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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       C. JenningsRequest for Comments: 6940                                         CiscoCategory: Standards Track                               B. Lowekamp, Ed.ISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Skype                                                             E. Rescorla                                                              RTFM, Inc.                                                                S. Baset                                                          H. Schulzrinne                                                     Columbia University                                                            January 2014REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD) Base ProtocolAbstract   This specification defines REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD),   a peer-to-peer (P2P) signaling protocol for use on the Internet.  A   P2P signaling protocol provides its clients with an abstract storage   and messaging service between a set of cooperating peers that form   the overlay network.  RELOAD is designed to support a P2P Session   Initiation Protocol (P2PSIP) network, but can be utilized by other   applications with similar requirements by defining new usages that   specify the Kinds of data that need to be stored for a particular   application.  RELOAD defines a security model based on a certificate   enrollment service that provides unique identities.  NAT traversal is   a fundamental service of the protocol.  RELOAD also allows access   from "client" nodes that do not need to route traffic or store data   for others.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/rfc6940.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 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.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71.1.  Basic Setting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81.2.  Architecture  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101.2.1.  Usage Layer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .131.2.2.  Message Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .131.2.3.  Storage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .141.2.4.  Topology Plug-in  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .151.2.5.  Forwarding and Link Management Layer  . . . . . . . .161.3.  Security  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .161.4.  Structure of This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .172.  Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .183.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .184.  Overlay Management Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .214.1.  Security and Identification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .214.1.1.  Shared-Key Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234.2.  Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234.2.1.  Client Routing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .244.2.2.  Minimum Functionality Requirements for Clients  . . .254.3.  Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20144.4.  Connectivity Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .294.5.  Overlay Algorithm Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .304.5.1.  Support for Pluggable Overlay Algorithms  . . . . . .304.5.2.  Joining, Leaving, and Maintenance Overview  . . . . .304.6.  First-Time Setup  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.6.1.  Initial Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.6.2.  Enrollment  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.6.3.  Diagnostics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .335.  Application Support Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .335.1.  Data Storage  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .335.1.1.  Storage Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .345.1.2.  Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .355.2.  Usages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .365.3.  Service Discovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .365.4.  Application Connectivity  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .366.  Overlay Management Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .376.1.  Message Receipt and Forwarding  . . . . . . . . . . . . .376.1.1.  Responsible ID  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .386.1.2.  Other ID  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .386.1.3.  Opaque ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .406.2.  Symmetric Recursive Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .416.2.1.  Request Origination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .416.2.2.  Response Origination  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .426.3.  Message Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .426.3.1.  Presentation Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .436.3.1.1.  Common Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .446.3.2.  Forwarding Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .466.3.2.1.  Processing Configuration Sequence Numbers . . . .496.3.2.2.  Destination and Via Lists . . . . . . . . . . . .506.3.2.3.  Forwarding Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .526.3.3.  Message Contents Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .536.3.3.1.  Response Codes and Response Errors  . . . . . . .546.3.4.  Security Block  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .576.4.  Overlay Topology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .606.4.1.  Topology Plug-in Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . .606.4.2.  Methods and Types for Use by Topology Plug-ins  . . .616.4.2.1.  Join  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .616.4.2.2.  Leave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .626.4.2.3.  Update  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .636.4.2.4.  RouteQuery  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .636.4.2.5.  Probe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .656.5.  Forwarding and Link Management Layer  . . . . . . . . . .676.5.1.  Attach  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .676.5.1.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .686.5.1.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .706.5.1.3.  Using ICE with RELOAD . . . . . . . . . . . . . .716.5.1.4.  Collecting STUN Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . .716.5.1.5.  Gathering Candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.5.1.6.  Prioritizing Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . .726.5.1.7.  Encoding the Attach Message . . . . . . . . . . .736.5.1.8.  Verifying ICE Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . .746.5.1.9.  Role Determination  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .746.5.1.10. Full ICE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .746.5.1.11. No-ICE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .756.5.1.12. Subsequent Offers and Answers . . . . . . . . . .756.5.1.13. Sending Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .756.5.1.14. Receiving Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .756.5.2.  AppAttach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .756.5.2.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .766.5.2.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .776.5.3.  Ping  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .776.5.3.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .776.5.3.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .776.5.4.  ConfigUpdate  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .786.5.4.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .786.5.4.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .796.6.  Overlay Link Layer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .806.6.1.  Future Overlay Link Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . .816.6.1.1.  HIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .826.6.1.2.  ICE-TCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .826.6.1.3.  Message-Oriented Transports . . . . . . . . . . .826.6.1.4.  Tunneled Transports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .826.6.2.  Framing Header  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .836.6.3.  Simple Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .846.6.3.1.  Stop and Wait Sender Algorithm  . . . . . . . . .856.6.4.  DTLS/UDP with SR  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .866.6.5.  TLS/TCP with FH, No-ICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .866.6.6.  DTLS/UDP with SR, No-ICE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .876.7.  Fragmentation and Reassembly  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .877.  Data Storage Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .887.1.  Data Signature Computation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .907.2.  Data Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .917.2.1.  Single Value  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .917.2.2.  Array . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .927.2.3.  Dictionary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .927.3.  Access Control Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .937.3.1.  USER-MATCH  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .937.3.2.  NODE-MATCH  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .937.3.3.  USER-NODE-MATCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .937.3.4.  NODE-MULTIPLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947.4.  Data Storage Methods  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947.4.1.  Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947.4.1.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947.4.1.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1007.4.1.3.  Removing Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.4.2.  Fetch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1027.4.2.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1027.4.2.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1047.4.3.  Stat  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1057.4.3.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1057.4.3.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1067.4.4.  Find  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1077.4.4.1.  Request Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1087.4.4.2.  Response Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1087.4.5.  Defining New Kinds  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1098.  Certificate Store Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1109.  TURN Server Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11010. Chord Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11210.1.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11310.2.  Hash Function  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11410.3.  Routing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11410.4.  Redundancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11410.5.  Joining  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11510.6.  Routing Attaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11610.7.  Updates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11710.7.1.  Handling Neighbor Failures . . . . . . . . . . . . .11810.7.2.  Handling Finger Table Entry Failure  . . . . . . . .11910.7.3.  Receiving Updates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11910.7.4.  Stabilization  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12010.7.4.1.  Updating the Neighbor Table  . . . . . . . . . .12010.7.4.2.  Refreshing the Finger Table  . . . . . . . . . .12110.7.4.3.  Adjusting Finger Table Size  . . . . . . . . . .12210.7.4.4.  Detecting Partitioning . . . . . . . . . . . . .12210.8.  Route Query  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12310.9.  Leaving  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12311. Enrollment and Bootstrap  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12411.1.  Overlay Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12411.1.1.  RELAX NG Grammar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13211.2.  Discovery through Configuration Server . . . . . . . . .13411.3.  Credentials  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13511.3.1.  Self-Generated Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . .13711.4.  Contacting a Bootstrap Node  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13812. Message Flow Example  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13813. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14413.1.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14413.2.  Attacks on P2P Overlays  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14513.3.  Certificate-Based Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14513.4.  Shared-Secret Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14713.5.  Storage Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14713.5.1.  Authorization  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14713.5.2.  Distributed Quota  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14813.5.3.  Correctness  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14813.5.4.  Residual Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .149Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.6.  Routing Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14913.6.1.  Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15013.6.2.  Admissions Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15013.6.3.  Peer Identification and Authentication . . . . . . .15113.6.4.  Protecting the Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15113.6.5.  Routing Loops and DoS Attacks  . . . . . . . . . . .15213.6.6.  Residual Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15214. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15314.1.  Well-Known URI Registration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15314.2.  Port Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15314.3.  Overlay Algorithm Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15414.4.  Access Control Policies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15414.5.  Application-ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15514.6.  Data Kind-ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15514.7.  Data Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15614.8.  Message Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15614.9.  Error Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15814.10. Overlay Link Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15914.11. Overlay Link Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15914.12. Forwarding Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16014.13. Probe Information Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16014.14. Message Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16114.15. Reload URI Scheme  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16114.15.1.  URI Registration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16214.16. Media Type Registration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16214.17. XML Namespace Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16314.17.1.  Config URL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16414.17.2.  Config Chord URL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16415. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16416. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16516.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16516.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .167Appendix A.  Routing Alternatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .171A.1.  Iterative vs. Recursive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .171A.2.  Symmetric vs. Forward Response  . . . . . . . . . . . . .171A.3.  Direct Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .172A.4.  Relay Peers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173A.5.  Symmetric Route Stability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173Appendix B.  Why Clients? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174B.1.  Why Not Only Peers? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174B.2.  Clients as Application-Level Agents . . . . . . . . . . .175Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20141.  Introduction   This document defines REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD), a   peer-to-peer (P2P) signaling protocol for use on the Internet.   RELOAD provides a generic, self-organizing overlay network service,   allowing nodes to route messages to other nodes and to store and   retrieve data in the overlay.  RELOAD provides several features that   are critical for a successful P2P protocol for the Internet:   Security Framework:  A P2P network will often be established among a      set of peers that do not trust each other.  RELOAD leverages a      central enrollment server to provide credentials for each peer,      which can then be used to authenticate each operation.  This      greatly reduces the possible attack surface.   Usage Model:  RELOAD is designed to support a variety of      applications, including P2P multimedia communications with the      Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [SIP-RELOAD].  RELOAD allows the      definition of new application usages, each of which can define its      own data types, along with the rules for their use.  This allows      RELOAD to be used with new applications through a simple      documentation process that supplies the details for each      application.   NAT Traversal:  RELOAD is designed to function in environments where      many, if not most, of the nodes are behind NATs or firewalls.      Operations for NAT traversal are part of the base design,      including using Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE)      [RFC5245] to establish new RELOAD or application protocol      connections.   Optimized Routing:  The very nature of overlay algorithms introduces      a requirement that peers participating in the P2P network route      requests on behalf of other peers in the network.  This introduces      a load on those other peers in the form of bandwidth and      processing power.  RELOAD has been defined with a simple,      lightweight forwarding header, thus minimizing the amount of      effort for intermediate peers.   Pluggable Overlay Algorithms:  RELOAD has been designed with an      abstract interface to the overlay layer to simplify implementing a      variety of structured (e.g., distributed hash tables (DHTs)) and      unstructured overlay algorithms.  The idea here is that RELOAD      provides a generic structure that can fit most types of overlay      topologies (ring, hyperspace, etc.).  To instantiate an actual      network, you combine RELOAD with a specific overlay algorithm,      which defines how to construct the overlay topology and route      messages efficiently within it.  This specification also definesJennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      how RELOAD is used with the Chord-based [Chord] DHT algorithm,      which is mandatory to implement.  Specifying a default "mandatory-      to-implement" overlay algorithm promotes interoperability, while      extensibility allows selection of overlay algorithms optimized for      a particular application.   Support for Clients:  RELOAD clients differ from RELOAD peers      primarily in that they do not store information on behalf of other      nodes in the overlay.  Rather, they use the overlay only to locate      users and resources, as well as to store information and to      contact other nodes.   These properties were designed specifically to meet the requirements   for a P2P protocol to support SIP.  This document defines the base   protocol for the distributed storage and location service, as well as   critical usage for NAT traversal.  The SIP Usage itself is described   separately in [SIP-RELOAD].  RELOAD is not limited to usage by SIP   and could serve as a tool for supporting other P2P applications with   similar needs.1.1.  Basic Setting   In this section, we provide a brief overview of the operational   setting for RELOAD.  A RELOAD Overlay Instance consists of a set of   nodes arranged in a partly connected graph.  Each node in the overlay   is assigned a numeric Node-ID for the lifetime of the node, which,   together with the specific overlay algorithm in use, determines its   position in the graph and the set of nodes it connects to.  The   Node-ID is also tightly coupled to the certificate (seeSection 13.3).  The figure below shows a trivial example which isn't   drawn from any particular overlay algorithm, but was chosen for   convenience of representation.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+      | Node 10|--------------| Node 20|--------------| Node 30|      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+          |                       |                       |          |                       |                       |      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+      | Node 40|--------------| Node 50|--------------| Node 60|      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+          |                       |                       |          |                       |                       |      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+      | Node 70|--------------| Node 80|--------------| Node 90|      +--------+              +--------+              +--------+                                  |                                  |                              +--------+                              | Node 85|                              |(Client)|                              +--------+   Because the graph is not fully connected, when a node wants to send a   message to another node, it may need to route it through the network.   For instance, Node 10 can talk directly to nodes 20 and 40, but not   to Node 70.  In order to send a message to Node 70, it would first   send it to Node 40, with instructions to pass it along to Node 70.   Different overlay algorithms will have different connectivity graphs,   but the general idea behind all of them is to allow any node in the   graph to efficiently reach every other node within a small number of   hops.   The RELOAD network is not only a messaging network.  It is also a   storage network, albeit one designed for small-scale transient   storage rather than for bulk storage of large objects.  Records are   stored under numeric addresses, called Resource-IDs, which occupy the   same space as node identifiers.  Peers are responsible for storing   the data associated with some set of addresses, as determined by   their Node-ID.  For instance, we might say that every peer is   responsible for storing any data value which has an address less than   or equal to its own Node-ID, but greater than the next lowest   Node-ID.  Thus, Node 20 would be responsible for storing values   11-20.   RELOAD also supports clients.  These are nodes which have Node-IDs   but do not participate in routing or storage.  For instance, in the   figure above, Node 85 is a client.  It can route to the rest of the   RELOAD network via Node 80, but no other node will route through it,   and Node 90 is still responsible for addresses in the range [81..90].   We refer to non-client nodes as peers.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Other applications (for instance, SIP) can be defined on top of   RELOAD and can use these two basic RELOAD services to provide their   own services.1.2.  Architecture   RELOAD is fundamentally an overlay network.  The following figure   shows the layered RELOAD architecture.            Application        +-------+  +-------+        | SIP   |  | XMPP  |  ...        | Usage |  | Usage |        +-------+  +-------+    ------------------------------------ Messaging Service Boundary    +------------------+     +---------+    |     Message      |<--->| Storage |    |    Transport     |     +---------+    +------------------+           ^           ^       ^               |           |       v               v           |     +-------------------+           |     |    Topology       |           |     |    Plug-in        |           |     +-------------------+           |         ^           v         v        +------------------+        |  Forwarding &    |        | Link Management  |        +------------------+    ------------------------------------ Overlay Link Service Boundary         +-------+  +-------+         |TLS    |  |DTLS   |  ...         |Overlay|  |Overlay|         |Link   |  |Link   |         +-------+  +-------+   The major components of RELOAD are:   Usage Layer:  Each application defines a RELOAD Usage, which is a set      of data Kinds and behaviors which describe how to use the services      provided by RELOAD.  These usages all talk to RELOAD through a      common Message Transport Service.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Message Transport:  Handles end-to-end reliability, manages request      state for the usages, and forwards Store and Fetch operations to      the Storage component.  It delivers message responses to the      component initiating the request.   Storage:  The Storage component is responsible for processing      messages relating to the storage and retrieval of data.  It talks      directly to the Topology Plug-in to manage data replication and      migration, and it talks to the Message Transport component to send      and receive messages.   Topology Plug-in:  The Topology Plug-in is responsible for      implementing the specific overlay algorithm being used.  It uses      the Message Transport component to send and receive overlay      management messages, the Storage component to manage data      replication, and the Forwarding Layer to control hop-by-hop      message forwarding.  This component superficially parallels      conventional routing algorithms, but is more tightly coupled to      the Forwarding Layer, because there is no single "Routing Table"      equivalent used by all overlay algorithms.  The Topology Plug-in      has two functions: constructing the local forwarding instructions      and selecting the operational topology (i.e., creating links by      sending overlay management messages).   Forwarding and Link Management Layer:  Stores and implements the      Routing Table by providing packet forwarding services between      nodes.  It also handles establishing new links between nodes,      including setting up connections for overlay links across NATs      using ICE.   Overlay Link Layer:  Responsible for actually transporting traffic      directly between nodes.  Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246]      and Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) [RFC6347] are the      currently defined "overlay link layer" protocols used by RELOAD      for hop-by-hop communication.  Each such protocol includes the      appropriate provisions for per-hop framing and hop-by-hop ACKs      needed by unreliable underlying transports.  New protocols can be      defined, as described in Sections6.6.1 and11.1.  As this      document defines only TLS and DTLS, we use those terms throughout      the remainder of the document with the understanding that some      future specification may add new overlay link layers.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   To further clarify the roles of the various layers, the following   figure parallels the architecture with each layer's role from an   overlay perspective and implementation layer in the Internet:    Internet    | Internet Model  |    Model       |   Equivalent    |          Reload                |   in Overlay    |       Architecture   -------------+-----------------+------------------------------------                |                 |    +-------+  +-------+                |  Application    |    | SIP   |  | XMPP  |  ...                |                 |    | Usage |  | Usage |                |                 |    +-------+  +-------+                |                 |  ----------------------------------                |                 |+------------------+     +---------+                |   Transport     ||     Message      |<--->| Storage |                |                 ||    Transport     |     +---------+                |                 |+------------------+           ^                |                 |       ^       ^               |                |                 |       |       v               v   Application  |                 |       |     +-------------------+                |   (Routing)     |       |     |     Topology      |                |                 |       |     |     Plug-in       |                |                 |       |     +-------------------+                |                 |       |         ^                |                 |       v         v                |    Network      |    +------------------+                |                 |    |  Forwarding &    |                |                 |    | Link Management  |                |                 |    +------------------+                |                 |  ----------------------------------   Transport    |      Link       |     +-------+  +------+                |                 |     |TLS    |  |DTLS  |  ...                |                 |     +-------+  +------+   -------------+-----------------+------------------------------------     Network    |                |       Link     |   In addition to the above components, nodes may communicate with a   central provisioning infrastructure (not shown) to get configuration   information, authentication credentials, and the initial set of nodes   to communicate with to join the overlay.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20141.2.1.  Usage Layer   The top layer, called the Usage Layer, has application usages, such   as the SIP Registration Usage [SIP-RELOAD], that use the abstract   Message Transport Service provided by RELOAD.  The goal of this layer   is to implement application-specific usages of the generic overlay   services provided by RELOAD.  The Usage defines how a specific   application maps its data into something that can be stored in the   overlay, where to store the data, how to secure the data, and finally   how applications can retrieve and use the data.   The architecture diagram shows both a SIP Usage and an XMPP Usage.  A   single application may require multiple usages; for example, a   voicemail feature in a softphone application that stores links to the   messages in the overlay would require a different usage than the type   of rendezvous service of XMPP or SIP.  A usage may define multiple   Kinds of data that are stored in the overlay and may also rely on   Kinds originally defined by other usages.   Because the security and storage policies for each Kind are dictated   by the usage defining the Kind, the usages may be coupled with the   Storage component to provide security policy enforcement and to   implement appropriate storage strategies according to the needs of   the usage.  The exact implementation of such an interface is outside   the scope of this specification.1.2.2.  Message Transport   The Message Transport component provides a generic message routing   service for the overlay.  The Message Transport layer is responsible   for end-to-end message transactions.  Each peer is identified by its   location in the overlay, as determined by its Node-ID.  A component   that is a client of the Message Transport can perform two basic   functions:   o  Send a message to a given peer specified by Node-ID or to the peer      responsible for a particular Resource-ID.   o  Receive messages that other peers sent to a Node-ID or Resource-ID      for which the receiving peer is responsible.   All usages rely on the Message Transport component to send and   receive messages from peers.  For instance, when a usage wants to   store data, it does so by sending Store requests.  Note that the   Storage component and the Topology Plug-in are themselves clients of   the Message Transport, because they need to send and receive messages   from other peers.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The Message Transport Service is responsible for end-to-end   reliability, which is accomplished by timer-based retransmissions.   Unlike the Internet transport layer, however, this layer does not   provide congestion control.  RELOAD is a request-response protocol,   with no more than two pairs of request-response messages used in   typical transactions between pairs of nodes; therefore, there are no   opportunities to observe and react to end-to-end congestion.  As with   all Internet applications, implementers are strongly discouraged from   writing applications that react to loss by immediately retrying the   transaction.   The Message Transport Service is similar to those described as   providing "key-based routing" (KBR) [wikiKBR], although as RELOAD   supports different overlay algorithms (including non-DHT overlay   algorithms) that calculate keys (storage indices, not encryption   keys) in different ways, the actual interface needs to accept   Resource Names rather than actual keys.   The Forwarding and Link Management layers are responsible for   maintaining the overlay in the face of changes in the available nodes   and underlying network supporting the overlay (the Internet).  They   also handle congestion control between overlay neighbors, and   exchange routing updates and data replicas in addition to forwarding   end-to-end messages.   Real-world experience has shown that a fixed timeout for the end-to-   end retransmission timer is sufficient for practical overlay   networks.  This timer is adjustable via the overlay configuration.   As the overlay configuration can be rapidly updated, this value could   be dynamically adjusted at coarse time scales, although algorithms   for determining how to accomplish this are beyond the scope of this   specification.  In many cases, however, other means of improving   network performance, such as having the Topology Plug-in remove lossy   links from use in overlay routing or reducing the overall hop count   of end-to-end paths, will be more effective than simply increasing   the retransmission timer.1.2.3.  Storage   One of the major functions of RELOAD is storage of data, that is,   allowing nodes to store data in the overlay and to retrieve data   stored by other nodes or by themselves.  The Storage component is   responsible for processing data storage and retrieval messages.  For   instance, the Storage component might receive a Store request for a   given resource from the Message Transport.  It would then query the   appropriate usage before storing the data value(s) in its local data   store and sending a response to the Message Transport for delivery to   the requesting node.  Typically, these messages will come from otherJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   nodes, but depending on the overlay topology, a node might be   responsible for storing data for itself as well, especially if the   overlay is small.   A peer's Node-ID determines the set of resources that it will be   responsible for storing.  However, the exact mapping between these is   determined by the overlay algorithm in use.  The Storage component   will only receive a Store request from the Message Transport if this   peer is responsible for that Resource-ID.  The Storage component is   notified by the Topology Plug-in when the Resource-IDs for which it   is responsible change, and the Storage component is then responsible   for migrating resources to other peers.1.2.4.  Topology Plug-in   RELOAD is explicitly designed to work with a variety of overlay   algorithms.  In order to facilitate this, the overlay algorithm   implementation is provided by a Topology Plug-in so that each overlay   can select an appropriate overlay algorithm that relies on the common   RELOAD core protocols and code.   The Topology Plug-in is responsible for maintaining the overlay   algorithm Routing Table, which is consulted by the Forwarding and   Link Management Layer before routing a message.  When connections are   made or broken, the Forwarding and Link Management Layer notifies the   Topology Plug-in, which adjusts the Routing Table as appropriate.   The Topology Plug-in will also instruct the Forwarding and Link   Management Layer to form new connections as dictated by the   requirements of the overlay algorithm Topology.  The Topology Plug-in   issues periodic update requests through Message Transport to maintain   and update its Routing Table.   As peers enter and leave, resources may be stored on different peers,   so the Topology Plug-in also keeps track of which peers are   responsible for which resources.  As peers join and leave, the   Topology Plug-in instructs the Storage component to issue resource   migration requests as appropriate, in order to ensure that other   peers have whatever resources they are now responsible for.  The   Topology Plug-in is also responsible for providing for redundant data   storage to protect against loss of information in the event of a peer   failure and to protect against compromised or subversive peers.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20141.2.5.  Forwarding and Link Management Layer   The Forwarding and Link Management Layer is responsible for getting a   message to the next peer, as determined by the Topology Plug-in.   This layer establishes and maintains the network connections as   needed by the Topology Plug-in.  This layer is also responsible for   setting up connections to other peers through NATs and firewalls   using ICE, and it can elect to forward traffic using relays for NAT   and firewall traversal.   Congestion control is implemented at this layer to protect the   Internet paths used to form the link in the overlay.  Additionally,   retransmission is performed to improve the reliability of end-to-end   transactions.  The relation of this layer to the Message Transport   Layer can be likened to the relation of the link-level congestion   control and retransmission in modern wireless networks ` to Internet   transport protocols.   This layer provides a generic interface that allows the Topology   Plug-in to control the overlay and resource operations and messages.   Because each overlay algorithm is defined and functions differently,   we generically refer to the table of other peers that the overlay   algorithm maintains and uses to route requests as a Routing Table.   The Topology Plug-in actually owns the Routing Table, and forwarding   decisions are made by querying the Topology Plug-in for the next hop   for a particular Node-ID or Resource-ID.  If this node is the   destination of the message, the message is delivered to the Message   Transport.   This layer also utilizes a framing header to encapsulate messages as   they are forwarded along each hop.  This header aids reliability   congestion control, flow control, etc.  It has meaning only in the   context of that individual link.   The Forwarding and Link Management Layer sits on top of the Overlay   Link Layer protocols that carry the actual traffic.  This   specification defines how to use DTLS and TLS protocols to carry   RELOAD messages.1.3.  Security   RELOAD's security model is based on each node having one or more   public key certificates.  In general, these certificates will be   assigned by a central server, which also assigns Node-IDs, although   self-signed certificates can be used in closed networks.  These   credentials can be leveraged to provide communications security for   RELOAD messages.  RELOAD provides communications security at three   levels:Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Connection level:  Connections between nodes are secured with TLS,      DTLS, or potentially some to-be-defined future protocol.   Message level:  Each RELOAD message is signed.   Object Level:  Stored objects are signed by the creating node.   These three levels of security work together to allow nodes to verify   the origin and correctness of data they receive from other nodes,   even in the face of malicious activity by other nodes in the overlay.   RELOAD also provides access control built on top of these   communications security features.  Because the peer responsible for   storing a piece of data can validate the signature on the data being   stored, it can determine whether or not a given operation is   permitted.   RELOAD also provides an optional shared-secret-based admission   control feature using shared secrets and TLS pre-shared keys (PSK) or   TLS Secure Remote Password (SRP).  In order to form a TLS connection   to any node in the overlay, a new node needs to know the shared   overlay key, thus restricting access to authorized users only.  This   feature is used together with certificate-based access control, not   as a replacement for it.  It is typically used when self-signed   certificates are being used but would generally not be used when the   certificates were all signed by an enrollment server.1.4.  Structure of This Document   The remainder of this document is structured as follows.   oSection 3 provides definitions of terms used in this document.   oSection 4 provides an overview of the mechanisms used to establish      and maintain the overlay.   oSection 5 provides an overview of the mechanism RELOAD provides to      support other applications.   oSection 6 defines the protocol messages that RELOAD uses to      establish and maintain the overlay.   oSection 7 defines the protocol messages that are used to store and      retrieve data using RELOAD.   oSection 8 defines the Certificate Store Usages.   oSection 9 defines the TURN Server Usage needed to locate TURN      (Traversal Using Relays around NAT) servers for NAT traversal.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   oSection 10 defines a specific Topology Plug-in using a Chord-based      algorithm.   oSection 11 defines the mechanisms that new RELOAD nodes use to      join the overlay for the first time.   oSection 12 provides an extended example.2.  Requirements Language   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.  Terminology   Terms in this document are defined in-line when used and are also   defined below for reference.  The definitions in this section use   terminology and concepts that are not explained until later in the   specification.   Admitting Peer (AP):  A peer in the overlay which helps the Joining      Node join the Overlay.   Bootstrap Node:  A network node used by Joining Nodes to help locate      the Admitting Peer.   Client:  A host that is able to store data in and retrieve data from      the overlay, but does not participate in routing or data storage      for the overlay.   Configuration Document:  An XML document containing all the Overlay      Parameters for one overlay instance.   Connection Table:  Contains connection information for the set of      nodes to which a node is directly connected, which include nodes      that are not yet available for routing.   Destination List:  A list of Node-IDs, Resource-IDs, and Opaque IDs      through which a message is to be routed, in strict order.  A      single Node-ID, Resource-ID, or Opaque ID is a trivial form of      Destination List.  When multiple Node-IDs are specified, a      Destination List is a loose source route.  The list is reduced hop      by hop, and does not include the source but does include the      destination.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   DHT:  A distributed hash table.  A DHT is an abstract storage service      realized by storing the contents of the hash table across a set of      peers.   ID:  A generic term for any kind of identifiers in an Overlay.  This      document specifies an ID as being an Application-ID, a Kind-ID, a      Node-ID, a transaction ID, a component ID, a response ID, a      Resource-ID, or an Opaque ID.   Joining Node (JN):  A node that is attempting to become a peer in a      particular Overlay.   Kind:  A Kind defines a particular type of data that can be stored in      the overlay.  Applications define new Kinds to store the data they      use.  Each Kind is identified with a unique integer called a      Kind-ID.   Kind-ID:  A unique 32-bit value identifying a Kind.  Kind-IDs are      either private or allocated by IANA (seeSection 14.6).   Maximum Request Lifetime:  The maximum time a request will wait for a      response.  This value is equal to the value of the overlay      reliability value (defined inSection 11.1) multiplied by the      number of transmissions (defined inSection 6.2.1), and so      defaults to 15 seconds.   Node:  The term "node" refers to a host that may be either a peer or      a client.  Because RELOAD uses the same protocol for both clients      and peers, much of the text applies equally to both.  Therefore,      we use "node" when the text applies to both clients and peers, and      we use the more specific term (i.e., "client" or "peer") when the      text applies only to clients or only to peers.   Node-ID:  A value of fixed but configurable length that uniquely      identifies a node.  Node-IDs of all 0s and all 1s are reserved.  A      value of 0 is not used in the wire protocol, but can be used to      indicate an invalid node in implementations and APIs.  The Node-ID      of all 1s is used on the wire protocol as a wildcard.   Overlay Algorithm:  An overlay algorithm defines the rules for      determining which peers in an overlay store a particular piece of      data and for determining a topology of interconnections amongst      peers in order to find a piece of data.   Overlay Instance:  A specific overlay algorithm and the collection of      peers that are collaborating to provide read and write access to      it.  Any number of overlay instances can be running in an IP      network at a time, and each operates in isolation of the others.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Overlay Parameters:  A set of values that are shared among all nodes      in an overlay.  The overlay parameters are distributed in an XML      document called the Configuration Document.   Peer:  A host that is participating in the overlay.  Peers are      responsible for holding some portion of the data that has been      stored in the overlay, and they are responsible for routing      messages on behalf of other hosts as needed by the Overlay      Algorithm.   Peer Admission:  The act of admitting a node (the Joining Node) into      an Overlay.  After the admission process is over, the Joining Node      is a fully functional peer of the overlay.  During the admission      process, the Joining Node may need to present credentials to prove      that it has sufficient authority to join the overlay.   Resource:  An object or group of objects stored in a P2P network.   Resource-ID:  A value that identifies some resources and which is      used as a key for storing and retrieving the resource.  Often this      is not human friendly/readable.  One way to generate a Resource-ID      is by applying a mapping function to some other unique name (e.g.,      user name or service name) for the resource.  The Resource-ID is      used by the distributed database algorithm to determine the peer      or peers that are responsible for storing the data for the      overlay.  In structured P2P networks, Resource-IDs are generally      fixed length and are formed by hashing the Resource Name.  In      unstructured networks, Resource Names may be used directly as      Resource-IDs and may be of variable length.   Resource Name:  The name by which a resource is identified.  In      unstructured P2P networks, the Resource Name is sometimes used      directly as a Resource-ID.  In structured P2P networks, the      Resource Name is typically mapped into a Resource-ID by using the      string as the input to hash function.  Structured and unstructured      P2P networks are described in [RFC5694].  A SIP resource, for      example, is often identified by its AOR (address-of-record), which      is an example of a Resource Name.   Responsible Peer:  The peer that is responsible for a specific      resource, as defined by the Topology Plug-in algorithm.   Routing Table:  The set of directly connected peers which a node can      use to forward overlay messages.  In normal operation, these peers      will all be in the Connection Table, but not vice versa, because      some peers may not yet be available for routing.  Peers may sendJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      messages directly to peers that are in their Connection Tables,      but may forward messages to peers that are not in their Connection      Table only through peers that are in the Routing Table.   Successor Replacement Hold-Down Time:  The amount of time to wait      before starting replication when a new successor is found; it      defaults to 30 seconds.   Transaction ID:  A randomly chosen identifier selected by the      originator of a request that is used to correlate requests and      responses.   Usage:  The definition of a set of data structures (data Kinds) that      an application wants to store in the overlay.  A usage may also      define a set of network protocols (Application IDs) that can be      tunneled over TLS or DTLS direct connections between nodes.  For      example, the SIP Usage defines a SIP registration data Kind, which      contains information on how to reach a SIP endpoint, and two      Application IDs corresponding to the SIP and SIPS protocols.   User:  A physical person identified by the certificates assigned to      them.   User Name:  A name identifying a user of the overlay, typically used      as a Resource Name or as a label on a resource that identifies the      user owning the resource.4.  Overlay Management Overview   The most basic function of RELOAD is as a generic overlay network.   Nodes need to be able to join the overlay, form connections to other   nodes, and route messages through the overlay to nodes to which they   are not directly connected.  This section provides an overview of the   mechanisms that perform these functions.4.1.  Security and Identification   The overlay parameters are specified in a Configuration Document.   Because the parameters include security-critical information, such as   the certificate signing trust anchors, the Configuration Document   needs to be retrieved securely.  The initial Configuration Document   is either initially fetched over HTTPS or manually provisioned.   Subsequent Configuration Document updates are received either as a   result of being refreshed periodically by the configuration server,   or, more commonly, by being flood-filled through the overlay, which   allows for fast propagation once an update is pushed.  In the latter   case, updates are via digital signatures that trace back to the   initial Configuration Document.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Every node in the RELOAD overlay is identified by a Node-ID.  The   Node-ID is used for three major purposes:   o  To address the node itself.   o  To determine the node's position in the overlay topology (if the      overlay is structured; overlays do not need to be structured).   o  To determine the set of resources for which the node is      responsible.   Each node has a certificate [RFC5280] containing its Node-ID in a   subjectAltName extension, which is unique within an overlay instance.   The certificate serves multiple purposes:   o  It entitles the user to store data at specific locations in the      Overlay Instance.  Each data Kind defines the specific rules for      determining which certificates can access each Resource-ID/Kind-ID      pair.  For instance, some Kinds might allow anyone to write at a      given location, whereas others might restrict writes to the owner      of a single certificate.   o  It entitles the user to operate a node that has a Node-ID found in      the certificate.  When the node forms a connection to another      peer, it uses this certificate so that a node connecting to it      knows it is connected to the correct node.  (Technically, a TLS or      DTLS association with client authentication is formed.)  In      addition, the node can sign messages, thus providing integrity and      authentication for messages which are sent from the node.   o  It entitles the user to use the user name found in the      certificate.   If a user has more than one device, typically they would get one   certificate for each device.  This allows each device to act as a   separate peer.   RELOAD supports multiple certificate issuance models.  The first is   based on a central enrollment process, which allocates a unique name   and Node-ID and puts them in a certificate for the user.  All peers   in a particular Overlay Instance have the enrollment server as a   trust anchor and so can verify any other peer's certificate.   The second model is useful in settings, when a group of users want to   set up an overlay network but are not concerned about attack by other   users in the network.  For instance, users on a LAN might want to set   up a short-term ad hoc network without going to the trouble ofJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   setting up an enrollment server.  RELOAD supports the use of self-   generated, self-signed certificates.  When self-signed certificates   are used, the node also generates its own Node-ID and user name.  The   Node-ID is computed as a digest of the public key, to prevent Node-ID   theft.  Note that the relevant cryptographic property for the digest   is partial preimage resistance.  Collision resistance is not needed,   because an attacker who can create two nodes with the same Node-ID   but a different public key obtains no advantage.  This model is still   subject to a number of known attacks (most notably, Sybil attacks   [Sybil]) and can be safely used only in closed networks where users   are mutually trusting.  Another drawback of this approach is that the   user's data is then tied to their key, so if a key is changed, any   data stored under their Node-ID needs to be re-stored.  This is not   an issue for centrally issued Node-IDs provided that the   Certification Authority (CA) reissues the same Node-ID when a new   certificate is generated.   The general principle here is that the security mechanisms (TLS or   DTLS at the data link layer and message signatures at the message   transport layer) are always used, even if the certificates are self-   signed.  This allows for a single set of code paths in the systems,   with the only difference being whether certificate verification is   used to chain to a single root of trust.4.1.1.  Shared-Key Security   RELOAD also provides an admission control system based on shared   keys.  In this model, the peers all share a single key which is used   to authenticate the peer-to-peer connections via TLS-PSK [RFC4279] or   TLS-SRP [RFC5054].4.2.  Clients   RELOAD defines a single protocol that is used both as the peer   protocol and as the client protocol for the overlay.  Having a single   protocol simplifies implementation, particularly for devices that may   act in either role, and allows clients to inject messages directly   into the overlay.   We use the term "peer" to identify a node in the overlay that routes   messages for nodes other than those to which it is directly   connected.  Peers also have storage responsibilities.  We use the   term "client" to refer to nodes that do not have routing or storage   responsibilities.  When text applies to both peers and clients, we   will simply refer to such devices as "nodes".Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   RELOAD's client support allows nodes that are not participating in   the overlay as peers to utilize the same implementation and to   benefit from the same security mechanisms as the peers.  Clients   possess and use certificates that authorize the user to store data at   certain locations in the overlay.  The Node-ID in the certificate is   used to identify the particular client as a member of the overlay and   to authenticate its messages.   In RELOAD, unlike some other designs, clients are not first-class   entities.  From the perspective of a peer, a client is a node that   has connected to the overlay, but that has not yet taken steps to   insert itself into the overlay topology.  It might never do so (if   it's a client), or it might eventually do so (if it's just a node   that is taking a long time to join).  The routing and storage rules   for RELOAD provide for correct behavior by peers regardless of   whether other nodes attached to them are clients or peers.  Of   course, a client implementation needs to know that it intends to be a   client, but this localizes complexity only to that node.   For more discussion about the motivation for RELOAD's client support,   seeAppendix B.4.2.1.  Client Routing   Clients may insert themselves in the overlay in two ways:   o  Establish a connection to the peer responsible for the client's      Node-ID in the overlay.  Then, requests may be sent from/to the      client using its Node-ID in the same manner as if it were a peer,      because the responsible peer in the overlay will handle the final      step of routing to the client.  This may require a TURN [RFC5766]      relay in cases where NATs or firewalls prevent a client from      forming a direct connection with its responsible peer.  Note that      clients that choose this option need to process Update messages      from the peer (Section 6.4.2.3).  These updates can indicate that      the peer is no longer responsible for the client's Node-ID.  The      client would then need to form a connection to the appropriate      peer.  Failure to do so will result in the client no longer      receiving messages.   o  Establish a connection with an arbitrary peer in the overlay      (perhaps based on network proximity or an inability to establish a      direct connection with the responsible peer).  In this case, the      client will rely on RELOAD's Destination List feature      (Section 6.3.2.2) to ensure reachability.  The client can initiate      requests, and any node in the overlay that knows the Destination      List to its current location can reach it, but the client is not      directly reachable using only its Node-ID.  If the client is toJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      receive incoming requests from other members of the overlay, the      Destination List needed to reach the client needs to be learnable      via other mechanisms, such as being stored in the overlay by a      usage.  A client connected this way using a certificate with only      a single Node-ID can proceed to use the connection without      performing an Attach (Section 6.5.1).  A client wishing to connect      using this mechanism with a certificate with multiple Node-IDs can      use a Ping (Section 6.5.3) to probe the Node-ID of the node to      which it is connected before performing the Attach.4.2.2.  Minimum Functionality Requirements for Clients   A node may act as a client simply because it does not have the   capacity or need to act as a peer in the overlay, or because it does   not even have an implementation of the Topology Plug-in defined inSection 6.4.1, needed to act as a peer in the overlay.  In order to   exchange RELOAD messages with a peer, a client needs to meet a   minimum level of functionality.  Such a client will:   o  Implement RELOAD's connection-management operations that are used      to establish the connection with the peer.   o  Implement RELOAD's data retrieval methods (with client      functionality).   o  Be able to calculate Resource-IDs used by the overlay.   o  Possess security credentials needed by the overlay that it is      implementing.   A client speaks the same protocol as the peers, knows how to   calculate Resource-IDs, and signs its requests in the same manner as   peers.  While a client does not necessarily require a full   implementation of the overlay algorithm, calculating the Resource-ID   requires an implementation of an appropriate algorithm for the   overlay.4.3.  Routing   This section discusses the capabilities of RELOAD's routing layer and   the protocol features used to implement the capabilities, and   provides a brief overview of how they are used.Appendix A discusses   some alternative designs and the trade-offs that would be necessary   to support them.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   RELOAD's routing provides the following capabilities:   Resource-based Routing:   RELOAD supports routing messages based      solely on the name of the resource.  Such messages are delivered      to a node that is responsible for that resource.  Both structured      and unstructured overlays are supported, so the route may not be      deterministic for all Topology Plug-ins.   Node-based Routing:   RELOAD supports routing messages to a specific      node in the overlay.   Clients:   RELOAD supports requests from and to clients that do not      participate in overlay routing.  The clients are located via      either of the mechanisms described above.   NAT Traversal:   RELOAD supports establishing and using connections      between nodes separated by one or more NATs, including locating      peers behind NATs for those overlays allowing/requiring it.   Low State:   RELOAD's routing algorithms do not require significant      state (i.e., state linear or greater in the number of outstanding      messages that have passed through it) to be stored on intermediate      peers.   Routability in Unstable Topologies:   Overlay topology changes      constantly in an overlay of moderate size due to the failure of      individual nodes and links in the system.  RELOAD's routing allows      peers to reroute messages when a failure is detected, and replies      can be returned to the requesting node as long as the peers that      originally forwarded the successful request do not fail before the      response is returned.   RELOAD's routing utilizes three basic mechanisms:   Destination Lists:   While, in principle, it is possible to just      inject a message into the overlay with a single Node-ID as the      destination, RELOAD provides a source-routing capability in the      form of "Destination Lists".  A Destination List provides a list      of the nodes through which a message flows in order (i.e., it is      loose source routed).  The minimal Destination List contains just      a single value.   Via Lists:   In order to allow responses to follow the same path as      requests, each message also contains a "Via List", which is      appended to by each node a message traverses.  This Via List can      then be inverted and used as a Destination List for the response.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   RouteQuery:   The RouteQuery method allows a node to query a peer for      the next hop it will use to route a message.  This method is      useful for diagnostics and for iterative routing (seeSection 6.4.2.4).   The basic routing mechanism that RELOAD uses is symmetric recursive.   We will first describe symmetric recursive routing and then discuss   its advantages in terms of the requirements discussed above.   Symmetric recursive routing requires that a request message follow a   path through the overlay to the destination: each peer forwards the   message closer to its destination.  The return path of the response   goes through the same nodes as the request (though it may also go   through some new intermediate nodes due to topology changes).  Note   that a failure on the reverse path caused by a topology change after   the request was sent will be handled by the end-to-end retransmission   of the response as described inSection 6.2.1.  For example, the   following figure shows a message following a route from A to Z   through B and X:   A         B         X         Z   -------------------------------   ---------->   Dest=Z            ---------->            Via=A            Dest=Z                      ---------->                      Via=A,B                      Dest=Z                      <----------                       Dest=X,B,A            <----------               Dest=B,A   <----------        Dest=A   Note that this figure does not indicate whether A is a client or   peer.  A forwards its request to B, and the response is returned to A   in the same manner regardless of A's role in the overlay.   This figure shows use of full Via Lists by intermediate peers B and   X.  However, if B and/or X are willing to store state, then they may   elect to truncate the lists and save the truncated information   internally using the transaction ID as a key to allow it to be   retrieved later.  Later, when the response message arrives, theJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   transaction ID would be used to recover the truncated information and   return the response message along the path from which the request   arrived.  This option requires a greater amount of state to be stored   on intermediate peers, but saves a small amount of bandwidth and   reduces the need for modifying the message en route.  Selection of   this mode of operation is a choice for the individual peer; the   techniques are interoperable even on a single message.  The figure   below shows B using full Via Lists, but X truncating them to X1 and   saving the state internally.   A         B         X         Z   -------------------------------   ---------->   Dest=Z            ---------->            Via=A            Dest=Z                      ---------->                      Via=X1                      Dest=Z                      <----------                        Dest=X,X1              <----------                 Dest=B,A   <----------        Dest=A   As before, when B receives the message, B creates a Via List   consisting of [A].  However, instead of sending [A, B], X creates an   opaque ID X1 which maps internally to [A, B] (perhaps by being an   encryption of [A, B]) and then forwards to Z with only X1 as the Via   List.  When the response arrives at X, it maps X1 back to [A, B],   then inverts it to produce the new Destination List [B, A], and   finally routes it to B.   RELOAD also supports a basic iterative "routing" mode, in which the   intermediate peers merely return a response indicating the next hop,   but do not actually forward the message to that next hop themselves.   Iterative routing is implemented using the RouteQuery method (seeSection 6.4.2.4), which requests this behavior.  Note that iterative   routing is selected only by the initiating node.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20144.4.  Connectivity Management   In order to provide efficient routing, a peer needs to maintain a set   of direct connections to other peers in the Overlay Instance.  Due to   the presence of NATs, these connections often cannot be formed   directly.  Instead, we use the Attach request to establish a   connection.  Attach uses Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE)   [RFC5245] to establish the connection.  It is assumed that the reader   is familiar with ICE.   Say that peer A wishes to form a direct connection to peer B, either   to join the overlay or to add more connections in its Routing Table.   It gathers ICE candidates and packages them up in an Attach request,   which it sends to B through usual overlay routing procedures.  B does   its own candidate gathering and sends back a response with its   candidates.  A and B then do ICE connectivity checks on the candidate   pairs.  The result is a connection between A and B.  At this point, A   and B MAY send messages directly between themselves without going   through other overlay peers.  In other words, A and B are in each   other's Connection Tables.  They MAY then execute an Update process,   resulting in additions to each other's Routing Tables, and may then   become able to route messages through each other to other overlay   nodes.   There are two cases where Attach is not used.  The first is when a   peer is joining the overlay and is not connected to any peers.  In   order to support this case, a small number of bootstrap nodes   typically need to be publicly accessible so that new peers can   directly connect to them.Section 11 contains more detail on this.   The second case is when a client connects to a peer at an arbitrary   IP address, rather than to its responsible peer, as described in the   second bullet point ofSection 4.2.1.   In general, a peer needs to maintain connections to all of the peers   near it in the Overlay Instance and to enough other peers to have   efficient routing (the details on what "enough" and "near" mean   depend on the specific overlay).  If a peer cannot form a connection   to some other peer, this is not necessarily a disaster; overlays can   route correctly even without fully connected links.  However, a peer   needs to try to maintain the specified Routing Table defined by the   Topology Plug-in algorithm and needs to form new connections if it   detects that it has fewer direct connections than specified by the   algorithm.  This also implies that peers, in accordance with the   Topology Plug-in algorithm, need to periodically verify that the   connected peers are still alive and, if not, need to try to re-form   the connections or form alternate ones.  SeeSection 10.7.4.3 for an   example on how a specific overlay algorithm implements these   constraints.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20144.5.  Overlay Algorithm Support   The Topology Plug-in allows RELOAD to support a variety of overlay   algorithms.  This specification defines a DHT based on Chord, which   is mandatory to implement, but the base RELOAD protocol is designed   to support a variety of overlay algorithms.  The information needed   to implement this DHT is fully contained in this specification, but   it is easier to understand if you are familiar with Chord-based   [Chord] DHTs.  A nice tutorial can be found at [wikiChord].4.5.1.  Support for Pluggable Overlay Algorithms   RELOAD defines three methods for overlay maintenance: Join, Update,   and Leave.  However, the contents of these messages, when they are   sent, and their precise semantics are specified by the actual overlay   algorithm, which is specified by configuration for all nodes in the   overlay and thus is known to nodes before they attempt to join the   overlay.  RELOAD merely provides a framework of commonly needed   methods that provide uniformity of notation (and ease of debugging)   for a variety of overlay algorithms.4.5.2.  Joining, Leaving, and Maintenance Overview   When a new peer wishes to join the Overlay Instance, it will need a   Node-ID that it is allowed to use and a set of credentials which   match that Node-ID.  When an enrollment server is used, the Node-ID   used is the one found in the certificate received from the enrollment   server.  The details of the joining procedure are defined by the   overlay algorithm, but the general steps for joining an Overlay   Instance are:   o  Form connections to some other peers.   o  Acquire the data values this peer is responsible for storing.   o  Inform the other peers which were previously responsible for that      data that this peer has taken over responsibility.   The first thing the peer needs to do is to form a connection to some   bootstrap node.  Because this is the first connection the peer makes,   these nodes will need public IP addresses so that they can be   connected to directly.  Once a peer has connected to one or more   bootstrap nodes, it can form connections in the usual way, by routing   Attach messages through the overlay to other nodes.  After a peer has   connected to the overlay for the first time, it can cache the set of   past adjacencies which have public IP addresses and can attempt to   use them as future bootstrap nodes.  Note that this requires someJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   notion of which addresses are likely to be public as discussed inSection 9.   After a peer has connected to a bootstrap node, it then needs to take   up its appropriate place in the overlay.  This requires two major   operations:   o  Form connections to other peers in the overlay to populate its      Routing Table.   o  Get a copy of the data it is now responsible for storing, and      assume responsibility for that data.   The second operation is performed by contacting the Admitting Peer   (AP), the node which is currently responsible for the relevant   section of the overlay.   The details of this operation depend mostly on the overlay algorithm   involved, but a typical case would be:   1.  JN sends a Join request to AP announcing its intention to join.   2.  AP sends a Join response.   3.  AP does a sequence of Stores to JN to give it the data it will       need.   4.  AP does Updates to JN and to other peers to tell them about its       own Routing Table.  At this point, both JN and AP consider JN       responsible for some section of the Overlay Instance.   5.  JN makes its own connections to the appropriate peers in the       Overlay Instance.   After this process completes, JN is a full member of the Overlay   Instance and can process Store/Fetch requests.   Note that the first node is a special case.  When ordinary nodes   cannot form connections to the bootstrap nodes, then they are not   part of the overlay.  However, the first node in the overlay can   obviously not connect to other nodes.  In order to support this case,   potential first nodes (which can also initially serve as bootstrap   nodes) need to somehow be instructed that they are the entire   overlay, rather than part of an existing overlay (e.g., by comparing   their IP address to the bootstrap IP addresses in the configuration   file).   Note that clients do not perform either of these operations.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20144.6.  First-Time Setup   Previous sections addressed how RELOAD works after a node has   connected.  This section provides an overview of how users get   connected to the overlay for the first time.  RELOAD is designed so   that users can start with the name of the overlay they wish to join   and perhaps an account name and password, and can leverage these into   having a working peer with minimal user intervention.  This helps   avoid the problems that have been experienced with conventional SIP   clients in which users need to manually configure a large number of   settings.4.6.1.  Initial Configuration   In the first phase of the setup process, the user starts with the   name of the overlay and uses it to download an initial set of overlay   configuration parameters.  The node does a DNS SRV [RFC2782] lookup   on the overlay name to get the address of a configuration server.  It   can then connect to this server with HTTPS [RFC2818] to download a   Configuration Document which contains the basic overlay configuration   parameters as well as a set of bootstrap nodes which can be used to   join the overlay.  The details of the relationships between names in   the HTTPS certificates and the overlay names are described inSection 11.2.   If a node already has the valid Configuration Document that it   received by an out-of-band method, this step can be skipped.  Note   that this out-of-band method needs to provide authentication and   integrity, because the Configuration Document contains the trust   anchors used by the overlay.4.6.2.  Enrollment   If the overlay is using centralized enrollment, then a user needs to   acquire a certificate before joining the overlay.  The certificate   attests both to the user's name within the overlay and to the   Node-IDs which they are permitted to operate.  In this case, the   Configuration Document will contain the address of an enrollment   server which can be used to obtain such a certificate and will also   contain the trust anchor, so this document must be retrieved securely   (seeSection 11.2).  The enrollment server may (and probably will)   require some sort of account name for the user and a password before   issuing the certificate.  The enrollment server's ability to ensure   attackers cannot get a large number of certificates for the overlay   is one of the cornerstones of RELOAD's security.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20144.6.3.  Diagnostics   Significant advice around managing a RELOAD overlay and extensions   for diagnostics are described in [P2P-DIAGNOSTICS].5.  Application Support Overview   RELOAD is not intended to be used alone, but rather as a substrate   for other applications.  These applications can use RELOAD for a   variety of purposes:   o  To store data in the overlay and to retrieve data stored by other      nodes.   o  As a discovery mechanism for services such as TURN.   o  To form direct connections which can be used to transmit      application-level messages without using the overlay.   This section provides an overview of these services.5.1.  Data Storage   RELOAD provides operations to Store and Fetch data.  Each location in   the Overlay Instance is referenced by a Resource-ID.  However, each   location may contain data elements corresponding to multiple Kinds   (e.g., certificate and SIP registration).  Similarly, there may be   multiple elements of a given Kind, as shown below:                      +--------------------------------+                      |            Resource-ID         |                      |                                |                      | +------------+  +------------+ |                      | |   Kind 1   |  |   Kind 2   | |                      | |            |  |            | |                      | | +--------+ |  | +--------+ | |                      | | | Value  | |  | | Value  | | |                      | | +--------+ |  | +--------+ | |                      | |            |  |            | |                      | | +--------+ |  | +--------+ | |                      | | | Value  | |  | | Value  | | |                      | | +--------+ |  | +--------+ | |                      | |            |  +------------+ |                      | | +--------+ |                 |                      | | | Value  | |                 |                      | | +--------+ |                 |                      | +------------+                 |                      +--------------------------------+Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Each Kind is identified by a Kind-ID, which is a code point either   assigned by IANA or allocated out of a private range.  As part of the   Kind definition, protocol designers may define constraints (such as   limits on size) on the values which may be stored.  For many Kinds,   the set may be restricted to a single value, while some sets may be   allowed to contain multiple identical items, and others may have only   unique items.  Note that a Kind may be employed by multiple usages,   and new usages are encouraged to use previously defined Kinds where   possible.  We define the following data models in this document,   although other usages can define their own structures:   single value:  There can be at most one item in the set, and any      value overwrites the previous item.   array:  Many values can be stored and addressed by a numeric index.   dictionary:  The values stored are indexed by a key.  Often, this key      is one of the values from the certificate of the peer sending the      Store request.   In order to protect stored data from tampering by other nodes, each   stored value is individually digitally signed by the node which   created it.  When a value is retrieved, the digital signature can be   verified to detect tampering.  If the certificate used to verify the   stored value signature expires, the value can no longer be retrieved   (although it may not be immediately garbage collected by the storing   node), and the creating node will need to store the value again if it   desires that the stored value continue to be available.5.1.1.  Storage Permissions   A major issue in peer-to-peer storage networks is minimizing the   burden of becoming a peer and, in particular, minimizing the amount   of data which any peer needs to store for other nodes.  RELOAD   addresses this issue by allowing any given node to store data only at   a small number of locations in the overlay, with those locations   being determined by the node's certificate.  When a peer uses a Store   request to place data at a location authorized by its certificate, it   signs that data with the private key that corresponds to its   certificate.  Then the peer responsible for storing the data is able   to verify that the peer issuing the request is authorized to make   that request.  Each data Kind defines the exact rules for determining   what certificate is appropriate.   The most natural rule is that a certificate authorizes a user to   store data keyed with their user name X.  Thus, only a user with a   certificate for "alice@example.org" could write to that location inJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   the overlay (seeSection 11.3).  However, other usages can define any   rules they choose, including publicly writable values.   The digital signature over the data serves two purposes.  First, it   allows the peer responsible for storing the data to verify that this   Store is authorized.  Second, it provides integrity for the data.   The signature is saved along with the data value (or values) so that   any reader can verify the integrity of the data.  Of course, the   responsible peer can "lose" the value, but it cannot undetectably   modify it.   The size requirements of the data being stored in the overlay are   variable.  For instance, a SIP AOR and voicemail differ widely in the   storage size.  RELOAD leaves it to the usage and overlay   configuration to limit size imbalances of various Kinds.5.1.2.  Replication   Replication in P2P overlays can be used to provide:   persistence:  if the responsible peer crashes and/or if the storing      peer leaves the overlay   security:  to guard against DoS attacks by the responsible peer or      routing attacks to that responsible peer   load balancing:  to balance the load of queries for popular resources   A variety of schemes are used in P2P overlays to achieve some of   these goals.  Common techniques include replicating on neighbors of   the responsible peer, randomly locating replicas around the overlay,   and replicating along the path to the responsible peer.   The core RELOAD specification does not specify a particular   replication strategy.  Instead, the first level of replication   strategies is determined by the overlay algorithm, which can base the   replication strategy on its particular topology.  For example, Chord   places replicas on successor peers, which will take over   responsibility if the responsible peer fails [Chord].   If additional replication is needed, for example, if data persistence   is particularly important for a particular usage, then that usage may   specify additional replication, such as implementing random   replications by inserting a different well-known constant into the   Resource Name used to store each replicated copy of the resource.   Such replication strategies can be added independently of the   underlying algorithm, and their usage can be determined based on the   needs of the particular usage.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20145.2.  Usages   By itself, the distributed storage layer provides only the   infrastructure on which applications are built.  In order to do   anything useful, a usage needs to be defined.  Each usage needs to   specify several things:   o  Register Kind-ID code points for any Kinds that the usage defines      (Section 14.6).   o  Define the data structure for each of the Kinds (the value member      inSection 7.2).  If the data structure contains character      strings, conversion rules between characters and the binary      storage need to be specified.   o  Define access control rules for each of the Kinds (Section 7.3).   o  Define how the Resource Name is used to form the Resource-ID where      each Kind is stored.   o  Describe how values will be merged when a network partition is      being healed.   The Kinds defined by a usage may also be applied to other usages.   However, a need for different parameters, such as a different access   control model, would imply the need to create a new Kind.5.3.  Service Discovery   RELOAD does not currently define a generic service discovery   algorithm as part of the base protocol, although a simplistic TURN-   specific discovery mechanism is provided.  A variety of service   discovery algorithms can be implemented as extensions to the base   protocol, such as the service discovery algorithm ReDIR   [opendht-sigcomm05] and [REDIR-RELOAD].5.4.  Application Connectivity   There is no requirement that a RELOAD Usage needs to use RELOAD's   primitives for establishing its own communication if it already   possesses its own means of establishing connections.  For example,   one could design a RELOAD-based resource discovery protocol which   used HTTP to retrieve the actual data.   For more common situations, however, it is the overlay itself --   rather than an external authority such as DNS -- which is used to   establish a connection.  RELOAD provides connectivity to applications   using the AppAttach method.  For example, if a P2PSIP node wishes toJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   establish a SIP dialog with another P2PSIP node, it will use   AppAttach to establish a direct connection with the other node.  This   new connection is separate from the peer protocol connection.  It is   a dedicated DTLS or TLS flow used only for the SIP dialog.6.  Overlay Management Protocol   This section defines the basic protocols used to create, maintain,   and use the RELOAD overlay network.  We start by defining the basic   concept of how message destinations are interpreted when routing   messages.  We then describe the symmetric recursive routing model,   which is RELOAD's default routing algorithm.  Finally, we define the   message structure and the messages used to join and maintain the   overlay.6.1.  Message Receipt and Forwarding   When a node receives a message, it first examines the overlay,   version, and other header fields to determine whether the message is   one it can process.  If any of these are incorrect, as defined inSection 6.3.2, it is an error and the message MUST be discarded.  The   peer SHOULD generate an appropriate error, but local policy can   override this and cause the message to be silently dropped.   Once the peer has determined that the message is correctly formatted   (note that this does not include signature-checking on intermediate   nodes as the message may be fragmented), it examines the first entry   on the Destination List.  There are three possible cases here:   o  The first entry on the Destination List is an ID for which the      peer is responsible.  A peer is always responsible for the      wildcard Node-ID.  Handling of this case is described inSection 6.1.1.   o  The first entry on the Destination List is an ID for which another      peer is responsible.  Handling of this case is described inSection 6.1.2.   o  The first entry on the Destination List is an opaque ID that is      being used for Destination List compression.  Handling of this      case is described inSection 6.1.3.  Note that opaque IDs can be      distinguished from Node-IDs and Resource-IDs on the wire as      described inSection 6.3.2.2.   These cases are handled as discussed below.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.1.1.  Responsible ID   If the first entry on the Destination List is an ID for which the   peer is responsible, there are several (mutually exclusive) subcases   to consider.   o  If the entry is a Resource-ID, then it MUST be the only entry on      the Destination List.  If there are other entries, the message      MUST be silently dropped.  Otherwise, the message is destined for      this node, so the node MUST verify the signature as described inSection 7.1 and MUST pass it to the upper layers.  "Upper layers"      is used here to mean the components above the "Overlay Link      Service Boundary" line in the figure inSection 1.2.   o  If the entry is a Node-ID which equals this node's Node-ID, then      the message is destined for this node.  If it is the only entry on      the Destination List, the message is destined for this node and so      the node passes it to the upper layers.  Otherwise, the node      removes the entry from the Destination List and repeats the      routing process with the next entry on the Destination List.  If      the message is a response and list compression was used, then the      node first modifies the Destination List to reinsert the saved      state, e.g., by unpacking any opaque IDs.   o  If the entry is the wildcard Node-ID (all "1"s), the message is      destined for this node, and the node passes the message to the      upper layers.  A message with a wildcard Node-ID as its first      entry is never forwarded; it is consumed locally.   o  If the entry is a Node-ID which is not equal to this node, then      the node MUST drop the message silently unless the Node-ID      corresponds to a node which is directly connected to this node      (i.e., a client).  In the latter case, the node MUST attempt to      forward the message to the destination node as described in the      next section (though this may fail for connectivity reasons,      because the TTL has expired, or because of some other error.)   Note that this process implies that in order to address a message to   "the peer that controls region X", a sender sends to Resource-ID X,   not Node-ID X.6.1.2.  Other ID   If the first entry on the Destination List is neither an opaque ID   nor an ID the peer is responsible for, then the peer MUST forward the   message towards that entry.  This means that it MUST select one of   the peers to which it is connected and which is most likely to be   responsible (according to the Topology Plug-in) for the first entryJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   on the Destination List.  For the CHORD-RELOAD topology, the routing   to the most likely responsible node is explained inSection 10.3.  If   the first entry on the Destination List is in the peer's Connection   Table, the peer MUST forward the message to that peer directly.   Otherwise, the peer consults the Routing Table to forward the   message.   Any intermediate peer which forwards a RELOAD request MUST ensure   that if it receives a response to that message, the response can be   routed back through the set of nodes through which the request   passed.  The peer selects one of these approaches:   o  The peer can add an entry to the Via List in the forwarding header      that will enable it to determine the correct node.  This is done      by appending to the Via List the Node-ID of the node from which      the request was received.   o  The peer can keep per-transaction state which will allow it to      determine the correct node.   As an example of the first strategy, consider an example with nodes   A, B, C, D, and E.  If node D receives a message from node C with Via   List [A, B], then D would forward to the next node E with Via List   [A, B, C].  Now, if E wants to respond to the message, it reverses   the Via List to produce the Destination List, resulting in   [D, C, B, A].  When D forwards the response to C, the Destination   List will contain [C, B, A].   As an example of the second strategy, if node D receives a message   from node C with transaction ID X (as assigned by A) and Via List   [A, B], it could store [X, C] in its state database and forward the   message with the Via List unchanged.  When D receives the response,   it consults its state database for transaction ID X, determines that   the request came from C, and forwards the response to C.   Intermediate peers which modify the Via List are not required to   simply add entries.  The only requirement is that the peer MUST be   able to reconstruct the correct Destination List on the return route.   RELOAD provides explicit support for this functionality in the form   of opaque IDs, which can replace any number of Via List entries.   For instance, in the above example, Node D might send E a Via List   containing only the opaque ID I.  E would then use the Destination   List [D, I] to send its return message.  When D processes this   Destination List, it would detect that I is an opaque ID, recover the   Via List [A, B, C], and reverse that to produce the correct   Destination List [C, B, A] before sending it to C.  This feature is   called "list compression".  Possibilities for an opaque ID include aJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   compressed and/or encrypted version of the original Via List and an   index into a state database containing the original Via List, but the   details are a local matter.   No matter what mechanism for storing Via List state is used, if an   intermediate peer exits the overlay, then on the return trip the   message cannot be forwarded and will be dropped.  The ordinary   timeout and retransmission mechanisms provide stability over this   type of failure.   Note that if an intermediate peer retains per-transaction state   instead of modifying the Via List, it needs some mechanism for timing   out that state; otherwise, its state database will grow without   bound.  Whatever algorithm is used, unless a FORWARD_CRITICAL   forwarding option (Section 6.3.2.3) or an overlay configuration   option explicitly indicates this state is not needed, the state MUST   be maintained for at least the value of the overlay-reliability-timer   configuration parameter and MAY be kept longer.  Future extensions,   such as [P2PSIP-RELAY], may define mechanisms for determining when   this state does not need to be retained.   There is no requirement to ensure that a request issued after the   receipt of a response follows the same path as the response.  As a   consequence, there is no requirement to use either of the mechanisms   described above (Via List or state retention) when processing a   response message.   A node receiving a request from another node MUST ensure that any   response to that request exits that node with a Destination List   equal to the concatenation of the Node-ID of the node from which the   request was received with the Via List in the original request.  The   intermediate node normally learns the Node-ID that the other node is   using via an Attach, but a node using a certificate with a single   Node-ID MAY elect not to send an Attach (seeSection 4.2.1, bullet   2).  If a node with a certificate with multiple Node-IDs attempts to   route a message other than a Ping or Attach through a node without   performing an Attach, the receiving node MUST reject the request with   an Error_Forbidden error.  The node MUST implement support for   returning responses to a Ping or Attach request made by a Joining   Node Attaching to its responsible peer.6.1.3.  Opaque ID   If the first entry on the Destination List is an opaque ID (e.g., a   compressed Via List), the peer MUST replace the entry with the   original Via List that it replaced and then re-examine the   Destination List to determine which of the three cases inSection 6.1   now applies.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.2.  Symmetric Recursive Routing   This section defines RELOAD's Symmetric Recursive Routing algorithm,   which is the default algorithm used by nodes to route messages   through the overlay.  All implementations MUST implement this routing   algorithm.  An overlay MAY be configured to use alternative routing   algorithms, and alternative routing algorithms MAY be selected on a   per-message basis.  That is, a node in an overlay which supports   Symmetric Recursive Routing and some other routing algorithm called   XXX might use Symmetric Recursive Routing some of the time and XXX at   other times.6.2.1.  Request Origination   In order to originate a message to a given Node-ID or Resource-ID, a   node MUST construct an appropriate Destination List.  The simplest   such Destination List is a single entry containing the Node-ID or   Resource-ID.  The resulting message MUST be forwarded to its   destination via the normal overlay routing mechanisms.  The node MAY   also construct a more complicated Destination List for source   routing.   Once the message is constructed, the node sends the message to an   adjacent peer.  If the first entry on the Destination List is   directly connected, then the message MUST be routed down that   connection.  Otherwise, the Topology Plug-in MUST be consulted to   determine the appropriate next hop.   Parallel requests for a resource are a common solution to improve   reliability in the face of churn or subversive peers.  Parallel   searches for usage-specified replicas are managed by the usage layer,   for instance, by having the usage store data at multiple   Resource-IDs, with the requesting node sending requests to each of   those Resource-IDs.  However, a single request MAY also be routed   through multiple adjacent peers, even when they are known to be   suboptimal, to improve reliability [vulnerabilities-acsac04].  Such   parallel searches MAY be specified by the Topology Plug-in, in which   case it would return multiple next hops and the request would be   routed to all of them.   Because messages can be lost in transit through the overlay, RELOAD   incorporates an end-to-end reliability mechanism.  When an   originating node transmits a request, it MUST set a timer to the   current overlay-reliability-timer.  If a response has not been   received when the timer fires, the request MUST be retransmitted with   the same transaction identifier.  The request MAY be retransmitted up   to 4 times, for a total of 5 messages.  After the timer for the fifth   transmission fires, the message MUST be considered to have failed.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Although the originating node will be doing both end-to-end and hop-   by-hop retransmissions, the end-by-end retransmission procedure is   not followed by intermediate nodes.  They follow the hop-by-hop   reliability procedure described inSection 6.6.3.   The above algorithm can result in multiple requests being delivered   to a node.  Receiving nodes MUST generate semantically equivalent   responses to retransmissions of the same request (this can be   determined by the transaction ID) if the request is received within   the maximum request lifetime (15 seconds).  For some requests (e.g.,   Fetch), this can be accomplished merely by processing the request   again.  For other requests (e.g., Store), it may be necessary to   maintain state for the duration of the request lifetime.6.2.2.  Response Origination   When a peer sends a response to a request using this routing   algorithm, it MUST construct the Destination List by reversing the   order of the entries on the Via List.  This has the result that the   response traverses the same peers as the request traversed, except in   reverse order (symmetric routing) and possibly with extra nodes   (loose routing).6.3.  Message Structure   RELOAD is a message-oriented request/response protocol.  The messages   are encoded using binary fields.  All integers are represented in   network byte order.  The general philosophy behind the design was to   use Type, Length, Value (TLV) fields to allow for extensibility.   However, for the parts of a structure that were required in all   messages, we just define these in a fixed position, as adding a type   and length for them is unnecessary and would only increase bandwidth   and introduce new potential interoperability issues.   Each message has three parts, which are concatenated, as shown below:     +-------------------------+     |    Forwarding Header    |     +-------------------------+     |    Message Contents     |     +-------------------------+     |     Security Block      |     +-------------------------+Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The contents of these parts are as follows:   Forwarding Header:  Each message has a generic header which is used      to forward the message between peers and to its final destination.      This header is the only information that an intermediate peer      (i.e., one that is not the target of a message) needs to examine.Section 6.3.2 describes the format of this part.   Message Contents:  The message being delivered between the peers.      From the perspective of the forwarding layer, the contents are      opaque; however, they are interpreted by the higher layers.Section 6.3.3 describes the format of this part.   Security Block:  A security block containing certificates and a      digital signature over the "Message Contents" section.  Note that      this signature can be computed without parsing the message      contents.  All messages MUST be signed by their originator.Section 6.3.4 describes the format of this part.6.3.1.  Presentation Language   The structures defined in this document are defined using a C-like   syntax based on the presentation language used to define TLS   [RFC5246].  Advantages of this style include:   o  It is familiar enough that most readers can grasp it quickly.   o  The ability to define nested structures allows a separation      between high-level and low-level message structures.   o  It has a straightforward wire encoding that allows quick      implementation, but the structures can be comprehended without      knowing the encoding.   o  It is possible to mechanically compile encoders and decoders.   Several idiosyncrasies of this language are worth noting:   o  All lengths are denoted in bytes, not objects.   o  Variable-length values are denoted like arrays, with angle      brackets.   o  "select" is used to indicate variant structures.   For instance, "uint16 array<0..2^8-2>;" represents up to 254 bytes,   which corresponds to up to 127 values of two bytes (16 bits) each.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   A repetitive structure member shares a common notation with a member   containing a variable-length block of data.  The latter always starts   with "opaque", whereas the former does not.  For instance, the   following denotes a variable block of data:                     opaque data<0..2^32-1>;   whereas the following denotes a list of 0, 1, or more instances of   the Name element:                     Name names<0..2^32-1>;6.3.1.1.  Common Definitions   This section provides an introduction to the presentation language   used throughout RELOAD.   An enum represents an enumerated type.  The values associated with   each possibility are represented in parentheses, and the maximum   value is represented as a nameless value, for purposes of describing   the width of the containing integral type.  For instance, Boolean   represents a true or false:         enum { false(0), true(1), (255) } Boolean;   A boolean value is either a 1 or a 0.  The max value of 255 indicates   that this is represented as a single byte on the wire.   The NodeId, shown below, represents a single Node-ID.             typedef opaque       NodeId[NodeIdLength];   A NodeId is a fixed-length structure represented as a series of   bytes, with the most significant byte first.  The length is set on a   per-overlay basis within the range of 16-20 bytes (128 to 160 bits).   (SeeSection 11.1 for how NodeIdLength is set.)  Note that the use of   "typedef" here is an extension to the TLS language, but its meaning   should be relatively obvious.  Also note that the [ size ] syntax   defines a fixed-length element that does not include the length of   the element in the on-the-wire encoding.   A ResourceId, shown below, represents a single Resource-ID.             typedef opaque       ResourceId<0..2^8-1>;   Like a NodeId, a ResourceId is an opaque string of bytes, but unlike   NodeIds, ResourceIds are variable length, up to 254 bytes (2040 bits)   in length.  On the wire, each ResourceId is preceded by a singleJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   length byte (allowing lengths up to 255 bytes).  Thus, the 3-byte   value "FOO" would be encoded as: 03 46 4f 4f.  Note the < range >   syntax defines a variable length element that includes the length of   the element in the on-the-wire encoding.  The number of bytes to   encode the length on the wire is derived by range; i.e., it is the   minimum number of bytes which can encode the largest range value.   A more complicated example is IpAddressPort, which represents a   network address and can be used to carry either an IPv6 or IPv4   address:        enum { invalidAddressType(0), ipv4_address(1), ipv6_address(2),             (255) } AddressType;        struct {          uint32                  addr;          uint16                  port;        } IPv4AddrPort;        struct {          uint128                 addr;          uint16                  port;        } IPv6AddrPort;        struct {          AddressType             type;          uint8                   length;          select (type) {            case ipv4_address:               IPv4AddrPort       v4addr_port;            case ipv6_address:               IPv6AddrPort       v6addr_port;            /* This structure can be extended */          };        } IpAddressPort;   The first two fields in the structure are the same no matter what   kind of address is being represented:   type:  The type of address (IPv4 or IPv6).   length:  The length of the rest of the structure.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   By having the type and the length appear at the beginning of the   structure regardless of the kind of address being represented, an   implementation which does not understand new address type X can still   parse the IpAddressPort field and then discard it if it is not   needed.   The rest of the IpAddressPort structure is either an IPv4AddrPort or   an IPv6AddrPort.  Both of these simply consist of an address   represented as an integer and a 16-bit port.  As an example, here is   the wire representation of the IPv4 address "192.0.2.1" with port   "6084".             01           ; type    = IPv4             06           ; length  = 6             c0 00 02 01  ; address = 192.0.2.1             17 c4        ; port    = 6084   Unless a given structure that uses a select explicitly allows for   unknown types in the select, any unknown type SHOULD be treated as a   parsing error, and the whole message SHOULD be discarded with no   response.6.3.2.  Forwarding Header   The forwarding header is defined as a ForwardingHeader structure, as   shown below.        struct {          uint32             relo_token;          uint32             overlay;          uint16             configuration_sequence;          uint8              version;          uint8              ttl;          uint32             fragment;          uint32             length;          uint64             transaction_id;          uint32             max_response_length;          uint16             via_list_length;          uint16             destination_list_length;          uint16             options_length;          Destination        via_list[via_list_length];          Destination        destination_list                               [destination_list_length];          ForwardingOption   options[options_length];        } ForwardingHeader;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The contents of the structure are:   relo_token:  The first four bytes identify this message as a RELOAD      message.  This field MUST contain the value 0xd2454c4f (the string      "RELO" with the high bit of the first byte set).   overlay:  The 32-bit checksum/hash of the overlay being used.  This      MUST be formed by taking the lower 32 bits of the SHA-1 [RFC3174]      hash of the overlay name.  The purpose of this field is to allow      nodes to participate in multiple overlays and to detect accidental      misconfiguration.  This is not a security-critical function.  The      overlay name MUST consist of a sequence of characters that would      be allowable as a DNS name.  Specifically, as it is used in a DNS      lookup, it will need to be compliant with the grammar for the      domain as specified inSection 2.3.1 of [RFC1035].   configuration_sequence:  The sequence number of the configuration      file.  SeeSection 6.3.2.1 for details.   version:  The version of the RELOAD protocol being used times 10.      RELOAD version numbers are fixed-point decimal numbers between      fixed-point integer between 0.1 and 25.4.  This document describes      version 1.0, with a value of 0x0a.  (Note that versions used prior      to the publication of this RFC used version number 0.1.)  Nodes      MUST reject messages with other versions.   ttl:  An 8-bit field indicating the number of iterations, or hops, a      message can experience before it is discarded.  The TTL (time-to-      live) value MUST be decremented by one at every hop along the      route the message traverses just before transmission.  If a      received message has a TTL of 0 and the message is not destined      for the receiving node, then the message MUST NOT be propagated      further, and an Error_TTL_Exceeded error should be generated.  The      initial value of the TTL SHOULD be 100 and MUST NOT exceed 100      unless defined otherwise by the overlay configuration.      Implementations which receive messages with a TTL greater than the      current value of initial-ttl (or the default of 100) MUST discard      the message and send an Error_TTL_Exceeded error.   fragment:  This field is used to handle fragmentation.  The high bit      (0x80000000) MUST be set for historical reasons.  If the next bit      (0x40000000) is set to 1, it indicates that this is the last (or      only) fragment.  The next six bits (0x20000000 through 0x01000000)      are reserved and SHOULD be set to zero.  The remainder of the      field is used to indicate the fragment offset; seeSection 6.7 for      details.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   length:  The count in bytes of the size of the message, including the      header, after the eventual fragmentation.   transaction_id:  A unique 64-bit number that identifies this      transaction and also allows receivers to disambiguate transactions      which are otherwise identical.  In order to provide a high      probability that transaction IDs are unique, they MUST be randomly      generated.  Responses use the same transaction ID as the request      to which they correspond.  Transaction IDs are also used for      fragment reassembly.  SeeSection 6.7 for details.   max_response_length:  The maximum size in bytes of a response.  This      is used by requesting nodes to avoid receiving (unexpected) very      large responses.  If this value is non-zero, responding peers MUST      check that any response would not exceed it and if so generate an      Error_Incompatible_with_Overlay value.  This value SHOULD be set      to zero for responses.   via_list_length:  The length of the Via List in bytes.  Note that in      this field and the following two length fields, we depart from the      usual variable-length convention of having the length immediately      precede the value, in order to make it easier for hardware      decoding engines to quickly determine the length of the header.   destination_list_length:  The length of the Destination List in      bytes.   options_length:  The length of the header options in bytes.   via_list:  The via_list contains the sequence of destinations through      which the message has passed.  The via_list starts out empty and      grows as the message traverses each peer.  In stateless cases, the      previous hop that the message is from is appended to the Via List      as specified inSection 6.1.2.   destination_list:  The destination_list contains a sequence of      destinations through which the message should pass.  The      Destination List is constructed by the message originator.  The      first element on the Destination List is where the message goes      next.  Generally, the list shrinks as the message traverses each      listed peer, though if list compression is used, this may not be      true.   options:  Contains a series of ForwardingOption entries.  SeeSection 6.3.2.3.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.3.2.1.  Processing Configuration Sequence Numbers   In order to be part of the overlay, a node MUST have a copy of the   overlay Configuration Document.  In order to allow for configuration   document changes, each version of the Configuration Document MUST   contain a sequence number which MUST be monotonically increasing mod   65535.  Because the sequence number may, in principle, wrap, greater   than or less than are interpreted by modulo arithmetic as in TCP.   When a destination node receives a request, it MUST check that the   configuration_sequence field is equal to its own configuration   sequence number.  If they do not match, the node MUST generate an   error, either Error_Config_Too_Old or Error_Config_Too_New.  In   addition, if the configuration file in the request is too old, the   node MUST generate a ConfigUpdate message to update the requesting   node.  This allows new Configuration Documents to propagate quickly   throughout the system.  The one exception to this rule is that if the   configuration_sequence field is equal to 65535 and the message type   is ConfigUpdate, then the message MUST be accepted regardless of the   receiving node's configuration sequence number.  Since 65535 is a   special value, peers sending a new configuration when the   configuration sequence is currently 65534 MUST set the configuration   sequence number to 0 when they send a new configuration.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.3.2.2.  Destination and Via Lists   The Destination List and Via List are sequences of Destination   values:     enum { invalidDestinationType(0), node(1), resource(2),            opaque_id_type(3), /* 128-255 not allowed */ (255) }          DestinationType;     select (destination_type) {      case node:             NodeId               node_id;      case resource:             ResourceId           resource_id;      case opaque_id_type:             opaque               opaque_id<0..2^8-1>;          /* This structure may be extended with new types */     } DestinationData;     struct {        DestinationType         type;        uint8                   length;        DestinationData         destination_data;     } Destination;     struct {        uint16               opaque_id; /* Top bit MUST be 1 */     } Destination;   If the destination structure is a 16-bit integer, then the first bit   MUST be set to 1, and it MUST be treated as if it were a full   structure with a DestinationType of opaque_id_type and an opaque_id   that was 2 bytes long with the value of the 16-bit integer.  If the   destination structure starts with DestinationType, then the first bit   MUST be set to 0, and the destination structure must use a TLV   structure with the following contents:   type      The type of the DestinationData Payload Data Unit (PDU).  It may      be one of "node", "resource", or "opaque_id_type".   length      The length of the destination_data.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   destination_data      The destination value itself, which is an encoded DestinationData      structure that depends on the value of "type".   Note that the destination structure encodes a Type, Length, Value.   The Length field specifies the length of the DestinationData values,   which allows the addition of new DestinationTypes.  It also allows an   implementation which does not understand a given DestinationType to   skip over it.   A DestinationData can be one of three types:   node      A Node-ID.   opaque      A compressed list of Node-IDs and an eventual Resource-ID.      Because this value has been compressed by one of the peers, it is      meaningful only to that peer and cannot be decoded by other peers.      Thus, it is represented as an opaque string.   resource      The Resource-ID of the resource which is desired.  This type MUST      appear only in the final location of a Destination List and MUST      NOT appear in a Via List.  It is meaningless to try to route      through a resource.   One possible encoding of the 16-bit integer version as an opaque   identifier is to encode an index into a Connection Table.  To avoid   misrouting responses in the event a response is delayed and the   Connection Table entry has changed, the identifier SHOULD be split   between an index and a generation counter for that index.  When a   Node first joins the overlay, the generation counters SHOULD be   initialized to random values.  An implementation MAY use 12 bits for   the Connection Table index and 3 bits for the generation counter.   (Note that this does not suggest a 4096-entry Connection Table for   every peer, only the ability to encode for a larger Connection   Table.)  When a Connection Table slot is used for a new connection,   the generation counter is incremented (with wrapping).  Connection   Table slots are used on a rotating basis to maximize the time   interval between uses of the same slot for different connections.   When routing a message to an entry in the Destination List encoding a   Connection Table entry, the peer MUST confirm that the generation   counter matches the current generation counter of that index before   forwarding the message.  If it does not match, the message MUST be   silently dropped.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.3.2.3.  Forwarding Option   The Forwarding header can be extended with forwarding header options,   which are a series of ForwardingOption structures:    enum { invalidForwardingOptionType(0), (255) }      ForwardingOptionType;    struct {      ForwardingOptionType      type;      uint8                     flags;      uint16                    length;      select (type) {            /* This type may be extended */      };    } ForwardingOption;   Each ForwardingOption consists of the following values:   type      The type of the option.  This structure allows for unknown options      types.   flags      Three flags are defined: FORWARD_CRITICAL(0x01),      DESTINATION_CRITICAL(0x02), and RESPONSE_COPY(0x04).  These flags      MUST NOT be set in a response.  If the FORWARD_CRITICAL flag is      set, any peer that would forward the message but does not      understand this option MUST reject the request with an      Error_Unsupported_Forwarding_Option error response.  If the      DESTINATION_CRITICAL flag is set, any node that generates a      response to the message but does not understand the forwarding      option MUST reject the request with an      Error_Unsupported_Forwarding_Option error response.  If the      RESPONSE_COPY flag is set, any node generating a response MUST      copy the option from the request to the response except that the      RESPONSE_COPY, FORWARD_CRITICAL, and DESTINATION_CRITICAL flags      MUST be cleared.   length      The length of the rest of the structure.  Note that a 0 length may      be reasonable if the mere presence of the option is meaningful and      no value is required.   option      The option value.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.3.3.  Message Contents Format   The second major part of a RELOAD message is the contents part, which   is defined by MessageContents:   enum { invalidMessageExtensionType(0),          (2^16-1) } MessageExtensionType;   struct {     MessageExtensionType  type;     Boolean               critical;     opaque                extension_contents<0..2^32-1>;   } MessageExtension;   struct {     uint16                 message_code;     opaque                 message_body<0..2^32-1>;     MessageExtension       extensions<0..2^32-1>;   } MessageContents;   The contents of this structure are as follows:   message_code      This indicates the message that is being sent.  The code space is      broken up as follows:      0x0  Invalid Message Code.  This code will never be assigned.      0x1 .. 0x7FFF  Requests and responses.  These code points are         always paired, with requests being an odd value and the         corresponding response being the request code plus 1.  Thus,         "probe_request" (the Probe request) has the value 1 and         "probe_answer" (the Probe response) has the value 2      0x8000 .. 0xFFFE  Reserved      0xFFFF  Error      The message codes are defined inSection 14.8.   message_body      The message body itself, represented as a variable-length string      of bytes.  The bytes themselves are dependent on the code value.      See the sections describing the various RELOAD methods (Join,      Update, Attach, Store, Fetch, etc.) for the definitions of the      payload contents.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   extensions      Extensions to the message.  Currently no extensions are defined,      but new extensions can be defined by the process described inSection 14.14.   All extensions have the following form:   type      The extension type.   critical      Whether this extension needs to be understood in order to process      the message.  If critical = True and the recipient does not      understand the message, it MUST generate an      Error_Unknown_Extension error.  If critical = False, the recipient      MAY choose to process the message even if it does not understand      the extension.   extension_contents      The contents of the extension (which are extension dependent).   The subsections6.4.2,6.5, and7 describe structures that are   inserted inside the message_body member, depending on the value of   the message_code value.  For example, a message_code value of   join_req means that the structure named JoinReq is inserted inside   message_body.  This document does not contain a mapping between   message_code values and structure names, as the conversion between   the two is obvious.   Similarly, this document uses the name of the structure without the   "Req" or "Ans" suffix to mean the execution of a transaction   consisting of the matching request and answer.  For example, when the   text says "perform an Attach", it must be understood as performing a   transaction composed of an AttachReq and an AttachAns.6.3.3.1.  Response Codes and Response Errors   A node processing a request MUST return its status in the   message_code field.  If the request was a success, then the message   code MUST be set to the response code that matches the request (i.e.,   the next code up).  The response payload is then as defined in the   request/response descriptions.   If the request has failed, then the message code MUST be set to   0xffff (error) and the payload MUST be an error_response message, as   shown below.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 54]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   When the message code is 0xFFFF, the payload MUST be an   ErrorResponse:         public struct {           uint16             error_code;           opaque             error_info<0..2^16-1>;         } ErrorResponse;   The contents of this structure are as follows:   error_code      A numeric error code indicating the error that occurred.   error_info      An optional arbitrary byte string.  Unless otherwise specified,      this will be a UTF-8 text string that provides further information      about what went wrong.  Developers are encouraged to include      enough diagnostic information to be useful in error_info.  The      specific text to be used and any relevant language or encoding      thereof is left to the implementation.   The following error code values are defined.  The numeric values for   these are defined inSection 14.9.   Error_Forbidden      The requesting node does not have permission to make this request.   Error_Not_Found      The resource or node cannot be found or does not exist.   Error_Request_Timeout      A response to the request has not been received in a suitable      amount of time.  The requesting node MAY resend the request at a      later time.   Error_Data_Too_Old      A store cannot be completed because the storage_time precedes the      existing value.   Error_Data_Too_Large      A store cannot be completed because the requested object exceeds      the size limits for that Kind.   Error_Generation_Counter_Too_Low      A store cannot be completed because the generation counter      precedes the existing value.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 55]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Error_Incompatible_with_Overlay      A peer receiving the request is using a different overlay, overlay      algorithm, or hash algorithm, or some other parameter that is      inconsistent with the overlay configuration.   Error_Unsupported_Forwarding_Option      A node received the request with a forwarding options flagged as      critical, but the node does not support this option.  SeeSection 6.3.2.3.   Error_TTL_Exceeded      A peer received the request in which the TTL was decremented to      zero.  SeeSection 6.3.2.   Error_Message_Too_Large      A peer received a request that was too large.  SeeSection 6.6.   Error_Response_Too_Large      A node would have generated a response that is too large per the      max_response_length field.   Error_Config_Too_Old      A destination node received a request with a configuration      sequence that is too old.  SeeSection 6.3.2.1.   Error_Config_Too_New      A destination node received a request with a configuration      sequence that is too new.  SeeSection 6.3.2.1.   Error_Unknown_Kind      A destination peer received a request with an unknown Kind-ID.      SeeSection 7.4.1.2.   Error_In_Progress      An Attach to this peer is already in progress.  SeeSection 6.5.1.2.   Error_Unknown_Extension      A destination node received a request with an unknown extension.   Error_Invalid_Message      Something about this message is invalid, but it does not fit the      other error codes.  When this message is sent, implementations      SHOULD provide some meaningful description in error_info to aid in      debugging.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 56]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Error_Exp_A      For the purposes of experimentation.  It is not meant for vendor-      specific use of any sort and MUST NOT be used for operational      deployments.   Error_Exp_B      For the purposes of experimentation.  It is not meant for vendor-      specific use of any sort and MUST NOT be used for operational      deployments.6.3.4.  Security Block   The third part of a RELOAD message is the security block.  The   security block is represented by a SecurityBlock structure:   struct {      CertificateType     type;   // FromRFC 6091      opaque              certificate<0..2^16-1>;   } GenericCertificate;   struct {      GenericCertificate certificates<0..2^16-1>;      Signature          signature;   } SecurityBlock;   The contents of this structure are:   certificates      A bucket of certificates.   signature      A signature.   The certificates bucket SHOULD contain all the certificates necessary   to verify every signature in both the message and the internal   message objects, except for those certificates in a root-cert element   of the current configuration file.  This is the only location in the   message which contains certificates, thus allowing only a single copy   of each certificate to be sent.  In systems that have an alternative   certificate distribution mechanism, some certificates MAY be omitted.   However, unless an alternative mechanism for immediately generating   certificates, such as shared secret security (Section 13.4) is used,   implementers MUST include all referenced certificates.   NOTE TO IMPLEMENTERS: This requirement implies that a peer storing   data is obligated to retain certificates for the data that it holds.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 57]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Each certificate is represented by a GenericCertificate structure,   which has the following contents:   type      The type of the certificate, as defined in [RFC6091].  Only the      use of X.509 certificates is defined in this document.   certificate      The encoded version of the certificate.  For X.509 certificates,      it is the Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER) form.   The signature is computed over the payload and parts of the   forwarding header.  In case of a Store, the payload MUST contain an   additional signature computed as described inSection 7.1.  All   signatures MUST be formatted using the Signature element.  This   element is also used in other contexts where signatures are needed.   The input structure to the signature computation MAY vary depending   on the data element being signed.     enum { invalidSignerIdentityType(0),            cert_hash(1), cert_hash_node_id(2),            none(3)            (255) } SignerIdentityType;     struct {       select (identity_type) {         case cert_hash;           HashAlgorithm      hash_alg;              // From TLS           opaque             certificate_hash<0..2^8-1>;         case cert_hash_node_id:           HashAlgorithm      hash_alg;              // From TLS           opaque             certificate_node_id_hash<0..2^8-1>;         case none:           /* empty */         /* This structure may be extended with new types if necessary*/       };     } SignerIdentityValue;     struct {       SignerIdentityType     identity_type;       uint16                 length;       SignerIdentityValue    identity[SignerIdentity.length];     } SignerIdentity;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 58]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014     struct {        SignatureAndHashAlgorithm     algorithm;   // From TLS        SignerIdentity                identity;        opaque                        signature_value<0..2^16-1>;     } Signature;   The Signature construct contains the following values:   algorithm      The signature algorithm in use.  The algorithm definitions are      found in the IANA TLS SignatureAlgorithm and HashAlgorithm      registries.  All implementations MUST support RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5      [RFC3447] signatures with SHA-256 hashes [RFC6234].   identity      The identity, as defined in the two paragraphs following this      list, used to form the signature.   signature_value      The value of the signature.      Note that storage operations allow for special values of algorithm      and identity.  See the Store Request definition (Section 7.4.1.1)      and the Fetch Response definition (Section 7.4.2.2).   There are two permitted identity formats, one for a certificate with   only one Node-ID and one for a certificate with multiple Node-IDs.   In the first case, the cert_hash type MUST be used.  The hash_alg   field is used to indicate the algorithm used to produce the hash.   The certificate_hash contains the hash of the certificate object   (i.e., the DER-encoded certificate).   In the second case, the cert_hash_node_id type MUST be used.  The   hash_alg is as in cert_hash, but the cert_hash_node_id is computed   over the NodeId used to sign concatenated with the certificate; i.e.,   H(NodeId || certificate).  The NodeId is represented without any   framing or length fields, as simple raw bytes.  This is safe because   NodeIds are a fixed length for a given overlay.   For signatures over messages, the input to the signature is computed   over:      overlay || transaction_id || MessageContents || SignerIdentity   where overlay and transaction_id come from the forwarding header and   || indicates concatenation.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 59]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The input to signatures over data values is different and is   described inSection 7.1.   All RELOAD messages MUST be signed.  Intermediate nodes do not verify   signatures.  Upon receipt (and fragment reassembly, if needed), the   destination node MUST verify the signature and the authorizing   certificate.  If the signature fails, the implementation SHOULD   simply drop the message and MUST NOT process it.  This check provides   a minimal level of assurance that the sending node is a valid part of   the overlay, and it provides cryptographic authentication of the   sending node.  In addition, responses MUST be checked as follows by   the requesting node:   1.  The response to a message sent to a Node-ID MUST have been sent       by that Node-ID unless the response has been sent to the wildcard       Node-ID.   2.  The response to a message sent to a Resource-ID MUST have been       sent by a Node-ID which is at least as close to the target       Resource-ID as any node in the requesting node's Neighbor Table.   The second condition serves as a primitive check for responses from   wildly wrong nodes but is not a complete check.  Note that in periods   of churn, it is possible for the requesting node to obtain a closer   neighbor while the request is outstanding.  This will cause the   response to be rejected and the request to be retransmitted.   In addition, some methods (especially Store) have additional   authentication requirements, which are described in the sections   covering those methods.6.4.  Overlay Topology   As discussed in previous sections, RELOAD defines a default overlay   topology (CHORD-RELOAD) but allows for other topologies through the   use of Topology Plug-ins.  This section describes the requirements   for new Topology Plug-ins and the methods that RELOAD provides for   overlay topology maintenance.6.4.1.  Topology Plug-in Requirements   When specifying a new overlay algorithm, at least the following MUST   be described:   o  Joining procedures, including the contents of the Join message.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 60]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   o  Stabilization procedures, including the contents of the Update      message, the frequency of topology probes and keepalives, and the      mechanism used to detect when peers have disconnected.   o  Exit procedures, including the contents of the Leave message.   o  The length of the Resource-IDs and for DHTs the hash algorithm to      compute the hash of an identifier.   o  The procedures that peers use to route messages.   o  The replication strategy used to ensure data redundancy.   All overlay algorithms MUST specify maintenance procedures that send   Updates to clients and peers that have established connections to the   peer responsible for a particular ID when the responsibility for that   ID changes.  Because tracking this information is difficult, overlay   algorithms MAY simply specify that an Update is sent to all members   of the Connection Table whenever the range of IDs for which the peer   is responsible changes.6.4.2.  Methods and Types for Use by Topology Plug-ins   This section describes the methods that Topology Plug-ins use to   join, leave, and maintain the overlay.6.4.2.1.  Join   A new peer (which already has credentials) uses the JoinReq message   to join the overlay.  The JoinReq is sent to the responsible peer   depending on the routing mechanism described in the Topology Plug-in.   This message notifies the responsible peer that the new peer is   taking over some of the overlay and that it needs to synchronize its   state.         struct {            NodeId                joining_peer_id;            opaque                overlay_specific_data<0..2^16-1>;         } JoinReq;   The minimal JoinReq contains only the Node-ID which the sending peer   wishes to assume.  Overlay algorithms MAY specify other data to   appear in this request.  Receivers of the JoinReq MUST verify that   the joining_peer_id field matches the Node-ID used to sign the   message and, if not, the message MUST be rejected with an   Error_Forbidden error.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 61]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Because joins may be executed only between nodes which are directly   adjacent, receiving peers MUST verify that any JoinReq they receive   arrives from a transport channel that is bound to the Node-ID to be   assumed by the Joining Node.  Implementations MUST use DTLS   anti-replay mechanisms, thus preventing replay attacks.   If the request succeeds, the responding peer responds with a JoinAns   message, as defined below:         struct {            opaque                overlay_specific_data<0..2^16-1>;         } JoinAns;   If the request succeeds, the responding peer MUST follow up by   executing the right sequence of Stores and Updates to transfer the   appropriate section of the overlay space to the Joining Node.  In   addition, overlay algorithms MAY define data to appear in the   response payload that provides additional information.   Joining Nodes MUST verify that the signature on the JoinAns message   matches the expected target (i.e., the adjacency over which they are   joining).  If not, they MUST discard the message.   In general, nodes which cannot form connections SHOULD report an   error to the user.  However, implementations MUST provide some   mechanism whereby nodes can determine that they are potentially the   first node and can take responsibility for the overlay.  (The idea is   to avoid having ordinary nodes try to become responsible for the   entire overlay during a partition.)  This specification does not   mandate any particular mechanism, but a configuration flag or setting   seems appropriate.6.4.2.2.  Leave   The LeaveReq message is used to indicate that a node is exiting the   overlay.  A node SHOULD send this message to each peer with which it   is directly connected prior to exiting the overlay.         struct {            NodeId                leaving_peer_id;            opaque                overlay_specific_data<0..2^16-1>;         } LeaveReq;   LeaveReq contains only the Node-ID of the leaving peer.  Overlay   algorithms MAY specify other data to appear in this request.   Receivers of the LeaveReq MUST verify that the leaving_peer_id field   matches the Node-ID used to sign the message and, if not, the message   MUST be rejected with an Error_Forbidden error.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 62]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Because leaves may be executed only between nodes which are directly   adjacent, receiving peers MUST verify that any LeaveReq they receive   arrives from a transport channel that is bound to the Node-ID to be   assumed by the leaving peer.  This also prevents replay attacks,   provided that DTLS anti-replay is used.   Upon receiving a Leave request, a peer MUST update its own Routing   Table and send the appropriate Store/Update sequences to re-stabilize   the overlay.   LeaveAns is an empty message.6.4.2.3.  Update   Update is the primary overlay-specific maintenance message.  It is   used by the sender to notify the recipient of the sender's view of   the current state of the overlay (that is, its routing state), and it   is up to the recipient to take whatever actions are appropriate to   deal with the state change.  In general, peers send Update messages   to all their adjacencies whenever they detect a topology shift.   When a peer receives an Attach request with the send_update flag set   to True (Section 6.4.2.4.1), it MUST send an Update message back to   the sender of the Attach request after completion of the   corresponding ICE check and TLS connection.  Note that the sender of   such an Attach request may not have joined the overlay yet.   When a peer detects through an Update that it is no longer   responsible for any data value it is storing, it MUST attempt to   Store a copy to the correct node unless it knows the newly   responsible node already has a copy of the data.  This prevents data   loss during large-scale topology shifts, such as the merging of   partitioned overlays.   The contents of the UpdateReq message are completely overlay   specific.  The UpdateAns response is expected to be either success or   an error.6.4.2.4.  RouteQuery   The RouteQuery request allows the sender to ask a peer where they   would route a message directed to a given destination.  In other   words, a RouteQuery for a destination X requests the Node-ID for the   node that the receiving peer would next route to in order to get to   X.  A RouteQuery can also request that the receiving peer initiate an   Update request to transfer the receiving peer's Routing Table.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 63]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   One important use of the RouteQuery request is to support iterative   routing.  The sender selects one of the peers in its Routing   Table and sends it a RouteQuery message with the destination field   set to the Node-ID or Resource-ID to which it wishes to route.  The   receiving peer responds with information about the peers to which the   request would be routed.  The sending peer MAY then use the Attach   method to attach to that peer(s) and repeat the RouteQuery.   Eventually, the sender gets a response from a peer that is closest to   the identifier in the destination field as determined by the Topology   Plug-in.  At that point, the sender can send messages directly to   that peer.6.4.2.4.1.  Request Definition   A RouteQueryReq message indicates the peer or resource that the   requesting node is interested in.  It also contains a "send_update"   option that allows the requesting node to request a full copy of the   other peer's Routing Table.         struct {           Boolean                send_update;           Destination            destination;           opaque                 overlay_specific_data<0..2^16-1>;         } RouteQueryReq;   The contents of the RouteQueryReq message are as follows:   send_update      A single byte.  This may be set to True to indicate that the      requester wishes the responder to initiate an Update request      immediately.  Otherwise, this value MUST be set to False.   destination      The destination which the requester is interested in.  This may be      any valid destination object, including a Node-ID, opaque ID, or      Resource-ID.      Note: If implementations are using opaque IDs for privacy      purposes, answering RouteQueryReqs for opaque IDs will allow the      requester to translate an opaque ID.  Implementations MAY wish to      consider limiting the use of RouteQuery for opaque IDs in such      cases.   overlay_specific_data      Other data as appropriate for the overlay.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 64]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.4.2.4.2.  Response Definition   A response to a successful RouteQueryReq request is a RouteQueryAns   message.  This message is completely overlay specific.6.4.2.5.  Probe   Probe provides primitive "exploration" services: it allows a node to   determine which resources another node is responsible for.  A probe   can be addressed to a specific Node-ID or to the peer controlling a   given location (by using a Resource-ID).  In either case, the target   node responds with a simple response containing some status   information.6.4.2.5.1.  Request Definition   The ProbeReq message contains a list (potentially empty) of the   pieces of status information that the requester would like the   responder to provide.        enum { invalidProbeInformationType(0), responsible_set(1),               num_resources(2), uptime(3), (255) }             ProbeInformationType;        struct {          ProbeInformationType     requested_info<0..2^8-1>;        } ProbeReq;   The currently defined values for ProbeInformationType are:   responsible_set      Indicates that the peer should Respond with the fraction of the      overlay for which the responding peer is responsible.   num_resources      Indicates that the peer should Respond with the number of      resources currently being stored by the peer.  Note that multiple      values under the same Resource-ID are counted only once.   uptime      Indicates that the peer should Respond with how long the peer has      been up, in seconds.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 65]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.4.2.5.2.  Response Definition   A successful ProbeAns response contains the information elements   requested by the peer.         struct {           select (type) {             case responsible_set:               uint32             responsible_ppb;             case num_resources:               uint32             num_resources;             case uptime:               uint32             uptime;             /* This type may be extended */           };         } ProbeInformationData;         struct {           ProbeInformationType    type;           uint8                   length;           ProbeInformationData    value;         } ProbeInformation;         struct {           ProbeInformation        probe_info<0..2^16-1>;         } ProbeAns;   A ProbeAns message contains a sequence of ProbeInformation   structures.  Each has a "length" indicating the length of the   following value field.  This structure allows for unknown option   types.   Each of the current possible Probe information types is a 32-bit   unsigned integer.  For type "responsible_ppb", it is the fraction of   the overlay for which the peer is responsible, in parts per billion.   For type "num_resources", it is the number of resources the peer is   storing.  For the type "uptime", it is the number of seconds the peer   has been up.   The responding peer SHOULD include any values that the requesting   node requested and that it recognizes.  They SHOULD be returned in   the requested order.  Any other values MUST NOT be returned.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 66]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.5.  Forwarding and Link Management Layer   Each node maintains connections to a set of other nodes defined by   the Topology Plug-in.  This section defines the methods RELOAD uses   to form and maintain connections between nodes in the overlay.  Three   methods are defined:   Attach      Used to form RELOAD connections between nodes using ICE for NAT      traversal.  When node A wants to connect to node B, it sends an      Attach message to node B through the overlay.  The Attach contains      A's ICE parameters.  B responds with its ICE parameters, and the      two nodes perform ICE to form connection.  Attach also allows two      nodes to connect via No-ICE instead of full ICE.   AppAttach      Used to form application-layer connections between nodes.   Ping      A simple request/response which is used to verify connectivity of      the target peer.6.5.1.  Attach   A node sends an Attach request when it wishes to establish a direct   Overlay Link connection to another node for the purpose of sending   RELOAD messages.  A client that can establish a connection directly   need not send an Attach, as described in the second bullet ofSection 4.2.1.   As described inSection 6.1, an Attach may be routed to either a   Node-ID or a Resource-ID.  An Attach routed to a specific Node-ID   will fail if that node is not reached.  An Attach routed to a   Resource-ID will establish a connection with the peer currently   responsible for that Resource-ID, which may be useful in establishing   a direct connection to the responsible peer for use with frequent or   large resource updates.   An Attach, in and of itself, does not result in updating the Routing   Table of either node.  That function is performed by Updates.  If   node A has Attached to node B, but has not received any Updates from   B, it MAY route messages which are directly addressed to B through   that channel, but it MUST NOT route messages through B to other peers   via that channel.  The process of Attaching is separate from the   process of becoming a peer (using Join and Update), to prevent half-   open states where a node has started to form connections but is not   really ready to act as a peer.  Thus, clients (unlike peers) can   simply Attach without sending Join or Update.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 67]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.5.1.1.  Request Definition   An Attach request message contains the requesting node ICE connection   parameters formatted into a binary structure.        enum { invalidOverlayLinkType(0), DTLS-UDP-SR(1),               DTLS-UDP-SR-NO-ICE(3), TLS-TCP-FH-NO-ICE(4),               (255) } OverlayLinkType;        enum { invalidCandType(0),               host(1), srflx(2), /* RESERVED(3), */ relay(4),               (255) } CandType;        struct {          opaque                name<0..2^16-1>;          opaque                value<0..2^16-1>;        } IceExtension;        struct {          IpAddressPort         addr_port;          OverlayLinkType       overlay_link;          opaque                foundation<0..255>;          uint32                priority;          CandType              type;          select (type) {            case host:              ;          /* Empty */            case srflx:            case relay:              IpAddressPort     rel_addr_port;          };          IceExtension          extensions<0..2^16-1>;        } IceCandidate;        struct {          opaque                ufrag<0..2^8-1>;          opaque                password<0..2^8-1>;          opaque                role<0..2^8-1>;          IceCandidate          candidates<0..2^16-1>;          Boolean               send_update;        } AttachReqAns;   The values contained in AttachReqAns are:   ufrag      The username fragment (from ICE).Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 68]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   password      The ICE password.   role      An active/passive/actpass attribute fromRFC 4145 [RFC4145].  This      value MUST be "passive" for the offerer (the peer sending the      Attach request) and "active" for the answerer (the peer sending      the Attach response).   candidates      One or more ICE candidate values, as described below.   send_update      Has the same meaning as the send_update field in RouteQueryReq.   Each ICE candidate is represented as an IceCandidate structure, which   is a direct translation of the information from the ICE string   structures, with the exception of the component ID.  Since there is   only one component, it is always 1, and thus left out of the   structure.  The remaining values are specified as follows:   addr_port      Corresponds to the ICE connection-address and port productions.   overlay_link      Corresponds to the ICE transport production.  Overlay Link      protocols used with No-ICE MUST specify "No-ICE" in their      description.  Future overlay link values can be added by defining      new OverlayLinkType values in the IANA registry as described inSection 14.10.  Future extensions to the encapsulation or framing      that provide for backward compatibility with the previously      specified encapsulation or framing values MUST use the same      OverlayLinkType value that was previously defined.      OverlayLinkType protocols are defined inSection 6.6      A single AttachReqAns MUST NOT include both candidates whose      OverlayLinkType protocols use ICE (the default) and candidates      that specify "No-ICE".   foundation      Corresponds to the ICE foundation production.   priority      Corresponds to the ICE priority production.   type      Corresponds to the ICE cand-type production.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 69]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   rel_addr_port      Corresponds to the ICE rel-addr and rel-port productions.  It is      present only for types "relay", "prfix", and "srflx".   extensions      ICE extensions.  The name and value fields correspond to binary      translations of the equivalent fields in the ICE extensions.   These values should be generated using the procedures described inSection 6.5.1.3.6.5.1.2.  Response Definition   If a peer receives an Attach request, it MUST determine how to   process the request as follows:   o  If the peer has not initiated an Attach request to the originating      peer of this Attach request, it MUST process this request and      SHOULD generate its own response with an AttachReqAns.  It should      then begin ICE checks.   o  If the peer has already sent an Attach request to and received the      response from the originating peer of this Attach request and, as      a result, an ICE check and TLS connection are in progress, then it      SHOULD generate an Error_In_Progress error instead of an      AttachReqAns.   o  If the peer has already sent an Attach request to but not yet      received the response from the originating peer of this Attach      request, it SHOULD apply the following tie-breaker heuristic to      determine how to handle this Attach request and the incomplete      Attach request it has sent out:      *  If the peer's own Node-ID is smaller when compared as big-         endian unsigned integers, it MUST cancel retransmission of its         own incomplete Attach request.  It MUST then process this         Attach request, generate an AttachReqAns response, and proceed         with the corresponding ICE check.      *  If the peer's own Node-ID is larger when compared as big-endian         unsigned integers, it MUST generate an Error_In_Progress error         to this Attach request, and then proceed to wait for and         complete the Attach and the corresponding ICE check it has         originated.   o  If the peer is overloaded or detects some other kind of error, it      MAY generate an error instead of an AttachReqAns.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 70]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   When a peer receives an Attach response, it SHOULD parse the response   and begin its own ICE checks.6.5.1.3.  Using ICE with RELOAD   This section describes the profile of ICE that is used with RELOAD.   RELOAD implementations MUST implement full ICE.   In ICE, as defined by [RFC5245], the Session Description Protocol   (SDP) is used to carry the ICE parameters.  In RELOAD, this function   is performed by a binary encoding in the Attach method.  This   encoding is more restricted than the SDP encoding because the RELOAD   environment is simpler:   o  Only a single media stream is supported.   o  In this case, the "stream" refers not to RTP or other types of      media, but rather to a connection for RELOAD itself or other      application-layer protocols, such as SIP.   o  RELOAD allows only for a single offer/answer exchange.  Unlike the      usage of ICE within SIP, there is never a need to send a      subsequent offer to update the default candidates to match the      ones selected by ICE.   An agent follows the ICE specification as described in [RFC5245] with   the changes and additional procedures described in the subsections   below.6.5.1.4.  Collecting STUN Servers   ICE relies on the node having one or more Session Traversal Utilities   for NAT (STUN) servers to use.  In conventional ICE, it is assumed   that nodes are configured with one or more STUN servers through some   out-of-band mechanism.  This is still possible in RELOAD, but RELOAD   also learns STUN servers as it connects to other peers.   A peer on a well-provisioned wide-area overlay will be configured   with one or more bootstrap nodes.  These nodes make an initial list   of STUN servers.  However, as the peer forms connections with   additional peers, it builds more peers that it can use like STUN   servers.   Because complicated NAT topologies are possible, a peer may need more   than one STUN server.  Specifically, a peer that is behind a single   NAT will typically observe only two IP addresses in its STUN checks:   its local address and its server reflexive address from a STUN server   outside its NAT.  However, if more NATs are involved, a peer mayJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 71]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   learn additional server reflexive addresses (which vary based on   where in the topology the STUN server is).  To maximize the chance of   achieving a direct connection, a peer SHOULD group other peers by the   peer-reflexive addresses it discovers through them.  It SHOULD then   select one peer from each group to use as a STUN server for future   connections.   Only peers to which the peer currently has connections may be used.   If the connection to that host is lost, it MUST be removed from the   list of STUN servers, and a new server from the same group MUST be   selected unless there are no others servers in the group, in which   case some other peer MAY be used.6.5.1.5.  Gathering Candidates   When a node wishes to establish a connection for the purposes of   RELOAD signaling or application signaling, it follows the process of   gathering candidates as described inSection 4 of ICE [RFC5245].   RELOAD utilizes a single component.  Consequently, gathering for   these "streams" requires a single component.  In the case where a   node has not yet found a TURN server, the agent would not include a   relayed candidate.   The ICE specification assumes that an ICE agent is configured with,   or somehow knows of, TURN and STUN servers.  RELOAD provides a way   for an agent to learn these by querying the overlay, as described in   Sections6.5.1.4 and9.   The default candidate selection described inSection 4.1.4 of ICE is   ignored; defaults are not signaled or utilized by RELOAD.   An alternative to using the full ICE supported by the Attach request   is to use the No-ICE mechanism by providing candidates with "No-ICE"   Overlay Link protocols.  Configuration for the overlay indicates   whether or not these Overlay Link protocols can be used.  An overlay   MUST be either all ICE or all No-ICE.   No-ICE will not work in all the scenarios where ICE would work, but   in some cases, particularly those with no NATs or firewalls, it will   work.6.5.1.6.  Prioritizing Candidates   Standardization of additional protocols for use with ICE is expected,   including TCP [RFC6544] and protocols such as the Stream Control   Transmission Protocol (SCTP) [RFC4960] and Datagram Congestion   Control Protocol (DCCP) [RFC4340].  UDP encapsulations for SCTP and   DCCP would expand the Overlay Link protocols available for RELOAD.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 72]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   When additional protocols are available, the following prioritization   is RECOMMENDED:   o  Highest priority is assigned to protocols that offer well-      understood congestion and flow control without head-of-line      blocking, for example, SCTP without message ordering, DCCP, and      those protocols encapsulated using UDP.   o  Second highest priority is assigned to protocols that offer well-      understood congestion and flow control, but that have head-of-line      blocking, such as TCP.   o  Lowest priority is assigned to protocols encapsulated over UDP      that do not implement well-established congestion control      algorithms.  The DTLS/UDP with Simple Reliability (SR) overlay      link protocol is an example of such a protocol.   Head-of-line blocking is undesirable in an Overlay Link protocol,   because the messages carried on a RELOAD link are independent, rather   than stream-oriented.  Therefore, if message N on a link is lost,   delaying message N+1 on that same link until N is successfully   retransmitted does nothing other than increase the latency for the   transaction of message N+1, as they are unrelated to each other.   Therefore, while the high quality, performance, and availability of   modern TCP implementations makes them very attractive, their   performance as Overlay Link protocols is not optimal.   Note that none of the protocols defined in this document meets these   conditions, but it is expected that new Overlay Link protocols   defined in the future will fill this gap.6.5.1.7.  Encoding the Attach MessageSection 4.3 of ICE describes procedures for encoding the SDP for   conveying RELOAD candidates.  Instead of actually encoding an SDP   message, the candidate information (IP address and port and transport   protocol, priority, foundation, type, and related address) is carried   within the attributes of the Attach request or its response.   Similarly, the username fragment and password are carried in the   Attach message or its response.Section 6.5.1 describes the detailed   attribute encoding for Attach.  The Attach request and its response   do not contain any default candidates or the ice-lite attribute, as   these features of ICE are not used by RELOAD.   Since the Attach request contains the candidate information and short   term credentials, it is considered as an offer for a single media   stream that happens to be encoded in a format different than SDP, but   is otherwise considered a valid offer for the purposes of followingJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 73]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   the ICE specification.  Similarly, the Attach response is considered   a valid answer for the purposes of following the ICE specification.6.5.1.8.  Verifying ICE Support   An agent MUST skip the verification procedures in Sections5.1 and   6.1 of ICE.  Since RELOAD requires full ICE from all agents, this   check is not required.6.5.1.9.  Role Determination   The roles of controlling and controlled, as described inSection 5.2   of ICE, are still utilized with RELOAD.  However, the offerer (the   entity sending the Attach request) will always be controlling, and   the answerer (the entity sending the Attach response) will always be   controlled.  The connectivity checks MUST still contain the ICE-   CONTROLLED and ICE-CONTROLLING attributes, however, even though the   role reversal capability for which they are defined will never be   needed with RELOAD.  This is to allow for a common codebase between   ICE for RELOAD and ICE for SDP.6.5.1.10.  Full ICE   When the overlay uses ICE, connectivity checks and nominations are   used as in regular ICE.6.5.1.10.1.  Connectivity Checks   The processes of forming check lists inSection 5.7 of ICE,   scheduling checks inSection 5.8, and checking connectivity checks inSection 7 are used with RELOAD without change.6.5.1.10.2.  Concluding ICE   The procedures inSection 8 of ICE are followed to conclude ICE, with   the following exceptions:   o  The controlling agent MUST NOT attempt to send an updated offer      once the state of its single media stream reaches Completed.   o  Once the state of ICE reaches Completed, the agent can immediately      free all unused candidates.  This is because RELOAD does not have      the concept of forking, and thus the three-second delay inSection 8.3 of ICE does not apply.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 74]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.5.1.10.3.  Media Keepalives   STUN MUST be utilized for the keepalives described inSection 10 of   ICE.6.5.1.11.  No-ICE   No-ICE is selected when either side has provided "no ICE" Overlay   Link candidates.  STUN is not used for connectivity checks when doing   No-ICE; instead, the DTLS or TLS handshake (or similar security layer   of future overlay link protocols) forms the connectivity check.  The   certificate exchanged during the TLS or DTLS handshake MUST match the   node which sent the AttachReqAns, and if it does not, the connection   MUST be closed.6.5.1.12.  Subsequent Offers and Answers   An agent MUST NOT send a subsequent offer or answer.  Thus, the   procedures inSection 9 of ICE MUST be ignored.6.5.1.13.  Sending Media   The procedures ofSection 11 of ICE apply to RELOAD as well.   However, in this case, the "media" takes the form of application-   layer protocols (e.g., RELOAD) over TLS or DTLS.  Consequently, once   ICE processing completes, the agent will begin TLS or DTLS procedures   to establish a secure connection.  The node that sent the Attach   request MUST be the TLS server.  The other node MUST be the TLS   client.  The server MUST request TLS client authentication.  The   nodes MUST verify that the certificate presented in the handshake   matches the identity of the other peer as found in the Attach   message.  Once the TLS or DTLS signaling is complete, the application   protocol is free to use the connection.   The concept of a previous selected pair for a component does not   apply to RELOAD, since ICE restarts are not possible with RELOAD.6.5.1.14.  Receiving Media   An agent MUST be prepared to receive packets for the application   protocol (TLS or DTLS carrying RELOAD) at any time.  The jitter and   RTP considerations inSection 11 of ICE do not apply to RELOAD.6.5.2.  AppAttach   A node sends an AppAttach request when it wishes to establish a   direct connection to another node for the purposes of sending   application-layer messages.  AppAttach is nearly identical to Attach,Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 75]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   except for the purpose of the connection: it is used to transport   non-RELOAD "media".  A separate request is used to avoid implementer   confusion between the two methods (this was found to be a real   problem with initial implementations).  The AppAttach request and its   response contain an application attribute, which indicates what   protocol is to be run over the connection.6.5.2.1.  Request Definition   An AppAttachReq message contains the requesting node's ICE connection   parameters formatted into a binary structure.        struct {          opaque                  ufrag<0..2^8-1>;          opaque                  password<0..2^8-1>;          uint16                  application;          opaque                  role<0..2^8-1>;          IceCandidate            candidates<0..2^16-1>;        } AppAttachReq;   The values contained in AppAttachReq and AppAttachAns are:   ufrag      The username fragment (from ICE).   password      The ICE password.   application      A 16-bit Application-ID, as defined in theSection 14.5.  This      number represents the IANA-registered application that is going to      send data on this connection.   role      An active/passive/actpass attribute fromRFC 4145 [RFC4145].   candidates      One or more ICE candidate values.   The application using the connection that is set up with this request   is responsible for providing traffic of sufficient frequency to keep   the NAT and Firewall binding alive.  Applications will often send   traffic every 25 seconds to ensure this.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 76]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.5.2.2.  Response Definition   If a peer receives an AppAttach request, it SHOULD process the   request and generate its own response with a AppAttachAns.  It should   then begin ICE checks.  When a peer receives an AppAttach response,   it SHOULD parse the response and begin its own ICE checks.  If the   Application ID is not supported, the peer MUST reply with an   Error_Not_Found error.        struct {          opaque                  ufrag<0..2^8-1>;          opaque                  password<0..2^8-1>;          uint16                  application;          opaque                  role<0..2^8-1>;          IceCandidate            candidates<0..2^16-1>;        } AppAttachAns;   The meaning of the fields is the same as in the AppAttachReq.6.5.3.  Ping   Ping is used to test connectivity along a path.  A ping can be   addressed to a specific Node-ID, to the peer controlling a given   location (by using a Resource-ID), or to the wildcard Node-ID.6.5.3.1.  Request Definition   The PingReq structure is used to make a Ping request.        struct {          opaque<0..2^16-1> padding;        } PingReq;   The Ping request is empty of meaningful contents.  However, it may   contain up to 65535 bytes of padding to facilitate the discovery of   overlay maximum packet sizes.6.5.3.2.  Response Definition   A successful PingAns response contains the information elements   requested by the peer.         struct {           uint64                 response_id;           uint64                 time;         } PingAns;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 77]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   A PingAns message contains the following elements:   response_id      A randomly generated 64-bit response ID.  This is used to      distinguish Ping responses.   time      The time when the Ping response was created, represented in the      same way as storage_time, defined inSection 7.6.5.4.  ConfigUpdate   The ConfigUpdate method is used to push updated configuration data   across the overlay.  Whenever a node detects that another node has   old configuration data, it MUST generate a ConfigUpdate request.  The   ConfigUpdate request allows updating of two kinds of data: the   configuration data (Section 6.3.2.1) and the Kind information   (Section 7.4.1.1).6.5.4.1.  Request Definition   The ConfigUpdateReq structure is used to provide updated   configuration information.        enum { invalidConfigUpdateType(0), config(1), kind(2), (255) }             ConfigUpdateType;        typedef uint32           KindId;        typedef opaque           KindDescription<0..2^16-1>;        struct {          ConfigUpdateType       type;          uint32                 length;          select (type) {            case config:                        opaque             config_data<0..2^24-1>;            case kind:                        KindDescription    kinds<0..2^24-1>;            /* This structure may be extended with new types */          };        } ConfigUpdateReq;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 78]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The ConfigUpdateReq message contains the following elements:   type      The type of the contents of the message.  This structure allows      for unknown content types.   length      The length of the remainder of the message.  This is included to      preserve backward compatibility and is 32 bits instead of 24 to      facilitate easy conversion between network and host byte order.   config_data (type==config)      The contents of the Configuration Document.   kinds (type==kind)      One or more XML kind-block productions (seeSection 11.1).  These      MUST be encoded with UTF-8 and assume a default namespace of      "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-base".6.5.4.2.  Response Definition   The ConfigUpdateAns structure is used to respond to a ConfigUpdateReq   request.        struct {        } ConfigUpdateAns;   If the ConfigUpdateReq is of type "config", it MUST be processed only   if all the following are true:   o  The sequence number in the document is greater than the current      configuration sequence number.   o  The Configuration Document is correctly digitally signed (seeSection 11 for details on signatures).   Otherwise, appropriate errors MUST be generated.   If the ConfigUpdateReq is of type "kind", it MUST be processed only   if it is correctly digitally signed by an acceptable Kind signer   (i.e., one listed in the current configuration file).  Details on the   kind-signer field in the configuration file are described inSection 11.1.  In addition, if the Kind update conflicts with an   existing known Kind (i.e., it is signed by a different signer), then   it should be rejected with an Error_Forbidden error.  This should not   happen in correctly functioning overlays.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 79]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   If the update is acceptable, then the node MUST reconfigure itself to   match the new information.  This may include adding permissions for   new Kinds, deleting old Kinds, or even, in extreme circumstances,   exiting and re-entering the overlay, if, for instance, the DHT   algorithm has changed.   If an implementation misses enough ConfigUpdates that include key   changes, it is possible that it will no longer be able to verify new   valid ConfigUpdates.  In this case, the only available recovery   mechanism is to attempt to retrieve a new Configuration Document,   typically by the mechanisms used for initial bootstrapping.  It is up   to implementers whether or how to decide to employ this sort of   recovery mechanism.   The response for ConfigUpdate is empty.6.6.  Overlay Link Layer   RELOAD can use multiple Overlay Link protocols to send its messages.   Because ICE is used to establish connections (seeSection 6.5.1.3),   RELOAD nodes are able to detect which Overlay Link protocols are   offered by other nodes and establish connections between them.  Any   link protocol needs to be able to establish a secure, authenticated   connection and to provide data origin authentication and message   integrity for individual data elements.  RELOAD currently supports   three Overlay Link protocols:   o  DTLS [RFC6347] over UDP with Simple Reliability (SR)      (OverlayLinkType=DTLS-UDP-SR)   o  TLS [RFC5246] over TCP with Framing Header, No-ICE      (OverlayLinkType=TLS-TCP-FH-NO-ICE)   o  DTLS [RFC6347] over UDP with SR, No-ICE      (OverlayLinkType=DTLS-UDP-SR-NO-ICE)   Note that although UDP does not properly have "connections", both TLS   and DTLS have a handshake that establishes a similar, stateful   association.  We refer to these as "connections" for the purposes of   this document.   If a peer receives a message that is larger than the value of max-   message-size defined in the overlay configuration, the peer SHOULD   send an Error_Message_Too_Large error and then close the TLS or DTLS   session from which the message was received.  Note that this error   can be sent and the session closed before the peer receives the   complete message.  If the forwarding header is larger than the max-Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 80]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   message-size, the receiver SHOULD close the TLS or DTLS session   without sending an error.   The RELOAD mechanism requires that failed links be quickly removed   from the Routing Table so end-to-end retransmission can handle lost   messages.  Overlay Link protocols MUST be designed with a mechanism   that quickly signals a likely failure, and implementations SHOULD   quickly act to remove a failed link from the Routing Table when   receiving this signal.  The entry can be restored if it proves to   resume functioning, or it can be replaced at some point in the future   if necessary.Section 10.7.2 contains more details specific to the   CHORD-RELOAD Topology Plug-in.   The Framing Header (FH) is used to frame messages and provide timing   when used on a reliable stream-based transport protocol.  Simple   Reliability (SR) uses the FH to provide congestion control and   partial reliability when using unreliable message-oriented transport   protocols.  We will first define each of these algorithms in Sections   6.6.2 and 6.6.3, and then define Overlay Link protocols that use them   in Sections6.6.4,6.6.5, and6.6.6.   Note: We expect future Overlay Link protocols to define replacements   for all components of these protocols, including the Framing Header.   The three protocols that we will discuss have been chosen for   simplicity of implementation and reasonable performance.6.6.1.  Future Overlay Link Protocols   It is possible to define new link-layer protocols and apply them to a   new overlay using the "overlay-link-protocol" configuration directive   (seeSection 11.1.).  However, any new protocols MUST meet the   following requirements:   Endpoint authentication:  When a node forms an association with      another endpoint, it MUST be possible to cryptographically verify      that the endpoint has a given Node-ID.   Traffic origin authentication and integrity:  When a node receives      traffic from another endpoint, it MUST be possible to      cryptographically verify that the traffic came from a given      association and that it has not been modified in transit from the      other endpoint in the association.  The overlay link protocol MUST      also provide replay prevention/detection.   Traffic confidentiality:  When a node sends traffic to another      endpoint, it MUST NOT be possible for a third party that is not      involved in the association to determine the contents of that      traffic.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 81]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Any new overlay protocol MUST be defined via Standards Action   [RFC5226].  SeeSection 14.11.6.6.1.1.  HIP   In a Host Identity Protocol Based Overlay Networking Environment (HIP   BONE) [RFC6079], HIP [RFC5201] provides connection management (e.g.,   NAT traversal and mobility) and security for the overlay network.   The P2PSIP Working Group has expressed interest in supporting a HIP-   based link protocol.  Such support would require specifying such   details as:   o  How to issue certificates which provide identities meaningful to      the HIP base exchange.  We anticipate that this would require a      mapping between Overlay Routable Cryptographic Hash Identifiers      (ORCHIDs) and NodeIds.   o  How to carry the HIP I1 and I2 messages.   o  How to carry RELOAD messages over HIP.   [HIP-RELOAD] documents work in progress on using RELOAD with the HIP   BONE.6.6.1.2.  ICE-TCP   The ICE-TCP RFC [RFC6544] allows TCP to be supported as an Overlay   Link protocol that can be added using ICE.6.6.1.3.  Message-Oriented Transports   Modern message-oriented transports offer high performance and good   congestion control, and they avoid head-of-line blocking in case of   lost data.  These characteristics make them preferable as underlying   transport protocols for RELOAD links.  SCTP without message ordering   and DCCP are two examples of such protocols.  However, currently they   are not well-supported by commonly available NATs, and specifications   for ICE session establishment are not available.6.6.1.4.  Tunneled Transports   As of the time of this writing, there is significant interest in the   IETF community in tunneling other transports over UDP, which is   motivated by the situation that UDP is well-supported by modern NAT   hardware and by the fact that performance similar to a native   implementation can be achieved.  Currently, SCTP, DCCP, and a generic   tunneling extension are being proposed for message-oriented   protocols.  Once ICE traversal has been specified for these tunneledJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 82]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   protocols, they should be straightforward to support as overlay link   protocols.6.6.2.  Framing Header   In order to support unreliable links and to allow for quick detection   of link failures when using reliable end-to-end transports, each   message is wrapped in a very simple framing layer (FramedMessage),   which is used only for each hop.  This layer contains a sequence   number which can then be used for ACKs.  The same header is used for   both reliable and unreliable transports for simplicity of   implementation.   The definition of FramedMessage is:        enum { data(128), ack(129), (255) } FramedMessageType;        struct {          FramedMessageType       type;          select (type) {            case data:              uint32              sequence;              opaque              message<0..2^24-1>;            case ack:              uint32              ack_sequence;              uint32              received;          };        } FramedMessage;   The type field of the PDU is set to indicate whether the message is   data or an acknowledgement.   If the message is of type "data", then the remainder of the PDU is as   follows:   sequence      The sequence number.  This increments by one for each framed      message sent over this transport session.   message      The message that is being transmitted.   Each connection has it own sequence number space.  Initially, the   value is zero, and it increments by exactly one for each message sent   over that connection.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 83]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   When the receiver receives a message, it SHOULD immediately send an   ACK message.  The receiver MUST keep track of the 32 most recent   sequence numbers received on this association in order to generate   the appropriate ACK.   If the PDU is of type "ack", the contents are as follows:   ack_sequence      The sequence number of the message being acknowledged.   received      A bitmask indicating if each of the previous 32 sequence numbers      before this packet has been among the 32 packets most recently      received on this connection.  When a packet is received with a      sequence number N, the receiver looks at the sequence number of      the 32 previously received packets on this connection.  We call      the previously received packet number M.  For each of the previous      32 packets, if the sequence number M is less than N but greater      than N-32, the N-M bit of the received bitmask is set to one;      otherwise, it is set to zero.  Note that a bit being set to one      indicates positively that a particular packet was received, but a      bit being set to zero means only that it is unknown whether or not      the packet has been received, because it might have been received      before the 32 most recently received packets.   The received field bits in the ACK provide a high degree of   redundancy so that the sender can figure out which packets the   receiver has received and can then estimate packet loss rates.  If   the sender also keeps track of the time at which recent sequence   numbers have been sent, the RTT (round-trip time) can be estimated.   Note that because retransmissions receive new sequence numbers,   multiple ACKs may be received for the same message.  This approach   provides more information than traditional TCP sequence numbers, but   care must be taken when applying algorithms designed based on TCP's   stream-oriented sequence number.6.6.3.  Simple Reliability   When RELOAD is carried over DTLS or another unreliable link protocol,   it needs to be used with a reliability and congestion control   mechanism, which is provided on a hop-by-hop basis.  The basic   principle is that each message, regardless of whether or not it   carries a request or response, will get an ACK and be reliably   retransmitted.  The receiver's job is very simple, and is limited to   just sending ACKs.  All the complexity is at the sender side.  This   allows the sending implementation to trade off performance versus   implementation complexity without affecting the wire protocol.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 84]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Because the receiver's role is limited to providing packet   acknowledgements, a wide variety of congestion control algorithms can   be implemented on the sender side while using the same basic wire   protocol.  The sender algorithm used MUST meet the requirements of   [RFC5405].6.6.3.1.  Stop and Wait Sender Algorithm   This section describes one possible implementation of a sender   algorithm for Simple Reliability.  It is adequate for overlays   running on underlying networks with low latency and loss (LANs) or   low-traffic overlays on the Internet.   A node MUST NOT have more than one unacknowledged message on the DTLS   connection at a time.  Note that because retransmissions of the same   message are given new sequence numbers, there may be multiple   unacknowledged sequence numbers in use.   The RTO (Retransmission TimeOut) is based on an estimate of the RTT.   The value for RTO is calculated separately for each DTLS session.   Implementations can use a static value for RTO or a dynamic estimate,   which will result in better performance.  For implementations that   use a static value, the default value for RTO is 500 ms.  Nodes MAY   use smaller values of RTO if it is known that all nodes are within   the local network.  The default RTO MAY be set to a larger value,   which is RECOMMENDED if it is known in advance (such as on high-   latency access links) that the RTT is larger.   Implementations that use a dynamic estimate to compute the RTO MUST   use the algorithm described inRFC 6298 [RFC6298], with the exception   that the value of RTO SHOULD NOT be rounded up to the nearest second,   but instead rounded up to the nearest millisecond.  The RTT of a   successful STUN transaction from the ICE stage is used as the initial   measurement for formula 2.2 ofRFC 6298.  The sender keeps track of   the time each message was sent for all recently sent messages.  Any   time an ACK is received, the sender can compute the RTT for that   message by looking at the time the ACK was received and the time when   the message was sent.  This is used as a subsequent RTT measurement   for formula 2.3 ofRFC 6298 to update the RTO estimate.  (Note that   because retransmissions receive new sequence numbers, all received   ACKs are used.)   An initiating node SHOULD retransmit a message if it has not received   an ACK after an interval of RTO (transit nodes do not retransmit at   this layer).  The node MUST double the time to wait after each   retransmission.  For each retransmission, the sequence number MUST be   incremented.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 85]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Retransmissions continue until a response is received, until a total   of 5 requests have been sent, until there has been a hard ICMP error   [RFC1122], or until a TLS alert indicating the end of the connection   has been sent or received.  The sender knows a response was received   when it receives an ACK with a sequence number that indicates it is a   response to one of the transmissions of this message.  For example,   assuming an RTO of 500 ms, requests would be sent at times 0 ms, 500   ms, 1500 ms, 3500 ms, and 7500 ms.  If all retransmissions for a   message fail, then the sending node SHOULD close the connection   routing the message.   To determine when a link might be failing without waiting for the   final timeout, observe when no ACKs have been received for an entire   RTO interval, and then wait for three retransmissions to occur beyond   that point.  If no ACKs have been received by the time the third   retransmission occurs, it is RECOMMENDED that the link be removed   from the Routing Table.  The link MAY be restored to the Routing   Table if ACKs resume before the connection is closed, as described   above.   A sender MUST wait 10 ms between receipt of an ACK and transmission   of the next message.6.6.4.  DTLS/UDP with SR   This overlay link protocol consists of DTLS over UDP while   implementing the SR protocol.  STUN connectivity checks and   keepalives are used.  Any compliant sender algorithm may be used.6.6.5.  TLS/TCP with FH, No-ICE   This overlay link protocol consists of TLS over TCP with the framing   header.  Because ICE is not used, STUN connectivity checks are not   used upon establishing the TCP connection, nor are they used for   keepalives.   Because the TCP layer's application-level timeout is too slow to be   useful for overlay routing, the Overlay Link implementation MUST use   the framing header to measure the RTT of the connection and calculate   an RTO as specified inSection 2 of [RFC6298].  The resulting RTO is   not used for retransmissions, but rather as a timeout to indicate   when the link SHOULD be removed from the Routing Table.  It is   RECOMMENDED that such a connection be retained for 30 seconds to   determine if the failure was transient before concluding the link has   failed permanently.   When sending candidates for TLS/TCP with FH, No-ICE, a passive   candidate MUST be provided.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 86]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20146.6.6.  DTLS/UDP with SR, No-ICE   This overlay link protocol consists of DTLS over UDP while   implementing the Simple Reliability protocol.  Because ICE is not   used, no STUN connectivity checks or keepalives are used.6.7.  Fragmentation and Reassembly   In order to allow transmission over datagram protocols such as DTLS,   RELOAD messages may be fragmented.   Any node along the path can fragment the message, but only the final   destination reassembles the fragments.  When a node takes a packet   and fragments it, each fragment has a full copy of the forwarding   header, but the data after the forwarding header is broken up into   appropriately sized chunks.  The size of the payload chunks needs to   take into account space to allow the Via and Destination Lists to   grow.  Each fragment MUST contain a full copy of the Via List,   Destination List, and ForwardingOptions and MUST contain at least 256   bytes of the message body.  If these elements cannot fit within the   MTU of the underlying datagram protocol, RELOAD fragmentation is not   performed, and IP-layer fragmentation is allowed to occur.  The   length field MUST contain the size of the message after   fragmentation.  When a message MUST be fragmented, it SHOULD be split   into equal-sized fragments that are no larger than the Path MTU   (PMTU) of the next overlay link minus 32 bytes.  This is to allow the   Via List to grow before further fragmentation is required.   Note that this fragmentation is not optimal for the end-to-end   path -- a message may be refragmented multiple times as it traverses   the overlay, but it is assembled only at the final destination.  This   option has been chosen as it is far easier to implement than end-to-   end (e2e) PMTU discovery across an ever-changing overlay and it   effectively addresses the reliability issues of relying on IP-layer   fragmentation.  However, Ping can be used to allow e2e PMTU discovery   to be implemented if desired.   Upon receipt of a fragmented message by the intended peer, the peer   holds the fragments in a holding buffer until the entire message has   been received.  The message is then reassembled into a single message   and processed.  In order to mitigate denial-of-service (DoS) attacks,   receivers SHOULD time out incomplete fragments after the maximum   request lifetime (15 seconds).  This time was derived from looking at   the end-to-end retransmission time and saving fragments long enough   for the full end-to-end retransmissions to take place.  Ideally, the   receiver would have enough buffer space to deal with as many   fragments as can arrive in the maximum request lifetime.  However, ifJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 87]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   the receiver runs out of buffer space to reassemble a message, it   MUST drop the message.   The fragment field of the forwarding header is used to encode   fragmentation information.  The offset is the number of bytes between   the end of the forwarding header and the start of the data.  The   first fragment therefore has an offset of 0.  The last fragment   indicator MUST be appropriately set.  If the message is not   fragmented, it is simply treated as if it is the only fragment: the   last fragment bit is set and the offset is 0, resulting in a fragment   value of 0xC0000000.   Note: The reason for this definition of the fragment field is that   originally, the high bit was defined in part of the specification as   "is fragmented", so there was some specification ambiguity about how   to encode messages with only one fragment.  This ambiguity was   resolved in favor of always encoding as the "last" fragment with   offset 0, thus simplifying the receiver code path, but resulting in   the high bit being redundant.  Because messages MUST be set with the   high bit set to 1, implementations SHOULD discard any message with it   set to 0.  Implementations (presumably legacy ones) which choose to   accept such messages MUST either ignore the remaining bits or ensure   that they are 0.  They MUST NOT try to interpret as fragmented   messages with the high bit set low.7.  Data Storage Protocol   RELOAD provides a set of generic mechanisms for storing and   retrieving data in the Overlay Instance.  These mechanisms can be   used for new applications simply by defining new code points and a   small set of rules.  No new protocol mechanisms are required.   The basic unit of stored data is a single StoredData structure:        struct {          uint32                  length;          uint64                  storage_time;          uint32                  lifetime;          StoredDataValue         value;          Signature               signature;        } StoredData;   The contents of this structure are as follows:   length      The size of the StoredData structure, in bytes, excluding the size      of length itself.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 88]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   storage_time      The time when the data was stored, represented as the number of      milliseconds elapsed since midnight Jan 1, 1970 UTC, not counting      leap seconds.  This will have the same values for seconds as      standard UNIX or POSIX time.  More information can be found at      [UnixTime].  Any attempt to store a data value with a storage time      before that of a value already stored at this location MUST      generate an Error_Data_Too_Old error.  This prevents rollback      attacks.  The node SHOULD make a best-effort attempt to use a      correct clock to determine this number.  However, the protocol      does not require synchronized clocks: the receiving peer uses the      storage time in the previous store, not its own clock.  Clock      values are used so that when clocks are generally synchronized,      data may be stored in a single transaction, rather than querying      for the value of a counter before the actual store.      If a node attempting to store new data in response to a user      request (rather than as an overlay maintenance operation such as      occurs when healing the overlay from a partition) is rejected with      an Error_Data_Too_Old error, the node MAY elect to perform its      store using a storage_time that increments the value used with the      previous store (this may be obtained by doing a Fetch).  This      situation may occur when the clocks of nodes storing to this      location are not properly synchronized.   lifetime      The validity period for the data, in seconds, starting from the      time the peer receives the StoreReq.   value      The data value itself, as described inSection 7.2.   signature      A signature, as defined inSection 7.1.   Each Resource-ID specifies a single location in the Overlay Instance.   However, each location may contain multiple StoredData values,   distinguished by Kind-ID.  The definition of a Kind describes both   the data values which may be stored and the data model of the data.   Some data models allow multiple values to be stored under the same   Kind-ID.Section 7.2 describes the available data models.  Thus, for   instance, a given Resource-ID might contain a single-value element   stored under Kind-ID X and an array containing multiple values stored   under Kind-ID Y.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 89]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.1.  Data Signature Computation   Each StoredData element is individually signed.  However, the   signature also must be self-contained and must cover the Kind-ID and   Resource-ID, even though they are not present in the StoredData   structure.  The input to the signature algorithm is:      resource_id || kind || storage_time || StoredDataValue ||      SignerIdentity   where || indicates concatenation and where these values are:   resource_id      The Resource-ID where this data is stored.   kind      The Kind-ID for this data.   storage_time      The contents of the storage_time data value.   StoredDataValue      The contents of the stored data value, as described in the      previous sections.   SignerIdentity      The signer identity, as defined inSection 6.3.4.   Once the signature has been computed, the signature is represented   using a signature element, as described inSection 6.3.4.   Note that there is no necessary relationship between the validity   window of a certificate and the expiry of the data it is   authenticating.  When signatures are verified, the current time MUST   be compared to the certificate validity period.  Stored data MAY be   set to expire after the signing certificate's validity period.  Such   signatures are not considered valid after the signing certificate   expires.  Implementations may "garbage collect" such data at their   convenience, either by purging it automatically (perhaps by setting   the upper bound on data storage to the lifetime of the signing   certificate) or by simply leaving it in place until it expires   naturally and relying on users of that data to notice the expired   signing certificate.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 90]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.2.  Data Models   The protocol currently defines the following data models:   o  single value   o  array   o  dictionary   These are represented with the StoredDataValue structure.  The actual   data model is known from the Kind being stored.        struct {          Boolean                exists;          opaque                 value<0..2^32-1>;        } DataValue;        struct {          select (DataModel) {            case single_value:              DataValue             single_value_entry;            case array:              ArrayEntry            array_entry;            case dictionary:              DictionaryEntry       dictionary_entry;            /* This structure may be extended */          };        } StoredDataValue;   The following sections discuss the properties of each data model.7.2.1.  Single Value   A single-value element is a simple sequence of bytes.  There may be   only one single-value element for each Resource-ID, Kind-ID pair.   A single value element is represented as a DataValue, which contains   the following two elements:   exists      This value indicates whether the value exists at all.  If it is      set to False, it means that no value is present.  If it is True,      this means that a value is present.  This gives the protocol a      mechanism for indicating nonexistence as opposed to emptiness.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 91]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   value      The stored data.7.2.2.  Array   An array is a set of opaque values addressed by an integer index.   Arrays are zero based.  Note that arrays can be sparse.  For   instance, a Store of "X" at index 2 in an empty array produces an   array with the values [ NA, NA, "X"].  Future attempts to fetch   elements at index 0 or 1 will return values with "exists" set to   False.   An array element is represented as an ArrayEntry:         struct {           uint32                  index;           DataValue               value;         } ArrayEntry;   The contents of this structure are:   index      The index of the data element in the array.   value      The stored data.7.2.3.  Dictionary   A dictionary is a set of opaque values indexed by an opaque key, with   one value for each key.  A single dictionary entry is represented as   a DictionaryEntry:         typedef opaque           DictionaryKey<0..2^16-1>;         struct {           DictionaryKey          key;           DataValue              value;         } DictionaryEntry;   The contents of this structure are:   key      The dictionary key for this value.   value      The stored data.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 92]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.3.  Access Control Policies   Every Kind which is storable in an overlay MUST be associated with an   access control policy.  This policy defines whether a request from a   given node to operate on a given value should succeed or fail.  It is   anticipated that only a small number of generic access control   policies are required.  To that end, this section describes a small   set of such policies, andSection 14.4 establishes a registry for new   policies, if required.  Each policy has a short string identifier   which is used to reference it in the Configuration Document.   In the following policies, the term "signer" refers to the signer of   the StoredValue object and, in the case of non-replica stores, to the   signer of the StoreReq message.  That is, in a non-replica store,   both the signer of the StoredValue and the signer of the StoreReq   MUST conform to the policy.  In the case of a replica store, the   signer of the StoredValue MUST conform to the policy, and the   StoreReq itself MUST be checked as described inSection 7.4.1.1.7.3.1.  USER-MATCH   In the USER-MATCH policy, a given value MUST be written (or   overwritten) if and only if the signer's certificate has a user name   which hashes (using the hash function for the overlay) to the   Resource-ID for the resource.  Recall that the certificate may,   depending on the overlay configuration, be self-signed.7.3.2.  NODE-MATCH   In the NODE-MATCH policy, a given value MUST be written (or   overwritten) if and only if the signer's certificate has a specified   Node-ID which hashes (using the hash function for the overlay) to the   Resource-ID for the resource and that Node-ID is the one indicated in   the SignerIdentity value cert_hash.7.3.3.  USER-NODE-MATCH   The USER-NODE-MATCH policy may be used only with dictionary types.   In the USER-NODE-MATCH policy, a given value MUST be written (or   overwritten) if and only if the signer's certificate has a user name   which hashes (using the hash function for the overlay) to the   Resource-ID for the resource.  In addition, the dictionary key MUST   be equal to the Node-ID in the certificate, and that Node-ID MUST be   the one indicated in the SignerIdentity value cert_hash.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 93]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.3.4.  NODE-MULTIPLE   In the NODE-MULTIPLE policy, a given value MUST be written (or   overwritten) if and only if the signer's certificate contains a   Node-ID such that H(Node-ID || i) is equal to the Resource-ID for   some small integer value of i and that Node-ID is the one indicated   in the SignerIdentity value cert_hash.  When this policy is in use,   the maximum value of i MUST be specified in the Kind definition.   Note that because i is not carried on the wire, the verifier MUST   iterate through potential i values, up to the maximum value, to   determine whether a store is acceptable.7.4.  Data Storage Methods   RELOAD provides several methods for storing and retrieving data:   o  Store values in the overlay.   o  Fetch values from the overlay.   o  Stat: Get metadata about values in the overlay.   o  Find the values stored at an individual peer.   These methods are described in the following sections.7.4.1.  Store   The Store method is used to store data in the overlay.  The format of   the Store request depends on the data model, which is determined by   the Kind.7.4.1.1.  Request Definition   A StoreReq message is a sequence of StoreKindData values, each of   which represents a sequence of stored values for a given Kind.  The   same Kind-ID MUST NOT be used twice in a given store request.  Each   value is then processed in turn.  These operations MUST be atomic.   If any operation fails, the state MUST be rolled back to what it was   before the request was received.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 94]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The store request is defined by the StoreReq structure:       struct {           KindId                 kind;           uint64                 generation_counter;           StoredData             values<0..2^32-1>;       } StoreKindData;       struct {           ResourceId             resource;           uint8                  replica_number;           StoreKindData          kind_data<0..2^32-1>;       } StoreReq;   A single Store request stores data of a number of Kinds to a single   resource location.  The contents of the structure are:   resource      The resource at which to store.   replica_number      The number of this replica.  When a storing peer saves replicas to      other peers, each peer is assigned a replica number, starting from      1, that is sent in the Store message.  This field is set to 0 when      a node is storing its own data.  This allows peers to distinguish      replica writes from original writes.  Different topologies may      choose to allocate or interpret the replica number differently      (seeSection 10.4).   kind_data      A series of elements, one for each Kind of data to be stored.   The peer MUST check that it is responsible for the resource if the   replica number is zero; if it is not, the peer must reject the   request.  The peer MUST check that it expects to be a replica for the   resource and that the request sender is consistent with being the   responsible node (i.e., that the receiving peer does not know of a   better node) if the replica number is nonzero; if the request sender   is not consistent, it should reject the request.   Each StoreKindData element represents the data to be stored for a   single Kind-ID.  The contents of the element are:   kind      The Kind-ID.  Implementations MUST reject requests corresponding      to unknown Kinds.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 95]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   generation_counter      The expected current state of the generation counter      (approximately the number of times that this object has been      written; see below for details).   values      The value or values to be stored.  This may contain one or more      stored_data values, depending on the data model associated with      each Kind.   The peer MUST perform the following checks:   o  The Kind-ID is known and supported.   o  The signatures over each individual data element, if any, are      valid.  If this check fails, the request MUST be rejected with an      Error_Forbidden error.   o  Each element is signed by a credential which is authorized to      write this Kind at this Resource-ID.  If this check fails, the      request MUST be rejected with an Error_Forbidden error.   o  For original (non-replica) stores, the StoreReq is signed by a      credential which is authorized to write this Kind at this      Resource-ID.  If this check fails, the request MUST be rejected      with an Error_Forbidden error.   o  For replica stores, the StoreReq is signed by a Node-ID which is a      plausible node to either have originally stored the value or have      been in the replica set.  What this means is overlay specific, but      in the case of the Chord-based DHT defined in this specification,      replica StoreReqs MUST come from nodes which are either in the      known replica set for a given resource or which are closer than      some node in the replica set.  If this check fails, the request      MUST be rejected with an Error_Forbidden error.   o  For original (non-replica) stores, the peer MUST check that if the      generation counter is nonzero, it equals the current value of the      generation counter for this Kind.  This feature allows the      generation counter to be used in a way similar to the HTTP ETag      feature.   o  For replica Stores, the peer MUST set the generation counter to      match the generation counter in the message and MUST NOT check the      generation counter against the current value.  Replica Stores MUST      NOT use a generation counter of 0.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 96]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   o  The storage time values are greater than that of any values which      would be replaced by this Store.   o  The size and number of the stored values are consistent with the      limits specified in the overlay configuration.   o  If the data is signed with identity_type set to "none" and/or      SignatureAndHashAlgorithm values set to {0, 0} ("anonymous" and      "none"), the StoreReq MUST be rejected with an Error_forbidden      error.  Only synthesized data returned by the storage can use      these values (seeSection 7.4.2.2)   If all these checks succeed, the peer MUST attempt to store the data   values.  For non-replica stores, if the store succeeds and the data   is changed, then the peer MUST increase the generation counter by at   least 1.  If there are multiple stored values in a single   StoreKindData, it is permissible for the peer to increase the   generation counter by only 1 for the entire Kind-ID or by 1 or more   than 1 for each value.  Accordingly, all stored data values MUST have   a generation counter of 1 or greater. 0 is used in the Store request   to indicate that the generation counter should be ignored for   processing this request.  However, the responsible peer should   increase the stored generation counter and should return the correct   generation counter in the response.   When a peer stores data previously stored by another node (e.g., for   replicas or topology shifts), it MUST adjust the lifetime value   downward to reflect the amount of time the value was stored at the   peer.  The adjustment SHOULD be implemented by an algorithm   equivalent to the following: at the time the peer initially receives   the StoreReq, it notes the local time T.  When it then attempts to do   a StoreReq to another node, it should decrement the lifetime value by   the difference between the current local time and T.   Unless otherwise specified by the usage, if a peer attempts to store   data previously stored by another node (e.g., for replicas or   topology shifts) and that store fails with either an   Error_Generation_Counter_Too_Low or an Error_Data_Too_Old error, the   peer MUST fetch the newer data from the peer generating the error and   use that to replace its own copy.  This rule allows resynchronization   after partitions heal.   When a network partition is being healed and unless otherwise   specified, the default merging rule is to act as if all the values   that need to be merged were stored and as if the order they were   stored in corresponds to the stored time values associated with (and   carried in) their values.  Because the stored time values are those   associated with the peer which did the writing, clock skew isJennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 97]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   generally not an issue.  If two nodes are on different partitions,   write to the same location, and have clock skew, this can create   merge conflicts.  However, because RELOAD deliberately segregates   storage so that data from different users and peers is stored in   different locations, and a single peer will typically only be in a   single network partition, this case will generally not arise.   The properties of stores for each data model are as follows:   single-value:  A store of a new single-value element creates the      element if it does not exist and overwrites any existing value      with the new value.   array:  A store of an array entry replaces (or inserts) the given      value at the location specified by the index.  Because arrays are      sparse, a store past the end of the array extends it with      nonexistent values (exists = False) as required.  A store at index      0xffffffff places the new value at the end of the array,      regardless of the length of the array.  The resulting StoredData      has the correct index value when it is subsequently fetched.   dictionary:  A store of a dictionary entry replaces (or inserts) the      given value at the location specified by the dictionary key.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 98]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The following figure shows the relationship between these structures   for an example store which stores the following values at resource   "1234":   o  The value "abc" is in the single-value location for Kind X.   o  The value "foo" at index 0 is in the array for Kind Y.   o  The value "bar" at index 1 is in the array for Kind Y.                                     Store                                resource=1234                              replica_number = 0                                   /      \                                  /        \                      StoreKindData        StoreKindData                  kind=X (Single-Value)    kind=Y (Array)                generation_counter = 99    generation_counter = 107                           |                    /\                           |                   /  \                       StoredData             /    \             storage_time = xxxxxxx          /      \                   lifetime = 86400         /        \                   signature = XXXX        /          \                           |               |           |                           |        StoredData       StoredData                           |    storage_time =       storage_time =                           |          yyyyyyyy       zzzzzzz                           |  lifetime = 86400       lifetime = 33200                           |  signature = YYYY       signature = ZZZZ                           |               |           |                    StoredDataValue        |           |                     value="abc"           |           |                                           |           |                                  StoredDataValue  StoredDataValue                                        index=0      index=1                                     value="foo"    value="bar"Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                   [Page 99]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.4.1.2.  Response Definition   In response to a successful Store request, the peer MUST return a   StoreAns message containing a series of StoreKindResponse elements,   which contains the current value of the generation counter for each   Kind-ID, as well as a list of the peers where the data will be   replicated by the node processing the request.        struct {          KindId                  kind;          uint64                  generation_counter;          NodeId                  replicas<0..2^16-1>;        } StoreKindResponse;        struct {          StoreKindResponse       kind_responses<0..2^16-1>;        } StoreAns;   The contents of each StoreKindResponse are:   kind      The Kind-ID being represented.   generation_counter      The current value of the generation counter for that Kind-ID.   replicas      The list of other peers at which the data was/will be replicated.      In overlays and applications where the responsible peer is      intended to store redundant copies, this allows the storing node      to independently verify that the replicas have in fact been      stored.  It does this verification by using the Stat method (seeSection 7.4.3).  Note that the storing node is not required to      perform this verification.   The response itself is just StoreKindResponse values packed end to   end.   If any of the generation counters in the request precede the   corresponding stored generation counter, then the peer MUST fail the   entire request and respond with an Error_Generation_Counter_Too_Low   error.  The error_info in the ErrorResponse MUST be a StoreAns   response containing the correct generation counter for each Kind and   the replica list, which will be empty.  For original (non-replica)   stores, a node which receives such an error SHOULD attempt to fetch   the data and, if the storage_time value is newer, replace its own   data with that newer data.  This rule improves data consistency in   the case of partitions and merges.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 100]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   If the data being stored is too large for the allowed limit by the   given usage, then the peer MUST fail the request and generate an   Error_Data_Too_Large error.   If any type of request tries to access a data Kind that the peer does   not know about, the peer MUST fail the request and generate an   Error_Unknown_Kind error.  The error_info in the Error_Response is:              KindId        unknown_kinds<0..2^8-1>;   which lists all the Kinds that were unrecognized.  A node which   receives this error MUST generate a ConfigUpdate message which   contains the appropriate Kind definition (assuming which, in fact, a   Kind which was defined in the configuration document was used).7.4.1.3.  Removing Values   RELOAD does not have an explicit Remove operation.  Rather, values   are Removed by storing "nonexistent" values in their place.  Each   DataValue contains a boolean value called "exists" which indicates   whether a value is present at that location.  In order to effectively   remove a value, the owner stores a new DataValue with "exists" set to   False:      exists = False      value = {} (0 length)   The owner SHOULD use a lifetime for the nonexistent value that is at   least as long as the remainder of the lifetime of the value it is   replacing.  Otherwise, it is possible for the original value to be   accidentally or maliciously re-stored after the storing node has   expired it.  Note that a window of vulnerability for replay attack   still exists after the original lifetime has expired (as with any   store).  This attack can be mitigated by doing a nonexistent store   with a very long lifetime.   Storing nodes MUST treat these nonexistent values the same way they   treat any other stored value, including overwriting the existing   value, replicating them, and aging them out as necessary when the   lifetime expires.  When a stored nonexistent value's lifetime   expires, it is simply removed from the storing node, as happens when   any other stored value expires.   Note that in the case of arrays and dictionaries, expiration may   create an implicit, unsigned "nonexistent" value to represent a gap   in the data structure, as might happen when any value is aged out.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 101]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   However, this value isn't persistent, nor is it replicated.  It is   simply synthesized by the storing node.7.4.2.  Fetch   The Fetch request retrieves one or more data elements stored at a   given Resource-ID.  A single Fetch request can retrieve multiple   different Kinds.7.4.2.1.  Request Definition   Fetch requests are defined by the FetchReq structure:        struct {          int32            first;          int32            last;        } ArrayRange;        struct {          KindId                  kind;          uint64                  generation;          uint16                  length;          select (DataModel) {            case single_value: ;    /* Empty */            case array:                 ArrayRange       indices<0..2^16-1>;            case dictionary:                 DictionaryKey    keys<0..2^16-1>;            /* This structure may be extended */          } model_specifier;        } StoredDataSpecifier;        struct {          ResourceId              resource;          StoredDataSpecifier     specifiers<0..2^16-1>;        } FetchReq;   The contents of the Fetch requests are as follows:   resource      The Resource-ID to fetch from.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 102]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   specifiers      A sequence of StoredDataSpecifier values, each specifying some of      the data values to retrieve.   Each StoredDataSpecifier specifies a single Kind of data to retrieve   and, if appropriate, the subset of values that are to be retrieved.   The contents of the StoredDataSpecifier structure are as follows:   kind      The Kind-ID of the data being fetched.  Implementations SHOULD      reject requests corresponding to unknown Kinds unless specifically      configured otherwise.   DataModel      The data model of the data.  This is not transmitted on the wire,      but comes from the definition of the Kind.   generation      The last generation counter that the requesting node saw.  This      may be used to avoid unnecessary fetches, or it may be set to      zero.   length      The length of the rest of the structure, thus allowing      extensibility.   model_specifier      A reference to the data value being requested within the data      model specified for the Kind.  For instance, if the data model is      "array", it might specify some subset of the values.   The model_specifier is as follows:   o  If the data model is single value, the specifier is empty.   o  If the data model is array, the specifier contains a list of      ArrayRange elements, each of which contains two integers.  The      first integer is the beginning of the range, and the second is the      end of the range.  0 is used to indicate the first element, and      0xffffffff is used to indicate the final element.  The first      integer MUST be less than or equal to the second.  While multiple      ranges MAY be specified, they MUST NOT overlap.   o  If the data model is dictionary, then the specifier contains a      list of the dictionary keys being requested.  If no keys are      specified, then this is a wildcard fetch and all key-value pairs      are returned.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 103]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The generation counter is used to indicate the requester's expected   state of the storing peer.  If the generation counter in the request   matches the stored counter, then the storing peer returns a response   with no StoredData values.7.4.2.2.  Response Definition   The response to a successful Fetch request is a FetchAns message   containing the data requested by the requester.         struct {           KindId                 kind;           uint64                 generation;           StoredData             values<0..2^32-1>;         } FetchKindResponse;         struct {           FetchKindResponse      kind_responses<0..2^32-1>;         } FetchAns;   The FetchAns structure contains a series of FetchKindResponse   structures.  There MUST be one FetchKindResponse element for each   Kind-ID in the request.   The contents of the FetchKindResponse structure are as follows:   kind      The Kind that this structure is for.   generation      The generation counter for this Kind.   values      The relevant values.  If the generation counter in the request      matches the generation counter in the stored data, then no      StoredData values are returned.  Otherwise, all relevant data      values MUST be returned.  A nonexistent value (i.e., one which the      node has no knowledge of) is represented by a synthetic value with      "exists" set to False and has an empty signature.  Specifically,      the identity_type is set to "none", the SignatureAndHashAlgorithm      values are set to {0, 0} ("anonymous" and "none", respectively),      and the signature value is of zero length.  This removes the need      for the responding node to do signatures for values which do not      exist.  These signatures are unnecessary, as the entire response      is signed by that node.  Note that entries which have been removed      by the procedure given inSection 7.4.1.3 and which have not yet      expired also have exists = False, but have valid signatures from      the node which did the store.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 104]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Upon receipt of a FetchAns message, nodes MUST verify the signatures   on all the received values.  Any values with invalid signatures   (including expired certificates) MUST be discarded.  Note that this   implies that implementations which wish to store data for long   periods of time must have certificates with appropriate expiration   dates or must re-store periodically.  Implementations MAY return the   subset of values with valid signatures, but in that case, they SHOULD   somehow signal to the application that a partial response was   received.   There is one subtle point about signature computation on arrays.  If   the storing node uses the append feature (where the   index=0xffffffff), then the index in the StoredData that is returned   will not match that used by the storing node, which would break the   signature.  In order to avoid this issue, the index value in the   array is set to zero before the signature is computed.  This implies   that malicious storing nodes can reorder array entries without being   detected.7.4.3.  Stat   The Stat request is used to get metadata (length, generation counter,   digest, etc.) for a stored element without retrieving the element   itself.  The name is from the UNIX stat(2) system call, which   performs a similar function for files in a file system.  It also   allows the requesting node to get a list of matching elements without   requesting the entire element.7.4.3.1.  Request Definition   The Stat request is identical to the Fetch request.  It simply   specifies the elements to get metadata about.        struct {          ResourceId              resource;          StoredDataSpecifier     specifiers<0..2^16-1>;        } StatReq;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 105]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.4.3.2.  Response Definition   The Stat response contains the same sort of entries that a Fetch   response would contain.  However, instead of containing the element   data, it contains metadata.        struct {          Boolean                exists;          uint32                 value_length;          HashAlgorithm          hash_algorithm;          opaque                 hash_value<0..255>;        } MetaData;        struct {          uint32                 index;          MetaData               value;        } ArrayEntryMeta;        struct {          DictionaryKey          key;          MetaData               value;        } DictionaryEntryMeta;        struct {          select (DataModel) {            case single_value:              MetaData              single_value_entry;            case array:              ArrayEntryMeta        array_entry;            case dictionary:              DictionaryEntryMeta   dictionary_entry;            /* This structure may be extended */          };        } MetaDataValue;        struct {          uint32                  value_length;          uint64                  storage_time;          uint32                  lifetime;          MetaDataValue           metadata;        } StoredMetaData;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 106]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014        struct {          KindId                 kind;          uint64                 generation;          StoredMetaData         values<0..2^32-1>;        } StatKindResponse;        struct {          StatKindResponse      kind_responses<0..2^32-1>;        } StatAns;   The structures used in StatAns parallel those used in FetchAns: a   response consists of multiple StatKindResponse values, one for each   Kind that was in the request.  The contents of the StatKindResponse   are the same as those in the FetchKindResponse, except that the   values list contains StoredMetaData entries instead of StoredData   entries.   The contents of the StoredMetaData structure are the same as the   corresponding fields in StoredData, except that there is no signature   field and the value is a MetaDataValue rather than a StoredDataValue.   A MetaDataValue is a variant structure, like a StoredDataValue,   except for the types of each arm, which replace DataValue with   MetaData.   The only new structure is MetaData, which has the following contents:   exists      Same as in DataValue.   value_length      The length of the stored value.   hash_algorithm      The hash algorithm used to perform the digest of the value.   hash_value      A digest using hash_algorithm on the value field of the DataValue,      including its 4 leading length bytes.7.4.4.  Find   The Find request can be used to explore the Overlay Instance.  A Find   request for a Resource-ID R and a Kind-ID T retrieves the   Resource-ID, if any, of the resource of Kind T known to the target   peer which is closest to R.  This method can be used to walk the   Overlay Instance by iteratively fetching R_n+1=nearest(1 + R_n).Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 107]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20147.4.4.1.  Request Definition   The FindReq message contains a Resource-ID and a series of Kind-IDs   identifying the resource the peer is interested in.     struct {       ResourceId                 resource;       KindId                     kinds<0..2^8-1>;     } FindReq;   The request contains a list of Kind-IDs which the Find is for, as   indicated below:   resource      The desired Resource-ID.   kinds      The desired Kind-IDs.  Each value MUST appear only once.      Otherwise, the request MUST be rejected with an error.7.4.4.2.  Response Definition   A response to a successful Find request is a FindAns message   containing the closest Resource-ID on the peer for each Kind   specified in the request.    struct {      KindId                      kind;      ResourceId                  closest;    } FindKindData;    struct {      FindKindData                results<0..2^16-1>;    } FindAns;   If the processing peer is not responsible for the specified   Resource-ID, it SHOULD return an Error_Not_Found error code.   For each Kind-ID in the request, the response MUST contain a   FindKindData indicating the closest Resource-ID for that Kind-ID,   unless the Kind is not allowed to be used with Find, in which case a   FindKindData for that Kind-ID MUST NOT be included in the response.   If a Kind-ID is not known, then the corresponding Resource-ID MUST be   0.  Note that different Kind-IDs may have different closest   Resource-IDs.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 108]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The response is simply a series of FindKindData elements, one per   Kind, concatenated end to end.  The contents of each element are:   kind      The Kind-ID.   closest      The closest Resource-ID to the specified Resource-ID.  It is 0 if      no Resource-ID is known.   Note that the response does not contain the contents of the data   stored at these Resource-IDs.  If the requester wants this, it must   retrieve it using Fetch.7.4.5.  Defining New Kinds   There are two ways to define a new Kind.  The first is by writing a   document and registering the Kind-ID with IANA.  This is the   preferred method for Kinds which may be widely used and reused.  The   second method is to simply define the Kind and its parameters in the   Configuration Document using the section of Kind-ID space set aside   for private use.  This method MAY be used to define ad hoc Kinds in   new overlays.   However a Kind is defined, the definition MUST include:   o  The meaning of the data to be stored (in some textual form).   o  The Kind-ID.   o  The data model (single value, array, dictionary, etc.).   o  The access control model.   In addition, when Kinds are registered with IANA, each Kind is   assigned a short string name which is used to refer to it in   Configuration Documents.   While each Kind needs to define what data model is used for its data,   this does not mean that it must define new data models.  Where   practical, Kinds should use the existing data models.  The intention   is that the basic data model set be sufficient for most applications/   usages.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 109]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 20148.  Certificate Store Usage   The Certificate Store Usage allows a node to store its certificate in   the overlay.   A user/node MUST store its certificate at Resource-IDs derived from   two Resource Names:   o  The user name in the certificate.   o  The Node-ID in the certificate.   Note that in the second case, the certificate for a peer is not   stored at its Node-ID but rather at a hash of its Node-ID.  The   intention here (as is common throughout RELOAD) is to avoid making a   peer responsible for its own data.   New certificates are stored at the end of the list.  This structure   allows users to store an old and a new certificate that both have the   same Node-ID, which allows for migration of certificates when they   are renewed.   This usage defines the following Kinds:   Name:  CERTIFICATE_BY_NODE   Data Model:  The data model for CERTIFICATE_BY_NODE data is array.   Access Control:  NODE-MATCH   Name:  CERTIFICATE_BY_USER   Data Model:  The data model for CERTIFICATE_BY_USER data is array.   Access Control:  USER-MATCH9.  TURN Server Usage   The TURN Server Usage allows a RELOAD peer to advertise that it is   prepared to be a TURN server, as defined in [RFC5766].  When a node   starts up, it joins the overlay network and forms several connections   in the process.  If the ICE stage in any of these connections returns   a reflexive address that is not the same as the peer's perceived   address, then the peer is behind a NAT and SHOULD NOT be a candidate   for a TURN server.  Additionally, if the peer's IP address is in the   private address space range as defined by [RFC1918], then it is alsoJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 110]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   SHOULD NOT be a candidate for a TURN server.  Otherwise, the peer   SHOULD assume that it is a potential TURN server and follow the   procedures below.   If the node is a candidate for a TURN server, it will insert some   pointers in the overlay so that other peers can find it.  The overlay   configuration file specifies a turn-density parameter that indicates   how many times each TURN server SHOULD record itself in the overlay.   Typically, this should be set to the reciprocal of the estimate of   what percentage of peers will act as TURN servers.  If the turn-   density is not set to zero, for each value, called d, between 1 and   turn-density, the peer forms a Resource Name by concatenating its   Node-ID and the value d.  This Resource Name is hashed to form a   Resource-ID.  The address of the peer is stored at that Resource-ID   using type TURN-SERVICE and the TurnServer object:        struct {          uint8                   iteration;          IpAddressPort           server_address;        } TurnServer;   The contents of this structure are as follows:   iteration      The d value.   server_address      The address at which the TURN server can be contacted.   Note:  Correct functioning of this algorithm depends on having turn-      density be a reasonable estimate of the reciprocal of the      proportion of nodes in the overlay that can act as TURN servers.      If the turn-density value in the configuration file is too low,      the process of finding TURN servers becomes more expensive, as      multiple candidate Resource-IDs must be probed to find a TURN      server.   Peers that provide this service need to support the TURN extensions   to STUN for media relay, as defined in [RFC5766].   This usage defines the following Kind to indicate that a peer is   willing to act as a TURN server:   Name:  TURN-SERVICE   Data Model:  The TURN-SERVICE Kind stores a single value for each      Resource-ID.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 111]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Access Control:  NODE-MULTIPLE, with a maximum iteration of counter      20.   Peers MAY find other servers by selecting a random Resource-ID and   then doing a Find request for the appropriate Kind-ID with that   Resource-ID.  The Find request gets routed to a random peer based on   the Resource-ID.  If that peer knows of any servers, they will be   returned.  The returned response may be empty if the peer does not   know of any servers, in which case the process gets repeated with   some other random Resource-ID.  As long as the ratio of servers   relative to peers is not too low, this approach will result in   finding a server relatively quickly.   Note to implementers: The certificates used by TurnServer entries   need to be retained, as described inSection 6.3.4.10.  Chord Algorithm   This algorithm is assigned the name CHORD-RELOAD to indicate that it   is an adaptation of the basic Chord-based DHT algorithm.   This algorithm differs from the Chord algorithm that was originally   presented in [Chord].  It has been updated based on more recent   research results and implementation experiences, and to adapt it to   the RELOAD protocol.  Here is a short list of differences:   o  The original Chord algorithm specified that a single predecessor      and a successor list be stored.  The CHORD-RELOAD algorithm      attempts to have more than one predecessor and successor.  The      predecessor sets help other neighbors learn their successor list.   o  The original Chord specification and analysis called for iterative      routing.  RELOAD specifies recursive routing.  In addition to the      performance implications, the cost of NAT traversal dictates      recursive routing.   o  Finger Table entries are indexed in the opposite order.  Original      Chord specifies finger[0] as the immediate successor of the peer.      CHORD-RELOAD specifies finger[0] as the peer 180 degrees around      the ring from the peer.  This change was made to simplify      discussion and implementation of variable-sized Finger Tables.      However, with either approach, no more than O(log N) entries      should typically be stored in a Finger Table.   o  The stabilize() and fix_fingers() algorithms in the original Chord      algorithm are merged into a single periodic process.      Stabilization is implemented slightly differently because of the      larger neighborhood, and fix_fingers is not as aggressive toJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 112]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      reduce load, nor does it search for optimal matches of the Finger      Table entries.   o  RELOAD allows for a 128-bit hash instead of a 160-bit hash, as      RELOAD is not designed to be used in networks with close to or      more than 2^128 nodes or objects (and it is hard to see how one      would assemble such a network).   o  RELOAD uses randomized finger entries, as described inSection 10.7.4.2.   o  The CHORD-RELOAD algorithm allows the use of either reactive or      periodic recovery.  The original Chord paper used periodic      recovery.  Reactive recovery provides better performance in small      overlays, but is believed to be unstable in large overlays      (greater than 1000) with high levels of churn      [handling-churn-usenix04].  The overlay configuration file      specifies a "chord-reactive" element that indicates whether      reactive recovery should be used.10.1.  Overview   The algorithm described here, CHORD-RELOAD, is a modified version of   the Chord algorithm.  In Chord (and in the algorithm described here),   nodes are arranged in a ring, with node n being adjacent to nodes n-1   and n+1 and with all arithmetic being done modulo 2^{k}, where k is   the length of the Node-ID in bits, so that node 2^{k} - 1 is directly   before node 0.   Each peer keeps track of a Finger Table and a Neighbor Table.  The   Neighbor Table contains at least the three peers before and after   this peer in the DHT ring.  There may not be three entries in all   cases, such as small rings or while the ring topology is changing.   The first entry in the Finger Table contains the peer halfway around   the ring from this peer, the second entry contains the peer that is   1/4th of the way around, the third entry contains the peer that is   1/8th of the way around, and so on.  Fundamentally, the Chord DHT can   be thought of as a doubly linked list formed by knowing the   successors and predecessor peers in the Neighbor Table, sorted by the   Node-ID.  As long as the successor peers are correct, the DHT will   return the correct result.  The pointers to the prior peers are kept   to enable the insertion of new peers into the list structure.   Keeping multiple predecessor and successor pointers makes it possible   to maintain the integrity of the data structure even when consecutive   peers simultaneously fail.  The Finger Table forms a skip list   [wikiSkiplist] so that entries in the linked list can be found in   O(log(N)) time instead of the typical O(N) time that a linked list   would provide, where N represents the number of nodes in the DHT.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 113]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The Neighbor Table and Finger Table entries contain logical Node-IDs   as values, but the actual mapping of an IP level addressing   information to reach that Node-ID is kept in the Connection Table.   A peer, x, is responsible for a particular Resource-ID, k, if k is   less than or equal to x and k is greater than p, where p is the   Node-ID of the previous peer in the Neighbor Table.  Care must be   taken when computing to note that all math is modulo 2^128.10.2.  Hash Function   For this Chord-based Topology Plug-in, the size of the Resource-ID is   128 bits.  The hash of a Resource-ID MUST be computed using SHA-1   [RFC3174], and then the SHA-1 result MUST be truncated to the most   significant 128 bits.10.3.  Routing   The Routing Table is conceptually the union of the Neighbor Table and   the Finger Table.   If a peer is not responsible for a Resource-ID k, but is directly   connected to a node with Node-ID k, then it MUST route the message to   that node.  Otherwise, it MUST route the request to the peer in the   Routing Table that has the largest Node-ID that is in the interval   between the peer and k. If no such node is found, the peer finds the   smallest Node-ID that is greater than k and MUST route the message to   that node.10.4.  Redundancy   When a peer receives a Store request for Resource-ID k and it is   responsible for Resource-ID k, it MUST store the data and return a   success response.  It MUST then send a Store request to its successor   in the Neighbor Table and to that peer's successor, incrementing the   replica number for each successor.  Note that these Store requests   are addressed to those specific peers, even though the Resource-ID   they are being asked to store is outside the range that they are   responsible for.  The peers receiving these SHOULD check that they   came from an appropriate predecessor in their Neighbor Table and that   they are in a range that this predecessor is responsible for.  Then,   they MUST store the data.  They do not themselves perform further   Stores, because they can determine that they are not responsible for   the Resource-ID.   Note that this Topology Plug-in does not use the replica number for   purposes other than knowing the difference between a replica and a   non-replica.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 114]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Managing replicas as the overlay changes is described inSection 10.7.3.   The sequential replicas used in this overlay algorithm protect   against peer failure but not against malicious peers.  Additional   replication from the Usage is required to protect resources from such   attacks, as discussed inSection 13.5.4.10.5.  Joining   The join process for a Joining Node (JN) with Node-ID n is as   follows:   1.  JN MUST connect to its chosen bootstrap node, as specified inSection 11.4.   2.  JN SHOULD send an Attach request to the Admitting Peer (AP) for       Resource-ID n+1.  The "send_update" flag can be used to acquire       the Routing Table of AP.   3.  JN SHOULD send Attach requests to initiate connections to each of       the peers in the Neighbor Table as well as to the desired peers       in the Finger Table.  Note that this does not populate their       Routing Tables, but only their Connection Tables, so JN will not       get messages that it is expected to route to other nodes.   4.  JN MUST enter into its Routing Table all the peers that it has       successfully contacted.   5.  JN MUST send a Join to AP.  The AP MUST send the response to the       Join.   6.  AP MUST do a series of Store requests to JN to store the data       that JN will be responsible for.   7.  AP MUST send JN an Update explicitly labeling JN as its       predecessor.  At this point, JN is part of the ring and is       responsible for a section of the overlay.  AP MAY now forget any       data which is assigned to JN and not AP.  AP SHOULD NOT forget       any data where AP is the replica set for the data.   8.  The AP MUST send an Update to all of its neighbors (including JN)       with the new values of its neighbor set (including JN).   9.  JN MUST send Updates to all of the peers in its Neighbor Table.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 115]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   If JN sends an Attach to AP with send_update, it immediately knows   most of its expected neighbors from AP's Routing Table update and MAY   directly connect to them.  This is the RECOMMENDED procedure.   If for some reason JN does not get AP's Routing Table, it MAY still   populate its Neighbor Table incrementally.  It SHOULD send a Ping   directed at Resource-ID n+1 (directly after its own Resource-ID).   This allows JN to discover its own successor.  Call that node p0.  JN   then SHOULD send a Ping to p0+1 to discover its successor (p1).  This   process MAY be repeated to discover as many successors as desired.   The values for the two peers before p will be found at a later stage,   when n receives an Update.  An alternate procedure is to send   Attaches to those nodes rather than Pings, which form the connections   immediately, but may be slower if the nodes need to collect ICE   candidates.   In order to set up its i'th Finger Table entry, JN MUST send an   Attach to peer n+2^(128-i).  This will be routed to a peer in   approximately the right location around the ring.  (Note that the   first entry in the Finger Table has i=1 and not i=0 in this   formulation.)   The Joining Node MUST NOT send any Update message placing itself in   the overlay until it has successfully completed an Attach with each   peer that should be in its Neighbor Table.10.6.  Routing Attaches   When a peer needs to Attach to a new peer in its Neighbor Table, it   MUST source-route the Attach request through the peer from which it   learned the new peer's Node-ID.  Source-routing these requests allows   the overlay to recover from instability.   All other Attach requests, such as those for new Finger   Table entries, are routed conventionally through the overlay.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 116]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201410.7.  Updates   An Update for this DHT is defined as:        enum { invalidChordUpdateType(0),               peer_ready(1), neighbors(2), full(3), (255) }             ChordUpdateType;        struct {           uint32                 uptime;           ChordUpdateType        type;           select (type){            case peer_ready:                   /* Empty */              ;            case neighbors:              NodeId              predecessors<0..2^16-1>;              NodeId              successors<0..2^16-1>;            case full:              NodeId              predecessors<0..2^16-1>;              NodeId              successors<0..2^16-1>;              NodeId              fingers<0..2^16-1>;          };        } ChordUpdate;   The "uptime" field contains the time this peer has been up in   seconds.   The "type" field contains the type of the update, which depends on   the reason the update was sent.   peer_ready      This peer is ready to receive messages.  This message is used to      indicate that a node which has Attached is a peer and can be      routed through.  It is also used as a connectivity check to non-      neighbor peers.   neighbors      This version is sent to members of the Chord Neighbor Table.   full      This version is sent to peers which request an Update with a      RouteQueryReq.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 117]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   If the message is of type "neighbors", then the contents of the   message will be:   predecessors      The predecessor set of the Updating peer.   successors      The successor set of the Updating peer.   If the message is of type "full", then the contents of the message   will be:   predecessors      The predecessor set of the Updating peer.   successors      The successor set of the Updating peer.   fingers      The Finger Table of the Updating peer, in numerically ascending      order.   A peer MUST maintain an association (via Attach) to every member of   its neighbor set.  A peer MUST attempt to maintain at least three   predecessors and three successors, even though this will not be   possible if the ring is very small.  It is RECOMMENDED that O(log(N))   predecessors and successors be maintained in the neighbor set.  There   are many ways to estimate N, some of which are discussed in   [DHT-RELOAD].10.7.1.  Handling Neighbor Failures   Every time a connection to a peer in the Neighbor Table is lost (as   determined by connectivity pings or the failure of some request), the   peer MUST remove the entry from its Neighbor Table and replace it   with the best match it has from the other peers in its Routing Table.   If using reactive recovery, the peer MUST send an immediate Update to   all nodes in its Neighbor Table.  The update will contain all the   Node-IDs of the current entries of the table (after the failed one   has been removed).  Note that when replacing a successor, the peer   SHOULD delay the creation of new replicas for the successor   replacement hold-down time (30 seconds) after removing the failed   entry from its Neighbor Table in order to allow a triggered update to   inform it of a better match for its Neighbor Table.   If the neighbor failure affects the peer's range of responsible IDs,   then the Update MUST be sent to all nodes in its Connection Table.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 118]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   A peer MAY attempt to reestablish connectivity with a lost neighbor   either by waiting additional time to see if connectivity returns or   by actively routing a new Attach to the lost peer.  Details for these   procedures are beyond the scope of this document.  In the case of an   attempt to reestablish connectivity with a lost neighbor, the peer   MUST be removed from the Neighbor Table.  Such a peer is returned to   the Neighbor Table once connectivity is reestablished.   If connectivity is lost to all successor peers in the Neighbor Table,   then this peer SHOULD behave as if it is joining the network and MUST   use Pings to find a peer and send it a Join.  If connectivity is lost   to all the peers in the Finger Table, this peer SHOULD assume that it   has been disconnected from the rest of the network, and it SHOULD   periodically try to join the DHT.10.7.2.  Handling Finger Table Entry Failure   If a Finger Table entry is found to have failed (as determined by   connectivity pings or the failure of some request), all references to   the failed peer MUST be removed from the Finger Table and replaced   with the closest preceding peer from the Finger Table or Neighbor   Table.   If using reactive recovery, the peer MUST initiate a search for a new   Finger Table entry, as described below.10.7.3.  Receiving Updates   When a peer x receives an Update request, it examines the Node-IDs in   the UpdateReq and at its Neighbor Table and decides if this UpdateReq   would change its Neighbor Table.  This is done by taking the set of   peers currently in the Neighbor Table and comparing them to the peers   in the Update request.  There are two major cases:   o  The UpdateReq contains peers that match x's Neighbor Table, so no      change is needed to the neighbor set.   o  The UpdateReq contains peers that x does not know about that      should be in x's Neighbor Table; i.e., they are closer than      entries in the Neighbor Table.   In the first case, no change is needed.   In the second case, x MUST attempt to Attach to the new peers, and if   it is successful, it MUST adjust its neighbor set accordingly.  Note   that x can maintain the now inferior peers as neighbors, but it MUST   remember the closer ones.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 119]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   After any Pings and Attaches are done, if the Neighbor Table changes   and the peer is using reactive recovery, the peer MUST send an Update   request to each member of its Connection Table.  These Update   requests are what end up filling in the predecessor/successor tables   of peers that this peer is a neighbor to.  A peer MUST NOT enter   itself in its successor or predecessor table and instead should leave   the entries empty.   If peer x is responsible for a Resource-ID R and x discovers that the   replica set for R (the next two nodes in its successor set) has   changed, it MUST send a Store for any data associated with R to any   new node in the replica set.  It SHOULD NOT delete data from peers   which have left the replica set.   When peer x detects that it is no longer in the replica set for a   resource R (i.e., there are three predecessors between x and R), it   SHOULD delete all data associated with R from its local store.   When a peer discovers that its range of responsible IDs has changed,   it MUST send an Update to all entries in its Connection Table.10.7.4.  Stabilization   There are four components to stabilization:   1.  Exchange Updates with all peers in its Neighbor Table to exchange       state.   2.  Search for better peers to place in its Finger Table.   3.  Search to determine if the current Finger Table size is       sufficiently large.   4.  Search to determine if the overlay has partitioned and needs to       recover.10.7.4.1.  Updating the Neighbor Table   A peer MUST periodically send an Update request to every peer in its   Neighbor Table.  The purpose of this is to keep the predecessor and   successor lists up to date and to detect failed peers.  The default   time is about every ten minutes, but the configuration server SHOULD   set this in the Configuration Document using the "chord-update-   interval" element (denominated in seconds).  A peer SHOULD randomly   offset these Update requests so they do not occur all at once.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 120]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201410.7.4.2.  Refreshing the Finger Table   A peer MUST periodically search for new peers to replace invalid   entries in the Finger Table.  For peer x, the i'th Finger Table entry   is valid if it is in the range [ x+2^( 128-i ),   x+2^( 128-(i-1) )-1 ].  Invalid entries occur in the Finger   Table when a previous Finger Table entry has failed or when no peer   has been found in that range.   Two possible methods for searching for new peers for the Finger   Table entries are presented:   Alternative 1: A peer selects one entry in the Finger Table from   among the invalid entries.  It pings for a new peer for that Finger   Table entry.  The selection SHOULD be exponentially weighted to   attempt to replace earlier (lower i) entries in the Finger Table.  A   simple way to implement this selection is to search through the   Finger Table entries from i=1, and each time an invalid entry is   encountered, send a Ping to replace that entry with probability 0.5.   Alternative 2: A peer monitors the Update messages received from its   connections to observe when an Update indicates a peer that would be   used to replace an invalid Finger Table entry, i, and flags that   entry in the Finger Table.  Every "chord-ping-interval" seconds, the   peer selects from among those flagged candidates using an   exponentially weighted probability, as above.   When searching for a better entry, the peer SHOULD send the Ping to a   Node-ID selected randomly from that range.  Random selection is   preferred over a search for strictly spaced entries to minimize the   effect of churn on overlay routing [minimizing-churn-sigcomm06].  An   implementation or subsequent specification MAY choose a method for   selecting Finger Table entries other than choosing randomly within   the range.  Any such alternate methods SHOULD be employed only on   Finger Table stabilization and not for the selection of initial   Finger Table entries unless the alternative method is faster and   imposes less overhead on the overlay.   A peer SHOULD NOT send Ping requests looking for new finger table   entries more often than the configuration element "chord-ping-   interval", which defaults to 3600 seconds (one per hour).   A peer MAY choose to keep connections to multiple peers that can act   for a given Finger Table entry.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 121]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201410.7.4.3.  Adjusting Finger Table Size   If the Finger Table has fewer than 16 entries, the node SHOULD   attempt to discover more fingers to grow the size of the table to 16.   The value 16 was chosen to ensure high odds of a node maintaining   connectivity to the overlay even with strange network partitions.   For many overlays, 16 Finger Table entries will be enough, but as an   overlay grows very large, more than 16 entries may be required in the   Finger Table for efficient routing.  An implementation SHOULD be   capable of increasing the number of entries in the Finger Table to   128 entries.   Although log(N) entries are all that are required for optimal   performance, careful implementation of stabilization will result in   no additional traffic being generated when maintaining a Finger   Table larger than log(N) entries.  Implementers are encouraged to   make use of RouteQuery and algorithms for determining where new   Finger Table entries may be found.  Complete details of possible   implementations are outside the scope of this specification.   A simple approach to sizing the Finger Table is to ensure that the   Finger Table is large enough to contain at least the final successor   in the peer's Neighbor Table.10.7.4.4.  Detecting Partitioning   To detect that a partitioning has occurred and to heal the overlay, a   peer P MUST periodically repeat the discovery process used in the   initial join for the overlay to locate an appropriate bootstrap node,   B.  P SHOULD then send a Ping for its own Node-ID routed through B.   If a response is received from peer S', which is not P's successor,   then the overlay is partitioned and P SHOULD send an Attach to S'   routed through B, followed by an Update sent to S'.  (Note that S'   may not be in P's Neighbor Table once the overlay is healed, but the   connection will allow S' to discover appropriate neighbor entries for   itself via its own stabilization.)   Future specifications may describe alternative mechanisms for   determining when to repeat the discovery process.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 122]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201410.8.  Route Query f.in 3       For CHORD-RELOAD, the RouteQueryReq contains no additional       information.  The RouteQueryAns contains the single Node-ID of       the next peer to which the responding peer would have routed the       request message in recursive routing:      struct {         NodeId                  next_peer;      } ChordRouteQueryAns;   The contents of this structure are as follows:   next_peer      The peer to which the responding peer would route the message in      order to deliver it to the destination listed in the request.   If the requester has set the send_update flag, the responder SHOULD   initiate an Update immediately after sending the RouteQueryAns.10.9.  Leaving   To support extensions, such as [DHT-RELOAD], peers SHOULD send a   Leave request to all members of their Neighbor Table before exiting   the Overlay Instance.  The overlay_specific_data field MUST contain   the ChordLeaveData structure, defined below:              enum { invalidChordLeaveType(0),                      from_succ(1), from_pred(2), (255) }                    ChordLeaveType;               struct {                 ChordLeaveType         type;                  select (type) {                    case from_succ:                      NodeId            successors<0..2^16-1>;                    case from_pred:                      NodeId           predecessors<0..2^16-1>;                  };               } ChordLeaveData;Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 123]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The "type" field indicates whether the Leave request was sent by a   predecessor or a successor of the recipient:   from_succ      The Leave request was sent by a successor.   from_pred      The Leave request was sent by a predecessor.   If the type of the request is "from_succ", the contents will be:   successors      The sender's successor list.   If the type of the request is "from_pred", the contents will be:   predecessors      The sender's predecessor list.   Any peer which receives a Leave for a peer n in its neighbor set MUST   follow procedures as if it had detected a peer failure as described   inSection 10.7.1.11.  Enrollment and Bootstrap   The section defines the format of the configuration data as well the   process to join a new overlay.11.1.  Overlay Configuration   This specification defines a new content type   "application/p2p-overlay+xml" for a MIME entity that contains overlay   information.  An example document is shown below:   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>   <overlay xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-base"      xmlns:ext="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-ext1"      xmlns:chord="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-chord">      <configuration instance-name="overlay.example.org" sequence="22"          expiration="2002-10-10T07:00:00Z" ext:ext-example="stuff" >          <topology-plugin> CHORD-RELOAD </topology-plugin>          <node-id-length>16</node-id-length>          <root-cert>   MIIDJDCCAo2gAwIBAgIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFADBwMQswCQYDVQQGEwJVUzET   MBEGA1UECBMKQ2FsaWZvcm5pYTERMA8GA1UEBxMIU2FuIEpvc2UxDjAMBgNVBAoT   BXNpcGl0MSkwJwYDVQQLEyBTaXBpdCBUZXN0IENlcnRpZmljYXRlIEF1dGhvcml0   eTAeFw0wMzA3MTgxMjIxNTJaFw0xMzA3MTUxMjIxNTJaMHAxCzAJBgNVBAYTAlVT   MRMwEQYDVQQIEwpDYWxpZm9ybmlhMREwDwYDVQQHEwhTYW4gSm9zZTEOMAwGA1UEJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 124]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   ChMFc2lwaXQxKTAnBgNVBAsTIFNpcGl0IFRlc3QgQ2VydGlmaWNhdGUgQXV0aG9y   aXR5MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDDIh6DkcUDLDyK9BEUxkud   +nJ4xrCVGKfgjHm6XaSuHiEtnfELHM+9WymzkBNzZpJu30yzsxwfKoIKugdNUrD4   N3viCicwcN35LgP/KnbN34cavXHr4ZlqxH+OdKB3hQTpQa38A7YXdaoz6goW2ft5   Mi74z03GNKP/G9BoKOGd5QIDAQABo4HNMIHKMB0GA1UdDgQWBBRrRhcU6pR2JYBU   bhNU2qHjVBShtjCBmgYDVR0jBIGSMIGPgBRrRhcU6pR2JYBUbhNU2qHjVBShtqF0   pHIwcDELMAkGA1UEBhMCVVMxEzARBgNVBAgTCkNhbGlmb3JuaWExETAPBgNVBAcT   CFNhbiBKb3NlMQ4wDAYDVQQKEwVzaXBpdDEpMCcGA1UECxMgU2lwaXQgVGVzdCBD   ZXJ0aWZpY2F0ZSBBdXRob3JpdHmCAQAwDAYDVR0TBAUwAwEB/zANBgkqhkiG9w0B   AQUFAAOBgQCWbRvv1ZGTRXxbH8/EqkdSCzSoUPrs+rQqR0xdQac9wNY/nlZbkR3O   qAezG6Sfmklvf+DOg5RxQq/+Y6I03LRepc7KeVDpaplMFGnpfKsibETMipwzayNQ   QgUf4cKBiF+65Ue7hZuDJa2EMv8qW4twEhGDYclpFU9YozyS1OhvUg==          </root-cert>          <root-cert> YmFkIGNlcnQK </root-cert>          <enrollment-server>https://example.org</enrollment-server>          <enrollment-server>https://example.net</enrollment-server>          <self-signed-permitted                    digest="sha1">false</self-signed-permitted>          <bootstrap-node address="192.0.0.1" port="6084" />          <bootstrap-node address="192.0.2.2" port="6084" />          <bootstrap-node address="2001:DB8::1" port="6084" />          <turn-density> 20 </turn-density>          <clients-permitted> false </clients-permitted>          <no-ice> false </no-ice>          <chord:chord-update-interval>              400</chord:chord-update-interval>          <chord:chord-ping-interval>30</chord:chord-ping-interval>          <chord:chord-reactive> true </chord:chord-reactive>          <shared-secret> password </shared-secret>          <max-message-size>4000</max-message-size>          <initial-ttl> 30 </initial-ttl>          <overlay-reliability-timer> 3000 </overlay-reliability-timer>          <overlay-link-protocol>TLS</overlay-link-protocol>          <configuration-signer>47112162e84c69ba</configuration-signer>          <kind-signer> 47112162e84c69ba </kind-signer>          <kind-signer> 6eba45d31a900c06 </kind-signer>          <bad-node> 6ebc45d31a900c06 </bad-node>          <bad-node> 6ebc45d31a900ca6 </bad-node>          <ext:example-extension> foo </ext:example-extension>          <mandatory-extension>              urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-ext1          </mandatory-extension>          <required-kinds>            <kind-block>              <kind name="SIP-REGISTRATION">Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 125]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014                  <data-model>SINGLE</data-model>                  <access-control>USER-MATCH</access-control>                  <max-count>1</max-count>                  <max-size>100</max-size>              </kind>              <kind-signature>                   VGhpcyBpcyBub3QgcmlnaHQhCg==              </kind-signature>            </kind-block>            <kind-block>              <kind>                  <data-model>ARRAY</data-model>                  <access-control>NODE-MULTIPLE</access-control>                  <max-node-multiple>3</max-node-multiple>                  <max-count>22</max-count>                  <max-size>4</max-size>                  <ext:example-kind-extension> 1                          </ext:example-kind-extension>              </kind>              <kind-signature>                 VGhpcyBpcyBub3QgcmlnaHQhCg==              </kind-signature>            </kind-block>          </required-kinds>      </configuration>      <signature> VGhpcyBpcyBub3QgcmlnaHQhCg== </signature>      <configuration instance-name="other.example.net">      </configuration>      <signature> VGhpcyBpcyBub3QgcmlnaHQhCg== </signature>    </overlay>   The file MUST be a well-formed XML document, and it SHOULD contain an   encoding declaration in the XML declaration.  The file MUST use the   UTF-8 character encoding.  The namespaces for the elements defined in   this specification are urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-base and   urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-chord.   Note that elements or attributes that are defined as type xsd:boolean   in the RELAX NG schema (Section 11.1.1) have two lexical   representations, "1" or "true" for the concept true, and "0" or   "false" for the concept false.  Whitespace and case processing   follows the rules of [OASIS.relax_ng] and XML Schema Datatypes   [W3C.REC-xmlschema-2-20041028].Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 126]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The file MAY contain multiple "configuration" elements, where each   one contains the configuration information for a different overlay.   Each configuration element MAY be followed by signature elements that   provide a signature over the preceding configuration element.  Each   configuration element has the following attributes:   instance-name      The name of the overlay (referred to as "overlay name" in this      specification)   expiration      Time in the future at which this overlay configuration is no      longer valid.  The node SHOULD retrieve a new copy of the      configuration at a randomly selected time that is before the      expiration time.  Note that if the certificates expire before a      new configuration is retried, the node will not be able to      validate the configuration file.  All times MUST conform to the      Internet date/time format defined in [RFC3339] and be specified      using UTC.   sequence      A monotonically increasing sequence number between 0 and 2^16-2.   Inside each overlay element, the following elements can occur:   topology-plug-in      This element defines the overlay algorithm being used.  If      missing, the default is "CHORD-RELOAD".   node-id-length      This element contains the length of a NodeId (NodeIdLength), in      bytes.  This value MUST be between 16 (128 bits) and 20 (160      bits).  If this element is not present, the default of 16 is used.   root-cert      This element contains a base-64-encoded X.509v3 certificate that      is a root trust anchor used to sign all certificates in this      overlay.  There can be more than one root-cert element.   enrollment-server      This element contains the URL at which the enrollment server can      be reached in a "url" element.  This URL MUST be of type "https:".      More than one enrollment-server element MAY be present.  Note that      there is no necessary relationship between the overlay name/      configuration server name and the enrollment server name.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 127]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   self-signed-permitted      This element indicates whether self-signed certificates are      permitted.  If it is set to "true", then self-signed certificates      are allowed, in which case the enrollment-server and root-cert      elements MAY be absent.  Otherwise, it SHOULD be absent, but MAY      be set to "false".  This element also contains an attribute      "digest", which indicates the digest to be used to compute the      Node-ID.  Valid values for this parameter are "sha1" and "sha256",      representing SHA-1 [RFC3174] and SHA-256 [RFC6234], respectively.      Implementations MUST support both of these algorithms.   bootstrap-node      This element represents the address of one of the bootstrap nodes.      It has an attribute called "address" that represents the IP      address (either IPv4 or IPv6, since they can be distinguished) and      an optional attribute called "port" that represents the port and      defaults to 6084.  The IPv6 address is in typical hexadecimal form      using standard period and colon separators as specified in      [RFC5952].  More than one bootstrap-node element MAY be present.   turn-density      This element is a positive integer that represents the approximate      reciprocal of density of nodes that can act as TURN servers.  For      example, if 5% of the nodes can act as TURN servers, this element      would be set to 20.  If it is not present, the default value is 1.      If there are no TURN servers in the overlay, it is set to zero.   clients-permitted      This element represents whether clients are permitted or whether      all nodes must be peers.  If clients are permitted, the element      MUST be set to "true" or be absent.  If the nodes are not allowed      to remain clients after the initial join, the element MUST be set      to "false".  There is currently no way for the overlay to enforce      this.   no-ice      This element represents whether nodes are REQUIRED to use the      "No-ICE" Overlay Link protocols in this overlay.  If it is absent,      it is treated as if it were set to "false".   chord-update-interval      The update frequency for the CHORD-RELOAD Topology Plug-in (seeSection 10).   chord-ping-interval      The Ping frequency for the CHORD-RELOAD Topology Plug-in (seeSection 10).Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 128]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   chord-reactive      Whether reactive recovery SHOULD be used for this overlay.  It is      set to "true" or "false".  If missing, the default is "true" (seeSection 10).   shared-secret      If shared secret mode is used, this element contains the shared      secret.  The security guarantee here is that any agent which is      able to access the Configuration Document (presumably protected by      some sort of HTTP access control or network topology) is able to      recover the shared secret and hence join the overlay.   max-message-size      Maximum size, in bytes, of any message in the overlay.  If this      value is not present, the default is 5000.   initial-ttl      Initial default TTL for messages (seeSection 6.3.2).  If this      value is not present, the default is 100.   overlay-reliability-timer      Default value for the end-to-end retransmission timer for      messages, in milliseconds.  If not present, the default value is      3000.  The value MUST be at least 200 milliseconds, which means      the minimum time delay before dropping a link is 1000      milliseconds.   overlay-link-protocol      Indicates a permissible overlay link protocol (seeSection 6.6.1      for requirements for such protocols).  An arbitrary number of      these elements may appear.  If none appear, then this implies the      default value, "TLS", which refers to the use of TLS and DTLS.  If      one or more elements appear, then no default value applies.   kind-signer      This contains a single Node-ID in hexadecimal and indicates that      the certificate with this Node-ID is allowed to sign Kinds.      Identifying kind-signer by Node-ID instead of certificate allows      the use of short-lived certificates without constantly having to      provide an updated configuration file.   configuration-signer      This contains a single Node-ID in hexadecimal and indicates that      the certificate with this Node-ID is allowed to sign      configurations for this instance-name.  Identifying the signer by      Node-ID instead of certificate allows the use of short-lived      certificates without constantly having to provide an updated      configuration file.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 129]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   bad-node      This contains a single Node-ID in hexadecimal and indicates that      the certificate with this Node-ID MUST NOT be considered valid.      This allows certificate revocation.  An arbitrary number of these      elements can be provided.  Note that because certificates may      expire, bad-node entries need be present only for the lifetime of      the certificate.  Technically speaking, bad Node-IDs may be reused      after their certificates have expired.  The requirement for      Node-IDs to be pseudorandomly generated gives this event a      vanishing probability.   mandatory-extension      This element contains the name of an XML namespace that a node      joining the overlay MUST support.  The presence of a mandatory-      extension element does not require the extension to be used in the      current configuration file, but can indicate that it may be used      in the future.  Note that the namespace is case-sensitive, as      specified in Section 2.3 of [w3c-xml-namespaces].  More than one      mandatory-extension element MAY be present.   Inside each configuration element, the required-kinds element MAY   also occur.  This element indicates the Kinds that members MUST   support and contains multiple kind-block elements that each define a   single Kind that MUST be supported by nodes in the overlay.  Each   kind-block consists of a single kind element and a kind-signature.   The kind element defines the Kind.  The kind-signature is the   signature computed over the kind element.   Each kind element has either an id attribute or a name attribute.   The name attribute is a string representing the Kind (the name   registered to IANA), while the id is an integer Kind-ID allocated out   of private space.   In addition, the kind element MUST contain the following elements:   max-count      The maximum number of values which members of the overlay must      support.   data-model      The data model to be used.   max-size      The maximum size of individual values.   access-control      The access control model to be used.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 130]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The kind element MAY also contain the following element:   max-node-multiple      If the access control is NODE-MULTIPLE, this element MUST be      included.  This indicates the maximum value for the i counter.  It      MUST be an integer greater than 0.   All of the non-optional values MUST be provided.  If the Kind is   registered with IANA, the data-model and access-control elements MUST   match those in the Kind registration, and clients MUST ignore them in   favor of the IANA versions.  Multiple kind-block elements MAY be   present.   The kind-block element also MUST contain a "kind-signature" element.   This signature is computed across the kind element from the beginning   of the first < of the kind element to the end of the last > of the   kind element in the same way as the signature element described later   in this section. kind-block elements MUST be signed by a node listed   in the kind-signers block of the current configuration.  Receivers   MUST verify the signature prior to accepting a kind-block.   The configuration element MUST be treated as a binary blob that   cannot be changed -- including any whitespace changes -- or the   signature will break.  The signature MUST be computed by taking each   configuration element and starting from, and including, the first <   at the start of <configuration> up to and including the > in </   configuration> and treating this as a binary blob that MUST be signed   using the standard SecurityBlock defined inSection 6.3.4.  The   SecurityBlock MUST be base-64 encoded using the base64 alphabet from   [RFC4648] and MUST be put in the signature element following the   configuration object in the configuration file.  Any configuration   file MUST be signed by one of the configuration-signer elements from   the previous extant configuration.  Recipients MUST verify the   signature prior to accepting the configuration file.   When a node receives a new configuration file, it MUST change its   configuration to meet the new requirements.  This may require the   node to exit the DHT and rejoin.  If a node is not capable of   supporting the new requirements, it MUST exit the overlay.  If some   information about a particular Kind changes from what the node   previously knew about the Kind (for example, the max size), the new   information in the configuration files overrides any previously   learned information.  If any Kind data was signed by a node that is   no longer allowed to sign Kinds, that Kind MUST be discarded along   with any stored information of that Kind.  Note that forcing an   avalanche restart of the overlay with a configuration change that   requires rejoining the overlay may result in serious performance   problems, including total collapse of the network if configurationJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 131]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   parameters are not properly considered.  Such an event may be   necessary in case of a compromised CA or similar problem, but for   large overlays, it should be avoided in almost all circumstances.11.1.1.  RELAX NG Grammar   The grammar for the configuration data is:   namespace chord = "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-chord"   namespace local = ""   default namespace p2pcf = "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-base"   namespace rng = "http://relaxng.org/ns/structure/1.0"   anything =       (element * { anything }        | attribute * { text }        | text)*   foreign-elements = element * - (p2pcf:* | local:* | chord:*)                      { anything }*   foreign-attributes = attribute * - (p2pcf:*|local:*|chord:*)                        { text }*   foreign-nodes = (foreign-attributes | foreign-elements)*   start =  element p2pcf:overlay {         overlay-element   }   overlay-element &=  element configuration {               attribute instance-name { xsd:string },               attribute expiration { xsd:dateTime }?,               attribute sequence { xsd:long }?,               foreign-attributes*,               parameter           }+   overlay-element &= element signature {               attribute algorithm { signature-algorithm-type }?,               xsd:base64Binary           }*   signature-algorithm-type |= "rsa-sha1"   signature-algorithm-type |=  xsd:string # signature alg extensions   parameter &= element topology-plugin { topology-plugin-type }?   topology-plugin-type |= xsd:string # topo plugin extensions   parameter &= element max-message-size { xsd:unsignedInt }?   parameter &= element initial-ttl { xsd:int }?   parameter &= element root-cert { xsd:base64Binary }*Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 132]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   parameter &= element required-kinds { kind-block* }?   parameter &= element enrollment-server { xsd:anyURI }*   parameter &= element kind-signer {  xsd:string }*   parameter &= element configuration-signer {  xsd:string }*   parameter &= element bad-node {  xsd:string }*   parameter &= element no-ice { xsd:boolean }?   parameter &= element shared-secret { xsd:string }?   parameter &= element overlay-link-protocol { xsd:string }*   parameter &= element clients-permitted { xsd:boolean }?   parameter &= element turn-density { xsd:unsignedByte }?   parameter &= element node-id-length { xsd:int }?   parameter &= element mandatory-extension { xsd:string }*   parameter &= foreign-elements*   parameter &=       element self-signed-permitted {           attribute digest { self-signed-digest-type },           xsd:boolean       }?   self-signed-digest-type |= "sha1"   self-signed-digest-type |=  xsd:string # signature digest extensions   parameter &= element bootstrap-node {                   attribute address { xsd:string },                   attribute port { xsd:int }?                }*   kind-block = element kind-block {       element kind {           (  attribute name { kind-names }              | attribute id { xsd:unsignedInt } ),           kind-parameter       } &       element kind-signature  {           attribute algorithm { signature-algorithm-type }?,           xsd:base64Binary       }?   }   kind-parameter &= element max-count { xsd:int }   kind-parameter &= element max-size { xsd:int }   kind-parameter &= element max-node-multiple { xsd:int }?   kind-parameter &= element data-model { data-model-type }   data-model-type |= "SINGLE"   data-model-type |= "ARRAY"   data-model-type |= "DICTIONARY"   data-model-type |=  xsd:string # data model extensionsJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 133]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   kind-parameter &= element access-control { access-control-type }   access-control-type |= "USER-MATCH"   access-control-type |= "NODE-MATCH"   access-control-type |= "USER-NODE-MATCH"   access-control-type |= "NODE-MULTIPLE"   access-control-type |= xsd:string # access control extensions   kind-parameter &= foreign-elements*   kind-names |= "TURN-SERVICE"   kind-names |= "CERTIFICATE_BY_NODE"   kind-names |= "CERTIFICATE_BY_USER"   kind-names |= xsd:string # kind extensions   # Chord specific parameters   topology-plugin-type |= "CHORD-RELOAD"   parameter &= element chord:chord-ping-interval { xsd:int }?   parameter &= element chord:chord-update-interval { xsd:int }?   parameter &= element chord:chord-reactive { xsd:boolean }?11.2.  Discovery through Configuration Server   When a node first enrolls in a new overlay, it starts with a   discovery process to find a configuration server.   The node MAY start by determining the overlay name.  This value MUST   be provided by the user or some other out-of-band provisioning   mechanism.  The out-of-band mechanism MAY also provide an optional   URL for the configuration server.  If a URL for the configuration   server is not provided, the node MUST do a DNS SRV query using a   Service name of "reload-config" and a protocol of TCP to find a   configuration server and form the URL by appending a path of   "/.well-known/reload-config" to the overlay name.  This uses the   "well-known URI" framework defined in [RFC5785].  For example, if the   overlay name was example.com, the URL would be   "https://example.com/.well-known/reload-config".   Once an address and URL for the configuration server are determined,   the peer MUST form an HTTPS connection to that IP address.  If an   optional URL for the configuration server was provided, the   certificate MUST match the domain name from the URL as described in   [RFC2818]; otherwise, the certificate MUST match the overlay name as   described in [RFC2818].  If the HTTPS certificates pass the name   matching, the node MUST fetch a new copy of the configuration file.   To do this, the peer performs a GET to the URL.  The result of the   HTTP GET is an XML configuration file described above.  If the XML is   not valid or the instance-name attribute of the overlay-element in   the XML does not match the overlay name, this configurations fileJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 134]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   SHOULD be discarded.  Otherwise, the new configuration MUST replace   any previously learned configuration file for this overlay.   For overlays that do not use a configuration server, nodes MUST   obtain the configuration information needed to join the overlay   through some out-of-band approach, such as an XML configuration file   sent over email.11.3.  Credentials   If the Configuration Document contains an enrollment-server element,   credentials are REQUIRED to join the Overlay Instance.  A peer which   does not yet have credentials MUST contact the enrollment server to   acquire them.   RELOAD defines its own trivial certificate request protocol.  We   would have liked to have used an existing protocol, but were   concerned about the implementation burden of even the simplest of   those protocols, such as [RFC5272] and [RFC5273].  The objective was   to have a protocol which could be easily implemented in a Web server   which the operator did not control (e.g., in a hosted service) and   which was compatible with the existing certificate-handling tooling   as used with the Web certificate infrastructure.  This means   accepting bare PKCS#10 requests and returning a single bare X.509   certificate.  Although the MIME types for these objects are defined,   none of the existing protocols support exactly this model.   The certificate request protocol MUST be performed over HTTPS.  The   server certificate MUST match the overlay name as described in   [RFC2818].  The request MUST be an HTTP POST with the parameters   encoded as described in [RFC2388] and with the following properties:   o  If authentication is required, there MUST be form parameters of      "password" and "username" containing the user's account name and      password in the clear (hence the need for HTTPS).  The username      and password strings MUST be UTF-8 strings compared as binary      objects.  Applications using RELOAD SHOULD define any needed      string preparation as per [RFC4013] or its successor documents.   o  If more than one Node-ID is required, there MUST be a form      parameter of "nodeids" containing the number of Node-IDs required.   o  There MUST be a form parameter of "csr" with a content type of      "application/pkcs10", as defined in [RFC2311], that contains the      certificate signing request (CSR).   o  The Accept header MUST contain the type "application/pkix-cert",      indicating the type that is expected in the response.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 135]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The enrollment server MUST authenticate the request using the   provided account name and password.  The reason for using theRFC2388 "multipart/form-data" encoding is so that the password parameter   will not be encoded in the URL, to reduce the chance of accidental   leakage of the password.  If the authentication succeeds and the   requested user name in the CSR is acceptable, the server MUST   generate and return a certificate for the CSR in the "csr" parameter   of the request.  The SubjectAltName field in the certificate MUST   contain the following values:   o  One or more Node-IDs which MUST be cryptographically random      [RFC4086].  Each MUST be chosen by the enrollment server in such a      way that it is unpredictable to the requesting user.  For example,      the user MUST NOT be informed of potential (random) Node-IDs prior      to authenticating.  Each is placed in the subjectAltName using the      uniformResourceIdentifier type, each MUST contain RELOAD URI, as      described inSection 14.15, and each MUST contain a Destination      List with a single entry of type "node_id".  The enrollment server      SHOULD maintain a mapping of users to Node-IDs and if the same      user returns (e.g., to have their certificate re-issued), the      enrollment server should return the same Node-IDs, thus avoiding      the need for implementations to re-store all their data when their      certificates expire.   o  A single name (the "user name") that this user is allowed to use      in the overlay, using type rfc822Name.  Enrollment servers SHOULD      take care to allow only legal characters in the name (e.g., no      embedded NULs), rather than simply accepting any name provided by      the user.  In some usages, the right side of the user name will      match the overlay name, but there is no requirement for this match      in this specification.  Applications using this specification MAY      define such a requirement or MAY otherwise limit the allowed range      of allowed user names.   The SubjectAltName field in the certificate MUST NOT contain any   identities other than those listed above.  The subject distinguished   name in the certificate MUST be empty.   The certificate MUST be returned as type "application/pkix-cert", as   defined in [RFC2585], with an HTTP status code of 200 OK.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 136]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Certificate processing errors SHOULD result in an HTTP return code of   403 Forbidden, along with a body of type "text/plain" and body that   consists of one of the tokens defined in the following list:   failed_authentication      The account name and password combination used in the HTTPS      request was not valid.   username_not_available      The requested user name in the CSR was not acceptable.   Node-IDs_not_available      The number of Node-IDs requested was not acceptable.   bad_CSR      There was some other problem with the CSR.   If the client receives an unknown token in the body, it SHOULD treat   it as a failure for an unknown reason.   The client MUST check that the returned certificate chains back to   one of the certificates received in the "root-cert" list of the   overlay configuration data (including PKIX BasicConstraints checks).   The node then reads the certificate to find the Node-ID it can use.11.3.1.  Self-Generated Credentials   If the "self-signed-permitted" element is present in the   configuration and is set to "true", then a node MUST generate its own   self-signed certificate to join the overlay.  The self-signed   certificate MAY contain any user name of the user's choice.   For self-signed certificates containing only one Node-ID, the Node-ID   MUST be computed by applying the digest specified in the self-signed-   permitted element to the DER representation of the user's public key   (more specifically, the subjectPublicKeyInfo) and taking the high-   order bits.  For self-signed certificates containing multiple   Node-IDs, the index of the Node-ID (from 1 to the number of Node-IDs   needed) must be prepended as a 4-byte big-endian integer to the DER   representation of the user's public key and taking the high-order   bits.  When accepting a self-signed certificate, nodes MUST check   that the Node-ID and public keys match.  This prevents Node-ID theft.   Once the node has constructed a self-signed certificate, it MAY join   the overlay.  It MUST store its certificate in the overlay   (Section 8), but SHOULD look to see if the user name is already taken   and, if so, choose another user name.  Note that this provides   protection only against accidental name collisions.  Name theft isJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 137]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   still possible.  If protection against name theft is desired, then   the enrollment service MUST be used.11.4.  Contacting a Bootstrap Node   In order to join the overlay, the Joining Node MUST contact a node in   the overlay.  Typically this means contacting the bootstrap nodes,   since they are reachable by the local peer or have public IP   addresses.  If the Joining Node has cached a list of peers that it   has previously been connected with in this overlay, as an   optimization it MAY attempt to use one or more of them as bootstrap   nodes before falling back to the bootstrap nodes listed in the   configuration file.   When contacting a bootstrap node, the Joining Node MUST first form   the DTLS or TLS connection to the bootstrap node and then send an   Attach request over this connection with the destination Resource-ID   set to the Joining Node's Node-ID plus 1.   When the requester node finally does receive a response from some   responding node, it MUST use the Node-ID in the response to start   sending requests to join the Overlay Instance as described inSection 6.4.   After a node has successfully joined the overlay network, it will   have direct connections to several peers.  Some MAY be added to the   cached bootstrap nodes list and used in future boots.  Peers that are   not directly connected MUST NOT be cached.  The suggested number of   peers to cache is 10.  Algorithms for determining which peers to   cache are beyond the scope of this specification.12.  Message Flow Example   The following abbreviations are used in the message flow diagrams:   JN = Joining Node, AP = Admitting Peer, NP = next peer after the AP,   NNP = next next peer which is the peer after NP, PP = previous peer   before the AP, PPP = previous previous peer which is the peer before   the PP, BP = bootstrap node.   In the following example, we assume that JN has formed a connection   to one of the bootstrap nodes.  JN then sends an Attach through that   peer to a Resource-ID of itself plus 1 (JN+1).  It gets routed to the   AP, because JN is not yet part of the overlay.  When AP responds, JN   and the AP use ICE to set up a connection and then set up DTLS.  Once   AP has connected to JN, AP sends to JN an Update to populate its   Routing Table.  The following example shows the Update happening   after the DTLS connection is formed, but it could also happen before,   in which case the Update would often be routed through other nodes.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 138]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014       JN        PPP       PP        AP        NP        NNP       BP        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachReq Dest=JN+1|         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------------------------------------->|        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |AttachReq Dest=JN+1|         |        |         |         |         |<----------------------------|        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |AttachAns          |         |        |         |         |         |---------------------------->|        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachAns          |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------------------------------------|        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |ICE      |         |         |         |         |         |        |<===========================>|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |TLS      |         |         |         |         |         |        |<...........................>|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateReq|         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |                                 Figure 1Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 139]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The JN then forms connections to the appropriate neighbors, such as   NP, by sending an Attach which gets routed via other nodes.  When NP   responds, JN and NP use ICE and DTLS to set up a connection.       JN        PPP       PP        AP        NP        NNP       BP        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachReq NP       |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |AttachReq NP       |         |        |         |         |         |-------->|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |AttachAns|         |         |        |         |         |         |<--------|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |ICE      |         |         |         |         |         |        |<=====================================>|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |TLS      |         |         |         |         |         |        |<.....................................>|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |                                 Figure 2Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 140]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The JN also needs to populate its Finger Table (for the Chord-based   DHT).  It issues an Attach to a variety of locations around the   overlay.  The diagram below shows JN sending an Attach halfway around   the Chord ring to the JN + 2^127.       JN        NP        XX        TP        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |AttachReq JN+2<<126|         |        |-------->|         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |AttachReq JN+2<<126|        |         |-------->|         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |AttachReq JN+2<<126        |         |         |-------->|        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |AttachAns|        |         |         |<--------|        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |         |AttachAns|         |        |         |<--------|         |        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |        |AttachAns|         |         |        |<--------|         |         |        |         |         |         |        |ICE      |         |         |        |<===========================>|        |         |         |         |        |TLS      |         |         |        |<...........................>|        |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |                                 Figure 3Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 141]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Once JN has a reasonable set of connections, it is ready to take its   place in the DHT.  It does this by sending a Join to AP.  AP sends a   series of Store requests to JN to store the data that JN will be   responsible for.  AP then sends JN an Update that explicitly labels   JN as its predecessor.  At this point, JN is part of the ring and is   responsible for a section of the overlay.  AP can now forget any data   which is assigned to JN and not to AP.       JN        PPP       PP        AP        NP        NNP       BP        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |JoinReq  |         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |JoinAns  |         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |StoreReq Data A    |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |StoreAns |         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |StoreReq Data B    |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |StoreAns |         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateReq|         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |                                 Figure 4Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 142]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   In Chord, JN's Neighbor Table needs to contain its own predecessors.   It couldn't connect to them previously, because it did not yet know   their addresses.  However, now that it has received an Update from   AP, as in the previous diagram, it has AP's predecessors, which are   also its own, so it sends Attaches to them.  Below, it is shown   connecting only to AP's closest predecessor, PP.       JN        PPP       PP        AP        NP        NNP       BP        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachReq Dest=PP  |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |AttachReq Dest=PP  |         |         |        |         |         |<--------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |AttachAns|         |         |         |        |         |         |-------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |AttachAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |TLS      |         |         |         |         |         |        |...................|         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateReq|         |         |         |         |         |        |------------------>|         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |<------------------|         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateReq|         |         |         |         |         |        |---------------------------->|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |<----------------------------|         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateReq|         |         |         |         |         |Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 143]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014        |-------------------------------------->|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |UpdateAns|         |         |         |         |         |        |<--------------------------------------|         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |        |         |         |         |         |         |         |                                 Figure 5   Finally, now that JN has a copy of all the data and is ready to route   messages and receive requests, it sends Updates to everyone in its   Routing Table to tell them it is ready to go.  Below, it is shown   sending such an update to TP.           JN        NP        XX        TP            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |            |UpdateReq|         |         |            |---------------------------->|            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |            |UpdateAns|         |         |            |<----------------------------|            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |            |         |         |         |                                 Figure 613.  Security Considerations13.1.  Overview   RELOAD provides a generic storage service, albeit one designed to be   useful for P2PSIP.  In this section, we discuss security issues that   are likely to be relevant to any usage of RELOAD.  More background   information can be found in [RFC5765].   In any Overlay Instance, any given user depends on a number of peers   with which they have no well-defined relationship except that they   are fellow members of the Overlay Instance.  In practice, these other   nodes may be friendly, lazy, curious, or outright malicious.  No   security system can provide complete protection in an environment   where most nodes are malicious.  The goal of security in RELOAD is toJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 144]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   provide strong security guarantees of some properties even in the   face of a large number of malicious nodes and to allow the overlay to   function correctly in the face of a modest number of malicious nodes.   P2PSIP deployments require the ability to authenticate both peers and   resources (users) without the active presence of a trusted entity in   the system.  We describe two mechanisms.  The first mechanism is   based on public key certificates and is suitable for general   deployments.  The second is an admission control mechanism based on   an overlay-wide shared symmetric key.13.2.  Attacks on P2P Overlays   The two basic functions provided by overlay nodes are storage and   routing: some peer is responsible for storing a node's data and for   allowing a third node to fetch this stored data, while other peers   are responsible for routing messages to and from the storing nodes.   Each of these issues is covered in the following sections.   P2P overlays are subject to attacks by subversive nodes that may   attempt to disrupt routing, corrupt or remove user registrations, or   eavesdrop on signaling.  The certificate-based security algorithms we   describe in this specification are intended to protect overlay   routing and user registration information in RELOAD messages.   To protect the signaling from attackers pretending to be valid nodes   (or nodes other than themselves), the first requirement is to ensure   that all messages are received from authorized members of the   overlay.  For this reason, RELOAD MUST transport all messages over a   secure channel (TLS and DTLS are defined in this document) which   provides message integrity and authentication of the directly   communicating peer.  In addition, messages and data MUST be digitally   signed with the sender's private key, providing end-to-end security   for communications.13.3.  Certificate-Based Security   This specification stores users' registrations and possibly other   data in an overlay network.  This requires a solution both to   securing this data and to securing, as well as possible, the routing   in the overlay.  Both types of security are based on requiring that   every entity in the system (whether user or peer) authenticate   cryptographically using an asymmetric key pair tied to a certificate.   When a user enrolls in the Overlay Instance, they request or are   assigned a unique name, such as "alice@dht.example.net".  These names   MUST be unique and are meant to be chosen and used by humans much   like a SIP address-of-record (AOR) or an email address.  The userJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 145]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   MUST also be assigned one or more Node-IDs by the central enrollment   authority.  Both the name and the Node-IDs are placed in the   certificate, along with the user's public key.   Each certificate enables an entity to act in two sorts of roles:   o  As a user, storing data at specific Resource-IDs in the Overlay      Instance corresponding to the user name.   o  As a overlay peer with the Node-IDs listed in the certificate.   Note that since only users of this Overlay Instance need to validate   a certificate, this usage does not require a global Public Key   Infrastructure (PKI).  Instead, certificates MUST be signed by a   central enrollment authority which acts as the certificate authority   for the Overlay Instance.  This authority signs each node's   certificate.  Because each node possesses the CA's certificate (which   they receive upon enrollment), they can verify the certificates of   the other entities in the overlay without further communication.   Because the certificates contain the user's/node's public key,   communications from the user/node can, in turn, be verified.   If self-signed certificates are used, then the security provided is   significantly decreased, since attackers can mount Sybil attacks.  In   addition, attackers cannot trust the user names in certificates   (although they can trust the Node-IDs, because they are   cryptographically verifiable).  This scheme may be appropriate for   some small deployments, such as a small office or an ad hoc overlay   set up among participants in a meeting where all hosts on the network   are trusted.  Some additional security can be provided by using the   shared secret admission control scheme as well.   Because all stored data is signed by the owner of the data, the   storing node can verify that the storer is authorized to perform a   store at that Resource-ID and also can allow any consumer of the data   to verify the provenance and integrity of the data when it retrieves   it.   Note that RELOAD does not itself provide a revocation/status   mechanism (although certificates may, of course, include Online   Certificate Status Protocol [OCSP] responder information).  Thus,   certificate lifetimes SHOULD be chosen to balance the compromise   window versus the cost of certificate renewal.  Because RELOAD is   already designed to operate in the face of some fraction of malicious   nodes, this form of compromise is not fatal.   All implementations MUST implement certificate-based security.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 146]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.4.  Shared-Secret Security   RELOAD also supports a shared secret admission control scheme that   relies on a single key that is shared among all members of the   overlay.  It is appropriate for small groups that wish to form a   private network without complexity.  In shared secret mode, all the   peers MUST share a single symmetric key which is used to key TLS-PSK   or TLS-SRP mode.  A peer which does not know the key cannot form TLS   connections with any other peer and therefore cannot join the   overlay.   One natural approach to a shared-secret scheme is to use a user-   entered password as the key.  The difficulty with this is that in   TLS-PSK mode, such keys are very susceptible to dictionary attacks.   If passwords are used as the source of shared keys, then TLS-SRP is a   superior choice, because it is not subject to dictionary attacks.13.5.  Storage Security   When certificate-based security is used in RELOAD, any given   Resource-ID/Kind-ID pair is bound to some small set of certificates.   In order to write data, the writer must prove possession of the   private key for one of those certificates.  Moreover, all data is   stored, signed with the same private key that was used to authorize   the storage.  This set of rules makes questions of authorization and   data integrity, which have historically been thorny for overlays,   relatively simple.13.5.1.  Authorization   When a node wants to store some value, it MUST first digitally sign   the value with its own private key.  It then sends a Store request   that contains both the value and the signature towards the storing   peer (which is defined by the Resource Name construction algorithm   for that particular Kind of value).   When the storing peer receives the request, it MUST determine whether   the storing node is authorized to store at this Resource-ID/Kind-ID   pair.  Determining this requires comparing the user's identity to the   requirements of the access control model (seeSection 7.3).  If it   satisfies those requirements, the user is authorized to write,   pending quota checks, as described in the next section.   For example, consider a certificate with the following properties:          User name: alice@dht.example.com          Node-ID:   013456789abcdef          Serial:    1234Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 147]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   If Alice wishes to Store a value of the "SIP Location" Kind, the   Resource Name will be the SIP AOR "sip:alice@dht.example.com".  The   Resource-ID will be determined by hashing the Resource Name.  Because   SIP Location uses the USER-NODE-MATCH policy, it first verifies that   the user name in the certificate hashes to the requested Resource-ID.   It then verifies that the Node-ID in the certificate matches the   dictionary key being used for the store.  If both of these checks   succeed, the Store is authorized.  Note that because the access   control model is different for different Kinds, the exact set of   checks will vary.13.5.2.  Distributed Quota   Being a peer in an Overlay Instance carries with it the   responsibility to store data for a given region of the Overlay   Instance.  However, allowing nodes to store unlimited amounts of data   would create unacceptable burdens on peers and would also enable   trivial denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.  RELOAD addresses this issue   by requiring configurations to define maximum sizes for each Kind of   stored data.  Attempts to store values exceeding this size MUST be   rejected.  (If peers are inconsistent about this, then strange   artifacts will happen when the zone of responsibility shifts and a   different peer becomes responsible for overlarge data.)  Because each   Resource-ID/Kind-ID pair is bound to a small set of certificates,   these size restrictions also create a distributed quota mechanism,   with the quotas administered by the central configuration server.   Allowing different Kinds of data to have different size restrictions   allows new usages the flexibility to define limits that fit their   needs without requiring all usages to have expansive limits.13.5.3.  Correctness   Because each stored value is signed, it is trivial for any retrieving   node to verify the integrity of the stored value.  More care needs to   be taken to prevent version rollback attacks.  Rollback attacks on   storage are prevented by the use of store times and lifetime values   in each store.  A lifetime represents the latest time at which the   data is valid and thus limits (although does not completely prevent)   the ability of the storing node to perform a rollback attack on   retrievers.  In order to prevent a rollback attack at the time of the   Store request, it is REQUIRED that storage times be monotonically   increasing.  Storing peers MUST reject Store requests with storage   times smaller than or equal to those that they are currently storing.   In addition, a fetching node which receives a data value with a   storage time older than the result of the previous fetch knows that a   rollback has occurred.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 148]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.5.4.  Residual Attacks   The mechanisms described here provide a high degree of security, but   some attacks remain possible.  Most simply, it is possible for   storing peers to refuse to store a value (i.e., they reject any   request).  In addition, a storing peer can deny knowledge of values   which it has previously accepted.  To some extent, these attacks can   be ameliorated by attempting to store to and retrieve from replicas,   but a retrieving node does not know whether or not it should try   this, as there is a cost to doing so.   The certificate-based authentication scheme prevents a single peer   from being able to forge data owned by other peers.  Furthermore,   although a subversive peer can refuse to return data resources for   which it is responsible, it cannot return forged data, because it   cannot provide authentication for such registrations.  Therefore,   parallel searches for redundant registrations can mitigate most of   the effects of a compromised peer.  The ultimate reliability of such   an overlay is a statistical question based on the replication factor   and the percentage of compromised peers.   In addition, when a Kind is multivalued (e.g., an array data model),   the storing peer can return only some subset of the values, thus   biasing its responses.  This can be countered by using single values   rather than sets, but that makes coordination between multiple   storing agents much more difficult.  This is a trade-off that must be   made when designing any usage.13.6.  Routing Security   Because the storage security system guarantees (within limits) the   integrity of the stored data, routing security focuses on stopping   the attacker from performing a DoS attack that misroutes requests in   the overlay.  There are a few obvious observations to make about   this.  First, it is easy to ensure that an attacker is at least a   valid node in the Overlay Instance.  Second, this is a DoS attack   only.  Third, if a large percentage of the nodes on the Overlay   Instance are controlled by the attacker, it is probably impossible to   perfectly secure against this.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 149]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.6.1.  Background   In general, attacks on DHT routing are mounted by the attacker   arranging to route traffic through one or two nodes that it controls.   In the Eclipse attack [Eclipse], the attacker tampers with messages   to and from nodes for which it is on-path with respect to a given   victim node.  This allows it to pretend to be all the nodes that are   reachable through it.  In the Sybil attack [Sybil], the attacker   registers a large number of nodes and is therefore able to capture a   large amount of the traffic through the DHT.   Both the Eclipse and Sybil attacks require the attacker to be able to   exercise control over her Node-IDs.  The Sybil attack requires the   creation of a large number of peers.  The Eclipse attack requires   that the attacker be able to impersonate specific peers.  In both   cases, RELOAD attempts to mitigate these attacks by the use of   centralized, certificate-based admission control.13.6.2.  Admissions Control   Admission to a RELOAD Overlay Instance is controlled by requiring   that each peer have a certificate containing its Node-ID.  The   requirement to have a certificate is enforced by using certificate-   based mutual authentication on each connection.  (Note: the following   applies only when self-signed certificates are not used.)  Whenever a   peer connects to another peer, each side automatically checks that   the other has a suitable certificate.  These Node-IDs MUST be   randomly assigned by the central enrollment server.  This has two   benefits:   o  It allows the enrollment server to limit the number of Node-IDs      issued to any individual user.   o  It prevents the attacker from choosing specific Node-IDs.   The first property allows protection against Sybil attacks (provided   that the enrollment server uses strict rate-limiting policies).  The   second property deters but does not completely prevent Eclipse   attacks.  Because an Eclipse attacker must impersonate peers on the   other side of the attacker, the attacker must have a certificate for   suitable Node-IDs, which requires him to repeatedly query the   enrollment server for new certificates, which will match only by   chance.  From the attacker's perspective, the difficulty is that if   the attacker has only a small number of certificates, the region of   the Overlay Instance he is impersonating appears to be very sparsely   populated by comparison to the victim's local region.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 150]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.6.3.  Peer Identification and Authentication   In general, whenever a peer engages in overlay activity that might   affect the Routing Table, it must establish its identity.  This   happens in two ways.  First, whenever a peer establishes a direct   connection to another peer, it authenticates via certificate-based   mutual authentication.  All messages between peers are sent over this   protected channel, and therefore the peers can verify the data origin   of the last-hop peer for requests and responses without further   cryptography.   In some situations, however, it is desirable to be able to establish   the identity of a peer with whom one is not directly connected.  The   most natural case is when a peer Updates its state.  At this point,   other peers may need to update their view of the overlay structure,   but they need to verify that the Update message came from the actual   peer rather than from an attacker.  To prevent having a peer accept   Update messages from an attacker, all overlay routing messages are   signed by the peer that generated them.   For messages that impact the topology of the overlay, replay is   typically prevented by having the information come directly from, or   be verified by, the nodes that claimed to have generated the update.   Data storage replay detection is done by signing the time of the node   that generated the signature on the Store request, thus providing a   time-based replay protection, but the time synchronization is needed   only between peers that can write to the same location.13.6.4.  Protecting the Signaling   The goal here is to stop an attacker from knowing who is signaling   what to whom.  An attacker is unlikely to be able to observe the   activities of a specific individual, given the randomization of IDs   and routing based on the present peers discussed above.  Furthermore,   because messages can be routed using only the header information, the   actual body of the RELOAD message can be encrypted during   transmission.   There are two lines of defense here.  The first is the use of TLS or   DTLS for each communications link between peers.  This provides   protection against attackers who are not members of the overlay.  The   second line of defense is to digitally sign each message.  This   prevents adversarial peers from modifying messages in flight, even if   they are on the routing path.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 151]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201413.6.5.  Routing Loops and DoS Attacks   Source-routing mechanisms are known to create the possibility for DoS   amplification, especially by the induction of routing loops   [RFC5095].  In order to limit amplification, the initial-ttl value in   the configuration file SHOULD be set to a value slightly larger than   the longest expected path through the network.  For Chord, experience   has shown that log(2) of the number of nodes in the network + 5 is a   safe bound.  Because nodes are required to enforce the initial-ttl as   the maximum value, an attacker cannot achieve an amplification factor   greater than initial-ttl, thus limiting the additional capabilities   provided by source routing.   In order to prevent the use of loops for targeted implementation   attacks, implementations SHOULD check the Destination List for   duplicate entries and discard such records with an   "Error_Invalid_Message" error.  This does not completely prevent   loops, but it does require that at least one attacker node be part of   the loop.13.6.6.  Residual Attacks   The routing security mechanisms in RELOAD are designed to contain   rather than eliminate attacks on routing.  It is still possible for   an attacker to mount a variety of attacks.  In particular, if an   attacker is able to take up a position on the overlay routing between   A and B, it can make it appear as if B does not exist or is   disconnected.  It can also advertise false network metrics in an   attempt to reroute traffic.  However, these are primarily DoS   attacks.   The certificate-based security scheme secures the namespace, but if   an individual peer is compromised or if an attacker obtains a   certificate from the CA, then a number of subversive peers can still   appear in the overlay.  While these peers cannot falsify responses to   resource queries, they can respond with error messages, effecting a   DoS attack on the resource registration.  They can also subvert   routing to other compromised peers.  To defend against such attacks,   a resource search must still consist of parallel searches for   replicated registrations.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 152]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.  IANA Considerations   This section contains the new code points registered by this   document.14.1.  Well-Known URI Registration   IANA has registered a "well-known URI" as described in [RFC5785]:           +----------------------------+----------------------+           | URI suffix:                | reload-config        |           | Change controller:         | IETF <iesg@ietf.org> |           | Specification document(s): |RFC 6940             |           | Related information:       | None                 |           +----------------------------+----------------------+14.2.  Port Registrations   IANA has already allocated a TCP port for the main peer-to-peer   protocol.  This port had the name p2psip-enroll and the port number   of 6084.  Per this document, IANA has updated this registration to   change the service name to reload-config.   IANA has made the following port registration:   +-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+   | Registration Technical      | IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>         |   | Contact                     |                                     |   | Registration Owner          | IETF <iesg@ietf.org>                |   | Transport Protocol          | TCP                                 |   | Port Number                 | 6084                                |   | Service Name                | reload-config                       |   | Description                 | Peer-to-Peer Infrastructure         |   |                             | Configuration                       |   +-----------------------------+-------------------------------------+Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 153]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.3.  Overlay Algorithm Types   IANA has created a "RELOAD Overlay Algorithm Types" Registry.   Entries in this registry are strings denoting the names of overlay   algorithms, as described inSection 11.1 of [RFC6940].  The   registration policy for this registry is "IETF Review" [RFC522].  The   initial contents of this registry are:                      +----------------+-----------+                      | Algorithm Name | Reference |                      +----------------+-----------+                      | CHORD-RELOAD   |RFC 6940 |                      | EXP-OVERLAY    |RFC 6940 |                      +----------------+-----------+   The value EXP-OVERLAY has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.4.  Access Control Policies   IANA has created a "RELOAD Access Control Policies" Registry.   Entries in this registry are strings denoting access control   policies, as described inSection 7.3 of [RFC6940].  New entries in   this registry SHALL be registered via Standards Action [RFC5226].   The initial contents of this registry are:                      +-----------------+-----------+                      | Access Policy   | Reference |                      +-----------------+-----------+                      | USER-MATCH      |RFC 6940 |                      | NODE-MATCH      |RFC 6940 |                      | USER-NODE-MATCH |RFC 6940 |                      | NODE-MULTIPLE   |RFC 6940 |                      | EXP-MATCH       |RFC 6940 |                      +-----------------+-----------+   The value EXP-MATCH has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 154]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.5.  Application-ID   IANA has created a "RELOAD Application-ID" Registry.  Entries in this   registry are 16-bit integers denoting Application-IDs, as described   inSection 6.5.2 of [RFC6940].  Code points in the range 1 to 32767   SHALL be registered via Standards Action [RFC5226].  Code points in   the range 32768 to 61440 SHALL be registered via Expert Review   [RFC5226].  Code points in the range 61441 to 65534 are reserved for   private use.  The initial contents of this registry are:     +-------------+----------------+-------------------------------+     | Application | Application-ID |                 Specification |     +-------------+----------------+-------------------------------+     | INVALID     |              0 |RFC 6940 |     | SIP         |           5060 | Reserved for use by SIP Usage |     | SIP         |           5061 | Reserved for use by SIP Usage |     | Reserved    |          65535 |RFC 6940 |     +-------------+----------------+-------------------------------+14.6.  Data Kind-ID   IANA has created a "RELOAD Data Kind-ID" registry.  Entries in this   registry are 32-bit integers denoting data Kinds, as described inSection 5.2 of [RFC6940].  Code points in the range 0x00000001 to   0x7FFFFFFF SHALL be registered via Standards Action [RFC5226].  Code   points in the range 0x8000000 to 0xF0000000 SHALL be registered via   Expert Review [RFC5226].  Code points in the range 0xF0000001 to   0xFFFFFFFE are reserved for private use via the Kind description   mechanism described inSection 11 of [RFC6940].  The initial contents   of this registry are:             +---------------------+------------+-----------+             | Kind                |    Kind-ID | Reference |             +---------------------+------------+-----------+             | INVALID             |        0x0 |RFC 6940 |             | TURN-SERVICE        |        0x2 |RFC 6940 |             | CERTIFICATE_BY_NODE |        0x3 |RFC 6940 |             | CERTIFICATE_BY_USER |       0x10 |RFC 6940 |             | Reserved            | 0x7fffffff |RFC 6940 |             | Reserved            | 0xfffffffe |RFC 6940 |             +---------------------+------------+-----------+Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 155]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.7.  Data Model   IANA has created a "RELOAD Data Model" registry.  Entries in this   registry are strings denoting data models, as described inSection 7.2 of [RFC6940].  New entries in this registry SHALL be   registered via Standards Action [RFC5226].  The initial contents of   this registry are:                        +------------+-----------+                        | Data Model | Reference |                        +------------+-----------+                        | INVALID    |RFC 6940 |                        | SINGLE     |RFC 6940 |                        | ARRAY      |RFC 6940 |                        | DICTIONARY |RFC 6940 |                        | EXP-DATA   |RFC 6940 |                        | RESERVED   |RFC 6940 |                        +------------+-----------+   The value EXP-DATA has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.8.  Message Codes   IANA has created a "RELOAD Message Codes" registry.  Entries in this   registry are 16-bit integers denoting method codes, as described inSection 6.3.3 of [RFC6940].  These codes SHALL be registered via   Standards Action [RFC5226].  The initial contents of this registry   are:Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 156]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+   | Message Code Name                   |     Code Value | Reference |   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+   | invalidMessageCode                  |            0x0 |RFC 6940 |   | probe_req                           |            0x1 |RFC 6940 |   | probe_ans                           |            0x2 |RFC 6940 |   | attach_req                          |            0x3 |RFC 6940 |   | attach_ans                          |            0x4 |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned                          |            0x5 |           |   | Unassigned                          |            0x6 |           |   | store_req                           |            0x7 |RFC 6940 |   | store_ans                           |            0x8 |RFC 6940 |   | fetch_req                           |            0x9 |RFC 6940 |   | fetch_ans                           |            0xA |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was remove_req)         |            0xB |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was remove_ans)         |            0xC |RFC 6940 |   | find_req                            |            0xD |RFC 6940 |   | find_ans                            |            0xE |RFC 6940 |   | join_req                            |            0xF |RFC 6940 |   | join_ans                            |           0x10 |RFC 6940 |   | leave_req                           |           0x11 |RFC 6940 |   | leave_ans                           |           0x12 |RFC 6940 |   | update_req                          |           0x13 |RFC 6940 |   | update_ans                          |           0x14 |RFC 6940 |   | route_query_req                     |           0x15 |RFC 6940 |   | route_query_ans                     |           0x16 |RFC 6940 |   | ping_req                            |           0x17 |RFC 6940 |   | ping_ans                            |           0x18 |RFC 6940 |   | stat_req                            |           0x19 |RFC 6940 |   | stat_ans                            |           0x1A |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was attachlite_req)     |           0x1B |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was attachlite_ans)     |           0x1C |RFC 6940 |   | app_attach_req                      |           0x1D |RFC 6940 |   | app_attach_ans                      |           0x1E |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was app_attachlite_req) |           0x1F |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned (was app_attachlite_ans) |           0x20 |RFC 6940 |   | config_update_req                   |           0x21 |RFC 6940 |   | config_update_ans                   |           0x22 |RFC 6940 |   | exp_a_req                           |           0x23 |RFC 6940 |   | exp_a_ans                           |           0x24 |RFC 6940 |   | exp_b_req                           |           0x25 |RFC 6940 |   | exp_b_ans                           |           0x26 |RFC 6940 |   | Reserved                            | 0x8000..0xFFFE |RFC 6940 |   | error                               |         0xFFFF |RFC 6940 |   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 157]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The values exp_a_req, exp_a_ans, exp_b_req, and exp_b_ans have been   made available for the purposes of experimentation.  These values are   not meant for vendor-specific use of any sort, and they MUST NOT be   used for operational deployments.14.9.  Error Codes   IANA has created a "RELOAD Error Code" registry.  Entries in this   registry are 16-bit integers denoting error codes, as described inSection 6.3.3.1 of [RFC6940].  New entries SHALL be defined via   Standards Action [RFC5226].  The initial contents of this registry   are:   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+   | Error Code Name                     |     Code Value | Reference |   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+   | invalidErrorCode                    |            0x0 |RFC 6940 |   | Unassigned                          |            0x1 |           |   | Error_Forbidden                     |            0x2 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Not_Found                     |            0x3 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Request_Timeout               |            0x4 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Generation_Counter_Too_Low    |            0x5 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Incompatible_with_Overlay     |            0x6 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Unsupported_Forwarding_Option |            0x7 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Data_Too_Large                |            0x8 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Data_Too_Old                  |            0x9 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_TTL_Exceeded                  |            0xA |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Message_Too_Large             |            0xB |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Unknown_Kind                  |            0xC |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Unknown_Extension             |            0xD |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Response_Too_Large            |            0xE |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Config_Too_Old                |            0xF |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Config_Too_New                |           0x10 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_In_Progress                   |           0x11 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Exp_A                         |           0x12 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Exp_B                         |           0x13 |RFC 6940 |   | Error_Invalid_Message               |           0x14 |RFC 6940 |   | Reserved                            | 0x8000..0xFFFE |RFC 6940 |   +-------------------------------------+----------------+-----------+   The values Error_Exp_A and Error_Exp_B have been made available for   the purposes of experimentation.  These values are not meant for   vendor-specific use of any sort, and they MUST NOT be used for   operational deployments.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 158]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.10.  Overlay Link Types   IANA has created a "RELOAD Overlay Link Registry".  Entries in this   registry are 8-bit integers, as described inSection 6.5.1.1 of   [RFC6940].  For more information on the link types defined here, seeSection 6.6 of [RFC6940].  New entries SHALL be defined via Standards   Action [RFC5226].  This registry has been initially populated with   the following values:                 +--------------------+------+-----------+                 | Protocol           | Code | Reference |                 +--------------------+------+-----------+                 | INVALID-PROTOCOL   |    0 |RFC 6940 |                 | DTLS-UDP-SR        |    1 |RFC 6940 |                 | DTLS-UDP-SR-NO-ICE |    3 |RFC 6940 |                 | TLS-TCP-FH-NO-ICE  |    4 |RFC 6940 |                 | EXP-LINK           |    5 |RFC 6940 |                 | Reserved           |  255 |RFC 6940 |                 +--------------------+------+-----------+   The value EXP-LINK has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.11.  Overlay Link Protocols   IANA has created a "RELOAD Overlay Link Protocol Registry".  Entries   in this registry are strings denoting protocols as described inSection 11.1 of this document and SHALL be defined via Standards   Action [RFC5226].  This registry has been initially populated with   the following values:                       +---------------+-----------+                       | Link Protocol | Reference |                       +---------------+-----------+                       | TLS           |RFC 6940 |                       | EXP-PROTOCOL  |RFC 6940 |                       +---------------+-----------+   The value EXP-PROTOCOL has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 159]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.12.  Forwarding Options   IANA has created a "RELOAD Forwarding Option Registry".  Entries in   this registry are 8-bit integers denoting options, as described inSection 6.3.2.3 of [RFC6940].  Values between 1 and 127 SHALL be   defined via Standards Action [RFC5226].  Entries in this registry   between 128 and 254 SHALL be defined via Specification Required   [RFC5226].  This registry has been initially populated with the   following values:              +-------------------------+------+-----------+              | Forwarding Option       | Code | Reference |              +-------------------------+------+-----------+              | invalidForwardingOption |    0 |RFC 6940 |              | exp-forward             |    1 |RFC 6940 |              | Reserved                |  255 |RFC 6940 |              +-------------------------+------+-----------+   The value exp-forward has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.13.  Probe Information Types   IANA has created a "RELOAD Probe Information Type Registry".  Entries   are 8-bit integers denoting types as described inSection 6.4.2.5.1   of [RFC6940] and SHALL be defined via Standards Action [RFC5226].   This registry has been initially populated with the following values:                 +--------------------+------+-----------+                 | Probe Option       | Code | Reference |                 +--------------------+------+-----------+                 | invalidProbeOption |    0 |RFC 6940 |                 | responsible_set    |    1 |RFC 6940 |                 | num_resources      |    2 |RFC 6940 |                 | uptime             |    3 |RFC 6940 |                 | exp-probe          |    4 |RFC 6940 |                 | Reserved           |  255 |RFC 6940 |                 +--------------------+------+-----------+   The value exp-probe has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 160]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.14.  Message Extensions   IANA has created a "RELOAD Extensions Registry".  Entries in this   registry are 8-bit integers denoting extensions as described inSection 6.3.3 of [RFC6940] and SHALL be defined via Specification   Required [RFC5226].  This registry has been initially populated with   the following values:           +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+           | Extensions Name             |   Code | Reference |           +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+           | invalidMessageExtensionType |    0x0 |RFC 6940 |           | exp-ext                     |    0x1 |RFC 6940 |           | Reserved                    | 0xFFFF |RFC 6940 |           +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+   The value exp-ext has been made available for the purposes of   experimentation.  This value is not meant for vendor-specific use of   any sort, and it MUST NOT be used for operational deployments.14.15.  Reload URI Scheme   This section describes the scheme for a reload URI, which can be used   to refer to either:   o  A peer, e.g., as used in a certificate (seeSection 11.3 of      [RFC6940]).   o  A resource inside a peer.   The reload URI is defined using a subset of the URI schema specified   inAppendix A of RFC 3986 [RFC3986] and the associated URI Guidelines   [RFC4395] per the following ABNF syntax:      RELOAD-URI = "reload://" destination "@" overlay "/"               [specifier]      destination = 1*HEXDIG      overlay = reg-name      specifier = 1*HEXDIG   The definitions of these productions are as follows:   destination      A hexadecimal-encoded Destination List object (i.e., multiple      concatenated Destination objects with no length prefix prior to      the object as a whole).Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 161]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   overlay      The name of the overlay.   specifier      A hexadecimal-encoded StoredDataSpecifier indicating the data      element.   If no specifier is present, this URI addresses the peer which can be   reached via the indicated Destination List at the indicated overlay   name.  If a specifier is present, the URI addresses the data value.14.15.1.  URI Registration   The following summarizes the information necessary to register the   reload URI.   URI Scheme Name:  reload   Status:   permanent   URI Scheme Syntax:  seeSection 14.15 of RFC 6940   URI Scheme Semantics:  The reload URI is intended to be used as a      reference to a RELOAD peer or resource.   Encoding Considerations:  The reload URI is not intended to be human-      readable text, so it is encoded entirely in US-ASCII.   Applications/protocols that Use this URI Scheme:  The RELOAD protocol      described inRFC 6940.   Interoperability Considerations:  SeeRFC 6940.   Security Considerations:  SeeRFC 6940   Contact:  Cullen Jennings <fluffy@cisco.com>   Author/Change Controller:  IESG   References:RFC 694014.16.  Media Type Registration   Type Name: application   Subtype Name: p2p-overlay+xml   Required Parameters: noneJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 162]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   Optional Parameters: none   Encoding Considerations: Must be binary encoded.   Security Considerations: This media type is typically not used to   transport information that needs to be kept confidential.  However,   there are cases where it is integrity of the information is   important.  For these cases, using a digital signature is   RECOMMENDED.  One way of doing this is specified inRFC 6940.  In the   case when the media includes a shared-secret element, the contents of   the file MUST be kept confidential or else anyone who can see the   shared secret can affect the RELOAD overlay network.   Interoperability Considerations: No known interoperability   consideration beyond those identified for application/xml in   [RFC3023].   Published Specification:RFC 6940   Applications that Use this Media Type: The type is used to configure   the peer-to-peer overlay networks defined inRFC 6940.   Additional Information: The syntax for this media type is specified   inSection 11.1 of [RFC6940].  The contents MUST be valid XML that is   compliant with the RELAX NG grammar specified inRFC 6940 and that   use the UTF-8[RFC3629] character encoding.      Magic Number(s): none      File Extension(s): relo      Macintosh File Type Code(s): none   Person & Email Address to Contact for Further Information: Cullen   Jennings <fluffy@cisco.com>   Intended Usage: COMMON   Restrictions on Usage: None   Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@cisco.com>   Change Controller: IESG14.17.  XML Namespace Registration   This document registers two URIs for the config and config-chord XML   namespaces in the IETF XML registry defined in [RFC3688].Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 163]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201414.17.1.  Config URL   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-base   Registrant Contact: IESG.   XML: N/A, the requested URIs are XML namespaces14.17.2.  Config Chord URL   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:config-chord   Registrant Contact: The IESG.   XML: N/A, the requested URIs are XML namespaces15.  Acknowledgments   This specification is a merge of the "REsource LOcation And Discovery   (RELOAD)" document by David A. Bryan, Marcia Zangrilli, and Bruce B.   Lowekamp; the "Address Settlement by Peer to Peer" document by Cullen   Jennings, Jonathan Rosenberg, and Eric Rescorla; the "Security   Extensions for RELOAD" document by Bruce B. Lowekamp and James   Deverick; the "A Chord-based DHT for Resource Lookup in P2PSIP" by   Marcia Zangrilli and David A. Bryan; and the Peer-to-Peer Protocol   (P2PP) document by Salman A. Baset, Henning Schulzrinne, and Marcin   Matuszewski.  Thanks to the authors of [RFC5389] for text included   from that document.  Vidya Narayanan provided many comments and   improvements.   The ideas and text for the Chord-specific extension data to the Leave   mechanisms were provided by Jouni Maenpaa, Gonzalo Camarillo, and   Jani Hautakorpi.   Thanks to the many people who contributed, including Ted Hardie,   Michael Chen, Dan York, Das Saumitra, Lyndsay Campbell, Brian Rosen,   David Bryan, Dave Craig, and Julian Cain.  Extensive last call   comments were provided by Jouni Maenpaa, Roni Even, Gonzalo   Camarillo, Ari Keranen, John Buford, Michael Chen, Frederic-Philippe   Met, Mary Barnes, Roland Bless, David Bryan, and Polina Goltsman.   Special thanks to Marc Petit-Huguenin, who provided an amazing amount   of detailed review.   Dean Willis and Marc Petit-Huguenin helped resolve and provided text   to fix many comments received during the IESG review.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 164]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 201416.  References16.1.  Normative References   [OASIS.relax_ng]              Bray, T. and M. Murata, "RELAX NG Specification", December              2001.   [RFC1918]  Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and              E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP5,RFC 1918, February 1996.   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2388]  Masinter, L., "Returning Values from Forms: multipart/              form-data",RFC 2388, August 1998.   [RFC2585]  Housley, R. and P. Hoffman, "Internet X.509 Public Key              Infrastructure Operational Protocols: FTP and HTTP",RFC2585, May 1999.   [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for              specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",RFC 2782,              February 2000.   [RFC2818]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS",RFC 2818, May 2000.   [RFC3023]  Murata, M., St. Laurent, S., and D. Kohn, "XML Media              Types",RFC 3023, January 2001.   [RFC3174]  Eastlake, D. and P. Jones, "US Secure Hash Algorithm 1              (SHA1)",RFC 3174, September 2001.   [RFC3339]  Klyne, G., Ed. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the              Internet: Timestamps",RFC 3339, July 2002.   [RFC3447]  Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography              Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications              Version 2.1",RFC 3447, February 2003.   [RFC3629]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO              10646", STD 63,RFC 3629, November 2003.   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC3986, January 2005.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 165]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   [RFC4279]  Eronen, P. and H. Tschofenig, "Pre-Shared Key Ciphersuites              for Transport Layer Security (TLS)",RFC 4279, December              2005.   [RFC4395]  Hansen, T., Hardie, T., and L. Masinter, "Guidelines and              Registration Procedures for New URI Schemes",BCP 35,RFC4395, February 2006.   [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data              Encodings",RFC 4648, October 2006.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.   [RFC5245]  Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment              (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT)              Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols",RFC 5245, April              2010.   [RFC5246]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security              (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246, August 2008.   [RFC5272]  Schaad, J. and M. Myers, "Certificate Management over CMS              (CMC)",RFC 5272, June 2008.   [RFC5273]  Schaad, J. and M. Myers, "Certificate Management over CMS              (CMC): Transport Protocols",RFC 5273, June 2008.   [RFC5389]  Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,              "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389,              October 2008.   [RFC5405]  Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "Unicast UDP Usage Guidelines              for Application Designers",BCP 145,RFC 5405, November              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.   [RFC5952]  Kawamura, S. and M. Kawashima, "A Recommendation for IPv6              Address Text Representation",RFC 5952, August 2010.   [RFC6091]  Mavrogiannopoulos, N. and D. Gillmor, "Using OpenPGP Keys              for Transport Layer Security (TLS) Authentication",RFC6091, February 2011.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 166]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   [RFC6234]  Eastlake, D. and T. Hansen, "US Secure Hash Algorithms              (SHA and SHA-based HMAC and HKDF)",RFC 6234, May 2011.   [RFC6298]  Paxson, V., Allman, M., Chu, J., and M. Sargent,              "Computing TCP's Retransmission Timer",RFC 6298, June              2011.   [RFC6347]  Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer              Security Version 1.2",RFC 6347, January 2012.   [W3C.REC-xmlschema-2-20041028]              Malhotra, A. and P. Biron, "XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes              Second Edition", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation              REC-xmlschema-2-20041028, October 2004,              <http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-2-20041028>.   [w3c-xml-namespaces]              Bray, T., Hollander, D., Layman, A., Tobin, R., and              University of Edinburgh and W3C, "Namespaces in XML 1.0              (Third Edition)", December 2008.16.2.  Informative References   [Chord]    Stoica, I., Morris, R., Liben-Nowell, D., Karger, D.,              Kaashoek, M., Dabek, F., and H. Balakrishnan, "Chord: A              Scalable Peer-to-peer Lookup Protocol for Internet              Applications", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking Volume              11, Issue 1, 17-32, Feb 2003, 2001.   [DHT-RELOAD]              Maenpaa, J. and G. Camarillo, "A Self-tuning Distributed              Hash Table (DHT) for REsource LOcation And Discovery              (RELOAD)", Work in Progress, August 2013.   [Eclipse]  Singh, A., Ngan, T., Druschel, T., and D. Wallach,              "Eclipse Attacks on Overlay Networks: Threats and              Defenses", INFOCOM 2006, April 2006.   [P2P-DIAGNOSTICS]              Song, H., Jiang, X., Even, R., and D. Bryan, "P2P Overlay              Diagnostics", Work in Progress, August 2013.   [P2PSIP-RELAY]              Zong, N., Jiang, X., Even, R., and Y. Zhang, "An extension              to RELOAD to support Relay Peer Routing", Work in              Progress, October 2013.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 167]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   [REDIR-RELOAD]              Maenpaa, J. and G. Camarillo, "Service Discovery Usage for              REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD)", Work in              Progress, August 2013.   [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and              specification", STD 13,RFC 1035, November 1987.   [RFC1122]  Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts -              Communication Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122, October 1989.   [RFC2311]  Dusse, S., Hoffman, P., Ramsdell, B., Lundblade, L., and              L. Repka, "S/MIME Version 2 Message Specification",RFC2311, March 1998.   [RFC3688]  Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry",BCP 81,RFC 3688,              January 2004.   [RFC4013]  Zeilenga, K., "SASLprep: Stringprep Profile for User Names              and Passwords",RFC 4013, February 2005.   [RFC4086]  Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness              Requirements for Security",BCP 106,RFC 4086, June 2005.   [RFC4145]  Yon, D. and G. Camarillo, "TCP-Based Media Transport in              the Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 4145,              September 2005.   [RFC4340]  Kohler, E., Handley, M., and S. Floyd, "Datagram              Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)",RFC 4340, March 2006.   [RFC4787]  Audet, F. and C. Jennings, "Network Address Translation              (NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast UDP",BCP 127,RFC 4787, January 2007.   [RFC4960]  Stewart, R., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",RFC4960, September 2007.   [RFC5054]  Taylor, D., Wu, T., Mavrogiannopoulos, N., and T. Perrin,              "Using the Secure Remote Password (SRP) Protocol for TLS              Authentication",RFC 5054, November 2007.   [RFC5095]  Abley, J., Savola, P., and G. Neville-Neil, "Deprecation              of Type 0 Routing Headers in IPv6",RFC 5095, December              2007.   [RFC5201]  Moskowitz, R., Nikander, P., Jokela, P., and T. Henderson,              "Host Identity Protocol",RFC 5201, April 2008.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 168]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,              Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key              Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List              (CRL) Profile",RFC 5280, May 2008.   [RFC5694]  Camarillo, G., Ed., and IAB, "Peer-to-Peer (P2P)              Architecture: Definition, Taxonomies, Examples, and              Applicability",RFC 5694, November 2009.   [RFC5765]  Schulzrinne, H., Marocco, E., and E. Ivov, "Security              Issues and Solutions in Peer-to-Peer Systems for Realtime              Communications",RFC 5765, February 2010.   [RFC5785]  Nottingham, M. and E. Hammer-Lahav, "Defining Well-Known              Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs)",RFC 5785, April              2010.   [RFC6079]  Camarillo, G., Nikander, P., Hautakorpi, J., Keranen, A.,              and A. Johnston, "HIP BONE: Host Identity Protocol (HIP)              Based Overlay Networking Environment (BONE)",RFC 6079,              January 2011.   [RFC6544]  Rosenberg, J., Keranen, A., Lowekamp, B., and A. Roach,              "TCP Candidates with Interactive Connectivity              Establishment (ICE)",RFC 6544, March 2012.   [RFC7086]  Keranen, A., Camarillo, G., and J. Maenpaa, "Host Identity              Protocol-Based Overlay Networking Environment (HIP BONE)              Instance Specification for REsource LOcation And Discovery              (RELOAD)",RFC 7086, January 2014.   [SIP-RELOAD]              Jennings, C., Lowekamp, B., Rescorla, E., Baset, S.,              Schulzrinne, H., and T. Schmidt, "A SIP Usage for RELOAD",              Work in Progress, July 2013.   [Sybil]    Douceur, J., "The Sybil Attack", IPTPS 02, March 2002.   [UnixTime] Wikipedia, "Unix Time", 2013, <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Unix_time&oldid=551527446>.   [bryan-design-hotp2p08]              Bryan, D., Lowekamp, B., and M. Zangrilli, "The Design of              a Versatile, Secure P2PSIP Communications Architecture for              the Public Internet", Hot-P2P'08, 2008.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 169]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   [handling-churn-usenix04]              Rhea, S., Geels, D., Roscoe, T., and J. Kubiatowicz,              "Handling Churn in a DHT", In Proc. of the USENIX Annual              Technical Conference June 2004 USENIX 2004, 2004.   [lookups-churn-p2p06]              Wu, D., Tian, Y., and K. Ng, "Analytical Study on              Improving DHT Lookup Performance under Churn", IEEE              P2P'06, 2006.   [minimizing-churn-sigcomm06]              Godfrey, P., Shenker, S., and I. Stoica, "Minimizing Churn              in Distributed Systems", SIGCOMM 2006, 2006.   [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05]              Freedman, M., Lakshminarayanan, K., Rhea, S., and I.              Stoica, "Non-Transitive Connectivity and DHTs", WORLDS'05,              2005.   [opendht-sigcomm05]              Rhea, S., Godfrey, B., Karp, B., Kubiatowicz, J.,              Ratnasamy, S., Shenker, S., Stoica, I., and H. Yu,              "OpenDHT: A Public DHT and its Uses", SIGCOMM'05, 2005.   [vulnerabilities-acsac04]              Srivatsa, M. and L. Liu, "Vulnerabilities and Security              Threats in Structured Peer-to-Peer Systems: A Quantitative              Analysis", ACSAC 2004, 2004.   [wikiChord]              Wikipedia, "Chord (peer-to-peer)", 2013,              <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chord_%28peer-to-peer%29&oldid=549516287>.   [wikiKBR]  Wikipedia, "Key-based routing", 2013, <en.wikipedia.org/w/              index.php?title=Key-based_routing&oldid=543850833>.   [wikiSkiplist]              Wikipedia, "Skip list", 2013, <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Skip_list&oldid=551304213>.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 170]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014Appendix A.  Routing Alternatives   Significant discussion has been focused on the selection of a routing   algorithm for P2PSIP.  This section discusses the motivations for   selecting symmetric recursive routing for RELOAD and describes the   extensions that would be required to support additional routing   algorithms.A.1.  Iterative vs. Recursive   Iterative routing has a number of advantages.  It is easier to debug,   consumes fewer resources on intermediate peers, and allows the   querying peer to identify and route around misbehaving peers   [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05].  However, in the presence of NATs,   iterative routing is intolerably expensive, because a new connection   must be established for each hop (using ICE) [bryan-design-hotp2p08].   Iterative routing is supported through the RouteQuery mechanism and   is primarily intended for debugging.  It also allows the querying   peer to evaluate the routing decisions made by the peers at each hop,   consider alternatives, and perhaps detect at what point the   forwarding path fails.A.2.  Symmetric vs. Forward Response   An alternative to the symmetric recursive routing method used by   RELOAD is forward-only routing, where the response is routed to the   requester as if it were a new message initiated by the responder.   (In the previous example, Z sends the response to A as if it were   sending a request.)  Forward-only routing requires no state in either   the message or intermediate peers.   The drawback of forward-only routing is that it does not work when   the overlay is unstable.  For example, if A is in the process of   joining the overlay and is sending a Join request to Z, it is not yet   reachable via forward-only routing.  Even if it is established in the   overlay, if network failures produce temporary instability, A may not   be reachable (and may be trying to stabilize its network connectivity   via Attach messages).   Furthermore, forward-only responses are less likely to reach the   querying peer than symmetric recursive ones are, because the forward   path is more likely to have a failed peer than is the request path   (which was just tested to route the request)   [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05].Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 171]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   An extension to RELOAD that supports forward-only routing but relies   on symmetric responses as a fallback would be possible, but due to   the complexities of determining when to use forward-only routing and   when to fallback to symmetric routing, we have chosen not to include   it as an option at this point.A.3.  Direct Response   Another routing option is direct response routing, in which the   response is returned directly to the querying node.  In the previous   example, if A encodes its IP address in the request, then Z can   simply deliver the response directly to A.  In the absence of NATs or   other connectivity issues, this is the optimal routing technique.   The challenge of implementing direct response routing is the presence   of NATs.  There are a number of complexities that must be addressed.   In this discussion, we will continue our assumption that A issued the   request and Z is generating the response.   o  The IP address listed by A may be unreachable, either due to NAT      or firewall rules.  Therefore, a direct response technique must      fallback to symmetric response [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05].      The hop-by-hop ACKs used by RELOAD allow Z to determine when A has      received the message (and the TLS negotiation will provide earlier      confirmation that A is reachable), but this fallback requires a      timeout that will increase the response latency whenever A is not      reachable from Z.   o  Whenever A is behind a NAT it, will have multiple candidate IP      addresses, each of which must be advertised to ensure      connectivity.  Therefore, Z will need to attempt multiple      connections to deliver the response.   o  One (or all) of A's candidate addresses may route from Z to a      different device on the Internet.  In the worst case, these nodes      may actually be running RELOAD on the same port.  Therefore, it is      absolutely necessary to establish a secure connection to      authenticate A before delivering the response.  This step      diminishes the efficiency of direct response routing, because      multiple round-trips are required before the message can be      delivered.   o  If A is behind a NAT and does not have a connection already      established with Z, there are only two ways the direct response      will work.  The first is that A and Z must both be behind the same      NAT, in which case the NAT is not involved.  In the more common      case, when Z is outside A's NAT, the response will be received      only if A's NAT implements endpoint-independent filtering.  As theJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 172]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014      choice of filtering mode conflates application transparency with      security [RFC4787] and no clear recommendation is available, the      prevalence of this feature in future devices remains unclear.   An extension to RELOAD that supports direct response routing but   relies on symmetric responses as a fallback would be possible, but   due to the complexities of determining when to use direct response   routing and when to fallback to symmetric routing, and the reduced   performance for responses to peers behind restrictive NATs, we have   chosen not to include it as an option at this point.A.4.  Relay Peers   [P2PSIP-RELAY] has proposed implementing a form of direct response by   having A identify a peer, Q, that will be directly reachable by any   other peer.  A uses Attach to establish a connection with Q and   advertises Q's IP address in the request sent to Z.  Z sends the   response to Q, which relays it to A.  This then reduces the latency   to two hops, and Z is negotiating a secure connection to Q.   This technique relies on the relative population of nodes such as A   that require relay peers and peers such as Q that are capable of   serving as a relay peer.  It also requires nodes to be able to   identify which category they are in.  This identification problem has   turned out to be hard to solve and is still an open area of   exploration.   An extension to RELOAD that supports relay peers is possible, but due   to the complexities of implementing such an alternative, we have not   added such a feature to RELOAD at this point.   A concept similar to relay peers, essentially choosing a relay peer   at random, has previously been suggested to solve problems of pair-   wise non-transitivity [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05], but   deterministic filtering provided by NATs makes random relay peers no   more likely to work than the responding peer.A.5.  Symmetric Route Stability   A common concern about symmetric recursive routing has been that one   or more peers along the request path may fail before the response is   received.  The significance of this problem essentially depends on   the response latency of the overlay.  An overlay that produces slow   responses will be vulnerable to churn, whereas responses that are   delivered very quickly are vulnerable only to failures that occur   over that small interval.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 173]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   The other aspect of this issue is whether the request itself can be   successfully delivered.  Assuming typical connection maintenance   intervals, the time period between the last maintenance and the   request being sent will be orders of magnitude greater than the delay   between the request being forwarded and the response being received.   Therefore, if the path was stable enough to be available to route the   request, it is almost certainly going to remain available to route   the response.   An overlay that is unstable enough to suffer this type of failure   frequently is unlikely to be able to support reliable functionality   regardless of the routing mechanism.  However, regardless of the   stability of the return path, studies show that in the event of high   churn, iterative routing is a better solution to ensure request   completion [lookups-churn-p2p06] [non-transitive-dhts-worlds05]   Finally, because RELOAD retries the end-to-end request, that retry   will address the issues of churn that remain.Appendix B.  Why Clients?   There are a wide variety of reasons a node may act as a client rather   than as a peer.  This section outlines some of those scenarios and   how the client's behavior changes based on its capabilities.B.1.  Why Not Only Peers?   For a number of reasons, a particular node may be forced to act as a   client even though it is willing to act as a peer.  These include:   o  The node does not have appropriate network connectivity, typically      because it has a low-bandwidth network connection.   o  The node may not have sufficient resources, such as computing      power, storage space, or battery power.   o  The overlay algorithm may dictate specific requirements for peer      selection.  These may include participating in the overlay to      determine trustworthiness, controlling the number of peers in the      overlay to reduce overly long routing paths, and ensuring minimum      application uptime before a node can join as a peer.   The ultimate criteria for a node to become a peer are determined by   the overlay algorithm and specific deployment.  A node acting as a   client that has a full implementation of RELOAD and the appropriate   overlay algorithm is capable of locating its responsible peer in the   overlay and using Attach to establish a direct connection to that   peer.  In that way, it may elect to be reachable under either of theJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 174]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014   routing approaches listed above.  Particularly for overlay algorithms   that elect nodes to serve as peers based on trustworthiness or   population, the overlay algorithm may require such a client to locate   itself at a particular place in the overlay.B.2.  Clients as Application-Level Agents   SIP defines an extensive protocol for registration and security   between a client and its registrar/proxy server(s).  Any SIP device   can act as a client of a RELOAD-based P2PSIP overlay if it contacts a   peer that implements the server-side functionality required by the   SIP protocol.  In this case, the peer would be acting as if it were   the user's peer and would need the appropriate credentials for that   user.   Application-level support for clients is defined by a usage.  A usage   offering support for application-level clients should specify how the   security of the system is maintained when the data is moved between   the application and RELOAD layers.Jennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 175]

RFC 6940                       RELOAD Base                  January 2014Authors' Addresses   Cullen Jennings   Cisco   400 3rd Avenue SW, Suite 350   Calgary   Canada   EMail: fluffy@cisco.com   Bruce B. Lowekamp (editor)   Skype   Palo Alto, CA   USA   EMail: bbl@lowekamp.net   Eric Rescorla   RTFM, Inc.   2064 Edgewood Drive   Palo Alto, CA  94303   USA   Phone: +1 650 678 2350   EMail: ekr@rtfm.com   Salman A. Baset   Columbia University   1214 Amsterdam Avenue   New York, NY   USA   EMail: salman@cs.columbia.edu   Henning Schulzrinne   Columbia University   1214 Amsterdam Avenue   New York, NY   USA   EMail: hgs@cs.columbia.eduJennings, et al.             Standards Track                  [Page 176]

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