/Prune-Holdtime] (with ties resolved in favor of the higher
        network  layer  address),  a  timer (the Join/Prune-Suppression-
        timer) in the recipient's route entry may be started to suppress
        further  Join/Prune  messages.  After  this  timer  expires, the
        recipient triggers a Join/Prune  message,  and  resumes  sending
        periodic   Join/Prunes,   for   this   entry.   The  Join/Prune-
        Suppression-timer should be restarted  each  time  a  Join/Prune
        message is received with a higher Holdtime.

     2.10 Unicast Routing Changes

        When unicast routing changes, an RPF check is done on all active
        (S,G),  (*,G)  and  (*,*,RP)  entries, and all affected expected
        incoming interfaces are  updated.  In  particular,  if  the  new
        incoming interface appears in the outgoing interface list, it is
        deleted from the outgoing interface list. The previous  incoming
        interface  may  be  added  to  the  outgoing interface list by a
        subsequent  Join/Prune  from  downstream.  Join/Prune   messages
        received   on   the  current  incoming  interface  are  ignored.
        Join/Prune messages  received  on  new  interfaces  or  existing
        outgoing  interfaces  are not ignored. Other outgoing interfaces
        are left as is until they are explicitly  pruned  by  downstream

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        routers  or  are timed out due to lack of appropriate Join/Prune
        messages. If the router has a (S,G) entry with the SPT-bit  set,
        and  the  updated  iif(S,G)  does   not  differ from iif(*,G) or
        iif(*,*,RP), then the router resets the SPT-bit.

        The router must send a Join/Prune message with  S  in  the  Join
        list  out any new incoming interfaces to inform upstream routers
        that it expects multicast datagrams over the interface.  It  may
        also  send a Join/Prune message with S in the Prune list out the
        old incoming interface, if the link is  operational,  to  inform
        upstream  routers  that  this  part  of the distribution tree is
        going away.

     2.11 PIM-SM for Inter-Domain Multicast

        Future documents will address the use of PIM-SM  as  a  backbone
        inter-domain  multicast  routing protocol. Design choices center
        primarily around the distribution and usage  of  RP  information
        for wide area, inter-domain groups.

     2.12 Security

        All PIM control messages may use IPsec [6] to  address  security
        concerns.  Security  mechanisms are likely to be enhanced in the
        near future.

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     3 Detailed Protocol Description

        This  section  describes  the  protocol  operations   from   the
        perspective   of   an   individual   router  implementation.  In
        particular,  for  each  message  type  we  describe  how  it  is
        generated and processed.

     3.1 Hello

        Hello messages are sent so neighboring routers can discover each
        other.

     3.1.1 Sending Hellos

        Hello messages are  sent  periodically  between  PIM  neighbors,
        every   [Hello-Period]   seconds.   This  informs  routers  what
        interfaces have PIM  neighbors.  Hello  messages  are  multicast
        using  address  224.0.0.13  (ALL-PIM-ROUTERS  group). The packet
        includes a Holdtime, set to [Hello-Holdtime], for  neighbors  to
        keep  the  information  valid.  Hellos  are sent on all types of
        communication links.

     3.1.2 Receiving Hellos

        When a router receives a Hello message, it  stores  the  network
        layer address for that neighbor, sets its Neighbor-timer for the
        Hello  sender  to  the  Holdtime  included  in  the  Hello,  and
        determines  the  Designated  Router (DR) for that interface. The
        highest addressed system is  elected  DR.  Each  Hello  received
        causes the DR's address to be updated.

        When a router that is the active DR receives a Hello from a  new
        neighbor  (i.e.,  from  an  address  that  is not yet in the DRs
        neighbor  table),  the  DR  unicasts  its  most  recent   RP-set
        information to the new neighbor.

     3.1.3 Timing out neighbor entries

        A periodic process is run to time out PIM  neighbors  that  have
        not  sent Hellos. If the DR has gone down, a new DR is chosen by
        scanning all neighbors on the interface and selecting the new DR
        to  be  the  one  with  the highest network layer address. If an
        interface has gone down, the router may optionally time out  all
        PIM neighbors associated with the interface.

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     3.2 Join/Prune

        Join/Prune messages are sent to join or prune a  branch  off  of
        the  multicast distribution tree. A single message contains both
        a join and prune list, either one of which  may  be  null.  Each
        list  contains a set of source addresses, indicating the source-
        specific trees or shared tree that the router wants to  join  or
        prune.

     3.2.1 Sending Join/Prune Messages

        Join/Prune messages are merged such that a  message  sent  to  a
        particular  upstream  neighbor,  N,  includes all of the current
        joined and pruned sources that are reached via N;  according  to
        unicast routing Join/Prune messages are multicast to all routers
        on multi-access networks with the target address set to the next
        hop  router  towards S or RP. Join/Prune messages are sent every
        [Join/Prune-Period] seconds. In the  future  we  will  introduce
        mechanisms  to  rate-limit  this control traffic on a hop by hop
        basis, in order to avoid excessive overhead on small  links.  In
        addition,  certain events cause triggered Join/Prune messages to
        be sent.

        Periodic Join/Prune Messages:

        A  router  sends  a periodic Join/Prune message to each distinct
        RPF neighbor associated with  each  (S,G),  (*,G)  and  (*,*,RP)
        entry.  Join/Prune messages are only sent if the RPF neighbor is
        a  PIM  neighbor.  A  periodic  Join/Prune  message  sent  to  a
        particular RPF neighbor is constructed as follows:

        1     Each router determines the RP for a (*,G) entry  by  using
             the  hash  function described. The RP address (with RPT and
             WC bits set) is included in the join  list  of  a  periodic
             Join/Prune message under the following conditions:

             1    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor toward the RP for an active (*,G) or (*,*,RP)
                  entry, and

             2    The outgoing interface list in the (*,G)  or  (*,*,RP)
                  entry is non-NULL, or the router is the DR on the same
                  interface as the RPF neighbor.

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        2    A particular source address, S, is  included  in  the  join
             list  with  the RPT and WC bits cleared under the following
             conditions:

             1    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor toward S, and

             2    There exists an active (S,G) entry  with  the  RPT-bit
                  flag cleared, and

             3    The oif list in the (S,G) entry is not null.

        3    A particular source address, S, is included  in  the  prune
             list  with  the RPT and WC bits cleared under the following
             conditions:

             1    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor toward S, and

             2    There exists an active (S,G) entry  with  the  RPT-bit
                  flag cleared, and

             3    The oif list in the (S,G) entry is null.

        4    A particular source address, S, is included  in  the  prune
             list with the RPT-bit  set and the WC bit cleared under the
             following conditions:

             1    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor  toward the RP and there exists a (S,G) entry
                  with the RPT-bit flag set and null oif list, or

             2    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor  toward  the  RP,  there exists a (S,G) entry
                  with the RPT-bit flag cleared and SPT-bit set, and the
                  incoming  interface  toward  S  is  different than the
                  incoming interface toward the RP, or

             3    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor toward the RP, and there exists a (*,G) entry
                  and (S,G) entry for a directly connected source.

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        5    The RP address (with RPT and WC bits set)  is  included  in
             the prune list if:

             1    The Join/Prune  message  is  being  sent  to  the  RPF
                  neighbor  toward the RP and there exists a (*,G) entry
                  with a null oif list (see Section  3.5.2).

        Triggered Join/Prune Messages:

        In  addition  to  periodic  messages,  the following events will
        trigger Join/Prune messages if as a result, a) a  new  entry  is
        created,  or  b)  the  oif list changes from null to non-null or
        non-null to null. The contents of  triggered  messages  are  the
        same as the periodic, described above.

        1    Receipt of an  indication  from  IGMP  that  the  state  of
             directly-connected-   membership  has  changed  (i.e.,  new
             members have just joined  `membership  indication'  or  all
             members  have  left), for a group G, may cause the last-hop
             router to build or modify corresponding (*,G)  state.  When
             IGMP  indicates that there are no longer directly connected
             members, the oif is removed from the oif list if  the  oif-
             timer  is not running. A Join/Prune message is triggered if
             and only if a) a new entry is created, or b) the  oif  list
             changes  from  null  to  non-null  or  non-null to null, as
             follows :

             1    If the receiving router does not have  a  route  entry
                  for G the router creates a (*,G) entry, copies the oif
                  list from the  corresponding  (*,*,RP)  entry  (if  it
                  exists),  and  includes  the interface included in the
                  IGMP membership indication in the oif list; as always,
                  the  router  never includes the entry's iif in the oif
                  list. The router sends a  Join/Prune  message  towards
                  the RP with the RP address and RPT-bit and WC-bits set
                  in the join list. Or,

             2    If a (S,G)RPT-bit or (*,G) entry already  exists,  the
                  interface  included  in the IGMP membership indication
                  is added to the oif  list  (if  it  was  not  included
                  already).

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        2    Receipt  of  a  Join/Prune  message  for  (S,G),  (*,G)  or
             (*,*,RP)  will  cause  building  or modifying corresponding
             state, and subsequent  triggering  of  upstream  Join/Prune
             messages, in the following cases:

             1    When there is no current route entry, the  RP  address
                  included  in the Join/Prune message is checked against
                  the local RP-Set information. If it matches, an  entry
                  will be created and the new entry will in turn trigger
                  an upstream Join/Prune message. If the router  has  no
                  RP-Set  information  it  may  discard  the message, or
                  optionally use the RP address included in the message.

             2    When the outgoing interface list  of  an  (S,G)RPT-bit
                  entry  becomes  null, the triggered Join/Prune message
                  will contain S in the prune list.

             3    When there exists a (S,G)RPT-bit with null  oif  list,
                  and  an  (*,G)  Join/Prune  message  is  received, the
                  arriving interface is added to  the  oif  list  and  a
                  (*,G) Join/Prune message is triggered upstream.

             4    When there exists a (*,G) with null oif  list,  and  a
                  (*,*,RP) Join/Prune message is received, the receiving
                  interface is added to the  oif  list  and  a  (*,*,RP)
                  Join/Prune message is triggered upstream.

        3    Receipt of a packet that matches on  a  (S,G)  entry  whose
             SPT-bit  is  cleared  triggers  the following if the packet
             arrived on the correct incoming interface and  there  is  a
             (*,G)   or   (*,*,RP)   entry  with  a  different  incoming
             interface: a) the router sets  the  SPT-bit  on  the  (S,G)
             entry, and b) the router sends a Join/Prune message towards
             the RP with S in the prune list and the RPT-bit set.

        4    Receipt of a packet at the DR  from  a  directly  connected
             source  S, on the subnet containing the address S, triggers
             a Join/Prune message towards the RP with  S  in  the  prune
             list and the RPT-bit set under the following conditions: a)
             there is no matching (S,G) state, and  b)  there  exists  a

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             (*,G) or (*,*,RP) for which the DR is not the RP.

        5    When a Join/Prune message is received for a  group  G,  the
             prune  list is checked. If the prune list contains a source
             or RP for which the receiving router  has  a  corresponding
             active (S,G), (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry, and whose iif is
             that on which the Join/Prune was received, then a join  for
             (S,G),  (*,G)  or  (*,*,RP)  is  triggered  to override the
             prune, respectively. (This is  necessary  in  the  case  of
             parallel  downstream  routers  connected  to a multi-access
             network.)

        6    When the RP fails, the RP  will  not  be  included  in  the
             Bootstrap messages sent to all routers in that domain. This
             triggers the DRs to send (*,G) Join/Prune messages  towards
             the  new  RP for the group, as determined by the RP-Set and
             the hash function.  As  described  earlier,  PMBRs  trigger
             (*,*,RP) joins towards each RP in the RP-Set.

        7    When an entry's  Join/Prune-Suppression  timer  expires,  a
             Join/Prune  message  is triggered upstream corresponding to
             that  entry,  even  if  the  outgoing  interface  has   not
             transitioned between null and non-null states.

        8    When the RPF neighbor changes (whether due to an Assert  or
             changes in unicast routing), the router sets a random delay
             timer  (the   Random-Delay-Join-Timer)   whose   expiration
             triggers  sending  of a Join/Prune message for the asserted
             route  entry  to  the  Assert  winner  (if  the  Join/Prune
             Suppression timer has expired.)

        We do not trigger prunes onto interfaces based on data  packets.
        Data  packets  that  arrive  on the wrong incoming interface are
        silently  dropped.   However,   on   point-to-point   interfaces
        triggered prunes may be sent as an optimization.

        aragraphFragmentation It is possible that a  Join/Prune  message
        constructed  according  to  the preceding rules could exceed the
        MTU of a network. In this case, the message can undergo semantic
        fragmentation  whereby  information  corresponding  to different
        groups  can  be  sent  in  different  messages.  However,  if  a
        Join/Prune  message  must  be fragmented the complete prune list
        corresponding to  a  group  G  must  be  included  in  the  same
        Join/Prune message as the associated RP-tree Join for G. If such
        semantic fragmentation is not possible, IP fragmentation  should

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        be used between the two neighboring hops.

     3.2.2 Receiving  Join/Prune  Messages  When  a  router  receives  a
        Join/Prune message, it processes it as follows.

        The receiver of the Join/Prune notes the interface on which  the
        PIM  message arrived, call it I. The receiver then checks to see
        if the Join/Prune message was addressed to the receiving  router
        itself  (i.e.,  the  router's  address  appears  in  the Unicast
        Upstream Neighbor Router field of the Join/Prune  message).  (If
        the  router is connected to a multiaccess LAN, the message could
        be intended for a different router.) If the  Join/Prune  is  for
        this router the following actions are taken.

        For each  group  address  G,  in  the  Join/Prune  message,  the
        associated  join  list is processed as follows. We refer to each
        address in the join list as Sj; Sj refers to the RP if the  RPT-
        bit and WC-bit are both set. For each Sj in the join list of the
        Join/Prune message:

        1    If an address, Sj, in  the  join  list  of  the  Join/Prune
             message  has  the RPT-bit and WC-bit set, then Sj is the RP
             address used by the downstream router(s) and the  following
             actions are taken:

             1    If Sj is not the same as  the  receiving  router's  RP
                  mapping  for  G,  the  receiving router may ignore the
                  Join/Prune message with respect to that  group  entry.
                  If the router does not have any RP-Set information, it
                  may use the address  Sj  included  in  the  Join/Prune
                  message as the RP for the group.

             2    If Sj is the same as the receiving router's RP mapping
                  for  G,  the  receiving  router adds I to the outgoing
                  interface list of the (*,G) route entry (if  there  is
                  no (*,G) entry, the router creates one first) and sets
                  the Oif-timer  for  that  interface  to  the  Holdtime
                  specified  in the Join/Prune message. In addition, the
                  Oif-Deletion-Delay for that interface is set to  1/3rd
                  the Holdtime specified in the Join/Prune message. If a
                  (*,*,RP) entry exists, for the RP associated  with  G,
                  then  the oif list of the newly created (*,G) entry is
                  copied from that (*,*,RP) entry.

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             3    For each (Si,G) entry associated with group G:  i)  if
                  Si  is not included in the prune list, ii) if I is not
                  on the same subnet as the address Si, and iii) if I is
                  not  the iif, then interface I is added to the oif
                  list and the Oif-timer  for  that  interface  in  each
                  affected  entry  is increased (never decreased) to the
                  Holdtime  included  in  the  Join/Prune  message.   In
                  addition,  if  the  Oif-timer  for  that  interface is
                  increased, the Oif-Deletion-Delay for  that  interface
                  is   set  to  1/3rd  the  Holdtime  specified  in  the
                  Join/Prune message.

                  If the group address in the Join/Prune message is  `*'
                  then  every (*,G) and (S,G) entry, whose group address
                  hashes to the RP indicated in the (*,*,RP)  Join/Prune
                  message,  is  updated  accordingly. A `*' in the group
                  field of the Join/Prune  is  represented  by  a  group
                  address  224.0.0.0  and  a  group  mask  length  of 4,
                  indicating a (*,*,RP) Join.

             4    If the (Si,G) entry has its RPT-bit flag set to 1, and
                  its  oif  list  is  the same as the (*,G) oif
                  list, then the (Si,G)RPT-bit entry is deleted,

             5    The incoming interface is set to the interface used to
                  send  unicast  packets  to  the  RP in the (*,G) route
                  entry, i.e., RPF interface toward the RP.

        2    For each address, Sj, in the join list  whose  RPT-bit  and
             WC-bit  are   not  set,  and for which there is no existing
             (Sj,G) route entry, the router initiates  one.  The  router
             creates  a  (S,G)  entry and copies all outgoing interfaces
             from the (S,G)RPT-bit entry, if it exists. If there  is  no
             (S,G)  entry,  the oif list is copied from the (*,G) entry;
             and if there is no (*,G) entry, the oif list is copied from
             the  (*,*,RP) entry, if it exists. In all cases, the iif of
             the (S,G) entry is always excluded from the oif list.

             1    The outgoing interface for (Sj,G) is  set  to  I.  The
                  incoming  interface for (Sj,G) is set to the interface
                  used to send unicast packets  to  Sj  (i.e.,  the  RPF
                  neighbor).

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             2    If the interface used to reach Sj, is the same  as  I,
                  this represents an error (or a unicast routing change)
                  and the Join/Prune must not be processed.

        3    For each address, Sj, in the join list  of  the  Join/Prune
             message, for which there is an existing (Sj,G) route entry,

             1    If the RPT-bit  is  not  set  for  Sj  listed  in  the
                  Join/Prune message, but the RPT-bit flag is set on the
                  existing (Sj,G) entry, the router clears  the  RPT-bit
                  flag  on the (Sj,G) entry, sets the incoming interface
                  to point towards Sj for that (Sj,G) entry, and sends a
                  Join/Prune message corresponding to that entry through
                  the new incoming interface; and

             2    If  I  is  not  the  same  as  the  existing  incoming
                  interface,  the  router adds I to the list of outgoing
                  interfaces.

             3    The Oif-timer for I is increased (never decreased)  to
                  the  Holdtime  included  in the Join/Prune message. In
                  addition, if  the  Oif-timer  for  that  interface  is
                  increased,  the  Oif-Deletion-Delay for that interface
                  is  set  to  1/3rd  the  Holdtime  specified  in   the
                  Join/Prune message.

             4    The (Sj,G) entry's SPT bit is cleared until data comes
                  down the shortest path tree.

        For each  group  address  G,  in  the  Join/Prune  message,  the
        associated  prune list is processed as follows. We refer to each
        address in the prune list as Sp; Sp refers  to  the  RP  if  the
        RPT-bit  and  WC-bit are both set. For each Sp in the prune list
        of the Join/Prune message:

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        1    For each address, Sp, in the prune list whose  RPT-bit  and
             WC-bit are cleared:

             1    If there is an existing (Sp,G) route entry, the router
                  lowers  the  entry's  Oif-timer  for  I  to  its  Oif-
                  Deletion-Delay, allowing for other downstream  routers
                  on  a multi-access LAN to override the prune. However,
                  on point-to-point  links,  the  oif-timer  is  expired
                  immediately.

             2    If the router has a current (*,G), or (*,*,RP),  route
                  entry,  and  if the existing (Sp,G) entry has its RPT-
                  bit flag set to 1, then this  (Sp,G)RPT-bit  entry  is
                  maintained   (not   deleted)   even  if  its  outgoing
                  interface list is null.

        2    For each address, Sp, in the prune list  whose  RPT-bit  is
             set and whose WC-bit cleared:

             1    If there is an existing (Sp,G) route entry, the router
                  lowers  the  entry's  Oif-timer  for  I  to  its  Oif-
                  Deletion-Delay, allowing for other downstream  routers
                  on  a multi-access LAN to override the prune. However,
                  on point-to-point  links,  the  oif-timer  is  expired
                  immediately.

             2    If the router has a current (*,G), or (*,*,RP),  route
                  entry,  and  if the existing (Sp,G) entry has its RPT-
                  bit flag set to 1, then this  (Sp,G)RPT-bit  entry  is
                  not deleted, and the Entry-timer is restarted, even if
                  its outgoing interface list is null.

             3    If (*,G), or corresponding (*,*,RP), state exists, but
                  there  is  no  (Sp,G) entry, an (Sp,G)RPT-bit entry is
                  created . The outgoing interface list is  copied  from
                  the  (*,G), or (*,*,RP), entry, with the interface, I,
                  on which the prune was received, is  deleted.  Packets
                  from  the  pruned  source, Sp, match on this state and
                  are not forwarded toward the pruned receivers.

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             4    If there exists a (Sp,G) entry, with  or  without  the
                  RPT-bit  set,  the oif-timer for I is expired, and the
                  Entry-timer is restarted.

        3    For each address, Sp, in the prune list whose  RPT-bit  and
             WC-bit are both set:

             1    If there is an existing (*,G) entry, with Sp as the RP
                  for  G,  the router lowers the entry's Oif-timer for I
                  to  its   Oif-Deletion-Delay,   allowing   for   other
                  downstream  routers  on a multi-access LAN to override
                  the prune. However, on point-to-point links, the  oif-
                  timer is expired immediately.

             2    If the corresponding (*,*,RP) state exists, but  there
                  is  no  (*,G)  entry,  a  (*,G)  entry is created. The
                  outgoing interface list is copied from (*,*,RP) entry,
                  with   the  interface,  I,  on  which  the  prune  was
                  received, deleted.

             For any new (S,G), (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry  created  by  an
             incoming Join/Prune message, the SPT-bit is cleared (and if
             a Join/Prune-Suppression timer is used, it is left off.)

        If the entry has a Join/Prune-Suppression timer associated  with
        it,  and if the received Join/Prune does not indicate the router
        as its target, then the receiving router examines the  join  and
        prune  lists  to  see  if any addresses in the list `completely-
        match' existing (S,G), (*,G), or (*,*,RP) state  for  which  the
        receiving  router  currently  schedules  Join/Prune messages. An
        element on the join or prune list `completely-matches'  a  route
        entry  only if both the addresses and RPT-bit flag are the same.
        If  the  incoming  Join/Prune  message  completely  matches   an
        existing  (S,G),  (*,G),  or  (*,*,RP)  entry and the Join/Prune
        arrived on the iif for that entry, then the router  compares
        the  Holdtime  included  in  the  Join/Prune message, to its own
        [Join/Prune-Holdtime].  If  its  own  [Join/Prune-Holdtime]   is
        lower,   the  Join/Prune-Suppression-timer  is  started  at  the
        [Join/Prune-Suppression-Timeout]. If  the  [Join/Prune-Holdtime]

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        is equal, the tie is resolved in favor of the Join/Prune Message
        originator that has the higher network layer address.  When  the
        Join/Prune  timer  expires,  the  router  triggers  a Join/Prune
        message for the corresponding entry(ies).

     3.3 Register and Register-Stop

        When a source first starts sending to a group  its  packets  are
        encapsulated  in  Register  messages  and sent to the RP. If the
        data rate warrants source-specific paths, the RP sets up  source
        specific  state  and  starts  sending  (S,G) Join/Prune messages
        toward the source, with S in the join list.

     3.3.1 Sending Registers and Receiving Register-Stops

        Register messages are sent as follows:

        1    When a DR receives  a  packet  from  a  directly  connected
             source, S, on the subnet containing the address S,

             1    If there is no  corresponding  (S,G)  entry,  and  the
                  router  has  RP-Set information, and the DR is not the
                  RP for G, the DR  creates  an  (S,G)  entry  with  the
                  Register-Suppression-timer   turned  off  and  the  RP
                  address set according to the hash function mapping for
                  the  corresponding  group. The oif list is copied from
                  existing (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entries, if they exist. The
                  iif of the (S,G) entry is always excluded from the oif
                  list. If there exists a (*,G) or (*,*,RP)  entry,  the
                  DR sends a Join/Prune message towards the RP with S in
                  the prune list and the RPT-bit set.

             2    If there is a (S,G) entry in existence, the DR  simply
                  restarts the corresponding Entry-timer.

             When a PMBR (e.g., a router that connects the PIM-SM region
             to  a dense mode region running DVMRP or PIM-DM) receives a
             packet from a source in the dense mode region,  the  router
             treats  the  packet as if it were from a directly connected
             source. A separate document will describe  the  details  of
             interoperability.

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        2    If the new or previously-existing (S,G)  entry's  Register-
             Suppression-timer  is  not  running,  the  data  packet  is
             encapsulated in a Register message and unicast  to  the  RP
             for that group. The data packet is also forwarded according
             to (S,G) state in the DR if the oif list is not null; since
             a  receiver  may  join  the  SP-tree  while the DR is still
             registering to the RP.

        3    If the (S,G) entry's Register-Suppression-timer is running,
             the  data  packet  is not sent in a Register message, it is
             just forwarded according to the (S,G) oif list.

        When the DR receives a Register-Stop message,  it  restarts  the
        Register-Suppression-timer in the corresponding (S,G) entry(ies)
        at [Register-Suppression-Timeout] seconds. If there is  data  to
        be  registered,  the  DR  may  send  a null Register (a Register
        message with a zero-length data portion in the inner packet)  to
        the  RP,  [Probe-Time]  seconds before the Register-Suppression-
        timer expires, to avoid sending occasional bursts of traffic  to
        an RP unnecessarily.

     3.3.2 Receiving Register Messages and Sending Register-Stops

        When a router (i.e., the RP) receives a  Register  message,  the
        router does the following:

        1    Decapsulates  the   data   packet,   and   checks   for   a
             corresponding (S,G) entry.

             1    If a (S,G) entry with cleared (0) SPT bit exists,  and
                  the   received   Register  does  not  have  the  Null-
                  Register-Bit set to 1, the packet  is  forwarded;  and
                  the  SPT bit is left cleared (0). If the SPT bit is 1,
                  the packet is dropped, and Register-Stop messages  are
                  triggered.  Register-Stops  should be rate-limited (in
                  an implementation-specific manner)  so  that  no  more
                  than a few are sent per round trip time. This prevents
                  a high datarate stream of packets  from  triggering  a
                  large  number  of  Register-Stop  messages between the
                  time that the first packet is received  and  the  time
                  when the source receives the first Register-Stop.

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             2    If there is no (S,G)  entry,  but  there  is  a  (*,G)
                  entry,  and  the  received  Register does not have the
                  Null-Register-Bit set to 1, the  packet  is  forwarded
                  according to the (*,G) entry.

             3    If there is a (*,*,RP) entry but no (*,G)  entry,  and
                  the   Register   received  does  not  have  the  Null-
                  Register-Bit set to 1,  a  (*,G)  or  (S,G)  entry  is
                  created  and  the oif list is copied from the (*,*,RP)
                  entry to  the  new  entry.  The  packet  is  forwarded
                  according to the created entry.

             4    If there is no G or (*,*,RP) entry corresponding to G,
                  the   packet   is  dropped,  and  a  Register-Stop  is
                  triggered.

             5    A ``Border bit'' bit is added to the Register message,
                  to  facilitate  interoperability mechanisms. PMBRs set
                  this bit when registering for  external  sources  (see
                  Section   2.7).  If  the  ``Border bit'' is set in the
                  Register, the RP does the following:

                  1    If there is no matching (S,G)  state,  but  there
                       exists  (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry, the RP creates a
                       (S,G) entry, with  a  `PMBR'  field.  This  field
                       holds  the source of the Register (i.e. the outer
                       network layer address of  the  register  packet).
                       The  RP  triggers a (S,G) join towards the source
                       of the data packet, and clears the  SPT  bit  for
                       the  (S,G) entry. If the received Register is not
                       a  `null  Register'  the  packet   is   forwarded
                       according to the created state. Else,

                  2    If the `PMBR' field for the  corresponding  (S,G)
                       entry  matches the source of the Register packet,
                       and  the  received  Register  is  not   a   `null
                       Register',  the  decapsulated packet is forwarded
                       to the oif list of that entry. Else,

                  3    If the `PMBR' field for the  corresponding  (S,G)

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                       entry  matches the source of the Register packet,
                       the decapsulated packet is forwarded to  the  oif
                       list of that entry, else

                  4    The packet is dropped,  and  a  Register-stop  is
                       triggered towards the source of the Register.

             The (S,G) Entry-timer is restarted  by  Registers  arriving
             from that source to that group.

        2    If the matching (S,G) or (*,G) state contains  a  null  oif
             list, the RP unicasts a Register-Stop message to the source
             of the Register message; in the latter  case,  the  source-
             address  field, within the Register-Stop message, is set to
             the wildcard value (all 0's). This message is not processed
             by   intermediate   routers,   hence   no  (S,G)  state  is
             constructed between the RP and the source.

        3    If the Register message arrival rate warrants it and  there
             is  no  existing  (S,G) entry, the RP sets up a (S,G) route
             entry with the outgoing interface list, excluding iif(S,G),
             copied  from the (*,G) outgoing interface list, its SPT-bit
             is initialized to 0. If a (*,G) entry does not  exist,  but
             there  exists a (*,*,RP) entry with the RP corresponding to
             G , the oif list for (S,G) is copied  -excluding  the  iif-
             from that (*,*,RP) entry.

             A timer (Entry-timer) is set for the (S,G) entry  and  this
             timer  is  restarted  by receipt of data packets for (S,G).
             The (S,G) entry causes the RP to send a Join/Prune  message
             for  the indicated group towards the source of the register
             message.

             If the (S,G) oif list  becomes  null,  Join/Prune  messages
             will not be sent towards the source, S.

     3.4 Multicast Data Packet Forwarding

        Processing a multicast data packet involves the following steps:

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        1    Lookup route state based on a longest match of  the  source
             address,  and  an exact match of the destination address in
             the data packet. If neither S, nor G, find a longest  match
             entry,  and  the  RP  for  the  packet's  destination group
             address  has  a  corresponding  (*,*,RP)  entry,  then  the
             longest  match  does  not  require  an  exact  match on the
             destination group address. In summary, the longest match is
             performed  in the following order: (1) (S,G), (2) (*,G). If
             neither is matched, then a lookup is performed on  (*,*,RP)
             entries.

        2    If the  packet  arrived  on  the  interface  found  in  the
             matching-entry's iif field, and the oif list is not
             null:

             1    Forward the packet to the oif list for that entry,
                  excluding  the  subnet  containing  S, and restart the
                  Entry-timer  if   the   matching   entry   is   (S,G).
                  Optionally,  the (S,G) Entry-timer may be restarted by
                  periodic checking of the matching packet count.

             2    If the entry is a (S,G) entry with a cleared  SPT-bit,
                  and  a  (*,G) or associated (*,*,RP) also exists whose
                  incoming interface is different than that  for  (S,G),
                  set  the  SPT-bit  for  the (S,G) entry and trigger an
                  (S,G) RPT-bit prune towards the RP.

             3    If the source of the packet  is  a  directly-connected
                  host  and  the  router  is  the  DR  on  the receiving
                  interface,   check   the    Register-Suppression-timer
                  associated with the (S,G) entry. If it is not running,
                  then the router encapsulates  the  data  packet  in  a
                  register message and sends it to the RP.

             This covers the common case of a packet arriving on the RPF
             interface  to  the  source or RP and being forwarded to all
             joined branches. It also detects when packets arrive on the
             SP-tree, and triggers their pruning from the RP-tree. If it
             is  the  DR  for  the  source,  it   sends   data   packets
             encapsulated in Registers to the RPs.

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        3    If the packet matches to an entry but did not arrive on the
             interface  found  in  the  entry's iif field, check the
             SPT-bit of the entry. If  the  SPT-bit  is  set,  drop  the
             packet.  If  the SPT-bit is cleared, then lookup the (*,G),
             or (*,*,RP), entry for G. If the packet arrived  on  the
             iif  found  in  (*,G),  or  the  corresponding  (*,*,RP),
             forward the packet to the  oif  list  of  the  matching
             entry. This covers the case when a data packet matches on a
             (S,G)  entry  for  which  the  SP-tree  has  not  yet  been
             completely established upstream.

        4    If the packet does not match any entry, but the  source  of
             the  data  packet  is a local, directly-connected host, and
             the router is the DR on a multi-access LAN and  has  RP-Set
             information, the DR uses the hash function to determine the
             RP associated with the destination group, G. The DR creates
             a  (S,G)  entry,  with  the  Register-Suppression-timer not
             running, encapsulates the data packet in a Register message
             and unicasts it to the RP.

        5    If the packet does not match to any entry, and it is not  a
             local host or the router is not the DR, drop the packet.

     3.4.1 Data triggered switch to shortest path tree (SP-tree)

        Different criteria can be applied to trigger switching over from
        the  RP-based  shared  tree  to  source-specific,  shortest path
        trees.

        One proposed example is  to  do  so  based  on  data  rate.  For
        example,  when  a  (*,G),  or  corresponding  (*,*,RP), entry is
        created, a data rate counter may be initiated  at  the  last-hop
        routers.  The  counter  is  incremented  with  every data packet
        received for directly connected members of an SM group,  if  the
        longest  match  is  (*,G) or (*,*,RP). If and when the data rate
        for the group exceeds a certain configured threshold  (t1),  the
        router  initiates  `source-specific'  data rate counters for the
        following data packets. Then, each  counter  for  a  source,  is
        incremented  when  packets  matching  on (*,G), or (*,*,RP), are
        received from that source. If the data rate from the  particular
        source  exceeds  a  configured  threshold (t2), a (S,G) entry is
        created and a Join/Prune message is sent towards the source.  If
        the RPF interface for (S,G) is
         not the same as that for (*,G) -or (*,*,RP), then  the  SPT-bit

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        is cleared in the (S,G) entry.

        Other configured rules may  be  enforced  to  cause  or  prevent
        establishment of (S,G) state.

     3.5 Assert

        Asserts are used  to  resolve  which  of  the  parallel  routers
        connected  to  a  multi-access LAN is responsible for forwarding
        packets onto the LAN.

     3.5.1 Sending Asserts

        The following Assert rules are provided when a multicast  packet
        is  received  on  an outgoing multi-access interface ``I'' of an
        existing active (S,G), (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry:

        1    Do unicast routing table lookup on source address from data
             packet,  and  send  assert  on  interface  ``I'' for source
             address  in  data  packet;  include  metric  preference  of
             routing protocol and metric from routing table lookup.

        2    If route is not found, use metric preference of  0x7fffffff
             and metric 0xffffffff.

        When an assert is sent for a (*,G) entry, the first bit  in  the
        metric preference (the RPT-bit) is set to 1, indicating the data
        packet is routed down the RP-tree.

        Asserts should be  rate-limited  in  an  implementation-specific
        manner.

     3.5.2 Receiving Asserts

        When an Assert is received the router performs a  longest  match
        on  the  source  and  group  address in the Assert message, only
        active entries -- that  have  packet  forwarding  state  --  are
        matched.   The  router  checks  the  first  bit  of  the  metric
        preference (RPT-bit).

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        1    If the RPT-bit is set, the router first  does  a  match  on
             (*,G), or (*,*,RP), entries; if no matching entry is found,
             it ignores the Assert.

        2    If the RPT-bit is not set in the Assert, the  router  first
             does  a  match  on  (S,G)  entries; if no matching entry is
             found, the router matches (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entries.

        Receiving Asserts on an entry's outgoing interface:

        If  the  interface  that received the Assert message is in the
        oif list of the matched entry, then this Assert  is  processed
        by this router as follows:

        1    If the Assert's RPT-bit is set and the  matching  entry  is
             (*,*,RP), the router creates a (*,G) entry. If the Assert's
             RPT-bit is cleared and the  matching  entry  is  (*,G),  or
             (*,*,RP),   the   router   creates  a  (S,G)RPT-bit  entry.
             Otherwise, no new entry  is  created  in  response  to  the
             Assert.

        2    The router then compares the metric values received in  the
             Assert  with  the metric values associated with the matched
             entry. The RPT-bit and metric preference  (in  that  order)
             are  treated  as  the  high-order  part of an Assert metric
             comparison. If the value in the Assert  is  less  than  the
             router's  value  (with ties broken by the IP address, where
             higher network layer address wins),  delete  the  interface
             from  the  entry.  When  the deletion occurs for a (*,G) or
             (*,*,RP) entry , the interface is  also  deleted  from  any
             associated (S,G)RPT-bit or (*,G) entries, respectively. The
             Entry-timer for the affected entries is restarted.

        3    If the router has won the election  the  router  keeps  the
             interface  in  its  outgoing interface list. It acts as the
             forwarder for the LAN.

        The winning router sends an Assert message  containing  its  own
        metric to that outgoing interface. This will cause other routers
        on the LAN to prune that interface from their route entries. The
        winning router sets the RPT-bit in the Assert message if a (*,G)

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        or (S,G)RPT-bit entry was matched.

        Receiving Asserts on an entry's incoming interface

        If  the  Assert arrived on the incoming interface of an existing
        (S,G), (*,G), or (*,*,RP) entry,  the  Assert  is  processed  as
        follows.  If  the  Assert  message  does  not  match  the entry,
        exactly, it is ignored; i.e, longest-match is not used  in  this
        case. If the Assert message does match exactly, then:

        1    Downstream routers will select the upstream router with the
             smallest   metric   preference  and  metric  as  their  RPF
             neighbor. If two metrics are the same, the highest  network
             layer address is chosen to break the tie. This is important
             so that downstream routers send subsequent Joins/Prunes (in
             SM)  to  the correct neighbor. An Assert-timer is initiated
             when changing the RPF neighbor to the Assert  winner.  When
             the  timer  expires,  the  router  resets  its RPF neighbor
             according to its unicast routing tables to capture  network
             dynamics and router failures.

        2    If the downstream routers have downstream members,  and  if
             the   Assert   caused  the  RPF  neighbor  to  change,  the
             downstream routers must trigger  a  Join/Prune  message  to
             inform the upstream router that packets are to be forwarded
             on the multi-access network.

     3.6 Candidate-RP-Advertisements and Bootstrap messages

        Candidate-RP-Advertisements   (C-RP-Advs)   are   periodic   PIM
        messages unicast to the BSR by those routers that are configured
        as Candidate-RPs (C-RPs).

        Bootstrap messages are periodic PIM messages originated  by  the
        Bootstrap router (BSR) within a domain, and forwarded hop-by-hop
        to distribute the current RP-set to all routers in that domain.

        The Bootstrap messages also support a simple mechanism by  which
        the  Candidate  BSR  (C-BSR)  with  the highest BSR-priority and
        address (referred to as the preferred BSR) is elected as the BSR
        for  the  domain.  We recommend that each router configured as a
        C-RP also be configured as a C-BSR. Sections  3.6.2  and   3.6.3
        describe  the  combined  function  of  Bootstrap messages as the

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        vehicle for BSR election and RP-Set distribution.

        A Finite State Machine description of the BSR election  and  RP-
        Set distribution mechanisms is included in Appendix II.

     3.6.1 Sending Candidate-RP-Advertisements

        C-RPs periodically unicast C-RP-Advs to the BSR for that domain.
        The  interval  for  sending  these  messages is subject to local
        configuration at the C-RP.

        Candidate-RP-Advertisements carry group address and  group  mask
        fields.  This  enables  the  advertising  router  to  limit  the
        advertisement to certain  prefixes  or  scopes  of  groups.  The
        advertising  router  may  enforce  this  scope  acceptance  when
        receiving Registers or Join/Prune messages.  C-RPs  should  send
        C-RP-Adv messages with the `Priority' field set to `0'.

     3.6.2 Receiving C-RP-Advs and Originating Bootstrap

        Upon receiving a C-RP-Adv, a router does the following:

        1    If the router is  not  the  elected  BSR,  it  ignores  the
             message, else

        2    The BSR adds the RP address to its local pool of  candidate
             RPs,  according  to  the associated group prefix(es) in the
             C-RP-Adv message. The Holdtime in the C-RP-Adv  message  is
             also stored with the corresponding RP, to be included later
             in the Bootstrap message. The BSR may apply a local  policy
             to  limit  the  number  of  Candidate  RPs  included in the
             Bootstrap  message.  The  BSR  may  override   the   prefix
             indicated  in a C-RP-Adv unless the `Priority' field is not
             zero.

        The BSR keeps an RP-timer per RP in its local  RP-set.  The  RP-
        timer  is initialized to the Holdtime in the RP's C-RP-Adv. When
        the timer expires, the corresponding RP is removed from the  RP-
        set.  The  RP-timer  is  restarted  by  the  C-RP-Advs  from the
        corresponding RP.

        The BSR also  uses  its  Bootstrap-timer  to  periodically  send
        Bootstrap  messages.  In  particular,  when  the Bootstrap-timer

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        expires, the BSR originates a Bootstrap message on each  of  its
        PIM  interfaces. To reduce the bootstrap message overhead during
        partition healing, the BSR  should  set  a  random  time  (as  a
        function  of the priority and address) after which the Bootstrap
        message is originated  only  if  no  other  preferred  Bootstrap
        message is received. For details see appendix
         6.2. The message is sent with a  TTL  of  1  to  the  `ALL-PIM-
        ROUTERS'  group.  In  steady state, the BSR originates Bootstrap
        messages  periodically.  At  startup,  the  Bootstrap-timer   is
        initialized  to [Bootstrap-Timeout], causing the first Bootstrap
        message to be originated only when and if the timer expires. For
        timer  details,  see  Section   3.6.3. A DR unicasts a Bootstrap
        message to each new PIM neighbor, i.e., after  the  DR  receives
        the  neighbor's  Hello  message  (it  does  so  even  if the new
        neighbor becomes the DR).

        The  Bootstrap  message  is  subdivided  into  sets  of   group-
        prefix,RP-Count,RP-addresses.    For    each   RP-address,   the
        corresponding Holdtime is included in the ``RP-Holdtime"  field.
        The   format   of   the   Bootstrap   message  allows  `semantic
        fragmentation', if the length of the original Bootstrap  message
        exceeds the packet maximum boundaries (see Section  4). However,
        we recommend against configuring a large number  of  routers  as
        C-RPs, to reduce the semantic fragmentation required.

     3.6.3 Receiving and Forwarding Bootstrap

        Each router keeps a Bootstrap-timer, initialized to  [Bootstrap-
        Timeout] at startup.

        When a router  receives  Bootstrap  message  sent  to  `ALL-PIM-
        ROUTERS' group, it performs the following:

        1    If the message was not sent by the RPF neighbor towards the
             BSR address included, the message is dropped. Else

        2    If the included BSR is  not preferred over, and  not  equal
             to, the currently active BSR:

             1    If the Bootstrap-timer has  not yet expired, or if the
                  receiving  router  is  a  C-BSR,  then  the  Bootstrap
                  message is dropped. Else

             2    If the Bootstrap-timer  has expired and the  receiving
                  router is not a C-BSR, the receiving router stores the

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                  RP-Set and BSR  address  and  priority  found  in  the
                  message,  and  restarts  the  timer  by  setting it to
                  [Bootstrap-Timeout]. The  Bootstrap  message  is  then
                  forwarded  out  all  PIM interfaces, excluding the one
                  over which the message arrived,  to  `ALL-PIM-ROUTERS'
                  group, with a TTL of 1.

        3    If the Bootstrap message includes a BSR  address  that   is
             preferred  over, or equal to, the currently active BSR, the
             router restarts its Bootstrap-timer at  [Bootstrap-Timeout]
             seconds. and stores the BSR address and RP-Set information.

             The  Bootstrap  message  is  then  forwarded  out  all  PIM
             interfaces,  excluding  the  one  over  which  the  message
             arrived, to `ALL-PIM-ROUTERS' group, with a TTL of 1.

        4    If the receiving router has no current RP  set  information
             and  the  Bootstrap  was  unicast  to  it  from  a directly
             connected neighbor, the router stores  the  information  as
             its  new  RP-set.  This covers the startup condition when a
             newly booted router obtains the RP-Set and BSR address from
             its DR.

        When a router receives a new RP-Set, it checks if  each  of  the
        RPs  referred to by existing state (i.e., by (*,G), (*,*,RP), or
        (S,G)RPT-bit entries) is in the new RP-Set. If an RP is  not  in
        the  new  RP-set, that RP is considered unreachable and the hash
        algorithm (see  below)  is  re-performed  for  each  group  with
        locally  active  state  that  previously hashed to that RP. This
        will cause those groups to be distributed  among  the  remaining
        RPs. When the new RP-Set contains a new RP, the value of the new
        RP is calculated for each group covered by  that  C-RP's  Group-
        prefix.  Any  group for which the new RP's value is greater than
        the previously active RP's value is switched over to the new RP.

     3.7 Hash Function

        The hash function is used by all routers within a domain, to map
        a  group  to  one of the C-RPs from the RP-Set. For a particular
        group, G, the hash function uses only those C-RPs  whose  Group-
        prefix covers G. The algorithm takes as input the group address,

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        and the addresses of the Candidate RPs, and gives as output  one
        RP address to be used.

        The protocol requires that all  routers  hash  to  the  same  RP
        within  a  domain  (except  for  transients). The following hash
        function must be used in each router:

        1     For RP addresses in the RP-Set, whose Group-prefix  covers
             G,  select  the  RPs with the highest priority (i.e. lowest
             `Priority' value), and compute a value:

           Value(G,M,C(i))=
           (1103515245 * ((1103515245 * (G&M)+12345) XOR C(i)) + 12345) mod 2^31

             where C_i is the  RP  address  and M  is  a  hash-mask
             included  in  Bootstrap  messages.  The  hash-mask allows a
             small number of consecutive groups (e.g., 4) to always hash
             to  the  same RP. For instance, hierarchically-encoded data
             can be sent on consecutive group addresses to get the  same
             delay and fate-sharing characteristics.

             For address families other than IPv4, a 32-bit digest to be
             used  as  C_i  must  first  be derived from the actual RP
             address. Such a digest method  must  be  used  consistently
             throughout the PIM domain. For IPv6 addresses, we recommend
             using the equivalent IPv4 address  for  an  IPv4-compatible
             address,  and  the  CRC-32  checksum  [7] of all other IPv6
             addresses.

        2    From  the  RPs  with  the  highest  priority  (i.e.  lowest
             `Priority' value), the candidate with the highest resulting
             value is then chosen as the RP  for  that  group,  and  its
             identity and hash value are stored with the entry created.

             Ties between RPs having the same hash value  and  priority,
             are broken in advantage of the highest address.

        The hash function algorithm is invoked by a DR,  upon  reception
        of  a  packet,  or  IGMP membership indication, for a group, for
        which the DR has no entry. It is invoked by any router that  has
        (*,*,RP)  state  when a packet is received for which there is no
        corresponding  (S,G)  or  (*,G)  entry.  Furthermore,  the  hash

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        function  is  invoked  by  all routers upon receiving a (*,G) or
        (*,*,RP) Join/Prune message.

     3.8 Processing Timer Events

        In this subsection, we  enumerate  all  timers  that  have  been
        discussed  or  implied. Since some critical timer events are not
        associated with the receipt or sending of messages, they are not
        fully covered by earlier subsections.

        Timers are implemented in an implementation-specific manner. For
        example, a timer may count up or down, or may simply expire at a
        specific time. Setting a timer to a value T means that  it  will
        expire after T seconds.

     3.8.1 Timers related to tree maintenance

        Each (S,G), (*,G), and (*,*,RP) route entry has multiple  timers
        associated  with  it:  one  for  each  interface in the outgoing
        interface list, one for the multicast routing entry itself,  and
        one  optional Join/Prune-Suppression-Timer. Each (S,G) and (*,G)
        entry also has an Assert-timer and a Random-Delay-Join-Timer for
        use   with   Asserts.   In   addition,  DR's  have  a  Register-
        Suppression-timer for each (S,G) entry and every  router  has  a
        single  Join/Prune-timer. (A router may optionally keep separate
        Join/Prune-timers for different interfaces or route  entries  if
        different Join/Prune periods are desired.)

        *    [Join/Prune-Timer] This  timer  is  used  for  periodically
             sending    aggregate    Join/Prune   messages.   To   avoid
             synchronization among routers booting simultaneously, it is
             initially  set to a random value between 1 and [Join/Prune-
             Period].  When  it  expires,  the  timer   is   immediately
             restarted  to  [Join/Prune-Period]. A Join/Prune message is
             then sent out each interface.  This  timer  should  not  be
             restarted by other events.

        *    [Join/Prune-Suppression-Timer (kept  per  route  entry)]  A
             route  entry's  (optional) Join/Prune-Suppression-Timer may
             be  used  to  suppress  duplicate   joins   from   multiple
             downstream  routers on the same LAN. When a Join message is
             received from a neighbor on the entry's incoming  interface
             in  which the included Holdtime is higher than the router's
             own  [Join/Prune-Holdtime]  (with  ties  broken  by  higher
             network  layer  address),  the timer is set to [Join/Prune-

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             Suppression-Timeout], with some random jitter introduced to
             avoid  synchronization  of triggered Join/Prune messages on
             expiration. (The random timeout value must  be  <  1.5  *
             [Join/Prune-Period]  to prevent losing data after 2 dropped
             Join/Prunes.)  The  timer  is  restarted   every   time   a
             subsequent  Join/Prune  message  (with  higher  Holdtime/IP
             address)  for  the  entry  is  received  on  its   incoming
             interface.  While the timer is running, Join/Prune messages
             for the entry  are  not  sent.  This  timer  is  idle  (not
             running) for point-to-point links.

        *    [Oif-Timer (kept per oif for each route entry)] A timer for
             each  oif  of  a  route entry is used to time out that oif.
             Because some of the outgoing interfaces in an  (S,G)  entry
             are copied from the (*,G) outgoing interface list, they may
             not have explicit (S,G) join  messages  from  some  of  the
             downstream  routers (i.e., where members are joining to the
             (*,G) tree only). Thus, when an Oif-timer is restarted in a
             (*,G)  entry, the Oif-timer is restarted for that interface
             in each existing (S,G) entry whose oif list  contains  that
             interface. The same rule applies to (*,G) and (S,G) entries
             when restarting an Oif-timer on a (*,*,RP) entry.

             The following table shows its usage when first  adding  the
             oif  to  the  entry's  oiflist, when it should be restarted
             (unless it is  already  higher),  and  when  it  should  be
             decreased (unless it is already lower).

Set to                   |   When                       |  Applies  to
included Holdtime        | adding oif off Join/Prune    | (S,G) (*,G) (*,*,RP)

Increased (only) to      | When                         |  Applies to
included  Holdtime       | received Join/Prune          | (S,G) (*,G) (*,*,RP)
(*,*,RP) oif-timer value | (*,*,RP) oif-timer restarted | (S,G) (*,G)
(*,G)  oif-timer  value  | (*,G) oif-timer restarted    | (S,G)

             When the timer expires, the oif is removed from the oiflist
             if  there  are no directly-connected members. When deleted,
             the oif is also removed in any associated  (S,G)  or  (*,G)
             entries.

        *    [Entry-Timer (kept per route entry)] A timer for each route
             entry  is  used to time out that entry. The following table

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             summarizes its usage when  first  adding  the  oif  to  the
             entry's oiflist, and when it should be restarted (unless it
             is already higher).

Set to                |  When                    | Applies to
[Data- Timeout]       | created off data packet  | (S,G)
included Holdtime     | created off Join/Prune   | (S,G) (*,G) (*,*,RP)

Increased  (only)  to |  When                    | Applies to
[Data-Timeout]        | receiving  data  packets | (S,G)no RPT-bit
oif-timer  value      | any oif-timer restarted  | (S,G)RPT-bit (*,G) (*,*,RP)
[Assert-Timeout]      | assert received          | (S,G)RPT-bit (*,G) w/null oif

             When the timer expires, the route entry is deleted; if  the
             entry   is  a  (*,G)  or  (*,*,RP)  entry,  all  associated
             (S,G)RPT-bit entries are also deleted.

        *    [Register-Suppression-Timer (kept per (S,G)  route  entry)]
             An  (S,G)  route entry's Register-Suppression-Timer is used
             to suppress registers when the RP is receiving data packets
             natively.  When  a  Register-Stop  message for the entry is
             received from the RP, the timer is set to a random value in
             the  range  0.5  *  [Register-Suppression-Timeout] to 1.5 *
             [Register-Suppression-Timeout]. While the timer is running,
             Registers  for  that  entry  will  be  suppressed.  If null
             registers are used, a null register  is  sent  [Probe-Time]
             seconds before the timer expires.

        *    [Assert-Timer  (per  (S,G)  or  (*,G)  route  entry)]   The
             Assert-Timer  for an (S,G) or (*,G) route entry is used for
             timing out Asserts received. When an Assert is received and
             the  RPF  neighbor  is  changed  to  the Assert winner, the
             Assert-Timer is set to [Assert-Timeout], and  is  restarted
             to  this value every time a subsequent Assert for the entry
             is received on  its  incoming  interface.  When  the  timer
             expires,  the  router  resets its RPF neighbor according to
             its unicast routing table.

        *    [Random-Delay-Join-Timer (per (S,G) or (*,G) route  entry)]
             The  Random-Delay-Join-Timer  for  an  (S,G) or (*,G) route
             entry is used to prevent synchronization  among  downstream
             routers  on a LAN when their RPF neighbor changes. When the
             RPF neighbor changes, this timer is set to a  random  value

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             between 0 and [Random-Delay-Join-Timeout] seconds. When the
             timer expires, a triggered Join/Prune message is  sent  for
             the   entry   unless  its  Join/Prune-Suppression-Timer  is
             running.

     3.8.2 Timers relating to neighbor discovery

        *    [Hello-Timer] This timer is used to periodically send Hello
             messages.  To  avoid  synchronization among routers booting
             simultaneously, it is  initially  set  to  a  random  value
             between 1 and [Hello-Period]. When it expires, the timer is
             immediately restarted to [Hello-Period]. A Hello message is
             then  sent  out  each  interface.  This timer should not be
             restarted by other events.

        *    [Neighbor-Timer (kept per neighbor)] A  Neighbor-Timer  for
             each  neighbor is used to time out the neighbor state. When
             a Hello message is received from a new neighbor, the  timer
             is  initially  set  to  the  Holdtime included in the Hello
             message (which is equal to the neighbor's value of  [Hello-
             Holdtime]).  Every time a subsequent Hello is received from
             that neighbor, the timer is restarted to  the  Holdtime  in
             the  Hello.  When  the timer expires, the neighbor state is
             removed.

     3.8.3 Timers relating to RP information

        *    [C-RP-Adv-Timer  (C-RP's  only)]  Routers   configured   as
             candidate RP's use this timer to periodically send C-RP-Adv
             messages. To avoid synchronization  among  routers  booting
             simultaneously,  the  timer  is  initially  set to a random
             value between 1 and [C-RP-Adv-Period]. When it expires, the
             timer  is  immediately restarted to [C-RP-Adv-Period]. A C-
             RP-Adv message is then sent to the elected BSR. This  timer
             should not be restarted by other events.

        *    [RP-Timer (BSR only, kept per RP in RP-Set)] The BSR uses a
             timer per RP in the RP-Set to monitor liveness. When a C-RP

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             is added to the RP-Set, its timer is set  to  the  Holdtime
             included  in  the C-RP-Adv message from that C-RP (which is
             equal to the C-RP's value of [RP-Holdtime]). Every  time  a
             subsequent  C-RP-Adv is received from that RP, its timer is
             restarted to the Holdtime in the C-RP-Adv. When  the  timer
             expires,  the  RP  is  removed  from the RP-Set included in
             Bootstrap messages.

        *    [Bootstrap-Timer]  This  timer  is  used  by  the  BSR   to
             periodically  originate  Bootstrap  messages,  and by other
             routers to time out the BSR (see
              3.6.3).  This  timer  is  initially  set  to   [Bootstrap-
             Timeout].  A  C-BSR  restarts  this  timer  to  [Bootstrap-
             Timeout]  upon  receiving  a  Bootstrap  message   from   a
             preferred  router,  and  originates a Bootstrap message and
             restarts the timer to [Bootstrap-Period] when  it  expires.
             Routers  not  configured  as  C-BSR's restart this timer to
             [Bootstrap-Timeout] upon receiving a Bootstrap message from
             the  elected  or a more preferred BSR, and ignore Bootstrap
             messages from non-preferred C-BSRs while it is running.

     3.8.4 Default timer values

        Most of the default timeout values for state information are 3.5
        times  the  refresh period. For example, Hellos refresh Neighbor
        state and the default Hello-timer period is  30  seconds,  so  a
        default  Neighbor-timer  duration  of 105 seconds is included in
        the  Holdtime  field  of  the  Hellos.  In  order   to   improve
        convergence,  however, the default timeout value for information
        related to RP liveness and Bootstrap messages is 2.5  times  the
        refresh period.

        In this version of the spec,  we  suggest  particular  numerical
        timer  settings.  A  future  version  of  the specification will
        specify a mechanism for timer values to  be  scaled  based  upon
        observed network parameters.

        *    [Join/Prune-Period]  This  is  the   interval   between
             sending  Join/Prune  messages. Default: 60 seconds. This
             value may be set to take into account such  things  as  the
             configured   bandwidth   and  expected  average  number  of
             multicast route entries for the attached  network  or  link

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             (e.g., the period would be longer for lower-speed links, or
             for routers in the center of the  network  that  expect  to
             have  a  larger  number of entries ). In addition, a router
             could modify  this  value  (and  corresponding  Join/Prune-
             Holdtime  value)  if  the  number  of route entries changes
             significantly  (e.g.,  by  an  order  of  magnitude).   For
             example,  given  a default minimum Join/Prune-Period value,
             if the number  of  route  entries  with  a  particular  iif
             increases  from  N  to N*100, the router could increase its
             Join/Prune-Period  (and  Join/Prune-Holdtime),   for   that
             interface,  by  a  factor  of 10; and if/when the number of
             entries decreases back to  N,  the  Join/Prune-Period  (and
             Join/Prune-Holdtime)  could  be  decreased  to its previous
             value. If the Join/Prune-Period is modified, these  changes
             should  be  made  relatively  infrequently  and  the router
             should continue to  refresh  at  its  previous  Join/Prune-
             Period  for at least Join/Prune-Holdtime, in order to allow
             the upstream router to adapt.

        *    [Join-Prune Holdtime] This is the Holdtime specified in
             Join/Prune  messages,  and  is  used to time out oifs. This
             should be set to 3.5 * [Join/Prune-Period].  Default:  210
             seconds.

        *    [Join/Prune-Suppression-Timeout]  This  is   the   mean
             interval  between  receiving  a  Join/Prune  with  a higher
             Holdtime (with ties broken by higher network layer address)
             and  allowing  duplicate Join/Prunes to be sent again. This
             should be set to approximately 1.25 *  [Join/Prune-Period].
              Default: 75 seconds.

        *    [Data-Timeout] This is the time after which (S,G) state
             for  a  silent  source  will  be  deleted.    Default: 210
             seconds.

        *    [Register-Suppression-Timeout]   This   is   the   mean
             interval  between  receiving  a  Register-Stop and allowing
             Registers to be  sent  again.  A  lower  value  means  more
             frequent  register bursts at RP, while a higher value means
             longer join  latency  for  new  receivers.    Default:  60
             seconds.  (Note  that  if  null Registers are sent [Probe-
             Time] seconds  before  the  timeout,  register  bursts  are
             prevents, and [Register-Suppression-Timeout] may be lowered
             to decrease join latency.)

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        *    [Probe-Time] When null Registers are used, this is  the
             time  between  sending  a  null  Register and the Register-
             Suppression-Timer  expiring  unless  it  is  restarted   by
             receiving  a  Register-Stop. Thus, a null Register would be
             sent  when  the  Register-Suppression-Timer  reaches   this
             value.  Default: 5 seconds.

        *    [Assert-Timeout] This is the interval between the  last
             time  an  Assert  is  received,  and  the time at which the
             assert is timed out.  Default: 180 seconds.

        *    [Random-Delay-Join-Timeout]   This   is   the   maximum
             interval  between  the  time when the RPF neighbor changes,
             and the time at which a  triggered  Join/Prune  message  is
             sent. Default: 4.5 seconds.

        *    [Hello-Period] This is  the  interval  between  sending
             Hello messages.  Default: 30 seconds.

        *    [Hello-Holdtime] This  is  the  Holdtime  specified  in
             Hello  messages,  after which neighbors will time out their
             neighbor entries for the router. This should be set to  3.5
             * [Hello-Period]. Default: 105 seconds.

        *    [C-RP-Adv-Period]  For  C-RPs,  this  is  the  interval
             between sending C-RP-Adv messages. Default: 60 seconds.

        *    [RP-Holdtime] For C-RPs, this is the Holdtime specified
             in  C-RP-Adv  messages,  and is used by the BSR to time out
             RPs. This should be  set  to  2.5  *  [C-RP-Adv-Period].
             Default: 150 seconds.

        *    [Bootstrap-Period] At the  elected  BSR,  this  is  the
             interval between originating Bootstrap messages, and should
             be equal to 60 seconds.

        *    [Bootstrap-Timeout] This is the time  after  which  the
             elected  BSR  will  be  assumed  unreachable when Bootstrap
             messages are not received from it. This should be set to
             `2 * [Bootstrap-Period] + 10'. Default: 130 seconds.

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     3.9 Summary of flags used

        Following is a summary of all the flags used in our scheme.

Bit           |  Used in    |  Definition

Border        | Register    | Register for external sources is coming from
                              PIM multicast  border  router
Null          | Register    | Register sent as Probe of RP, the encapsulated
                              IP data packet should  not  be  forwarded
RPT           | Route entry | Entry represents  state  on  the  RP-tree
RPT           | Join/Prune  | Join is associated with the shared tree and
                              therefore the Join/Prune message is propagated
                              along the RP-tree (source encoded is an RP
                              address)
RPT           | Assert      | The data packet was routed down the shared
                              tree; thus, the path indicated corresponds
                              to the RP tree
SPT           | (S,G) entry | Packets have arrived on the iif towards S, and
                              the iif is different from the (*,G) iif
WC            |Join         | The receiver expects to receive packets from all
                              sources via this (shared tree) path. Thus, the
                              Join/Prune applies to a (*,G) entry
WC            | Route entry | Wildcard entry; if there is no more specific
                              match for a particular source, packets will
                              be forwarded according to this entry

     3.10 Security

        All PIM control messages may use IPsec [6] to  address  security
        concerns.

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     4 Packet Formats

        This section describes the details of the packet formats for PIM
        control messages.

        All PIM control messages have protocol number 103.

        Basically, PIM messages are either unicast (e.g.  Registers  and
        Register-Stop),  or  multicast  hop-by-hop  to `ALL-PIM-ROUTERS'
        group `224.0.0.13' (e.g. Join/Prune, Asserts, etc.).

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Ver
              PIM Version number is 2.

        Type  Types for specific PIM messages.  PIM Types are:

           0 = Hello
           1 = Register
           2 = Register-Stop
           3 = Join/Prune
           4 = Bootstrap
           5 = Assert
           6 = Graft (used in PIM-DM only)
           7 = Graft-Ack (used in PIM-DM only)
           8 = Candidate-RP-Advertisement

        Reserved
              set to zero. Ignored upon receipt.

        Checksum
              The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of  the  one's

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             complement  sum  of  the entire PIM message, (excluding the
             data portion in the Register message).  For  computing  the
             checksum, the checksum field is zeroed.

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     4.1 Encoded Source and Group Address formats

        1    Encoded-Unicast-address: Takes the following 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
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         | Addr Family   | Encoding Type |     Unicast Address           |
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+++++++

             Addr Family
                   The address family of the `Unicast Address' field  of
                  this address.

                  Here is the address family numbers assigned by IANA:

             Number    Description
             - ------    ---------------------------------------------------------
                  0    Reserved
                  1    IP (IP version 4)
                  2    IP6 (IP version 6)
                  3    NSAP
                  4    HDLC (8-bit multidrop)
                  5    BBN 1822
                  6    802 (includes all 802 media plus Ethernet "canonical format")
                  7    E.163
                  8    E.164 (SMDS, Frame Relay, ATM)
                  9    F.69 (Telex)
                 10    X.121 (X.25, Frame Relay)
                 11    IPX
                 12    Appletalk
                 13    Decnet IV
                 14    Banyan Vines
                 15    E.164 with NSAP format subaddress

             Encoding Type
                   The type of encoding used within a  specific  Address
                  Family.  The value `0' is reserved for this field, and
                  represents the native encoding of the Address Family.

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             Unicast Address
                   The unicast  address  as  represented  by  the  given
                  Address Family and Encoding Type.

        2    Encoded-Group-Address: Takes the following 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
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         | Addr Family   | Encoding Type |   Reserved    |  Mask Len     |
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         |                Group multicast Address                        |
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

             Addr Family
                   described above.

             Encoding Type
                   described above.

             Reserved
                   Transmitted as zero. Ignored upon receipt.

             Mask Len
                   The Mask length is 8 bits. The value is the number of
                  contiguous  bits  left  justified used as a mask which
                  describes the address. It is less than or equal to the
                  address  length  in  bits for the given Address Family
                  and Encoding Type. If the message is sent for a single
                  group  then  the  Mask  length  must equal the address
                  length in  bits  for  the  given  Address  Family  and
                  Encoding  Type.  (e.g. 32 for IPv4 native encoding and
                  128 for IPv6 native encoding).

             Group multicast Address
                   contains the group address.

        3    Encoded-Source-Address: Takes the following format:

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          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
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         | Addr Family   | Encoding Type | Rsrvd   |S|W|R|  Mask Len     |
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         |                        Source Address                         |
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

             Addr Family
                   described above.

             Encoding Type
                   described above.

             Reserved
                   Transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt.

             S,W,R See Section 4.5 for details.

             Mask Length
                   Mask length is 8 bits. The value  is  the  number  of
                  contiguous  bits  left  justified used as a mask which
                  describes the address. The mask length  must  be  less
                  than  or  equal  to the address length in bits for the
                  given Address Family and Encoding Type. If the message
                  is  sent  for a single group then the Mask length must
                  equal the address length in bits for the given Address
                  Family  and  Encoding Type. In version 2 of PIM, it is
                  strongly recommended that this field be set to 32  for
                  IPv4 native encoding.

             Source Address
                   The source address.

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     4.2 Hello Message

        It is sent periodically by routers on all interfaces.

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |       OptionType              |         OptionLength          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          OptionValue                          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+++
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |       OptionType              |         OptionLength          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          OptionValue                          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+++

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        OptionType
              The type of the option given in the following  OptionValue
             field.

        OptionLength
              The length of the OptionValue field in bytes.

        OptionValue
              A variable length field, carrying the value of the option.

        The Option fields may contain the following values:

        *    OptionType = 1; OptionLength = 2; OptionValue  =  Holdtime;
             where  Holdtime  is the amount of time a receiver must keep
             the neighbor reachable, in seconds. If the Holdtime is  set
             to  `0xffff',  the receiver of this message never times out
             the neighbor. This may be used with ISDN  lines,  to  avoid
             keeping   the   link   up  with  periodic  Hello  messages.

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             Furthermore, if the Holdtime is set to `0', the information
             is timed out immediately.

        *    OptionType 2 to 16: reserved

        *    The  rest  of  the  OptionTypes  are  defined  in   another
             document.

        In general, options may be ignored; but a router must not ignore
        the

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     4.3 Register Message

        A Register message is sent by the DR or a PMBR to the RP when  a
        multicast  packet needs to be transmitted on the RP-tree. Source
        address is set to the address of the DR, destination address  is
        to the RP's address.

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |B|N|                       Reserved                            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                                                               |
                          Multicast data packet
    |                                                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.  Note that the checksum  for  Registers
             is  done  only on the PIM header, excluding the data packet
             portion.

        B     The Border bit. If the router is a DR for a source that it
             is  directly  connected  to, it sets the B bit to 0. If the
             router is a PMBR for  a  source  in  a  directly  connected
             cloud, it sets the B bit to 1.

        N     The Null-Register bit. Set to 1 by a DR  that  is  probing
             the  RP  before  expiring  its  local  Register-Suppression
             timer. Set to 0 otherwise.

        Multicast data packet
              The original packet sent by the source.

        For (S,G) null Registers,  the  Multicast  data  packet  portion
        contains  only a dummy header with S as the source address, G as
        the destination address, and a data length of zero.

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     4.4 Register-Stop Message

        A Register-Stop is unicast from the RP  to  the  sender  of  the
        Register  message.  Source  address  is the address to which the
        register  was  addressed.  Destination  address  is  the  source
        address of the register message.

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                    Encoded-Group Address                      |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                    Encoded-Unicast-Source Address             |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        Encoded-Group Address
              Format described above. Note that for  Register-Stops  the
             Mask  Len  field  contains full address length * 8 (e.g. 32
             for IPv4 native encoding), if the message  is  sent  for  a
             single group.

        Encoded-Unicast-Source Address
              host address of  source  from  multicast  data  packet  in
             register.  The  format  for  this  address  is given in the
             Encoded-Unicast-Address in  4.1. A special wild card  value
             (0's), can be used to indicate any source.

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     4.5 Join/Prune Message

        A Join/Prune message is sent by routers towards upstream sources
        and  RPs.  Joins  are  sent  to build shared trees (RP trees) or
        source trees (SPT). Prunes are sent to prune source  trees  when
        members  leave  groups  as  well  as sources that do not use the
        shared tree.

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     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |             Encoded-Unicast-Upstream Neighbor Address         |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |  Reserved     | Num groups    |          Holdtime             |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |            Encoded-Multicast Group Address-1                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |   Number of Joined  Sources   |   Number of Pruned Sources    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Joined Source Address-1                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                             .                                 |
    |                             .                                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Joined Source Address-n                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Pruned Source Address-1                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                             .                                 |
    |                             .                                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Pruned Source Address-n                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                           .                                   |
    |                           .                                   |
    |                           .                                   |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                Encoded-Multicast Group Address-n              |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |   Number of Joined  Sources   |   Number of Pruned Sources    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Joined Source Address-1                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                             .                                 |
    |                             .                                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Joined Source Address-n                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |               Encoded-Pruned Source Address-1                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                             .                                 |
    |                             .                                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

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    |               Encoded-Pruned Source Address-n                 |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        Encoded-Unicast Upstream Neighbor Address
              The address of the RPF or upstream  neighbor.  The  format
             for this address is given in the Encoded-Unicast-Address in
             4.1. .IP "Reserved"
              Transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt.

        Holdtime
              The amount of time a receiver  must  keep  the  Join/Prune
             state  alive,  in  seconds.  If  the  Holdtime  is  set  to
             `0xffff', the receiver of this message never times out  the
             oif. This may be used with ISDN lines, to avoid keeping the
             link up with periodical Join/Prune  messages.  Furthermore,
             if the Holdtime is set to `0', the information is timed out
             immediately.

        Number of Groups
              The number  of  multicast  group  sets  contained  in  the
             message.

        Encoded-Multicast group address
              For format description see Section
              4.1. A wild card group in the (*,*,RP) join is represented
             by  a  224.0.0.0  in the group address field and `4' in the
             mask length field. A (*,*,RP) join also has the WC-bit  and
             the RPT-bit set.

        Number of Joined Sources
              Number of join source addresses listed for a given group.

        Join Source Address-1 .. n
              This list contains the sources  that  the  sending  router
             will  forward  multicast  datagrams  for if received on the
             interface this message is sent on.

             See format section  4.1. The  fields  explanation  for  the
             Encoded-Source-Address format follows:

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             Reserved
                   Described above.

             S     The Sparse bit is a 1 bit value, set to 1 for PIM-SM.
                  It is used for PIM v.1 compatibility.

             W     The WC bit is a 1 bit value. If 1, the join or  prune
                  applies to the (*,G) or (*,*,RP) entry. If 0, the join
                  or prune applies to the (S,G) entry where S is  Source
                  Address.  Joins  and  prunes  sent towards the RP must
                  have this bit set.

             R     The RPT-bit is a 1 bit value. If 1,  the  information
                  about  (S,G)  is  sent  towards  the  RP.  If  0,  the
                  information must be sent toward  S,  where  S  is  the
                  Source Address.

             Mask Length, Source Address
                   Described above.

             Represented  in  the  form  of
             <  WC-bit  ><  RPT-bit  ><Mask length >< Source address>:

             A source address could  be  a  host  IPv4  native  encoding
             address :

              < 0 >< 0 >< 32 >< 192.1.1.17 >

             A source address could be the RP's IP address :

              < 1 >< 1 >< 32 >< 131.108.13.111 >

             A source address could be a subnet address  to  prune  from
             the RP-tree :

              < 0 >< 1 >< 28 >< 192.1.1.16 >

             A source address could be a general aggregate :

              < 0 >< 0 >< 16 >< 192.1.0.0 >

        Number of Pruned Sources
              Number of prune source addresses listed for a group.

        Prune Source Address-1 .. n
              This list contains the sources  that  the  sending  router

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             does  not  want  to  forward  multicast  datagrams for when
             received on the interface this message is sent on.  If  the
             Join/Prune  message  boundary  exceeds  the  maximum packet
             size, then the join and prune lists for the same group must
             be included in the same packet.

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     4.6 Bootstrap Message

        The Bootstrap messages are multicast to `ALL-PIM-ROUTERS' group,
        out  all interfaces having PIM neighbors (excluding the one over
        which the message was received).  Bootstrap  messages  are  sent
        with  TTL  value  of 1. Bootstrap messages originate at the BSR,
        and are forwarded by intermediate routers.

        Bootstrap message is divided up into  `semantic  fragments',  if
        the original message exceeds the maximum packet size boundaries.

        The semantics of a single `fragment' is given below:

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     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |         Fragment Tag          | Hash Mask len | BSR-priority  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-BSR-Address                   |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Encoded-Group Address-1               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | RP-Count-1    | Frag RP-Cnt-1 |         Reserved              |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-1                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RP1-Holdtime         | RP1-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-2                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RP2-Holdtime         | RP2-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-m                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RPm-Holdtime         | RPm-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Encoded-Group Address-2               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Encoded-Group Address-n               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | RP-Count-n    | Frag RP-Cnt-n |          Reserved             |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-1                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RP1-Holdtime         | RP1-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-2                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RP2-Holdtime         | RP2-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |

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    |                               .                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address-m                  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |          RPm-Holdtime         | RPm-Priority  |   Reserved    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        Fragment Tag
              A randomly  generated  number,  acts  to  distinguish  the
             fragments   belonging   to  different  Bootstrap  messages;
             fragments belonging to same  Bootstrap  message  carry  the
             same `Fragment Tag'.

        Hash Mask len
              The length (in bits) of  the  mask  to  use  in  the  hash
             function.  For IPv4 we recommend a value of 30. For IPv6 we
             recommend a value of 126.

        BSR-priority
              Contains the BSR priority value of the included BSR.  This
             field is considered as a high order byte when comparing BSR
             addresses.

        Encoded-Unicast-BSR-Address
              The address of the bootstrap router for  the  domain.  The
             format  for  this  address is given in the Encoded-Unicast-
             Address in  4.1. .IP "Encoded-Group Address-1..n"
              The  group  prefix  (address  and  mask)  with  which  the
             Candidate RPs are associated. Format previously described.

        RP-Count-1..n
              The number of Candidate RP addresses included in the whole
             Bootstrap  message  for  the  corresponding group prefix. A
             router does  not replace its old RP-Set for a  given  group
             prefix  until/unless  it  receives `RP-Count' addresses for
             that prefix; the addresses could be  carried  over  several
             fragments.  If  only  part  of the RP-Set for a given group
             prefix  was  received,  the  router  discards  it,  without
             updating that specific group prefix's RP-Set.

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        Frag RP-Cnt-1..m
              The number of Candidate  RP  addresses  included  in  this
             fragment  of  the  Bootstrap message, for the corresponding
             group prefix. The `Frag RP-Cnt' field  facilitates  parsing
             of  the  RP-Set for a given group prefix, when carried over
             more than one fragment.

        Encoded-Unicast-RP-address-1..m
              The address of the Candidate RPs,  for  the  corresponding
             group  prefix.  The format for this address is given in the
             Encoded-Unicast-Address in  4.1. .IP "RP1..m-Holdtime"
              The Holdtime for  the  corresponding  RP.  This  field  is
             copied  from  the  `Holdtime'  field  of  the associated RP
             stored at the BSR.

        RP1..m-Priority
              The `Priority' of the corresponding RP  and  Encoded-Group
             Address.  This  field  is  copied from the `Priority' field
             stored  at  the  BSR   when   receiving   a   Candidate-RP-
             Advertisement.  The highest priority is `0' (i.e. the lower
             the value of the `Priority' field, the higher).  Note  that
             the priority is per RP per Encoded-Group Address.

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     4.7 Assert Message

        The Assert message is sent  when  a  multicast  data  packet  is
        received  on an outgoing interface corresponding to the (S,G) or
        (*,G) associated with the source.

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                      Encoded-Group Address                    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |              Encoded-Unicast-Source Address                   |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |R|                        Metric Preference                    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          Metric                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        Encoded-Group Address
              The group address to which the data packet was  addressed,
             and   which   triggered   the   Assert.  Format  previously
             described.

        Encoded-Unicast-Source Address
              Source address from multicast datagram that triggered  the
             Assert  packet  to  be sent. The format for this address is
             given in the Encoded-Unicast-Address in  4.1. .IP "R"
              RPT-bit is a 1 bit value. If the multicast  datagram  that
             triggered  the  Assert  packet  is routed down the RP tree,
             then the RPT-bit is 1; if the multicast datagram is  routed
             down the SPT, it is 0.

        Metric Preference
              Preference value assigned to the unicast routing  protocol
             that provided the route to Host address.

        Metric The unicast routing table metric. The metric is in  units
             applicable to the unicast routing protocol used.

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     4.8 Graft Message

        Used in dense-mode. Refer to PIM dense mode specification.

     4.9 Graft-Ack Message

        Used in dense-mode. Refer to PIM dense mode specification.

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     4.10 Candidate-RP-Advertisement

        Candidate-RP-Advertisements are periodically  unicast  from  the
        C-RPs to the BSR.

     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
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |PIM Ver| Type  | Reserved      |           Checksum            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | Prefix-Cnt    |   Priority    |             Holdtime          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                 Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address                    |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Encoded-Group Address-1               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    |                               .                               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                         Encoded-Group Address-n               |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        PIM Version, Type, Reserved, Checksum
              Described above.

        Prefix-Cnt
              The number of encoded  group  addresses  included  in  the
             message;  indicating  the group prefixes for which the C-RP
             is advertising. A Prefix-Cnt of `0'  implies  a  prefix  of
             224.0.0.0 with mask length of 4; i.e. all multicast groups.
             If  the  C-RP   is   not   configured   with   Group-prefix
             information,  the  C-RP puts a default value of `0' in this
             field.

        Priority
              The `Priority' of the included RP, for  the  corresponding
             Encoded-Group  Address  (if  any).  highest priority is `0'
             (i.e. the lower the value  of  the  `Priority'  field,  the
             higher  the priority). This field is stored at the BSR upon
             receipt  along  with  the  RP  address  and   corresponding
             Encoded-Group Address.

        Holdtime

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              The amount of time the advertisement is valid. This  field
             allows advertisements to be aged out.

        Encoded-Unicast-RP-Address
              The address of the interface to advertise as  a  Candidate
             RP.  The  format  for this address is given in the Encoded-
             Unicast-Address in  4.1. .IP "Encoded-Group Address-1..n"
              The group prefixes for  which  the  C-RP  is  advertising.
             Format previously described.

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     5 Acknowledgments

        Tony Ballardie, Scott Brim, Jon  Crowcroft,  Bill  Fenner,  Paul
        Francis,   Joel  Halpern,  Horst  Hodel,  Polly  Huang,  Stephen
        Ostrowski,  Lixia  Zhang  and  Girish   Chandranmenon   provided
        detailed comments on previous drafts. The authors of CBT [8] and
        membership of the IDMR WG provided many of the motivating  ideas
        for this work and useful feedback on design details.

        This work was supported  by  the  National  Science  Foundation,
        ARPA, cisco Systems and Sun Microsystems.

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     6 Appendices
     6.1 Appendix I: Major Changes and Updates to the Spec

        This appendix populates the major changes in  the  specification
        document as compared to `draft-ietf-idmr-pim-spec-01.ps,txt'.

        bsubsection*Major Changes

        List of changes since March '96 IETF:

        1. (*,*,RP) Joins state and data forwarding check;  replaces  (*,G-
        Prefix)  Joins  state for interoperability. (*,G) negative cache
        introduced for the (*,*,RP) state supporting mechanisms.

        2. Semantic fragmentation for the Bootstrap message.

        3. Refinement of Assert details.

        4. Addition and refinement of Join/Prune suppression  and  Register
        suppression (introduction of null Registers).

        5. Editorial changes and clarifications to the timers section.

        6. Addition of Appendix II (BSR Election and RP-Set  Distribution),
        and Appendix III (Glossary of Terms).

        7. Addition of table of contents.

        List of changes incurred since version 1 of the spec.:

        1. Proposal and  refinement  of  bootstrap  router  (BSR)  election
        mechanisms

        2. Introduction of hash functions for Group to RP mapping

        3. New  RP-liveness  indication  mechanisms  based  upon  the   the
        Bootstrap Router (BSR) and the Bootstrap messages.

        4. Removal of reachability messages, RP reports  and  multiple  RPs
        per group.

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        *Packet Format Changes

        Packet Format incurred updates to accommodate different  address
        lengths, and address aggregation.

        1    The `Addr Family' and `Encoding Type' fields were added  to
             the packet formats.

        2    The  Encoded  source  and  group   address   formats   were
             introduced,  with the use of a `Mask length' field to allow
             aggregation, section  4.1.

        3    Packet formats are no  longer  IGMP  messages;  rather  PIM
             messages.

        PIM message types and formats were also modified:

        [Note: most changes were made to the May  95  version,  unless
        otherwise specified].

        1    Obsolete messages:

            Register-Ack [Feb. 96]

            Poll and Poll Response [Feb. 96]

            RP-Reachability [Feb. 96]

            RPlist-Mapping [Feb. 96]

        2     New messages:

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            Candidate-RP-Advertisement [change made in  October  95]
            RP-Set [Feb. 96]

        3       Modified messages:

            Join/Prune [Feb. 96]
            Register [Feb. 96]
            Register-Stop [Feb.  96]
            Hello (addition of OptionTypes) [Aug 96]

        4        Renamed messages:

             Query messages are renamed as Hello messages [Aug. 96]
             RP-Set  messages are renamed as Bootstrap messages [Aug. 96]

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     6.2 Appendix II: BSR Election and RP-Set Distribution

        For simplicity, the bootstrap message is used in  both  the  BSR
        election   and   the   RP-Set   distribution  mechanisms.  These
        mechanisms  are  described  by  the  following  state   machine,
        illustrated   in  figure  4.  The  protocol  transitions  for  a
        Candidate-BSR are given in state diagram (a).  For  routers  not
        configured as Candidate-BSRs, the protocol transitions are given
        in state diagram (b).

         [Figures are present only in the postscript version]
         Fig. 4  State Diagram for the BSR election and RP-Set distribution

        Each  PIM  router  keeps  a  bootstrap-timer,   initialized   to
        [Bootstrap-Timeout],   in  addition  to  a  local  BSR  field
        `LclBSR' (initialized to a local address if  Candidate-BSR,  or
        to  0  otherwise),  and a local RP-Set `LclRP-Set' (initially
        empty). The main stimuli to the state machine are  timer  events
        and arrival of bootstrap messages:

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        bsubsection*Initial States and Timer Events

        1

        2    If the router is a Candidate-BSR:

             1

             2    The router operates initially in the `CandBSR'  state,
                  where it does not originate any bootstrap messages.

             3    If the bootstrap-timer expires, and the current  state
                  is   `CandBSR',  the  router  originates  a  bootstrap
                  message carrying the local  RP-Set  and  its  own  BSR
                  priority  and address, restarts the bootstrap-timer at
                  [Bootstrap-Period]  seconds,  and  transits  into  the
                  `ElectedBSR'  state.  Note  that the actual sending of
                  the bootstrap message may be delayed by a random value
                  to  reduce  transient control overhead. To obtain best
                  results,  the  random  value  is  set  such  that  the
                  preferred  BSR  is  the first to originate a bootstrap
                  message. We propose  the  following  as  an  efficient
                  implementation of the random value delay (in seconds):

           Delay = 5 + 2 * log_2(1 + bestPriority - myPriority) + AddrDelay

                  where  myPriority is the Candidate-BSR's
                  configured priority, and  bestPriority equals:

                  bestPriority = Max(storedPriority, myPriority) ]

                  and  AddrDelay is given by the following:

                  1    if  (  bestPriority  equals    myPriority)   then
                       [AddrDelay = log_2(bestAddr - myAddr) / 16, ]

                  2    else [AddrDelay = 2 - (myAddr / 2^31) ]

                  where  myAddr  is  the  Candidate-BSR's  address,  and
                  bestAddr is the stored BSR's address.

             4    If the bootstrap-timer expires, and the current  state
                  is  `ElectedBSR',  the  router  originates a bootstrap
                  message, and restarts the RP-Set timer at  [Bootstrap-
                  Period]. No state transition is incurred.

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                  This  way,  the  elected   BSR   originates   periodic
                  bootstrap messages every [Bootstrap-Period].

        3    If a router is not a Candidate-BSR:

             1

             2    The router operates initially in the `AxptAny'  state.
                  In  such  state,  a router accepts the first bootstrap
                  message from the The  Reverse  Path  Forwarding  (RPF)
                  neighbor  toward the included BSR. The RPF neighbor in
                  this case is the next  hop  router  en  route  to  the
                  included BSR.

             3    If the bootstrap-timer expires, and the current  state
                  is   `AxptPref'--   where   the  router  accepts  only
                  preferred bootstrap messages (those  that  carry  BSR-
                  priority  and  address  higher  than,  or  equal to,
                  `LclBSR') from the RPF neighbor toward  the  included
                  BSR-- the router transits into the `AxptAny' state.

                  In this case, if an elected BSR  becomes  unreachable,
                  the  routers  start  accepting bootstrap messages from
                  another  Candidate-BSR   after   the   bootstrap-timer
                  expires.  All  PIM routers within a domain converge on
                  the preferred reachable Candidate-BSR.

        Receiving Bootstrap Message:

        To avoid loops, an RPF check is performed on  the  included  BSR
        address.  Upon  receiving  a  bootstrap  message  from  the  RPF
        neighbor toward the included  BSR,  the  following  actions  are
        taken:

        1    If the router is not a Candidate-BSR:

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             1    If the current state is `AxptAny', the router  accepts
                  the   bootstrap   message,   and   transits  into  the
                  `AxptPref' state.

             2    If the current state is `AxptPref', and the  bootstrap
                  message  is  preferred,  the  message  is accepted. No
                  state transition is incurred.

        2    If the router is a Candidate-BSR, and the bootstrap message
             is  preferred,  the  message  is accepted. Further, if this
             happens when the current state is `Elected BSR', the router
             transits into the `CandBSR' state.

        When a bootstrap message is accepted, the  router  restarts  the
        bootstrap-timer  at [Bootstrap-Timeout], stores the received BSR
        priority and address in `LclBSR', and the received RP-Set  in
        `LclRP-Set',  and  forwards  the  bootstrap  message out all
        interfaces except the receiving interface.

        If a bootstrap message is rejected,  no  state  transitions  are
        triggered.

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     6.3 Appendix III: Glossary of Terms

        Following is an alphabetized list of terms and definitions  used
        throughout this specification.

        *    { Bootstrap router (BSR)}. A BSR is a  dynamically  elected
             router   within   a  PIM  domain.  It  is  responsible  for
             constructing the RP-Set and originating Bootstrap messages.

        *    { Candidate-BSR (C-BSR)}. A C-BSR is a router configured to
             participate in the BSR election and act as BSRs if elected.

        *    { Candidate RP (C-RP)}. A C-RP is a  router  configured  to
             send  periodic  Candidate-RP-Advertisement  messages to the
             BSR, and act as  an  RP  when  it  receives  Join/Prune  or
             Register messages for the advertised group prefix.

        *    { Designated Router (DR)}. The DR sets up  multicast  route
             entries  and  sends  corresponding  Join/Prune and Register
             messages on  behalf  of  directly-connected  receivers  and
             sources,  respectively.  The  DR may or may not be the same
             router as the IGMP Querier. The DR may or may  not  be  the
             long-term,  last-hop  router for the group; a router on the
             LAN that has a lower metric route to the data source, or to
             the   group's  RP,  may  take  over  the  role  of  sending
             Join/Prune messages.

        *    { Incoming interface (iif)}. The iif of a  multicast  route
             entry  indicates  the  interface  from which multicast data
             packets are accepted for forwarding. The iif is initialized
             when the entry is created.

        *     Join list. The Join list is one of two lists of  addresses
             that  is  included  in  a  Join/Prune message; each address
             refers to a source or RP. It indicates those sources or RPs
             to which downstream receiver(s) wish to join.

        *    { Last-hop router}. The last-hop router is the last  router
             to receive multicast data packets before they are delivered
             to directly-connected member hosts. In general the last-hop
             router  is  the  DR  for  the  LAN.  However, under various

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             conditions described in this  document  a  parallel  router
             connected  to  the  same  LAN may take over as the last-hop
             router in place of the DR.

        *    { Outgoing interface  (oif)  list}.  Each  multicast  route
             entry has an oif list containing the outgoing interfaces to
             which multicast packets should be forwarded.

        *     Prune List. The Prune list is the second list of addresses
             that  is  included  in  a  Join/Prune message. It indicates
             those sources or RPs from which downstream receiver(s) wish
             to prune.

        *    { PIM Multicast Border Router (PMBR)}. A  PMBR  connects  a
             PIM domain to other multicast routing domain(s).

        *    { Rendezvous  Point  (RP)}.  Each  multicast  group  has  a
             shared-tree via which receivers hear of new sources and new
             receivers hear of all sources. The RP is the root  of  this
             per-group shared tree, called the RP-Tree.

        *    { RP-Set}. The RP-Set is a set of RP addresses  constructed
             by  the  BSR based on Candidate-RP advertisements received.
             The RP-Set information is distributed to all PIM routers in
             the BSR's PIM domain.

        *    { Reverse Path Forwarding (RPF)}. RPF is used to select the
             appropriate  incoming interface for a multicast route entry
             . The RPF neighbor for an address X  is  the  the  next-hop
             router  used to forward packets toward X. The RPF interface
             is the interface to that RPF neighbor. In the  common  case
             this  is  the next hop used by the unicast routing protocol
             for sending unicast packets toward X. For example, in cases
             where  unicast  and  multicast routes are not congruent, it
             can be different.

        *    { Route entry.} A multicast route entry is state maintained
             in a router along the distribution tree and is created, and
             updated based on incoming control messages. The route entry
             may  be  different from the forwarding entry; the latter is
             used to forward data packets  in  real  time.  Typically  a

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             forwarding  entry is not created until data packets arrive,
             the forwarding entry's iif and oif list are copied from the
             route  entry,  and  the forwarding entry may be flushed and
             recreated at will.

        *    { Shortest path tree  (SPT)}.  The  SPT  is  the  multicast
             distribution  tree  created  by  the  merger  of all of the
             shortest paths that connect receivers  to  the  source  (as
             determined by unicast routing).

        *    { Sparse Mode (SM)}. SM is  one  mode  of  operation  of  a
             multicast   protocol.   PIM  SM  uses  explicit  Join/Prune
             messages and Rendezvous points in place of Dense Mode PIM's
             and DVMRP's broadcast and prune mechanism.

        *    { Wildcard (WC) multicast route entry}. Wildcard  multicast
             route entries are those entries that may be used to forward
             packets for any source  sending  to  the  specified  group.
             Wildcard  bots  in  the  join  list of a Join/Prune message
             represent either a (*,G) or (*,*,RP)  join;  in  the  prune
             list they represent a (*,G) prune.

        *    { (S,G) route entry}.  (S,G)  is  a  source-specific  route
             entry.  It  may  be  created  in  response to data packets,
             Join/Prune messages, or Asserts. The (S,G) state in routers
             creates a source-rooted, shortest path (or reverse shortest
             path) distribution tree. (S,G)RPT bit entries  are  source-
             specific  entries  on the shared RP-Tree; these entries are
             used to prune particular sources off of the shared tree.

        *    { (*,G) route entry}. Group members join the shared RP-Tree
             for  a  particular group. This tree is represented by (*,G)
             multicast route entries along the  shortest  path  branches
             between the RP and the group members.

        *    { (*,*,RP) route entry}. (*,*,RP) refers to any source  and
             any  multicast  group  that  maps to the RP included in the
             entry. The routers along the shortest path branches between
             a  domain's RP(s) and its PMBRs keep (*,*,RP) state and use
             it to determine how to deliver packets toward the PMBRs  if
             data  packets arrive for which there is not a longer match.
             The  wildcard  group  in  the  (*,*,RP)  route   entry   is

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             represented  by  a  group  address  of 224.0.0.0 and a mask
             length of 4 bits.

        References

   1.   S.Deering,  D.Estrin,  D.Farinacci,  V.Jacobson,  C.Liu,  L.Wei,
        P.Sharma,  and  A.Helmy.  Protocol independent multicast (pim) :
        Motivation and architecture.
         Internet Draft, May 1995.

   2.   S.Deering, D.Estrin, D.Farinacci, V.Jacobson, C.Liu, and  L.Wei.
        The pim architecture for wide-area multicast routing.
         ACM Transactions on Networks, April 1996.

   3.   D.Estrin, D.Farinacci, V.Jacobson, C.Liu, L.Wei,  P.Sharma,  and
        A.Helmy.  Protocol  independent  multicast-dense mode (pim-dm) :
        Protocol specification.  Internet Draft, November 1995.

   4.   S.Deering.  Host  extensions  for  ip  multicasting,  aug  1989.
        RFC1112.

   5.   W.Fenner. Internet group management protocol, version 2.
         Internet Draft, May 1996.

   6.   R.Atkinson. Security architecture  for  the  internet  protocol,
        August 1995. RFC-1825.

   7.   MarkR.  Nelson.  File  verification  using  CRC.  Dr.  Dobb's
        Journal, May 1992.

   8.   A.J. Ballardie, P.F. Francis, and J.Crowcroft. Core based trees.
        In  Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM, San Francisco, 1993.

Estrin,Farinacci,Helmy,Thaler,Deering,Handley,Jacobson,Liu,Sharma,Wei  [Page 80]

Addresses of Authors:

Deborah Estrin
Computer Science Dept/ISI
University of Southern Calif.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
estrin@usc.edu

Dino Farinacci
Cisco Systems Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive,
San Jose, CA 95134
dino@cisco.com

Ahmed Helmy
Computer Science Dept.
University of Southern Calif.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
ahelmy@catarina.usc.edu

David Thaler
EECS Department
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
thalerd@eecs.umich.edu

Stephen Deering
Xerox PARC
3333 Coyote Hill Road
Palo Alto, CA 94304
deering@parc.xerox.com

Mark Handley
Department of Computer Science
University College London
Gower Street
London, WC1E 6BT
UK
m.handley@cs.ucl.ac.uk

Van Jacobson
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
1 Cyclotron Road
Berkeley, CA 94720
van@ee.lbl.gov

Ching-gung  Liu
Computer Science Dept.
University of Southern Calif.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
charley@catarina.usc.edu

Puneet Sharma
Computer Science Dept.
University of Southern Calif.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
puneet@catarina.usc.edu

Liming Wei
Cisco Systems Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive,
San Jose, CA 95134
lwei@cisco.com