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INFORMATIONAL
Independent Submission                                  A. BhattacharyyaRequest for Comments: 7967                              S. BandyopadhyayCategory: Informational                                           A. PalISSN: 2070-1721                                                  T. Bose                                          Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.                                                             August 2016Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) Option for No Server ResponseAbstract   There can be machine-to-machine (M2M) scenarios where server   responses to client requests are redundant.  This kind of open-loop   exchange (with no response path from the server to the client) may be   desired to minimize resource consumption in constrained systems while   updating many resources simultaneously or performing high-frequency   updates.  CoAP already provides Non-confirmable (NON) messages that   are not acknowledged by the recipient.  However, the request/response   semantics still require the server to respond with a status code   indicating "the result of the attempt to understand and satisfy the   request", perRFC 7252.   This specification introduces a CoAP option called 'No-Response'.   Using this option, the client can explicitly express to the server   its disinterest in all responses against the particular request.   This option also provides granular control to enable expression of   disinterest to a particular response class or a combination of   response classes.  The server MAY decide to suppress the response by   not transmitting it back to the client according to the value of the   No-Response option in the request.  This option may be effective for   both unicast and multicast requests.  This document also discusses a   few examples of applications that benefit from this option.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other   RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at   its discretion and makes no statement about its value for   implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by   the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 7841.   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/rfc7967.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2016 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.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Potential Benefits .........................................41.2. Terminology ................................................42. Option Definition ...............................................52.1. Granular Control over Response Suppression .................52.2. Method-Specific Applicability Considerations ...............83. Miscellaneous Aspects ...........................................93.1. Reusing Tokens .............................................9      3.2. Taking Care of Congestion Control and Server-Side           Flow Control ..............................................103.3. Considerations regarding Caching of Responses .............11      3.4. Handling the No-Response Option for a HTTP-to-CoAP           Reverse Proxy .............................................114. Application Scenarios ..........................................12      4.1. Frequent Update of Geolocation from Vehicles to           Backend Server ............................................124.1.1. Using No-Response with PUT .........................134.1.2. Using No-Response with POST ........................144.1.2.1. POST Updating a Fixed Target Resource .....144.1.2.2. POST Updating through Query String ........15      4.2. Multicasting Actuation Command from a Handheld Device           to a Group of Appliances ..................................154.2.1. Using Granular Response Suppression ................165. IANA Considerations ............................................166. Security Considerations ........................................167. References .....................................................167.1. Normative References ......................................167.2. Informative References ....................................17   Acknowledgments ...................................................18   Authors' Addresses ................................................181.  Introduction   This specification defines a new option for the Constrained   Application Protocol (CoAP) [RFC7252] called 'No-Response'.  This   option enables clients to explicitly express their disinterest in   receiving responses back from the server.  The disinterest can be   expressed at the granularity of response classes (e.g., 2.xx) or a   combination of classes (e.g., 2.xx and 5.xx).  By default, this   option indicates interest in all response classes.  The server MAY   decide to suppress the response by not transmitting it back to the   client according to the value of the No-Response option in the   request.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   Along with the technical details, this document presents some   practical application scenarios that highlight the usefulness of this   option.  [ITS-LIGHT] and [CoAP-ADAPT] contain the background research   for this document.   In this document, when it is mentioned that a request from a client   is with No-Response, the intended meaning is that the client   expresses its disinterest for all or some selected classes of   responses.1.1.  Potential Benefits   The use of the No-Response option should be driven by typical   application requirements and, particularly, characteristics of the   information to be updated.  If this option is opportunistically used   in a fitting M2M application, then the concerned system may benefit   in the following aspects.  (However, note that this option is   elective, and servers can simply ignore the preference expressed by   the client.)      *  Reduction in network congestion due to effective reduction of         the overall traffic.      *  Reduction in server-side load by relieving the server from         responding to requests for which responses are not necessary.      *  Reduction in battery consumption at the constrained         endpoint(s).      *  Reduction in overall communication cost.1.2.  Terminology   The terms used in this document are in conformance with those defined   in [RFC7252].   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20162.  Option Definition   The properties of the No-Response option are given in Table 1.  In   this table, the C, U, N, and R columns indicate the properties   Critical, Unsafe, NoCacheKey, and Repeatable, respectively.   +--------+---+---+---+---+-------------+--------+--------+---------+   | Number | C | U | N | R |   Name      | Format | Length | Default |   +--------+---+---+---+---+-------------+--------+--------+---------+   |   258  |   | X | - |   | No-Response |  uint  |  0-1   |    0    |   +--------+---+---+---+---+-------------+--------+--------+---------+                       Table 1: Option Properties   This option is a request option.  It is elective and not repeatable.   This option is Unsafe-to-Forward, as the intermediary MUST know how   to interpret this option.  Otherwise, the intermediary (without   knowledge about the special unidirectional nature of the request)   would wait for responses.   Note: Since CoAP maintains a clear separation between the      request/response and the message sub-layer, this option does not      have any dependency on the type of message      (Confirmable/Non-confirmable).  So, even the absence of a message      sub-layer (e.g., CoAP over TCP [CoAP-TCP-TLS]) should have no      effect on the interpretation of this option.  However, considering      the CoAP-over-UDP scenario [RFC7252], NON messages are best suited      to this option because of the expected benefits.  Using      No-Response with NON messages gets rid of any kind of reverse      traffic, and the interaction becomes completely open loop.      Using this option with CON requests may not serve the desired      purpose if piggybacked responses are triggered.  But, if the      server responds with a separate response (which, perhaps, the      client does not care about), then this option can be useful.      Suppressing the separate response reduces traffic by one      additional CoAP message in this case.   This option contains values to indicate disinterest in all or a   particular class or combination of classes of responses as described   inSection 2.1.2.1.  Granular Control over Response Suppression   This option enables granular control over response suppression by   allowing the client to express its disinterest in a typical class or   combination of classes of responses.  For example, a client may   explicitly tell the receiver that no response is required unlessBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   something 'bad' happens and a response of class 4.xx or 5.xx is to be   fed back to the client.  No response of the class 2.xx is required in   such case.   Note:Section 2.7 of [RFC7390] describes a scheme where a server in      the multicast group may decide on its own to suppress responses      for group communication with granular control.  The client does      not have any knowledge about that.  However, on the other hand,      the No-Response option enables the client to explicitly inform the      servers about its disinterest in responses.  Such explicit control      on the client side may be helpful for debugging network resources.      An example scenario is described inSection 4.2.1.   The server MUST send back responses of the classes for which the   client has not expressed any disinterest.  There may be instances   where a server, on its own, decides to suppress responses.  An   example is suppression of responses by multicast servers as described   inSection 2.7 of [RFC7390].  If such a server receives a request   with a No-Response option showing 'interest' in specific response   classes (i.e., not expressing disinterest for these options), then   any default behavior of suppressing responses, if present, MUST be   overridden to deliver those responses that are of interest to the   client.   So, for example, suppose a multicast server suppresses all responses   by default and receives a request with a No-Response option   expressing disinterest in 2.xx (success) responses only.  Note that   the option value naturally expresses interest in error responses 4.xx   and 5.xx in this case.  Thus, the server must send back a response if   the concerned request caused an error.   The option value is defined as a bit map (Table 2) to achieve   granular suppression.  Its length can be 0 bytes (empty) or 1 byte.   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+   | Value | Binary Representation |          Description              |   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+   |   0   |      <empty>          | Interested in all responses.      |   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+   |   2   |      00000010         | Not interested in 2.xx responses. |   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+   |   8   |      00001000         | Not interested in 4.xx responses. |   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+   |  16   |      00010000         | Not interested in 5.xx responses. |   +-------+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+                          Table 2: Option ValuesBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   The conventions used in deciding the option values are:   1.  To suppress an individual class: Set bit number (n-1) starting       from the least significant bit (bit number 0) to suppress all       responses belonging to class n.xx.  So,               option value to suppress n.xx class = 2**(n-1)   2.  To suppress a combination of classes: Set each corresponding bit       according to point 1 above.  Example: The option value will be 18       (binary: 00010010) to suppress both 2.xx and 5.xx responses.       This is essentially bitwise OR of the corresponding individual       values for suppressing 2.xx and 5.xx.  The "CoAP Response Codes"       registry (seeSection 12.1.2 of [RFC7252]) defines 2.xx, 4.xx,       and 5.xx responses.  So, an option value of 26 (binary: 00011010)       will request to suppress all response codes defined in [RFC7252].   Note: When No-Response is used with value 26 in a request, the client      endpoint SHOULD cease listening to response(s) to the particular      request.  On the other hand, showing interest in at least one      class of response means that the client endpoint can no longer      completely cease listening activity and must be configured to      listen during some application specific time-out period for the      particular request.  The client endpoint never knows whether the      present request will be a success or a failure.  Thus, for      example, if the client decides to open up the response for errors      (4.xx and 5.xx), then it has to wait for the entire time-out      period -- even for the instances where the request is successful      (and the server is not supposed to send back a response).  Note      that in this context there may be situations when the response to      errors might get lost.  In such a situation, the client would wait      during the time-out period but would not receive any response.      However, this should not give the client the impression that the      request was necessarily successful.  In other words, in this case,      the client cannot distinguish between response suppression and      message loss.  The application designer needs to tackle this      situation.  For example, while performing frequent updates, the      client may strategically interweave requests without No-Response      option into a series of requests with No-Response to check      periodically that things are fine at the server end and the server      is actively responding.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20162.2.  Method-Specific Applicability Considerations   The following table provides a ready reference on the possible   applicability of this option with four REST methods.  This table is   for the type of possible interactions foreseen at the time of   preparing this specification.  The key words fromRFC 2119 such as   "SHOULD NOT", etc., deliberately have not been used in this table   because it only contains suggestions.   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+   | Method Name |              Remarks on Applicability              |   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |             | This should not be used with a conventional GET    |   |             | request when the client requests the contents      |   |             | of a resource.  However, this option may be useful |   |             | for exceptional cases where GET requests have side |   |     GET     | effects.  For instance, the proactive cancellation |   |             | procedure for observing a request [RFC7641]        |   |             | requires a client to issue a GET request with the  |   |             | Observe option set to 1 ('deregister').  If it is  |   |             | more efficient to use this deregistration instead  |   |             | of reactive cancellation (rejecting the next       |   |             | notification with RST), the client MAY express its |   |             | disinterest in the response to such a GET request. |   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |             | Suitable for frequent updates (particularly in NON |   |             | messages) on existing resources.  Might not be     |   |             | useful when PUT is used to create a new resource,  |   |             | as it may be important for the client to know that |   |     PUT     | the resource creation was actually successful in   |   |             | order to carry out future actions.  Also, it may be|   |             | important to ensure that a resource was actually   |   |             | created rather than updating an existing resource. |   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |             | If POST is used to update a target resource,       |   |             | then No-Response can be used in the same manner as |   |             | in PUT.  This option may also be useful while      |   |     POST    | updating through query strings rather than updating|   |             | a fixed target resource (seeSection 4.1.2.2 for an|   |             | example).                                          |   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |             | Deletion is usually a permanent action.  If the    |   |    DELETE   | client wants to ensure that the deletion request   |   |             | was properly executed, then this option should not |   |             | be used with the request.                          |   +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+    Table 3: Suggested Applicability of No-Response with REST MethodsBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20163.  Miscellaneous Aspects   This section further describes important implementation aspects worth   considering while using the No-Response option.  The following   discussion contains guidelines and requirements (derived by combining   [RFC7252], [RFC7390], and [RFC5405]) for the application developer.3.1.  Reusing Tokens   Tokens provide a matching criteria between a request and the   corresponding response.  The life of a Token starts when it is   assigned to a request and ends when the final matching response is   received.  Then, the Token can again be reused.  However, a request   with No-Response typically does not have any guaranteed response   path.  So, the client has to decide on its own about when it can   retire a Token that has been used in an earlier request so that the   Token can be reused in a future request.  Since the No-Response   option is 'elective', a server that has not implemented this option   will respond back.  This leads to the following two scenarios:   The first scenario is when the client is never going to care about   any response coming back or about relating the response to the   original request.  In that case, it MAY reuse the Token value at   liberty.   However, as a second scenario, let us consider that the client sends   two requests where the first request is with No-Response and the   second request (with the same Token) is without No-Response.  In this   case, a delayed response to the first one can be interpreted as a   response to the second request (client needs a response in the second   case) if the time interval between using the same Token is not long   enough.  This creates a problem in the request-response semantics.   The most ideal solution would be to always use a unique Token for   requests with No-Response.  But if a client wants to reuse a Token,   then in most practical cases the client implementation SHOULD   implement an application-specific reuse time after which it can reuse   the Token.  A minimum reuse time for Tokens with a similar expression   as inSection 2.5 of [RFC7390] SHOULD be used:   TOKEN_REUSE_TIME = NON_LIFETIME + MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY +                      MAX_LATENCY   NON_LIFETIME and MAX_LATENCY are defined inSection 4.8.2 of   [RFC7252].  MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY has the same interpretation as   inSection 2.5 of [RFC7390] for a multicast request.  For a unicast   request, since the message is sent to only one server,   MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY means the expected maximum response delayBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   from the particular server to that client that sent the request.  For   multicast requests, MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY has the same   interpretation as inSection 2.5 of [RFC7390].  So, for multicast it   is the expected maximum server response delay "over all servers that   the client can send a multicast request to", per [RFC7390].  This   response delay for a given server includes its specific Leisure   period; where Leisure is defined inSection 8.2 of [RFC7252].  In   general, the Leisure for a server may not be known to the client.  A   lower bound for Leisure, lb_Leisure, is defined in [RFC7252], but not   an upper bound as is needed in this case.  Therefore, the upper bound   can be estimated by taking N (N>>1) times the lower bound lb_Leisure:                          lb_Leisure = S * G / R   where   S = estimated response size   G = group size estimate   R = data transfer rate   Any estimate of MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY MUST be larger than   DEFAULT_LEISURE, as defined in [RFC7252].   Note: If it is not possible for the client to get a reasonable      estimate of the MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY, then the client, to be      safe, SHOULD use a unique Token for each stream of messages.3.2.  Taking Care of Congestion Control and Server-Side Flow Control   This section provides guidelines for basic congestion control.   Better congestion control mechanisms can be designed as future work.   If this option is used with NON messages, then the interaction   becomes completely open loop.  The absence of any feedback from the   server-end affects congestion-control mechanisms.  In this case, the   communication pattern maps to the scenario where the application   cannot maintain an RTT estimate as described inSection 3.1.2 of   [RFC5405].  Hence, per [RFC5405], a 3-second interval is suggested as   the minimum interval between successive updates, and it is suggested   to use an even less aggressive rate when possible.  However, in case   of a higher rate of updates, the application MUST have some knowledge   about the channel, and an application developer MUST interweave   occasional closed-loop exchanges (e.g., NON messages without   No-Response, or CON messages) to get an RTT estimate between the   endpoints.   Interweaving requests without No-Response is a MUST in case of an   aggressive request rate for applications where server-side flow   control is necessary.  For example, as proposed in [CoAP-PUBSUB], aBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   broker MAY return 4.29 (Too Many Requests) in order to request a   client to slow down the request rate.  Interweaving requests without   No-Response allows the client to listen to such a response.3.3.  Considerations regarding Caching of Responses   The cacheability of CoAP responses does not depend on the request   method, but it depends on the Response Code.  The No-Response option   does not lead to any impact on cacheability of responses.  If a   request containing No-Response triggers a cacheable response, then   the response MUST be cached.  However, the response MAY not be   transmitted considering the value of the No-Response option in the   request.   For example, if a request with No-Response triggers a cacheable   response of 4.xx class with Max-Age not equal to 0, then the response   must be cached.  The cache will return the response to subsequent   similar requests without No-Response as long as the Max-Age has not   elapsed.3.4.  Handling the No-Response Option for a HTTP-to-CoAP Reverse Proxy   A HTTP-to-CoAP reverse proxy MAY translate an incoming HTTP request   to a corresponding CoAP request indicating that no response is   required (showing disinterest in all classes of responses) based on   some application-specific requirement.  In this case, it is   RECOMMENDED that the reverse proxy generate an HTTP response with   status code 204 (No Content) when such response is allowed.  The   generated response is sent after the proxy has successfully sent out   the CoAP request.   If the reverse proxy applies No-Response for one or more classes of   responses, it will wait for responses up to an application-specific   maximum time (T_max) before responding to the HTTP side.  If a   response of a desired class is received within T_max, then the   response gets translated to HTTP as defined in [HTTP-to-CoAP].   However, if the proxy does not receive any response within T_max, it   is RECOMMENDED that the reverse Proxy send an HTTP response with   status code 204 (No Content) when allowed for the specific HTTP   request method.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20164.  Application Scenarios   This section describes some examples of application scenarios that   may potentially benefit from the use of the No-Response option.4.1.  Frequent Update of Geolocation from Vehicles to Backend Server   Let us consider an intelligent traffic system (ITS) consisting of   vehicles equipped with a sensor gateway comprising sensors like GPS   and accelerometer sensors.  The sensor gateway acts as a CoAP client.   It connects to the Internet using a low-bandwidth cellular connection   (e.g., General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)).  The GPS coordinates of   the vehicle are periodically updated to the backend server.   While performing frequent location updates, retransmitting (through   the CoAP CON mechanism) a location coordinate that the vehicle has   already left is not efficient as it adds redundant traffic to the   network.  Therefore, the updates are done using NON messages.   However, given the huge number of vehicles updating frequently, the   NON exchange will also trigger a huge number of responses from the   backend.  Thus, the cumulative load on the network will be quite   significant.  Also, the client in this case may not be interested in   getting responses to location update requests for a location it has   already passed and when the next location update is imminent.   On the contrary, if the client endpoints on the vehicles explicitly   declare that they do not need any status response back from the   server, then load will be reduced significantly.  The assumption is   that the high rate of updates will compensate for the stray losses in   geolocation reports.   Note: It may be argued that the above example application can also be      implemented using the Observe option [RFC7641] with NON      notifications.  But, in practice, implementing with Observe would      require lot of bookkeeping at the data collection endpoint at the      backend (observer).  The observer needs to maintain all the      observe relationships with each vehicle.  The data collection      endpoint may be unable to know all its data sources beforehand.      The client endpoints at vehicles may go offline or come back      online randomly.  In the case of Observe, the onus is always on      the data collection endpoint to establish an observe relationship      with each data source.  On the other hand, implementation will be      much simpler if initiating is left to the data source to carry out      updates using the No-Response option.  Another way of looking at      it is that the implementation choice depends on where there is      interest to initiate the update.  In an Observe scenario, the      interest is expressed by the data consumer.  In contrast, theBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016      classic update case applies when the interest is from the data      producer.  The No-Response option makes classic updates consume      even less resources.   The following subsections illustrate some sample exchanges based on   the application described above.4.1.1.  Using No-Response with PUT   Each vehicle is assigned a dedicated resource "vehicle-stat-<n>",   where <n> can be any string uniquely identifying the vehicle.  The   update requests are sent using NON messages.  The No-Response option   causes the server not to respond back.   Client Server   |      |   |      |   +----->| Header: PUT (T=NON, Code=0.03, MID=0x7d38)   | PUT  | Token: 0x53   |      | Uri-Path: "vehicle-stat-00"   |      | Content Type: text/plain   |      | No-Response: 26   |      | Payload:   |      | "VehID=00&RouteID=DN47&Lat=22.5658745&Long=88.4107966667&   |      | Time=2013-01-13T11:24:31"   |      |   [No response from the server.  Next update in 20 s.]   |      |   +----->| Header: PUT (T=NON, Code=0.03, MID=0x7d39)   | PUT  | Token: 0x54   |      | Uri-Path: "vehicle-stat-00"   |      | Content Type: text/plain   |      | No-Response: 26   |      | Payload:   |      | "VehID=00&RouteID=DN47&Lat=22.5649015&Long=88.4103511667&   |      | Time=2013-01-13T11:24:51"     Figure 1: Example of Unreliable Update with No-Response Option                                Using PUTBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20164.1.2.  Using No-Response with POST4.1.2.1.  POST Updating a Fixed Target Resource   In this case, POST acts the same way as PUT.  The exchanges are the   same as above.  The updated values are carried as payload of POST as   shown in Figure 2.   Client Server   |      |   |      |   +----->| Header: POST (T=NON, Code=0.02, MID=0x7d38)   | POST | Token: 0x53   |      | Uri-Path: "vehicle-stat-00"   |      | Content Type: text/plain   |      | No-Response: 26   |      | Payload:   |      | "VehID=00&RouteID=DN47&Lat=22.5658745&Long=88.4107966667&   |      | Time=2013-01-13T11:24:31"   |      |   [No response from the server.  Next update in 20 s.]   |      |   +----->| Header: POST (T=NON, Code=0.02, MID=0x7d39)   | POST | Token: 0x54   |      | Uri-Path: "vehicle-stat-00"   |      | Content Type: text/plain   |      | No-Response: 26   |      | Payload:   |      | "VehID=00&RouteID=DN47&Lat=22.5649015&Long=88.4103511667&   |      | Time=2013-01-13T11:24:51"    Figure 2: Example of Unreliable Update with No-Response Option                   Using POST as the Update MethodBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20164.1.2.2.  POST Updating through Query String   It may be possible that the backend infrastructure deploys a   dedicated database to store the location updates.  In such a case,   the client can update through a POST by sending a query string in the   URI.  The query string contains the name/value pairs for each update.   No-Response can be used in the same manner as for updating fixed   resources.  The scenario is depicted in Figure 3.   Client Server   |      |   |      |   +----->| Header: POST (T=NON, Code=0.02, MID=0x7d38)   | POST | Token: 0x53   |      | Uri-Path: "updateOrInsertInfo"   |      | Uri-Query: "VehID=00"   |      | Uri-Query: "RouteID=DN47"   |      | Uri-Query: "Lat=22.5658745"   |      | Uri-Query: "Long=88.4107966667"   |      | Uri-Query: "Time=2013-01-13T11:24:31"   |      | No-Response: 26   |      |   [No response from the server.  Next update in 20 s.]   |      |   +----->| Header: POST (T=NON, Code=0.02, MID=0x7d39)   | POST | Token: 0x54   |      | Uri-Path: "updateOrInsertInfo"   |      | Uri-Query: "VehID=00"   |      | Uri-Query: "RouteID=DN47"   |      | Uri-Query: "Lat=22.5649015"   |      | Uri-Query: "Long=88.4103511667"   |      | Uri-Query: "Time=2013-01-13T11:24:51"   |      | No-Response: 26   |      |    Figure 3: Example of Unreliable Update with No-Response Option    Using POST with a Query String to Insert Update Information                     into the Backend Database4.2.  Multicasting Actuation Command from a Handheld Device to a Group      of Appliances   A handheld device (e.g., a smart phone) may be programmed to act as   an IP-enabled switch to remotely operate on one or more IP-enabled   appliances.  For example, a multicast request to switch on/off all   the lights of a building can be sent.  In this case, the IP switchBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   application can use the No-Response option in a NON request message   to reduce the traffic generated due to simultaneous CoAP responses   from all the lights.   Thus, No-Response helps in reducing overall communication cost and   the probability of network congestion in this case.4.2.1.  Using Granular Response Suppression   The IP switch application may optionally use granular response   suppression such that the error responses are not suppressed.  In   that case, the lights that could not execute the request would   respond back and be readily identified.  Thus, explicit suppression   of option classes by the multicast client may be useful to debug the   network and the application.5.  IANA Considerations   The IANA had previously assigned number 284 to this option in the   "CoAP Option Numbers" registry.  IANA has updated this as shown   below:            +--------+--------------+-------------+            | Number |     Name     |  Reference  |            +--------+--------------+-------------+            |   258  | No-Response  |RFC 7967   |            +--------+--------------+-------------+6.  Security Considerations   The No-Response option defined in this document presents no security   considerations beyond those inSection 11 of the base CoAP   specification [RFC7252].7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC7252]  Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7252,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 20167.2.  Informative References   [CoAP-ADAPT]              Bandyopadhyay, S., Bhattacharyya, A., and A. Pal,              "Adapting protocol characteristics of CoAP using sensed              indication for vehicular analytics", 11th ACM Conference              on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (SenSys '13),              DOI 10.1145/2517351.2517422, November 2013.   [CoAP-PUBSUB]              Koster, M., Keranen, A., and J. Jimenez, "Publish-              Subscribe Broker for the Constrained Application Protocol              (CoAP)", Work in Progress,draft-koster-core-coap-pubsub-05, July 2016.   [CoAP-TCP-TLS]              Bormann, C., Lemay, S., Tschofenig, H., Hartke, K.,              Silverajan, B., and B. Raymor, Ed., "CoAP (Constrained              Application Protocol) over TCP, TLS, and WebSockets", Work              in Progress,draft-ietf-core-coap-tcp-tls-04, August 2016.   [HTTP-to-CoAP]              Castellani, A., Loreto, S., Rahman, A., Fossati, T., and              E. Dijk, "Guidelines for HTTP-to-CoAP Mapping              Implementations", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-core-http-mapping-13, July 2016.   [ITS-LIGHT]              Bhattacharyya, A., Bandyopadhyay, S., and A. Pal,              "ITS-light: Adaptive lightweight scheme to resource              optimize intelligent transportation tracking system (ITS)              - Customizing CoAP for opportunistic optimization", 10th              International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems:              Computing, Networking and Services (MobiQuitous 2013),              DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-11569-6_58, December 2013.   [RFC5405]  Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "Unicast UDP Usage Guidelines              for Application Designers",BCP 145,RFC 5405,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5405, November 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5405>.   [RFC7390]  Rahman, A., Ed., and E. Dijk, Ed., "Group Communication              for the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC7390, DOI 10.17487/RFC7390, October 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7390>.Bhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 7967                 CoAP No-Response Option             August 2016   [RFC7641]  Hartke, K., "Observing Resources in the Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7641,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7641, September 2015,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7641>.Acknowledgments   Thanks to Carsten Bormann, Matthias Kovatsch, Esko Dijk, Bert   Greevenbosch, Akbar Rahman, and Klaus Hartke for their valuable   input.Authors' Addresses   Abhijan Bhattacharyya   Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.   Kolkata, India   Email: abhijan.bhattacharyya@tcs.com   Soma Bandyopadhyay   Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.   Kolkata, India   Email: soma.bandyopadhyay@tcs.com   Arpan Pal   Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.   Kolkata, India   Email: arpan.pal@tcs.com   Tulika Bose   Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.   Kolkata, India   Email: tulika.bose@tcs.comBhattacharyya, et al.         Informational                    [Page 18]

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