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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          Y. ZhangRequest for Comments: 6972                                       CoolpadCategory: Informational                                          N. ZongISSN: 2070-1721                                      Huawei Technologies                                                               July 2013Problem Statement and Requirements ofthe Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocol (PPSP)Abstract   Peer-to-Peer (P2P) streaming systems becoming more and more popular   on the Internet, and most of them are using proprietary protocols.   This document identifies problems associated with proprietary   protocols; proposes the development of the Peer-to-Peer Streaming   Protocol (PPSP), which includes the tracker and peer protocols; and   discusses the scope, requirements, and use cases of PPSP.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   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).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 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/rfc6972.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 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.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1.  Backgrounds  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2.  Requirements Language  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Terminology and Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33.  Problem Statement  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.1.  Heterogeneous P2P Traffic and P2P Cache Deployment . . . .53.2.  QoS Issue and CDN Deployment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5     3.3.  Extended Applicability in Mobile and Wireless           Environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.  Tasks of PPSP: Standard Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocols . . .74.1.  Tasks and Design Issues of the Tracker Protocol  . . . . .84.2.  Tasks and Design Issues of the Peer Protocol . . . . . . .95.  Use Cases of PPSP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.1.  Worldwide Provision of Live/VoD Streaming  . . . . . . . .95.2.  Enabling CDN for P2P VoD Streaming . . . . . . . . . . . .115.3.  Cross-Screen Streaming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.4.  Cache Service Supporting P2P Streaming . . . . . . . . . .135.5.  Proxy Service Supporting P2P Streaming . . . . . . . . . .145.5.1.  Home Networking Scenario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .145.5.2.  Browser-Based HTTP Streaming . . . . . . . . . . . . .146.  Requirements of PPSP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.1.  Basic Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.2.  Operational and Management Requirements  . . . . . . . . .156.2.1.  Operational Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . .166.2.2.  Management Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .176.3.  PPSP Tracker Protocol Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . .176.4.  PPSP Peer Protocol Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . .187.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .198.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .219.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .219.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .219.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20131.  Introduction1.1.  Backgrounds   Streaming traffic is among the largest and fastest growing traffic on   the Internet [Cisco].  Peer-to-Peer (P2P) streaming contributes   substantially to this growth.  With the advantage of high scalability   and fault tolerance against a single point of failure, P2P streaming   applications are able to distribute large-scale, live, and video-on-   demand (VoD) streaming programs to a large audience with only a   handful of servers.  More and more providers are joining the P2P   streaming ecosystem, e.g., Content Distribution Networks (CDN)   providers started using P2P technologies to distribute their   streaming content.   Given the increasing integration of P2P streaming in the global   content delivery infrastructure, there is a need for an open and   standard streaming signaling protocol suite.  Almost all existing   systems use proprietary protocols.  Having multiple proprietary   protocols that perform similar functions results in repetitious   development efforts for new systems, and the lock-in effects lead to   substantial integration difficulties with other players (e.g., CDN).   For example, in the enhancement of existing caches and CDN systems to   support P2P streaming, proprietary protocols may increase the   complexity of interactions with different P2P streaming applications.   In this document, we propose the development of an open, P2P   Streaming Protocol, which is abbreviated as PPSP, to standardize   signaling operations in the P2P streaming system to solve the above-   mentioned problems.1.2.  Requirements Language   The key words "MUST" and "MUST NOT" in this document are to be   interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119] and indicate   requirement levels for compliant implementations.2.  Terminology and Concepts   CHUNK: A CHUNK is a basic unit of data organized in P2P streaming for   storage, scheduling, advertisement, and exchange among peers [VoD].   A CHUNK size varies from several KBs to several MBs in different   systems.  In the case of the MB size CHUNK scenario, a sub-CHUNK   structure named piece is often defined to fit in a single transmitted   packet.  A streaming system may use different granularities for   different usage, e.g., using CHUNKs during data exchange and using a   larger unit such as a set of CHUNKs during advertisement.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   CHUNK ID: The identifier of a CHUNK in a content stream.   CLIENT: A CLIENT refers to a participant in a P2P streaming system   that only receives streaming content.  In some cases, a node not   having enough computing and storage capabilities will act as a   CLIENT.  Such a node can be viewed as a specific type of PEER.   CONTENT DISTRIBUTION NETWORK (CDN): A CDN is a collection of nodes   that are deployed, in general, at the network edge, like Points of   Presence (POP) or Data Centers (DC), and store content provided by   the original content servers.  Typically, CDN nodes serve content to   the users located nearby topologically.   LIVE STREAMING: LIVE STREAMING refers to a scenario where all the   audiences receive streaming content for the same ongoing event.  It   is desired that the lags between the play points of the audiences and   streaming source be small.   P2P CACHE: A P2P CACHE refers to a network entity that caches P2P   traffic in the network and, either transparently or explicitly,   streams content to other PEERs.   PEER: A PEER refers to a participant in a P2P streaming system that   not only receives streaming content, but also caches and streams   streaming content to other participants.   PEER LIST: A list of PEERs that are in the same SWARM maintained by   the TRACKER.  A PEER can fetch the PEER LIST of a SWARM from the   TRACKER or from other PEERs in order to know which PEERs have the   required streaming content.   PEER ID: The identifier of a PEER such that other PEERs, or the   TRACKER, can refer to the PEER by using its ID.   PEER-TO-PEER STREAMING PROTOCOL (PPSP): PPSPs refer to the primary   signaling protocols among various P2P streaming system components,   including the TRACKER and the PEER.   TRACKER: A TRACKER refers to a directory service that maintains a   list of PEERs participating in a specific audio/video channel or in   the distribution of a streaming file.  Also, the TRACKER answers PEER   LIST queries received from PEERs.  The TRACKER is a logical component   that can be centralized or distributed.   VIDEO ON DEMAND (VoD): VIDEO ON DEMAND refers to a scenario in which   different audiences may watch different parts of the same recorded   streaming with downloaded content.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   SWARM: A SWARM refers to a group of PEERs that exchange data to   distribute CHUNKs of the same content (e.g., video/audio program,   digital file, etc.) at a given time.   SWARM ID: The identifier of a SWARM containing a group of PEERs   sharing a common streaming content.   SUPER-NODE: A SUPER-NODE is a special kind of PEER deployed by ISPs.   This kind of PEER is more stable with higher computing, storage, and   bandwidth capabilities than normal PEERs.3.  Problem Statement   The problems caused by proprietary protocols for P2P streaming   applications are described in this section.3.1.  Heterogeneous P2P Traffic and P2P Cache Deployment   ISPs are faced with different P2P streaming applications introducing   substantial traffic into their infrastructure, including their   backbone and their exchange/interconnection points.  P2P caches are   used by ISPs to locally store content and hence reduce the P2P   traffic.  P2P caches usually operate at the chunk or file   granularity.   However, unlike web traffic that is represented by HTTP requests and   responses and therefore allows any caching device to be served (as   long as it supports HTTP), P2P traffic is originated by multiple P2P   applications that require the ISPs to deploy different type of caches   for the different types of P2P streams.   This increases both engineering and operational costs dramatically.3.2.  QoS Issue and CDN Deployment   When compared to client/server streaming, P2P streaming is often   criticized due to its poorer QoS performance (e.g., longer startup   delay, longer seek delay, and channel switch delay).  Hybrid CDN/P2P   is a good approach to address this problem [CDN-P2P].   In order to form the hybrid P2P+CDN architecture, the CDN must be   aware of the specific P2P streaming protocol in the collaboration.   Similar to what is described inSection 3.1, proprietary P2P   protocols introduce complexity and the deployment cost of CDN.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20133.3.  Extended Applicability in Mobile and Wireless Environments   Mobile and wireless networks, which make considerable use of   streaming service, are becoming increasingly important in today's   Internet.  It's reported that the average volume of video traffic on   mobile networks had risen up to 50% in the early part of 2012   [ByteMobile].  There are multiple prior studies exploring P2P   streaming in mobile and wireless networks [Mobile-Streaming1]   [Mobile-Streaming2].   However, it's difficult to directly apply current P2P streaming   protocols (even assuming we can reuse some of the proprietary ones)   in mobile and wireless networks.   Following are some illustrative problems:      First, P2P streaming assumes a stable Internet connection in      downlink and uplink directions, with decent capacity and peers      that can run for hours.  This isn't the typical setting for mobile      terminals.  Usually, the connections are unstable and expensive in      terms of energy consumption and transmission (especially in uplink      direction).  To make mobile/wireless P2P streaming feasible,      trackers may need more information on peers like packet loss rate,      peer battery status, and processing capability during peer      selection as compared to fixed peers.  Unfortunately, current      protocols don't convey this kind of information.      Second, current practices often use a "bitmap" message in order to      exchange chunk availability.  The message size is in kilobytes and      is exchanged frequently, e.g., an interval of several seconds or      less.  In a mobile environment with scarce bandwidth, the message      size may need to be shortened, or it may require more efficient      methods for expressing and distributing chunk-availability      information, which is different from wireline P2P streaming.      Third, for resource-constrained peers, like mobile handsets or      set-top boxes (STB), there are multiple systems competing for      severely limited resources when using proprietary protocols.  The      terminal has to install different streaming client software for      different usages, e.g., some for movies and others for sports.      Each of these applications will compete for the same set of      resources, even when one of the applications is running in      background mode.  PPSP can alleviate this problem with the basic      idea that the "one common client software with PPSP and different      scheduling plug-ins" is better than "different client software      running at the same time" in memory and disk consumption.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20134.  Tasks of PPSP: Standard Peer-to-Peer Streaming Protocols   PPSP aims to solve the problems mentioned above by standardizing   signaling protocols that support either live or VoD streaming.  PPSP   supports both centralized and distributed trackers.  In distributed   trackers, the tracker functionality is distributed in decentralized   peers.  In this section, the tracker is a logic conception that can   be implemented in a dedicated tracker server or in peers.   The PPSP design includes a signaling protocol between trackers and   peers (the PPSP "tracker protocol") and a signaling protocol among   the peers (the PPSP "peer protocol") as shown in Figure 1.  The two   protocols enable peers to receive streaming content within the time   constraints.                +------------------------------------------------+                |                                                |                |     +--------------------------------+         |                |     |            Tracker             |         |                |     +--------------------------------+         |                |        |     ^                   ^             |                |Tracker |     | Tracker           |Tracker      |                |Protocol|     | Protocol          |Protocol     |                |        |     |                   |             |                |        V     |                   |             |                |     +---------+    Peer     +---------+        |                |     |   Peer  |<----------->|   Peer  |        |                |     +---------+   Protocol  +---------+        |                |       | ^                                      |                |       | |Peer                                  |                |       | |Protocol                              |                |       V |                                      |                |     +---------------+                          |                |     |      Peer     |                          |                |     +---------------+                          |                |                                                |                |                                                |                +------------------------------------------------+                    Figure 1: PPSP System Architecture   The PPSP design, in general, needs to solve the following challenges:      1) When joining a swarm, how does a peer know which peers it      should contact for content?      2) After determining a set of peers, how does a peer make contact      with these peers?  In which manner?Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013      3) How to choose peers with better service capabilities and how to      collect such information from peers?      4) How to improve the efficiency of the communication, e.g., which      compact on-the-wire message format and suitable underlying      transport mechanism (UDP or TCP)?      5) How to improve the robustness of the system using PPSP, e.g.,      when the tracker fails?  How to make the tracker protocol and the      peer protocol loosely coupled?4.1.  Tasks and Design Issues of the Tracker Protocol   The tracker protocol handles the initial and periodic exchange of   meta-information between trackers and peers, such as a peer list and   content information.   Therefore, the tracker protocol is best modeled as a request/response   protocol between peers and trackers, and will carry information   needed for the selection of peers suitable for real-time/VoD   streaming.   Special tasks for the design of the tracker protocol are listed   below.  This is a high-level task list.  The detailed requirements on   the design of the tracker protocol are explicated inSection 6.      1) How should a peer be globally identified?  This is related to      the peer ID definition but irrelevant to how the peer ID is      generated.      2) How to identify different peers, e.g., peers with public or      private IP addresses, peers behind or not behind NAT, peers with      IPV4 or IPV6 addresses, peers with different properties?      3) The tracker protocol must be light weight, since a tracker may      need to serve a large number of peers.  This is related to the      encoding issue (e.g., Binary based or Text based) and keep-alive      mechanism.      4) How can the tracker report an optimized peer list to serve      particular content?  This is related to the status statistic, with      which the tracker can be aware of the peer status and content      status.   The PPSP tracker protocol will consider all these issues in the   design according to the requirements from both the peer and tracker   perspectives and will also take into consideration deployment and   operation perspectives.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20134.2.  Tasks and Design Issues of the Peer Protocol   The peer protocol controls the advertising and exchange of content   between the peers.   Therefore, the peer protocol is modeled as a gossip-like protocol   with periodic exchanges of neighbor and chunk-availability   information.   Special tasks for the design of the peer protocol are listed below.   This is a high-level task-list.  The detailed requirements on the   design of the peer protocol are explicated inSection 6.      1) How is certain content globally identified and verified?  Since      the content can be retrieved from everywhere, how to ensure the      exchanged content between the peers is authentic?      2) How to identify the chunk availability in certain content?      This is related to the chunk-addressing and chunk-state      maintenance.  Considering the large amount of chunks in certain      content, light-weight expression is necessary.      3) How to ensure the peer protocol efficiency?  As we mentioned inSection 3, the chunk availability information exchange is quite      frequent.  How to balance the information exchange size and amount      is a big challenge.   The PPSP peer protocol will consider all the above issues in the   design according to the requirements from the peer perspective.5.  Use Cases of PPSP   This section is not a to-do list for the WG; it provides details on   how PPSP could be used in practice.5.1.  Worldwide Provision of Live/VoD Streaming   The content provider can increase live streaming coverage by   introducing PPSP between different providers.  This is quite similar   to the case described in CDNI [RFC6707] [RFC6770].   Let us assume a scenario in which there is only provider A (e.g., in   China) providing live streaming service in provider B's (e.g., in the   USA) and C's (e.g., in Europe) coverage.  Without PPSP, when a user   (e.g., a Chinese American) in the USA requests the program to the   tracker (which is located in A's coverage), the tracker may generally   return a peer list to the user including most of the peers in China,   because generally most users are in China and there are only fewZhang & Zong                  Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   users in the USA.  This may affect the user experience.  But, if we   can use the PPSP tracker protocol to involve B and C in the   cooperative provision, as shown in Figure 2, even when the streaming   does no attract many users in the USA and Europe, the tracker in A   can optimally return a peer list to the user including B's and C's   Super-Nodes (SN for short) to provide a better user performance.   Furthermore, B's User2 and C's User3 can exchange data (availability)   with these local SNs using the peer protocol.   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+   |                                                                   |   |                          +------------------+                     |   |            +------------>| A's      Tracker |<----------+         |   |            |             +------------------+           |         |   |     Tracker|                ^              ^            |         |   |    Protocol|         Tracker|              |Tracker     |Tracker  |   |            |        Protocol|              |Protocol    |Protocol |   |            |                |              |            |         |   |            |                |              |            |         |   |            v                v              v            v         |   |      +------+ Peer    +------+            +------+    +------+    |   |      | B's  |<------->| B's  |            | C's  |    | C's  |    |   |      | SN1  |Protocol | SN2  |            | SN1  |    | SN2  |    |   |      +------+         +------+            +------+    +------+    |   |         ^  ^                                           ^ ^        |   |         |  |                                           | |        |   |         |  | Peer Protocol                Peer Protocol| |        |   | Peer    |  +-------------+              +--------------+ |Peer    |   | Protocol|                |              |                |Protocol|   |         |                |              |                |        |   |         |                |              |                |        |   |         |                |              |                |        |   |         v                v              v                v        |   |      +------+ Peer    +------+    +---------+  Peer   +---------+ |   |      | A's  |<------> | B's  |    |A's      |<------> |C's      | |   |      | User1|Protocol | User2|    | User1   |Protocol | User3   | |   |      +------+         +------+    +---------+         +---------+ |   |                                                                   |   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+                 Figure 2: Cooperative Vendors InteractionZhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20135.2.  Enabling CDN for P2P VoD Streaming   Figure 3 shows an example of enabling CDN to support P2P VoD   streaming from different content providers by introducing PPSP inside   CDN overlays.  It is similar to Figure 2, except that the   intermediate SNs are replaced by 3rd party CDN surrogates.  The CDN   nodes talk with the different streaming systems (including trackers   and peers) using the same PPSP protocols.   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+   |                                                                   |   |                   +-------------+    +--------------+             |   |            +----->| A's Tracker |    |  B's Tracker |<---+        |   |            |      +-------------+    +--------------+    |        |   |     Tracker|              ^  ^        ^    ^             |        |   |    Protocol|       Tracker|  |Tracker |    |Tracker      |Tracker |   |            |      Protocol|  |Protocol|    |Protocol     |Protocol|   |            |              |  |        |    |             |        |   |            |              |  |        |    |             |        |   |            v              v  |        |    v             v        |   |      +------+ Peer   +------+|        |  +------+Internal+------+ |   |      | CDN  |<------>| CDN  ||        |  | CDN  |<-----> | CDN  | |   |      | Node1|Protocol| Node2||        |  | Node3|Protocol| Node4| |   |      +------+        +------+|        |  +------+        +------+ |   |         ^  ^                 |        |        ^         ^        |   |         |  |                 |        |        |         |        |   |         |  | Peer Protocol   |        |   HTTP |         |        |   | Peer    |  +-------------+   |        | +------+         |Peer    |   | Protocol|                |   |        | | Protocol       |Protocol|   |         |                | +-+        | |                |        |   |         |                | |          | |                |        |   |         |                | |          | |                |        |   |         v                v v          v v                v        |   |      +------+ Peer    +------+    +---------+  Peer   +---------+ |   |      | A's  |<------> | A's  |    |B's      |<------> |B's      | |   |      | User1|Protocol | User2|    | User3   |Protocol | User4   | |   |      +------+         +------+    +---------+         +---------+ |   |                                                                   |   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+                  Figure 3: CDN Supporting P2P Streaming   Furthermore, the interaction between the CDN nodes can be executed by   either existing (maybe proprietary) protocols or the PPSP peer   protocol.  The peer protocol is useful for building new CDN systems   (e.g., operator CDN) that support streaming at a low cost.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   Note that for compatibility reasons, both HTTP and P2P streaming can   be supported by CDN from the users' perspective.5.3.  Cross-Screen Streaming   In this scenario, PC, STB/TV, and mobile terminals from both fixed   and mobile/wireless networks share the streaming content.  With PPSP,   peers can identify the types of access networks, average load, and   peer abilities and get to know what content other peers have even in   different networks (potentially with the conversion of the content   availability expression in different networks) as shown in Figure 4.    +------------------------------------------------------------------+    |                                                                  |    |      Tracker Protocol  +---------+   Tracker Protocol            |    |        +-------------> | Tracker |<------------------+           |    |        |               +---------+                   |           |    |        |                    ^                        |           |    |        |                    |                        |           |    |        |                    |                        |           |    |        V                    |                        V           |    |    +------+                 |                +------------+      |    |    |  STB |           Tracker Protocol       |Mobile Phone|      |    |    +------+                 |                +------------+      |    |        ^                    |                        ^           |    |        |                    |                        |           |    |        |                    |                        |           |    |        |                    V                        |           |    |        |Peer Protocol  +---------+    Peer Protocol  |           |    |        +-------------> |    PC   |<------------------+           |    |                        +---------+                               |    |                                                                  |    +------------------------------------------------------------------+              Figure 4: Heterogeneous P2P Streaming with PPSP   Such information will play an important role in selecting suitable   peers, e.g., a PC or STB is more likely to provide stable content,   and a mobile peer within a high-load cell is unlikely to be selected,   which may lead to a higher load on the base station.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20135.4.  Cache Service Supporting P2P Streaming   In Figure 5, when peers request the P2P streaming data, the cache   nodes intercept the requests and ask for the frequently visited   content (or part of) on behalf of the peers.  To do this, it asks the   tracker for the peer list and the tracker replies with external peers   in the peer list.  After the cache nodes exchange data with these   peers, it can also act as a peer and report what it caches to the   tracker and serve inside requesting peers afterward.  This operation   greatly decreases the inter-network traffic in many conditions and   enhances the user experience.      +----------------------------------------------------------------+      |                                                                |      |    Tracker Protocol +---------+                                |      |  +----------------> | Tracker |                                |      |  |                  +---------+                                |      |  |                       ^                                     |      |  |                       |                                     |      |  |                       | Tracker Protocol                    |      |  |                       |                                     |      |  |                       |                                     |      |  |             +---------|-------------------------------------|      |  |             |         V                                     |      |  |             |     +---------+                               |      |  |  +----------|---> | Cache   |<-------------------+          |      |  |  |          |     +---------+        Tracker/Peer|          |      |  |  | Peer     |                          Protocol  |          |      |  |  | Protocol |                                    |          |      |  |  |          |                                    |          |      |  |  |          |                                    |          |      |  V  V          |                                    V          |      |  +-----------+ |        ISP Domain             +------------+  |      |  |  External | |                               |   Inside   |  |      |  |  Peer     | |                               |   Peer     |  |      |  +-----------+ |                               +------------+  |      +----------------------------------------------------------------+          Figure 5: Cache Service Supporting Streaming with PPSP   The cache nodes do not need to update their library when new   applications supporting PPSP are introduced, which reduces the cost.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20135.5.  Proxy Service Supporting P2P Streaming5.5.1.  Home Networking Scenario   For applications where the peer is not colocated with the Media   Player in the same device (e.g., the peer is located in a Home Media   Gateway), we can use a PPSP Proxy, as shown in Figure 6.       +---------------------------------------------------------------+       |                                                               |       |    Tracker Protocol +--------+                                |       |  +----------------> | Tracker|                                |       |  |                  +--------+                                |       |  |                       ^                                    |       |  |                       |                                    |       |  |                       | Tracker Protocol                   |       |  |                       |                                    |       |  |             +---------|------------------------------------|       |  |             |         V                                    |       |  |             |     +--------+                               |       |  |  +----------|---> |  PPSP   |<------------------+          |       |  |  |          |     |  Proxy  |       DLNA         |         |       |  |  | Peer     |     +--------+       Protocol     |          |       |  |  | Protocol|                                    |          |       |  |  |          |                                    |         |       |  V  V          |                                    V         |       |  +-----------+ |        Home Domain            +-----------+  |       |  |  External | |                               |DLNA  Pres.|  |       |  |  Peer     | |                               |Devices    |  |       |  +-----------+ |                               +-----------+  |       +---------------------------------------------------------------+             Figure 6: Proxy Service Supporting P2P Streaming   As shown in Figure 6, the PPSP Proxy terminates both the tracker and   peer protocol, allowing the legacy presentation devices to access P2P   streaming content.  In Figure 6, the Digital Living Network Alliance   (DLNA) protocol [DLNA] is used in order to communicate with the   presentation devices, thanks to its wide deployment.  Obviously,   other protocols can also be used.5.5.2.  Browser-Based HTTP Streaming   P2P Plug-ins are often used in browser-based environments to stream   content.  With P2P plug-ins, HTTP streaming can be turned into P2P   streaming.  From the browser (and hence the user) perspective, it's   just HTTP-based streaming, but the PPSP-capable plug-in can actually   accelerate the process by leveraging streams from multiple sources/Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   peers [P2PYoutube].  In this case, the plug-ins behave just like the   proxy.6.  Requirements of PPSP   This section enumerates the requirements that should be considered   when designing PPSP.6.1.  Basic Requirements   PPSP.REQ-1: Each peer MUST have a unique ID (i.e., peer ID).      It's a basic requirement for a peer to be uniquely identified in a      P2P streaming system so that other peers or trackers can refer to      the peer by ID.      Note that a peer can join multiple swarms with a unique ID or      change swarm without changing its ID.   PPSP.REQ-2: The streaming content MUST be uniquely identified by a   swarm ID.      A swarm refers to a group of peers sharing the same streaming      content.  A swarm ID uniquely identifies a swarm.  The swarm ID      can be used in two cases: 1) a peer requests the tracker for the      peer list indexed by a swarm ID; 2) a peer tells the tracker about      the swarms it belongs to.   PPSP.REQ-3: The streaming content MUST be partitioned into chunks.   PPSP.REQ-4: Each chunk MUST have a unique ID (i.e., chunk ID) in the   swarm.      Each chunk must have a unique ID in the swarm so that the peer can      understand which chunks are stored in which peers and which chunks      are requested by other peers.6.2.  Operational and Management Requirements   This section lists some operational and management requirements based   on the checklist presented inAppendix A of [RFC5706].Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20136.2.1.  Operational Considerations   PPSP.OAM.REQ-1: PPSP MUST be sufficiently configurable.      According to basic requirements, when setting up PPSP, a content      provider should generate chunk IDs and a swarm ID for each stream      of content.  An original content server and tracker are configured      and set up.  The content provider should then publish this      information, typically by creating web links.      The configuration should allow the proxy-based and end-client      scenarios.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-2: PPSP MUST implement a set of configuration parameters   with default values.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-3: PPSP MUST support diagnostic operations.      Mechanisms must be supported by PPSP to verify correct operation.      The PPSP tracker should collect the status of the peers including      the peer's activity, whether it obtained chunks in time, etc.      Such information can be used to monitor the streaming behavior of      PPSP.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-4: PPSP MUST facilitate achieving quality acceptable to   the streaming application.      There are basic quality requirements for streaming systems.  The      setup time to receive a new streaming channel or to switch between      channels should be reasonably small.  End-to-end delay, which      consists of the time between content generation (e.g., a camera)      and content consumption (e.g., a monitor), will become critical in      case of live streaming, especially in provisioning of sporting      events where an end-to-end delay of 1 minute or more are not      acceptable.      For instance, the tracker and peer protocol can carry quality      related parameters (e.g., video quality and delay requirements)      together with the priorities of these parameters, in addition to      the measured QoS situation (e.g., performance, available uplink      bandwidth) of content providing peers.      PPSP implementations may use techniques such as scalable streaming      to handle bandwidth shortages without disrupting playback.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20136.2.2.  Management Considerations   PPSP.OAM.REQ-5: When management objectives need to be supported in   implementations, PPSP MUST support remote management using a standard   interface, as well as a basic set of management information.      Due to large-scale peer networks, PPSP tracker service or seeders      should remotely collect information from peers and expose the      information via a standard interface for management purposes.      Peer information can be collected via a PPSP tracker protocol or      peer protocol.      The minimum set of management objects should include swarm      information such as content characteristics and rate limits;      tracking information such as swarm list and log events; and peer      information such as peer activity, chunk statistics, and log      event.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-6: PPSP MUST support fault monitoring including peer and   server health, as well as the streaming behavior of peers.      Peer and server health will at least include node activity and      connectivity, especially for peers behind NAT.  As mentioned in      PPSP.OAM.REQ-4, streaming behavior of the peer can be learned from      chunk distribution information.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-7: PPSP MUST support configuration management to define   the configuration parameters.      A set of configurable parameters related to chunk generation in      the PPSP setup stage can be defined by content providers via a      management interface to content servers.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-8: PPSP MUST support performance management with respect   to streaming performance based on chunk distribution statistics,   network load, and tracker and peer monitoring.   PPSP.OAM.REQ-9: PPSP MUST support security management.  SeeSection 7   of this document.6.3.  PPSP Tracker Protocol Requirements   PPSP.TP.REQ-1: The tracker protocol MUST allow the peer to solicit a   peer list in a swarm generated and possibly tailored by the tracker   in a query and response manner.      The tracker request message may include the requesting peer's      preference parameter (e.g., preferred number of peers in the peerZhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013      list) or preferred downloading bandwidth.  The tracker will then      be able to select an appropriate set of peers for the requesting      peer according to the preference.      The tracker may also generate the peer list with the help of      traffic optimization services, e.g., Application-Layer Traffic      Optimization [ALTO].   PPSP.TP.REQ-2: The tracker protocol MUST report the peer's activity   in the swarm to the tracker.   PPSP.TP.REQ-3: The tracker protocol MUST take the frequency of   message exchange and efficient bandwidth use into consideration when   communicating chunk availability information.      For example, the chunk availability information between peer and      tracker can be presented in a compact method, e.g., to express a      sequence of continuous "1" more efficiently.   PPSP.TP.REQ-4: The tracker protocol MUST have a provision for the   tracker to authenticate the peer.      This ensures that only the authenticated users can access the      original content in the P2P streaming system.6.4.  PPSP Peer Protocol Requirements   PPSP.PP.REQ-1: The peer protocol MUST allow the peer to solicit the   chunk information from other peers in a query and response manner.   PPSP.PP.REQ-2: The chunk information exchanged between a pair of   peers MUST NOT be passed to other peers, unless the chunk information   is validated (e.g., preventing hearsay and DoS attacks).   PPSP.PP.REQ-3: The peer protocol MUST allow the peer to solicit an   additional list of peers to that received from the tracker.      It is possible that a peer may need additional peers for certain      streaming content.  Therefore, the peer is allowed to communicate      with other peers in the current peer list to obtain an additional      list of peers in the same swarm.   PPSP.PP.REQ-4: When used for soliciting an additional list of peers,   the peer protocol MUST contain swarm-membership information of the   peers that have explicitly indicated they are part of the swarm,   which is verifiable by the receiver.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   PPSP.PP.REQ-5: The additional list of peers MUST only contain peers   that have been checked to be valid and online recently (e.g.,   preventing hearsay and DoS attacks).   PPSP.PP.REQ-6: The peer protocol MUST report the peer's chunk   availability update.      Due to the dynamic change of the buffered streaming content in      each peer and the frequent join/leave of peers in the swarm, the      streaming content availability among a peer's neighbors (i.e., the      peers known to a peer by getting the peer list from either the      tracker or peers) always changes, and thus requires being updated      on time.  This update should be done at least on demand.  For      example, when a peer requires finding more peers with certain      chunks, it sends a message to some other peers in the swarm for a      streaming content availability update.  Alternatively, each peer      in the swarm can advertise its streaming content availability to      some other peers periodically.  However, the detailed mechanisms      for this update, such as how far to spread the update message, how      often to send this update message, etc., should be left to the      algorithms, rather than protocol concerns.   PPSP.PP.REQ-7: The peer protocol MUST take the frequency of message   exchange and efficient bandwidth use into consideration when   communicating chunk information.      For example, the chunk availability information between peers can      be presented in a compact method.   PPSP.PP.REQ-8: The peer protocol MUST exchange additional   information, e.g., status about the peers.      This information can be, for instance, information about the      access link or information about whether a peer is running on      battery or is connected to a power supply.  With such information,      a peer can select more appropriate peers for streaming.7.  Security Considerations   This document discusses the problem statement and requirements around   P2P streaming protocols without specifying the protocols.  However,   we believe it is important for the reader to understand areas of   security introduced by the P2P nature of the proposed solution.  The   main issue is the usage of untrusted entities (peers) for service   provisioning.  For example, malicious peers/trackers may:   o  Originate DoS attacks to the trackers by sending a large number of      requests with the tracker protocol;Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   o  Originate fake information on behalf of other peers;   o  Originate fake information about chunk availability;   o  Originate fake reply messages on behalf of the tracker;   o  Leak private information about other peers or trackers.   We list some important security requirements for PPSP protocols   below:   PPSP.SEC.REQ-1: PPSP MUST support closed swarms, where the peers are   authenticated or in a private network.      This ensures that only the trusted peers can access the original      content in the P2P streaming system.  This can be achieved by      security mechanisms such as peer authentication and/or key      management schemes.      Another aspect is that confidentiality of the streaming content in      PPSP needs to be supported.  In order to achieve this, PPSP should      provide mechanisms to encrypt the data exchange among the peers.   PPSP.SEC.REQ-2: Integrity of the streaming content in PPSP MUST be   supported to provide a peer with the possibility of identifying   unauthentic content (undesirable modifications by other entities   rather than its genuine source).      In a P2P live streaming system, a polluter can introduce corrupted      chunks.  Each receiver integrates into its playback stream the      polluted chunks it receives from its neighbors.  Since the peers      forward chunks to other peers, the polluted content can      potentially spread through the P2P streaming network.      The PPSP protocol specifications will document the expected      threats (and how they will be mitigated by each protocol) and also      considerations on threats and mitigations when combining both      protocols in an application.  This will include privacy of the      users and protection of the content distribution.   PPSP.SEC.REQ-3: The security mechanisms in PPSP, such as key   management and checksum distribution, MUST scale well in P2P   streaming systems.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 20138.  Acknowledgements   Thanks to J. Seng, G. Camarillo, R. Yang, C. Schmidt, R. Cruz, Y. Gu,   A. Bakker, and S. Previdi for contributing to many sections of this   document.  Thank you to C. Williams, V. Pascual, and L. Xiao for   contributing to the PPSP requirements section.   We would like to acknowledge the following people who provided   review, feedback, and suggestions to this document: M. Stiemerling,   D. Bryan, E. Marocco, V. Gurbani, R. Even, H. Zhang, D. Zhang,   J. Lei, H. Song, X. Jiang, J. Seedorf, D. Saumitra, A. Rahman,   J. Pouwelse, W. Eddy, B. Claise, D. Harrington, J. Arkko, and all the   AD reviewers.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC5706]  Harrington, D., "Guidelines for Considering Operations and              Management of New Protocols and Protocol Extensions",RFC 5706, November 2009.   [RFC6707]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Le Faucheur, F., and N. Bitar, "Content              Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI) Problem              Statement",RFC 6707, September 2012.   [RFC6770]  Bertrand, G., Stephan, E., Burbridge, T., Eardley, P., Ma,              K., and G. Watson, "Use Cases for Content Delivery Network              Interconnection",RFC 6770, November 2012.9.2.  Informative References   [ALTO]     Alimi, R., Penno, R., and Y. Yang,"ALTO Protocol", Work              in Progress, December 2009.   [ByteMobile]              Bytemobile, "Mobile Video Traffic Hits Nearly 70% on              Certain Networks", February 2012,              <http://www.bytemobile.com/news-events/2012/archive_230212.html>.Zhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 6972                 PPSP Problem Statement                July 2013   [CDN-P2P]  Xu, D., Kulkarni, S., Rosenberg, C., and H-K. Chai,              "Analysis of a CDN-P2P Hybrid Architecture for              Cost-Effective Streaming Media Distribution", Multimedia              Systems, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 383-399, 2006.   [Cisco]    Cisco, "Cisco Visual Networking Index: Forecast and              Methodology, 2012 - 2017", Visual Networking Index (VNI),              <http://www.cisco.com/en/US/solutions/collateral/ns341/              ns525/ns537/ns705/ns827/ white_paper_c11-481360_              ns827_Networking_Solutions_White_Paper.html>.   [DLNA]     "DLNA", <http://www.dlna.org>.   [Mobile-Streaming1]              Noh, J., Makar, M., and B. Girod, "Streaming To Mobile              Users In A Peer-to-Peer Network", MOBIMEDIA , 2009.   [Mobile-Streaming2]              Peltotalo, J., Harju, J., Saukkoh, M., Vaatamoinen, L.,              Bouazizi, I., Curcio, I., and J. van Gassel, "A Real-Time              Peer-to-Peer Streaming System for Mobile Networking              Environment", Proceedings of the INFOCOM and Workshop on              Mobile Video Delivery (MoVID '09), 2009.   [P2PYoutube]              "Youtube Extension-Opera Add-Ons", Opera Software,              <https://addons.opera.com/en/extensions/details/p2p-youtube/>.   [VoD]      Huang, Y., Fu, T., Chiu, D-M.,  Lui, J., and C. Huang,              "Challenges, Design and Analysis of a Large-Scale P2P-VoD              System", SIGCOMM , 2008.Authors' Addresses   Yunfei Zhang   Coolpad   EMail: hishigh@gmail.com   Ning Zong   Huawei Technologies   EMail: zongning@huawei.comZhang & Zong                  Informational                    [Page 22]

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