RFC8724

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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Minaburo Request for Comments: 8724 Acklio Category: Standards Track L. Toutain ISSN: 2070-1721 IMT Atlantique

                                                               C. Gomez
                                   Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya
                                                             D. Barthel
                                                            Orange Labs
                                                             JC. Zuniga
                                                                 SIGFOX
                                                             April 2020


  SCHC: Generic Framework for Static Context Header Compression and
                            Fragmentation

Abstract

  This document defines the Static Context Header Compression and
  fragmentation (SCHC) framework, which provides both a header
  compression mechanism and an optional fragmentation mechanism.  SCHC
  has been designed with Low-Power Wide Area Networks (LPWANs) in mind.
  SCHC compression is based on a common static context stored both in
  the LPWAN device and in the network infrastructure side.  This
  document defines a generic header compression mechanism and its
  application to compress IPv6/UDP headers.
  This document also specifies an optional fragmentation and reassembly
  mechanism.  It can be used to support the IPv6 MTU requirement over
  the LPWAN technologies.  Fragmentation is needed for IPv6 datagrams
  that, after SCHC compression or when such compression was not
  possible, still exceed the Layer 2 maximum payload size.
  The SCHC header compression and fragmentation mechanisms are
  independent of the specific LPWAN technology over which they are
  used.  This document defines generic functionalities and offers
  flexibility with regard to parameter settings and mechanism choices.
  This document standardizes the exchange over the LPWAN between two
  SCHC entities.  Settings and choices specific to a technology or a
  product are expected to be grouped into profiles, which are specified
  in other documents.  Data models for the context and profiles are out
  of scope.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.
  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8724.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.
  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
  2.  Requirements Notation
  3.  LPWAN Architecture
  4.  Terminology
  5.  SCHC Overview
    5.1.  SCHC Packet Format
    5.2.  Functional Mapping
  6.  RuleID
  7.  Compression/Decompression
    7.1.  SCHC C/D Rules
    7.2.  Packet Processing
    7.3.  Matching Operators
    7.4.  Compression/Decompression Actions (CDA)
      7.4.1.  Processing Fixed-Length Fields
      7.4.2.  Processing Variable-Length Fields
      7.4.3.  Not-Sent CDA
      7.4.4.  Value-Sent CDA
      7.4.5.  Mapping-Sent CDA
      7.4.6.  LSB CDA
      7.4.7.  DevIID, AppIID CDA
      7.4.8.  Compute-*
  8.  Fragmentation/Reassembly
    8.1.  Overview
    8.2.  SCHC F/R Protocol Elements
      8.2.1.  Messages
      8.2.2.  Tiles, Windows, Bitmaps, Timers, Counters
      8.2.3.  Integrity Checking
      8.2.4.  Header Fields
    8.3.  SCHC F/R Message Formats
      8.3.1.  SCHC Fragment Format
      8.3.2.  SCHC ACK Format
      8.3.3.  SCHC ACK REQ Format
      8.3.4.  SCHC Sender-Abort Format
      8.3.5.  SCHC Receiver-Abort Format
    8.4.  SCHC F/R Modes
      8.4.1.  No-ACK Mode
      8.4.2.  ACK-Always Mode
      8.4.3.  ACK-on-Error Mode
  9.  Padding Management
  10. SCHC Compression for IPv6 and UDP Headers
    10.1.  IPv6 Version Field
    10.2.  IPv6 Traffic Class Field
    10.3.  Flow Label Field
    10.4.  Payload Length Field
    10.5.  Next Header Field
    10.6.  Hop Limit Field
    10.7.  IPv6 Addresses Fields
      10.7.1.  IPv6 Source and Destination Prefixes
      10.7.2.  IPv6 Source and Destination IID
    10.8.  IPv6 Extension Headers
    10.9.  UDP Source and Destination Ports
    10.10. UDP Length Field
    10.11. UDP Checksum Field
  11. IANA Considerations
  12. Security Considerations
    12.1.  Security Considerations for SCHC Compression/Decompression
      12.1.1.  Forged SCHC Packet
      12.1.2.  Compressed Packet Size as a Side Channel to Guess a
              Secret Token
      12.1.3.  Decompressed Packet Different from the Original Packet
    12.2.  Security Considerations for SCHC Fragmentation/Reassembly
      12.2.1.  Buffer Reservation Attack
      12.2.2.  Corrupt Fragment Attack
      12.2.3.  Fragmentation as a Way to Bypass Network Inspection
      12.2.4.  Privacy Issues Associated with SCHC Header Fields
  13. References
    13.1.  Normative References
    13.2.  Informative References
  Appendix A.  Compression Examples
  Appendix B.  Fragmentation Examples
  Appendix C.  Fragmentation State Machines
  Appendix D.  SCHC Parameters
  Appendix E.  Supporting Multiple Window Sizes for Fragmentation
  Appendix F.  ACK-Always and ACK-on-Error on Quasi-Bidirectional
          Links
  Acknowledgements
  Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

  This document defines the Static Context Header Compression and
  fragmentation (SCHC) framework, which provides both a header
  compression mechanism and an optional fragmentation mechanism.  SCHC
  has been designed with Low-Power Wide Area Networks (LPWANs) in mind.
  LPWAN technologies impose some strict limitations on traffic.  For
  instance, devices sleep most of the time and may only receive data
  during short periods of time after transmission, in order to preserve
  battery.  LPWAN technologies are also characterized by a greatly
  reduced data unit and/or payload size (see [RFC8376]).
  Header compression is needed for efficient Internet connectivity to a
  node within an LPWAN.  The following properties of LPWANs can be
  exploited to get an efficient header compression:
  *  The network topology is star-oriented, which means that all
     packets between the same source-destination pair follow the same
     path.  For the needs of this document, the architecture can simply
     be described as Devices (Dev) exchanging information with LPWAN
     Application Servers (Apps) through a Network Gateway (NGW).
  *  Because devices embed built-in applications, the traffic flows to
     be compressed are known in advance.  Indeed, new applications are
     less frequently installed in an LPWAN device than they are in a
     general-purpose computer or smartphone.
  SCHC compression uses a Context (a set of Rules) in which information
  about header fields is stored.  This Context is static: the values of
  the header fields and the actions to do compression/decompression do
  not change over time.  This avoids the need for complex
  resynchronization mechanisms.  Indeed, a return path may be more
  restricted/expensive, or may sometimes be completely unavailable
  [RFC8376].  A compression protocol that relies on feedback is not
  compatible with the characteristics of such LPWANs.
  In most cases, a small Rule identifier is enough to represent the
  full IPv6/UDP headers.  The SCHC header compression mechanism is
  independent of the specific LPWAN technology over which it is used.
  Furthermore, some LPWAN technologies do not provide a fragmentation
  functionality; to support the IPv6 MTU requirement of 1280 bytes
  [RFC8200], they require a fragmentation protocol at the adaptation
  layer below IPv6.  Accordingly, this document defines an optional
  fragmentation/reassembly mechanism to help LPWAN technologies support
  the IPv6 MTU requirement.
  This document defines generic functionality and offers flexibility
  with regard to parameter settings and mechanism choices.  Technology-
  specific settings are expected to be grouped into Profiles specified
  in other documents.

2. Requirements Notation

  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
  BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
  capitals, as shown here.

3. LPWAN Architecture

  LPWAN architectures are similar among them, but each LPWAN technology
  names architecture elements differently.  In this document, we use
  terminology from [RFC8376], which identifies the following entities
  in a typical LPWAN (see Figure 1):
  *  Devices (Dev) are the end-devices or hosts (e.g., sensors,
     actuators, etc.).  There can be a very high density of devices per
     Radio Gateway.
  *  The Radio Gateway (RGW) is the endpoint of the constrained link.
  *  The Network Gateway (NGW) is the interconnection node between the
     Radio Gateway and the Internet.
  *  The Application Server (App) is the endpoint of the application-
     level protocol on the Internet side.
   ()   ()   ()       |
    ()  () () ()     / \       +---------+
  () () () () () () /   \======|    ^    |             +-----------+
   ()  ()   ()     |           | <--|--> |             |Application|
  ()  ()  ()  ()  / \==========|    v    |=============|   Server  |
    ()  ()  ()   /   \         +---------+             +-----------+
   Dev            RGWs             NGW                      App
  Figure 1: LPWAN Architecture (Simplified from That Shown in RFC 8376)

4. Terminology

  This section defines terminology and abbreviations used in this
  document.  It extends the terminology of [RFC8376].
  The SCHC acronym is pronounced like "sheek" in English (or "chic" in
  French).  Therefore, this document writes "a SCHC Packet" instead of
  "an SCHC Packet".
  App:     LPWAN Application Server, as defined by [RFC8376].  It runs
           an application sending/receiving packets to/from the Dev.
  AppIID:  Application Interface Identifier.  The IID that identifies
           the App interface.
  Compression Residue:  The bits that remain to be sent (beyond the
           RuleID itself) after applying the SCHC compression.
  Context:  A set of Rules used to compress/decompress headers, or to
           fragment/reassemble a packet.
  Dev:     Device, as defined by [RFC8376].
  DevIID:  Device Interface Identifier.  The IID that identifies the
           Dev interface.
  Downlink:  From the App to the Dev.
  IID:     Interface Identifier.  See the IPv6 addressing architecture
           [RFC7136].
  L2:      Layer 2.  The immediate lower layer that SCHC interfaces
           with, for example an underlying LPWAN technology.  It does
           not necessarily correspond to the OSI model definition of
           Layer 2.
  L2 Word:  This is the minimum subdivision of payload data that the L2
           will carry.  In most L2 technologies, the L2 Word is an
           octet.  In bit-oriented radio technologies, the L2 Word
           might be a single bit.  The L2 Word size is assumed to be
           constant over time for each device.
  Padding:  Extra bits that may be appended by SCHC to a data unit that
           it passes down to L2 for transmission.  SCHC itself operates
           on bits, not bytes, and does not have any alignment
           prerequisite.  See Section 9.
  Profile:  SCHC offers variations in the way it is operated, with a
           number of parameters listed in Appendix D.  A Profile
           indicates a particular setting of all these parameters.
           Both ends of a SCHC communication must be provisioned with
           the same Profile information and with the same set of Rules
           before the communication starts, so that there is no
           ambiguity in how they expect to communicate.
  Rule:    Part of the Context that describes how a packet is
           compressed/decompressed or fragmented/reassembled.
  RuleID:  Rule Identifier.  An identifier for a Rule.
  SCHC:    Static Context Header Compression and fragmentation (SCHC),
           a generic framework.
  SCHC C/D:  SCHC Compressor/Decompressor, or SCHC Compression/
           Decompression.  The SCHC entity or mechanism used on both
           sides, at the Dev and at the network, to achieve
           compression/decompression of headers.
  SCHC F/R:  SCHC Fragmenter/Reassembler or SCHC Fragmentation/
           Reassembly.  The SCHC entity or mechanism used on both
           sides, at the Dev and at the network, to achieve
           fragmentation/reassembly of SCHC Packets.
  SCHC Packet:  A packet (e.g., an IPv6 packet) whose header has been
           compressed as per the header compression mechanism defined
           in this document.  If the header compression process is
           unable to actually compress the packet header, the packet
           with the uncompressed header is still called a SCHC Packet
           (in this case, a RuleID is used to indicate that the packet
           header has not been compressed).  See Section 7 for more
           details.
  Uplink:  From the Dev to the App.
  Additional terminology for the optional SCHC F/R is found in
  Section 8.2.
  Additional terminology for SCHC C/D is found in Section 7.1.

5. SCHC Overview

  SCHC can be characterized as an adaptation layer between an upper
  layer (for example, IPv6) and an underlying layer (for example, an
  LPWAN technology).  SCHC comprises two sublayers (i.e., the
  Compression sublayer and the Fragmentation sublayer), as shown in
  Figure 2.
               +----------------+
               |      IPv6      |
            +- +----------------+
            |  |   Compression  |
      SCHC <   +----------------+
            |  |  Fragmentation |
            +- +----------------+
               |LPWAN technology|
               +----------------+
    Figure 2: Example of Protocol Stack Comprising IPv6, SCHC, and an
                             LPWAN Technology
  Before an upper layer packet (e.g., an IPv6 packet) is transmitted to
  the underlying layer, header compression is first attempted.  The
  resulting packet is called a "SCHC Packet", whether or not any
  compression is performed.  If needed by the underlying layer, the
  optional SCHC fragmentation MAY be applied to the SCHC Packet.  The
  inverse operations take place at the receiver.  This process is
  illustrated in Figure 3.
  A packet (e.g., an IPv6 packet)
           |                                           ^
           v                                           |
  +------------------+                      +--------------------+
  | SCHC Compression |                      | SCHC Decompression |
  +------------------+                      +--------------------+
           |                                           ^
           |   If no fragmentation (*)                 |
           +-------------- SCHC Packet  -------------->|
           |                                           |
           v                                           |
  +--------------------+                       +-----------------+
  | SCHC Fragmentation |                       | SCHC Reassembly |
  +--------------------+                       +-----------------+
        |     ^                                     |     ^
        |     |                                     |     |
        |     +---------- SCHC ACK (+) -------------+     |
        |                                                 |
        +-------------- SCHC Fragments -------------------+
          Sender                                    Receiver
  *: the decision not to use SCHC fragmentation is left to each Profile
  +: optional, depends on Fragmentation mode
         Figure 3: SCHC Operations at the Sender and the Receiver

5.1. SCHC Packet Format

  The SCHC Packet is composed of the Compressed Header followed by the
  payload from the original packet (see Figure 4).  The Compressed
  Header itself is composed of the RuleID and a Compression Residue,
  which is the output of compressing the packet header with the Rule
  identified by that RuleID (see Section 7).  The Compression Residue
  may be empty.  Both the RuleID and the Compression Residue
  potentially have a variable size, and are not necessarily a multiple
  of bytes in size.
  |------- Compressed Header -------|
  +---------------------------------+--------------------+
  |  RuleID  |  Compression Residue |      Payload       |
  +---------------------------------+--------------------+
                          Figure 4: SCHC Packet

5.2. Functional Mapping

  Figure 5 maps the functional elements of Figure 3 onto the LPWAN
  architecture elements of Figure 1.
          Dev                                               App
  +----------------+                               +----+ +----+ +----+
  | App1 App2 App3 |                               |App1| |App2| |App3|
  |                |                               |    | |    | |    |
  |       UDP      |                               |UDP | |UDP | |UDP |
  |      IPv6      |                               |IPv6| |IPv6| |IPv6|
  |                |                               |    | |    | |    |
  |SCHC C/D and F/R|                               |    | |    | |    |
  +--------+-------+                               +----+ +----+ +----+
           |  +---+     +---+    +----+    +----+    .      .      .
           +~ |RGW| === |NGW| == |SCHC| == |SCHC|..... Internet ....
              +---+     +---+    |F/R |    |C/D |
                                 +----+    +----+
                     Figure 5: Architectural Mapping
  SCHC C/D and SCHC F/R are located on both sides of the LPWAN
  transmission, hereafter called the "Dev side" and the "Network
  Infrastructure side".
  The operation in the Uplink direction is as follows.  The Device
  application uses IPv6 or IPv6/UDP protocols.  Before sending the
  packets, the Dev compresses their headers using SCHC C/D; if the SCHC
  Packet resulting from the compression needs to be fragmented by SCHC,
  SCHC F/R is performed (see Section 8).  The resulting SCHC Fragments
  are sent to an LPWAN Radio Gateway (RGW), which forwards them to a
  Network Gateway (NGW).  The NGW sends the data to a SCHC F/R for
  reassembly (if needed) and then to the SCHC C/D for decompression.
  After decompression, the packet can be sent over the Internet to one
  or several Apps.
  The SCHC F/R and SCHC C/D on the Network Infrastructure side can be
  part of the NGW or located in the Internet as long as a tunnel is
  established between them and the NGW.  For some LPWAN technologies,
  it may be suitable to locate the SCHC F/R functionality nearer the
  NGW, in order to better deal with time constraints of such
  technologies.
  The SCHC C/Ds on both sides MUST share the same set of Rules.  So
  MUST the SCHC F/Rs on both sides.
  The operation in the Downlink direction is similar to that in the
  Uplink direction, only reversing the order in which the architecture
  elements are traversed.

6. RuleID

  RuleIDs identify the Rules used for compression/decompression or for
  fragmentation/reassembly.
  The scope of the RuleID of a compression/decompression Rule is the
  link between the SCHC C/D in a given Dev and the corresponding SCHC
  C/D in the Network Infrastructure side.  The scope of the RuleID of a
  fragmentation/reassembly Rule is the link between the SCHC F/R in a
  given Dev and the corresponding SCHC F/R in the Network
  Infrastructure side.  If such a link is bidirectional, the scope
  includes both directions.
  The RuleIDs are therefore specific to the Context related to one Dev.
  Hence, multiple Dev instances, which refer to different Contexts, MAY
  reuse the same RuleID for different Rules.  On the Network
  Infrastructure side, in order to identify the correct Rule to be
  applied to Uplink traffic, the SCHC C/D or SCHC F/R needs to
  associate the RuleID with the Dev identifier.  Similarly, for
  Downlink traffic, the SCHC C/D or SCHC F/R on the Network
  Infrastructure side first needs to identify the destination Dev
  before looking for the appropriate Rule (and associated RuleID) in
  the Context of that Dev.
  Inside their scopes, Rules for compression/decompression and Rules
  for fragmentation/reassembly share the same RuleID space.
  The size of the RuleIDs is not specified in this document, as it is
  implementation-specific and can vary according to the LPWAN
  technology and the number of Rules, among other things.  It is
  defined in Profiles.
  The RuleIDs are used:
  *  For SCHC C/D, to identify the Rule that is used to compress a
     packet header.
     -  At least one RuleID MUST be allocated to tagging packets for
        which SCHC compression was not possible (i.e., no matching
        compression Rule was found).
  *  In SCHC F/R, to identify the specific mode and settings of
     fragmentation/reassembly for one direction of data traffic (Uplink
     or Downlink).
     -  When SCHC F/R is used for both communication directions, at
        least two RuleID values are needed for fragmentation/
        reassembly: one per direction of data traffic.  This is because
        fragmentation/reassembly may entail control messages flowing in
        the reverse direction compared to data traffic.

7. Compression/Decompression

  Compression with SCHC is based on using a set of Rules, which
  constitutes the Context of SCHC C/D, to compress or decompress
  headers.  SCHC avoids Context synchronization traffic, which consumes
  considerable bandwidth in other header compression mechanisms such as
  RObust Header Compression (RoHC) [RFC5795].  Since the content of
  packets is highly predictable in LPWANs, static Contexts can be
  stored beforehand.  The Contexts MUST be stored at both ends, and
  they can be learned by a provisioning protocol, by out-of-band means,
  or by pre-provisioning.  The way the Contexts are provisioned is out
  of the scope of this document.

7.1. SCHC C/D Rules

  The main idea of the SCHC compression scheme is to transmit the
  RuleID to the other end instead of sending known field values.  This
  RuleID identifies a Rule that matches the original packet values.
  Hence, when a value is known by both ends, it is only necessary to
  send the corresponding RuleID over the LPWAN.  The manner by which
  Rules are generated is out of the scope of this document.  The Rules
  MAY be changed at run-time, but the mechanism is out of scope of this
  document.
  The SCHC C/D Context is a set of Rules.  See Figure 6 for a high-
  level, abstract representation of the Context.  The formal
  specification of the representation of the Rules is outside the scope
  of this document.
  Each Rule itself contains a list of Field Descriptors composed of a
  Field Identifier (FID), a Field Length (FL), a Field Position (FP), a
  Direction Indicator (DI), a Target Value (TV), a Matching Operator
  (MO), and a Compression/Decompression Action (CDA).
    /-----------------------------------------------------------------\
    |                         Rule N                                  |
   /-----------------------------------------------------------------\|
   |                       Rule i                                    ||
  /-----------------------------------------------------------------\||
  |  (FID)            Rule 1                                        |||
  |+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
  ||Field 1|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act||||
  |+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
  ||Field 2|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act||||
  |+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|||
  ||...    |..|..|..|   ...      | ...             | ...           ||||
  |+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+||/
  ||Field N|FL|FP|DI|Target Value|Matching Operator|Comp/Decomp Act|||
  |+-------+--+--+--+------------+-----------------+---------------+|/
  |                                                                 |
  \-----------------------------------------------------------------/
                       Figure 6: A SCHC C/D Context
  A Rule does not describe how the compressor parses a packet header to
  find and identify each field (e.g., the IPv6 Source Address, the UDP
  Destination Port, or a CoAP URI path option).  It is assumed that
  there is a protocol parser alongside SCHC that is able to identify
  all the fields encountered in the headers to be compressed, and to
  label them with a Field ID.  Rules only describe the compression/
  decompression behavior for each header field, after it has been
  identified.
  In a Rule, the Field Descriptors are listed in the order in which the
  fields appear in the packet header.  The Field Descriptors describe
  the header fields with the following entries:
  *  Field Identifier (FID) designates a protocol and field (e.g., UDP
     Destination Port), unambiguously among all protocols that a SCHC
     compressor processes.  In the presence of protocol nesting, the
     Field ID also identifies the nesting.
  *  Field Length (FL) represents the length of the original field.  It
     can be either a fixed value (in bits) if the length is known when
     the Rule is created or a type if the length is variable.  The
     length of a header field is defined by its own protocol
     specification (e.g., IPv6 or UDP).  If the length is variable, the
     type defines the process to compute the length and its unit (bits,
     bytes...).
  *  Field Position (FP): most often, a field only occurs once in a
     packet header.  However, some fields may occur multiple times.  An
     example is the uri-path of CoAP.  FP indicates which occurrence
     this Field Descriptor applies to.  The default value is 1.  The
     value 1 designates the first occurrence.  The value 0 is special.
     It means "don't care", see Section 7.2.
  *  A Direction Indicator (DI) indicates the packet direction(s) this
     Field Descriptor applies to.  It allows for asymmetric processing,
     using the same Rule.  Three values are possible:
     Up:  this Field Descriptor is only applicable to packets traveling
        Uplink.
     Dw:  this Field Descriptor is only applicable to packets traveling
        Downlink.
     Bi:  this Field Descriptor is applicable to packets traveling
        Uplink or Downlink.
  *  Target Value (TV) is the value used to match against the packet
     header field.  The Target Value can be a scalar value of any type
     (integer, strings, etc.) or a more complex structure (array, list,
     etc.).  The types and representations are out of scope for this
     document.
  *  Matching Operator (MO) is the operator used to match the field
     value and the Target Value.  The Matching Operator may require
     some parameters.  The set of MOs defined in this document can be
     found in Section 7.3.
  *  Compression/Decompression Action (CDA) describes the pair of
     actions that are performed at the compressor to compress a header
     field and at the decompressor to recover the original value of the
     header field.  Some CDAs might use parameter values for their
     operation.  The set of CDAs defined in this document can be found
     in Section 7.4.

7.2. Packet Processing

  The compression/decompression process follows several phases:
  Compression Rule selection:  the general idea is to browse the Rule
     set to find a Rule that has a matching Field Descriptor (given the
     DI and FP) for all and only those header fields that appear in the
     packet being compressed.  The detailed algorithm is the following:
     *  The first step is to check the FIDs.  If any header field of
        the packet being examined cannot be matched with a Field
        Descriptor with the correct FID, the Rule MUST be disregarded.
        If any Field Descriptor in the Rule has a FID that cannot be
        matched to one of the header fields of the packet being
        examined, the Rule MUST be disregarded.
     *  The next step is to match the Field Descriptors by their
        direction, using the DI.  If any field of the packet header
        cannot be matched with a Field Descriptor with the correct FID
        and DI, the Rule MUST be disregarded.
     *  Then, the Field Descriptors are further selected according to
        FP.  If any field of the packet header cannot be matched with a
        Field Descriptor with the correct FID, DI and FP, the Rule MUST
        be disregarded.
        The value 0 for FP means "don't care", i.e., the comparison of
        this Field Descriptor's FP with the position of the field of
        the packet header being compressed returns True, whatever that
        position.  FP=0 can be useful to build compression Rules for
        protocol headers in which some fields order is irrelevant.  An
        example could be uri-queries in CoAP.  Care needs to be
        exercised when writing Rules containing FP=0 values.  Indeed,
        it may result in decompressed packets having fields ordered
        differently compared to the original packet.
     *  Once each header field has been associated with a Field
        Descriptor with matching FID, DI, and FP, each packet field's
        value is then compared to the corresponding TV stored in the
        Rule for that specific field, using the MO.  If every field in
        the packet header satisfies the corresponding MOs of a Rule
        (i.e., all MO results are True), that Rule is valid for use to
        compress the header.  Otherwise, the Rule MUST be disregarded.
        This specification does not prevent multiple Rules from
        matching the above steps and, therefore, being valid for use.
        Which Rule to use among multiple valid Rules is left to the
        implementation.  As long as the same Rule set is installed at
        both ends, this degree of freedom does not constitute an
        interoperability issue.
     *  If no valid compression Rule is found, then the packet MUST be
        sent uncompressed using the RuleID dedicated to this purpose
        (see Section 6).  The entire packet header is the Compression
        Residue (see Figure 4).  Sending an uncompressed header is
        likely to require SCHC F/R.
  Compression:  if a valid Rule is found, each field of the header is
     compressed according to the CDAs of the Rule.  The fields are
     compressed in the order that the Field Descriptors appear in the
     Rule.  The compression of each field results in a residue, which
     may be empty.  The Compression Residue for the packet header is
     the concatenation of the non-empty residues for each field of the
     header, in the order the Field Descriptors appear in the Rule.
     The order in which the Field Descriptors appear in the Rule is
     therefore semantically important.
      |------------------- Compression Residue -------------------|
      +-----------------+-----------------+-----+-----------------+
      | field 1 residue | field 2 residue | ... | field N residue |
      +-----------------+-----------------+-----+-----------------+
                 Figure 7: Compression Residue Structure
  Sending:  The RuleID is sent to the other end jointly with the
     Compression Residue (which could be empty) or the uncompressed
     header, and directly followed by the payload (see Figure 4).  The
     way the RuleID is sent will be specified in the Profile and is out
     of the scope of the present document.  For example, it could be
     included in an L2 header or sent as part of the L2 payload.
  Decompression:  when decompressing, on the Network Infrastructure
     side, the SCHC C/D needs to find the correct Rule based on the L2
     address of the Dev.  On the Dev side, only the RuleID is needed to
     identify the correct Rule since the Dev typically only holds Rules
     that apply to itself.
     This Rule describes the compressed header format.  From this, the
     decompressor determines the order of the residues, the fixed-size
     or variable-size nature of each residue (see Section 7.4.2), and
     the size of the fixed-size residues.
     Therefore, from the received compressed header, it can retrieve
     all the residue values and associate them to the corresponding
     header fields.
     For each field in the header, the receiver applies the CDA action
     associated with that field in order to reconstruct the original
     header field value.  The CDA application order can be different
     from the order in which the fields are listed in the Rule.  In
     particular, Compute-* MUST be applied after the application of the
     CDAs of all the fields it computes on.

7.3. Matching Operators

  MOs are functions used at the compression side of SCHC C/D.  They are
  not typed and can be applied to integer, string or any other data
  type.  The result of the operation can either be True or False.  The
  following MOs are defined:
  equal:  The match result is True if the field value in the packet
     matches the TV.
  ignore:  No matching is attempted between the field value in the
     packet and the TV in the Rule.  The result is always True.
  MSB(x):  A match is obtained if the most significant (leftmost) x
     bits of the packet header field value are equal to the TV in the
     Rule.  The x parameter of the MSB MO indicates how many bits are
     involved in the comparison.  If the FL is described as variable,
     the x parameter must be a multiple of the FL unit.  For example, x
     must be multiple of 8 if the unit of the variable length is bytes.
  match-mapping:  With match-mapping, TV is a list of values.  Each
     value of the list is identified by an index.  Compression is
     achieved by sending the index instead of the original header field
     value.  This operator matches if the header field value is equal
     to one of the values in the target list.

7.4. Compression/Decompression Actions (CDA)

  The CDA specifies the actions taken during the compression of header
  fields and the inverse action taken by the decompressor to restore
  the original value.  The CDAs defined by this document are described
  in detail in Section 7.4.3 to Section 7.4.8.  They are summarized in
  Table 1.
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | Action       | Compression            | Decompression         |
    +==============+========================+=======================+
    | not-sent     | elided                 | use TV stored in Rule |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | value-sent   | send                   | use received value    |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | mapping-sent | send index             | retrieve value from   |
    |              |                        | TV list               |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | LSB          | send least significant | concatenate TV and    |
    |              | bits (LSB)             | received value        |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | compute-*    | elided                 | recompute at          |
    |              |                        | decompressor          |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | DevIID       | elided                 | build IID from L2 Dev |
    |              |                        | addr                  |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
    | AppIID       | elided                 | build IID from L2 App |
    |              |                        | addr                  |
    +--------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
              Table 1: Compression and Decompression Actions
  The first column shows the action's name.  The second and third
  columns show the compression and decompression behaviors for each
  action.

7.4.1. Processing Fixed-Length Fields

  If the field is identified in the Field Descriptor as being of fixed
  length, then applying the CDA to compress this field results in a
  fixed amount of bits.  The residue for that field is simply the bits
  resulting from applying the CDA to the field.  This value may be
  empty (e.g., not-sent CDA), in which case the field residue is absent
  from the Compression Residue.
  |- field residue -|
  +-----------------+
  |      value      |
  +-----------------+
               Figure 8: Fixed-Size Field Residue Structure

7.4.2. Processing Variable-Length Fields

  If the field is identified in the Field Descriptor as being of
  variable length, then applying the CDA to compress this field may
  result in a value of fixed size (e.g., not-sent or mapping-sent) or
  of variable size (e.g., value-sent or LSB).  In the latter case, the
  residue for that field is the bits that result from applying the CDA
  to the field, preceded with the size of the value.  The most
  significant bit of the size is stored to the left (leftmost bit of
  the residue field).
  |--- field residue ---|
  +-------+-------------+
  |  size |    value    |
  +-------+-------------+
             Figure 9: Variable-Size Field Residue Structure
  The size (using the unit defined in the FL) is encoded on 4, 12, or
  28 bits as follows:
  *  If the size is between 0 and 14, it is encoded as a 4-bit unsigned
     integer.
  *  Sizes between 15 and 254 are encoded as 0b1111 followed by the
     8-bit unsigned integer.
  *  Larger sizes are encoded as 0xfff followed by the 16-bit unsigned
     integer.
  If the field is identified in the Field Descriptor as being of
  variable length and this field is not present in the packet header
  being compressed, size 0 MUST be sent to denote its absence.

7.4.3. Not-Sent CDA

  The not-sent action can be used when the field value is specified in
  a Rule and, therefore, known by both the Compressor and the
  Decompressor.  This action SHOULD be used with the "equal" MO.  If MO
  is "ignore", there is a risk of having a decompressed field value
  that is different from the original field that was compressed.
  The compressor does not send any residue for a field on which not-
  sent compression is applied.
  The decompressor restores the field value with the TV stored in the
  matched Rule identified by the received RuleID.

7.4.4. Value-Sent CDA

  The value-sent action can be used when the field value is not known
  by both the Compressor and the Decompressor.  The field is sent in
  its entirety, using the same bit order as in the original packet
  header.
  If this action is performed on a variable-length field, the size of
  the residue value (using the units defined in FL) MUST be sent as
  described in Section 7.4.2.
  This action is generally used with the "ignore" MO.

7.4.5. Mapping-Sent CDA

  The mapping-sent action is used to send an index (the index into the
  TV list of values) instead of the original value.  This action is
  used together with the "match-mapping" MO.
  On the compressor side, the match-mapping MO searches the TV for a
  match with the header field value.  The mapping-sent CDA then sends
  the corresponding index as the field residue.  The most significant
  bit of the index is stored to the left (leftmost bit of the residue
  field).
  On the decompressor side, the CDA uses the received index to restore
  the field value by looking up the list in the TV.
  The number of bits sent is the minimal size for coding all the
  possible indices.
  The first element in the list MUST be represented by index value 0,
  and successive elements in the list MUST have indices incremented by
  1.

7.4.6. LSB CDA

  The LSB action is used together with the "MSB(x)" MO to avoid sending
  the most significant part of the packet field if that part is already
  known by the receiving end.
  The compressor sends the LSBs as the field residue value.  The number
  of bits sent is the original header field length minus the length
  specified in the MSB(x) MO.  The bits appear in the residue in the
  same bit order as in the original packet header.
  The decompressor concatenates the x most significant bits of the TV
  and the received residue value.
  If this action is performed on a variable-length field, the size of
  the residue value (using the units defined in FL) MUST be sent as
  described in Section 7.4.2.

7.4.7. DevIID, AppIID CDA

  These actions are used to process the DevIID and AppIID of the IPv6
  addresses, respectively.  AppIID CDA is less common since most
  current LPWAN technologies frames contain a single L2 address, which
  is the Dev's address.
  The DevIID value MAY be computed from the Dev ID present in the L2
  header, or from some other stable identifier.  The computation is
  specific to each Profile and MAY depend on the Dev ID size.
  In the Downlink direction, at the compressor, the DevIID CDA may be
  used to generate the L2 addresses on the LPWAN, based on the packet's
  Destination Address.

7.4.8. Compute-*

  Some fields can be elided at the compressor and recomputed locally at
  the decompressor.
  Because the field is uniquely identified by its FID (e.g., IPv6
  length), the relevant protocol specification unambiguously defines
  the algorithm for such computation.
  An example of a field that knows how to recompute itself is IPv6
  length.

8. Fragmentation/Reassembly

8.1. Overview

  In LPWAN technologies, the L2 MTU typically ranges from tens to
  hundreds of bytes.  Some of these technologies do not have an
  internal fragmentation/reassembly mechanism.
  The optional SCHC F/R functionality enables such LPWAN technologies
  to comply with the IPv6 MTU requirement of 1280 bytes [RFC8200].  It
  is OPTIONAL to implement per this specification, but Profiles may
  specify that it is REQUIRED.
  This specification includes several SCHC F/R modes, which allow for a
  range of reliability options such as optional SCHC Fragment
  retransmission.  More modes may be defined in the future.
  The same SCHC F/R mode MUST be used for all SCHC Fragments of a given
  SCHC Packet.  This document does not specify which mode(s) must be
  implemented and used over a specific LPWAN technology.  That
  information will be given in Profiles.
  SCHC allows transmitting non-fragmented SCHC Packet concurrently with
  fragmented SCHC Packets.  In addition, SCHC F/R provides protocol
  elements that allow transmitting several fragmented SCHC Packets
  concurrently, i.e., interleaving the transmission of fragments from
  different fragmented SCHC Packets.  A Profile MAY restrict the latter
  behavior.
  The L2 Word size (see Section 4) determines the encoding of some
  messages.  SCHC F/R usually generates SCHC Fragments and SCHC ACKs
  that are multiples of L2 Words.

8.2. SCHC F/R Protocol Elements

  This subsection describes the different elements that are used to
  enable the SCHC F/R functionality defined in this document.  These
  elements include the SCHC F/R messages, tiles, windows, bitmaps,
  counters, timers, and header fields.
  The elements are described here in a generic manner.  Their
  application to each SCHC F/R mode is found in Section 8.4.

8.2.1. Messages

  SCHC F/R defines the following messages:
  SCHC Fragment:  A message that carries part of a SCHC Packet from the
     sender to the receiver.
  SCHC ACK:  An acknowledgement for fragmentation, by the receiver to
     the sender.  This message is used to indicate whether or not the
     reception of pieces of, or the whole of, the fragmented SCHC
     Packet was successful.
  SCHC ACK REQ:  A request by the sender for a SCHC ACK from the
     receiver.
  SCHC Sender-Abort:  A message by the sender telling the receiver that
     it has aborted the transmission of a fragmented SCHC Packet.
  SCHC Receiver-Abort:  A message by the receiver to tell the sender to
     abort the transmission of a fragmented SCHC Packet.
  The format of these messages is provided in Section 8.3.

8.2.2. Tiles, Windows, Bitmaps, Timers, Counters

8.2.2.1. Tiles

  The SCHC Packet is fragmented into pieces, hereafter called "tiles".
  The tiles MUST be non-empty and pairwise disjoint.  Their union MUST
  be equal to the SCHC Packet.
  See Figure 10 for an example.
                                  SCHC Packet
          +----+--+-----+---+----+-+---+-----+...-----+----+---+------+
  Tiles   |    |  |     |   |    | |   |     |        |    |   |      |
          +----+--+-----+---+----+-+---+-----+...-----+----+---+------+
                Figure 10: SCHC Packet Fragmented in Tiles
  Modes (see Section 8.4) MAY place additional constraints on tile
  sizes.
  Each SCHC Fragment message carries at least one tile in its Payload,
  if the Payload field is present.

8.2.2.2. Windows

  Some SCHC F/R modes may handle successive tiles in groups, called
  windows.
  If windows are used:
  *  all the windows of a SCHC Packet, except the last one, MUST
     contain the same number of tiles.  This number is WINDOW_SIZE.
  *  WINDOW_SIZE MUST be specified in a Profile.
  *  the windows are numbered.
  *  their numbers MUST increment by 1 from 0 upward, from the start of
     the SCHC Packet to its end.
  *  the last window MUST contain WINDOW_SIZE tiles or less.
  *  tiles are numbered within each window.
  *  the tile indices MUST decrement by 1 from WINDOW_SIZE - 1
     downward, looking from the start of the SCHC Packet toward its
     end.
  *  therefore, each tile of a SCHC Packet is uniquely identified by a
     window number and a tile index within this window.
  See Figure 11 for an example.
          +---------------------------------------------...-----------+
          |                       SCHC Packet                         |
          +---------------------------------------------...-----------+
  Tile#   | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 4 |     | 0 | 4 |3|
  Window# |-------- 0 --------|-------- 1 --------|- 2  ... 27 -|- 28-|
    Figure 11: SCHC Packet Fragmented in Tiles Grouped in 29 Windows,
                           with WINDOW_SIZE = 5
  Appendix E discusses the benefits of selecting one among multiple
  window sizes depending on the size of the SCHC Packet to be
  fragmented.
  When windows are used:
  *  Bitmaps (see Section 8.2.2.3) MAY be sent back by the receiver to
     the sender in a SCHC ACK message.
  *  A Bitmap corresponds to exactly one Window.

8.2.2.3. Bitmaps

  Each bit in the Bitmap for a window corresponds to a tile in the
  window.  Therefore, each Bitmap has WINDOW_SIZE bits.  The bit at the
  leftmost position corresponds to the tile numbered WINDOW_SIZE - 1.
  Consecutive bits, going right, correspond to sequentially decreasing
  tile indices.  In Bitmaps for windows that are not the last one of a
  SCHC Packet, the bit at the rightmost position corresponds to the
  tile numbered 0.  In the Bitmap for the last window, the bit at the
  rightmost position corresponds either to the tile numbered 0 or to a
  tile that is sent/received as "the last one of the SCHC Packet"
  without explicitly stating its number (see Section 8.3.1.2).
  At the receiver:
  *  a bit set to 1 in the Bitmap indicates that a tile associated with
     that bit position has been correctly received for that window.
  *  a bit set to 0 in the Bitmap indicates that there has been no tile
     correctly received, associated with that bit position, for that
     window.  Possible reasons include that the tile was not sent at
     all, not received, or received with errors.

8.2.2.4. Timers and Counters

  Some SCHC F/R modes can use the following timers and counters:
  Inactivity Timer:  a SCHC Fragment receiver uses this timer to abort
     waiting for a SCHC F/R message.
  Retransmission Timer:  a SCHC Fragment sender uses this timer to
     abort waiting for an expected SCHC ACK.
  Attempts:  this counter counts the requests for SCHC ACKs, up to
     MAX_ACK_REQUESTS.

8.2.3. Integrity Checking

  The integrity of the fragmentation-reassembly process of a SCHC
  Packet MUST be checked at the receive end.  A Profile MUST specify
  how integrity checking is performed.
  It is RECOMMENDED that integrity checking be performed by computing a
  Reassembly Check Sequence (RCS) based on the SCHC Packet at the
  sender side and transmitting it to the receiver for comparison with
  the RCS locally computed after reassembly.
  The RCS supports UDP checksum elision by SCHC C/D (see
  Section 10.11).
  The CRC32 polynomial 0xEDB88320 (i.e., the reversed polynomial
  representation, which is used in the Ethernet standard [ETHERNET]) is
  RECOMMENDED as the default algorithm for computing the RCS.
  The RCS MUST be computed on the full SCHC Packet concatenated with
  the padding bits, if any, of the SCHC Fragment carrying the last
  tile.  The rationale is that the SCHC reassembler has no way of
  knowing the boundary between the last tile and the padding bits.
  Indeed, this requires decompressing the SCHC Packet, which is out of
  the scope of the SCHC reassembler.
  The concatenation of the complete SCHC Packet and any padding bits,
  if present, of the last SCHC Fragment does not generally constitute
  an integer number of bytes.  CRC libraries are usually byte oriented.
  It is RECOMMENDED that the concatenation of the complete SCHC Packet
  and any last fragment padding bits be zero-extended to the next byte
  boundary and that the RCS be computed on that byte array.

8.2.4. Header Fields

  The SCHC F/R messages contain the following fields (see the formats
  in Section 8.3):
  RuleID:  this field is present in all the SCHC F/R messages.  The
     Rule identifies:
     *  that a SCHC F/R message is being carried, as opposed to an
        unfragmented SCHC Packet,
     *  which SCHC F/R mode is used,
     *  in case this mode uses windows, what the value of WINDOW_SIZE
        is, and
     *  what other optional fields are present and what the field sizes
        are.
     The Rule tells apart a non-fragmented SCHC Packet from SCHC
     Fragments.  It will also tell apart SCHC Fragments of fragmented
     SCHC Packets that use different SCHC F/R modes or different
     parameters.  Therefore, interleaved transmission of these is
     possible.
     All SCHC F/R messages pertaining to the same SCHC Packet MUST bear
     the same RuleID.
  Datagram Tag (DTag):  This field allows differentiating SCHC F/R
     messages belonging to different SCHC Packets that may be using the
     same RuleID simultaneously.  Hence, it allows interleaving
     fragments of a new SCHC Packet with fragments of a previous SCHC
     Packet under the same RuleID.
     The size of the DTag field (called "T", in bits) is defined by
     each Profile for each RuleID.  When T is 0, the DTag field does
     not appear in the SCHC F/R messages and the DTag value is defined
     as 0.
     When T is 0, there can be no more than one fragmented SCHC Packet
     in transit for each fragmentation RuleID.
     If T is not 0, DTag:
     *  MUST be set to the same value for all the SCHC F/R messages
        related to the same fragmented SCHC Packet, and
     *  MUST be set to different values for SCHC F/R messages related
        to different SCHC Packets that are being fragmented under the
        same RuleID and whose transmission may overlap.
  W:  The W field is optional.  It is only present if windows are used.
     Its presence and size (called "M", in bits) is defined by each
     SCHC F/R mode and each Profile for each RuleID.
     This field carries information pertaining to the window a SCHC F/R
     message relates to.  If present, W MUST carry the same value for
     all the SCHC F/R messages related to the same window.  Depending
     on the mode and Profile, W may carry the full window number, or
     just the LSB or any other partial representation of the window
     number.
  Fragment Compressed Number (FCN):  The FCN field is present in the
     SCHC Fragment Header.  Its size (called "N", in bits) is defined
     by each Profile for each RuleID.
     This field conveys information about the progress in the sequence
     of tiles being transmitted by SCHC Fragment messages.  For
     example, it can contain a partial, efficient representation of a
     larger-sized tile index.  The description of the exact use of the
     FCN field is left to each SCHC F/R mode.  However, two values are
     reserved for special purposes.  They help control the SCHC F/R
     process:
     *  The FCN value with all the bits equal to 1 (called "All-1")
        signals that the very last tile of a SCHC Packet has been
        transmitted.  By extension, if windows are used, the last
        window of a packet is called the "All-1" window.
     *  If windows are used, the FCN value with all the bits equal to 0
        (called "All-0") signals the last tile of a window that is not
        the last one of the SCHC packet.  By extension, such a window
        is called an "All-0 window".
  Reassembly Check Sequence (RCS):  This field only appears in the
     All-1 SCHC Fragments.  Its size (called "U", in bits) is defined
     by each Profile for each RuleID.
     See Section 8.2.3 for the RCS default size, default polynomial and
     details on RCS computation.
  C (integrity Check):  C is a 1-bit field.  This field is used in the
     SCHC ACK message to report on the reassembled SCHC Packet
     integrity check (see Section 8.2.3).
     A value of 1 tells that the integrity check was performed and is
     successful.  A value of 0 tells that the integrity check was not
     performed or that it was a failure.
  Compressed Bitmap:  The Compressed Bitmap is used together with
     windows and Bitmaps (see Section 8.2.2.3).  Its presence and size
     is defined for each SCHC F/R mode for each RuleID.
     This field appears in the SCHC ACK message to report on the
     receiver Bitmap (see Section 8.3.2.1).

8.3. SCHC F/R Message Formats

  This section defines the SCHC Fragment formats, the SCHC ACK format,
  the SCHC ACK REQ format and the SCHC Abort formats.

8.3.1. SCHC Fragment Format

  A SCHC Fragment conforms to the general format shown in Figure 12.
  It comprises a SCHC Fragment Header and a SCHC Fragment Payload.  The
  SCHC Fragment Payload carries one or several tile(s).
  +-----------------+-----------------------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
  | Fragment Header | Fragment Payload      | padding (as needed)
  +-----------------+-----------------------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                 Figure 12: SCHC Fragment General Format

8.3.1.1. Regular SCHC Fragment

  The Regular SCHC Fragment format is shown in Figure 13.  Regular SCHC
  Fragments are generally used to carry tiles that are not the last one
  of a SCHC Packet.  The DTag field and the W field are OPTIONAL, their
  presence is specified by each mode and Profile.
  |-- SCHC Fragment Header ----|
           |-- T --|-M-|-- N --|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+--------...-------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  | RuleID | DTag  | W |  FCN  | Fragment Payload | padding (as needed)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+--------...-------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
       Figure 13: Detailed Header Format for Regular SCHC Fragments
  The FCN field MUST NOT contain all bits set to 1.
  Profiles MUST ensure that a SCHC Fragment with FCN equal to 0 (called
  an "All-0 SCHC Fragment") is distinguishable by size, even in the
  presence of padding, from a SCHC ACK REQ message (see Section 8.3.3)
  with the same RuleID value and with the same T, M, and N values.
  This condition is met if the Payload is at least the size of an L2
  Word.  This condition is also met if the SCHC Fragment Header is a
  multiple of L2 Words.

8.3.1.2. All-1 SCHC Fragment

  The All-1 SCHC Fragment format is shown in Figure 14.  The sender
  uses the All-1 SCHC Fragment format for the message that completes
  the emission of a fragmented SCHC Packet.  The DTag field, the W
  field, the RCS field and the Payload are OPTIONAL, their presence is
  specified by each mode and Profile.  At least one of RCS field or
  Fragment Payload MUST be present.  The FCN field is all ones.
  |------- SCHC Fragment Header -------|
           |-- T --|-M-|-- N --|-- U --|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+- ... -+-----...-----+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
  | RuleID | DTag  | W | 11..1 |  RCS  | FragPayload | pad. (as needed)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+- ... -+-----...-----+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
                         (FCN)
      Figure 14: Detailed Header Format for the All-1 SCHC Fragment
  Profiles MUST ensure that an All-1 SCHC Fragment message is
  distinguishable by size, even in the presence of padding, from a SCHC
  Sender-Abort message (see Section 8.3.4) with the same RuleID value
  and with the same T, M, and N values.  This condition is met if the
  RCS is present and is at least the size of an L2 Word or if the
  Payload is present and is at least the size an L2 Word.  This
  condition is also met if the SCHC Sender-Abort Header is a multiple
  of L2 Words.

8.3.2. SCHC ACK Format

  The SCHC ACK message is shown in Figure 15.  The DTag field and the W
  field are OPTIONAL, their presence is specified by each mode and
  Profile.  The Compressed Bitmap field MUST be present in SCHC F/R
  modes that use windows and MUST NOT be present in other modes.
  |--- SCHC ACK Header ----|
           |-- T --|-M-| 1 |
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=1| padding as needed                (success)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+------ ... ------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|Compressed Bitmap| pad. as needed (failure)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+------ ... ------+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
                Figure 15: Format of the SCHC ACK Message
  The SCHC ACK Header contains a C bit (see Section 8.2.4).
  If the C bit is set to 1 (integrity check successful), no Bitmap is
  carried.
  If the C bit is set to 0 (integrity check not performed or failed)
  and if windows are used, a Compressed Bitmap for the window referred
  to by the W field is transmitted as specified in Section 8.3.2.1.

8.3.2.1. Bitmap Compression

  For transmission, the Compressed Bitmap in the SCHC ACK message is
  defined by the following algorithm (see Figure 16 for a follow-along
  example):
  *  Build a temporary SCHC ACK message that contains the Header
     followed by the original Bitmap (see Section 8.2.2.3 for a
     description of Bitmaps).
  *  Position scissors at the end of the Bitmap, after its last bit.
  *  While the bit on the left of the scissors is 1 and belongs to the
     Bitmap, keep moving left, then stop.
  *  Then, while the scissors are not on an L2 Word boundary of the
     SCHC ACK message and there is a Bitmap bit on the right of the
     scissors, keep moving right, then stop.
  *  At this point, cut and drop off any bits to the right of the
     scissors.
  When one or more bits have effectively been dropped off as a result
  of the above algorithm, the SCHC ACK message is a multiple of L2
  Words; no padding bits will be appended.
  Because the SCHC Fragment sender knows the size of the original
  Bitmap, it can reconstruct the original Bitmap from the Compressed
  Bitmap received in the SCHC ACK message.
  Figure 16 shows an example where L2 Words are actually bytes and
  where the original Bitmap contains 17 bits, the last 15 of which are
  all set to 1.
  |--- SCHC ACK Header ----|--------      Bitmap     --------|
           |-- T --|-M-| 1 |
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+---------------------------------+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+---------------------------------+
         next L2 Word boundary ->|
           Figure 16: SCHC ACK Header Plus Uncompressed Bitmap
  Figure 17 shows that the last 14 bits are not sent.
  |--- SCHC ACK Header ----|CpBmp|
           |-- T --|-M-| 1 |
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+-----+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1 0 1|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+-----+
         next L2 Word boundary ->|
       Figure 17: Resulting SCHC ACK Message with Compressed Bitmap
  Figure 18 shows an example of a SCHC ACK with tile indices ranging
  from 6 down to 0, where the Bitmap indicates that the second and the
  fourth tile of the window have not been correctly received.
  |--- SCHC ACK Header ----|--- Bitmap --|
           |-- T --|-M-| 1 |6 5 4 3 2 1 0| (tile #)
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1 0 1 0 1 1 1|     uncompressed Bitmap
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+
     next L2 Word boundary ->|<-- L2 Word --->|
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1 0 1 0 1 1 1|pad.| transmitted SCHC ACK
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)+
     next L2 Word boundary ->|<-- L2 Word --->|
         Figure 18: Example of a SCHC ACK Message, Missing Tiles
  Figure 19 shows an example of a SCHC ACK with tile indices ranging
  from 6 down to 0, where integrity check has not been performed or has
  failed and the Bitmap indicates that there is no missing tile in that
  window.
  |--- SCHC ACK Header ----|--- Bitmap --|
           |-- T --|-M-| 1 |6 5 4 3 2 1 0| (tile #)
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1 1 1 1 1 1 1|  with uncompressed Bitmap
  +--------+-------+---+---+-------------+
     next L2 Word boundary ->|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+-+
  | RuleID |  DTag | W |C=0|1|                  transmitted SCHC ACK
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+---+-+
     next L2 Word boundary ->|
        Figure 19: Example of a SCHC ACK Message, No Missing Tile

8.3.3. SCHC ACK REQ Format

  The SCHC ACK REQ is used by a sender to request a SCHC ACK from the
  receiver.  Its format is shown in Figure 20.  The DTag field and the
  W field are OPTIONAL, their presence is specified by each mode and
  Profile.  The FCN field is all zero.
  |--- SCHC ACK REQ Header ----|
           |-- T --|-M-|-- N --|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
  | RuleID | DTag  | W |  0..0 | padding (as needed)      (no payload)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                      Figure 20: SCHC ACK REQ Format

8.3.4. SCHC Sender-Abort Format

  When a SCHC Fragment sender needs to abort an ongoing fragmented SCHC
  Packet transmission, it sends a SCHC Sender-Abort message to the SCHC
  Fragment receiver.
  The SCHC Sender-Abort format is shown in Figure 21.  The DTag field
  and the W field are OPTIONAL, their presence is specified by each
  mode and Profile.  The FCN field is all ones.
  |--- Sender-Abort Header ----|
           |-- T --|-M-|-- N --|
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
  | RuleID | DTag  | W | 11..1 | padding (as needed)
  +-- ... -+- ... -+---+- ... -+21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                   Figure 21: SCHC Sender-Abort Format
  If the W field is present:
  *  the fragment sender MUST set it to all ones.  Other values are
     RESERVED.
  *  the fragment receiver MUST check its value.  If the value is
     different from all ones, the message MUST be ignored.
  The SCHC Sender-Abort MUST NOT be acknowledged.

8.3.5. SCHC Receiver-Abort Format

  When a SCHC Fragment receiver needs to abort an ongoing fragmented
  SCHC Packet transmission, it transmits a SCHC Receiver-Abort message
  to the SCHC Fragment sender.
  The SCHC Receiver-Abort format is shown in Figure 22.  The DTag field
  and the W field are OPTIONAL, their presence is specified by each
  mode and Profile.
  |-- Receiver-Abort Header ---|
             |--- T ---|-M-| 1 |
  +--- ... --+-- ... --+---+---+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |  RuleID  |   DTag  | W |C=1| 1..1|      1..1     |
  +--- ... --+-- ... --+---+---+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
             next L2 Word boundary ->|<-- L2 Word -->|
                  Figure 22: SCHC Receiver-Abort Format
  If the W field is present:
  *  the fragment receiver MUST set it to all ones.  Other values are
     RESERVED.
  *  if the value is different from all ones, the fragment sender MUST
     ignore the message.
  The SCHC Receiver-Abort has the same header as a SCHC ACK message.
  The bits that follow the SCHC Receiver-Abort Header MUST be as
  follows:
  *  if the Header does not end at an L2 Word boundary, append bits set
     to 1 as needed to reach the next L2 Word boundary.
  *  append exactly one more L2 Word with bits all set to ones.
  Such a bit pattern never occurs in a legitimate SCHC ACK.  This is
  how the fragment sender recognizes a SCHC Receiver-Abort.
  The SCHC Receiver-Abort MUST NOT be acknowledged.

8.4. SCHC F/R Modes

  This specification includes several SCHC F/R modes that:
  *  allow for a range of reliability options, such as optional SCHC
     Fragment retransmission.
  *  support various LPWAN characteristics, such as links with variable
     MTU or unidirectional links.
  More modes may be defined in the future.
  Appendix B provides examples of fragmentation sessions based on the
  modes described hereafter.
  Appendix C provides examples of Finite State Machines implementing
  the SCHC F/R modes described hereafter.

8.4.1. No-ACK Mode

  The No-ACK mode has been designed under the assumption that data unit
  out-of-sequence delivery does not occur between the entity performing
  fragmentation and the entity performing reassembly.  This mode
  supports L2 technologies that have a variable MTU.
  In No-ACK mode, there is no communication from the fragment receiver
  to the fragment sender.  The sender transmits all the SCHC Fragments
  without expecting any acknowledgement.  Therefore, No-ACK does not
  require bidirectional links: unidirectional links are just fine.
  In No-ACK mode, only the All-1 SCHC Fragment is padded as needed.
  The other SCHC Fragments are intrinsically aligned to L2 Words.
  The tile sizes are not required to be uniform.  Windows are not used.
  The Retransmission Timer is not used.  The Attempts counter is not
  used.
  Each Profile MUST specify which RuleID value(s) corresponds to SCHC
  F/R messages operating in this mode.
  The W field MUST NOT be present in the SCHC F/R messages.  SCHC ACK
  MUST NOT be sent.  SCHC ACK REQ MUST NOT be sent.  SCHC Sender-Abort
  MAY be sent.  SCHC Receiver-Abort MUST NOT be sent.
  The value of N (size of the FCN field) is RECOMMENDED to be 1.
  Each Profile, for each RuleID value, MUST define:
  *  the size of the DTag field,
  *  the size and algorithm for the RCS field, and
  *  the expiration time of the Inactivity Timer.
  Each Profile, for each RuleID value, MAY define
  *  a value of N different from the recommended one, and
  *  the meaning of values sent in the FCN field, for values different
     from the All-1 value.
  For each active pair of RuleID and DTag values, the receiver MUST
  maintain an Inactivity Timer.  If the receiver is under-resourced to
  do this, it MUST silently drop the related messages.

8.4.1.1. Sender Behavior

  At the beginning of the fragmentation of a new SCHC Packet, the
  fragment sender MUST select a RuleID and DTag value pair for this
  SCHC Packet.
  Each SCHC Fragment MUST contain exactly one tile in its Payload.  The
  tile MUST be at least the size of an L2 Word.  The sender MUST
  transmit the SCHC Fragments messages in the order that the tiles
  appear in the SCHC Packet.  Except for the last tile of a SCHC
  Packet, each tile MUST be of a size that complements the SCHC
  Fragment Header so that the SCHC Fragment is a multiple of L2 Words
  without the need for padding bits.  Except for the last one, the SCHC
  Fragments MUST use the Regular SCHC Fragment format specified in
  Section 8.3.1.1.  The SCHC Fragment that carries the last tile MUST
  be an All-1 SCHC Fragment, described in Section 8.3.1.2.
  The sender MAY transmit a SCHC Sender-Abort.
  Figure 39 shows an example of a corresponding state machine.

8.4.1.2. Receiver Behavior

  Upon receiving each Regular SCHC Fragment:
  *  the receiver MUST reset the Inactivity Timer.
  *  the receiver assembles the payloads of the SCHC Fragments.
  On receiving an All-1 SCHC Fragment:
  *  the receiver MUST append the All-1 SCHC Fragment Payload and the
     padding bits to the previously received SCHC Fragment Payloads for
     this SCHC Packet.
  *  the receiver MUST perform the integrity check.
  *  if integrity checking fails, the receiver MUST drop the
     reassembled SCHC Packet.
  *  the reassembly operation concludes.
  On expiration of the Inactivity Timer, the receiver MUST drop the
  SCHC Packet being reassembled.
  On receiving a SCHC Sender-Abort, the receiver MAY drop the SCHC
  Packet being reassembled.
  Figure 40 shows an example of a corresponding state machine.

8.4.2. ACK-Always Mode

  The ACK-Always mode has been designed under the following
  assumptions:
  *  Data unit out-of-sequence delivery does not occur between the
     entity performing fragmentation and the entity performing
     reassembly,
  *  The L2 MTU value does not change while the fragments of a SCHC
     Packet are being transmitted, and
  *  There is a feedback path from the reassembler to the fragmenter.
     See Appendix F for a discussion on using ACK-Always mode on quasi-
     bidirectional links.
  In ACK-Always mode, windows are used.  An acknowledgement, positive
  or negative, is transmitted by the fragment receiver to the fragment
  sender at the end of the transmission of each window of SCHC
  Fragments.
  The tiles are not required to be of uniform size.  In ACK-Always
  mode, only the All-1 SCHC Fragment is padded as needed.  The other
  SCHC Fragments are intrinsically aligned to L2 Words.
  Briefly, the algorithm is as follows: after a first blind
  transmission of all the tiles of a window, the fragment sender
  iterates retransmitting the tiles that are reported missing until the
  fragment receiver reports that all the tiles belonging to the window
  have been correctly received or until too many attempts were made.
  The fragment sender only advances to the next window of tiles when it
  has ascertained that all the tiles belonging to the current window
  have been fully and correctly received.  This results in a per-window
  lock-step behavior between the sender and the receiver.
  Each Profile MUST specify which RuleID value(s) correspond to SCHC F/
  R messages operating in this mode.
  The W field MUST be present and its size M MUST be 1 bit.
  Each Profile, for each RuleID value, MUST define:
  *  the value of N,
  *  the value of WINDOW_SIZE, which MUST be strictly less than 2^N,
  *  the size and algorithm for the RCS field,
  *  the value of T,
  *  the value of MAX_ACK_REQUESTS,
  *  the expiration time of the Retransmission Timer, and
  *  the expiration time of the Inactivity Timer.
  For each active pair of RuleID and DTag values, the sender MUST
  maintain:
  *  one Attempts counter
  *  one Retransmission Timer
  For each active pair of RuleID and DTag values, the receiver MUST
  maintain
  *  one Inactivity Timer, and
  *  one Attempts counter.

8.4.2.1. Sender Behavior

  At the beginning of the fragmentation of a new SCHC Packet, the
  fragment sender MUST select a RuleID and DTag value pair for this
  SCHC Packet.
  Each SCHC Fragment MUST contain exactly one tile in its Payload.  All
  tiles with the index 0, as well as the last tile, MUST be at least
  the size of an L2 Word.
  In all SCHC Fragment messages, the W field MUST be filled with the
  LSB of the window number that the sender is currently processing.
  For a SCHC Fragment that carries a tile other than the last one of
  the SCHC Packet:
  *  the Fragment MUST be of the Regular type specified in
     Section 8.3.1.1.
  *  the FCN field MUST contain the tile index.
  *  each tile MUST be of a size that complements the SCHC Fragment
     Header so that the SCHC Fragment is a multiple of L2 Words without
     the need for padding bits.
  The SCHC Fragment that carries the last tile MUST be an All-1 SCHC
  Fragment, described in Section 8.3.1.2.
  The fragment sender MUST start by transmitting the window numbered 0.
  All message receptions being discussed in the rest of this section
  are to be understood as "matching the RuleID and DTag pair being
  processed", even if not spelled out, for brevity.
  The sender starts by a "blind transmission" phase, in which it MUST
  transmit all the tiles composing the window, in decreasing tile index
  order.
  Then, it enters a "retransmission phase" in which it MUST initialize
  an Attempts counter to 0, it MUST start a Retransmission Timer and it
  MUST await a SCHC ACK.
  *  Then, upon receiving a SCHC ACK:
     -  if the SCHC ACK indicates that some tiles are missing at the
        receiver, then the sender MUST transmit all the tiles that have
        been reported missing, it MUST increment Attempts, it MUST
        reset the Retransmission Timer, and MUST await the next SCHC
        ACK.
     -  if the current window is not the last one and the SCHC ACK
        indicates that all tiles were correctly received, the sender
        MUST stop the Retransmission Timer, it MUST advance to the next
        fragmentation window, and it MUST start a blind transmission
        phase as described above.
     -  if the current window is the last one and the SCHC ACK
        indicates that more tiles were received than the sender sent,
        the fragment sender MUST send a SCHC Sender-Abort, and it MAY
        exit with an error condition.
     -  if the current window is the last one and the SCHC ACK
        indicates that all tiles were correctly received, yet the
        integrity check was a failure, the fragment sender MUST send a
        SCHC Sender-Abort, and it MAY exit with an error condition.
     -  if the current window is the last one and the SCHC ACK
        indicates that integrity checking was successful, the sender
        exits successfully.
  *  on Retransmission Timer expiration:
     -  if Attempts is strictly less that MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the
        fragment sender MUST send a SCHC ACK REQ and MUST increment the
        Attempts counter.
     -  otherwise, the fragment sender MUST send a SCHC Sender-Abort,
        and it MAY exit with an error condition.
  At any time:
  *  on receiving a SCHC Receiver-Abort, the fragment sender MAY exit
     with an error condition.
  *  on receiving a SCHC ACK that bears a W value different from the W
     value that it currently uses, the fragment sender MUST silently
     discard and ignore that SCHC ACK.
  Figure 41 shows an example of a corresponding state machine.

8.4.2.2. Receiver Behavior

  On receiving a SCHC Fragment with a RuleID and DTag pair not being
  processed at that time:
  *  the receiver SHOULD check if the DTag value has not recently been
     used for that RuleID value, thereby ensuring that the received
     SCHC Fragment is not a remnant of a prior fragmented SCHC Packet
     transmission.  The initial value of the Inactivity Timer is the
     RECOMMENDED lifetime for the DTag value at the receiver.  If the
     SCHC Fragment is determined to be such a remnant, the receiver MAY
     silently ignore it and discard it.
  *  the receiver MUST start a process to assemble a new SCHC Packet
     with that RuleID and DTag value pair.
  *  the receiver MUST start an Inactivity Timer for that RuleID and
     DTag pair.  It MUST initialize an Attempts counter to 0 for that
     RuleID and DTag pair.  It MUST initialize a window counter to 0.
     If the receiver is under-resourced to do this, it MUST respond to
     the sender with a SCHC Receiver-Abort.
  In the rest of this section, "local W bit" means the least
  significant bit of the window counter of the receiver.
  On reception of any SCHC F/R message for the RuleID and DTag pair
  being processed, the receiver MUST reset the Inactivity Timer
  pertaining to that RuleID and DTag pair.
  All message receptions being discussed in the rest of this section
  are to be understood as "matching the RuleID and DTag pair being
  processed", even if not spelled out, for brevity.
  The receiver MUST first initialize an empty Bitmap for the first
  window then enter an "acceptance phase", in which:
  *  on receiving a SCHC Fragment or a SCHC ACK REQ, either one having
     the W bit different from the local W bit, the receiver MUST
     silently ignore and discard that message.
  *  on receiving a SCHC ACK REQ with the W bit equal to the local W
     bit, the receiver MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window.
  *  on receiving a SCHC Fragment with the W bit equal to the local W
     bit, the receiver MUST assemble the received tile based on the
     window counter and on the FCN field in the SCHC Fragment, and it
     MUST update the Bitmap.
     -  if the SCHC Fragment received is an All-0 SCHC Fragment, the
        current window is determined to be a not-last window, the
        receiver MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window and it MUST enter
        the "retransmission phase" for this window.
     -  if the SCHC Fragment received is an All-1 SCHC Fragment, the
        current window is determined to be the last window, the padding
        bits of the All-1 SCHC Fragment MUST be assembled after the
        received tile, the receiver MUST perform the integrity check
        and it MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window.  Then:
        o  If the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC Packet
           has been correctly reassembled, the receiver MUST enter the
           "clean-up phase" for this window.
        o  If the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC Packet
           has not been correctly reassembled, the receiver enters the
           "retransmission phase" for this window.
  In the "retransmission phase":
  *  if the window is a not-last window:
     -  on receiving a SCHC Fragment that is not All-0 or All-1 and
        that has a W bit different from the local W bit, the receiver
        MUST increment its window counter and allocate a fresh Bitmap,
        it MUST assemble the tile received and update the Bitmap, and
        it MUST enter the "acceptance phase" for that new window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC ACK REQ with a W bit different from the
        local W bit, the receiver MUST increment its window counter and
        allocate a fresh Bitmap, it MUST send a SCHC ACK for that new
        window, and it MUST enter the "acceptance phase" for that new
        window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC All-0 Fragment with a W bit different from
        the local W bit, the receiver MUST increment its window counter
        and allocate a fresh Bitmap, it MUST assemble the tile received
        and update the Bitmap, it MUST send a SCHC ACK for that new
        window, and it MUST stay in the "retransmission phase" for that
        new window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC All-1 Fragment with a W bit different from
        the local W bit, the receiver MUST increment its window counter
        and allocate a fresh Bitmap; it MUST assemble the tile
        received, including the padding bits; it MUST update the Bitmap
        and perform the integrity check; it MUST send a SCHC ACK for
        the new window, which is determined to be the last window.
        Then:
        o  If the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC Packet
           has been correctly reassembled, the receiver MUST enter the
           "clean-up phase" for that new window.
        o  If the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC Packet
           has not been correctly reassembled, the receiver enters the
           "retransmission phase" for that new window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC Fragment with a W bit equal to the local W
        bit:
        o  if the SCHC Fragment received is an All-1 SCHC Fragment, the
           receiver MUST silently ignore it and discard it.
        o  otherwise, the receiver MUST assemble the tile received and
           update the Bitmap.  If the Bitmap becomes fully populated
           with 1's or if the SCHC Fragment is an All-0, the receiver
           MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC ACK REQ with the W bit equal to the local W
        bit, the receiver MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window.
  *  if the window is the last window:
     -  on receiving a SCHC Fragment or a SCHC ACK REQ, either one
        having a W bit different from the local W bit, the receiver
        MUST silently ignore and discard that message.
     -  on receiving a SCHC ACK REQ with the W bit equal to the local W
        bit, the receiver MUST send a SCHC ACK for this window.
     -  on receiving a SCHC Fragment with a W bit equal to the local W
        bit:
        o  if the SCHC Fragment received is an All-0 SCHC Fragment, the
           receiver MUST silently ignore it and discard it.
        o  otherwise, the receiver MUST update the Bitmap, and it MUST
           assemble the tile received.  If the SCHC Fragment received
           is an All-1 SCHC Fragment, the receiver MUST assemble the
           padding bits of the All-1 SCHC Fragment after the received
           tile, it MUST perform the integrity check and:
           +  if the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC
              Packet has been correctly reassembled, the receiver MUST
              send a SCHC ACK and it enters the "clean-up phase".
           +  if the integrity check indicates that the full SCHC
              Packet has not been correctly reassembled:
              *  if the SCHC Fragment received was an All-1 SCHC
                 Fragment, the receiver MUST send a SCHC ACK for this
                 window.
  In the "clean-up phase":
  *  On receiving an All-1 SCHC Fragment or a SCHC ACK REQ, either one
     having the W bit equal to the local W bit, the receiver MUST send
     a SCHC ACK.
  *  Any other SCHC Fragment received MUST be silently ignored and
     discarded.
  At any time, on sending a SCHC ACK, the receiver MUST increment the
  Attempts counter.
  At any time, on incrementing its window counter, the receiver MUST
  reset the Attempts counter.
  At any time, on expiration of the Inactivity Timer, on receiving a
  SCHC Sender-Abort or when Attempts reaches MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the
  receiver MUST send a SCHC Receiver-Abort, and it MAY exit the receive
  process for that SCHC Packet.
  Figure 42 shows an example of a corresponding state machine.

8.4.3. ACK-on-Error Mode

  The ACK-on-Error mode supports L2 technologies that have variable MTU
  and out-of-order delivery.  It requires an L2 that provides a
  feedback path from the reassembler to the fragmenter.  See Appendix F
  for a discussion on using ACK-on-Error mode on quasi-bidirectional
  links.
  In ACK-on-Error mode, windows are used.
  All tiles except the last one and the penultimate one MUST be of
  equal size, hereafter called "regular".  The size of the last tile
  MUST be smaller than or equal to the regular tile size.  Regarding
  the penultimate tile, a Profile MUST pick one of the following two
  options:
  *  The penultimate tile size MUST be the regular tile size, or
  *  the penultimate tile size MUST be either the regular tile size or
     the regular tile size minus one L2 Word.
  A SCHC Fragment message carries one or several contiguous tiles,
  which may span multiple windows.  A SCHC ACK reports on the reception
  of exactly one window of tiles.
  See Figure 23 for an example.
          +---------------------------------------------...-----------+
          |                       SCHC Packet                         |
          +---------------------------------------------...-----------+
  Tile#   | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 4 |     | 0 | 4 |3|
  Window# |-------- 0 --------|-------- 1 --------|- 2  ... 27 -|- 28-|


  SCHC Fragment msg   |-----------|
      Figure 23: SCHC Packet Fragmented in Tiles, ACK-on-Error Mode
  The W field is wide enough that it unambiguously represents an
  absolute window number.  The fragment receiver sends SCHC ACKs to the
  fragment sender about windows for which tiles are missing.  No SCHC
  ACK is sent by the fragment receiver for windows that it knows have
  been fully received.
  The fragment sender retransmits SCHC Fragments for tiles that are
  reported missing.  It can advance to next windows even before it has
  ascertained that all tiles belonging to previous windows have been
  correctly received, and it can still later retransmit SCHC Fragments
  with tiles belonging to previous windows.  Therefore, the sender and
  the receiver may operate in a decoupled fashion.  The fragmented SCHC
  Packet transmission concludes when:
  *  integrity checking shows that the fragmented SCHC Packet has been
     correctly reassembled at the receive end, and this information has
     been conveyed back to the sender, or
  *  too many retransmission attempts were made, or
  *  the receiver determines that the transmission of this fragmented
     SCHC Packet has been inactive for too long.
  Each Profile MUST specify which RuleID value(s) corresponds to SCHC
  F/R messages operating in this mode.
  The W field MUST be present in the SCHC F/R messages.
  Each Profile, for each RuleID value, MUST define:
  *  the tile size (a tile does not need to be multiple of an L2 Word,
     but it MUST be at least the size of an L2 Word),
  *  the value of M,
  *  the value of N,
  *  the value of WINDOW_SIZE, which MUST be strictly less than 2^N,
  *  the size and algorithm for the RCS field,
  *  the value of T,
  *  the value of MAX_ACK_REQUESTS,
  *  the expiration time of the Retransmission Timer,
  *  the expiration time of the Inactivity Timer,
  *  if the last tile is carried in a Regular SCHC Fragment or an All-1
     SCHC Fragment (see Section 8.4.3.1), and
  *  if the penultimate tile MAY be one L2 Word smaller than the
     regular tile size.  In this case, the regular tile size MUST be at
     least twice the L2 Word size.
  For each active pair of RuleID and DTag values, the sender MUST
  maintain:
  *  one Attempts counter, and
  *  one Retransmission Timer.
  For each active pair of RuleID and DTag values, the receiver MUST
  maintain:
  *  one Inactivity Timer, and
  *  one Attempts counter.

8.4.3.1. Sender Behavior

  At the beginning of the fragmentation of a new SCHC Packet:
  *  the fragment sender MUST select a RuleID and DTag value pair for
     this SCHC Packet.  A Rule MUST NOT be selected if the values of M
     and WINDOW_SIZE for that Rule are such that the SCHC Packet cannot
     be fragmented in (2^M) * WINDOW_SIZE tiles or less.
  *  the fragment sender MUST initialize the Attempts counter to 0 for
     that RuleID and DTag value pair.
  A Regular SCHC Fragment message carries in its payload one or more
  tiles.  If more than one tile is carried in one Regular SCHC
  Fragment:
  *  the selected tiles MUST be contiguous in the original SCHC Packet,
     and
  *  they MUST be placed in the SCHC Fragment Payload adjacent to one
     another, in the order they appear in the SCHC Packet, from the
     start of the SCHC Packet toward its end.
  Tiles that are not the last one MUST be sent in Regular SCHC
  Fragments specified in Section 8.3.1.1.  The FCN field MUST contain
  the tile index of the first tile sent in that SCHC Fragment.
  In a Regular SCHC Fragment message, the sender MUST fill the W field
  with the window number of the first tile sent in that SCHC Fragment.
  A Profile MUST define if the last tile of a SCHC Packet is sent:
  *  in a Regular SCHC Fragment, alone or as part of a multi-tiles
     Payload,
  *  alone in an All-1 SCHC Fragment, or
  *  with any of the above two methods.
  In an All-1 SCHC Fragment message, the sender MUST fill the W field
  with the window number of the last tile of the SCHC Packet.
  The fragment sender MUST send SCHC Fragments such that, all together,
  they contain all the tiles of the fragmented SCHC Packet.
  The fragment sender MUST send at least one All-1 SCHC Fragment.
  In doing the two items above, the sender MUST ascertain that the
  receiver will not receive the last tile through both a Regular SCHC
  Fragment and an All-1 SCHC Fragment.
  The fragment sender MUST listen for SCHC ACK messages after having
  sent:
  *  an All-1 SCHC Fragment, or
  *  a SCHC ACK REQ.
  A Profile MAY specify other times at which the fragment sender MUST
  listen for SCHC ACK messages.  For example, this could be after
  sending a complete window of tiles.
  Each time a fragment sender sends an All-1 SCHC Fragment or a SCHC
  ACK REQ:
  *  it MUST increment the Attempts counter, and
  *  it MUST reset the Retransmission Timer.
  On Retransmission Timer expiration:
  *  if the Attempts counter is strictly less than MAX_ACK_REQUESTS,
     the fragment sender MUST send either the All-1 SCHC Fragment or a
     SCHC ACK REQ with the W field corresponding to the last window,
  *  otherwise, the fragment sender MUST send a SCHC Sender-Abort, and
     it MAY exit with an error condition.
  All message receptions being discussed in the rest of this section
  are to be understood as "matching the RuleID and DTag pair being
  processed", even if not spelled out, for brevity.
  On receiving a SCHC ACK:
  *  if the W field in the SCHC ACK corresponds to the last window of
     the SCHC Packet:
     -  if the C bit is set, the sender MAY exit successfully.
     -  otherwise:
        o  if the Profile mandates that the last tile be sent in an
           All-1 SCHC Fragment:
           +  if the SCHC ACK shows no missing tile at the receiver,
              the sender:
              *  MUST send a SCHC Sender-Abort, and
              *  MAY exit with an error condition.
           +  otherwise:
              *  the fragment sender MUST send SCHC Fragment messages
                 containing all the tiles that are reported missing in
                 the SCHC ACK.
              *  if the last of these SCHC Fragment messages is not an
                 All-1 SCHC Fragment, then the fragment sender MUST in
                 addition send after it a SCHC ACK REQ with the W field
                 corresponding to the last window.
              *  in doing the two items above, the sender MUST
                 ascertain that the receiver will not receive the last
                 tile through both a Regular SCHC Fragment and an All-1
                 SCHC Fragment.
        o  otherwise:
           +  if the SCHC ACK shows no missing tile at the receiver,
              the sender MUST send the All-1 SCHC Fragment
           +  otherwise:
              *  the fragment sender MUST send SCHC Fragment messages
                 containing all the tiles that are reported missing in
                 the SCHC ACK.
              *  the fragment sender MUST then send either the All-1
                 SCHC Fragment or a SCHC ACK REQ with the W field
                 corresponding to the last window.
  *  otherwise, the fragment sender:
     -  MUST send SCHC Fragment messages containing the tiles that are
        reported missing in the SCHC ACK.
     -  then, it MAY send a SCHC ACK REQ with the W field corresponding
        to the last window.
  See Figure 43 for one among several possible examples of a Finite
  State Machine implementing a sender behavior obeying this
  specification.

8.4.3.2. Receiver Behavior

  On receiving a SCHC Fragment with a RuleID and DTag pair not being
  processed at that time:
  *  the receiver SHOULD check if the DTag value has not recently been
     used for that RuleID value, thereby ensuring that the received
     SCHC Fragment is not a remnant of a prior fragmented SCHC Packet
     transmission.  The initial value of the Inactivity Timer is the
     RECOMMENDED lifetime for the DTag value at the receiver.  If the
     SCHC Fragment is determined to be such a remnant, the receiver MAY
     silently ignore it and discard it.
  *  the receiver MUST start a process to assemble a new SCHC Packet
     with that RuleID and DTag value pair.  The receiver MUST start an
     Inactivity Timer for that RuleID and DTag value pair.  It MUST
     initialize an Attempts counter to 0 for that RuleID and DTag value
     pair.  If the receiver is under-resourced to do this, it MUST
     respond to the sender with a SCHC Receiver-Abort.
  On reception of any SCHC F/R message for the RuleID and DTag pair
  being processed, the receiver MUST reset the Inactivity Timer
  pertaining to that RuleID and DTag pair.
  All message receptions being discussed in the rest of this section
  are to be understood as "matching the RuleID and DTag pair being
  processed", even if not spelled out, for brevity.
  On receiving a SCHC Fragment message, the receiver determines what
  tiles were received, based on the payload length and on the W and FCN
  fields of the SCHC Fragment.
  *  if the FCN is All-1, if a Payload is present, the full SCHC
     Fragment Payload MUST be assembled including the padding bits.
     This is because the size of the last tile is not known by the
     receiver; therefore, padding bits are indistinguishable from the
     tile data bits, at this stage.  They will be removed by the SCHC
     C/D sublayer.  If the size of the SCHC Fragment Payload exceeds or
     equals the size of one regular tile plus the size of an L2 Word,
     this SHOULD raise an error flag.
  *  otherwise, tiles MUST be assembled based on the a priori known
     tile size.
     -  If allowed by the Profile, the end of the payload MAY contain
        the last tile, which may be shorter.  Padding bits are
        indistinguishable from the tile data bits, at this stage.
     -  The payload may contain the penultimate tile that, if allowed
        by the Profile, MAY be exactly one L2 Word shorter than the
        regular tile size.
     -  Otherwise, padding bits MUST be discarded.  This is possible
        because:
        o  the size of the tiles is known a priori,
        o  tiles are larger than an L2 Word, and
        o  padding bits are always strictly less than an L2 Word.
  On receiving a SCHC ACK REQ or an All-1 SCHC Fragment:
  *  if the receiver knows of any windows with missing tiles for the
     packet being reassembled, it MUST return a SCHC ACK for the
     lowest-numbered such window:
  *  otherwise:
     -  if it has received at least one tile, it MUST return a SCHC ACK
        for the highest-numbered window it currently has tiles for,
     -  otherwise, it MUST return a SCHC ACK for window numbered 0.
  A Profile MAY specify other times and circumstances at which a
  receiver sends a SCHC ACK, and which window the SCHC ACK reports
  about in these circumstances.
  Upon sending a SCHC ACK, the receiver MUST increase the Attempts
  counter.
  After receiving an All-1 SCHC Fragment, a receiver MUST check the
  integrity of the reassembled SCHC Packet at least every time it
  prepares for sending a SCHC ACK for the last window.
  Upon receiving a SCHC Sender-Abort, the receiver MAY exit with an
  error condition.
  Upon expiration of the Inactivity Timer, the receiver MUST send a
  SCHC Receiver-Abort, and it MAY exit with an error condition.
  On the Attempts counter exceeding MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, the receiver MUST
  send a SCHC Receiver-Abort, and it MAY exit with an error condition.
  Reassembly of the SCHC Packet concludes when:
  *  a Sender-Abort has been received, or
  *  the Inactivity Timer has expired, or
  *  the Attempts counter has exceeded MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, or
  *  at least an All-1 SCHC Fragment has been received and integrity
     checking of the reassembled SCHC Packet is successful.
  See Figure 44 for one among several possible examples of a Finite
  State Machine implementing a receiver behavior obeying this
  specification.  The example provided is meant to match the sender
  Finite State Machine of Figure 43.

9. Padding Management

  SCHC C/D and SCHC F/R operate on bits, not bytes.  SCHC itself does
  not have any alignment prerequisite.  The size of SCHC Packets can be
  any number of bits.
  If the L2 constrains the payload to align to coarser boundaries (for
  example, bytes), the SCHC messages MUST be padded.  When padding
  occurs, the number of appended bits MUST be strictly less than the L2
  Word size.
  If a SCHC Packet is sent unfragmented (see Figure 24), it is padded
  as needed for transmission.
  If a SCHC Packet needs to be fragmented for transmission, it is not
  padded in itself.  Only the SCHC F/R messages are padded as needed
  for transmission.  Some SCHC F/R messages are intrinsically aligned
  to L2 Words.
  A packet (e.g., an IPv6 packet)
           |                                           ^ (padding bits
           v                                           |       dropped)
  +------------------+                      +--------------------+
  | SCHC Compression |                      | SCHC Decompression |
  +------------------+                      +--------------------+
           |                                           ^
           |   If no fragmentation,                    |
           +---- SCHC Packet + padding as needed ----->|
           |                                           | (integrity
           v                                           |  checked)
  +--------------------+                       +-----------------+
  | SCHC Fragmentation |                       | SCHC Reassembly |
  +--------------------+                       +-----------------+
       |       ^                                   |       ^
       |       |                                   |       |
       |       +--- SCHC ACK + padding as needed --+       |
       |                                                   |
       +------- SCHC Fragments + padding as needed---------+
          Sender                                    Receiver
         Figure 24: SCHC Operations, Including Padding as Needed
  Each Profile MUST specify the size of the L2 Word.  The L2 Word might
  actually be a single bit, in which case no padding will take place at
  all.
  A Profile MUST define the value of the padding bits if the L2 Word is
  wider than a single bit.  The RECOMMENDED value is 0.

10. SCHC Compression for IPv6 and UDP Headers

  This section lists the IPv6 and UDP header fields and describes how
  they can be compressed.  An example of a set of Rules for UDP/IPv6
  header compression is provided in Appendix A.

10.1. IPv6 Version Field

  The IPv6 version field is labeled by the protocol parser as being the
  "version" field of the IPv6 protocol.  Therefore, it only exists for
  IPv6 packets.  In the Rule, TV is set to 6, MO to "ignore" and CDA to
  "not-sent".

10.2. IPv6 Traffic Class Field

  If the Diffserv field does not vary and is known by both sides, the
  Field Descriptor in the Rule SHOULD contain a TV with this well-known
  value, an "equal" MO, and a "not-sent" CDA.
  Otherwise (e.g., ECN bits are to be transmitted), two possibilities
  can be considered depending on the variability of the value:
  *  One possibility is to not compress the field and send the original
     value.  In the Rule, TV is not set to any particular value, MO is
     set to "ignore", and CDA is set to "value-sent".
  *  If some upper bits in the field are constant and known, a better
     option is to only send the LSBs.  In the Rule, TV is set to a
     value with the stable known upper part, MO is set to MSB(x), and
     CDA to LSB.
     ECN functionality depends on both bits of the ECN field, which are
     the 2 LSBs of this field; hence, sending only a single LSB of this
     field is NOT RECOMMENDED.

10.3. Flow Label Field

  If the flow label is not set, i.e., its value is zero, the Field
  Descriptor in the Rule SHOULD contain a TV set to zero, an "equal"
  MO, and a "not-sent" CDA.
  If the flow label is set to a pseudorandom value according to
  [RFC6437], in the Rule, TV is not set to any particular value, MO is
  set to "ignore", and CDA is set to "value-sent".
  If the flow label is set according to some prior agreement, i.e., by
  a flow state establishment method as allowed by [RFC6437], the Field
  Descriptor in the Rule SHOULD contain a TV with this agreed-upon
  value, an "equal" MO, and a "not-sent" CDA.

10.4. Payload Length Field

  This field can be elided for the transmission on the LPWAN.  The SCHC
  C/D recomputes the original payload length value.  In the Field
  Descriptor, TV is not set, MO is set to "ignore", and CDA is
  "compute-*".

10.5. Next Header Field

  If the Next Header field does not vary and is known by both sides,
  the Field Descriptor in the Rule SHOULD contain a TV with this Next
  Header value, the MO SHOULD be "equal", and the CDA SHOULD be "not-
  sent".
  Otherwise, TV is not set in the Field Descriptor, MO is set to
  "ignore", and CDA is set to "value-sent".  Alternatively, a matching-
  list MAY also be used.

10.6. Hop Limit Field

  The field behavior for this field is different for Uplink and
  Downlink.  In Uplink, since there is no IP forwarding between the Dev
  and the SCHC C/D, the value is relatively constant.  On the other
  hand, the Downlink value depends on Internet routing and can change
  more frequently.  The DI can be used to distinguish both directions:
  *  in an Up Field Descriptor, elide the field: the TV is set to the
     known constant value, the MO is set to "equal" and the CDA is set
     to "not-sent".
  *  in a Dw Field Descriptor, the Hop Limit is elided for transmission
     and forced to 1 at the receiver, by setting TV to 1, MO to
     "ignore" and CDA to "not-sent".  This prevents any further
     forwarding.

10.7. IPv6 Addresses Fields

  As in 6LoWPAN [RFC4944], IPv6 addresses are split into two 64-bit-
  long fields; one for the prefix and one for the Interface Identifier
  (IID).  These fields SHOULD be compressed.  To allow for a single
  Rule being used for both directions, these values are identified by
  their role (Dev or App) and not by their position in the header
  (source or destination).

10.7.1. IPv6 Source and Destination Prefixes

  Both ends MUST be configured with the appropriate prefixes.  For a
  specific flow, the source and destination prefixes can be unique and
  stored in the Context.  In that case, the TV for the source and
  destination prefixes contain the values, the MO is set to "equal" and
  the CDA is set to "not-sent".
  If the Rule is intended to compress packets with different prefix
  values, match-mapping SHOULD be used.  The different prefixes are
  listed in the TV, the MO is set to "match-mapping" and the CDA is set
  to "mapping-sent".  See Figure 26.
  Otherwise, the TV is not set, the MO is set to "ignore", and the CDA
  is set to "value-sent".

10.7.2. IPv6 Source and Destination IID

  If the Dev or App IID are based on an L2 address, then the IID can be
  reconstructed with information coming from the L2 header.  In that
  case, the TV is not set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set
  to "DevIID" or "AppIID".  On LPWAN technologies where the frames
  carry a single identifier (corresponding to the Dev), AppIID cannot
  be used.
  As described in [RFC8065], it may be undesirable to build the Dev
  IPv6 IID out of the Dev address.  Another static value is used
  instead.  In that case, the TV contains the static value, the MO
  operator is set to "equal" and the CDA is set to "not-sent".
  If several IIDs are possible, then the TV contains the list of
  possible IIDs, the MO is set to "match-mapping" and the CDA is set to
  "mapping-sent".
  It may also happen that the IID variability only expresses itself on
  a few bytes.  In that case, the TV is set to the stable part of the
  IID, the MO is set to "MSB" and the CDA is set to "LSB".
  Finally, the IID can be sent in its entirety on the L2.  In that
  case, the TV is not set, the MO is set to "ignore", and the CDA is
  set to "value-sent".

10.8. IPv6 Extension Headers

  This document does not provide recommendations on how to compress
  IPv6 extension headers.

10.9. UDP Source and Destination Ports

  To allow for a single Rule being used for both directions, the UDP
  port values are identified by their role (Dev or App) and not by
  their position in the header (source or destination).  The SCHC C/D
  MUST be aware of the traffic direction (Uplink, Downlink) to select
  the appropriate field.  The following Rules apply for Dev and App
  port numbers.
  If both ends know the port number, it can be elided.  The TV contains
  the port number, the MO is set to "equal", and the CDA is set to
  "not-sent".
  If the port variation is on few bits, the TV contains the stable part
  of the port number, the MO is set to "MSB", and the CDA is set to
  "LSB".
  If some well-known values are used, the TV can contain the list of
  these values, the MO is set to "match-mapping", and the CDA is set to
  "mapping-sent".
  Otherwise, the port numbers are sent over the L2.  The TV is not set,
  the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set to "value-sent".

10.10. UDP Length Field

  The parser MUST NOT label this field unless the UDP Length value
  matches the Payload Length value from the IPv6 header.  The TV is not
  set, the MO is set to "ignore", and the CDA is set to "compute-*".

10.11. UDP Checksum Field

  The UDP checksum operation is mandatory with IPv6 for most packets,
  but there are exceptions [RFC8200].
  For instance, protocols that use UDP as a tunnel encapsulation may
  enable zero-checksum mode for a specific port (or set of ports) for
  sending and/or receiving.  [RFC8200] requires any node implementing
  zero-checksum mode to follow the requirements specified in
  "Applicability Statement for the Use of IPv6 UDP Datagrams with Zero
  Checksums" [RFC6936].
  6LoWPAN Header Compression [RFC6282] also specifies that a UDP
  checksum can be elided by the compressor and recomputed by the
  decompressor when an upper layer guarantees the integrity of the UDP
  payload and pseudo-header.  A specific example of this is when a
  message integrity check protects the compressed message between the
  compressor that elides the UDP checksum and the decompressor that
  computes it, with a strength that is identical or better to the UDP
  checksum.
  Similarly, a SCHC compressor MAY elide the UDP checksum when another
  layer guarantees at least equal integrity protection for the UDP
  payload and the pseudo-header.  In this case, the TV is not set, the
  MO is set to "ignore", and the CDA is set to "compute-*".
  In particular, when SCHC fragmentation is used, a fragmentation RCS
  of 2 bytes or more provides equal or better protection than the UDP
  checksum; in that case, if the compressor is collocated with the
  fragmentation point and the decompressor is collocated with the
  packet reassembly point, and if the SCHC Packet is fragmented even
  when it would fit unfragmented in the L2 MTU, then the compressor MAY
  verify and then elide the UDP checksum.  Whether and when the UDP
  Checksum is elided is to be specified in the Profile.
  Since the compression happens before the fragmentation, implementers
  should understand the risks when dealing with unprotected data below
  the transport layer and take special care when manipulating that
  data.
  In other cases, the checksum SHOULD be explicitly sent.  The TV is
  not set, the MO is set to "ignore" and the CDA is set to "value-
  sent".

11. IANA Considerations

  This document has no IANA actions.

12. Security Considerations

  As explained in Section 5, SCHC is expected to be implemented on top
  of LPWAN technologies, which are expected to implement security
  measures.
  In this section, we analyze the potential security threats that could
  be introduced into an LPWAN by adding the SCHC functionalities.

12.1. Security Considerations for SCHC Compression/Decompression

12.1.1. Forged SCHC Packet

  Let's assume that an attacker is able to send a forged SCHC Packet to
  a SCHC decompressor.
  Let's first consider the case where the RuleID contained in that
  forged SCHC Packet does not correspond to a Rule allocated in the
  Rule table.  An implementation should detect that the RuleID is
  invalid and should silently drop the offending SCHC Packet.
  Let's now consider that the RuleID corresponds to a Rule in the
  table.  With the CDAs defined in this document, the reconstructed
  packet is, at most, a constant number of bits bigger than the SCHC
  Packet that was received.  This assumes that the compute-*
  decompression actions produce a bounded number of bits, irrespective
  of the incoming SCHC Packet.  This property is true for IPv6 Length,
  UDP Length, and UDP Checksum, for which the compute-* CDA is
  recommended by this document.
  As a consequence, SCHC decompression does not amplify attacks, beyond
  adding a bounded number of bits to the SCHC Packet received.  This
  bound is determined by the Rule stored in the receiving device.
  As a general safety measure, a SCHC decompressor should never
  reconstruct a packet larger than MAX_PACKET_SIZE (defined in a
  Profile, with 1500 bytes as generic default).

12.1.2. Compressed Packet Size as a Side Channel to Guess a Secret

        Token
  Some packet compression methods are known to be susceptible to
  attacks, such as BREACH and CRIME.  The attack involves injecting
  arbitrary data into the packet and observing the resulting compressed
  packet size.  The observed size potentially reflects correlation
  between the arbitrary data and some content that was meant to remain
  secret, such as a security token, thereby allowing the attacker to
  get at the secret.
  By contrast, SCHC compression takes place header field by header
  field, with the SCHC Packet being a mere concatenation of the
  compression residues of each of the individual field.  Any
  correlation between header fields does not result in a change in the
  SCHC Packet size compressed under the same Rule.
  If SCHC C/D is used to compress packets that include a secret
  information field, such as a token, the Rule set should be designed
  so that the size of the compression residue for the field to remain
  secret is the same irrespective of the value of the secret
  information.  This is achieved by, e.g., sending this field in
  extenso with the "ignore" MO and the "value-sent" CDA.  This
  recommendation is disputable if it is ascertained that the Rule set
  itself will remain secret.

12.1.3. Decompressed Packet Different from the Original Packet

  As explained in Section 7.2, using FPs with value 0 in Field
  Descriptors in a Rule may result in header fields appearing in the
  decompressed packet in an order different from that in the original
  packet.  Likewise, as stated in Section 7.4.3, using an "ignore" MO
  together with a "not-sent" CDA will result in the header field taking
  the TV value, which is likely to be different from the original
  value.
  Depending on the protocol, the order of header fields in the packet
  may or may not be functionally significant.
  Furthermore, if the packet is protected by a checksum or a similar
  integrity protection mechanism, and if the checksum is transmitted
  instead of being recomputed as part of the decompression, these
  situations may result in the packet being considered corrupt and
  dropped.

12.2. Security Considerations for SCHC Fragmentation/Reassembly

12.2.1. Buffer Reservation Attack

  Let's assume that an attacker is able to send a forged SCHC Fragment
  to a SCHC reassembler.
  A node can perform a buffer reservation attack: the receiver will
  reserve buffer space for the SCHC Packet.  If the implementation has
  only one buffer, other incoming fragmented SCHC Packets will be
  dropped while the reassembly buffer is occupied during the reassembly
  timeout.  Once that timeout expires, the attacker can repeat the same
  procedure, and iterate, thus, creating a denial-of-service attack.
  An implementation may have multiple reassembly buffers.  The cost to
  mount this attack is linear with the number of buffers at the target
  node.  Better, the cost for an attacker can be increased if
  individual fragments of multiple SCHC Packets can be stored in the
  reassembly buffer.  The finer grained the reassembly buffer (down to
  the smallest tile size), the higher the cost of the attack.  If
  buffer overload does occur, a smart receiver could selectively
  discard SCHC Packets being reassembled based on the sender behavior,
  which may help identify which SCHC Fragments have been sent by the
  attacker.  Another mild countermeasure is for the target to abort the
  fragmentation/reassembly session as early as it detects a non-
  identical SCHC Fragment duplicate, anticipating for an eventual
  corrupt SCHC Packet, so as to save the sender the hassle of sending
  the rest of the fragments for this SCHC Packet.

12.2.2. Corrupt Fragment Attack

  Let's assume that an attacker is able to send a forged SCHC Fragment
  to a SCHC reassembler.  The malicious node is additionally assumed to
  be able to hear an incoming communication destined to the target
  node.
  It can then send a forged SCHC Fragment that looks like it belongs to
  a SCHC Packet already being reassembled at the target node.  This can
  cause the SCHC Packet to be considered corrupt and to be dropped by
  the receiver.  The amplification happens here by a single spoofed
  SCHC Fragment rendering a full sequence of legitimate SCHC Fragments
  useless.  If the target uses ACK-Always or ACK-on-Error mode, such a
  malicious node can also interfere with the acknowledgement and
  repetition algorithm of SCHC F/R.  A single spoofed ACK, with all
  Bitmap bits set to 0, will trigger the repetition of WINDOW_SIZE
  tiles.  This protocol loop amplification depletes the energy source
  of the target node and consumes the channel bandwidth.  Similarly, a
  spoofed ACK REQ will trigger the sending of a SCHC ACK, which may be
  much larger than the ACK REQ if WINDOW_SIZE is large.  These
  consequences should be borne in mind when defining profiles for SCHC
  over specific LPWAN technologies.

12.2.3. Fragmentation as a Way to Bypass Network Inspection

  Fragmentation is known for potentially allowing one to force through
  a Network Inspection device (e.g., firewall) packets that would be
  rejected if unfragmented.  This involves sending overlapping
  fragments to rewrite fields whose initial value led the Network
  Inspection device to allow the flow to go through.
  SCHC F/R is expected to be used over one LPWAN link, where no Network
  Inspection device is expected to sit.  As described in Section 5.2,
  even if the SCHC F/R on the Network Infrastructure side is located in
  the Internet, a tunnel is to be established between it and the NGW.

12.2.4. Privacy Issues Associated with SCHC Header Fields

  SCHC F/R allocates a DTag value to fragments belonging to the same
  SCHC Packet.  Concerns were raised that, if DTag is a wide counter
  that is incremented in a predictable fashion for each new fragmented
  SCHC Packet, it might lead to a privacy issue, such as enabling
  tracking of a device across LPWANs.
  However, SCHC F/R is expected to be used over exactly one LPWAN link.
  As described in Section 5.2, even if the SCHC F/R on the Network
  Infrastructure side is located in the Internet, a tunnel is to be
  established between it and the NGW.  Therefore, assuming the tunnel
  provides confidentiality, neither the DTag field nor any other SCHC-
  introduced field is visible over the Internet.

13. References

13.1. Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
  [RFC6936]  Fairhurst, G. and M. Westerlund, "Applicability Statement
             for the Use of IPv6 UDP Datagrams with Zero Checksums",
             RFC 6936, DOI 10.17487/RFC6936, April 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6936>.
  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
  [RFC8200]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
             (IPv6) Specification", STD 86, RFC 8200,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8200, July 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8200>.
  [RFC8376]  Farrell, S., Ed., "Low-Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN)
             Overview", RFC 8376, DOI 10.17487/RFC8376, May 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8376>.

13.2. Informative References

  [ETHERNET] IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Ethernet",
             DOI 10.1109/IEEESTD.2012.6419735, IEEE
             Standard 802.3-2012, December 2012,
             <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6419735>.
  [RFC4944]  Montenegro, G., Kushalnagar, N., Hui, J., and D. Culler,
             "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over IEEE 802.15.4
             Networks", RFC 4944, DOI 10.17487/RFC4944, September 2007,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4944>.
  [RFC5795]  Sandlund, K., Pelletier, G., and L-E. Jonsson, "The RObust
             Header Compression (ROHC) Framework", RFC 5795,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5795, March 2010,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5795>.
  [RFC6282]  Hui, J., Ed. and P. Thubert, "Compression Format for IPv6
             Datagrams over IEEE 802.15.4-Based Networks", RFC 6282,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6282, September 2011,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6282>.
  [RFC6437]  Amante, S., Carpenter, B., Jiang, S., and J. Rajahalme,
             "IPv6 Flow Label Specification", RFC 6437,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6437, November 2011,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6437>.
  [RFC7136]  Carpenter, B. and S. Jiang, "Significance of IPv6
             Interface Identifiers", RFC 7136, DOI 10.17487/RFC7136,
             February 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7136>.
  [RFC8065]  Thaler, D., "Privacy Considerations for IPv6 Adaptation-
             Layer Mechanisms", RFC 8065, DOI 10.17487/RFC8065,
             February 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8065>.

Appendix A. Compression Examples

  This section gives some scenarios of the compression mechanism for
  IPv6/UDP.  The goal is to illustrate the behavior of SCHC.
  The mechanisms defined in this document can be applied to a Dev that
  embeds some applications running over CoAP.  In this example, three
  flows are considered.  The first flow is for the device management
  based on CoAP using Link Local IPv6 addresses and UDP ports 123 and
  124 for Dev and App, respectively.  The second flow is a CoAP server
  for measurements done by the Dev (using ports 5683) and Global IPv6
  Address prefixes alpha::IID/64 to beta::1/64.  The last flow is for
  legacy applications using different ports numbers, the destination
  IPv6 address prefix is gamma::1/64.
  Figure 25 presents the protocol stack.  IPv6 and UDP are represented
  with dotted lines since these protocols are compressed on the radio
  link.
   Management   Data
  +----------+---------+---------+
  |   CoAP   |  CoAP   | legacy  |
  +----||----+---||----+---||----+
  .   UDP    .  UDP    |   UDP   |
  ................................
  .   IPv6   .  IPv6   .  IPv6   .
  +------------------------------+
  |    SCHC Header compression   |
  |      and fragmentation       |
  +------------------------------+
  |      LPWAN L2 technologies   |
  +------------------------------+
           Dev or NGW
             Figure 25: Simplified Protocol Stack for LP-WAN
  Rule 0
    Special RuleID used to tag an uncompressed UDP/IPV6 packet.
  Rule 1
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
   |       FID      |FL|FP|DI|    TV   |   MO   |     CDA    || Sent |
   |                |  |  |  |         |        |            ||[bits]|
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+---------------------++------+
   |IPv6 Version    |4 |1 |Bi|6        | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Diffserv   |8 |1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Length     |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17       | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Hop Limit  |8 |1 |Bi|255      | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 DevPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|FE80::/64| equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 DevIID     |64|1 |Bi|         | ignore | DevIID     ||      |
   |IPv6 AppPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|FE80::/64| equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 AppIID     |64|1 |Bi|::1      | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
   |UDP DevPort     |16|1 |Bi|123      | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |UDP AppPort     |16|1 |Bi|124      | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |UDP Length      |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |UDP checksum    |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
               Figure 26: Context Rules - Rule 0 and Rule 1
   Rule 2
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
   |       FID      |FL|FP|DI|    TV   |   MO   |     CDA    || Sent |
   |                |  |  |  |         |        |            ||[bits]|
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
   |IPv6 Version    |4 |1 |Bi|6        | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Diffserv   |8 |1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Length     |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17       | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Hop Limit  |8 |1 |Bi|255      | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 DevPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|[alpha/64, match- |mapping-sent||   1  |
   |                |  |  |  |fe80::/64] mapping|            ||      |
   |IPv6 DevIID     |64|1 |Bi|         | ignore | DevIID     ||      |
   |IPv6 AppPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|[beta/64,| match- |mapping-sent||   2  |
   |                |  |  |  |alpha/64,| mapping|            ||      |
   |                |  |  |  |fe80::64]|        |            ||      |
   |IPv6 AppIID     |64|1 |Bi|::1000   | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
   |UDP DevPort     |16|1 |Bi|5683     | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |UDP AppPort     |16|1 |Bi|5683     | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |UDP Length      |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |UDP checksum    |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
                    Figure 27: Context Rules - Rule 2
   Rule 3
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
   |       FID      |FL|FP|DI|    TV   |   MO   |     CDA    || Sent |
   |                |  |  |  |         |        |            ||[bits]|
   +----------------+--+--+--+---------+--------+------------++------+
   |IPv6 Version    |4 |1 |Bi|6        | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Diffserv   |8 |1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Flow Label |20|1 |Bi|0        | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Length     |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |IPv6 Next Header|8 |1 |Bi|17       | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Hop Limit  |8 |1 |Up|255      | ignore | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 Hop Limit  |8 |1 |Dw|         | ignore | value-sent ||   8  |
   |IPv6 DevPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|alpha/64 | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 DevIID     |64|1 |Bi|         | ignore | DevIID     ||      |
   |IPv6 AppPrefix  |64|1 |Bi|gamma/64 | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   |IPv6 AppIID     |64|1 |Bi|::1000   | equal  | not-sent   ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
   |UDP DevPort     |16|1 |Bi|8720     | MSB(12)| LSB        ||   4  |
   |UDP AppPort     |16|1 |Bi|8720     | MSB(12)| LSB        ||   4  |
   |UDP Length      |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   |UDP checksum    |16|1 |Bi|         | ignore | compute-*  ||      |
   +================+==+==+==+=========+========+============++======+
                    Figure 28: Context Rules - Rule 3
  Figures 26 to 28 describe an example of a Rule set.
  In this example, 0 was chosen as the special RuleID that tags packets
  that cannot be compressed with any compression Rule.
  All the fields described in Rules 1-3 are present in the IPv6 and UDP
  headers.  The DevIID value is inferred from the L2 header.
  Rules 2-3 use global addresses.  The way the Dev learns the prefix is
  not in the scope of the document.
  Rule 3 compresses each port number to 4 bits.

Appendix B. Fragmentation Examples

  This section provides examples for the various fragment reliability
  modes specified in this document.  In the drawings, Bitmaps are shown
  in their uncompressed form.
  Figure 29 illustrates the transmission in No-ACK mode of a SCHC
  Packet that needs 11 SCHC Fragments.  FCN is 1 bit wide.
          Sender               Receiver
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-------FCN=0-------->|
            |-----FCN=1 + RCS --->| Integrity check: success
          (End)
                Figure 29: No-ACK Mode, 11 SCHC Fragments
  In the following examples, N (the size of the FCN field) is 3 bits.
  The All-1 FCN value is therefore 7.
  Figure 30 illustrates the transmission in ACK-on-Error mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in 11 tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment,
  WINDOW_SIZE=7 and no lost SCHC Fragment.
          Sender               Receiver
            |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=0----->|
        (no ACK)
            |-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=4----->|
            |--W=1, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: success
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=1 ---| C=1
          (End)
        Figure 30: ACK-on-Error Mode, 11 Tiles, One Tile per SCHC
                     Fragment, No Lost SCHC Fragment
  Figure 31 illustrates the transmission in ACK-on-Error mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in 11 tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment,
  WINDOW_SIZE=7, and three lost SCHC Fragments.
          Sender               Receiver
            |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=0----->|        6543210
            |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:1101011
            |-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
        (no ACK)
            |-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=4--X-->|
            |- W=1, FCN=7 + RCS ->| Integrity check: failure
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1100001
            |-----W=1, FCN=4----->| Integrity check: success
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=1 ---| C=1
          (End)
        Figure 31: ACK-on-Error Mode, 11 Tiles, One Tile per SCHC
                      Fragment, Lost SCHC Fragments
  Figure 32 shows an example of a transmission in ACK-on-Error mode of
  a SCHC Packet fragmented in 73 tiles, with N=5, WINDOW_SIZE=28, M=2,
  and three lost SCHC Fragments.
     Sender               Receiver
      |-----W=0, FCN=27----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=23----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=19----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=15--X-->| 4 tiles sent (not received)
      |-----W=0, FCN=11----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=7 ----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=3 ----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=27----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=23----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=19----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=15----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=11----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=7 ----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=3 --X-->| 4 tiles sent (not received)
      |-----W=2, FCN=27----->| 4 tiles sent
      |-----W=2, FCN=23----->| 4 tiles sent
  ^   |-----W=2, FCN=19----->| 1 tile sent
  |   |-----W=2, FCN=18----->| 1 tile sent
  |   |-----W=2, FCN=17----->| 1 tile sent
      |-----W=2, FCN=16----->| 1 tile sent
  s   |-----W=2, FCN=15----->| 1 tile sent
  m   |-----W=2, FCN=14----->| 1 tile sent
  a   |-----W=2, FCN=13--X-->| 1 tile sent (not received)
  l   |-----W=2, FCN=12----->| 1 tile sent
  l   |---W=2, FCN=31 + RCS->| Integrity check: failure
  e   |<--- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1111111111110000111111111111
  r   |-----W=0, FCN=15----->| 1 tile sent
      |-----W=0, FCN=14----->| 1 tile sent
  L   |-----W=0, FCN=13----->| 1 tile sent
  2   |-----W=0, FCN=12----->| 1 tile sent
      |<--- ACK, W=1, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1111111111111111111111110000
  M   |-----W=1, FCN=3 ----->| 1 tile sent
  T   |-----W=1, FCN=2 ----->| 1 tile sent
  U   |-----W=1, FCN=1 ----->| 1 tile sent
      |-----W=1, FCN=0 ----->| 1 tile sent
  |   |<--- ACK, W=2, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1111111111111101000000000001
  |   |-----W=2, FCN=13----->| Integrity check: success
  V   |<--- ACK, W=2, C=1 ---| C=1
    (End)
                Figure 32: ACK-on-Error Mode, Variable MTU
  In this example, the L2 MTU becomes reduced just before sending the
  "W=2, FCN=19" fragment, leaving space for only one tile in each
  forthcoming SCHC Fragment.  Before retransmissions, the 73 tiles are
  carried by a total of 25 SCHC Fragments, the last nine being of
  smaller size.
  Note: other sequences of events (e.g., regarding when ACKs are sent
  by the Receiver) are also allowed by this specification.  Profiles
  may restrict this flexibility.
  Figure 33 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in 11 tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment, with
  N=3, WINDOW_SIZE=7, and no loss.
          Sender               Receiver
            |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=0----->|
            |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:1111111
            |-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=4----->|
            |--W=1, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: success
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=1 ---| C=1
          (End)
    Figure 33: ACK-Always Mode, 11 Tiles, One Tile per SCHC Fragment,
                                 No Loss
  Figure 34 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in 11 tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment, N=3,
  WINDOW_SIZE=7 and three lost SCHC Fragments.
          Sender               Receiver
            |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=3----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=1----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=0----->|        6543210
            |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:1101011
            |-----W=0, FCN=4----->|
            |-----W=0, FCN=2----->|
            |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:1111111
            |-----W=1, FCN=6----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=5----->|
            |-----W=1, FCN=4--X-->|
            |--W=1, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: failure
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:11000001
            |-----W=1, FCN=4----->| Integrity check: success
            |<-- ACK, W=1, C=1 ---| C=1
          (End)
    Figure 34: ACK-Always Mode, 11 Tiles, One Tile per SCHC Fragment,
                        Three Lost SCHC Fragments
  Figure 35 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in six tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment, N=3,
  WINDOW_SIZE=7, three lost SCHC Fragments, and only one retry needed
  to recover each lost SCHC Fragment.
            Sender                Receiver
               |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=3--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
               |--W=0, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: failure
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1100001
               |-----W=0, FCN=4----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=3----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=2----->| Integrity check: success
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=1 ---| C=1
             (End)
         Figure 35: ACK-Always Mode, Six Tiles, One Tile per SCHC
                   Fragment, Three Lost SCHC Fragments
  Figure 36 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in six tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment, N=3,
  WINDOW_SIZE=7, three lost SCHC Fragments, and the second SCHC ACK
  lost.
            Sender                Receiver
               |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=3--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
               |--W=0, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: failure
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1100001
               |-----W=0, FCN=4----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=3----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=2----->| Integrity check: success
               |<-X-ACK, W=0, C=1 ---| C=1
      timeout  |                     |
               |--- W=0, ACK REQ --->| ACK REQ
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=1 ---| C=1
             (End)
         Figure 36: ACK-Always Mode, Six Tiles, One Tile per SCHC
                         Fragment, SCHC ACK Loss
  Figure 37 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in six tiles, with N=3, WINDOW_SIZE=7, with three
  lost SCHC Fragments, and one retransmitted SCHC Fragment lost again.
             Sender                Receiver
               |-----W=0, FCN=6----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=5----->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=4--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=3--X-->|
               |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
               |--W=0, FCN=7 + RCS-->| Integrity check: failure
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap:1100001
               |-----W=0, FCN=4----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=3----->| Integrity check: failure
               |-----W=0, FCN=2--X-->|
        timeout|                     |
               |--- W=0, ACK REQ --->| ACK REQ
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| C=0, Bitmap: 1111101
               |-----W=0, FCN=2----->| Integrity check: success
               |<-- ACK, W=0, C=1 ---| C=1
             (End)
        Figure 37: ACK-Always Mode, Six Tiles, Retransmitted SCHC
                           Fragment Lost Again
  Figure 38 illustrates the transmission in ACK-Always mode of a SCHC
  Packet fragmented in 28 tiles, with one tile per SCHC Fragment, N=5,
  WINDOW_SIZE=24, and two lost SCHC Fragments.
        Sender               Receiver
          |-----W=0, FCN=23----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=22----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=21--X-->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=20----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=19----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=18----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=17----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=16----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=15----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=14----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=13----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=12----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=11----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=10--X-->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=9 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=8 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=7 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=6 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=5 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=4 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=3 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=2 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=1 ----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=0 ----->|
          |                      |
          |<--- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:110111111111101111111111
          |-----W=0, FCN=21----->|
          |-----W=0, FCN=10----->|
          |<--- ACK, W=0, C=0 ---| Bitmap:111111111111111111111111
          |-----W=1, FCN=23----->|
          |-----W=1, FCN=22----->|
          |-----W=1, FCN=21----->|
          |--W=1, FCN=31 + RCS-->| Integrity check: success
          |<--- ACK, W=1, C=1 ---| C=1
        (End)
    Figure 38: ACK-Always Mode, 28 Tiles, One Tile per SCHC Fragment,
                           Lost SCHC Fragments

Appendix C. Fragmentation State Machines

  The fragmentation state machines of the sender and the receiver, one
  for each of the different reliability modes, are described in the
  following figures:
               +===========+
  +------------+  Init     |
  |  FCN=0     +===========+
  |  No Window
  |  No Bitmap
  |                   +-------+
  |          +========+==+    | More Fragments
  |          |           | <--+ 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  +--------> |   Send    |      send Fragment (FCN=0)
             +===+=======+
                 |  last fragment
                 |  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
                 |  FCN = 1
                 v  send fragment+RCS
             +============+
             |    END     |
             +============+
           Figure 39: Sender State Machine for the No-ACK Mode
                        +------+ Not All-1
             +==========+=+    | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
             |            + <--+ set Inactivity Timer
             |  RCV Frag  +-------+
             +=+===+======+       |All-1 &
     All-1 &   |   |              |RCS correct
   RCS wrong   |   |Inactivity    |
               |   |Timer Exp.    |
               v   |              |
    +==========++  |              v
    |   Error   |<-+     +========+==+
    +===========+        |    END    |
                         +===========+
          Figure 40: Receiver State Machine for the No-ACK Mode
                +=======+
                | INIT  |       FCN!=0 & more frags
                |       |       21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
                +======++  +--+ send Window + frag(FCN)
                   W=0 |   |  | FCN-
    Clear lcl_bm       |   |  v set lcl_bm
         FCN=max value |  ++==+========+
                       +> |            |
  +---------------------> |    SEND    |
  |                       +==+===+=====+
  |      FCN==0 & more frags |   | last frag
  |    21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~ |   | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  |               set lcl_bm |   | set lcl_bm
  |   send wnd + frag(all-0) |   | send wnd+frag(all-1)+RCS
  |       set Retrans_Timer  |   | set Retrans_Timer
  |                          |   |
  |Recv_wnd == wnd &         |   |
  |lcl_bm==recv_bm &         |   |  +----------------------+
  |more frag                 |   |  | lcl_bm!=rcv-bm       |
  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~    |   |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)            |
  |Stop Retrans_Timer        |   |  | Attempt++            v
  |clear lcl_bm              v   v  |                +=====+=+
  |window=next_window   +====+===+==+===+            |Resend |
  +---------------------+               |            |Missing|
                   +----+     Wait      |            |Frag   |
  not expected wnd |    |    Bitmap     |            +=======+
  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~ +--->+               ++Retrans_Timer Exp  |
      discard frag      +==+=+===+=+==+=+| 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~ |
                           | |   | ^  ^  |reSend(empty)All-* |
                           | |   | |  |  |Set Retrans_Timer  |
                           | |   | |  +--+Attempt++          |
    C_bit==1 &             | |   | +-------------------------+
  Recv_window==window &    | |   |   all missing frags sent
               no more frag| |   |   21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
   21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)| |   |   Set Retrans_Timer
         Stop Retrans_Timer| |   |
   +=============+         | |   |
   |     END     +<--------+ |   |
   +=============+           |   | Attempt > MAX_ACK_REQUESTS
              All-1 Window & |   | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)
                 C_bit ==0 & |   v Send Abort
            lcl_bm==recv_bm  | +=+===========+
                21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~ +>|    ERROR    |
                  Send Abort   +=============+
         Figure 41: Sender State Machine for the ACK-Always Mode
   Not All- & w=expected +---+   +---+w = Not expected
   21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~ |   |   |   |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
   Set lcl_bm(FCN)       |   v   v   |discard
                        ++===+===+===+=+
  +---------------------+     Rcv      +--->* ABORT
  |  +------------------+   Window     |
  |  |                  +=====+==+=====+
  |  |       All-0 & w=expect |  ^ w =next & not-All
  |  |     21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) |  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
  |  |    set lcl_bm(FCN)     |  |expected = next window
  |  |      send lcl_bm       |  |Clear lcl_bm
  |  |                        |  |
  |  | w=expected & not-All   |  |
  |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)     |  |
  |  |     set lcl_bm(FCN)+-+ |  | +--+ w=next & All-0
  |  |     if lcl_bm full | | |  | |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  |  |     send lcl_bm    | | |  | |  | expected = nxt wnd
  |  |                    v | v  | |  | Clear lcl_bm
  |  |w=expected& All-1 +=+=+=+==+=++ | set lcl_bm(FCN)
  |  |  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~  +->+    Wait   +<+ send lcl_bm
  |  |    discard    +--|    Next   |
  |  | All-0  +---------+  Window   +--->* ABORT
  |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)  +-------->+========+=++
  |  | snd lcl_bm  All-1 & w=next| |  All-1 & w=nxt
  |  |                & RCS wrong| |  & RCS right
  |  |          21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~| | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)
  |  |            set lcl_bm(FCN)| |set lcl_bm(FCN)
  |  |                send lcl_bm| |send lcl_bm
  |  |                           | +----------------------+
  |  |All-1 & w=expected         |                        |
  |  |& RCS wrong                v   +---+ w=expected &   |
  |  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)  +====+=====+ | RCS wrong      |
  |  |set lcl_bm(FCN)       |          +<+ 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC) |
  |  |send lcl_bm           | Wait End |   set lcl_bm(FCN)|
  |  +--------------------->+          +--->* ABORT       |
  |                         +===+====+=+-+ All-1&RCS wrong|
  |                             |    ^   | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)|
  |      w=expected & RCS right |    +---+   send lcl_bm  |
  |      21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~ |                         |
  |       set lcl_bm(FCN)       | +-+ Not All-1           |
  |        send lcl_bm          | | | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)           |
  |                             | | |  discard            |
  |All-1&w=expected & RCS right | | |                     |
  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) v | v +----+All-1         |
  |set lcl_bm(FCN)            +=+=+=+=+==+ |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)     |
  |send lcl_bm                |          +<+Send lcl_bm   |
  +-------------------------->+    END   |                |
                              +==========+<---------------+
         --->* ABORT
         In any state
            on receiving a SCHC ACK REQ
               Send a SCHC ACK for the current window
        Figure 42: Receiver State Machine for the ACK-Always Mode
                    +=======+
                    |       |
                    | INIT  |
                    |       |       FCN!=0 & more frags
                    +======++       21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
       Frag RuleID trigger |   +--+ Send cur_W + frag(FCN);
       21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC) |   |  | FCN--;
    cur_W=0; FCN=max_value;|   |  | set [cur_W, cur_Bmp]
      clear [cur_W, Bmp_n];|   |  v
            clear rcv_Bmp  |  ++==+==========+       **BACK_TO_SEND
                           +->+              |   cur_W==rcv_W &
        **BACK_TO_SEND        |     SEND     |   [cur_W,Bmp_n]==rcv_Bmp
  +-------------------------->+              |   & more frags
  |  +----------------------->+              |   21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
  |  |                        ++==+==========+   cur_W++;
  |  |      FCN==0 & more frags|  |last frag     clear [cur_W, Bmp_n]
  |  |  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)|  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
  |  |        set cur_Bmp;     |  |set [cur_W, Bmp_n];
  |  |send cur_W + frag(All-0);|  |send cur_W + frag(All-1)+RCS;
  |  |        set Retrans_Timer|  |set Retrans_Timer
  |  |                         |  | +---------------------------------+
  |  |                         |  | |cur_W ==                         |
  |  |Retrans_Timer expires &  |  | |   rcv_W & [cur_W,Bmp_n]!=rcv_Bmp|
  |  |more Frags               |  | |  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)            |
  |  |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)     |  | |  Attempts++; W=cur_W            |
  |  |stop Retrans_Timer;      |  | | +--------+           rcv_W==Wn &|
  |  |[cur_W,Bmp_n]==cur_Bmp;  v  v | |        v   [Wn,Bmp_n]!=rcv_Bmp|
  |  |cur_W++            +=====+==+=+=+==+   +=+=========+ 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~|
  |  +-------------------+               |   | Resend    | Attempts++;|
  +----------------------+   Wait x ACK  |   | Missing   |       W=Wn |
  +--------------------->+               |   | Frags(W)  +<-----------+
  |         rcv_W==Wn &+-+               |   +======+====+
  | [Wn,Bmp_n]!=rcv_Bmp| ++=+===+===+==+=+          |
  |      21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)|  ^ |   |   |  ^            |
  |        send (cur_W,+--+ |   |   |  +------------+
  |        ALL-0-empty)     |   |   |     all missing frag sent(W)
  |                         |   |   |     21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
  |  Retrans_Timer expires &|   |   |     set Retrans_Timer
  |            No more Frags|   |   |
  |           21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)|   |   |
  |      stop Retrans_Timer;|   |   |
  |(re)send frag(All-1)+RCS |   |   |
  +-------------------------+   |   |
                   cur_W==rcv_W&|   |
         [cur_W,Bmp_n]==rcv_Bmp&|   | Attempts > MAX_ACK_REQUESTS
    No more Frags & RCS flag==OK|   | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
              21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)|   | send Abort
   +=========+stop Retrans_Timer|   |  +===========+
   |   END   +<-----------------+   +->+   ERROR   |
   +=========+                         +===========+
        Figure 43: Sender State Machine for the ACK-on-Error Mode
  This is an example only.  It is not normative.  The specification in
  Section 8.4.3.1 allows for sequences of operations different from the
  one shown here.
                   +=======+        New frag RuleID received
                   |       |        21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)
                   | INIT  +-------+cur_W=0;clear([cur_W,Bmp_n]);
                   +=======+       |sync=0
                                   |
      Not All* & rcv_W==cur_W+---+ | +--+
        21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC) |   | | | (E)
        set[cur_W,Bmp_n(FCN)]|   v v v  |
                            ++===+=+=+==+=+
     +----------------------+             +--+ All-0&Full[cur_W,Bmp_n]
     |           ABORT *<---+  Rcv Window |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
     |  +-------------------+             +<-+ cur_W++;set Inact_timer;
     |  |                +->+=+=+=+=+=+===+    clear [cur_W,Bmp_n]
     |  | All-0 empty(Wn)|    | | | ^ ^
     |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC) +----+ | | | |rcv_W==cur_W & sync==0;
     |  | sendACK([Wn,Bmp_n])   | | | |& Full([cur_W,Bmp_n])
     |  |                       | | | |& All* || last_miss_frag
     |  |                       | | | |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~
     |  |    All* & rcv_W==cur_W|(C)| |sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n]);
     |  |              & sync==0| | | |cur_W++; clear([cur_W,Bmp_n])
     |  |&no_full([cur_W,Bmp_n])| |(E)|
     |  |      21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~ | | | |              +========+
     |  | sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n])| | | |              | Error/ |
     |  |                       | | | |   +----+     | Abort  |
     |  |                       v v | |   |    |     +===+====+
     |  |                   +===+=+=+=+===+=+ (D)        ^
     |  |                +--+    Wait x     |  |         |
     |  | All-0 empty(Wn)+->| Missing Frags |<-+         |
     |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)    +=============+=+            |
     |  | sendACK([Wn,Bmp_n])             +--------------+
     |  |                                       *ABORT
     v  v
    (A)(B)
                                     (D) All* || last_miss_frag
      (C) All* & sync>0                  & rcv_W!=cur_W & sync>0
          21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~                   & Full([rcv_W,Bmp_n])
          Wn=oldest[not full(W)];        21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
          sendACK([Wn,Bmp_n])            Wn=oldest[not full(W)];
                                         sendACK([Wn,Bmp_n]);sync--
                               ABORT-->* Uplink Only &
                                         Inact_Timer expires
      (E) Not All* & rcv_W!=cur_W        || Attempts > MAX_ACK_REQUESTS
          21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)           21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
          sync++; cur_W=rcv_W;           send Abort
          set[cur_W,Bmp_n(FCN)]
    (A)(B)
     |  |
     |  | All-1 & rcv_W==cur_W & RCS!=OK        All-0 empty(Wn)
     |  | 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk)     +-+  21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
     |  | sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n],C=0)       | v  sendACK([Wn,Bmp_n])
     |  |                      +===========+=++
     |  +--------------------->+   Wait End   +-+
     |                         +=====+=+====+=+ | All-1
     |     rcv_W==cur_W & RCS==OK    | |    ^   | & rcv_W==cur_W
     |     21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~~    | |    +---+ & RCS!=OK
     |  sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n],C=1)   | |          21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)
     |                               | | sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n],C=0);
     |                               | |          Attempts++
     |All-1 & Full([cur_W,Bmp_n])    | |
     |& RCS==OK & sync==0            | +-->* ABORT
     |21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)Admin (talk) 21:56, 22 September 2020 (UTC)            v
     |sendACK([cur_W,Bmp_n],C=1)   +=+=========+
     +---------------------------->+    END    |
                                   +===========+
       Figure 44: Receiver State Machine for the ACK-on-Error Mode

Appendix D. SCHC Parameters

  This section lists the information that needs to be provided in the
  LPWAN technology-specific documents.
  *  Most common uses cases, deployment scenarios.
  *  Mapping of the SCHC architectural elements onto the LPWAN
     architecture.
  *  Assessment of LPWAN integrity checking.
  *  Various potential channel conditions for the technology and the
     corresponding recommended use of SCHC C/D and SCHC F/R.
  This section lists the parameters that need to be defined in the
  Profile.
  *  RuleID numbering scheme, fixed-size or variable-size RuleIDs,
     number of Rules, the way the RuleID is transmitted.
  *  maximum packet size that should ever be reconstructed by SCHC
     decompression (MAX_PACKET_SIZE).  See Section 12.
  *  Padding: size of the L2 Word (for most LPWAN technologies, this
     would be a byte; for some technologies, a bit).
  *  Decision to use SCHC fragmentation mechanism or not.  If yes, the
     document must describe:
     -  reliability mode(s) used, in which cases (e.g., based on link
        channel condition).
     -  RuleID values assigned to each mode in use.
     -  presence and number of bits for DTag (T) for each RuleID value,
        lifetime of DTag at the receiver.
     -  support for interleaved packet transmission, to what extent.
     -  WINDOW_SIZE, for modes that use windows.
     -  number of bits for W (M) for each RuleID value, for modes that
        use windows.
     -  number of bits for FCN (N) for each RuleID value, meaning of
        the FCN values.
     -  what makes an All-0 SCHC Fragment and a SCHC ACK REQ
        distinguishable (see Section 8.3.1.1).
     -  what makes an All-1 SCHC Fragment and a SCHC Sender-Abort
        distinguishable (see Section 8.3.1.2).
     -  for RuleIDs that use ACK-on-Error mode: when the last tile of a
        SCHC Packet is to be sent in a Regular SCHC Fragment, alone in
        an All-1 SCHC Fragment or with any of these two methods.
     -  for RuleIDs that use ACK-on-Error mode: if the penultimate tile
        of a SCHC Packet is of the regular size only or if it can also
        be one L2 Word shorter.
     -  for RuleIDs that use ACK-on-Error mode: times at which the
        sender must listen for SCHC ACKs.
     -  size of RCS and algorithm for its computation, for each RuleID,
        if different from the default CRC32.  Byte fill-up with zeroes
        or other mechanism, to be specified.  Support for UDP checksum
        elision.
     -  Retransmission Timer duration for each RuleID value, if
        applicable to the SCHC F/R mode.
     -  Inactivity Timer duration for each RuleID value, if applicable
        to the SCHC F/R mode.
     -  MAX_ACK_REQUESTS value for each RuleID value, if applicable to
        the SCHC F/R mode.
  *  if L2 Word is wider than a bit and SCHC fragmentation is used,
     value of the padding bits (0 or 1).
  A Profile may define a delay to be added after each SCHC message
  transmission for compliance with local regulations or other
  constraints imposed by the applications.
  *  In some LPWAN technologies, as part of energy-saving techniques,
     Downlink transmission is only possible immediately after an Uplink
     transmission.  In order to avoid potentially high delay in the
     Downlink transmission of a fragmented SCHC Packet, the SCHC
     Fragment receiver may perform an Uplink transmission as soon as
     possible after reception of a SCHC Fragment that is not the last
     one.  Such Uplink transmission may be triggered by the L2 (e.g.,
     an L2 ACK sent in response to a SCHC Fragment encapsulated in a L2
     PDU that requires an L2 ACK) or it may be triggered from an upper
     layer.  See Appendix F.
  *  the following parameters need to be addressed in documents other
     than this one but not necessarily in the LPWAN technology-specific
     documents:
     -  The way the Contexts are provisioned.
     -  The way the Rules are generated.

Appendix E. Supporting Multiple Window Sizes for Fragmentation

  For ACK-Always or ACK-on-Error, implementers may opt to support a
  single window size or multiple window sizes.  The latter, when
  feasible, may provide performance optimizations.  For example, a
  large WINDOW_SIZE should be used for packets that need to be split
  into a large number of tiles.  However, when the number of tiles
  required to carry a packet is low, a smaller WINDOW_SIZE and, thus, a
  shorter Bitmap, may be sufficient to provide reception status on all
  tiles.  If multiple window sizes are supported, the RuleID signals
  what WINDOW_SIZE is in use for a specific packet transmission.

Appendix F. ACK-Always and ACK-on-Error on Quasi-Bidirectional Links

  The ACK-Always and ACK-on-Error modes of SCHC F/R are bidirectional
  protocols: they require a feedback path from the reassembler to the
  fragmenter.
  Some LPWAN technologies provide quasi-bidirectional connectivity,
  whereby a Downlink transmission from the Network Infrastructure can
  only take place right after an Uplink transmission by the Dev.
  When using SCHC F/R to send fragmented SCHC Packets Downlink over
  these quasi-bidirectional links, the following situation may arise:
  if an Uplink SCHC ACK is lost, the SCHC ACK REQ message by the sender
  could be stuck indefinitely in the Downlink queue at the Network
  Infrastructure, waiting for a transmission opportunity.
  There are many ways by which this deadlock can be avoided.  The Dev
  application might be sending recurring Uplink messages such as keep-
  alive, or the Dev application stack might be sending other recurring
  Uplink messages as part of its operation.  However, these are out of
  the control of this generic SCHC specification.
  In order to cope with quasi-bidirectional links, a SCHC-over-foo
  specification may want to amend the SCHC F/R specification to add a
  timer-based retransmission of the SCHC ACK.  Below is an example of
  the suggested behavior for ACK-Always mode.  Because it is an
  example, [RFC2119] language is deliberately not used here.
  For Downlink transmission of a fragmented SCHC Packet in ACK-Always
  mode, the SCHC Fragment receiver may support timer-based SCHC ACK
  retransmission.  In this mechanism, the SCHC Fragment receiver
  initializes and starts a timer (the UplinkACK Timer) after the
  transmission of a SCHC ACK, except when the SCHC ACK is sent in
  response to the last SCHC Fragment of a packet (All-1 fragment).  In
  the latter case, the SCHC Fragment receiver does not start a timer
  after transmission of the SCHC ACK.
  If, after transmission of a SCHC ACK that is not an All-1 fragment,
  and before expiration of the corresponding UplinkACK timer, the SCHC
  Fragment receiver receives a SCHC Fragment that belongs to the
  current window (e.g., a missing SCHC Fragment from the current
  window) or to the next window, the UplinkACK timer for the SCHC ACK
  is stopped.  However, if the UplinkACK timer expires, the SCHC ACK is
  resent and the UplinkACK timer is reinitialized and restarted.
  The default initial value for the UplinkACK Timer, as well as the
  maximum number of retries for a specific SCHC ACK, denoted
  MAX_ACK_REQUESTS, is to be defined in a Profile.  The initial value
  of the UplinkACK timer is expected to be greater than that of the
  Retransmission timer, in order to make sure that a (buffered) SCHC
  Fragment to be retransmitted finds an opportunity for that
  transmission.  One exception to this recommendation is the special
  case of the All-1 SCHC Fragment transmission.
  When the SCHC Fragment sender transmits the All-1 SCHC Fragment, it
  starts its Retransmission Timer with a large timeout value (e.g.,
  several times that of the initial UplinkACK Timer).  If a SCHC ACK is
  received before expiration of this timer, the SCHC Fragment sender
  retransmits any lost SCHC Fragments as reported by the SCHC ACK, or
  if the SCHC ACK confirms successful reception of all SCHC Fragments
  of the last window, the transmission of the fragmented SCHC Packet is
  considered complete.  If the timer expires, and no SCHC ACK has been
  received since the start of the timer, the SCHC Fragment sender
  assumes that the All-1 SCHC Fragment has been successfully received
  (and possibly, the last SCHC ACK has been lost: this mechanism
  assumes that the Retransmission Timer for the All-1 SCHC Fragment is
  long enough to allow several SCHC ACK retries if the All-1 SCHC
  Fragment has not been received by the SCHC Fragment receiver, and it
  also assumes that it is unlikely that several ACKs become all lost).

Acknowledgements

  Thanks to (in alphabetical order) Sergio Aguilar Romero, David Black,
  Carsten Bormann, Deborah Brungard, Brian Carpenter, Philippe Clavier,
  Alissa Cooper, Roman Danyliw, Daniel Ducuara Beltran, Diego Dujovne,
  Eduardo Ingles Sanchez, Rahul Jadhav, Benjamin Kaduk, Arunprabhu
  Kandasamy, Suresh Krishnan, Mirja Kuehlewind, Barry Leiba, Sergio
  Lopez Bernal, Antoni Markovski, Alexey Melnikov, Georgios
  Papadopoulos, Alexander Pelov, Charles Perkins, Edgar Ramos, Alvaro
  Retana, Adam Roach, Shoichi Sakane, Joseph Salowey, Pascal Thubert,
  and Eric Vyncke for useful design considerations, reviews and
  comments.
  Carles Gomez has been funded in part by the Spanish Government
  (Ministerio de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte) through the Jose
  Castillejo grant CAS15/00336 and by the ERDF and the Spanish
  Government through project TEC2016-79988-P.  Part of his contribution
  to this work has been carried out during his stay as a visiting
  scholar at the Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge.

Authors' Addresses

  Ana Minaburo
  Acklio
  1137A avenue des Champs Blancs
  35510 Cesson-Sevigne Cedex
  France
  Email: [email protected]


  Laurent Toutain
  IMT Atlantique
  2 rue de la Chataigneraie
  CS 17607
  35576 Cesson-Sevigne Cedex
  France
  Email: [email protected]


  Carles Gomez
  Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya
  C/Esteve Terradas, 7
  08860 Castelldefels
  Spain
  Email: [email protected]


  Dominique Barthel
  Orange Labs
  28 chemin du Vieux Chene
  38243 Meylan
  France
  Email: [email protected]


  Juan Carlos Zuniga
  SIGFOX
  425 rue Jean Rostand
  31670 Labege
  France
  Email: [email protected]