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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                             J. OttRequest for Comments: 3259                      TZI, Universitaet BremenCategory: Informational                                       C. Perkins                                      USC Information Sciences Institute                                                             D. Kutscher                                                TZI, Universitaet Bremen                                                              April 2002A Message Bus for Local CoordinationStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   The local Message Bus (Mbus) is a light-weight message-oriented   coordination protocol for group communication between application   components.  The Mbus provides automatic location of communication   peers, subject based addressing, reliable message transfer and   different types of communication schemes.  The protocol is layered on   top of IP multicast and is specified for IPv4 and IPv6.  The IP   multicast scope is limited to link-local multicast.  This document   specifies the Mbus protocol, i.e., message syntax, addressing and   transport mechanisms.Table of Contents1.    Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1   Mbus Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2   Purpose of this Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.3   Areas of Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.4   Terminology for requirement specifications . . . . . . . . .62.    Common Formal Syntax Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.    Message Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.    Addressing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.1   Mandatory Address Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105.    Message Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.1   Message Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.2   Message Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.3   Command Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20026.    Transport  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .136.1   Local Multicast/Broadcast  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .146.1.1 Mbus multicast groups for IPv4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.1.2 Mbus multicast groups for IPv6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.1.3 Use of Broadcast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .166.1.4 Mbus UDP Port Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .166.2   Directed Unicast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .167.    Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .188.    Awareness of other Entities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208.1   Hello Message Transmission Interval  . . . . . . . . . . . .218.1.1 Calculating the Interval for Hello Messages  . . . . . . . .228.1.2 Initialization of Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23   8.1.3 Adjusting the Hello Message Interval when the Number of         Entities increases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23   8.1.4 Adjusting the Hello Message Interval when the Number of         Entities decreases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .238.1.5 Expiration of hello timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .238.2   Calculating the Timeout for Mbus Entities  . . . . . . . . .249.    Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .249.1   mbus.hello . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .249.2   mbus.bye . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .259.3   mbus.ping  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .259.4   mbus.quit  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .269.5   mbus.waiting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .269.6   mbus.go  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2710.   Constants  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2711.   Mbus Security  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.1  Security Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.2  Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.3  Message Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2911.4  Procedures for Senders and Receivers . . . . . . . . . . . .3012.   Mbus Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3112.1  File based parameter storage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3312.2  Registry based parameter storage . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3413.   Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3414.   IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3515.   References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35A.    About References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37B.    Limitations and Future Work  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37   Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38   Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20021.  Introduction   The implementation of multiparty multimedia conferencing systems is   one example where a simple coordination infrastructure can be useful:   In a variety of conferencing scenarios, a local communication channel   can provide conference-related information exchange between co-   located but otherwise independent application entities, for example   those taking part in application sessions that belong to the same   conference.  In loosely coupled conferences such a mechanism allows   for coordination of application entities, e.g., to implement   synchronization between media streams or to configure entities   without user interaction.  It can also be used to implement tightly   coupled conferences enabling a conference controller to enforce   conference wide control within an end system.   Conferencing systems such as IP telephones can also be viewed as   components of a distributed system and can thus be integrated into a   group of application modules: For example, an IP telephony call that   is conducted with a stand-alone IP telephone can be dynamically   extended to include media engines for other media types using the   coordination function of an appropriate coordination mechanism.   Different individual conferencing components can thus be combined to   build a coherent multimedia conferencing system for a user.   Other possible scenarios include the coordination of application   components that are distributed on different hosts in a network, for   example, so-called Internet appliances.1.1  Mbus Overview   Local coordination of application components requires a number of   different interaction models: some messages (such as membership   information, floor control notifications, dissemination of conference   state changes, etc.) may need to be sent to all local application   entities.  Messages may also be targeted at a certain application   class (e.g., all whiteboards or all audio tools) or agent type (e.g.,   all user interfaces rather than all media engines).  Or there may be   any (application- or message-specific) subgrouping defining the   intended recipients, e.g., messages related to media synchronization.   Finally, there may be messages that are directed at a single entity:   for example, specific configuration settings that a conference   controller sends to a particular application entity, or query-   response exchanges between any local server and its clients.   The Mbus protocol as defined here satisfies these different   communication needs by defining different message transport   mechanisms (defined inSection 6) and by providing a flexible   addressing scheme (defined inSection 4).Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   Furthermore, Mbus messages exchanged between application entities may   have different reliability requirements (which are typically derived   from their semantics).  Some messages will have a rather transient   character conveying ephemeral state information (which is   refreshed/updated periodically), such as the volume meter level of an   audio receiver entity to be displayed by its user interface agent.   Certain Mbus messages (such as queries for parameters or queries to   local servers) may require a response from the peer(s), thereby   providing an explicit acknowledgment at the semantic level on top of   the Mbus.  Other messages will modify the application or conference   state and hence it is crucial that they do not get lost.  The latter   type of message has to be delivered reliably to the recipient,   whereas messages of the first type do not require reliability   mechanisms at the Mbus transport layer.  For messages confirmed at   the application layer it is up to the discretion of the application   whether or not to use a reliable transport underneath.   In some cases, application entities will want to tailor the degree of   reliability to their needs, others will want to rely on the   underlying transport to ensure delivery of the messages -- and this   may be different for each Mbus message.  The Mbus message passing   mechanism specified in this document provides a maximum of   flexibility by providing reliable transmission achieved through   transport-layer acknowledgments (in case of point-to-point   communications only) as well as unreliable message passing (for   unicast, local multicast, and local broadcast).  We address this   topic inSection 4.   Finally, accidental or malicious disturbance of Mbus communications   through messages originated by applications from other users needs to   be prevented.  Accidental reception of Mbus messages from other users   may occur if either two users share the same host for using Mbus   applications or if they are using Mbus applications that are spread   across the same network link: in either case, the used Mbus multicast   address and the port number may be identical leading to reception of   the other party's Mbus messages in addition to the user's own ones.   Malicious disturbance may happen because of applications multicasting   (e.g., at a global scope) or unicasting Mbus messages.  To eliminate   the possibility of processing unwanted Mbus messages, the Mbus   protocol contains message digests for authentication.  Furthermore,   the Mbus allows for encryption to ensure privacy and thus enable   using the Mbus for local key distribution and other functions   potentially sensitive to eavesdropping.  This document defines the   framework for configuring Mbus applications with regard to security   parameters inSection 12.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20021.2  Purpose of this Document   Three components constitute the message bus: the low level message   passing mechanisms, a command syntax and naming hierarchy, and the   addressing scheme.   The purpose of this document is to define the protocol mechanisms of   the lower level Mbus message passing mechanism which is common to all   Mbus implementations.  This includes the specification of   o  the generic Mbus message format;   o  the addressing concept for application entities (note that      concrete addressing schemes are to be defined by application-      specific profiles);   o  the transport mechanisms to be employed for conveying messages      between (co-located) application entities;   o  the security concept to prevent misuse of the Message Bus (such as      taking control of another user's conferencing environment);   o  the details of the Mbus message syntax; and   o  a set of mandatory application independent commands that are used      for bootstrapping Mbus sessions.1.3 Areas of Application   The Mbus protocol can be deployed in many different application   areas, including but not limited to:   Local conference control: In the Mbone community a model has arisen      whereby a set of loosely coupled tools are used to participate in      a conference.  A typical scenario is that audio, video, and shared      workspace functionality is provided by three separate tools      (although some combined tools exist).  This maps well onto the      underlying RTP [8] (as well as other) media streams, which are      also transmitted separately.  Given such an architecture, it is      useful to be able to perform some coordination of the separate      media tools.  For example, it may be desirable to communicate      playout-point information between audio and video tools, in order      to implement lip-synchronization, to arbitrate the use of shared      resources (such as input devices), etc.      A refinement of this architecture relies on the presence of a      number of media engines which perform protocol functions as well      as capturing and playout of media.  In addition, one (or more)Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      (separate) user interface agents exist that interact with and      control their media engine(s).  Such an approach allows      flexibility in the user-interface design and implementation, but      obviously requires some means by which the various involved agents      may communicate with one another.  This is particularly desirable      to enable a coherent response to a user's conference-related      actions (such as joining or leaving a conference).      Although current practice in the Mbone community is to work with a      loosely coupled conference control model, situations arise where      this is not appropriate and a more tightly coupled wide-area      conference control protocol must be employed.  In such cases, it      is highly desirable to be able to re-use the existing tools (media      engines) available for loosely coupled conferences and integrate      them with a system component implementing the tight conference      control model.  One appropriate means to achieve this integration      is a communication channel that allows a dedicated conference      control entity to "remotely" control the media engines in addition      to or instead of their respective user interfaces.   Control of device groups in a network: A group of devices that are      connected to a local network, e.g., home appliances in a home      network, require a local coordination mechanism.  Minimizing      manual configuration and the the possibility to deploy group      communication will be useful in this application area as well.1.4  Terminology for requirement specifications   In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",   "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",   and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [1] and   indicate requirement levels for compliant Mbus implementations.2.  Common Formal Syntax Rules   This section contains definitions of common ABNF [13] syntax elements   that are later referenced by other definitions in this document:      base64          = base64_terminal /                        ( 1*(4base64_CHAR) [base64_terminal] )      base64_char     = UPALPHA / LOALPHA / DIGIT / "+" / "/"                        ;; Case-sensitive      base64_terminal = (2base64_char "==") / (3base64_char "=")      UPALPHA         = %x41-5A            ;; Uppercase: A-ZOtt, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      LOALPHA         = %x61-7A            ;; Lowercase: a-z      ALPHA           =  %x41-5A / %x61-7A   ; A-Z / a-z      CHAR            =  %x01-7E                         ; any 7-bit US-ASCII character,                          excluding NUL and delete      OCTET           =  %x00-FF                         ; 8 bits of data      CR              =  %x0D                         ; carriage return      CRLF            =  CR LF                         ; Internet standard newline      DIGIT           =  %x30-39                         ; 0-9      DQUOTE          =  %x22                         ; " (Double Quote)      HTAB            =  %x09                         ; horizontal tab      LF              =  %x0A                         ; linefeed      LWSP            =  *(WSP / CRLF WSP)                         ; linear white space (past newline)      SP              =  %x20                         ; space      WSP             =  SP / HTAB                         ; white space   Taken fromRFC 2234 [13] andRFC 2554 [14].3.  Message Format   An Mbus message comprises a header and a body.  The header is used to   indicate how and where a message should be delivered and the body   provides information and commands to the destination entity.  The   following pieces of information are included in the header:Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      A fixed ProtocolID field identifies the version of the message bus      protocol used.  The protocol defined in this document is      "mbus/1.0" (case-sensitive).      A sequence number (SeqNum) is contained in each message.  The      first message sent by a source SHOULD set SeqNum to zero, and it      MUST increment by one for each message sent by that source.  A      single sequence number is used for all messages from a source,      irrespective of the intended recipients and the reliability mode      selected. The value range of a sequence number is (0,4294967295).      An implementation MUST re-set its sequence number to 0 after      reaching 4294967295.  Implementations MUST take into account that      the SeqNum of other entities may wrap-around.      SeqNums are decimal numbers in ASCII representation.      The TimeStamp field is also contained in each message and SHOULD      contain a decimal number representing the time of the message      construction in milliseconds since 00:00:00, UTC, January 1, 1970.      A MessageType field indicates the kind of message being sent.  The      value "R" indicates that the message is to be transmitted reliably      and MUST be acknowledged by the recipient, "U" indicates an      unreliable message which MUST NOT be acknowledged.      The SrcAddr field identifies the sender of a message.  This MUST      be a complete address, with all address elements specified.  The      addressing scheme is described inSection 4.      The DestAddr field identifies the intended recipient(s) of the      message.  This field MAY be wildcarded by omitting address      elements and hence address any number (including zero) of      application entities.  The addressing scheme is described inSection 4.      The AckList field comprises a list of SeqNums for which this      message is an acknowledgment.  SeeSection 7 for details.   The header is followed by the message body which contains zero or   more commands to be delivered to the destination entity.  The syntax   for a complete message is given inSection 5.   If multiple commands are contained within the same Mbus message   payload, they MUST to be delivered to the Mbus application in the   same sequence in which they appear in the message payload.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20024.  Addressing   Each entity in the message has a unique Mbus address that is used to   identify the entity.  Mbus addresses are sequences of address   elements that are tag/value pairs.  The tag and the value are   separated by a colon and tag/value pairs are separated by whitespace,   like this:      (tag:value tag:value ...)   The formal ABNF syntax definition for Mbus addresses and their   elements is as follows:      mbus_address    = "(" *WSP *1address_list *WSP ")"      address_list    = address_element                      / address_element 1*WSP address_list      address_element = address_tag ":" address_value      address_tag     = 1*32(ALPHA)      address_value   = 1*64(%x21-27 / %x2A-7E)                        ; any 7-bit US-ASCII character                        ; excluding white space, delete,                        ; control characters, "(" and ")"   Note that this and other ABNF definitions in this document use the   non-terminal symbols defined inSection 2.   An address_tag MUST be unique within an Mbus address, i.e., it MUST   only occur once.   Each entity has a fixed sequence of address elements constituting its   address and MUST only process messages sent to addresses that either   match all elements or consist of a subset of its own address   elements.  The order of address elements in an address sequence is   not relevant.  Two address elements match if both their tags and   their values are equivalent.  Equivalence for address element and   address value strings means that each octet in the one string has the   same value as the corresponding octet in the second string.  For   example, an entity with an address of:   (conf:test media:audio module:engine app:rat id:4711-1@192.168.1.1)   will process messages sent to   (media:audio module:engine)Ott, et. al.                 Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   and   (module:engine)   but must ignore messages sent to   (conf:test media:audio module:engine app:rat id:123-4@192.168.1.1   foo:bar)   and   (foo:bar)   A message that should be processed by all entities requires an empty   set of address elements.4.1  Mandatory Address Elements   Each Mbus entity MUST provide one mandatory address element that   allows it to identify the entity.  The element tag is "id" and the   value MUST be be composed of the following components:   o  The IP address of the interface that is used for sending messages      to the Mbus.  For IPv4 this is the address in dotted decimal      notation.  For IPv6 the interface-ID-part of the node's link-local      address in textual representation as specified inRFC 2373 [3]      MUST be used.      In this specification, this part is called the "host-ID".   o  An identifier ("entity-ID") that is unique within the scope of a      single host-ID.  The entity comprises two parts.  For systems      where the concept of a process ID is applicable it is RECOMMENDED      that this identifier be composed using a process-ID and a per-      process disambiguator for different Mbus entities of a process.      If a process ID is not available, this part of the entity-ID may      be randomly chosen (it is recommended that at least a 32 bit      random number is chosen).  Both numbers are represented in decimal      textual form and MUST be separated by a '-' (ASCII x2d) character.   Note that the entity-ID cannot be the port number of the endpoint   used for sending messages to the Mbus because implementations MAY use   the common Mbus port number for sending to and receiving from the   multicast group (as specified inSection 6).   The complete syntax definition for the entity identifier is as   follows:Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      id-element   = "id:" id-value      id-value     = entity-id "@" host-id      entity-id    = 1*10DIGIT "-" 1*5DIGIT      host-id      = (IPv4address / IPv6address)   Please refer to [3] for the productions of IPv4address and IPv6address.   An example for an id element:      id:4711-99@192.168.1.15.  Message Syntax5.1  Message Encoding   All messages MUST use the UTF-8 character encoding.  Note that US   ASCII is a subset of UTF-8 and requires no additional encoding, and   that a message encoded with UTF-8 will not contain zero bytes.   Each Message MAY be encrypted using a secret key algorithm as   defined inSection 11.5.2  Message Header   The fields in the header are separated by white space characters,   and followed by CRLF.  The format of the header is as follows:   msg_header = "mbus/1.0" 1*WSP SeqNum 1*WSP TimeStamp 1*WSP                MessageType 1*WSP SrcAddr 1*WSP DestAddr 1*WSP AckList   The header fields are explained in Message Format (Section 3).  Here   are the ABNF syntax definitions for the header fields:      SeqNum      = 1*10DIGIT     ; numeric range 0 - 2^32-1      TimeStamp   = 1*13DIGIT      MessageType = "R" / "U"      ScrAddr     = mbus_address      DestAddr    = mbus_addressOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      AckList     = "(" *WSP *1(1*DIGIT *(1*WSP 1*10DIGIT)) *WSP ")"      SeeSection 4 for a definition of "mbus_address".   The syntax definition of a complete message is as follows:      mbus_message = msg_header *1(CRLF msg_payload)      msg_payload  = mbus_command *(CRLF mbus_command)   The definition of production rules for an Mbus command is given inSection 5.3.5.3  Command Syntax   The header is followed by zero, one, or more, commands to be   delivered to the Mbus entities indicated by the DestAddr field.  Each   command consists of a command name that is followed by a list of   zero, or more parameters and is terminated by a newline.      command ( parameter parameter ... )   Syntactically, the command name MUST be a `symbol' as defined in the   following table.  The parameters MAY be any data type drawn from the   following table:      val             = Integer / Float / String / List /                        Symbol / Data      Integer         = *1"-" 1*DIGIT      Float           = *1"-" 1*DIGIT "." 1*DIGIT      String          = DQUOTE *CHAR DQUOTE                        ; see below for escape characters      List            = "(" *WSP *1(val *(1*WSP val)) *WSP ")"      Symbol          = ALPHA *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" /                        ".")      Data            = "<" *base64 ">"   Boolean values are encoded as an integer, with the value of zero   representing false, and non-zero representing true.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   String parameters in the payload MUST be enclosed in the double quote   (") character.  Within strings, the escape character is the backslash   (\), and the following escape sequences are defined:      +----------------+-----------+      |Escape Sequence |  Meaning  |      +----------------+-----------+      |      \\        |    \      |      |      \"        |     "     |      |      \n        | newline   |      +----------------+-----------+   List parameters do not have to be homogeneous lists, i.e., they can   contain parameters of different types.   Opaque data is represented as Base64-encoded (seeRFC 1521 [7])   character strings surrounded by "< " and "> "   The ABNF syntax definition for Mbus commands is as follows:      mbus_command = command_name arglist      command_name = Symbol      arglist      = List   Command names SHOULD be constructed hierarchically to group   conceptually related commands under a common hierarchy.  The   delimiter between names in the hierarchy MUST be "."  (dot).   Application profiles MUST NOT define commands starting with "mbus.".   The Mbus addressing scheme defined inSection 4 allows specifying   incomplete addresses by omitting certain elements of an address   element list, enabling entities to send commands to a group of Mbus   entities.  Therefore, all command names SHOULD be unambiguous in a   way that it is possible to interpret or ignore them without   considering the message's address.   A set of commands within a certain hierarchy that MUST be understood   by every entity is defined inSection 9.6.  Transport   All messages are transmitted as UDP messages, with two possible   alternatives:Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   1. Local multicast/broadcast:      This transport class MUST be used for all messages that are not      sent to a fully qualified target address.  It MAY also be used for      messages that are sent to a fully qualified target address.  It      MUST be provided by conforming implementations.  SeeSection 6.1      for details.   2. Directed unicast:      This transport class MAY be used for messages that are sent to a      fully qualified destination address.  It is OPTIONAL and does not      have to be provided by conforming implementations.   A fully qualified target address is an Mbus address of an existing   Mbus entity in an Mbus session. An implementation can identify an   Mbus address as fully qualified by maintaining a list of known   entities within an Mbus session. Each known entity has its own   unique, fully qualified Mbus address.   Messages are transmitted in UDP datagrams, a maximum message size of   64 KBytes MUST NOT be exceeded.  It is RECOMMENDED that applications   using a non host-local scope do not exceed a message size of the link   MTU.   Note that "unicast", "multicast" and "broadcast" mean IP Unicast, IP   Multicast and IP Broadcast respectively.  It is possible to send an   Mbus message that is addressed to a single entity using IP Multicast.   This specification deals with both Mbus over UDP/IPv4 and Mbus over   UDP/IPv6.6.1  Local Multicast/Broadcast   In general, the Mbus uses multicast with a limited scope for message   transport.  Two different Mbus multicast scopes are defined, either   of which can be configured to be used with an Mbus session:   1.  host-local   2.  link-local   Participants of an Mbus session have to know the multicast address in   advance -- it cannot be negotiated during the session since it is   already needed for initial communication between the Mbus entities   during the bootstrapping phase.  It also cannot be allocated prior to   an Mbus session because there would be no mechanism to announce the   allocated address to all potential Mbus entities.  Therefore, the   multicast address has to be assigned statically.  This document   defines the use of statically assigned addresses and also provides aOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   specification of how an Mbus session can be configured to use non-   standard, unassigned addresses (seeSection 12).   The following sections specify the use of multicast addresses for   IPv4 and IPv6.6.1.1  Mbus multicast groups for IPv4   For IPv4, a statically assigned, scope-relative multicast address as   defined byRFC 2365 [11] is used.  The offset for the scope relative   address for Mbus is 8 (MBUS, seehttp://www.iana.org/assignments/multicast-addresses [19]).   Different scopes are defined byRFC 2365 [11].  The IPv4 Local Scope   (239.255.0.0/16) is the minimal enclosing scope for administratively   scoped multicast (as defined byRFC 2365 [11]) and not further   divisible -- its exact extent is site dependent.   For the IPv4 Local Scope, applying the rules ofRFC 2365 [11] and   using the assigned offset of 8, the Mbus multicast address is   therefore 239.255.255.247.   For IPv4, the different defined Mbus scopes (host-local and link-   local) are to be realized as follows:   host-local multicast: Unless configured otherwise, the assigned      scope-relative Mbus address in the Local Scope (239.255.255.247 as      ofRFC 2365 [11]) MUST be used.  Mbus UDP datagrams SHOULD be sent      with a TTL of 0.   link-local multicast: Unless configured otherwise, the assigned      scope-relative Mbus address in the Local Scope (239.255.255.247 as      ofRFC 2365 [11]) MUST be used.  Mbus UDP datagrams SHOULD be sent      with a TTL of 1.6.1.2  Mbus multicast groups for IPv6   IPv6 has different address ranges for different multicast scopes and   distinguishes node local and link local scopes, that are implemented   as a set of address prefixes for the different address ranges (RFC2373 [3]).  The link-local prefix is FF02, the node-local prefix is   FF01.  A permanently assigned multicast address will be used for Mbus   multicast communication, i.e., an address that is independent of the   scope value and that can be used for all scopes.  Implementations for   IPv6 MUST use the scope-independent address and the appropriate   prefix for the selected scope.  For host-local Mbus communication the   IPv6 node-local scope prefix MUST be used, for link-local Mbus   communication the IPv6 link-local scope prefix MUST be used.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   The permanent IPv6 multicast address for Mbus/Ipv6 is   FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:300.   FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:300 SHOULD be used for Mbus/IPv6 where the X in FF0X   indicates that the scope is not fixed because this is an all scope   address.  This means, for node-local scope, FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:300   SHOULD be used and for link-local scope FF02:0:0:0:0:0:0:300 SHOULD   be used.  SeeRFC 2375 [4] for IPv6 multicast address assignments.   If a single application system is distributed across several co-   located hosts, link local scope SHOULD be used for multicasting Mbus   messages that potentially have recipients on the other hosts.  The   Mbus protocol is not intended (and hence deliberately not designed)   for communication between hosts not on the same link.  SeeSection 12   for specifications of Mbus configuration mechanisms.6.1.3  Use of Broadcast   In situations where multicast is not available, broadcast MAY be used   instead.  In these cases an IP broadcast address for the connected   network SHOULD be used for sending.  The node-local broadcast address   for IPv6 is FF01:0:0:0:0:0:0:1, the link-local broadcast address for   IPv6 is FF02:0:0:0:0:0:0:1.  For IPv4, the generic broadcast address   (for link-local broadcast) is 255.255.255.255.  It is RECOMMENDED   that IPv4-implementations use the generic broadcast address and a TTL   of zero for host-local broadcast.   Broadcast MUST NOT be used in situations where multicast is available   and supported by all systems participating in an Mbus session.   SeeSection 12 for configuring the use of broadcast.6.1.4  Mbus UDP Port Number   The registered Mbus UDP port number is 47000.6.2  Directed Unicast   Directed unicast (via UDP) to the port of a specific application is   an alternative transport class to multicast.  Directed unicast is an   OPTIONAL optimization and MAY be used by Mbus implementations for   delivering messages addressed to a single application entity only --   the address of which the Mbus implementation has learned from other   message exchanges before.  Note that the DestAddr field of such   messages MUST be filled in properly nevertheless.  Every Mbus entity   SHOULD use a single unique endpoint address for sending messages to   the Mbus multicast group or to individual receiving entities.  AOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   unique endpoint address is a tuple consisting of the entity's IP   address and a UDP source port number, where the port number is   different from the standard Mbus port number.   Messages MUST only be sent via unicast if the Mbus target address is   unique and if the sending entity can verify that the receiving entity   uses a unique endpoint address.  The latter can be verified by   considering the last message received from that entity.      Note that several Mbus entities, say within the same process, may      share a common transport address; in this case, the contents of      the destination address field is used to further dispatch the      message.  Given the definition of "unique endpoint address" above,      the use of a shared endpoint address and a dispatcher still allows      other Mbus entities to send unicast messages to one of the      entities that share the endpoint address.  So this can be      considered an implementation detail.   Messages with an empty target address list MUST always be sent to all   Mbus entities (via multicast if available).   The following algorithm can be used by sending entities to determine   whether an Mbus address is unique considering the current set of Mbus   entities:         let ta=the target address;         iterate through the set of all         currently known Mbus addresses {            let ti=the address in each iteration;            count the addresses for which            the predicate isSubsetOf(ta,ti) yields true;         }      If the count of matching addresses is exactly 1 the address is      unique.  The following algorithm can be used for the predicate      isSubsetOf, that checks whether the second message matches the      first according to the rules specified inSection 4.  (A match      means that a receiving entity that uses the second Mbus address      must also process received messages with the first address as a      target address.)         isSubsetOf(addr a1,a2) yields true, iff            every address element of a1 is contained            in a2's address element list.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      An address element a1 is contained in an address element list if      the list contains an element that is equal to a1.  An address      element is considered equal to another address element if it has      the same values for both of the two address element fields (tag      and value).7.  Reliability   While most messages are expected to be sent using unreliable   transport, it may be necessary to deliver some messages reliably.   Reliability can be selected on a per message basis by means of the   MessageType field.  Reliable delivery is supported for messages with   a single recipient only; i.e., to a fully qualified Mbus address.  An   entity can thus only send reliable messages to known addresses, i.e.,   it can only send reliable messages to entities that have announced   their existence on the Mbus (e.g., by means of mbus.hello() messages   as defined inSection 9.1).  A sending entity MUST NOT send a message   reliably if the target address is not unique.  (SeeSection 6 for the   specification of an algorithm to determine whether an address is   unique.)  A receiving entity MUST only process and acknowledge a   reliable message if the destination address exactly matches its own   source address (the destination address MUST NOT be a subset of the   source address).   Disallowing reliable message delivery for messages sent to multiple   destinations is motivated by simplicity of the implementation as well   as the protocol.  The desired effect can be achieved at the   application layer by sending individual reliable messages to each   fully qualified destination address, if the membership information   for the Mbus session is available.   Each message is tagged with a message sequence number.  If the   MessageType is "R", the sender expects an acknowledgment from the   recipient within a short period of time.  If the acknowledgment is   not received within this interval, the sender MUST retransmit the   message (with the same message sequence number), increase the   timeout, and restart the timer.  Messages MUST be retransmitted a   small number of times (see below) before the transmission or the   recipient are considered to have failed.  If the message is not   delivered successfully, the sending application is notified.  In this   case, it is up to the application to determine the specific actions   (if any) to be taken.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   Reliable messages MUST be acknowledged by adding their SeqNum to the   AckList field of a message sent to the originator of the reliable   message.  This message MUST be sent to a fully qualified Mbus target   address.  Multiple acknowledgments MAY be sent in a single message.   Implementations MAY either piggy-back the AckList onto another   message sent to the same destination, or MAY send a dedicated   acknowledgment message, with no commands in the message payload part.   The precise procedures are as follows:   Sender: A sender A of a reliable message M to receiver B MUST      transmit the message either via IP-multicast or via IP-unicast,      keep a copy of M, initialize a retransmission counter N to '1',      and start a retransmission timer T (initialized to T_r).  If an      acknowledgment is received from B, timer T MUST be cancelled and      the copy of M is discarded.  If T expires, the message M MUST be      retransmitted, the counter N MUST be incremented by one, and the      timer MUST be restarted (set to N*T_r).  If N exceeds the      retransmission threshold N_r, the transmission is assumed to have      failed, further retransmission attempts MUST NOT be undertaken,      the copy of M MUST be discarded, and the sending application      SHOULD be notified.   Receiver: A receiver B of a reliable message from a sender A MUST      acknowledge reception of the message within a time period T_c <      T_r.  This MAY be done by means of a dedicated acknowledgment      message or by piggy-backing the acknowledgment on another message      addressed only to A.   Receiver optimization: In a simple implementation, B may choose to      immediately send a dedicated acknowledgment message.  However, for      efficiency, it could add the SeqNum of the received message to a      sender-specific list of acknowledgments; if the added SeqNum is      the first acknowledgment in the list, B SHOULD start an      acknowledgment timer TA (initialized to T_c).  When the timer      expires, B SHOULD create a dedicated acknowledgment message and      send it to A.  If B is to transmit another Mbus message addressed      only to A, it should piggy-back the acknowledgments onto this      message and cancel TA.  In either case, B should store a copy of      the acknowledgment list as a single entry in the per-sender copy      list, keep this entry for a period T_k, and empty the      acknowledgment list.  In case any of the messages kept in an entry      of the copy list is received again from A, the entire      acknowledgment list stored in this entry is scheduled for (re-)      transmission following the above rules.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   Constants and Algorithms: The following constants and algorithms      SHOULD be used by implementations:      T_r=100ms      N_r=3      T_c=70ms      T_k=((N_r)*(N_r+1)/2)*T_r8.  Awareness of other Entities   Before Mbus entities can communicate with one another, they need to   mutually find out about their existence.  After this bootstrap   procedure that each Mbus entity goes through all other entities   listening to the same Mbus know about the newcomer and the newcomer   has learned about all the other entities.  Furthermore, entities need   to be able to to notice the failure (or leaving) of other entities.   Any Mbus entity MUST announce its presence (on the Mbus) after   starting up.  This is to be done repeatedly throughout its lifetime   to address the issues of startup sequence: Entities should always   become aware of other entities independent of the order of starting.   Each Mbus entity MUST maintain the number of Mbus session members and   continuously update this number according to any observed changes.   The mechanisms of how the existence and the leaving of other entities   can be detected are dedicated Mbus messages for entity awareness:   mbus.hello (Section 9.1) and mbus.bye (Section 9.2).  Each Mbus   protocol implementation MUST periodically send mbus.hello messages   that are used by other entities to monitor the existence of that   entity.  If an entity has not received mbus.hello messages for a   certain time (seeSection 8.2) from an entity, the respective entity   is considered to have left the Mbus and MUST be excluded from the set   of currently known entities.  Upon the reception of a mbus.bye   message the respective entity is considered to have left the Mbus as   well and MUST be excluded from the set of currently known entities   immediately.   Each Mbus entity MUST send hello messages to the Mbus after startup.   After transmission of the hello message, it MUST start a timer after   the expiration of which the next hello message is to be transmitted.   Transmission of hello messages MUST NOT be stopped unless the entity   detaches from the Mbus.  The interval for sending hello messages is   dependent on the current number of entities in an Mbus group and can   thus change dynamically in order to avoid congestion due to many   entities sending hello messages at a constant high rate.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002Section 8.1 specifies the calculation of hello message intervals that   MUST be used by protocol implementations.  Using the values that are   calculated for obtaining the current hello message timer, the timeout   for received hello messages is calculated inSection 8.2.Section 9   specifies the command synopsis for the corresponding Mbus messages.8.1  Hello Message Transmission Interval   Since the number of entities in an Mbus session may vary, care must   be taken to allow the Mbus protocol to automatically scale over a   wide range of group sizes.  The average rate at which hello messages   are received would increase linearly to the number of entities in a   session if the sending interval was set to a fixed value.  Given an   interval of 1 second this would mean that an entity taking part in an   Mbus session with n entities would receive n hello messages per   second.  Assuming all entities resided on one host, this would lead   to n*n messages that have to be processed per second -- which is   obviously not a viable solution for larger groups.  It is therefore   necessary to deploy dynamically adapted hello message intervals,   taking varying numbers of entities into account.  In the following,   we specify an algorithm that MUST be used by implementors to   calculate the interval for hello messages considering the observed   number of Mbus entities.   The algorithm features the following characteristics:   o  The number of hello messages that are received by a single entity      in a certain time unit remains approximately constant as the      number of entities changes.   o  The effective interval that is used by a specific Mbus entity is      randomized in order to avoid unintentional synchronization of      hello messages within an Mbus session.  The first hello message of      an entity is also delayed by a certain random amount of time.   o  A timer reconsideration mechanism is deployed in order to adapt      the interval more appropriately in situations where a rapid change      of the number of entities is observed.  This is useful when an      entity joins an Mbus session and is still learning of the      existence of other entities or when a larger number of entities      leaves the Mbus at once.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20028.1.1  Calculating the Interval for Hello Messages   The following variable names are used in the calculation specified   below (all time values in milliseconds):   hello_p: The last time a hello message has been sent by a Mbus      entity.   hello_now: The current time   hello_d: The deterministic calculated interval between hello      messages.   hello_e: The effective (randomized) interval between hello messages.   hello_n: The time for the next scheduled transmission of a hello      message.   entities_p: The numbers of entities at the time hello_n has been last      recomputed.   entities: The number of currently known entities.   The interval between hello messages MUST be calculated as follows:   The number of currently known entities is multiplied by   c_hello_factor, yielding the interval between hello messages in   milliseconds.  This is the deterministic calculated interval, denoted   hello_d.  The minimum value for hello_d is c_hello_min which yields      hello_d = max(c_hello_min,c_hello_factor * entities * 1ms).Section 8 provides a specification of how to obtain the number of   currently known entities.Section 10 provides values for the   constants c_hello_factor and c_hello_min.   The effective interval hello_e that is to be used by individual   entities is calculated by multiplying hello_d with a randomly chosen   number between c_hello_dither_min and c_hello_dither_max as follows:       hello_e = c_hello_dither_min +                 RND * (c_hello_dither_max - c_hello_dither_min)   with RND being a random function that yields an even distribution   between 0 and 1.  See alsoSection 10.   hello_n, the time for the next hello message in milliseconds is set   to hello_e + hello_now.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20028.1.2  Initialization of Values   Upon joining an Mbus session a protocol implementation sets   hello_p=0, hello_now=0 and entities=1, entities_p=1 (the Mbus entity   itself) and then calculates the time for the next hello message as   specified inSection 8.1.1.  The next hello message is scheduled for   transmission at hello_n.8.1.3  Adjusting the Hello Message Interval when the Number of Entities       increases   When the existence of a new entity is observed by a protocol   implementation the number of currently known entities is updated.  No   further action concerning the calculation of the hello message   interval is required.  The reconsideration of the timer interval   takes place when the current timer for the next hello message expires   (seeSection 8.1.5).8.1.4  Adjusting the Hello Message Interval when the Number of Entities       decreases   Upon realizing that an entity has left the Mbus the number of   currently known entities is updated and the following algorithm   should be used to reconsider the timer interval for hello messages:   1. The value for hello_n is updated by setting hello_n = hello_now +      (entities/entities_p)*(hello_n - hello_now)   2. The value for hello_p is updated by setting hello_p = hello_now -      (entities/entities_p)*(hello_now - hello_p)   3. The currently active timer for the next hello messages is      cancelled and a new timer is started for hello_n.   4. entities_p is set to entities.8.1.5 Expiration of hello timers   When the hello message timer expires, the protocol implementation   MUST perform the following operations:      The hello interval hello_e is computed as specified inSection8.1.1.      1. IF hello_e + hello_p <= hello_now THEN a hello message is         transmitted.  hello_p is set to hello_now, hello_e is         calculated again as specified inSection 8.1.1 and hello_n is         set to hello_e + hello_now.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      2. ELSE IF hello_e + hello_p > hello_now THEN hello_n is set to         hello_e + hello_p.  A new timer for the next hello message is         started to expire at hello_n.  No hello message is transmitted.      entities_p is set to entities.8.2  Calculating the Timeout for Mbus Entities   Whenever an Mbus entity has not heard for a time span of   c_hello_dead*(hello_d*c_hello_dither_max) milliseconds from another   Mbus entity it may consider this entity to have failed (or have quit   silently).  The number of the currently known entities MUST be   updated accordingly.  SeeSection 8.1.4 for details.  Note that no   need for any further action is necessarily implied from this   observation.Section 8.1.1 specifies how to obtain hello_d.Section 10 defines   values for the constants c_hello_dead and c_hello_dither_max.9.  Messages   This section defines some basic application-independent messages that   MUST be understood by all implementations; these messages are   required for proper operation of the Mbus.  This specification does   not contain application-specific messages. These are to be defined   outside of the basic Mbus protocol specification in separate Mbus   profiles.9.1  mbus.hello      Syntax:      mbus.hello()      Parameters: - none -   mbus.hello messages MUST be sent unreliably to all Mbus entities.   Each Mbus entity learns about other Mbus entities by observing their   mbus.hello messages and tracking the sender address of each message   and can thus calculate the current number of entities.   mbus.hello messages MUST be sent periodically in dynamically   calculated intervals as specified inSection 8.   Upon startup the first mbus.hello message MUST be sent after a delay   hello_delay, where hello_delay be a randomly chosen number between 0   and c_hello_min (seeSection 10).Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20029.2  mbus.bye      Syntax:  mbus.bye()      Parameters: - none -   An Mbus entity that is about to terminate (or "detach" from the Mbus)   SHOULD announce this by transmitting an mbus.bye message.  The   mbus.bye message MUST be sent unreliably to all entities.9.3  mbus.ping      Syntax:  mbus.ping()      Parameters: - none -   mbus.ping can be used to solicit other entities to signal their   existence by replying with an mbus.hello message.  Each protocol   implementation MUST understand mbus.ping and reply with an mbus.hello   message.  The reply hello message MUST be delayed for hello_delay   milliseconds, where hello_delay be a randomly chosen number between 0   and c_hello_min (seeSection 10).  Several mbus.ping messages MAY be   answered by a single mbus.hello: if one or more further mbus.ping   messages are received while the entity is waiting hello_delay time   units before transmitting the mbus.hello message, no extra mbus.hello   message need be scheduled for those additional mbus.ping messages.   As specified inSection 9.1 hello messages MUST be sent unreliably to   all Mbus entities.  This is also the case for replies to ping   messages.  An entity that replies to mbus.ping with mbus.hello SHOULD   stop any outstanding timers for hello messages after sending the   hello message and schedule a new timer event for the subsequent hello   message.  (Note that using the variables and the algorithms ofSection 8.1.1 this can be achieved by setting hello_p to hello_now.)   mbus.ping allows a new entity to quickly check for other entities   without having to wait for the regular individual hello messages.  By   specifying a target address the new entity can restrict the   solicitation for hello messages to a subset of entities it is   interested in.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20029.4  mbus.quit      Syntax:      mbus.quit()      Parameters: - none -   The mbus.quit message is used to request other entities to terminate   themselves (and detach from the Mbus).  Whether this request is   honoured by receiving entities or not is application specific and   not defined in this document.   The mbus.quit message can be multicast or sent reliably via unicast   to a single Mbus entity or a group of entities.9.5  mbus.waiting      Syntax:      mbus.waiting(condition)      Parameters:         symbol condition         The condition parameter is used to indicate that the entity         transmitting this message is waiting for a particular event to         occur.   An Mbus entity SHOULD be able to indicate that it is waiting for a   certain event to happen (similar to a P() operation on a semaphore   but without creating external state somewhere else).  In conjunction   with this, an Mbus entity SHOULD be capable of indicating to another   entity that this condition is now satisfied (similar to a semaphore's   V() operation).   The mbus.waiting message MAY be broadcast to all Mbus entities, MAY   be multicast to an arbitrary subgroup, or MAY be unicast to a   particular peer.  Transmission of the mbus.waiting message MUST be   unreliable and hence MUST be repeated at an application-defined   interval (until the condition is satisfied).   If an application wants to indicate that it is waiting for several   conditions to be met, several mbus.waiting messages are sent   (possibly included in the same Mbus payload).  Note that mbus.hello   and mbus.waiting messages may also be transmitted in a single Mbus   payload.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 20029.6  mbus.go      Syntax:      mbus.go(condition)      Parameters:         symbol condition         This parameter specifies which condition is met.   The mbus.go message is sent by an Mbus entity to "unblock" another   Mbus entity -- which has indicated that it is waiting for a certain   condition to be met.  Only a single condition can be specified per   mbus.go message.  If several conditions are satisfied simultaneously   multiple mbus.go messages MAY be combined in a single Mbus payload.   The mbus.go message MUST be sent reliably via unicast to the Mbus   entity to unblock.10.  Constants   The following values for timers and counters mentioned in this   document SHOULD be used by implementations:      +-------------------+------------------------+--------------+      |Timer / Counter    | Value                  | Unit         |      +-------------------+------------------------+--------------+      |c_hello_factor     | 200                    |     -        |      |c_hello_min        | 1000                   | milliseconds |      |c_hello_dither_min | 0.9                    |     -        |      |c_hello_dither_max | 1.1                    |     -        |      |c_hello_dead       | 5                      |     -        |      +-------------------+------------------------+--------------+         T_r=100ms         N_r=3         T_c=70ms         T_k=((N_r)*(N_r+1)/2)*T_rOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 200211.  Mbus Security11.1  Security Model   In order to prevent accidental or malicious disturbance of Mbus   communications through messages originated by applications from other   users, message authentication is deployed (Section 11.3).  For each   message, a digest MUST be calculated based on the value of a shared   secret key value.  Receivers of messages MUST check if the sender   belongs to the same Mbus security domain by re-calculating the digest   and comparing it to the received value.  The messages MUST only be   processed further if both values are equal.  In order to allow   different simultaneous Mbus sessions at a given scope and to   compensate defective implementations of host local multicast, message   authentication MUST be provided by conforming implementations.   Privacy of Mbus message transport can be achieved by optionally using   symmetric encryption methods (Section 11.2).  Each message MAY be   encrypted using an additional shared secret key and a symmetric   encryption algorithm.  Encryption is OPTIONAL for applications, i.e.,   it is allowed to configure an Mbus domain not to use encryption.  But   conforming implementations MUST provide the possibility to use   message encryption (see below).   Message authentication and encryption can be parameterized: the   algorithms to apply, the keys to use, etc.  These and other   parameters are defined in an Mbus configuration object that is   accessible by all Mbus entities that participate in an Mbus session.   In order to achieve interoperability conforming implementations   SHOULD use the values provided by such an Mbus configuration.Section 12 defines the mandatory and optional parameters as well as   storage procedures for different platforms.  Only in cases where none   of the options mentioned inSection 12 is applicable alternative   methods of configuring Mbus protocol entities MAY be deployed.   The algorithms and procedures for applying encryption and   authentication techniques are specified in the following sections.11.2  Encryption   Encryption of messages is OPTIONAL, that means, an Mbus MAY be   configured not to use encryption.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   Implementations can choose between different encryption algorithms.   Every conforming implementation MUST provide the AES [18] algorithm.   In addition, the following algorithms SHOULD be supported: DES [16],   3DES (triple DES) [16] and IDEA [20].   For algorithms requiring en/decryption data to be padded to certain   boundaries octets with a value of 0 SHOULD be used for padding   characters.   The length of the encryption keys is determined by the currently used   encryption algorithm.  This means, the configured encryption key MUST   NOT be shorter than the native key length for the currently   configured algorithm.   DES implementations MUST use the DES Cipher Block Chaining (CBC)   mode.  DES keys (56 bits) MUST be encoded as 8 octets as described inRFC 1423 [12], resulting in 12 Base64-encoded characters.  IDEA uses   128-bit keys (24 Base64-encoded characters).  AES can use either   128-bit, 192-bit or 256-bit keys.  For Mbus encryption using AES only   128-bit keys (24 Base64-encoded characters) MUST be used.11.3  Message Authentication   For authentication of messages, hashed message authentication codes   (HMACs) as described inRFC 2104 [5] are deployed.  In general,   implementations can choose between a number of digest algorithms.   For Mbus authentication, the HMAC algorithm MUST be applied in the   following way:      The keyed hash value is calculated using the HMAC algorithm      specified inRFC 2104 [5].  The specific hash algorithm and the      secret hash key MUST be obtained from the Mbus configuration (seeSection 12).      The keyed hash values (seeRFC 2104 [5]) MUST be truncated to 96      bits (12 octets).      Subsequently, the resulting 12 octets MUST be Base64-encoded,      resulting in 16 Base64-encoded characters (seeRFC 1521 [7]).   Either MD5 [15] or SHA-1 [17] SHOULD be used for message   authentication codes (MACs).  An implementation MAY provide MD5,   whereas SHA-1 MUST be implemented.   The length of the hash keys is determined by the selected hashing   algorithm.  This means, the configured hash key MUST NOT be shorter   than the native key length for the currently configured algorithm.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 200211.4  Procedures for Senders and Receivers   The algorithms that MUST be provided by implementations are AES and   SHA-1.   SeeSection 12 for a specification of notations for Base64-strings.   A sender MUST apply the following operations to a message that is to   be sent:   1. If encryption is enabled, the message MUST be encrypted using the      configured algorithm and the configured encryption key.  Padding      (adding extra-characters) for block-ciphers MUST be applied as      specified inSection 11.2.  If encryption is not enabled, the      message is left unchanged.   2. Subsequently, a message authentication code (MAC) for the      (encrypted) message MUST be calculated using the configured HMAC-      algorithm and the configured hash key.   3. The MAC MUST then be converted to Base64 encoding, resulting in 16      Base64-characters as specified inSection 11.3.   4. At last, the sender MUST construct the final message by placing      the (encrypted) message after the base64-encoded MAC and a CRLF.      The ABNF definition for the final message is as follows:      final_msg = MsgDigest CRLF encr_msg      MsgDigest = base64      encr_msg  = *OCTET   A receiver MUST apply the following operations to a message that it   has received:   1. Separate the base64-encoded MAC from the (encrypted) message and      decode the MAC.   2. Re-calculate the MAC for the message using the configured HMAC-      algorithm and the configured hash key.   3. Compare the original MAC with re-calculated MAC.  If they differ,      the message MUST be discarded without further processing.   4. If encryption is enabled, the message MUST be decrypted using the      configured algorithm and the configured encryption key.  Trailing      octets with a value of 0 MUST be deleted.  If the message does notOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      start with the string "mbus/" the message MUST be discarded      without further processing.12.  Mbus Configuration   An implementation MUST be configurable by the following parameters:      Configuration version         The version number of the given configuration entity.  Version         numbers allow implementations to check if they can process the         entries of a given configuration entity.  Version number are         integer values.  The version number for the version specified         here is 1.      Encryption key         The secret key used for message encryption.      Hash key         The hash key used for message authentication.      Scope         The multicast scope to be used for sent messages.   The above parameters are mandatory and MUST be present in every Mbus   configuration entity.   The following parameters are optional.  When they are present they   MUST be honored.  When they are not present implementations SHOULD   fall back to the predefined default values (as defined in Transport   (Section 6)):      Address         The non-standard multicast address to use for message         transport.      Use of Broadcast         It can be specified whether broadcast should be used.  If         broadcast has been configured implementations SHOULD use the         network broadcast address (as specified inSection 6.1.3)         instead of the standard multicast address.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002      Port Number         The non-standard UDP port number to use for message transport.   Two distinct facilities for parameter storage are considered: For   Unix-like systems a per-user configuration file SHOULD be used and   for Windows-95/98/NT/2000/XP systems a set of registry entries is   defined that SHOULD be used.  For other systems it is RECOMMENDED   that the file-based configuration mechanism is used.   The syntax of the values for the respective parameter entries remains   the same for both configuration facilities.  The following defines a   set of ABNF (seeRFC 2234 [13]) productions that are later re-used   for the definitions for the configuration file syntax and registry   entries:   algo-id          =    "NOENCR" / "AES" / "DES" / "3DES" / "IDEA" /                            "HMAC-MD5-96" / "HMAC-SHA1-96"   scope            =    "HOSTLOCAL" / "LINKLOCAL"   key              =    base64   version_number   =    1*10DIGIT   key_value        =    "(" algo-id "," key ")"   address          =    IPv4address / IPv6address / "BROADCAST"   port             =    1*5DIGIT   ; values from 0 through 65535   Given the definition above, a key entry MUST be specified using this   notation:      "("algo-id","base64string")"   algo-id is one of the character strings specified above.  For algo-   id=="NOENCR" the other fields are ignored.  The delimiting commas   MUST always be present though.   A Base64 string consists of the characters defined in the Base64   char-set (seeRFC 1521 [7]) including all possible padding   characters, i.e., the length of a Base64-string is always a multiple   of 4.   The scope parameter is used to configure an IP-Multicast scope and   may be set to either "HOSTLOCAL" or "LINKLOCAL".  Implementations   SHOULD choose an appropriate IP-Multicast scope depending on theOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   value of this parameter and construct an effective IP-Address   considering the specifications ofSection 6.1.   The use of broadcast is configured by providing the value "BROADCAST"   for the address field.  If broadcast has been configured,   implementations SHOULD use the network broadcast address for the used   IP version instead of the standard multicast address.   The version_number parameter specifies a version number for the used   configuration entity.12.1  File based parameter storage   The file name for an Mbus configuration file is ".mbus" in the user's   home-directory.  If an environment variable called MBUS is defined   implementations SHOULD interpret the value of this variable as a   fully qualified file name that is to be used for the configuration   file.  Implementations MUST ensure that this file has appropriate   file permissions that prevent other users to read or write it.  The   file MUST exist before a conference is initiated.  Its contents MUST   be UTF-8 encoded and MUST comply to the following syntax definition:      mbus-file     =    mbus-topic LF *(entry LF)      mbus-topic    =    "[MBUS]"      entry         =     1*(version_info / hashkey_info                             / encryptionkey_info / scope_info                             / port_info / address_info)      version_info  =    "CONFIG_VERSION=" version_number      hashkey_info  =    "HASHKEY=" key_value      encrkey_info  =    "ENCRYPTIONKEY=" key_value      scope_info    =    "SCOPE=" scope      port_info     =    "PORT=" port      address_info  =    "ADDRESS=" address   The following entries are defined: CONFIG_VERSION, HASHKEY,   ENCRYPTIONKEY, SCOPE, PORT, ADDRESS.   The entries CONFIG_VERSION, HASHKEY and ENCRYPTIONKEY are mandatory,   they MUST be present in every Mbus configuration file.  The order of   entries is not significant.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   An example for an Mbus configuration file:      [MBUS]      CONFIG_VERSION=1      HASHKEY=(HMAC-MD5-96,MTIzMTU2MTg5MTEy)      ENCRYPTIONKEY=(DES,MTIzMTU2MQ==)      SCOPE=HOSTLOCAL      ADDRESS=224.255.222.239      PORT=4700012.2  Registry-based parameter storage   For systems lacking the concept of a user's home-directory as a place   for configuration files the suggested database for configuration   settings (e.g., the Windows9x, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP   registry) SHOULD be used.  The hierarchy for Mbus related registry   entries is as follows:      HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Mbus   The entries in this hierarchy section are:      +---------------+--------+----------------+      |Name           | Type   | ABNF production|      +---------------+--------+----------------|      |CONFIG_VERSION | DWORD  | version_number |      |HASHKEY        | String | key_value      |      |ENCRYPTIONKEY  | String | key_value      |      |SCOPE          | String | scope          |      |ADDRESS        | String | address        |      |PORT           | DWORD  | port           |      +---------------+--------+----------------+   The same syntax for key values as for the file based configuration   facility MUST be used.13.  Security Considerations   The Mbus security mechanisms are specified inSection 11.1.   It should be noted that the Mbus transport specification defines a   mandatory baseline set of algorithms that have to be supported by   implementations.  This baseline set is intended to provide reasonable   security by mandating algorithms and key lengths that are considered   to be cryptographically strong enough at the time of writing.   However, in order to allow for efficiency it is allowable to use   cryptographically weaker algorithms, for example HMAC-MD5 instead ofOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   HMAC-SHA1.  Furthermore, encryption can be turned off completely if   privacy is provided by other means or not considered important for a   certain application.   Users of the Mbus should therefore be aware of the selected security   configuration and should check if it meets the security demands for a   given application.  Since every implementation MUST provide the   cryptographically strong algorithm it should always be possible to   configure an Mbus in a way that secure communication with   authentication and privacy is ensured.   In any way, application developers should be aware of incorrect IP   implementations that do not conform toRFC 1122 [2] and do send   datagrams with TTL values of zero, resulting in Mbus messages sent to   the local network link although a user might have selected host local   scope in the Mbus configuration.  When using administratively scoped   multicast, users cannot always assume the presence of correctly   configured boundary routers.  In these cases the use of encryption   SHOULD be considered if privacy is desired.14.  IANA Considerations   The IANA has assigned a scope-relative multicast address with an   offset of 8 for Mbus/IPv4.  The IPv6 permanent multicast address is   FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:300.   The registered Mbus UDP port number is 47000.15.  References   [1]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]   Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication         Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122, October 1989.   [3]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing         Architecture",RFC 2373, July 1998.   [4]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IPv6 Multicast Address         Assignments",RFC 2375, July 1998.   [5]   Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-Hashing         for Message Authentication",RFC 2104, February 1997.   [6]   Resnick, P., Editor, "Internet Message Format",RFC 2822, April         2001.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002   [7]   Borenstein, N. and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail         Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing         the Format of Internet Message Bodies",RFC 1521, September         1993.   [8]   Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobsen,         "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications",RFC1889, January 1996.   [9]   Handley, M., Schulzrinne, H., Schooler, E. and J. Rosenberg,         "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 2543, March 1999.   [10]  Handley, M. and V. Jacobsen, "SDP: Session Description         Protocol",RFC 2327, April 1998.   [11]  Meyer, D., "Administratively Scoped IP Multicast",BCP 23,RFC2365, July 1998.   [12]  Balenson, D., "Privacy Enhancement for Internet Electronic         Mail: Part III: Algorithms, Modes, and Identifiers",RFC 1423,         February 1993.   [13]  Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax         Specifications: ABNF",RFC 2234, November 1997.   [14]  Myers, J., "SMTP Service Extension for Authentication",RFC2554, March 1999.   [15]  Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm",RFC 1321, April         1992.   [16]  U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE/National Institute of Standards and         Technology, "Data Encryption Standard (DES)", FIPS PUB 46-3,         Category Computer Security, Subcategory Cryptography, October         1999.   [17]  U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE/National Institute of Standards and         Technology, "Secure Hash Standard", FIPS PUB 180-1, April 1995.   [18]  Daemen, J.D. and V.R. Rijmen, "AES Proposal: Rijndael", March         1999.   [19]  IANA, "Internet Multicast Addresses", URLhttp://www.iana.org/assignments/multicast-addresses, May 2001.   [20]  Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography", Edition 2, Publisher John         Wiley & Sons, Inc., status: non-normative, 1996.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 36]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002Appendix A.  About References   Please note that the list of references contains normative as well as   non-normative references.  Each Non-normative references is marked as   "status: non-normative".  All unmarked references are normative.Appendix B.  Limitations and Future Work   The Mbus is a light-weight local coordination mechanism and   deliberately not designed for larger scope coordination.  It is   expected to be used on a single node or -- at most -- on a single   network link.   Therefore the Mbus protocol does not contain features that would be   required to qualify it for the use over the global Internet:      There are no mechanisms to provide congestion control.  The issue      of congestion control is a general problem for multicast      protocols.  The Mbus allows for un-acknowledged messages that are      sent unreliably, for example as event notifications, from one      entity to another.  Since negative acknowledgements are not      defined there is no way the sender could realize that it is      flooding another entity or congesting a low bandwidth network      segment.      The reliability mechanism, i.e., the retransmission timers, are      designed to provide effective, responsive message transport on      local links but are not suited to cope with larger delays that      could be introduced from router queues etc.   Some experiments are currently underway to test the applicability of   bridges between different distributed Mbus domains without changing   the basic protocol semantics.  Since the use of such bridges should   be orthogonal to the basic Mbus protocol definitions and since these   experiments are still work in progress there is no mention of this   concept in this specification.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 37]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002Authors' Addresses   Joerg Ott   TZI, Universitaet Bremen   Bibliothekstr. 1   Bremen  28359   Germany   Phone: +49.421.201-7028   Fax:   +49.421.218-7000   EMail: jo@tzi.uni-bremen.de   Colin Perkins   USC Information Sciences Institute   3811 N. Fairfax Drive #200   Arlington VA 22203   USA   EMail: csp@isi.edu   Dirk Kutscher   TZI, Universitaet Bremen   Bibliothekstr. 1   Bremen  28359   Germany   Phone: +49.421.218-7595   Fax:   +49.421.218-7000   EMail: dku@tzi.uni-bremen.deOtt, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 38]

RFC 3259          A Message Bus for Local Coordination        April 2002Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Ott, et. al.                 Informational                     [Page 39]

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