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EXPERIMENTAL
Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)                            J. BufordRequest for Comments: 7019                           Avaya Labs ResearchCategory: Experimental                                   M. Kolberg, Ed.ISSN: 2070-1721                                   University of Stirling                                                          September 2013Application-Layer Multicast Extensionsto REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD)Abstract   We define a REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD) Usage for   Application-Layer Multicast (ALM) as well as a mapping to the RELOAD   experimental message type to support ALM.  The ALM Usage is intended   to support a variety of ALM control algorithms in an overlay-   independent way.  Two example algorithms are defined, based on Scribe   and P2PCast.   This document is a product of the Scalable Adaptive Multicast   Research Group (SAM RG).Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for examination, experimental implementation, and   evaluation.   This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This document is a product of the Internet Research Task   Force (IRTF).  The IRTF publishes the results of Internet-related   research and development activities.  These results might not be   suitable for deployment.  This RFC represents the consensus of the   Scalable Adaptive Multicast Research Group of the Internet Research   Task Force (IRTF).  Documents approved for publication by the IRSG   are not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; seeSection 2   of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7019.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................41.1. Requirements Language ......................................52. Definitions .....................................................52.1. Overlay Network ............................................52.2. Overlay Multicast ..........................................52.3. Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) ............................62.4. Any-Source Multicast (ASM) .................................62.5. Peer .......................................................63. Assumptions .....................................................63.1. Overlay ....................................................63.2. Overlay Multicast ..........................................73.3. RELOAD .....................................................73.4. NAT ........................................................73.5. Tree Topology ..............................................74. Architecture Extensions to RELOAD ...............................75. RELOAD ALM Usage ................................................96. ALM Tree Control Signaling ......................................97. ALM Messages Mapped to RELOAD ..................................117.1. Introduction ..............................................117.2. Tree Lifecycle Messages ...................................127.2.1. CreateALMTree ......................................127.2.2. CreateALMTreeResponse ..............................137.2.3. Join ...............................................137.2.4. JoinAccept (Join Response) .........................147.2.5. JoinReject (Join Response) .........................157.2.6. JoinConfirm ........................................157.2.7. JoinConfirmResponse ................................167.2.8. JoinDecline ........................................167.2.9. JoinDeclineResponse ................................167.2.10. Leave .............................................177.2.11. LeaveResponse .....................................177.2.12. Reform or Optimize Tree ...........................177.2.13. ReformResponse ....................................187.2.14. Heartbeat .........................................18Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20137.2.15. Heartbeat Response ................................187.2.16. NodeQuery .........................................197.2.17. NodeQueryResponse .................................197.2.18. Push ..............................................217.2.19. PushResponse ......................................228. Scribe Algorithm ...............................................228.1. Overview ..................................................228.2. Create ....................................................238.3. Join ......................................................248.4. Leave .....................................................248.5. JoinConfirm ...............................................248.6. JoinDecline ...............................................248.7. Multicast .................................................249. P2PCast Algorithm ..............................................259.1. Overview ..................................................259.2. Message Mapping ...........................................259.3. Create ....................................................269.4. Join ......................................................269.5. Leave .....................................................289.6. JoinConfirm ...............................................289.7. Multicast .................................................2810. Message Format ................................................2810.1. ALMHeader Definition .....................................3010.2. ALMMessageContents Definition ............................3110.3. Response Codes ...........................................3111. Examples ......................................................3211.1. Create Tree ..............................................3211.2. Join Tree ................................................3311.3. Leave Tree ...............................................3511.4. Push Data ................................................3512. Kind Definitions ..............................................3612.1. ALMTree Kind Definition ..................................3613. RELOAD Configuration File Extensions ..........................3714. IANA Considerations ...........................................3714.1. ALM Algorithm Types ......................................3714.2. Message Code Registration ................................3814.3. Error Code Registration ..................................3815. Security Considerations .......................................3916. Acknowledgements ..............................................4017. References ....................................................4017.1. Normative Reference ......................................4017.2. Informative References ...................................40Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20131.  Introduction   The concept of scalable adaptive multicast includes both scaling   properties and adaptability properties.  Scalability is intended to   cover:   o  large group size   o  large numbers of small groups   o  rate of group membership change   o  admission control for QoS   o  use with network-layer QoS mechanisms   o  varying degrees of reliability   o  trees connecting nodes over the global Internet   Adaptability includes   o  use of different control mechanisms for different multicast trees      depending on initial application parameters or application classes   o  changing multicast tree structure depending on changes in      application requirements, network conditions, and membership   Application-Layer Multicast (ALM) has been demonstrated to be a   viable multicast technology where native multicast isn't available.   Many ALM designs have been proposed.  This ALM Usage focuses on:   o  ALM implemented in RELOAD-based overlays   o  Support for a variety of ALM control algorithms   o  Providing a basis for defining a separate hybrid ALM RELOAD Usage   RELOAD [RELOAD] has an application extension mechanism in which a new   type of application defines a Usage.  A RELOAD Usage defines a set of   data types and rules for their use.  In addition, this document   describes additional message types and a new ALM algorithm plugin   architectural component.   This document represents the consensus of the SAM RG.  It was   repeatedly discussed within the research group, as well as with other   Application-Layer Multicast experts.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20131.1.  Requirements Language   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].2.  Definitions   We adopt the terminology defined in Section 3 of [RELOAD],   specifically the distinction between "node", "peer", and "client".2.1.  Overlay Network   Overlay network: An application-layer virtual or logical network with   addressable end points that provides connectivity, routing, and   messaging between end points.  Overlay networks are frequently used   as a substrate for deploying new network services or for providing a   routing topology not available from the underlying physical network.   Many peer-to-peer systems are overlay networks that run on top of the   Internet.  In Figure 1, "P" indicates overlay peers, and peers are   connected in a logical address space.  The links shown in the figure   represent predecessor/successor links.  Depending on the overlay   routing model, additional or different links may be present.                           P    P    P   P     P                         ..+....+....+...+.....+...                        .                          +P                      P+                            .                        .                          +P                         ..+....+....+...+.....+...                           P    P    P   P     P                     Figure 1: Overlay Network Example2.2.  Overlay Multicast   Overlay Multicast (OM): Hosts participating in a multicast session   form an overlay network and utilize unicast connections among pairs   of hosts for data dissemination [BUFORD2009] [KOLBERG2010]   [BUFORD2008].  The hosts in overlay multicast exclusively handle   group management, routing, and tree construction, without any support   from Internet routers.  This is also commonly known as Application-   Layer Multicast (ALM) or End-System Multicast (ESM).  We call systems   that use proxies connected in an overlay multicast backbone "proxied   overlay multicast" or POM.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20132.3.  Source-Specific Multicast (SSM)   SSM tree: The creator of the tree is the source.  It sends data   messages to the tree root that are forwarded down the tree.2.4.  Any-Source Multicast (ASM)   ASM tree: A node sending a data message sends the message to its   parent and its children.  Each node receiving a data message from one   edge forwards it to the remaining tree edges to which it is   connected.2.5.  Peer   Peer: An autonomous end system that is connected to the physical   network and participates in and contributes resources to overlay   construction, routing, and maintenance.  Some peers may also perform   additional roles such as connection relays, super nodes, NAT   traversal assistance, and data storage.3.  Assumptions3.1.  Overlay   Peers connect in a large-scale overlay, which may be used for a   variety of peer-to-peer applications in addition to multicast   sessions.  Peers may assume additional roles in the overlay beyond   participation in the overlay and in multicast trees.  We assume a   single-structured overlay routing algorithm is used.  Any of a   variety of multi-hop, one-hop, or variable-hop overlay algorithms   could be used.   Castro, et al. [CASTRO2003] compared multi-hop overlays and found   that tree-based construction in a single overlay outperformed using   separate overlays for each multicast session.  We use a single   overlay rather than separate overlays per multicast session.   An overlay multicast algorithm may leverage the overlay's mechanism   for maintaining overlay state in the face of churn.  For example, a   peer may store a number of DHT (Distributed Hash Table) entries.   When the peer gracefully leaves the overlay, it transfers those   entries to the nearest peer.  When another peer joins that is closer   to some of the entries than the current peer that holds those   entries, than those entries are migrated.  Overlay churn affects   multicast trees as well; remedies include automatic migration of the   tree state and automatic rejoin operations for dislocated child   nodes.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20133.2.  Overlay Multicast   The overlay supports concurrent multiple multicast trees.  The limit   on the number of concurrent trees depends on peer and network   resources and is not an intrinsic property of the overlay.3.3.  RELOAD   We use RELOAD [RELOAD] as the peer-to-peer (P2P) overlay for data   storage and the mechanism by which the peers interconnect and route   messages.  RELOAD is a generic P2P overlay, and application support   is defined by profiles called Usages.3.4.  NAT   Some nodes in the overlay may be in a private address space and   behind firewalls.  We use the RELOAD mechanisms for NAT traversal.   We permit clients to be leaf nodes in an ALM tree.3.5.  Tree Topology   All tree control messages are routed in the overlay.  Two types of   data or media topologies are envisioned: 1) tree edges are paths in   the overlay, and 2) tree edges are direct connections between a   parent and child peer in the tree, formed using the RELOAD AppAttach   method.4.  Architecture Extensions to RELOAD   There are two changes as depicted in Figure 2.  New ALM messages are   mapped to RELOAD Message Transport using the RELOAD experimental   message type.  A plugin for ALM algorithms handles the ALM state and   control.  The ALM algorithm is under control of the application via   the Group API [COMMON-API].Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013                                                       +---------+                                                       |Group API|                                                       +---------+                                                            |          ------------------- Application  ------------------------              +-------+                                     |              | ALM   |                                     |              | Usage |                                     |              +-------+                                     |           -------------- Messaging Service Boundary --------------                                                            |             +--------+      +-----------+---------+    +---------+             | Storage|<---> | RELOAD    | ALM     |<-->| ALM Alg |             +--------+      | Message   | Messages|    +---------+                     ^       | Transport |         |                     |       +-----------+---------+                     v          |    |                    +-------------+  |                    | Topology    |  |                    | Plugin      |  |                    +-------------+  |                       ^             |                       v             v                    +-------------------+                    | Forwarding &      |                    | Link Management   |                    +-------------------+           ---------- Overlay Link Service Boundary --------------                 Figure 2: RELOAD Architecture Extensions   The ALM components interact with RELOAD as follows:   o  ALM uses the RELOAD data storage functionality to store an ALMTree      instance when a new ALM tree is created in the overlay and to      retrieve ALMTree instance(s) for existing ALM trees.   o  ALM applications and management tools may use the RELOAD data      storage functionality to store diagnostic information about the      operation of trees, including average number of trees, delay from      source to leaf nodes, bandwidth use, and packet loss rate.  In      addition, diagnostic information may include statistics specific      to the tree root or to any node in the tree.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20135.  RELOAD ALM Usage   Applications of RELOAD are restricted in the data types that can be   stored in the DHT.  The profile of accepted data types for an   application is referred to as a Usage.  RELOAD is designed so that   new applications can easily define new Usages.  New RELOAD Usages are   needed for multicast applications since the data types in base RELOAD   and existing Usages are not sufficient.   We define an ALM Usage in RELOAD.  This ALM Usage is sufficient for   applications that require ALM functionality in the overlay.  Figure 2   shows the internal structure of the ALM Usage.  This contains the   Group API ([COMMON-API]), an ALM algorithm plugin (e.g., Scribe), and   the ALM messages that are then sent out to the RELOAD network.   A RELOAD Usage is required [RELOAD] to define the following:   o  Kind-ID and code points   o  data structures for each Kind   o  access control rules for each Kind   o  the Resource Name used to hash to the Resource ID that determines      where the Kind is stored   o  address restoration after recovery from a network partition (to      form a single coherent network)   o  the types of connections that can be initiated using AppConnect   An ALM group_id is a RELOAD node_id.  The owner of an ALM group   creates a RELOAD node_id as specified in [RELOAD].  This means that a   group_id is used as a RELOAD Destination for overlay routing   purposes.6.  ALM Tree Control Signaling   Peers use the overlay to support ALM operations such as:   o  CreateALMTree   o  Join   o  Leave   o  Reform or optimize treeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   There are a variety of algorithms for peers to form multicast trees   in the overlay.  The approach presented here permits multiple such   algorithms to be supported in the overlay since different algorithms   may be more suitable for certain application requirements; the   approach also supports experimentation.  Therefore, overlay messaging   corresponding to the set of overlay multicast operations MUST carry   algorithm identification information.   For example, for small groups, the join point might be directly   assigned by the rendezvous point, while for large trees the Join   request might be propagated down the tree with candidate parents   forwarding their position directly to the new node.   Here is a simplistic notation for forming a multicast tree in the   overlay.  Its main advantage is the use of the overlay for routing   both control and data messages.  The group creator does not have to   be the root of the tree or even in the tree.  It does not consider   per-node load, admission control, or alternative paths.  After the   creation of a tree, the group_id is expected to be advertised or   distributed out of band, perhaps by publishing in the DHT.   Similarly, joining peers will discover the group_id out of band,   perhaps by a lookup in the tree.   As stated earlier, multiple algorithms will coexist in the overlay.   1.  Peer that initiates multicast group:       group_id = create();  // Allocate a unique group_id.                             // The root is the nearest                             // peer in the overlay.   2.  Any joining peer:       joinTree(group_id); // sends "join group_id" message       The overlay routes the Join request using the overlay routing       mechanism toward the peer with the nearest ID to the group_id.       This peer is the root.  Peers on the path to the root join the       tree as forwarding points.   3.  Leave Tree:       leaveTree(group_id); // removes this node from the treeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013       Propagates a Leave request to each child node and to the parent       node.  If the parent node is a forwarding node and this is its       last child, then it propagates a Leave request to its parent.  A       child node receiving a Leave request from a parent sends a Join       request to the group_id.   4.  Message forwarding:       multicastMsg(group_id, msg);       For message forwarding, both Any-Source Multicast (ASM) and       Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) approaches may be used.7.  ALM Messages Mapped to RELOAD7.1.  Introduction   In this document, we define messages for overlay multicast tree   creation, using an existing protocol (RELOAD) in the P2P-SIP WG   [RELOAD] for a universal structured peer-to-peer overlay protocol.   RELOAD provides the mechanism to support a number of overlay   topologies.  Hence, the overlay multicast framework defined in this   document can be used with P2P-SIP and makes the Scalable Adaptive   Multicast (SAM) framework overlay agnostic.   As discussed in the SAM requirements document [SAM-GENERIC], there   are a variety of ALM tree formation and tree maintenance algorithms.   The intent of this specification is to be algorithm agnostic, similar   to how RELOAD is overlay algorithm agnostic.  We assume that all   control messages are propagated using overlay routed messages.   The message types needed for ALM behavior are divided into the   following categories:   o  Tree lifecycle (Create, Join, Leave, Reform, Heartbeat)   o  Peer region and multicast properties   The message codes are defined inSection 14.2 of this document.   Messages are mapped to the RELOAD experimental message type.   In the following sections, the protocol messages as mapped to RELOAD   are discussed.  Detailed example message flows are provided inSection 11.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   In the following descriptions, we use the datatype Dictionary, which   is a set of opaque values indexed by an opaque key with one value for   each key.  A single dictionary entry is represented by a   DictionaryEntry as defined inSection 7.2.3 of the RELOAD document   [RELOAD].  The Dictionary datatype is defined as follows:   struct {     DictionaryEntry elements<0..2^16-1>;     } Dictionary;7.2.  Tree Lifecycle Messages   Peers use the overlay to transmit ALM operations defined in this   section.7.2.1.  CreateALMTree   A new ALM tree is created in the overlay with the identity specified   by group_id.  The common interpretation in a DHT-based overlay of   group_id is that the peer with a peer_id closest to and less than the   group_id is the root of the tree.  However, other overlay types are   supported.  The tree has no children at the time it is created.   The group_id is generated from a well-known session key to be used by   other peers to address the multicast tree in the overlay.  The   generation of the group_id from the session_key MUST be done using   the overlay's ID-generation mechanism.      struct {        node_id peer_id;        opaque session_key<0..2^32-1>;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } ALMTree;   peer_id: overlay address of the peer that creates the multicast tree.   session_key: a well-known string that when hashed using the overlay's   ID-generation algorithm produces the group_id.   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree.   options: name-value list of properties to be associated with the   tree, such as the maximum size of the tree, restrictions on peers   joining the tree, latency constraints, preference for distributed or   centralized tree formation and maintenance, and Heartbeat interval.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   Tree creation is subject to access control since it involves a Store   operation.  The NODE-MATCH access policy defined in Section 7.3.2 of   [RELOAD] is used.   A successful CreateALMTree causes an ALMTree structure to be stored   in the overlay at the node G responsible for the group_id.  This node   G performs the RELOAD-defined StoreReq operation as a side effect of   performing the CreateALMTree.  If the StoreReq fails, the   CreateALMTree fails too.   After a successful CreateALMTree, peers can use the RELOAD Fetch   method to retrieve the ALMTree struct at address group_id.  The   ALMTree Kind is defined inSection 12.1.7.2.2.  CreateALMTreeResponse   After receiving a CreateALMTree message from node S, the peer sends a   CreateALMTreeResponse to node S.        struct {          Dictionary options;        } CreateALMTreeResponse;   options: A node may provide algorithm-dependent parameters about the   created tree to the requesting node.7.2.3.  Join   Join causes the distributed algorithm for peer join of a specific ALM   group to be invoked.  The definition of the Join request is shown   below.  If successful, the joining peer is notified of one or more   candidate parent peers in one or more JoinAccept messages.  The   particular ALM join algorithm is not specified in this protocol.      struct {        node_id peer_id;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } Join;   peer_id: overlay address of joining/leaving peer   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   options: name-value list of options proposed by joining peerBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   RELOAD is a request-response protocol.  Consequently, the messages   JoinAccept and JoinReject (defined below) are matching responses for   Join.  If JoinReject is received, then no further action on this   request is carried out.  If JoinAccept is received, then either a   JoinConfirm or a JoinDecline message (see below) is sent.  The   matching response for JoinConfirm is JoinConfirmResponse.  The   matching response for JoinDecline is JoinDeclineResponse.   The following list shows the matching request-responses according to   the request-response mechanism defined in [RELOAD].      Join -- JoinAccept: Node C sends a Join request to node P.  If      node P accepts, it responds with JoinAccept.      Join -- JoinReject: Node C sends a Join request to node P.  If      node P does not accept the Join request, it responds with      JoinReject.      JoinConfirm -- JoinConfirmResponse: If node P sent node C a      JoinAccept and node C confirms with a JoinConfirm request, then      node P responds with a JoinConfirmResponse.      JoinDecline -- JoinDeclineResponse: If node P sent node C a      JoinAccept and node C declines with a JoinDecline request, then      node P responds with a JoinDeclineResponse.   Thus, Join, JoinConfirm, and JoinDecline are treated as requests as   defined in RELOAD, are mapped to the RELOAD exp_a_req message, and   are therefore retransmitted until either a retry limit is reached or   a matching response received.  JoinAccept, JoinReject,   JoinConfirmResponse, and JoinDeclineResponse are treated as message   responses as defined above and are mapped to the RELOAD exp_a_ans   message.   The Join behavior can be described as follows:   if(checkAccept(msg)) {       recvJoins.add(msg.source, msg.group_id)       SEND(JoinAccept(node_id, msg.source, msg.group_id))   }7.2.4.  JoinAccept (Join Response)   JoinAccept tells the requesting joining peer that the indicated peer   is available to act as its parent in the ALM tree specified by   group_id, with the corresponding options specified.  A peer MAY   receive more than one JoinAccept from different candidate parent   peers in the group_id tree.  The peer accepts a peer as parent usingBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   a JoinConfirm message.  A JoinAccept that receives neither a   JoinConfirm nor JoinDecline message MUST expire.  RELOAD   implementations are able to read a local configuration file for   settings.  It is assumed that this file contains the timeout value to   be used.      struct {        node_id parent_peer_id;        node_id child_peer_id;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } JoinAccept;   parent_peer_id: overlay address of a peer that accepts the joining   peer   child_peer_id: overlay address of joining peer   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   options: name-value list of options accepted by parent peer7.2.5.  JoinReject (Join Response)   A peer receiving a Join request responds with a JoinReject response   to indicate the request is rejected.7.2.6.  JoinConfirm   A peer receiving a JoinAccept message that it wishes to accept MUST   explicitly accept it using a JoinConfirm message before the   expiration of a timer for the JoinAccept message.  The joining peer   MUST include only those options from the JoinAccept that it also   accepts, completing the negotiation of options between the two peers.      struct {        node_id child_peer_id;        node_id parent_peer_id;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } JoinConfirm;   child_peer_id: overlay address of joining peer that is a child of the   parent peer   parent_peer_id: overlay address of the peer that is the parent of the   joining peerBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   options: name-value list of options accepted by both peers   The JoinConfirm message behavior is described below:   if(recvJoins.contains(msg.source,msg.group_id)){      if !(groups.contains(msg.group_id)) {         groups.add(msg.group_id)         SEND(msg,msg.group_id)      }      groups[msg.group_id].children.add(msg.source)      recvJoins.del(msg.source, msg.group_id)   }7.2.7.  JoinConfirmResponse   A peer receiving a JoinConfirm message responds with a   JoinConfirmResponse message.7.2.8.  JoinDecline   A peer receiving a JoinAccept message that it does not wish to accept   MAY explicitly decline it using a JoinDecline message.      struct {        node_id peer_id;        node_id parent_peer_id;        node_id group_id;      } JoinDecline;   peer_id: overlay address of joining peer that declines the JoinAccept   parent_peer_id: overlay address of the peer that issued a JoinAccept   to this peer   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   The behavior of the JoinDecline message is described as follows:   if(recvJoins.contains(msg.source,msg.group_id))      recvJoins.del(msg.source, msg.group_id)7.2.9.  JoinDeclineResponse   A peer receiving a JoinConfirm message responds with a   JoinDeclineResponse message.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20137.2.10.  Leave   A peer that is part of an ALM tree identified by group_id that   intends to detach from either a child or parent peer SHOULD send a   Leave request to the peer from which it wishes to detach.  A peer   receiving a Leave request from a peer that is neither in its parent   nor child lists SHOULD ignore the message.      struct {        node_id peer_id;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } Leave;   peer_id: overlay address of leaving peer   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   options: name-value list of options   The behavior of the Leave request can be described as:   groups[msg.group_id].children.remove(msg.source)   if (groups[msg.group].children = 0)         SEND(msg,groups[msg.group_id].parent)7.2.11.  LeaveResponse   A peer receiving a Leave request responds with a LeaveResponse   message.7.2.12.  Reform or Optimize Tree   This triggers a reorganization of either the entire tree or only a   subtree.  It MAY include hints to specific peers of recommended   parent or child peers to which to reconnect.  A peer receiving this   message MAY ignore it, MAY propagate it to other peers in its   subtree, and MAY invoke local algorithms for selecting preferred   parent and/or child peers.      struct {        node_id group_id;        node_id peer_id;        Dictionary options;      } Reform;   group_id: overlay address of the root of the treeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   peer_id: if omitted, then the tree is reorganized starting from the   root; otherwise, it is reorganized only at the subtree identified by   peer_id.   options: name-value list of options7.2.13.  ReformResponse   A peer receiving a Reform message responds with a ReformResponse.      struct {        Dictionary options;      } ReformResponse;   options: algorithm-dependent information about the results of the   Reform operation7.2.14.  Heartbeat   A child node signals to its adjacent parent nodes in the tree that it   is alive.  If a parent node does not receive a Heartbeat message   within N Heartbeat time intervals, it MUST treat this as an explicit   Leave request from the unresponsive peer.  N is configurable.  RELOAD   implementations are able to read a local configuration file for   settings.  It is assumed that this file contains the value for N to   be used.      struct {        node_id peer_id_src;        node_id peer_id_dst;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } Heartbeat;   peer_id_src: source of Heartbeat   peer_id_dst: destination of Heartbeat   group_id: overlay address of the root of the tree   options: an algorithm may use the Heartbeat message to provide state   information to adjacent nodes in the treeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20137.2.15.  Heartbeat Response   A parent node responds with a HeartbeatResponse to a Heartbeat from a   child node indicating that it has received the Heartbeat message.7.2.16.  NodeQuery   The NodeQuery message is used to obtain information about the state   and performance of the tree on a per-node basis.  A set of nodes   could be queried to construct a centralized view of the multicast   trees, similar to a web crawler.        struct {          node_id peer_id_src;          node_id peer_id_dst;        } NodeQuery;   peer_id_src: source of query   peer_id_dst: destination of query7.2.17.  NodeQueryResponse   The response to a NodeQuery message contains a NodeStatistics   instance for this node.   public struct {      uint32        node_lifetime;      uint32        total_number_trees;      uint16        number_algorithms_supported;      uint8         algorithms_supported[32];      TreeData      max_tree_data;      uint16        number_active_trees;      TreeData      tree_data<0..2^8-1>;      ImplementationInfo impl_info;   }  NodeStatistics;      node_lifetime: time the node has been alive in seconds since last      restart      total_number_trees: total number of trees this node has been part      of during the node lifetime      number_algorithms_supported: value between 0..2^16-1 corresponding      to the number of algorithms supported      algorithms_supported: list of algorithms, each byte encoded using      the corresponding algorithm codeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013      max_tree_data: data about tree with largest number of nodes that      this node was part of.  NodeQuery can be used to crawl all the      nodes in an ALM tree to fill this field.  This is intended to      support monitoring, algorithm design, and general experimentation      with ALM in RELOAD.      number_active_trees: current number of trees that the node is part      of      tree_data: details of each active tree; the number of such is      specified by number_active_trees      impl_info: information about the implementation of this Usage   public struct {     uint32       tree_id;     uint8        algorithm;     node_id      tree_root;     uint8        number_parents;     node_id      parent<0..2^8-1>;     uint16       number_child_nodes;     node_id      children<0..2^16-1>;     uint32       path_length_to_root;     uint32       path_delay_to_root;     uint32       path_delay_to_child;   } TreeData;      tree_id: the ID of the tree      algorithm: code identifying the multicast algorithm used by this      tree      tree_root: node_id of tree root, or 0 if unknown      number_parents: 0 .. 2^8-1 indicates number of parent nodes for      this node      parent: the RELOAD node_id of each parent node      number_child_nodes: 0..2^16-1 indicates number of children      children: the RELOAD node_id of each child node      path_length_to_root: number of overlay hops to the root of the      tree      path_delay_to_root: RTT in milliseconds to root nodeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013      path_delay_to_child: last measured RTT in milliseconds to child      node with largest RTT   public struct {     uint32       join_confirm_timeout;     uint32       heartbeat_interval;     uint32       heartbeat_response_timeout;     uint16       info_length;     uint8        info<0..2^16-1>;   } ImplementationInfo;      join_confirm_timeout: The default time for      JoinConfirm/JoinDecline, intended to provide sufficient time for a      Join request to receive all responses and confirm the best choice.      Default value is 5000 msec.  An implementation can change this      value.      heartbeat_interval: The default Heartbeat interval is 2000 msec.      Different interoperating implementations could use different      intervals.      heartbeat_response_timeout: The default Heartbeat timeout is 5000      msec and is the max time between Heartbeat reports from an      adjacent node in the tree at which point the Heartbeat is missed.      info_length: length of the info field      info: implementation-specific information, such as name of      implementation, build version, and implementation-specific      featuresBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20137.2.18.  Push   A peer sends arbitrary multicast data to other peers in the tree.   Nodes in the tree forward this message to adjacent nodes in the tree   in an algorithm-dependent way.      struct {        node_id group_id;        uint8  priority;        uint32 length;        uint8  data<0..2^32-1>;      } Push;   group_id: overlay address of root of the ALM tree   priority: the relative priority of the message; highest priority is   255.  A node may ignore this field.   length: length of the data field in bytes   data: the data   In pseudocode, the behavior of Push can be described as:   foreach(groups[msg.group_id].children as node_id)        SEND(msg,node_id)   if memberOf(msg.group_id)        invokeMessageHandler(msg.group_id, msg)7.2.19.  PushResponse   After receiving a Push message from node S, the receiving peer sends   a PushResponse to node S.      struct {        Dictionary options;      } PushResponse;   options: A node may provide feedback to the sender about previous   Push messages in some window, for example, the last N Push messages.   The feedback could include, for each Push message received, the   number of adjacent nodes that were forwarded the Push message and the   number of adjacent nodes from which a PushResponse was received.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20138.  Scribe Algorithm8.1.  Overview   Figure 3 shows a mapping between RELOAD ALM messages (as defined inSection 5 of this document) and Scribe messages as defined in   [CASTRO2002].              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | Section |RELOAD ALM Message | Scribe Message  |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.1   | CreateALMTree     | Create          |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.3   | Join              | Join            |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.4   | JoinAccept        |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.6   | JoinConfirm       |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.8   | JoinDecline       |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.10  | Leave             | Leave           |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.12  | Reform            |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.14  | Heartbeat         |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.16  | NodeQuery         |                 |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              | 7.2.18  | Push              | Multicast       |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              |         | Note 1            | deliver         |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              |         | Note 1            | forward         |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              |         | Note 1            | route           |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+              |         | Note 1            | send            |              +---------+-------------------+-----------------+                   Figure 3: Mapping to Scribe Messages   Note 1: These Scribe messages are handled by RELOAD messages.   The following sections describe the Scribe algorithm in more detail.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20138.2.  Create   This message will create a group with group_id.  This message MUST be   delivered to the node whose node_id is closest to the group_id.  This   node becomes the rendezvous point and root for the new multicast   tree.  Groups MAY have multiple sources of multicast messages.8.3.  Join   To join a multicast tree, a node SHOULD send a Join request with the   group_id as the key.  This message gets routed by the overlay to the   rendezvous point of the tree.  If an intermediate node is already a   forwarder for this tree, it SHOULD add the joining node as a child.   Otherwise, the node SHOULD create a child table for the group and add   the joining node.  It SHOULD then send the Join request towards the   rendezvous point terminating the Join request from the child.   To adapt the Scribe algorithm to the ALM Usage proposed here, after a   Join request is accepted, a JoinAccept message MUST be returned to   the joining node.8.4.  Leave   When leaving a multicast group, a node SHOULD change its local state   to indicate that it left the group.  If the node has no children in   its table, it MUST send a Leave request to its parent, from where it   SHOULD travel up the multicast tree and stop at a node that still has   children remaining after removing the leaving node.8.5.  JoinConfirm   This message is not part of the Scribe protocol but is required by   the basic protocol proposed in this document.  Thus, the Usage MUST   send this message to confirm a joining node accepting its parent   node.8.6.  JoinDecline   Like JoinConfirm, this message is not part of the Scribe protocol.   Thus, the Usage MUST send this message if a peer receiving a   JoinAccept message wishes to decline it.8.7.  Multicast   A message to be multicast to a group MUST be sent to the rendezvous   node from where it is forwarded down the tree.  If a node is a member   of the tree rather than just a forwarder, it SHOULD pass the   multicast data up to the application.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20139.  P2PCast Algorithm9.1.  Overview   P2PCast [P2PCAST] creates a forest of related trees to increase load   balancing.  P2PCast is independent of the underlying P2P substrate.   Its goals and approach are similar to SplitStream [SPLITSTREAM]   (which assumes Pastry as the P2P overlay).  In P2PCast, the content   provider splits the stream of data into f stripes.  Each tree in the   forest of multicast trees is an (almost) full tree of arity f.  These   trees are conceptually separate: every node of the system appears   once in each tree, with the content provider being the source in all   of them.  To ensure that each peer contributes as much bandwidth as   it receives, every node is a leaf in all the trees except for one, in   which the node will serve as an internal node (proper tree of this   node).  To reduce the complexity of the discussion that follows, the   remainder of this section will assume that f = 2.  However, the   algorithm scales for any number f.   P2PCast distinguishes the following types of nodes:   o  Incomplete Node: A node with less than f children in its proper      stripe   o  Only-Child Node: A node whose parent (in any multicast tree) is an      incomplete node   o  Complete Node: A node with exactly f children in its proper stripe   o  Special Node: A single node that is a leaf in all multicast trees      of the forestBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 25]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20139.2.  Message Mapping   Figure 4 shows a mapping between RELOAD ALM messages (as defined inSection 5 of this document) and P2PCast messages as defined in   [P2PCAST].               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | Section |RELOAD ALM Message | P2PCast Message |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.1   | CreateALMTree     | Create          |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.3   | Join              | Join            |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.4   | JoinAccept        |                 |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.6   | JoinConfirm       |                 |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.8   | JoinDecline       |                 |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.10  | Leave             | Leave           |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.12  | Reform            | Takeon          |               |         |                   | Substitute      |               |         |                   | Search          |               |         |                   | Replace         |               |         |                   | Direct          |               |         |                   | Update          |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.14  | Heartbeat         |                 |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.16  | NodeQuery         |                 |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+               | 7.2.18  | Push              | Multicast       |               +---------+-------------------+-----------------+                   Figure 4: Mapping to P2PCast Messages   The following sections describe the mapping of the P2PCast messages   in more detail.9.3.  Create   This message will create a group with group_id.  This message MUST be   delivered to the node whose node_id is closest to the group_id.  This   node becomes the rendezvous point and root for the new multicast   tree.  The rendezvous point will maintain f subtrees.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 26]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 20139.4.  Join   To join a multicast tree, a joining node N MUST send a Join request   to a random node A already part of the tree.  Depending on the type   of A, the joining algorithm continues as follows:   o  Incomplete Node: Node A will arbitrarily select for which tree it      wants to serve as an internal node and adopt N in that tree.  In      the other tree, node N will adopt node A as a child (taking node      A's place in the tree), thus becoming an internal node in the      stripe that node A didn't choose.   o  Only-Child Node: As this node has a parent that is an incomplete      node, the joining node will be redirected to the parent node and      will handle the request as detailed above.   o  Complete Node: The contacted node A must be a leaf in the other      tree.  If node A is a leaf node in Stripe 1, node N will become an      internal node in Stripe 1, taking the place of node A and adopting      it at the same time.  To find a place for itself in the other      stripe, node N starts a random walk down the subtree rooted at the      sibling of node A (if node A is the root and thus does not have      siblings, node N is sent directly to a leaf in that tree), which      ends as soon as node N finds an incomplete node or a leaf.  In      this case, node N is adopted by the incomplete node.   o  Special Node: as this node is a leaf in all subtrees, the joining      node MAY adopt the node in one tree and become a child in the      other.   P2PCast uses defined messages for communication between nodes during   reorganization.  To use P2PCast in this context, these messages are   encapsulated by the message type Reform.  In doing so, the P2PCast   message is to be included in the options parameter of Reform.  The   following reorganization messages are defined by P2PCast:      Takeon: To take another peer as a child      Substitute: To take the place of a child of some peer      Search: To obtain the child of a node in a particular stripe      Replace: Different from Substitute in that the calling node that      makes a node its child sheds off a random child      Direct: To direct a node to its would-be parent      Update: A node sends its updated state to its childrenBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 27]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   To adapt the P2PCast algorithm to the ALM Usage proposed here, after   a Join request is accepted, a JoinAccept message MUST be returned to   the joining node (one for every subtree).9.5.  Leave   When leaving a multicast group, a node will change its local state to   indicate that it left the group.  Disregarding the case where the   leaving node is the root of the tree, the leaving node must be   complete or incomplete in its proper tree.  In the other trees, the   node is a leaf and can just disappear by notifying its parent.  For   the proper tree, if the node is incomplete, it is replaced by its   child.  However, if the node is complete, a gap is created that is   filled by a random child.  If this child is incomplete, it can simply   fill the gap.  However, if it is complete, it needs to shed a random   child.  This child is directed to its sibling, which sheds a random   child.  This process ripples down the tree until the next-to-last   level is reached.  The shed node is then taken as a child by the   parent of the deleted node in the other stripe.   Again, for the reorganization of the tree, the Reform message type is   used as defined in the previous section.9.6.  JoinConfirm   This message is not part of the P2PCast protocol but is required by   the basic protocol defined in this document.  Thus, the Usage MUST   send this message to confirm a joining node accepting its parent   node.  As with Join and JoinAccept, this MUST be carried out for   every subtree.9.7.  Multicast   A message to be multicast to a group MUST be sent to the rendezvous   node from where it is forwarded down the tree by being split into k   stripes.  Each stripe is then sent via a subtree.  If a receiving   node is a member of the tree rather than just a forwarder, it MAY   pass the multicast data up to the application.10.  Message Format   All messages are mapped to the RELOAD experimental message type.  The   mapping is shown in Figure 5.  The message codes are listed inSection 14.2.  The format of the body of a message is provided in   [RELOAD].Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 28]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Message                 |RELOAD Code Point |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | CreateALMTree           | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | CreateALMTreeResponse   | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Join                    | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinAccept              | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinReject              | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinConfirm             | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinConfirmResponse     | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinDecline             | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | JoinDeclineResponse     | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Leave                   | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | LeaveResponse           | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Reform                  | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | ReformResponse          | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Heartbeat               | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | HeartbeatResponse       | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | NodeQuery               | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | NodeQueryResponse       | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | Push                    | exp_a_req        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                | PushResponse            | exp_a_ans        |                +-------------------------+------------------+                   Figure 5: RELOAD Message Code MappingBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 29]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   For Data Kind-IDs, the RELOAD specification [RELOAD] states: "Code   points in the range 0xF0000001 to 0xFFFFFFFE are reserved for private   use".  ALM Usage Kind-IDs are defined in the private use range.   All ALM Usage messages map to the RELOAD Message Extension mechanism.   Code points for the Kinds defined in this document MUST NOT conflict   with any defined code points for RELOAD.  RELOAD defines exp_a_req   and exp_a_ans for experimental purposes.  This specification uses   only these message types for all ALM messages.  RELOAD defines the   MessageContents data structure.  The ALM mapping uses the fields as   follows:   o  message_code: exp_a_req for requests and exp_a_ans for responses   o  message_body: contains one instance of ALMHeader followed by one      instance of ALMMessageContents   o  extensions: unused10.1.  ALMHeader Definition   struct {      uint32           sam_token;      uint16           alm_algorithm_id;      uint8            version;   } ALMHeader;   The fields in ALMHeader are used as follows:      sam_token: The first four bytes identify this message as an ALM      message.  This field MUST contain the value 0xD3414D42 (the string      "SAMB" with the high bit of the first byte set).      alm_algorithm_id: The ALM Algorithm ID of the ALM algorithm being      used.  Each multicast tree uses only one algorithm.  Trees with      different ALM algorithms can coexist and can share the same nodes.      ALM Algorithm ID codes are defined inSection 14.1.      version: The version of the ALM protocol being used.  This is a      fixed-point integer between 0.1 and 25.4.  This document describes      version 1.0 with a value of 0xA.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 30]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201310.2.  ALMMessageContents Definition   struct {      uint16       alm_message_code;      opaque       alm_message_body;   } ALMMessageContents;   The fields in ALMMessageContents are used as follows:      alm_message_code: This indicates the message being sent.  The      message codes are listed inSection 14.2.      alm_message_body: The message body itself, represented as a      variable-length string of bytes.  The bytes themselves are      dependent on the code value.  See Sections8 and9, which describe      the various ALM methods for the definitions of the payload      contents.10.3.  Response Codes   Response codes are defined in Section 6.3.3.1 of [RELOAD].  This   specification maps to RELOAD ErrorResponse as follows:   ErrorResponse.error_code = Error_Exp_A;   Error_info contains an ALMErrorResponse instance.   public struct {      uint16   alm_error_code;      opaque   alm_error_info<0..2^16-1>;   } ALMErrorResponse;   alm_error_code: The following error code values are defined.  Numeric   values for these are defined inSection 14.3.      Error_Unknown_Algorithm: The multicast algorithm is not known or      not supported.      Error_Child_Limit_Reached: The maximum number of child nodes has      been reached for this node.      Error_Node_Bandwidth_Reached: The overall data bandwidth limit      through this node has been reached.      Error_Node_Conn_Limit_Reached: The total number of connections to      this node has been reached.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 31]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013      Error_Link_Cap_Limit_Reached: The capacity of a link has been      reached.      Error_Node_Mem_Limit_Reached: An internal memory capacity of the      node has been reached.      Error_Node_CPU_Cap_Limit_Reached: An internal processing capacity      of the node has been reached.      Error_Path_Limit_Reached: The maximum path length in hop count      over the multicast tree has been reached.      Error_Path_Delay_Limit_Reached: The maximum path length in message      delay over the multicast tree has been reached.      Error_Tree_Fanout_Limit_Reached: The maximum fanout of a multicast      tree has been reached.      Error_Tree_Depth_Limit_Reached: The maximum height of a multicast      tree has been reached.      Error_Other: A human-readable description is placed in the      alm_error_info field.11.  Examples   All peers in the examples are assumed to have completed   bootstrapping.  "Pn" refers to peer N.  "group_id" refers to a peer   responsible for storing the ALMTree instance with group_id.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 32]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201311.1.  Create Tree   A node with "NODE-MATCH" rights sends a CreateALMTree request to the   group_id node, which also has NODE-MATCH rights for its own address.   The group_id node determines whether to create the new tree and, if   so, performs a local StoreReq.  If the CreateALMTree succeeds, the   ALMTree instance can be retrieved using Fetch.  An example message   flow for creating a tree is depicted in Figure 6.                P1      P2      P3       P4      group_id                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       |                | CreateALMTree |        |       |                |------------------------------->|                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       | StoreReq                |       |       |        |       |--+                |       |       |        |       |  |                |       |       |        |       |  |                |       |       |        |       |<-+                |       |       |        |       | StoreResponse                |       |       |        |       |--+                |       |       |        |       |  |                |       |       |        |       |  |                |       |       |        |       |<-+                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       |                |       | CreateALMTreeResponse  |                |<-------------------------------|                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       |                | Fetch         |        |       |                |------------------------------->|                |       |       |        |       |                |       |       |        |       |                |       |         FetchResponse  |                |<-------------------------------|                |       |       |        |       |             Figure 6: Message Flow Example for CreateALMTree11.2.  Join Tree   P1 joins node group_id as child node.  P2 joins the tree as a child   of P1.  P4 joins the tree as a child of P1.  The corresponding   message flow is shown in Figure 7.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 33]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013                   P1      P2      P3       P4      group_id                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   | Join                           |                   |------------------------------->|                   |       |       |        |       |                   | JoinAccept                     |                   |<-------------------------------|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |Join                    |                   |       |----------------------->|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |                            Join|                   |<-------------------------------|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |JoinAccept     |        |       |                   |------>|       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |JoinConfirm    |        |       |                   |<------|       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |Join   |                   |       |       |        |------>|                   |       |       |        |  Join |                   |<-------------------------------|                   |       |       |        |       |                   | Join  |       |        |       |                   |------>|       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   | JoinAccept    |        |       |                   |----------------------->|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       | JoinAccept     |       |                   |       |--------------->|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |   JoinConfirm  |       |                   |<-----------------------|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |   JoinDecline  |       |                   |       |<---------------|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |               Figure 7: Message Flow Example for Tree JoinBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 34]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201311.3.  Leave Tree                   P1      P2      P3       P4      group_id                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |  Leave |       |                   |<-----------------------|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   | LeaveResponse |        |       |                   |----------------------->|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |               Figure 8: Message Flow Example for Leave TreeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 35]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201311.4.  Push Data   The multicast data is pushed recursively P1 => group_id => P1 => P2,   P4 following the tree topology created in the Join example above.  An   example message flow is shown in Figure 9.                   P1      P2      P3       P4      group_id                   |       |       |        |       |                   | Push  |       |        |       |                   |------------------------------->|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |    PushResponse|                   |<-------------------------------|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |   Push|                   |<-------------------------------|                   |       |       |        |       |                   | PushResponse  |        |       |                   |------------------------------->|                   |       |       |        |       |                   |Push   |       |        |       |                   |------>|       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |PushResponse   |        |       |                   |<------|       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   | Push  |       |        |       |                   |----------------------->|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |   PushResponse |       |                   |<-----------------------|       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |                   |       |       |        |       |              Figure 9: Message Flow Example for Pushing Data12.  Kind Definitions12.1.  ALMTree Kind Definition   This section defines the ALMTree Kind per Section 7.4.5 of [RELOAD].   An instance of the ALMTree Kind is stored in the overlay for each ALM   tree instance.  It is stored at the address group_id.   Kind-ID: 0xF0000001.  (This is a private-use code point per   Section 14.6 of [RELOAD].)  The Resource Name for the ALMTree Kind-ID   is the session_key used to identify the ALM tree.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 36]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   Data Model: The data model is the ALMTree structure.   Access Control: NODE-MATCH.  The node performing the store operation   is required to have NODE-MATCH access.   Meaning: The meaning of the fields is given inSection 7.2.1.      struct {        node_id peer_id;        opaque session_key<0..2^32-1>;        node_id group_id;        Dictionary options;      } ALMTree;13.  RELOAD Configuration File Extensions   There are no ALM parameters defined for the RELOAD configuration   file.14.  IANA Considerations   This section contains the new code points registered by this   document.14.1.  ALM Algorithm Types   IANA has created the "SAM ALM Algorithm IDs" registry.  Entries in   this registry are 16-bit integers denoting Application-Layer   Multicast algorithms as described inSection 10.1 of this document.   Code points in the range 0x0003 to 0x7FFF SHALL be registered viaRFC 5226 [RFC5226] Expert Review.  Code points in the range 0x8000 to   0xFFFF are reserved for private use.  The initial contents of this   registry are:              +----------------+-------------------+-----------+              | Algorithm Name | ALM Algorithm ID  | RFC       |              +----------------+-------------------+-----------+              | INVALID-ALG    |            0x0000 |RFC 7019  |              | SCRIBE-SAM     |            0x0001 |RFC 7019  |              | P2PCAST-SAM    |            0x0002 |RFC 7019  |              | Reserved       |     0x8000-0xFFFF |RFC 7019  |              +----------------+-------------------+-----------+          Figure 10: "SAM ALM Algorithm IDs" Registry Allocations   These values have been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  These values are not meant for vendor-specific use   of any sort and MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 37]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201314.2.  Message Code Registration   IANA has created the "SAM ALM Message Codes" registry.  Entries in   this registry are 16-bit integers denoting message codes as described   inSection 10.2 of this document.  Code points in the range 0x0014 to   0x7FFF SHALL be registered viaRFC 5226 [RFC5226] Expert Review.   Code points in the range 0x8000 to 0xFFFF are reserved for private   use.  The initial contents of this registry are:        +-------------------------+----------------------+-----------+        | Message Code Name       | Message Code Value   | RFC       |        +-------------------------+----------------------+-----------+        | InvalidMessageCode      |               0x0000 |RFC 7019  |        | CreateALMTree           |               0x0001 |RFC 7019  |        | CreateALMTreeResponse   |               0x0002 |RFC 7019  |        | Join                    |               0x0003 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinAccept              |               0x0004 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinReject              |               0x0005 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinConfirm             |               0x0006 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinConfirmResponse     |               0x0007 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinDecline             |               0x0008 |RFC 7019  |        | JoinDeclineResponse     |               0x0009 |RFC 7019  |        | Leave                   |               0x000A |RFC 7019  |        | LeaveResponse           |               0x000B |RFC 7019  |        | Reform                  |               0x000C |RFC 7019  |        | ReformResponse          |               0x000D |RFC 7019  |        | Heartbeat               |               0x000E |RFC 7019  |        | HeartbeatResponse       |               0x000F |RFC 7019  |        | NodeQuery               |               0x0010 |RFC 7019  |        | NodeQueryResponse       |               0x0011 |RFC 7019  |        | Push                    |               0x0012 |RFC 7019  |        | PushResponse            |               0x0013 |RFC 7019  |        | Reserved                |        0x8000-0xFFFF |RFC 7019  |        +-------------------------+----------------------+-----------+          Figure 11: "SAM ALM Message Codes" Registry Allocations   These values have been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  These values are not meant for vendor-specific use   of any sort and MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.3.  Error Code Registration   IANA has created the "SAM ALM Error Codes" registry.  Entries in this   registry are 16-bit integers denoting error codes as described inSection 10.3 of this document.  Code points in the range 0x000D toBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 38]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   0x7FFF SHALL be registered viaRFC 5226 [RFC5226] Expert Review.   Code points in the range 0x8000 to 0xFFFF are reserved for private   use.  The initial contents of this registry are:      +----------------------------------+---------------+-----------+      | Error Code Name                  | Code Value    | RFC       |      +----------------------------------+---------------+-----------+      | InvalidErrorCode                 |       0x0000  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Unknown_Algorithm          |       0x0001  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Child_Limit_Reached        |       0x0002  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Node_Bandwidth_Reached     |       0x0003  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Node_Conn_Limit_Reached    |       0x0004  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Link_Cap_Limit_Reached     |       0x0005  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Node_Mem_Limit_Reached     |       0x0006  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Node_CPU_Cap_Limit_Reached |       0x0007  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Path_Limit_Reached         |       0x0008  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Path_Delay_Limit_Reached   |       0x0009  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Tree_Fanout_Limit_Reached  |       0x000A  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Tree_Depth_Limit_Reached   |       0x000B  |RFC 7019  |      | Error_Other                      |       0x000C  |RFC 7019  |      | Reserved                         | 0x8000-0xFFFF |RFC 7019  |      +----------------------------------+---------------+-----------+           Figure 12: "SAM ALM Error Codes" Registry Allocations   These values have been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  These values are not meant for vendor-specific use   of any sort and MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.15.  Security Considerations   Overlays are vulnerable to DoS and collusion attacks.  We are not   solving overlay security issues.  We assume that the node   authentication model as defined in [RELOAD] will be used.   Security issues specific to ALM Usage include the following:   o  The right to create group_id at some node_id   o  The right to store Tree info at some location in the DHT   o  A limit on number of messages per second and bandwidth use   o  The right to join an ALM treeBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 39]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 201316.  Acknowledgements   Marc Petit-Huguenin, Michael Welzl, Joerg Ott, and Lars Eggert   provided important comments on earlier versions of this document.17.  References17.1.  Normative Reference   [RFC2119]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                 Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.17.2.  Informative References   [BUFORD2008]  Buford, J. and H. Yu, "P2P: Overlay Multicast",                 Encyclopedia of Wireless and Mobile Communications,                 2008, <http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1081/E-EWMC-120043583>.   [BUFORD2009]  Buford, J., Yu, H., and E. Lua, "P2P Networking and                 Applications (Chapter 9)", Morgan Kaufman, 2009,                 <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/book/9780123742148>.   [CASTRO2002]  Castro, M., Druschel, P., Kermarrec, A., and A.                 Rowstron, "SCRIBE: A large-scale and decentralized                 application-level multicast infrastructure", IEEE                 Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 20,                 No. 8, October 2002, <http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/login.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1038579>.   [CASTRO2003]  Castro, M., Jones, M., Kermarrec, A., Rowstron, A.,                 Theimer, M., Wang, H., and A. Wolman, "An Evaluation of                 Scalable Application-level Multicast Built Using Peer-                 to-peer Overlays", Proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM 2003,                 April 2003, <http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/login.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1208986>.   [COMMON-API]  Waehlisch, M., Schmidt, T., and S. Venaas, "A Common                 API for Transparent Hybrid Multicast", Work in                 Progress, April 2013.   [KOLBERG2010] Kolberg, M., "Employing Multicast in P2P Overlay                 Networks", Handbook of Peer-to-Peer Networking, 2010,                 <http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-0-387-09751-0_30.pdf>.Buford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 40]

RFC 7019                ALM Extensions to RELOAD          September 2013   [P2PCAST]     Nicolosi, A. and S. Annapureddy, "P2PCast: A Peer-to-                 Peer Multicast Scheme for Streaming Data", Stanford                 Secure Computer Systems Group Report, May 2003,                 <http://www.scs.stanford.edu/~reddy/research/p2pcast/report.pdf>.   [RELOAD]      Jennings, C., Lowekamp, B., Ed., Rescorla, E., Baset,                 S., and H. Schulzrinne, "REsource LOcation And                 Discovery (RELOAD) Base Protocol", Work in Progress,                 February 2013.   [RFC5226]     Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing                 an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC5226, May 2008.   [SAM-GENERIC] Muramoto, E., Imai, Y., and N. Kawaguchi, "Requirements                 for Scalable Adaptive Multicast Framework in Non-GIG                 Networks", Work in Progress, November 2006.   [SPLITSTREAM] Castro, M., Druschel, P., Nandi, A., Kermarrec, A.,                 Rowstron, A., and A. Singh, "SplitStream: High-                 Bandwidth Multicast in a Cooperative Environment", SOSP                 '03, Lake Bolton, New York, October 2003,                 <http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=945474>.Authors' Addresses   John Buford   Avaya Labs Research   211 Mt. Airy Rd.   Basking Ridge, New Jersey  07920   USA   Phone: +1 908 848 5675   EMail: buford@avaya.com   Mario Kolberg (editor)   University of Stirling   Dept. of Computing Science and Mathematics   Stirling  FK9 4LA   UK   Phone: +44 1786 46 7440   EMail: mkolberg@ieee.org   URI:http://www.cs.stir.ac.uk/~mkoBuford & Kolberg              Experimental                     [Page 41]

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