Internet DRAFT - draft-saintandre-sip-xmpp-groupchat

draft-saintandre-sip-xmpp-groupchat






Network Working Group                                     P. Saint-Andre
Internet-Draft                                       Cisco Systems, Inc.
Intended status: Standards Track                               S. Ibarra
Expires: December 22, 2013                                   AG Projects
                                                               S. Loreto
                                                                Ericsson
                                                           June 20, 2013


   Interworking between the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and the
      Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP): Groupchat
                 draft-saintandre-sip-xmpp-groupchat-04

Abstract

   This document defines a bidirectional protocol mapping for the
   exchange of instant messages in the context of a multiparty chat
   session among users of the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and
   users of the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP).
   Specifically, this document defines a mapping between the SIP-based
   Message Session Relay Protocol (MSRP) and the XMPP Multi-User Chat
   (MUC) extension.

Status of this Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute
   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-
   Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

   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."

   This Internet-Draft will expire on December 22, 2013.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2013 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



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   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 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   2.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   3.  XMPP MUC to MSRP Multi-party Messaging Session . . . . . . . .  3
     3.1.  Enter Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
     3.2.  Set Nickname . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
     3.3.  Change Nickname  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     3.4.  Invite Another User to a Room  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     3.5.  Presence Broadcast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     3.6.  Exchange Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
       3.6.1.  Send a Message to All Occupants  . . . . . . . . . . . 15
       3.6.2.  Send a Private Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
     3.7.  Exit Room  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
   4.  MSRP Multi-party Messaging Session to XMPP MUC . . . . . . . . 19
     4.1.  Enter Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
     4.2.  Change Nickname  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
     4.3.  Invite Another User to a Room  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
     4.4.  Presence Broadcast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
     4.5.  Exchange Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
       4.5.1.  Send a Message to All Occupants  . . . . . . . . . . . 26
       4.5.2.  Send a Private Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
     4.6.  Exit Room  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
   5.  Handling of Nicknames and Display Names  . . . . . . . . . . . 29
   6.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
   7.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
   8.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
     8.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
     8.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
   Appendix A.  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
   Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32












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1.  Introduction

   Both the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [RFC3261] and the
   Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) [RFC6120] can be
   used for the purpose of multiparty text chat over the Internet.  To
   ensure interworking between these technologies, it is important to
   define bidirectional protocol mappings.

   The architectural assumptions underlying such protocol mappings are
   provided in [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core], including mapping of
   addresses and error conditions.  This document specifies mappings for
   multiparty text chat sessions (often called "groupchat");
   specifically, this document defines a mapping between the XMPP Multi-
   User Chat (MUC) extension [XEP-0045] and SIP-based multiparty chat
   using Message Session Relay Protocol [RFC4975] as specified in
   [I-D.ietf-simple-chat].

   Both MUC and MSRP contain a large set of features, such as the
   ability to administer rooms, kick and ban users, reserve a nickname
   within a room, change room subject, enable room moderation, and
   destroy the room.  This document covers only a basic subset of
   groupchat features: joining the room, establishing or changing a room
   nickname, inviting another user to the room, modifying presence
   information within the room, sending a message to all participants,
   sending a private message to a single participant, and leaving the
   room.  Future documents might define mappings for additional features
   beyond this set.

   The discussion venue for this document is the stox@ietf.org mailing
   list; visit https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/stox for
   subscription information and discussion archives.


2.  Terminology

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
   [RFC2119].

   A number of technical terms used here are defined in [RFC3261],
   [RFC4975], [RFC6120], and [XEP-0045].  The term "JID" is short for
   "Jabber Identifier".


3.  XMPP MUC to MSRP Multi-party Messaging Session

   This section describes how to map an XMPP MUC session to an MSRP



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   Multi-party Messaging session.  The following diagram outlines the
   overall protocol flow.

   XMPP User                   Gateway               MSRP Conference
       |                          |                          |
       |(F1) (XMPP) Enter room    |                          |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F2) (SIP) INVITE         |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F3) (SIP) 200 OK         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |(F4) (SIP) ACK            |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F5) (MSRP) NICKNAME      |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F6) (MSRP) 200 OK        |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |(F7) (SIP)SUBSCRIBE       |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |     Event:conference     |
       |                          |                          |
       |                          |(F8) (SIP) 200 OK         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |(F9) (SIP) NOTIFY         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |(F10) (SIP) 200 OK        |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |(F11) (XMPP) Presence     |                          |
       |<-------------------------|                          |
       |(F12) (XMPP) Subject      |                          |
       |<-------------------------|                          |
       |                          |                          |
       |(F13) (XMPP) Chat message |                          |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F14) (MSRP) SEND         |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F15) (MSRP) 200 OK       |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |                          |
       |(F16) (XMPP) Chat message |                          |
       |<-------------------------|                          |
       .                          .                          .
       .                          .                          .
       |(F17) (XMPP) Exit room    |                          |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F18) (SIP) BYE           |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F19) (SIP) 200 OK        |



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       |                          |<-------------------------|

   Detailed protocol flows and mappings are provided in the following
   sections.

3.1.  Enter Room

   As defined in the XMPP Multi-User Chat (MUC) extensions [XEP-0045],
   when an XMPP user (say, juliet@example.com) wants to join a groupchat
   room (say, "verona@chat.example.org"), she sends a <presence/> stanza
   to that chat room.  In her request she also specifies the nickname
   she wants to use within the room (say, "JuliC"); in XMPP this Room
   Nickname is the resourcepart of an Occupant JID (thus
   "verona@chat.example.org/JuliC").  The joining client signals its
   ability to speak the multi-user chat protocol by including in the
   initial presence stanza an empty <x/> element qualified by the
   'http://jabber.org/protocol/muc' namespace.

   Example: (F1) Juliet enters room

       <presence from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'>
         <x xmlns='http='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
       </presence>

   Upon receiving such a presence stanza, the XMPP server to which
   Juliet has authenticated attempts to (a) deliver the stanza to a
   local domain or (b) route the presence stanza to the remote domain
   that services the hostname in the 'to' attribute.  In this document
   we assume that the hostname in the 'to' attribute is a groupchat-
   aware SIP/MSRP service hosted by a separate server.

   As specified in [RFC6121], the XMPP server needs to determine the
   identity of the remote domain, which it does by performing one or
   more DNS SRV lookups [RFC2782].  For presence stanzas, the order of
   lookups recommended by [RFC6121] is to first try the "_xmpp-server"
   service as specified in [RFC6120] and to then try the "_pres" service
   as specified in [RFC3861].  Here we assume that the first lookup will
   fail but that the second lookup will succeed and return a resolution
   "_pres._s2x.example.org", since we have already assumed that the
   example.org hostname is running a SIP instant messaging service.
   (Note: The XMPP server might have previously determined that the
   remote domain is a SIMPLE server, in which case it would not need to
   perform the SRV lookups; the caching of such information is a matter
   of implementation and local service policy, and is therefore out of
   scope for this document.)

   Once the XMPP server (example.com) has determined that the remote



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   domain is serviced by a SIMPLE server, it hands the XMPP presence
   stanza off to its local XMPP-to-SIP gateway code (this might be a
   specialized connection manager within the example.com service or
   might be a dedicated component at, say, x2s.example.com), which
   transforms the presence stanza into SIP syntax and routes it to the
   remote conference server (chat.example.org).

   Because a multi-user chat service accepts the presence stanza shown
   above as a request to enter a room, the XMPP-to-SIP gateway
   transforms it in a SIP INVITE request.

   Example: (F2) Juliet enters room (SIP conversion)

       INVITE sip:verona@chat.example.org SIP/2.0
       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
       From: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>
       Contact: <sip:juliet@example.com>;gr=balcony
       Call-ID: 711609sa
       Content-Type: application/sdp
       Content-Length: [length]

       c=IN IP4 x2s.example.org
       m=message 7654 TCP/MSRP *
       a=accept-types:text/cpim
       a=accept-wrapped-types:text/plain text/html
       a=path:msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       a=chatroom

   Here the Session Description Protocol offer specifies the MSRP-aware
   XMPP-to-SIP gateway on the XMPP side as well as other particulars of
   the session.

      There is no direct mapping for the MSRP URIs.  In fact MSRP URIs
      identify a session of instant messages at a particular device;
      they are ephemeral and have no meaning outside the scope of that
      session.  The authority component of the MSRP URI MUST contain the
      XMPP-to-SIP gateway hostname or numeric IP address and an explicit
      port number.

   As specified in [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core], the mapping of XMPP
   syntax elements to SIP and [RFC4566] syntax elements is as shown in
   the following table.









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   Table 1: Message syntax mapping from XMPP to SIP/SDP

       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  XMPP Element or Attribute  |  SIP Header or SDP Contents |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  from                       |  From                       |
       |  to (without the /nick)     |  To                         |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+

   Here we assume that the MSRP conference server accepts the session
   establishment.  It includes the 'isfocus' and other relevant feature
   tags in the Contact header field of the response.  The MSRP
   confernece server also includes an answer session description that
   acknowledges the choice of media and contains the extensions
   specified in [I-D.ietf-simple-chat].

   Example: (F3) Chat room accepts session establishment

     SIP/2.0 200 OK
     From: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
     To: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>;tag=786
     Call-ID: 711609sa
     Contact: <sip:verona@chat.example.org;transport=tcp>\
              ;methods="INVITE,BYE,OPTIONS,ACK,CANCEL,SUBSCRIBE,NOTIFY"\
              ;automata;isfocus;message;event="conference"
     Content-Type: application/sdp
     Content-Length: [length]

     c=IN IP4 example.org
     m=message 12763 TCP/MSRP *
     a=chatroom:nickname private-messages
     a=accept-types:message/cpim
     a=accept-wrapped-types:text/plain text/html *
     a=path:msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp

   Upon receiving such a response, the SIMPLE server or associated SIP-
   to-XMPP gateway sends a SIP ACK to the MSRP conference server on
   behalf of the joining user.

   Example: (F4) Gateway sends ACK to MSRP conference server

       ACK sip:verona@chat.example.org SIP/2.0
       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;tag=087js
       From: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>;tag=786
       Call-ID: 711609sa






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3.2.  Set Nickname

   If the chat room server accepted the session, the SIMPLE server or
   associated SIP-to-XMPP gateway MUST set up the nickname as received
   in the presence stanza (i.e., the resourcepart of the 'to' address,
   such "JuliC" in "verona@chat.example.org/JuliC").  The nickname is
   set up using the extension specified in [I-D.ietf-simple-chat].

   Example: (F5) Gateway sets up nickname

       MSRP a786hjs2 NICKNAME
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       Use-Nickname: "JuliC"
       -------a786hjs2

   The MSRP conference server analyzes the existing allocation of
   nicknames, accepts the nickname proposal and answers with a 200
   response.

   Example: (F6) MSRP conference accepts nickname proposal

       MSRP a786hjs2 200 OK
       To-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       -------a786hjs2

   So far we have assumed that the requested nickname did not conflict
   with any existing nicknames.  The following text describes the
   handling of a nickname conflict.





















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                                                     MSRP conference
   XMPP User                   Gateway                     server
       |                          |                          |
       |(F1) (XMPP) Enter room    |                          |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F2) (SIP) INVITE         |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F3) (SIP) 200 OK         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |(F4) (SIP) ACK            |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F5) (MSRP) NICKNAME      |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F6) (MSRP) 425 Error     |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       |                          |                          |
       |(F7) (XMPP) Presence Error
       |<-------------------------|                          |
       .                          .                          .
       |                          |(F8) (SIP) BYE            |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F9) (SIP) 200 OK         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|

   The MSRP conference server analyzes the existing allocation of
   nicknames, and detects that the nickname proposal is already provided
   to another participant.  In this case the MSRP conference server
   answers with a 425 response.

   Example: (F6) MSRP conference does not accept nickname proposal

       MSRP a786hjs2 425 Nickname usage failed
       To-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       -------a786hjs2

   Upon receiving such a response, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway SHOULD
   translate it into an XMPP presence stanza of type "error" specifying
   a <conflict/> error condition (which implies that the XMPP client
   will then need to choose another nickname and repeat the process of
   joining).










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   Example: (F7) Conflict error for nickname

       <presence from='verona@chat.example.org'
                 to='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                 type='error'>
         <x xmlns='http='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
         <error type='cancel'>
           <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
         </error>
       </presence>

   Alternatively, the gateway might generate a new nickname request on
   behalf of the XMPP user, thus shielding the XMPP client from handling
   the conflict error.

3.3.  Change Nickname

   The XMPP user might want to change her nickname.  She can do so by
   sending an updated presence stanza to the room, containing a new
   nickname.

                                                     MSRP conference
   XMPP User                   Gateway                     server
       |                          |                          |
       |(F1) (XMPP) Presence to change Nickname              |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F2) (MSRP) NICKNAME      |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F3) (MSRP) 200 OK        |
       |                          |<-------------------------|


   Example: (F1) Juliet changes her nickname

       <presence from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/Juliet'/>

   The nickname change is handled as described above.

3.4.  Invite Another User to a Room

   In XMPP there are two methods for inviting another user to a room:
   direct invitations [XEP-0249] (sent directly from the user's real JID
   outside the room to the invitee's real JID) and mediated invitations
   (sent through the room from the user's Occupant JID to the invitee's
   JID).  In this document we cover mediated invitations only.





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   XMPP User                   Gateway               MSRP Conference
       |                          |                          |
       |(F1) (XMPP) Message stanza to invite participant     |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F2) (SIP) REFER          |
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |                          |(F3) (SIP) 200 OK         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|
       .                          .                          .
       |                          |(F4) (SIP) NOTIFY         |
       |                          |<-------------------------|


   For example, if Juliet decides to invite Benvolio to the room, she
   sends a message stanza with an invite and Benvolio's JID (which could
   be his real JID or an Occupant JID in another room).

   Example: (F1) Juliet invites Hecate to the room

   <message from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
            id='nzd143v8'
            to='verona@chat.example.org'>
     <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user'>
       <invite to='benvolio@example.com'/>
     </x>
   </message>

   The SIP - XMPP gateway then sends a SIP REFER request to the MSRP
   conference server indicating who needs to be invited in the Refer-To
   header, as per [RFC4579] (sec 5.5)

   Example: (F2) SIP translation of invite

     REFER sip:verona@chat.example.com SIP/2.0
     Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKg4534
     Max-Forwards: 70
     To: <sip:verona@chat.example.com>
     From: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>;tag=5534562
     Call-ID: 849392fklgl43
     CSeq: 476 REFER
     Contact: <sip:juliet@juliet.example.com>
     Allow: INVITE, ACK, CANCEL, OPTIONS, BYE, REFER, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY
     Accept: message/sipfrag
     Refer-To: <sip:benvolio@example.com>
     Supported: replaces
     Content-Length: 0

   The progress of the invitation will be tracked by the reeived NOTIFY



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   requests as per [RFC3515].

   Example: (F4) Progress notification for invitation

   NOTIFY sip:juliet@example.com SIP/2.0
   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK9922ef992-25
   To: <sip:juliet@example.com>;tag=5534562
   From: <sip:verona@chat.example.com>;tag=18747389
   Call-ID: 849392fklgl43
   CSeq: 1993402 NOTIFY
   Max-Forwards: 70
   Event: refer
   Subscription-State: active;expires=60
   Contact: sip:verona@chat.example.com
   Content-Type: message/sipfrag;version=2.0
   Content-Length: ...

   SIP/2.0 200 OK

3.5.  Presence Broadcast

   If the MSRP conference service accepts the request to enter a room,
   the XMPP user expects to receive back presence information from all
   the existing occupants of the room.  So the XMPP-to-SIP gateway MUST
   subscribe to the Conference Event package [RFC4575] on the MSRP
   conference server.  When the subscription is completed the MSRP
   conference server sends to the XMPP-to-SIP gateway a NOTIFY
   containing the presence information of all the existing occupants,
   represented using the [RFC4575] format.






















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   Example: (F9) MSRP conference sends presence information

       NOTIFY sip:verona@chat.example.org SIP/2.0
       To: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>;gr=balcony
       From: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;tag=a3343df32
       Call-ID: k3l43id034ksereree
       Event: conference
       Subscription-State: active;expires=3600
       Content-Type: application/conference-info+xml
       Content-Length: ...

       <conference-info version="0" state="full"
           entity="sip:3402934234@chat.example.org">
         <conference-description>
           <subject>Today in Verona</subject>
           <conf-uris>
             <entry>
               <uri>tel:+18882934234</uri>
             </entry>
           </conf-uris>
         </conference-description>
         <users>
           <user entity="sip:verona@chat.example.org;gr=Romeo"
                 state="full">
             <display-text>Romeo</display-text>
             <roles>
               <entry>participant</entry>
             </roles>
           </user>
           <user entity="sip:verona@chat.example.org;gr=Ben"
                 state="full">
             <display-text>Ben</display-text>
             <roles>
               <entry>participant</entry>
             </roles>
           </user>
         </users>
       </conference-info>


   The following table shows the syntax mapping from the RFC 4575
   payload to the XMPP participants list.  (Mappings for elements not
   mentioned are undefined.)








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   Table 2: Participant list mapping

       +--------------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  RFC 4575 Element              |  XMPP Element or Attribute  |
       +--------------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  conference-info entity        |  room JID                   |
       |  conference subject            |  room subject               |
       |  user entity                   |  participant bare JID       |
       |  user display-text / nickname  |  participant nickname       |
       |  endpoint entity               |  participant full JID       |
       +--------------------------------+-----------------------------+

   Upon receiving such a response, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway MUST send a
   200 OK to the MSRP conference server and translate the participant
   list into a series of XMPP presence stanzas.

   Example: (F11) Chatroom presence information translated into XMPP

       <presence from='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'>
         <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user'>
           <item affiliation='none' role='participant'/>
         </x>
       </presence>

       <presence from='verona@chat.example.org/Ben'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'>
         <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user'>
           <item affiliation='none' role='participant'/>
         </x>
       </presence>

   If the NOTIFY included a subject, the gateway SHALL convert it into a
   separate XMPP message.

   Example: (F12) Chatroom subject translated into XMPP

       <message from='verona@chat.example.com/mayor'
                to='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                id='mbh2vd68'>
         <subject>Today in Verona</subject>
       </message>

   The mapping of SIP and [RFC4575] payload syntax elements to XMPP
   syntax elements is as shown in the following table.  (Mappings for
   elements not mentioned are undefined.)





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   Table 2: Message syntax mapping from SIP to XMPP

       +---------------------------------+-----------------------------+
       | SIP Header or RFC4575 Contents  | XMPP Element or Attribute   |
       +---------------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  <user entity=...>              |  From                       |
       |  To + / <display-text>          |  To                         |
       |  roles                          |  role                       |
       |  'none'                         |  affiliation                |
       +---------------------------------+-----------------------------+

3.6.  Exchange Messages

   Once the user has joined the chatroom, the user can exchange an
   unbounded number of messages both public and private.

   The mapping of XMPP syntax elements to MSRP syntax elements is as
   shown in the following table.  (Mappings for elements not mentioned
   are undefined.)

   Table 3: Message syntax mapping from XMPP Message to MSRP

       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  XMPP Element or Attribute  |  CPIM Header                |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  to                         |  To                         |
       |  from                       |  From                       |
       |  <body/>                    |  body of the SEND request   |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+

3.6.1.  Send a Message to All Occupants

   When Juliet wants to sends a message to all other occupants in the
   room, she sends a message of type "groupchat" to the <room@service>
   itself (in our example, <verona@chat.example.org>).

   The following examples show an exchange of a public message.

   Example: (F13) Juliet sends message to all occupants

       <message from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                to='verona@chat.example.org'
                type='groupchat'
                id='lzfed24s'>
             <body>Who knows where Romeo is?</body>
       </message>

   Upon receiving such a message, the XMPP-to-SIP gateway MUST translate



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   it into an MSRP SEND message.

   Example: (F14) Gateway transforms XMPP message to MSRP

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652491
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
       From: "Juliet" <sip:juliet@example.com>
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       Who knows where Romeo is?
       -------a786hjs2$

   Upon receiving the SEND request, if the request either contains a
   Failure-Report header field value of "yes" or does not contain a
   Failure-Report header at all, the MSRP conference server MUST
   immediately generate and send a response.

       MSRP d93kswow 200 OK
       To-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       -------d93kswow$

   Since an XMPP MUC room could be moderated and an XMPP user cannot be
   sure whether her message has been accepted or not without receiving
   it back from the server, [XEP-0045] states that the sender needs to
   receive the same message it has generated.  So in this scenario the
   XMPP-to-SIP gateway has to reflect the message back to the sender.
   This prodedure only applies to XMPP endpoints.

3.6.2.  Send a Private Message

   Since each occupant has a unique JID, Juliet can send a "private
   message" to a selected occupant through the service by sending a
   message to the user's occupant JID.  The XMPP message type SHOULD be
   "chat" and MUST NOT be "groupchat", but MAY be left unspecified.

   If the XMPP-to-SIP gateway has support for private messaging it MUST
   advertise that fact by adding a "private-messages" value to the
   a=chatroom SDP attribute it sends to the MSRP conference server, as
   specified in [I-D.ietf-simple-chat].




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       a=chatroom:nickname private-messages

   The following examples show an exchange of a private message.

   Example: Juliet sends private message

       <message from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                to='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'
                type='chat'
                id='6sfln45q'/>
             <body>O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?</body>
       </message>

   Upon receiving such a message, the XMPP-to-SIP gateway MUST translate
   it into an MSRP SEND message.

   Example: Gateway transforms private message from XMPP to MSRP

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652491
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;gr=Romeo
       From: <sip:juliet@example.org>;gr=balcony
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
       -------a786hjs2$

   The MSRP conference server is responsible for sending the message to
   the intended recipient, and when doing so MUST modify the "From"
   header to the sender's address within the chatroom.















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   Example: MSRP conference sends private message to SIP user

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.org:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652491
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:romeo@example.com>
       From: <sip:verona@chat.example.com>;gr=JuliC
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
       -------a786hjs2$

3.7.  Exit Room

   If Juliet decides to exit the chatroom, her client sends a presence
   stanza of type "unavailable" to the occupant JID she is currently
   using in the room (here <verona@chat.example.org/JuliC>).

   Example: (F17) Juliet exits room

       <presence from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'
                 type='unavailable'/>

   Upon receiving such a stanza, the XMPP-to-SIP gateway terminates the
   SIP session by sending a SIP BYE to the MSRP conference server.  The
   MSRP conference server then responds with a 200 OK.

   Juliet MAY include a custom exit message in the presence stanza of
   type "unavailable", in which case it SHOULD be broadcasted to other
   participants using the methods described above.

   Example: (F17) Juliet exits the chatroom

       <presence from='juliet@example.com/balcony'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'
                 type='unavailable'>
         <status>Time to go!</status>
       </presence>







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4.  MSRP Multi-party Messaging Session to XMPP MUC

   This section describes how to map a Multi-party Instant Message (IM)
   MSRP session to an XMPP Multi-User Chat (MUC) session.

   SIP User                  Gateway                   XMPP MUC
      |                         |                          |
      |(F1)(SIP) INVITE         |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |(F2) (SIP) 200 OK        |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |(F3) (SIP) ACK           |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |(F4) (MSRP) NICKNAME     |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |(F5)(XMPP) Enter room     |
      |                         |------------------------->|
      |(F6) (MSRP) 200 OK       |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |                         |(F7)(XMPP) (XMPP) Presence|
      |                         |<-------------------------|
      |                         |                          |
      |(F8)(SIP) SUBSCRIBE      |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |     Event:conference    |                          |
      |                         |                          |
      |(F9) (SIP) 200 OK        |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |(F10) (SIP) NOTIFY       |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |(F11) (SIP) 200 OK       |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |(F12)(XMPP) (XMPP) Subject|
      |                         |<-------------------------|
      |                         |                          |
      |(F13)(MSRP) SEND         |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |(F14)(MSRP) SEND         |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |(F15)(XMPP) Chat message  |
      |(F16)(MSRP) 200 OK       |------------------------->|
      |<------------------------|(F17)(XMPP) Chat message  |
      |                         |<-------------------------|
      |(F18)(MSRP) SEND         |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |(F19)(MSRP) 200 OK       |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      .                         .                          .



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      .                         .                          .
      |                         |                          |
      |(F20)(SIP) BYE           |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |(F21)(XMPP) Exiting a room|
      |                         |------------------------->|
      |(F22)(SIP) 200 OK        |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |

   Note: If the XMPP presence stanza is received before the SIP
   SUBSCRIBE dialog is established for the "conference" event, then the
   server SHOULD cache the participants list until the subscription is
   established and delivered in a SIP NOTIFY request.

4.1.  Enter Room

   When the SIP user ("Romeo") wants to join a groupchat room
   ("Verona"), he first has to start the SIP session by sending out a
   SIP INVITE request containing an offered session description that
   includes an MSRP media line accompanied by a mandatory "path" and
   "chatroom" attributes.  The MSRP media line is also accompanied by an
   "accept-types" attribute specifing support for a Message/CPIM top
   level wrapper for the MSRP message.

   Example: (F1) SIP user starts the session

       INVITE sip:verona@chat.example.org SIP/2.0
       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
       From: "Romeo" <sip:romeo@example.com>;gr=orchard
       Call-ID: 742510no
       Content-Type: application/sdp
       Content-Length: [length]

       c=IN IP4 s2x.example.net
       m=message 7313 TCP/MSRP *
       a=accept-types:message/cpim text/plain text/html
       a=path:msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       a=chatroom

   Upon receiving the INVITE, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway needs to determine
   the identity of the remote domain, which it does by performing one or
   more DNS SRV lookups [RFC2782].  The SIP-to-XMPP gateway SHOULD
   resolve the address present in the To header of the INVITE to an 'im'
   URI, then follow the rules in [RFC3861] regarding the "_im" SRV
   service for the target domain contained in the To header.  If SRV
   address resolution fails for the "_im" service, the SIP-to-XMPP
   gateway MAY attempt a lookup for the "_xmpp-server" service as
   specified in [RFC6120] or MAY return an error to the sender (i.e.,



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   502 Bad Gateway).

   If SRV address resolution succeeds, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway SHOULD
   answer successfuly with a SIP 200 OK (F2).

   Implementations MAY wait until the nickname is set with an MSRP
   NICKNAME chunk before joining the XMPP MUC or MAY choose a temporary
   nickname (such as the SIP From header display name) and use it to
   join the room.

     SIP/2.0 200 OK
     To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
     From: "Romeo" <sip:romeo@example.com>;gr=orchard
     Contact: <sip:x2s.example.com;transport=tcp> \
              ;methods="INVITE,BYE,OPTIONS,ACK,CANCEL,SUBSCRIBE,NOTIFY"\
              ;automata;isfocus;message;event="conference"
     Call-ID: 742510no
     Content-Type: application/sdp

     c=IN IP4 x2s.example.com
     m=message 8763 TCP/MSRP *
     a=accept-types:message/cpim text/plain text/html
     a=path:msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
     a=chatroom:nickname private-messages

   Example: (F4) MSRP user sets up nickname

       MSRP a786hjs2 NICKNAME
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       Use-Nickname: "Romeo"
           -------a786hjs2

   Upon receiving the MSRP NICKNAME request, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway is
   responsible for generating an XMPP presence stanza and sending it to
   the chatroom.

   Example: (F5) Romeo enters chatroom

       <presence from='romeo@example.com'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'>
         <x xmlns='http='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
       </presence>

   If the room does not already contain another user with the requested
   nickname, the service accepts the access request.  Thus if the
   gateway does not receive any stanza of type "error" specifying a
   <conflict/> error condition, it MUST answer the MSRP nickname



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   proposal with a 200 OK response (F6).

   Example: (F6) Acknowledgement of join

       MSRP a786hjs2 200 OK
       To-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
           -------a786hjs2

   So far we have assumed that the requested nickname did not conflict
   with any existing nicknames.  The following flow shows the handling
   of a nickname conflict.

                                                     XMPP conference
   SIP User                  Gateway                     server
      |                         |                          |
      |(F1)(SIP) INVITE         |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |(F2) (SIP) 200 OK        |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |(F3) (SIP) ACK           |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |                          |
      |(F4) (MSRP) NICKNAME     |                          |
      |------------------------>|                          |
      |                         |(F5)(XMPP) Entering a room|
      |                         |------------------------->|
      |                         |(F7) (XMPP) Presence Error|
      |                         |<-------------------------|
      |(F6) (MSRP) 425 Error    |                          |
      |<------------------------|                          |
      |                         |                          |


4.2.  Change Nickname

   If Romeo decides to change his nickname within the room, he MUST send
   a new MSRP NICKNAME request.  In fact modification of the nickname in
   MSRP is not different from the initial reservation and usage of a
   nickname.











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                                                     XMPP conference
   SIP User                   Gateway                      server
       |                          |                          |
       |(F1) (MSRP) NICKNAME      |                          |
       |------------------------->|                          |
       |                          |(F2) (XMPP) Presence w/ Nickname
       |                          |------------------------->|
       |(F3) (MSRP) 200 OK        |                          |
       |<-------------------------|                          |


   Example: (F1) MSRP user changes nickname

       MSRP a786hjs2 NICKNAME
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       Use-Nickname: "montecchi"
           -------a786hjs2

   Upon receiving such a message, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway MUST translate
   it into an XMPP presence stanza.

   Example: (F2) XMPP translation of nickname change

       <presence from='romeo@example.com'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/montecchi'/>


4.3.  Invite Another User to a Room

   To follow.

4.4.  Presence Broadcast

   If the multi-user chat service is able to add the SIP user to the
   room, it sends presence from all the existing occupants' room JIDs to
   the new occupant's full JID, including extended presence information
   about roles in an <x/> element.













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   Example: (F7) Chatroom presence information translated into XMPP

       <presence from='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'
                 to='romeo@example.com'>
         <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user'>
           <item affiliation='none' role='participant'/>
         </x>
       </presence>

       <presence from='verona@chat.example.org/Ben'
                 to='romeo@example.com'>
         <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc#user'>
           <item affiliation='none' role='participant'/>
         </x>
       </presence>

   Upon receiving these presence stanzas, if the MSRP conference server
   has already completed the subscription to the Conference Event
   package [RFC4575], the XMPP-to-SIP gateway MUST translate them in a
   SIP NOTIFY request containing the participant list (represented in
   the [RFC4575] format).






























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   Example: (F10) MSRP translation of XMPP participant presence

       NOTIFY sip:romeo@example.com SIP/2.0
       To: <sip:romeo@example.com>;tag=43524545
       From: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;tag=a3343df32
       Call-ID: k3l43id034ksererff
       Event: conference
       Subscription-State: active;expires=3600
       Content-Type: application/conference-info+xml
       Content-Length: ...

       <conference-info version="0" state="full"
           entity="sip:verona@chat.example.org">
         <conference-description>
           <subject>Today in Verona</subject>
           <conf-uris>
             <entry>
               <uri>tel:+18882934234</uri>
               <uri>sip:verona@chat.example.org</uri>
             </entry>
           </conf-uris>
        </conference-description>
        <users>
          <user entity="sip:verona@chat.example.org/JuliC"
                state="full">
            <display-text>JuliC</display-text>
            <roles>
              <entry>participant</entry>
            </roles>
          </user>
          <user entity="sip:verona@chat.example.org/Ben"
                state="full">
            <display-text>Ben</display-text>
            <roles>
              <entry>participant</entry>
            </roles>
        </users>
       </conference-info>


4.5.  Exchange Messages

   Once the user has joined the chat room, the user can exchange an
   unbounded number of messages both public and private.

   The mapping of MSRP syntax elements to XMPP syntax elements SHOULD be
   as shown in the following table.  (Mappings for elements not
   mentioned are undefined.)



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   Table 4: Message syntax mapping from MSRP Message to XMPP

       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  CPIM Header                |XMPP Element or Attribute    |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |  To                         |  to                         |
       |  From                       |  from                       |
       |  body of the SEND request   |  <body/>                    |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+

4.5.1.  Send a Message to All Occupants

   When Romeo wants to send a message to all other occupants in the
   room, he sends an MSRP SEND request to <room@service> itself (i.e.,
   <verona@chat.example.org> in our example).

   The following examples show an exchange of a public message.

   Example: (F12) Romeo sends a message to the chat room

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652492
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>
       From: "Romeo" <sip:romeo@example.com>;gr=orchard
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       Romeo is here!
       -------a786hjs2$

   Upon receiving the SEND request, if the request either contains a
   Failure-Report header field value of "yes" or does not contain a
   Failure-Report header at all, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway MUST
   immediately translate it into an XMPP message stanza (F13) and then
   generate and send an MSRP response (F14).











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   Example: (F13) XMPP translation of message

       <message from='romeo@example.com/orchard'
                to='verona@chat.example.org'
                type='groupchat'
                id='8gbx1g4p'>
         <body>Romeo is here!</body>
       </message>

   Example: (F14) MSRP response to public message

       MSRP d93kswow 200 OK
       To-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       -------d93kswow$

   Note well that the XMPP MUC room will reflect the sender's message
   back to all users, including the sender.  In MSRP this reflected
   message is unnecessary.  Therefore gateways are advised to maintain a
   cache and if the same stanza is received within a reasonable amount
   of time, assume is the reflected message and ignore it.

4.5.2.  Send a Private Message

   Romeo can send a "private message" to a selected occupant via the
   chat room service by sending a message to the occupant's room
   nickname.

   The following examples show an exchange of a private message.

   Example: (F12) Romeo sends a private message

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652492
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;gr=JuliC
       From: "Romeo" <sip:romeo@example.com>;gr=orchard
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       I am here!!!
       -------a786hjs2$

   The MSRP conference is responsible for transforming the "From"



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   address into an in-room address.

   Example: MSRP handling of private message

       MSRP a786hjs2 SEND
       To-Path: msrp://s2x.example.net:7313/ansp71weztas;tcp
       From-Path: msrp://x2s.example.com:8763/lkjh37s2s20w2a;tcp
       Message-ID: 87652492
       Byte-Range: 1-*/*
       Content-Type: message/cpim

       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;gr=JuliC
       From: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;gr=Romeo
       DateTime: 2008-10-15T15:02:31-03:00
       Content-Type: text/plain

       I am here!!!
       -------a786hjs2$

   Once the MSRP conference sends that message to the gateway, the
   gateway is responsible for translating it into XMPP syntax.

   Example: (F13) XMPP translation of private message

       <message from='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'
                to='verona@chat.example.org/JuliC'
                type='chat'
                id='rg2ca9k7'/>
             <body>I am here!!!</body>
       </message>

4.6.  Exit Room

   If Romeo decides to exit the chat room, his client sends a SIP BYE to
   the <verona@chat.example.org> chat room.

   Example: (F11) Romeo terminates the session

       BYE sip:verona@chat.example.org SIP/2.0
       Max-Forwards: 70
       From: "Romeo" <sip:romeo@example.net>;tag=786
       To: <sip:verona@chat.example.org>;tag=534
       Call-ID: 742510no
       Cseq: 1 BYE
       Content-Length: 0

   Upon receiving the SIP BYE, the SIP-to-XMPP gateway translates it in
   a presence stanza (F19) and sends it to the XMPP MUC room service.



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   Then the SIP-to-XMPP gateway responds with a 200 OK to the MSRP user.

   Example: (F19) Romeo exits the chatroom

       <presence from='romeo@example.com'
                 to='verona@chat.example.org/Romeo'
                 type='unavailable'>
       </presence>


5.  Handling of Nicknames and Display Names

   Fundamental rules for mapping addresses between XMPP and SIP are
   provided in [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core].  However, chatrooms
   include a more specialized, unique identifier for each participant in
   a room, called a nickname.  Implementations are strongly encouraged
   to apply the rules for preparation and comparison of nicknames
   specified in [I-D.ietf-precis-nickname].

   In addition to nicknames, some groupchat implementations also include
   display names (which might or might not be different from users'
   nicknames).  A display name need not be unique within the context of
   a room but instead simply provides a user-friendly name for a
   participant.

   In SIP, the nickname is the value of the XCON 'nickname' attribute of
   the <user/> element [RFC6501] and the display name is the XML
   character data of the conference-info <display-text/> element
   [RFC4575].  In XMPP, the nickname is the value of the resourcepart of
   the Occupant JID [XEP-0045] and the display name is the XML character
   data of the <nick/> element [XEP-0172].

   In practice, the <display-text/> element is treated as canonical in
   SIP implementations, and the <nick/> element is rarely used in XMPP
   implementations.  Therefore, for display purposes SIP implementations
   ought to use the <display-text/> element (not the XCON 'nickname'
   attribute) and XMPP implementations ought to use the resourcepart of
   the Occupant JID (not the character data of the <nick/> element).

   If there is a conflict between the SIP nickname and the XMPP
   nickname, the SIP-to-XMPP or XMPP-to-SIP gateway is responsible for
   adjusting the nickname to avoid the conflict and for informing the
   SIP or XMPP client of the unique nickname used to join the chatroom.


6.  Security Considerations

   The security considerations of [RFC3261], [RFC4975], [RFC6120],



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   [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core], [I-D.ietf-simple-chat], and
   [XEP-0045] apply.

   Additional security considerations will be provided in a future
   version of this specification.


7.  IANA Considerations

   This document requests no actions of the IANA.


8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

   [I-D.ietf-precis-nickname]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Preparation and Comparison of
              Nicknames", draft-ietf-precis-nickname-05 (work in
              progress), November 2012.

   [I-D.ietf-simple-chat]
              Niemi, A., Garcia-Martin, M., and G. Sandbakken, "Multi-
              party Instant Message (IM) Sessions Using the Message
              Session Relay  Protocol (MSRP)", draft-ietf-simple-chat-18
              (work in progress), January 2013.

   [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core]
              Saint-Andre, P., Houri, A., and J. Hildebrand,
              "Interworking between the Session Initiation Protocol
              (SIP) and the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol
              (XMPP): Core", draft-saintandre-sip-xmpp-core-05 (work in
              progress), June 2013.

   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
              A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
              Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
              June 2002.

   [RFC3861]  Peterson, J., "Address Resolution for Instant Messaging
              and Presence", RFC 3861, August 2004.

   [RFC4579]  Johnston, A. and O. Levin, "Session Initiation Protocol
              (SIP) Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents",
              RFC 4579, August 2006.



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   [RFC4975]  Campbell, B., Mahy, R., and C. Jennings, "The Message
              Session Relay Protocol (MSRP)", RFC 4975, September 2007.

   [RFC6120]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Core", RFC 6120, March 2011.

   [RFC6121]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence",
              RFC 6121, March 2011.

   [XEP-0045]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Multi-User Chat", XSF XEP 0045,
              July 2008.

8.2.  Informative References

   [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
              specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
              February 2000.

   [RFC3515]  Sparks, R., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer
              Method", RFC 3515, April 2003.

   [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
              Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006.

   [RFC4575]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and O. Levin, "A Session
              Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Conference
              State", RFC 4575, August 2006.

   [RFC6501]  Novo, O., Camarillo, G., Morgan, D., and J. Urpalainen,
              "Conference Information Data Model for Centralized
              Conferencing (XCON)", RFC 6501, March 2012.

   [XEP-0172]
              Saint-Andre, P. and V. Mercier, "User Nickname", XSF
              XEP 0172, March 2012.

   [XEP-0249]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Direct MUC Invitations", XSF XEP 0249,
              September 2011.


Appendix A.  Acknowledgements

   Special thanks to Fabio Forno for his co-authorship of an early
   version of this document.




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   Some text in this document was borrowed from
   [I-D.saintandre-sip-xmpp-core] and from [XEP-0045].


Authors' Addresses

   Peter Saint-Andre
   Cisco Systems, Inc.
   1899 Wynkoop Street, Suite 600
   Denver, CO  80202
   USA

   Phone: +1-303-308-3282
   Email: psaintan@cisco.com


   Saul Ibarra Corretge
   AG Projects
   Dr. Leijdsstraat 92
   Haarlem  2021RK
   The Netherlands

   Email: saul@ag-projects.com


   Salvatore Loreto
   Ericsson
   Hirsalantie 11
   Jorvas  02420
   Finland

   Email: Salvatore.Loreto@ericsson.com



















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