Re: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN (Ricardo Silva)

Zach Shelby <zach@sensinode.com> Mon, 25 May 2009 21:06 UTC

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Date: Tue, 26 May 2009 00:07:51 +0300
From: Zach Shelby <zach@sensinode.com>
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To: Ricardo Silva <ricardo.mendao@gmail.com>
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Cc: 6lowpan@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN (Ricardo Silva)
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Hi Ricardo,

Thanks for reminding about your draft. A couple quick comments:

- This model would require the edge routers to be aware of this "Micro 
MIPv6" message format, and to provide the compression/decompression. 
This means such a micro format would need separate standardization.

- You should take draft-ietf-6lowpan-hc-05 (when posted) into account as 
it will provide next-header compression for extension headers including 
some of the optimizations needed by your draft.

You might want to consider PMIPv6 and NEMO in your next draft, and how 
proxy methods could be used first and foremost to avoid LoWPAN nodes to 
get involved with MIPv6 at all.

PMIPv6 and NEMO don't solve the problem of node mobility between domains 
however, which would still require a LoWPAN node to speak MIPv6.

Then again, it probably is just a reality that IPv6 addresses of LoWPAN 
nodes will change upon inter-domain node mobility... and applications 
will need to live with that.

- Zach

Ricardo Silva wrote:
> Dear All,
> 
>  I am sending our draft about mobility in lowPANs. It would be great if 
> you could send me your feedback.
> 
> https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/draft-silva-6lowpan-mipv6/
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Ricardo Mendão Silva
> 
> Laboratory of Telecommunications and Telematic
> Department of Informatics Engineering
> University of Coimbra
> PORTUGAL
> 
> 
> On May 25, 2009, at 7:00 PM, 6lowpan-request@ietf.org 
> <mailto:6lowpan-request@ietf.org> wrote:
> 
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>> Today's Topics:
>>
>>   1. MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN (Zach Shelby)
>>   2. Re: MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN (Julien Abeille (jabeille))
>>   3. Re: MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN (Jong-Hyouk Lee)
>>
>>
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 1
>> Date: Mon, 25 May 2009 16:16:27 +0300
>> From: Zach Shelby <zach@sensinode.com>
>> Subject: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN
>> To: 6lowpan <6lowpan@ietf.org>
>> Message-ID: <4A1A9A2B.7060708@sensinode.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252; format=flowed
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> On a bit of a tangent... I have been studying different ways of dealing
>> with mobility of 6LoWPAN nodes and networks. Extended LoWPANs provide
>> some mobility support for micro-mobility, which is good. Properly
>> designed applications can also deal with IP addresses changing. But what
>> if you would want to have a stable IP address for a 6LoWPAN node or a
>> stable prefix for a whole LoWPAN?
>>
>> MIPv6 have several problems to be used directly by LoWPAN nodes, e.g.:
>> - IP-in-IP encapsulation with the home agent
>> - Security for binding management messages
>> - Potentially large amounts of binding messages
>> Is anyone aware of work on MIPv6 proxy mechanisms which would allow e.g.
>> an Edge Router to proxy MIPv6 operations on behalf of a LoWPAN node?
>> Maybe revive the Foreign Agent for IPv6? ;-)
>>
>> NEMO is much more clearly applicable to 6LoWPAN network mobility. The
>> basic NEMO protocol is a perfect match, allowing an Edge Router or other
>> router in the visited network to act as a Mobile Router and perform
>> MIPv6 on behalf of the network. Thus maintaining constant prefixes for
>> all LoWPANs under the router. I don't see route optimization to be
>> necessary for NEMO used with 6LoWPAN, the performance of traffic going
>> through the home agent should be fine.
>>
>> Thoughts?
>>
>> - Zach
>>
>> -- 
>> http://www.sensinode.com
>> http://zachshelby.org - My blog ?On the Internet of Things?
>> Mobile: +358 40 7796297
>>
>> Zach Shelby
>> Head of Research
>> Sensinode Ltd.
>> Kidekuja 2
>> 88610 Vuokatti, FINLAND
>>
>> This e-mail and all attached material are confidential and may contain
>> legally privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient,
>> please contact the sender and delete the e-mail from your system without
>> producing, distributing or retaining copies thereof.
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 2
>> Date: Mon, 25 May 2009 16:21:49 +0200
>> From: "Julien Abeille (jabeille)" <jabeille@cisco.com>
>> Subject: Re: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN
>> To: "Zach Shelby" <zach@sensinode.com>, "6lowpan" <6lowpan@ietf.org>
>> Message-ID:
>> <38F26F36EAA981478A49D1F37F474A8603210E6F@xmb-ams-33d.emea.cisco.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>>
>> Hi Zach,
>>
>> The issue with NEMO is that if nodes move from one router to another
>> (meaning the routers doing the nemo signaling), their address change.
>> NEMO is made to handle mobility of the whole network behind the router,
>> not individual nodes moving from this network to another.
>>
>> What you are probably looking for is Proxy Mobile IPv6
>> (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5213.txt) and in general the work behing
>> done by the netlmm working group
>> (http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/netlmm-charter.html) and the netext
>> working group (http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/netext-charter.html).
>>
>> Best,
>> Julien
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: 6lowpan-bounces@ietf.org [mailto:6lowpan-bounces@ietf.org] On
>> Behalf Of Zach Shelby
>> Sent: lundi 25 mai 2009 15:16
>> To: 6lowpan
>> Subject: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> On a bit of a tangent... I have been studying different ways of dealing
>> with mobility of 6LoWPAN nodes and networks. Extended LoWPANs provide
>> some mobility support for micro-mobility, which is good. Properly
>> designed applications can also deal with IP addresses changing. But what
>> if you would want to have a stable IP address for a 6LoWPAN node or a
>> stable prefix for a whole LoWPAN?
>>
>> MIPv6 have several problems to be used directly by LoWPAN nodes, e.g.:
>> - IP-in-IP encapsulation with the home agent
>> - Security for binding management messages
>> - Potentially large amounts of binding messages Is anyone aware of work
>> on MIPv6 proxy mechanisms which would allow e.g.
>> an Edge Router to proxy MIPv6 operations on behalf of a LoWPAN node?
>> Maybe revive the Foreign Agent for IPv6? ;-)
>>
>> NEMO is much more clearly applicable to 6LoWPAN network mobility. The
>> basic NEMO protocol is a perfect match, allowing an Edge Router or other
>> router in the visited network to act as a Mobile Router and perform
>> MIPv6 on behalf of the network. Thus maintaining constant prefixes for
>> all LoWPANs under the router. I don't see route optimization to be
>> necessary for NEMO used with 6LoWPAN, the performance of traffic going
>> through the home agent should be fine.
>>
>> Thoughts?
>>
>> - Zach
>>
>> --
>> http://www.sensinode.com
>> http://zachshelby.org - My blog "On the Internet of Things"
>> Mobile: +358 40 7796297
>>
>> Zach Shelby
>> Head of Research
>> Sensinode Ltd.
>> Kidekuja 2
>> 88610 Vuokatti, FINLAND
>>
>> This e-mail and all attached material are confidential and may contain
>> legally privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient,
>> please contact the sender and delete the e-mail from your system without
>> producing, distributing or retaining copies thereof.
>> _______________________________________________
>> 6lowpan mailing list
>> 6lowpan@ietf.org
>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6lowpan
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 3
>> Date: Mon, 25 May 2009 23:41:08 +0900
>> From: Jong-Hyouk Lee <jonghyouk@gmail.com>
>> Subject: Re: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN
>> To: Zach Shelby <zach@sensinode.com>, "Julien Abeille (jabeille)"
>> <jabeille@cisco.com>
>> Cc: 6lowpan <6lowpan@ietf.org>
>> Message-ID:
>> <f54070070905250741h3899da4fscb044b7d1fa71c8a@mail.gmail.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>>
>> Hi, all.
>>
>> NEMO scenarios within PMIPv6 domain have been presented in the following
>> document.
>>
>> http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-jhlee-netlmm-nemo-scenarios-01
>>
>> Hope you find useful scenarios for 6LowPAN.
>>
>> Cheers.
>>
>> On Mon, May 25, 2009 at 11:21 PM, Julien Abeille (jabeille) <
>> jabeille@cisco.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Zach,
>>>
>>> The issue with NEMO is that if nodes move from one router to another
>>> (meaning the routers doing the nemo signaling), their address change.
>>> NEMO is made to handle mobility of the whole network behind the router,
>>> not individual nodes moving from this network to another.
>>>
>>> What you are probably looking for is Proxy Mobile IPv6
>>> (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5213.txt) and in general the work behing
>>> done by the netlmm working group
>>> (http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/netlmm-charter.html) and the netext
>>> working group (http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/netext-charter.html).
>>>
>>> Best,
>>> Julien
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: 6lowpan-bounces@ietf.org [mailto:6lowpan-bounces@ietf.org] On
>>> Behalf Of Zach Shelby
>>> Sent: lundi 25 mai 2009 15:16
>>> To: 6lowpan
>>> Subject: [6lowpan] MIPv6 and 6LoWPAN
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> On a bit of a tangent... I have been studying different ways of dealing
>>> with mobility of 6LoWPAN nodes and networks. Extended LoWPANs provide
>>> some mobility support for micro-mobility, which is good. Properly
>>> designed applications can also deal with IP addresses changing. But what
>>> if you would want to have a stable IP address for a 6LoWPAN node or a
>>> stable prefix for a whole LoWPAN?
>>>
>>> MIPv6 have several problems to be used directly by LoWPAN nodes, e.g.:
>>> - IP-in-IP encapsulation with the home agent
>>> - Security for binding management messages
>>> - Potentially large amounts of binding messages Is anyone aware of work
>>> on MIPv6 proxy mechanisms which would allow e.g.
>>> an Edge Router to proxy MIPv6 operations on behalf of a LoWPAN node?
>>> Maybe revive the Foreign Agent for IPv6? ;-)
>>>
>>> NEMO is much more clearly applicable to 6LoWPAN network mobility. The
>>> basic NEMO protocol is a perfect match, allowing an Edge Router or other
>>> router in the visited network to act as a Mobile Router and perform
>>> MIPv6 on behalf of the network. Thus maintaining constant prefixes for
>>> all LoWPANs under the router. I don't see route optimization to be
>>> necessary for NEMO used with 6LoWPAN, the performance of traffic going
>>> through the home agent should be fine.
>>>
>>> Thoughts?
>>>
>>> - Zach
>>>
>>> --
>>> http://www.sensinode.com
>>> http://zachshelby.org - My blog "On the Internet of Things"
>>> Mobile: +358 40 7796297
>>>
>>> Zach Shelby
>>> Head of Research
>>> Sensinode Ltd.
>>> Kidekuja 2
>>> 88610 Vuokatti, FINLAND
>>>
>>> This e-mail and all attached material are confidential and may contain
>>> legally privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient,
>>> please contact the sender and delete the e-mail from your system without
>>> producing, distributing or retaining copies thereof.
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> 6lowpan mailing list
>>> 6lowpan@ietf.org
>>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6lowpan
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> 6lowpan mailing list
>>> 6lowpan@ietf.org
>>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/6lowpan
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> Internet Management Technology Lab, Sungkyunkwan University.
>> Jong-Hyouk Lee.
>>
>> #email: jonghyouk (at) gmail (dot) com
>> #webpage: http://hurryon.googlepages.com/
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-- 
http://www.sensinode.com
http://zachshelby.org - My blog “On the Internet of Things”
Mobile: +358 40 7796297

Zach Shelby
Head of Research
Sensinode Ltd.
Kidekuja 2
88610 Vuokatti, FINLAND

This e-mail and all attached material are confidential and may contain 
legally privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, 
please contact the sender and delete the e-mail from your system without 
producing, distributing or retaining copies thereof.