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Network Working Group                                P. Saint-Andre, Ed.Request for Comments: 3921                    Jabber Software FoundationCategory: Standards Track                                   October 2004Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP):Instant Messaging and PresenceStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).Abstract   This memo describes extensions to and applications of the core   features of the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)   that provide the basic instant messaging (IM) and presence   functionality defined inRFC 2779.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004Table of Contents1.   Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22.   Syntax of XML Stanzas  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.   Session Establishment  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.   Exchanging Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.   Exchanging Presence Information  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .166.   Managing Subscriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.   Roster Management  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .278.   Integration of Roster Items and Presence Subscriptions . . .329.   Subscription States  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5610.  Blocking Communication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6211.  Server Rules for Handling XML Stanzas  . . . . . . . . . . .8512.  IM and Presence Compliance Requirements  . . . . . . . . . .8813.  Internationalization Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . .8914.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8915.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9016.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91A.   vCards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93B.   XML Schemas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93C.   Differences Between Jabber IM/Presence Protocols and XMPP. .105   Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106   Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106   Author's Address. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106   Full Copyright Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1071.  Introduction1.1.  Overview   The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is a protocol   for streaming XML [XML] elements in order to exchange messages and   presence information in close to real time.  The core features of   XMPP are defined in Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol   (XMPP): Core [XMPP-CORE].  These features -- mainly XML streams, use   of TLS and SASL, and the <message/>, <presence/>, and <iq/> children   of the stream root -- provide the building blocks for many types of   near-real-time applications, which may be layered on top of the core   by sending application-specific data qualified by particular XML   namespaces [XML-NAMES].  This memo describes extensions to and   applications of the core features of XMPP that provide the basic   functionality expected of an instant messaging (IM) and presence   application as defined inRFC 2779 [IMP-REQS].Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20041.2.  Requirements   For the purposes of this memo, the requirements of a basic instant   messaging and presence application are defined by [IMP-REQS], which   at a high level stipulates that a user must be able to complete the   following use cases:   o  Exchange messages with other users   o  Exchange presence information with other users   o  Manage subscriptions to and from other users   o  Manage items in a contact list (in XMPP this is called a "roster")   o  Block communications to or from specific other users   Detailed definitions of these functionality areas are contained in   [IMP-REQS], and the interested reader is directed to that document   regarding the requirements addressed herein.   [IMP-REQS] also stipulates that presence services must be separable   from instant messaging services; i.e., it must be possible to use the   protocol to provide a presence service, an instant messaging service,   or both.  Although the text of this memo assumes that implementations   and deployments will want to offer a unified instant messaging and   presence service, there is no requirement that a service must offer   both a presence service and an instant messaging service, and the   protocol makes it possible to offer separate and distinct services   for presence and for instant messaging.   Note: While XMPP-based instant messaging and presence meets the   requirements of [IMP-REQS], it was not designed explicitly with that   specification in mind, since the base protocol evolved through an   open development process within the Jabber open-source community   beforeRFC 2779 was written.  Note also that although protocols   addressing many other functionality areas have been defined in the   Jabber community, such protocols are not included in this memo   because they are not required by [IMP-REQS].1.3.  Terminology   This memo inherits the terminology defined in [XMPP-CORE].   The capitalized 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 inBCP14,RFC 2119 [TERMS].Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20042.  Syntax of XML Stanzas   The basic semantics and common attributes of XML stanzas qualified by   the 'jabber:client' and 'jabber:server' namespaces are defined in   [XMPP-CORE].  However, these namespaces also define various child   elements, as well as values for the common 'type' attribute, that are   specific to instant messaging and presence applications.  Thus,   before addressing particular "use cases" for such applications, we   here further describe the syntax of XML stanzas, thereby   supplementing the discussion in [XMPP-CORE].2.1.  Message Syntax   Message stanzas qualified by the 'jabber:client' or 'jabber:server'   namespace are used to "push" information to another entity.  Common   uses in instant messaging applications include single messages,   messages sent in the context of a chat conversation, messages sent in   the context of a multi-user chat room, headlines and other alerts,   and errors.2.1.1.  Types of Message   The 'type' attribute of a message stanza is RECOMMENDED; if included,   it specifies the conversational context of the message, thus   providing a hint regarding presentation (e.g., in a GUI).  If   included, the 'type' attribute MUST have one of the following values:   o  chat -- The message is sent in the context of a one-to-one chat      conversation.  A compliant client SHOULD present the message in an      interface enabling one-to-one chat between the two parties,      including an appropriate conversation history.   o  error -- An error has occurred related to a previous message sent      by the sender (for details regarding stanza error syntax, refer to      [XMPP-CORE]).  A compliant client SHOULD present an appropriate      interface informing the sender of the nature of the error.   o  groupchat -- The message is sent in the context of a multi-user      chat environment (similar to that of [IRC]).  A compliant client      SHOULD present the message in an interface enabling many-to-many      chat between the parties, including a roster of parties in the      chatroom and an appropriate conversation history.  Full definition      of XMPP-based groupchat protocols is out of scope for this memo.   o  headline -- The message is probably generated by an automated      service that delivers or broadcasts content (news, sports, market      information, RSS feeds, etc.).  No reply to the message is      expected, and a compliant client SHOULD present the message in anSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004      interface that appropriately differentiates the message from      standalone messages, chat sessions, or groupchat sessions (e.g.,      by not providing the recipient with the ability to reply).   o  normal -- The message is a single message that is sent outside the      context of a one-to-one conversation or groupchat, and to which it      is expected that the recipient will reply.  A compliant client      SHOULD present the message in an interface enabling the recipient      to reply, but without a conversation history.   An IM application SHOULD support all of the foregoing message types;   if an application receives a message with no 'type' attribute or the   application does not understand the value of the 'type' attribute   provided, it MUST consider the message to be of type "normal" (i.e.,   "normal" is the default).  The "error" type MUST be generated only in   response to an error related to a message received from another   entity.   Although the 'type' attribute is OPTIONAL, it is considered polite to   mirror the type in any replies to a message; furthermore, some   specialized applications (e.g., a multi-user chat service) MAY at   their discretion enforce the use of a particular message type (e.g.,   type='groupchat').2.1.2.  Child Elements   As described under extended namespaces (Section 2.4), a message   stanza MAY contain any properly-namespaced child element.   In accordance with the default namespace declaration, by default a   message stanza is qualified by the 'jabber:client' or 'jabber:server'   namespace, which defines certain allowable children of message   stanzas.  If the message stanza is of type "error", it MUST include   an <error/> child; for details, see [XMPP-CORE].  Otherwise, the   message stanza MAY contain any of the following child elements   without an explicit namespace declaration:   1.  <subject/>   2.  <body/>   3.  <thread/>2.1.2.1.  Subject   The <subject/> element contains human-readable XML character data   that specifies the topic of the message.  The <subject/> element MUST   NOT possess any attributes, with the exception of the 'xml:lang'   attribute.  Multiple instances of the <subject/> element MAY be   included for the purpose of providing alternate versions of the sameSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   subject, but only if each instance possesses an 'xml:lang' attribute   with a distinct language value.  The <subject/> element MUST NOT   contain mixed content (as defined in Section 3.2.2 of [XML]).2.1.2.2.  Body   The <body/> element contains human-readable XML character data that   specifies the textual contents of the message; this child element is   normally included but is OPTIONAL.  The <body/> element MUST NOT   possess any attributes, with the exception of the 'xml:lang'   attribute.  Multiple instances of the <body/> element MAY be included   but only if each instance possesses an 'xml:lang' attribute with a   distinct language value.  The <body/> element MUST NOT contain mixed   content (as defined in Section 3.2.2 of [XML]).2.1.2.3.  Thread   The <thread/> element contains non-human-readable XML character data   specifying an identifier that is used for tracking a conversation   thread (sometimes referred to as an "instant messaging session")   between two entities.  The value of the <thread/> element is   generated by the sender and SHOULD be copied back in any replies.  If   used, it MUST be unique to that conversation thread within the stream   and MUST be consistent throughout that conversation (a client that   receives a message from the same full JID but with a different thread   ID MUST assume that the message in question exists outside the   context of the existing conversation thread).  The use of the   <thread/> element is OPTIONAL and is not used to identify individual   messages, only conversations.  A message stanza MUST NOT contain more   than one <thread/> element.  The <thread/> element MUST NOT possess   any attributes.  The value of the <thread/> element MUST be treated   as opaque by entities; no semantic meaning may be derived from it,   and only exact comparisons may be made against it.  The <thread/>   element MUST NOT contain mixed content (as defined in Section 3.2.2   of [XML]).2.2.  Presence Syntax   Presence stanzas are used qualified by the 'jabber:client' or   'jabber:server' namespace to express an entity's current network   availability (offline or online, along with various sub-states of the   latter and optional user-defined descriptive text), and to notify   other entities of that availability.  Presence stanzas are also used   to negotiate and manage subscriptions to the presence of other   entities.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20042.2.1.  Types of Presence   The 'type' attribute of a presence stanza is OPTIONAL.  A presence   stanza that does not possess a 'type' attribute is used to signal to   the server that the sender is online and available for communication.   If included, the 'type' attribute specifies a lack of availability, a   request to manage a subscription to another entity's presence, a   request for another entity's current presence, or an error related to   a previously-sent presence stanza.  If included, the 'type' attribute   MUST have one of the following values:   o  unavailable -- Signals that the entity is no longer available for      communication.   o  subscribe -- The sender wishes to subscribe to the recipient's      presence.   o  subscribed -- The sender has allowed the recipient to receive      their presence.   o  unsubscribe -- The sender is unsubscribing from another entity's      presence.   o  unsubscribed -- The subscription request has been denied or a      previously-granted subscription has been cancelled.   o  probe -- A request for an entity's current presence; SHOULD be      generated only by a server on behalf of a user.   o  error -- An error has occurred regarding processing or delivery of      a previously-sent presence stanza.   For detailed information regarding presence semantics and the   subscription model used in the context of XMPP-based instant   messaging and presence applications, refer to Exchanging Presence   Information (Section 5) and Managing Subscriptions (Section 6).2.2.2.  Child Elements   As described under extended namespaces (Section 2.4), a presence   stanza MAY contain any properly-namespaced child element.   In accordance with the default namespace declaration, by default a   presence stanza is qualified by the 'jabber:client' or   'jabber:server' namespace, which defines certain allowable children   of presence stanzas.  If the presence stanza is of type "error", it   MUST include an <error/> child; for details, see [XMPP-CORE].  If the   presence stanza possesses no 'type' attribute, it MAY contain any ofSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   the following child elements (note that the <status/> child MAY be   sent in a presence stanza of type "unavailable" or, for historical   reasons, "subscribe"):   1.  <show/>   2.  <status/>   3.  <priority/>2.2.2.1.  Show   The OPTIONAL <show/> element contains non-human-readable XML   character data that specifies the particular availability status of   an entity or specific resource.  A presence stanza MUST NOT contain   more than one <show/> element.  The <show/> element MUST NOT possess   any attributes.  If provided, the XML character data value MUST be   one of the following (additional availability types could be defined   through a properly-namespaced child element of the presence stanza):   o  away -- The entity or resource is temporarily away.   o  chat -- The entity or resource is actively interested in chatting.   o  dnd -- The entity or resource is busy (dnd = "Do Not Disturb").   o  xa -- The entity or resource is away for an extended period (xa =      "eXtended Away").   If no <show/> element is provided, the entity is assumed to be online   and available.2.2.2.2.  Status   The OPTIONAL <status/> element contains XML character data specifying   a natural-language description of availability status.  It is   normally used in conjunction with the show element to provide a   detailed description of an availability state (e.g., "In a meeting").   The <status/> element MUST NOT possess any attributes, with the   exception of the 'xml:lang' attribute.  Multiple instances of the   <status/> element MAY be included but only if each instance possesses   an 'xml:lang' attribute with a distinct language value.2.2.2.3.  Priority   The OPTIONAL <priority/> element contains non-human-readable XML   character data that specifies the priority level of the resource. The   value MUST be an integer between -128 and +127.  A presence stanza   MUST NOT contain more than one <priority/> element.  The <priority/>   element MUST NOT possess any attributes.  If no priority is provided,Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   a server SHOULD consider the priority to be zero.  For information   regarding the semantics of priority values in stanza routing within   instant messaging and presence applications, refer to Server Rules   for Handling XML Stanzas (Section 11).2.3.  IQ Syntax   IQ stanzas provide a structured request-response mechanism.  The   basic semantics of that mechanism (e.g., that the 'id' attribute is   REQUIRED) are defined in [XMPP-CORE], whereas the specific semantics   required to complete particular use cases are defined in all cases by   an extended namespace (Section 2.4) (note that the 'jabber:client'   and 'jabber:server' namespaces do not define any children of IQ   stanzas other than the common <error/>).  This memo defines two such   extended namespaces, one for Roster Management (Section 7) and the   other for Blocking Communication (Section 10); however, an IQ stanza   MAY contain structured information qualified by any extended   namespace.2.4.  Extended Namespaces   While the three XML stanza kinds defined in the "jabber:client" or   "jabber:server" namespace (along with their attributes and child   elements) provide a basic level of functionality for messaging and   presence, XMPP uses XML namespaces to extend the stanzas for the   purpose of providing additional functionality.  Thus a message or   presence stanza MAY contain one or more optional child elements   specifying content that extends the meaning of the message (e.g., an   XHTML-formatted version of the message body), and an IQ stanza MAY   contain one such child element.  This child element MAY have any name   and MUST possess an 'xmlns' namespace declaration (other than   "jabber:client", "jabber:server", or   "http://etherx.jabber.org/streams") that defines all data contained   within the child element.   Support for any given extended namespace is OPTIONAL on the part of   any implementation (aside from the extended namespaces defined   herein).  If an entity does not understand such a namespace, the   entity's expected behavior depends on whether the entity is (1) the   recipient or (2) an entity that is routing the stanza to the   recipient:   Recipient: If a recipient receives a stanza that contains a child      element it does not understand, it SHOULD ignore that specific XML      data, i.e., it SHOULD not process it or present it to a user or      associated application (if any).  In particular:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004      *  If an entity receives a message or presence stanza that         contains XML data qualified by a namespace it does not         understand, the portion of the stanza that is in the unknown         namespace SHOULD be ignored.      *  If an entity receives a message stanza whose only child element         is qualified by a namespace it does not understand, it MUST         ignore the entire stanza.      *  If an entity receives an IQ stanza of type "get" or "set"         containing a child element qualified by a namespace it does not         understand, the entity SHOULD return an IQ stanza of type         "error" with an error condition of <service-unavailable/>.   Router: If a routing entity (usually a server) handles a stanza that      contains a child element it does not understand, it SHOULD ignore      the associated XML data by passing it on untouched to the      recipient.3.  Session Establishment   Most instant messaging and presence applications based on XMPP are   implemented via a client-server architecture that requires a client   to establish a session on a server in order to engage in the expected   instant messaging and presence activities.  However, there are   several pre-conditions that MUST be met before a client can establish   an instant messaging and presence session.  These are:   1.  Stream Authentication -- a client MUST complete stream       authentication as documented in [XMPP-CORE] before attempting to       establish a session or send any XML stanzas.   2.  Resource Binding -- after completing stream authentication, a       client MUST bind a resource to the stream so that the client's       address is of the form <user@domain/resource>, after which the       entity is now said to be a "connected resource" in the       terminology of [XMPP-CORE].   If a server supports sessions, it MUST include a <session/> element   qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session' namespace in   the stream features it advertises to a client after the completion of   stream authentication as defined in [XMPP-CORE]:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Server advertises session establishment feature to client:   <stream:stream       xmlns='jabber:client'       xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'       id='c2s_345'       from='example.com'       version='1.0'>   <stream:features>     <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>     <session xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'/>   </stream:features>   Upon being so informed that session establishment is required (and   after completing resource binding), the client MUST establish a   session if it desires to engage in instant messaging and presence   functionality; it completes this step by sending to the server an IQ   stanza of type "set" containing an empty <session/> child element   qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session' namespace:   Step 1: Client requests session with server:   <iq to='example.com'       type='set'       id='sess_1'>     <session xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'/>   </iq>   Step 2: Server informs client that session has been created:   <iq from='example.com'       type='result'       id='sess_1'/>   Upon establishing a session, a connected resource (in the terminology   of [XMPP-CORE]) is said to be an "active resource".   Several error conditions are possible.  For example, the server may   encounter an internal condition that prevents it from creating the   session, the username or authorization identity may lack permissions   to create a session, or there may already be an active resource   associated with a resource identifier of the same name.   If the server encounters an internal condition that prevents it from   creating the session, it MUST return an error.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Step 2 (alt): Server responds with error (internal server error):   <iq from='example.com' type='error' id='sess_1'>     <session xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'/>     <error type='wait'>       <internal-server-error           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   If the username or resource is not allowed to create a session, the   server MUST return an error (e.g., forbidden).   Step 2 (alt): Server responds with error (username or resource not   allowed to create session):   <iq from='example.com' type='error' id='sess_1'>     <session xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'/>     <error type='auth'>       <forbidden           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   If there is already an active resource of the same name, the server   MUST either (1) terminate the active resource and allow the   newly-requested session, or (2) disallow the newly-requested session   and maintain the active resource.  Which of these the server does is   up to the implementation, although it is RECOMMENDED to implement   case #1.  In case #1, the server SHOULD send a <conflict/> stream   error to the active resource, terminate the XML stream and underlying   TCP connection for the active resource, and return a IQ stanza of   type "result" (indicating success) to the newly-requested session. In   case #2, the server SHOULD send a <conflict/> stanza error to the   newly-requested session but maintain the XML stream for that   connection so that the newly-requested session has an opportunity to   negotiate a non-conflicting resource identifier before sending   another request for session establishment.   Step 2 (alt): Server informs existing active resource of resource   conflict (case #1):   <stream:error>     <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>   </stream:error>   </stream:stream>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Step 2 (alt): Server informs newly-requested session of resource   conflict (case #2):   <iq from='example.com' type='error' id='sess_1'>     <session xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'/>     <error type='cancel'>       <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   After establishing a session, a client SHOULD send initial presence   and request its roster as described below, although these actions are   OPTIONAL.   Note: Before allowing the creation of instant messaging and presence   sessions, a server MAY require prior account provisioning.  Possible   methods for account provisioning include account creation by a server   administrator as well as in-band account registration using the   'jabber:iq:register' namespace; the latter method is out of scope for   this memo, but is documented in [JEP-0077], published by the Jabber   Software Foundation [JSF].4.  Exchanging Messages   Exchanging messages is a basic use of XMPP and is brought about when   a user generates a message stanza that is addressed to another   entity.  As defined under Server Rules for Handling XML Stanzas   (Section 11), the sender's server is responsible for delivering the   message to the intended recipient (if the recipient is on the same   server) or for routing the message to the recipient's server (if the   recipient is on a different server).   For information regarding the syntax of message stanzas as well as   their defined attributes and child elements, refer to Message Syntax   (Section 2.1).4.1.  Specifying an Intended Recipient   An instant messaging client SHOULD specify an intended recipient for   a message by providing the JID of an entity other than the sender in   the 'to' attribute of the <message/> stanza.  If the message is being   sent in reply to a message previously received from an address of the   form <user@domain/resource> (e.g., within the context of a chat   session), the value of the 'to' address SHOULD be of the form   <user@domain/resource> rather than of the form <user@domain> unless   the sender has knowledge (via presence) that the intended recipient's   resource is no longer available.  If the message is being sentSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   outside the context of any existing chat session or received message,   the value of the 'to' address SHOULD be of the form <user@domain>   rather than of the form <user@domain/resource>.4.2.  Specifying a Message Type   As noted, it is RECOMMENDED for a message stanza to possess a 'type'   attribute whose value captures the conversational context (if any) of   the message (see Type (Section 2.1.1)).   The following example shows a valid value of the 'type' attribute:   Example: A message of a defined type:   <message       to='romeo@example.net'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <body>Wherefore art thou, Romeo?</body>   </message>4.3.  Specifying a Message Body   A message stanza MAY (and often will) contain a child <body/> element   whose XML character data specifies the primary meaning of the message   (see Body (Section 2.1.2.2)).   Example: A message with a body:   <message       to='romeo@example.net'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <body>Wherefore art thou, Romeo?</body>     <body xml:lang='cz'>Pro&#x010D;e&#x017D; jsi ty, Romeo?</body>   </message>4.4.  Specifying a Message Subject   A message stanza MAY contain one or more child <subject/> elements   specifying the topic of the message (see Subject (Section 2.1.2.1)).Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: A message with a subject:   <message       to='romeo@example.net'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <subject>I implore you!</subject>     <subject         xml:lang='cz'>&#x00DA;p&#x011B;nliv&#x011B; prosim!</subject>     <body>Wherefore art thou, Romeo?</body>     <body xml:lang='cz'>Pro&#x010D;e&#x017D; jsi ty, Romeo?</body>   </message>4.5.  Specifying a Conversation Thread   A message stanza MAY contain a child <thread/> element specifying the   conversation thread in which the message is situated, for the purpose   of tracking the conversation (see Thread (Section 2.1.2.3)).   Example: A threaded conversation:   <message       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>     <thread>e0ffe42b28561960c6b12b944a092794b9683a38</thread>   </message>   <message       to='juliet@example.com/balcony'       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <body>Neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike.</body>     <thread>e0ffe42b28561960c6b12b944a092794b9683a38</thread>   </message>   <message       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='chat'       xml:lang='en'>     <body>How cam'st thou hither, tell me, and wherefore?</body>     <thread>e0ffe42b28561960c6b12b944a092794b9683a38</thread>   </message>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20045.  Exchanging Presence Information   Exchanging presence information is made relatively straightforward   within XMPP by using presence stanzas.  However, we see here a   contrast to the handling of messages: although a client MAY send   directed presence information to another entity by including a 'to'   address, normally presence notifications (i.e., presence stanzas with   no 'type' or of type "unavailable" and with no 'to' address) are sent   from a client to its server and then broadcasted by the server to any   entities that are subscribed to the presence of the sending entity   (in the terminology ofRFC 2778 [IMP-MODEL], these entities are   subscribers).  This broadcast model does not apply to   subscription-related presence stanzas or presence stanzas of type   "error", but to presence notifications only as defined above.  (Note:   While presence information MAY be provided on a user's behalf by an   automated service, normally it is provided by the user's client.)   For information regarding the syntax of presence stanzas as well as   their defined attributes and child elements, refer to [XMPP-CORE].5.1.  Client and Server Presence Responsibilities5.1.1.  Initial Presence   After establishing a session, a client SHOULD send initial presence   to the server in order to signal its availability for communications.   As defined herein, the initial presence stanza (1) MUST possess no   'to' address (signalling that it is meant to be broadcasted by the   server on behalf of the client) and (2) MUST possess no 'type'   attribute (signalling the user's availability).  After sending   initial presence, an active resource is said to be an "available   resource".   Upon receiving initial presence from a client, the user's server MUST   do the following if there is not already one or more available   resources for the user (if there is already one or more available   resources for the user, the server obviously does not need to send   the presence probes, since it already possesses the requisite   information):   1.  Send presence probes (i.e., presence stanzas whose 'type'       attribute is set to a value of "probe") from the full JID (e.g.,       <user@example.com/resource>) of the user to all contacts to which       the user is subscribed in order to determine if they are       available; such contacts are those for which a JID is present in       the user's roster with the 'subscription' attribute set to a       value of "to" or "both".  (Note: The user's server MUST NOT send       presence probes to contacts from which the user is blockingSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       inbound presence notifications, as described under Blocking       Inbound Presence Notifications (Section 10.10).)   2.  Broadcast initial presence from the full JID (e.g.,       <user@example.com/resource>) of the user to all contacts that are       subscribed to the user's presence information; such contacts are       those for which a JID is present in the user's roster with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "from" or "both".       (Note: The user's server MUST NOT broadcast initial presence to       contacts to which the user is blocking outbound presence       notifications, as described under Blocking Outbound Presence       Notifications (Section 10.11).)   In addition, the user's server MUST broadcast initial presence from   the user's new available resource to any of the user's existing   available resources (if any).   Upon receiving initial presence from the user, the contact's server   MUST deliver the user's presence stanza to the full JIDs   (<contact@example.org/resource>) associated with all of the contact's   available resources, but only if the user is in the contact's roster   with a subscription state of "to" or "both" and the contact has not   blocked inbound presence notifications from the user's bare or full   JID (as defined under Blocking Inbound Presence Notifications   (Section 10.10)).   If the user's server receives a presence stanza of type "error" in   response to the initial presence that it sent to a contact on behalf   of the user, it SHOULD NOT send further presence updates to that   contact (until and unless it receives a presence stanza from the   contact).5.1.2.  Presence Broadcast   After sending initial presence, the user MAY update its presence   information for broadcasting at any time during its session by   sending a presence stanza with no 'to' address and either no 'type'   attribute or a 'type' attribute with a value of "unavailable". (Note:   A user's client SHOULD NOT send a presence update to broadcast   information that changes independently of the user's presence and   availability.)   If the presence stanza lacks a 'type' attribute (i.e., expresses   availability), the user's server MUST broadcast the full XML of that   presence stanza to all contacts (1) that are in the user's roster   with a subscription type of "from" or "both", (2) to whom the userSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   has not blocked outbound presence notifications, and (3) from whom   the server has not received a presence error during the user's   session (as well as to any of the user's other available resources).   If the presence stanza has a 'type' attribute set to a value of   "unavailable", the user's server MUST broadcast the full XML of that   presence stanza to all entities that fit the above description, as   well as to any entities to which the user has sent directed available   presence during the user's session (if the user has not yet sent   directed unavailable presence to that entity).5.1.3.  Presence Probes   Upon receiving a presence probe from the user, the contact's server   SHOULD reply as follows:   1.  If the user is not in the contact's roster with a subscription       state of "From", "From + Pending Out", or "Both" (as defined       under Subscription States (Section 9)), the contact's server MUST       return a presence stanza of type "error" in response to the       presence probe (however, if a server receives a presence probe       from a subdomain of the server's hostname or another such trusted       service, it MAY provide presence information about the user to       that entity).  Specifically:       *  if the user is in the contact's roster with a subscription          state of "None", "None + Pending Out", or "To" (or is not in          the contact's roster at all), the contact's server MUST return          a <forbidden/> stanza error in response to the presence probe.       *  if the user is in the contact's roster with a subscription          state of "None + Pending In", "None + Pending Out/In", or "To          + Pending In", the contact's server MUST return a          <not-authorized/> stanza error in response to the presence          probe.   2.  Else, if the contact is blocking presence notifications to the       user's bare JID or full JID (using either a default list or       active list as defined under Blocking Outbound Presence       Notifications (Section 10.11)), the server MUST NOT reply to the       presence probe.   3.  Else, if the contact has no available resources, the server MUST       either (1) reply to the presence probe by sending to the user the       full XML of the last presence stanza of type "unavailable"       received by the server from the contact, or (2) not reply at all.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   4.  Else, if the contact has at least one available resource, the       server MUST reply to the presence probe by sending to the user       the full XML of the last presence stanza with no 'to' attribute       received by the server from each of the contact's available       resources (again, subject to privacy lists in force for each       session).5.1.4.  Directed Presence   A user MAY send directed presence to another entity (i.e., a presence   stanza with a 'to' attribute whose value is the JID of the other   entity and with either no 'type' attribute or a 'type' attribute   whose value is "unavailable").  There are three possible cases:   1.  If the user sends directed presence to a contact that is in the       user's roster with a subscription type of "from" or "both" after       having sent initial presence and before sending unavailable       presence broadcast, the user's server MUST route or deliver the       full XML of that presence stanza (subject to privacy lists) but       SHOULD NOT otherwise modify the contact's status regarding       presence broadcast (i.e., it SHOULD include the contact's JID in       any subsequent presence broadcasts initiated by the user).   2.  If the user sends directed presence to an entity that is not in       the user's roster with a subscription type of "from" or "both"       after having sent initial presence and before sending unavailable       presence broadcast, the user's server MUST route or deliver the       full XML of that presence stanza to the entity but MUST NOT       modify the contact's status regarding available presence       broadcast (i.e., it MUST NOT include the entity's JID in any       subsequent broadcasts of available presence initiated by the       user); however, if the available resource from which the user       sent the directed presence become unavailable, the user's server       MUST broadcast that unavailable presence to the entity (if the       user has not yet sent directed unavailable presence to that       entity).   3.  If the user sends directed presence without first sending initial       presence or after having sent unavailable presence broadcast       (i.e., the resource is active but not available), the user's       server MUST treat the entities to which the user sends directed       presence in the same way that it treats the entities listed in       case #2 above.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20045.1.5.  Unavailable Presence   Before ending its session with a server, a client SHOULD gracefully   become unavailable by sending a final presence stanza that possesses   no 'to' attribute and that possesses a 'type' attribute whose value   is "unavailable" (optionally, the final presence stanza MAY contain   one or more <status/> elements specifying the reason why the user is   no longer available).  However, the user's server MUST NOT depend on   receiving final presence from an available resource, since the   resource may become unavailable unexpectedly or may be timed out by   the server.  If one of the user's resources becomes unavailable for   any reason (either gracefully or ungracefully), the user's server   MUST broadcast unavailable presence to all contacts (1) that are in   the user's roster with a subscription type of "from" or "both", (2)   to whom the user has not blocked outbound presence, and (3) from whom   the server has not received a presence error during the user's   session; the user's server MUST also send that unavailable presence   stanza to any of the user's other available resources, as well as to   any entities to which the user has sent directed presence during the   user's session for that resource (if the user has not yet sent   directed unavailable presence to that entity).  Any presence stanza   with no 'type' attribute and no 'to' attribute that is sent after   sending directed unavailable presence or broadcasted unavailable   presence MUST be broadcasted by the server to all subscribers.5.1.6.  Presence Subscriptions   A subscription request is a presence stanza whose 'type' attribute   has a value of "subscribe".  If the subscription request is being   sent to an instant messaging contact, the JID supplied in the 'to'   attribute SHOULD be of the form <contact@example.org> rather than   <contact@example.org/resource>, since the desired result is normally   for the user to receive presence from all of the contact's resources,   not merely the particular resource specified in the 'to' attribute.   A user's server MUST NOT automatically approve subscription requests   on the user's behalf.  All subscription requests MUST be directed to   the user's client, specifically to one or more available resources   associated with the user.  If there is no available resource   associated with the user when the subscription request is received by   the user's server, the user's server MUST keep a record of the   subscription request and deliver the request when the user next   creates an available resource, until the user either approves or   denies the request.  If there is more than one available resource   associated with the user when the subscription request is received by   the user's server, the user's server MUST broadcast that subscription   request to all available resources in accordance with Server Rules   for Handling XML Stanzas (Section 11).  (Note: If an active resourceSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   has not provided initial presence, the server MUST NOT consider it to   be available and therefore MUST NOT send subscription requests to   it.)   However, if the user receives a presence stanza of type   "subscribe" from a contact to whom the user has already granted   permission to see the user's presence information (e.g., in cases   when the contact is seeking to resynchronize subscription states),   the user's server SHOULD auto-reply on behalf of the user.  In   addition, the user's server MAY choose to re-send an unapproved   pending subscription request to the contact based on an   implementation-specific algorithm (e.g., whenever a new resource   becomes available for the user, or after a certain amount of time has   elapsed); this helps to recover from transient, silent errors that   may have occurred in relation to the original subscription request.5.2.  Specifying Availability Status   A client MAY provide further information about its availability   status by using the <show/> element (see Show (Section 2.2.2.1)).   Example: Availability status:   <presence>     <show>dnd</show>   </presence>5.3.  Specifying Detailed Status Information   In conjunction with the <show/> element, a client MAY provide   detailed status information by using the <status/> element (see   Status (Section 2.2.2.2)).   Example: Detailed status information:   <presence xml:lang='en'>     <show>dnd</show>     <status>Wooing Juliet</status>     <status xml:lang='cz'>Ja dvo&#x0159;&#x00ED;m Juliet</status>   </presence>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20045.4.  Specifying Presence Priority   A client MAY provide a priority for its resource by using the   <priority/> element (see Priority (Section 2.2.2.3)).   Example: Presence priority:   <presence xml:lang='en'>     <show>dnd</show>     <status>Wooing Juliet</status>     <status xml:lang='cz'>Ja dvo&#x0159;&#x00ED;m Juliet</status>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>5.5.  Presence Examples   The examples in this section illustrate the presence-related   protocols described above.  The user is romeo@example.net, he has an   available resource whose resource identifier is "orchard", and he has   the following individuals in his roster:   o  juliet@example.com (subscription="both" and she has two available      resources, one whose resource is "chamber" and another whose      resource is "balcony")   o  benvolio@example.org (subscription="to")   o  mercutio@example.org (subscription="from")   Example 1: User sends initial presence:   <presence/>   Example 2: User's server sends presence probes to contacts with   subscription="to" and subscription="both" on behalf of the user's   available resource:   <presence       type='probe'       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'/>   <presence       type='probe'       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='benvolio@example.org'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example 3: User's server sends initial presence to contacts with   subscription="from" and subscription="both" on behalf of the user's   available resource:   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'/>   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='mercutio@example.org'/>   Example 4: Contacts' servers reply to presence probe on behalf of all   available resources:   <presence       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>away</show>     <status>be right back</status>     <priority>0</priority>   </presence>   <presence       from='juliet@example.com/chamber'       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>   <presence       from='benvolio@example.org/pda'       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>dnd</show>     <status>gallivanting</status>   </presence>   Example 5: Contacts' servers deliver user's initial presence to all   available resources or return error to user:   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com/chamber'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com/balcony'/>   <presence       type='error'       from='mercutio@example.org'       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <error type='cancel'>       <gone xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </presence>   Example 6: User sends directed presence to another user not in his   roster:   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='nurse@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>dnd</show>     <status>courting Juliet</status>     <priority>0</priority>   </presence>   Example 7: User sends updated available presence information for   broadcasting:   <presence xml:lang='en'>     <show>away</show>     <status>I shall return!</status>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>   Example 8: User's server broadcasts updated presence information only   to one contact (not those from whom an error was received or to whom   the user sent directed presence):   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>away</show>     <status>I shall return!</status>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example 9: Contact's server delivers updated presence information to   all of the contact's available resources:   [to "balcony" resource...]   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>away</show>     <status>I shall return!</status>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>   [to "chamber" resource...]   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <show>away</show>     <status>I shall return!</status>     <priority>1</priority>   </presence>   Example 10: One of the contact's resources broadcasts final presence:   <presence from='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='unavailable'/>   Example 11: Contact's server sends unavailable presence information   to user:   <presence       type='unavailable'       from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>   Example 12: User sends final presence:   <presence from='romeo@example.net/orchard'             type='unavailable'             xml:lang='en'>     <status>gone home</status>   </presence>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example 13: User's server broadcasts unavailable presence information   to contact as well as to the person to whom the user sent directed   presence:   <presence       type='unavailable'       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='juliet@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <status>gone home</status>   </presence>   <presence       from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       to='nurse@example.com'       xml:lang='en'>     <status>gone home</status>   </presence>6.  Managing Subscriptions   In order to protect the privacy of instant messaging users and any   other entities, presence and availability information is disclosed   only to other entities that the user has approved.  When a user has   agreed that another entity may view its presence, the entity is said   to have a subscription to the user's presence information.  A   subscription lasts across sessions; indeed, it lasts until the   subscriber unsubscribes or the subscribee cancels the   previously-granted subscription.  Subscriptions are managed within   XMPP by sending presence stanzas containing specially-defined   attributes.   Note: There are important interactions between subscriptions and   rosters; these are defined under Integration of Roster Items and   Presence Subscriptions (Section 8), and the reader must refer to that   section for a complete understanding of presence subscriptions.6.1.  Requesting a Subscription   A request to subscribe to another entity's presence is made by   sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe".   Example: Sending a subscription request:   <presence to='juliet@example.com' type='subscribe'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   For client and server responsibilities regarding presence   subscription requests, refer to Presence Subscriptions (Section5.1.6).6.2.  Handling a Subscription Request   When a client receives a subscription request from another entity, it   MUST either approve the request by sending a presence stanza of type   "subscribed" or refuse the request by sending a presence stanza of   type "unsubscribed".   Example: Approving a subscription request:   <presence to='romeo@example.net' type='subscribed'/>   Example: Refusing a presence subscription request:   <presence to='romeo@example.net' type='unsubscribed'/>6.3.  Cancelling a Subscription from Another Entity   If a user would like to cancel a previously-granted subscription   request, it sends a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed".   Example: Cancelling a previously granted subscription request:   <presence to='romeo@example.net' type='unsubscribed'/>6.4.  Unsubscribing from Another Entity's Presence   If a user would like to unsubscribe from the presence of another   entity, it sends a presence stanza of type "unsubscribe".   Example: Unsubscribing from an entity's presence:   <presence to='juliet@example.com' type='unsubscribe'/>7.  Roster Management   In XMPP, one's contact list is called a roster, which consists of any   number of specific roster items, each roster item being identified by   a unique JID (usually of the form <contact@domain>).  A user's roster   is stored by the user's server on the user's behalf so that the user   may access roster information from any resource.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Note: There are important interactions between rosters and   subscriptions; these are defined under Integration of Roster Items   and Presence Subscriptions (Section 8), and the reader must refer to   that section for a complete understanding of roster management.7.1.  Syntax and Semantics   Rosters are managed using IQ stanzas, specifically by means of a   <query/> child element qualified by the 'jabber:iq:roster' namespace.   The <query/> element MAY contain one or more <item/> children, each   describing a unique roster item or "contact".   The "key" or unique identifier for each roster item is a JID,   encapsulated in the 'jid' attribute of the <item/> element (which is   REQUIRED).  The value of the 'jid' attribute SHOULD be of the form   <user@domain> if the item is associated with another (human) instant   messaging user.   The state of the presence subscription in relation to a roster item   is captured in the 'subscription' attribute of the <item/> element.   Allowable values for this attribute are:   o  "none" -- the user does not have a subscription to the contact's      presence information, and the contact does not have a subscription      to the user's presence information   o  "to" -- the user has a subscription to the contact's presence      information, but the contact does not have a subscription to the      user's presence information   o  "from" -- the contact has a subscription to the user's presence      information, but the user does not have a subscription to the      contact's presence information   o  "both" -- both the user and the contact have subscriptions to each      other's presence information   Each <item/> element MAY contain a 'name' attribute, which sets the   "nickname" to be associated with the JID, as determined by the user   (not the contact).  The value of the 'name' attribute is opaque.   Each <item/> element MAY contain one or more <group/> child elements,   for use in collecting roster items into various categories.  The XML   character data of the <group/> element is opaque.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20047.2.  Business Rules   A server MUST ignore any 'to' address on a roster "set", and MUST   treat any roster "set" as applying to the sender.  For added safety,   a client SHOULD check the "from" address of a "roster push" (incoming   IQ of type "set" containing a roster item) to ensure that it is from   a trusted source; specifically, the stanza MUST either have no 'from'   attribute (i.e., implicitly from the server) or have a 'from'   attribute whose value matches the user's bare JID (of the form   <user@domain>) or full JID (of the form <user@domain/resource>);   otherwise, the client SHOULD ignore the "roster push".7.3.  Retrieving One's Roster on Login   Upon connecting to the server and becoming an active resource, a   client SHOULD request the roster before sending initial presence   (however, because receiving the roster may not be desirable for all   resources, e.g., a connection with limited bandwidth, the client's   request for the roster is OPTIONAL).  If an available resource does   not request the roster during a session, the server MUST NOT send it   presence subscriptions and associated roster updates.   Example: Client requests current roster from server:   <iq from='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='get' id='roster_1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'/>   </iq>   Example: Client receives roster from server:   <iq to='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='result' id='roster_1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='romeo@example.net'             name='Romeo'             subscription='both'>         <group>Friends</group>       </item>       <item jid='mercutio@example.org'             name='Mercutio'             subscription='from'>         <group>Friends</group>       </item>       <item jid='benvolio@example.org'             name='Benvolio'             subscription='both'>         <group>Friends</group>       </item>     </query>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   </iq>7.4.  Adding a Roster Item   At any time, a user MAY add an item to his or her roster.   Example: Client adds a new item:   <iq from='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='set' id='roster_2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='nurse@example.com'             name='Nurse'>         <group>Servants</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   The server MUST update the roster information in persistent storage,   and also push the change out to all of the user's available resources   that have requested the roster.  This "roster push" consists of an IQ   stanza of type "set" from the server to the client and enables all   available resources to remain in sync with the server-based roster   information.   Example: Server (1) pushes the updated roster information to all   available resources that have requested the roster and (2) replies   with an IQ result to the sending resource:   <iq to='juliet@example.com/balcony'       type='set'       id='a78b4q6ha463'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='nurse@example.com'             name='Nurse'             subscription='none'>         <group>Servants</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <iq to='juliet@example.com/chamber'       type='set'       id='a78b4q6ha464'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='nurse@example.com'             name='Nurse'             subscription='none'>         <group>Servants</group>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <iq to='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='result' id='roster_2'/>   As required by the semantics of the IQ stanza kind as defined in   [XMPP-CORE], each resource that received the roster push MUST reply   with an IQ stanza of type "result" (or "error").   Example: Resources reply with an IQ result to the server:   <iq from='juliet@example.com/balcony'       to='example.com'       type='result'       id='a78b4q6ha463'/>   <iq from='juliet@example.com/chamber'       to='example.com'       type='result'       id='a78b4q6ha464'/>7.5.  Updating a Roster Item   Updating an existing roster item (e.g., changing the group) is done   in the same way as adding a new roster item, i.e., by sending the   roster item in an IQ set to the server.   Example: User updates roster item (added group):   <iq from='juliet@example.com/chamber' type='set' id='roster_3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='romeo@example.net'             name='Romeo'             subscription='both'>         <group>Friends</group>         <group>Lovers</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   As with adding a roster item, when updating a roster item the server   MUST update the roster information in persistent storage, and also   initiate a roster push to all of the user's available resources that   have requested the roster.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20047.6.  Deleting a Roster Item   At any time, a user MAY delete an item from his or her roster by   sending an IQ set to the server and making sure that the value of the   'subscription' attribute is "remove" (a compliant server MUST ignore   any other values of the 'subscription' attribute when received from a   client).   Example: Client removes an item:   <iq from='juliet@example.com/balcony' type='set' id='roster_4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item jid='nurse@example.com' subscription='remove'/>     </query>   </iq>   As with adding a roster item, when deleting a roster item the server   MUST update the roster information in persistent storage, initiate a   roster push to all of the user's available resources that have   requested the roster (with the 'subscription' attribute set to a   value of "remove"), and send an IQ result to the initiating resource.   For further information about the implications of this command, see   Removing a Roster Item and Cancelling All Subscriptions (Section8.6).8.  Integration of Roster Items and Presence Subscriptions8.1.  Overview   Some level of integration between roster items and presence   subscriptions is normally expected by an instant messaging user   regarding the user's subscriptions to and from other contacts.  This   section describes the level of integration that MUST be supported   within XMPP instant messaging applications.   There are four primary subscription states:   o  None -- the user does not have a subscription to the contact's      presence information, and the contact does not have a subscription      to the user's presence informationSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   o  To -- the user has a subscription to the contact's presence      information, but the contact does not have a subscription to the      user's presence information   o  From -- the contact has a subscription to the user's presence      information, but the user does not have a subscription to the      contact's presence information   o  Both -- both the user and the contact have subscriptions to each      other's presence information (i.e., the union of 'from' and 'to')   Each of these states is reflected in the roster of both the user and   the contact, thus resulting in durable subscription states.   Narrative explanations of how these subscription states interact with   roster items in order to complete certain defined use cases are   provided in the following sub-sections.  Full details regarding   server and client handling of all subscription states (including   pending states between the primary states listed above) is provided   in Subscription States (Section 9).   The server MUST NOT send presence subscription requests or roster   pushes to unavailable resources, nor to available resources that have   not requested the roster.   The 'from' and 'to' addresses are OPTIONAL in roster pushes; if   included, their values SHOULD be the full JID of the resource for   that session.  A client MUST acknowledge each roster push with an IQ   stanza of type "result" (for the sake of brevity, these stanzas are   not shown in the following examples but are required by the IQ   semantics defined in [XMPP-CORE]).8.2.  User Subscribes to Contact   The process by which a user subscribes to a contact, including the   interaction between roster items and subscription states, is   described below.   1.  In preparation for being able to render the contact in the user's       client interface and for the server to keep track of the       subscription, the user's client SHOULD perform a "roster set" for       the new roster item.  This request consists of sending an IQ       stanza of type='set' containing a <query/> element qualified by       the 'jabber:iq:roster' namespace, which in turn contains an       <item/> element that defines the new roster item; the <item/>       element MUST possess a 'jid' attribute, MAY possess a 'name'       attribute, MUST NOT possess a 'subscription' attribute, and MAY       contain one or more <group/> child elements:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set' id='set1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   2.  As a result, the user's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push       for the new roster item to all available resources associated       with this user that have requested the roster, setting the       'subscription' attribute to a value of "none"; and (2) MUST reply       to the sending resource with an IQ result indicating the success       of the roster set:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='none'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <iq type='result' id='set1'/>   3.  If the user wants to request a subscription to the contact's       presence information, the user's client MUST send a presence       stanza of type='subscribe' to the contact:   <presence to='contact@example.org' type='subscribe'/>   4.  As a result, the user's server MUST initiate a second roster push       to all of the user's available resources that have requested the       roster, setting the contact to the pending sub-state of the       'none' subscription state; this pending sub-state is denoted by       the inclusion of the ask='subscribe' attribute in the roster       item:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='none'           ask='subscribe'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   Note: If the user did not create a roster item before sending the   subscription request, the server MUST now create one on behalf of the   user, then send a roster push to all of the user's available   resources that have requested the roster, absent the 'name' attribute   and the <group/> child shown above.   5.  The user's server MUST also stamp the presence stanza of type       "subscribe" with the user's bare JID (i.e., <user@example.com>)       as the 'from' address (if the user provided a 'from' address set       to the user's full JID, the server SHOULD remove the resource       identifier).  If the contact is served by a different host than       the user, the user's server MUST route the presence stanza to the       contact's server for delivery to the contact (this case is       assumed throughout; however, if the contact is served by the same       host, then the server can simply deliver the presence stanza       directly):   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='subscribe'/>   Note: If the user's server receives a presence stanza of type "error"   from the contact's server, it MUST deliver the error stanza to the   user, whose client MAY determine that the error is in response to the   outgoing presence stanza of type "subscribe" it sent previously   (e.g., by tracking an 'id' attribute) and then choose to resend the   "subscribe" request or revert the roster to its previous state by   sending a presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact.   6.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribe" addressed       to the contact, the contact's server MUST determine if there is       at least one available resource from which the contact has       requested the roster.  If so, it MUST deliver the subscription       request to the contact (if not, the contact's server MUST store       the subscription request offline for delivery when this conditionSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       is next met; normally this is done by adding a roster item for       the contact to the user's roster, with a state of "None + Pending       In" as defined under Subscription States (Section 9), however a       server SHOULD NOT push or deliver roster items in that state to       the contact).  No matter when the subscription request is       delivered, the contact must decide whether or not to approve it       (subject to the contact's configured preferences, the contact's       client MAY approve or refuse the subscription request without       presenting it to the contact).  Here we assume the "happy path"       that the contact approves the subscription request (the alternate       flow of declining the subscription request is defined inSection8.2.1).  In this case, the contact's client (1) SHOULD perform a       roster set specifying the desired nickname and group for the user       (if any); and (2) MUST send a presence stanza of type       "subscribed" to the user in order to approve the subscription       request.   <iq type='set' id='set2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence to='user@example.com' type='subscribed'/>   7.  As a result, the contact's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push       to all available resources associated with the contact that have       requested the roster, containing a roster item for the user with       the subscription state set to 'from' (the server MUST send this       even if the contact did not perform a roster set); (2) MUST       return an IQ result to the sending resource indicating the       success of the roster set; (3) MUST route the presence stanza of       type "subscribed" to the user, first stamping the 'from' address       as the bare JID (<contact@example.org>) of the contact; and (4)       MUST send available presence from all of the contact's available       resources to the user:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set' to='contact@example.org/resource'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='from'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <iq type='result' to='contact@example.org/resource' id='set2'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='subscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'/>   Note: If the contact's server receives a presence stanza of type   "error" from the user's server, it MUST deliver the error stanza to   the contact, whose client MAY determine that the error is in response   to the outgoing presence stanza of type "subscribed" it sent   previously (e.g., by tracking an 'id' attribute) and then choose to   resend the "subscribed" notification or revert the roster to its   previous state by sending a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to   the user.   8.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribed" addressed       to the user, the user's server MUST first verify that the contact       is in the user's roster with either of the following states: (a)       subscription='none' and ask='subscribe' or (b)       subscription='from' and ask='subscribe'.  If the contact is not       in the user's roster with either of those states, the user's       server MUST silently ignore the presence stanza of type       "subscribed" (i.e., it MUST NOT route it to the user, modify the       user's roster, or generate a roster push to the user's available       resources).  If the contact is in the user's roster with either       of those states, the user's server (1) MUST deliver the presence       stanza of type "subscribed" from the contact to the user; (2)       MUST initiate a roster push to all of the user's available       resources that have requested the roster, containing an updated       roster item for the contact with the 'subscription' attribute setSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       to a value of "to"; and (3) MUST deliver the available presence       stanza received from each of the contact's available resources to       each of the user's available resources:   <presence       to='user@example.com'       from='contact@example.org'       type='subscribed'/>   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='to'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com/resource'/>   9.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribed", the user       SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact;       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).   From the perspective of the user, there now exists a subscription to   the contact's presence information; from the perspective of the   contact, there now exists a subscription from the user.8.2.1.  Alternate Flow: Contact Declines Subscription Request   The above activity flow represents the "happy path" regarding the   user's subscription request to the contact.  The main alternate flow   occurs if the contact refuses the user's subscription request, as   described below.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   1.  If the contact wants to refuse the request, the contact's client       MUST send a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the user       (instead of the presence stanza of type "subscribed" sent in Step       6 ofSection 8.2):   <presence to='user@example.com' type='unsubscribed'/>   2.  As a result, the contact's server MUST route the presence stanza       of type "unsubscribed" to the user, first stamping the 'from'       address as the bare JID (<contact@example.org>) of the contact:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   Note: If the contact's server previously added the user to the   contact's roster for tracking purposes, it MUST remove the relevant   item at this time.   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed"       addressed to the user, the user's server (1) MUST deliver that       presence stanza to the user and (2) MUST initiate a roster push       to all of the user's available resources that have requested the       roster, containing an updated roster item for the contact with       the 'subscription' attribute set to a value of "none" and with no       'ask' attribute:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='none'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       user SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact or "denying" it bySaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact;       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).   As a result of this activity, the contact is now in the user's roster   with a subscription state of "none", whereas the user is not in the   contact's roster at all.8.3.  Creating a Mutual Subscription   The user and contact can build on the "happy path" described above to   create a mutual subscription (i.e., a subscription of type "both").   The process is described below.   1.  If the contact wants to create a mutual subscription, the contact       MUST send a subscription request to the user (subject to the       contact's configured preferences, the contact's client MAY send       this automatically):   <presence to='user@example.com' type='subscribe'/>   2.  As a result, the contact's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push       to all available resources associated with the contact that have       requested the roster, with the user still in the 'from'       subscription state but with a pending 'to' subscription denoted       by the inclusion of the ask='subscribe' attribute in the roster       item; and (2) MUST route the presence stanza of type "subscribe"       to the user, first stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID       (<contact@example.org>) of the contact:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='from'           ask='subscribe'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='subscribe'/>   Note: If the contact's server receives a presence stanza of type   "error" from the user's server, it MUST deliver the error stanza to   the contact, whose client MAY determine that the error is in response   to the outgoing presence stanza of type "subscribe" it sent   previously (e.g., by tracking an 'id' attribute) and then choose to   resend the "subscribe" request or revert the roster to its previous   state by sending a presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the user.   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribe" addressed       to the user, the user's server must determine if there is at       least one available resource for which the user has requested the       roster.  If so, the user's server MUST deliver the subscription       request to the user (if not, it MUST store the subscription       request offline for delivery when this condition is next met). No       matter when the subscription request is delivered, the user must       then decide whether or not to approve it (subject to the user's       configured preferences, the user's client MAY approve or refuse       the subscription request without presenting it to the user).       Here we assume the "happy path" that the user approves the       subscription request (the alternate flow of declining the       subscription request is defined inSection 8.3.1).  In this case,       the user's client MUST send a presence stanza of type       "subscribed" to the contact in order to approve the subscription       request.   <presence to='contact@example.org' type='subscribed'/>   4.  As a result, the user's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push to       all of the user's available resources that have requested the       roster, containing a roster item for the contact with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "both"; (2) MUST route       the presence stanza of type "subscribed" to the contact, first       stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID (<user@example.com>)       of the user; and (3) MUST send to the contact the full XML of the       last presence stanza with no 'to' attribute received by the       server from each of the user's available resources (subject to       privacy lists in force for each session):Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='both'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='subscribed'/>   <presence       from='user@example.com/resource'       to='contact@example.org'/>   Note: If the user's server receives a presence stanza of type "error"   from the contact's server, it MUST deliver the error stanza to the   user, whose client MAY determine that the error is in response to the   outgoing presence stanza of type "subscribed" it sent previously   (e.g., by tracking an 'id' attribute) and then choose to resend the   subscription request or revert the roster to its previous state by   sending a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the contact.   5.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribed" addressed       to the contact, the contact's server MUST first verify that the       user is in the contact's roster with either of the following       states: (a) subscription='none' and ask='subscribe' or (b)       subscription='from' and ask='subscribe'.  If the user is not in       the contact's roster with either of those states, the contact's       server MUST silently ignore the presence stanza of type       "subscribed" (i.e., it MUST NOT route it to the contact, modify       the contact's roster, or generate a roster push to the contact's       available resources).  If the user is in the contact's roster       with either of those states, the contact's server (1) MUST       deliver the presence stanza of type "subscribed" from the user to       the contact; (2) MUST initiate a roster push to all available       resources associated with the contact that have requested the       roster, containing an updated roster item for the user with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "both"; and (3) MUST       deliver the available presence stanza received from each of the       user's available resources to each of the contact's available       resources:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='subscribed'/>   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='both'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com/resource'       to='contact@example.org/resource'/>   6.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "subscribed", the       contact SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "subscribe" to the user or "denying" it by sending       a presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the user; this step       does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the contact's server know that it MUST no longer send       notification of the subscription state change to the contact (seeSection 9.4).   The user and the contact now have a mutual subscription to each   other's presence -- i.e., the subscription is of type "both".8.3.1.  Alternate Flow: User Declines Subscription Request   The above activity flow represents the "happy path" regarding the   contact's subscription request to the user.  The main alternate flow   occurs if the user refuses the contact's subscription request, as   described below.   1.  If the user wants to refuse the request, the user's client MUST       send a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the contact       (instead of the presence stanza of type "subscribed" sent in Step       3 ofSection 8.3):   <presence to='contact@example.org' type='unsubscribed'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   2.  As a result, the user's server MUST route the presence stanza of       type "unsubscribed" to the contact, first stamping the 'from'       address as the bare JID (<user@example.com>) of the user:   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribed'/>   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed"       addressed to the contact, the contact's server (1) MUST deliver       that presence stanza to the contact; and (2) MUST initiate a       roster push to all available resources associated with the       contact that have requested the roster, containing an updated       roster item for the user with the 'subscription' attribute set to       a value of "from" and with no 'ask' attribute:   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='from'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       contact SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the user or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the user; this       step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the contact's server know that it MUST no longer send       notification of the subscription state change to the contact (seeSection 9.4).   As a result of this activity, there has been no change in the   subscription state; i.e., the contact is in the user's roster with a   subscription state of "to" and the user is in the contact's roster   with a subscription state of "from".Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 20048.4.  Unsubscribing   At any time after subscribing to a contact's presence information, a   user MAY unsubscribe.  While the XML that the user sends to make this   happen is the same in all instances, the subsequent subscription   state is different depending on the subscription state obtaining when   the unsubscribe "command" is sent.  Both possible scenarios are   described below.8.4.1.  Case #1: Unsubscribing When Subscription is Not Mutual   In the first case, the user has a subscription to the contact's   presence information but the contact does not have a subscription to   the user's presence information (i.e., the subscription is not yet   mutual).   1.  If the user wants to unsubscribe from the contact's presence       information, the user MUST send a presence stanza of type       "unsubscribe" to the contact:   <presence to='contact@example.org' type='unsubscribe'/>   2.  As a result, the user's server (1) MUST send a roster push to all       of the user's available resources that have requested the roster,       containing an updated roster item for the contact with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "none"; and (2) MUST       route the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact,       first stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID       (<user@example.com>) of the user:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='none'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe"       addressed to the contact, the contact's server (1) MUST initiate       a roster push to all available resources associated with the       contact that have requested the roster, containing an updated       roster item for the user with the 'subscription' attribute set to       a value of "none" (if the contact is unavailable or has not       requested the roster, the contact's server MUST modify the roster       item and send that modified item the next time the contact       requests the roster); and (2) MUST deliver the "unsubscribe"       state change notification to the contact:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='none'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe", the       contact SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the user or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribed" to the user; this       step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the contact's server know that it MUST no longer send       notification of the subscription state change to the contact (seeSection 9.4).   5.  The contact's server then (1) MUST send a presence stanza of type       "unsubscribed" to the user; and (2) SHOULD send unavailable       presence from all of the contact's available resources to the       user:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   6.  When the user's server receives the presence stanzas of type       "unsubscribed" and "unavailable", it MUST deliver them to the       user:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   7.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       user SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact;       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).8.4.2.  Case #2: Unsubscribing When Subscription is Mutual   In the second case, the user has a subscription to the contact's   presence information and the contact also has a subscription to the   user's presence information (i.e., the subscription is mutual).   1.  If the user wants to unsubscribe from the contact's presence       information, the user MUST send a presence stanza of type       "unsubscribe" to the contact:   <presence to='contact@example.org' type='unsubscribe'/>   2.  As a result, the user's server (1) MUST send a roster push to all       of the user's available resources that have requested the roster,       containing an updated roster item for the contact with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "from"; and (2) MUST       route the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact,       first stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID       (<user@example.com>) of the user:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='from'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe"       addressed to the contact, the contact's server (1) MUST initiate       a roster push to all available resources associated with the       contact that have requested the roster, containing an updated       roster item for the user with the 'subscription' attribute set to       a value of "to" (if the contact is unavailable or has not       requested the roster, the contact's server MUST modify the roster       item and send that modified item the next time the contact       requests the roster); and (2) MUST deliver the "unsubscribe"       state change notification to the contact:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='to'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe", the       contact SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the user or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribed" to the user; thisSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the contact's server know that it MUST no longer send       notification of the subscription state change to the contact (seeSection 9.4).   5.  The contact's server then (1) MUST send a presence stanza of type       "unsubscribed" to the user; and (2) SHOULD send unavailable       presence from all of the contact's available resources to the       user:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   6.  When the user's server receives the presence stanzas of type       "unsubscribed" and "unavailable", it MUST deliver them to the       user:   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   7.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       user SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact;       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).   Note: Obviously this does not result in removal of the roster item   from the user's roster, and the contact still has a subscription to   the user's presence information.  In order to both completely cancelSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   a mutual subscription and fully remove the roster item from the   user's roster, the user SHOULD update the roster item with   subscription='remove' as defined under Removing a Roster Item and   Cancelling All Subscriptions (Section 8.6).8.5.  Cancelling a Subscription   At any time after approving a subscription request from a user, a   contact MAY cancel that subscription.  While the XML that the contact   sends to make this happen is the same in all instances, the   subsequent subscription state is different depending on the   subscription state obtaining when the cancellation was sent.  Both   possible scenarios are described below.8.5.1.  Case #1: Cancelling When Subscription is Not Mutual   In the first case, the user has a subscription to the contact's   presence information but the contact does not have a subscription to   the user's presence information (i.e., the subscription is not yet   mutual).   1.  If the contact wants to cancel the user's subscription, the       contact MUST send a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the       user:   <presence to='user@example.com' type='unsubscribed'/>   2.  As a result, the contact's server (1) MUST send a roster push to       all of the contact's available resources that have requested the       roster, containing an updated roster item for the user with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "none"; (2) MUST route       the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the user, first       stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID       (<contact@example.org>) of the contact; and (3) SHOULD send       unavailable presence from all of the contact's available       resources to the user:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='none'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed"       addressed to the user, the user's server (1) MUST initiate a       roster push to all of the user's available resources that have       requested the roster, containing an updated roster item for the       contact with the 'subscription' attribute set to a value of       "none" (if the user is unavailable or has not requested the       roster, the user's server MUST modify the roster item and send       that modified item the next time the user requests the roster);       (2) MUST deliver the "unsubscribed" state change notification to       all of the user's available resources; and (3) MUST deliver the       unavailable presence to all of the user's available resources:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='none'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       user SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact;Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).8.5.2.  Case #2: Cancelling When Subscription is Mutual   In the second case, the user has a subscription to the contact's   presence information and the contact also has a subscription to the   user's presence information (i.e., the subscription is mutual).   1.  If the contact wants to cancel the user's subscription, the       contact MUST send a presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the       user:   <presence to='user@example.com' type='unsubscribed'/>   2.  As a result, the contact's server (1) MUST send a roster push to       all of the contact's available resources that have requested the       roster, containing an updated roster item for the user with the       'subscription' attribute set to a value of "to"; (2) MUST route       the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed" to the user, first       stamping the 'from' address as the bare JID       (<contact@example.org>) of the contact; and (3) SHOULD send       unavailable presence from all of the contact's available       resources to all of the user's available resources:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='to'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   3.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed"       addressed to the user, the user's server (1) MUST initiate a       roster push to all of the user's available resources that have       requested the roster, containing an updated roster item for the       contact with the 'subscription' attribute set to a value of       "from" (if the user is unavailable or has not requested the       roster, the user's server MUST modify the roster item and send       that modified item the next time the user requests the roster);       and (2) MUST deliver the "unsubscribed" state change notification       to all of the user's available resources; and (3) MUST deliver       the unavailable presence to all of the user's available       resources:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='from'           name='MyContact'>         <group>MyBuddies</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='contact@example.org'       to='user@example.com'       type='unsubscribed'/>   <presence       from='contact@example.org/resource'       to='user@example.com'       type='unavailable'/>   4.  Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the       user SHOULD acknowledge receipt of that subscription state       notification through either "affirming" it by sending a presence       stanza of type "unsubscribe" to the contact or "denying" it by       sending a presence stanza of type "subscribe" to the contact;       this step does not necessarily affect the subscription state (see       Subscription States (Section 9) for details), but instead lets       the user's server know that it MUST no longer send notification       of the subscription state change to the user (seeSection 9.4).   Note: Obviously this does not result in removal of the roster item   from the contact's roster, and the contact still has a subscription   to the user's presence information.  In order to both completely   cancel a mutual subscription and fully remove the roster item fromSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   the contact's roster, the contact should update the roster item with   subscription='remove' as defined under Removing a Roster Item and   Cancelling All Subscriptions (Section 8.6).8.6.  Removing a Roster Item and Cancelling All Subscriptions   Because there may be many steps involved in completely removing a   roster item and cancelling subscriptions in both directions, the   roster management protocol includes a "shortcut" method for doing so.   The process may be initiated no matter what the current subscription   state is by sending a roster set containing an item for the contact   with the 'subscription' attribute set to a value of "remove":   <iq type='set' id='remove1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='remove'/>     </query>   </iq>   When the user removes a contact from his or her roster by setting the   'subscription' attribute to a value of "remove", the user's server   (1) MUST automatically cancel any existing presence subscription   between the user and the contact (both 'to' and 'from' as   appropriate); (2) MUST remove the roster item from the user's roster   and inform all of the user's available resources that have requested   the roster of the roster item removal; (3) MUST inform the resource   that initiated the removal of success; and (4) SHOULD send   unavailable presence from all of the user's available resources to   the contact:   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribed'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='contact@example.org'           subscription='remove'/>     </query>   </iq>   <iq type='result' id='remove1'/>   <presence       from='user@example.com/resource'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unavailable'/>   Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribe", the   contact's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push to all available   resources associated with the contact that have requested the roster,   containing an updated roster item for the user with the   'subscription' attribute set to a value of "to" (if the contact is   unavailable or has not requested the roster, the contact's server   MUST modify the roster item and send that modified item the next time   the contact requests the roster); and (2) MUST also deliver the   "unsubscribe" state change notification to all of the contact's   available resources:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='to'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribe'/>   Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unsubscribed", the   contact's server (1) MUST initiate a roster push to all available   resources associated with the contact that have requested the roster,   containing an updated roster item for the user with the   'subscription' attribute set to a value of "none" (if the contact is   unavailable or has not requested the roster, the contact's serverSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   MUST modify the roster item and send that modified item the next time   the contact requests the roster); and (2) MUST also deliver the   "unsubscribe" state change notification to all of the contact's   available resources:   <iq type='set'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'>       <item           jid='user@example.com'           subscription='none'           name='SomeUser'>         <group>SomeGroup</group>       </item>     </query>   </iq>   <presence       from='user@example.com'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unsubscribed'/>   Upon receiving the presence stanza of type "unavailable" addressed to   the contact, the contact's server MUST deliver the unavailable   presence to all of the user's available resources:   <presence       from='user@example.com/resource'       to='contact@example.org'       type='unavailable'/>   Note: When the user removes the contact from the user's roster, the   end state of the contact's roster is that the user is still in the   contact's roster with a subscription state of "none"; in order to   completely remove the roster item for the user, the contact needs to   also send a roster removal request.9.  Subscription States   This section provides detailed information about subscription states   and server handling of subscription-related presence stanzas (i.e.,   presence stanzas of type "subscribe", "subscribed", "unsubscribe",   and "unsubscribed").9.1.  Defined States   There are nine possible subscription states, which are described here   from the user's (not contact's) perspective:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   1.  "None" = contact and user are not subscribed to each other, and       neither has requested a subscription from the other   2.  "None + Pending Out" = contact and user are not subscribed to       each other, and user has sent contact a subscription request but       contact has not replied yet   3.  "None + Pending In" = contact and user are not subscribed to each       other, and contact has sent user a subscription request but user       has not replied yet (note: contact's server SHOULD NOT push or       deliver roster items in this state, but instead SHOULD wait until       contact has approved subscription request from user)   4.  "None + Pending Out/In" = contact and user are not subscribed to       each other, contact has sent user a subscription request but user       has not replied yet, and user has sent contact a subscription       request but contact has not replied yet   5.  "To" = user is subscribed to contact (one-way)   6.  "To + Pending In" = user is subscribed to contact, and contact       has sent user a subscription request but user has not replied yet   7.  "From" = contact is subscribed to user (one-way)   8.  "From + Pending Out" = contact is subscribed to user, and user       has sent contact a subscription request but contact has not       replied yet   9.  "Both" = user and contact are subscribed to each other (two-way)9.2.  Server Handling of Outbound Presence Subscription Stanzas   Outbound presence subscription stanzas enable the user to manage his   or her subscription to the contact's presence information (via the   "subscribe" and "unsubscribe" types), and to manage the contact's   access to the user's presence information (via the "subscribed" and   "unsubscribed" types).   Because it is possible for the user's server and the contact's server   to lose synchronization regarding subscription states, the user's   server MUST without exception route all outbound presence stanzas of   type "subscribe" or "unsubscribe" to the contact so that the user is   able to resynchronize his or her subscription to the contact's   presence information if needed.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   The user's server SHOULD NOT route a presence stanza of type   "subscribed" or "unsubscribed" to the contact if the stanza does not   result in a subscription state change from the user's perspective,   and MUST NOT make a state change.  If the stanza results in a   subscription state change, the user's server MUST route the stanza to   the contact and MUST make the appropriate state change.  These rules   are summarized in the following tables.   Table 1: Recommended handling of outbound "subscribed" stanzas   +----------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  ROUTE?  |  NEW STATE               |   +----------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  yes     |  "From"                  |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  yes     |  "From + Pending Out"    |   |  "To"                    |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  yes     |  "Both"                  |   |  "From"                  |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "Both"                  |  no      |  no state change         |   +----------------------------------------------------------------+   Table 2: Recommended handling of outbound "unsubscribed" stanzas   +----------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  ROUTE?  |  NEW STATE               |   +----------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  yes     |  "None"                  |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  yes     |  "None + Pending Out"    |   |  "To"                    |  no      |  no state change         |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  yes     |  "To"                    |   |  "From"                  |  yes     |  "None"                  |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  yes     |  "None + Pending Out"    |   |  "Both"                  |  yes     |  "To"                    |   +----------------------------------------------------------------+9.3.  Server Handling of Inbound Presence Subscription Stanzas   Inbound presence subscription stanzas request a subscription-related   action from the user (via the "subscribe" type), inform the user of   subscription-related actions taken by the contact (via the   "unsubscribe" type), or enable the contact to manage the user's   access to the contact's presence information (via the "subscribed"   and "unsubscribed" types).Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   When the user's server receives a subscription request for the user   from the contact (i.e., a presence stanza of type "subscribe"), it   MUST deliver that request to the user for approval if the user has   not already granted the contact access to the user's presence   information and if there is no pending inbound subscription request;   however, the user's server SHOULD NOT deliver the new request if   there is a pending inbound subscription request, since the previous   subscription request will have been recorded.  If the user has   already granted the contact access to the user's presence   information, the user's server SHOULD auto-reply to an inbound   presence stanza of type "subscribe" from the contact by sending a   presence stanza of type "subscribed" to the contact on behalf of the   user; this rule enables the contact to resynchronize the subscription   state if needed.  These rules are summarized in the following table.   Table 3: Recommended handling of inbound "subscribe" stanzas   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  DELIVER?  |  NEW STATE               |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  yes       |  "None + Pending In"     |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  yes       |  "None + Pending Out/In" |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "To"                    |  yes       |  "To + Pending In"       |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "From"                  |  no *      |  no state change         |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  no *      |  no state change         |   |  "Both"                  |  no *      |  no state change         |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   * Server SHOULD auto-reply with "subscribed" stanza   When the user's server receives a presence stanza of type   "unsubscribe" for the user from the contact, if the stanza results in   a subscription state change from the user's perspective then the   user's server SHOULD auto-reply by sending a presence stanza of type   "unsubscribed" to the contact on behalf of the user, MUST deliver the   "unsubscribe" stanza to the user, and MUST change the state.  If no   subscription state change results, the user's server SHOULD NOT   deliver the stanza and MUST NOT change the state.  These rules are   summarized in the following table.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Table 4: Recommended handling of inbound "unsubscribe" stanzas   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  DELIVER?  |  NEW STATE               |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  yes *     |  "None"                  |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  yes *     |  "None + Pending Out"    |   |  "To"                    |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  yes *     |  "To"                    |   |  "From"                  |  yes *     |  "None"                  |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  yes *     |  "None + Pending Out     |   |  "Both"                  |  yes *     |  "To"                    |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   * Server SHOULD auto-reply with "unsubscribed" stanza   When the user's server receives a presence stanza of type   "subscribed" for the user from the contact, it MUST NOT deliver the   stanza to the user and MUST NOT change the subscription state if   there is no pending outbound request for access to the contact's   presence information.  If there is a pending outbound request for   access to the contact's presence information and the inbound presence   stanza of type "subscribed" results in a subscription state change,   the user's server MUST deliver the stanza to the user and MUST change   the subscription state.  If the user already has access to the   contact's presence information, the inbound presence stanza of type   "subscribed" does not result in a subscription state change;   therefore the user's server SHOULD NOT deliver the stanza to the user   and MUST NOT change the subscription state.  These rules are   summarized in the following table.   Table 5: Recommended handling of inbound "subscribed" stanzas   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  DELIVER?  |  NEW STATE               |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  yes       |  "To"                    |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  yes       |  "To + Pending In"       |   |  "To"                    |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "From"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  yes       |  "Both"                  |   |  "Both"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   When the user's server receives a presence stanza of type   "unsubscribed" for the user from the contact, it MUST deliver the   stanza to the user and MUST change the subscription state if there is   a pending outbound request for access to the contact's presence   information or if the user currently has access to the contact's   presence information.  Otherwise, the user's server SHOULD NOT   deliver the stanza and MUST NOT change the subscription state.  These   rules are summarized in the following table.   Table 6: Recommended handling of inbound "unsubscribed" stanzas   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  EXISTING STATE          |  DELIVER?  |  NEW STATE               |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+   |  "None"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out"    |  yes       |  "None"                  |   |  "None + Pending In"     |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "None + Pending Out/In" |  yes       |  "None + Pending In"     |   |  "To"                    |  yes       |  "None"                  |   |  "To + Pending In"       |  yes       |  "None + Pending In"     |   |  "From"                  |  no        |  no state change         |   |  "From + Pending Out"    |  yes       |  "From"                  |   |  "Both"                  |  yes       |  "From"                  |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+9.4.  Server Delivery and Client Acknowledgement of Subscription      Requests and State Change Notifications   When a server receives an inbound presence stanza of type "subscribe"   (i.e., a subscription request) or of type "subscribed",   "unsubscribe", or "unsubscribed" (i.e., a subscription state change   notification), in addition to sending the appropriate roster push (or   updated roster when the roster is next requested by an available   resource), it MUST deliver the request or notification to the   intended recipient at least once.  A server MAY require the recipient   to acknowledge receipt of all state change notifications (and MUST   require acknowledgement in the case of subscription requests, i.e.,   presence stanzas of type "subscribe").  In order to require   acknowledgement, a server SHOULD send the request or notification to   the recipient each time the recipient logs in, until the recipient   acknowledges receipt of the notification by "affirming" or "denying"   the notification, as shown in the following table:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Table 7: Acknowledgement of subscription state change notifications   +--------------------------------------------------+   |  STANZA TYPE   |  ACCEPT        |  DENY          |   +--------------------------------------------------+   |  subscribe     |  subscribed    |  unsubscribed  |   |  subscribed    |  subscribe     |  unsubscribe   |   |  unsubscribe   |  unsubscribed  |  subscribed    |   |  unsubscribed  |  unsubscribe   |  subscribe     |   +--------------------------------------------------+   Obviously, given the foregoing subscription state charts, some of the   acknowledgement stanzas will be routed to the contact and result in   subscription state changes, while others will not.  However, any such   stanzas MUST result in the server's no longer sending the   subscription state notification to the user.   Because a user's server MUST automatically generate outbound presence   stanzas of type "unsubscribe" and "unsubscribed" upon receiving a   roster set with the 'subscription' attribute set to a value of   "remove" (see Removing a Roster Item and Cancelling All Subscriptions   (Section 8.6)), the server MUST treat a roster remove request as   equivalent to sending both of those presence stanzas for purposes of   determining whether to continue sending subscription state change   notifications of type "subscribe" or "subscribed" to the user.10.  Blocking Communication   Most instant messaging systems have found it necessary to implement   some method for users to block communications from particular other   users (this is also required by sections5.1.5,5.1.15,5.3.2, and   5.4.10 of [IMP-REQS]).  In XMPP this is done by managing one's   privacy lists using the 'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace.   Server-side privacy lists enable successful completion of the   following use cases:   o  Retrieving one's privacy lists.   o  Adding, removing, and editing one's privacy lists.   o  Setting, changing, or declining active lists.   o  Setting, changing, or declining the default list (i.e., the list      that is active by default).   o  Allowing or blocking messages based on JID, group, or subscription      type (or globally).Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   o  Allowing or blocking inbound presence notifications based on JID,      group, or subscription type (or globally).   o  Allowing or blocking outbound presence notifications based on JID,      group, or subscription type (or globally).   o  Allowing or blocking IQ stanzas based on JID, group, or      subscription type (or globally).   o  Allowing or blocking all communications based on JID, group, or      subscription type (or globally).   Note: Presence notifications do not include presence subscriptions,   only presence information that is broadcasted to entities that are   subscribed to a user's presence information.  Thus this includes   presence stanzas with no 'type' attribute or of type='unavailable'   only.10.1.  Syntax and Semantics   A user MAY define one or more privacy lists, which are stored by the   user's server.  Each <list/> element contains one or more rules in   the form of <item/> elements, and each <item/> element uses   attributes to define a privacy rule type, a specific value to which   the rule applies, the relevant action, and the place of the item in   the processing order.   The syntax is as follows:   <iq>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='foo'>         <item             type='[jid|group|subscription]'             value='bar'             action='[allow|deny]'             order='unsignedInt'>           [<message/>]           [<presence-in/>]           [<presence-out/>]           [<iq/>]         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   If the type is "jid", then the 'value' attribute MUST contain a valid   Jabber ID.  JIDs SHOULD be matched in the following order:   1.  <user@domain/resource> (only that resource matches)   2.  <user@domain> (any resource matches)   3.  <domain/resource> (only that resource matches)   4.  <domain> (the domain itself matches, as does any user@domain,       domain/resource, or address containing a subdomain)   If the type is "group", then the 'value' attribute SHOULD contain the   name of a group in the user's roster.  (If a client attempts to   update, create, or delete a list item with a group that is not in the   user's roster, the server SHOULD return to the client an   <item-not-found/> stanza error.)   If the type is "subscription", then the 'value' attribute MUST be one   of "both", "to", "from", or "none" as defined under Roster Syntax and   Semantics (Section 7.1), where "none" includes entities that are   totally unknown to the user and therefore not in the user's roster at   all.   If no 'type' attribute is included, the rule provides the   "fall-through" case.   The 'action' attribute MUST be included and its value MUST be either   "allow" or "deny".   The 'order' attribute MUST be included and its value MUST be a   non-negative integer that is unique among all items in the list.  (If   a client attempts to create or update a list with non-unique order   values, the server MUST return to the client a <bad-request/> stanza   error.)   The <item/> element MAY contain one or more child elements that   enable an entity to specify more granular control over which kinds of   stanzas are to be blocked (i.e., rather than blocking all stanzas).   The allowable child elements are:   o  <message/> -- blocks incoming message stanzas   o  <iq/> -- blocks incoming IQ stanzas   o  <presence-in/> -- blocks incoming presence notifications   o  <presence-out/> -- blocks outgoing presence notificationsSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Within the 'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace, the <query/> child of an IQ   stanza of type "set" MUST NOT include more than one child element   (i.e., the stanza MUST contain only one <active/> element, one   <default/> element, or one <list/> element); if a sending entity   violates this rule, the receiving entity MUST return a <bad-request/>   stanza error.   When a client adds or updates a privacy list, the <list/> element   SHOULD contain at least one <item/> child element; when a client   removes a privacy list, the <list/> element MUST NOT contain any   <item/> child elements.   When a client updates a privacy list, it must include all of the   desired items (i.e., not a "delta").10.2.  Business Rules   1.  If there is an active list set for a session, it affects only the       session(s) for which it is activated, and only for the duration       of the session(s); the server MUST apply the active list only and       MUST NOT apply the default list (i.e., there is no "layering" of       lists).   2.  The default list applies to the user as a whole, and is processed       if there is no active list set for the target session/resource to       which a stanza is addressed, or if there are no current sessions       for the user.   3.  If there is no active list set for a session (or there are no       current sessions for the user), and there is no default list,       then all stanzas SHOULD BE accepted or appropriately processed by       the server on behalf of the user in accordance with the Server       Rules for Handling XML Stanzas (Section 11).   4.  Privacy lists MUST be the first delivery rule applied by a       server, superseding (1) the routing and delivery rules specified       in Server Rules for Handling XML Stanzas (Section 11), and (2)       the handling of subscription-related presence stanzas (and       corresponding generation of roster pushes) specified in       Integration of Roster Items and Presence Subscriptions (Section8).   5.  The order in which privacy list items are processed by the server       is important.  List items MUST be processed in ascending order       determined by the integer values of the 'order' attribute for       each <item/>.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   6.  As soon as a stanza is matched against a privacy list rule, the       server MUST appropriately handle the stanza in accordance with       the rule and cease processing.   7.  If no fall-through item is provided in a list, the fall-through       action is assumed to be "allow".   8.  If a user updates the definition for an active list, subsequent       processing based on that active list MUST use the updated       definition (for all resources to which that active list currently       applies).   9.  If a change to the subscription state or roster group of a roster       item defined in an active or default list occurs during a user's       session, subsequent processing based on that list MUST take into       account the changed state or group (for all resources to which       that list currently applies).   10. When the definition for a rule is modified, the server MUST send       an IQ stanza of type "set" to all connected resources, containing       a <query/> element with only one <list/> child element, where the       'name' attribute is set to the name of the modified privacy list.       These "privacy list pushes" adhere to the same semantics as the       "roster pushes" used in roster management, except that only the       list name itself (not the full list definition or the "delta") is       pushed to the connected resources.  It is up to the receiving       resource to determine whether to retrieve the modified list       definition, although a connected resource SHOULD do so if the       list currently applies to it.   11. When a resource attempts to remove a list or specify a new       default list while that list applies to a connected resource       other than the sending resource, the server MUST return a       <conflict/> error to the sending resource and MUST NOT make the       requested change.10.3.  Retrieving One's Privacy Lists   Example: Client requests names of privacy lists from server:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='get' id='getlist1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'/>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 66]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: Server sends names of privacy lists to client, preceded by   active list and default list:   <iq type='result' id='getlist1' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <active name='private'/>       <default name='public'/>       <list name='public'/>       <list name='private'/>       <list name='special'/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Client requests a privacy list from server:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='get' id='getlist2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server sends a privacy list to client:   <iq type='result' id='getlist2' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='1'/>         <item action='allow' order='2'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Client requests another privacy list from server:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='get' id='getlist3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='private'/>     </query>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 67]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: Server sends another privacy list to client:   <iq type='result' id='getlist3' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='private'>         <item type='subscription'               value='both'               action='allow'               order='10'/>         <item action='deny' order='15'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Client requests yet another privacy list from server:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='get' id='getlist4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='special'/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server sends yet another privacy list to client:   <iq type='result' id='getlist4' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='special'>         <item type='jid'               value='juliet@example.com'               action='allow'               order='6'/>         <item type='jid'               value='benvolio@example.org'               action='allow'               order='7'/>         <item type='jid'               value='mercutio@example.org'               action='allow'               order='42'/>         <item action='deny' order='666'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   In this example, the user has three lists: (1) 'public', which allows   communications from everyone except one specific entity (this is the   default list); (2) 'private', which allows communications only withSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 68]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   contacts who have a bidirectional subscription with the user (this is   the active list); and (3) 'special', which allows communications only   with three specific entities.   If the user attempts to retrieve a list but a list by that name does   not exist, the server MUST return an <item-not-found/> stanza error   to the user:   Example: Client attempts to retrieve non-existent list:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='getlist5'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='The Empty Set'/>     </query>     <error type='cancel'>       <item-not-found           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   The user is allowed to retrieve only one list at a time.  If the user   attempts to retrieve more than one list in the same request, the   server MUST return a <bad request/> stanza error to the user:   Example: Client attempts to retrieve more than one list:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='getlist6'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'/>       <list name='private'/>       <list name='special'/>     </query>     <error type='modify'>       <bad-request           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>10.4.  Managing Active Lists   In order to set or change the active list currently being applied by   the server, the user MUST send an IQ stanza of type "set" with a   <query/> element qualified by the 'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace that   contains an empty <active/> child element possessing a 'name'   attribute whose value is set to the desired list name.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 69]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: Client requests change of active list:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='active1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <active name='special'/>     </query>   </iq>   The server MUST activate and apply the requested list before sending   the result back to the client.   Example: Server acknowledges success of active list change:   <iq type='result' id='active1' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>   If the user attempts to set an active list but a list by that name   does not exist, the server MUST return an <item-not-found/> stanza   error to the user:   Example: Client attempts to set a non-existent list as active:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='active2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <active name='The Empty Set'/>     </query>     <error type='cancel'>       <item-not-found           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   In order to decline the use of any active list, the connected   resource MUST send an empty <active/> element with no 'name'   attribute.   Example: Client declines the use of active lists:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='active3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <active/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server acknowledges success of declining any active list:   <iq type='result' id='active3' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 70]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 200410.5.  Managing the Default List   In order to change its default list (which applies to the user as a   whole, not only the sending resource), the user MUST send an IQ   stanza of type "set" with a <query/> element qualified by the   'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace that contains an empty <default/> child   element possessing a 'name' attribute whose value is set to the   desired list name.   Example: User requests change of default list:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='default1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <default name='special'/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server acknowledges success of default list change:   <iq type='result' id='default1' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>   If the user attempts to change which list is the default list but the   default list is in use by at least one connected resource other than   the sending resource, the server MUST return a <conflict/> stanza   error to the sending resource:   Example: Client attempts to change the default list but that list is   in use by another resource:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='default1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <default name='special'/>     </query>     <error type='cancel'>       <conflict           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   If the user attempts to set a default list but a list by that name   does not exist, the server MUST return an <item-not-found/> stanza   error to the user:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 71]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: Client attempts to set a non-existent list as default:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='default1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <default name='The Empty Set'/>     </query>     <error type='cancel'>       <item-not-found           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>   In order to decline the use of a default list (i.e., to use the   domain's stanza routing rules at all times), the user MUST send an   empty <default/> element with no 'name' attribute.   Example: Client declines the use of the default list:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='default2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <default/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server acknowledges success of declining any default list:   <iq type='result' id='default2' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>   If one connected resource attempts to decline the use of a default   list for the user as a whole but the default list currently applies   to at least one other connected resource, the server MUST return a   <conflict/> error to the sending resource:   Example: Client attempts to decline a default list but that list is   in use by another resource:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='error' id='default3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <default/>     </query>     <error type='cancel'>       <conflict           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 72]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 200410.6.  Editing a Privacy List   In order to edit a privacy list, the user MUST send an IQ stanza of   type "set" with a <query/> element qualified by the   'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace that contains one <list/> child element   possessing a 'name' attribute whose value is set to the list name the   user would like to edit.  The <list/> element MUST contain one or   more <item/> elements, which specify the user's desired changes to   the list by including all elements in the list (not the "delta").   Example: Client edits a privacy list:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='edit1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='3'/>         <item type='jid'               value='paris@example.org'               action='deny'               order='5'/>         <item action='allow' order='68'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server acknowledges success of list edit:   <iq type='result' id='edit1' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>   Note: The value of the 'order' attribute for any given item is not   fixed.  Thus in the foregoing example if the user would like to add 4   items between the "tybalt@example.com" item and the   "paris@example.org" item, the user's client MUST renumber the   relevant items before submitting the list to the server.   The server MUST now send a "privacy list push" to all connected   resources:   Example: Privacy list push on list edit:   <iq to='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='push1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'/>     </query>   </iq>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 73]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   <iq to='romeo@example.net/home' type='set' id='push2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='public'/>     </query>   </iq>   In accordance with the semantics of IQ stanzas defined in   [XMPP-CORE], each connected resource MUST return an IQ result to the   server as well:   Example: Acknowledging receipt of privacy list pushes:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard'       type='result'       id='push1'/>   <iq from='romeo@example.net/home'       type='result'       id='push2'/>10.7.  Adding a New Privacy List   The same protocol used to edit an existing list is used to create a   new list.  If the list name matches that of an existing list, the   request to add a new list will overwrite the old one.  As with list   edits, the server MUST also send a "privacy list push" to all   connected resources.10.8.  Removing a Privacy List   In order to remove a privacy list, the user MUST send an IQ stanza of   type "set" with a <query/> element qualified by the   'jabber:iq:privacy' namespace that contains one empty <list/> child   element possessing a 'name' attribute whose value is set to the list   name the user would like to remove.   Example: Client removes a privacy list:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='remove1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='private'/>     </query>   </iq>   Example: Server acknowledges success of list removal:   <iq type='result' id='remove1' to='romeo@example.net/orchard'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 74]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   If a user attempts to remove a list that is currently being applied   to at least one resource other than the sending resource, the server   MUST return a <conflict/> stanza error to the user; i.e., the user   MUST first set another list to active or default before attempting to   remove it.  If the user attempts to remove a list but a list by that   name does not exist, the server MUST return an <item-not-found/>   stanza error to the user.  If the user attempts to remove more than   one list in the same request, the server MUST return a <bad request/>   stanza error to the user.10.9.  Blocking Messages   Server-side privacy lists enable a user to block incoming messages   from other entities based on the entity's JID, roster group, or   subscription status (or globally).  The following examples illustrate   the protocol.  (Note: For the sake of brevity, IQ stanzas of type   "result" are not shown in the following examples, nor are "privacy   list pushes".)   Example: User blocks based on JID:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='msg1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='message-jid-example'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='3'>           <message/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive messages from the entity with the specified JID.   Example: User blocks based on roster group:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='msg2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='message-group-example'>         <item type='group'               value='Enemies'               action='deny'               order='4'>           <message/>         </item>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 75]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive messages from any entities in the specified roster   group.   Example: User blocks based on subscription type:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='msg3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='message-sub-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='none'               action='deny'               order='5'>           <message/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive messages from any entities with the specified   subscription type.   Example: User blocks globally:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='msg4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='message-global-example'>         <item action='deny' order='6'>           <message/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive messages from any other users.10.10.  Blocking Inbound Presence Notifications   Server-side privacy lists enable a user to block incoming presence   notifications from other entities based on the entity's JID, roster   group, or subscription status (or globally).  The following examples   illustrate the protocol.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 76]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Note: Presence notifications do not include presence subscriptions,   only presence information that is broadcasted to the user because the   user is currently subscribed to a contact's presence information.   Thus this includes presence stanzas with no 'type' attribute or of   type='unavailable' only.   Example: User blocks based on JID:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presin1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presin-jid-example'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='7'>           <presence-in/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive presence notifications from the entity with the   specified JID.   Example: User blocks based on roster group:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presin2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presin-group-example'>         <item type='group'               value='Enemies'               action='deny'               order='8'>           <presence-in/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive presence notifications from any entities in the   specified roster group.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 77]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: User blocks based on subscription type:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presin3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presin-sub-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='to'               action='deny'               order='9'>           <presence-in/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive presence notifications from any entities with the   specified subscription type.   Example: User blocks globally:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presin4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presin-global-example'>         <item action='deny' order='11'>           <presence-in/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive presence notifications from any other users.10.11.  Blocking Outbound Presence Notifications   Server-side privacy lists enable a user to block outgoing presence   notifications to other entities based on the entity's JID, roster   group, or subscription status (or globally).  The following examples   illustrate the protocol.   Note: Presence notifications do not include presence subscriptions,   only presence information that is broadcasted to contacts because   those contacts are currently subscribed to the user's presence   information.  Thus this includes presence stanzas with no 'type'   attribute or of type='unavailable' only.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 78]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: User blocks based on JID:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presout1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presout-jid-example'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='13'>           <presence-out/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not send presence notifications to the entity with the specified   JID.   Example: User blocks based on roster group:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presout2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presout-group-example'>         <item type='group'               value='Enemies'               action='deny'               order='15'>           <presence-out/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not send presence notifications to any entities in the specified   roster group.   Example: User blocks based on subscription type:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presout3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presout-sub-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='from'               action='deny'               order='17'>           <presence-out/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 79]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not send presence notifications to any entities with the   specified subscription type.   Example: User blocks globally:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='presout4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='presout-global-example'>         <item action='deny' order='23'>           <presence-out/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not send presence notifications to any other users.10.12.  Blocking IQ Stanzas   Server-side privacy lists enable a user to block incoming IQ stanzas   from other entities based on the entity's JID, roster group, or   subscription status (or globally).  The following examples illustrate   the protocol.   Example: User blocks based on JID:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='iq1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='iq-jid-example'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='29'>           <iq/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive IQ stanzas from the entity with the specified JID.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 80]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: User blocks based on roster group:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='iq2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='iq-group-example'>         <item type='group'               value='Enemies'               action='deny'               order='31'>           <iq/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive IQ stanzas from any entities in the specified roster   group.   Example: User blocks based on subscription type:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='iq3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='iq-sub-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='none'               action='deny'               order='17'>           <iq/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive IQ stanzas from any entities with the specified   subscription type.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 81]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   Example: User blocks globally:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='iq4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='iq-global-example'>         <item action='deny' order='1'>           <iq/>         </item>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive IQ stanzas from any other users.10.13.  Blocking All Communication   Server-side privacy lists enable a user to block all stanzas from and   to other entities based on the entity's JID, roster group, or   subscription status (or globally).  Note that this includes   subscription-related presence stanzas, which are excluded by Blocking   Inbound Presence Notifications (Section 10.10).  The following   examples illustrate the protocol.   Example: User blocks based on JID:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='all1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='all-jid-example'>         <item type='jid'               value='tybalt@example.com'               action='deny'               order='23'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive any communications from, nor send any stanzas to,   the entity with the specified JID.   Example: User blocks based on roster group:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='all2'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='all-group-example'>         <item type='group'               value='Enemies'Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 82]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004               action='deny'               order='13'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive any communications from, nor send any stanzas to,   any entities in the specified roster group.   Example: User blocks based on subscription type:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='all3'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='all-sub-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='none'               action='deny'               order='11'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive any communications from, nor send any stanzas to,   any entities with the specified subscription type.   Example: User blocks globally:   <iq from='romeo@example.net/orchard' type='set' id='all4'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='all-global-example'>         <item action='deny' order='7'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>   As a result of creating and applying the foregoing list, the user   will not receive any communications from, nor send any stanzas to,   any other users.10.14.  Blocked Entity Attempts to Communicate with User   If a blocked entity attempts to send message or presence stanzas to   the user, the user's server SHOULD silently drop the stanza and MUST   NOT return an error to the sending entity.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 83]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   If a blocked entity attempts to send an IQ stanza of type "get" or   "set" to the user, the user's server MUST return to the sending   entity a <service-unavailable/> stanza error, since this is the   standard error code sent from a client that does not understand the   namespace of an IQ get or set.  IQ stanzas of other types SHOULD be   silently dropped by the server.   Example: Blocked entity attempts to send IQ get:   <iq type='get'       to='romeo@example.net'       from='tybalt@example.com/pda'       id='probing1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:version'/>   </iq>   Example: Server returns error to blocked entity:   <iq type='error'       from='romeo@example.net'       to='tybalt@example.com/pda'       id='probing1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:version'/>     <error type='cancel'>       <service-unavailable           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     </error>   </iq>10.15.  Higher-Level Heuristics   When building a representation of a higher-level privacy heuristic, a   client SHOULD use the simplest possible representation.   For example, the heuristic "block all communications with any user   not in my roster" could be constructed in any of the following ways:   o  allow communications from all JIDs in my roster (i.e., listing      each JID as a separate list item), but block communications with      everyone else   o  allow communications from any user who is in one of the groups      that make up my roster (i.e., listing each group as a separate      list item), but block communications from everyone else   o  allow communications from any user with whom I have a subscription      of 'both' or 'to' or 'from' (i.e., listing each subscription value      separately), but block communications from everyone elseSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 84]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   o  block communications from anyone whose subscription state is      'none'   The final representation is the simplest and SHOULD be used; here is   the XML that would be sent in this case:   <iq type='set' id='heuristic1'>     <query xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'>       <list name='heuristic-example'>         <item type='subscription'               value='none'               action='deny'               order='437'/>       </list>     </query>   </iq>11.  Server Rules for Handling XML Stanzas   Basic routing and delivery rules for servers are defined in   [XMPP-CORE].  This section defines additional rules for   XMPP-compliant instant messaging and presence servers.11.1.  Inbound Stanzas   If the hostname of the domain identifier portion of the JID contained   in the 'to' attribute of an inbound stanza matches a hostname of the   server itself and the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the   form <user@example.com> or <user@example.com/resource>, the server   MUST first apply any privacy lists (Section 10) that are in force,   then follow the rules defined below:   1.  If the JID is of the form <user@domain/resource> and an available       resource matches the full JID, the recipient's server MUST       deliver the stanza to that resource.   2.  Else if the JID is of the form <user@domain> or <user@domain/       resource> and the associated user account does not exist, the       recipient's server (a) SHOULD silently ignore the stanza (i.e.,       neither deliver it nor return an error) if it is a presence       stanza, (b) MUST return a <service-unavailable/> stanza error to       the sender if it is an IQ stanza, and (c) SHOULD return a       <service-unavailable/> stanza error to the sender if it is a       message stanza.   3.  Else if the JID is of the form <user@domain/resource> and no       available resource matches the full JID, the recipient's server       (a) SHOULD silently ignore the stanza (i.e., neither deliver itSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 85]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       nor return an error) if it is a presence stanza, (b) MUST return       a <service-unavailable/> stanza error to the sender if it is an       IQ stanza, and (c) SHOULD treat the stanza as if it were       addressed to <user@domain> if it is a message stanza.   4.  Else if the JID is of the form <user@domain> and there is at       least one available resource available for the user, the       recipient's server MUST follow these rules:       1.  For message stanzas, the server SHOULD deliver the stanza to           the highest-priority available resource (if the resource did           not provide a value for the <priority/> element, the server           SHOULD consider it to have provided a value of zero).  If two           or more available resources have the same priority, the           server MAY use some other rule (e.g., most recent connect           time, most recent activity time, or highest availability as           determined by some hierarchy of <show/> values) to choose           between them or MAY deliver the message to all such           resources.  However, the server MUST NOT deliver the stanza           to an available resource with a negative priority; if the           only available resource has a negative priority, the server           SHOULD handle the message as if there were no available           resources (defined below).  In addition, the server MUST NOT           rewrite the 'to' attribute (i.e., it MUST leave it as           <user@domain> rather than change it to <user@domain/           resource>).       2.  For presence stanzas other than those of type "probe", the           server MUST deliver the stanza to all available resources;           for presence probes, the server SHOULD reply based on the           rules defined in Presence Probes (Section 5.1.3).  In           addition, the server MUST NOT rewrite the 'to' attribute           (i.e., it MUST leave it as <user@domain> rather than change           it to <user@domain/resource>).       3.  For IQ stanzas, the server itself MUST reply on behalf of the           user with either an IQ result or an IQ error, and MUST NOT           deliver the IQ stanza to any of the available resources.           Specifically, if the semantics of the qualifying namespace           define a reply that the server can provide, the server MUST           reply to the stanza on behalf of the user; if not, the server           MUST reply with a <service-unavailable/> stanza error.   5.  Else if the JID is of the form <user@domain> and there are no       available resources associated with the user, how the stanza is       handled depends on the stanza type:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 86]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       1.  For presence stanzas of type "subscribe", "subscribed",           "unsubscribe", and "unsubscribed", the server MUST maintain a           record of the stanza and deliver the stanza at least once           (i.e., when the user next creates an available resource); in           addition, the server MUST continue to deliver presence           stanzas of type "subscribe" until the user either approves or           denies the subscription request (see also Presence           Subscriptions (Section 5.1.6)).       2.  For all other presence stanzas, the server SHOULD silently           ignore the stanza by not storing it for later delivery or           replying to it on behalf of the user.       3.  For message stanzas, the server MAY choose to store the           stanza on behalf of the user and deliver it when the user           next becomes available, or forward the message to the user           via some other means (e.g., to the user's email account).           However, if offline message storage or message forwarding is           not enabled, the server MUST return to the sender a           <service-unavailable/> stanza error.  (Note: Offline message           storage and message forwarding are not defined in XMPP, since           they are strictly a matter of implementation and service           provisioning.)       4.  For IQ stanzas, the server itself MUST reply on behalf of the           user with either an IQ result or an IQ error.  Specifically,           if the semantics of the qualifying namespace define a reply           that the server can provide, the server MUST reply to the           stanza on behalf of the user; if not, the server MUST reply           with a <service-unavailable/> stanza error.11.2.  Outbound Stanzas   If the hostname of the domain identifier portion of the address   contained in the 'to' attribute of an outbound stanza matches a   hostname of the server itself, the server MUST deliver the stanza to   a local entity according the rules for Inbound Stanzas (Section11.1).   If the hostname of the domain identifier portion of the address   contained in the 'to' attribute of an outbound stanza does not match   a hostname of the server itself, the server MUST attempt to route the   stanza to the foreign domain.  The recommended order of actions is as   follows:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 87]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   1.  First attempt to resolve the foreign hostname using an [SRV]       Service of "xmpp-server" and Proto of "tcp", resulting in       resource records such as "_xmpp-server._tcp.example.com.", as       specified in [XMPP-CORE].   2.  If the "xmpp-server" address record resolution fails, attempt to       resolve the "_im" or "_pres" [SRV] Service as specified in       [IMP-SRV], using the "_im" Service for <message/> stanzas and the       "_pres" Service for <presence/> stanzas (it is up to the       implementation how to handle <iq/> stanzas).  This will result in       one or more resolutions of the form "_im.<proto>.example.com." or       "_pres.<proto>.example.com.", where "<proto>" would be a label       registered in the Instant Messaging SRV Protocol Label registry       or the Presence SRV Protocol Label registry: either "_xmpp" for       an XMPP-aware domain or some other IANA-registered label (e.g.,       "_simple") for a non-XMPP-aware domain.   3.  If both SRV address record resolutions fail, attempt to perform a       normal IPv4/IPv6 address record resolution to determine the IP       address using the "xmpp-server" port of 5269 registered with the       IANA, as specified in [XMPP-CORE].   Administrators of server deployments are strongly encouraged to keep   the _im._xmpp, _pres._xmpp, and _xmpp._tcp SRV records properly   synchronized, since different implementations might perform the "_im"   and "_pres" lookups before the "xmpp-server" lookup.12.  IM and Presence Compliance Requirements   This section summarizes the specific aspects of the Extensible   Messaging and Presence Protocol that MUST be supported by instant   messaging and presence servers and clients in order to be considered   compliant implementations.  All such applications MUST comply with   the requirements specified in [XMPP-CORE].  The text in this section   specifies additional compliance requirements for instant messaging   and presence servers and clients; note well that the requirements   described here supplement but do not supersede the core requirements.   Note also that a server or client MAY support only presence or   instant messaging, and is not required to support both if only a   presence service or an instant messaging service is desired.12.1.  Servers   In addition to core server compliance requirements, an instant   messaging and presence server MUST additionally support the following   protocols:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 88]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   o  All server-related instant messaging and presence syntax and      semantics defined in this document, including presence broadcast      on behalf of clients, presence subscriptions, roster storage and      manipulation, privacy lists, and IM-specific routing and delivery      rules12.2.  Clients   In addition to core client compliance requirements, an instant   messaging and presence client MUST additionally support the following   protocols:   o  Generation and handling of the IM-specific semantics of XML      stanzas as defined by the XML schemas, including the 'type'      attribute of message and presence stanzas as well as their child      elements   o  All client-related instant messaging syntax and semantics defined      in this document, including presence subscriptions, roster      management, and privacy lists   o  End-to-end object encryption as defined in End-to-End Object      Encryption in the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol      (XMPP) [XMPP-E2E]   A client MUST also handle addresses that are encoded as "im:" URIs as   specified in [CPIM], and MAY do so by removing the "im:" scheme and   entrusting address resolution to the server as specified under   Outbound Stanzas (Section 11.2).13.  Internationalization Considerations   For internationalization considerations, refer to the relevant   section of [XMPP-CORE].14.  Security Considerations   Core security considerations for XMPP are defined in the relevant   section of [XMPP-CORE].   Additional considerations that apply only to instant messaging and   presence applications of XMPP are defined in several places within   this memo; specifically:Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 89]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   o  When a server processes an inbound stanza of any kind whose      intended recipient is a user associated with one of the server's      hostnames, the server MUST first apply any privacy lists (Section10) that are in force (see Server Rules for Handling XML Stanzas      (Section 11)).   o  When a server processes an inbound presence stanza of type "probe"      whose intended recipient is a user associated with one of the      server's hostnames, the server MUST NOT reveal the user's presence      information if the sender is an entity that is not authorized to      receive that information as determined by presence subscriptions      (see Client and Server Presence Responsibilities (Section 5.1)).   o  When a server processes an outbound presence stanza with no type      or of type "unavailable", it MUST follow the rules defined under      Client and Server Presence Responsibilities (Section 5.1) in order      to ensure that such presence information is not broadcasted to      entities that are not authorized to know such information.   o  When a server generates an error stanza in response to receiving a      stanza for a user who does not exist, the use of the      <service-unavailable/> error condition helps protect against      well-known dictionary attacks, since this is the same error      condition that is returned if, for instance, the namespace of an      IQ child element is not understood, or if offline message storage      or message forwarding is not enabled for a domain.15.  IANA Considerations   For a number of related IANA considerations, refer to the relevant   section of [XMPP-CORE].15.1.  XML Namespace Name for Session Data   A URN sub-namespace for session-related data in the Extensible   Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This   namespace name adheres to the format defined in The IETF XML Registry   [XML-REG].)   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session   Specification:RFC 3921   Description: This is the XML namespace name for session-related data      in the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as      defined byRFC 3921.   Registrant Contact: IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmppwg@jabber.org>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 90]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 200415.2.  Instant Messaging SRV Protocol Label Registration   Address Resolution for Instant Messaging and Presence [IMP-SRV]   defines an Instant Messaging SRV Protocol Label registry for   protocols that can provide services that conform to the "_im" SRV   Service label.  Because XMPP is one such protocol, the IANA registers   the "_xmpp" protocol label in the appropriate registry, as follows:   Protocol label: _xmpp   Specification:RFC 3921   Description: Instant messaging protocol label for the Extensible      Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as defined byRFC 3921.   Registrant Contact: IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmppwg@jabber.org>15.3.  Presence SRV Protocol Label Registration   Address Resolution for Instant Messaging and Presence [IMP-SRV]   defines a Presence SRV Protocol Label registry for protocols that can   provide services that conform to the "_pres" SRV Service label.   Because XMPP is one such protocol, the IANA registers the "_xmpp"   protocol label in the appropriate registry, as follows:   Protocol label: _xmpp   Specification:RFC 3921   Description: Presence protocol label for the Extensible Messaging and      Presence Protocol (XMPP) as defined byRFC 3921.   Registrant Contact: IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmppwg@jabber.org>16.  References16.1.  Normative References   [CPIM]      Peterson, J., "Common Profile for Instant Messaging               (CPIM)",RFC 3860, August 2004.   [IMP-REQS]  Day, M., Aggarwal, S., Mohr, G., and J. Vincent, "Instant               Messaging/Presence Protocol Requirements",RFC 2779,               February 2000.   [IMP-SRV]   Peterson, J., "Address Resolution for Instant Messaging               and Presence",RFC 3861, August 2004.   [SRV]       Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for               specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",RFC 2782,               February 2000.   [TERMS]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 91]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004   [XML]       Bray, T., Paoli, J., Sperberg-McQueen, C., and E. Maler,               "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (2nd ed)", W3C               REC-xml, October 2000, <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml>.   [XML-NAMES] Bray, T., Hollander, D., and A. Layman, "Namespaces in               XML", W3C REC-xml-names, January 1999,               <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names>.   [XMPP-CORE] Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence               Protocol (XMPP): Core",RFC 3920, October 2004.   [XMPP-E2E]  Saint-Andre, P., "End-to-End Object Encryption in the               Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)",RFC3923, October 2004.16.2.  Informative References   [IMP-MODEL] Day, M., Rosenberg, J., and H. Sugano, "A Model for               Presence and Instant Messaging",RFC 2778, February 2000.   [IRC]       Oikarinen, J. and D. Reed, "Internet Relay Chat               Protocol",RFC 1459, May 1993.   [JEP-0054]  Saint-Andre, P., "vcard-temp", JSF JEP 0054, March 2003.   [JEP-0077]  Saint-Andre, P., "In-Band Registration", JSF JEP 0077,               August 2004.   [JEP-0078]  Saint-Andre, P., "Non-SASL Authentication", JSF JEP 0078,               July 2004.   [JSF]       Jabber Software Foundation, "Jabber Software Foundation",               <http://www.jabber.org/>.   [VCARD]     Dawson, F. and T. Howes, "vCard MIME Directory Profile",RFC 2426, September 1998.   [XML-REG]   Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry",BCP 81,RFC 3688,               January 2004.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 92]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004Appendix A.  vCards   Sections3.1.3 and4.1.4 of [IMP-REQS] require that it be possible to   retrieve out-of-band contact information for other users (e.g.,   telephone number or email address).  An XML representation of the   vCard specification defined inRFC 2426 [VCARD] is in common use   within the Jabber community to provide such information but is out of   scope for XMPP (documentation of this protocol is contained in   [JEP-0054], published by the Jabber Software Foundation [JSF]).Appendix B.  XML Schemas   The following XML schemas are descriptive, not normative.  For   schemas defining the core features of XMPP, refer to [XMPP-CORE].B.1  jabber:client   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>   <xs:schema       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'       targetNamespace='jabber:client'       xmlns='jabber:client'       elementFormDefault='qualified'>     <xs:import namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     <xs:element name='message'>        <xs:complexType>           <xs:sequence>             <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>               <xs:element ref='subject'/>               <xs:element ref='body'/>               <xs:element ref='thread'/>             </xs:choice>             <xs:any     namespace='##other'                         minOccurs='0'                         maxOccurs='unbounded'/>             <xs:element ref='error'                         minOccurs='0'/>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 93]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004           </xs:sequence>           <xs:attribute name='from'                         type='xs:string'                         use='optional'/>           <xs:attribute name='id'                         type='xs:NMTOKEN'                         use='optional'/>           <xs:attribute name='to'                         type='xs:string'                         use='optional'/>           <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional' default='normal'>             <xs:simpleType>               <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>                 <xs:enumeration value='chat'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='error'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='groupchat'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='headline'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='normal'/>               </xs:restriction>             </xs:simpleType>           </xs:attribute>           <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>        </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='body'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='subject'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='thread' type='xs:NMTOKEN'/>     <xs:element name='presence'>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 94]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>             <xs:element ref='show'/>             <xs:element ref='status'/>             <xs:element ref='priority'/>           </xs:choice>           <xs:any     namespace='##other'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>           <xs:element ref='error'                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='from'                       type='xs:string'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='id'                       type='xs:NMTOKEN'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='to'                       type='xs:string'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='error'/>               <xs:enumeration value='probe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='subscribe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='subscribed'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unavailable'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unsubscribe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unsubscribed'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='show'>       <xs:simpleType>         <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>           <xs:enumeration value='away'/>           <xs:enumeration value='chat'/>           <xs:enumeration value='dnd'/>           <xs:enumeration value='xa'/>         </xs:restriction>       </xs:simpleType>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 95]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='status'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='priority' type='xs:byte'/>     <xs:element name='iq'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:any     namespace='##other'                       minOccurs='0'/>           <xs:element ref='error'                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='from'                       type='xs:string'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='id'                       type='xs:NMTOKEN'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='to'                       type='xs:string'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='required'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='error'/>               <xs:enumeration value='get'/>               <xs:enumeration value='result'/>               <xs:enumeration value='set'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='error'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence  xmlns:err='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 96]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004           <xs:group   ref='err:stanzaErrorGroup'/>           <xs:element ref='err:text'                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='code' type='xs:byte' use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='required'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='auth'/>               <xs:enumeration value='cancel'/>               <xs:enumeration value='continue'/>               <xs:enumeration value='modify'/>               <xs:enumeration value='wait'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>   </xs:schema>B.2  jabber:server   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>   <xs:schema       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'       targetNamespace='jabber:server'       xmlns='jabber:server'       elementFormDefault='qualified'>     <xs:import namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>     <xs:element name='message'>        <xs:complexType>           <xs:sequence>             <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>               <xs:element ref='subject'/>               <xs:element ref='body'/>               <xs:element ref='thread'/>             </xs:choice>             <xs:any     namespace='##other'                         minOccurs='0'                         maxOccurs='unbounded'/>             <xs:element ref='error'                         minOccurs='0'/>           </xs:sequence>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 97]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004           <xs:attribute name='from'                         type='xs:string'                         use='required'/>           <xs:attribute name='id'                         type='xs:NMTOKEN'                         use='optional'/>           <xs:attribute name='to'                         type='xs:string'                         use='required'/>           <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional' default='normal'>             <xs:simpleType>               <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>                 <xs:enumeration value='chat'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='error'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='groupchat'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='headline'/>                 <xs:enumeration value='normal'/>               </xs:restriction>             </xs:simpleType>           </xs:attribute>           <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>        </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='body'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='subject'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='thread' type='xs:NMTOKEN'/>     <xs:element name='presence'>       <xs:complexType>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 98]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004         <xs:sequence>           <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>             <xs:element ref='show'/>             <xs:element ref='status'/>             <xs:element ref='priority'/>           </xs:choice>           <xs:any     namespace='##other'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>           <xs:element ref='error'                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='from'                       type='xs:string'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='id'                       type='xs:NMTOKEN'                       use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='to'                       type='xs:string'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='error'/>               <xs:enumeration value='probe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='subscribe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='subscribed'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unavailable'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unsubscribe'/>               <xs:enumeration value='unsubscribed'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='show'>       <xs:simpleType>         <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>           <xs:enumeration value='away'/>           <xs:enumeration value='chat'/>           <xs:enumeration value='dnd'/>           <xs:enumeration value='xa'/>         </xs:restriction>       </xs:simpleType>     </xs:element>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                    [Page 99]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004     <xs:element name='status'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='priority' type='xs:byte'/>     <xs:element name='iq'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:any     namespace='##other'                       minOccurs='0'/>           <xs:element ref='error'                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='from'                       type='xs:string'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='id'                       type='xs:NMTOKEN'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='to'                       type='xs:string'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='required'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='error'/>               <xs:enumeration value='get'/>               <xs:enumeration value='result'/>               <xs:enumeration value='set'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='error'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence  xmlns:err='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'>           <xs:group   ref='err:stanzaErrorGroup'/>           <xs:element ref='err:text'Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 100]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004                       minOccurs='0'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='code' type='xs:byte' use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='required'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='auth'/>               <xs:enumeration value='cancel'/>               <xs:enumeration value='continue'/>               <xs:enumeration value='modify'/>               <xs:enumeration value='wait'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>   </xs:schema>B.3  session   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>   <xs:schema       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-session'       elementFormDefault='qualified'>     <xs:element name='session' type='empty'/>     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>         <xs:enumeration value=''/>       </xs:restriction>     </xs:simpleType>   </xs:schema>B.4  jabber:iq:privacy   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>   <xs:schema       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'       targetNamespace='jabber:iq:privacy'Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 101]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004       xmlns='jabber:iq:privacy'       elementFormDefault='qualified'>     <xs:element name='query'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:element ref='active'                       minOccurs='0'/>           <xs:element ref='default'                       minOccurs='0'/>           <xs:element ref='list'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>         </xs:sequence>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='active'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:NMTOKEN'>             <xs:attribute name='name'                           type='xs:string'                           use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='default'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:simpleContent>           <xs:extension base='xs:NMTOKEN'>             <xs:attribute name='name'                           type='xs:string'                           use='optional'/>           </xs:extension>         </xs:simpleContent>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='list'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:element ref='item'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>         </xs:sequence>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 102]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004         <xs:attribute name='name'                       type='xs:string'                       use='required'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='item'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:element name='iq'                       minOccurs='0'                       type='empty'/>           <xs:element name='message'                       minOccurs='0'                       type='empty'/>           <xs:element name='presence-in'                       minOccurs='0'                       type='empty'/>           <xs:element name='presence-out'                       minOccurs='0'                       type='empty'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='action' use='required'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='allow'/>               <xs:enumeration value='deny'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute name='order'                       type='xs:unsignedInt'                       use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='group'/>               <xs:enumeration value='jid'/>               <xs:enumeration value='subscription'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute name='value'                       type='xs:string'                       use='optional'/>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 103]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>         <xs:enumeration value=''/>       </xs:restriction>     </xs:simpleType>   </xs:schema>B.5  jabber:iq:roster   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>   <xs:schema       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'       targetNamespace='jabber:iq:roster'       xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'       elementFormDefault='qualified'>     <xs:element name='query'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:element ref='item'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>         </xs:sequence>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='item'>       <xs:complexType>         <xs:sequence>           <xs:element ref='group'                       minOccurs='0'                       maxOccurs='unbounded'/>         </xs:sequence>         <xs:attribute name='ask' use='optional'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>               <xs:enumeration value='subscribe'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>         <xs:attribute name='jid' type='xs:string' use='required'/>         <xs:attribute name='name' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>         <xs:attribute name='subscription' use='optional'>           <xs:simpleType>             <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 104]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004               <xs:enumeration value='both'/>               <xs:enumeration value='from'/>               <xs:enumeration value='none'/>               <xs:enumeration value='remove'/>               <xs:enumeration value='to'/>             </xs:restriction>           </xs:simpleType>         </xs:attribute>       </xs:complexType>     </xs:element>     <xs:element name='group' type='xs:string'/>   </xs:schema>Appendix C.  Differences Between Jabber IM/Presence Protocols and XMPP   This section is non-normative.   XMPP has been adapted from the protocols originally developed in the   Jabber open-source community, which can be thought of as "XMPP 0.9".   Because there exists a large installed base of Jabber implementations   and deployments, it may be helpful to specify the key differences   between the relevant Jabber protocols and XMPP in order to expedite   and encourage upgrades of those implementations and deployments to   XMPP.  This section summarizes the differences that relate   specifically to instant messaging and presence applications, while   the corresponding section of [XMPP-CORE] summarizes the differences   that relate to all XMPP applications.C.1  Session Establishment   The client-to-server authentication protocol developed in the Jabber   community assumed that every client is an IM client and therefore   initiated an IM session upon successful authentication and resource   binding, which are performed simultaneously (documentation of this   protocol is contained in [JEP-0078], published by the Jabber Software   Foundation [JSF]).  XMPP maintains a stricter separation between core   functionality and IM functionality; therefore, an IM session is not   created until the client specifically requests one using the protocol   defined under Session Establishment (Section 3).Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 105]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004C.2  Privacy Lists   The Jabber community began to define a protocol for communications   blocking (privacy lists) in late 2001, but that effort was deprecated   once the XMPP Working Group was formed.  Therefore the protocol   defined under Blocking Communication (Section 10) is the only such   protocol defined for use in the Jabber community.Contributors   Most of the core aspects of the Extensible Messaging and Presence   Protocol were developed originally within the Jabber open-source   community in 1999.  This community was founded by Jeremie Miller, who   released source code for the initial version of the jabberd server in   January 1999.  Major early contributors to the base protocol also   included Ryan Eatmon, Peter Millard, Thomas Muldowney, and Dave   Smith.  Work specific to instant messaging and presence by the XMPP   Working Group has concentrated especially on IM session establishment   and communication blocking (privacy lists); the session establishment   protocol was mainly developed by Rob Norris and Joe Hildebrand, and   the privacy lists protocol was originally contributed by Peter   Millard.Acknowledgements   Thanks are due to a number of individuals in addition to the   contributors listed.  Although it is difficult to provide a complete   list, the following individuals were particularly helpful in defining   the protocols or in commenting on the specifications in this memo:   Thomas Charron, Richard Dobson, Schuyler Heath, Jonathan Hogg, Craig   Kaes, Jacek Konieczny, Lisa Dusseault, Alexey Melnikov, Keith   Minkler, Julian Missig, Pete Resnick, Marshall Rose, Jean-Louis   Seguineau, Alexey Shchepin, Iain Shigeoka, and David Waite.  Thanks   also to members of the XMPP Working Group and the IETF community for   comments and feedback provided throughout the life of this memo.Author's Address   Peter Saint-Andre (editor)   Jabber Software Foundation   EMail: stpeter@jabber.orgSaint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 106]

RFC 3921                        XMPP IM                     October 2004Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/S HE   REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE   INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR   IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the IETF's procedures with respect to rights in IETF Documents can   be found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Saint-Andre                 Standards Track                   [Page 107]

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