RFC888

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                              RFC 888


                 "STUB" EXTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOL


                        Linda J. Seamonson
                           Eric C. Rosen


                        BBN Communications


                           January 1984






This note describes the Exterior Gateway Protocol used to connect Stub Gateways to an Autonomous System of core Gateways. This document specifies the working protocol, and defines an ARPA official protocol. All implementers of Gateways should carefully review this document.








 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


                         Table of Contents



 1   INTRODUCTION.......................................... 1
 2   DEFINITIONS AND OVERVIEW.............................. 4
 3   NEIGHBOR ACQUISITION.................................. 7
 4   NEIGHBOR REACHABILITY PROTOCOL....................... 10
 5   NETWORK REACHABILITY (NR) MESSAGE.................... 15
 6   POLLING FOR NR MESSAGES.............................. 22
 7   SENDING NR MESSAGES.................................. 24
 8   INDIRECT NEIGHBORS................................... 26
 9   LIMITATIONS.......................................... 27
 A   APPENDIX A - EGP MESSAGE FORMATS..................... 28
 A.1   NEIGHBOR ACQUISITION MESSAGE....................... 28
 A.2   NEIGHBOR HELLO/I HEARD YOU MESSAGE................. 30
 A.3   NR POLL MESSAGE.................................... 32
 A.4   NETWORK REACHABILITY MESSAGE....................... 34
 A.5   EGP ERROR MESSAGE.................................. 37









                               - i -





 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 1  INTRODUCTION


      The DARPA Catenet is expected to be a continuously expanding
 system,  with  more  and  more  hosts  on  more and more networks
 participating in it.  Of course, this will require more and  more
 gateways.   In  the  past,  such  expansion  has taken place in a
 relatively unstructured manner.  New gateways,  often  containing
 radically different software than the existing gateways, would be
 added and would immediately begin  participating  in  the  common
 routing algorithm via the GGP protocol.  However, as the internet
 grows larger and larger, this simple method of expansion  becomes
 less and less feasible.  There are a number of reasons for this:


      - the overhead of the routing algorithm becomes  excessively
        large;


      - the  proliferation   of   radically   different   gateways
        participating  in  a single common routing algorithm makes
        maintenance and fault isolation nearly  impossible,  since
        it  becomes  impossible to regard       the internet as an
        integrated communications system;


      - the  gateway  software  and  algorithms,  especially   the
        routing  algorithm, become too rigid and inflexible, since


                               - 1 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


        any proposed change  must be made in  too  many  different
        places   and   by   too   many   different        people.



      In the future, the internet is expected to evolve into a set
 of  separate  sections or  "autonomous  systems",  each  of which
 consists of a set of one or more relatively homogeneous gateways.
 The  protocols,  and  in  particular  the routing algorithm which
 these gateways use among themselves, will be  a  private  matter,
 and  need never be implemented in gateways outside the particular
 sections or system.


      In the simplest case, an autonomous system might consist  of
 just a single gateway connecting, for example, a local network to
 the ARPANET.  Such a gateway might be called  a  "stub  gateway",
 since  its  only purpose is to interface the local network to the
 rest of the internet, and it is  not  intended  to  be  used  for
 handling  any traffic which neither originated in nor is destined
 for that particular local network.  In the near-term  future,  we
 will  begin  to  think  of  the  internet  as a set of autonomous
 systems, one of which consists of the DARPA gateways  on  ARPANET
 and  SATNET,  and  the others of which are stub gateways to local
 networks.   The former system, which we  shall  call  the  "core"



                               - 2 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 system,  will be used as a transport or "long-haul" system by the
 latter systems.


      Ultimately, the internet may consist of a number of co-equal
 autonomous  systems,  any  of  which  may  be used as a transport
 medium for traffic originating in any system and destined for any
 system.  This more general case is still the subject of research.
 This paper describes only how stub gateways connect to  the  core
 system using the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP).
















                               - 3 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 2  DEFINITIONS AND OVERVIEW


      For the purposes of this paper, a "stub gateway" is  defined
 as follows:


      - it is not a core gateway
      - it shares a network with at least one core gateway (has an
        interface on the same network as some core gateway)
      - it has interfaces to one or more networks  which  have  no
        core gateways
      - all other nets which are reachable from  the  core  system
        via  the stub have no other path to the core system except
        via the stub


      The stub gateway is expected to fully execute  the  Internet
 Control Message Protocol (ICMP), as well as the EGP protocol.  In
 particular, it must respond to ICMP echo requests, and must  send
 ICMP  destination  dead  messages  as  appropriate.   It  is also
 required to send ICMP Redirect messages as appropriate.


      Autonomous systems will be  assigned  16-bit  identification
 numbers  (in  much  the same ways as network and protocol numbers
 are now assigned), and every EGP message header contains a  field



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 for  this  number.   Zero  will not be assigned to any autonomous
 system; the use  of  zero  as  an  autonomous  system  number  is
 reserved for future use.


      We call two gateways "neighbors" if there is  a  network  to
 which  each  has  an interface.  If two neighbors are part of the
 same autonomous system, we  call  them  INTERIOR  NEIGHBORS;  for
 example,  any  two core gateways on the same network are interior
 neighbors of each other.  If two neighbors are not  part  of  the
 same  autonomous  system,  we  call  them EXTERIOR NEIGHBORS; for
 example, a stub gateway and any core gateway that share a network
 are exterior neighbors of each other.  In order for one system to
 use another as a transport medium, gateways  which  are  exterior
 neighbors  of  each other must be able to find out which networks
 can be reached through the other.  The Exterior Gateway  Protocol
 enables this information to be passed between exterior neighbors.
 Since it is a polling protocol, it also enables each  gateway  to
 control   the  rate  at  which  it  sends  and  receives  network
 reachability information, allowing each system to control its own
 overhead.   It  also  enables  each system to have an independent
 routing algorithm whose operation cannot be disrupted by failures
 of other systems.



                               - 5 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


      The Exterior Gateway Protocol has three parts: (a)  Neighbor
 Acquisition Protocol, (b) Neighbor Reachability Protocol, and (c)
 Network  Reachability  determination.   Note  that  all  messages
 defined  by EGP are intended to travel only a single "hop".  That
 is, they originate at one gateway and are sent to  a  neighboring
 gateway   without  the  mediation  of  any  intervening  gateway.
 Therefore, the time-to-live field should be set to a  very  small
 value.   Gateways  which  encounter EGP messages in their message
 streams which are not addressed to them may discard them.


      Each EGP message contains a sequence  number.   The  gateway
 should maintain one sequence number per neighbor.













                               - 6 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 3  NEIGHBOR ACQUISITION


      Before it is possible to obtain routing information from  an
 exterior  gateway,  it  is necessary to acquire that gateway as a
 direct neighbor.  (The distinction between  direct  and  indirect
 neighbors  will  be  made  in a later section.)  In order for two
 gateways to become direct neighbors, they must be  neighbors,  in
 the  sense  defined  above,  and  they  must execute the NEIGHBOR
 ACQUISITION  PROTOCOL,  which  is  simply  a   standard   two-way
 handshake.


      A gateway that wishes to initiate neighbor acquisition  with
 another  sends  it  a Neighbor Acquisition Request.  This message
 should be repeatedly transmitted (at a reasonable  rate,  perhaps
 once  every  30 seconds or so) until a Neighbor Acquisition Reply
 or a Neighbor Acquisition Refusal is received.  The Request  will
 contain  an  identification number which is copied into the reply
 so that request and reply can be matched up.


      A gateway receiving  a  Neighbor  Acquisition  Request  must
 determine  whether  it  wishes to become a direct neighbor of the
 source of the Request.  If not, it may, at  its  option,  respond
 with   a   Neighbor   Acquisition   Refusal  message,  optionally
 specifying the reason for refusal.  Otherwise, it should  send  a


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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 Neighbor Acquisition Reply message.


      The gateway  that  sent  the  Request  should  consider  the
 Neighbor Acquisition complete when it has received the neighbor's
 Reply.  The gateway that  sent  the  Reply  should  consider  the
 acquisition complete when it has sent the Reply.


      Unmatched Replies or Refusals should be  discarded  after  a
 reasonable  period  of time.  However, information about any such
 unmatched messages may be useful for diagnostic purposes.


      A Neighbor Acquisition  Request  from  a  gateway  which  is
 already a direct neighbor should be responded to with a Reply.


      A Neighbor Acquisition Request or Reply from  gateway  G  to
 gateway  G'  carries the minimum interval in seconds with which G
 is willing to answer Neighbor Reachability Hello Messages from G'
 and the minimum interval in seconds with which G is willing to be
 polled for NR messages (see below).


      If  a  gateway  wishes  to  cease  being  a  neighbor  of  a
 particular  exterior  gateway, it sends a Neighbor Cease message.
 A gateway  receiving  a  Neighbor  Cease  message  should  always
 respond with a Neighbor Cease Acknowledgment.  It should cease to
 treat the sender of the message as a neighbor in any way.   Since


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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 there  is  a  significant  amount  of protocol run between direct
 neighbors (see below), if some gateway no longer needs  to  be  a
 direct  neighbor  of  some other, it is "polite" to indicate this
 fact with a Neighbor Cease Message.  The Neighbor  Cease  Message
 should  be  retransmitted  (up  to some number of times) until an
 acknowledgment for it is received.


      Once  a  Neighbor  Cease  message  has  been  received,  the
 Neighbor   Reachability  Protocol  (below)  should  cease  to  be
 executed.


      A stub should have tables configured in with  the  addresses
 of  a  small  number  of  the  core gateways (no more than two or
 three) with which it has  a  common  network.   It  will  be  the
 responsibility  of the stub to initiate neighbor acquisition with
 these gateways.  If the direct neighbors of  a  stub  should  all
 fail,  it  will  be  the responsibility of the stub to acquire at
 least one new direct neighbor.  It can do so by choosing  one  of
 the  core  gateways which it has had as an indirect neighbor (see
 below), and executing the neighbor acquisition protocol with  it.
 (It  is  possible  that  no  more than one core gateway will ever
 agree to become a direct neighbor with any given stub gateway  at
 any one time.)



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 4  NEIGHBOR REACHABILITY PROTOCOL


      It is important for a gateway to keep real-time  information
 as  to the reachability of its neighbors.  If a gateway concludes
 that a particular neighbor cannot be  reached,  it  should  cease
 forwarding  traffic to that gateway.  To make that determination,
 a NEIGHBOR REACHABILITY protocol is  needed.   The  EGP  protocol
 provides two messages types for this purpose -- a "Hello" message
 and an "I Heard You" message.


      When a "Hello" message is received from a  direct  neighbor,
 an "I Heard You" must be returned to that neighbor "immediately".
 The delay between receiving a "Hello" and returning an  "I  Heard
 You" should never be more than a few seconds.


      Core  gateways  will  use  the   following   algorithm   for
 determining reachablility of an exterior neighbor:


      A reachable  neighbor  shall  be  declared  unreachable  if,
 during  the  time  in  which  the  core  gateway  sent its last n
 "Hello"s, it received fewer than k "I Heard You"s in return.   An
 unreachable  neighbor  shall be declared reachable if, during the
 time in which the core gateway  sent  its  last  m  "Hello"s,  it
 received at least j "I Heard You"s in return.



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


      Stub  gateways  may  also  send  "Hello"s  to  their  direct
 neighbors  and  receive  "I Heard You"s in return.  The algorithm
 for determining reachability may  be  similar  to  the  algorithm
 described  above.  However, it is not necessary for stubs to send
 "Hello"s.  The "Hello" and "I Heard You" messages have  a  status
 field  which  the  sending  gateway  uses  to indicate whether it
 thinks  the  receiving  gateway  is  reachable  or   not.    This
 information  can  be  useful  for  diagnostic  purposes.  It also
 allows a stub gateway  to  make  its  reachability  determination
 parasitic  on  its  core neighbor: only the core gateway actually
 needs to send "Hello" messages, and the stub can declare it up or
 down based on the status field in the "Hello".  That is, the stub
 gateway (which sends only  "I  Heard  You"s)  declares  the  core
 gateway  (which  sends  only  "Hello"s)  to be reachable when the
 "Hello"s from the core indicate that it has declared the stub  to
 be reachable.


      The frequency with which the  "Hello"s  are  sent,  and  the
 values of the parameters k, n, j, and m cannot be specified here.
 For best results, this will depend on the characteristics of  the
 neighbor  and  of the network which the neighbors have in common.
 THIS IMPLIES THAT THE PROPER PARAMETERS MAY NEED TO BE DETERMINED
 JOINTLY  BY THE DESIGNERS AND IMPLEMENTERS OF THE TWO NEIGHBORING


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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 GATEWAYS;  choosing  algorithms  and  parameters  in   isolation,
 without  considering  the characteristics of the neighbor and the
 connecting network, would not be expected to  result  in  optimum
 reachability determinations.


      However, the Neighbor Acquisition Request and Reply messages
 provide  neighbors with a way to inform each other of the minimum
 frequency at which they  are  willing  to  answer  Hellos.   When
 gateway  G sends a Neighbor Acquisition Request to gateway G', it
 states that it does not  wish  to  answer  Hellos  from  G'  more
 frequently  than  once  every  X  seconds.   G'  in  its Neighbor
 Acquisition Reply states that it does not wish to  answer  Hellos
 from  G  more  frequently  than  once  every  Y seconds.  The two
 frequencies do not have to be the same, but  each  neighbor  must
 conform  to  the  interval requested by the other.  A gateway may
 send Hellos less frequently than requested, but not more.


      A  direct  neighbor  gateway   should   also   be   declared
 unreachable  if  the  network  connecting it supplies lower level
 protocol information from which this can be deduced.   Thus,  for
 example,  if  a gateway receives an 1822 Destination Dead message
 from the ARPANET which indicates that a direct neighbor is  dead,
 it should declare that neighbor unreachable.  The neighbor should



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 not be declared reachable again until  the  requisite  number  of
 Hello/I-Heard-You packets have been exchanged.


      A direct neighbor which  has  become  unreachable  does  not
 thereby  cease  to  be  a  direct  neighbor.  The neighbor can be
 declared reachable again without  any  need  to  go  through  the
 neighbor  acquisition  protocol  again.  However, if the neighbor
 remains unreachable for an extremely long period of time, such as
 an  hour,  the  gateway  should  cease to treat it as a neighbor,
 i.e., should cease sending Hello messages to  it.   The  neighbor
 acquisition  protocol  would  then  need to be repeated before it
 could become a direct neighbor again.


      "Hello" messages from sources other  than  direct  neighbors
 should  simply  be ignored.  However, logging the presence of any
 such messages might provide useful diagnostic information.


      A gateway which is going down, or  whose  interface  to  the
 network which connects it to a particular neighbor is going down,
 should send a Neighbor Cease  message  to  all  direct  neighbors
 which  will  no  longer  be  able to reach it.  The Cease message
 should use the info field to specify the reason as "going  down".
 It  should  retransmit  that message (up to some number of times)
 until it receives a Neighbor Cease Acknowledgment.  This provides


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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 the  neighbors  with an advance warning of an outage, and enables
 them to prepare for it in a way which will minimize disruption to
 existing traffic.






















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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 5  NETWORK REACHABILITY (NR) MESSAGE


      Terminology: Let gateway G have an interface to  network  N.
 We  say  that G is AN APPROPRIATE FIRST HOP to network M relative
 to network N (where M and N are distinct networks) if and only if
 the following condition holds:


      Traffic which is destined for network M, and  which  arrives
      at gateway G over its network N interface, will be forwarded
      to M by G over a path  which  does  not  include  any  other
      gateway with an interface to network N.


      In short, G is  an  appropriate  first  hop  for  network  M
 relative  to network N just in case there is no better gateway on
 network N through which to route traffic which  is  destined  for
 network  M.   For  optimal routing, traffic in network N which is
 destined for network M ought always to be forwarded to a  gateway
 which is an appropriate first hop.


      In  order  for  exterior  neighbors  G  and  G'  (which  are
 neighbors  over network N) to be able to use each other as packet
 switches for forwarding traffic to remote networks, each needs to
 know  the  list of networks for which the other is an appropriate
 first hop.  The Exterior  Gateway  Protocol  defines  a  message,



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 called  the  Network  Reachability  Message  (or NR message), for
 transferring this information.


      Let G be a gateway on network N.  Then the NR message  which
 G sends about network N must contain the following information:


      A list of all the networks for which  G  is  an  appropriate
      first hop relative to network N.


 If G' can obtain this information from exterior neighbor G,  then
 it  knows  that no traffic destined for networks which are NOT in
 that list should be forwarded to G.  (It cannot simply  conclude,
 however,  that all traffic for any networks in that list ought to
 be forwarded via G, since G' may also have other neighbors  which
 are also appropriate first hops to network N.  For example, G and
 G might each be neighbors of G',  but  might  be  "equidistant"
 from  some  network  M.   Then each could be an appropriate first
 hop.)


      For each network in the list, the NR message also  specifies
 the "distance" (according to some metric whose definition is left
 to the designers of the autonomous system of which gateway G is a
 member)  from  G  to  that  network.   Core  gateways will report
 distances less than 128 for networks that can be reached  without



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 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 leaving  the  core  system,  and  greater  than  or  equal to 128
 otherwise.  A stub gateway should report distances less than  128
 for all networks listed in its NR messages.


      The maximum value of distance (255.) shall be taken to  mean
 that  the network is UNREACHABLE.  ALL OTHER VALUES WILL BE TAKEN
 TO MEAN THAT THE NETWORK IS REACHABLE.


      If an NR message from some gateway G fails to  mention  some
 network  N which was mentioned in the previous NR message from G,
 it is possible that N has become unreachable from G.  If  several
 successive  NR  messages  from  G omit mention of N, it should be
 taken to mean that  N  is  no  longer  reachable  from  G.   This
 procedure  is  necessary  to  ensure  that  networks which can no
 longer be  reached,  but  which  are  never  explicitly  declared
 unreachable, are timed out and removed from the list of reachable
 networks.


      It will often be the case that where a core gateway G and  a
 stub  gateway  G'  are  direct neighbors on network N, G knows of
 many more gateway neighbors on network N,  and  knows  for  which
 networks  those  gateway neighbors are the appropriate first hop.
 Since the stub G' may not know about all these  other  neighbors,
 it  is  convenient  and often more efficient for it to be able to


                              - 17 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 obtain this information from G.  Therefore, the  EGP  NR  message
 also  contains  fields  which allow the core gateway G to specify
 the following information:


      a) A list of all neighbors (both interior and exterior) of G
         (on  network  N)  which  G  has reliably determined to be
         reachable.  G may also include indirect neighbors in this
         list (see below.)


      b) For each of those neighbors, the  list  of  networks  for
         which that neighbor is an appropriate first hop (relative
         to network N).


      c) For each such <neighbor, network>  pair,  the  "distance"
         from that neighbor to that network.


      Thus the NR message provides a means of allowing  a  gateway
 to  "discover" new neighbors by seeing whether a neighbor that it
 already knows  of  has  any  additional  neighbors  on  the  same
 network.  This information also makes possible the implementation
 of the INDIRECT NEIGHBOR strategy defined below.


      A  more  precise  description  of  the  NR  message  is  the
 following.



                              - 18 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


      The data portion of the  message  will  consist  largely  of
 blocks  of data.  Each block will be headed by a gateway address,
 which will be the address  either  of  the  gateway  sending  the
 message  or  of  one  of  that gateway's neighbors.  Each gateway
 address will be followed by a list of the networks for which that
 gateway  is  an  appropriate first hop.  All networks at the same
 distance from the gateway will be grouped together in this  list,
 preceded  by  the  distance  itself and the number of networks at
 that distance.  The whole list is preceded  by  a  count  of  the
 distance-groups in the list.


      Preceding the list of data blocks is:
      a) The count (one byte) of the number of interior  neighbors
         of  G  for  which  this message contains data blocks.  By
         convention, this count will include the data block for  G
         itself, which should be the first one to appear.


      b) The count (one byte) of the number of exterior  neighbors
            of  G  for  which  this  message contains data blocks.



      c) The address of the network which this message  is  about.
         If  G  and  G' are neighbors on network N, then in the NR
         message going from G  to  G',  this  is  the  address  of


                              - 19 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


         network   N.   For  convenience,  four  bytes  have  been
         allocated for this address -- the trailing one,  two,  or
         three bytes should be zero.


      Then follow the data blocks themselves, first the block  for
 G itself, then the blocks for all the interior neighbors of G (if
 any), then the blocks for  the  exterior  neighbors.   Since  all
 gateways  mentioned  are  on  the same network, whose address has
 already been given, the gateway  addresses  are  given  with  the
 network  address part (one, two, or three bytes) omitted, to save
 space.


      In the list of networks, each network address is either one,
 two,  or three bytes, depending on whether it is a class A, class
 B, or class C network.  No trailing bytes are used.


      The NR message  sent  by  a  stub  should  be  the  simplest
 allowable.   That  is,  it  should have only a single data block,
 headed by its own address (on the network it has in  common  with
 the neighboring core gateway), listing just the networks to which
 it is an appropriate first hop.  These will be just the  networks
 that can be reached no other way, in general.




                              - 20 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


      The core gateways will send complete NR messages, containing
 information  about all other gateways on the common network, both
 core gateways (which shall be listed as interior  neighbors)  and
 other  gateways (which shall be listed as exterior neighbors, and
 may include the stub itself).  This information will  enable  the
 stub  to  become  an  indirect  neighbor (see below) of all these
 other gateways.  That is, the stub shall forward traffic directly
 to  these  other  gateways  as  appropriate, but shall not become
 direct neighbors with them.


      The  stub  should  NEVER  forward  to   any   (directly   or
 indirectly)  neighboring  core gateway any traffic for which that
 gateway is not an appropriate first hop, as indicated  in  an  NR
 message.   Of  course, this does not apply to datagrams which are
 using the source route option; any such datagrams  should  always
 be  forwarded as indicated in the source route option field, even
 if that  requires  forwarding  to  a  gateway  which  is  not  an
 appropriate first hop.







                              - 21 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 6  POLLING FOR NR MESSAGES


      No gateway is required to send  NR  messages  to  any  other
 gateway,  except  as  a  response  to  an  NR  Poll from a direct
 neighbor.  However, a gateway is required to  respond  to  an  NR
 Poll  from  a  direct neighbor within several seconds (subject to
 the qualification two paragraphs  hence),  even  if  the  gateway
 believes that neighbor to be down.


      The EGP NR Poll message is defined  for  this  purpose.   No
 gateway  may  poll another for an NR message more often than once
 per minute.  A gateway receiving more than one  poll  per  minute
 may  simply  ignore  the  excess  polls,  or  may return an error
 message.


      The minimum interval which gateway  G  will  accept  as  the
 polling  interval  from gateway G' and the minimum interval which
 G' will accept as the polling interval from G  are  specified  at
 the  time  that  G  and  G'  become  direct  neighbors.  Both the
 Neighbor Acquisition Request and the Neighbor  Acquisition  Reply
 allow  the  sender  to  specify,  in seconds, its desired minimum
 polling interval.  If G specifies to G' that its minimum  polling
 interval  is  X,  G'  should not poll G more frequently than once
 every X seconds.  G will not guarantee to  answer  more  frequent


                              - 22 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 polls.


      Polls must only  be  sent  to  direct  neighbors  which  are
 declared reachable by the neighbor reachability protocol.


      An NR Poll message contains a sequence number chosen by  the
 polling  gateway.   The polled gateway will return this number in
 the NR message it sends in response to the poll,  to  enable  the
 polling gateway to match up received NR messages with polls.


      In general, a poll should be retransmitted  some  number  of
 times  (with a reasonable interval between retransmissions) until
 an NR message is received.  IF NO NR MESSAGE  IS  RECEIVED  AFTER
 THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF RETRANSMISSIONS, THE POLLING GATEWAY SHOULD
 ASSUME THAT THE POLLED GATEWAY IS NOT AN  APPROPRIATE  FIRST  HOP
 FOR  ANY  NETWORK  WHATSOEVER.   The  optimum  parameters for the
 polling/retransmission  algorithm  will  be  dependent   on   the
 characteristics   of   the  two  neighbors  and  of  the  network
 connecting them.


      Received NR messages whose  identification  numbers  do  not
 match  the  identification  number of the most recently sent poll
 shall be ignored.  There is no provision for multiple outstanding
 polls to the same neighbor.



                              - 23 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 7  SENDING NR MESSAGES


      In general, NR messages are to be sent only in response to a
 poll.   However,  between  two  successive polls from an exterior
 neighbor, a gateway may send one  and  only  one  unsolicited  NR
 message  to  that  neighbor.   This  gives  it limited ability to
 quickly announce  network  reachability  changes  that  may  have
 occurred in the interval since the last poll.  Excess unsolicited
 NR messages may be ignored, or an error message may be returned.


      An NR message should be sent within  several  seconds  after
 receipt  of  a poll.  Failure to respond in a timely manner to an
 NR poll may result in the polling  gateway's  deciding  that  the
 polled gateway is not an appropriate first hop to any network.


      NR messages sent in response to  polls  carry  the  sequence
 number  of  the  poll  message in their "sequence number" fields.
 Unsolicited NR messages carry the identification  number  of  the
 last  poll  received,  and have the "unsolicited" bit set.  (Note
 that this allows for only a single  unsolicited  NR  message  per
 polling period.)


      Polls from  non-neighbors,  from  neighbors  which  are  not
 declared  reachable, or with bad IP source network fields, should



                              - 24 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 be responded to with an EGP error message  with  the  appropriate
 "reason"  field.   If  G  sends  an  NR poll to G' with IP source
 network N, and G' is not a neighbor of  G  on  its  interface  to
 network  N  (or G' does not have an interface to network N), then
 the source network field is considered "bad".


      A gateway is normally not required to send more than one  NR
 message  within the minimum interval specified at the time of the
 neighbor acquisition.  An exception to  this  must  be  made  for
 duplicate polls (successive polls with the same sequence number),
 which occur when an NR message is lost  in  transit.   A  gateway
 should  send an NR message containing its most recent information
 in response to a duplicate poll.












                              - 25 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 8  INDIRECT NEIGHBORS


      Becoming a "direct neighbor" of an exterior gateway requires
 three  steps:  (a)  neighbor  acquisition, (b) running a neighbor
 reachability protocol, and (c) polling the neighbor  periodically
 for NR messages.  Suppose, however, that gateway G receives an NR
 message from G', in which G'  indicates  the  presence  of  other
 neighbors  G1, ..., Gn, each of which is an appropriate first hop
 for some set of networks to which G' itself is not an appropriate
 first hop.  Then G should be allowed to forward traffic for those
 networks directly to the appropriate one of G1, ..., Gn,  without
 having to send it to G' first.  In this case, G may be considered
 an INDIRECT NEIGHBOR of G1, ..., Gn, since it is  a  neighbor  of
 these  other  gateways for the purpose of forwarding traffic, but
 does not perform neighbor acquisition, neighbor reachability,  or
 exchange   of  NR  messages  with  them.   Neighbor  and  network
 reachability information is obtained indirectly via G', hence the
 designation  "indirect  neighbor".   We say that G is an indirect
 neighbor of G1, ..., Gn VIA G'.


      If G is an indirect neighbor of  G'  via  G,  and  then  G
 receives  an  NR  message  from  G which does not mention G', G
 should treat G' as having become unreachable.



                              - 26 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 9  LIMITATIONS


      It must be clearly  understood  that  the  Exterior  Gateway
 Protocol   does  not  in  itself  constitute  a  network  routing
 algorithm.  In addition, it does not provide all the  information
 needed  to  implement  a  general area routing algorithm.  If the
 topology does not obey the  rules  given  for  stubs  above,  the
 Exterior  Gateway  Protocol  does  not provide enough topological
 information to prevent loops.


      If any gateway sends an NR message with  false  information,
 claiming  to be an appropriate first hop to a network which it in
 fact cannot even reach, traffic  destined  to  that  network  may
 never be delivered.  Implementers must bear this in mind.












                              - 27 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 A  APPENDIX A - EGP MESSAGE FORMATS
      The Exterior Gateway Protocol runs under Internet Protocol as
 protocol number 8 (decimal).



 A.1  NEIGHBOR ACQUISITION 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! EGP Version # !     Type      !     Code      !    Info       !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !        Checksum               !       Autonomous System #     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !        Sequence #             !       NR Hello interval       !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !        NR poll interval       !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Description:
      The Neighbor Acquisition messages are used by interior and
      exterior gateways to become neighbors of each other.
 EGP Version #
     2
 Type
     3
 Code
      Code = 0      Neighbor Acquisition Request
      Code = 1      Neighbor Acquisition Reply
      Code = 2      Neighbor Acquisition Refusal (see Info field)
      Code = 3      Neighbor Cease Message (see Info field)
      Code = 4      Neighbor Cease Acknowledgment
 Checksum


                              - 28 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


     The  EGP checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
     complement sum of the  EGP  message  starting  with  the  EGP
     version  number  field.   For  computing  the  checksum,  the
     checksum field should be zero.
 Autonomous System #
     This   16-bit   number   identifies   the  autonomous  system
     containing the gateway which is the source of this message.
 Info
     For Refusal message, gives reason for refusal:
         0  Unspecified
         1  Out of table space
         2  Administrative prohibition
     For Cease message, gives reason for ceasing to be neighbor:
         0 Unspecified
         1 Going down
         2 No longer needed
     Otherwise, this field MUST be zero.
 Sequence Number
     A sequence number to aid in matching requests and
     replies.
 NR Hello Interval
     Minimum Hello polling interval(seconds).
 NR Poll Interval
     Minumum NR polling interval(seconds).





                              - 29 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 A.2  NEIGHBOR HELLO/I HEARD YOU 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! EGP Version # !    Type       !     Code      !    Status     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !    Checksum                   !    Autonomous System #        !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !      Sequence #               !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Description:
     Exterior  neighbors  use  EGP  Neighbor Hello and I Heard You
     Messages to determine neighbor connectivity.  When a  gateway
     receives  an  EGP  Neighbor  Hello message from a neighbor it
     should respond with an EGP I Heard You message.
 EGP Version #
     2
 Type
     5
 Code
      Code = 0 for Hello
      Code = 1 for I Heard you
 Checksum
     The  EGP checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
     complement sum of the  EGP  message  starting  with  the  EGP
     version  number  field.   For  computing  the  checksum,  the
     checksum field should be zero.
 Autonomous System #
     This   16-bit   number   identifies   the  autonomous  system
     containing the gateway which is the source of this message.



                              - 30 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 Sequence Number
     A sequence number to aid in matching requests and replies.
 Status
         0  No status given
         1  You appear reachable to me
         2  You appear unreachable to me due to neighbor
            reachability protocol
         3  You appear unreachable to me due to network
            reachability information (such as 1822 "destination
            dead" messages from ARPANET)
         4  You appear unreachable to me due to problems
            with my network interface

















                              - 31 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 A.3  NR POLL 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! EGP Version # !    Type       !     Code      !    Unused     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !         Checksum              !       Autonomous System #     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !         Sequence #            !       Unused                  !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !             IP Source Network                                 !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+


 Description:
      A  gateway  that  wants  to  receive  an  NR message from an
      Exterior Gateway will send an NR Poll message.  Each gateway
      mentioned in the NR message will have an  interface  on  the
      network that is in the IP source network field.
 EGP Version #
     2
 Type
     2
 Code
     0
 Checksum
      The EGP checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
      complement  sum  of  the  EGP  message starting with the EGP
      version number  field.   For  computing  the  checksum,  the
      checksum field should be zero.
 Autonomous System #
     This   16-bit   number   identifies   the  autonomous  system


                              - 32 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


     containing the gateway which is the source of this message.
 Sequence Number
      A sequence  number  to  aid in matching requests and
      replies.
 IP Source Network
      Each  gateway  mentioned  in  the  NR  message  will have an
      interface on the network that is in the  IP  source  network
      field.   The  IP  source  network  is  coded  as one byte of
      network number followed by two bytes of  zero  for  class  A
      networks,  two  bytes of network number followed by one byte
      of zero for class B networks, and  three  bytes  of  network
      number for class C networks.
















                              - 33 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 A.4  NETWORK REACHABILITY 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! EGP Version # !     Type      !   Code        !U! Zeroes      !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !    Checksum                   !       Autonomous System #     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !    Sequence #                 ! # of Int Gwys ! # of Ext Gwys !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !                      IP Source Network                        !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Gateway 1 IP address (without network #)      ! ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  # Distances  !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  Distance 1   !   # Nets      !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net 1,1,1   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net 1,1,2   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
        ...
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  Distance 2   !   # Nets      !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net 1,2,1   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net 1,2,2   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
        ...
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !             Gateway  n IP address (without network #)         !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  # Distances  !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  Distance 1   !  # Nets       !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net n,1,1   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net n,1,2   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !  Distance 2   !  # Nets       !


                              - 34 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net n,2,1   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !   net n,2,2   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  ; 1, 2 or 3 bytes
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       ...


 Description:
      The  Network  Reachability  message (NR) is used to discover
 which networks may be reached through Exterior Gateways.  The  NR
 message is sent in response to an NR Poll message.
 EGP Version #
     2
 Type
     1
 Code
     0
 Checksum
     The  EGP checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
     complement sum of the  EGP  message  starting  with  the  EGP
     version  number  field.   For  computing  the  checksum,  the
     checksum field should be zero.
 Autonomous System #
     This   16-bit   number   identifies   the  autonomous  system
     containing the gateway which is the source of this message.
 U (Unsolicited) bit
     This bit is set if the NR message is being sent unsolicited.



                              - 35 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 Sequence Number
     The  sequence  number  of  the  last  NR  poll  message
     received from the neighbor to whom this NR message  is  being
     sent.   This  number  is  used  to  aid in matching polls and
     replies.
 IP Source Network
      Each  gateway  mentioned  in  the  NR  message  will have an
      interface on the network that is in the  IP  source  network
      field.
 # of Interior Gateways
      The  number  of interior gateways that are mentioned in this
      message.
 # of Exterior Gateways
      The  number  of exterior gateways that are mentioned in this
      message.
 Gateway IP address
      1, 2 or 3 bytes of Gateway IP address (without network #).
 # of Distances
      The number of distances in the gateway block.
 Distance
      The distance.
 # of Nets
      The number of nets at this distance.
 Network address
      1, 2,  or 3 bytes of network address of network which can be
      reached via the preceding gateway.



                              - 36 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


 A.5  EGP ERROR 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! EGP Version # !    Type       !     Code      !    Unused     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !    Checksum                   !       Autonomous System #     !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !       Sequence #              !          Reason               !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 !                                                               !
 !                     Error Message Header                      !
 !            (first three 32-bit words of EGP header)           !
 !                                                               !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Description:
     An  EGP  Error  Message is sent in response to an EGP Message
     that has a bad checksum or has an incorrect value in  one  of
     its fields.
 EGP Version #
     2
 Type
     8
 Code
     0
 Checksum
      The EGP checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's
      complement  sum  of  the  EGP  message starting with the EGP
      version number  field.   For  computing  the  checksum,  the
      checksum field should be zero.
 Autonomous System #



                              - 37 -




 RFC 888                                              JANUARY 1984


     This   16-bit   number   identifies   the  autonomous  system
     containing the gateway which is the source of this message.
 Sequence Number
      A  sequence number assigned by the gateway sending the error
      message.
 Reason
      The reason that the EGP message was in error.  The following
      reasons are defined:
      0  -  unspecified
      1  -  Bad EGP checksum
      2  -  Bad IP Source address in NR Poll or Response
      3  -  Undefined EGP Type or Code
      4  -  Received poll from non-neighbor
      5  -  Received excess unsolicted NR message
      6  -  Received excess poll
      7  -  Erroneous counts in received NR message
      8  -  No response received to NR poll













                              - 38 -