Cellular IP’s datagram tunnelling is incompatible with Community Address Translation (NAT). This document presents extensions to the Cellular IP protocol and a tunnelling method which permits cell nodes utilizing Cellular IP to operate in non-public tackle networks that are separated from the general public web by NAT gadgets. The NAT traversal relies on using the Mobile IP Residence Agent UDP port for encapsulated data visitors. [Requirements Observe]
This doc describes an utility programming interface and a corresponding protocol (MGCP) for controlling Voice over IP (VoIP) Gateways from exterior call control parts. MGCP assumes a call control structure where the decision control “intelligence” is outside the gateways and Bus Company dealt with by external name control elements. This memo offers info for the Web neighborhood.
This doc describes a protocol for controlling middleboxes akin to firewalls and network deal with translators. It’s a completely compliant implementation of the Middlebox Communications (MIDCOM) semantics described in RFC 3989. Compared to earlier experimental versions of the SIMCO protocol, this version (3.0) uses binary message encodings so as to scale back useful resource necessities. This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.
With a purpose to deploy DNSSEC (Area Name System Security Extensions) operationally, DNSSEC conscious servers ought to solely carry out automated inclusion of DNSSEC RRs when there is an express indication that the resolver can understand these RRs. This doc proposes using a bit in the EDNS0 header to supply that specific indication and describes the necessary protocol adjustments to implement that notification. [Standards Monitor]
This RFC is primarily supposed as a perspective on the ARM and points out among the differences between the ARM and the ISORM which have been expressed by members in NWG common meetings, NWG protocol design committee conferences, the ARPA Web Working Group, and non-public conversations over the intervening years. Originally published as M82-47 by the MITRE Corporation, Bedford, Massachusetts.