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<rfc category="std" docName="draft-gundogan-roll-dis-modifications-00"
     ipr="trust200902">
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  <!-- ***** FRONT MATTER ***** -->

  <front>
    <!-- The abbreviated title is used in the page header - it is only necessary if the 
         full title is longer than 39 characters -->

    <title abbrev="draft-gundogan-roll-dis-modifications-00">DIS Modifications</title>

    <!-- add 'role="editor"' below for the editors if appropriate -->

    <!-- Another author who claims to be an editor -->

    <author fullname="Cenk Gundogan" initials="C.G." surname="Gundogan" role="editor">
        <organization>FU Berlin</organization>
        <address>
            <email>cenk.guendogan@fu-berlin.de</email>
        </address>
    </author>

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        <phone>+1 414 2295001</phone>

        <email>mukul@uwm.edu</email>
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    <author fullname="Zhong Denglin" initials="D." surname="Zhong" role="editor">
      <organization>INSA Lyon</organization>

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        <postal>
          <street>20 Avenue Albert Einstein</street>

          <city>Villeurbanne</city>

          <region></region>

          <code>69621</code>

          <country>France</country>
        </postal>

        <email>denglin.zhong@insa-lyon.fr</email>
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    <author fullname="Dominique Barthel" initials="D." surname="Barthel">
      <organization>Orange</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>28 Chemin Du Vieux Chene, BP 98</street>

          <city>Meylan</city>

          <region></region>

          <code>38243</code>

          <country>France</country>
        </postal>

        <email>dominique.barthel@orange.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    
    <author fullname="Emmanuel Baccelli" initials="E.B." surname="Baccelli">
      <organization>INRIA</organization>

      <address>
        <phone>+33-169-335-511</phone>

        <email>Emmanuel.Baccelli@inria.fr</email>

        <uri>http://www.emmanuelbaccelli.org/</uri>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date month="July" year="2016" />

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    <!-- Meta-data Declarations -->

    <area>Routing</area>

    <workgroup>Internet Engineering Task Force</workgroup>

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         IETF is fine for individual submissions.  
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    <keyword>DIS, RPL, ROLL</keyword>

    <!-- Keywords will be incorporated into HTML output
         files in a meta tag but they have no effect on text or nroff
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    <abstract>
      <t>This document augments <xref target="RFC6550"></xref> with DIS flags
      and options that allow a RPL node to better control how neighbor RPL
      routers respond to its solicitation for DIOs.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>

  <middle>
    <section title="Introduction">
      <t>This document augments <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>, the
      RPL routing protocol specification.</t>
      <section title="RFC6550 refresher">
      	<t>Per <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>, a RPL node can send a DODAG
        Information Solicitation (DIS) message to
        solicit DODAG Information Object (DIO) messages from neighbor RPL
        routers.</t>
        <t>A DIS can be multicast to all the routers in range or it can be unicast to
        a specific neighbor router.</t>
        <t>A DIS may carry a Solicited Information option that specifies
        the predicates of the DAG(s) the soliciting node is interested in. In the
        absence of such Solicited Information option, the soliciting node is deemed
        interested in receiving DIOs for all the DAGs known by the solicited router(s).</t>
        <t><xref target="RFC6550"></xref> requires a router to treat the receipt
        of a multicast DIS as an inconsistency and hence reset its Trickle
        timers for the matching DAGs. As a result of the general Trickle timer mechanism,
        future DIOs will be sent at a higher rate. See <xref target="RFC6206"></xref> for
        the specification of Trickle timers and the definition of "inconsistency".</t>
        <t><xref target="RFC6550"></xref> requires a router that receives a unicast DIS
        to respond by unicasting a DIO for each matching DAG and to not reset the
        associated Trickle timer. Such a DIO generated in response to a unicast DIS
        must contain a Configuration option.</t>
        <t>This description is summarized in <xref target="RFC6550_DIS_behavior_table"></xref>.</t>
        <texttable anchor="RFC6550_DIS_behavior_table"
            title="Router behavior on receiving a DIS, as per RFC6550">
          <ttcol align="center"></ttcol>
          <ttcol align="center">Unicast DIS</ttcol>
          <ttcol align="center">Multicast DIS</ttcol>
          <c>no option present</c><c>unicast DIO, don't reset Trickle timer</c><c>do reset Trickle timer</c>
          <c>--------------------------</c><c>--------------------</c><c>-------------</c>
          <c>Solicited Information option present, not matching</c><c>do nothing</c><c>do nothing</c>
          <c>--------------------------</c><c>--------------------</c><c>-------------</c>
          <c>Solicited Information option present, matching</c><c>unicast DIO, don't reset Trickle timer</c><c>do reset Trickle timer</c>
          <!-- <postamble>Behavior as </postamble> -->
        </texttable>
        <t>More precisely, <xref target="RFC6550_DIS_behavior_table"></xref> 
        describes the behavior of routers for each DAG they belong to. In the 
        general case where multiple RPL instances
        co-exist in a network, routers will maintain a Trickle timer for the
        one DAG of each RPL instance they belong to, and nodes may send a DIS
        with multiple Solicited Information options pertaining to different
        DAGs or instances. In this more general case, routers will respond for
        each individual DAG/instance they belong to as per
        <xref target="RFC6550_DIS_behavior_table"></xref>.</t>
      </section>
      <section title="Undesirable effects">
        <t>Now, consider a RPL leaf node that desires to join a certain DAG. This
        node can either wait for its neighbor RPL routers to voluntarily
        transmit DIOs or it can proactively solicit DIOs using a DIS message.
        Voluntary DIO transmissions may happen after a very long time if the
        network is stable and the Trickle timer intervals have reached large
        values. Thus, proactively seeking DIOs using a DIS may be the only
        reasonable option. Since the node does not know which neighbor routers
        belong to the DAG, it must solicit the DIOs using a multicast DIS (with
        predicates of the desired DAG specified inside a Solicited Information
        option). On receiving this DIS, the neighbor routers that belong to the
        desired DAG will reset their Trickle timers and quickly transmit their
        DIOs. The downside of resetting Trickle timers is that the routers will
        keep transmitting frequent DIOs for a considerable duration until the
        Trickle timers again reach long intervals. These DIO transmissions are
        unnecessary, consume precious energy and may contribute to congestion
        in the network.</t>

        <t>There are other scenarios where resetting of Trickle timer following
        the receipt of a multicast DIS is not appropriate. For example, consider
        a RPL router that desires to free up memory by deleting state for the
        defunct DAGs it belongs to. Identifying a defunct DAG may require the
        node to solicit DIOs from its DAG parents using a multicast DIS.</t>

        <t>Certain scenarios may require a RPL router to solicit a DIO from
        a parent by using a unicast DIS. The parent is forced to include a
        Configuration option within the unicast DIO, although the requesting
        node might still have this information locally available.
        Since the information within the Configuration option is described
        as generally static and unchanging throughout the DODAG, it inflates
        the unicast DIO unnecessarily by 16 bytes for each request.</t>

      </section>
      <section title="Desired improvments">
        <t>To deal with the situations described above, there is a need in the
        industry for DIS flags and options that allow a RPL node to control how
        neighbor RPL routers respond to its solicitation for DIOs, for example
        by expressing:
        <list style="symbols">
          <t>the routing constraints that routers should meet to be
          allowed to respond, thereby lowering the number of responders</t>

          <t>whether the responding routers should reset their Trickle
          timers or not, thereby limiting the cumulated number of transmitted DIOs</t>

          <t>whether the responding routers should respond with a unicast DIO
          instead of a multicast one, thereby lowering the overhearing cost in
          the network</t>

          <t>whether the responding routers should omit DIO options that
          were not requested explicitely and thus reducing the amount of
          traffic and giving full control over the options of the solicited DIO</t>

          <t>the time interval over which the responding routers should schedule
          their DIO transmissions, thereby lowering the occurence of collisions.</t>
        </list></t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section title="Terminology">
      <t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
      "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
      "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in <xref
      target="RFC2119"></xref>.</t>

      <t>Additionally, this document uses terminology from <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>. Specifically, the term RPL node
      refers to a RPL router or a RPL host as defined in <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="dis-flags" title="DIS Base Object flags">
      <t>This document defines three new flags inside the DIS base object:
      	<list style="symbols">
          <t>the "No Inconsistency" (N) flag: On receiving a multicast DIS
          with the N flag set, a RPL router MUST NOT reset the Trickle timers for
          the matching DAGs. In addition, it MUST take specific action, which is
          to respond by explicitely sending a DIO. This DIO MUST include a Configuration
          option. This behavior augments <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>, which
          had provision for such flag.
          Since this specific, one-shot DIO is not a consequence of the general
          Trickle timer mechanism, it will be sent right away if no Response
          Spreading option is present or it will be scheduled according to the
          Response Spreading option if one is present in the DIS (see
          <xref target="resp-spread"></xref>).</t>

          <t>the "DIO Type" (T) flag: In case the N flag is set, this T flag specifies
          what type of DIO is sent in response. It MUST be a unicast DIO if
          this flag is set and it MUST be a multicast DIO if this flag is reset.</t>

          <t>the "DIO Option Request" (R) flag: On receiving a DIS with the R flag set,
          the receiver MUST include all options that were requested by the DIS containing
          one or multiple DIO Option Request options. A responding RPL router MUST NOT include
          DIO options that were not explicitely requested. Note that this behaviour contradicts
          with <xref target="RFC6550"></xref> for the case of including a Configuration option
          in all DIOs requested by a unicast DIS.</t>

        </list></t>
        <t>When a unicast DIS is transmitted, both its N and T flags SHOULD be 0,
        which are the default values per <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>.
        On receiving a unicast DIS, the N and T flags MUST be ignored and
        treated as 00. When the R flag is unset, then a RPL router may include
        or omit DIO options like specified in <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>.
        A rpl router responding to a DIS with the R flag set MUST only include all
        requested DIO options in the solicited DIO.</t>
          
        <t>The modified DIS base object is shown in <xref
        target="modified-dis-fig"></xref>.</t>
      <figure anchor="modified-dis-fig" title="Modified DIS Base Object">
        <artwork><![CDATA[
    0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |N|T|R|  Flags  |    Reserved   | Option(s)...
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

]]></artwork>
      </figure>

    </section>

    <section title="DIS Options">
      <section anchor="Metric_Container" title="Metric Container">
        <t>In order to lower the number of routers that will respond to a
        DIS, this document allows routing constraints to be carried by a DIS.
        Only the router(s) that satisfy these constraints is (are) allowed
        to respond to the DIS.</t>
        <t>These routing constraints are described using a Metric
        Container option contained in the DIS. Metric Containers are defined
        in <xref target="RFC6550"></xref> and <xref target="RFC6551"></xref>.
        Metric Containers options were previously only allowed in DIOs.
        This document augments <xref target="RFC6550"></xref> by allowing the
        inclusion of a Metric Container option inside a DIS as well.</t>
        <t> A RPL
        router that receives a DIS with a Metric Container option MUST ignore
        any Metric object in it, and MUST evaluate the "mandatory" Constraint
        objects in it by comparing the constraint value to the
        value of the corresponding routing metric that the router maintains
        for the matching DAG(s). These routing metric values MUST
        satisfy all the mandatory constraints in order for the router to
        consider the solicitation successful for the matching DAG(s). This
        augments the behavior already present in <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>
        with the Solicited Information option.</t>
        <t> This option can be used in both unicast and multicast DIS.</t>
      </section>

      <section anchor="resp-spread" title="Response Spreading">
        <figure anchor="response-spreading"
                title="The Response Spreading option">
          <artwork><![CDATA[
          0                   1                   2
          0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         |  Type = 0x0B  |    Length     | Spread. Inter.|
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
]]></artwork>
        </figure>

        <t>Even with the use of the Solicited Information and 
        the <xref target="Metric_Container"></xref>	options, a multicast DIS
        may still lead to a large number of RPL routers taking immediate
        action and responding with DIOs. Concurrent transmissions by multiple
        routers are not desirable since they may lead to poor channel utilization
        or even to packet loss. Unicast
        DIOs may be able to avail of link-level retransmissions. However,
        multicast DIOs usually have no such protection, since they commonly
        make use of link layer broadcast. To avoid
        such problems, this document specifies an optional DIO response
        spreading mechanism.</t>

        <t>This document defines a new RPL control message option called
        Response Spreading option, shown in <xref
        target="response-spreading"></xref>, with a recommended Type value
        0x0B (to be confirmed by IANA). A RPL router that
        explicitely responds with a specific, one-shot DIO to a DIS that
        includes a Response Spreading
        option, MUST wait for a time uniformly chosen in the interval
        [O..2^SpreadingInterval], expressed in ms, before attempting to
        transmit its DIO. If the DIS does not include a Response Spreading
        option, the node is free to transmit the DIO as it otherwise
        would.</t>

        <t>A Response Spreading option MAY be included inside a unicast
        DIS message, but there is no benefit in doing so.</t> 
        
        <t>Multiple Response Spreading options SHOULD NOT be used inside
        a same DIS message.</t> 
        
        <t>This mechanism MUST NOT affect the Trickle timer mechanism.</t>
        
      </section>

      <section anchor="dio-option-req" title="DIO Option Request">
        <figure anchor="fig_dio-option-req" title="The DIO Option Request option">
          <artwork><![CDATA[
          0                   1                   2
          0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
         |  Type = 0x0C  |    Length     | Req. Opt. Type|
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
]]></artwork>
        </figure>

        <t>If a unicast DIS is used to request a DIO, then <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>
        mandates that a Configuration option MUST be included in this DIO.
        The Configuration option contains generally static information that
        stays unmodified throughout the DAG. For scenarios where a RPL node
        is already part of a DAG and hence is holding the information that
        is propagated with the Configuration option, an inclusion of such
        leads to an unnecesary inflation of 16 bytes for each solicited DIO.</t>

        <t>As per <xref target="RFC6550"></xref>, no process is defined to
        trigger the inclusion of other DIO options in a solicited DIO.</t>

        <t>This document defines a new RPL control message option called
        DIO Option Request option, shown in <xref target="fig_dio-option-req"></xref>,
        with a recommended Type value of 0x0C (to be confirmed by IANA).
        This new option allows full control over the options of the solicited DIO.
        The target of a unicast or multicast DIS with the R flag set and with one or more
        DIO Option Request options included, MUST include these requested options
        in the solicited DIO. For a DIS with the R flag unset, a RPL router behaves
        like described in <xref target="RFC6550"></xref> with regard to DIO options.</t>

      </section>

    </section>


    <section anchor="OverallBehavior" title="Full behavior illustration">
    	<t><xref target="this_DIS_behavior-1"></xref> and
    	<xref target="this_DIS_behavior-2"></xref> illustrate the normative behavior
    	described in <xref target="dis-flags"></xref>
    	and <xref target="Metric_Container"></xref>.</t>

    	<figure anchor="this_DIS_behavior-1"
              title="Overall DIS behavior, part 1"
              >
          <artwork><![CDATA[
                           +--------------------+----------------------
                           |    Unicast DIS     |         Multicast DIS      
                           +--------------------+--------------------+-
                           |                    |         N=0        |
      +--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+-
      |                    | unicast DIO,       |                    |
      | no option present  | don't              | do                 |
      |                    | reset Trickle timer| reset Trickle timer|
      +--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+- 
      | Solicited Informa- |                    |                    |
      | tion/Metric Contai-| do nothing         | do nothing         |
      | ner option present,|                    |                    |
      | not matching.      |                    |                    |
      +--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+-
      | Solicited Informa- | unicast DIO,       |                    |
      | tion/Metric Contai-| don't              | do                 |
      | ner option present,| reset Trickle timer| reset Trickle timer|
      | matching.          |                    |                    |
      +--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+-
]]></artwork>
        </figure>
        <t>Notice that <xref target="this_DIS_behavior-1"></xref> is indeed
        identical to <xref target="RFC6550_DIS_behavior_table"></xref> when
        Metric Container options are not used in DIS.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="this_DIS_behavior-2"
              title="Overall DIS behavior, part 2">
          <artwork><![CDATA[  
      -------------------------------------------+
       Multicast DIS                             |
      ----------------------+--------------------+
       |      N=1, T=0      |      N=1, T=1      |
      -+--------------------+--------------------+
       | multicast DIO,     | unicast DIO,       |
       | don't              | don't              |
       | reset Trickle timer| reset Trickle timer|
      -+--------------------+--------------------+
       |                    |                    |
       | do nothing         | do nothing         |
       |                    |                    |
       |                    |                    |
      -+--------------------+--------------------+
       | multicast DIO,     | unicast DIO,       |
       | don't              | don't              |
       | reset Trickle timer| reset Trickle timer|
       |                    |                    |
      -+--------------------+--------------------+            
]]></artwork>
        </figure>

      <t>For the sake of completeness, let's remind here that a specific, one-shot
      DIO generated in response to a DIS with the R flag unset MUST contain a
      Configuration option. If the R flag is set, then this DIO contains only
      explicitely requested DIO options. This DIO's transmission is delayed
      according to the Delay Spreading option of the DIS, if one such option is present.
      </t>
        
    </section>


    <section title="IANA Considerations">
      <section title="DIS Flags">
        <t>IANA is requested to allocate bits 0, 1 and 2 of the DIS Flag Field to
        become the "No Inconsistency", "DIO Type", and "DIO Option Request" bits,
        the functionality of which is described in <xref target="dis-flags"></xref> of this
        document.</t>

        <texttable>
          <ttcol align="center">Value</ttcol>

          <ttcol align="center">Meaning</ttcol>

          <ttcol align="center">Reference</ttcol>

          <c>0</c>

          <c>No Inconsistency</c>

          <c>This document</c>

          <c>1</c>

          <c>DIO Type</c>

          <c>This document</c>

          <c>2</c>

          <c>DIO Option Request</c>

          <c>This document</c>
        </texttable>
      </section>

      <section title="RPL Control Message Options">
        <t>IANA is requested to allocate a new code point in the "RPL Control
        Message Options" registry for the "Response Spreading" option and the
        "Dio Option Request" option, the behavior of which are described in
        <xref target="resp-spread"></xref> and <xref target="dio-option-req"></xref>,
        respectively.</t>

        <texttable>
          <ttcol align="center">Value</ttcol>

          <ttcol align="center">Meaning</ttcol>

          <ttcol align="center">Reference</ttcol>

          <c>0x0B</c>

          <c>Response Spreading</c>

          <c>This document</c>

          <c>0x0C</c>

          <c>DIO Option Request</c>

          <c>This document</c>

          <postamble>RPL Control Message Options</postamble>
        </texttable>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Security" title="Security Considerations">
      <t>TBA</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Ackowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">
      <t>A lot of text in this document originates from
      <!--
      <xref target="cations"></xref>
      -->
      now-expired [I-D.goyal-roll-dis-modifications] 
      co-authored with M. Goyal. The requirements and solutions also
      draw from now-expired [I-D.dejean-roll-selective-dis] co-authored with
      N. Dejean. Their contribution is deeply acknowledged.</t>
      <t>We also thank (TBA) for their useful feedback and discussion.</t>
    </section>

  </middle>

  <!--  *****BACK MATTER ***** -->

  <back>
    <!-- References split into informative and normative -->

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     1. define an ENTITY at the top, and use "ampersand character"RFC2629; here (as shown)
     2. simply use a PI "less than character"?rfc include="reference.RFC.2119.xml"?> here
        (for I-Ds: include="reference.I-D.narten-iana-considerations-rfc2434bis.xml")

     Both are cited textually in the same manner: by using xref elements.
     If you use the PI option, xml2rfc will, by default, try to find included files in the same
     directory as the including file. You can also define the XML_LIBRARY environment variable
     with a value containing a set of directories to search.  These can be either in the local
     filing system or remote ones accessed by http (http://domain/dir/... ).-->

    <references title="Normative References">
      &RFC2119;

      &RFC6550;

      &RFC6551;
    </references>

    <references title="Informative References">
      <!-- Here we use entities that we defined at the beginning. -->


      &RFC4861;

      &RFC5881;

      &RFC5184;

      &RFC6206;
    </references>

      <section title="Applications">
      <t>This section details two example mechanisms that use the DIS flags
      and options defined in this document. The first mechanism describes how
      a leaf node may join a desired DAG in an energy efficient manner.
      The second mechanism details how a
      node may identify defunct DAGs for which it still maintains state.</t>

      <section title="A Leaf Node Joining a DAG">
        <t>A new leaf node that joins an established LLN runs an iterative
        algorithm in which it requests (using multicast DIS) DIOs from routers
        belonging to the desired DAG.</t>
        <t>The DIS message has the "No
        Inconsistency" flag set to prevent resetting of Trickle timer in
        responding routers, thereby keeping the aggregated number of transmissions
        low. It also
        has the "DIO Type" flag set to make responding routers send unicast
        DIOs back, thereby not triggering full reception in nearby nodes that
        have state-of-the-art radio receivers with hardware-based address filtering.</t>
        <t>The DIS message can include a
        Response Spreading option prescribing a suitable spreading interval
        based on the expected density of nearby routers and on the expected
        Layer 2 technology.</t>
        <t>The DIS will likely include a
        Metric Container listing the routing constraints that the responding
        routers must satisfy in order to be allowed to respond.</t>
        <t>At each iteration, the node multicasts such a
        DIS and waits for forthcoming DIOs. After a time equal to the spreading
        interval, the node considers the current iteration to be unsuccessful.
        The node consequently relaxes the routing constraints somewhat and
        proceeds to the next iteration.</t>
        <t>The cycle repeats until the node receives one or more DIOs or
        until it has relaxed the constraints to the lowest acceptable values.</t>
        <t>This algorithm has been proven in the field to be extremely
        energy-efficient, especially when routers have a wide communication range.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Identifying A Defunct DAG">
        <t>A RPL node may remove a neighbor from its parent set for a DAG for
        a number of reasons: <list style="symbols">
            <t>The neighbor is no longer reachable, as determined using a
            mechanism such as Neighbor Unreachanility Detection (NUD) <xref
            target="RFC4861"></xref>, Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
            <xref target="RFC5881"></xref> or L2 triggers <xref
            target="RFC5184"></xref>; or</t>

            <t>The neighbor advertises an infinite rank in the DAG; or</t>

            <t>Keeping the neighbor as a parent would required the node to
            increase its rank beyond L + DAGMaxRankIncrease, where L is the
            minimum rank the node has had in this DAG; or</t>

            <t>The neighbor advertises membership in a different DAG within
            the same RPL Instance, where a different DAG is recognised by a
            different DODAGID or a different DODAGVersionNumber.</t>
          </list></t>

        <t>Even if the conditions listed above exist, a RPL node may fail to
        remove a neighbor from its parent set because:<list style="symbols">
            <t>The node may fail to receive the neighbor's DIOs advertising an
            increased rank or the neighbor's membership in a different
            DAG;</t>

            <t>The node may not check, and hence may not detect, the
            neighbor's unreachability for a long time. For example, the node
            may not have any data to send to this neighbor and hence may not
            encounter any event (such as failure to send data to this
            neighbor) that would trigger a check for the neighbor's
            reachability.</t>
          </list></t>

        <t>In such cases, a node would continue to consider itself attached to
        a DAG even if all its parents in the DAG are unreachable or have moved
        to different DAGs. Such a DAG can be characterized as being defunct
        from the node's perspective. If the node maintains state about a large
        number of defunct DAGs, such state may prevent a considerable portion
        of the total memory in the node from being available for more useful
        purposes.</t>

        <t>To alleviate the problem described above, a RPL node may invoke
        the following procedure to identify a defunct DAG and delete the state
        it maintains for this DAG. Note that, given the proactive nature of
        RPL protocol, the lack of data traffic using a DAG can not be
        considered a reliable indication of the DAG's defunction. Further, the
        Trickle timer based control of DIO transmissions means the possibility
        of an indefinite delay in the receipt of a new DIO from a functional
        DAG parent. Hence, the mechanism described here is based on the use of
        a DIS message to solicit DIOs about a DAG suspected of defunction.
        Further, a multicast DIS is used so as to avoid the need to query each
        parent individually and also to discover other neighbor routers that
        may serve as the node's new parents in the DAG.</t>

        <t>When a RPL node has not received a DIO from any of its parents in
        a DAG for more than a locally configured time duration:<list
            style="symbols">
            <t>The node generates a multicast DIS message with:<list
                style="symbols">
                <t>the "No Inconsistency" flag set so that the responding routers
                do not reset their Trickle timers.</t>

                <t>the "DIO Type" flag not set so that the responding routers send
                multicast DIOs and other nodes in the vicinity do not need to
                invoke this procedure.</t>

                <t>a Solicited Information option to identify the DAG in
                question. This option must have the I and D flags set and the
                RPLInstanceID/DODAGID fields must be set to values identifying
                the DAG. The V flag inside the Solicited Information option
                should not be set so as to allow the neighbors to send DIOs
                advertising the latest version of the DAG.</t>

                <t>a Response Spreading option specifying a suitable time
                interval over which the DIO responses may arrive.</t>
              </list></t>

            <t>After sending the DIS, the node waits for the duration
            specified inside the Response Spreading option to receive the DIOs
            generated by its neighbors. At the conclusion of the wait
            duration:<list style="symbols">
                <t>If the node has received one or more DIOs advertising newer
                version(s) of the DAG, it joins the latest version of the DAG,
                selects a new parent set among the neighbors advertising the
                latest DAG version and marks the DAG status as functional.</t>

                <t>Otherwise, if the node has not received a DIO advertising
                the current version of the DAG from a neighbor in the parent
                set, it removes that neighbor from the parent set. As a
                result, if the node has no parent left in the DAG, it marks
                the DAG as defunct and schedule the deletion of the state it
                has maintained for the DAG after a locally configured "hold"
                duration. (This is because, as per RPL specification, when a
                node no longer has any parents left in a DAG, it is still
                required to remember the DAG's identity (RPLInstanceID,
                DODAGID, DODAGVersionNumber), the lowest rank (L) it has had
                in this DAG and the DAGMaxRankIncrease value for the DAG for a
                certain time interval to ensure that the node does not join an
                earlier version of the DAG and does not rejoin the current
                version of the DAG at a rank higher than L +
                DAGMaxRankIncrease.)</t>
              </list></t>
          </list></t>
      </section>

      <section title="Explicit and Implicit DIO Option Requests">
          <t>
              Certain information from a DIO is only needed occasionally
              or for specific events:
              <list style="symbols">
                  <t>
                      A Configuration option contains information that is
                      static and stays mostly unchanged during the lifetime
                      of the DODAG. Thus, the Configuration option is important
                      when joining the DODAG, but inflates the DIO unnecessarily
                      thereafter.
                  </t>
                  <t>
                      A Prefix Information option is also useful when joining
                      a DODAG to perform address autoconfiguration and propagating the prefixes.
                      After that, it is only relevant when changes occure that would affect
                      the prefix information (new prefixes, lifetime updates, ...).
                  </t>
                  <t>
                      More DIO options may be added in the future that have
                      similar properties as mentioned above.
                  </t>
              </list>
          </t>
          <t>
              The Configuration and Prefix Information options may be omitted
              from the trickle timer based DIOs, leading to less bytes for each DIO.
              Once a RPL router decides to join a DODAG, it may solicit a DIO by
              sending a DIS with the R flag set and two "DIO Option Request" options
              included. One for the Configuration option, the other for the Prefix Information
              option. Upon receiving these options in the next DIO, the RPL router can
              successfully finish the joining process.
          </t>
    </section>
    </section>
    <section title="Experimental data">
      <t>The effectiveness of these flags and options has been measured on
      real industrial hardware.</t>
      <t>Data to be added</t>
    </section>
  </back>
    <!-- Change Log
-->
</rfc>
