Abstract Mobile Internet Protocol (IP) uses tunneling from the home agent to the mobile node’s care-of address, but rarely in the reverse direction
Texte intégral
Documents relatifs
particular, it describes managed objects used for managing the Mobile Node, Foreign Agent and Home Agent of the Mobile IP Protocol.. Table
If a foreign agent receives an un-encapsulated packet from a mobile node which had explicitly requested the Encapsulated Delivery Style, then the foreign agent MUST NOT
Whenever the Agent Advertisement contains the Challenge extension, if the mobile node does not have a security association with the Foreign Agent, then it MUST include
source IP address and co-located care-of address which contains a MIP UDP Tunnel Request Extension, the home agent SHOULD respond with a Registration Reply containing a
The mobile node MUST use its home address - either in the Home Address destination option or in the Source Address field of the IPv6 header - in Binding Updates sent to
In order for the home agent to be able to tunnel a Home Test message to the mobile node, it uses the current care-of address as the destination of the tunnel packets, as if
If a MN-HA Key Generation Nonce Request From AAA extension is present in the Registration Request message, then the mobile node MUST create or update its Mobility
o An attacking network entity purporting to offer the mobile node a legitimate home agent address or bootstrapping for the IPsec SAs may instead offer a bogus home