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IP Routing

IP Routing. Routing - the process of choosing a path over which to send packets Router - a computer that performs routing Routing is one of the Internet Protocol’s primary functions. IP Routing. Criteria that could (ideally) be used to make routing decisions: Network characteristics

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IP Routing

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  1. IP Routing • Routing - the process of choosing a path over which to send packets • Router - a computer that performs routing • Routing is one of the Internet Protocol’s primary functions

  2. IP Routing • Criteria that could (ideally) be used to make routing decisions: • Network characteristics • Network topology • Network load • Datagram length • Type of service requested in the datagram’s header • IP routing software: • Normally does not consider most of these factors • Makes decisions based on fixed assumptions about shortest paths

  3. R3 R4 R5 Net 1 Net 2 R1 R2 Host Review: Internet Architecture

  4. Hosts vs. Routers • Hosts make routing decisions • Hosts don’t typically transfer packets from one network to another • Routers make routing decisions • Routers typically transfer packets from one network to another

  5. Direct vs. Indirect Delivery • Direct delivery - transmit datagram across a single physical network to the destination • Indirect delivery - transmit datagram across multiple physical networks (with the aid of routers) to the destination • How does a machine know which method of delivery to use?

  6. Direct Delivery • Map the destination IP address to a physical address • Encapsulate the datagram in a physical frame • Send the frame over the physical network to the destination

  7. Indirect Delivery • Encapsulate the datagram in a frame • Choose a router on the physical network • Send the frame to that router • Router forwards the datagram on towards its final destination • How does the host choose a router? • How does the router forward the datagram?

  8. The IP Routing Table • Routing table - each machine stores information about destination networks and how to reach them • Using only netid portion of the IP address keeps routing tables: • Small • Relatively stable

  9. Next-Hop Routing

  10. Next-Hop Routing (cont) • Routing table at machine M contains pairs (N,R) • N is the IP address of a destination network • R is the IP address of the “next” router (R and M must share a physical network) • Routing table size: • Depends on the number of networks in the internet • Only grows when new networks are added

  11. Properties of Next-Hop Routes • All traffic destined for a given network takes the same path • Only the final router can determine whether a host exists or is operational • Routes are not necessarily symmetric

  12. Default Routes • No route in the routing table = datagrams sent to the default router • Both simplifies routing tables and reduces their size:

  13. Host-Specific Routes • Routing tables are allowed to include per-host routes as a special case:

  14. The IP Routing Algorithm Extract the destination IP address, D, from the datagram and compute the netid, N If N matches any directly connected network address deliver the datagram directly else if the routing table contains a host-specific address for D send the datagram to the next-hop specified in the table else if the routing table contains a route for network N send the datagram to the next-hop specified in the table else if the routing table contains a default router send the datagram there else declare a routing error

  15. Why not Use Physical Addresses? • Routing tables store the IP address of the next hop • IP addresses must be translated into physical addresses

  16. IP Routing - Summary • Routing is one of the Internet Protocol’s primary functions • Routing is the process of choosing a path over which to send packets • Questions not answered: • How does a host or router initialize its routing table? • How are routing tables updated as the network changes?

  17. Error and Control Messages in the Internet Protocol • Extranormal communication among routers and hosts is sometimes necessary to: • Report errors • Handle abnormal conditions • Update routing information • The Internet Protocol defines a single mechanism for these types of messages

  18. The Internet ControlMessage Protocol (ICMP) • Normally generated by and intended for the IP software • Two levels of encapsulation:

  19. ICMP is for Error Reporting • Errors are reported to a datagram’s original sender • It is the sender’s responsibility to take appropriate action • Exception: ICMP messages are not generated for errors that result from datagrams carrying ICMP messages

  20. ICMP Message Format • All ICMP messages begin with the same three fields: • TYPE (1 octet) - identifies the message • CODE (1 octet) - information about the subtype • CHECKSUM (2 octets) - covers the ICMP message • ICMP error messages always include the header and first 64 data bits of the datagram causing the problem

  21. The ICMP TYPE Field Type Field ICMP Message Type ------------- -------------------------- 0 Echo Reply 3 Destination Unreachable 4 Source Quench 5 Redirect 8 Echo Request 11 Time Exceeded for Datagram 12 Parameter Problem on Datagram 13 Timestamp Request 14 Timestamp Reply 15 Information Request (obsolete) 16 Information Reply (obsolete) 17 Address Mask Request 18 Address Mask Reply

  22. Echo Request and Reply Messages • IDENTIFIER and SEQUENCE NUMBER • Used by the sender to match replies with requests

  23. Destination Unreachable Messages • Sent when a router cannot deliver or forward a datagram

  24. Destination UnreachableCODE Field Code Value Meaning -------------- ----------- 0 Network Unreachable 1 Host Unreachable 2 Protocol Unreachable 3 Port Unreachable 4 Fragmentation needed and DF set 5 Source Route Failed 6 Destination Network unknown 7 Destination Host Unknown 8 Source Host Isolated 9 Comm. Administratively prohibited (network) 10 Comm. Administratively prohibited (host) 11 Network unreachable for type of service 12 Host unreachable for type of service

  25. Congestion and DatagramFlow Control • Most routers have a limited queue in which to store arriving datagrams • Congestion - a router is overrun with traffic • High-speed computer sends datagrams faster than a router can retransmit them • Many computers send datagrams to the same router at once

  26. Source Quench Message • Congested routers send one for every datagram they drop:

  27. Source Quench Messages • Hosts that receive source quench messages should stop sending datagrams to that router (temporarily) • When it hasn’t received a source quench message in a while, the host can start gradually increasing its traffic again

  28. H R2 Net 3 Net 2 Net 1 R1 Redirect Messages • Hosts initialize routing table at startup • When a router detects a host using a nonoptimal route it sends the host a ICMP redirect message

  29. Redirect Messages Code Value Meaning -------------- ----------- 0 Redirect datagrams for the Net (obsolete) 1 Redirect datagrams for the Host 2 Redirect datagrams for the Type of Service and Net 3 Redirect datagrams for the Type of Service and Host

  30. Time Exceeded Messages • Code 0 - Datagram dropped because TTL reached 0 • Code 1 - Datagram dropped because fragment reassembly time exceeded

  31. ICMP – Security Issues • ICMP can be a source of security vulnerabilities: • Flaws in ICMP implementation can be exploited • Recall the teardrop vulnerability in IP • ICMP is well suited for denial-of-service attacks • Anyone notice the –f (flood) option to ping? • According to the man page: “This can be very hard on a network and should be used with caution.”

  32. Ping of Death • Attacker constructs an ICMP echo request message containing 65,510 data octets and sends it to a victim host:

  33. Ping of Death (cont) • The total size of the resulting datagram (65538 octets) is larger than the 65,536 octet limit specified by IP • Several systems did not handle this oversized IP datagram properly • Hang • Crash • Reboot • Fixed by software patches

  34. Smurf • Attacker sends ICMP echo request messages to a broadcast address at an intermediate site • Broadcast address = a copy of the datagram is delivered to every host connected to a specified network • For some broadcast address, a single request could generate replies from dozens or hundreds of hosts • The source address in each request packet is spoofed so that replies are sent to a victim machine • Result: the victim’s machine/network is flooded by ICMP echo replies • Many sites have reconfigured their machines so that their machines do not respond to ICMP echo requests sent to a broadcast address

  35. Smurf (cont)

  36. ICMP - Summary • ICMP provides a mechanism for extranormal communication among routers and hosts • Echo request/reply • Destination unreachable • Source quench • Redirect • Time exceeded • Sometimes incoming ICMP messages are blocked for security reasons

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