Information technology — Control network protocol — Part 4: IP communication

ISO/IEC 14908-4:2011 specifies the transporting of the Control Network Protocol (CNP) packets for commercial local area control networks over Internet Protocol (IP) networks using a tunnelling mechanism wherein the CNP packets are encapsulated within IP packets. It applies to both CNP nodes and CNP routers. The purpose of ISO/IEC 14908-4:2011 is to ensure interoperability between various CNP devices that wish to use IP networks to communicate using the CNP.

Technologies de l'information — Protocole de réseau de contrôle — Partie 4: Communication IP

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INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 14908-4
First edition
2012-02-15


Information technology — Control
network protocol —
Part 4:
IP communication
Technologies de l'information — Protocole de réseau de contrôle —
Partie 4: Communication IP





Reference number
ISO/IEC 14908-4:2012(E)
©
ISO/IEC 2012

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ISO/IEC 14908-4:2012(E)

COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT


©  ISO/IEC 2012
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means,
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ii © ISO/IEC 2012 — All rights reserved

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Contents
Page
FOREWORD .4
Introduction.5
1 Scope.7
2 Normative references .8
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviations.8
3.1 Terms and definitions.8
3.2 Abbreviations.9
4 Requirements.9
5 CNP/IP device specification .10
5.1 IP Related device specifications.10
5.2 CNP related device specifications.10
6 IP channel.11
6.1 Specification.11
6.2 IP transport mechanisms .13
7 CNP/IP device.14
7.1 Configuration of a CNP/IP device .14
7.2 Configuration parameters .14
7.3 Configuration techniques.16
8 CNP/IP messages.17
8.1 Definition of CNP/IP messages and modes of operation.17
8.2 Common message header .18
8.3 Packet segmentation .19
8.4 Data packet exchange .22
8.5 Configuration server interactions.24
8.6 Miscellaneous Status Messages.32
8.7 Vendor Specific Messages.36
8.8 Authentication of CNP Packets.36
9 Packet formats .38
9.1 Packet Types.38
9.2 Common CNP/IP Header .39
9.3 Segment Packet .41
9.4 CNP Data Packets .42
9.5 CNP/IP Device Registration/configuration packets.42
9.6 Channel Membership Packet .46
9.7 Channel Routing Packet.47
9.8 Request Packet .49
9.9 Acknowledge Packet .50
9.10 Send List Packet .51
9.11 Node Status/Health/Statistics Response Message .52
Annex A (normative) Specifications for the CNP standard .55
Annex B (informative) Specifications for CNP .57

Figures
Figure 1 — Typical CNP/IP application. 7
Figure 2 — IP protocol stack. 13

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14908-4 © ISO/IEC:2012 (E) - 3 -
Figure 3 — Packet bunching. 19
Figure 4 — Authentication encoding and decoding of CNP packets . 37
Tables
Table 1 —Device Registration with Configuration Server Protocol . 28
Table 2 — Server to Device Unsolicited Configuration Message Protocol . 29
Table 3 — Device to Server Channel Membership Request Protocol. 29
Table 4 — Device to Server Send List Request Protocol. 31
Table 5 — Device to Server Channel Routing Update Protocol. 31
Table 6 — 6 Device to Server Channel Routing Request Protocol . 32
Table 7 — Protocol for Requesting a Device’s Configuration. 35
Table 8 — Protocol for Requesting a Device’s Send List. 35
Table 9 — Protocol for Requesting a Device’s Channel Definition. 35
Table 10 — Protocol for Requesting a Device’s Channel Routing Information. 36
Table 11 — Message type cross reference.39
Table 12 —Common Packet Header format . 39
Table 13 —Segment Packet format. 41
Table 14 — Data Packet format. 42
Table 15 — Device registration/configuration packet format. 43
Table 16 —Channel Membership Packet format . 46
Table 17 — Channel Routing Packet formats. 47
Table 18 — Configuration Request Packet format. 49
Table 19 — Request Reason codes . 50
Table 20 — Request Amount codes . 50
Table 21 — Request Action codes. 50
Table 22 — Acknowledge Packet formats . 51
Table 23 — Send List Packet format . 52
Table 24 — Node Status/Health/Statistics Response Message. 53

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Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical Commission)
form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are members of ISO or IEC
participate in the development of International Standards through technical committees established by the
respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical activity. ISO and IEC technical committees
collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in
liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the work. In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have
established a joint technical committee, ISO/IEC JTC 1.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2.
The main task of the joint technical committee is to prepare International Standards. Draft International
Standards adopted by the joint technical committee are circulated to national bodies for voting. Publication as an
International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the national bodies casting a vote.
ISO/IEC 14908-4 was prepared by CEN/TC 247 and was adopted, under a special “fast-track procedure”, by
Joint Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology, in parallel with its approval by the national
bodies of ISO and IEC.
ISO/IEC 14908 consists of the following parts, under the general title Information technology — Control network
protocol:
 Part 1: Protocol stack
 Part 2: Twisted pair communication
 Part 3: Power line channel specification
Part 4: IP communication

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Introduction
This International Standard has been prepared to provide mechanisms through which various vendors
of local area control networks may exchange information in a standardised way. It defines
communication capabilities.
This International Standard is used by all involved in design, manufacture, engineering, installation
and commissioning activities.
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC) draw attention to the fact that it is claimed that compliance with this
International Standard may involve the use of patents held by Echelon Corporation
The ISO and IEC take no position concerning the evidence, validity and scope of this patent
right. The holder of this putative patent right has assured the ISO and IEC that they are willing
to negotiate licences under reasonable and non-discriminatory terms and conditions with
applicants throughout the world. In this respect, the statement of the holder of the putative patent
rights is registered with the ISO and IEC. Information may be obtained from:
Echelon Corporation, 4015 Meridian Avenue, San Jose, CA 94304, USA, phone +1-408-
938-5234, fax: +1-408-790-3800 http://www.echelon.com.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this International Standard
may be the subject of patent rights other than those identified above. ISO and IEC shall not
be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY – CONTROL NETWORK PROTOCOL –
Part 4: IP communication

1 Scope
This International Standard specifies the transporting of the Control Network Protocol (CNP) packets
for commercial local area control networks over Internet Protocol (IP) networks using a tunnelling
mechanism wherein the CNP packets are encapsulated within IP packets. It applies to both CNP
nodes and CNP routers.
The purpose of this International Standard is to insure interoperability between various CNP devices
that wish to use IP networks to communicate using the CNP protocol.
The main body of this International Standard is independent of the CNP protocol being transported
over the IP network. The reader is directed to Annex A and Annex B for the normative and informative,
respectively, aspects of this specification that are specific to ISO/IEC 14908-1.
Figure 1 shows a possible configuration of such CNP devices and networks connected to an IP
network.
Workstation Embedded
running CNP
CNP Stack Device
CNP/IP to CNP/IP CNP/IP to CNP/IP
Router Router
IP Channel IP Channel
INTERNET
CNP/IP Router CNP/IP Router CNP/IP Router
CNP CNP CNP
Nodes Nodes Nodes
CNP CNP CNP
Channel Channel Channel

Figure 1 — Typical CNP/IP application
Figure 1 depicts two types of CNP devices: CNP nodes and CNP routers. It should be noted that the
routers shown can route packets between typical CNP channels (such as twisted pair or power line)
and an IP channel or it can route CNP packets between two IP channels. In this International Standard
the IP channel will be defined in such a way to allow it to be used like any other CNP channel.
In the above diagram the IP network can be considered to be one or more IP channels. This
International Standard covers only how CNP packets are transported over IP channels. It does not
cover how CNP packets are routed between standard CNP channels and IP channels. This
specification is not intended to cover the lower layers (physical, MAC and link layers) of either
standard CNP or IP channels.

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2 Normative references
None.
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
3.1.1
tunneling
encapsulation of one protocol’s packet within the payload of another protocol’s packets
3.1.2
channel
common communications transport mechanism that a specific collection of CNP devices share and
communicate over without the use of a router
NOTE 1 Channels are used to transport CNP packets below the link layer of the CNP protocol stack.
NOTE 2 Typically this refers to some type of physical media such as power line, RF, or twisted pair, but in the
case of IP networks this channel is not physical, but a protocol tunnel.
3.1.3
CNP device
device that uses the CNP protocol to communicate with other CNP devices
NOTE Specifically a CNP/IP device is a CNP device that communicates with other CNP devices over an IP
channel.
3.1.4
CNP router
special type of CNP device that routes CNP protocol packets between two or more channels
NOTE Specifically a CNP/IP router is a CNP router in which at least one of the channels it routes packets
over is an IP channel.
3.1.5
CNP node
special type of CNP device that can send or receive CNP protocol packets, but does not route them
between channels
NOTE 1 Specifically a CNP/IP node is a CNP node in which at least one of the channels it sends and receives
packets over is an IP channel.
NOTE 2 All CNP devices are either routers, nodes or both.
3.1.6
CNP group
collection of CNP devices that share a common multicast address
3.1.7
node ID
logical network address that differentiates nodes within the same subnet or domain

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3.1.8
Must Be Zero (MBZ)
reserved field that may be used in the following versions of the protocol
NOTE Such fields shall be sent as zero and ignored by the receiver in implementations conforming to the
current version of the specification.
3.2 Abbreviations
CTP Channel Timeout Period
CNP Control Network Protocol
LFS Last Forwarded Sequence
MBZ Must Be Zero
NTP Network Time Protocol
PSN Packet Sequence Number
SA/DA Source Address / Destination Address
SID Session Identifier
SNTP Simple Network Time Protocol
UDP User Datagram Protocol
4 Requirements
The following is a set of general requirements for the transporting of CNP packets over IP channels:
 be as efficient as possible to allow quasi real-time operation;
 be independent of the application level interface used to receive the packets. For example the
tunnelling protocol should not rely on the existence of a socket interface or how that interface may
be used;
 insure that CNP packet ordering is preserved;
 insure that CNP packets that are “stale” (outside the maximum timeout characteristics of the IP
channel) are not forwarded;
 detect packets that get duplicated in the IP network;
 support IP routing devices that prioritise IP packets;
 optional security measures to prevent malicious users from tampering with devices;
 scalable;
 allow status information to be extracted from CNP/IP devices;
 support the exchange of configuration information between CNP/IP devices and configuration
servers.

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5 CNP/IP device specification
5.1  IP Related device specifications
A CNP/IP device shall behave like any standard IP host capable of exchanging IP packets with any
other IP host either on the same IP subnet or anywhere else in the Internet cloud. A CNP/IP device
shall have a single unicast IP address and may be capable belonging to as many as 32 multi-cast
groups. It is optional that a CNP/IP device support multi-casting. This document does not address the
routing of IP packets between subnets or through the Internet. The CNP/IP devices shall be
compatible with whatever standard mechanisms (IP routers, switches etc.) are required to perform the
IP routing functions.
5.2  CNP related device specifications
5.2.1 Packet formats
The general format of CNP packets which are tunnelled over the IP channel are those packets that are
received from or sent to the Link layer (layer 2) of the CNP protocol stack. Refer to Annex A for a
precise specification of the packet formats corresponding to the CNP protocol.
5.2.2 Addressing schemes
Different CNP protocols generally use different addressing schemes to exchange packets. Although it
is generally not necessary to understand the contents of a CNP packet or its addresses in order to
tunnel CNP packets over IP, some aspects of the CNP addressing scheme are reflected in the
process of configuration. This is especially true when it comes to setting up the IP channels that are
used for tunnelling. Since CNP protocols use different addressing schemes the terminology used in
the main body of this specification for describing addresses are meant to be general and rich enough
to describe the superset of addressing schemes used in all CNP protocols. The following CNP
addressing terms are used in this specification.
 Unique ID. This refers to an ID that is globally unique to all devices within a specific protocol.
Unique ID’s are generally fixed in nature in that they never change through the life of a device.
 Domain. This is the highest level of a three level hierarchical addressing scheme. Domain ID’s
should be unique within a particular network. This means that in a particular network where
Domains are used if two devices have the same Domain ID they belong to the same Domain.
Domain ID’s are generally logical in nature and can be changed and configured.
 Subnet. This is the middle level of a three level hierarchical addressing scheme. Subnet ID’s
should be unique within a particular domain. This means that in a particular network where subnet
ID’s are used if two devices have the same Domain ID and the same Subnet ID then they belong
to the same Subnet. Some CNP's do not use Domains in which case the Subnet may be the
highest level of address for a device. Subnet ID’s are generally logical in nature and can be
changed and configured.
 Node. This is the lowest level of any hierarchical addressing scheme. Node ID’s should be unique
within a particular Subnet. No two devices within the same subset should have the same Node ID.
Node ID’s are generally logical in nature and can be changed and configured.
 Group. Groups are an orthogonal addressing scheme to the hierarchical Domain/Subnet/Node
triplet just described. Groups are used to allow multi-casting of messages. Some CNP’s may not
support group addresses and even those that do will have different rules for how they relate to the
other addressing schemes. These considerations are not relevant to this specification.
The definitions above are fairly general and are provided as a guideline for how to map the CNP
protocol to these terms. In general how the various addressing schemes work within a CNP protocol
are not relevant to this specification. It is only necessary to know what the various addressing terms
refer to.

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Of special note is how these addresses are used for routing within the CNP protocol. Therefore a table
is given in the appendix that specifies how the appropriate addresses used in that protocol map to the
terms given above.
6 IP channel
6.1 Specification
IP channels are not like typical CNP channels that currently exist. Typical CNP channels are physical
busses by nature. This implies that all devices on the channel will by default receive all packets
transmitted on that channel. In addition when a new device is added to the channel it is not necessary
that other devices on the channel become aware of it before they can exchange packets. To transmit
a packet on a channel it is only necessary that a device be capable of physically transmitting the
packet on the channel, nothing more. If a device is simply physically connected to a channel it is
capable of exchanging packets with other devices on the channel.
By contrast an IP channel is not physical, but logical in nature. There are a number of different
physical media that can support IP communications and any of them should be capable of supporting
a CNP channel. Because we are dealing with a logical channel it is necessary to “construct” the
channel by informing each device on the channel of the existence of the other devices on that channel.
In other words before a device can transmit a packet to some other device on an IP channel it shall be
made aware of how to specifically send a packet to that device, i.e. its IP address.
Another significant difference between physical and logical channels is that in the case of typical
physical channels it is possible to calculate fixed upper bounds on the length of time it will take a
packet to traverse from one device to another once the packet is transmitted on the channel. This is
not always possible for IP networks. The deviation of packet delivery times between CNP devices on
an IP channel are much higher than those experienced with typical CNP channels.
As depicted in Figure 1 the IP channel is used as an intermediary transport mechanism for the CNP
packets by a variety of CNP/IP devices. When a CNP packet is transported on an IP channel, an IP
message encapsulating the CNP packets is sent to other CNP/IP devices on that IP channel. On
reception of one of the IP messages by a CNP/IP device the CNP packets are extracted and
processed. A single IP message may contain more than one CNP packet. Therefore the IP messages
shall be formatted in such a way to allow the extraction of the individual CNP packets. This is referred
to a packet “bunching”. CNP/IP devices shall support the reception of bunched packets. Likewise the
bunching shall be done in such a fashion that each CNP packet contained within a bunched IP
message is complete, i.e. CNP packets should not cross IP message boundaries as a result of
bunching. It is also a requirement that intermediate IP devices be capable of unbundling bunched CNP
packets and bunching them in a different manner before forwarding them.
The IP channel is specified by the list of unicast IP addresses, exactly one for each CNP/IP device.
There is no maximum to the number of CNP/IP devices on a single IP channel.
If every CNP/IP device on an IP channel contained a list of unicast IP addresses for every other
CNP/IP device on that IP channel, this is all that would be required to enable the tunnelling of CNP
packets. In the most brute force approach, for each CNP packet to be forwarded on the IP channel a
separate unicast IP message could be sent to each CNP/IP device in the channel. This does not scale
very well so the following techniques will be used to reduce the IP traffic:
 IP multi-cast groups;
 selective forwarding.
IP multi-cast groups allow a single IP message to be sent to more than one CNP/IP device. Therefore
a complete definition of a CNP/IP channel should contain not only the unicast IP addresses of all the
CNP/IP devices on the channel but also the IP multi-cast groups to which they belong. Each CNP/IP
device can belong to up to 32 multi-cast addresses.

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Selective forwarding refers to examining the contents of the CNP packet before forwarding it to
determine if it should be sent to a particular CNP/IP device. In order to do this additional CNP specific
information shall be known about each potential destination. If the CNP/IP device is a router then the
information necessary to perform selective forwarding is the routing tables of the CNP/IP router. If the
device is simply a node then the domain, subnet, node id, unique id, and CNP groups that the node
belongs to should be known. Therefore all this information is also part of a complete IP channel
definition. In short a complete IP channel definition contains all known information that may be
relevant to the forwarding of packets to the other CNP/IP devices in the IP channel. It is the universe
of all relevant knowledge about the IP channel.
It is important that whatever forwarding scheme is used by a CNP/IP device the following conditions
are always true:
a) CNP protocol packets are always received by all CNP/IP devices on the IP channel that need to
receive them regardless of whether they are routers or nodes. If there is any ambiguity or
uncertainty concerning which CNP/IP devices should receive a CNP packet then that packet may
or may not be discarded depending upon specific implementation considerations of the device.
The device may either forward the packet to all devices on the channel or it may simply discard it
and not forward it to any;
b) a specific CNP packet should never be transmitted twice to the same CNP/IP device unless it is
because of some retry mechanism above the link layer of the CNP protocol stack. Due to the
nature of IP networks it may happen that a CNP/IP device may receive duplicate IP messages,
but this should never be the result of the message being transmitted more than once from another
CNP/IP device.
In addition selective forwarding can be performed on multi-cast groups if the groups were formed
based upon some criteria. For example multi-cast group ‘A’ may contain all CNP/IP devices belonging
to domain ID ‘W’. If a CNP packet is des
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