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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                           E. IvovRequest for Comments: 7081                                         JitsiCategory: Informational                                   P. Saint-AndreISSN: 2070-1721                                      Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                              E. Marocco                                                          Telecom Italia                                                           November 2013CUSAX: Combined Use of the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)and the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)Abstract   This document suggests some strategies for the combined use of the   Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and the Extensible Messaging and   Presence Protocol (XMPP) both in user-oriented clients and in   deployed servers.  Such strategies, which mainly consist of   configuration changes and minimal software modifications to existing   clients and servers, aim to provide a single, full-featured, real-   time communication service by using complementary subsets of features   from SIP and from XMPP.  Typically, such subsets consist of telephony   capabilities from SIP and instant messaging and presence capabilities   from XMPP.  This document does not define any new protocols or syntax   for either SIP or XMPP and, by intent, does not attempt to   standardize "best current practices".  Instead, it merely aims to   provide practical guidance to those who are interested in the   combined use of SIP and XMPP for real-time communication.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/rfc7081.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013Copyright 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.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Client Bootstrap ................................................53. Operation .......................................................63.1. Server-Side Setup ..........................................73.2. Service Management .........................................73.3. Client-Side Discovery and Usability ........................83.4. Indicating a Relationship between SIP and XMPP Accounts ....93.5. Matching Incoming SIP Calls to XMPP JIDs ..................104. Multi-Party Interactions .......................................115. Federation .....................................................126. Summary of Suggested Strategies ................................137. Security Considerations ........................................148. References .....................................................158.1. Normative References ......................................158.2. Informative References ....................................16Appendix A. Acknowledgements ......................................181.  Introduction   Historically, SIP [RFC3261] and XMPP [RFC6120] have often been   implemented and deployed with different purposes: from its very   start, SIP's primary goal has been to provide a means of conducting   "Internet telephone calls".  On the other hand, XMPP has, from its   Jabber days, been mostly used for instant messaging, presence   [RFC6121], and related services such as groupchat rooms [XEP-0045].Ivov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   For various reasons, these trends have continued through the years,   even after each of the protocols had been equipped to provide the   features it was initially lacking:   o  In the context of the SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence      Leveraging Extensions (SIMPLE) working group, the IETF has defined      a number of protocols and protocol extensions that not only allow      for SIP to be used for regular instant messaging and presence but      that also provide mechanisms for related features such as      multi-party chat, server-stored contact lists, and file transfer      [RFC6914].   o  Similarly, the XMPP community and the XMPP Standards Foundation      have worked on defining a number of XMPP Extension Protocols      (XEPs) that provide XMPP implementations with the means of      establishing end-to-end sessions.  These extensions are often      jointly referred to as Jingle [XEP-0166], and arguably their most      popular use case is audio and video calling [XEP-0167].   However, although SIP has been extended for messaging and presence   and XMPP has been extended for voice and video, the reality is that   SIP remains the protocol of choice for telephony-like services, and   XMPP remains the protocol of choice for IM and presence services.  As   a result, a number of adopters have found themselves needing features   that are not offered by any single-protocol solution, but ones that   separately exist in SIP and XMPP implementations.  The idea of   seamlessly using both protocols together would hence often appeal to   service providers and users.  Most often, such a service would employ   SIP exclusively for audio, video, and telephony services and rely on   XMPP for anything else varying from chat, contact-list management,   and presence to whiteboarding and exchanging files.  Because these   services and clients involve the combined use of SIP and XMPP, we   label them "CUSAX" for short.                     +------------+      +-------------+                     | SIP Server |      | XMPP Server |                     +------------+      +-------------+                              \             /                     media     \           /  instant messaging,                     signaling  \         /   presence, etc.                                 \       /                              +--------------+                              | CUSAX Client |                              +--------------+                  Figure 1: Division of ResponsibilitiesIvov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   This document suggests different configuration options and minimal   modifications to existing software so that clients and servers can   offer these hybrid services while providing an optimal user   experience.  It covers server discovery, determining a SIP Address of   Record (AOR) while using XMPP, and determining an XMPP Jabber   Identifier (JID) from incoming SIP requests.  Most of the text here   pertains to client behavior, but we also suggest certain server-side   configurations and operational strategies.  The document also   discusses significant security considerations that can arise when   offering a dual-protocol solution and provides advice for avoiding   security mismatches that would result in degraded communications   security for end users.   Note that this document is focused on coexistence of SIP and XMPP   functionality in end-user-oriented clients.  By intent, it does not   define methods for protocol-level mapping between SIP and XMPP, as   might be used within a server-side gateway between a SIP network and   an XMPP network (a separate series of documents has been produced   that defines such mappings).  More generally, this document does not   describe service policies for inter-domain communication (often   called "federation") between service providers (e.g., how a service   provider that offers a CUSAX service might communicate with a   SIP-only or XMPP-only service), nor does it describe the reasons why   a service provider might choose SIP or XMPP for various features.   This document concentrates on use cases where the SIP services and   XMPP services are controlled by one and the same provider, since that   assumption greatly simplifies both client implementation and   server-side deployment (e.g., a single service provider can enforce   common or coordinated policies across both the SIP and XMPP aspects   of a CUSAX service, which is not possible if a SIP service is offered   by one provider and an XMPP service is offered by another provider).   Since this document is of an informational nature, it is not   unreasonable for clients to apply some of the guidelines here even in   cases where there is no established relationship between the SIP and   the XMPP services (for example, it is reasonable for a client to   provide a way for its users to easily start a call to a phone number   or SIP URI found in a vCard or obtained from a user directory).   However, the strategies to pursue in such cases are left to   application developers.   This document makes a further simplifying assumption by discussing   only the use of a single client, not use of and coordination among   multiple endpoints controlled by the same user (e.g., user agents   running simultaneously on a laptop computer, tablet, and mobile   phone).  Although user agents running on separate endpoints might   themselves be CUSAX clients or might engage in different aspects of   an interaction (e.g., a user might employ her mobile phone for audioIvov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   and her tablet for video and text chat), such usage complicates the   guidelines for developers of user agents and therefore is left as a   matter of implementation for now.   It is important to note that this document does not attempt to   standardize "best current practices" in the sense defined in the   Internet Standards Process [RFC2026].  Instead, it collects together   informational documentation about some strategies that might prove   helpful to those who implement and deploy combined SIP/XMPP software   and services.  With sufficient use and appropriate modification to   incorporate the lessons of experience, these strategies might someday   form the basis for standardization of best current practices.2.  Client Bootstrap   One of the main problems of using two distinct protocols when   providing one service is the impact on usability.  Email services,   for example, have long been affected by the mixed use of SMTP for   outgoing mail and Post Office Protocol version 3 (POP3) or IMAP for   incoming mail.  Although standard service discovery methods (such as   the proper DNS records) make it possible for a user agent to locate   the right host(s) for connect purposes, they do not provide the kind   of detailed information that is needed to actually configure the user   agent for use with the service.  As a result, it is rather   complicated for inexperienced users to configure a mail client and   start using it with a new service; and as a result, Internet service   providers often need to provide configuration instructions for   various mail clients.  Client developers and communication device   manufacturers, on the other hand, often ship with a number of   so-called "wizard" interfaces that enable users to easily configure   accounts with a number of popular email services.  Although this may   improve the situation to some extent, the user experience is still   clearly suboptimal.   While it should be possible for CUSAX users to manually configure   their separate SIP and XMPP accounts (often using "wizards"), service   providers offering CUSAX services to users of dual-stack SIP/XMPP   clients ought to provide methods for online provisioning, typically   by means of a web-based service at an HTTPS URL (naturally, single-   purpose SIP services or XMPP services could offer such methods as   well, but they can be especially helpful where the two aspects of the   CUSAX service need to have several configuration options in common).   Although the specifics of such mechanisms are outside the scope of   this document, they should make it possible for a service provider to   remotely configure the clients based on minimal user input (e.g.,   only a user ID and password).  As far as the authors are aware, no   open protocol for endpoint configuration is yet available andIvov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   adopted; however, application developers are encouraged to explore   the potential for future progress in this space (e.g., perhaps based   on technologies such as WebFinger [RFC7033]).   By default, when a CUSAX client is used in concert with SIP and XMPP   accounts that have a CUSAX relationship (seeSection 3.4), the client   should disable audio and video calling over XMPP and disable instant   messaging and presence over SIP.  (It is a matter of implementation   whether a CUSAX client allows a user to override these defaults in   various ways, e.g., by domain, by individual contact, or by device.)   The main advantage of this approach is that a client would employ the   most relevant features from both SIP and XMPP when used in the   context of a CUSAX service.  Note that this default configuration   does not apply to stand-alone SIP accounts or XMPP accounts, for   which other settings are likely to be more appropriate (seeSection 3.4 for details).   Once a client has been provisioned, it needs to independently log   into the SIP account and XMPP account that make up the CUSAX   "service" and then maintain both connections.   In order to improve the user experience, when reporting connection   status, a CUSAX client may wish to present the XMPP connection as an   "instant messaging" or a "chat" account and the SIP connection as a   "Voice and Video" or a "Telephony" connection.  The exact naming is   of course entirely up to implementers.  The point is that, in cases   where SIP and XMPP are components of a service offered by a single   provider, such presentation could help users better understand why   they are being shown two different connections for what they perceive   as a single service (especially when one of the connections is   disrupted while the other one is still active).  Alternatively, the   developers of a CUSAX client or the providers of a CUSAX service   might decide to force a client to completely disconnect unless both   aspects are successfully connected.   Clients may also choose to delay their XMPP connection until they   have been successfully registered on SIP.  This would help avoid the   situation where a user appears online to her contacts but calling the   user's client would fail because the user's client is still   connecting to the SIP aspect of the CUSAX service.3.  Operation   Once a CUSAX client has been provisioned and authorized to connect to   the corresponding SIP and XMPP services, it would proceed by   retrieving its XMPP roster.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   The client should use XMPP for most forms of communication with the   contacts from this roster, which will occur naturally because they   were retrieved through XMPP.  Audio/video features, however, would   typically be disabled in the XMPP stack, so media-related   communication based on these features (e.g., direct calls,   conferences, desktop streaming, etc.) would happen over SIP.  The   rest of this section describes deployment, discovery, usability, and   linking semantics that enable CUSAX clients to seamlessly use SIP for   these features.3.1.  Server-Side Setup   In order for CUSAX to function properly, XMPP service administrators   should make sure that at least one of the vCard [RFC6350] "tel"   fields for each contact is properly populated with a SIP URI for the   user's address at the SIP audio/video service provided by the CUSAX   server.  There are no limitations as to the form of that number.  For   example, while it is desirable to maintain a certain consistency   between SIP AORs and XMPP JIDs, that is by no means required.  It is   quite important, however, that the phone number or SIP AOR stored in   the vCard be reachable through the SIP aspect of this CUSAX service.   (The same considerations apply even if the directory storage format   is not vCard storage over XMPP as described by [XEP-0054] or   [XEP-0292].)   Administrators may also choose to include the "video" tel type   defined in [RFC6350] for accounts that would be capable of handling   video communication.   To ensure that the foregoing approach is always respected, service   providers might consider validating the values of vCard "tel" fields   before storing changes.  Of course, such validation would be feasible   only in cases where a single provider controls both the XMPP and the   SIP service since such providers would "know" (e.g., based on use of   a common user database for both services) what SIP AOR corresponds to   a given XMPP user.3.2.  Service Management   The task of operating and managing a stand-alone SIP service or XMPP   service is not always easy.  Combining the two into a unified service   introduces additional challenges, including:   o  The necessity of opening additional ports on the client side if      SIP functionality is added to an existing XMPP deployment, or vice      versa.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   o  The potential for important differences in security posture across      SIP and XMPP (e.g., SIP servers and XMPP servers might support      different Transport Layer Security (TLS) ciphersuites).   o  The need for, ideally, a common authentication backend and other      infrastructure that is shared across the SIP and XMPP aspects of      the combined service.   o  Coordinated monitoring and logging of the SIP and XMPP servers to      enable the correlation of incidents and the pinpointing of      problems.   o  The difficulty of troubleshooting client-side issues, e.g., if the      client loses connectivity for XMPP but maintains its SIP      connection.   Although separation of functionality (SIP for media and XMPP for IM   and presence) can help to ease the operational burden to some extent,   service providers are urged to address the foregoing challenges and   similar issues when preparing to launch a CUSAX service.   Beyond the issues listed above, service providers might want to be   aware of more subtle operational issues that can arise.  For example,   if a service provider uses different network operators for the SIP   service and the XMPP service, end-to-end connectivity might be more   reliable or consistent in one service than in the other service.   Similar issues can arise when the media path and the signaling path   go over different networks, even in stand-alone SIP or XMPP services.   Providers of CUSAX services are advised to consider the potential for   such topologies to cause operational challenges.3.3.  Client-Side Discovery and Usability   When rendering the roster for a particular XMPP account, CUSAX   clients should make sure that users are presented with a "Call"   option for each roster entry that has a properly set "tel" field.   This is the case even if calling features have been disabled for that   particular XMPP account, as advised by this document.  The usefulness   of such a feature is not limited to CUSAX.  After all, numbers are   entered in vCards or stored in directories in order to be dialed and   called.  Hence, as long as an XMPP client has any means of conducting   a call, it may wish to make it possible for the user to easily dial   any numbers that it learned through whatever means.   Clients that have separate triggers (e.g., buttons) for audio calls   and video calls may choose to use the presence or absence of the   "video" tel type defined in [RFC6350] as the basis for choosingIvov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   whether to enable or disable the possibility for starting video calls   (i.e., if there is no "video" tel type for a particular contact, the   client could disable the "video call" button for that contact).   In addition to discovering phone numbers from vCards or user   directories, clients may also check for alternative communication   methods as advertised in XMPP presence broadcasts and Personal   Eventing Protocol nodes as described in "XEP-0152: Reachability   Addresses" [XEP-0152].  However, these indications are merely hints,   and a receiving client ought not associate a SIP address and an XMPP   address unless it has some way to verify the relationship (e.g., the   vCard of the XMPP account lists the SIP address and the vCard of the   SIP account lists the XMPP address, or the relationship is made   explicit in a record provided by a trusted directory).   Alternatively, or in cases where vCard or directory data is not   available, a CUSAX client could take the user's own address book as   the canonical source for contact addresses.3.4.  Indicating a Relationship between SIP and XMPP Accounts   In order to improve usability, in cases where clients are provisioned   with only a single telephony-capable account they ought to initiate   calls immediately upon user request without asking users to indicate   an account that the call should go through.  This way, CUSAX users   (whose only account with calling capabilities is usually the SIP part   of their service) would have a better experience, since from the   user's perspective calls "just work at the click of a button".   In some cases, however, clients will be configured with more than the   two XMPP and SIP accounts provisioned by the CUSAX provider.  Users   are likely to add additional stand-alone XMPP or SIP accounts (or   accounts for other communications protocols), any of which might have   both telephony and instant messaging capabilities.  Such situations   can introduce additional ambiguity since all of the telephony-capable   accounts could be used for calling the numbers the client has learned   from vCards or directories.   To avoid such confusion, client implementers and CUSAX service   providers may choose to indicate the existence of a special   relationship between the SIP and XMPP accounts of a CUSAX service.   For example, let's say that Alice's service provider has opened both   an XMPP account and a SIP account for her.  During or after   provisioning, her client could indicate that alice@xmpp.example.com   has a CUSAX relationship to alice@sip.example.com (i.e., that they   are two aspects of the same service).  This way, whenever Alice   triggers a call to a contact in her XMPP roster, the client would   preferentially initiate this call through her example.com SIP account   even if other possibilities exist (such as the XMPP account where theIvov, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   vCard was obtained or a SIP account with another provider).   Similarly, the client would preferentially initiate textual chat   sessions using her XMPP account.   If, on the other hand, no relationship has been configured or   discovered between a SIP account and an XMPP account, and the client   is aware of multiple telephony-capable accounts, it ought to present   the user with the option of using XMPP Jingle as one method for   engaging in audio and video interactions with a contact who has an   XMPP address.  This can help to ensure that a CUSAX user can complete   audio and video calls with XMPP users who are not part of a CUSAX   deployment.3.5.  Matching Incoming SIP Calls to XMPP JIDs   When receiving a SIP call, a CUSAX client may wish to determine the   identity of the caller and a corresponding XMPP roster entry so that   the receiving user could revert to chatting or other forms of   communication that require XMPP.  To do so, a CUSAX client could   search the user's roster for an entry whose vCard has a "tel" field   matching the originator of the call.  In addition, in order to avoid   the effort of iterating over the entire roster of the user and   retrieving vCards for all of the user's contacts, the receiving   client may guess at the identity of the caller based a SIP Call-Info   header whose 'purpose' header field parameter has a value of "impp"   as described in [RFC6993].  To enable this usage, a sending client   would need to include such a Call-Info header in the SIP messages   that it sends when initiating a call.  An example follows.   Call-Info: <xmpp:alice@xmpp.example.com> ;purpose=impp   Note that the information from the Call-Info header should only be   used as a cue: the actual AOR-to-JID binding would still need to be   confirmed by the vCard of a contact in the receiving user's roster or   through some other trusted means (such as an enterprise directory).   If this confirmation succeeds, the client would not need to search   the entire roster and retrieve all vCards.  Not performing the check   might enable any caller (including malicious ones) to employ someone   else's identity and perform various scams or Man-in-the-Middle   attacks.   However, although an AOR-to-JID binding can be a helpful hint to the   user, nothing in the foregoing paragraph ought to be construed as   necessarily discouraging users, clients, or service providers from   accepting calls originated by entities that are not established   contacts of the user (e.g., as reflected in the user's roster); that   is a policy matter for the user, client, or service provider.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   It is also worth noting that callers preferring to remain anonymous   as per [RFC3325] would not provide Call-Info information.4.  Multi-Party Interactions   CUSAX clients that support the SIP conferencing framework [RFC4353]   can detect when a call they are participating in is actually a   conference and can then subscribe to conference state updates as per   [RFC4575].  A regular SIP user agent might also use the same   conference URI for text communication with the Message Session Relay   Protocol (MSRP).  However, given that SIP's instant messaging   capabilities would normally be disabled (or simply not supported) in   CUSAX deployments, an XMPP Multi-User Chat (MUC) room [XEP-0045]   associated with the conference can be announced/discovered through   <service-uris> bearing the "grouptextchat" purpose [GROUPTEXTCHAT].   Similarly, an XMPP MUC room can advertise the SIP URI of an   associated service for audio/video interactions using the   'audio-video-uri' field of the "muc#roominfo" data form [XEP-0004] to   include extended information [XEP-0128] about the MUC room within   XMPP service discovery [XEP-0030]; see [XEP-0045] for an example.   These methods would enable a CUSAX-aware SIP conference server to   advertise the existence of an associated XMPP chat room and for a   CUSAX-aware XMPP chat room to advertise the existence of an   associated SIP conference server.   If a CUSAX client joins the MUC room associated with a particular   call, it should not rely on any synchronization between the two.   Both the SIP conference and the XMPP MUC room would function   independently, each issuing and delivering its own state updates.   Hence, it is possible that certain peers would temporarily or   permanently be reachable in only one of the two conferences.  This   would typically be the case with single-stack clients that have only   joined the SIP call or the XMPP MUC room.  It is therefore important   for CUSAX clients to provide a clear indication to users as to the   level of involvement of the various participants: i.e., a user needs   to be able to easily understand whether a certain participant can   receive text messages, audio/video, or both.   At the level of the CUSAX service, it is also possible to enforce   tighter integration between the XMPP MUC room and the SIP conference.   Permissions, roles, kicks, and bans that are granted and performed in   the MUC room can easily be imitated by the conference focus/mixer   into the SIP call.  If, for example, a certain MUC member is muted,   the conference mixer can choose to also apply the mute on the media   stream corresponding to that participant.  However, the details and   exact level of such integration are entirely up to implementers and   service providers.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   The approach above describes one relatively lightweight possibility   of combining SIP and XMPP multi-party interaction semantics without   requiring tight integration between the two.  As with the rest of   this document, this approach is by no means normative.   Implementations and future documents may define other methods or   provide other suggestions for improving the unified communications   user experience in cases of multi-user chats and conference calling.5.  Federation   In theory, there are no technical reasons why federation (i.e.,   inter-domain communication) would require special behavior from CUSAX   clients.  However, it is worth noting that differences in   administration policies may sometimes lead to potentially confusing   user experiences.   For example, let's say atlanta.example.com observes the CUSAX   policies described in this document.  All XMPP users at   atlanta.example.com are hence configured to have vCards that match   their SIP identities.  Alice is therefore used to making free, high-   quality SIP calls to all the people in her roster.  Alice can also   make calls to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) by simply   dialing numbers.  She may even be used to these calls being billed to   her online account, so she would be careful about how long they last.   This is not a problem for her since she can easily distinguish   between a free SIP call (one that she made by calling one of her   roster entries) from a paid PSTN call that she dialed as a number.   Then, Alice adds xmpp:bob@biloxi.example.com.  The Biloxi domain only   has an XMPP service.  There is no SIP server and Bob uses an   XMPP-only client.  However, Bob has added his mobile number to his   vCard in order to make it easily accessible to his contacts.  Alice's   client would pick up this number and make it possible for Alice to   start a call to Bob's mobile phone number.   This could be a problem because, other than the fact that Bob's   address is from a different domain, Alice would have no obvious and   straightforward cues telling her that this is in fact a call to the   PSTN.  In addition to the potentially lower audio quality, Alice may   also end up incurring unexpected charges for such calls.   In order to avoid such issues, providers maintaining a CUSAX service   for the users in their domain may choose to provide additional cues   (e.g., a service-generated signal that triggers a user-interface   warning in a CUSAX client, an auditory tone, or a spoken message)   indicating that a call would incur unexpected charges.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   Another scenario arises when a SIP service allows communication only   with intra-domain numbers; here, Alice might be prevented from   establishing a call with Bob's mobile phone.  Providers should   therefore make sure that calls to inter-domain numbers are flagged   with an appropriate audio or textual warning.6.  Summary of Suggested Strategies   The following strategies are suggested for CUSAX user agents:   1.   By default, prefer SIP for audio and video and XMPP for        messaging and presence.   2.   Use XMPP for all forms of communication with the contacts from        the XMPP roster, with the exception of features that are based        on establishing real-time sessions (e.g., audio/video calls) for        which SIP should be used.   3.   Provide online provisioning options for providers to remotely        set up SIP and XMPP accounts so that users wouldn't need to go        through a multi-step configuration process.   4.   Provide online provisioning options for providers to completely        disable features for an account associated with a given protocol        (SIP or XMPP) if the features are preferred in another protocol        (XMPP or SIP).   5.   Present a "Call" option for each roster entry that has a        properly set "tel" field in the vCard or equivalent.   6.   If the client is provisioned with only a single telephony-        capable account, initiate calls immediately upon user request        without asking users to indicate an account that the call should        go through.   7.   If no relationship has been configured or discovered between a        SIP account and an XMPP account, and the client is aware of        multiple telephony-capable accounts, present the user with the        choice of reaching the contact through any of those accounts.   8.   If known, indicate the existence of a special relationship        between the SIP and XMPP accounts of a CUSAX service.   9.   Optionally, present the XMPP connection as an "instant        messaging" or a "chat" account and the SIP connection as a        "Voice and Video" or a "Telephony" account.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   10.  Optionally, determine the identity of the audio/video caller and        a corresponding XMPP roster entry so that the user could use        textual chatting or other forms of communication that require        XMPP.   11.  Optionally, delay the XMPP connection until after a SIP        connection has been successfully registered.   12.  Optionally, check for alternative communication methods (SIP        addresses advertised over XMPP and XMPP addresses advertised        over SIP).   The following strategies are suggested for CUSAX services:   1.  Use online provisioning and configuration of accounts so that       users won't need to set up two separate accounts for the CUSAX       service.   2.  Use online provisioning so that calling features are disabled for       all XMPP accounts.   3.  Ensure that at least one of the vCard "tel" fields for each XMPP       user is properly populated with a SIP URI that is reachable       through the SIP service.   4.  Optionally, include the "video" tel type for accounts that are       capable of handling video communication.   5.  Optionally, provision clients with information indicating that       specific SIP and XMPP accounts are related in a CUSAX service.   6.  Optionally, attach a "Call-Info" header with an "impp" purpose to       all SIP INVITE messages, so that clients can more rapidly       associate a caller with a roster entry and display a "Caller ID".7.  Security Considerations   Use of the same user agent with two different accounts providing   complementary features introduces the possibility of mismatches   between the security profiles of those accounts or features.  Two   security mismatches of particular concern are:   o  The SIP aspect and XMPP aspect of a CUSAX service might offer      different authentication options (e.g., digest authentication for      SIP as specified in [RFC3261] and Salted Challenge Response      Authentication Mechanism (SCRAM) authentication [RFC5802] for XMPP      as specified in [RFC6120]).  Because SIP uses a password-based      method (digest) and XMPP uses a pluggable framework forIvov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013      authentication via the Simple Authentication and Security Layer      (SASL) technology [RFC4422], it is also possible that the XMPP      connection could be authenticated using a password-free method      such as client certificates with SASL EXTERNAL, even though a      username and password is used for the SIP connection.   o  The Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246] ciphersuites offered      or negotiated on the XMPP side might be different from those on      the SIP side because of implementation or configuration      differences between the SIP server and the XMPP server.  Even more      seriously, a CUSAX client might successfully negotiate TLS when      connecting to the XMPP aspect of the service but not when      connecting to the SIP aspect, or vice versa.  In this situation,      an end user might think that the combined CUSAX session with the      service is protected by TLS, even though only one aspect is      protected.   Security mismatches such as these (as well as others related to end-   to-end encryption of messages or media) introduce the possibility of   downgrade attacks, eavesdropping, information leakage, and other   security vulnerabilities.  User agent developers and service   providers must ensure that such mismatches are avoided as much as   possible (e.g., by enforcing common and strong security   configurations and policies across protocols).  Specifically, if both   protocols are not safeguarded by similar levels of cryptographic   protection, the user must be informed of that fact and given the   opportunity to bring both up to the same level.Section 5 discusses potential issues that may arise due to a mismatch   between client capabilities, such as calls being initiated with costs   that are not expected by the end user.  Such issues could be   triggered maliciously, as well as by accident.  Implementers   therefore need to provide necessary cues to raise user awareness as   suggested inSection 5.   Refer to the specifications for the relevant SIP and XMPP features   for detailed security considerations applying to each "stack" in a   CUSAX client.8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [RFC3261]        Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G.,                    Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M.,                    and E. Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   [RFC6120]        Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence                    Protocol (XMPP): Core",RFC 6120, March 2011.   [RFC6121]        Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence                    Protocol (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence",RFC 6121, March 2011.8.2.  Informative References   [GROUPTEXTCHAT]  Ivov, E., "A Group Text Chat Purpose for Conference                    and Service URIs in the Session Initiation Protocol                    (SIP) Event Package for Conference State", Work                    in Progress, June 2013.   [RFC2026]        Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process --                    Revision 3",BCP 9,RFC 2026, October 1996.   [RFC3325]        Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, "Private                    Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)                    for Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks",RFC 3325, November 2002.   [RFC4353]        Rosenberg, J., "A Framework for Conferencing with                    the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4353,                    February 2006.   [RFC4422]        Melnikov, A. and K. Zeilenga, "Simple Authentication                    and Security Layer (SASL)",RFC 4422, June 2006.   [RFC4575]        Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and O. Levin, "A                    Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for                    Conference State",RFC 4575, August 2006.   [RFC5246]        Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer                    Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246,                    August 2008.   [RFC5802]        Newman, C., Menon-Sen, A., Melnikov, A., and N.                    Williams, "Salted Challenge Response Authentication                    Mechanism (SCRAM) SASL and GSS-API Mechanisms",RFC 5802, July 2010.   [RFC6350]        Perreault, S., "vCard Format Specification",RFC 6350, August 2011.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013   [RFC6914]        Rosenberg, J., "SIMPLE Made Simple: An Overview of                    the IETF Specifications for Instant Messaging and                    Presence Using the Session Initiation Protocol                    (SIP)",RFC 6914, April 2013.   [RFC6993]        Saint-Andre, P., "Instant Messaging and Presence                    Purpose for the Call-Info Header Field in the                    Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 6993,                    July 2013.   [RFC7033]        Jones, P., Salgueiro, G., Jones, M., and J. Smarr,                    "WebFinger",RFC 7033, September 2013.   [XEP-0004]       Eatmon, R., Hildebrand, J., Miller, J., Muldowney,                    T., and P. Saint-Andre, "Data Forms", XSF XEP 0004,                    August 2007.   [XEP-0030]       Hildebrand, J., Millard, P., Eatmon, R., and P.                    Saint-Andre, "Service Discovery", XSF XEP 0030,                    June 2008.   [XEP-0045]       Saint-Andre, P., "Multi-User Chat", XSF XEP 0045,                    February 2012.   [XEP-0054]       Saint-Andre, P., "vcard-temp", XSF XEP 0054,                    July 2008.   [XEP-0128]       Saint-Andre, P., "Service Discovery Extensions", XSF                    XEP 0128, October 2004.   [XEP-0152]       Hildebrand, J. and P. Saint-Andre, "XEP-0152:                    Reachability Addresses", XEP XEP-0152,                    September 2013.   [XEP-0166]       Ludwig, S., Beda, J., Saint-Andre, P., McQueen, R.,                    Egan, S., and J. Hildebrand, "Jingle", XSF XEP 0166,                    December 2009.   [XEP-0167]       Ludwig, S., Saint-Andre, P., Egan, S., McQueen, R.,                    and D. Cionoiu, "Jingle RTP Sessions", XSF XEP 0167,                    December 2009.   [XEP-0292]       Saint-Andre, P. and S. Mizzi, "vCard4 Over XMPP",                    XSF XEP 0292, September 2013.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013Appendix A.  Acknowledgements   This document is inspired by the "SIXPAC" work of Markus Isomaki and   Simo Veikkolainen.  Markus also provided various suggestions for   improving the document.   The authors would also like to thank the following people for their   reviews and suggestions: Sebastien Couture, Dan-Christian Bogos,   Richard Brady, Olivier Crete, Aaron Evans, Kevin Gallagher, Adrian   Georgescu, Saul Ibarra Corretge, David Laban, Gergely Lukacsy,   Spencer MacDonald, Murray Mar, Daniel Pocock, Travis Reitter, and   Gonzalo Salgueiro.   Brian Carpenter, Ted Hardie, Paul Hoffman, and Benson Schliesser   reviewed the document on behalf of the General Area Review Team, the   Applications Area Directorate, the Security Directorate, and the   Operations and Management Directorate, respectively.   Benoit Claise, Barry Leiba, and Pete Resnick provided helpful and   substantive feedback during IESG review.   The document shepherd was Mary Barnes.  The sponsoring Area Director   was Gonzalo Camarillo.Ivov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 7081              Combined Use of SIP and XMPP         November 2013Authors' Addresses   Emil Ivov   Jitsi   Strasbourg  67000   France   Phone: +33-177-624-330   EMail: emcho@jitsi.org   Peter Saint-Andre   Cisco Systems, Inc.   1899 Wynkoop Street, Suite 600   Denver, CO  80202   USA   Phone: +1-303-308-3282   EMail: psaintan@cisco.com   Enrico Marocco   Telecom Italia   Via G. Reiss Romoli, 274   Turin  10148   Italy   EMail: enrico.marocco@telecomitalia.itIvov, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 19]

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