> "The UOR-2-TS packet type cannot be used if the IP-ID is
> not random (RND=1) and cannot be deduced from the
> reference IP-ID and the transmitted SN."
> I think RND=1 means that ip-id is random. In RFC3095 page 82,
> UOR-2-TS cannot be used if there is no IPv4 header in the
> context or if value(RND) and value(RND2) are both 1. It seems
> that you mean "The UOR-2-TS packet type can be used if the
> IP-ID is random (RND=1)"
Yes, you're right. I made a mistake in my explanation :-/
> "The UOR-2-TS packet type cannot be used if the IP-ID is
> not random (RND=1) and cannot be deduced from the
> reference IP-ID and the transmitted SN."
> I think RND=1 means that ip-id is random. In RFC3095 page 82,
> UOR-2-TS cannot be used if there is no IPv4 header in the
> context or if value(RND) and value(RND2) are both 1. It seems
> that you mean "The UOR-2-TS packet type can be used if the
> IP-ID is random (RND=1)"
Yes, you're right. I made a mistake in my explanation :-/
Regards,
Didier