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Network Working Group                                          A. NewtonRequest for Comments: 4993                                VeriSign, Inc.Category: Standards Track                                    August 2007A Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocolfor the Internet Registry Information ServiceStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).Abstract   This document describes a lightweight UDP transfer protocol for the   Internet Registry Information Service (IRIS).  This transfer protocol   uses a single packet for every request and response, and optionally   employs compression over the contents of the packet.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Document Terminology ............................................33. Packet Format ...................................................43.1. Payload Descriptor .........................................43.1.1. Payload Request Descriptor ..........................43.1.2. Payload Response Descriptor .........................53.1.3. Payload Header ......................................63.1.4. Payload Types .......................................63.1.5. Version Information .................................73.1.6. Size Information ....................................83.1.7. Other Information ...................................84. Interactions ....................................................95. Internationalization Considerations ............................106. IRIS Transport Mapping Definitions .............................106.1. URI Scheme ................................................106.2. Application Protocol Label ................................107. IANA Considerations ............................................107.1. Registrations .............................................107.1.1. URI Scheme Registration ............................107.1.2. Well-known UDP Port Registration ...................117.1.3. S-NAPTR Registration ...............................118. Security Considerations ........................................129. References .....................................................139.1. Normative References ......................................139.2. Informative References ....................................13Appendix A. Examples ..............................................14Appendix B. Contributors ..........................................18Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 20071.  Introduction   Using Straightforward Name Authority Pointers (S-NAPTR) [4], IRIS has   the ability to define the use of multiple application transports or   transfer protocols for different types of registry services, all at   the discretion of the server operator.  The UDP transfer protocol   defined in this document is completely independent of the registry   types for which it can carry data.   The binding of this UDP transfer protocol to IRIS is called IRIS-LWZ   (for IRIS Lightweight using Compression).  Its message exchange   pattern is simple: a client sends a request in one UDP packet, and a   server responds with an answer in one UDP packet.   IRIS-LWZ packets are composed of two parts, a binary payload   descriptor and a request/response transaction payload.  The request/   response transaction payload may be compressed using the DEFLATE [1]   algorithm.2.  Document Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [6].   Octet fields with numeric values are given according to the   conventions inRFC 1166 [10]: the leftmost bit of the whole field is   the most significant bit; when a multi-octet quantity is transmitted   the most significant octet is transmitted first.  Bits signifying   flags in an octet are numbered according to the conventions ofRFC1166 [10]: bit 0 is the most significant bit and bit 7 is the least   significant bit.  When a diagram describes a group of octets, the   order of transmission for the octets starts from the left.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 20073.  Packet Format   The packet format for IRIS-LWZ is as follows:         +------------+---------+   field |  payload   | payload |         | descriptor |         |         +------------+---------+   octets 3 or 6..261*    0..n     * In request packets, the payload descriptor can vary in length       from 6 to 261 octets (i.e., 6..261).  In response packets, the       payload descriptor is always 3 octets.                                IRIS-LWZ Packet       Each IRIS-LWZ query or response is contained in a single UDP       packet.  Servers MUST be prepared to accept packets as large as       4000 octets, and clients MUST NOT send packets larger than 4000       octets.3.1.  Payload Descriptor       The payload descriptor has two different formats, one for a       request and one for a response.  However, each format shares a       common 1-octet payload header described inSection 3.1.3.3.1.1.  Payload Request Descriptor       The payload descriptor for request packets varies from 6 to 261       octets in length and has the following format:             +--------+-------------+----------+-----------+-----------+       field | header | transaction | maximum  | authority | authority |             |        |     ID      | response |  length   |           |             |        |             | length   |           |           |             +--------+-------------+----------+-----------+-----------+       octets    1           2           2           1         0..255                          Request Payload Descriptor       These fields have the following meanings:       o  header - as described inSection 3.1.3.   o  transaction ID - a 16-bit value identifying the transaction.  This      value will be returned in the payload response descriptor (Section3.1.2) and can be used by clients to match requests withNewton                      Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007      responses.  Clients SHOULD NOT use sequential values (seeSection8).  Clients MUST NOT set all the bits in this value to 1 (i.e.,      use a value of 0xFFFF).   o  maximum response length - the total length of the UDP packet      (i.e., UDP header length + payload descriptor length + XML payload      length) that should not be exceeded when responding to this      request.  If the server cannot provide a response that is equal to      or less than this value, then it MUST respond with size      information (Section 3.1.6).   o  authority length - the length of the authority field in this      payload descriptor.   o  authority - a string of octets describing the authority against      which this request is to be executed.  See [3] for the definition      and description of an authority.  The number of octets in this      string MUST be no more and no less than the number specified by      the authority length.3.1.2.  Payload Response Descriptor   The payload descriptor for response packets is always 3 octets and   consists of a payload header (Section 3.1.3) and a transaction ID.         +--------+-------------+   field | header | transaction |         |        |     ID      |         +--------+-------------+   octets    1           2                        Payload Response Descriptor   The purpose of the transaction ID is to allow clients to match   requests to responses.  A value of 0xFFFF is reserved for server use.   The value of the transaction ID is as follows:   1.  If the transaction ID in the corresponding request could not be       read due to truncation, servers MUST use a transaction ID with       all bits set to 1 (i.e., a value of OxFFFF) and send a descriptor       error (seeSection 3.1.7).   2.  If the transaction ID in the corresponding request is a value of       0xFFFF, servers MUST use a transaction ID of 0xFFFF and send a       descriptor error (seeSection 3.1.7).   3.  Otherwise, the transaction ID MUST be the value of the       transaction ID of the corresponding request.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 20073.1.3.  Payload Header   The bits of the payload header are ordered according toRFC 1166   [10], where bit 0 is the most significant and bit 7 is the least   significant.  Each bit in the 1-octet payload header has the   following meaning:   o  bits 0 and 1 - version number ('V' field) - If 0 (both bits are      zero), the protocol is the version defined in this document.      Otherwise, the rest of the bits in the header and the payload may      be interpreted as another version.   o  bit 2 - request/response flag ('RR' flag) - If 0, this packet is a      request (Section 3.1.1) packet.  If 1, this packet is a response      (Section 3.1.2) packet.   o  bits 3 - payload deflated ('PD' flag) - If 1, the payload is      compressed using the DEFLATE [1] algorithm.   o  bit 4 - deflate supported ('DS' flag) - If 1, the sender of this      packet supports compression using the DEFLATE algorithm.  When      this bit is 0 in a request, the payload of the response MUST NOT      be compressed with DEFLATE.   o  bit 5 - reserved - This MUST be 0.   o  bits 6 and 7 - The value of these bits indicates payload types      (Section 3.1.4) ('PT' field).3.1.4.  Payload Types   A payload type indicates the type of content in the UDP packet   following the payload descriptor.  Some payload types have no meaning   in request packets, and some payload types differ in meaning between   requests and responses.  Some payload types indicate an empty   payload.   The payload type values in binary are as follows:      00 - xml payload ('xml' type).  The payload is either an IRIS-      based XML request or an IRIS-based XML response.      01 - version info ('vi' type).  In a request packet, this payload      type indicates that the server is to respond with version      information (Section 3.1.5), and that the payload is empty.  In a      response packet, this payload type indicates that the payload is      version information (Section 3.1.5).Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007      10 - size info ('si' type).  This payload type has no meaning in a      request packet and is a descriptor error.  In a response packet,      this payload type indicates that the payload is size information      (Section 3.1.6).      11 - other info ('oi' type).  This payload type has no meaning in      a request packet and is a descriptor error.  In a response packet,      this payload type indicates that the payload is other information      (Section 3.1.7).3.1.5.  Version Information   A payload type with version information ('vi') MUST be conformant to   the XML defined in [8] and use the <versions> element as the root   element.   In the context of IRIS-LWZ, the protocol identifiers for these   elements are as follows:      <transferProtocol> - the value "iris.lwz1" to indicate the      protocol specified in this document.      <application> - the XML namespace identifier for IRIS [3].      <dataModel> - the XML namespace identifier for IRIS registries.   This document defines no extension identifiers and no authentication   mechanism identifiers.   Servers SHOULD send version information in the following cases:   1.  In response to a version information request (i.e., the PT field       is set to 'vi').   2.  The version in a payload descriptor header does not match a       version the server supports.   3.  The IRIS-based XML payload does not match a version the server       supports.   The protocols identified by the <transferProtocol> element MUST only   indicate protocols running on the same socket as the sender of the   corresponding response.  In other words, while a server operator may   also be running IRIS-XPC [9], this XML instance is only intended to   describe version negotiation for IRIS-LWZ.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   The octet size for the 'requestSizeOctets' and 'responseSizeOctets'   attributes of the <tranferProtocol> element are defined inSection3.1.6.3.1.6.  Size Information   A payload type with size information ('si') MUST be conformant to the   XML defined in [8] and use the <size> element as the root element.   Octet counts provided by this information are defined as the total   length of the UDP packet (i.e., UDP header length + payload   descriptor length + XML payload length).3.1.7.  Other Information   A payload type with other information ('oi') MUST be conformant to   the XML defined in [8] and use the <other> element as the root   element.   The values for the 'type' attribute of <other> are as follows:      'descriptor-error' - indicates there was an error decoding the      descriptor.  Servers SHOULD send a descriptor error in the      following cases:      1.  When a request is received with a payload type indicating size          information (i.e., the PT field is 'si').      2.  When a request is received with a payload type indicating          other information (i.e., the PT field is 'oi').      3.  When a request is sent with a transaction ID of 0xFFFF (which          is reserved for server use).      4.  When a request is received with an incomplete or truncated          payload descriptor.      5.  When reserved bits in the payload descriptor are set to values          other than zero.      'payload-error' - indicates there was an error interpreting the      payload.  Servers MUST send a payload error if they receive XML      (i.e., the PT field is set to 'xml') and the XML cannot be parsed.      'system-error' - indicates that the receiver cannot process the      request due to a condition not related to this protocol.  Servers      SHOULD send a system-error when they are capable of responding to      requests but not capable of processing requests.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007      'authority-error' - indicates that the intended authority      specified in the corresponding request is not served by the      receiver.  Servers SHOULD send an authority error when they      receive a request directed to an authority other than those they      serve.      'no-inflation-support-error' - indicates that the receiver does      not support payloads that have been compressed with DEFLATE [1].      Servers MUST send this error when they receive a request that has      been compressed with DEFLATE but they do not support inflation.4.  Interactions   The intent of IRIS-LWZ is to utilize UDP for IRIS requests and   responses when UDP is appropriate.  Not all IRIS requests and   responses will be able to utilize UDP and may require the use of   other transfer protocols (i.e., IRIS-XPC [9] and/or Blocks Extensible   Exchange Protocol (BEEP)).  The following strategy SHOULD be used:   1.  If a request requires authentication, confidentiality, or other       security, use another transfer protocol.  IRIS-XPC [9] is       RECOMMENDED.   2.  The maximum packet size should be calculated as follows:       a.  If the path MTU is unknown, the maximum packet size MUST be           1500 octets.       b.  If the path MTU is known, the maximum packet size MUST NOT           exceed the path MTU and MUST NOT exceed 4000 octets.   3.  If a request is less than or equal to the maximum packet size,       send it uncompressed.   4.  If a request can be compressed to a size less than or equal to       the maximum packet size, send the request using compression.       Otherwise, use another transfer protocol.  In cases where another       transfer protocol is needed, IRIS-XPC [9] is RECOMMENDED.   5.  If a request yields a size error, send the request with another       transfer protocol.  IRIS-XPC [9] is RECOMMENDED.   For retransmission of requests considered to be unanswered, a client   SHOULD retransmit using a timeout value initially set to 1 second.   This timeout value SHOULD be doubled for every retransmission, and a   client SHOULD NOT retransmit any request once the timeout value has   reached 60 seconds.Newton                      Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   Clients that use timeout values other than the recommendations above   MUST allocate or have allocated dedicated network resources that will   ensure fairness to other network packets and avoid network   congestion.   Clients MUST NOT have more than one outstanding request (i.e., an   unanswered request that has not timed out) at a time unless they   allocate or have been allocated dedicated network bandwidth and   resources reserved specifically for this purpose.   Finally, if a client intends multiple requests to the same server in   a short amount of time, this protocol offers no real advantage over   IRIS-XPC [9].  In such a case, IRIS-XPC is RECOMMENDED to be used as   it would be similarly or more efficient and would offer greater   response sizes and allow better security.5.  Internationalization Considerations   XML processors are obliged to recognize both UTF-8 and UTF-16 [2]   encodings.  Use of the XML defined by [8] MUST NOT use any other   character encodings other than UTF-8 or UTF-16.6.  IRIS Transport Mapping Definitions   This section lists the definitions required by IRIS [3] for transport   mappings.6.1.  URI Scheme   SeeSection 7.1.1.6.2.  Application Protocol Label   SeeSection 7.1.3.7.  IANA Considerations7.1.  Registrations7.1.1.  URI Scheme Registration   URL scheme name: iris.lwz   Status: permanent   URL scheme syntax: defined in [3].   Character encoding considerations: as defined inRFC 3986 [5].Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   Intended usage: identifies an IRIS entity made available using XML   over UDP   Applications using this scheme: defined in IRIS [3].   Interoperability considerations: n/a   Security Considerations: defined inSection 8.   Relevant Publications: IRIS [3].   Contact Information: Andrew Newton <andy@hxr.us>   Author/Change controller: the IESG7.1.2.  Well-known UDP Port Registration   Protocol Number: UDP   UDP Port Number: 715   Message Formats, Types, Opcodes, and Sequences: defined in Sections3   and 3.1.   Functions: defined in IRIS [3].   Use of Broadcast/Multicast: none   Proposed Name: IRIS-LWZ   Short name: iris.lwz   Contact Information: Andrew Newton <andy@hxr.us>7.1.3.  S-NAPTR Registration   Application Protocol Label (see [4]): iris.lwz   Intended usage: identifies an IRIS server using XML over UDP   Interoperability considerations: n/a   Security Considerations: defined inSection 8.   Relevant Publications: IRIS [3].   Contact Information: Andrew Newton <andy@hxr.us>Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   Author/Change controller: the IESG8.  Security Considerations   IRIS-LWZ is intended for serving public data; it provides no in-band   mechanisms for authentication or confidentiality.  Any application   with these needs must provide out-of-band mechanisms (e.g., IPsec),   or use the IRIS transfer protocols that provide such capabilities,   such as IRIS-XPC [9].   Due to this lack of security, it is possible for an attacker to alter   IRIS-LWZ messages sent from the client to the server and from the   server to the client.  Such an attack can result in denying usage of   an IRIS service or in supplying false information to end users and   many other scenarios.   Because IRIS-LWZ is a UDP-based protocol, it is possible for servers   using IRIS-LWZ to be used in a type of distributed denial-of-service   attack known as a reflection attack.  This type of attack affects   other types of UDP-using protocols, such as DNS.  Server operators   should be prepared to apply the same methods used for mitigating   reflection attacks with other protocols, such as DNS, when using   IRIS-LWZ.  All operators should follow the advice given inBCP 38   [7].   IRIS-LWZ uses transaction IDs in the payload descriptors to better   enable a client to match a response to a request.  By randomizing the   transaction IDs being used (i.e., not using sequential numbers),   attackers flooding the network with a large amount of spoofed packets   have a lesser chance of succeeding with the attack.  This measure is   not guaranteed to thwart any such attack.  Client implementers MUST   take appropriate measures when ignoring this advice.Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 20079.  References9.1.  Normative References   [1]   Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification         version 1.3",RFC 1951, May 1996.   [2]   The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version 3", ISBN         0-201-61633-5, 2000, <The Unicode Standard, Version 3>.   [3]   Newton, A. and M. Sanz, "IRIS: The Internet Registry         Information Service (IRIS) Core Protocol",RFC 3981, January         2005.   [4]   Daigle, L. and A. Newton, "Domain-Based Application Service         Location Using SRV RRs and the Dynamic Delegation Discovery         Service (DDDS)",RFC 3958, January 2005.   [5]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform         Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC 3986,         January 2005.   [6]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",RFC 2119,BCP 14, March 1997.   [7]   Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:         Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source         Address Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000.   [8]   Newton, A., "A Common Schema for Internet Registry Information         Service Transfer Protocols",RFC 4991, August 2007.   [9]   Newton, A., "XML Pipelining with Chunks for the Internet         Registry Information Service",RFC 4992, August 2007.9.2.  Informative References   [10]  Kirkpatrick, S., Stahl, M., and M. Recker, "Internet numbers",RFC 1166, July 1990.Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007Appendix A.  Examples   This section gives examples of IRIS-LWZ exchanges.  Lines beginning   with "C:" denote data sent by the client to the server, and lines   beginning with "S:" denote data sent by the server to the client.   Following the "C:" or "S:", the line contains either octet values in   hexadecimal notation with comments or XML fragments.  No line   contains both octet values with comments and XML fragments.  Comments   are contained within parentheses.Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   The following example demonstrates an IRIS client requesting a lookup   of 'AUP' in the 'local' entity class of a 'dreg1' registry.  The   client passes a bag (see [3]) with the search request.  The server   responds with a 'nameNotFound' response and an explanation.   C:           (request packet)   C: 0x08      (header: V=0,RR=request,PD=no,DS=yes,PT=xml)   C: 0x03 0xA4 (transaction ID=932)   C: 0x05 0xDA (maximum response size=1498)   C: 0x09      (authority length=9)   C:           (authority="localhost")   C: 0x6c 0x6f 0x63 0x61 0x6c 0x68 0x6f 0x73 0x74   C:           (IRIS XML request)   C: <request xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1"   C:    xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" >   C:    <searchSet>   C:      <bag>   C:        <simpleBag xmlns="http://example.com/">   C:          <salt>127.0.0.1:3434</salt>   C:          <md5>4LnQ1KdCahzyvwBqJis5rw==</md5>   C:        </simpleBag>   C:      </bag>   C:      <lookupEntity   C:        registryType="dreg1"   C:        entityClass="local"   C:        entityName="AUP" />   C:    </searchSet>   C: </request>   S:           (response packet)   S: 0x20      (header: V=0,RR=response,PD=no,DS=no,PT=xml)   S: 0x03 0xA4 (transaction ID=932)   S:           (IRIS XML response)   S: <iris:response xmlns:iris="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1">   S: <iris:resultSet><iris:answer></iris:answer>   S: <iris:nameNotFound><iris:explanation language="en-US">   S: The name 'AUP' is not found in 'local'.</iris:explanation>   S: </iris:nameNotFound></iris:resultSet></iris:response>                                 Example 1Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   The following example demonstrates an IRIS client requesting domain   availability information for 'milo.example.com'.  The server responds   that the domain is assigned and active.   C:           (request packet)   C: 0x00      (header: V=0,RR=request,PD=no,DS=no,PT=xml)   C: 0x0B 0xE7 (transaction ID=3047)   C: 0x0F 0xA0 (maximum response size=4000)   C: 0x0B      (authority length=11)   C:           (authority="example.com")   C: 0x65 0x78 0x61 0x6D 0x70 0x6C 0x65 0x23 0x63 0x6F 0x6D   C:           (IRIS XML request)   C: <request xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1"   C:   xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"   C:   xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1 iris.xsd" >   C:   <searchSet>   C:     <lookupEntity   C:       registryType="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dchk1"   C:       entityClass="domain-name"   C:       entityName="milo.example.com" />   C:   </searchSet>   C: </request>   S:           (response packet)   S: 0x20      (header: V=0,RR=response,PD=no,DS=no,PT=xml)   S: 0x0B 0xE7 (transaction ID=3047)   S:           (IRIS XML response)   S: <iris:response xmlns:iris="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1">   S: <iris:resultSet><iris:answer><domain   S: authority="example.com" registryType="dchk1"   S: entityClass="domain-name" entityName="tcs-com-1"   S: temporaryReference="true"   S: xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dchk1"><domainName>   S: milo.example.com</domainName><status><assignedAndActive/>   S: </status></domain></iris:answer>   S: </iris:resultSet></iris:response>                                 Example 2Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   The following example demonstrates an IRIS client requesting domain   availability information for felix.example.net, hobbes.example.net,   and daffy.example.net.  The client does not support responses   compressed with DEFLATE, and the maximum UDP packet it can safely   receive is 498 octets.  The server responds with size information   indicating that it would take 1211 octets to provide an answer.   C:           (request packet)   C: 0x00      (header: V=0,RR=request,PD=no,DS=no,PT=xml)   C: 0x7E 0x8A (transaction ID=32394)   C: 0x01 0xF2 (maximum response size=498)   C: 0x0B      (authority length=11)   C:           (authority="example.net")   C: 0x65 0x78 0x61 0x6D 0x70 0x6C 0x65 0x23 0x6E 0x65 0x74   C:           (IRIS XML request)   C: <request xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1"   C:   xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"   C:   xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1 iris1.xsd">   C:   <searchSet>   C:     <lookupEntity registryType="dchk1" entityClass="domain-name"   C:       entityName="felix.example.net" />   C:   </searchSet>   C:   <searchSet>   C:     <lookupEntity registryType="dchk1" entityClass="domain-name"   C:       entityName="hobbes.example.net" />   C:   </searchSet>   C:   <searchSet>   C:     <lookupEntity registryType="dchk1" entityClass="domain-name"   C:       entityName="daffy.example.net" />   C:   </searchSet>   C: </request>   S:           (response packet)   S: 0x22      (header: V=0,RR=response,PD=no,DS=no,PT=si)   S: 0x7E 0x8A (transaction ID=32394)   S:           (Size Information XML response)   S: <responseSize xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris-transport">   S:   <octets>1211</octets>   S: </responseSize>                                 Example 3Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007   The following example illustrates an IRIS client requesting the   version information from a server, and the server returning the   version information.   C:           (request packet)   C: 0x01      (header: V=0,RR=request,PD=no,DS=no,PT=vi)   C: 0x2E 0x9C (transaction ID=11932)   C: 0x01 0xF2 (maximum response size=498)   C: 0x0B      (authority length=11)   C:           (authority="example.net")   C: 0x65 0x78 0x61 0x6D 0x70 0x6C 0x65 0x23 0x6E 0x65 0x74   S:           (response packet)   S: 0x21      (header: V=0,RR=response,PD=no,DS=no,PT=vi)   S: 0x2E 0x9C (transaction ID=11932)   S:           (Version Information XML response)   S: <versions xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris-transport">   S:   <transferProtocol protocolId="iris.lwz1">   S:     <application protocolId="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:iris1">   S:       <dataModel protocolId="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dchk1"/>   S:       <dataModel protocolId="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dreg1"/>   S:     </application>   S:   </transferProtocol>   S: </versions>                                 Example 4Appendix B.  Contributors   Substantive contributions to this document have been provided by the   members of the IETF's CRISP Working Group, especially Milena Caires   and David Blacka.Author's Address   Andrew L. Newton   VeriSign, Inc.   21345 Ridgetop Circle   Sterling, VA  20166   USA   Phone: +1 703 948 3382   EMail: andy@hxr.us   URI:http://www.verisignlabs.com/Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4993      Lightweight UDP Transfer Protocol for IRIS     August 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Newton                      Standards Track                    [Page 19]

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