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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          Y. NomuraRequest for Comments: 4473                                  Fujitsu LabsCategory: Informational                                         R. Walsh                                                              J-P. Luoma                                                                   Nokia                                                                  J. Ott                                       Helsinki University of Technology                                                          H. Schulzrinne                                                     Columbia University                                                                May 2006Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)Status 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 (2006).Abstract   This memo specifies requirements for a framework and protocols for   accessing and updating Internet Media Guide (IMG) information for   media-on-demand and multicast applications.  These requirements are   designed to guide choice and development of IMG protocols for   efficient and scalable delivery.Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Background and Motivation ..................................31.2. Scope of This Document .....................................42. Terminology .....................................................52.1. New Terms ..................................................53. Problem Statement ...............................................64. Use Cases Requiring IMGs ........................................74.1. Connectivity-based Use Cases ...............................74.1.1. IP Datacast to a Wireless Receiver ..................74.1.2. Regular Fixed Dial-up Internet Connection ...........84.1.3. Broadband Always-on Fixed Internet Connection .......94.2. Content-orientated Use Cases ...............................94.2.1. TV and Radio Program Delivery .......................94.2.2. Media Coverage of a Live Event .....................104.2.3. Distance Learning ..................................104.2.4. Multiplayer Gaming .................................104.2.5. File Distribution ..................................114.2.6. Coming-release and Pre-released Content ............115. Requirements ...................................................115.1. General Requirements ......................................115.1.1. Independence of IMG Operations from IMG Metadata ...115.1.2. Multiple IMG Senders ...............................125.1.3. Modularity .........................................125.2. Delivery Properties .......................................125.2.1. Scalability ........................................135.2.2. Support for Intermittent Connectivity ..............135.2.3. Congestion Control .................................135.2.4. Sender- and Receiver-Driven Delivery ...............135.3. Customized IMGs ...........................................145.4. Reliability ...............................................155.4.1. Managing Consistency ...............................155.4.2. Reliable Message Exchange ..........................165.5. IMG Descriptions ..........................................166. Security Considerations ........................................176.1. IMG Authentication and Integrity ..........................186.2. Privacy ...................................................196.3. Access Control for IMGs ...................................196.4. Denial-of-Service (DOS) Attacks ...........................206.5. Replay Attacks ............................................207. Normative References ...........................................218. Informative References .........................................219. Acknowledgements ...............................................22Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20061.  Introduction1.1.  Background and Motivation   For some ten years, multicast-based (multimedia) conferences   (including IETF working group sessions) as well as broadcasts of   lectures/seminars, concerts, and other events have been used in the   Internet, more precisely, on the MBONE.  Schedules and descriptions   for such multimedia sessions as well as the transport addresses,   codecs, and their parameters have been described using the Session   Description Protocol (SDP) [2] as a rudimentary (but as of then   largely sufficient) means.  Descriptions have been disseminated using   the Session Announcement Protocol (SAP) [3] and Session Directory   Tools such as SD [4] or SDR [5]; descriptions have also been put up   on web pages, sent by electronic mail, etc.   Recently, interest has grown to expand -- or better: to generalize --   the applicability of these kinds of session descriptions.   Descriptions are becoming more elaborate in terms of included   metadata, more generic regarding the types of media sessions, and   possibly also support other transports than just IP (e.g., legacy TV   channel addresses).  This peers well with the DVB (Digital Video   Broadcasting) [6] Organization's increased activities towards IP-   based communications over satellite, cable, and terrestrial radio   networks, also considering IP as the basis for TV broadcasts and   further services.  The program/content descriptions are referred to   as Internet Media Guides (IMGs) and can be viewed as a generalization   of Electronic Program Guides (EPGs) and multimedia session   descriptions.   An Internet Media Guide (IMG) has a structured collection of   multimedia session descriptions expressed using SDP, SDPng [7], or   some similar session description format.  This is used to describe a   set of multimedia services (e.g., television program schedules,   content delivery schedules) but may also refer to other networked   resources including web pages.  IMGs provide the envelope for   metadata formats and session descriptions defined elsewhere with the   aim of facilitating structuring, versioning, referencing,   distributing, and maintaining (caching, updating) such information.   The IMG metadata may be delivered to a potentially large audience,   who uses it to join a subset of the sessions described, and who may   need to be notified of changes to this information.  Hence, a   framework for distributing IMG metadata in various different ways is   needed to accommodate the needs of different audiences: For   traditional broadcast-style scenarios, multicast-based (push)   distribution of IMG metadata needs to be supported.  Where no   multicast is available, unicast-based push is required, too.Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   Furthermore, IMG metadata may need to be retrieved interactively,   similar to web pages (e.g., after rebooting a system or when a user   is browsing after network connectivity has been re-established).   Finally, IMG metadata may be updated as time elapses because content   described in the guide may be changed: for example, the airtime of an   event such as a concert or sports event may change, possibly   affecting the airtime of subsequent media.  This may be done by   polling the IMG sender as well as by asynchronous change   notifications.   Furthermore, any Internet host can be a sender of content and thus an   IMG sender.  Some of the content sources and sinks may only be   connected to the Internet sporadically.  Also, a single human user   may use many different devices to access metadata.  Thus, we envision   that IMG metadata can be sent and received by, among others, cellular   phones, Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), personal computers,   streaming video servers, set-top boxes, video cameras, and Digital   Video Recorders (DVRs), and that the data be carried across arbitrary   types of link layers, including bandwidth-constrained mobile   networks.  However, generally we expect IMG senders to be well-   connected hosts.   Finally, with many potential senders and receivers, different types   of networks, and presumably numerous service providers, IMG metadata   may need to be combined, split, filtered, augmented, modified, etc.,   on their way from the sender(s) to the receiver(s) to provide the   ultimate user with a suitable selection of multimedia services   according to her preferences, subscriptions, location, and context   (e.g., devices, access networks).1.2.  Scope of This Document   This document defines requirements that Internet Media Guide   mechanisms must satisfy in order to deliver IMG metadata to a   potentially large audience.  Since IMGs can describe many kinds of   multimedia content, IMG methods are generally applicable to several   scenarios.   In considering wide applicability, this document provides the problem   statement and discusses existing mechanisms in this area.  Then   several use case scenarios for IMGs are explained including   descriptions of how IMG metadata and IMG delivery mechanisms   contribute to these scenarios.  Following this, this document   provides general requirements that are independent of any transport   layer mechanism and application, such as delivery properties,   reliability, and IMG descriptions.Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   This document reflects investigating work on delivery mechanisms for   IMGs and generalizing work on session announcement and initiation   protocols, especially in the field of the MMUSIC working group (SAP,   SIP [8], SDP).2.  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 [1].2.1.  New Terms   Internet Media Guide (IMG): IMG is a generic term used to describe         the formation, delivery, and use of IMG metadata.  The         definition of the IMG is intentionally left imprecise.   IMG Element: The smallest atomic element of metadata that can be         transmitted separately by IMG operations and referenced         individually from other IMG elements.   IMG Metadata: A set of metadata consisting of one or more IMG         elements.  IMG metadata describes the features of multimedia         content used to enable selection of and access to media         sessions containing content.  For example, metadata may consist         of the URI, title, airtime, bandwidth needed, file size, text         summary, genre, and access restrictions.   IMG Delivery: The process of exchanging IMG metadata in terms of both         large-scale and atomic data transfers.   IMG Sender: An IMG sender is a logical entity that sends IMG metadata         to one or more IMG receivers.   IMG Receiver: An IMG receiver is a logical entity that receives IMG         metadata from an IMG sender.   IMG Transceiver: An IMG transceiver combines an IMG receiver and         sender.  It may modify received IMG metadata or merge IMG         metadata received from several different IMG senders.   IMG Operation: An atomic operation of an IMG transport protocol, used         between IMG sender(s) and IMG receiver(s) for the delivery of         IMG metadata and for the control of IMG sender(s)/receiver(s).   IMG Transport Protocol: A protocol that transports IMG metadata from         an IMG sender to IMG receiver(s).Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   IMG Transport Session: An association between an IMG sender and one         or more IMG receivers within the scope of an IMG transport         protocol.  An IMG transport session involves a time-bound         series of IMG transport protocol interactions that provide         delivery of IMG metadata from the IMG sender to the IMG         receiver(s).3.  Problem Statement   As we enumerate the requirements for IMGs, it will become clear that   they are not fully addressed by the existing protocols.  The   "Framework for the Usage of Internet Media Guides" [9] discusses   about these issues in more detail.   The MMUSIC working group has long been investigating content, media   and service information delivery mechanisms, and protocols, and has   itself produced the Session Announcement Protocol (SAP), the Session   Description Protocol (SDP), and the Session Initiation Protocol   (SIP).  SDP is capable of describing multimedia sessions (i.e.,   content in a wider sense) by means of limited descriptive information   intended for human perception plus transport, scheduling information,   and codecs and addresses for setting up media sessions.  SIP and SAP   are protocols to distribute these session descriptions.   However, we perceive a lack of a standard solution for scalable IMG   delivery mechanism in the number of receivers with consistency of IMG   metadata between an IMG sender and IMG receiver for both bi-   directional and unidirectional transport.  With increased service   dynamics and complexity, there is an increased requirement for   updates to these content descriptions.   HTTP [10] is a well-known information retrieval protocol using bi-   directional transport and is widely used to deliver web-based content   descriptions to many hosts.  However, it has well-recognized   limitations of scalability in the number of HTTP clients since it   relies on the polling mechanism to keep information consistent   between the server and client.   SAP [3] is an announcement protocol that distributes session   descriptions via multicast.  It does not support prioritization or   fine-grained metadata selection and update notifications, as it   places restrictions on metadata payload size and always sends the   whole metadata.  It requires a wide-area multicast infrastructure for   it to be deployable beyond a local area network.Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   SIP [8] and SIP-specific event notifications [11] can be used to   notify subscribers of the update of IMG metadata for bi-directional   transport.  However, it is necessary to define an event package for   IMGs.   We also perceive a lack of standard solution for flexible content   descriptions to support a multitude of application-specific metadata   and associated data models with a different amount of detail and   different target audiences.   SDP [2] has a text-encoded syntax to specify multimedia sessions for   announcements and invitations.  It is primarily intended to describe   client capability requirements and enable client application   selection.  Although SDP is extensible, it has limitations such as   structured extensibility and capability to reference properties of a   multimedia session from the description of another session.   These can mostly be overcome by the XML-based SDPng [7] -- which is   intended for both two-way negotiation and unidirectional delivery --   or similar content description mechanisms.  Since SDPng addresses   multiparty multimedia conferences, it would be necessary to extend   the XML schema in order to describe general multimedia content.4.  Use Cases Requiring IMGs4.1.  Connectivity-based Use Cases4.1.1.  IP Datacast to a Wireless Receiver   IP Datacast is the delivery of IP-based services over broadcast   radio.  Internet content delivery is therefore unidirectional in this   case.  However, there can be significant benefits from being able to   provide rich media one-to-many services to such receivers.   There are two main classes of receiver in this use case: fixed   mains-powered and mobile battery-powered.  Both of these are affected   by radio phenomena and so robust, or error-resilient, delivery is   important.  Carouselled metadata transfer (cyclically repeated with a   fixed bandwidth) provides a base level of robustness for an IP   datacast-based announcement system, although the design of   carouselled transfer should enable battery-powered receivers to go   through periods of sleep to extend their operational time between   charges.  Insertion of Forward Error Correction (FEC) data into   metadata announcements improves error resilience, and reordering   (interleaving) data blocks further increases tolerance to burst   errors.Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   To enable receivers to more accurately specify the metadata they are   interested in, the unidirectional delivery may be distributed between   several logical channels.  This is so that a receiver needs only   access the channels of interest and thus can reduce the amount of   time, storage, and CPU resources needed for processing the IP data.   Also, hierarchical channels enable receivers to subscribe to a   (possibly well-known) root multicast channel/group and progressively   access only those additional channels based on metadata in parent   channels.   In some cases, the receiver may have multiple access interfaces   adding bi-directional communications capability.  This enables a   multitude of options, but most important, it enables NACK-based   reliability and the individual retrieval of missed or not-multicast   sets of metadata.   Thus, essential IMG features in this case include the following:   robust unidirectional delivery (with optional levels of reliability   including "plug-in FEC" supported by a transport layer protocol),   which implies easily identifiable segmentation of delivery data to   make FEC, carousel, interleaving, and other schemes possible;   effective identification of metadata sets (probably uniquely) to   enable more efficient use of multicast and unicast retrieval over   multiple access systems regardless of the parts of metadata and   application-specific extensions in use; and prioritization of   metadata, which can (for instance) be achieved by spreading it   between channels and allocating/distributing bandwidth accordingly.   Furthermore, some cases require IMG metadata authentication and some   group security/encryption and supporting security message exchanges   (out of band from the IMG multicast sessions).4.1.2.  Regular Fixed Dial-up Internet Connection   Dial-up connections tend to be reasonably slow (<56 kbps in any   case), and thus large data transfers are less feasible, especially   during an active application session (such as a file transfer   described by IMG metadata).  They can also be intermittent,   especially if a user is paying for the connected time, or connected   through a less reliable exchange.  Thus, this favors locally stored   IMG metadata over web-based browsing, especially where parts of the   metadata change infrequently.  There may be no service provider   preference over unicast and multicast transport for small and medium   numbers of users as the last-mile dial-up connection limits per-user   congestion, and a user may prefer the more reliable option (unicast   unless reliable multicast is provided).Nomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20064.1.3.  Broadband Always-on Fixed Internet Connection   Typically, bandwidth is less of an issue to a broadband user and   unicast transport, such as using query-response methods, may be   typical for a PC user.  If a system were only used in this context,   with content providers, ISPs, and users having no other requirements,   then web-based browsing may be equally suitable.  However, broadband   users sharing a local area network, especially wireless, may benefit   more from local storage features than on-line browsing, especially if   they have intermittent Internet access.   Some services on broadband, such as live media broadcasting, benefit   from multicast transport for streaming media because of scalability.   In the cases where multicast transport is already available, it is   convenient for a sender and receiver to retrieve IMG metadata over   multicast transport.  Thus, broadband users may be forced to retrieve   IMG metadata over multicast if backbone operators require this to   keep system-wide bandwidth usage feasible.4.2.  Content-orientated Use Cases   IMGs will be able to support a very wide range of use cases for   enabling content/media delivery.  The following few sections just   touch the surface of what is possible and are intended to provide an   understanding of the scope and type of IMG usage.  Many more examples   may be relevant, for instance, those detailed in [12].  There are   several unique features of IMGs that set them apart from related   application areas such as Service Location Protocol (SLP) based   service location discovery, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol   (LDAP) based indexing services, and search engines such as Google.   Features unique to IMGs include the following:      o  IMG metadata is generally time-related      o  There are timeliness requirements in the delivery of IMG         metadata      o  IMG metadata may be updated as time elapses or when an event         arises4.2.1.  TV and Radio Program Delivery   A sender of audio/video streaming content can use the IMG metadata to   describe the scheduling and other properties of audio/video sessions   and events within those sessions, such as individual TV and radio   programs and segments within those programs.  IMG metadata describing   audio/video streaming content could be represented in a formatNomura, et al.               Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   similar to that of a TV guide in newspapers, or an Electronic Program   Guide available on digital TV receivers.   TV and radio programs can be selected for reception either manually   by the end-user or automatically based on the content descriptions   and the preferences of the user.  The received TV and radio content   can be either presented in real time or recorded for later   consumption.  There may be changes in the scheduling of a TV or a   radio program, possibly affecting the transmission times of   subsequent programs.  IMG metadata can be used to notify receivers of   such changes, enabling users to be prompted or recording times to be   adjusted.4.2.2.  Media Coverage of a Live Event   The media coverage of a live event such as a rock concert or a sports   event is a special case of regular TV/radio programming.  There may   be unexpected changes in the scheduling of a live event, or the event   may be unscheduled to start with (such as breaking news).  In   addition to audio/video streams, textual information relevant to the   event (e.g., statistics of the players during a football match) may   be sent to user terminals.  Different transport modes or even   different access technologies can be used for the different media:   for example, a unidirectional datacast transport could be used for   the audio/video streams and an interactive cellular connection for   the textual data.  IMG metadata should enable terminals to discover   the availability of different media used to cover a live event.4.2.3.  Distance Learning   IMG metadata could describe compound sessions or services enabling   several alternative interaction modes between the participants.  For   example, the combination of one-to-many media streaming, unicast   messaging, and downloading of presentation material could be useful   for distance learning.4.2.4.  Multiplayer Gaming   Multiplayer games are an example of real-time multiparty   communication sessions that could be advertised using IMGs.  A gaming   session could be advertised either by a dedicated server or by the   terminals of individual users.  A user could use IMGs to learn of   active multiplayer gaming sessions, or advertise the user's interest   in establishing such a session.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20064.2.5.  File Distribution   IMGs support the communication of file delivery session properties,   enabling the scheduled delivery or synchronization of files between a   number of hosts.  The received IMG metadata could be subsequently   used by any application (also outside the scope of IMGs), for   example, to download a file with a software update.  IMG metadata can   provide a description to each file in a file delivery session,   assisting users or receiving software in selecting individual files   for reception.   For example, when a content provider wants to distribute a large   amount of data in file format to thousands of clients, the content   provider can use IMG metadata to schedule the delivery effectively.   Since IMG metadata can describe time-related data for each receiver,   the content provider can schedule delivery time for each receiver.   This can save network bandwidth and delivery capacity of senders.  In   addition, IMG metadata can be used to consistency check, and thus   synchronize, a set of files between a sender host and receiver host,   when those files change as time elapses.4.2.6.  Coming-release and Pre-released Content   IMG metadata can be used to describe items of content before the   details of their final release are known.  A user may be interested   in coming content (a new movie or software title where some aspects   of the content description are known in advance) and so subscribe to   an information service that notifies the user of changes to metadata   describing that content.  Thus, as the coming release (or pre-   releases, e.g., as movie trailers or software demos) become   available, the IMG metadata changes and the user is notified of this   change.  For example, the user could see an announcement of a movie   that will be released sometime in the next few months, and configure   the user's terminal to receive and record any trailers or promotional   material as they become available.5.  Requirements5.1.  General Requirements5.1.1.  Independence of IMG Operations from IMG Metadata   REQ GEN-1: Carrying different kinds of IMG metadata format and   different IMG metadata formats in the IMG message body MUST be   allowed.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   REQ GEN-2: Delivery mechanisms SHOULD support many different   applications' specific metadata formats to keep the system   interoperable with existing applications.   This provides flexibility in selecting/designing an IMG transport   protocol suited to various scenarios.5.1.2.  Multiple IMG Senders   REQ GEN-3: IMG receivers MUST be allowed to communicate with any   number of IMG senders simultaneously.   This might lead to receiving redundant IMG metadata describing the   same items; however, it enables the IMG receiver access to more IMG   metadata than may be available from a single IMG sender.  This also   provides flexibility for the IMG transport protocols and does not   preclude a mechanism to solve inconsistency among IMG metadata due to   multiple IMG senders.  This document assumes that a typical IMG   environment will involve many more IMG receivers than IMG senders and   that IMG senders are continually connected for the duration of   interest (rather than intermittently connected).5.1.3.  Modularity   REQ GEN-4: The IMG delivery mechanisms MUST allow the combination of   several IMG operations.   This is for the purpose of extending functionality (e.g., several or   one protocol(s) to provide all the needed operations).  Applications   can select an appropriate operation set to fulfill their purpose.5.2.  Delivery Properties   This section describes general performance requirements based on the   assumption that the range of IMG usage shall be important.  However,   note that requirements for delivery properties may vary based on the   usage scenario, and thus some limited-use implementations place less   importance on some requirements.   For example, it is clear that a multicast transport may provide more   scalable delivery than a unicast transport; however, scalability   requirements do not preclude the unicast transport mechanisms.  In   this sense, scalability is always important for the protocols   irrespective of transport mechanisms.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20065.2.1.  Scalability   REQ DEL-1: The IMG system MUST be scalable to large numbers of   messages, so as to allow design and use of delivery mechanisms that   will not fail in delivering up-to-date information under huge numbers   of transactions and massive quantities of IMG metadata.   REQ DEL-2: IMGs SHOULD provide a method to prevent an IMG sender from   sending unnecessary IMG metadata that have been stored or deleted in   IMG receivers.   REQ DEL-3: The protocol MUST be scalable to very large audience sizes   requiring IMG delivery.5.2.2.  Support for Intermittent Connectivity   REQ DEL-4: The system MUST enable IMG receivers with intermittent   access to network resources (connectivity) to receive and adequately   maintain sufficient IMG metadata.   This allows intermittent access to save power where there is no need   to keep communications links powered up while they are sitting idle.   For instance, in this situation, periodic bursts of notifies or a   fast cycling update carousel allow hosts to wake up for short periods   of time and still be kept up-to-date.  This can be beneficial for IMG   receivers with sporadic connections to the fixed Internet, but is   critical in the battery-powered wireless Internet.   The implication of intermittent connectivity is that immediate   distribution of changes becomes infeasible and so managing data   consistency should be focused on the timely delivery of data.5.2.3.  Congestion Control   REQ DEL-5: Internet-friendly congestion control MUST be provided for   use on the public Internet.   REQ DEL-6: An IMG entity SHOULD invalidate the IMG metadata item when   an IMG metadata item has lifetime information and its lifetime is   over.  This will lessen the need for notifications of updates from   the IMG sender to the IMG receiver to invalidate the item and may   help in reducing load.5.2.4.  Sender- and Receiver-Driven Delivery   REQ DEL-7: The system MUST be flexible in choosing sender-driven,   receiver-driven, or both delivery schemes.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   Sender-driven delivery achieves high scalability without interaction   between the IMG sender and receiver.   In contrast, receiver-driven delivery provides on-demand delivery for   IMG receivers.  Since an IMG sender's complete IMG metadata may be a   very large amount of data, the IMG receiver needs to be able to   access the guide when convenient (e.g., when sufficient network   bandwidth is available to the IMG receiver).5.3.  Customized IMGs   REQ CUS-1: The system MUST allow delivery of customized IMG metadata.   The IMG receiver may require a subset of all the IMG metadata   available according to their preferences (type of content, media   description, appropriate age group, etc.) and configuration.   The IMG receiver might send its preferences in the IMG operations   that can specify user-specific IMG metadata to be delivered.  These   preferences could consist of filtering rules.  When receiving these   messages, the IMG sender might respond with appropriate messages   carrying a subset of IMG metadata that matches the IMG receiver's   preferences.   This mechanism can reduce the amount of IMG metadata delivered from   the IMG sender to IMG receiver, and consequently it can save the   resource consumption on the IMG entities and networks.  It is   typically useful in unicast cases and also beneficial in multicast   cases where an IMG sender distributes the same IMG metadata to   interested IMG receivers at the same time.   For multicast and unicast cases where the IMG sender does not provide   customized IMG metadata, the IMG receiver could receive all IMG   metadata transmitted on the channels that the IMG receiver has   joined.  However, it may select and filter the IMG metadata to get   customized IMG metadata by its preferences, and thus drop unwanted   metadata immediately upon reception.   Customizing metadata might be achieved by changing the IMG   descriptions sent and IMG receivers and/or changing the delivery   properties (channels used).   Note that customization and scalability are only somewhat exclusive.   Systems providing an IMG receiver to an IMG sender request-based   customization will be generally less scalable to massive IMG receiver   populations than those without this return signaling technique.   Thus, customization, as with any feature that affects scalability,   should be carefully designed for the intended application, and it mayNomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   not be possible that a one-size-fits-all solution for customization   would meet the scalability requirements for all applications and   deployment cases.5.4.  Reliability5.4.1.  Managing Consistency   IMG metadata tends to change as time elapses; as new content is   added, the old IMG metadata stored in the IMG receiver becomes   unavailable, and the parameters of the existing IMG metadata are   changed.   REQ REL-1: The system MUST manage IMG metadata consistency.   Either the IMG sender can simply make updates available   (unsynchronized), or the IMG sender and receiver can interact to keep   their copies of the IMG metadata synchronized.   In the unsynchronized model, the IMG sender does not know whether a   particular IMG receiver has an up-to-date copy of the IMG metadata.   In the synchronized model, updating a cached copy of the IMG metadata   is necessary to control consistency when the IMG sender or receiver   could not communicate for a while.  In this case, the IMG sender or   receiver may need to confirm its consistency by IMG operations.   REQ REL-2: Since IMG metadata can change at any time, IMG receivers   SHOULD be notified of such changes.   Fulfilling this requirement needs to be compatible with the   scalability requirements for the number of IMG receivers and the   consistency of metadata.   Depending on the size of the IMG metadata, the interested party may   want to defer retrieving the actual information.  The change   notification should be addressed to a logical user (or user group),   rather than a host, since users may change devices.   Note that depending on the deployment environment and application   specifics, the level of acceptable inconsistency varies.  Thus, this   document does not define inconsistency as specific time and state   differences between IMG metadata stored in an IMG sender and IMG   metadata stored in an IMG receiver.   In general, the consistency of metadata for content and media is more   important immediately prior to and during the media's session(s).   Hosts that forward (or otherwise resend) metadata may not tolerateNomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   inconsistencies because delivering out-of-date data is both   misleading and bandwidth inefficient.5.4.2.  Reliable Message Exchange   REQ REL-4: An IMG transport protocol MUST support reliable message   exchange.   The extent to which this could result in 100% error-free delivery to   100% of IMG receivers is a statistical characteristic of the   protocols used.  Usage of reliable IMG delivery mechanisms is   expected to depend on the extent to which underlying networks provide   reliability and, conversely, introduce errors.  Note that some   deployments of IMG transport protocols may not aim to provide perfect   reception to all IMG receivers in all possible cases.5.5.  IMG Descriptions   REQ DES-1: IMG metadata MUST be interoperable over any IMG transport   protocol, such that an application receiving the same metadata over   any one (or more) of several network connections and/or IMG transport   protocols will interpret the metadata in exactly the same way.  (This   also relates to the 'Independence of IMG Operations from IMG   Metadata' requirements.)   REQ DES-2: IMG delivery MUST enable the carriage of any format of   application-specific metadata.   Thus, the system will support the description of many kinds of   multimedia content, without the need for a single homogeneous   metadata syntax for all uses (which would be infeasible anyway).   This is essential for environments using IMG systems to support many   kinds of multimedia content and to achieve wide applicability.   REQ DES-3: Whereas specific applications relying on IMGs will need to   select one or more specific application-specific metadata formats   (standard, syntax, etc.), the IMG system MUST be independent of this   (it may be aware, but it will operate in the same way for all).   Thus, a metadata transfer envelope format that is uniform across all   different application-specific IMG metadata formats is needed.  The   envelope would reference (point to) or carry (as payload) some   application-specific metadata, and the envelope would support the   maintenance of the application-specific metadata, which may also   serve the metadata relationships determined by the data model(s)   used.  The envelope would not need to be aware of the data model(s)   in use.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   REQ DES-4: IMG metadata MUST be structured to enable fragmentation   for efficient delivery.   This is intended to ensure that an IMG sender with more than a   trivial knowledge of metadata is able to deliver only part of its   (and the global) complete IMG metadata knowledge.  (For instance, a   trivial quantity of knowledge could be a single SDP description.)  In   general, the resolution of this fragmentation will be very much   dependent on the optimal delivery of a deployment, although some   metadata syntaxes will inherently affect the sensible lower limit for   a single element/fragment.   REQ DES-5: A metadata transfer envelope MUST be defined to include   essential parameters.   Examples of essential parameters are those that allow the metadata in   question to be uniquely identified and updated by new versions of the   same metadata.   REQ DES-6: It SHALL be possible to deduce the metadata format via the   metadata transfer envelope.   REQ DES-7: IMG senders SHALL use a metadata transfer envelope for   each IMG metadata transfer.   Thus, it will even be possible to describe relationships between   syntactically dissimilar application-specific formats within the same   body of IMG metadata knowledge.  (For instance, a data model could be   instantiated using both SDP and SDPng.)   REQ DES-8: IMG metadata SHOULD support the description of differences   between an updated version and an old version of IMG metadata when   the IMG delivery mechanism carries updated IMG metadata and those   differences are considerably little (e.g., by providing a 'delta' of   the two versions; this also relates the delivery property   requirements for congestion control inSection 5.2.3).6.  Security Considerations   Internet Media Guides are used to convey information about multimedia   resources from one or more IMG senders across one or more   intermediaries to one or more IMG receivers.  IMG metadata may be   pushed to the IMG receivers or interactively retrieved by them.  IMGs   provide metadata as well as scheduling and rendezvous information   about multimedia resources, and so on, and requests for IMG metadata   may contain information about the requesting users.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   The information contained in IMG metadata as well as the operations   related to IMGs should be secured to avoid forged information,   misdirected users, and spoofed IMG senders, for example, and to   protect user privacy.   The remainder of this section addresses the security requirements for   IMGs.6.1.  IMG Authentication and Integrity   IMG metadata and its parts need to be protected against unauthorized   alteration/addition/deletion on the way.  Their originator needs to   be authenticated.   REQ AUT-1: It MUST be possible to authenticate the originator of a   set of IMG metadata.   REQ AUT-2: It MUST be possible to authenticate the originator of a   subpart of IMG metadata (e.g., a delta or a subset of the   information).   REQ AUT-3: It MUST be possible to validate the integrity of IMG   metadata.   REQ AUT-4: It MUST be possible to validate the integrity of a subpart   of IMG metadata (e.g., a delta or a subset of the information).   REQ AUT-5: It MUST be possible to separate or combine individually   authenticated pieces of IMG metadata (e.g., in an IMG transceiver)   without invalidating the authentication.   REQ AUT-6: It MUST be possible to validate the integrity of an   individually authenticated piece of IMG metadata even after this   piece has been separated from other pieces of IMG metadata and   combined with other pieces to form new IMG metadata.   REQ AUT-7: It MUST be possible to authenticate the originator of an   IMG operation.   REQ AUT-8: It MUST be possible to validate the integrity of any   contents of an IMG operation (e.g., the subscription or inquiry   information).Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20066.2.  Privacy   Customized IMG metadata and IMG metadata delivered by notification to   individual users may reveal information about the habits and   preferences of a user and may thus deserve confidentiality   protection, even though the information itself is public.   REQ PRI-1: It MUST be possible to keep user requests to subscribe to   or retrieve certain (parts of) IMG metadata confidential.   REQ PRI-2: It MUST be possible to keep IMG metadata, pieces of IMG   metadata, or pointers to IMG metadata delivered to individual users   or groups of users confidential.   REQ PRI-3: It SHOULD be possible to ensure this confidentiality end-   to-end, that is, to prevent intermediaries (such as IMG transceivers)   from accessing the contained information.6.3.  Access Control for IMGs   Some IMG metadata may be freely available, while access to other IMG   metadata may be restricted to closed user groups (e.g., paying   subscribers).  Also, different parts of IMG metadata may be protected   at different levels: for example, metadata describing a media session   may be freely accessible, while rendezvous information to actually   access the media session may require authorization.   REQ ACC-1: It MUST be possible to authorize user access to IMG   metadata.   REQ ACC-2: It MUST be possible to authorize access of users to pieces   of IMG metadata (delta information, subparts, pointers).   REQ ACC-3: It MUST be possible to require different authorization for   different parts of the same IMG metadata.   REQ ACC-4: It MUST be possible to access selected IMG metadata   anonymously.   REQ ACC-5: It MUST be possible for an IMG receiver to choose not to   receive (parts of) IMG metadata in order to avoid being identified by   the IMG sender.   REQ ACC-6: It SHOULD be possible for an IMG transceiver to select   suitable authorization methods that are compatible between both IMG   senders and IMG receivers it interacts with.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   REQ ACC-7: It MAY be possible for IMG senders to require certain   authorization that cannot be modified by intermediaries.6.4.  Denial-of-Service (DOS) Attacks   Retrieving or distributing IMG metadata may require state in the IMG   senders, transceivers, and/or receivers for the respective IMG   transport sessions.  Attackers may create large numbers of sessions   with any of the above IMG entities to disrupt regular operation.   REQ DOS-1: IMG operations SHOULD be authenticated.   REQ DOS-2: It SHOULD be possible to avoid DoS attacks that build up   session state in IMG entities to exhaust their resources.   REQ DOS-3: It SHOULD be possible to avoid DoS attacks that exhaust   resources of IMG entities by flooding them with IMG metadata.   As an example, two potential solutions that may be considered are   running an IMG entity in stateless mode or identification and   discarding of malicious packets by an IMG entity.6.5.  Replay Attacks   IMG metadata disseminated by an IMG sender or an IMG transceiver may   be updated, be deleted, or lose validity over time for some other   reasons.  Replaying outdated IMG metadata needs to be prevented.   Furthermore, replay attacks may also apply to IMG operations (rather   than just their payload).  Replaying operations also needs to be   prevented.   REQ REP-1: IMG metadata MUST be protected against partial or full   replacement of newer ("current") versions by older ones.   In a system with multiple senders, it may not be feasible to prevent   some senders from delivering older versions of metadata than others -   as a result of imperfect sender-sender data consistency.  Thus,   replay attacks and delivery of inconsistent data require that an IMG   receiver verifies that the IMG metadata is valid and reliable by   using some security mechanism(s) (e.g., authorization,   authentication, or integrity).   REQ REP-2: Mechanisms MUST be provided to mitigate replay attacks on   the IMG operations.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006   The level of threat from replay attacks varies very much depending on   system scale and how well defined or open it is.  Thus, mitigating   replay attacks may lead to different solutions for different systems,   independent of the basic delivery method and metadata definitions.  A   system with multiple senders presents a more challenging scenario for   handling replay attacks.  As an example, bundling metadata with a   security mechanism is one potential solution.7.  Normative References   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.8.  Informative References   [2]  Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description        Protocol",RFC 2327, April 1998.   [3]  Handley, M., Perkins, C., and E. Whelan, "Session Announcement        Protocol",RFC 2974, October 2000.   [4]  Session Directory,ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/conferencing/sd/   [5]  Session Directory Tool,http://www-mice.cs.ucl.ac.uk/multimedia/software/sdr/   [6]  Digital Video Broadcasting Project,http://www.dvb.org/   [7]  Kutscher, D., Ott, J., and C. Bormann, "Session description and        capability negotiation", Work in Progress, February 2005.   [8]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, "SIP:        Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.   [9]  Nomura, Y., Walsh, R., Luoma, J-P., Asaeda, H., and H.        Schulzrinne, "Framework for the Usage of Internet Media Guides        (IMG)",RFC 4435, April 2006.   [10] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., Masinter, L.,        Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --        HTTP/1.1",RFC 2616, June 1999.   [11] Roach, A.B., "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event        Notification",RFC 3265, June 2002.   [12] Quinn, B. and K. Almeroth, "IP Multicast Applications:        Challenges and Solutions",RFC 3170, September 2001.Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 20069.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Hitoshi Asaeda, Gonzalo Camarillo,   Jean-Pierre Evain, Dirk Kutscher, Petri Koskelainen, Colin Perkins,   Toni Paila, and Magnus Westerlund for their excellent comments and   ideas on this work.Authors' Addresses   Yuji Nomura   Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.   4-1-1 Kamikodanaka, Nakahara-ku, Kawasaki 211-8588   Japan   EMail: nom@flab.fujitsu.co.jp   Rod Walsh   Nokia Research Center   P.O. Box 100, FIN-33721 Tampere   Finland   EMail: rod.walsh@nokia.com   Juha-Pekka Luoma   Nokia Research Center   P.O. Box 100, FIN-33721 Tampere   Finland   EMail: juha-pekka.luoma@nokia.com   Joerg Ott   Helsinki University of Technology   Networking Laboratory   PO Box 3000   FIN-02015 TKK   Finland   EMail: jo@netlab.tkk.fi   Henning Schulzrinne   Dept. of Computer Science   Columbia University   1214 Amsterdam Avenue   New York, NY 10027   USA   EMail: schulzrinne@cs.columbia.eduNomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 4473     Requirements for Internet Media Guides (IMGs)      May 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   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 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 provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Nomura, et al.               Informational                     [Page 23]

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