PPSP Rui S. Cruz INTERNET-DRAFT Mario S. Nunes Intended Status: Standards Track IST/INESC-ID/INOV Expires: June 15, 2016 Yingjie Gu Jinwei Xia Rachel Huang Huawei Joao P. Taveira IST/INOV Deng Lingli China Mobile December 13, 2015 PPSP Tracker Protocol-Base Protocol (PPSP-TP/1.0) draft-ietf-ppsp-base-tracker-protocol-11 Abstract This document specifies the base Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocol- Tracker Protocol (PPSP-TP/1.0), an application-layer control (signaling) protocol for the exchange of meta information between trackers and peers. The specification outlines the architecture of the protocol and its functionality, and describes message flows, message processing instructions, message formats, formal syntax and semantics. The PPSP Tracker Protocol enables cooperating peers to form content streaming overlay networks to support near real-time Structured Media content delivery (audio, video, associated timed text and metadata), such as adaptive multi-rate, layered (scalable) and multi-view (3D) videos, in live, time-shifted and on-demand modes. Status of this Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. 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." Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 1] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/1id-abstracts.html The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html Copyright and License Notice Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. Table of Contents 1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.1 Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.2 Design Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 1.2.1 Typical Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 1.2.2 Enrollment and Bootstrap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 2 Protocol Architecture and Functional View . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2.1 Messaging Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 2.2 Request/Response model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 2.3 State Machines and Flows of the Protocol . . . . . . . . . 13 2.3.1 Normal Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 2.3.2 Error Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 3 Protocol Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.1 Presentation Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.2 Resource Element Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.2.1 Version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.2.2 Peer Number Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.2.3 Swarm Action Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 3.2.4 Peer Information Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 3.2.5 Statistics and Status Information Element . . . . . . . 20 3.3 Requests and Responses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 3.3.1 Request Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 3.3.2 Response Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 2] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 3.3.3 Request Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 3.3.4 Response Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 3.4 PPSP-TP Message Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 4 Protocol Specification: Encoding and Operation . . . . . . . . 24 4.1 Requests and Responses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 4.1.1 CONNECT Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 4.1.1.1 Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 4.1.2 FIND Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 4.1.2.1 Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 4.1.3 STAT_REPORT Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 4.1.3.1 Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 4.2 Response element in response Messages . . . . . . . . . . . 37 4.3 Error and Recovery conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 4.4 Parsing of Unknown Fields in Message-body . . . . . . . . . 38 5 Operations and Manageability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 5.1 Operational Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 5.1.1 Installation and Initial Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 5.1.2 Migration Path . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.1.3 Requirements on Other Protocols and Functional Components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.1.4 Impact on Network Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.1.5 Verifying Correct Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.2 Management Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.2.1 Interoperability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 5.2.2 Management Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 5.2.3 Fault Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 5.2.4 Configuration Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 5.2.5 Accounting Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 5.2.6 Performance Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 5.2.7 Security Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 6 Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 6.1 Authentication between Tracker and Peers . . . . . . . . . 42 6.2 Content Integrity protection against polluting peers/trackers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 6.3 Residual attacks and mitigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 6.4 Pro-incentive parameter trustfulness . . . . . . . . . . . 43 7 Guidelines for Extending PPSP-TP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 7.1 Forms of PPSP-TP Extension . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 7.2 Issues to Be Addressed in PPSP-TP Extensions . . . . . . . 46 8 IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 8.1 MIME Type Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 8.2 PPSP Tracker Protocol Version Number Registry . . . . . . . 48 9 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 10 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 10.1 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 10.2 Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Appendix A. Revision History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 3] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 1 Introduction The Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocol (PPSP) is composed of two protocols: the PPSP Tracker Protocol and the PPSP Peer Protocol. [RFC6972] specifies that the Tracker Protocol should standardize the messages between PPSP peers and PPSP trackers and also defines the requirements. The PPSP Tracker Protocol provides communication between trackers and peers, by which peers send meta information to trackers, report streaming status and obtain peer lists from trackers. The PPSP architecture requires PPSP peers able to communicate with a tracker in order to participate in a particular streaming content swarm. This centralized tracker service is used by PPSP peers for content registration and location. The signaling and the media data transfer between PPSP peers is not in the scope of this specification. This document introduces a base PPSP Tracker Protocol which satisfies the requirements from [RFC6972]. 1.1 Terminology 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 [KEYWORDS]. absolute time: Absolute time is expressed as ISO 8601 timestamps, using zero UTC offset. Fractions of a second may be indicated. Example for December 25, 2010 at 14h56 and 20.25 seconds: basic format 20101225T145620.25Z or extended format 2010-12- 25T14:56:20.25Z. chunk: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. chunk ID: A unique resource identifier for a chunk. The identifier type depends on the addressing scheme used, i.e., an integer, an HTTP-URL and possibly a byte-range, and is described in the MPD. LEECH: A LEECH refers to the peers in a swarm that download content from other peers as well as contribute its downloaded content with others. A LEECH SHOULD join the swarm with uncompleted media content. MPD (Media Presentation Description): Formalized description for a media presentation, i.e., describes the structure of the media, namely, the Representations, the codecs used, the chunks, and the Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 4] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 corresponding addressing scheme. peer: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. peer ID: The identifier of a peer such that other peers, or the Tracker, can refer to the peer by using its ID. The peer ID is mandatory, can take the form of a universal unique identifier (UUID), defined in [RFC4122], and can be bound to a network address of the peer, i.e., an IP address, or a uniform resource identifier/locator (URI/URL) that uniquely identifies the corresponding peer in the network. The peer ID and any required security certificates are obtained from an offline enrollment server. peer list: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. PPSP: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. PPSP-TP: The abbreviation of Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocols - Tracker Protocol. SEEDER: A SEEDER refers to the peers in a swarm that only contribute the content they have to others. A SEEDER SHOULD join the swarm with the complete media content. service portal: A logical entity typically used for client enrollment and content information publishing, searching and retrieval. It is usually located in a server of content provider. swarm: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. swarm ID: The identifier of a swarm containing a group of peers sharing a common streaming content. The swarm ID may use a universal unique identifier (UUID), e.g., a 64 or 128 bit datum to refer to the content resource being shared among peers. tracker: See the terminology in [RFC6972]. transaction ID: The identifier of a request from the peer to the tracker. Used to disambiguate responses that may arrive in a different order of the corresponding requests. 1.2 Design Overview The functional entities related to PPSP protocols are the Client Media Player, the service portal, the tracker and the peers. The complete description of Client Media Player and service portal is not discussed here, as not in the scope the specification. The Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 5] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 functional entities directly involved in the PPSP Tracker Protocol are trackers and peers (which may support different capabilities). The Client Media Player is a logical entity providing direct interface to the end user at the client device, and includes the functions to select, request, decode and render contents. The Client Media Player may interface with the local peer application using request and response standard formats for HTTP request and response messages [RFC7230]. The service portal is a logical entity typically used for client enrollment and content information publishing, searching and retrieval. A peer corresponds to a logical entity (typically in a user device) that actually participates in sharing a media content. Peers are organized in (various) swarms corresponding each swarm to the group of peers streaming a certain content at any given time. A tracker is a logical entity that maintains the lists of peers storing chunks for a specific Live media channel or on-demand media streaming content, answers queries from peers and collects information on the activity of peers. While a tracker may have an underlying implementation consisting of more than one physical node, logically the tracker can most simply be thought of as a single element, and in this document it will be treated as a single logical entity. Communications between these physical nodes to present them as a single tracker to peers is not considered in PPSP-TP which is a protocol between a tracker and a peer. PPSP-TP is not used to exchange actual content data (either on demand or live streaming) with peers, but information about which peers can provide the content. And PPSP-TP is not designed for applications where in-sync reception is needed. 1.2.1 Typical PPSP Session When a peer wants to receive streaming of a selected content (LEECH mode): 1. Peer connects to a tracker and joins a swarm. 2. Peer acquires a list of other peers in the swarm from the tracker. 3. Peer exchanges its content availability with the peers on the obtained peer list. 4. Peer identifies the peers with desired content. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 6] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 5. Peer requests content from the identified peers. When a peer wants to share streaming contents (SEEDER mode) with other peers: 1. Peer connects to a tracker. 2. Peer sends information to the tracker about the swarms it belongs to (joined swarms). 3. Peer waits other peers as LEECH to connect with it (see previous step 3 - 5). After having been disconnected due to some termination conditions or user controls, a peer can resume previous activity by connecting and re-joining the corresponding swarm(s). 1.2.2 An Example of PPSP Session In order to be able to bootstrap in the P2P network, a peer must first obtain a peer ID and any required security certificates or authorization tokens from an enrollment service (end-user registration). The peer ID MUST be unique (see the terminology of peer ID in Section 1.1), however, the representation of the peer ID specification of the format of the peer ID is not considered in this document. +--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +---------+ +--------+ | Player | | Peer_1 | | Portal | | Tracker | | Peer_2 | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +---------+ +--------+ | | | | | (a) |--Page request----------------->| | | |<--------------Page with links--| | | |--Select stream (MPD request)-->| | | |<--------------------OK+MPD(x)--| | | (b) |--Start/Resume->|--CONNECT(join x)------------>| | |<-----------OK--|<----------------OK+Peerlist--| | | | | | |--Get(chunk)--->|<---------- (Peer protocol) ------------->| |<--------chunk--|<---------------------------------chunks--| : : : : : | |--STAT_REPORT---------------->| | | |<-------------------------OK--| | : : : : : | |--FIND----------------------->| | | |<----------------OK+Peerlist--| | : : : : : |--Get(chunk)--->|<---------- (Peer protocol) ------------->| |<--------chunk--|<---------------------------------chunks--| : : : : : Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 7] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Figure 1: A typical PPSP session for streaming a content. To join an existing P2P streaming service and to participate in content sharing, any peer must first locate a tracker. As illustrated in Figure 1, a P2P streaming session may be initiated starting at point (a), with the Client Media Player browsing for the desired content in order to request it (to the local Peer_1 in the figure), or resume a previously initiated stream, but starting at point (b). For this example, the Peer_1 is in mode LEECH. At point (a) in Figure 1, the Client Media Player accesses the Portal and selects the content of interest. The Portal returns the Media Presentation Description (MPD) file that includes information about the address of one or more trackers (that can be grouped by tiers of priority) which are controlling the swarm x for that media content (e.g., content x). With the information from the MPD the Client Media Player is able to trigger the start of the streaming session, requesting to the local Peer_1 the chunks of interest. The PPSP streaming session is then started (or resumed) at Peer_1 by sending a PPSP-TP CONNECT message to the tracker in order to join swarm x. The tracker will then return the OK response message containing a peer list, if the CONNECT message is successfully accepted. From that point, every chunk request is addressed by Peer_1 to its neighbors (Peer_2 in Figure 1) using the PPSP Peer Protocol, returning the received chunks to the Client Media Player. Once connected, Peer_1 needs to periodically report its status and statistics data to the tracker using a PPSP-TP STAT_REPORT message. If Peer_1 needs to refresh its neighborhood (for example, due to churn) it will send a PPSP-TP FIND message (with the desired scope) to the tracker. Peers that are only SEEDERs (i.e., serving contents to other peers), as are the typical cases of service provider P2P edge caches and/or Media Servers, trigger their P2P streaming sessions for contents x, y, z... (Figure 2), not from Media Player signals, but from some "Start" activation signal received from the service provider provisioning mechanism. In this particular case the peer starts or resumes all its streaming sessions just by sending a PPSP-TP CONNECT message to the tracker (Figure 2), in order to "join" all the requested swarms. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 8] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Periodically, the peer also report its status and statistics data to the tracker using a PPSP-TP STAT_REPORT message. +---------+ +---------+ | SEEDER | | Tracker | +---------+ +---------+ | | Start->|--CONNECT (join x,y,z)-------->| |<--------------------------OK--| : : | | |--STAT_REPORT----------------->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : | | |--STAT_REPORT----------------->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : Figure 2: A typical PPSP session for a streaming SEEDER. The specification of the mechanisms used by the Client Media Player (or provisioning process) and the peer to signal start/resume streams or request media chunks, obtain a peer ID, security certificates or tokens are not in the scope of this document. 2 Protocol Architecture and Functional View PPSP-TP is designed with a layered approach i.e., a PPSP-TP Request/Response layer, a Message layer and a Transport layer. The PPSP-TP Request/Response layer deals with the interactions between tracker and peers using request and response messages (see Figure 3). +----------------------+ | Application | +----------------------+ | Request/Response | PPSP-TP |----------------------| | (HTTP) Message | +----------------------+ | TRANSPORT | +----------------------+ Figure 3: Abstract layering of PPSP-TP. The Message layer deals with the framing format, for encoding and transmitting the data through the underlying transport protocol, as well as the asynchronous nature of the interactions between tracker Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 9] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 and peers. The Transport layer is responsible for the actual transmission of requests and responses over network transports, including the determination of the connection to use for a request or response message when using TCP, or TLS [RFC5246] over it. 2.1 Messaging Model The messaging model of PPSP-TP aligns with HTTP protocol and the semantics of its messages, currently in version 1.1 [RFC7230], but intended to support future versions of HTTP. 2.2 Request/Response model PPSP-TP uses a REST-Like (Representational State Transfer) design with the goal of leveraging current HTTP implementations and infrastructure, as well as familiarity with existing REST-like services in popular use. PPSP-TP messages use the UTF-8 character set [RFC3629] and are either requests from peers to a tracker service, or responses from a tracker service to peers. The request and response semantics are carried as entities (header and body) in messages which correspond to either HTTP request methods or HTTP response codes, respectively. PPSP-TP uses the HTTP POST method to send parameters in requests. PPSP-TP messages use JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) [RFC7159] to encode message bodies. Peers send requests to tracker. Trackers send a single response for each request though both requests and responses can be subject to fragmentation of messages in transport. The request messages of the base protocol are listed in Table 1: +------------------------------+ | PPSP-TP/1.0 Request Messages | +------------------------------+ | CONNECT | | FIND | | STAT_REPORT | +------------------------------+ Table 1: Request Messages Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 10] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 CONNECT: This request message is used when a peer registers in the tracker (or if already registered) to notify it about the participation in named swarm(s). The tracker records the peer ID, connect-time (referenced to the absolute time), peer IP addresses (and associated location information), link status and peer mode for the named swarm(s). The tracker also changes the content availability of the valid named swarm(s), i.e., changes the peers lists of the corresponding swarm(s) for the requesting peer ID. On receiving a CONNECT message, the tracker first checks the peer mode type (SEEDER/LEECH) for the specified swarm(s) and then decides the next steps (more details are referred in section 4.1) FIND: This request message is used by peers to request to the tracker, whenever needed, a list of peers active in the named swarm. On receiving a FIND message, the tracker finds the peers, listed in content status of the specified swarm that can satisfy the requesting peer's requirements, returning the list to the requesting peer. To create the peer list, the tracker may take peer status, capabilities and peers priority into consideration. Peer priority may be determined by network topology preference, operator policy preference, etc. STAT_REPORT: This request message is used to allow an active peer to send status (and optionally statistic data) to the tracker to signal continuing activity. This request message MUST be sent periodically to the tracker while the peer is active in the system. 2.3 State Machines and Flows of the Protocol The state machine for the tracker is very simple, as shown in Figure 4. Peer ID registrations represent a dynamic piece of state maintained by the network. -------------------------------------------- / \ | +------------+ +=========+ +======+ | \-| TERMINATED |<---| STARTED |<---| INIT |<-/ +------------+ +=========+ +======+ (Transient) \- (start tracker) Figure 4: Tracker State Machine When there are no peers connected in the tracker, the state machine is in the INIT state. When the "first" peer connects for registration with its peer ID, the state machine moves from INIT to STARTED. As long as there is at Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 11] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 least one active registration of a peer ID, the state machine remains in the STARTED state. When the "last" peer ID is removed, the state machine transitions to TERMINATED. From there, it immediately transitions back to the INIT state. Because of that, the TERMINATED state here is transient. Once in STARTED state, each peer is instantiated (per peer ID) in the tracker state machine with a dedicated transaction state machine (Figure 5), which is deleted when the peer ID is removed. -------------------------------------------- / \ | +------------+ +=========+ +======+ | \-| TERMINATED |<---| STARTED |<---| INIT |<-/ +------------+ +=========+ +======+ (Transient) | (1) \- (start tracker) V +-----------+ +-------+ rcv CONNECT (Transient) | TERMINATE | | START | --------------- (1) +-----------+ +-------+ strt init timer rcv FIND ^ | rcv STAT_REPORT | | on registration error | v on action error | +------------+ ---------------- (A) +<-----| PEER | (Transient) stop init timer | | REGISTERED | snd error | +------------+ | | on timeout (C) | | process swarm actions ---------------- | | --------------------- (2) stop track timer (C) | | snd OK (PeerList) clean peer info (C) | / stop init timer del registration (C) | / strt track timer | / | | | | rcv FIND STAT_REPORT ERR(B) \ | ---- --------------- (3) FIND ERR(B) ---- \ | / \ snd OK (PeerList) CONNECT ERR(B) / \ \ | | | rst track timer rcv CONNECT | (4) | | | | | ----------- | v | v v | rcv STAT_REPORT snd OK \ +==============+ / --------------- (3) rst track timer ----| TRACKING |---- snd OK response snd error (B) +==============+ rst track timer Figure 5: Per-Peer-ID Transaction State Machine and Flow Diagram Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 12] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Unlike the tracker state machine, which exists even when no peer IDs are registered, the "per-Peer-ID" transaction state machine is instantiated only when the peer ID starts registration in the tracker, and is deleted when the peer ID is de-registered/removed. This allows for an implementation optimization whereby the tracker can destroy the objects associated with the "per-Peer-ID" transaction state machine once it enters the TERMINATE state (Figure 5). When a new peer ID is added, the corresponding "per-Peer-ID" state machine is instantiated, and it moves into the PEER REGISTERED state. Because of that, the START state here is transient. When the peer ID is no longer bound to a registration, the "per-Peer- ID" state machine moves to the TERMINATE state, and the state machine is destroyed. During the lifetime of streaming activity of a peer, the instantiated "per-Peer-ID" transaction state machine progresses from one state to another in response to various events. The events that may potentially advance the state include: o Reception of CONNECT, FIND and STAT_REPORT messages, or o Timeout events. The state diagram in Figure 5 illustrates state changes, together with the causing events and resulting actions. Specific error conditions are not shown in the state diagram. 2.3.1 Normal Operation On normal operation the process consists of the following steps: 1) When a peer wants to access the system, it needs to register with a tracker by sending a CONNECT message asking for the swarm(s) it wants to join. This request from a new peer ID triggers the instantiation in the tracker of a "per-Peer-ID" State Machine. In the START state of the new "per-Peer-ID" SM, the tracker registers the peer ID and associated information (IP addresses), starts the "init timer" and moves to PEER REGISTERED state. 2) In PEER REGISTERED state, if peer ID is valid, the tracker either a) processes the requested action(s) for the valid swarm information contained in the CONNECT request and in case of success the tracker stops the "init timer", starts the "track timer" and sends the response to the peer (the response may contain the appropriate list of peers for the joining swarm(s), as detailed in section 4.1, or b) moves the valid FIND request to TRACKING state. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 13] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 3) In TRACKING state, STAT_REPORT or FIND messages received from that peer ID will reset the "track timer" and the tracker responds to the respectively requests with a) a successful condition, b) a successful condition containing the appropriate list of peers for the named swarm (section 4.2). 4) While TRACKING, a CONNECT message received from that peer ID with valid swarm actions information (section 4.1.1) resets the "track timer" and the tracker responds to the request with a successful condition. 2.3.2 Error Conditions Peers are required not to generate protocol elements that are invalid. However, several situations of a peer may lead to abnormal conditions in the interaction with the tracker. The situations may be related with peer malfunction or communications errors. The tracker reacts to the abnormal situations depending on its current state related to a peer ID, as follows: A) At PEER REGISTERED state, when a CONNECT request only contains invalid swarm actions (section 6.1.1), the tracker responds with PPSP-TP error code specified in Section 4.3, deletes the registration, transition to TERMINATE state for that peer ID and the SM is destroyed. At the PEER REGISTERED state, if the peer ID is considered invalid (in the case of a CONNECT request or in the case of FIND or STAT_REPORT requests received from an unregistered peer ID), the tracker responds with either error codes authentication required or Forbidden (described in section 4.3), transitions to TERMINATE state for that peer ID and the SM is destroyed. B) At the TRACKING state (while the "track timer" has not expired) receiving a CONNECT message from that peer ID with invalid swarm actions (section 5.1), or receiving a FIND/STAT_REPORT message from that peer ID with invalid swarm ID is considered an error condition. The tracker responds with corresponding error code (described in section 4.3). C) In TRACKING state, without receiving messages from the peer, on timeout (track timer) the tracker cleans all the information associated with the peer ID in all swarms it was joined, deletes the registration, transitions to TERMINATE state for that peer ID and the SM is destroyed. NOTE: These situations may correspond to malfunctions at the peer or to malicious conditions. As preventive measure, the tracker proceeds Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 14] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 to TERMINATE state for that peer ID. 3 Protocol Specification 3.1 Presentation Language PPSP-TP uses a REST-Like design, encoding the requests and responses using JSON [RFC7159]. For a generalization of the definition of protocol elements and fields, their types and structures, this document uses a C-style notation, similar to the presentation language used to define TLS [RFC5246]. A JSON object consists of name/value pairs with the grammar specified in [RFC7159]. In this document, comments begin with "//", and the "ppsp_tp_string_t" and "ppsp_tp_integer_t" types are used to indicate the JSON string and number, respectively. Optional fields are enclosed in "[ ]" brackets. An array is indicated by two numbers in angle brackets, , where "min" indicates the minimal number of values and "max" the maximum. An "*" is used to denote a no upper bound value for "max". 3.2 Resource Element Types This section details the format of PPSP-TP resource element types. 3.2.1 Version For both requests and responses, the version of PPSP-TP being used MUST be indicated by the attribute version, defined as follows: ppsp_tp_integer_t ppsp_tp_version_t = 1 The defined value for ppsp_tp_version_t is listed in Table 2 +----------------------------------------------------------+ | ppsp_tp_version_t | Description | +----------------------------------------------------------+ | 0 | Reserved | | 1 | Protocol specified in this document | | 2-255 | Unassigned | +----------------------------------------------------------+ Table 2: PPSP Tracker Protocol Version Numbers 3.2.2 Peer Number Element The peer number element is a scope selector optionally present in Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 15] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 CONNECT and FIND requests. This element contains the attribute peer_count to indicate the maximum number of peers in the returned peer list. Peer_count should be less than 30 in this specification. The other 4 attributes, i.e., ability_nat, concurrent_links, online_time and upload_bandwidth may be also contained in this element to inform the tracker the status of the peer so that the tracker could return some eligible peers based on the implementing rules set by the service providers: o ability_nat is used to indicate the preferred NAT traversal situation of the requesting peer. o concurrent_links means the number of P2P links the peer currently has. o online_time represents online duration time of the peer. The unit is second. o upload_bandwidth is the maximum upload bandwidth capability of the peer. The unit is kbps. The definition of the scope selector element and attributes is defined as follows: Object { ppsp_tp_integer_t peer_count; [ppsp_tp_string_t ability_nat = "NO_NAT" | "STUN" | "TURN";] [ppsp_tp_integer_t concurrent_links;] [ppsp_tp_integer_t online_time;] [ppsp_tp_integer_t upload_bandwidth;] } ppsp_tp_peer_num_t; 3.2.3 Swarm Action Element The swarm action element identifies the action(s) to be taken in the named swarm(s) as well as the corresponding peer mode (if the peer is LEECH or SEEDER in that swarm). Object { ppsp_tp_string_t swarm_id; //swarm ID ppsp_tp_string_t action = "JOIN" |"LEAVE"; // Action type of // the CONNECT // message Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 16] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 ppsp_tp_string_t peer_mode = "SEEDER" | "LEECH"; // Mode of the peer // participating // in this swarm } ppsp_tp_swarm_action_t; 3.2.4 Peer Information Elements The peer information elements provides network identification information of peers. A peer information consists of peer identifier and the IP related addressing information. Object { ppsp_tp_string_t peer_id; ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t peer_addr; }ppsp_tp_peer_info_t; The ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t element includes the IP address and port, with a few optional attributes related with connection type and network location (in terms of ASN) as well as, optionally, the identifier of the Peer Protocol being used. Object { ppsp_tp_ip_address ip_address; ppsp_tp_integer_t port; ppsp_tp_integer_t priority; ppsp_tp_string_t type = "HOST" | "REFLEXIVE" | "PROXY"; [ppsp_tp_string_t connection = "wireless" | "wired";] [ppsp_tp_string_t asn;] [ppsp_tp_string_t peer_protocol;] } ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t; The semantics of ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t attributes are listed in Table 3: +----------------------+----------------------------------+ | Element or Attribute | Description | +----------------------+----------------------------------+ | ip_address | IP Address information | | port | IP service port value | | priority | The priority of this interface.It| | | may be determined by network | Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 17] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 | | topology preference, operator | | | policy preference, etc. How to | | | create a priority is outside of | | | the scope. The larger the value, | | | the higher the priority. | | type | Describes the address for NAT | | | traversal, which can be HOST | | | REFLEXIVE or PROXY | | connection | Access type (wireless or wired.) | | asn | Autonomous System Number | | peer_protocol | PPSP Peer Protocol supported | +----------------------+----------------------------------+ Table 3: Semantics of ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t. In this document, IP address is specified as ppsp_tp_addr_value. The exact characters and format depend on address_type: o The IPv4 address is encoded as specified by the IPv4address rule in Section 3.2.2 of [RFC3986]. o The IPv6 address is encoded as specified in section 4 of [RFC5952]. Object { ppsp_tp_string_t address_type; ppsp_tp_addr_value address; } ppsp_tp_ip_address; The peer Information in responses is grouped in a ppsp_tp_peer_group_t element: Object { ppsp_tp_peer_info_t peer_info<1..*>; } ppsp_tp_peer_group_t; 3.2.5 Statistics and Status Information Element The statistics element (stat) is used to describe several properties relevant to the P2P network. These properties can be related to stream statistics and peer status information. Each stat element will correspond to a property type and several stat blocks can be reported in a single STAT_REPORT message, corresponding to some or all the swarms the peer is actively involved. This specification only defines the property type "STREAM_STATS". Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 18] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 The definition of the statistic element and attributes is as follows: Object { ppsp_tp_string_t swarm_id; ppsp_tp_integer_t uploaded_bytes; ppsp_tp_integer_t downloaded_bytes; ppsp_tp_integer_t available_bandwidth; ppsp_tp_integer_t concurrent_links; } stream_stats; The semantics of stream_stats attributes are listed in Table 4: +----------------------+----------------------------------+ | Element or Attribute | Description | +----------------------+----------------------------------+ | swarm_id | Swarm ID | | uploaded_bytes | Bytes sent to swarm | | downloaded_bytes | Bytes received from swarm | | available_bandwidth | available instantaneous upload | | | bandwidth | | concurrent_links | The number of concurrent links | +----------------------+----------------------------------+ Table 4: Semantics of stream_stats. The Stat Information is grouped in the ppsp_tp_stat_group_t element: Object { ppsp_tp_string_t type = "STREAM_STATS"; // property type stream_stats stat<1..*>; } ppsp_tp_stat_group_t Other properties may be defined, related for example with incentives and reputation mechanisms like "peer online time", or connectivity conditions like physical "link status", etc. For that purpose, the Stat element may be extended to provide additional specific information for new properties, elements or attributes (guidelines in section 7). 3.3 Requests and Responses This section defines the structure of PPSP-TP requests and responses. 3.3.1 Request Types Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 19] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 The request type includes CONNECT, FIND and STAT_REPORT, defined as follows: ppsp_tp_string_t ppsp_tp_request_type_t = "CONNECT" | "FIND" | "STAT_REPORT"; 3.3.2 Response Types Response type corresponds to the response method type of the message, defined as follows: JSONValue ppsp_tp_response_type_t = 0x00 // SUCCESSFUL | 0x01; // FAILED 3.3.3 Request Element The request element MUST be present in requests and corresponds to the request method type for the message. The generic definition of a request element is the following: Object { [ppsp_tp_peer_num_t peer_num;] [ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t peer_addr<1..*>;] ppsp_tp_swarm_action_t swarm_action<1..*>; } ppsp_tp_request_connect; Object { ppsp_tp_string_t swarm_id; [ppsp_tp_peer_num_t peer_num;] } ppsp_tp_request_find; Object { ppsp_tp_version_t version; ppsp_tp_request_type_t request_type; ppsp_tp_string_t transaction_id; ppsp_tp_string_t peer_id; JSONValue request_data = ppsp_tp_req_connect connect | ppsp_tp_req_find find | ppsp_tp_stat_group_t stat_report; } ppsp_tp_request; A request element consists the version of PPSP-TP, the request type, a transaction ID and the requesting peer ID, as well as the requesting body, i.e., request_data. The request_data MUST be Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 20] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 correctly set to the corresponding element based on the request type (see Table 5). +----------------------+----------------------+ | request_type | request_data | +----------------------+----------------------+ | "CONNECT" | "connect" | | "FIND" | "find" | | "STAT_REPORT" | "stat_report" | +----------------------+----------------------+ Table 5: The relationship between request_type and request_data. 3.3.4 Response Element The generic definition of a response element is the following: Object { ppsp_tp_version_t version; ppsp_tp_response_type_t response_type; ppsp_tp_integer_t error_code; ppsp_tp_string_t transaction_id; [ppsp_tp_peer_addr_t peer_addr;] [ppsp_tp_swarm_action_result_t swarm_result<1..*>;] } ppsp_tp_response; A response element consists the version of PPSP-TP, the response type, the error code, a transaction ID, and optionally the public address of the requesting peer and one or multiple swarm action result elements. Normally, swarm action result elements SHOULD be present and error_code MUST be set to 0 when response_type is 0x00. Swarm action result elements SHOULD NOT be set when error_code is 0x01. Detailed selection of error_code is introduced in Section 4.3; Object { ppsp_tp_string_t swarm_id; ppsp_tp_response_type_t result; [ppsp_tp_peer_group_t peer_group;] }ppsp_tp_swarm_action_result_t; A swarm action result element represents the result of an action requested by the peer. It contains a swarm identifier which globally indicates the swarm, the result for the peer of this action which it could be CONNECT ("JOIN" or "LEAVE"), FIND or STAT_REQPORT, and optionally one peer group element. The attribute result indicates the operation result of the corresponding request. When the response element is corresponding to the STAT_REPORT request, or the result Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 21] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 attribute is set to 0x01, the peer group element SHOULD NOT be set. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 22] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 3.4 PPSP-TP Message Element PPSP-TP messages (requests or responses) are designed to have a similar structure with a root field named "PPSPTrackerProtocol" containing meta information and data pertaining to a request or a response. The base type of PPSP-TP message is defined as follows: Object { JSONValue PPSPTrackerProtocol = ppsp_tp_request Request | ppsp_tp_response Response; } ppsp_tp_message_root; 4 Protocol Specification: Encoding and Operation PPSP-TP is a message-oriented request/response protocol. PPSP-TP messages use a text type encoding in JSON [RFC7159], which MUST be indicated in the Content-Type field in HTTP/1.1 [RFC7231], specifying the application/ppsp-tracker+json media type for all PPSP-TP request parameters and responses. Implementations MUST support the "https" URI scheme [RFC2818] and Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246]. For deployment scenarios where peer (Client) authentication is desired at the tracker, HTTP Digest Authentication [RFC7616] MUST be supported, with TLS Client Authentication as the preferred mechanism, if available. PPSP-TP uses the HTTP POST method to send parameters in requests to provide information resources that are the function of one or more of those input parameters. Input parameters are encoded in JSON in the HTTP entity body of the request. The section describes the operation of the three types of requests of PPSP-TP and provides some examples of usage. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 23] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 4.1 Requests and Responses 4.1.1 CONNECT Request This method is used when a peer registers to the system and/or requests some swarm actions (join/leave). The peer MUST properly set the request type to CONNECT, generate and set the transaction_ids, set the peer_id and MUST include swarms the peer is interested in, followed by the corresponding action type and peer mode. o When a peer already possesses a content and agrees to share it to others, it should set the action type to the value JOIN, as well as set the peer mode to SEEDER during its start (or re-start) period. o When a peer makes a request to join a swarm to consume content, it should set the action type to the value JOIN, as well as set the peer mode to LEECH during its start (or re-start) period. In the above cases, the peer can provide optional information on the addresses of its network interface(s), for example, the priority, type, connection and ASN. When a peer plans to leave a previously joined swarm, it should set action type to LEAVE, regardless of the peer mode. When receiving a well-formed CONNECT request message, the tracker start by pre-processing the peer authentication information (provided as Authorization scheme and token in the HTTP message) to check whether it is valid and that it can connect to the service, then proceed to register the peer in the service and perform the swarm actions requested. In case of success a response message with a corresponding response value of SUCCESSFUL will be generated. The valid sets of number of swarms whose action type is combined with peer mode for the CONNECT request logic are enumerated in Table 6 (referring to the tracker "per-Peer-ID" state machine in Section 2.3). Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 24] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | Swarm | peer_mode | action | Initial | Final | Request | | Number | value | value | State | State | validity | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------| | 1 | LEECH | JOIN | START | TRACKING | Valid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | 1 | LEECH | LEAVE | START | TERMINATE | Invalid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | 1 | LEECH | LEAVE | TRACKING | TERMINATE | Valid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | 1 | LEECH | JOIN | START | TERMINATE | Invalid | | 1 | LEECH | LEAVE | | | | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | 1 | LEECH | JOIN | TRACKING | TRACKING | Valid | | 1 | LEECH | LEAVE | | | | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | N | SEEDER | JOIN | START | TRACKING | Valid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | N | SEEDER | JOIN | TRACKING | TERMINATE | Invalid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ | N | SEEDER | LEAVE | TRACKING | TERMINATE | Valid | +-----------+-----------+---------+----------+-----------+----------+ Table 6: Validity of action combinations in CONNECT request. In the CONNECT request message, multiple swarm action elements ppsp_tp_swarm_action_t could be contained. Each of them contains the request action and the peer_mode of the peer. The peer_mode attribute MUST be set to the type of participation of the peer in the swarm (SEEDER or LEECH). The CONNECT message may contain multiple peer_addr elements with attributes ip_address, port, priority and type (if ICE [RFC5245] NAT traversal techniques are used), and optionally connection, asn and peer_protocol corresponding to each of the network interfaces the peer wants to advertise. The element peer_num indicates the maximum number of peers to be returned in a list from the tracker. The returned peer list can be optionally filtered by some indicated properties, such as ability_nat for NAT traversal, and concurrent_links, online_time and upload_bandwidth for the preferred capabilities. The element transaction_id MUST be present in requests to uniquely identify the transaction. Responses to completed transactions use the same transaction_id as the request they correspond to. The response may include peer_addr data of the requesting peer public Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 25] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 IP address. Peers can use Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) [RFC5389] and Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) [RFC5766] to gather their candidates, in which case peer_addr SHOULD NOT present in the response. If no STUN is used and the tracker is able to work as a "STUN-like" server which can inspect the public address of a peer, the tracker can return the address back with a " REFLEXIVE " attribute type. The swarm_result may also include peer_addr data corresponding to the peer IDs and public IP addresses of the selected active peers in the requested swarm. The tracker may also include the attribute asn with network location information of the transport address, corresponding to the Autonomous System Number of the access network provider of the referenced peer. In case the peer_mode is SEEDER, the tracker responds with a SUCCESSFUL response and enters the peer information into the corresponding swarm activity. In case the peer_mode is LEECH (or if a SEEDER includes a peer_num element in the request), the tracker will search and select an appropriate list of peers satisfying the conditions set by the requesting peer. The peer list returned MUST contain the peer IDs and the corresponding IP Addresses. To create the peer list, the tracker may take peer status and network location information into consideration, to express network topology preferences or Operators' policy preferences, with regard to the possibility of connecting with other IETF efforts such as ALTO [RFC7285]. IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: If no peer_num attributes are present in the request the tracker may return a random sample from the peer population. 4.1.1.1 Example The following example of a CONNECT request corresponds to a peer that wants to start (or re-start) sharing its previously streamed contents (peer_mode is SEEDER). Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 26] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 POST https://tracker.example.com/video_1 HTTP/1.1 Host: tracker.example.com Content-Length: 494 Content-Type: application/ppsp-tracker+json Accept: application/ppsp-tracker+json { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "request_type": "CONNECT", "transaction_id": "12345", "peer_id": "656164657220", "connect":{ "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "192.0.2.2" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "type": "HOST", "connection": "wired", "asn": "45645" }, "swarm_action": [{ "swarm_id": "1111", "action": "JOIN", "peer_mode": "SEEDER" }, { "swarm_id": "2222", "action": "JOIN", "peer_mode": "SEEDER" }] } } } Another example of the message-body of a CONNECT request corresponds to a peer (peer_mode is LEECH, meaning that the peer is not in possession of the content) requesting join to a swarm, in order to start receiving the stream, and providing optional information on the addresses of its network interface(s): { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "request_type": "CONNECT", Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 27] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 "transaction_id": "12345.0", "peer_id": "656164657221", "connect":{ "peer_num": { "peer_count": 5, "ability_nat": "STUN", "concurrent_links": "5", "online_time": "200", "upload_bandwidth": "600" }, "peer_addr": [{ "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "192.0.2.2" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "type": "HOST", "connection": "wired", "asn": "3256546" }, { "ip_address":{ "address_type": "ipv6", "address": "2001:db8::2" }, "port": 80, "priority": 2, "type": "HOST", "connection": "wireless", "asn": "34563456", "peer_protocol": "PPSP-PP" }], "swarm_action": { "swarm_id": "1111", "action": "JOIN", "peer_mode": "LEECH" } } } } The next example of a CONNECT request corresponds to a peer "leaving" a previously joined swarm and requesting join to a new swarm. This is the typical example of a user watching a live channel but then deciding to switch to a different one: Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 28] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "request_type": "CONNECT", "transaction_id": "12345", "peer_id": "656164657221", "connect":{ "peer_num": { "peer_count": 5, "ability_nat": "STUN", "concurrent_links": "5", "online_time": "200", "upload_bandwidth": "600" }, "swarm_action": [{ "swarm_id": "1111", "action": "LEAVE", "peer_mode": "LEECH" }, { "swarm_id": "2222", "action": "JOIN", "peer_mode": "LEECH" }] } } } The next example illustrates the response for the previous example of CONNECT request where the peer requested two swarm actions and not more than 5 other peers, receiving from the tracker a peer list with only 2 two other peers in the swarm "2222": Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 29] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Length: 1342 Content-Type: application/ppsp-tracker+json { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "response_type": 0, "error_code": 0, "transaction_id": "12345", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.1" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "asn": "64496" }, "swarm_result": { "swarm_id": "2222", "result": 0, "peer_group": { "peer_info": [{ "peer_id": "956264622298", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.22" }, "port": 80, "priority": 2, "type": "REFLEXIVE", "connection": "wired", "asn": "64496", "peer_protocol": "PPSP-PP" } }, { "peer_id": "3332001256741", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.201" }, "port": 80, "priority": 2, "type": "REFLEXIVE", Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 30] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 "connection": "wired", "asn": "64496", "peer_protocol": "PPSP-PP" } }] } } } } 4.1.2 FIND Request This method allows peers to request to the tracker, whenever needed, a new peer list for the swarm. The FIND request may include a peer_number element to indicate to the tracker the maximum number of peers to be returned in a list corresponding to the indicated conditions set by the requesting peer, being ability_nat for NAT traversal (considering that PPSP-ICE NAT traversal techniques may be used), and optionally concurrent_links, online_time and upload_bandwidth for the preferred capabilities. When receiving a well-formed FIND request the tracker processes the information to check if it is valid. In case of success a response message with a response value of SUCCESSFUL will be generated and the tracker will search out the list of peers for the swarm and select an appropriate peer list satisfying the conditions set by the requesting peer. The peer list returned MUST contain the peer IDs and the corresponding IP Addresses. The tracker may take the ability of peers and popularity of the requested content into consideration. For example, the tracker could select peers with higher ability than the current peers that provide the content if the content is relatively popular (see Section 5.1.1); and the tracker could also select peers with lower ability than the current peers that provide the content when the content is relatively uncommon. The tracker may take network location information into consideration as well, to express network topology preferences or operators' policy preferences. It can implement other IETF efforts like ALTO[RFC7285], which is out of the scope of this document. The response MUST include peer_group element which contains the peer IDs and the corresponding IP Addresses, may also include the attribute asn with network location information of the transport address, corresponding to the Autonomous System Number of the access network provider of the referenced peer. The response may also include peer_addr element that includes the Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 31] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 requesting peer public IP address. If no STUN is used and the tracker is able to work as a "STUN-like" server which can inspect the public address of a peer, the tracker can return the address back with a " REFLEXIVE " attribute type. IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: If no peer_num attributes are present in the request the tracker may return a random sample from the peer population. 4.1.2.1 Example An example of the message-body of a FIND request, where the peer requests to the tracker an list of not more than 5 peers in the swarm "1111" conforming to the characteristics expressed (concurrent links, online time, and upload bandwidth level) is the following: { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "request_type": "FIND", "transaction_id": "12345", "peer_id": "656164657221", "swarm_id": "1111", "peer_num": { "peer_count": 5, "ability_nat": "STUN", "concurrent_links": "5", "online_time": "200", "upload_bandwidth": "600" } } } An example of the message-body of a response for the above FIND request, including the requesting peer public IP address information, is the following: { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "response_type": 0, "error_code": 0, "transaction_id": "12345", "swarm_result": { "swarm_id": "1111", "result": 0, "peer_group": { "peer_info": [{ Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 32] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 "peer_id": "656164657221", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.1" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "type": "REFLEXIVE", "connection": "wireless", "asn": "64496" } }, { "peer_id": "956264622298", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.22" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "type": "REFLEXIVE", "connection": "wireless", "asn": "64496" } }, { "peer_id": "3332001256741", "peer_addr": { "ip_address": { "address_type": "ipv4", "address": "198.51.100.201" }, "port": 80, "priority": 1, "type": "REFLEXIVE", "connection": "wireless", "asn": "64496" } }] } } } } 4.1.3 STAT_REPORT Request Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 33] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 This method allows peers to send status and statistic data to trackers. The method is initiated by the peer, periodically while active. The peer MUST set the request_type to "STAT_REPORT", set the peer_id with the identifier of the peer, and generate and set the transaction_id. The report may include multiple statistics elements describing several properties relevant to a specific swarm. These properties can be related with stream statistics and peer status information, including uploaded_bytes, downloaded_bytes, available_bandwidth, concurrent_links and etc. Other properties may be defined (guidelines in Section 7.1) related for example, with incentives and reputation mechanisms. In case no Statistics Group is included, the STAT_REPORT is used as a "keep- alive" message to prevent the tracker from de-registering the peer when "track timer" expires. If the request is valid the tracker processes the received information for future use, and generates a response message with a response value of SUCCESSFUL. The response MUST have the same transaction_id value as the request. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 34] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 4.1.3.1 Example An example of the message-body of a STAT_REPORT request is: { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "request_type": "STAT_REPORT", "transaction_id": "12345", "peer_id": "656164657221", "stat_report": { "type": "STREAM_STATS", "Stat": { "swarm_id": "1111", "uploaded_bytes": 512, "downloaded_bytes": 768, "available_bandwidth": 1024000, "concurrent_links": 5 } } } } An example of the message-body of a response for the START_REPORT request is: { "PPSPTrackerProtocol": { "version": 1, "response_type": 0, "error_code": 0, "transaction_id": "12345", "swarm_result": { "swarm_id": "1111", "result": 0 } } } Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 35] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 4.2 Response Element in Response Messages Table 7 indicates the response type and corresponding semantics. +--------------------+---------------------+ | Response Type | Semantics | | | | +--------------------+---------------------+ | 0 | SUCCESSFUL | | 1 | FAILED | +--------------------+---------------------+ Table 7: Semantics for the Value of Response Type. SUCCESSFUL: indicates that the request has been processed properly and the desired operation has completed. The body of the response message includes the requested information and MUST include the same transaction_id of the corresponding request. CONNECT: returns information about the successful registration of the peer and/or of each swarm action requested. may additionally return the list of peers corresponding to the action attribute requested. FIND: returns the list of peers corresponding to the requested scope. STAT_REPORT: confirms the success of the requested operation. FAILED: indicates that the request has not been processed properly. And corresponding error_code SHOULD be set according to the conditions described in Section 4.3. 4.3 Error and Recovery conditions If the peer receives an invalid response, the same request with identical content including the same transaction_id MUST be repeated. The transaction_id on a request can be reused if and only if all of the content is identical, including Date/Time information. Details of the retry process (including time intervals to pause, number of retries to attempt, and timeouts for retrying) are implementation dependent. The tracker MUST be prepared to receive a request with a repeated transaction_id. Error situations resulting from the Normal Operation or from abnormal Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 36] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 conditions (Section 2.3.2) MUST be responded with response_type set to 0x01 and with the adequate error_code, as described here: o If the message is found to be incorrectly formed, the receiver MUST respond with a 01 (bad request) error_code with an empty message- body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). o If the version number of the protocol is for a version the receiver does not supports, the receiver MUST respond with a 02 (Unsupported Version Number) error_code with an empty message-body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). o In the PEER REGISTERED and TRACKING states of the tracker, certain requests are not allowed (Section 2.3.2). The tracker MUST respond with a 03 (Forbidden) error_code with an empty message-body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). o If the tracker is unable to process a request message due to unexpected condition, it SHOULD respond with a 04 (Internal Server Error) error_code with an empty message-body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). o If the tracker is unable to process a request message for being in an overloaded state, it SHOULD respond with a 05 (Service Unavailable) error_code with an empty message-body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). o If authentication is required for the peer to make the request, the tracker SHOULD respond with a 06 (Authentication Required) error_code with an empty message-body (no peer_addr and swarm_result attributes). 4.4 Parsing of Unknown Fields in Message-body This document only details object members used by this specification. Extensions may include additional members within JSON objects defined in this document. PPSP-TP implementations MUST ignore unknown members when processing PPSP-TP messages. 5 Operations and Manageability This section provides the operational and managements aspects that are required to be considered in implementations of PPSP-TP. These aspects follow the recommendations expressed in [RFC5706]. 5.1 Operational Considerations The PPSP-TP provides communication between trackers and peers and is Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 37] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 conceived as a "client-server" mechanism, allowing the exchange of information about the participant peers sharing multimedia streaming contents. The "serving" component, i.e., the tracker, is a logical entity that can be envisioned as a centralized service (implemented in one or more physical nodes), or a fully distributed service. The "client" component can be implemented at each peer participating in the streaming of contents. 5.1.1 Installation and Initial Setup Content providers wishing to use PPSP for content distribution should setup at least a PPSP tracker and a service portal (public web server) to publish links of the content descriptions, for access to their on-demand or live original contents sources. Content/Service providers should also create conditions to generate peer IDs and any required security certificates, as well as chunk IDs and swarm IDs for each streaming content. The configuration processes for the PPSP Tracking facility, the service portal and content sources are not standardized, enabling all the flexibility for implementers. The swarm IDs of available contents, as well as the addresses of the PPSP Tracking facility, can be distributed to end-users in various ways, but it is common practice to include both the swarm ID and the corresponding PPSP tracker addresses (as URLs) in the MPD of the content, which is obtainable (a link) from the service portal. The available contents could have different importance attribute values to indicate whether the content is popular or not. However, it is a totally implementation design and outside of this specification. For example, the importance attribute values of the contents could be set by content providers when distributing them or could be determined by the tracker based on the statistics of the requests from the peers that request the content. The tracker could set a upper threshold to decide that the content is popular enough when the importance attribute value is higher than the upper threshold. And the tracker could also set a lower threshold to decide that the content is uncommon enough when the importance attribute value is lower than the lower threshold. End-users browse and search for the desired contents in the service portal, selecting by clicking the links of the corresponding MPDs. This action typically requires security certificates or authorization tokens from an enrollment service (end user registration), and then launches the Client Media Player (with PPSP awareness) which will then, using PPSP-TP, contact the PPSP tracker to join the Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 38] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 corresponding swarm and obtain the transport addresses of other PPSP peers in order to start streaming the content. 5.1.2 Migration Path There is no previous standard protocol providing similar functionality as PPSP-TP. However, some popular proprietary protocols, e.g., BitTorrent, are used in existing systems. There is no way for PPSP-TP to migrate to proprietary protocols like BitTorrent tracker protocol. And because PPSP-TP is an application level protocol, there is no harm for PPSP-TP having no migration path. However, proprietary protocols migrating to standard protocols like PPSP-TP can solve the problems raised in [RFC6972]. It is also possible for systems to use PPSP-TP as the management protocol to work with exiting propriety peer protocols like BitTorrent peer protocol. 5.1.3 Requirements on Other Protocols and Functional Components For security reasons, when using PPSP Peer protocol with PPSP-TP, the mechanisms described in Section 6.1 should be observed. 5.1.4 Impact on Network Operation As the messaging model of PPSP-TP aligns with HTTP protocol and the semantics of its messages, the impact on Network Operation is similar to using HTTP. 5.1.5 Verifying Correct Operation The correct operation of PPSP-TP can be verified both at the tracker and at the peer by logging the behavior of PPSP-TP. Additionally, the PPSP tracker collects the status of the peers including peer's activity, and such information can be used to monitor and obtain the global view of the operation. 5.2 Management Considerations The management considerations for PPSP-TP are similar to other solutions using HTTP for large-scale content distribution. The PPSP tracker can be realized by geographically distributed tracker nodes or multiple server nodes in a data center. As these nodes are akin to WWW nodes, their configuration procedures, detection of faults, measurement of performance, usage accounting and security measures can be achieved by standard solutions and facilities. 5.2.1 Interoperability Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 39] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Interoperability refers to allowing information sharing and operations between multiple devices and multiple management applications. For PPSP-TP, distinct types of devices host PPSP-TP trackers and peers. Therefore, support for multiple standard schema languages, management protocols and information models, suited to different purposes, was considered in the PPSP-TP design. Specifically, management functionality for PPSP-TP devices can be achieved with Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) [RFC3410], syslog [RFC5424] and NETCONF [RFC6241]. 5.2.2 Management Information PPSP trackers may implement SNMP management interfaces, namely the Application Management MIB [RFC2564] without the need to instrument the tracker application itself. The channel, connections and transaction objects of the the Application Management MIB can be used to report the basic behavior of the PPSP tracker service. The Application Performance Measurement MIB (APM-MIB) [RFC3729] and the Transport Performance Metrics MIB (TPM-MIB) [RFC4150] can be used with PPSP-TP, providing adequate metrics for the analysis of performance for transaction flows in the network, in direct relationship to the transport of PPSP-TP. The Host Resources MIB [RFC2790] can be used to supply information on the hardware, the operating system, and the installed and running software on a PPSP tracker host. The TCP-MIB [RFC4022] can additionally be considered for network monitoring. Logging is an important functionality for PPSP-TP tracker and peer, done via syslog [RFC5424]. 5.2.3 Fault Management As PPSP tracker failures can be mainly attributed to host or network conditions, the facilities previously described for verifying the correct operation of PPSP-TP and the management of PPSP tracker servers, appear sufficient for PPSP-TP fault monitoring. 5.2.4 Configuration Management PPSP tracker deployments, when realized by geographically distributed tracker nodes or multiple server nodes in a data center, may benefit from a standard way of replicating atomic configuration updates over a set of server nodes. This functionality can be provided via NETCONF [RFC6241]. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 40] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 5.2.5 Accounting Management PPSP-TP implementations, namely for content provider environments, can benefit from accounting standardization efforts as defined in [RFC2975], in terms of resource consumption data, for the purposes of capacity and trend analysis, cost allocation, auditing, and billing. 5.2.6 Performance Management Being transaction-oriented, PPSP-TP performance, in terms of availability and responsiveness, can be measured with the facilities of the APM-MIB [RFC3729] and the TPM-MIB [RFC4150]. 5.2.7 Security Management Standard SNMP notifications for PPSP tracker management [RFC3411] and syslog messages [RFC5424] can be used, to alert operators to the conditions identified in the security considerations (Section 6). The statistics collected about the operation of PPSP-TP can be used for detecting attacks, such as the receipt of malformed messages, messages out of order, or messages with invalid timestamps. However, collecting such endpoint properties may also raise some security issues. For example, the statistics collected by the tracker may be disclosed to an unauthorized third party which has some malicious intention. To address such risk, the provider of the tracker should evaluate how much information is revealed and the associated risks. And confidentiality mechanism must be provided by HTTP over TLS to guarantee the confidentiality of PPSP-TP. 6 Security Considerations P2P streaming systems are subject to attacks by malicious or unfriendly peers/trackers that may eavesdrop on signaling, forge/deny information/knowledge about streaming content and/or its availability, impersonating a valid participant, or launch DoS attacks to a chosen victim. No security system can guarantee complete security in an open P2P streaming system where participants may be malicious or uncooperative. The goal of security considerations described here is to provide sufficient protection for maintaining some security properties during the tracker-peer communication even in the face of a large number of malicious peers and/or eventual distrustful trackers (under the distributed tracker deployment scenario). Since the protocol uses HTTP to transfer signaling most of the same security considerations described in [RFC7230] and [RFC7231] also Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 41] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 apply. Due to the transactional nature of the communication between peers and tracker the method for adding authentication and data security services can be the OAuth 2.0 Authorization [RFC6749] with bearer token, which provides the peer with the information required to successfully utilize an access token to make protected requests to the tracker. 6.1 Authentication between Tracker and Peers To protect the PPSP-TP signaling from attackers pretending to be valid peers (or peers other than themselves) all messages received in the tracker SHOULD be received from authorized peers. For that purpose a peer SHOULD enroll in the system via a centralized enrollment server. The enrollment server is expected to provide a proper peer ID for the peer and information about the authentication mechanisms. The specification of the enrollment method and the provision of identifiers and authentication tokens is out of scope of this specification. Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246] MUST be used in the communication between peers and tracker to provide privacy and data integrity. Software engineers developing and service providers deploying the tracker should make themselves familiar with the Best Current Practices (BCP) on configuring HTTP over TLS [RFC7525]. OAuth 2.0 Authorization [RFC6749] SHOULD be also considered when digest authentication and HTTPS client certificates are required. 6.2 Content Integrity Protection Against Polluting Peers/Trackers Malicious peers may declaim ownership of popular content to the tracker and try to serve polluted (i.e., decoy content or even virus/trojan infected contents) to other peers. For trackers, they don't exchange content information among peers, hence they are difficult to detect if a peer is polluting the content or not. Usually, this kind of pollution can be detected by PPSPP [RFC7574]. [RFC7574] requires the use of Merkle Hash Tree scheme for protecting the integrity of the content. More details can be seen in Section 5 of [RFC7574]. Some attackers that disrupt P2P streaming on behalf of content providers may provide false or modified content or peer list information to achieve certain malicious goals. Peers connecting to those portals or trackers provided by the attackers may be redirected to some corrupted malicious content. However, there is no standard ways to for peers to avoid this kind of situations completely. Peers can have mechanisms to detect undesirable content or results themselves. For example, if a peer finds the portal returns some Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 42] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 undesired content information or the tracker returns some malicious peer lists, the peer may want to quit the swarm, or switch to other P2P streaming services provided by other content providers. 6.3 Residual attacks and mitigation To mitigate the impact of Sybil attackers, impersonating a large number of valid participants by repeatedly acquiring different peer identities, the enrollment server SHOULD carefully regulate the rate of peer/tracker admission. There is no guarantee that peers honestly report their status to the tracker, or serve authentic content to other peers as they claim to the tracker. It is expected that a global trust mechanism, where the credit of each peer is accumulated from evaluations for previous transactions, may be taken into account by other peers when selecting partners for future transactions, helping to mitigate the impact of such malicious behaviors. A globally trusted tracker may also take part of the trust mechanism by collecting evaluations, computing credit values and providing them to joining peers. 6.4 Pro-incentive parameter trustfulness Property types for STAT_REPORT messages may consider additional pro- incentive parameters (guidelines for extension in Section 7), which can enable the tracker to improve the performance of the whole P2P streaming system. Trustworthiness of these pro-incentive parameters is critical to the effectiveness of the incentive mechanisms. Furthermore, both the amount of uploaded and downloaded data should be reported to the tracker to allow checking if there is any inconsistency between the upload and download report, and establish an appropriate credit/trust system. One such solution could be a reputation-incentive mechanism, based on the notions of reputation, social awareness and fairness. The mechanism would promote cooperation among participants (via each peer's reputation) based on the history of past transactions, such as, count of chunk requests (sent, received) in a swarm, contribution time of the peer, cumulative uploaded and downloaded content, JOIN and LEAVE timestamps, attainable rate, etc. Alternatively, exchange of cryptographic receipts signed by receiving peers can be used to attest to the upload contribution of a peer to the swarm, as suggested in [Contracts]. 6.5 Privacy for Peers Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 43] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 The PPSP-TP provides mechanisms in which the peers can send message containing IP addresses, ports and other information to the tracker. A tracker or a third party who is able to intercept such messages can store and process the obtained information in order to analyze peers' behaviors and communication patterns. Such analysis can lead to privacy risks. For example, an unauthorized party may snoops on the data transmission from the peer to a tracker in order to introduce some corrupted chunks. The PPSP peer protocol [RFC7574] has already included some mechanisms to protect the streamed content, see section 12.3 and 12.4 of [RFC7574]. For PPSP-TP, peer implementations as well as tracker implementations MUST support the "https" URI scheme [RFC2818] and Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246]. In addition, a peer should be cognizant about potential tracker tracking through queries of peers, e.g., by using HTTP cookies. The PPSP-TP protocol specified in this document does not rely on HTTP cookies. Thus, peers may decide not to return cookies received from the tracker, in order to making some additional tracking more difficult. 7 Guidelines for Extending PPSP-TP Extension mechanisms allow designers to add new features or to customize existing features of a protocol for different operating environments [RFC6709]. Extending a protocol implies either the addition of features without changing the protocol itself or the addition of new elements creating new versions of an existing schema and therefore new versions of the protocol. In PPSP-TP it means that an extension MUST NOT alter an existing protocol schema as the changes would result in a new version of an existing schema, not an extension of an existing schema, typically non-backwards-compatible. Additionally, a designer MUST remember that extensions themselves may also be extensible. Extensions MUST adhere to the principles described in this section in order to be considered valid. Extensions MUST be documented in standards-track RFCs if there are requirements for coordination, interoperability, and broad distribution. 7.1 Forms of PPSP-TP Extension Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 44] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 In PPSP-TP two extension mechanisms can be used: a Request-Response Extension or a Protocol-level Extension. o Request-Response Extension: Adding elements or attributes to an existing element mapping in the schema is the simplest form of extension. This form should be explored before any other. This task can be accomplished by extending an existing element mapping. For example, an element mapping for the Statistics Group can be extended to include additional elements needed to express status information about the activity of the peer, such as online time for the Stat element. o Protocol-level Extension: If there is no existing element mapping that can be extended to meet the requirements and the existing PPSP-TP request and response message structures are insufficient, then extending the protocol should be considered in order to define new operational requests and responses. For example, to enhance the level of control and the granularity of the operations, a new version of the protocol with new messages (JOIN, DISCONNECT), a retro-compatible change in semantics of an existing CONNECT request/response and an extension in STAT_REPORT could be considered. As illustrated in Figure 6, the peer would use an enhanced CONNECT request to perform the initial registration in the system. Then it would join a first swarm as SEEDER, later join a second swarm as LEECH, and then disconnect from the latter swarm but keeping as SEEDER for the first one. When deciding to leave the system, the peer disconnects gracefully from it: Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 45] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 +--------+ +---------+ | Peer | | Tracker | +--------+ +---------+ | | |--CONNECT--------------------->| |<--------------------------OK--| |--JOIN(swarm_a;SEEDER)---------->| |<--------------------------OK--| : : |--STAT_REPORT(activity)------->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : |--JOIN(swarm_b;LEECH)--------->| |<-----------------OK+PeerList--| : : |--STAT_REPORT(ChunkMap_b)----->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : |--DISCONNECT(swarm_b)--------->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : |--STAT_REPORT(activity)------->| |<--------------------------Ok--| : : |--DISCONNECT------------------>| |<---------------------Ok(BYE)--| Figure 6: Example of a session for a PPSP-TP extended version. 7.2 Issues to Be Addressed in PPSP-TP Extensions There are several issues that all extensions should take into consideration. - Overview of the Extension: It is RECOMMENDED that extensions to PPSP-TP have a protocol overview section that discusses the basic operation of the extension. The most important processing rules for the elements in the message flows SHOULD also be mentioned. - Backward Compatibility: The new extension MUST be backward compatible with the base PPSP-TP specified in this document. - Syntactic Issues: Extensions that define new request/response methods SHOULD use all capitals for the method name, keeping with a long-standing convention in many protocols, such as HTTP. Method names are case sensitive in PPSP-TP. Method names SHOULD be shorter than 16 characters and SHOULD attempt to convey the Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 46] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 general meaning of the request or response. - Semantic Issues: PPSP-TP extensions MUST clearly define the semantics of the extensions. Specifically, the extension MUST specify the behaviors expected from both the peer and the tracker in processing the extension, with the processing rules in temporal order of the common messaging scenario. Processing rules generally specify actions to be taken on receipt of messages and expiration of timers. The extension SHOULD specify procedures to be taken in exceptional conditions that are recoverable. Handling of unrecoverable errors does not require specification. - Security Issues: As security is an important component of any protocol, designers of PPSP-TP extensions need to carefully consider security requirements, e.g., authorization requirements and requirements for end-to-end integrity. - Examples of Usage: The specification of the extension SHOULD give examples of message flows and message formatting and include examples of messages containing new syntax. Examples of message flows should be given to cover common cases and at least one failure or unusual case. 8 IANA Considerations 8.1 MIME Type Registry This document registers application/ppsp-tracker+json media types. Type name: application Subtype name: ppsp-tracker+json Required parameters: n/a Optional parameters: n/a Encoding considerations: Encoding considerations are identical to those specified for the "application/json" media type. See [RFC7159]. Security considerations: See Section 6. Interoperability considerations: This document specifies format of conforming messages and the interpretation thereof. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 47] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Published specification: This document. Applications that use this media type: PPSP trackers and peers either stand alone or embedded within other applications. Additional information: Magic number(s): n/a File extension(s): n/a. Macintosh file type code(s): n/a Fragment identifier considerations: n/a Person & email address to contact for further information: See Authors' Addresses section. Intended usage: COMMON Restrictions on usage: none Author: See Authors' Addresses section. Change controller: IESG (iesg@ietf.org) 8.2 PPSP Tracker Protocol Version Number Registry Registry name is "PPSP Tracker Protocol Version Number Registry". Values are integers in the range 0-255, with initial assignments and reservations given in Table 2. New PPSP-TP version types are assigned after IETF Review [RFC5226] to ensure that proper documentation regarding the new version types and their usage has been provided. 8.3 PPSP Tracker Protocol Request Type Registry Registry name is "PPSP Tracker Protocol Request Type Registry". Values are strings listed in Table 8. New PPSP-TP request types are assigned after IETF Review [RFC5226] to ensure that proper documentation regarding the new request types and their usage has been provided. +----------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | request_type | Description | +----------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | "CONNECT" | CONNECT message specified in this document| | "FIND" | FIND message specified in this document | | "STAT_REPORT" | STAT_REPORT message specified in this | Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 48] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 | | document | +----------------------+-------------------------------------------+ Table 8: The PPSP Tracker Protocol Request Type Registry. 8.4 PPSP Tracker Protocol Error Code Registry Registry name is "PPSP Tracker Protocol Error Code Registry". Values are strings listed in Table 9. New PPSP-TP error codes are assigned after IETF Review [RFC5226] to ensure that proper documentation regarding the new error codes and their usage has been provided. +---------------+-------------------------------------------+ | error_code | Description | +---------------+-------------------------------------------+ | 00 | no error | | 01 | bad request | | 02 | unsupported version number | | 03 | forbidden action | | 04 | internal server error | | 05 | service unavailable | | 06 | authentication required | +---------------+-------------------------------------------+ Table 9: The PPSP Tracker Protocol Error Code Registry. 9 Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank many people for for their help and comments, particularly: Zhang Yunfei, Liao Hongluan, Roni Even, Dave Cottlehuber, Bhumip Khasnabish, Wu Yichuan, Peng Jin, Chi Jing, Zong Ning, Song Haibin, Chen Wei, Zhijia Chen, Christian Schmidt, Lars Eggert, David Harrington, Henning Schulzrinne, Kangheng Wu, Martin Stiemerling, Jianyin Zhang, Johan Pouwelse, Riccardo Petrocco and Arno Bakker. The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the SARACEN project [SARACEN], the European Commission, Huawei or China Mobile. 10 References 10.1 Normative References [KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 49] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 [RFC2818] Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, May 2000. [RFC3411] Harrington, D., Presuhn, R. and B., Wijnen, "An Architecture for Describing Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) Management Frameworks", RFC 3411, December 2002. [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003. [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005. [RFC5245] Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols", RFC 5245, April 2010. [RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008. [RFC5389] Rosenberg, J., Mahy R. and D., Wing, "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC 5389, October 2008. [RFC5766] Mahy, R., Matthews, P. and J., Rosenberg, "Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC5766, April 2010. [RFC5952] Kawamura, S. and M. Kawashima, "A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation", RFC 5952, August 2010. [RFC6241] Enns, R., Bjorklund, M., Schoenwaelder, J. and A., Bierman, "Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6241, June 2011. [RFC6749] Hardt, D., "The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework", RFC 6749, October 2012. [RFC7159] Bray, T., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format", RFC 7159, March 2014. [RFC7230] Fielding, R., and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing", RFC 7230, June 2014. [RFC7231] Fielding, R., and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content", RFC 7231, June 2014. [RFC7285] Alimi, R., Penno, R., Yang, Y., Kiesel S., Previdi, S., Roome, W., Shalunov, S. and R. Woundy, "Application-Layer Traffic Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 50] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Optimization (ALTO) Protocol", RF 7285, September 2014. [RFC7574] Bakker, A., Petrocco, R. and V., Grishchenko, "Peer-to- Peer Streaming Peer Protocol (PPSPP)", RFC 7574, July 2015. [RFC7616] Shekh-Yusef, R., Ahrens, D., and S. Bremer, "HTTP Digest Access Authentication", RFC 7616, September 2015. 10.2 Informative References [RFC2564] Kalbfleisch, C., Krupczak, C., Presuhn, R., and J. Saperia, "Application Management MIB", RFC 2564, May 1999. [RFC2790] Waldbusser, S. and P. Grillo, "Host Resources MIB", RFC 2790, March 2000. [RFC2975] Aboba, B., Arkko, J., and D. Harrington, "Introduction to Accounting Management", RFC 2975, October 2000. [RFC3410] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart, "Introduction and Applicability Statements for Internet-Standard Management Framework", RFC 3410, December 2002. [RFC3729] Waldbusser, S., "Application Performance Measurement MIB", RFC 3729, March 2004. [RFC4022] Raghunarayan, R., Ed., "Management Information Base for the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)", RFC 4022, March 2005. [RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122, July 2005. [RFC4150] Dietz, R. and R. Cole, "Transport Performance Metrics MIB", RFC 4150, August 2005. [RFC5226] Narten, T. and H., Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", RFC 5226, May 2008. [RFC5424] Gerhards, R., "The Syslog Protocol", RFC 5424, March 2009. [RFC5706] Harrington, D., "Guidelines for Considering Operations and Management of New Protocols and Protocol Extensions", RFC 5706, November 2009. [RFC6709] Carpenter, B., Aboba, B. and S., Cheshire, "Design Considerations for Protocol Extensions", RFC 6709, September 2012. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 51] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 [RFC6972] Zhang, Y., and N., Zong, "Problem Statement and Requirement of the Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocol (PPSP)", RFC 6972, July 2013. [RFC7525] Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P., Saint-Andre, "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)", RFC 7525, May 2015. [SARACEN] "SARACEN Project Website", http://www.saracen-p2p.eu/. [Contracts] Piatek, M., Venkataramani, A., Yang, R., Zhang, D. and A. Jaffe, "Contracts: Practical Contribution Incentives for P2P Live Streaming", in NSDI '10: USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation, April 2010. Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 52] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Appendix A. Revision History -00 2013-02-14 Initial version. -01 2013-02-14 Minor revision. -02 2013-10-21 Minor revision. -03 2013-12-31 Major revision + Introduced a generalization of the protocol specification using a C-style notation. - removed all examples of protocol message encoding in XML -04 2014-07-01 Minor Revision - removed Appendix referencing the use of HTTP + refined the presentation language specification to include protocol elements definitions. -05 2014-07-04 Minor Revision -06 2014-10-27 Minor Revision -07 2014-12-12 Major Revision + introduced a text-based (JSON) protocol encoding with examples for all the messages + corrections in the specifications of protocol elements + section 5 specification of protocol elements semantics + introduced a IANA MIME Type registry -08 2015-01-08 Major Revision * merge sections 5 and 4 with section 3; renumbered all other + refined the protocol elements definitions for consistency with the JSON data structures + revised protocol messages encoding examples + additional IANA registry for protocol version * editorial corrections -09 (2015-3-27) Major Revision + Add concurrent_link in the stream_stats specification. + Remove "PROXY" value from "ability_nat" specification. + Dividing attributes by "," in the example * editorial corrections -10 (Current version) Major Revision + Update dates -11 (2015-12-12) Address the comments from IESG review Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 53] INTERNET DRAFT PPSP-TP/1.0 December 13, 2015 Authors' Addresses Rui Santos Cruz IST/INESC-ID/INOV Phone: +351.939060939 Email: rui.cruz@ieee.org Mario Serafim Nunes IST/INESC-ID/INOV Rua Alves Redol, n.9 1000-029 LISBOA, Portugal Phone: +351.213100256 Email: mario.nunes@inov.pt Rachel Huang (Editor) Huawei Email: rachel.huang@huawei.com Jinwei Xia Huawei Nanjing, Baixia District 210001, China Phone: +86-025-86622310 Email: xiajinwei@huawei.com Joao P. Taveira IST/INOV Email: joao.silva@inov.pt Deng Lingli China Mobile Email: denglingli@chinamobile.com Gu Yingjie Email: guyingjie@gmail.com Cruz, et al. Expires June 15, 2016 [Page 54]