Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6) specifies routing support to permit an IPv6 host to continue using its "permanent" home address as it moves around the Internet. Mobile IPv6 supports transparency above the IP layer, including maintenance of active TCP connections and UDP port bindings. The specifications for these mechanisms consist of: draft-ietf-mobileip-ipv6-24 (RFC XXX) and draft-ietf-mobileip-mipv6-ha-ipsec-06 (RFC XXX) The protocol as specified in the above two documents can be considered as the baseline or minimum protocol set for implementing IPv6 mobility. During the development phase of the base protocol, a few additional features were identified as necessary to facilitate deployment (described below). The primary goal of the MIP6 working group will be to enhance base IPv6 mobility by continuing work on developments that are required for wide-scale deployments. Additionally the working group will ensure that any issues identified by the interop testing of the MIPv6 specifications are addressed quickly. Specific work items with this goal in mind are listed below: 1) Create and maintain an issue list that is generated on the basis of interop testing and address these issues as enhancements to the base protocol 2) Features such as renumbering of the home link, home agent discovery, Route Optimization, which are currently a part of the base specification can be specified more explicitly as separate specifications. This will also enable modularizing the Mobile IPv6 specification further into the minimal subset and add-on features. Some of these specifications will be identified as base mechanisms of Mobile IPv6. 3) A number of enhancements to basic IPv6 mobility were identified during the development of the base specification. These enhancements will be taken up in a phased manner depending on the priority identified with each. Below are listed the work items to be taken up by the WG: - A bootstrap mechanism for setting up security associations between the Mobile Node (MN) and Home Agent (HA) that would enable easier deployment of Mobile IPv6. This bootstrap mechanism is intended to be used when the device is turned on the very first time and activates MIPv6. The WG should investigate and define the scope before solving the problem. - Improving home agent reliability: in the event of a home agent crashing, this would allow another home agent to continue providing service to a given mobile node. - Support for a Mobile Node changing its home address, either because of renumbering in its home network or because it periodically changes addresses (perhaps via RFC3041) - Route optimization will require security mechanisms for trusting and updating the binding information.Return-routability is the basic mechanism for route-optimization. Mechanisms using a shared secret Key/Security Association will be considered. Methods for establishing a security association between the mobile node and the correspondent node are out of the scope of the WG. - The working group will also document problem statements associated with deploying Mobile IPv6 in the following areas: a. Mobile IPv6 issues in the presence of firewalls b. Mobile IPv6 deployment and transition issues in the presence of IPv4/IPv6 networks c. Multicast issues It should be noted that there are potential optimizations that might make mobile IP more attractive for use by certain applications (e.g., making handovers "faster"). The latter category of optimizations is explicitly out-of-scope at this time; this WG will focus on issues for which there is strong consensus that the work is needed to get basic mobility deployable on a large scale.