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Table Of Contents  The TCP/IP Guide
 9  TCP/IP Lower-Layer (Interface, Internet and Transport) Protocols (OSI Layers 2, 3 and 4)
      9  TCP/IP Internet Layer (OSI Network Layer) Protocols
           9  Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP/ICMPv4 and ICMPv6)
                9  ICMP Concepts and General Operation

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ICMP Message Creation and Processing Conventions and Rules
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ICMP Message Types and Formats
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ICMP Common Message Format and Data Encapsulation
(Page 1 of 2)

As we have seen in the preceding topics, ICMP is not so much a protocol that performs a specific function as a framework for the exchange of error reports and information. Since each of the message types is used for a different purpose, they differ in the types of information each contains. This means each ICMP message has a slightly different format. At the same time, however, ICMP message types also have a degree of commonality—a portion of each message is common between message types.

ICMP Common Message Format

The structure of an ICMP message can be generally thought of as having a common part and a unique part. The common part consists of three fields that have the same size and same meaning in all ICMP messages (though the values in the fields aren't the same for each ICMP message type, of course). The unique part contains fields that are specific to each type of message.

Interestingly, the common message format is basically the same for ICMPv4 and ICMPv6. It is described in Table 87 and Figure 138.


Table 87: ICMP Common Message Format

Field Name

Size (bytes)

Description

Type

1

Type: Identifies the ICMP message type. For ICMPv6, values from 0 to 127 are error messages and values 128 to 255 are informational messages. Common values for this field are given in the table in the topic on ICMP message classes and types.

Code

1

Code: Identifies the “subtype” of message within each ICMP message Type value. Thus, up to 256 “subtypes” can be defined for each message type. Values for this field are shown in the individual ICMP message type topics.

Checksum

2

Checksum: 16-bit checksum field that is calculated in a manner similar to the IP header checksum in IPv4. It provides error detection coverage for the entire ICMP message. Note that in ICMPv6, a pseudo-header of IPv6 header fields is prepended for checksum calculation; this is similar to the way this is done in TCP.

Message
Body / Data

Variable

Message Body: Contains the specific fields used to implement each message type. This is the unique part of the message as I mentioned above.


The message body typically contains one or several fields that carry information of relevance to each specific type of ICMP message. For error messages, we see here one more area of commonality in ICMP messages: all ICMP error messages include a portion of the original IP datagram that led to the ICMP error message. This aids in diagnosing the problem that caused the ICMP message to be generated, by allowing the error to be communicated to higher layers.


Figure 138: ICMP Common Message Format

This overall, generic message format is used for both ICMPv4 and ICMPv6 message types.

 


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ICMP Message Creation and Processing Conventions and Rules
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ICMP Message Types and Formats
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