Network Working Group G. Malkin Request for Comments: 1785 Xylogics, Inc. Updates: 1350 A. Harkin Category: Informational Hewlett Packard Co. March 1995 TFTP Option Negotiation Analysis Status of this Memo This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Abstract The TFTP option negotiation mechanism, proposed in [1], is a backward-compatible extension to the TFTP protocol, defined in [2]. It allows file transfer options to be negotiated prior to the transfer using a mechanism which is consistent with TFTP's Request Packet format. The mechanism is kept simple by enforcing a request- respond-acknowledge sequence, similar to the lock-step approach taken by TFTP itself. This document was written to allay concerns that the presence of options in a TFTP Request packet might cause pathological behavior on servers which do not support TFTP option negotiation. Test Results A TFTP client, modified to send TFTP options, was tested against five unmodified servers: DEC DEC 3000/400 alpha OSF1 V3.0 SGI IP17 mips IRIX 5.2 SUN sun4c sparc SunOS 5.1 IBM RS/6000 Model 320 AIX 3.4 SUN sun4m SunOS 4.1.3 In each case, the servers ignored the option information in the Request packet and the transfer proceeded as though no option negotiation had been attempted. In addition, the standard BSD4.3 source for TFTPD, the starting point for many implementations, was examined. The code clearly ignores any extraneous information in Request packets. From these results and examinations, it is clear that the TFTP option Malkin & Harkin [Page 1]
RFC 1785 TFTP Option Negotiation Analysis March 1995
negotiation mechanism is fully backward-compatible with unmodified
TFTP servers.
Security Considerations
Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
References
[1] Malkin, G., and A. Harkin, "TFTP Option Extension", RFC 1782,
Xylogics, Inc., Hewlett Packard Co., March 1995.
[2] Sollins, K., "The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2)", STD 33, RFC 1350,
MIT, July 1992.
Related Documents
Malkin, G., and A. Harkin, "TFTP Blocksize Option", RFC 1783,
Xylogics, Inc., Hewlett Packard Co., March 1995.
Malkin, G., and A. Harkin, "TFTP Timeout Interval and Transfer Size
Options", RFC 1784, Xylogics, Inc., Hewlett Packard Co., March
1995.
Authors' Addresses
Gary Scott Malkin
Xylogics, Inc.
53 Third Avenue
Burlington, MA 01803
Phone: (617) 272-8140
EMail: gmalkin@xylogics.com
Art Harkin
Internet Services Project
Information Networks Division
19420 Homestead Road MS 43LN
Cupertino, CA 95014
Phone: (408) 447-3755
EMail: ash@cup.hp.com
Malkin & Harkin [Page 2]
mirror server hosted at Truenetwork, Russian Federation.