I am not seeing the problem. 
 
The "non-secure IPv6 link" you're mentioning is a "virtual link", over a
"real" physical link. The "real" physical link, the "real" L2, provides
the error detection, which uncovers packet errors in the IPv6 tunnel
packets, like on any other IPv6 packet.
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Manfredi, Albert E [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2008 3:09 PM
To: Alex Conta
Cc: ipv6@ietf.org
Subject: RE: Checksum in IPv6 header
 [....] 


  _____  

From: Alex Conta [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2008 12:50 PM
To: 'Rahim Choudhary'; Templin, Fred L; 'Fred Baker'
Cc: ipv6@ietf.org
Subject: RE: Checksum in IPv6 header

The reason is IPsec tunnels, where encrypted packets are tunneled
through a non-secure IPv6 link. In such cases, you can't count on L2
checksums when going across the tunnel boundaries. Or did I miss part of
that recent thread?
 
Bert
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------
IETF IPv6 working group mailing list
ipv6@ietf.org
Administrative Requests: http://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipv6
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to