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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         M. CottonRequest for Comments: 6335                                         ICANNBCP: 165                                                       L. EggertUpdates:2780,2782,3828,4340,4960,5595                        NokiaCategory: Best Current Practice                                 J. TouchISSN: 2070-1721                                                  USC/ISI                                                           M. Westerlund                                                                Ericsson                                                             S. Cheshire                                                                   Apple                                                             August 2011Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) Procedures for the Management    of the Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number RegistryAbstract   This document defines the procedures that the Internet Assigned   Numbers Authority (IANA) uses when handling assignment and other   requests related to the Service Name and Transport Protocol Port   Number registry.  It also discusses the rationale and principles   behind these procedures and how they facilitate the long-term   sustainability of the registry.   This document updates IANA's procedures by obsoleting the previous   UDP and TCP port assignment procedures defined in Sections8 and9.1   of the IANA Allocation Guidelines, and it updates the IANA service   name and port assignment procedures for UDP-Lite, the Datagram   Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP), and the Stream Control   Transmission Protocol (SCTP).  It also updates the DNS SRV   specification to clarify what a service name is and how it is   registered.Status of This Memo   This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.   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   BCPs 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/rfc6335.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 1]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 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.   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 2]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.  Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.  Conventions Used in This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85.  Service Names  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85.1.  Service Name Syntax  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.2.  Service Name Usage in DNS SRV Records  . . . . . . . . . .106.  Port Number Ranges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .116.1.  Service Names and Port Numbers for Experimentation . . . .12   7.  Principles for Service Name and Transport Protocol Port       Number Registry Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .127.1.  Past Principles  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .137.2.  Updated Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13   8.  IANA Procedures for Managing the Service Name and       Transport Protocol Port Number Registry  . . . . . . . . . . .168.1.  Service Name and Port Number Assignment  . . . . . . . . .168.2.  Service Name and Port Number De-Assignment . . . . . . . .218.3.  Service Name and Port Number Reuse . . . . . . . . . . . .218.4.  Service Name and Port Number Revocation  . . . . . . . . .228.5.  Service Name and Port Number Transfers . . . . . . . . . .228.6.  Maintenance Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .238.7.  Disagreements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .239.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2310. IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2410.1. Service Name Consistency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2410.2. Port Numbers for SCTP and DCCP Experimentation . . . . . .2610.3. Updates to DCCP Registries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2711. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2812. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2813. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2913.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2913.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 3]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20111.  Introduction   For many years, the assignment of new service names and port number   values for use with the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) [RFC0793]   and the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) [RFC0768] has had less than   clear guidelines.  New transport protocols have been added -- the   Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) [RFC4960] and the   Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP) [RFC4342] -- and new   mechanisms like DNS SRV records [RFC2782] have been developed, each   with separate registries and separate guidelines.  The community also   recognized the need for additional procedures beyond just assignment;   notably modification, revocation, and release.   A key element of the procedural streamlining specified in this   document is to establish identical assignment procedures for all IETF   transport protocols.  This document brings the IANA procedures for   TCP and UDP in line with those for SCTP and DCCP, resulting in a   single process that requesters and IANA follow for all requests for   all transport protocols, including future protocols not yet defined.   In addition to detailing the IANA procedures for the initial   assignment of service names and port numbers, this document also   specifies post-assignment procedures that until now have been handled   in an ad hoc manner.  These include procedures to de-assign a port   number that is no longer in use, to take a port number assigned for   one service that is no longer in use and reuse it for another   service, and the procedure by which IANA can unilaterally revoke a   prior port number assignment.Section 8 discusses the specifics of   these procedures and processes that requesters and IANA follow for   all requests for all current and future transport protocols.   IANA is the authority for assigning service names and port numbers.   The registries that are created to store these assignments are   maintained by IANA.  For protocols developed by IETF working groups,   IANA now also offers a method for the "early assignment" [RFC4020] of   service names and port numbers, as described inSection 8.1.   This document updates IANA's procedures for UDP and TCP port numbers   by obsoleting Sections8 and9.1 of the IANA Allocation Guidelines   [RFC2780].  (Note that other sections of the IANA Allocation   Guidelines, relating to the protocol field values in IPv4 headers,   were also updated in February 2008 [RFC5237].)  This document also   updates the IANA assignment procedures for DCCP [RFC4340] [RFC5595]   and SCTP [RFC4960].Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 4]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   The Lightweight User Datagram Protocol (UDP-Lite) shares the port   space with UDP.  The UDP-Lite specification [RFC3828] says: "UDP-Lite   uses the same set of port number values assigned by the IANA for use   by UDP".  An update of the UDP procedures therefore also results in a   corresponding update of the UDP-Lite procedures.   This document also clarifies what a service name is and how it is   assigned.  This will impact the DNS SRV specification [RFC2782],   because that specification merely makes a brief mention that the   symbolic names of services are defined in "Assigned Numbers"   [RFC1700], without stating to which section it refers within that   230-page document.  The DNS SRV specification may have been referring   to the list of Port Assignments (known as /etc/services on Unix), or   to the "Protocol And Service Names" section, or to both, or to some   other section.  Furthermore, "Assigned Numbers" [RFC1700] has been   obsoleted [RFC3232] and has been replaced by on-line registries   [PORTREG] [PROTSERVREG].   The development of new transport protocols is a major effort that the   IETF does not undertake very often.  If a new transport protocol is   standardized in the future, it is expected to follow these guidelines   and practices around using service names and port numbers as much as   possible, for consistency.   At the time of writing of this document, the internal procedures of   "Expert Review" teams, including that of IANA's port review team, are   not documented in any RFC and this document doesn't change that.2.  Motivation   Information about the assignment procedures for the port registry has   existed in three locations: the forms for requesting port number   assignments on the IANA web site [SYSFORM] [USRFORM], an introductory   text section in the file listing the port number assignments   themselves (known as the port numbers registry) [PORTREG], and two   brief sections of the IANA Allocation Guidelines [RFC2780].   Similarly, the procedures surrounding service names have been   historically unclear.  Service names were originally created as   mnemonic identifiers for port numbers without a well-defined syntax,   apart from the 14-character limit mentioned on the IANA website   [SYSFORM] [USRFORM].  Even that length limit has not been   consistently applied, and some assigned service names are 15   characters long.  When service identification via DNS SRV Resource   Records (RRs) was introduced [RFC2782], it became useful to start   assigning service names alone, and because IANA had no procedure for   assigning a service name without an associated port number, this ledCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 5]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   to the creation of an informal temporary service name registry   outside of the control of IANA, which now contains roughly 500   service names [SRVREG].   This document aggregates all this scattered information into a single   reference that aligns and clearly defines the management procedures   for both service names and port numbers.  It gives more detailed   guidance to prospective requesters of service names and ports than   the existing documentation, and it streamlines the IANA procedures   for the management of the registry, so that requests can be completed   in a timely manner.   This document defines rules for assignment of service names without   associated port numbers, for such usages as DNS SRV records   [RFC2782], which was not possible under the previous IANA procedures.   The document also merges service name assignments from the non-IANA   ad hoc registry [SRVREG] and from the IANA Protocol and Service Names   registry [PROTSERVREG] into the IANA Service Name and Transport   Protocol Port Number registry [PORTREG], which from here on is the   single authoritative registry for service names and port numbers.   An additional purpose of this document is to describe the principles   that guide the IETF and IANA in their role as the long-term joint   stewards of the service name and port number registry.  TCP and UDP   have had remarkable success over the last decades.  Thousands of   applications and application-level protocols have service names and   port numbers assigned for their use, and there is every reason to   believe that this trend will continue into the future.  It is hence   extremely important that management of the registry follow principles   that ensure its long-term usefulness as a shared resource.Section 7   discusses these principles in detail.3.  Background   The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) [RFC0793] and the User   Datagram Protocol (UDP) [RFC0768] have enjoyed a remarkable success   over the decades as the two most widely used transport protocols on   the Internet.  They have relied on the concept of "ports" as logical   entities for Internet communication.  Ports serve two purposes:   first, they provide a demultiplexing identifier to differentiate   transport sessions between the same pair of endpoints, and second,   they may also identify the application protocol and associated   service to which processes connect.  Newer transport protocols, such   as the Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) [RFC4960] and the   Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP) [RFC4342], have also   adopted the concept of ports for their communication sessions and use   16-bit port numbers in the same way as TCP and UDP (and UDP-Lite   [RFC3828], a variant of UDP).Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 6]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   Port numbers are the original and most widely used means for   application and service identification on the Internet.  Ports are   16-bit numbers, and the combination of source and destination port   numbers together with the IP addresses of the communicating end   systems uniquely identifies a session of a given transport protocol.   Port numbers are also known by their associated service names such as   "telnet" for port number 23 and "http" (as well as "www" and   "www-http") for port number 80.   All involved parties -- hosts running services, hosts accessing   services on other hosts, and intermediate devices (such as firewalls   and NATs) that restrict services -- need to agree on which service   corresponds to a particular destination port.  Although this is   ultimately a local decision with meaning only between the endpoints   of a connection, it is common for many services to have a default   port upon which those servers usually listen, when possible, and   these ports are recorded by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority   (IANA) through the service name and port number registry [PORTREG].   Over time, the assumption that a particular port number necessarily   implies a particular service may become less true.  For example,   multiple instances of the same service on the same host cannot   generally listen on the same port, and multiple hosts behind the same   NAT gateway cannot all have a mapping for the same port on the   external side of the NAT gateway, whether using static port mappings   configured by hand by the user, or dynamic port mappings configured   automatically using a port mapping protocol like the NAT Port Mapping   Protocol [NAT-PMP] or Internet Gateway Device [IGD].   Applications may use port numbers directly, look up port numbers   based on service names via system calls such as getservbyname() on   UNIX, look up port numbers by performing queries for DNS SRV records   [RFC2782] [DNS-SD], or determine port numbers in a variety of other   ways like the TCP Port Service Multiplexer (TCPMUX) [RFC1078].   Designers of applications and application-level protocols may apply   to IANA for an assigned service name and port number for a specific   application, and may -- after assignment -- assume that no other   application will use that service name or port number for its   communication sessions.  Application designers also have the option   of requesting only an assigned service name without a corresponding   fixed port number if their application does not require one, such as   applications that use DNS SRV records to look up port numbers   dynamically at run-time.  Because the port number space is finite   (and therefore conservation is an important goal), the alternative of   using service names instead of port numbers is RECOMMENDED whenever   possible.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 7]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20114.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" [RFC2119].   This document uses the term "assignment" to refer to the procedure by   which IANA provides service names and/or port numbers to requesting   parties; other RFCs refer to this as "allocation" or "registration".   This document assumes that all these terms have the same meaning, and   will use terms other than "assignment" only when quoting from or   referring to text in these other documents.5.  Service Names   Service names are the unique key in the Service Name and Transport   Protocol Port Number registry.  This unique symbolic name for a   service may also be used for other purposes, such as in DNS SRV   records [RFC2782].  Within the registry, this unique key ensures that   different services can be unambiguously distinguished, thus   preventing name collisions and avoiding confusion about who is the   Assignee for a particular entry.   There may be more than one service name associated with a particular   transport protocol and port.  There are three ways that such port   number overloading can occur:   o  Overloading occurs when one service is an extension of another      service, and an in-band mechanism exists for determining if the      extension is present or not.  One example is port 3478, which has      the service name aliases "stun" and "turn".  Traversal Using      Relays around NAT (TURN) [RFC5766] is an extension to the Session      Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) [RFC5389] service.  TURN-      enabled clients wishing to locate TURN servers could attempt to      discover "stun" services and then check in-band if the server also      supports TURN, but this would be inefficient.  Enabling them to      directly query for "turn" servers by name is a better approach.      (Note that TURN servers in this case should also be locatable via      a "stun" discovery, because every TURN server is also a STUN      server.)   o  By historical accident, the service name "http" has two synonyms      "www" and "www-http".  When used in SRV records [RFC2782] and      similar service discovery mechanisms, only the service name "http"      should be used, not these additional names.  If a server were to      advertise "www", it would not be discovered by clients browsing      for "http".  Advertising or browsing for the aliases as well asCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 8]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011      the primary service name is inefficient, and achieves nothing that      is not already achieved by using the service name "http"      exclusively.   o  As indicated in this document inSection 10.1, overloading has      been used to create replacement names that are consistent with the      syntax this document prescribes for legacy names that do not      conform to this syntax already.  For such cases, only the new name      should be used in SRV records, to avoid the same issues as with      historical cases of multiple names, and also because the legacy      names are incompatible with SRV record use.   Assignment requests for new names for existing registered services   will be rejected, as a result.  Implementers are requested to inform   IANA if they discover other cases where a single service has multiple   names, so that one name may be recorded as the primary name for   service discovery purposes.   Service names are assigned on a "first come, first served" basis, as   described inSection 8.1.  Names should be brief and informative,   avoiding words or abbreviations that are redundant in the context of   the registry (e.g., "port", "service", "protocol", etc.)  Names   referring to discovery services, e.g., using multicast or broadcast   to identify endpoints capable of a given service, SHOULD use an   easily identifiable suffix (e.g., "-disc").5.1.  Service Name Syntax   Valid service names are hereby normatively defined as follows:   o  MUST be at least 1 character and no more than 15 characters long   o  MUST contain only US-ASCII [ANSI.X3.4-1986] letters 'A' - 'Z' and      'a' - 'z', digits '0' - '9', and hyphens ('-', ASCII 0x2D or      decimal 45)   o  MUST contain at least one letter ('A' - 'Z' or 'a' - 'z')   o  MUST NOT begin or end with a hyphen   o  hyphens MUST NOT be adjacent to other hyphens   The reason for requiring at least one letter is to avoid service   names like "23" (could be confused with a numeric port) or "6000-   6063" (could be confused with a numeric port range).  Although   service names may contain both upper-case and lower-case letters,   case is ignored for comparison purposes, so both "http" and "HTTP"   denote the same service.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                 [Page 9]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   Service names are purely opaque identifiers, and no semantics are   implied by any superficial structure that a given service name may   appear to have.  For example, a company called "Example" may choose   to register service names "Example-Foo" and "Example-Bar" for its   "Foo" and "Bar" products, but the "Example" company cannot claim to   "own" all service names beginning with "Example-"; they cannot   prevent someone else from registering "Example-Baz" for a different   service, and they cannot prevent other developers from using the   "Example-Foo" and "Example-Bar" service types in order to   interoperate with the "Foo" and "Bar" products.  Technically   speaking, in service discovery protocols, service names are merely a   series of byte values on the wire; for the mnemonic convenience of   human developers, it can be convenient to interpret those byte values   as human-readable ASCII characters, but software should treat them as   purely opaque identifiers and not attempt to parse them for any   additional embedded meaning.   As of August 5, 2009, approximately 98% of the so-called "Short   Names" [SYSFORM] [USRFORM] for existing port number assignments   [PORTREG] already met the rules for legal service names stated inSection 8.1, and hence for these services their service name is   exactly the same as their historical "Short Name".  In approximately   2% of cases, the new "service name" is derived based on the old   "Short Name" as described below inSection 10.1.   The rules for valid service names, excepting the limit of 15   characters maximum, are also expressed below (as a non-normative   convenience) using ABNF [RFC5234].      SRVNAME = *(1*DIGIT [HYPHEN]) ALPHA *([HYPHEN] ALNUM)      ALNUM   = ALPHA / DIGIT     ; A-Z, a-z, 0-9      HYPHEN  = %x2D              ; "-"      ALPHA   = %x41-5A / %x61-7A ; A-Z / a-z [RFC5234]      DIGIT   = %x30-39           ; 0-9       [RFC5234]5.2.  Service Name Usage in DNS SRV Records   The DNS SRV specification [RFC2782] states that the Service Label   part of the owner name of a DNS SRV record includes a "Service"   element, described as "the symbolic name of the desired service", but   as discussed above, it is not clear precisely what this means.   This document clarifies that the Service Label MUST be a service name   as defined herein with an underscore prepended.  The service name   SHOULD be registered with IANA and recorded in the Service Name and   Transport Protocol Port Number registry [PORTREG].Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 10]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   The details of using Service Names in SRV Service Labels are   specified in the DNS SRV specification [RFC2782].6.  Port Number Ranges   TCP, UDP, UDP-Lite, SCTP, and DCCP use 16-bit namespaces for their   port number registries.  The port registries for all of these   transport protocols are subdivided into three ranges of numbers   [RFC1340], andSection 8.1.2 describes the IANA procedures for each   range in detail:   o  the System Ports, also known as the Well Known Ports, from 0-1023      (assigned by IANA)   o  the User Ports, also known as the Registered Ports, from 1024-      49151 (assigned by IANA)   o  the Dynamic Ports, also known as the Private or Ephemeral Ports,      from 49152-65535 (never assigned)   Of the assignable port ranges (System Ports and User Ports, i.e.,   port numbers 0-49151), individual port numbers are in one of three   states at any given time:   o  Assigned: Assigned port numbers are currently assigned to the      service indicated in the registry.   o  Unassigned: Unassigned port numbers are currently available for      assignment upon request, as per the procedures outlined in this      document.   o  Reserved: Reserved port numbers are not available for regular      assignment; they are "assigned to IANA" for special purposes.      Reserved port numbers include values at the edges of each range,      e.g., 0, 1023, 1024, etc., which may be used to extend these      ranges or the overall port number space in the future.   In order to keep the size of the registry manageable, IANA typically   only records the Assigned and Reserved service names and port numbers   in the registry.  Unassigned values are typically not explicitly   listed.  (There are very many Unassigned service names and   enumerating them all would not be practical.)   As a data point, when this document was written, approximately 76% of   the TCP and UDP System Ports were assigned, and approximately 9% of   the User Ports were assigned.  (As noted, Dynamic Ports are never   assigned.)Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 11]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20116.1.  Service Names and Port Numbers for Experimentation   Of the System Ports, two TCP and UDP port numbers (1021 and 1022),   together with their respective service names ("exp1" and "exp2"),   have been assigned for experimentation with new applications and   application-layer protocols that require a port number in the   assigned ports range [RFC4727].   Please refer to Sections1 and1.1 of "Assigning Experimental and   Testing Numbers Considered Useful" [RFC3692] for how these   experimental port numbers are to be used.   This document assigns the same two service names and port numbers for   experimentation with new application-layer protocols over SCTP and   DCCP inSection 10.2.   Unfortunately, it can be difficult to limit access to these ports.   Users SHOULD take measures to ensure that experimental ports are   connecting to the intended process.  For example, users of these   experimental ports might include a 64-bit nonce, once on each segment   of a message-oriented channel (e.g., UDP), or once at the beginning   of a byte-stream (e.g., TCP), which is used to confirm that the port   is being used as intended.  Such confirmation of intended use is   especially important when these ports are associated with privileged   (e.g., system or administrator) processes.7.  Principles for Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number    Registry Management   Management procedures for the Service Name and Transport Protocol   Port Number registry include assignment of service names and port   numbers upon request, as well as management of information about   existing assignments.  The latter includes maintaining contact and   description information about assignments, revoking abandoned   assignments, and redefining assignments when needed.  Of these   procedures, careful port number assignment is most critical, in order   to continue to conserve the remaining port numbers.   As noted earlier, only about 9% of the User Port space is currently   assigned.  The current rate of assignment is approximately 400 ports   per year, and has remained steady for the past 8 years.  At that   rate, if similar conservation continues, this resource will sustain   another 85 years of assignment - without the need to resort to   reassignment of released values or revocation.  The namespace   available for service names is much larger, which allows for simpler   management procedures.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 12]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20117.1.  Past Principles   The principles for service name and port number management are based   on the recommendations of the IANA "Expert Review" team.  Until   recently, that team followed a set of informal guidelines developed   based on the review experience from previous assignment requests.   These original guidelines, although informal, had never been publicly   documented.  They are recorded here for historical purposes only; the   current guidelines are described inSection 7.2.  These guidelines   previously were:   o  TCP and UDP ports were simultaneously assigned when either was      requested   o  Port numbers were the primary assignment; service names were      informative only, and did not have a well-defined syntax   o  Port numbers were conserved informally, and sometimes      inconsistently (e.g., some services were assigned ranges of many      port numbers even where not strictly necessary)   o  SCTP and DCCP service name and port number registries were managed      separately from the TCP/UDP registries   o  Service names could not be assigned in the old ports registry      without assigning an associated port number at the same time7.2.  Updated Principles   This section summarizes the current principles by which IANA both   handles the Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number registry   and attempts to conserve the port number space.  This description is   intended to inform applicants requesting service names and port   numbers.  IANA has flexibility beyond these principles when handling   assignment requests; other factors may come into play, and exceptions   may be made to best serve the needs of the Internet.  Applicants   should be aware that IANA decisions are not required to be bound to   these principles.  These principles and general advice to users on   port use are expected to change over time.   IANA strives to assign service names that do not request an   associated port number assignment under a simple "First Come First   Served" policy [RFC5226].  IANA MAY, at its discretion, refer service   name requests to "Expert Review" in cases of mass assignment requests   or other situations where IANA believes "Expert Review" is advisable   [RFC5226]; use of the "Expert Review" helps advise IANA informally in   cases where "IETF Review" or "IESG Approval" is used, as with most   IETF protocols.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 13]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   The basic principle of service name and port number registry   management is to conserve use of the port space where possible.   Extensions to support larger port number spaces would require   changing many core protocols of the current Internet in a way that   would not be backward compatible and interfere with both current and   legacy applications.   Conservation of the port number space is required because this space   is a limited resource, so applications are expected to participate in   the traffic demultiplexing process where feasible.  The port numbers   are expected to encode as little information as possible that will   still enable an application to perform further demultiplexing by   itself.  In particular, the principles form a goal that IANA strives   to achieve for new applications (with exceptions as deemed   appropriate, especially as for extensions to legacy services) as   follows:   o  IANA strives to assign only one assigned port number per service      or application.      Note: At the time of writing of this document, there is no IETF      consensus on when it is appropriate to use a second port for an      insecure version of a protocol.   o  IANA strives to assign only one assigned port number for all      variants of a service (e.g., for updated versions of a service).   o  IANA strives to encourage the deployment of secure protocols.   o  IANA strives to assign only one assigned port number for all      different types of devices using or participating in the same      service.   o  IANA strives to assign port numbers only for the transport      protocol(s) explicitly named in an assignment request.   o  IANA may recover unused port numbers, via the new procedures of      de-assignment, revocation, and transfer.   Where possible, a given service is expected to demultiplex messages   if necessary.  For example, applications and protocols are expected   to include in-band version information, so that future versions of   the application or protocol can share the same assigned port.   Applications and protocols are also expected to be able to   efficiently use a single assigned port for multiple sessions, either   by demultiplexing multiple streams within one port or by using the   assigned port to coordinate using dynamic ports for subsequent   exchanges (e.g., in the spirit of FTP [RFC0959]).Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 14]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   Ports are used in various ways, notably:   o  as endpoint process identifiers   o  as application protocol identifiers   o  for firewall-filtering purposes   Both the process-identifier and the protocol-identifier uses suggest   that anything a single process can demultiplex, or that can be   encoded into a single protocol, should be.  The firewall-filtering   use suggests that some uses that could be multiplexed or encoded   could instead be separated to allow for easier firewall management.   Note that this latter use is much less sound, because port numbers   have meaning only for the two endpoints involved in a connection, and   drawing conclusions about the service that generated a given flow   based on observed port numbers is not always reliable.   Effective with the publication of this document, IANA will begin   assigning port numbers for only those transport protocols explicitly   included in an assignment request.  This ends the long-standing   practice of automatically assigning a port number to an application   for both TCP and UDP, even if the request is for only one of these   transport protocols.  The new assignment procedure conserves   resources by assigning a port number to an application for only those   transport protocols (TCP, UDP, SCTP, and/or DCCP) it actually uses.   The port number will be marked as Reserved -- instead of Assigned --   in the port number registries of the other transport protocols.  When   applications start supporting the use of some of those additional   transport protocols, the Assignee for the assignment MUST request   that IANA convert these reserved ports into assignments.  An   application MUST NOT assume that it can use a port number assigned to   it for use with one transport protocol with another transport   protocol without IANA converting the reservation into an assignment.   When the available pool of unassigned numbers has run out in a port   range, it will be necessary for IANA to consider the Reserved ports   for assignment.  This is part of the motivation for not automatically   assigning ports for transport protocols other than the requested   one(s).  This will allow more ports to be available for assignment at   that point.  To help conserve ports, application developers SHOULD   request assignment of only those transport protocols that their   application currently uses.   Conservation of port numbers is improved by procedures that allow   previously assigned port numbers to become Unassigned, either through   de-assignment or through revocation, and by a procedure that lets   application designers transfer an assigned but unused port number toCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 15]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   a new application.Section 8 describes these procedures, which until   now were undocumented.  Port number conservation is also improved by   recommending that applications that do not require an assigned port   should register only a service name without an associated port   number.8.  IANA Procedures for Managing the Service Name and Transport Protocol    Port Number Registry   This section describes the process for handling requests associated   with IANA's management of the Service Name and Transport Protocol   Port Number registry.  Such requests include initial assignment, de-   assignment, reuse, and updates to the contact information or   description associated with an assignment.  Revocation is an   additional process, initiated by IANA.8.1.  Service Name and Port Number Assignment   Assignment refers to the process of providing service names or port   numbers to applicants.  All such assignments are made from service   names or port numbers that are Unassigned or Reserved at the time of   the assignment.   o  Unassigned names and numbers are assigned according to the rules      described inSection 8.1.2 below.   o  Reserved numbers and names are generally only assigned by a      "Standards Action" or "IESG Approval", and MUST be accompanied by      a statement explaining the reason a Reserved number or name is      appropriate for this action.  The only exception to this rule is      that the current Assignee of a port number MAY request the      assignment of the corresponding Reserved port number for other      transport protocols when needed.  IANA will initiate an "Expert      Review" [RFC5226] for such requests.   When an assignment for one or more transport protocols is approved,   the port number for any non-requested transport protocol(s) will be   marked as Reserved.  IANA SHOULD NOT assign that port number to any   other application or service until no other port numbers remain   Unassigned in the requested range.  It is anticipated that at such   time a new document will be published specifying IANA procedures for   assignment of such ports.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 16]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20118.1.1.  General Assignment Procedure   A service name or port number assignment request contains the   following information.  The service name is the unique identifier of   a given service:      Service Name (REQUIRED)      Transport Protocol(s) (REQUIRED)      Assignee (REQUIRED)      Contact (REQUIRED)      Description (REQUIRED)      Reference (REQUIRED)      Port Number (OPTIONAL)      Service Code (REQUIRED for DCCP only)      Known Unauthorized Uses (OPTIONAL)      Assignment Notes (OPTIONAL)   o  Service Name: A desired unique service name for the service      associated with the assignment request MUST be provided.  This      name may be used with various service selection and discovery      mechanisms (including, but not limited to, DNS SRV records      [RFC2782]).  The name MUST be compliant with the syntax defined inSection 5.1.  In order to be unique, they MUST NOT be identical to      any currently assigned service name in the IANA registry      [PORTREG].  Service names are case-insensitive; they may be      provided and entered into the registry with mixed case for      clarity, but case is ignored otherwise.   o  Transport Protocol(s): The transport protocol(s) for which an      assignment is requested MUST be provided.  This field is currently      limited to one or more of TCP, UDP, SCTP, and DCCP.  Requests      without any port assignment and only a service name are still      required to indicate which protocol the service uses.   o  Assignee: Name and email address of the party to whom the      assignment is made.  This is REQUIRED.  The Assignee is the      organization, company or individual person responsible for the      initial assignment.  For assignments done through RFCs published      via the "IETF Document Stream" [RFC4844], the Assignee will be the      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>.   o  Contact: Name and email address of the Contact person for the      assignment.  This is REQUIRED.  The Contact person is the      responsible person for the Internet community to send questions      to.  This person is also authorized to submit changes on behalf of      the Assignee; in cases of conflict between the Assignee and the      Contact, the Assignee decisions take precedence.  AdditionalCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 17]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011      address information MAY be provided.  For assignments done through      RFCs published via the "IETF Document Stream" [RFC4844], the      Contact will be the IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>.   o  Description: A short description of the service associated with      the assignment request is REQUIRED.  It should avoid all but the      most well-known acronyms.   o  Reference: A description of (or a reference to a document      describing) the protocol or application using this port.  This is      REQUIRED.  The description must state whether the protocol uses      IP-layer broadcast, multicast, or anycast communication.      For assignments requesting only a Service Name, or a Service Name      and User Port, a statement that the protocol is proprietary and      not publicly documented is also acceptable, provided that the      required information regarding the use of IP broadcast, multicast,      or anycast is given.      For any assignment request that includes a User Port, the      assignment request MUST explain why a port number in the Dynamic      Ports range (discovered by clients dynamically at run-time) is      unsuitable for the given application.      For any assignment request that includes a System Port, the      assignment request MUST explain why a port number in the User      Ports or Dynamic Ports ranges is unsuitable, and a reference to a      stable protocol specification document MUST be provided.      IANA MAY accept early assignment [RFC4020] requests (known as      "early allocation" therein) from IETF working groups that      reference a sufficiently stable Internet-Draft instead of a      published Standards-Track RFC.   o  Port Number: If assignment of a port number is desired, either the      port number the requester suggests for assignment or indication of      port range (user or system) MUST be provided.  If only a service      name is to be assigned, this field is left empty.  If a specific      port number is requested, IANA is encouraged to assign the      requested number.  If a range is specified, IANA will choose a      suitable number from the User or System Ports ranges.  Note that      the applicant MUST NOT use the requested port in implementations      deployed for use on the public Internet prior to the completion of      the assignment, because there is no guarantee that IANA will      assign the requested port.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 18]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   o  Service Code: If the assignment request includes DCCP as a      transport protocol, then the request MUST include a desired unique      DCCP service code [RFC5595], and MUST NOT include a requested DCCP      service code otherwise.Section 19.8 of the DCCP specification      [RFC4340] defines requirements and rules for assignment, updated      by this document.  Note that, as per the DCCP Service Codes      document [RFC5595], some service codes are not assigned; zero      (absence of a meaningful service code) and 4294967295 (0xFFFFFFFF;      invalid service code) are permanently reserved, and the Private      service codes 1056964608-1073741823 (0x3F000000-0x3FFFFFFF; i.e.,      32-bit values with the high-order byte equal to a value of 63      (0x3F), corresponding to the ASCII character '?') are not      centrally assigned.   o  Known Unauthorized Uses: A list of uses by applications or      organizations who are not the Assignee.  This is OPTIONAL.  This      list may be augmented by IANA after assignment when unauthorized      uses are reported.   o  Assignment Notes: Indications of owner/name change, or any other      assignment process issue.  This is OPTIONAL.  This list may be      updated by IANA after assignment to help track changes to an      assignment, e.g., de-assignment, owner/name changes, etc.   If the assignment request is for the addition of a new transport   protocol to a previously assigned service name and the requester is   not the Assignee or Contact for the previously assigned service name,   IANA needs to confirm with the Assignee for the existing assignment   whether this addition is appropriate.   If the assignment request is for a new service name sharing the same   port as a previously assigned service name (see port number   overloading inSection 5), IANA needs to confirm with the Assignee   for the existing service name and other appropriate experts whether   the overloading is appropriate.   When IANA receives an assignment request -- containing the above   information -- that is requesting a port number, IANA SHALL initiate   an "Expert Review" [RFC5226] in order to determine whether an   assignment should be made.  For requests that are not seeking a port   number, IANA SHOULD assign the service name under a simple "First   Come First Served" policy [RFC5226].Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 19]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20118.1.2.  Variances for Specific Port Number RangesSection 6 describes the different port number ranges.  It is   important to note that IANA applies slightly different procedures   when managing the different port ranges of the service name and port   number registry:   o  Ports in the Dynamic Ports range (49152-65535) have been      specifically set aside for local and dynamic use and cannot be      assigned through IANA.  Application software may simply use any      dynamic port that is available on the local host, without any sort      of assignment.  On the other hand, application software MUST NOT      assume that a specific port number in the Dynamic Ports range will      always be available for communication at all times, and a port      number in that range hence MUST NOT be used as a service      identifier.   o  Ports in the User Ports range (1024-49151) are available for      assignment through IANA, and MAY be used as service identifiers      upon successful assignment.  Because assigning a port number for a      specific application consumes a fraction of the shared resource      that is the port number registry, IANA will require the requester      to document the intended use of the port number.  For most IETF      protocols, ports in the User Ports range will be assigned under      the "IETF Review" or "IESG Approval" procedures [RFC5226] and no      further documentation is required.  Where these procedures do not      apply, then the requester must input the documentation to the      "Expert Review" procedure [RFC5226], by which IANA will have a      technical expert review the request to determine whether to grant      the assignment.  Regardless of the path ("IETF Review", "IESG      Approval", or "Expert Review"), the submitted documentation is      expected to be the same, as described in this section, and MUST      explain why using a port number in the Dynamic Ports range is      unsuitable for the given application.  Further, IANA MAY utilize      the "Expert Review" process informally to inform their position in      participating in "IETF Review" and "IESG Approval".   o  Ports in the System Ports range (0-1023) are also available for      assignment through IANA.  Because the System Ports range is both      the smallest and the most densely assigned, the requirements for      new assignments are more strict than those for the User Ports      range, and will only be granted under the "IETF Review" or "IESG      Approval" procedures [RFC5226].  A request for a System Port      number MUST document *both* why using a port number from the      Dynamic Ports range is unsuitable *and* why using a port number      from the User Ports range is unsuitable for that application.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 20]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 20118.2.  Service Name and Port Number De-Assignment   The Assignee of a granted port number assignment can return the port   number to IANA at any time if they no longer have a need for it.  The   port number will be de-assigned and will be marked as Reserved.  IANA   should not reassign port numbers that have been de-assigned until all   unassigned port numbers in the specific range have been assigned.   Before proceeding with a port number de-assignment, IANA needs to   reasonably establish that the value is actually no longer in use.   Because there is much less danger of exhausting the service name   space compared to the port number space, it is RECOMMENDED that a   given service name remain assigned even after all associated port   number assignments have become de-assigned.  Under this policy, it   will appear in the registry as if it had been created through a   service name assignment request that did not include any port   numbers.   On rare occasions, it may still be useful to de-assign a service   name.  In such cases, IANA will mark the service name as Reserved.   IANA will involve their IESG-appointed expert in such cases.   IANA will include a comment in the registry when de-assignment   happens to indicate its historic usage.8.3.  Service Name and Port Number Reuse   If the Assignee of a granted port number assignment no longer has a   need for the assigned number, but would like to reuse it for a   different application, they can submit a request to IANA to do so.   Logically, port number reuse is to be thought of as a de-assignment   (Section 8.2) followed by an immediate (re-)assignment (Section 8.1)   of the same port number for a new application.  Consequently, the   information that needs to be provided about the proposed new use of   the port number is identical to what would need to be provided for a   new port number assignment for the specific ports range.   Because there is much less danger of exhausting the service name   space compared to the port number space, it is RECOMMENDED that the   original service name associated with the prior use of the port   number remains assigned, and a new service name be created and   associated with the port number.  This is again consistent with   viewing a reuse request as a de-assignment followed by an immediate   (re-)assignment.  Reusing an assigned service name for a different   application is NOT RECOMMENDED.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 21]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   IANA needs to carefully review such requests before approving them.   In some instances, the Expert Reviewer will determine that the   application the port number was assigned to has found usage beyond   the original Assignee, or that there is a concern that it may have   such users.  This determination MUST be made quickly.  A community   call concerning revocation of a port number (see below) MAY be   considered, if a broader use of the port number is suspected.8.4.  Service Name and Port Number Revocation   A port number revocation can be thought of as an IANA-initiated de-   assignment (Section 8.2), and has exactly the same effect on the   registry.   Sometimes, it will be clear that a specific port number is no longer   in use and that IANA can revoke it and mark it as Reserved.  At other   times, it may be unclear whether a given assigned port number is   still in use somewhere in the Internet.  In those cases, IANA must   carefully consider the consequences of revoking the port number, and   SHOULD only do so if there is an overwhelming need.   With the help of their IESG-appointed Expert Reviewer, IANA SHALL   formulate a request to the IESG to issue a four-week community call   concerning the pending port number revocation.  The IESG and IANA,   with the Expert Reviewer's support, SHALL determine promptly after   the end of the community call whether revocation should proceed, and   then communicate their decision to the community.  This procedure   typically involves similar steps to de-assignment except that it is   initiated by IANA.   Because there is much less danger of exhausting the service name   space compared to the port number space, revoking service names is   NOT RECOMMENDED.8.5.  Service Name and Port Number Transfers   The value of service names and port numbers is defined by their   careful management as a shared Internet resource, whereas enabling   transfer allows the potential for associated monetary exchanges.  As   a result, the IETF does not permit service name or port number   assignments to be transferred between parties, even when they are   mutually consenting.   The appropriate alternate procedure is a coordinated de-assignment   and assignment: The new party requests the service name or port   number via an assignment and the previous party releases its   assignment via the de-assignment procedure outlined above.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 22]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   With the help of their IESG-appointed Expert Reviewer, IANA SHALL   carefully determine if there is a valid technical, operational, or   managerial reason to grant the requested new assignment.8.6.  Maintenance Issues   In addition to the formal procedures described above, updates to the   Description and Contact information are coordinated by IANA in an   informal manner, and may be initiated by either the Assignee or by   IANA, e.g., by the latter requesting an update to current Contact   information.  (Note that the Assignee cannot be changed as a separate   procedure; see insteadSection 8.5 above.)8.7.  Disagreements   In the case of disagreements around any request, there is the   possibility of appeal following the normal appeals process for IANA   assignments as defined bySection 7 of "Guidelines for Writing an   IANA Considerations Section in RFCs" [RFC5226].9.  Security Considerations   The IANA guidelines described in this document do not change the   security properties of UDP, TCP, SCTP, or DCCP.   Assignment of a service name or port number does not in any way imply   an endorsement of an application or product, and the fact that   network traffic is flowing to or from an assigned port number does   not mean that it is "good" traffic, or even that it is used by the   assigned service.  Firewall and system administrators should choose   how to configure their systems based on their knowledge of the   traffic in question, not based on whether or not there is an assigned   service name or port number.   Services are expected to include support for security, either as   default or dynamically negotiated in-band.  The use of separate   service name or port number assignments for secure and insecure   variants of the same service is to be avoided in order to discourage   the deployment of insecure services.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 23]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 201110.  IANA Considerations   This document obsoletes Sections8 and9.1 of the March 2000 IANA   Allocation Guidelines [RFC2780].   Upon approval of this document for publication as an RFC, IANA worked   with Stuart Cheshire, maintainer of the independent service name   registry [SRVREG], to merge the contents of that private registry   into the official IANA registry.  The independent registry web page   has been updated with pointers to the IANA registry and to this RFC.   IANA created a new service name entry in the service name and port   number registry [PORTREG] for all entries in the Protocol and Service   Names registry [PROTSERVREG] that did not already have one assigned.   IANA also indicates in the Assignment Notes for "www" and "www-http"   that they are duplicate terms that refer to the "http" service, and   should not be used for discovery purposes.  For this conceptual   service (human-readable web pages served over HTTP), the correct   service name to use for service discovery purposes is "http" (seeSection 5).10.1.  Service Name ConsistencySection 8.1 defines which character strings are well-formed service   names, which until now had not been clearly defined.  The definition   inSection 8.1 was chosen to allow maximum compatibility of service   names with current and future service discovery mechanisms.   As of August 5, 2009, approximately 98% of the so-called "Short   Names" from existing port number assignments [PORTREG] met the rules   for legal service names stated inSection 8.1, and hence for these   services their service name is exactly the same as their "Short   Name".   The remaining approximately 2% of the existing "Short Names" are not   suitable to be used directly as well-formed service names because   they contain illegal characters such as asterisks, dots, pluses,   slashes, or underscores.  All existing "Short Names" conform to the   length requirement of 15 characters or fewer.  For these 96   unsuitable "Short Names", listed in the table below, the service name   is the Short Name with any illegal characters replaced by hyphens.   IANA added an entry to the registry that uses the new well-formed   primary service name for the existing service and that otherwise   duplicates the original assignment information.  In the description   field of this new entry giving the primary service name, IANA   recorded that it has assigned a well-formed service name for the   previous service and references the original assignment.  In theCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 24]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   Assignment Notes field of the original assignment, IANA added a note   that this entry is an alias to the new well-formed service name, and   that the old service name is historic, not usable for use with many   common service discovery mechanisms.   96 names containing illegal characters to be replaced by hyphens:          +----------------+-----------------+-----------------+          | 914c/g         | acmaint_dbd     | acmaint_transd  |          | atex_elmd      | avanti_cdp      | badm_priv       |          | badm_pub       | bdir_priv       | bdir_pub        |          | bmc_ctd_ldap   | bmc_patroldb    | boks_clntd      |          | boks_servc     | boks_servm      | broker_service  |          | bues_service   | canit_store     | cedros_fds      |          | cl/1           | contamac_icm    | corel_vncadmin  |          | csc_proxy      | cvc_hostd       | dbcontrol_agent |          | dec_dlm        | dl_agent        | documentum_s    |          | dsmeter_iatc   | dsx_monitor     | elpro_tunnel    |          | elvin_client   | elvin_server    | encrypted_admin |          | erunbook_agent | erunbook_server | esri_sde        |          | EtherNet/IP-1  | EtherNet/IP-2   | event_listener  |          | flr_agent      | gds_db          | ibm_wrless_lan  |          | iceedcp_rx     | iceedcp_tx      | iclcnet_svinfo  |          | idig_mux       | ife_icorp       | instl_bootc     |          | instl_boots    | intel_rci       | interhdl_elmd   |          | lan900_remote  | LiebDevMgmt_A   | LiebDevMgmt_C   |          | LiebDevMgmt_DM | mapper-ws_ethd  | matrix_vnet     |          | mdbs_daemon    | menandmice_noh  | msl_lmd         |          | nburn_id       | ncr_ccl         | nds_sso         |          | netmap_lm      | nms_topo_serv   | notify_srvr     |          | novell-lu6.2   | nuts_bootp      | nuts_dem        |          | ocs_amu        | ocs_cmu         | pipe_server     |          | pra_elmd       | printer_agent   | redstorm_diag   |          | redstorm_find  | redstorm_info   | redstorm_join   |          | resource_mgr   | rmonitor_secure | rsvp_tunnel     |          | sai_sentlm     | sge_execd       | sge_qmaster     |          | shiva_confsrvr | sql*net         | srvc_registry   |          | stm_pproc      | subntbcst_tftp  | udt_os          |          | universe_suite | veritas_pbx     | vision_elmd     |          | vision_server  | wrs_registry    | z39.50          |          +----------------+-----------------+-----------------+   In addition to the 96 names listed above, the service name for   "whois++" is "whoispp", following the example set by the   "application/whoispp-query" MIME Content-Type [RFC2957].Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 25]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   There were four names recorded in IANA's Port Number Registry   [PORTREG] that conflicted with names previously recorded in the ad   hoc SRV name registry [SRVREG]: esp, hydra, recipe, and xmp.   The name conflicts were resolved amicably:   The IANA Port Number Registry Short Name "esp" had been registered by   Andrew Chernow, and he informed the authors that the port was no   longer in use and the registration was no longer required.  The SRV   registry entry for "esp" remains in effect.   The SRV name "hydra" for SubEthaEdit had already been retired in   favor of the new SRV name "see".  The IANA Port Number Registry entry   for "hydra" remains in effect.   The SRV name "recipe" was in use in an open source project that had   not yet been packaged for distribution, and the registrant Daniel   Taylor was willing to change to a different service name.  Thanks to   Daniel Taylor for accommodating this change.  The IANA Port Number   Registry entry for "recipe" remains in effect.   The IANA Port Number Registry Short Name "xmp" had been registered by   Bobby Krupczak, but since his registration included an assigned port   number (which is still in use and remains unaffected by this change),   he was willing to switch to a different service name.  Thanks to   Bobby Krupczak for accommodating this change.  The SRV registry entry   for "xmp" remains in effect.10.2.  Port Numbers for SCTP and DCCP Experimentation   Two System UDP and TCP ports, 1021 and 1022, have been reserved for   experimental use [RFC4727].  This document assigns the same port   numbers for SCTP and DCCP, updates the TCP and UDP assignments, and   also instructs IANA to automatically assign these two port numbers   for any future transport protocol with a similar 16-bit port number   namespace.   Note that these port numbers are meant for temporary experimentation   and development in controlled environments.  Before using these port   numbers, carefully consider the advice inSection 6.1 in this   document, as well as in Sections1 and1.1 of "Assigning Experimental   and Testing Numbers Considered Useful" [RFC3692].  Most importantly,   application developers must request a permanent port number   assignment from IANA as described inSection 8.1 before any kind of   non-experimental deployment.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 26]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011           +--------------------+-----------------------------+           | Service Name       | exp1                        |           | Transport Protocol | DCCP, SCTP, TCP, UDP        |           | Assignee           | IESG <iesg@ietf.org>        |           | Contact            | IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org> |           | Description        |RFC3692-style Experiment 1  |           | Reference          | [RFC4727] [RFC6335]         |           | Port Number        | 1021                        |           +--------------------+-----------------------------+           +--------------------+-----------------------------+           | Service Name       | exp2                        |           | Transport Protocol | DCCP, SCTP, TCP, UDP        |           | Assignee           | IESG <iesg@ietf.org>        |           | Contact            | IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org> |           | Description        |RFC3692-style Experiment 2  |           | Reference          | [RFC4727] [RFC6335]         |           | Port Number        | 1022                        |           +--------------------+-----------------------------+10.3.  Updates to DCCP Registries   This document updates the IANA assignment procedures for the DCCP   Port Number and DCCP Service Codes Registries [RFC4340].10.3.1.  DCCP Service Code Registry   Service codes are assigned on a "first come, first served" basis   according toSection 19.8 of the DCCP specification [RFC4340].  This   document updates that section by extending the guidelines given there   in the following ways:   o  IANA MAY assign new service codes without seeking "Expert Review"      using their discretion, but SHOULD seek "Expert Review" if a      request asks for more than five service codes.   o  IANA should feel free to contact the DCCP Expert Reviewer with any      questions related to requests for DCCP-related codepoints.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 27]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 201110.3.2.  DCCP Port Numbers Registry   The DCCP ports registry is defined bySection 19.9 of the DCCP   specification [RFC4340].  Assignments in this registry require prior   assignment of a service code.  Not all service codes require IANA-   assigned ports.  This document updates that section by extending the   guidelines given there in the following way:   o  IANA should normally assign a value in the range 1024-49151 to a      DCCP server port.  IANA requests to assign port numbers in the      System Ports range (0 through 1023) require an "IETF Review"      [RFC5226] prior to assignment by IANA [RFC4340].   o  IANA MUST NOT assign more than one DCCP server port to a single      service code value.   o  The assignment of multiple service codes to the same DCCP port is      allowed, but subject to "Expert Review".   o  The set of service code values associated with a DCCP server port      should be recorded in the service name and port number registry.   o  A request for additional service codes to be associated with an      already assigned port number requires "Expert Review".  These      requests will normally be accepted when they originate from the      contact associated with the port assignment.  In other cases,      these applications will be expected to use an unassigned port,      when this is available.   The DCCP specification [RFC4340] notes that a short port name MUST be   associated with each DCCP server port that has been assigned.  This   document clarifies that this short port name is the service name as   defined here, and this name MUST be unique.11.  Contributors   Alfred Hoenes (ah@tr-sys.de) and Allison Mankin (mankin@psg.com) have   contributed text and ideas to this document.12.  Acknowledgments   The text inSection 10.3 is based on a suggestion originally proposed   as a part of the DCCP Service Codes document [RFC5595] by Gorry   Fairhurst.   Lars Eggert is partly funded by the Trilogy Project [TRILOGY], a   research project supported by the European Commission under its   Seventh Framework Program.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 28]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 201113.  References13.1.  Normative References   [ANSI.X3.4-1986]  American National Standards Institute, "Coded                     Character Set - 7-bit American Standard Code for                     Information Interchange", ANSI X3.4, 1986.   [RFC0768]         Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768, August 1980.   [RFC0793]         Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC 793, September 1981.   [RFC2119]         Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                     Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2780]         Bradner, S. and V. Paxson, "IANA Allocation                     Guidelines For Values In the Internet Protocol and                     Related Headers",BCP 37,RFC 2780, March 2000.   [RFC2782]         Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS                     RR for specifying the location of services (DNS                     SRV)",RFC 2782, February 2000.   [RFC3828]         Larzon, L-A., Degermark, M., Pink, S., Jonsson,                     L-E., and G. Fairhurst, "The Lightweight User                     Datagram Protocol (UDP-Lite)",RFC 3828, July 2004.   [RFC4020]         Kompella, K. and A. Zinin, "Early IANA Allocation                     of Standards Track Code Points",BCP 100,RFC 4020,                     February 2005.   [RFC4340]         Kohler, E., Handley, M., and S. Floyd, "Datagram                     Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)",RFC 4340,                     March 2006.   [RFC4727]         Fenner, B., "Experimental Values In IPv4, IPv6,                     ICMPv4, ICMPv6, UDP, and TCP Headers",RFC 4727,                     November 2006.   [RFC4960]         Stewart, R., "Stream Control Transmission                     Protocol",RFC 4960, September 2007.   [RFC5226]         Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for                     Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226, May 2008.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 29]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   [RFC5234]         Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for                     Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68,RFC 5234,                     January 2008.   [RFC5595]         Fairhurst, G., "The Datagram Congestion Control                     Protocol (DCCP) Service Codes",RFC 5595,                     September 2009.13.2.  Informative References   [DNS-SD]          Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "DNS-Based Service                     Discovery", Work in Progress, February 2011.   [IGD]             UPnP Forum, "Internet Gateway Device (IGD) V 1.0",                     November 2001.   [NAT-PMP]         Cheshire, S., "NAT Port Mapping Protocol (NAT-                     PMP)", Work in Progress, April 2008.   [PORTREG]         Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA),                     "Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number                     Registry",                     <http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers>.   [PROTSERVREG]     Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA),                     "Protocol and Service Names Registry",                     <http://www.iana.org/assignments/service-names>.   [RFC0959]         Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer                     Protocol", STD 9,RFC 959, October 1985.   [RFC1078]         Lottor, M., "TCP port service Multiplexer                     (TCPMUX)",RFC 1078, November 1988.   [RFC1340]         Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers",RFC 1340, July 1992.   [RFC1700]         Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers",RFC 1700, October 1994.   [RFC2957]         Daigle, L. and P. Faltstrom, "The application/                     whoispp-query Content-Type",RFC 2957,                     October 2000.   [RFC3232]         Reynolds, J., "Assigned Numbers:RFC 1700 is                     Replaced by an On-line Database",RFC 3232,                     January 2002.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 30]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   [RFC3692]         Narten, T., "Assigning Experimental and Testing                     Numbers Considered Useful",BCP 82,RFC 3692,                     January 2004.   [RFC4342]         Floyd, S., Kohler, E., and J. Padhye, "Profile for                     Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)                     Congestion Control ID 3: TCP-Friendly Rate Control                     (TFRC)",RFC 4342, March 2006.   [RFC4844]         Daigle, L. and Internet Architecture Board, "The                     RFC Series and RFC Editor",RFC 4844, July 2007.   [RFC5237]         Arkko, J. and S. Bradner, "IANA Allocation                     Guidelines for the Protocol Field",BCP 37,RFC 5237, February 2008.   [RFC5389]         Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,                     "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389, October 2008.   [RFC5766]         Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and J. Rosenberg,                     "Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay                     Extensions to Session Traversal Utilities for NAT                     (STUN)",RFC 5766, April 2010.   [SRVREG]          "DNS SRV Service Types Registry",                     <http://www.dns-sd.org/ServiceTypes.html>.   [SYSFORM]         Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA),                     "Application for System (Well Known) Port Number",                     <http://www.iana.org/>.   [TRILOGY]         "Trilogy Project",                     <http://www.trilogy-project.org/>.   [USRFORM]         Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA),                     "Application for User (Registered) Port Number",                     <http://www.iana.org/>.Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 31]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011Authors' Addresses   Michelle Cotton   Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers   4676 Admiralty Way, Suite 330   Marina del Rey, CA  90292   USA   Phone: +1 310 823 9358   EMail: michelle.cotton@icann.org   URI:http://www.iana.org/   Lars Eggert   Nokia Research Center   P.O. Box 407   Nokia Group  00045   Finland   Phone: +358 50 48 24461   EMail: lars.eggert@nokia.com   URI:http://research.nokia.com/people/lars_eggert/   Joe Touch   USC/ISI   4676 Admiralty Way   Marina del Rey, CA  90292   USA   Phone: +1 310 448 9151   EMail: touch@isi.edu   URI:http://www.isi.edu/touch   Magnus Westerlund   Ericsson   Farogatan 6   Stockholm  164 80   Sweden   Phone: +46 8 719 0000   EMail: magnus.westerlund@ericsson.comCotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 32]

RFC 6335         Service Name and Port Number Procedures     August 2011   Stuart Cheshire   Apple Inc.   1 Infinite Loop   Cupertino, CA  95014   USA   Phone: +1 408 974 3207   EMail: cheshire@apple.com   URI:http://stuartcheshire.org/Cotton, et al.            Best Current Practice                [Page 33]

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