%ents; ]>
Jingle This specification defines an XMPP protocol extension for initiating and managing peer-to-peer media sessions between two XMPP entities in a way that is interoperable with existing Internet standards. The protocol provides a pluggable model that enables the core session management semantics to be used for a wide variety of application types (e.g., voice chat, video chat, file sharing) and with a wide variety of transport methods (e.g., TCP, UDP, ICE, application-specific transports). &LEGALNOTICE; 0166 Experimental Standards Track Standards Council XMPP Core jingle &scottlu; &joebeda; &stpeter; &robmcqueen; &seanegan; &hildjj; 0.32 2008-10-07 psa

Added content-reject action to mirror content-accept for replies to content-add; also added transport-reject action to mirror transport-accept for replies to transport-replace.

0.31 2008-09-25 psa

Added disposition attribute to content element for mapping to SIP Content-Disposition header.

0.30 2008-09-23 ram/psa
  • Allowed content-add in PENDING state.
  • Clarified that session-accept action accepts only the content definition(s) in the session-initiate.
  • Added optional thread element.
  • Clarified tie breaks for transport-replace.
  • Modified namespaces to incorporate namespace versioning.
  • Cleaned up XML schemas.
0.29 2008-07-31 psa/ram
  • Changed "reliable" vs. "lossy" to "streaming" vs. "datagram", since reliability or dependability is orthogonal to the streaming nature of the transport.
  • Deleted the "content-remove" action.
  • Added "transport-replace" action (answered by "transport-accept").
  • Removed <condition/> element as container for Jingle condition elements inside <reason/>, since it introduced an unnecessary layer of indirection.
  • Modified state machine to allow content removal during PENDING state.
  • Noted that a session can have more than one content instance of the same type.
  • Noted that the 'name' attribute is unique to a creator.
  • Changed examples to once again use voice chat instead of file transfer.
0.28 2008-06-16 psa

Modified state machine to allow content-replace during PENDING state for more seamless handling of fallback scenarios.

0.27 2008-06-04 psa

Updated examples to track changes to XEP-0167 and retraction of XEP-0180; corrected definition of name attribute to allow semantic meaning.

0.26 2008-05-28 psa

Corrected several errors in the state diagrams.

0.25 2008-02-29 psa

More clearly specified the content-replace action (essentially similar to content-add); specified that content-accept shall be sent in response to content-replace; removed content-modify and content-accept from PENDING state; adjusted text regarding initial session negotiation.

0.24 2008-02-28 ram/psa

Added content-replace action; modified reasoncode and reasontext to use elements instead of attributes; added sid element to handle alternative-session condition; modified examples to use file transfer instead of voice chat; moved profile element to XEP-0167 and XEP-0180.

0.23 2008-01-11 psa

Removed content-accept after content-remove; removed errors for unsupported-content and unsupported-transports since they are handled via session-terminate; clarified handling of responder attribute.

0.22 2007-12-06 psa

Modified session flows for busy, unsupported application formats, and unsupported transport methods to enable separation between Jingle core and distinct modules for applications and transports; moved resource determination recommendations to XEP-208.

0.21 2007-11-27 psa

Further editorial review.

0.20 2007-11-15 psa

Editorial review and consistency check; moved voice chat scenarios to XEP-0167.

0.19 2007-11-13 psa

Added scenario for handling of busy state, including Jingle-specific error code and modified error flow (no longer an instance of decline).

0.18 2007-11-08 psa

Added scenarios for various session flows; clarified handling of content-add, content-modify, and content-remove actions; clarified rules for codec priority.

0.17 2007-06-20 psa

Added <unsupported-info/> error.

0.16 2007-06-06 psa

Clarified resource determination process and updated text to reflect modifications to XEP-0168.

0.15 2007-05-25 psa

Rewrote introduction and moved historical text to separate section.

0.14 2007-04-17 psa

Clarified session lifetime; defined reason attribute and associated registry; further specified conformance requirements.

0.13 2007-03-23 psa/ram

Simplified signalling process and state chart; Removed session-redirect action (use redirect error instead); removed content-decline action; removed transport-* actions (except transport-info for ICE negotiation); removed description-* actions; simplified syntax to allow only one transport per content type; corrected syntax of creator attribute to be either initiator or responder (not JIDs); added profile attribute to content element in order to specify RTP profile in use.

0.12 2006-12-21 psa/ram

Added creator attribute to content element for prevention of race condition; modified spec to use provisional namespace before advancement to Draft (per XEP-0053).

0.11 2006-10-31 psa

Completed clarifications and corrections throughout; added section on Jingle Actions.

0.10 2006-09-29 ram/psa

Made several corrections to the state machines and examples.

0.9 2006-09-08 ram/psa

Further cleaned up state machines and state-related actions.

0.8 2006-08-23 ram/psa

Changed channels to components in line with ICE; changed various action names for consistency; added session-extend and session-reduce actions to add and remove description/transport pairs; added description-modify action; added sender attribute to specify directionality.

0.7 2006-07-17 psa

Added implementation note about handling multiple content types.

0.6 2006-07-12 se/psa

Changed media type to content type.

0.5 2006-03-20 psa/jb

Further clarified state machine diagrams; specified that session accept must include agreed-upon media format and transport description; moved deployment notes to appropriate transport spec.

0.4 2006-03-01 psa/jb

Added glossary; clarified state machines; updated to reflect publication of XEP-0176 and XEP-0177.

0.3 2006-02-24 psa/jb

Provided more detail about modify scenarios; defined media-specific and transport-specific actions and adjusted state machine accordingly.

0.2 2006-02-13 psa/jb

Per agreement among the co-authors, moved transport definition to separate specification, simplified state machine, and made other associated changes to the text, examples, and schemas; also harmonized redirect, decline, and terminate processes.

0.1 2005-12-15 psa

Initial version.

0.0.10 2005-12-11 psa

More fully documented burst mode, connectivity checks, error cases, etc.

0.0.9 2005-12-08 psa

Restructured document flow; provided example of burst mode.

0.0.8 2005-12-05 psa/sl/jb

Distinguished between dribble mode and burst mode, including mode attribute, service discovery features, and implementation notes; provided detailed resource discovery examples; corrected state chart; specified session termination; specified error conditions; specified semantics of informational messages; began to define security considerations; added Joe Beda as co-author.

0.0.7 2005-11-08 psa

Added more detail to basic session flow; harmonized candidate negotiation process with ICE.

0.0.6 2005-10-27 psa

Added XMPP Registrar considerations; defined schema; completed slight syntax cleanup.

0.0.5 2005-10-21 psa/sl

Separated method description formats from signalling protocol.

0.0.4 2005-10-19 psa/sl

Harmonized basic session flow with Google Talk protocol; added Scott Ludwig as co-author.

0.0.3 2005-10-10 psa

Added more detail to basic session flow.

0.0.2 2005-10-07 psa/jjh

Protocol cleanup.

0.0.1 2005-10-06 psa/jjh

First draft.

The purpose of Jingle is to enable one-to-one, peer-to-peer media sessions between XMPP entities, where the negotiation occurs over the XMPP "channel" and the media is exchanged outside the XMPP channel using technologies such as the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP; &rfc3550;), the User Datagram Protocol (UDP; &rfc0768;), and &ice;.

One target application for Jingle is simple voice chat (see &xep0167;). We stress the word "simple". The purpose of Jingle is not to build a full-fledged telephony application that supports call waiting, call forwarding, call transfer, hold music, IVR systems, find-me-follow-me functionality, conference calls, and the like. These features are of interest to some user populations, but adding support for them to the core Jingle layer would introduce unnecessary complexity into a technology that is designed for basic multimedia interaction.

The purpose of Jingle is not to supplant or replace technologies based on Session Initiation Protocol (SIP; &rfc3261;). Because dual-stack XMPP+SIP clients are difficult to build, Jingle was designed as a pure XMPP signalling protocol. However, Jingle is at the same time designed to interwork with SIP so that the millions of deployed XMPP clients can be added onto existing Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) networks, rather than limiting XMPP users to a separate and distinct network.

Jingle is designed in a modular way so that developers can easily add support for multimedia session types other than voice chat, such as application sharing, file sharing, collaborative editing, whiteboarding, and torrent broadcasting. The transport methods are also modular, so that Jingle implementations can use any appropriate media transport (including proprietary methods not standardized through the XMPP Standards Foundation).

This section provides a friendly introduction to Jingle.

In essence, Jingle enables two XMPP entities (e.g., romeo@montague.lit and juliet@capulet.lit) to set up, manage, and tear down a multimedia session. The negotiation takes place over XMPP, and the media transfer takes place outside of XMPP. The simplest session flow is as follows:

| | ack | |<----------------------------| | session-accept | |<----------------------------| | ack | |---------------------------->| | MEDIA SESSION | |<===========================>| | session-terminate | |<----------------------------| | ack | |---------------------------->| | | ]]>

Naturally, more complex scenarios are possible; such scenarios are described in other specifications, such as XEP-0167 for voice chat.

The simplest flow might happen as follows. The example is that of a voice chat offer, where the transport method is &xep0176;.

action='session-initiate' initiator='romeo@montague.net/orchard' sid='a73sjjvkla37jfea'> ]]>

Upon receiving the session-initiate stanza, the responder determines whether it can proceed with the negotiation. If there is no error, the responder acknowledges the session initiation request.

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After successful transport negotiation (not shown here), the responder accepts the session by sending a session-accept action to the initiator.

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And the initiator acknowledges session acceptance:

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The initiator and responder would then exchange media using any of the acceptable codecs.

Eventually, one of the parties (here the responder) will terminate the session.

Sorry, gotta go! ]]>

The other party then acknowledges termination of the session:

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The protocol defined herein is designed to meet the following requirements:

  1. Make it possible to manage a wide variety of peer-to-peer sessions (including but not limited to voice and video) within XMPP.
  2. When a peer-to-peer connection cannot be negotiated, make it possible to fall back to relayed communications.
  3. Clearly separate the signalling channel (XMPP) from the data channel.
  4. Clearly separate the application formats (e.g., audio) from the transport methods (e.g., RTP).
  5. Make it possible to add, modify, and remove both application types and transport methods in an existing session.
  6. Make it relatively easy to implement support for the protocol in standard Jabber/XMPP clients.
  7. Where communication with non-XMPP entities is needed, push as much complexity as possible onto server-side gateways between the XMPP network and the non-XMPP network.

This document defines the signalling protocol only. Additional documents specify the following:

Term Definition
Application Format The data format of the content type being established, which formally declares one purpose of the session (e.g., "voice" or "video"). This is the 'what' of the session (i.e., the bits to be transferred), such as the acceptable codecs when establishing a voice conversation. In Jingle XML syntax the application format is the namespace of the &DESCRIPTION; element.
Component A numbered stream of data that needs to be transmitted between the endpoints for a given content type in the context of a given session. It is up to the transport to negotiate the details of each component. Depending on the content type, multiple components might be needed (e.g., one to transmit an RTP stream and another to transmit RTCP timing information).
Content Type A pair formed by the combination of one application format and one transport method.
Session One or more content types negotiated between two entities. It is delimited in time by a session-initiate action and a session-terminate action. During the lifetime of a session, content types can be added or removed. A session consists of at least one content type at a time.
Transport Method The method for establishing data stream(s) between entities. Possible transports might include ICE-TCP, Raw UDP, inband data, etc. This is the 'how' of the session. In Jingle XML syntax this is the namespace of the &TRANSPORT; element. The transport method defines how to transfer bits from one host to another. Each transport method must specify whether it is datagram (thus suitable for applications where some packet loss is tolerable) or streaming (thus suitable for applications where packet loss is not tolerable).

In diagrams, the following conventions are used:

  • Dashed lines (---) represent Jingle stanzas that are sent via the XMPP signalling channel.
  • Double-dashed lines (===) represent media packets that are sent via the media channel, which typically is not an XMPP channel but a direct or mediated channel between the endpoints.

Jingle consists of three parts, each with its own syntax and semantics:

  1. Overall session management
  2. Application types (the "what")
  3. Transport methods (the "how")

This document defines the semantics and syntax for overall session management. It also provides pluggable "slots" for application formats and transport methods, which are specified in separate documents.

At the most basic level, the process for initial negotiation of a Jingle session is as follows (i.e., the actions that can be generated during the PENDING state):

  1. One user (the "initiator") sends to another user (the "responder") a session initiation request with at least one content definition.
  2. If the responder wants to proceed, it acknowledges the session initiation request by sending an IQ result.
  3. The parties attempt to set up data transmission over the designated transport method as defined in the relevant specification.
  4. Optionally, either party can add or remove content definitions, or change the direction of the media flow.
  5. Optionally, either party can send session-info actions (to inform the other party that it is attempting transport negotiation, that its device is ringing, etc.).
  6. As soon as the responder determines that data can flow over the designated transport, it sends to the initiator a session-accept action.
  7. The parties start sending data over the transport.

After the initial session negotiation has been completed and the session is in the ACTIVE state, the parties can adjust the session definition by sending the content-modify, content-remove, content-add, and transport-replace actions. In addition, certain transport methods allow continued sending of transport-info actions while in the ACTIVE state. And naturally the parties can send session-info actions at any time.

The state machine for overall session management (i.e., the state per Session ID) is as follows:

o | | session-initiate | | +------------------------+ |/ | PENDING o----------------------+ | | | content-accept, | | | | content-add, | | | | content-modify, | | | | content-reject, | | | | content-remove, | | | | session-info, | | | | transport-accept, | | | | transport-info, | | | | transport-reject, | | | | transport-replace | | | +-------------------+ | | | | session-accept | | | ACTIVE o----------------------+ | | | content-accept, | | | | content-add, | | | | content-modify, | | | | content-reject, | | | | content-remove, | | | | session-info, | | | | transport-accept, | | | | transport-info, | | | | transport-reject, | | | | transport-replace | | | +-------------------+ | | | +--------------------------+ | | session-terminate | o ENDED

As shown, there are three overall session states:

  1. PENDING
  2. ACTIVE
  3. ENDED

The actions related to management of the overall Jingle session are as follows (detailed definitions are provided in under Action Attribute).

  • content-accept -- Accept a content-add action received from another party.
  • content-add -- Add one or more new content definitions to the session.
  • content-modify -- Change the directionality of media sending.
  • content-reject -- Reject a content-add action received from another party.
  • content-remove -- Remove one or more content definitions from the session.
  • session-accept -- Definitively accept a session negotiation.
  • session-info -- Send session-level information, such as a ringing message.
  • session-initiate -- Request negotiation of a new Jingle session.
  • session-terminate -- End an existing session.
  • transport-accept -- Accept a transport-replace action received from another party.
  • transport-info -- Exchange transport candidates.
  • transport-reject -- Reject a transport-replace action received from another party.
  • transport-replace -- Redefine a transport method or replace it with a different method.

This section defines the high-level flow of a Jingle session. More detailed descriptions are provided in the specifications for Jingle application formats and transport methods.

In order to initiate a Jingle session, the initiator needs to determine which of the responder's XMPP resources is best for the desired application format. Methods for doing so are out of scope for this specification. However, see the Determining Support section of this document (and associated specifications) for relevant information.

Once the initiator has discovered which of the responder's XMPP resources is ideal for the desired application format, it sends a session initiation request to the responder. This request is an IQ-set containing a &JINGLE; element qualified by the 'urn:xmpp:jingle:0' namespace &VNOTE;, where the value of the 'action' attribute is "session-initiate" and where the &JINGLE; element contains one or more &CONTENT; elements. Each &CONTENT; element defines a content type to be transferred during the session, and each &CONTENT; element in turn contains one &DESCRIPTION; child element that specifies a desired application format and one &TRANSPORT; child element that specifies a potential transport method. If either party wishes to propose the use of multiple transport methods for the same application format, it MUST include multiple &CONTENT; elements.

action='session-initiate' initiator='romeo@montague.net/orchard' sid='a73sjjvkla37jfea'> ]]>

Note: The syntax and semantics of the &DESCRIPTION; and &TRANSPORT; elements are out of scope for this document, since they are defined in related specifications. The syntax and semantics of the &JINGLE; and &CONTENT; elements are specified in this document under Formal Definition.

Note: In order to expedite session establishment, the initiator MAY send transport candidates (e.g., for negotiation of the ICE transport) immediately after sending the session-initiate action and before receiving acknowledgement from the responder (i.e., the initiator MUST consider the session to be PENDING even before receiving acknowledgement). Given in-order delivery in accordance with &xmppcore;, the responder will receive such transport-info actions after receiving the session-initiate action (if not, it is appropriate for the responder to return <unknown-session/> errors since according to its state machine the session does not exist).

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Unless one of the following errors occurs, the responder SHOULD acknowledge receipt of the initiation request.

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However, after acknowledging the session initiation request, the responder might subsequently determine that it cannot proceed with negotiation of the session (e.g., because it does not support any of the offered application formats or transport methods, because a human user is busy or unable to accept the session, because a human user wishes to formally decline the session, etc.). In these cases, the responder SHOULD immediately acknowledge the session initiation request but then terminate the session with an appropriate reason as described in the Termination section of this document.

There are several reasons why the responder might immediately return an error instead of acknowledging receipt of the initiation request:

  • The initiator is unknown to the responder and the responder does not communicate with unknown entities.
  • The responder does not support Jingle.
  • The responder wishes to redirect the request to another address.
  • The responder does not have sufficient resources to participate in a session.
  • The initiation request was malformed.

If the initiator is unknown to the responder (e.g., via presence subscription as defined in &rfc3921; or stanza session negotiation as defined in &xep0155;) and the responder has a policy of not communicating via Jingle with unknown entities, it MUST return a &unavailable; error.

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If the responder does not support Jingle, it MUST return a &unavailable; error.

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If the responder wishes to redirect the request to another address, it MUST return a &redirect; error.

xmpp:voicemail@capulet.lit ]]>

If the responder does not have sufficient resources to participate in a session, it MUST return a &constraint; error.

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If the initiation request was malformed, the responder MUST return a &badrequest; error.

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In general, negotiation will be necessary before the parties can agree on an acceptable set of application formats and transport methods. There are many potential parameter combinations, as defined in the relevant specifications for various application formats and transport methods.

The allowable negotiations (including content-level and transport-level negotiations) are as follows:

  • Exchanging particular transport candidates via the transport-info action.
  • Modifying the communication direction for a content type via the content-modify action.
  • Changing the definition of a content type via the transport-replace action (typically to fall back to a more suitable transport).
  • Adding a content type via the content-add action.
  • Removing a content type via the content-remove action.

If (after negotiation of transport methods and application formats as well as checking of transport candidates) the responder determines that it will be able to establish a connection, it sends a definitive acceptance to the initiator.

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The initiator then acknowledges the responder's definitive acceptance, after which the parties can exchange media over the negotiated connection.

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If one of the parties cannot find a suitable transport method or candidate, it SHOULD terminate the session as described below.

Once a session is in the ACTIVE state, it might be modified via a content-add, content-modify, content-remove, or transport-info action. Examples of such modifications are shown in the specifications for various application formats and transport methods.

In order to gracefully end the session (which can be done at any point after acknowledging receipt of the initiation request, including immediately thereafter in order to decline the request), either the responder or the initiator MUST send a session-terminate action to the other party.

The party that terminates the session SHOULD include a <reason/> element that specifies why the session is being terminated. Examples follow.

One reason for terminating the session is that the terminating party is busy; in this case, the recommended condition is "busy".

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Another reason for terminating the session is that the terminating party wishes to formally decline the session; in this case, the recommended condition is "decline".

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Another reason for terminating the session is that the terminating party already has an existing session with the other party and wishes to use that session rather than initiate a new session; in this case, the recommended condition is "alternative-session" and the terminating party SHOULD include the session ID of the alternative session in the <sid/> element.

b84tkkwlmb48kgfb ]]>

Another reason for terminating the session is that the terminating party does not support any of the offered application formats; in this case, the recommended condition is "unsupported-applications".

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Another reason for terminating the session is that the terminating party does not support any of the offered transport methods; in this case, the recommended condition is "unsupported-transports".

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Upon receiving an action of "session-terminate", the other party MUST then acknowledge termination of the session:

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Note: As soon as an entity sends a session-terminate action, it MUST consider the session to be in the ENDED state (even before receiving acknowledgement from the other party). If the terminating entity receives additional Jingle-related IQ-sets from the other party after sending the session-terminate action, it MUST reply with an <unknown-session/> error.

Unfortunately, not all sessions end gracefully. In applications of Jingle that also involve the exchange of presence information, receipt of &UNAVAILABLE; from the other party MAY be considered a session-ending event. However, in this case there is nothing for the party to acknowledge.

At any point after initiation of a Jingle session, either entity MAY send an informational message to the other party, for example to inform the other party that a device is ringing.

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An informational message MUST be an IQ-set containing a &JINGLE; element whose 'action' attribute is set to a value of "session-info" or "transport-info"; the &JINGLE; element SHOULD further contain a payload child element (specific to the application format or transport method) that specifies the information being communicated. If the party that receives an informational message does not understand the payload, it MUST return a &feature; error with a Jingle-specific error condition of <unsupported-info/>.

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However, the &JINGLE; element associated with a session-info action MAY be empty. If either party receives an empty session-info action for an active session, it MUST send an empty IQ result; this usage functions as a "ping" to determine session vitality.

]]> ]]>

The &JINGLE; element MAY be empty or contain one or more &CONTENT; elements (for which see Content Element).

The attributes of the &JINGLE; element are as follows.

Attribute Definition Inclusion
action A Jingle action as described under Action Attribute. REQUIRED
initiator The full JID of the entity that has initiated the session flow (which can be different from the 'from' address on the IQ-set). REQUIRED
responder The full JID of the entity that has replied to the initiation, which can be different from the 'to' address on the IQ-set. RECOMMENDED
sid A random session identifier generated by the initiator, which effectively maps to the local-part of a SIP "Call-ID" parameter; this SHOULD match the XML Nmtoken production See <http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/WD-xml-2e-20000814#NT-Nmtoken> so that XML character escaping is not needed for characters such as '&'. REQUIRED

The value of the 'action' attribute SHOULD be one of the following. If an entity receives a value not defined here, it SHOULD ignore attribute and SHOULD return a &badrequest; error to the sender.

The content-accept action is used to accept a content-add action received from another party.

The content-add action is used to add one or more new content definitions to the session. The sender MUST specify only the added content definition(s), not the added content definition(s) plus the existing content definition(s). Therefore it is the responsibility of the recipient to maintain a local copy of the current content definition(s). If the recipient wishes to include the new content definition in the session, it MUST send a content-accept action to the other party; if not, it MUST send a content-reject action to the other party.

The content-modify action is used to change the direction of an existing content definition thorugh modification of the 'senders' attribute. If the recipient deems the directionality of a content-modify action to be unacceptable, it MAY reply with a contrary content-modify action, terminate the session, or simply refuse to send or accept application data in the new direction. In any case, the recipient MUST NOT send a content-accept action in response to the content-modify.

The content-reject action is used to reject a content-add action received from another party.

The content-remove action is used to remove one or more content definitions from the session. The sender MUST specify only the removed content definition(s), not the removed content definition(s) plus the remaining content definition(s). Therefore it is the responsibility of the recipient to maintain a local copy of the current content definition(s). Upon receiving a content-remove from the other party, the recipient MUST NOT send a content-accept and MUST NOT continue to negotiate the transport method related to that content definition or send application data related to that content definition. If the content-remove results in zero content definitions for the session, the entity that receives the content-remove SHOULD send a session-terminate action to the other party (since a session with no content definitions is void).

The session-accept action is used to definitively accept a session negotiation (implicitly this action also serves as a content-accept). A session-accept action indicates acceptance only of the content definition(s) whose disposition type is "session" (the default value of the &CONTENT; element's 'disposition' attribute), not any content definition(s) whose disposition type is something other than "session" (e.g., "early-session" for early media). In the session-accept stanza, the &JINGLE; element MUST contain one or more <content/> elements, each of which MUST contain one <description/> element and one <transport/> element. The &JINGLE; element SHOULD possess a 'responder' attribute that explicitly specifies the full JID of the responding entity; after sending acknowledgement of the session-accept, the initiator SHOULD send all future commmunications about this Jingle session to the JID provided in the 'responder' attribute and note the new JID in the user interface.

The session-info action is used to send session-level information, such as (for Jingle RTP sessions) a ringing message.

The session-initiate action is used to request negotiation of a new Jingle session. When sending a session-initiate, the value of the &CONTENT; element's 'disposition' attribute MUST be "session" (to be precise, if there are multiple &CONTENT; elements then at least one MUST have a disposition of "session"); if this rule is violated, the responder MUST return a &badrequest; error to the initiator.

The session-terminate action is used to end an existing session.

The transport-accept action is used to accept a transport-replace action received from another party.

The transport-info action is used to exchange transport candidates; it is mainly used in XEP-0176 but might be used in other transport specifications.

The transport-reject action is used to reject a transport-replace action received from another party.

The transport-replace action is used to redefine a transport method, typically for fallback to a different method (e.g., changing from ICE-UDP to Raw UDP for a datagram transport, or changing from &xep0065; to &xep0047; for a streaming transport). If the recipient wishes to use the new transport definition, it MUST send a transport-accept action to the other party; if not, it MUST send a transport-reject action to the other party.

It is possible that two instances of certain actions can be sent at the same time in the context of an existing session, one by each party; for example, both parties might simulaneously attempt to send a content-add, content-modify, or content-remove action. In all such cases, the action sent by the initiator MUST overrule the action sent by the responder; i.e., both parties MUST accept the action sent by the initiator and the initiator MUST return an &unexpected; error to the responder for the duplicate action.

The attributes of the &CONTENT; element are as follows.

Attribute Definition Inclusion
creator Which party originally generated the content type (used to prevent race conditions regarding modifications); the defined values are "initiator" and "responder" (where the default is "initiator"). REQUIRED
disposition How the content definition is to be interpreted by the recipient. The meaning of this attribute matches the "Content-Disposition" header as defined in &rfc2183; and applied to SIP by RFC 3261. The value of this attribute SHOULD be one of the values registered in the &ianadispositions;. The default value of this attribute is "session". OPTIONAL
name A unique name or identifier for the content type according to the creator, which MAY have meaning to a human user in order to differentiate this content type from other content types (e.g., two content types containing video media could differentiate between "room-pan" and "slides"). REQUIRED
senders Which parties in the session will be generating content; the allowable values are "initiator", "responder", or "both" (where the default is "both"). RECOMMENDED

The structure of the <reason/> element is as follows.

  • The <reason/> element MUST contain an element that provides machine-readable information about the condition that prompted the action.
  • The <reason/> element MAY contain a <text/> element that provides human-readable information about the reason for the action.
  • The <reason/> element MAY contain an element qualified by some other namespace that provides more detailed machine-readable information about the reason for the action.

The defined conditions are described in the following table.

Element Description
<alternative-session/> The party prefers to use an existing session with the peer rather than initiate a new session; the Jingle session ID of the alternative session SHOULD be provided as the XML character data of the <sid/> child.
<busy/> The party is busy and cannot accept a session.
<cancel/> The initiator wishes to formally cancel the session initiation request.
<connectivity-error/> The action is related to connectivity problems.
<decline/> The party wishes to formally decline the session.
<ended/> The session has formally ended.
<expired/> The session length has exceeded a pre-defined time limit (e.g., a meeting hosted at a conference service).
<general-error/> The action is related to a non-specific application error.
<media-error/> The action is related to media processing problems.
<no-error/> The action is generated during the normal course of state management.
<success/> The session has been successfully completed.
<timeout/> A request has not been answered so the sender is timing out the request.
<unsupported-applications/> The party supports none of the offered application types.
<unsupported-transports/> The party supports none of the offered transport methods.

The syntax and semantics of the <thread/> element exactly matches that of the <thread/> element as defined for the &MESSAGE; stanza (qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace) as defined in &xmppim;. It is used to associate a Jingle session or sessions with an ongoing conversation, so that user interfaces with the ability to present multiple interactions in the same window can show an association between the conversation and the Jingle session(s).

The Jingle-specific error conditions are as follows. These condition elements are qualified by the 'urn:xmpp:jingle:errors:0' namespace &VNOTE;.

Jingle Condition XMPP Condition Description
<out-of-order/> &unexpected; The request cannot occur at this point in the state machine (e.g., session-initiate after session-accept).
<unknown-session/> &badrequest; The 'sid' attribute specifies a session that is unknown to the recipient (e.g., no longer live according to the recipient's state machine because the recipient previously terminated the session).
<unsupported-info/> &feature; The recipient does not support the informational payload of a session-info action.

If an entity supports Jingle, it MUST advertise that fact by returning a feature of "urn:xmpp:jingle:0" &VNOTE; in response to a &xep0030; information request. The response MUST also include features for the application formats and transport methods supported by the responding entity, as described in the relevant specifications.

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In order for an application to determine whether an entity supports this protocol, where possible it SHOULD use the dynamic, presence-based profile of service discovery defined in &xep0115;. However, if an application has not received entity capabilities information from an entity, it SHOULD use explicit service discovery instead.

A document that specifies a Jingle application format (e.g., RTP sessions) MUST define:

  1. How successful application format negotiation occurs.
  2. A &DESCRIPTION; element and associated semantics for representing the application format.
  3. If and how the application format can be mapped to the Session Description Protocol, including the appropriate SDP media type (see Section 8.2.1 of RFC 4566).
  4. Whether the media for the application format shall be sent over a streaming transport method or a datagram transport method (or, if both, which is preferred).
  5. Exactly how the media is to be sent and received over a streaming or datagram transport.

A document that specifies a Jingle transport method (e.g., raw UDP) MUST define:

  1. How successful transport negotiation occurs.
  2. A &TRANSPORT; element and associated semantics for representing the transport method.
  3. Whether the transport is streaming or datagram.
  4. If and how the transport handles "components" (e.g., for the Real Time Control Protocol).

Jingle sessions can be resource-intensive. Therefore, it is possible to launch a denial-of-service attack against an entity by burdening it with too many Jingle sessions. Care must be taken to accept sessions only from known entities and only if the entity's device is able to process such sessions.

Jingle communications can be enabled through gateways to non-XMPP networks, whose security characteristics can be quite different from those of XMPP networks. (For example, on some SIP networks authentication is optional and "from" addresses can be easily forged.) Care must be taken in communicating through such gateways.

Mere negotiation of a Jingle session can expose sensitive information about the parties (e.g., IP addresses). Care must be taken in communicating such information, and end-to-end encryption should be used if the parties do not trust the intermediate servers or gateways.

This document requires no interaction with &IANA;.

This specification defines the following XML namespaces:

  • urn:xmpp:jingle:0
  • urn:xmpp:jingle:errors:0

Upon advancement of this specification from a status of Experimental to a status of Draft, the ®ISTRAR; shall add the foregoing namespaces to the registry located at &NAMESPACES;, as described in Section 4 of &xep0053;.

If the protocol defined in this specification undergoes a major revision that is not fully backward-compatible with an older version, or that contains significant new features, the XMPP Registrar shall increment the protocol version number found at the end of the XML namespaces defined herein, as described in Section 4 of XEP-0053.

The XMPP Registrar shall maintain a registry of Jingle application formats. All application format registrations shall be defined in separate specifications (not in this document). Application types defined within the XEP series MUST be registered with the XMPP Registrar, resulting in protocol URNs of the form "urn:xmpp:jingle:app:name" (where "name" is the registered name of the application format).

®PROCESS; The name of the application format. A natural-language summary of the application format. Whether the media can be sent over a "streaming" transport, a "datagram" transport, or "both". The document in which the application format is specified. ]]>

The XMPP Registrar shall maintain a registry of Jingle transport methods. All transport method registrations shall be defined in separate specifications (not in this document). Transport methods defined within the XEP series MUST be registered with the XMPP Registrar, resulting in protocol URNs of the form "urn:xmpp:jingle:transport:name" (where "name" is the registered name of the transport method).

®PROCESS; the name of the transport method a natural-language summary of the transport method whether the transport method can be "streaming", "datagram", or "both" the document in which this transport method is specified ]]>
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Until Jingle was developed, there existed no widely-adopted standard for initiating and managing peer-to-peer interactions between XMPP entities. Although several large service providers and Jabber client teams had written and implemented their own proprietary XMPP extensions for peer-to-peer signalling (usually only for voice), those technologies were not open and did not always take into account requirements to interoperate with SIP-based technologies. The only existing open protocol was &xep0111;, which made it possible to initiate and manage peer-to-peer sessions, but which did not provide enough of the key signalling semantics to be easily implemented in Jabber/XMPP clients. It is true that TINS made it relatively easy to implement an XMPP-to-SIP gateway; however, in line with the long-time Jabber philosophy of "simple clients, complex servers", it would be better to force complexity onto the server-side gateway and to keep the client as simple as possible.

The result was an unfortunate fragmentation within the XMPP community regarding signalling protocols. Essentially, there were two possible approaches to solving the problem:

  1. Recommend that all client developers implement a dual-stack (XMPP + SIP) solution.
  2. Define a full-featured protocol for XMPP signalling.

Implementation experience indicates that a dual-stack approach might not be feasible on all the computing platforms for which Jabber clients have been written, or even desirable on platforms where it is feasible. For example, one large ISP decided to switch to a pure XMPP approach after having implemented and deployed a dual-stack client for several years. Therefore, it seemed reasonable to define an XMPP signalling protocol that could provide the necessary session management semantics while also making it relatively straightforward to interoperate with existing Internet standards.

As a result of feedback received on XEP-0111, the original authors of this document (Joe Hildebrand and Peter Saint-Andre) began to define such a signalling protocol, code-named Jingle. Upon communication with members of the Google Talk team, Google Talk is a messaging and voice chat service and client provided by Google; see <http://www.google.com/talk/>. it was discovered that the emerging Jingle approach was conceptually (and even syntactically) quite similar to the signalling protocol used in the Google Talk application. Therefore, in the interest of interoperability and adoption, we decided to harmonize the two approaches. The signalling protocol specified herein is, therefore, substantially equivalent to the original Google Talk protocol, with several adjustments based on feedback received from implementors as well as for publication by the XMPP Standards Foundation.

The authors would like to thank Rohan Mahy for his valuable input on early versions of the Jingle specifications. Thiago Camargo, Diana Cionoiu, Olivier Crête, Dafydd Harries, Antti Ijäs, Tim Julien, Lauri Kaila, Justin Karneges, Jussi Laako, Steffen Larsen, Anthony Minessale, Akito Nozaki, Matt O'Gorman, Mike Ruprecht, Rob Taylor, Matt Tucker, Justin Uberti, Saku Vainio, Brian West, Jeff Williams, and others have also provided helpful input. Thanks also to those who have commented on the &SSIG; and Jingle Before this specification was formally accepted by the XMPP Standards Foundation as an XMPP Extension Protocol, it was discussed on the semi-private <jingle@jabber.org> mailing list. This list has since been resurrected as a special-purpose venue for discussion of Jingle protocols and implementation; interested developers can subscribe and access the archives at at <http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jingle/>. mailing lists.