<remark><p>Added ability to request credentials from a particular service; incremented the protocol version number to reflect the new feature.</p></remark>
<p>An XMPP client or other entity might need to discover services external to the XMPP network in order to complete certain XMPP-related use cases. One example is the discovery of STUN servers (see &rfc5389;) and TURN relays (see &turn;) for the sake of negotiating media exchanges via &xep0176;. <note>The protocol specified herein is functionally equivalent to the protocol currently used in the Google Talk service for discovery of STUN servers, as documented at <<linkurl='http://code.google.com/apis/talk/jep_extensions/jingleinfo.html'>http://code.google.com/apis/talk/jep_extensions/jingleinfo.html</link>>, but has been broadened in scope to address additional use cases if desired.</note> An XMPP entity can already discover such external services in several ways, including:</p>
<p>Unfortunately, some of the foregoing methods are subject to human error and others are either not widely available or cannot be deployed in wide range of scenarios (e.g., when the administrators of an XMPP service do not have access to DNS SRV records). Therefore, this document defines a way for an XMPP server or discovery service to provide information about external services, which might include extended information such as temporary credentials for authentication at such services. This method SHOULD be used only as a fallback when the relevant service discovery technologies (DNS SRV, DDDS, SLP, S-NAPTR, U-NAPTR, etc.) are not available to the XMPP entities involved (typically a client and server). This method does not use &xep0030; since that technology is designed for discovery of XMPP entities, not entities outside an XMPP network.</p>
<p>In order to learn about external services known to an XMPP server or discovery service, a requesting entity (typically a client) sends an IQ-get containing an empty <services/> element qualified by the 'urn:xmpp:extdisco:1' namespace &NSNOTE;, typically to its own server but perhaps alternatively to a dedicated discovery service.</p>
<p>The responding entity (XMPP server or discovery service) SHOULD return the list of external services it is aware of, but MAY instead return an appropriate error, such as &unavailable; if the responding entity does not support this protocol or &forbidden; if the requesting entity does not have permission to receive the list of external services. Each service is encapsulated via a <service/> element.</p>
<p>Note: The processes by which a responding entity discovers external services for "proxying" to XMPP entities are out of scope for this specification.</p>
<p>The <service/> element MAY be empty or MAY include extended information about the service as described in the <linkurl='#extended'>Extended Information</link> section of this document.</p>
<p>The attributes of the <service/> element are summarized in the following table.</p>
<tablecaption='Attributes'>
<tr>
<th>Name</th>
<th>Definition</th>
<th>Inclusion</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>host</td>
<td>Either a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) or an IP address (IPv4 or IPv6).</td>
<p>* Note: The processes by which an external service might generate (or an XMPP server might negotiate) the username and password are outside the scope of this specification. One possible approach is for the XMPP server to generate a short-term authentication credential based on a private key shared with the external service.</p>
<p>A requesting entity requests services of a particular type by sending a <services/> element including a 'type' attribute specifying the service type of interest.</p>
<p>If a requesting entity requests services of a particular type, the responding service MAY as needed send an updated list of the relevant services by "pushing" the list to a requesting entity that has previously requested the list. However, it MUST NOT push updates to the requesting entity unless it has presence information about the requesting entity (e.g., because the requesting entity is connected to the XMPP server or because the requesting entity has shared presence with a remote discovery service). A push is an IQ set to the requesting entity containing a <service/> payload with updated data about services matching the requested type (e.g., new services or updated credentials)</p>
<p>An entity might know about an external service via DNS or some other means, but still might need short-term credentials to use the service. The entity can request credentials by sending a special request to the server.</p>
<examplecaption='Entity Requests Credentials at a Service'><![CDATA[
<iqfrom='bard@shakespeare.lit/globe'
id='xi2cax48'
to='shakespeare.lit'
type='get'>
<credentialsxmlns='urn:xmpp:extdisco:1'>
<servicehost='turn.shakespeare.lit'/>
</credentials>
</iq>
]]></example>
<p>The server then returns credentials if possible.</p>
<p>If the server cannot obtain credentials at the service, it returns an appropriate stanza error, such as ¬found;, &remoteserver;, &timeout;, or ¬authorized;.</p>
<p>If a server or service needs to include extended information, it SHOULD do so by including each bit of information as the XML character data of the <value/> child of a distinct <field/> element, with the entire set of fields contained within an <x/> element of type "result" qualified by the 'jabber:x:data' namespace (see &xep0004;); this <x/> element SHOULD be a child of the <service/> element qualified by the 'urn:xmpp:extdisco:1' namespace &NSNOTE;. Thus the IQ result SHOULD be of the following form:</p>
<p>If the data fields are to be used in the context of a protocol approved by the XMPP Standards Foundation, they SHOULD be registered in accordance with the rules defined in &xep0068;, resulting in the inclusion of a <field/> element whose 'var' attribute has a value of "FORM_TYPE" and whose 'type' attribute has a value of "hidden".</p>
<p>Note: Although &xep0128; specifies that an XMPP entity MUST NOT supply extended information about associated children communicated via the 'http://jabber.org/protocol/disco#info' namespace, that rule does not apply to External Service Discovery since services external to the XMPP network cannot communicate via XMPP.</p>
<p>If an XMPP entity supports this protocol, it MUST report that fact by including a service discovery feature of "urn:xmpp:extdisco:1" &NSNOTE; in response to a &xep0030; information request:</p>
<p>If the requesting entity includes an 'xml:lang' attribute with its request, the responding entity SHUOLD include appropriately internationalized text as the value of the 'name' attribute. No other attributes are human-readable.</p>
<p>Because the responding entity (XMPP server or discovery service) functions as a "proxy" from external services to the XMPP network, it could modify the information it receives before passing it on to the requesting entity.</p>
<p>Upon advancement of this specification from a status of Experimental to a status of Draft, the ®ISTRAR; shall add the foregoing namespace to the registry located at &NAMESPACES;, as described in Section 4 of &xep0053;.</p>
<p>The XMPP Registrar shall maintain a registry of external service types and their associated transport protocol(s). Such service types will probably be derived from the &ianaports;, defined DNS SRV record types, defined DDDS records for NAPTR, S-NAPTR, and U-NAPTR, and &ianaslp;.</p>