1 / 42

Chapter 18 Mobile IP

Chapter 18 Mobile IP. Jose Alcid David Chapman Aaron Trank. COMP429 Spring 2006. Overview. What is Mobile IP? Mobility, Routing, and Addressing Mobile IP Characteristics Mobile IP Operation Mobile Addressing Details Foreign Agent Discovery Agent Registration. Overview.

bien
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 18 Mobile IP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 18Mobile IP Jose Alcid David Chapman Aaron Trank • COMP429 Spring 2006

  2. Overview • What is Mobile IP? • Mobility, Routing, and Addressing • Mobile IP Characteristics • Mobile IP Operation • Mobile Addressing Details • Foreign Agent Discovery • Agent Registration

  3. Overview • Registration Message Format • Communication With Foreign Agent • Datagram Transmission And Reception • The Two-Crossing Problem • Communication With Computers On the Home Network

  4. QUIZ • You’ll have the chance to win 2 AMC movie tickets!!

  5. What is Mobile IP? • IETF standard protocol • Designed to allow mobile users to move from one network to another while maintaining their permanent IP address. • Described in IETF RFC 3344

  6. Mobility, Routing and Addressing • Mobile Computing • Refers to a system that allows computers to move from one location to another • The IP addressing scheme makes mobility difficult • The host’s address must change • Routers must propagate a host-specific route across the entire Internet • Neither alternative works well

  7. Mobility, Routing and Addressing • Changing an address breaks all existing transport-layer connections and may require restarting some network services • If the host contacts a server that uses reverse DNS lookup to authenticate, an additional change to DNS may be required • A host-specific routing approach cannot scale because communicating and storing a route for each host requires excessive bandwidth and memory

  8. Mobile IP Characteristics • IETF devised a technology to permit IP mobility • Officially named IP Mobility Support • Popularly called: MOBILE IP

  9. Mobile IP Characteristics • General Characteristics include: • Transparency • Mobility is transparent to applications and transport layer protocols • A TCP connection can survive a change in location provided the connection is not used during transition • Interoperability With IPv4 • A host using mobile IP can interoperate with stationary hosts that run conventional IPv4 software

  10. Mobile IP Characteristics • Scalability • The solution permits mobility across the Internet • Security • Mobile IP provides security facilities that can be used to ensure all messages are authenticated (i.e. to prevent an arbitrary computer from impersonating a mobile host) • Macro Mobility • Mobile IP focuses on the problem of long-duration moves (e.g., a user who takes a portable computer on a business trip)

  11. Mobile IP Operation • What is the Biggest Challenge? • Biggest challenge is allowing a host to retain its address without requiring routers to learn host-specific routes. • Mobile IP solves the problem by: • Allowing a computer to hold two addresses simultaneously • A permanent and fixed PRIMARY ADDRESS • And a SECONDARY ADDRESS that is temporary

  12. Mobile IP

  13. Mobile IP Operation • Mobile IP is designed for macroscopic mobility rather than continuous, high-speed movement WHY?

  14. Mobile IP Operation • The reason should be clear: • OVERHEAD • Because it requires considerable overhead after each move, Mobile IP is intended for situations in which a host moves infrequently and remains at a given location for a relatively long period of time (e.g, hours or days)

  15. Mobile IP But Wait! There’s More!

  16. Mobile IP versus Standard IP • IP assumes end hosts are in fixed physical locations • What happens if we move a host between networks? • IP addresses enable IP routing algorithms to get packets to the correct network: -DHCP is used to get packets to end hosts in networks • This still assumes a fixed end host

  17. Mobile IP versus Standard IP

  18. Mobile IP versus Standard IP • What if a user wants to roam between networks? • Mobile users don’t want to know that they are moving between networks • Why can’t mobile users change IP when running an application?

  19. Mobile IP versus Standard IP • Mobile IP was developed as a means for transparently dealing with problems of mobile users • Enables hosts to stay connected to the Internet regardless of their location • Enables hosts to be tracked without needing to change their IP address • Requires no changes to software of non-mobile hosts/routers • Requires addition of some infrastructure • Has no geographical limitations • Requires no modifications to IP addresses or IP address format • Supports security • Could be even more important than physically connected routing

  20. Mobile IP Entities • Mobile Node (MN) • The entity that may change its point of attachment from network to network in the Internet • Detects it has moved and registers with “best” FA • Assigned a permanent IP called its home address to which other hosts send packets regardless of MN’s location • Since this IP doesn’t change it can be used by long-lived applications as MN’s location changes • Home Agent (HA) • This is router with additional functionality • Located on home network of MN • Does mobility binding of MN’s IP with its COA • Forwards packets to appropriate network when MN is away • Does this through encapsulation (IP in IP Tunneling)

  21. Mobile IP Entities • Foreign Agent (FA) • Another router with enhanced functionality • If MN is away from HA the it uses an FA to send/receive data to/from HA • Advertises itself periodically • Forward’s MN’s registration request • Decapsulates messages for delivery to MN • Care-of-address (COA) • Address which identifies MN’s current location • Sent by FA to HA when MN attaches • Usually the IP address of the FA • Correspondent Node (CN) • End host to which MN is corresponding (eg. a web server)

  22. Mobile IP versus DHCP

  23. Two types of care-of addresses Co-Located Mobile computer handles all forwarding and tunneling itself Mobile obtains a local address on foreign network (e.g. via DHCP) Handles details of contacting the home agent to register Advantage: portability Disadvantage: Must have special software Foreign Agent Requires active participant on foreign network Mobile discovers agent when arrives on foreign network Obtains care-of address from foreign agent † Advantage: Mobile computer does not need extra software Disadvantage: Limited access for Mobile computers † A foreign agent does not need to assign a unique address. Instead, the agent may assign its IP address.

  24. Foreign Agent Discovery • Uses ICMP router discovery mechanism • Routers periodically send ICMP router advertisement messages • Hosts may send an ICMP router solicitation to prompt for the advertisement • A Mobile may also multicast to the all agents group (224.0.0.11) • If the router acts as a foreign agent then in its reply it will append a mobility agent extension • The message type is the same as for ICMP router advertisements except that if the datagram length specified in the IP header is greater than the length specified in the ICMP router discovery message, then the extension is present

  25. Mobility agent advertisement extension 0 8 16 24 31 Fields Type Type field ICMP = 16 (information reply) Length Size of the extension msg in octets excluding Type & Length fields Sequence Sequence number for the message, allows recipient to determine when a msg is lost Code Defines a specific feature of the agent Lifetime Specifies a max amount of time in secs that the agent is willing to accept registration requests Care-of-addr Second address for the Mobile host

  26. Mobility agent advertisement extension 0 8 16 24 31 Code Bits 0 Agent supports reversed tunneling • Unused (must be zero) • Agent uses Generic Route Encapsulation • Agent uses minimal encapsulation • Agent functions as foreign agent • Agent functions as home agent • The agent is busy and is not accepting registrations • Registration with an agent is required even when using a co-located care-of-address

  27. Communicating with a Foreign Agent • Foreign Agent may use its address as the secondary address for the Mobile Host • How can the foreign agent communicate with the Mobile host when it does not have a unique address? • The Mobile host supplies its hardware address during the registration. • The foreign agent will use the hardware address and home IP address to communicate with the Mobile host

  28. Communicating with Home Network • When a host is at a foreign site the home agent can intercept datagrams that arrive from external sources and forward them without problems • A special case arises when the Mobile is at a foreign site and hosts from the home network attempt to forward datagrams to the Mobile unit • Those datagrams will be sent via direct delivery and not be intercepted by the home agent • Therefore the home agent must arrange to intercept the ARP requests on behalf of the Mobile host which acts as a proxy

  29. Agent Registration • Before it can receive datagrams at the foreign location a Mobile host must register with an agent • Registration is done via UDP • The procedure allows a host to: • Register with a foreign agent • Register with the home agent to arrange forwarding • Renew a registration that is due to expire • Deregister with the home agent

  30. Registration Message Format 0 8 16 24 31 Fields Type 1 = registration request, 3 = registration reply Flags/Code Bits used in both requests and replies. They are used as result codes in a registration reply message and specify forwarding details in a registration request. Lifetime Specifies number of seconds the registration is valid Home addr Mobile’s static IP home address Home agent Home agents IP address

  31. Registration Message Format 0 8 16 24 31 Fields cont… Care-of addr Mobile’s temporary foreign address Identification 64 bit number generated by the Mobile. Used to match requests with incoming replies. Prevents Mobile from accepting old messages. Extensions variable-length field. Each request is required to contain a mobile-home authentication extension that allows the home agent to verify the mobile’s identity

  32. Two Crossing Problem • Poor performance within a foreign network • Spatial locality of reference • Visiting mobile will tend to communicate with hosts local to the foreign network • Crossing internet is more expensive than local delivery • AKA 2X problem

  33. Mobile IP: Encapsulation Options • IP-within-IP: The entire original IP packet becomes the payload in a new IP packet. • The original, inner IP header is unchanged except that the TTL field is decreased by 1 • The outer header is a full IP header.

  34. Mobile IP: Encapsulation Options Version = 4 IHL Type of service Total Length Identification Flags Fragment Offset Time To Live Protocol = 4 Header Checksum Source Address (home agent address) Destination Address (care-of-address) Version = 4 IHL Type of service Total Length Identification Flags Fragment Offset Time To Live Protocol Header Checksum Source Address (home agent address) Destination Address (care-of-address) IP Payload New IP Header Old IP Header

  35. Mobile IP: Encapsulation Options • Minimal encapsulation: A new, condensed header is inserted between the original IP header and the original IP payload. • The original IP header is then modified to form a new outer IP header.

  36. Mobile IP: Encapsulation Options Version = 4 IHL Type of Service Total Length Identification Flags Fragment Offset Time To Live Protocol = 55 Header checksum Source Address (home agent address) Destination Address (care-of-address) Protocol S Retrieved Header checksum Destination address (home address) Source Address(original sender may not be present) IP Payload (e.g. TCP segment) Modified IP Header Minimal forwarding Header

  37. Mobile IP Tunneling Across Internet

  38. Security in Mobile IP • Authentication can be performed by all parties • Only authentication between MN and HA is required • MD5 is the default • Replay protection • Timestamps are mandatory • HA and FA do not have to share any security information.

  39. References • www.cs.wisc.edu/~pb/640/ • www.cs.okstate.edu/~saranga • www.wi-fiplanet.com/tutorials/article.php/2205821 • www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft/120t/120t1/mobileip.htm

More Related