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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         R. SparksRequest for Comments: 6026                                       TekelecUpdates:3261                                           T. ZourzouvillysCategory: Standards Track                                          SkypeISSN: 2070-1721                                           September 2010Correct Transaction Handling for 2xx Responsesto Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) INVITE RequestsAbstract   This document normatively updatesRFC 3261, the Session Initiation   Protocol (SIP), to address an error in the specified handling of   success (2xx class) responses to INVITE requests.  Elements followingRFC 3261 exactly will misidentify retransmissions of the request as a   new, unassociated request.  The correction involves modifying the   INVITE transaction state machines.  The correction also changes the   way responses that cannot be matched to an existing transaction are   handled to address a security risk.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6026.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Conventions and Definitions .....................................33. Reason for Change ...............................................34. Summary of Change ...............................................45. Consequences if Not Implemented .................................46. The Change ......................................................47. Change Details ..................................................57.1. Server Transaction Impacts .................................57.2. Client Transaction Impacts .................................97.3. Proxy Considerations ......................................108. Exact Changes toRFC 3261 ......................................118.1. Page 85 ...................................................118.2. Page 107 ..................................................118.3. Page 114 ..................................................118.4. Pages 126 through 128 .....................................128.5. Pages 134 to 135 ..........................................158.6. Page 136 ..................................................158.7. Page 137 ..................................................178.8. Page 141 ..................................................178.9. Page 144 ..................................................188.10. Page 146 .................................................188.11. Page 265 .................................................189. IANA Considerations ............................................1810. Security Considerations .......................................1911. Acknowledgments ...............................................2012. Normative References ..........................................20Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20101.  Introduction   This document describes an essential correction to the Session   Initiation Protocol (SIP), defined in [RFC3261].  The change   addresses an error in the handling of 2xx class responses to INVITE   requests that leads to retransmissions of the INVITE being treated as   new requests and forbids forwarding stray INVITE responses.2.  Conventions and Definitions   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].3.  Reason for Change   One use of the INVITE method in SIP is to establish new sessions.   These "initial" INVITEs may fork at intermediaries, and more than one   receiving endpoint may choose to accept the request.  SIP is designed   such that the requester receives all of these success responses.   Two sets of requirements in [RFC3261] work together to allow multiple   2xx responses to be processed correctly by the requester.  First, all   elements are required to immediately destroy any INVITE client   transaction state upon forwarding a matching 2xx class response.   This requirement applies to both UAs (user agents) and proxies   (proxies forward the response upstream, the transaction layer at user   agents forwards the response to its "UA core").  Second, all proxies   are required to statelessly forward upstream any 2xx class responses   that do not match an existing transaction, also called stray   responses.  The transaction layer at user agents is required to   forward these responses to its UA core.  Logic in the UA core deals   with acknowledging each of these responses.   This technique for specifying the behavior was chosen over adjusting   INVITE client transaction state machines as a simpler way to specify   the correct behavior.   Over time, implementation experience demonstrated the existing text   is in error.  Once any element with a server transaction (say, a   proxy in the path of the INVITE) deletes that transaction state, any   retransmission of the INVITE will be treated as a new request,   potentially forwarded to different locations than the original.  Many   implementations in the field have made proprietary adjustments to   their transaction logic to avoid this error.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010   The requirement to statelessly forward stray responses has also been   identified as a security risk.  Through it, elements compliant to   [RFC3261] are compelled to do work (forward packets) that is not   protected by the admission policies applied to requests.  This can be   leveraged to, for instance, use a SIP proxy as an anonymizing   forwarder of packets in a distributed denial-of-service attack.   General Internet endpoints can also collude to tunnel non-SIP content   through such proxies by wrapping them in an SIP response envelope.   Additionally, [RFC3261] requires that if an unrecoverable transport   error is encountered while sending a response in a client   transaction, that the transaction moves immediately into the   "Terminated" state.  This will result in any retransmitted INVITE   requests received after such an error was encountered to be processed   as a new request instead of being absorbed as a retransmission.4.  Summary of Change   This correction document updates [RFC3261], adding a state and   changing the transitions in the INVITE client state machine such that   the INVITE client transaction remains in place to receive multiple   2xx responses.  It adds a state to the INVITE server state machine to   absorb retransmissions of the INVITE after a 2xx response has been   sent.  It modifies state transitions in the INVITE server state   machine to absorb retransmissions of the INVITE request after   encountering an unrecoverable transport error when sending a   response.  It also forbids forwarding stray responses to INVITE   requests (not just 2xx responses), whichRFC 3261 requires.5.  Consequences if Not Implemented   Implementations strictly conformant to [RFC3261] will process   retransmitted initial INVITE requests as new requests.  Proxies may   forward them to different locations than the original.  Proxies may   also be used as anonymizing forwarders of bulk traffic.   Implementations will process any retransmitted INVITE request as a   new request after an attempt to send a response results in an   unrecoverable error.6.  The Change   An element sending or receiving a 2xx to an INVITE transaction MUST   NOT destroy any matching INVITE transaction state.  This state is   necessary to ensure correct processing of retransmissions of the   request and the retransmission of the 2xx and ACK that follow.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010   An element encountering an unrecoverable transport error when trying   to send a response to an INVITE request MUST NOT immediately destroy   the associated INVITE server transaction state.  This state is   necessary to ensure correct processing of retransmissions of the   request.   When receiving any SIP response, a transaction-stateful proxy MUST   compare the transaction identifier in that response against its   existing transaction state machines.  The proxy MUST NOT forward the   response if there is no matching transaction state machine.   When receiving an ACK that matches an existing INVITE server   transaction and that does not contain a branch parameter containing   the magic cookie defined inRFC 3261, the matching transaction MUST   be checked to see if it is in the "Accepted" state.  If it is, then   the ACK must be passed directly to the transaction user instead of   being absorbed by the transaction state machine.  This is necessary   as requests fromRFC 2543 clients will not include a unique branch   parameter, and the mechanisms for calculating the transaction ID from   such a request will be the same for both INVITE and ACKs.7.  Change Details   These changes impact requirements in several sections ofRFC 3261.   The exact effect on that text is detailed inSection 8.  This section   describes the details of the change, particularly the impact on the   INVITE state machines, more succinctly to facilitate review and   simplify implementation.7.1.  Server Transaction Impacts   To allow a SIP element to recognize retransmissions of an INVITE as   retransmissions instead of new requests, a new state, "Accepted", is   added to the INVITE server transaction state machine.  A new timer,   Timer L, is also added to ultimately allow the state machine to   terminate.  A server transaction in the "Proceeding" state will   transition to the "Accepted" state when it issues a 2xx response and   will remain in that state just long enough to absorb any   retransmissions of the INVITE.   If the SIP element's TU (Transaction User) issues a 2xx response for   this transaction while the state machine is in the "Proceeding"   state, the state machine MUST transition to the "Accepted" state and   set Timer L to 64*T1, where T1 is the round-trip time estimate   defined inSection 17.1.1.1 of [RFC3261].Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010   While in the "Accepted" state, any retransmissions of the INVITE   received will match this transaction state machine and will be   absorbed by the machine without changing its state.  These   retransmissions are not passed onto the TU.RFC 3261 requires the TU   to periodically retransmit the 2xx response until it receives an ACK.   The server transaction MUST NOT generate 2xx retransmissions on its   own.  Any retransmission of the 2xx response passed from the TU to   the transaction while in the "Accepted" state MUST be passed to the   transport layer for transmission.  Any ACKs received from the network   while in the "Accepted" state MUST be passed directly to the TU and   not absorbed.   When Timer L fires and the state machine is in the "Accepted" state,   the machine MUST transition to the "Terminated" state.  Once the   transaction is in the "Terminated" state, it MUST be destroyed   immediately.  Timer L reflects the amount of time the server   transaction could receive 2xx responses for retransmission from the   TU while it is waiting to receive an ACK.   A server transaction MUST NOT discard transaction state based only on   encountering a non-recoverable transport error when sending a   response.  Instead, the associated INVITE server transaction state   machine MUST remain in its current state.  (Timers will eventually   cause it to transition to the "Terminated" state).  This allows   retransmissions of the INVITE to be absorbed instead of being   processed as a new request.   Figures 1 and 2 show the parts of the INVITE server state machine   that have changed.  The entire new INVITE server state machine is   shown in Figure 5.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010    BEFORE                                 AFTER  +-----------+                       +-----------+  |           |                       |           |  | Proceeding|                       | Proceeding|  |           |                       |           |  |           |                       |           |  |           |                       |           |  |           |                       |           |  +-----------+                       +-----------+           |2xx from TU                      |2xx from TU           |send response                    |send response           +-------------->+                 +------->+                           |                          |                           |                          |                           |                          |                           |                          |  Transport                           |                 INVITE   |  Error                           |                 -        |  Inform TU                           |                 +-----+  |  +--+                           |                 |     |  V  |  v                           |                 |  +------------+                           |                 |  |            |<--+                           |                 +->|  Accepted  |   | ACK                           |                    |            |---+ to TU                           |                    +------------+                           |                     |   ^     |                           |                  +--+   |     |                           |                  |      +-----+                           |                  |  2xx from TU                           |                  |  send response                           |                  |                           |                  | Timer L fires                           |                  | -                           |                  |                           |                  V  +-----------+            |                +------------+  |           |            |                |            |  | Terminated|<-----------+                | Terminated |  |           |                             |            |  +-----------+                             +------------+     Figure 1: Changes to the INVITE server transaction state machine                             when sending 2xxSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010     BEFORE                                  AFTER  +-----------+                          +------------+  |           |                          |            |  | Proceeding|                          | Proceeding | Transport Err.  |           |                          |            | Inform TU  |           |   Transport Err.         |            |----------+  |           |   Inform TU              |            |          |  |           |--------------->+         |            |<---------+  +-----------+                |         +------------+                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |                       Transport Err.  +-----------+                |         +-----------+ Inform TU  |           |                |         |           |---------+  | Completed |                |         | Completed |         |  |           |                |         |           |<--------+  +-----------+                |         +-----------+           |                   |           |                   |           +------------------>+                 Transport Err.|                 Inform TU     |                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |                               |  +-----------+                |  |           |                |  | Terminated|<---------------+  |           |  +-----------+   Figure 2: Changes to the INVITE server transaction state machine on                       encountering transport errorSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20107.2.  Client Transaction Impacts   In order to correctly distinguish retransmissions of 2xx responses   from stray 2xx responses, the INVITE client state machine is modified   to not transition immediately to "Terminated" on receipt of a 2xx   response.  Instead, the machine will transition to a new "Accepted"   state, and remain there just long enough, determined by a new timer   M, to receive and pass to the TU any retransmissions of the 2xx   response or any additional 2xx responses from other branches of a   downstream fork of the matching request.  If a 2xx response is   received while the client INVITE state machine is in the "Calling" or   "Proceeding" states, it MUST transition to the "Accepted" state, pass   the 2xx response to the TU, and set Timer M to 64*T1.  A 2xx response   received while in the "Accepted" state MUST be passed to the TU and   the machine remains in the "Accepted" state.  The client transaction   MUST NOT generate an ACK to any 2xx response on its own.  The TU   responsible for the transaction will generate the ACK.   When Timer M fires and the state machine is in the "Accepted" state,   the machine MUST transition to the "Terminated" state.  Once the   transaction is in the "Terminated" state, it MUST be destroyed   immediately.   Any response received that does not match an existing client   transaction state machine is simply dropped.  (Implementations are,   of course, free to log or do other implementation-specific things   with such responses, but the implementer should be sure to consider   the impact of large numbers of malicious stray responses.)   Note that it is not necessary to preserve client transaction state   upon the detection of unrecoverable transport errors.  Existing   requirements ensure the TU has been notified, and the new   requirements in this document ensure that any received retransmitted   response will be dropped since there will no longer be any matching   transaction state.   Figure 3 shows the part of the INVITE client state machine that has   changed.  The entire new INVITE client state machine is shown in   Figure 5.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010   +-----------+                        +-----------+   |           |                        |           |   |  Calling  |                        |  Calling  |   |           |----------->+           |           |-----------+   +-----------+ 2xx        |           +-----------+ 2xx       |                 2xx to TU  |                         2xx to TU |                            |                                   |                            |                                   |                            |                                   |                            |                                   |   +-----------+            |           +-----------+           |   |           |            |           |           |           |   |Proceeding |----------->|           |Proceeding |---------->|   |           | 2xx        |           |           | 2xx       |   +-----------+ 2xx to TU  |           +-----------+ 2xx to TU |                            |                                   |                            |                                   |                            |                                   |                            |                                   V                            |                            +-----------+                            |                            |           |                            |                            | Accepted  |                            |                        +---|           |                            |              2xx       |   +-----------+                            |              2xx to TU |     ^    |                            |                        |     |    |                            |                        +-----+    |                            |                                   |                            |                 +-----------------+                            |                 | Timer M fires                            |                 | -                            |                 V   +-----------+            |           +-----------+   |           |            |           |           |   | Terminated|<-----------+           | Terminated|   |           |                        |           |   +-----------+                        +-----------+     Figure 3: Changes to the INVITE client transaction state machine7.3.  Proxy Considerations   This document changes the behavior of transaction-stateful proxies to   not forward stray INVITE responses.  When receiving any SIP response,   a transaction-stateful proxy MUST compare the transaction identifier   in that response against its existing transaction state machines.   The proxy MUST NOT forward the response if there is no matching   transaction state machine.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20108.  Exact Changes toRFC 3261   This section describes exactly the same changes as above, but shows   exactly which text inRFC 3261 is affected.  This document   intentionally does not contain a Figure 4 or Figure 6 so that the   labels for Figures 5 and 7 are identical to the labels of the figures   they are replacing inRFC 3261.8.1.  Page 85Section 13.3.1.4, paragraph 4, is replaced entirely by:      Once the response has been constructed, it is passed to the INVITE      server transaction.  In order to ensure reliable end-to-end      transport of the response, it is necessary to periodically pass      the response directly to the transport until the ACK arrives.  The      2xx response is passed to the transport with an interval that      starts at T1 seconds and doubles for each retransmission until it      reaches T2 seconds (T1 and T2 are defined inSection 17).      Response retransmissions cease when an ACK request for the      response is received.  This is independent of whatever transport      protocols are used to send the response.8.2.  Page 107Section 16.7, paragraphs 1 and 2, are replaced entirely by:      When a response is received by an element, it first tries to      locate a client transaction (Section 17.1.3) matching the      response.  If a transaction is found, the response is handed to      the client transaction.  If none is found, the element MUST NOT      forward the response.8.3.  Page 114Section 16.7, part 9, first paragraph.  Replace this sentence:      If the server transaction is no longer available to handle the      transmission, the element MUST forward the response statelessly by      sending it to the server transport.   with      If the server transaction is no longer available to handle the      transmission, the response is simply discarded.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20108.4.  Pages 126 through 128Section 17.1.1.2.  Replace paragraph 7 (starting "When in either")   through the end of the section with:      When in either the "Calling" or "Proceeding" states, reception of      a response with status code from 300-699 MUST cause the client      transaction to transition to "Completed".  The client transaction      MUST pass the received response up to the TU, and the client      transaction MUST generate an ACK request, even if the transport is      reliable (guidelines for constructing the ACK from the response      are given inSection 17.1.1.3), and then pass the ACK to the      transport layer for transmission.  The ACK MUST be sent to the      same address, port, and transport to which the original request      was sent.      The client transaction MUST start Timer D when it enters the      "Completed" state for any reason, with a value of at least 32      seconds for unreliable transports, and a value of zero seconds for      reliable transports.  Timer D reflects the amount of time that the      server transaction can remain in the "Completed" state when      unreliable transports are used.  This is equal to Timer H in the      INVITE server transaction, whose default is 64*T1, and is also      equal to the time a UAS core will wait for an ACK once it sends a      2xx response.  However, the client transaction does not know the      value of T1 in use by the server transaction or any downstream UAS      cores, so an absolute minimum of 32 s is used instead of basing      Timer D on T1.      Any retransmissions of a response with status code 300-699 that      are received while in the "Completed" state MUST cause the ACK to      be re-passed to the transport layer for retransmission, but the      newly received response MUST NOT be passed up to the TU.      A retransmission of the response is defined as any response that      would match the same client transaction based on the rules ofSection 17.1.3.      If Timer D fires while the client transaction is in the      "Completed" state, the client transaction MUST move to the      "Terminated" state.      When a 2xx response is received while in either the "Calling" or      "Proceeding" states, the client transaction MUST transition to the      "Accepted" state, and Timer M MUST be started with a value of      64*T1.  The 2xx response MUST be passed up to the TU.  The client      transaction MUST NOT generate an ACK to the 2xx response -- its      handling is delegated to the TU.  A UAC core will send an ACK toSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010      the 2xx response using a new transaction.  A proxy core will      always forward the 2xx response upstream.      The purpose of the "Accepted" state is to allow the client      transaction to continue to exist to receive, and pass to the TU,      any retransmissions of the 2xx response and any additional 2xx      responses from other branches of the INVITE if it forked      downstream.  Timer M reflects the amount of time that the      transaction user will wait for such messages.      Any 2xx responses that match this client transaction and that are      received while in the "Accepted" state MUST be passed up to the      TU.  The client transaction MUST NOT generate an ACK to the 2xx      response.  The client transaction takes no further action.      If Timer M fires while the client transaction is in the "Accepted"      state, the client transaction MUST move to the "Terminated" state.      The client transaction MUST be destroyed the instant it enters the      "Terminated" state.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010      Replace Figure 5 with:                                    |INVITE from TU                  Timer A fires     |INVITE sent      Timer B fires                  Reset A,          V                 or Transport Err.                  INVITE sent +-----------+           inform TU                    +---------|           |--------------------------+                    |         |  Calling  |                          |                    +-------->|           |-----------+              |   300-699                    +-----------+ 2xx       |              |   ACK sent                      |  |       2xx to TU |              |   resp. to TU                   |  |1xx              |              |   +-----------------------------+  |1xx to TU        |              |   |                                |                 |              |   |                1xx             V                 |              |   |                1xx to TU +-----------+           |              |   |                +---------|           |           |              |   |                |         |Proceeding |           |              |   |                +-------->|           |           |              |   |                          +-----------+ 2xx       |              |   |         300-699             |    |     2xx to TU |              |   |         ACK sent,  +--------+    +---------------+              |   |         resp. to TU|                             |              |   |                    |                             |              |   |                    V                             V              |   |              +-----------+                   +----------+       |   +------------->|           |Transport Err.     |          |       |                  | Completed |Inform TU          | Accepted |       |               +--|           |-------+           |          |-+     |       300-699 |  +-----------+       |           +----------+ |     |       ACK sent|    ^  |              |               |  ^     |     |               |    |  |              |               |  |     |     |               +----+  |              |               |  +-----+     |                       |Timer D fires |  Timer M fires|    2xx       |                       |-             |             - |    2xx to TU |                       +--------+     |   +-----------+              |      NOTE:                     V     V   V                          |   Transitions                 +------------+                        |   are labeled                 |            |                        |   with the event              | Terminated |<-----------------------+   over the action             |            |   to take.                    +------------+                    Figure 5: INVITE client transactionSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20108.5.  Pages 134 to 135Section 17.2.1, paragraph 4, is replaced with:      If, while in the "Proceeding" state, the TU passes a 2xx response      to the server transaction, the server transaction MUST pass this      response to the transport layer for transmission.  It is not      retransmitted by the server transaction; retransmissions of 2xx      responses are handled by the TU.  The server transaction MUST then      transition to the "Accepted" state.8.6.  Page 136   Replace Figure 7 with:Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010                                      |INVITE                                      |pass INV to TU                   INVITE             V send 100 if TU won't in 200 ms                   send response+------------+                       +--------|            |--------+ 101-199 from TU                       |        |            |        | send response                       +------->|            |<-------+                                | Proceeding |                                |            |--------+ Transport Err.                                |            |        | Inform TU                                |            |<-------+                                +------------+                   300-699 from TU |    |2xx from TU                   send response   |    |send response                    +--------------+    +------------+                    |                                |   INVITE           V          Timer G fires         |   send response +-----------+ send response         |        +--------|           |--------+              |        |        |           |        |              |        +------->| Completed |<-------+      INVITE  |  Transport Err.                 |           |               -       |  Inform TU        +--------|           |----+          +-----+ |  +---+        |        +-----------+    | ACK      |     | v  |   v        |          ^   |          | -        |  +------------+        |          |   |          |          |  |            |---+ ACK        +----------+   |          |          +->|  Accepted  |   | to TU        Transport Err. |          |             |            |<--+        Inform TU      |          V             +------------+                       |      +-----------+        |  ^     |                       |      |           |        |  |     |                       |      | Confirmed |        |  +-----+                       |      |           |        |  2xx from TU         Timer H fires |      +-----------+        |  send response         -             |          |                |                       |          | Timer I fires  |                       |          | -              | Timer L fires                       |          V                | -                       |        +------------+     |                       |        |            |<----+                       +------->| Terminated |                                |            |                                +------------+                    Figure 7: INVITE server transactionSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20108.7.  Page 137   InSection 17.2.1, replace the last paragraph (starting "Once the   transaction") with:      The purpose of the "Accepted" state is to absorb retransmissions      of an accepted INVITE request.  Any such retransmissions are      absorbed entirely within the server transaction.  They are not      passed up to the TU since any downstream UAS cores that accepted      the request have taken responsibility for reliability and will      already retransmit their 2xx responses if necessary.      While in the "Accepted" state, if the TU passes a 2xx response,      the server transaction MUST pass the response to the transport      layer for transmission.      When the INVITE server transaction enters the "Accepted" state,      Timer L MUST be set to fire in 64*T1 for all transports.  This      value matches both Timer B in the next upstream client state      machine (the amount of time the previous hop will wait for a      response when no provisionals have been sent) and the amount of      time this (or any downstream) UAS core might be retransmitting the      2xx while waiting for an ACK.  If an ACK is received while the      INVITE server transaction is in the "Accepted" state, then the ACK      must be passed up to the TU.  If Timer L fires while the INVITE      server transaction is in the "Accepted" state, the transaction      MUST transition to the "Terminated" state.      Once the transaction is in the "Terminated" state, it MUST be      destroyed immediately.8.8.  Page 141   InSection 17.2.4, replace the second paragraph with:      First, the procedures in [4] are followed, which attempt to      deliver the response to a backup.  If those should all fail, based      on the definition of failure in [4], the server transaction SHOULD      inform the TU that a failure has occurred, and MUST remain in the      current state.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 20108.9.  Page 144      InSection 18.1.2, replace the second paragraph with:      The client transport uses the matching procedures ofSection17.1.3 to attempt to match the response to an existing      transaction.  If there is a match, the response MUST be passed to      that transaction.  Otherwise, any element other than a stateless      proxy MUST silently discard the response.8.10.  Page 146      InSection 18.2.1, replace the last paragraph with:      Next, the server transport attempts to match the request to a      server transaction.  It does so using the matching rules described      inSection 17.2.3.  If a matching server transaction is found, the      request is passed to that transaction for processing.  If no match      is found, the request is passed to the core, which may decide to      construct a new server transaction for that request.8.11.  Page 265      Add to Table 4:      Timer L  64*T1Section 17.2.1       Wait time for                                                     accepted INVITE                                                     request retransmits      Timer M  64*T1Section 17.1.1       Wait time for                                                     retransmission of                                                     2xx to INVITE or                                                     additional 2xx from                                                     other branches of                                                     a forked INVITE9.  IANA Considerations   IANA has updated the SIP Parameters: Method and Response Codes   registry as follows:   OLD:   Methods Reference   ------- ---------   INVITE  [RFC3261]Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 2010   NEW:   Methods Reference   ------- ---------   INVITE  [RFC3261][RFC6026]10.  Security Considerations   This document makes two changes to the Session Initiation Protocol to   address the error discussed inSection 3.  It changes the behavior of   both the client and server INVITE transaction state machines, and it   changes the way "stray" responses (those that don't match any   existing transaction) are handled at transaction-stateful elements.   The changes to the state machines cause elements to hold onto each   accepted INVITE transaction state 32 seconds longer than what was   specified inRFC 3261.  This will have a direct impact on the amount   of work an attacker that is leveraging state exhaustion will have to   exert against the system.  However, this additional state is   necessary to achieve correct operation.  There is some discussion of   avoiding state exhaustion and other denial-of-service attacks inRFC3261,Section 26.3.2.4.RFC 3261 required SIP proxies to forward any stray 2xx class   responses to an INVITE request upstream statelessly.  As a result,   conformant proxies can be forced to forward packets (that look   sufficiently like SIP responses) to destinations of the sender's   choosing.Section 3 discusses some of the malicious behavior this   enables.  This document reverses the stateless forwarding   requirement, making it a violation of the specification to forward   stray responses.RFC 3261 defines a "stateless proxy", which forwards requests and   responses without creating or maintaining any transaction state.  The   requirements introduced in this document do not change the behavior   of these elements in any way.  Stateless proxies are inherently   vulnerable to the abuses discussed inSection 3.  One way operators   might mitigate this vulnerability is to carefully control which peer   elements can present traffic to a given stateless proxy.   The changes introduced by this document are backward-compatible.   Transaction behavior will be no less correct, and possibly more   correct, when only one peer in a transaction implements these   changes.  Except for the considerations mentioned earlier in this   section, introducing elements implementing these changes into   deployments withRFC 3261 implementations adds no additional security   concerns.Sparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6026         Correct Handling for SIP 2xx Responses   September 201011.  Acknowledgments   Pekka Pessi reported the improper handling of INVITE retransmissions.   Brett Tate performed a careful review uncovering the need for the   "Accepted" state and Timer M in the client transaction state machine.   Jan Kolomaznik noticed that a server transaction should let a TU know   about transport errors when it attempts to send a 2xx class response.   Michael Procter corrected several nits.12.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3261]  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.Authors' Addresses   Robert Sparks   Tekelec   17210 Campbell Road   Suite 250   Dallas, Texas  75252   USA   EMail: RjS@nostrum.com   Theo Zourzouvillys   Skype   3rd Floor   8000 Marina Blvd   Brisbane, California  84005   US   EMail: theo@crazygreek.co.ukSparks & Zourzouvillys       Standards Track                   [Page 20]

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