RFC 2005 (rfc2005) - Page 2 of 5
Applicability Statement for IP Mobility Support
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 2005 Mobile IP Applicability Statement October 1996
-- a topologically significant address -- to which standard IP
routing mechanisms can deliver packets.
The Mobile IP protocol defines the following:
- an authenticated registration procedure by which a mobile node
informs its home agent(s) of its care-of address(es);
- an extension to ICMP Router Discovery [RFC 1256] which allows mobile
nodes to discover prospective home agents and foreign agents; and
- the rules for routing packets to and from mobile nodes, including
the specification of one mandatory tunneling mechanism ([MIP-IPinIP])
and several optional tunneling mechanisms ([MIP-MINENC] and
[RFC 1701]).
2. Applicability
Mobile IP is intended to solve node mobility across changes in IP
subnet. It is just as suitable for mobility across homogeneous media
as it is for mobility across heterogeneous media. That is, Mobile IP
facilitates node movement from one Ethernet segment to another as
well as it accommodates node movement from an Ethernet segment to a
wireless LAN.
One can think of Mobile IP as solving the "macro" mobility management
problem. It is less well suited for more "micro" mobility management
applications -- for example, handoff amongst wireless transceivers,
each of which covers only a very small geographic area. In this
later situation, link-layer mechanisms for link maintenance (i.e.
link-layer handoff) might offer faster convergence and less overhead
than Mobile IP.
Mobile IP scales to handle a large number of mobile nodes in the
Internet. Without route optimization as described in [MIP-OPTIM],
however, the home agent is a potential load point when serving many
mobile nodes. When home agents become overburdened, additional home
agents can be added -- and even dynamically discovered by mobile
nodes -- using mechanisms defined in the Mobile IP documents.
Finally, it is noted that mobile nodes are assigned (home) IP
addresses largely the same way in which stationary hosts are assigned
long-term IP addresses; namely, by the authority who owns them.
Properly applied, Mobile IP allows mobile nodes to communicate using
only their home address regardless of their current location. Mobile
IP, therefore, makes no attempt to solve the problems related to
local or global, IP address, renumbering.
Solomon Standards Track