One document matched: draft-bryan-sipping-p2p-00.txt
SIPPING WG D. Bryan
Internet-Draft College of William and Mary
Expires: July 24, 2005 C. Jennings
Cisco Systems
January 20, 2005
A P2P Approach to SIP Registration
draft-bryan-sipping-p2p-00
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is subject to all provisions
of Section 3 of RFC 3667. By submitting this Internet-Draft, each
author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of
which he or she is aware have been or will be disclosed, and any of
which he or she become aware will be disclosed, in accordance with
RFC 3668.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as
Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
This Internet-Draft will expire on July 24, 2005.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
Abstract
This document outlines the motivation and requirements for a
Peer-to-Peer (P2P) based approach to building a SIP registrar using
distributed hash tables, and presents the architectural design for
such a system. This design removes the need for central servers from
SIP, while offering full backward compatibility with SIP, allowing
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 1]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
reuse of existing clients, and allowing P2P enabled nodes to
communicate with conventional SIP entities. A basic introduction to
the concepts of P2P is presented, backward compatibility issues
addressed, and the security considerations are considered.
This is very early work to explore the characteristics that a P2P
system might have. It is less secure in many ways than the
traditional approach to SIP but has certain other interesting
characteristics that may make it desirable in some situations. This
work is being discussed on the sipping@ietf.org mailing list.
Table of Contents
1. Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Definitions and Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
4. Peer-to-Peer Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. P2P SIP Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
5.1 P2P Overlay Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.2 Message Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.3 Node Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5.4 User Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5.5 Session Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6. Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
6.1 P2P Overlay Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
7. Headers and Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7.1 Option Tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7.2 Node-IDs and the user=node Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7.3 User IDs and the resource-ID= Parameter . . . . . . . . . 13
7.4 The DHT-NodeID Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
7.5 The DHT-Link Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
7.6 URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
8. DHT Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
8.1 Node Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
8.1.1 Bootstrapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
8.1.2 Nodes Joining the Overlay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
8.1.3 Nodes Leaving the Overlay Gracefully . . . . . . . . . 20
8.2 Periodic Stabilization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
8.3 Handling Failed Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
8.4 Node Failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9. User-level operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.1 User Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9.1.1 Registering User Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.1.2 Refreshing User Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.1.3 Removing User Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
9.1.4 Querying User Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
9.2 Session Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
9.3 Presence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 2]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
10. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
10.1 Example of a Node Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
10.2 Example of a User Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
10.3 Example of a Session Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.4 Example of a Node Leaving the System . . . . . . . . . . 33
10.5 Example of a Successful User Search . . . . . . . . . . 33
10.6 Example of an Unsucessful User Search . . . . . . . . . 34
11. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.1 Threat Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2 Protecting the Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.1 Email Based Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2.2 Certificate Based Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.3 Protecting the Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.4 Protecting the Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.5 Protecting the Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.6 Replay Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.7 Cut and Paste Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.8 Identify Theft Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.9 Limitations of the Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
12. Open Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
13. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
14. Implementations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
15. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
16. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
16.1 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
16.2 Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 39
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 3]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
1. Conventions
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC-2119 [1].
2. Introduction
As SIP [2] and SIMPLE based Voice over IP (VoIP) Instant Messaging
(IM) systems have increased in popularity, situations have emerged
where centralized servers are either inconvenient or undesirable.
For example, a group of users wishing to communicate between each
other, but using machines that are not consistently connected to the
network are often forced to use a central server that is outside the
control of the group. Similarly, groups wishing to establish
ephemeral networks for use in meetings, conferences, or classes often
do not wish to configure a centralized server. Organizations may
also want to allow their members to communicate with each other
without traffic flowing to third parties, but may not have the staff
or equipment to maintain a server.
Peer-to-Peer (P2P) computing has emerged as a mechanism for
completely decentralized, server-free implementations of various
applications. This draft presents a SIP based system that uses P2P
mechanisms to remove the need for central servers in SIP and SIMPLE
based communications systems.
3. Definitions and Terminology
This document uses the terminology defined in RFC 3261 [2], as well
as the following terms:
Overlay or Overlay Network: This document refers to the virtual
network created by the interconnection between the nodes
participating in the P2P SIP network as the "overlay network", in
keeping with the terminology used in the P2P community.
Node or Peer: Any entity that participates in the overlay network,
understanding the p2p extensions described in this in document, is
a "node" or "peer".
Adapter Node: An adapter node is a node in the overlay that acts as
an adapter for other non-P2P enabled SIP entities, allowing them
to access the resources of the overlay. The adapter node
participates actively in the overlay network, while the non-P2P
enabled SIP entities it provides service to DO NOT. Compare these
to the term "super node" in the P2P community.
Node Registration: The act of a peer joining the overlay.
Registration allows a peer to communicate with other peers, and
requires (allows?) it to take on some server-like responsibilities
such as maintaining resource location information. It DOES NOT
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 4]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
register the user so that they can receive phone calls, which is
the traditional SIP use of the word registration. We refer to
traditional SIP registration as "user registration".
User Registration: The act of a user registering themselves with a
SIP network. User registration creates a mapping between a SIP
URI and a contact for a user to be created. This is the
traditional meaning of registration in SIP. For a P2P SIP node,
this action MUST occur after node registration.
Joining Node: During the node registration process, this is the node
that is attempting to register -- that is, the node that is
attempting to join the overlay network.
Bootstrap Node: During the process of node registration, the
bootstrap node is the node that the joining node contacts. This
node may be a well-known node, a node located using a broadcast
method, a node that the joining node previously knew about, or a
node that another bootstrap node referred the joining node to.
Often, the only role the bootstrap node plays in the node
registration is to direct the joining node to the admitting node.
Admiting Node: During the process of node registration, this is the
node that is currently responsible for the portion of the name
space the new node will eventually reside in. This node is
responsible for generating many of the messages exchanged during
node registration.
Node-ID: The address, in the SHA-1 hashspace, resulting from hashing
the unique ID of a particular node. A node with particular
Node-ID will be responsible for maintaining information about
resources with Resource-IDs that are nearby in the hashspace.
Resource-ID: The address, in the SHA-1 hashspace, resulting from
hashing the resource's resource name or keyword. Any information
about this resource will then be stored at that location in the
name space, and maintained by a node with a Node-ID with a value
numerically similar to the Resource-ID.
Successor Node and Predecessor Node: A term borrowed from Chord.
These terms refer to the node directly after (before) a particular
node in the address space. This does not mean the
successor/predecessor node's ID is one greater/less than the node,
it simply means that there are no other nodes in the namespace
between the node and the successor/predecessor.
Neighbors: A collection of nodes that a particular node can reach in
one hop. In general, note that a node's set of neighbors is
equivalent to the entries in that node's finger table. In our DHT
structure, neighbor relations are NOT symmetric.
Finger Table: The list of nodes that a node uses to send messages to.
The finger table contains many entries about nodes with similar
IDs, and fewer entries about more remote IDs.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 5]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Namespace or hashspace: That range of numbers that valid results from
the hash algorithm fall into. For example, for SHA-1, all results
are 40 hex digits, resulting in a namespace ranging from
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 to
ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff. These are the valid
values for Node-IDs and Resource-IDs.
4. Peer-to-Peer Background
The fundamental principle behind Peer-to-Peer (P2P) networks is that
each and every node has equal importance in the network that is
formed. Rather than a large number of client machines contacting one
or more central servers, nodes interact directly with each other.
Each node that participates in the P2P system provides server-like
functionality and services as well as being a client within the
system. In this way, the services or resources that would be
provided by a centralized entity are instead available from all nodes
within the system. P2P networks form logical networks connecting the
peers to one another. This logical network is referred to as an
overlay network, as it is in some sense a new, small sub-network at a
higher logical level than the one that actually connects the nodes.
Some P2P networks also have certain nodes which provide a higher
level of functionality. Often these nodes form a P2P network and
connect to each other, then serve a number of true clients. These
more powerful nodes are often referred to as super-nodes
Many P2P systems further assume that nodes are ephemeral in nature.
A node may join or leave the overlay at any time. The design of
these P2P networks takes this fact into account. Information is
often replicated, and the topology of the overlay can be quickly
adapted as nodes enter and leave.
Perhaps the most famous (or perhaps infamous) purpose to which P2P
technology has been applied is file swapping. In these systems,
individual users stored files, and joined the overlay network by
connecting to a small number of nodes already in the overlay. When
the user wanted to locate a particular file they did not have, they
would locate it by contacting these neighbors. Several alternatives
existed for this query. In early systems, a node searching for a
file would ask their neighbors if they had the file. If one of these
nodes had the file, it would respond telling the requester they had
the file. If not, they passed the request on to their neighbors.
The search was limited to a particular depth using a Time to Live
(TTL) mechanism, but since nodes had no idea what other nodes were
doing, queries continued until the TTL was reached, even if some node
had already replied. This approach, often called the flood search
approach, proved inefficient.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 6]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
To improve the efficiency, most newer systems locate resources using
a Distributed Hash Table, or DHT. Nodes are organized using a
Distributed Hash Table (DHT) P2P structure. In such a system, every
resource has a Resource-ID, which is obtained by hashing some keyword
that identifies the resource. Resources can be thought of as being
stored in the distributed hash table at the entry corresponding to
their Resource-ID. The nodes that make up the overlay network are
also assigned an ID, called a Node-ID, which maps to the same hash
space as the Resource-IDs. A node that has a Node-ID near a
particular Resource-ID will be responsible for storing the
information about that resource. The hash space is divided up so
that all of the hash space is the responsibility of some particular
node, although as nodes enter and leave the system, the hash area
that any particular node is responsible for my shrink or grow.
Messages are exchanged between the nodes in the DHT as the nodes
enter and leave to preserve the structure of the DHT. The hash space
is often visualized as a grid, circle or line.
When a user wishes to search, they contact a node they know that is
nearest to the ID of the file. If that node does not know how to
find the resource, it asks the node with the ID nearest the request
that it knows about. In this fashion, the request eventually reaches
the node responsible for the resource, which then replies to the
requester.
The Chord [4] system is one particular popular DHT implementation.
Chord uses a ring type structure for the nodes in the overlay. In
this structure, a node with a hash of 0 would be a neighbor of a node
that hashes to the highest possible hash value. If the hash has 2^n
bits in the range, each node will keep a "finger table" of pointers
to at most n other nodes. The ith entry in the finger table contains
a pointer to a node at least 2^(i) units away in the hash space.
These highest finger table entry thus point to a range 1/2 of the way
across the hash space, the next highest 1/4, the next 1/8, and the
smallest entry points to a range only 1 away in the hash space.
Searching is accomplished by sending messages to the node in the
table that is closest to the destination address. That neighbor
should have more finer resolution detail about the area and can route
the message closer to the area in question. This process is repeated
until the message reaches the node responsible for the destination,
which can determine if the resource searched for is present.
Not all systems advertised as P2P are truly P2P. Many systems, such
as the original Napster system, many existing SIP deployments, and
Skype, are what are referred to as hybrid systems. In hybrid
systems, nodes communicate with each other to exchange information,
but resource location is still handled with a centralized server. We
do not consider these type of systems to be P2P in this document.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 7]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Our goal is design a system that requires no central server of any
type.
All P2P systems need to solve the problem of bootstrapping, which is
locating some initial node in the overlay. This problem is solved by
different P2P systems in different ways, including using some set of
fixed nodes, requiring that a node be located using an offline
mechanism, or using a broadcast/multicast mechanism.
P2P systems offer several advantages over centralized architectures
such as client-server architecture. P2P systems distribute resources
across multiple machines, greatly reducing the potential of failure
due to a single node, resulting in increased robustness, as well some
measure of protection from Denial-of-Service (DOS) attacks. P2P
systems also have the advantage of scaling more easily as the number
of nodes increases, since nodes offer server-like functionality, and
so additional servers do not need to be added.
P2P systems have their own class of problems, however. In
particular, malicious nodes can provide incorrect information,
possibly denying access to resource in the system. Additionally,
users can sometimes create many nodes in the system, possibly using
this as a mechanism for high-jacking the system. These type of
attack is often referred to as a Sybil [5] attack.
5. P2P SIP Overview
In this section we provide an overview of how P2P SIP works. Details
are provided in the remainder of the document. Details such as URL
format, headers, and specific call flows are not presented in this
section. Instead, a top level, simplified picture is presented.
Unlike a conventional SIP architecture, P2P SIP systems require no
central servers. P2P enabled SIP nodes communicate with other P2P
enabled SIP nodes, or peers, to establish sessions. Rather than a
traditional architecture where many SIP UAs connect to a central
proxy server, in a P2P SIP network, the peers connect directly to a
few other peers, forming a virtual network of peers referred to as an
overlay network. The nodes participating in this overlay not only
act as traditional SIP UAs, allowing their users to place and receive
calls, but, when viewed collectively with the other peers, perform
the roles of registrars and proxies in traditional SIP networks.
These roles include resource location, maintaining presence
information, and call routing. Each participating peer will maintain
some fraction of the information that would normally be maintained by
the proxy and/or registrar in a conventional SIP network.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 8]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
5.1 P2P Overlay Structure
Nodes are organized using a Distributed Hash Table (DHT) P2P
structure. In such a system, every resource has a Resource-ID, which
is obtained by hashing some keyword that identifies the resource.
Resources can be thought of as being stored in the distributed hash
table at the entry corresponding to their Resource-ID. The nodes
that make up the overlay network are also assigned an ID, called a
Node-ID, which maps to the same hash space as the Resource-IDs. A
node that has a Node-ID near a particular Resource-ID will be
responsible for storing the information about that resource. The
hash space is divided up so that all of the hash space is the
responsibility of some particular node, although as nodes enter and
leave the system, the hash area that any particular node is
responsible for may shrink or grow. Messages are exchanged between
the nodes in the DHT as the nodes enter and leave. Additionally,
redundancy is implemented to protect against a node failing.
Each node keeps information about how to contact some number of other
nodes in the overlay. In terms of the overlay network, these are the
neighbors of the node. The node will have a small number of
neighbors with Node-IDs very different than its own, and more
neighbors with similar Node-IDs -- it knows more about nodes located
nearby in hash space, but also has access to some nodes with
different Node-IDs. When locating a resource with a particular
Resource-ID, the node will send the request to the neighbor with the
Node-ID closest in the hash space to the desired Resource-ID. Since
the node receiving the request has many neighbors with similar
Node-IDs, it will presumably know of a node with a Node-ID closer to
the Resource-ID. The request is then forwarded to this closer node.
The process is repeated until the node responsible for the
Resource-ID is located and the requested information is obtained.
5.2 Message Format
All of the messages that are needed to maintain the DHT, as well as
those needed to query for information are implemented using SIP
messages. We will briefly discuss the exchange of information in the
system. Fundamentally, messages are being exchanged for two
purposes. The first type of messages are those needed to maintain
the DHT, such as the messages needed to join or leave the overlay,
and to transfer information as a result. The second type of messages
are those used to allow the users of the overlay to communicate.
This second type of message is the type most SIP users will be
familiar with -- registering users, inviting other users to a
session, etc.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 9]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
5.3 Node Registration
When a node wishes to join the overlay, it will send a REGISTER
message to a bootstrap node already in the overlay, requesting to
join. In response, additional REGISTER messages are exchanged to
allow the joining node to learn about other nodes in the overlay
(neighbors) and to obtain the information about resources the joining
node will be responsible for maintaining. Other messages will be
exchanged later to maintain the overlay as other nodes enter and
leave, but once the initial set messages are exchanged, a node has
joined the overlay.
5.4 User Registration
The REGISTER messages that are exchanged to allow a node to join the
overlay make up a node registration. The node registration does not,
however, register the user with the P2P SIP network -- it has only
allowed the node to join the overlay.
Once a node has joined the overlay, the user that node represents
must be registered with the system. This process is referred to as
user registration. This registration is analogous to the traditional
SIP registration, in which a message is sent to the registrar
creating a mapping between a SIP URI and a user's contact. The only
difference is that since there is no central registrar, some node in
the overlay will maintain the registration on the users behalf.
The user's node will hash the user name, resulting in a resource-ID
corresponding to that user name. A REGISTER message containing
contact information for the user is constructed. The user's node
will look up the node it is aware of with a Node-ID nearest the
resource-ID calculated from the user's name, and forward the message
to this node. If the receiving node is not responsible for the
portion of the hash space corresponding to that resource-ID, it will
return a 302 - Redirect response, and also report the node nearest in
the hash space that it is aware of. The user's node will then resend
the request to this nearer node. The process is repeated until the
REGISTER message reaches the node responsible for the portion of the
hash space that includes the hashed user id. This node then stores
the registration for that user, and returns a 200 response. For
redundancy, the user should also store the registration at some other
nodes immediately following the responsible node, so it will send
registrations to these nodes as well, The addresses of these nodes
will be provided in the 200 of the responsible node.
5.5 Session Establishment
Establishing a session works very much like user registration. The
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 10]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
caller's node constructs an INVITE message, and hashes the name of
the called. The caller's node sends the message to the node nearest
the hashed name that it is aware of. Again, if the node the message
is sent to is not responsible for that ID, a 302 with a closer node
is returned, and the caller's node will retry sending the message to
this node. The behavior is slightly different when the node storing
that registration is finally reached. Rather than returning a 200,
as in the registration case, it sends back a 302 where the contact is
the actual address of the called's node. When the caller resends the
message to that node, the call is completed in the conventional SIP
format.
6. Architecture
P2P SIP nodes must implement some "server-like" behaviors, as well as
DHT behaviors. The code that implements the additional server-like
and DHT behavior can be located in several places in the network.
The simplest is to have nodes that are endpoints directly joining the
overlay as peers. These nodes have the basic functionality of any
SIP endpoint, but additionally implement the operations described in
this document to enable self-organization.
The behavior can also be located in an adapter node, which allow one
or more conventional SIP UAs to interact with the P2P overlay
network. These adapters perform the additional server-like behavior
on behalf of the UAs it supports. In this case, these UAs are not
peers in the overlay, only the adapter node is, and all the
interaction with the P2P network is carried out by the adapter node.
The adapter essentially acts as a proxy server for the unmodified SIP
UAs. A full featured SIP proxy, implementing not only the limited
proxy-like functions described here, but other services as outlined
in RFC 3261, may also implement the functions of an adapter node,
allowing the UAs it supports to communicate with nodes in the
overlay.
In most places in this document, which type of node we are discussing
won't affect the discussion. In those cases where it will, we have
noted the differences.
6.1 P2P Overlay Structure
The P2P system uses a distributed hash table (DHT) similar to Chord.
Like Chord, the system uses consistent hashing to a one dimensional
name space, conceptually in the form of a circle. Unlike Chord, all
the messages needed to maintain the DHT are strictly SIP messages,
although this requires extensions to conventional SIP
implementations. We use many Chord-like terms, which are defined in
the section Definitions and Terminology. (Section 3)
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 11]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Implementations MUST use the SHA-1 hash algorithm. Each node in the
overlay network is identified by a unique Node-ID. The Node-ID MUST
be calculated at the time the node joins the network using the SHA-1
[3] algorithm to hash the IP address of the node (please see the open
issues section of this document). A node is placed into the space of
the overlay using this hashed value. The IP address is chosen to
remove the ability of the node to select its own placement in the
overlay network, or to create multiple identities in the overlay --
both of which are popular attacks against a P2P network.
Information stored in the overlay is mapped by a key called a
Resource-ID. The Resource-ID MUST be generated by hashing the
identifying string using the SHA-1 algorithm. The key is associated
with (stored by) first node in the network with a Node-ID that is
equal to or greater (mod the size of the namespace) than the
Resource-ID.
Each node keeps information about a number of other nodes in the
overlay. In addition to keeping track of the predecessor and some
number of successor nodes (the nodes directly before or after the
node in the hash space), we keep track of several additional entries
that point to ranges in the hash space away from the node. These
additional entries make up the finger table.
Chord recommends keeping a number of finger table entries equal to
the size in bits of the hash space -- 160 for SHA-1. These entries
point to the first node greater than equal to a distance 2^i away
from the node, for 0 <= i <= 159, mod 2^160. Essentially, the node
divides the overlay hash circle up into segments, the first being the
segment from [0-2^0) away from the node, the second being from
[2^0-2^1), the third being from [2^1-2^2), etc., all the way to the
segment from [2^158-2^159) away from node. It then stores an entry
in the finger table for the first node with a Node-ID greater than or
equal to the start of this interval. When the node wants to find a
resource in that interval, it uses the node listed in the
corresponding finger table as the first node to send the request to.
As the distance between a node and an entry in the finger table
increases, the granularity of information about that portion of the
overlay increases -- a node knows about more nodes near and just
after it than it does nodes that far away. The details of the
messages that exchanged to populate this table, as well as the
algorithms used to keep this current (derived from Chord) are
discussed below.
We recommend that, while using the full SHA-1 hash algorithm, nodes
SHOULD NOT maintain the full 160 entries in the finger table, but
rather some more manageable subset -- perhaps 16 entries for small
networks, 32 for larger networks. As this effects only the
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 12]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
efficiency of the client, it is left to the implementor to determine
a useful value.
7. Headers and Parameters
7.1 Option Tags
We create the new option tag "dht" to indicate support for DHT based
P2P SIP. As described in RFC 3261. Nodes MUST include a Require and
Supported header with the option tag dht for all messages that are
intended to processed in a P2P method. Clients supporting P2P and
contacting another SIP entity for a transaction that may or may not
be P2P SHOULD include a Supported header with dht.
7.2 Node-IDs and the user=node Parameter
Node-IDs are of the form SHA-1:<40 hex digit hash>, with the hash
being the result of using SHA-1 to hash the IP address. The
resulting Node-ID looks like
SHA-1:a04d371e3f4078a7a8c49bb7a4ea6199fc9d5c77. Formally, Node-IDs
are defined as follows:
NodeID = "SHA-1" HCOLON 40LHEX
Additionally, we use the parameter "user=node" when we are
registering nodes into the overlay, as opposed to registering users
to receive calls. Formally, user=node parameter is defined by using
the keyword "node" of type token, serving as "other-user" in the
definition of user-param from RFC 3261.
7.3 User IDs and the resource-ID= Parameter
No special restrictions, beyond those imposed by RFC 3261, are
imposed on the user IDs in a P2P SIP system. Note that various
security schemes, two of which are discussed in Protecting the
Namespace (Section 11.2) may place restrictions of their own on the
User IDs.
Following a user name, the optional parameter resource-ID=<40 hex
digit hash> MAY be provided. This is strictly as a courtesy to nodes
receiving requests for this user, as it prevents them from having to
hash the user name again before routing. This parameter MUST NOT be
used when making any changes to the data stored in an overlay, as it
may be spoofed or incorrect. If the hash parameter is used
incorrectly for routing, this only affects the transmitting node's
user. If it is used to insert or modify stored information, it can
affect the systems integrity. Nodes MUST verify the hash of user
names before making changes that affect the overlay.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 13]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Formally, the resource-ID= parameter is defined as a uri-parameter of
type other-param as defined by RFC 3261. The pname in this case is
defined as "resource-ID", and the pvalue as a ResourceID, as defined
below
ResourceID = "SHA-1" HCOLON 40LHEX
7.4 The DHT-NodeID Header
We introduce a new SIP header called the DHT-NodeID header. This
header is used to express the Node-ID of the sending node.
The format of the DHT-NodeID header is as follows. It consists of
the header name/colon, followed by a Node-ID, as described above,
followed by a space, and finally an address for this node. Thus the
header format is:
DHT-NodeID: <Node-ID> <IP address>
Examples:
A node with an SHA-1 hashed Node-ID of
a04d371e3f4078a7a8c49bb7a4ea6199fc9d5c77 on IP 192.1.1.1:
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:a04d371e3f4078a7a8c49bb7a4ea6199fc9d5c77
192.1.1.1
The formal syntax of the DHT-Link header is:
DHT-NodeID = "DHT-NodeID" HCOLON NodeID SWS host
NodeID = "SHA-1" HCOLON 40LHEX ;as defined above
7.5 The DHT-Link Header
We introduce a new SIP header called the DHT-Link header. The
DHT-Link header is used to transfer information about where in the
DHT other nodes are located. In particular, it is used by nodes to
pass information about the predecessor, successors, and finger table
information stored by a node.
The format of the DHT-Link header is as follows. It consists of the
header name/colon, followed by 4 parameters -- type, depth, Node-ID
and IP address, each separated by a space. Thus the header format
is:
DHT-Link: <type> <depth> <Node-ID> <IP address>
and an example, the header might look like (using a shortened 10
digit Node-ID for simplicity):
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:671a65bf22 192.168.0.1
The type parameter can take on 3 values, and consists of a single
letter. That letter can be P, S, or F. P indicates that the
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 14]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
information provided describes a predecessor of the sending node. S
indicates that the information describes a successor node, and F
indicates that it is a finger table node from the sending node.
The depth parameter is a non-negative integer representing which
predecessor, successor, or finger table entry is being described.
For predecessors and successors, this indicates strictly depth. In
other words, "P 1" indicates the nodes immediate predecessor, while
"S 5" would indicate the fifth successor. "P 0" or "S 0" would
indicate the sending node itself. In the case of finger table
entries, the depth indicates the exponent of the offset. Since
finger tables point to ranges in the hash table that are offset from
the current node in the hash space by a power of two. That is,
finger table entry i points to a range that begins with a node 2^i
away in the hash space, and there are a maximum of k finger table
entries, where k is the size of the hash result in bits. For an
finger table entry, the depth parameter corresponds to this exponent
i. In other words, "F 0" would correspond to a finger table entry
pointing to the node for a range starting a distance 2^0 = 1 from the
Node-ID in the hash space, while "F 6" would point to node used to
search for resources in a range starting 2^6 = 64 away from the
Node-ID in the hash space.
Examples:
The sending node's immediate predecessor is 192.168.0.1: DHT-Link: P
1 SHA-1:671a65bf22 192.168.0.1
The sending node's fifth successor is 10.0.1.1: DHT-Link: S 1
SHA-1:23fe841ddd 10.0.1.1
The sending node's 2^3 finger table entry (the range starting 2^3 = 8
away in the hash space) is 192.168.0.3: DHT-Link: F 3
SHA-1:75783b47df 192.168.0.3
The formal syntax of the DHT-Link header is:
DHT-Link = "DHT-Link" HCOLON DHTL-type SWS DHTL-depth SWS Node-ID
SWS host
DHTL-type = "P" / "S" / "F"
DHTL-depth = 1*DIGIT
7.6 URIs
[To Do: Have quite a few URIs in here, but no section really defining
them. Need a good section that describes them and nails things down]
8. DHT Operations
8.1 Node Registration
The SIP REGISTER message is used extensively in this system.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 15]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
REGISTER is used to register users, as in conventional SIP systems,
and we discuss this further in the User Registration (Section 9.1)
section of this document. Additionally, SIP REGISTER messages are
used to register a new node with the DHT and to register the
information needed to maintain the DHT. The algorithms used in this
system draw extensively from the Chord algorithms. It is node
registration -- rather than user registration, that is discussed in
this section of the document.
8.1.1 Bootstrapping
When a node wishes to join an existing overlay, it must first locate
some node that is already participating in the overlay. referred to
as the bootstrap node. Nodes MAY use any method they choose to
locate the initial bootstrap node. The following are some methods
that may be used:
Static Locations: Some number of nodes in the overlay may be
persistent, and have well know addresses. These address could be
configured into the node application, or obtained using an
out-of-band mechanism such as a web page.
Cached Nodes: While this mechanism cannot be used the first time that
a node runs, on subsequent attempts to join the overlay, a node
might choose to use peers it connected to the last time it was
connected.
Broadcast mechanisms: Nodes can use a broadcast mechanism to locate
the initial peer, for example by sending the first REGISTER
message to the SIP multicast address.
In the rest of this section, we assume that a bootstrap node has been
located.
8.1.2 Nodes Joining the Overlay
8.1.2.1 Registering with the Overlay
After a node has located an initial bootstrap node, the process of
joining the overlay is started by constructing a REGISTER message and
sending it to the bootstrap node. Third party registration MAY NOT
be used for registering nodes into the overlay, and attempts to do so
MUST be rejected by the node receiving such a request. (although
third party registrations are used for other purposes, as described
below) The node first creates their Node-ID. This MUST be
constructed using the SHA-1 algorithm to hash the IP address of the
node. Once the Node-ID has been calculated, the node MUST construct
a SIP REGISTER message following the instructions in RFC3261, section
10, with the exceptions outlined below.
The Request-URI that is constructed for the REGISTER MUST be
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 16]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
prepended with the name of the overlay the node wishes to join,
followed by a slash. For example, if the node wishes to join a an
overlay called "sipchat", and the IP address of the bootstrap node is
11.22.33.44, the resulting Request-URI would be of the form "REGISTER
sip:sipchat/11.22.33.44 SIP/2.0".
The To and From fields of the REGISTER message MUST contain a URI
constructed by using the hashed Node-ID as the user name, and the IP
address of the node. The URI MUST be prepended with the name of the
overlay the node wishes to join. The REGISTER message MUST contain a
Require header field value of dht. Additionally, both the to and
from field MUST include the user=node parameter. A To field might
look like the following (the node ID has been shortened to 10 hex
characters here for formatting reasons) :
To: sip:sipchat/SHA-1:a542b3ef98@11.22.33.44;user=node
The node MUST provide a contact field when registering, so that this
may be identified as a registration/update, rather than a query. The
node MUST provide an expires parameter or expires header with a
non-zero value. As in standard SIP registrations, Expire headers
with a value of zero will be used to remove registrations.
The node MUST provide a DHT-NodeID header field containing their
calculated Node-ID and IP.
Once the REGISTER message is constructed, the node sends it to the
bootstrap node. The bootstrap determines that this is a node
registration because of the presence of the user=node parameter and
presence of an expires header/parameter. The bootstrap node SHOULD
verify that the hashed Node-ID corresponds to the IP address
specified in the URI. The bootstrap node examines the Node-ID to
determine if it corresponds to the portion of the overlay the
bootstrap node is responsible for. If it does, the node will handle
the REGISTER request itself, if not, it will provide the joining node
with information about a node closer to the area of the overlay where
the joining nodes Node-ID is stored.
If the bootstrap node is not responsible for the area of the hash
table where Node-ID should be stored, the node MUST generate a 302
message. Nodes SHOULD NOT proxy the request, as described in
RFC3261:10.3, item1. (although they could, it would place undue
burden on a peer to ask it to do so, so we advise against it) To
construct the 302, the bootstrap node MUST look up the node in its
finger table nearest the joining node's Node-ID, and uses it to
create a contact field. The contact field is placed in the 302, with
a user=node parameter and this response is sent to the joining node.
The responding node MUST include a DHT-NodeID header.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 17]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Upon receiving the 302, the joining node uses the contact address as
the new bootstrap node. The process is repeated until the node
contacted is currently responsible for the area of the DHT in which
the new node will reside. The receiving node that is responsible for
that portion of the overlay is referred to as the admitting node.
The admitting node MUST verify that the Node-ID hash of the IP
address is valid, as described above, but the admitting node differs
in that it recognizes that it is presently responsible for this
region of the hash space -- that is, it is currently the node storing
the information that this Node-Id will eventually be responsible for.
The admitting node is responsible for helping the joining node become
a member of the overlay. In addition to verifying that the Node-ID
was properly calculated, the admitting node MAY require an
authentication challenge to the REGISTER message. Once any challenge
has been met, the admitting MUST send a 200 OK message to the joining
node.
The admitting node MUST provide the joining node with its current
predecessor in the 200. This is placed in a DHT-Link header, using a
type of P and a depth of 1. For example, if the admitting node's
predecessor has an IP address of 192.1.1.1, they would include a
header of the following form in their 200 (again, hashed value is
shortened for editorial reasons):
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:53ed23f67a 192.168.1.1
Additionally, the node MUST provide the successor node, and SHOULD
provide 4 successor node (if that many are present), as these will
are used to redundantly store user registrations. Nodes SHOULD
maintain 4 successors to allow user registrations to be stored
redundantly.
Additionally, the admitting node must include a DHT-NodeID header
containing the admitting node's Node-ID and IP. Note that the
admitting node's predecessor will become the joining node's
predecessor, while the admitting node will become the joining node's
successor. This information was transmitted in the 200 in the
DHT-Link P 1 header and the DHT-Node headers respectively.
Similarly, the joining node will become the admitting node's
predecessor. This information was contained in the REGISTER requests
DHT-Node parameter. The admitting node's successor is unchanged.
The admitting node MAY optionally send a copy of the entries in their
finger table to the joining node, using DHT-Link headers of the F
type. As the joining node will likely be nearby the admitting node
in the hash space (at least for an overlay with a reasonable number
of nodes), this finger table information can likely improve the
performance of the queries required to obtain a correct finger table
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 18]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
information. The user must calculate and reconstruct the intervals
that the admitting would have based on the F parameters and the
Node-ID supplied in the 200.
Before turning to populating the joining node's finger table, we must
show how to search to find the node responsible for an arbitrary
location in the hash space.
8.1.2.2 Resource Location/Search
One may find the node responsible for a particular space in the hash
table as follows. Note that this corresponds to the find_successor
operation in the Chord literature.
As with traditional SIP, REGISTER messages that are sent without a
Contact: header are assumed to be queries. If a user wishes to know
if a particular resource exists, or what node would be responsible
for it if it did exist, a register with no Contact is used.
The node looks for the finger table entry that covers the range they
wish to search. If the finger table entry has not yet been filled
(and the node was not provided another finger table to use to get
started), then the node may send the request to any node it has
available, including their successor, predecessor, or even some boot
strap node. While these initial searches may be less efficient, they
will succeed.
The Request-URI MUST be constructed using the node selected in the
paragraph as the destination, as discussed in the section Registering
with the Overlay. (Section 8.1.2.1) The To field MUST be constructed
providing a Node-ID corresponding to the arbitrary hash address we
are searching for, and MUST NOT include the user=node parameter. It
MAY include the resource-ID parameter, described later in the User
Registration section. The From field MUST be be constructed as
described in the section Registering with the Overlay.
(Section 8.1.2.1) with the searching node's URI. The DHT-NodeID
header MUST be included. The request MUST NOT contain a Contact
header. Note that these are third party registrations. Once
constructed, the message is sent to the node in the Request-URI.
If that node is not responsible, it will return a 302 message
providing a closer contact, and the searching node will construct and
send a new REGISTER to the node provided in the contact. Eventually,
the REGISTER will reach the node responsible for that space in the
overlay. If that node is storing a resource with that key, it MUST
return a 200 with a Contact header corresponding to that resource.
Additionally, the 200 MUST include a DHT-NodeID header containing the
Node-ID of the responding node. If the data is not present, the node
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 19]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
MUST return a 404, which MUST include a DHT-NodeID header containing
the Node-ID of the responding node. In either case, the responding
node MUST also provide DHT-Link headers providing both the
predecessor and successor, as these are required in stabilization
algorithms.
The searching node, in addition to determining if there is some data
in the overlay associated with the arbitrary key we searched for now
knows the Node-ID and IP address of the node responsible for that
data. It is contained in the Node-ID field of the reply.
8.1.2.3 Populating the Joining Node's Finger Table
Once admitted, the joining node MUST populate its finger table. If
the admitting node provided finger table information, the joining
node MAY use this information to construct a temporary finger table,
and use this temporary table in the queries to populate the table,
but MAY NOT simply use the provided finger table information. To
populate the finger table, the node must take its Node-ID and, by
applying the offsets, calculate the Resource-IDs corresponding to the
start of each finger interval. See the P2P Overlay Structure
(Section 6.1) subsection in the Architecture section of this
document. The joining node then performs a search for each of these
start intervals, as described above. The resulting Node-IDs/IPs are
entered into the corresponding finger table entries.
8.1.2.4 Transfering User Registrations
Because the joining node has split the area in the hash space that
the admitting node was responsible for, some portion of these user
registrations are now the responsibility of the joining node, and
these user registrations are handed to the joining node by means of
these user registrations. These are third party registration. Third
part registrations are allowed for user registrations and arbitrary
searches, but are not allowed for node registrations. These
registrations are exactly the same as those discussed in Registering
and Removing User Registrations (Section 9.1), except that as they
are third party registration from a node, the From field should be
constructed as described in the sections above.
8.1.3 Nodes Leaving the Overlay Gracefully
Nodes MUST send their registrations to their successor before leaving
the overlay, as described in the section above. Additionally, nodes
MUST unregister themselves with both their successor and predecessor.
This REGISTER is constructed exactly the same as one used to connect,
with the following exceptions. The expires parameter or header MUST
be provided, and MUST be set to 0. The nodes MUST include DHT-Link
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 20]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
headers listing their predecessor and 4 successor nodes. This allows
the nodes receiving the requests to obtain the information needed to
correct their predecessor and successor nodes, as well as keep their
successor lists needed for redundancy current.
8.2 Periodic Stabilization
In order to keep the overlay stable, nodes must periodically perform
book keeping operations to take into account node failures.
Periodically (we suggest 60-360 seconds), nodes MUST perform an
arbitrary query for their current successor's Node-ID. The node
should examine the response from their successor. The predecessor
reported should be the node that made the request. If it is not, the
node should update their own successor with the predecessor returned,
and additionally should send a REGISTER to this node, as if the
stabilizing node had just entered the system. This will serve to
properly update the overlay.
Additionally, when this periodic stabilization takes place, the node
should perform searches as discussed in Populating the Joining Node's
Finger Table (Section 8.1.2.3) to ensure that the finger table is up
to date.
8.3 Handling Failed Requests
When a request sent to any node fails, the user MUST perform searches
to update their pointers. If the failed request was sent to a node
in the finger table, than the searches discussed in Populating the
Joining Node's Finger Table (Section 8.1.2.3) should be performed for
all intervals that rely on the failed node. If the predecessor or
successor node fails, a search for the predecessor or successor's ID
should be performed, and requests should should be repeated, based on
the predecessors and successors returned by these, until the correct
successor or predecessors are determined.
8.4 Node Failure
Node failures is handled by the periodic stabilization and responses
to failed requests discussed above. 4-way redundancy registrations
ensures that unless 4 sequential nodes fail, registrations will not
be lost.
9. User-level operations
9.1 User Registration
User registrations are maintained, collectively, by the nodes of the
overlay. Registrations SHOULD be stored redundantly in some number
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 21]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
of nodes succeeding the node responsible for the registration, and we
describe how to do this in these sections.
9.1.1 Registering User Registrations
When a node is in the overlay, it must register the users for which
it is responsible into the overlay as data. This differs from the
registrations described above in that these registrations are
responsible for entering a URI->IP address mapping into the overlay
as data, rather than joining a node into the overlay. These
registrations are very similar to those outlined in section 10 of
RFC3261. As with node registrations, the user's full user id should
be hashed using SHA-1, resulting in a Resource-ID corresponding to
the user's user id. The node will route the message to the node
listed in the finger table covering the interval containing the
Resource-ID of the hashed user id. The node constructs the register
message as follows:
The Request-URI that is constructed for the REGISTER MUST be
prepended with the name of the overlay the user wishes to join. For
example, assume the user wishes to join the overlay "sipchat", and
the node in the finger table with Node-ID closest to but equal to or
greater than the Resource-ID calculated by hashing the user name is
11.22.33.44. The Request-URI would be of the form: "REGISTER
sip:sipchat/11.22.33.44 SIP/2.0".
The To and From fields of the REGISTER message MUST contain a URI
constructed using the user's user-id and IP address. For example, if
the user is alice@p2psip.org, the To field would look like:
To: sip:sipchat/alice@p2psip.org
The node MAY append the resource-ID parameter to the To and From.
For example, if we assume alice@p2psip.org hashes to a671b93eff
(shortening the 40 hex digit hash to 10 digits to conserve space),
the To field would look like:
To: sip:sipchat/alice@p2psip.org;resource-ID=sha1:a671b93eff
The From field should be constructed in a similar fashion.
The node MUST provide a contact field when registering, so that this
may be identified as a registration/update, rather than a query. The
node MUST provide an expires parameter with a non-zero value. As in
standard SIP registrations, Expires parameters with a value of zero
will be used to remove registrations. The node MAY append a
resource-ID to the Contact as well.
The node MUST include the value dht in Require and Supported headers.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 22]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
The message is routed in a fashion exactly analogous to that
described in the section on node registration (Section 8.1). Once
the message arrives at a destination that is responsible for that
portion of the hash namespace, the node recognizes it as a user
registration, rather than a node wishing to join the system, based
upon the fact that the To and From fields do not contain user=node
parameters. The node responds with a 200, and MUST include successor
nodes that can be used by the registering node to send redundant
registrations to.
The registering node SHOULD use the successor nodes provided in the
200, and construct registrations to send to these nodes as well.
[To Do: Need to have some way of letting these nodes know these are
redundant registrations so they don't 302 them as "that isn't an
interval I am responsible for"]
9.1.2 Refreshing User Registrations
User registrations are refreshed exactly as described in RFC 3261,
Section 10. Users should send a new registration with a valid
expiration time prior to the time that the registration is set to
expire.
Agents MAY cache the address where they previously registered and
attempt to send refreshes to this node, but they are not guaranteed
success, as a new node may have registered and may now be responsible
for this are of the space. In such a case, the node will receive a
302 from the node with which they previously registered, and should
follow the same procedure for locating the node they used in the
initial registration.
As with initial registrations, the sending node should use the
successors provided in the 200 to send these updates to the redundant
nodes as well.
9.1.3 Removing User Registrations
User registrations are removed exactly as described in RFC 3261,
Section 10. Users should send a registration with expiration time of
zero.
As with initial registrations, the sending node should use the
successors provided in the 200 to send these registration removals to
the redundant nodes as well.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 23]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
9.1.4 Querying User Registrations
User registrations are queried exactly as described in RFC 3261,
Section 10. Users should send a registration with no contact header.
As described in Resource Location/Search (Section 8.1.2.2), this
mechanism can also be used to locate the node responsible for a
particular Resource-ID.
9.2 Session Establishment
When a caller wishes to send a SIP message (such as an INVITE or
MESSAGE message to start a conversation, or a subscribe message to
create a presence relationship with another user), the user must
locate the node where this called's information resides.
The caller hashes the name of the called and obtains a Resource-ID in
the DHT for that user. The user then searches for this Resource-ID
as described in the section titled Resource Location.
(Section 8.1.2.2)
Once the node responsible for the Resource-ID is located, it will
provide either a 302, providing a contact for the users UA, or will
provide a 404 if the user is not registered. If a 302 with a valid
contact is received, the call will complete in the standard RFC 3261
fashion. If a 404 is received, the user is not registered and the
call will not complete.
9.3 Presence
We use SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY for this. We subscribe to every node on our
buddy list when we come online. If the user's are online, that means
that we know exactly where they are. Nodes SHOULD use their buddies
as additional "finger table" entries (essentially, cached values),
consulting these first, as connections are likely to be made to
people on the users buddy list. These should also be periodically
checked, as described in the Periodic Stabilization (Section 8.2)
section.
If buddies are offline, one should periodically try to make the
connection. Alternately, we use the same register mechanism that is
used at node-join time to let nodes we are here, rather than forcing
them to do periodic subscribes. If a UA receives a SUBSCRIBE from
some buddy that is currently offline, it SHOULD attempt to subscribe
to that buddy. This will allow people that are reciprocally on each
others buddy lists to rapidly be notified when one or the other comes
online.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 24]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
10. Examples
For our examples, we use a simplified network. Rather than use a
full SHA-1 hash, and the resulting 2^160 namespace, we instead use a
smaller 4 bit hash, leading to a namespace of size 16. All hash
results in our examples are contrived. We list the Node-ID and
Resource-IDs as SHA-1:xx, where xx is a number between 0 and 15 (2^4
namespace). In a real situation, the full 40 hex chars would be
used. Additionally, because the number of finger table entries is so
small in this case, we use the full 4 entries, where in a real case
we suggest that one uses less than the number of bits in the
namespace.
The empty overlay can be visualized as a circle with 16 possible
vacant points, each corresponding to one possible location in the
hash space. On the left, we have labeled these locations in the hash
space as 0-15, starting in the upper left, and have used 0s to
indicate vacant spaces in the hash space. On the right, we show the
same network with 3 operating nodes, denoted by capital Ns, with
Node-IDs of SHA-1:3, SHA-1:5, and SHA-1:10. We will use this sample
network state as the starting point for all our networks:
0 1 2 0 1 2
0----0----0 0----0----0
/ \ / \
15 0 0 3 15 0 N 3
/ \ / \
14 0 0 4 14 0 0 4
| | | |
13 0 0 5 13 0 N 5
| | | |
12 0 0 6 12 0 0 6
\ / \ /
11 0 0 7 11 0 0 7
\ / \ /
0----0----0 N----0----0
10 9 8 10 9 8
Further, for the sake of example simplicity, assume the node Node-ID
3 has IP address 3.3.3.3, the node node with Node-ID 5 has IP address
5.5.5.5, etc.
Data that hashes to a Resource-ID is stored by the next node whose
Node-ID is equal to or larger than the Resource-ID, mod the size of
the hash. As such, Node 3 is responsible for any resources hashing
from 11-15, as well as 0-3. Node 5 is responsible for resources with
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 25]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Resource-IDs from 4-5, and Node 10 is responsible for resources with
Resource-IDs from 6-10. From this illustration, you follow a
location clockwise until you encounter a node, and this is the node
responsible for storing the information. This is illustrated below:
0 1 2
0----0----0
/ \
15 0 N 3
/
14 0 0 4
| |
13 0 N 5
|
12 0 0 6
\ /
11 0 0 7
/
N----0----0
10 9 8
Finger tables give pointers to nearby nodes. For our system, with 4
bit identifiers, we have 4 finger table entries. These finger tables
point to the node nearest to Node-ID + 2^0, Node-ID + 2^1, Node-ID +
2^2 and Node-ID + 2^3. If no node is present at that location, the
next available node will be used. Thus, for our 3 nodes, the finger
tables look like the following, with ranges (indicated in traditional
mathematical form) mapping to the node those requests will be sent
to:
Node 3 Node 5 Node 10
2^0 Entry [4,5) -> 5 [6,7) -> 10 [11,12) -> 3
2^1 Entry [5,7) -> 5 [7,9) -> 10 [12,14) -> 3
2^2 Entry [7,11) -> 10 [9,13) -> 10 [14,2) -> 3
2^3 Entry [11.3) -> 3 [13,5) -> 3 [2,10) -> 3
Assume further our sample network is called sipchat, and that 2 users
are currently registered. User alice has a Resource-ID of 5, so her
registration information is stored at node 5. User bob is also
registered, and has a Resource-ID of 12, so his registration
information is stored by node 3. Assume further that bob's UA is
collocated with Node 10, so his contact is sipchat/bob@10.10.10.10,
and that alice is running a UA on a completely separate IP of
99.99.99.99, but is using an adapter node running on Node 3,
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 26]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
therefore Node 3 will send messages on alice's behalf, but alice's
contact is sipchat/alice@99.99.99.99.
In each of the examples below, we assume we start from the network
described above. Changes to the example network from previous
examples are discarded.
Note that for simplicity we do not show user registration redundancy
in any examples. This includes responses -- we only send predecessor
and successor, as well as finger table -- not redundant successors.
10.1 Example of a Node Registration
Assume a new node wishes to join the system. The node has an IP
address of 14.14.14.14, which we shall assume hashes to a Node-ID of
SHA-1:14. From an out of band mechanism, this node discovers node 5.
This node constructs a REGISTER as described in Registering with the
Overlay (Section 8.1.2.1), and sends it to node 5. Node 5 verifies
that 14.14.14.14 hashes to 14, then checks to see if it controls that
portion of the namespace. Since it does not, it looks up in its
finger table where it would route a search for 14, and determines it
would send it to node 3. The node then sends a 302 back to node 14,
with a contact of node 3.
Node 14 the constructs a new REGISTER and sends it to Node 3. Again,
Node 3 verifies the hash, and determines it is currently responsible
for 14 in the hash space. After an optional challenge, it replies
with a 200 OK message to admit the node to the system. Finally, Node
3 sends a third party registration on behalf of bob to Node 14,
transferring bob's registration to the new node.
Node 14 Node 5 Node 3
| | |
|(1) REGISTER | |
|------------------>| |
| | |
|(2) 302 | |
|<------------------| |
| | |
|(3) REGISTER | |
|-------------------------------------->|
| | |
|(4) 200 | |
|<--------------------------------------|
| | |
|(5) REGISTER | |
|<--------------------------------------|
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 27]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
| | |
|(6) 200 | |
|-------------------------------------->|
| | |
Node 14 -> Node 5
REGISTER sip:sipchat/5.5.5.5 SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchate/SHA-1:14@14.14.14.14;user=node
From: sip:sipchat/SHA-1:14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Contact: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Expires: 600
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:14 14.14.14.14
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 5 -> Node 14
SIP/2.0 302 Moved Temporarily
Contact: sip:sipchat/3@3.3.3.3;user=node
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 14 -> Node 3
REGISTER sip:sipchat/3.3.3.3 SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
From: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Contact: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Expires: 600
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:14 14.14.14.14
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 3 -> Node 14
SIP/2.0 200 OK
To: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
From: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Contact: sip:sipchat/14@14.14.14.14;user=node
Expires: 600
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 28]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: F 0 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: F 1 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: F 2 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
DHT-Link: F 3 SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 3 -> Node 14
REGISTER sip:sipchat/14.14.14.14 SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat/bob@p2psip.org
From: sip:sipchat/3@3.3.3.3;user=node
Contact: sip:sipchat/bob@10.10.10.10;expires=201
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 14 -> Node 3
SIP/2.0 200 OK
To: sip:sipchat/bob@p2psip.org
From: sip:sipchat/3@3.3.3.3;user=node
Contact: sip:sipchat/bob@10.10.10.10;expires=201
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:14 14.14.14.14
Require: dht
Supported: dht
10.2 Example of a User Registration
Assume user carl starts a UA collocated with node 5. Carl's contact
will be carl@5.5.5.5, and his user name will be carl@p2psip.org.
Carl's Node hashes his user id and determines that the corresponding
Resource-ID will be 11 -- that is, Carl's registration will be stored
by by the node responsible for Resource-ID 11 -- ultimately Node 3 in
our example.
Carl's UA begins by constructing a SIP REGISTER message as described
in Registering User Registrations (Section 9.1.1). Carl's UA
consults its finger table, and determines that it should route
requests pertaining to a Resource-ID of 11 to Node 10. The REGISTER
is sent to Node 10, which observes that it is not responsible for
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 29]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
that portion of the namespace, and consults the finger table, finding
Node 3 in the appropriate entry. Node 10 sends a 302 containing Node
3 as a contact.
Node 5 constructs a new REGISTER on behalf of carl, and sends it to
Node 3. Node 3 recognizes that it is responsible for storing this
registration, and replies with a 200 OK (although in reality it might
challenge in some way). The 200 contains some number of successor
nodes -- in this case 2 (although in our contrived example, one is
node 5 itself) that carl's node could send redundant registrations
to. In our example, we do not show these. The 200 also (like 302s)
must contain successors/predecessors in case the request is being
used for stabilization. Again, in the tiny contrived example it
looks odd since the second successor is the same as the predecessor.
In a larger example this would not be the case.
[To Do: Maybe use a bigger example to fix these problems? That might
be to big and ugly. Need a good way to show this]
Node 5 Node 10 Node 3
| | |
|(1) REGISTER | |
|------------------>| |
| | |
|(2) 302 | |
|<------------------| |
| | |
|(3) REGISTER | |
|-------------------------------------->|
| | |
|(4) 200 | |
|<--------------------------------------|
| | |
Node 5 -> Node 10
REGISTER sip:sipchat/10.10.10.10 SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
From: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Contact: sip:sipchat/carl@5.5.5.5;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Expires: 600
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 30]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Node 10 -> Node 5
SIP/2.0 302 Moved Temporarily
Contact: sip:sipchat/3@3.3.3.3;user=node
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 5 -> Node 3
REGISTER sip:sipchat/3.3.3.3 SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
From: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Contact: sip:sipchat/carl@5.5.5.5;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Expires: 600
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 3 -> Node 5
SIP/2.0 200 OK
To: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
From: sip:sipchat/carl@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Contact: sip:sipchat/carl@5.5.5.5;resource-ID=SHA-1:11
Expires: 600
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: S 2 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
Require: dht
Supported: dht
10.3 Example of a Session Establishment
Assume user bob wishes to call user alice. Bob's node hashes alice's
user id, resulting in a Resource-ID of 5. Bob's node (recall that
Bob's UA is collocated with node 10) consults it's finger table, and
determines that a request for Resource-ID 5 should be routed to Node
3. An INVITE message is constructed and routed to Node 3. Node 3
determines it is not responsible for a Resource-ID of 5, looks up the
ID in it's finger table and determines it should be routed to Node 5,
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 31]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
so it returns a 302 referring to Node 5. Bob's node resends the
INVITE to Node 5, which stores alice's information. It sends a 302
with alice's contact -- sipchat/alice@99.99.99.99. Bob finally sends
an invite to alice's UA, and session establishment is completed as
normal.
[To Do: Need to get the messages right. Alice's UA doesn't support
dht, so need to tweak the messages a bit as far as supported and
such. May need to figure out if sipchat/ belongs in her contact]
Node 10 Node 3 Node 5 Alice UA
| | | |
|(1) INVITE | | |
|------------------>| | |
| | | |
|(2) 302 | | |
|<------------------| | |
| | | |
|(3) INVITE | | |
|----------------------------------->| |
| | | |
|(4) 302 | | |
|<-----------------------------------| |
| | | |
|(5) INVITE | | |
|------------------------------------------------------>|
| | | |
|(6) 180 | | |
|<------------------------------------------------------|
| | | |
|(7) 200 | | |
|<------------------------------------------------------|
| | | |
|(8) ACK | | |
|------------------------------------------------------>|
| | | |
Node 10 -> Node 3
INVITE sip:sipchat/alice@p2psip.org SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat/alice@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:5
From: sip:sipchat/bob@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:12
Contact: sip:sipchat/bob@10.10.10.10
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10.10
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 32]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Node 3 -> Node 10
SIP/2.0 302 Moved Temporarily
Contact: sip:sipchat/5@5.5.5.5;user=node
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 10 -> Node 5
INVITE sip:sipchat/alice@p2psip.org SIP/2.0
To: sip:sipchat:alice@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:5
From: sip:sipchat:bob@p2psip.org;resource-ID=SHA-1:12
Contact: sip:sipchat:bob@10.10.10.10
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10.10
Require: dht
Supported: dht
Node 5 -> Node 10
SIP/2.0 302 Moved Temporarily
Contact: sip:sipchat:alice@99.99.99.99
DHT-NodeID: SHA-1:5 5.5.5.5
DHT-Link: P 1 SHA-1:3 3.3.3.3
DHT-Link: S 1 SHA-1:10 10.10.10.10
Require: dht
Supported: dht
[To Do: Rest of call flow, with correct handling of fact
Alice's UA is not DHT compliant]
10.4 Example of a Node Leaving the System
[To Do: Add an example here]
10.5 Example of a Successful User Search
[To Do: Add an example here]
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 33]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
10.6 Example of an Unsucessful User Search
[To Do: Add an example here]
11. Security Considerations
[To Do: Still a lots of work to be done here.]
There are many inherent security issues in a system such as this and
it is clearly not the solution for everyone. However, it does trade
off some security for certain other properties such as no centralized
server or owner of the name space.
11.1 Threat Model
The attacker is assumed to be able to generate and identity and
become a valid node in the system. They can see other nodes and
process certain queries. Attackers may wish to receive
communications for another participant. Stop another user from
receiving their messages. Stop large portions of the users from
receiving messages. Send messages that appear to be from others.
Users would like to know they are communicating with the same person
they previously talked to. Be able to verify identity via some out
of band mechanism. Attackers may try to squat on all the good names.
Users would like to get a name that is meaningful to them. Attackers
may have computers that are many times faster than the average user.
Attackers may be able to DOS other particular nodes and make them
fail. To make a robust DHT, many nodes needs to store information on
behalf of the community. Nodes may lie about this and not store the
information. Attackers may which to see who is communicating with
whom and how much data they are communicating.
11.2 Protecting the Namespace
A key requirement of the system is that there is no centralized
naming authority and users can pick names. This means that two users
could pick the same name and the system needs a way to arbitrate
between which one of them should be allowed to use that name. We
present two schemes for protecting the namespace. Implementations
SHOULD use some scheme to ensure that users are who they say they
are.
11.2.1 Email Based Protection
Users MUST use a valid email address as their user id. At the time
the user registers with the system, the responsible node looks to see
if any previous registrations have been entered for this user. If
they have not, the node generates an email and sends it to the email
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 34]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
being used as a user id. Included in this email is a password. This
password may either be a conventional password, or a portion of a key
system, in which case other nodes that might replicate the
information would have only the public portion of the key.
After receiving this email, the user will re-register. The node
receiving the registration MUST challenge the registration, expecting
the user to provide the password sent in email. If the user
successfully meets the challenge, the password is stored along with
the users registration, as well as an expiration. The expiration
SHOULD be for a period of between 30 and 90 days. This registration,
like a normal user registration SHOULD be replicated to other nodes,
so that they can preserve the password.
When a node re-registers at a later date, the node must check if the
password is still valid. If it is not, a new email must be sent. If
it is, the registering user should be challenged, and if the
registration is successful, the expiration SHOULD be advanced to 30
or 90 days from the date of re-registration. In such a way,
registrations will only expire if the user ids are unused for an
extended portion of time.
11.2.2 Certificate Based Protection
11.3 Protecting the Routing
The DHT forms a complex routing table. When a node joins, nodes it
contacts could like about finger information to try and send all the
traffic from that done through themselves.
11.4 Protecting the Signaling
The goal here is to stop the attacker from know who is signaling what
to who.
The interactive systems mans that nodes only see the queries.
Clients can randomly generate these to obfuscate who they are tying
to connect too. Cached results localize the area in the DHT where an
attackers node would have to be located to see a attempted connection
to a given node.
11.5 Protecting the Media
All the media needs to be S/MIME encrypted. This reduces the value
of intercepting someone else communication to a fairly low value
because you can't see the media in the message. This is critical.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 35]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
11.6 Replay Attacks
11.7 Cut and Paste Attacks
11.8 Identify Theft Attacks
11.9 Limitations of the Security
12. Open Issues
There are certainly many open issues. Here are a few.
Still working on the details of what names look like, how they are
allocated and protected, and how they are disambiguated from
traditional names that use DNS based routing.
Using routable IP addresses for the Node-ID is problematic. Using
them solves a big problem with preventing the Sybil attack and
preventing people from simply making tons of nodes that join the
network and pollute the space, but on the other hand, this will be a
BIG problem with NATs. If home users' machines are used, some large
fraction probably have IP addresses in the 192.168.0.x and
192.168.1.x families, and that clearly won't work, since they will
all hash to the same ID. I used IP address for now in the draft, but
we need a better way to generate Node-IDs that works for NATs and
preserves all the protection against P2P attacks of using them.
Among the thoughts we have had on this issue. First, require the use
of mechanisms such as STUN, and require that actual IP addresses be
placed in the messages. This works well, but causes the problem that
only one node can be behind a NAT. Appending a port does NOT solve
the problem, as users then, by selecting arbitrary port numbers can
create a very large number of Node-IDs, and in a network with a small
number of nodes, could likely find a Node-ID that would place them
between any pair of nodes they desired, causing disruption to the
network. One possibility we have considered is to append the port
number -- unmodified -- to the hash. This would still allow users
behind a NAT to have different Node-IDs, but the range of addresses
within the hash would be very limited -- the user would only be able
to insert themselves between other nodes behind the same NAT they are
behind. There would still be issues with being able to control an
arbitrary number of successors, but they seem less serious than the
other alternative. This issue needs to be explored.
Not sure what the correct delimiter between the overlay and username
in URIs is. We have used / for now (sip:sipchat/user@address), but
perhaps this isn't the right choice. Need to ensure that we have a
legal character and that there won't be any issues with parsing.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 36]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
This draft needs to be changed to use all non-routable IP addresses
in the examples.
13. Acknowledgements
The following people provided useful feedback, commentary, advice,
design ideas, criticism, or proofreading during the course of writing
this draft:
Adam Roach, Bruce B. Lowekamp, Robert Sparks, Kundan Singh, Henning
Schulzrinne, Marcia Zangrilli.
Thank you for your help!
14. Implementations
Currently, two groups involved in this area of research have P2P SIP
implementations:
College of William and Mary: One P2P SIP implementation is called
SoSIMPLE [6] and is being developed at the College of William and
Mary. This project is being developed by David A. Bryan and
Bruce B. Lowekamp.
Columbia University Another project on P2P-SIP [7] is being developed
at Columbia University by Kundan Singh and Henning Schulzrinne.
15. IANA Considerations
This document would require registering the following:
o Option tag "DHT"
o "DHT-Link" as a Header Field
o "DHT-NodeID" as a Header Field
o "node" as a valid value for parameter user (?)
o "Resource-ID" as a valid URI parameter (?)
[ToDo: Not sure if that is all the things that would need to be
registered]
16. References
16.1 Normative References
[1] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[2] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:
Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 37]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
[3] Eastlake, 3rd, D. and P. Jones, "US Secure Hash Algorithm 1
(SHA1)", RFC 3174, September 2001.
16.2 Informative References
[4] Stoica, I., Morris, R., Karger, D., Kaashoek, M. and H.
Balakrishnan, "Chord: A Scalable Peer-to-peer Lookup Service for
Internet Applications", SIGCOMM '01, August 2001.
[5] Douceur, J., "The Sybil Attack", IPTPS '02, March 2002.
URIs
[6] <http://www.p2psip.org>
[7] <http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~kns10/research/p2p-sip/>
Authors' Addresses
David A. Bryan
College of William and Mary
Department of Computer Science
P.O. Box 8795
Williamsburg, VA 23187
USA
Phone: +1 757 784 5601
Email: bryan@ethernot.org
Cullen Jennings
Cisco Systems
170 West Tasman Drive
MS: SJC-21/3
San Jose, CA 95134
USA
Phone: +1 408 421 9990
Email: fluffy@cisco.com
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 38]
Internet-Draft P2P SIP Registration January 2005
Intellectual Property Statement
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at
ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
Disclaimer of Validity
This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). This document is subject
to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and
except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.
Acknowledgment
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
Bryan & Jennings Expires July 24, 2005 [Page 39]
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-22 08:34:09 |