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authorOthmar Gsenger <otti@anytun.org>2007-04-26 13:39:31 +0000
committerOthmar Gsenger <otti@anytun.org>2007-04-26 13:39:31 +0000
commit312373416128e4f9c078155277defca2170538cc (patch)
treeb3b3c4de45a5847c05bb7321c60a11c8d615b907 /internet-draft-satp.xml
parentsatp xml text (diff)
korrektur
Diffstat (limited to 'internet-draft-satp.xml')
-rw-r--r--internet-draft-satp.xml4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/internet-draft-satp.xml b/internet-draft-satp.xml
index 6c80339..a66377d 100644
--- a/internet-draft-satp.xml
+++ b/internet-draft-satp.xml
@@ -41,13 +41,13 @@
<keyword>secure</keyword>
<keyword>protocol</keyword>
<abstract>
- <t>The secure anycast tunneling protocol (satp) defines a protocol used for communication between any combination of unicast and anycast tunnel endpoints. It has less protocol overhead than IPSec in Tunnel mode and allows tunneling of every ETHER TYPE protocol (e.g. ethernet, ip, arp ...). satp directly includes cryptography and message authentication based on the methodes used by SRTP. It is intended to deliver a generic, scaleable and secure solution for tunneling and relaying of packets of any protocol.
+ <t>The secure anycast tunneling protocol (satp) defines a protocol used for communication between any combination of unicast and anycast tunnel endpoints. It allows tunneling of every ETHER TYPE protocol (e.g. ethernet, ip, arp ...). SATP directly includes cryptography and message authentication based on the methodes used by SRTP. It is intended to deliver a generic, scaleable and secure solution for tunneling and relaying of packets of any protocol.
</t>
</abstract>
</front>
<middle>
<section title='Introduction'>
- <t>SATP is somehow a mixture of an generic encapsulation protocol as <xref target="RFC2784">GRE</xref> and a secure tunneling protocol as <xref target="RFC2401">IPsec</xref> in tunnel mode. To save some header overhead it uses the encryption technices of <xref target="RFC3711">SRTP</xref>. It supports peer to peer tunnels, where tunnel endpoints CAN be any combination of unicast, multicast or anycast hosts, so it defines a <xref target="RFC1546">Host Anycast Service</xref></t>
+ <t>SATP is somehow a mixture of an generic encapsulation protocol as <xref target="RFC2784">GRE</xref> and a secure tunneling protocol as <xref target="RFC2401">IPsec</xref> in tunnel mode. To save some header overhead it uses the encryption technices of <xref target="RFC3711">SRTP</xref>. It supports peer to peer tunnels, where tunnel endpoints can be any combination of unicast, multicast or anycast hosts, so it defines a <xref target="RFC1546">Host Anycast Service</xref></t>
</section>
<section title="Motivation and usage scenarios">
<t>This section gives an overview of possible usage scenarios. Please note, that the protocols used in the figures are only examples and that SATP itself does not care about either transport protocols or encapsulated protocols. Routing is not done by SATP and each implemetation MAY choose it's own way of doing this task (e.g. using functions provided by the operating system). SATP is used only to encapsulate and encrypt data.</t>