400px, An example of the fragmentation of a protocol data unit in a given layer into smaller fragments.
IP fragmentation is an
Internet Protocol (IP) process that breaks
packets into smaller pieces (fragments), so that the resulting pieces can pass through a link with a smaller
maximum transmission unit (MTU) than the original packet size. The fragments are reassembled by the receiving
host.
The details of the fragmentation mechanism, as well as the overall architectural approach to fragmentation, are different between
IPv4
Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) is the fourth version of the Internet Protocol (IP). It is one of the core protocols of standards-based internetworking methods in the Internet and other packet-switched networks. IPv4 was the first version de ...
and
IPv6.
Process
describes the procedure for IP fragmentation, and transmission and reassembly of IP packets.
RFC 815 describes a simplified reassembly algorithm.
The ''Identification'' field along with the ''foreign'' and ''local internet address'' and the ''protocol ID'', and ''Fragment'' offset field along with ''Don't Fragment'' and ''More Fragments'' flags in the
IP header are used for fragmentation and reassembly of IP packets.
[
If a receiving host receives a fragmented IP packet, it has to reassemble the packet and pass it to the higher protocol layer. Reassembly is intended to happen in the receiving host but in practice it may be done by an intermediate router, for example, network address translation (NAT) ''may'' need to reassemble fragments in order to translate data streams.
]
IPv4 and IPv6 differences
Under IPv4, a router that receives a network packet larger than the next hop's MTU has two options: drop the packet if the ''Don't Fragment'' (DF) flag bit is set in the packet's header and send an Internet Control Message Protocol
The Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) is a supporting protocol in the Internet protocol suite. It is used by network devices, including routers, to send error messages and operational information indicating success or failure when communi ...
(ICMP) message which indicates the condition ''Fragmentation Needed'' (Type 3, Code 4), or fragment the packet and send it over the link with a smaller MTU. Although originators may produce fragmented packets, IPv6 routers do not have the option to fragment further. Instead, network equipment is required to deliver any IPv6 packets or packet fragments smaller than or equal to 1280 bytes and IPv6 hosts are required to determine the optimal MTU through Path MTU Discovery before sending packets.
Though the header formats are different for IPv4 and IPv6, analogous fields are used for fragmentation, so the same algorithm can be reused for IPv4 and IPv6 fragmentation and reassembly.
In IPv4, hosts must make a best-effort attempt to reassemble fragmented IP packets with a total reassembled size of up to 576 bytes. They may also attempt to reassemble fragmented IP packets larger than 576 bytes, but they are also permitted to silently discard such larger packets. Applications are recommended to refrain from sending packets larger than 576 bytes unless they have prior knowledge that the remote host is capable of accepting or reassembling them.[
In IPv6, hosts must make a best-effort attempt to reassemble fragmented packets with a total reassembled size of up to 1500 bytes, larger than IPv6's minimum MTU of 1280 bytes.] Fragmented packets with a total reassembled size larger than 1500 bytes may optionally be silently discarded. Applications relying upon IPv6 fragmentation to overcome a path MTU limitation must explicitly fragment the packet at the point of origin; however, they should not attempt to send fragmented packets with a total size larger than 1500 bytes unless they know in advance that the remote host is capable of reassembly.
Impact on network forwarding
When a network has multiple parallel paths, technologies like LAG and CEF split traffic across the paths according to a hash algorithm. One goal of the algorithm is to ensure all packets of the same flow
Flow may refer to:
Science and technology
* Fluid flow, the motion of a gas or liquid
* Flow (geomorphology), a type of mass wasting or slope movement in geomorphology
* Flow (mathematics), a group action of the real numbers on a set
* Flow (psych ...
are sent out the same path to minimize unnecessary packet reordering
In computer networking, out-of-order delivery is the delivery of packet (information technology), data packets in a different order from which they were sent. Out-of-order delivery can be caused by packets following multiple paths through a netwo ...
.
IP fragmentation can cause excessive retransmissions when fragments encounter packet loss and reliable protocols such as TCP must retransmit all of the fragments in order to recover from the loss of a single fragment. Thus, senders typically use two approaches to decide the size of IP packets to send over the network. The first is for the sending host to send an IP packet of size equal to the MTU of the first hop of the source-destination pair. The second is to run the Path MTU Discovery algorithm to determine the path MTU between two IP hosts so that IP fragmentation can be avoided.
, IP fragmentation is considered fragile and often undesired due to its security impact.
See also
*
*
* IP fragmentation attack
IP fragmentation attacks are a kind of computer security attack based on how the Internet Protocol (IP) requires data to be transmitted and processed. Specifically, it invokes IP fragmentation, a process used to partition messages (the service ...
* Protocol data unit and Service data unit
References
External links
What is packet fragmentation?
The Never-Ending Story of IP Fragmentation
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ip Fragmentation
Internet Protocol