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Jingle Raw UDP Transport This document defines a Jingle transport method that results in sending data over a raw User Datagram Protocol (UDP) connection. &LEGALNOTICE; 0177 Experimental Standards Track Standards Council XMPP Core XEP-0166 TO BE ASSIGNED &joebeda; &stpeter; &scottlu; &hildjj; &seanegan; 0.5 2007-03-23 psa

Updated to reflect changes to XEP-0166; clarified media data checking.

0.4 2006-12-21 psa

Recommended sending of candidate in initiation request to save a round trip and expedite the negotiation; removed name attribute; clarified flow of negotiation; modified spec to use provisional namespace before advancement to Draft (per XEP-0053).

0.3 2006-10-31 psa

Added informational messages; clarified connectivity checks and acceptance process; mentioned that the Raw UDP candidate is conceptually equivalent to the concept of an in-use candidate from the ICE specification; added reference to RFC 4347.

0.2 2006-07-12 se/psa

Removed candidate element and specified exchange of address information via transport-info messages; clarified usage of name attribute.

0.1 2006-03-01 psa/jb

Initial version (split from XEP-0166).

&xep0166; defines a framework for negotiating and managing out-of-band data sessions over XMPP. In order to provide a flexible framework, the base Jingle specification defines neither data transport methods nor content formats, leaving that up to separate specifications. The current document defines a transport method for establishing and managing data between XMPP entities using a raw User Datagram Protocol (UDP) connection (see &rfc0768;).

The Jingle transport method defined herein is designed to meet the following requirements:

  1. Make it possible to establish and manage out-of-band connections between two XMPP entities over the IP address and port that the parties consider most likely to succeed.
  2. Make it relatively easy to implement support in standard Jabber/XMPP clients.
  3. 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.

Note: The Raw UDP transport does not provide traversal of Network Address Translators (NATs) and is provided only for the purpose of specifying the IP address and port that an entity considers most likely to succeed without the need for NAT traversal. This is also helpful for bootstrapping of Jingle implementation by developers working on a local network. If NAT traversal is needed, &xep0176; SHOULD be used.

In order for the initiator in a Jingle exchange to start the negotiation, it MUST send a Jingle "session-initiate" stanza as described in XEP-0166. This stanza MUST include at least one content type. If the initiator wishes to negotiate the Raw UDP transport for a given content type, it MUST include a &TRANSPORT; child element qualified by the 'http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0177.html#ns' namespace (see Protocol Namespaces), which MUST This is required to avoid a round trip and help expedite the negotiation. include the initiator's Raw UDP candidate via the 'ip', 'port', 'generation', and 'name' attributes of the &CANDIDATE; element.

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The 'generation', 'ip', and 'port' attributes are REQUIRED. The 'ip' and 'port' attributes are self-explanatory. The 'generation' attribute provides a tracking mechanism for determining which version of this candidate is in force (this is useful if the candidate is redefined mid-stream, for example if the port is changed).

Note: The "Raw UDP candidate" is the candidate that the entity has reason to believe will be most likely to succeed for that content type, and thus is equivalent to the "in-use" candidate as described in &ice;. In older versions of XEP-0166, this was referrred to as the "default candidate". This is not necessarily the entity's preferred address for communication, but instead is the "address most likely to succeed", i.e., the address that is assumed to be reachable by the vast majority of target entities. To determine reachability, the client needs classify ahead of time the permissiveness of the NAT or firewall it is behind, if any. It then SHOULD assign the Raw UDP candidate as follows, where the candidate types are as described in ICE:

NAT Type Recommended Raw UDP Candidate Type
None Host candidate
Symmetric (not permissive) Relay candidate
Permissive Server reflexive or peer reflexive candidate discovered via &rfc3489;

As described in XEP-0166, to provisionally accept the session initiation request, the receiver returns an IQ-result:

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Once the responder provisionally accepts the session, it:

  • MUST check the initiator's Raw UDP candidate by attempting to send data via UDP to the specified IP and port (see next section).
  • SHOULD send its own Raw UDP candidate to the initiator via a Jingle "transport-info" message.
  • MAY send an informational message.

These are done simultaneously in order to ensure that a connection can be made, since the initiator's Raw UDP candidate may not result in success.

The responder MUST immediately attempt to send data to the IP and port specified in the initiation request. Because delivery of UDP data is not necessarily acknowledged, the data can be sent using &rfc0862;; if the data is echoed back, the recipient would then send a Jingle "content-accept" (or "session-accept") action to the initiator.

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The initiator MUST then acknowledge acceptance by returning an IQ result (or a standard XMPP error).

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While checking the initiator's Raw UDP candidate, the responder SHOULD send its own Raw UDP candidate to the initiator by sending a transport-info message to the initiator, as shown in the following example.

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The initiator MUST then acknowledge receipt by returning an IQ result (or a standard XMPP error).

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Naturally, the initiator then MUST also check the responder's Raw UDP candidate by following the checking procedure outlined above.

While checking the initiator's Raw UDP candidate, the responder MAY send an informational message to communicate the status of transport checking. The informational message MUST be an IQ-set containing a &JINGLE; element of type "session-info", where the informational message is a payload element specified in the Informational Messages section of this document.

Informational messages MAY be sent by the receiver within the context of the Raw UDP transport to communicate the status of transport checking. The informational message MUST be an IQ-set containing a &JINGLE; element of type "session-info", where the informational message is a payload element qualified by the 'http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0177.html#ns-info' namespace (see Protocol Namespaces). The following payload elements are defined:

Element Meaning
<failed/> Connectivity checks failed.
<succeeded/> Connectivity checks succeeded.
<trying/> Connectivity checks are underway.

Note: Because the informational message is sent in an IQ-set, the receiving party MUST return either an IQ-result or an IQ-error (normally only an IQ-result to acknowledge receipt; no error flows are defined or envisioned at this time).

In order to secure the data stream that is negotiated via the Jingle ICE transport, implementations SHOULD use encryption methods appropriate to the transport method and media being exchanged (for details regarding audio and video exchanges via RTP, refer to XEP-0167 and XEP-0180).

This document requires no interaction with &IANA;.

Until this specification advances to a status of Draft, its associated namespaces shall be "http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0177.html#ns" and "http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0177.html#ns-info"; upon advancement of this specification, the ®ISTRAR; shall issue permanent namespaces in accordance with the process defined in Section 4 of &xep0053;.

The XMPP Registrar shall include "raw-udp" in its registry of Jingle transport methods. The registry submission is as follows:

raw-udp A method for exchanging data over a raw UDP connection. XEP-0176 ]]>
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