Tunnel Setup Protocol

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Short description: Networking control protocol

In computer networking, the Tunnel Setup Protocol (TSP) is an experimental networking control protocol used to negotiate IP tunnel setup parameters between a tunnel client host and a tunnel broker server, the tunnel end-points.REFERENCE FOR RFC5572 IS NOT DEFINED YET. You are invited to add it here. A major use of TSP is in IPv6 transition mechanisms.

Parameter negotiation

The TSP protocol performs negotiation of the following parameters:

  • User authentication using the Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) protocolREFERENCE FOR RFC4422 IS NOT DEFINED YET. You are invited to add it here.
  • Tunnel encapsulation for a variety of tunneling scenarios:
    • IPv6 over IPv4 tunnelsREFERENCE FOR RFC4213 IS NOT DEFINED YET. You are invited to add it here.
    • IPv4 over IPv6 tunnelsREFERENCE FOR RFC2473 IS NOT DEFINED YET. You are invited to add it here.
    • IPv6 over UDP/IPv4 tunnels for built-in traversal of network address translators (NAT)
  • IP address assignment for both tunnel endpoints
  • Domain Name System (DNS) registration of end point addresses and reverse DNS
  • Tunnel keep-alive mechanism as needed
  • IPv6 address prefix assignment for routers
  • Routing protocols

TSP Session

A TSP session is initiated by the TSP client in the goal of establishing an end-to-end tunnel with the TSP server (tunnel broker). The session consists of a basic exchange of XML-encoded data using TCP or UDP. After the negotiation of tunnel setup parameters, the session is terminated and the client undertakes the task of configuring its local tunnel endpoint.

See also

References

External links