<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
  <!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.8 (Ruby 2.6.10) -->


<!DOCTYPE rfc  [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">

<!ENTITY RFC6724 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6724.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC8028 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8028.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC4861 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4861.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC2119 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2119.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC4191 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4191.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC4193 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4193.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC7526 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.7526.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC8174 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8174.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC1918 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.1918.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC6555 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6555.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC8305 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8305.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC3587 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3587.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC8925 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8925.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC3484 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3484.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC4862 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4862.xml">
<!ENTITY RFC3493 SYSTEM "https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3493.xml">
]>


<rfc ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-6man-rfc6724-update-20" category="std" consensus="true" submissionType="IETF" updates="6724">
  <front>
    <title abbrev="Prioritizing known-local ULA in RFC 6724">Prioritizing known-local IPv6 ULAs through address selection policy</title>

    <author initials="N." surname="Buraglio" fullname="Nick Buraglio">
      <organization>Energy Sciences Network</organization>
      <address>
        <email>buraglio@forwardingplane.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="T." surname="Chown" fullname="Tim Chown">
      <organization>Jisc</organization>
      <address>
        <email>Tim.Chown@jisc.ac.uk</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Duncan" fullname="Jeremy Duncan">
      <organization>Tachyon Dynamics</organization>
      <address>
        <email>jduncan@tachyondynamics.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date year="2025" month="May" day="13"/>

    <area>Int</area>
    <workgroup>6MAN</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>

    <abstract>


<?line 57?>

<t>This document draws on several years of operational experience to update the recommended process of Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) defined in RFC6724, defining the concept of "known-local" Unique Local Address (ULA) prefixes that enable ULA-to-ULA communications within fd00::/8 to become preferred over both IPv4-IPv4 and GUA-to-GUA (Global Unicast Addresses) for local use. The document defines the means by which nodes can both identify and insert such prefixes into their address selection policy table. It also clarifies the mandatory, unconditional requirement for support for Rule 5.5 defined in Section 5 of RFC6724 and demotes the preference for 6to4 addresses. These changes to default behavior improve supportability of common use cases, including automatic / unmanaged scenarios, and makes preference for IPv6 over IPv4 consistent in local site networks for both ULA and GUA prefixes. It is recognized that some less common deployment scenarios may require explicit configuration or custom changes to achieve desired operational parameters.</t>



    </abstract>



  </front>

  <middle>


<?line 61?>

<section anchor="introduction"><name>Introduction</name>

<t>Since its publication in 2012, Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) <xref target="RFC6724"></xref> has become an important mechanism by which nodes can perform address selection, deriving the most appropriate source and destination address pair to use from a candidate set by following the procedures defined in the RFC. Part of the process involves the use of a policy table, where the precedence and labels for address prefixes are listed, and for which a default policy table is defined.</t>

<t>It was always expected that the default policy table may need to be changed based on operational experience; section 2.1 says "It is important that implementations provide a way to change the default policies as more experience is gained" and points to the examples in Section 10, which include Section 10.6 where a ULA example is presented.</t>

<t>This document is written on the basis of such operational experience, in particular for scenarios where ULAs are used for their intended purpose as stated in <xref target="RFC4193"/>, i.e., they are designed to be routed within a local site and by default not advertised, used or received from external locations to that site. The document defines how preference for ULAs may be elevated for appropriate, common scenarios.</t>

<t>To support the preference to use ULA address pairs over both IPv4 and GUA address pairs for local intra-site scenarios, the concept of a "known-local" ULA address is introduced. This document describes the means for nodes to determine ULA prefixes that are known to be local to the site they are operating in and to insert those prefixes into their policy table with a label that differs from general ULA prefixes. This capability allows nodes to prefer ULA-ULA communication locally, but still use GUA-GUA address pairs for external communication, and importantly avoid selecting a ULA source to talk to a non-local ULA destination.</t>

<t>This document also reinforces the text in Section 5 of RFC6724 to require support for Rule 5.5.</t>

<t>RFC4193 defines ULAs within fc00::/7, where the L bit, as detailed in Section 3.1, is set to 1 for locally assigned (generated) prefixes, with L=0 as yet undefined. The use of known-locals as described in this document therefore applies to the currently used ULA prefixes under fd00::/8, where the prefixes conform to the definition in Section 3.1 of <xref target="RFC4193"/>.</t>

<t>The overall goal of this update is to improve behavior for common scenarios, and to assist in the phasing out of use of IPv4, while noting that some specific scenarios may still require explicit configuration.</t>

<t>An IPv6 deployment, whether enterprise, residential or other, may use combinations of IPv6 GUAs, IPv6 ULAs, IPv4 globals, IPv4 RFC1918 addresses, and may or may not use some form of NAT. However, this document makes no comment or recommendation on how ULAs are used, or on the use of NAT in an IPv6 network.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="terminology"><name>Terminology</name>

<t>The key words "<bcp14>MUST</bcp14>", "<bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>REQUIRED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL
NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14>",
"<bcp14>MAY</bcp14>", and "<bcp14>OPTIONAL</bcp14>" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>

<?line -18?>

<t>GUA: Global Unicast Addresses as defined in <xref target="RFC3587"/></t>

<t>ULA: Unique Local Addresses as defined in <xref target="RFC4193"/></t>

<t>Known-local ULA: A ULA prefix that an individual organization/site has determined to be local to a given node/network</t>

<t>RA: IPv6 Router Advertisement as defined in <xref target="RFC4861"/></t>

<t>PIO: IPv6 Prefix Information Option as defined in <xref target="RFC4861"/></t>

<t>SLAAC: IPv6 Stateless Address Auto-configuration <xref target="RFC4862"/></t>

</section>
<section anchor="operational-issues-regarding-preference-for-ipv4-addresses-over-ulas"><name>Operational Issues Regarding Preference for IPv4 addresses over ULAs</name>

<t>With multi-addressing being the norm for IPv6, more so where nodes are dual-stack, the ability for a node to pick an appropriate address pair for communication is very important.</t>

<t>Where getaddrinfo() as referenced in <xref target="RFC3493"/>, or a comparable API is used, the sorting behavior should take into account both
the source addresses of the requesting node as well as the destination addresses returned, and sort the candidate address pairs following the procedures defined in RFC6724.</t>

<t>The current default policy table leads to preference for use of IPv6 GUAs over IPv4 globals, which is widely considered preferential behavior to support greater use of IPv6 in dual-stack environments. This helps in allowing sites to phase out IPv4 as its evidenced use becomes ever lower.</t>

<t>However, there are two issues with preference, or rather non-preference, for ULAs as originally defined in RFC6724.</t>

<t>One is that the same default policy table also puts IPv6 ULAs below all IPv4 addresses, including <xref target="RFC1918"/> addresses, such that IPv4-IPv4 address pairs are favored over ULA-ULA address pairs. For many site operators this behavior will be counter-intuitive, given the IPv6 GUA preference, and may create difficulties with respect to planning, operational, and security implications for environments where ULA addresses are used in IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack network scenarios. The expected default prioritization of known-local IPv6 traffic over IPv4 by default, as happens with IPv6 GUA addresses, does not happen for ULAs.</t>

<t>As a result, the use of ULAs is not a viable option for dual-stack networking transition planning, large scale network modeling, network lab environments or other modes of large scale networking that run both IPv4 and IPv6 concurrently with the expectation that IPv6 will be preferred by default. Local preference of ULAs over IPv4 is thus important to assist operators in phasing out IPv4 from dual-stack environments and is an important enabler for sites seeking to move from dual-stack to IPv6-only networking.</t>

<t>The other issue is that where nodes in a dual-stack site are addressed from both ULA and GUA prefixes, RFC6724 will see GUA-GUA address pairs chosen over ULA-ULA. One goal of ULA addresses was to allow local communications to be independent of the availability of external connectivity and addresses, such that persistent ULAs can be used even when the global prefix made available to a site is withdrawn or changes.</t>

<t>This document therefore introduces two changes to RFC6724 to support a node implementing elevated or differential preference for  known-local ULAs, i.e., ULAs within a common local network, over both IPv4 and IPv6 GUAs.</t>

<t>The first change is an update to the default policy table to elevate the preference for ULAs prefixes such that ULAs, like GUAs, carry a higher precedence than all IPv4 addresses, making IPv6 precedence over IPv4 consistent for both ULAs and GUAs.</t>

<t>The second change is the introduction of the concept of known-local ULAs. RFC6724 includes a method by which nodes <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> provide more fine-grained support for further elevating the preference for specific ULA prefixes, while leaving other general ULA prefixes at the precedence described in the previous paragraph. This document elevates the requirement for specific ULA prefixes to be inserted into the policy table to be a <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>, but only for observed prefixes that are known to be local, i.e., known-local ULAs. Nodes implementing this behavior will see ULA prefixes known to be local to the node's site having precedence over IPv4 addresses and also over IPv6 GUA addresses, such that they can use ULA addresses independently of global prefixes within their site and continue to use GUA-GUA address pairs to talk to destinations external to their site.</t>

<t>These changes aim to improve the default handling of address selection for common cases, and unmanaged / automatic scenarios rather than those where DHCPv6 is deployed. The changes are discussed in more detail in the following sections, with a further section providing a summary of the proposed updates.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="preference-of-6to4-addresses"><name>Preference of 6to4 addresses</name>

<t>The anycast prefix for 6to4 relays was formally deprecated by <xref target="RFC7526"/> in 2015, and since that time the use of 6to4 addresses has further declined, with very little evidence of its use on the public internet. Note that RFC7526 does not deprecate the 6to4 IPv6 prefix 2002::/16, it only deprecates the 6to4 Relay IPv4 prefix.</t>

<t>This document therefore demotes the precedence of the 6to4 prefix in the policy table to the same precedence as carried by the Teredo prefix. Leaving this entry in the default table will cause no problems and will help if any deployments still exist, and ensure 6to4 prefixes are differentiated from general GUAs.</t>

<t>The discussion regarding the adding of 6to4 site prefixes in section 10.7 of RFC6724 remains valid.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="adjustments-to-rfc-6724"><name>Adjustments to RFC 6724</name>

<t>This document makes three specific changes to RFC6724: first to update the default policy table, second to change Rule 5.5 on preferring addresses in a prefix advertised by the next-hop to a <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>, and third to require that nodes <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> insert observed known-local ULA prefixes into their policy table.</t>

<section anchor="policy-table-update"><name>Policy Table Update</name>

<t>This update alters the default policy table listed in Rule 2.1 of RFC 6724.</t>

<t>It should be noted the order of rows in the policy table is of no consequence and only the precedence value is relevant.</t>

<t>The table below reflects the current RFC6724 state on the left, and the updated state defined by this RFC on the right:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
                    RFC6724                               Updated                  
Prefix       Precedence Label        Prefix        Precedence Label              
::1/128              50     0        ::1/128               50     0
                                     $known_local/48       45    14 (**)
::/0                 40     1        ::/0                  40     1
::ffff:0:0/96        35     4        ::ffff:0:0/96         20     4 (*)
2002::/16            30     2        2002::/16              5     2 (*)
2001::/32             5     5        2001::/32              5     5
fc00::/7              3    13        fc00::/7              30    13 (*)
::/96                 1     3        ::/96                  1     3
fec0::/10             1    11        fec0::/10              1    11
3ffe::/16             1    12        3ffe::/16              1    12

(*) value(s) changed in update
(**) $known_local = the ULA Known-Local /48 IPv6 prefix(es) (if any) 
with precedence and labels per the rules in Sec 5.3

]]></artwork></figure>

<t>The update moves 2002::/16 to de-preference its status in line with <xref target="RFC7526"/> and moves the precedence of fc00::/7 above legacy IPv4, with ::ffff:0:0/96 now set to precedence 20.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="rule-55"><name>Rule 5.5</name>

<t>The heuristic for address selection defined in Rule 5.5 of Section 5 of RFC6724 to prefer addresses in a prefix advertised by a next-hop router has proven to be very useful.</t>

<t>The text in RFC6724 states that the Rules <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be followed in order, but also includes a discussion note under Rule 5.5 that says that an IPv6 implementation is not required to remember which next-hops advertised which prefixes and thus that Rule 5.5 is only
applicable to implementations that track this information.</t>

<t>This document removes that exception and elevates the requirement to prefer addresses in a prefix advertised by a next-hop router to a <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> for all nodes.</t>

<t>This change means that an IPv6 implementation will need to remember which next-hops advertised which prefixes
<xref target="RFC8028"/>, despite the conceptual models of IPv6 hosts in Section 5 of <xref target="RFC4861"/> and Section 3 of <xref target="RFC4191"/>
having no such requirement.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="automatic-insertion-of-known-local-ula-prefixes-into-the-policy-table"><name>Automatic insertion of known-local ULA prefixes into the policy table</name>

<t>Section 2.1 of RFC6724 states that "an implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> automatically add additional site-specific rows to the default table based on its configured addresses, such as for Unique Local Addresses (ULAs)", but it provides no detail on how such behavior might be implemented.</t>

<t>If a node can determine which ULA prefix(es) are known to be local, it can provide differential treatment for those over general ULAs, and insert these into the policy table at a higher precedence than GUAs while keeping all general ULA prefixes to a lower precedence.</t>

<t>This document thus elevates the <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> requirement above for insertion to a <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> for the specific case of known-local ULAs.</t>

<t>These known-local ULA prefixes are inferred from ULA addresses assigned to interfaces or learned from Prefix Information Options (PIOs) in Router Advertisements (RAs) <xref target="RFC4861"/> received on any interface regardless of how the PIO flags are set. Further, they are learned from Route Information Options (RIOs) in RAs received on any interface by Type C hosts that process RIOs, as defined in <xref target="RFC4191"/>.</t>

<t>Section 3.1 of RFC4193 only defines ULA prefixes where the L-bit is set to 1, i.e., prefixes under fd00::/8 where the prefix is locally assigned or generated. The use of ULAs where L=0, i.e., prefixes under fc00::/8, is currently undefined.</t>

<t>The following rules define how the learnt known-local ULA prefixes under fd00::/8 are inserted into the address selection policy table for a node, through a conceptual list of known-local prefixes.</t>

<t><list style="numbers">
  <t>Any RIO or PIO that is delivered in an RA in which the "SNAC Router" RA header flag bit <xref target="SNACBIT"/> is set <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be ignored when considering the following rules.</t>
  <t>RIOs from within fd00::/8 are considered the preferred information source for determining known-local ULAs and should override other conflicting information or assumptions from other sources, including PIOs.</t>
  <t>RIOs within fd00::/8 that are of length /40 or longer <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be added to the known-local ULA list. RIOs for shorter prefixes <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be used to insert known-local ULA entries in the address selection policy table</t>
  <t>PIOs received within fd00::/8 that are not already in the node's known-local ULA list <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be added to the list with an assumed prefix length of /48, regardless of how the PIO flags are set.</t>
  <t>ULA interface addresses from within fd00::/8, particularly ones not created by SLAAC, and not already covered by the known-local ULA list <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be added to the list with an assumed prefix length of /48. However, as with rule 1, if the ULA interface address was generated on the basis of a PIO that has only been seen in RAs in which the SNAC router flag bit is set, this ULA prefix <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be used as described in this rule (rule 5).</t>
  <t>When inserting known-local ULA entries into the policy table, they <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> have a label of 14 (rather than the default ULA label of 13) and a precedence of 45.</t>
  <t>Entries <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be removed from the known-local ULA list and the Policy Table when the announced RIOs or PIOs are deprecated, or an interface address is removed, and there is no covering RIO or PIO.</t>
</list></t>

<t>When support is added for the insertion of known-local ULA prefixes into the current policy table it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> default to on, but a mechanism <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be supported to administratively toggle the behavior off and on.</t>

<t>Tools that display a node's current policy table <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> show all currently inserted known-local ULA prefixes.</t>

<t>The identification and insertion of known-local prefixes under fc00::/8 is currently not defined.</t>

<t>Note that a practical limit exists on the number of RIOs and PIOs that can be placed into a single RA. Therefore, there is a practical limit to the number of known-local ULAs that can be expressed on a single network and the number of ULA prefixes that can automatically be preferred over IPv4 and GUA prefixes within the policy table. This limit is unlikely to impact most networks, especially residential and other small unmanaged networks that automatically generate ULA prefixes.</t>

<t>Section 4 of RFC4191 says "Routers <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> send more than 17 Route Information Options in Router Advertisements per link. This arbitrary bound is meant to reinforce that relatively few and carefully selected routes should be advertised to hosts." The exact limit will depend on other Options that are used. So while this is not the practical limit discussed above, operators <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> take extra care not to cause the RA size to exceed the MTU when filling the RA with RA Options when exceeding this limit.</t>

<t>Note that in the case of Rule 2 above it would be expected that ULA prefixes being included in the known-local prefix
list be compliant with Section 3 of RFC4193 (i.e., /48 in size) but the above rule is pragmatic in that it allows
the use of ULA prefixes from /48 to /40 in length.
Most networks use ("are expected to use") /48 prefixes as per
RFC4193. However, it is possible that in some circumstances a
larger managed enterprise may wish to use a shorter prefix (e.g., to simplify management, filtering
rules, etc, and to overcome the issue with the number of RIOs an RA
can carry as described in the above paragraph). However, such
non-compliant use of ULAs may be problematic in other ways, e.g., carrying an increased risk of collision with other
ULA prefixes, where you might be using someone else's compliant prefix because shorter prefixes have a lower chance to be globally unique.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="configuration-of-the-default-policy-table"><name>Configuration of the default policy table</name>

<t>As stated in Section 2.1 of RFC6724 "IPv6 implementations <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> support configurable address selection via a mechanism at least as powerful as the policy tables defined here".</t>

<t>Based on operational experience to date, it is important that node policy tables can be changed once deployed to support future emerging use cases. This update thus re-states the importance of such configurability.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="intended-behaviors"><name>Intended behaviors</name>

<t>In this section we review the intended default behaviors after this update is applied.</t>

<section anchor="gua-gua-preferred-over-ipv4-ipv4"><name>GUA-GUA preferred over IPv4-IPv4</name>

<t>This is the current behavior, and remains unaltered. The rationale is to promote use of IPv6 GUAs in dual-stack environments.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="gua-gua-preferred-over-ula-ula"><name>GUA-GUA preferred over ULA-ULA</name>

<t>This is the current behavior, and remains unaltered for the general case.</t>

<t>However, where a ULA prefix is determined to be local, and added as a known-local ULA prefix to a node's address selection policy table, communications to addresses in other known-local ULA prefixes will prefer ULA-ULA address pairs to GUA-GUA (matching label, higher precedence).</t>

</section>
<section anchor="known-local-ula-known-local-ula-preferred-over-gua-gua"><name>Known-local ULA - Known-local ULA preferred over GUA-GUA</name>

<t>As described in the previous case, this document elevates preference for use of ULAs over GUAs in cases where the ULA prefix(es) in use can be determined to be local to a site or organization.</t>

<t>By only adapting this behavior for known-local ULAs, a node will not select a ULA source to talk to a non-local ULA destination and will instead correctly use GUA-GUA.</t>

<t>Nodes not yet implementing this RFC will continue to use GUA-GUA over ULA-ULA for all cases.</t>

<t>As an example, consider a site that uses prefixes ULA1::/48, ULA2::/48 and GUA1::/48.</t>

<t>Host A has address ULA1::1 and GUA1:1::1
Host B has address ULA2::1 and GUA1:2::1</t>

<t>Both ULA prefixes have been determined to be known-local through RIOs.
Perhaps ULA2 is reachable within the site, but its prefix is not in direct use at host A.</t>

<t>If host A sends to host B the candidate pairs are ULA1::1 - ULA2::1 and GUA1::1::1 - GUA1:2::1.</t>

<t>In this case ULA1::1 - ULA2::1 wins because of matching labels (both 14) and higher precedence than GUA (45 vs 40).</t>

<t>If host A were to send to a host C with addresses ULA3::1 (where ULA3::/48 has not been learned to be a known-local prefix) and GUA2:1::1, host A would use the GUA address pair for the communication as the GUAs have matching labels (both 1) where the known-local ULA and general ULA do not (14 and 13 respectively).</t>

</section>
<section anchor="known-local-ula-ula-preferred-over-ipv4-ipv4"><name>Known-local ULA-ULA preferred over IPv4-IPv4</name>

<t>This update changes previous behavior for this case. RFC6724 as originally defined would lead to IPv4 being preferred over ULAs, which is contrary to the spirit of the IPv6 GUA preference over IPv4, and to the goal of removing evidenced use of IPv4 in a dual-stack site before transitioning to IPv6-only.</t>

<t>This document elevates the precedence of known-local ULAs above IPv4, so known-local ULA-ULA address pairs will be chosen over IPv4-IPv4 pairs (matching label, higher precedence).</t>

</section>
<section anchor="ipv4-ipv4-preferred-over-ula-gua"><name>IPv4-IPv4 preferred over ULA-GUA</name>

<t>An IPv6 ULA address will only be preferred over an IPv4 address if both IPv6 ULA source and destination addresses are available. With Rule 5 of Section 6 of RFC6724 and the ULA-specific label added in <xref target="RFC6724"/> (which was not present in <xref target="RFC3484"/>) an IPv4 source and destination will be preferred over an IPv6 ULA source and an IPv6 GUA destination address, even though generally known-local IPv6 ULA addresses are preferred over IPv4 in the policy table as proposed in this update. The IPv4 matching label trumps ULA-GUA.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="discussion-of-ula-source-with-gua-or-remote-ula-destination"><name>Discussion of ULA source with GUA or remote ULA destination</name>

<t>In this section we present a discussion on the scenarios where a ULA source may be communicating with a GUA or ULA destination.</t>

<t>A potential problem exists when a ULA source attempts to communicate with GUA or remote ULA destinations. In these scenarios, the ULA source as stated earlier is by default intended for communication only with the local network, meaning an individual site, several sites that are part of the same organization, or multiple sites across cooperating organizations, as detailed in <xref target="RFC4193"/>. As a result, most GUA and ULA destinations are not attached to the same local network as the ULA source and are, therefore, not reachable from the ULA source.</t>

<t>Scenario 1: ULA source and GUA destination</t>

<t>When only a ULA source is available for communication with GUA destinations, this generally implies no connectivity to the IPv6 Internet is available. Otherwise, a GUA source would have been made available and selected for use with GUA destinations. As a result, the ULA source will typically fail when it attempts to communicate with most GUA destinations. However, corner cases exist where the ULA source will not fail, such as when GUA destinations are attached to the same local network as the ULA source.</t>

<t>Scenario 2: ULA source and remote ULA destination</t>

<t>Receiving a DNS response for a ULA destination that is not attached to the local network, in other words, a remote ULA destination, is considered a misconfiguration in most cases, or at least this contradicts the operational guidelines provided in Section 4.4 of RFC4193. Nevertheless, this can occur, and the ULA source will typically fail when it attempts to communicate with ULA destinations that are not attached to the same local network as the ULA source. This case provides a rationale for implementing support for known-local ULA prefix insertion in the policy table, such that differential behavior can be applied for known-local versus general ULA prefixes.</t>

<t>The remainder of this section discusses several complementary mechanisms involved with these scenarios.</t>

<section anchor="the-ula-label-and-its-precedence"><name>The ULA Label and its Precedence</name>

<t>RFC6724 added (in obsoleting RFC3484) a separate label for ULAs (the whole range, under fc00::/7), whose default precedence is raised by this update. This separate label interacts with Rule 5 of Section 6 of RFC6724, which says:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
Rule 5: Prefer matching label.

If Label(Source(DA)) = Label(DA) and Label(Source(DB)) <> Label(DB), 
then prefer DA.

Similarly, if Label(Source(DA)) <> Label(DA) and Label(Source(DB)) = 
Label(DB), then prefer DB.
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>In the first scenario, the ULA source label, whether known-local or not, will not match the GUA destination label. Therefore, an IPv4 destination, if available, will be preferred over a GUA destination with a ULA source, even though the GUA destination has higher precedence than the IPv4 destination in the policy table. This means the IPv4 destination will be moved up in the list of destinations over the GUA destination with the ULA source.</t>

<t>If the ULA (fc00::/7) label is removed from the policy table, a GUA destination with a ULA source will be preferred over an IPv4 destination, as GUA and ULA will be part of the same label (for ::/0).</t>

<t>In the second scenario, if the ULA source has been recognized as being within a known-local prefix that has been inserted into the address selection policy table, then the known-local ULA source and general ULA destination will have different labels, and therefore IPv4 communication will be preferred.</t>

<t>If the ULA source has not been recognized as known-local, e.g., if the insertion of known-local prefixes into the policy table has been administratively disabled, its general ULA label will match the general ULA destination label and therefore, whether part of the local network or not, the ULA destination will be preferred over an IPv4 destination.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="happy-eyeballs"><name>Happy Eyeballs</name>

<t>Regardless of the preference resulting from the above discussion, Happy Eyeballs version 1 <xref target="RFC6555"/> or version 2 <xref target="RFC8305"/>, if implemented, will try both the GUA or ULA destination with the ULA source and the IPv4 destination and source pairings.
The ULA source will typically fail to communicate with most GUA or remote ULA destinations, and IPv4 will be preferred if IPv4 connectivity is available unless the GUA or ULA destinations are attached to the same local network as the ULA source.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="try-the-next-address"><name>Try the Next Address</name>

<t>As stated in Section 2 of RFC6724:</t>

<t>"Well-behaved applications <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> simply use the first address returned from an API such as getaddrinfo() and then give up if it fails. For many applications, it is appropriate to iterate through the list of addresses returned from getaddrinfo() until a working address is found. For other applications, it might be appropriate to try multiple addresses in parallel (e.g., with some small delay in between) and use the first one to succeed."</t>

<t>Therefore, when an IPv4 destination is preferred over GUA or ULA destinations, IPv4 will likely succeed if IPv4 connectivity is available, and the GUA or ULA destination may only be tried if Happy Eyeballs is implemented.</t>

<t>On the other hand, if the GUA or ULA destination with the ULA source is preferred, the ULA source will typically fail to communicate with GUA or ULA destinations that are not connected to the same local network. However, if the operational guidelines in Section 4.3 of RFC4193  are followed, recognizing this failure can be accelerated, and transport layer timeouts (e.g., TCP) can be avoided. The guidelines will cause a Destination Unreachable ICMPv6 Error to be received by the source device, signaling the next address in the list to be tried, as discussed above.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="following-ula-operational-guidelines-in-rfc4193"><name>Following ULA operational guidelines in RFC4193</name>

<t>This section re-emphasizes two important operational requirements stated in <xref target="RFC4193"/> that should be followed by operators.</t>

<section anchor="filtering-ula-source-addresses-at-site-borders"><name>Filtering ULA-source addresses at site borders</name>

<t>Section 4.3 states "Site border routers and firewalls should be configured to not forward
any packets with Local IPv6 source or destination addresses outside the site, unless they have been explicitly configured with routing information about specific /48 or longer Local IPv6 prefixes".</t>

<t>And further that "Site border routers should respond with the appropriate ICMPv6 Destination Unreachable message to inform the source that the packet was not forwarded".</t>

<t>As stated in the above discussion, such ICMPv6 messages can assist in fast failover for TCP connections.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="avoid-using-ula-addresses-in-the-global-dns"><name>Avoid using ULA addresses in the global DNS</name>

<t>Section 4.3 of RFC4193 states that "AAAA and PTR records for locally assigned local IPv6 addresses are not recommended being installed in the global DNS."</t>

<t>This is particularly important given the general method presented in this document elevates the priority for ULAs above IPv4. However, where support for insertion of known-local prefixes is implemented, such "rogue" ULAs in the global DNS are no longer a concern for address selection as they would have the lowest precedence.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="the-practicalities-of-implementing-address-selection-support"><name>The practicalities of implementing address selection support</name>

<t>As with most adjustments to standards, and using the introduction of RFC6724 as a measuring stick, the updates defined in this document will likely take several years to become common enough for consistent behavior within most operating systems. At the time of writing, it has been over 10 years since RFC6724 has been published but we continue to see existing commercial and open source operating systems exhibiting RFC3484 (or other) behavior.</t>

<t>While it should be noted that RFC6724 defines a solution to adjust the address preference selection table that is functional theoretically, operationally the solution is operating system dependent and in practice policy table changes cannot be signaled by any currently deployed network mechanism. While RFC7078 defines such a DHCPv6 option, there are few if any implementations. This lack of an intra-protocol or network-based ability to adjust address selection preference, along with the inability to adjust a notable number of operating systems either programmatically or manually, renders operational scalability of such a mechanism challenging.</t>

<t>It is especially important to note this behavior in the long lifecycle equipment that exists in industrial control and operational technology environments due to their very long mean time to replacement/lifecycle.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="limitations-of-rfc6724"><name>Limitations of RFC6724</name>

<t>The procedures defined in RFC6724 do not give optimal results for all scenarios. As stated in the introduction, the aim of this update is to improve the behavior for the most common scenarios.</t>

<t>It is widely recognized in the IETF 6man WG that the whole 3484/6724/getaddrinfo() model is fundamentally inadequate for optimal address selection.  A model that considers address pairs directly, rather than sorting on destination addresses with the best source for that address, would be preferable, but beyond the scope of this document.</t>

<t>To simplify address selection, operators may instead look to deploy IPv6-only and/or may choose to only use GUA addresses and no ULA addresses. Other approaches to reduce the use of IPv4, e.g., through use of DHCPv4 Option 108 as defined in <xref target="RFC8925"/> as part of an "IPv6 Mostly" deployment model, also helps simplify address selection for nodes.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="acknowledgements"><name>Acknowledgements</name>

<t>The authors would like to acknowledge the valuable input and contributions of the 6man WG including (in alphabetic order) Erik Auerswald, Dale Carder, Brian Carpenter, Tom Coffeen, Lorenzo Colitti, Chris Cummings, David Farmer (in particular for the ULA to GUA/ULA discussion text, and discussion of using the specific fd00::/8 prefix for known-locals), Bob Hinden, Scott Hogg, Ed Horley, Ted Lemon, Jen Linkova, Michael Richardson, Kyle Rose, Nathan Sherrard, Ole Troan, Eduard Vasilenko, Eric Vyncke, Paul Wefel, Timothy Winters, and XiPeng Xiao.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="implementation-status"><name>Implementation Status</name>

<t>This section should be removed before publication as an RFC.</t>

<t>There are two known implementations of the ULA known-local preference mechanism.
The first implementation was created by Lorenzo Colitti at Google as a prototype solution, with public code available for reference on their android platform available to the public <xref target="ANDROID"/>. It was last updated in April of 2024, and does not include the capability to listen for RIO/PIO changes, but does support adding the ULA prefix learned on the interface to the known-local preference.</t>

<t>The second implementation was written by Jeremy Duncan at Tachyon Dynamics and made available as open source, reference prototype code available <xref target="RAIO-ULA-PY"/>. This implementation includes a full implementation written in python, including the capability to listen to RIO and PIO on the wire and adjust ULA known-local prefixes as needed. It was last updated in May of 2024.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="security-considerations"><name>Security Considerations</name>

<t>There are no direct security considerations in this document.</t>

<t>The mixed preference for IPv6 over IPv4 from the default policy table in RFC 6724 represents a potential security issue, given an operator may expect ULAs to be used when in practice RFC 1918 addresses are used instead.</t>

<t>The requirements of RFC 4193, stated earlier in this document, should be followed for optimal behavior.</t>

<t>Operators should be mindful of cases where communicating nodes have differing behaviors for address selection, e.g., RFC 3484 behavior, RFC 6724, the updated RFC 6724 behavior defined here, some other non-IETF-standardized behavior, or even no mechanism. There may thus be inconsistent behavior for communications initiated in each direction between two nodes. Ultimately all nodes should be made compliant to the updated specification described in this document.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="iana-considerations"><name>IANA Considerations</name>

<t>None.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="summary-of-changes-and-additional-text-since-rfc6724"><name>Summary of changes and additional text since RFC6724</name>
<t>This section should be removed before publication as an RFC.</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Introduced concept of known-locals and rules for their insertion/removal in the table.</t>
  <t>Changed default policy table to move fc00::/7 to precedence 30, above legacy IPv4.</t>
  <t>Changed default policy table to move the 6to4 address block 2002::/16 to the same precedence as the Teredo prefix.</t>
  <t>Changed ::ffff:0:0/96 to precedence 20.</t>
  <t>Changed Rule 5.5 to a <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> support.</t>
  <t>Defined the concept of known-local ULA prefixes for currently defined RFC4193 ULAs with L=1 under fd00::/8, how they may be learnt, and the <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> requirement to insert them into the policy table.</t>
  <t>Added text clarifying intended behaviors.</t>
  <t>Added text discussing ULA to GUA/ULA case.</t>
  <t>Added text for the security section.</t>
  <t>Added text to account for SNAC bit.</t>
</list></t>

</section>


  </middle>

  <back>


    <references title='Normative References' anchor="sec-normative-references">

&RFC6724;
&RFC8028;
&RFC4861;
&RFC2119;
&RFC4191;
&RFC4193;
&RFC7526;
<reference anchor="SNACBIT" target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-6man-snac-router-ra-flag/">
  <front>
    <title>SNAC Router Flag in ICMPv6 Router Advertisement Messages</title>
    <author >
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="ANDROID" target="https://r.android.com/3046000">
  <front>
    <title>Optionally prefer known-local ULAs in Android</title>
    <author >
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RAIO-ULA-PY" target="https://github.com/jeremy-duncan/raio_ula">
  <front>
    <title>Python known-local ULA implementation</title>
    <author >
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
&RFC8174;


    </references>

    <references title='Informative References' anchor="sec-informative-references">

&RFC1918;
&RFC6555;
&RFC8305;
&RFC3587;
&RFC8925;
&RFC3484;
&RFC4862;
&RFC3493;


    </references>



  </back>

<!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>

