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==================================== 80 ========================================
==================================== 72 ================================
-->
<!--            TODO!!
== We could write text for more Recommendations.

== We could more fully describe the IPv6 uses of multicast.

== We could describe more potential multicast applications that might be
   enabled with better multicast solutions (if in fact better solutions exist).

-->
<rfc category="info" docName="draft-ietf-mboned-ieee802-mcast-problems-13"
     ipr="trust200902">
  <front>
    <title abbrev="Multicast Over IEEE 802 Wireless">Multicast Considerations
    over IEEE 802 Wireless Media</title>

    <author fullname="Charles E. Perkins" initials="C.E." surname="Perkins">
      <organization abbrev="Blue Meadow Networks">Blue Meadow Networks</organization>

      <address>
	<postal>
	  <street></street>

	  <city></city>

	  <code></code>

	  <region></region>

	  <country></country>
	</postal>

	<phone>+1-408-330-4586</phone>

	<email>charliep@computer.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Mike McBride" initials="M." surname="McBride">
      <organization abbrev="Futurewei">Futurewei Technologies Inc.</organization>

      <address>
	<postal>
	  <street>2330 Central Expressway</street>

	  <city>Santa Clara</city>

	  <code>95055</code>

	  <region>CA</region>

	  <country>USA</country>
	</postal>

	<email>michael.mcbride@futurewei.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Dorothy Stanley" initials="D" surname="Stanley">
      <organization abbrev="HPE">Hewlett Packard Enterprise</organization>

      <address>
	<postal>
	  <street>2000 North Naperville Rd.</street>

	  <city>Naperville</city>

	  <code>60566</code>

	  <region>IL</region>

	  <country>USA</country>
	</postal>

	<phone>+1 630 979 1572</phone>

	<email>dstanley1389@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Warren Kumari" initials="W" surname="Kumari">
      <organization abbrev="Google">Google</organization>

      <address>
	<postal>
	  <street>1600 Amphitheatre Parkway</street>

	  <city>Mountain View</city>

	  <code>94043</code>

	  <region>CA</region>

	  <country>USA</country>
	</postal>

	<email>warren@kumari.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Juan Carlos Zuniga" initials="JC" surname="Zuniga">
      <organization abbrev="SIGFOX">SIGFOX</organization>

      <address>
	<postal>
	  <street>425 rue Jean Rostand</street>

	  <city>Labege</city>

	  <code>31670</code>

	  <region/>

	  <country>France</country>
	</postal>

	<email>j.c.zuniga@ieee.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>

<date/>

<area>Internet</area>

<workgroup>Internet Area</workgroup>

<keyword>Multicast</keyword>

<keyword>IEEE 802 Wireless Multicast</keyword>

  <abstract>
    <t>
	Well-known issues with multicast have prevented the deployment of
	multicast in 802.11 (wifi) and other local-area wireless environments.
<!-- deleted re: Jake Holland, Aug. 10.
	IETF multicast experts have been meeting
	together to discuss these issues and provide IEEE updates.  The
	mboned working group is chartered to receive regular reports on the
	current state of the deployment of multicast technology, create
	"practice and experience" documents that capture the experience of
	those who have deployed and are deploying various multicast
	technologies, and provide feedback to other relevant working groups.
  -->
	This document describes the problems of known limitations
	with wireless (primarily 802.11) Layer-2 multicast.  Also described are certain multicast
	enhancement features that have been specified by the IETF,
	and by IEEE 802, for wireless media, as well as some operational choices
	that can be taken to improve the performance of the network.  Finally,
	some recommendations are provided about the usage and combination of
	these features and operational choices.
    </t>
  </abstract>
</front>

<middle>

<section anchor="intro" title="Introduction">

    <t>
	Well-known issues with multicast have prevented the deployment of
	multicast in 802.11 <xref target="dot11"/> and other local-area
	wireless environments, as described in <xref target="mc-props"/>,
	<xref target="mc-prob-stmt"/>.  Performance issues have been observed
	when multicast
	packet transmissions of IETF protocols are used over IEEE 802 wireless
	media.  Even though enhancements for multicast transmissions have been
	designed at both IETF and IEEE 802, incompatibilities still exist
	between specifications, implementations and configuration choices.
    </t>

    <t> Many IETF protocols depend on multicast/broadcast for delivery of
	control messages to multiple receivers. Multicast allows sending data to 
	multiple interested recipients without the source needing to send duplicate
	data to each recipient. With broadcast traffic, data is sent to every device 
	regardless of their interest in the data. Multicast is used for various
	purposes such as neighbor discovery, network flooding, address
	resolution, as well minimizing media occupancy for the
	transmission of data that is intended for multiple receivers.
	In addition to protocol use of broadcast/multicast for
	control messages, more applications, such as push to talk in
	hospitals, or video in enterprises, universities, and homes, are
	sending multicast IP to end user devices, which are increasingly
	using Wi-Fi for their connectivity. </t>

    <t> IETF protocols typically rely on network protocol layering in order
	to reduce or eliminate any dependence of higher level protocols on
	the specific nature of the MAC layer protocols or the physical media.
	In the case of multicast transmissions, higher level protocols have
	traditionally been designed as if transmitting a packet to an IP
	address had the same cost in interference and network media access,
	regardless of whether the destination IP address is a unicast address
	or a multicast or broadcast address. This model was reasonable for
	networks where the physical medium was wired, like Ethernet.
	Unfortunately, for many wireless media, the costs to access the
	medium can be quite different.  Multicast over Wi-Fi has often been
	plagued by such poor performance that it is disallowed.
	Some enhancements have been designed
	in IETF protocols that are assumed to work primarily over wireless
	media.  However, these enhancements are usually implemented in limited
	deployments and not widespread on most wireless networks.</t>

    <t> IEEE 802 wireless protocols have been designed with certain features
	to support multicast traffic. For instance, lower modulations are
	used to transmit multicast frames, so that these can be received by
	all stations in the cell, regardless of the distance or path
	attenuation from the base station or access point.  However, these
	lower modulation transmissions occupy the medium longer;
	they hamper efficient transmission of traffic using
	higher order modulations to nearby stations.
	For these and other reasons, IEEE 802 working groups such as 802.11
	have designed features to improve the performance of multicast
	transmissions at Layer 2 <xref target="ietf_802-11" />.
	In addition to protocol design features, certain operational and
	configuration enhancements can ameliorate the network
	performance issues created by multicast traffic,
	as described in <xref target="optim3" />.</t>

    <t> There seems to be general agreement that these problems will not
	be fixed anytime soon, primarily because it's expensive to do so
	and due to multicast being unreliable.  Compared to unicast over Wi-Fi,
	multicast is often treated as somewhat of a second class citizen, even
	though there are many protocols using multicast.  Something needs to
	be provided in order to make them more reliable.  IPv6
	neighbor discovery saturating the Wi-Fi link is only part of the
	problem.  Wi-Fi traffic classes may help.  This document is intended
	to help make the determination about
	what problems should be solved by the IETF and what problems
	should be solved by the IEEE (see <xref target="discussion" />).
<!--
	A "multicast over wifi" IETF mailing list has been formed
	(mcast-wifi@ietf.org) for further discussion.  This draft will
	be updated according to the current state of discussion.
  -->
    </t>

    <t> This document details various problems caused by multicast transmission
	over wireless networks, including high packet error rates, no
	acknowledgements, and low data rate.  It also explains some
	enhancements that have been designed at the IETF and IEEE 802.11 to ameliorate
	the effects of multicast traffic.  Recommendations are also provided
	to implementors about how to use and combine these enhancements.
	Some advice about the operational choices that can be taken is also
	included.  It is likely that this document will also be considered
	relevant to designers of future IEEE wireless specifications. </t>
</section>	<!-- end section "Introduction" -->

<section anchor="def" 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" />.</t>
	<t>This document also uses some terminology from <xref
	target="RFC5444" />.</t>
	-->

   <t>This document uses the following definitions:
	<list style="hanging">
	<t hangText="ACK"><vspace/> The 802.11 layer 2 acknowledgement</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="AP"><vspace/> IEEE 802.11 Access Point</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="basic rate"><vspace/> The slowest rate of all the
	   connected devices, at which multicast and broadcast traffic is
	   generally transmitted</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="DTIM"><vspace/> Delivery Traffic Indication Map (DTIM): An
	   information element that advertises whether or not any associated
	   stations have buffered multicast or broadcast frames</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="MCS"><vspace/> Modulation and Coding Scheme</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="NOC"><vspace/> Network Operations Center</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="PER"><vspace/> Packet Error Rate</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="STA"><vspace/> 802.11 station (e.g. handheld device)</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	<t hangText="TIM"><vspace/> Traffic Indication Map (TIM): An
	   information element that advertises whether or not any associated
	   stations have buffered unicast frames</t>
	<t><vspace/></t>
	</list></t>
      <!-- <t><vspace blankLines="19" /></t>  -->
</section>	<!-- end section "Terminology" -->

<section anchor="multicast_issues" title="Identified multicast issues">
  <section anchor="l2_issues" title="Issues at Layer 2 and Below">
	<t> In this section some of the issues related to the use of multicast
	   transmissions over IEEE 802 wireless technologies are described.</t>

    <section anchor="reliability" title="Multicast reliability">
	<t> Multicast traffic is typically much less reliable than unicast
	    traffic. Since multicast makes point-to-multipoint communications,
	    multiple acknowledgements would be needed to guarantee reception
	    at all recipients.  Since there are no ACKs for multicast
	    packets, it is not possible for the Access Point (AP) to
	    know whether or not a retransmission is needed.  Even in the wired
	    Internet, this characteristic often causes undesirably high error
	    rates.  This has contributed to the relatively slow uptake of
	    multicast applications even though the protocols have long been
	    available.  The situation for wireless links is much worse, and is
	    quite sensitive to the presence of background traffic.
	    Consequently, there can be a high packet error rate (PER)
	    due to lack of retransmission, and because the sender never backs
	    off.  It is not uncommon for there to be a packet loss rate of 5%
	    or more, which is particularly troublesome for video and other
	    environments where high data rates and high reliability are
	    required.  </t>
    </section>	<!-- end section "Multicast reliability" -->

    <section anchor="lower_rate" title="Lower and Variable Data Rate">

	<t> Multicast over wired differs from multicast over wireless because
	    transmission over wired links often occurs at
	    a fixed rate.  Wi-Fi, on the other hand, has a transmission rate
	    that varies depending upon the STA's proximity to the AP.
	    The throughput of video flows, and the capacity of the broader
	    Wi-Fi network, will change and will impact the ability for QoS
	    solutions to effectively reserve bandwidth and provide admission
	    control. </t>

	<t> For wireless stations associated with an Access Point, the power
	    necessary for good reception can vary from station to station.  For
	    unicast, the goal is to minimize power requirements while maximizing
	    the data rate to the destination.  For multicast, the goal is simply
	    to maximize the number of receivers that will correctly receive the
	    multicast packet; generally the Access Point has
	    to use a much lower data rate at a power level high enough for even
	    the farthest station to receive the packet, for example as briefly
	    mentioned in section 2 of <xref target="RFC5757"/>.  Consequently, the data
	    rate of a video stream, for instance, would be constrained by the
	    environmental considerations of the least reliable receiver
	    associated with the Access Point. </t>

	<t> Because more robust modulation and coding schemes (MCSs)
	    have longer range but also lower data rate, multicast / broadcast
	    traffic is generally transmitted at the slowest rate of all the
	    connected devices. This is also known as the basic rate.
	    The amount of additional interference depends on the
	    specific wireless technology.  In fact, backward compatibility and
	    multi-stream implementations mean that the maximum unicast rates
	    are currently up to a few Gbps, so there can be more than
	    3 orders of magnitude difference in the transmission rate between
	    multicast / broadcast versus optimal unicast forwarding.  Some
	    techniques employed to increase spectral efficiency, such as spatial
	    multiplexing in MIMO systems, are not available with more than
	    one intended receiver; it is not the case that backwards
	    compatibility is the only factor responsible for lower multicast
	    transmission rates. </t>

	<t> Wired multicast also affects wireless LANs when the AP extends
	    the wired segment; in that case, multicast / broadcast frames
	    on the wired LAN side are copied to the Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN).  Since broadcast
	    messages are transmitted at the most robust MCS,
	    many large frames are sent at a slow rate over the air. </t>
    </section>	<!-- end section "Lower Data Rate" -->

    <section anchor="interference" title="Capacity and Impact on Interference">
	<t> Transmissions at a lower
	    rate require longer occupancy of the wireless medium and thus
	    take away from the airtime of other communications and
	    degrade the overall capacity.  Furthermore, transmission at higher
	    power, as is required to reach all multicast STAs associated
	    to the AP, proportionately increases the area of interference. </t>
    </section>	<!-- end section "Capacity and Impact on Interference" -->

    <section anchor="power_save" title="Power-save Effects on Multicast">
	<t> One of the characteristics of multicast transmission is that every
	    station has to be configured to wake up to receive the multicast,
	    even though the received packet may ultimately be discarded.  This
	    process can have a large effect on the power consumption by
	    the multicast receiver station. For this reason there are workarounds,
	    such as Directed Multicast Service (DMS) described in Section 4, to
	    prevent unnecessarily waking up stations.</t>

	<t> Multicast can work poorly with the power-save mechanisms defined in
	    IEEE 802.11e, for the following reasons.
	    <list style="symbols">
	    <t> Clients may be unable to stay in sleep mode due to
		multicast control packets frequently waking them up.</t>

	    <t> Both unicast and multicast traffic can be delayed by
		power-saving mechanisms.</t>

	    <t> A unicast packet is delayed until an STA wakes up and requests
		it.  Unicast traffic may also be delayed to improve power
		save, efficiency and increase probability of aggregation.</t>

	    <t> Multicast traffic is delayed in a wireless network if any of
		the STAs in that network are power savers.
		All STAs associated to the AP have to be
		awake at a known time to receive multicast traffic.</t>

	    <t> Packets can also be discarded due to buffer limitations in
		the AP and non-AP STA.</t>
	    </list></t>
    </section>	<!-- end section "Power-save Effects on Multicast" -->
  </section>	<!-- end section "Issues at Layer 2 and Below" -->

  <section anchor="l3_issues" title="Issues at Layer 3 and Above">
      <t> This section identifies some representative IETF protocols, and
	  describes possible negative effects due to performance degradation
	  when using multicast transmissions for control messages.
	  Common uses of multicast include:
	  <list style="symbols">
		<t> Control plane signaling </t>
		<t> Neighbor Discovery </t>
		<t> Address Resolution </t>
		<t> Service Discovery </t>
		<t> Applications (video delivery, stock data, etc.) </t>
		<t> On-demand routing </t>
		<t> Backbone construction </t>
		<t> Other L3 protocols (non-IP) </t>
<!--  CEP: citations needed here, especially for non-IP protocols.  -->
	  </list>
      </t>
      <t>
	User Datagram Protocol (UDP) is the most common transport layer
	protocol for multicast applications.
	By itself, UDP is not reliable -- messages may be lost or
	delivered out of order.
      </t>

      <section anchor="IPv4" title="IPv4 issues">
	<t> The following list contains some representative
	    discovery protocols, which utilize broadcast/multicast, that are used with IPv4.
	    <list style="symbols">
		<t>ARP <xref target="RFC5424"/></t>
		<t>DHCP <xref target="RFC2131"/></t>
		<t>mDNS <xref target="RFC6762"/></t>
		<t>uPnP <xref target="RFC6970"/></t>
	    </list></t>

        <t> After initial configuration, ARP (described in more detail later) and DHCP occur much less
	    commonly, but service discovery can occur at any time.  Some
	    widely-deployed service discovery protocols (e.g., for finding a
	    printer) utilize mDNS (i.e., multicast) which is often the first
	    service that operators drop.  Even if multicast snooping <xref target="RFC4541"/> (which provides the benefit of conserving 
	    bandwidth on those segments of the network where no node has expressed interest in receiving 
	    packets addressed to the group address) is utilized, many devices can register at once and cause serious
	    network degradation.</t>
      </section>   <!-- end section 'IPv4 uses' -->

      <section anchor="IPv6" title="IPv6 issues">
	<t> IPv6 makes extensive use of multicast, including the following:
	    <list style="symbols">
	    <t> DHCPv6 <xref target="RFC8415"/></t>
	    <t> Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) <xref target="RFC7761"/></t>
	    <t> IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) <xref target="RFC4861"/></t>
	    <t> multicast DNS (mDNS) <xref target="RFC6762"/></t>
	    <t> Router Discovery <xref target="RFC4286"/></t>
	    </list></t>
	<t> IPv6 NDP Neighbor Solicitation (NS) messages used in Duplicate Address 
	    Detection (DAD) and Address Lookup make use of Link-Scope multicast.  In
	    contrast to IPv4, an IPv6 node will typically use multiple
	    addresses, and may change them often for privacy reasons.  This
	    intensifies the impact of multicast messages that are associated
	    to the mobility of a node.  Router advertisement (RA) messages
	    are also periodically multicasted over the Link.
	</t>
	<t> Neighbors may be considered lost if several consecutive
	    Neighbor Discovery packets fail.
	</t>
	</section> <!-- end section 'IPv6 uses' -->

	<section anchor="mld" title="MLD issues">
	<t> Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) <xref target="RFC4541"/> is
	    used to identify members of a multicast group that are connected to
	    the ports of a switch.  Forwarding multicast frames into a
	    Wi-Fi-enabled area can use such switch support for hardware
	    forwarding state information. However, since IPv6 makes heavy use
	    of multicast, each STA with an IPv6 address will require state on
	    the switch for several and possibly many multicast solicited-node
	    addresses. Multicast addresses that do not have forwarding state
	    installed (perhaps due to hardware memory limitations on the
	    switch) cause frames to be flooded on all ports of the switch. Some 
	    switch vendors do not support MLD, for link-scope multicast, due to
	    the increase it can cause in state. </t>
      </section>	<!-- end section "MLD issues" -->

      <section anchor="spurious" title="Spurious Neighbor Discovery">
	<t> On the Internet there is a "background radiation" of scanning
	    traffic (people scanning for vulnerable machines) and backscatter
	    (responses from spoofed traffic, etc). This means that routers
	    very often receive packets destined for IPv4 addresses regardless of
	    whether those IP addresses are in use. In the cases where the IP
	    is assigned to a host, the router broadcasts an ARP request, gets back an ARP
	    reply, and caches it; then traffic can be delivered to the host.
	    When the IP address is not in use, the router broadcasts one (or
	    more) ARP requests, and never gets a reply. This means that it does
	    not populate the ARP cache, and the next time there is traffic for
	    that IP address the router will rebroadcast the ARP requests.
	</t>

	<t> The rate of these ARP requests is proportional to the size of the
	    subnets, the rate of scanning and backscatter, and how long the
	    router keeps state on non-responding ARPs. As it turns out, this
	    rate is inversely proportional to how occupied the subnet is
	    (valid ARPs end up in a cache, stopping the broadcasting; unused
	    IPs never respond, and so cause more broadcasts).  Depending on
	    the address space in use, the time of day, how occupied the
	    subnet is, and other unknown factors, thousands of broadcasts per second 
	    have been observed. Around 2,000 broadcasts per second have been observed at
	    the IETF NOC during face-to-face meetings. </t>
	    
  <t> With Neighbor Discovery for IPv6 <xref target="RFC4861"/>, nodes 
      accomplish address resolution by multicasting a Neighbor Solicitation 
      that asks the target node to return its link-layer address.  Neighbor 
      Solicitation messages are multicast to the solicited-node multicast 
      address of the target address.  The target returns its link-layer address 
      in a unicast Neighbor Advertisement message.  A single request-response 
      pair of packets is sufficient for both the initiator and the target to resolve 
      each other's link-layer addresses; the initiator includes its link-layer 
      address in the Neighbor Solicitation.</t>

	<t> On a wired network, there is not a huge difference between unicast,
	    multicast and broadcast traffic.  Due to hardware filtering
	    (see, e.g., <xref target="Deri-2010" />), inadvertently flooded
	    traffic (or excessive ethernet multicast) on wired networks
	    can be quite a bit less costly, compared to wireless cases where sleeping 
	    devices have to wake up to process packets.  Wired Ethernets tend to be switched
	    networks, further reducing interference from multicast.  There is
	    effectively no collision / scheduling problem except at extremely
	    high port utilizations. </t>

	<t> This is not true in the wireless realm; wireless equipment is
	    often unable to send high volumes of broadcast and multicast
	    traffic, causing numerous broadcast and multicast packets to be
	    dropped.  Consequently, when a host connects it is often not
	    able to complete DHCP, and IPv6 RAs get dropped, leading to
	    users being unable to use the network.</t>
      </section>	<!-- end section "Spurious Neighbor Discovery" -->

    </section>	<!-- end section "Issues at Layer 3 and Above" -->

  </section>

  <section anchor="optim2" title="Multicast protocol optimizations">
    <t> This section lists some optimizations that have been specified in
	IEEE 802 and IETF that are aimed at reducing or eliminating the
	issues discussed in <xref target="multicast_issues"/>.</t>

    <section anchor="proxy-arp" title="Proxy ARP in 802.11-2012">
	<t> The AP knows the MAC address and IP address for all associated
	    STAs.  In this way, the AP acts as the central "manager" for all
	    the 802.11 STAs in its basic service set (BSS). Proxy ARP is easy to implement at the
	    AP, and offers the following advantages:
	<list style="symbols">
	<t> Reduced broadcast traffic (transmitted at low MCS) on the
	       wireless medium</t>
	<t> STA benefits from extended power save in sleep mode, as ARP
	    requests for STA's IP address are handled instead by the AP.</t>
	<t> ARP frames are kept off the wireless medium.</t>
	<t> No changes are needed to STA implementation.</t>
	</list></t>

	<t> Here is the specification language as
	    described in clause 10.23.13 of <xref target="dot11-proxyarp"/>:
	    <list style="empty">
	    <t> When the AP supports Proxy ARP "[...] the AP shall maintain a
		Hardware Address to Internet Address mapping for each
		associated station, and shall update the mapping when the
		Internet Address of the associated station changes. When the
		IPv4 address being resolved in the ARP request packet is used
		by a non-AP STA currently associated to the BSS, the proxy ARP
		service shall respond on behalf of the non-AP STA".</t>
	  </list></t>
      </section>	<!-- end section "Proxy ARP in 802.11-2012" -->

    <section anchor="proxy-ND"
	       title="IPv6 Address Registration and Proxy Neighbor Discovery">

    <t>
	As used in this section,
	a Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Network (6LoWPAN) denotes a low
	power lossy network (LLN) that supports
	<xref target="RFC6282"> 6LoWPAN Header Compression (HC)</xref>.
	A <xref target="I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture">6TiSCH network</xref>
	is an example of a 6LowPAN.
	In order to control the use of IPv6 multicast over 6LoWPANs, the
	<xref target="RFC6775">6LoWPAN Neighbor Discovery (6LoWPAN ND)</xref>
	standard defines an address registration mechanism that relies on a
	central registry to assess address uniqueness, as a substitute to the
	inefficient DAD mechanism found in the mainstream IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP)
	<xref target="RFC4861"/><xref target="RFC4862"/>.
    </t>

    <t>
	The 6lo Working Group has specified an
	<xref target="RFC8505">update</xref> to RFC6775.
	Wireless devices can register their address to a
	<xref target="I-D.ietf-6lo-backbone-router">Backbone Router</xref>,
	which proxies for the registered addresses with the IPv6
	NDP running on a high speed aggregating backbone. The update also
	enables a proxy registration mechanism on behalf of the registered
	node, e.g.  by a 6LoWPAN router to which the mobile node is attached.
    </t>

      <t>
	The general idea behind the backbone router concept is that broadcast
	and multicast messaging should be tightly controlled in a variety
	of  WLANs and Wireless Personal Area
	Networks (WPANs).
	Connectivity to a particular link that provides the subnet should
	be left to Layer-3. The model for the Backbone Router operation is
	represented in <xref target='figBackbone'/>.
      </t>

<figure anchor='figBackbone' title="Backbone Link and Backbone Routers">
<artwork><![CDATA[
              |
            +-----+
            |     | Gateway (default) router
            |     |
            +-----+
               |
               |      Backbone Link
         +--------------------+------------------+
         |                    |                  |
      +-----+             +-----+             +-----+
      |     | Backbone    |     | Backbone    |     | Backbone
      |     | router 1    |     | router 2    |     | router 3
      +-----+             +-----+             +-----+
         o                o   o  o              o o
     o o   o  o       o o   o  o  o         o  o  o  o o
    o  o o  o o       o   o  o  o  o        o  o  o o o
    o   o  o  o          o    o  o           o  o   o
      o   o o               o  o                 o o

        LLN 1              LLN 2                LLN 3
]]></artwork>
</figure>
    <t>
      LLN nodes can move freely from an LLN anchored at one IPv6 Backbone Router
      to an LLN anchored at another Backbone Router on the same backbone,
      keeping any of the IPv6 addresses they have configured.
      The Backbone Routers maintain a Binding Table of their
      Registered Nodes, which serves as a distributed database of all the LLN
      Nodes. An extension to the Neighbor Discovery Protocol is introduced to
      exchange Binding Table information across the Backbone Link as needed
      for the operation of IPv6 Neighbor Discovery.
    </t>
    <t>
	RFC6775 and follow-on work <xref target="RFC8505"/>
	address the needs of LLNs, and similar techniques are likely to be
	valuable on any type of
	link where sleeping devices are attached, or where the use of
	broadcast and multicast operations should be limited. </t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="buffer" title="Buffering to Improve Battery Life">
    <t> Methods have been developed to help save battery life; for example,
	a device might not wake up when the AP receives a multicast packet.
	The AP acts on behalf of STAs in various ways.  To enable use of
	the power-saving feature for STAs in its BSS, the AP buffers frames
	for delivery to the STA at the time when the STA is scheduled for
	reception.  If an AP, for instance, expresses a DTIM (Delivery Traffic
	Indication Message) of 3 then
	the AP will send a multicast packet every 3 packets.  In fact,
	when any single wireless STA associated with an access point has
	802.11 power-save mode enabled, the access point buffers all multicast
	frames and sends them only after the next DTIM beacon.  </t>

    <t> In practice, most AP's will send a multicast every 30 packets.
	For unicast the AP could send a TIM (Traffic Indication Message),
	but for multicast the AP sends a broadcast to everyone.  DTIM does
	power management but STAs can choose whether or not to wake up 
	and whether or not to drop the packet.  Unfortunately, without proper administrative
	control, such STAs may be unable to determine why their
	multicast operations do not work. </t>
    </section> <!-- end of section 'Buffering to improve Power-Save'  -->
    
  <section title="Limiting multicast buffer hardware queue depth">
    <t>The CAB (Content after Beacon) queue is used for beacon-triggered 
    transmission of buffered multicast frames. If lots of multicast frames were 
    buffered, and this queue fills up, it drowns out all regular traffic. To limit the 
    damage that buffered traffic can do, some drivers limit the amount of 
    queued multicast data to a fraction of the beacon_interval. An example of 
    this is <xref target="CAB" />. </t>
    </section>   
    
    <section anchor="ipv6" title="IPv6 support in 802.11-2012">
    <t> IPv6 uses NDP instead of ARP. Every IPv6 node subscribes to a special 
    multicast address for this purpose.
    </t>

    <t> Here is the specification language from clause 10.23.13
	    of <xref target="dot11-proxyarp"/>:
	<list style="empty">
	    <t>"When an IPv6 address is being resolved, the Proxy Neighbor
	    Discovery service shall respond with a Neighbor Advertisement
	    message [...] on behalf of an associated STA to an [ICMPv6]
	    Neighbor Solicitation message [...]. When MAC address mappings
	    change, the AP may send unsolicited Neighbor Advertisement
	    Messages on behalf of a STA."</t>
	</list></t>

    <t>NDP may be used to request additional information
	<list style="symbols">
	    <t>Maximum Transmission Unit</t>
	    <t>Router Solicitation</t>
	    <t>Router Advertisement, etc.</t>
	</list>
	NDP messages are sent as group addressed (broadcast) frames
	in 802.11. Using the proxy operation helps to keep NDP messages off
	the wireless medium.</t>
    </section>	<!-- end of section 'IPv6 support in 802.11-2012' -->

    <section anchor="convert" title="Using Unicast Instead of Multicast">
      <t> It is often possible to transmit multicast control and data messages
	  by using unicast transmissions to each station individually.</t>

	<section anchor="convert-over" title="Overview">
	<t>
	   In many situations, it's a good choice to use unicast instead of
	   multicast over the Wi-Fi link.  This avoids most of the
	   problems specific to multicast over Wi-Fi, since the individual
	   frames are then acknowledged and buffered for power save clients,
	   in the way that unicast traffic normally operates.
	</t>
	<t>
	   This approach comes with the tradeoff of sometimes sending
	   the same packet multiple times over the Wi-Fi link.  However,
	   in many cases, such as video into a residential home network,
	   this can be a good tradeoff, since the Wi-Fi link may have enough
	   capacity for the unicast traffic to be transmitted to each
	   subscribed STA, even though multicast addressing may have been
	   necessary for the upstream access network.
	</t>
	<t>
	   Several technologies exist that can be used to arrange unicast
	   transport over the Wi-Fi link, outlined in the subsections below.
	</t>
	</section>	<!-- end of section 'Overview' -->

	<section anchor="convert-l2"
			title="Layer 2 Conversion to Unicast">
	<t>
	    It is often possible to transmit multicast control and data messages
	    by using unicast transmissions to each station individually.
	</t>
	<t>
	    Although there is not yet a standardized method of conversion, at
	    least one widely available implementation exists in the Linux
	    bridging code <xref target="bridge-mc-2-uc"/>.  Other proprietary
	    implementations are available from various vendors.
	    In general, these implementations perform a straightforward
	    mapping for groups or channels, discovered by IGMP or MLD
	    snooping, to the corresponding unicast MAC addresses.
	</t>
	</section>  <!-- end of section 'Layer 2 Conversion to Unicast' -->

	<section anchor="convert-DMS" title="Directed Multicast Service (DMS)">
	<t>
	    There are situations where more is needed than simply converting
	    multicast to unicast. <!-- Editor's note: citation needed -->
	    For these purposes, DMS enables an STA to request that the AP
	    transmit multicast group addressed frames destined to the
	    requesting STAs as individually addressed frames [i.e., convert
	    multicast to unicast].  Here are some characteristics of DMS:
	    <list style="symbols">
	    <t>	Requires 802.11n A-MSDUs</t>
	    <t>	Individually addressed frames are acknowledged and are
		buffered for power save STAs</t>
	    <t>	The requesting STA may specify traffic characteristics for
		DMS traffic</t>
	    <t>	DMS was defined in IEEE Std 802.11v-2011</t>
	    <t> DMS requires changes to both AP and STA implementation.</t>
	    </list>
	    DMS is not currently implemented in products.
	    See <xref target="Tramarin2017"/> and <xref target="Oliva2013"/>
	    for more information. </t>
	</section> <!-- end of section 'Directed Multicast Service (DMS)' -->

	<section anchor="convert-amt"
				title="Automatic Multicast Tunneling (AMT)">
	<t>
	    AMT<xref target="RFC7450"/> provides a method to tunnel multicast
	    IP packets inside unicast IP packets over network links that only
	    support unicast.  When an operating system or application running
	    on an STA has an AMT gateway capability integrated, it's possible
	    to use unicast to traverse the Wi-Fi link by deploying an AMT
	    relay in the non-Wi-Fi portion of the network connected to the AP.
	</t>
	<t>
	    It is recommended that multicast-enabled networks deploying AMT
	    relays for this purpose make the relays locally discoverable with
	    the following methods, as described in
			<xref target="I-D.ietf-mboned-driad-amt-discovery"/>:
	    <list style="symbols">
	    <t>	DNS-SD <xref target="RFC6763"/></t>
	    <t>	the well-known IP addresses from Section 7 of
		<xref target="RFC7450"/></t>
	    </list>
	</t>
	<t>
	   An AMT gateway that implements multiple standard discovery methods
	   is more likely to discover the local multicast-capable network,
	   instead of forming a connection to a non-local AMT relay further upstream.
	</t>
	</section> <!-- end of section 'Automatic Multicast Tunneling (AMT)'-->

    </section>   <!-- end of section 'Using Unicast Instead of Multicast' -->

    <section anchor="GCR" title="GroupCast with Retries (GCR)">
    <t> GCR (defined in <xref target="dot11aa"/>) provides greater
	reliability by using either unsolicited retries or a block
	acknowledgement mechanism. GCR increases probability of broadcast
	frame reception success, but still does not guarantee success.</t>

    <t> For the block acknowledgement mechanism, the AP transmits each
	group addressed frame as conventional group addressed transmission.
	Retransmissions are group addressed, but hidden from non-11aa STAs.
	A directed block acknowledgement scheme is used to harvest reception
	status from receivers; retransmissions are based upon these
	responses.</t>

    <t> GCR is suitable for all group sizes including medium to large
	groups. As the number of devices in the group increases, GCR can send
	block acknowledgement requests to only a small subset of the group.
	GCR does require changes to both AP and STA implementations.</t>

    <t> GCR may introduce unacceptable latency. After sending a group of
	data frames to the group, the AP has to do the following:

	<list style="symbols">
	<t>unicast a Block Ack Request (BAR) to a subset of members.</t>

	<t>wait for the corresponding Block Ack (BA).</t>

	<t>retransmit any missed frames.</t>

	<t>resume other operations that may have been delayed.</t>
	</list> This latency may not be acceptable for some traffic.</t>

     <t> There are ongoing extensions in 802.11 to improve GCR performance.
	 <list style="symbols">
	 <t> BAR is sent using downlink MU-MIMO (note that downlink MU-MIMO
		is already specified in 802.11-REVmc 4.3).</t>

	 <t> BA is sent using uplink MU-MIMO (which is a .11ax feature).</t>

	 <t> Additional 802.11ax extensions are under consideration; see
		<xref target="mc-ack-mux"/></t>

	 <t> Latency may also be reduced by simultaneously receiving BA
		information from multiple STAs.</t>
	 </list></t>
    </section>
  </section>

  <section anchor="optim3" title="Operational optimizations">
  <t>	This section lists some operational optimizations that can be
	implemented when deploying wireless IEEE 802 networks to mitigate
	some of the issues discussed in <xref target="multicast_issues"/>.</t>
<!--  Jake Holland:
  Is it worth adding here use cases that are considered probably useful, but
  not currently done with multicast over Wi-Fi, in part because of these
  concerns? (e.g. apps providing instant replays in a stadium IIUC currently
  use unicast, but could theoretically share a lot of bandwidth)
  -->

      <section anchor="mitigate-spurious"
	       title="Mitigating Problems from Spurious Neighbor Discovery">
      <t> <list hangIndent="6" style="hanging">
	  <t hangText="ARP Sponges"><vspace blankLines="1"/> An ARP Sponge
	    sits on a network and learns which IP addresses are actually in
	    use. It also listens for ARP requests, and, if it sees an ARP for
	    an IP address that it believes is not used, it will reply with
	    its own MAC address. This means that the router now has an IP to
	    MAC mapping, which it caches. If that IP is later assigned to a
	    machine (e.g using DHCP), the ARP sponge will see this, and will
	    stop replying for that address. Gratuitous ARPs (or the machine
	    ARPing for its gateway) will replace the sponged address in the
	    router ARP table. This technique is quite effective; but,
	    unfortunately, the ARP sponge daemons were not really designed for
	    this use (one of the most widely deployed arp sponges
	    <xref target="arpsponge"/>, was
	    designed to deal with the disappearance of participants from an
	    IXP) and so are not optimized for this purpose.  One daemon is
	    needed per subnet, the tuning is tricky (the scanning rate versus
	    the population rate versus retires, etc.) and sometimes daemons just stop, 
	    requiring a restart of the daemon which causes disruption. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

	  <t hangText="Router mitigations"><vspace blankLines="1"/> Some
	    routers (often those based on Linux) implement a "negative ARP
	    cache" daemon. Simply put, if the router does not see a reply to
	    an ARP it can be configured to cache this information for some
	    interval. Unfortunately, the core routers in use often do
	    not support this. When a host connects to a network and gets an IP
	    address, it will ARP for its default gateway (the router). The
	    router will update its cache with the IP to host MAC mapping
	    learned from the request (passive ARP learning). <vspace
	    blankLines="1"/></t>

	  <t hangText="Firewall unused space"><vspace blankLines="1"/> The
	    distribution of users on wireless networks / subnets may change in various
	    use cases, such as conference venues (e.g SSIDs are renamed, some SSIDs
	    lose favor, etc).  This makes utilization for particular SSIDs
	    difficult to predict ahead of time, but usage can be monitored
	    as attendees use the different networks. Configuring multiple
	    DHCP pools per subnet, and enabling them sequentially, can create
	    a large subnet, from which only addresses in the lower portions
	    are assigned. Therefore input IP access lists can be applied,
	    which deny traffic to the upper, unused portions. Then the
	    router does not attempt to forward packets to the unused portions
	    of the subnets, and so does not ARP for it. This method has proven
	    to be very effective, but is somewhat of a blunt axe, is fairly
	    labor intensive, and requires coordination. <vspace
	    blankLines="1"/></t>

	  <t hangText="Disabling/filtering ARP requests"><vspace
	    blankLines="1"/> In general, the router does not need to ARP for
	    hosts; when a host connects, the router can learn the IP to MAC
	    mapping from the ARP request sent by that host.  Consequently it
	    should be possible to disable and / or filter ARP requests from the
	    router.  Unfortunately, ARP is a very low level / fundamental part
	    of the IP stack, and is often offloaded from the normal control
	    plane. While many routers can filter layer-2 traffic, this is
	    usually implemented as an input filter and / or has limited
	    ability to filter output broadcast traffic. This means that the
	    simple "just disable ARP or filter it outbound" seems like a
	    really simple (and obvious) solution, but implementations /
	    architectural issues make this difficult or awkward in practice.
	    <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

	  <t hangText="NAT"><vspace blankLines="1"/> Broadcasts can often be 
	    caused by outside wifi scanning / backscatter traffic. In order to reduce the impact of
	    broadcasts, NAT can be used on the entire (or a large portion) of a network. This would
	    eliminate NAT translation entries for unused addresses, and the router would never ARP 
	    for them. There are, however, many reasons to avoid using NAT in such a blanket fashion.
	    <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

	  <t hangText="Stateful firewalls"><vspace blankLines="1"/> Another
	    obvious solution would be to put a stateful firewall between the
	    wireless network and the Internet. This firewall would block
	    incoming traffic not associated with an outbound request.
	    But this conflicts with the need and desire of some
	    organizations to have the network as open as possible and to
	    honor the end-to-end principle. An attendee on a meeting network
	    should be an Internet host, and should be able to receive
	    unsolicited requests. Unfortunately, keeping the network working
	    and stable is the first priority and a stateful firewall may be
	    required in order to achieve this.</t>
	  </list></t>
	</section><!--'Mitigating Problems from Spurious Neighbor Discovery'-->

	<section anchor="mitigate-spurious-sd"
	       title="Mitigating Spurious Service Discovery Messages">
	<t>
	    <list hangIndent="6" style="hanging">
	    <t>
		In networks that must support hundreds of STAs, operators have
		observed network degradation due to many devices simultaneously
		registering with mDNS. In a network with many clients, it is
		recommended to ensure that mDNS packets designed to discover
		services in smaller home networks be constrained to avoid
		disrupting other traffic.
	    </t>
	    </list>
	</t>
	</section> <!-- 'Mitigating Spurious Service Discovery Messages' -->
    </section>	<!-- end section 'Layer 3 optimizations' -->

    <section anchor="other-media"
	     title="Multicast Considerations for Other Wireless Media">

    <t> Many of the causes of performance degradation described in earlier
	sections are also observable for wireless media other than 802.11.</t>

    <t> For instance, problems with power save, excess media occupancy, and
	poor reliability will also affect 802.15.3 and 802.15.4. Unfortunately,
	802.15 media specifications do not yet include mechanisms similar to
	those developed for 802.11. In fact, the design philosophy for 802.15
	is oriented towards minimality, with the result that many such
	functions are relegated to operation within higher layer protocols.
	This leads to a patchwork of non-interoperable and vendor-specific
	solutions.  See <xref target="uli"/> for some additional discussion,
	and a proposal for a task group to resolve similar issues, in which
	the multicast problems might be considered for mitigation. </t>

    <t> Similar considerations hold for most other wireless media.  A brief
	introduction is provided in <xref target="RFC5757"/> for the following:
	<list style="symbols">
	<t> 802.16 WIMAX </t>
	<t> 3GPP/3GPP2 </t>
	<t> DVB-H / DVB-IPDC </t>
	<t> TV Broadcast and Satellite Networks </t>
	</list></t>
    </section>	<!-- 'Multicast Considerations for Other Wireless Media' -->

<!--  CEP: More recommendations are needed.  -->
    <section anchor="recommendations" title="Recommendations">
    <t>	This section provides some recommendations about the usage and
	combinations of some of the multicast enhancements described in
	<xref target="optim2"/> and <xref target="optim3"/>.</t>
    <t> Future protocol documents utilizing multicast signaling should
	be carefully scrutinized if the protocol is likely to be used over
	wireless media. </t>
    <t> Proxy methods should be encouraged to conserve network bandwidth
	and power utilization by low-power devices.  The device can use
	a unicast message to its proxy, and then the proxy can take care
	of any needed multicast operations.  </t>
    <t> Multicast signaling for wireless devices should be done in a way
	compatible with low duty-cycle operation. </t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="discussion" title="On-going Discussion Items">
    <t>	This section suggests two discussion items for further resolution. </t>
    <t> First, standards (and private) organizations should develop guidelines to help clarify when
	multicast packets should be sent wired rather than wireless.  For example,
	<eref target="https://www.ieee802.org/1/pages/802.1ak.html">802.1ak</eref> works on
	both ethernet and Wi-Fi and organizations could help decision making
	by developing guidelines for multicast over Wi-Fi including options for when traffic should be sent wired.</t>

    <t>
	Second, reliable registration to Layer-2 multicast groups, and a reliable
	multicast operation at Layer-2, might provide a good multicast over wifi solution.
	There shouldn't be a need to support 2^24 groups to get solicited node
	multicast working: it is possible to simply select a number of
	trailing bits that make sense for a given network size to limit the
	number of unwanted deliveries to reasonable levels.  IEEE 802.1,
	802.11, and 802.15 should be encouraged to revisit L2 multicast issues and provide
	workable solutions.
	</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="sec" title="Security Considerations">
    <t>
	This document does not introduce or modify any security mechanisms. 
	Multicast deployed on wired or wireless networks as discussed in this document can be 
	made more secure in a variety of ways. <xref target="RFC7761"/>, for instance,
  specifies the use of IPsec to ensure authentication of the link-local messages 
  in the Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM) routing protocol.  
  <xref target="RFC5796"/>specifies mechanisms to authenticate the PIM-SM link-local messages 
  using the IP security (IPsec) Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) or (optionally) the
   Authentication Header (AH).
    </t>
    <t>
	As noted in <xref target="group_key"/>, the unreliable nature of
	multicast transmission over wireless media can cause subtle problems
	with multicast group key management and updates.  When WPA (TKIP) or WPA2 (AES-CCMP) 
	encryption is in use, AP to client (From DS) multicasts have to be encrypted with a separate encryption key that 
	is known to all of the clients (this is called the Group Key). Quoting further from that
	website, "... most clients are able to get connected and surf the web,
	check email, etc. even when From DS multicasts are broken. So a lot of
	people don't realize they have multicast problems on their network..."
    </t>
    
    <t>This document encourages the use of proxy methods to conserve network bandwidth and
        power utilization by low-power devices. One such proxy method listed is an Arp Sponge which 
        listens for ARP requests, and, if it sees an ARP for an IP address that it believes is not used, it will reply 
        with its own MAC address. ARP poisoning and false advertising could potentially undermine (e.g. DoS) 
        this, and other, proxy approaches.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="iana" title="IANA Considerations">
    <t> This document does not request any IANA actions.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="acknowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">
    <t>
	This document has benefitted from discussions with the following
	people, in alphabetical order:
	    Mikael Abrahamsson,
	    Bill Atwood,
	    Stuart Cheshire,
	    Donald Eastlake,
	    Toerless Eckert,
	    Jake Holland,
	    Joel Jaeggli,
	    Jan Komissar,
	    David Lamparter,
	    Morten Pedersen,
	    Pascal Thubert,
	    Jeffrey (Zhaohui) Zhang
    </t>
    </section>
  </middle>

  <back>
    <references title="Informative References">
	<!-- <?rfc include='reference.RFC.2119.xml'?> -->

	<?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-6lo-backbone-router.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-mboned-driad-amt-discovery.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.5424.xml'?>
  <?rfc include='reference.RFC.2131.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.4861.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.4286.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.4541.xml'?>
  <?rfc include='reference.RFC.7761.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.4862.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.5757.xml'?>
  <?rfc include='reference.RFC.5796.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.6282.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.6762.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.6763.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.6775.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.6970.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.7450.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.8505.xml'?>
	<?rfc include='reference.RFC.8415.xml'?>

      <reference anchor="uli" target='https://mentor.ieee.org/802.15/dcn/15/15-15-0521-01-wng0-llc-proposal-for-802-15-4.pptx'>
	<front>
	  <title>LLC Proposal for 802.15.4</title>

	  <author fullname="Pat Kinney">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>
	    

	  <date month="Nov" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="ietf_802-11" target='https://mentor.ieee.org/802.11/dcn/15/11-15-1261-03-0arc-multicast-performance-optimization-features-overview-for-ietf-nov-2015.ppt'>
	<front>
	  <title>IEEE 802.11 multicast capabilities</title>

<!-- author fullname="Dorothy Stanley" initials="D" surname="Stanley"  -->
    	  <author fullname="Dorothy&nbsp;Stanley">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>
	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="Nov" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="mc-ack-mux" target='https://mentor.ieee.org/802.11/dcn/15/11-15-0800-00-00ax-multiplexing-of-acknowledgements-for-multicast-transmission.pptx'>
	<front>
	  <title>Multiplexing of Acknowledgements for Multicast
	  Transmission</title>

	  <author fullname="Yusuke Tanaka">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Sony Corp."</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Eisuke Sakai">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Sony Corp."</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Yuichi Morioka">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Sony Corp."</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Masahito Mori">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Sony Corp."</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Guido Hiertz">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Ericsson"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Sean Coffey">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless, Realtek"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="July" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="dot11"
	target='http://standards.ieee.org/findstds/standard/802.11-2016.html'>
	<front>
	  <title>802.11-2016 - IEEE Standard for Information technology--Telecommunications and information exchange between systems Local and metropolitan area networks--Specific requirements - Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) Specification (includes 802.11v amendment)</title>

	  <author surname="P802.11">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="March" year="2016"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="mc-props" target='https://mentor.ieee.org/802.11/dcn/15/11-15-1161-02-0arc-802-11-multicast-properties.ppt'>
	<front>
	  <title>IEEE 802.11 multicast properties</title>

	  <author fullname="Adrian Stephens">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="March" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="bridge-mc-2-uc" target='https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/6db6f0eae6052b70885562e1733896647ec1d807'>
	<front>
	  <title>bridge: multicast to unicast</title>

	  <author fullname="Felix Fietkau">
	    <organization>"Linux"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="Jan" year="2017"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="arpsponge"
      target='http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.182.4692'>
	<front>
	  <title>Effects of IPv4 and IPv6 address resolution on AMS-IX and
		 the ARP Sponge</title>

	  <author fullname="Marco Wessel">
	    <organization>"Universiteit van Amsterdam"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Niels Sijm">
	    <organization>"Universiteit van Amsterdam"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="July" year="2009"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="dot11-proxyarp" target='https://mentor.ieee.org/802.11/dcn/15/11-15-1015-01-00ax-proxy-arp-in-802-11ax.pptx'>
	<front>
	  <title>Proxy ARP in 802.11ax</title>

	  <author fullname="Guido R. Hiertz" initials="G. R." surname="Hiertz">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless P802.11"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Filip Mestanov" initials="F." surname="Mestanov">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless P802.11"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Brian Hart" initials="B." surname="Hart">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless P802.11"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="September" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="dot11aa"
	target='https://standards.ieee.org/standard/802_11aa-2012.html'>
	<front>
	  <title>Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and
	  Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications Amendment 2: MAC Enhancements
	  for Robust Audio Video Streaming</title>

	  <author surname="P802.11">
	    <organization>"IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="March" year="2012"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="mc-prob-stmt" target='https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2013/01/multicast-problem-statement.pptx'>
	<front>
	  <title>Multicast on 802.11</title>

	  <author fullname="Mikael Abrahamsson">
	    <organization>"IAB, IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Adrian Stephens">
	    <organization>"IAB, IEEE 802 Wireless"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="March" year="2015"/>
	</front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="Deri-2010"
	    target="http://ripe61.ripe.net/presentations/138-Deri_RIPE_61.pdf">
	<front>
	  <title abbrev="Deri-2010">10 Gbit Hardware Packet Filtering Using
		Commodity Network Adapters</title>

	  <author fullname="Luca Deri" initials="L." surname="Deri">
	    <organization>NTOP</organization>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Joseph Gasparakis" initials="J."
							surname="Gasparakis">
	    <organization>Intel</organization>
	  </author>

	  <date year="2010" />
	</front>

	<seriesInfo name="RIPE" value="61" />

	<format
	    target="http://ripe61.ripe.net/presentations/138-Deri_RIPE_61.pdf"
	    type="HTML" />
      </reference>
      
      
  <reference anchor="CAB"
	    target="https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/2687951/">
	<front>
	  <title abbrev="CAB">Limit multicast buffer hardware queue depth</title>
	  <author fullname="Felix Fietkau">
	    <organization>"openwrt.org"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>
	  <date year="2013" />
	</front>
  </reference>
      
      

      <reference anchor="group_key" target='https://superuser.com/questions/730288/why-do-some-wifi-routers-block-multicast-packets-going-from-wired-to-wireless'>
	<front>
	  <title>Why do some WiFi routers block multicast packets going from wired to wireless?</title>

	  <author fullname="Spiff">
	    <organization>"superuser.com"</organization>

	    <address>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="Jan" year="2017"/>
	</front>
      </reference>
      
      

      <reference anchor="Tramarin2017">
	<front>
	  <title> IEEE 802.11n for Distributed Measurement Systems</title>
	  <author fullname="Federico Tramarin" initials="F." surname="Tramarin">
	    <organization>
		National Research Council of Italy, CNR-IEIIT
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Via Gradenigo 6/B, 35131 Padova, Italy
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Stefano Vitturi"
					initials="S." surname="Vitturi">
	    <organization>
		National Research Council of Italy, CNR-IEIIT
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Via Gradenigo 6/B, 35131 Padova, Italy
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Michele Luvisotto"
					initials="M." surname="Luvisotto">
	    <organization>
		Dept. of Information Engineering, University of Padova
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Via Gradenigo 6/B, 35131 Padova, Italy
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>
	  <date month="May" year="2017"/>
	</front>
	<seriesInfo name="2017 IEEE International Instrumentation and
			Measurement Technology Conference (I2MTC)"
			value="pp. 1-6"/>
	    </reference>

<!--
Antonio de la Oliva
	Universidad Carlos III de Madrid,
	Avda. Universidad, 30, 28911 Leganes, Spain

Pablo Serrano
	Universidad Carlos III de Madrid,
	Avda. Universidad, 30, 28911 Leganes, Spain

Pablo Salvador
	Institute IMDEA Networks,
	Avda. del Mar Mediterraneo, 22, 28911 Leganes, Spain

Albert Banchs
	Institute IMDEA Networks,
	Avda. del Mar Mediterraneo, 22, 28911 Leganes, Spain

Email:
{ aoliva,pablo } @it.uc3m.es

Email:
{ josepablo.salvador,albert.banchs } @imdea.org


@INPROCEEDINGS{6583394,
author={A. de la Oliva and P. Serrano and P. Salvador and A. Banchs},
booktitle={2013 IEEE 14th International Symposium on "A World of Wireless, Mobile and Multimedia Networks" (WoWMoM)},
title={Performance evaluation of the IEEE 802.11aa multicast mechanisms for video streaming},
year={2013},
volume={},
number={},
pages={1-9},
keywords={multicast communication;performance evaluation;radio transmitters;
	telecommunication traffic;video communication;video streaming;
	wireless LAN;IEEE 802.11aa Task Group;IEEE 802.11aa multicast mechanism;
	Internet traffic;group addressed frame handling;home environment;
	multicast flow transmission;multimedia traffic;performance evaluation;
	resource complexity;resource consumption;video streaming;video traffic;
	video transmission;wireless LAN;wireless equipment;
	IEEE 802.11 Standards;Multimedia communication;Receivers;Reliability;
	Streaming media;Wireless LAN;802.11aa;Groupcast;WLAN},
doi={10.1109/WoWMoM.2013.6583394},
ISSN={},
month={June},}
   -->

      <reference anchor="Oliva2013">
	<front>
	  <title> Performance evaluation of the IEEE 802.11aa multicast
		  mechanisms for video streaming </title>
	  <author fullname="Antonio de la Oliva"
		initials="A." surname="de la Oliva">
	    <organization>
		Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Avda. Universidad, 30, 28911 Leganes, Spain
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Pablo Serrano" initials="P." surname="Serrano">
	    <organization>
		Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Avda. Universidad, 30, 28911 Leganes, Spain
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Pablo Salvador" initials="P." surname="Salvador">
	    <organization>
		Institute IMDEA Networks,
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Avda. del Mar Mediterraneo, 22, 28911 Leganes, Spain
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <author fullname="Albert Banchs" initials="A." surname="Banchs">
	    <organization>
		Institute IMDEA Networks,
	    </organization>
	    <address>
	      <postal>
		<street>
			Avda. del Mar Mediterraneo, 22, 28911 Leganes, Spain
		</street>
	      </postal>
	    </address>
	  </author>

	  <date month="June" year="2013"/>
	</front>
	<seriesInfo name='2013 IEEE 14th International Symposium on
		"A World of Wireless, Mobile and Multimedia Networks" (WoWMoM)'
		value="pp. 1-9"/>
	</reference>

      <!--
	<reference anchor="dot15mc">
	<front>
	<title>IEEE 802.15.4 and ZigBee as Enabling Technologies</title>
	<author surname='Stefano Tennina et al.'>
	<organization>
	</organization>
	<address>
	<uri>https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2013/01/multicast-problem-statement.pptx</uri>
	</address>
	</author>
	<date month="March" year="2015"/>
	</front>
	</reference>
<author surname='Stefano Tennina, Anis Koubaa, Roberta Daidone,
Mario Alves, et al.'>
Koubaa had first 'a' with caret
Mario had 'a' with accent
    -->
    </references>

</back>
</rfc>
