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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                      J. RosenbergRequest for Comments: 5245                                   jdrosen.netObsoletes:4091,4092                                         April 2010Category: Standards TrackISSN: 2070-1721Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE):A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal forOffer/Answer ProtocolsAbstract   This document describes a protocol for Network Address Translator   (NAT) traversal for UDP-based multimedia sessions established with   the offer/answer model.  This protocol is called Interactive   Connectivity Establishment (ICE).  ICE makes use of the Session   Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) protocol and its extension,   Traversal Using Relay NAT (TURN).  ICE can be used by any protocol   utilizing the offer/answer model, such as the Session Initiation   Protocol (SIP).Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5245.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.  Overview of ICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.1.  Gathering Candidate Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.2.  Connectivity Checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .112.3.  Sorting Candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .122.4.  Frozen Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .132.5.  Security for Checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .142.6.  Concluding ICE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .142.7.  Lite Implementations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .163.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .164.  Sending the Initial Offer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .194.1.  Full Implementation Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . .194.1.1.  Gathering Candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .194.1.1.1.  Host Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .204.1.1.2.  Server Reflexive and Relayed Candidates . . . . .204.1.1.3.  Computing Foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . .224.1.1.4.  Keeping Candidates Alive  . . . . . . . . . . . .224.1.2.  Prioritizing Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .224.1.2.1.  Recommended Formula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23         4.1.2.2.  Guidelines for Choosing Type and Local                   Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234.1.3.  Eliminating Redundant Candidates  . . . . . . . . . .254.1.4.  Choosing Default Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . .254.2.  Lite Implementation Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . .254.3.  Encoding the SDP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .265.  Receiving the Initial Offer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.1.  Verifying ICE Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.2.  Determining Role  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .295.3.  Gathering Candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .305.4.  Prioritizing Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .305.5.  Choosing Default Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20105.6.  Encoding the SDP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .315.7.  Forming the Check Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .315.7.1.  Forming Candidate Pairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .315.7.2.  Computing Pair Priority and Ordering Pairs  . . . . .345.7.3.  Pruning the Pairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .345.7.4.  Computing States  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .345.8.  Scheduling Checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .376.  Receipt of the Initial Answer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396.1.  Verifying ICE Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396.2.  Determining Role  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396.3.  Forming the Check List  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .406.4.  Performing Ordinary Checks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .407.  Performing Connectivity Checks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .407.1.  STUN Client Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .407.1.1.  Creating Permissions for Relayed Candidates . . . . .407.1.2.  Sending the Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .407.1.2.1.  PRIORITY and USE-CANDIDATE  . . . . . . . . . . .417.1.2.2.  ICE-CONTROLLED and ICE-CONTROLLING  . . . . . . .417.1.2.3.  Forming Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .417.1.2.4.  DiffServ Treatment  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .427.1.3.  Processing the Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .427.1.3.1.  Failure Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .427.1.3.2.  Success Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .437.1.3.2.1.  Discovering Peer Reflexive Candidates . . . .437.1.3.2.2.  Constructing a Valid Pair . . . . . . . . . .447.1.3.2.3.  Updating Pair States  . . . . . . . . . . . .457.1.3.2.4.  Updating the Nominated Flag . . . . . . . . .467.1.3.3.  Check List and Timer State Updates  . . . . . . .467.2.  STUN Server Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .467.2.1.  Additional Procedures for Full Implementations  . . .477.2.1.1.  Detecting and Repairing Role Conflicts  . . . . .477.2.1.2.  Computing Mapped Address  . . . . . . . . . . . .487.2.1.3.  Learning Peer Reflexive Candidates  . . . . . . .497.2.1.4.  Triggered Checks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .497.2.1.5.  Updating the Nominated Flag . . . . . . . . . . .507.2.2.  Additional Procedures for Lite Implementations  . . .518.  Concluding ICE Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .518.1.  Procedures for Full Implementations . . . . . . . . . . .518.1.1.  Nominating Pairs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .518.1.1.1.  Regular Nomination  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .528.1.1.2.  Aggressive Nomination . . . . . . . . . . . . . .528.1.2.  Updating States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .538.2.  Procedures for Lite Implementations . . . . . . . . . . .548.2.1.  Peer Is Full  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .548.2.2.  Peer Is Lite  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .558.3.  Freeing Candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .568.3.1.  Full Implementation Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . .568.3.2.  Lite Implementation Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . .56Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.  Subsequent Offer/Answer Exchanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . .569.1.  Generating the Offer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .579.1.1.  Procedures for All Implementations  . . . . . . . . .579.1.1.1.  ICE Restarts  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .579.1.1.2.  Removing a Media Stream . . . . . . . . . . . . .589.1.1.3.  Adding a Media Stream . . . . . . . . . . . . . .589.1.2.  Procedures for Full Implementations . . . . . . . . .589.1.2.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running . . . . .589.1.2.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed . . . .599.1.3.  Procedures for Lite Implementations . . . . . . . . .599.1.3.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running . . . . .599.1.3.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed . . . .609.2.  Receiving the Offer and Generating an Answer  . . . . . .609.2.1.  Procedures for All Implementations  . . . . . . . . .609.2.1.1.  Detecting ICE Restart . . . . . . . . . . . . . .609.2.1.2.  New Media Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .619.2.1.3.  Removed Media Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .619.2.2.  Procedures for Full Implementations . . . . . . . . .61         9.2.2.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running and no                   remote-candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61         9.2.2.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed and                   no remote-candidates  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .619.2.2.3.  Existing Media Streams and remote-candidates  . .619.2.3.  Procedures for Lite Implementations . . . . . . . . .629.3.  Updating the Check and Valid Lists  . . . . . . . . . . .639.3.1.  Procedures for Full Implementations . . . . . . . . .639.3.1.1.  ICE Restarts  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .639.3.1.2.  New Media Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .639.3.1.3.  Removed Media Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .649.3.1.4.  ICE Continuing for Existing Media Stream  . . . .649.3.2.  Procedures for Lite Implementations . . . . . . . . .6410. Keepalives  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6511. Media Handling  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6611.1. Sending Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6611.1.1. Procedures for Full Implementations . . . . . . . . .6611.1.2. Procedures for Lite Implementations . . . . . . . . .6711.1.3. Procedures for All Implementations  . . . . . . . . .6711.2. Receiving Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6712. Usage with SIP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6812.1. Latency Guidelines  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6812.1.1. Offer in INVITE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6812.1.2. Offer in Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7012.2. SIP Option Tags and Media Feature Tags  . . . . . . . . .7012.3. Interactions with Forking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7012.4. Interactions with Preconditions . . . . . . . . . . . . .7012.5. Interactions with Third Party Call Control  . . . . . . .7113. Relationship with ANAT  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7114. Extensibility Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201015. Grammar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7315.1. "candidate" Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7315.2. "remote-candidates" Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7515.3. "ice-lite" and "ice-mismatch" Attributes  . . . . . . . .7515.4. "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd" Attributes  . . . . . . . . . .7615.5. "ice-options" Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7616. Setting Ta and RTO  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7616.1. RTP Media Streams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7716.2. Non-RTP Sessions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7817. Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7918. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8518.1. Attacks on Connectivity Checks  . . . . . . . . . . . . .8618.2. Attacks on Server Reflexive Address Gathering . . . . . .8818.3. Attacks on Relayed Candidate Gathering  . . . . . . . . .8918.4. Attacks on the Offer/Answer Exchanges . . . . . . . . . .8918.5. Insider Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9018.5.1. The Voice Hammer Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9018.5.2. STUN Amplification Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9018.6. Interactions with Application Layer Gateways and SIP  . .9119. STUN Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9219.1. New Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9219.2. New Error Response Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9320. Operational Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9320.1. NAT and Firewall Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9320.2. Bandwidth Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9320.2.1. STUN and TURN Server Capacity Planning  . . . . . . .9320.2.2. Gathering and Connectivity Checks . . . . . . . . . .9420.2.3. Keepalives  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9420.3. ICE and ICE-lite  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9520.4. Troubleshooting and Performance Management  . . . . . . .9520.5. Endpoint Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9521. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9621.1. SDP Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9621.1.1. candidate Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9621.1.2. remote-candidates Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . .9621.1.3. ice-lite Attribute  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9721.1.4. ice-mismatch Attribute  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9721.1.5. ice-pwd Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9821.1.6. ice-ufrag Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9821.1.7. ice-options Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9821.2. STUN Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9921.3. STUN Error Responses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9922. IAB Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9922.1. Problem Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10022.2. Exit Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10022.3. Brittleness Introduced by ICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10122.4. Requirements for a Long-Term Solution . . . . . . . . . .10222.5. Issues with Existing NAPT Boxes . . . . . . . . . . . . .102Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201023. Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10224. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10324.1. Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10324.2. Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104Appendix A.  Lite and Full Implementations  . . . . . . . . . . .107Appendix B.  Design Motivations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .108B.1.  Pacing of STUN Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .108B.2.  Candidates with Multiple Bases  . . . . . . . . . . . . .109B.3.  Purpose of the <rel-addr> and <rel-port> Attributes . . .111B.4.  Importance of the STUN Username . . . . . . . . . . . . .111B.5.  The Candidate Pair Priority Formula . . . . . . . . . . .113B.6.  The remote-candidates Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . .113B.7.  Why Are Keepalives Needed?  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114B.8.  Why Prefer Peer Reflexive Candidates? . . . . . . . . . .115B.9.  Why Send an Updated Offer?  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115B.10. Why Are Binding Indications Used for Keepalives?  . . . .115B.11. Why Is the Conflict Resolution Mechanism Needed?  . . . .1161.  IntroductionRFC 3264 [RFC3264] defines a two-phase exchange of Session   Description Protocol (SDP) messages [RFC4566] for the purposes of   establishment of multimedia sessions.  This offer/answer mechanism is   used by protocols such as the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)   [RFC3261].   Protocols using offer/answer are difficult to operate through Network   Address Translators (NATs).  Because their purpose is to establish a   flow of media packets, they tend to carry the IP addresses and ports   of media sources and sinks within their messages, which is known to   be problematic through NAT [RFC3235].  The protocols also seek to   create a media flow directly between participants, so that there is   no application layer intermediary between them.  This is done to   reduce media latency, decrease packet loss, and reduce the   operational costs of deploying the application.  However, this is   difficult to accomplish through NAT.  A full treatment of the reasons   for this is beyond the scope of this specification.   Numerous solutions have been defined for allowing these protocols to   operate through NAT.  These include Application Layer Gateways   (ALGs), the Middlebox Control Protocol [RFC3303], the original Simple   Traversal of UDP Through NAT (STUN) [RFC3489] specification, and   Realm Specific IP [RFC3102] [RFC3103] along with session description   extensions needed to make them work, such as the Session Description   Protocol (SDP) [RFC4566] attribute for the Real Time Control Protocol   (RTCP) [RFC3605].  Unfortunately, these techniques all have pros and   cons which, make each one optimal in some network topologies, but a   poor choice in others.  The result is that administrators andRosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   implementors are making assumptions about the topologies of the   networks in which their solutions will be deployed.  This introduces   complexity and brittleness into the system.  What is needed is a   single solution that is flexible enough to work well in all   situations.   This specification defines Interactive Connectivity Establishment   (ICE) as a technique for NAT traversal for UDP-based media streams   (though ICE can be extended to handle other transport protocols, such   as TCP [ICE-TCP]) established by the offer/answer model.  ICE is an   extension to the offer/answer model, and works by including a   multiplicity of IP addresses and ports in SDP offers and answers,   which are then tested for connectivity by peer-to-peer connectivity   checks.  The IP addresses and ports included in the SDP and the   connectivity checks are performed using the revised STUN   specification [RFC5389], now renamed to Session Traversal Utilities   for NAT.  The new name and new specification reflect its new role as   a tool that is used with other NAT traversal techniques (namely ICE)   rather than a standalone NAT traversal solution, as the original STUN   specification was.  ICE also makes use of Traversal Using Relays   around NAT (TURN) [RFC5766], an extension to STUN.  Because ICE   exchanges a multiplicity of IP addresses and ports for each media   stream, it also allows for address selection for multihomed and dual-   stack hosts, and for this reason it deprecatesRFC 4091 [RFC4091] and   [RFC4092].2.  Overview of ICE   In a typical ICE deployment, we have two endpoints (known as AGENTS   inRFC 3264 terminology) that want to communicate.  They are able to   communicate indirectly via some signaling protocol (such as SIP), by   which they can perform an offer/answer exchange of SDP [RFC3264]   messages.  Note that ICE is not intended for NAT traversal for SIP,   which is assumed to be provided via another mechanism [RFC5626].  At   the beginning of the ICE process, the agents are ignorant of their   own topologies.  In particular, they might or might not be behind a   NAT (or multiple tiers of NATs).  ICE allows the agents to discover   enough information about their topologies to potentially find one or   more paths by which they can communicate.   Figure 1 shows a typical environment for ICE deployment.  The two   endpoints are labelled L and R (for left and right, which helps   visualize call flows).  Both L and R are behind their own respective   NATs though they may not be aware of it.  The type of NAT and its   properties are also unknown.  Agents L and R are capable of engaging   in an offer/answer exchange by which they can exchange SDP messages,   whose purpose is to set up a media session between L and R.   Typically, this exchange will occur through a SIP server.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   In addition to the agents, a SIP server and NATs, ICE is typically   used in concert with STUN or TURN servers in the network.  Each agent   can have its own STUN or TURN server, or they can be the same.                              +-------+                              | SIP   |           +-------+          | Srvr  |          +-------+           | STUN  |          |       |          | STUN  |           | Srvr  |          +-------+          | Srvr  |           |       |         /         \         |       |           +-------+        /           \        +-------+                           /             \                          /               \                         /                 \                        /                   \                       /  <-  Signaling  ->  \                      /                       \                     /                         \               +--------+                   +--------+               |  NAT   |                   |  NAT   |               +--------+                   +--------+                 /                                \                /                                  \               /                                    \           +-------+                             +-------+           | Agent |                             | Agent |           |   L   |                             |   R   |           |       |                             |       |           +-------+                             +-------+                     Figure 1: ICE Deployment Scenario   The basic idea behind ICE is as follows: each agent has a variety of   candidate TRANSPORT ADDRESSES (combination of IP address and port for   a particular transport protocol, which is always UDP in this   specification)) it could use to communicate with the other agent.   These might include:   o  A transport address on a directly attached network interface   o  A translated transport address on the public side of a NAT (a      "server reflexive" address)   o  A transport address allocated from a TURN server (a "relayed      address").   Potentially, any of L's candidate transport addresses can be used to   communicate with any of R's candidate transport addresses.  InRosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   practice, however, many combinations will not work.  For instance, if   L and R are both behind NATs, their directly attached interface   addresses are unlikely to be able to communicate directly (this is   why ICE is needed, after all!).  The purpose of ICE is to discover   which pairs of addresses will work.  The way that ICE does this is to   systematically try all possible pairs (in a carefully sorted order)   until it finds one or more that work.2.1.  Gathering Candidate Addresses   In order to execute ICE, an agent has to identify all of its address   candidates.  A CANDIDATE is a transport address -- a combination of   IP address and port for a particular transport protocol (with only   UDP specified here).  This document defines three types of   candidates, some derived from physical or logical network interfaces,   others discoverable via STUN and TURN.  Naturally, one viable   candidate is a transport address obtained directly from a local   interface.  Such a candidate is called a HOST CANDIDATE.  The local   interface could be ethernet or WiFi, or it could be one that is   obtained through a tunnel mechanism, such as a Virtual Private   Network (VPN) or Mobile IP (MIP).  In all cases, such a network   interface appears to the agent as a local interface from which ports   (and thus candidates) can be allocated.   If an agent is multihomed, it obtains a candidate from each IP   address.  Depending on the location of the PEER (the other agent in   the session) on the IP network relative to the agent, the agent may   be reachable by the peer through one or more of those IP addresses.   Consider, for example, an agent that has a local IP address on a   private net 10 network (I1), and a second connected to the public   Internet (I2).  A candidate from I1 will be directly reachable when   communicating with a peer on the same private net 10 network, while a   candidate from I2 will be directly reachable when communicating with   a peer on the public Internet.  Rather than trying to guess which IP   address will work prior to sending an offer, the offering agent   includes both candidates in its offer.   Next, the agent uses STUN or TURN to obtain additional candidates.   These come in two flavors: translated addresses on the public side of   a NAT (SERVER REFLEXIVE CANDIDATES) and addresses on TURN servers   (RELAYED CANDIDATES).  When TURN servers are utilized, both types of   candidates are obtained from the TURN server.  If only STUN servers   are utilized, only server reflexive candidates are obtained from   them.  The relationship of these candidates to the host candidate is   shown in Figure 2.  In this figure, both types of candidates are   discovered using TURN.  In the figure, the notation X:x means IP   address X and UDP port x.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010                 To Internet                     |                     |                     |  /------------  Relayed                 Y:y | /               Address                 +--------+                 |        |                 |  TURN  |                 | Server |                 |        |                 +--------+                     |                     |                     | /------------  Server              X1':x1'|/               Reflexive               +------------+         Address               |    NAT     |               +------------+                     |                     | /------------  Local                 X:x |/               Address                 +--------+                 |        |                 | Agent  |                 |        |                 +--------+                     Figure 2: Candidate Relationships   When the agent sends the TURN Allocate request from IP address and   port X:x, the NAT (assuming there is one) will create a binding   X1':x1', mapping this server reflexive candidate to the host   candidate X:x.  Outgoing packets sent from the host candidate will be   translated by the NAT to the server reflexive candidate.  Incoming   packets sent to the server reflexive candidate will be translated by   the NAT to the host candidate and forwarded to the agent.  We call   the host candidate associated with a given server reflexive candidate   the BASE.      Note: "Base" refers to the address an agent sends from for a      particular candidate.  Thus, as a degenerate case host candidates      also have a base, but it's the same as the host candidate.   When there are multiple NATs between the agent and the TURN server,   the TURN request will create a binding on each NAT, but only the   outermost server reflexive candidate (the one nearest the TURNRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   server) will be discovered by the agent.  If the agent is not behind   a NAT, then the base candidate will be the same as the server   reflexive candidate and the server reflexive candidate is redundant   and will be eliminated.   The Allocate request then arrives at the TURN server.  The TURN   server allocates a port y from its local IP address Y, and generates   an Allocate response, informing the agent of this relayed candidate.   The TURN server also informs the agent of the server reflexive   candidate, X1':x1' by copying the source transport address of the   Allocate request into the Allocate response.  The TURN server acts as   a packet relay, forwarding traffic between L and R. In order to send   traffic to L, R sends traffic to the TURN server at Y:y, and the TURN   server forwards that to X1':x1', which passes through the NAT where   it is mapped to X:x and delivered to L.   When only STUN servers are utilized, the agent sends a STUN Binding   request [RFC5389] to its STUN server.  The STUN server will inform   the agent of the server reflexive candidate X1':x1' by copying the   source transport address of the Binding request into the Binding   response.2.2.  Connectivity Checks   Once L has gathered all of its candidates, it orders them in highest   to lowest priority and sends them to R over the signaling channel.   The candidates are carried in attributes in the SDP offer.  When R   receives the offer, it performs the same gathering process and   responds with its own list of candidates.  At the end of this   process, each agent has a complete list of both its candidates and   its peer's candidates.  It pairs them up, resulting in CANDIDATE   PAIRS.  To see which pairs work, each agent schedules a series of   CHECKS.  Each check is a STUN request/response transaction that the   client will perform on a particular candidate pair by sending a STUN   request from the local candidate to the remote candidate.   The basic principle of the connectivity checks is simple:   1.  Sort the candidate pairs in priority order.   2.  Send checks on each candidate pair in priority order.   3.  Acknowledge checks received from the other agent.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   With both agents performing a check on a candidate pair, the result   is a 4-way handshake:   L                        R   -                        -   STUN request ->             \  L's             <- STUN response  /  check              <- STUN request  \  R's   STUN response ->            /  check                    Figure 3: Basic Connectivity Check   It is important to note that the STUN requests are sent to and from   the exact same IP addresses and ports that will be used for media   (e.g., RTP and RTCP).  Consequently, agents demultiplex STUN and RTP/   RTCP using contents of the packets, rather than the port on which   they are received.  Fortunately, this demultiplexing is easy to do,   especially for RTP and RTCP.   Because a STUN Binding request is used for the connectivity check,   the STUN Binding response will contain the agent's translated   transport address on the public side of any NATs between the agent   and its peer.  If this transport address is different from other   candidates the agent already learned, it represents a new candidate,   called a PEER REFLEXIVE CANDIDATE, which then gets tested by ICE just   the same as any other candidate.   As an optimization, as soon as R gets L's check message, R schedules   a connectivity check message to be sent to L on the same candidate   pair.  This accelerates the process of finding a valid candidate, and   is called a TRIGGERED CHECK.   At the end of this handshake, both L and R know that they can send   (and receive) messages end-to-end in both directions.2.3.  Sorting Candidates   Because the algorithm above searches all candidate pairs, if a   working pair exists it will eventually find it no matter what order   the candidates are tried in.  In order to produce faster (and better)   results, the candidates are sorted in a specified order.  The   resulting list of sorted candidate pairs is called the CHECK LIST.   The algorithm is described inSection 4.1.2 but follows two general   principles:   o  Each agent gives its candidates a numeric priority, which is sent      along with the candidate to the peer.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   o  The local and remote priorities are combined so that each agent      has the same ordering for the candidate pairs.   The second property is important for getting ICE to work when there   are NATs in front of L and R.  Frequently, NATs will not allow   packets in from a host until the agent behind the NAT has sent a   packet towards that host.  Consequently, ICE checks in each direction   will not succeed until both sides have sent a check through their   respective NATs.   The agent works through this check list by sending a STUN request for   the next candidate pair on the list periodically.  These are called   ORDINARY CHECKS.   In general, the priority algorithm is designed so that candidates of   similar type get similar priorities and so that more direct routes   (that is, through fewer media relays and through fewer NATs) are   preferred over indirect ones (ones with more media relays and more   NATs).  Within those guidelines, however, agents have a fair amount   of discretion about how to tune their algorithms.2.4.  Frozen Candidates   The previous description only addresses the case where the agents   wish to establish a media session with one COMPONENT (a piece of a   media stream requiring a single transport address; a media stream may   require multiple components, each of which has to work for the media   stream as a whole to be work).  Typically (e.g., with RTP and RTCP),   the agents actually need to establish connectivity for more than one   flow.   The network properties are likely to be very similar for each   component (especially because RTP and RTCP are sent and received from   the same IP address).  It is usually possible to leverage information   from one media component in order to determine the best candidates   for another.  ICE does this with a mechanism called "frozen   candidates".   Each candidate is associated with a property called its FOUNDATION.   Two candidates have the same foundation when they are "similar" -- of   the same type and obtained from the same host candidate and STUN   server using the same protocol.  Otherwise, their foundation is   different.  A candidate pair has a foundation too, which is just the   concatenation of the foundations of its two candidates.  Initially,   only the candidate pairs with unique foundations are tested.  The   other candidate pairs are marked "frozen".  When the connectivity   checks for a candidate pair succeed, the other candidate pairs withRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   the same foundation are unfrozen.  This avoids repeated checking of   components that are superficially more attractive but in fact are   likely to fail.   While we've described "frozen" here as a separate mechanism for   expository purposes, in fact it is an integral part of ICE and the   ICE prioritization algorithm automatically ensures that the right   candidates are unfrozen and checked in the right order.2.5.  Security for Checks   Because ICE is used to discover which addresses can be used to send   media between two agents, it is important to ensure that the process   cannot be hijacked to send media to the wrong location.  Each STUN   connectivity check is covered by a message authentication code (MAC)   computed using a key exchanged in the signaling channel.  This MAC   provides message integrity and data origin authentication, thus   stopping an attacker from forging or modifying connectivity check   messages.  Furthermore, if the SIP [RFC3261] caller is using ICE, and   their call forks, the ICE exchanges happen independently with each   forked recipient.  In such a case, the keys exchanged in the   signaling help associate each ICE exchange with each forked   recipient.2.6.  Concluding ICE   ICE checks are performed in a specific sequence, so that high-   priority candidate pairs are checked first, followed by lower-   priority ones.  One way to conclude ICE is to declare victory as soon   as a check for each component of each media stream completes   successfully.  Indeed, this is a reasonable algorithm, and details   for it are provided below.  However, it is possible that a packet   loss will cause a higher-priority check to take longer to complete.   In that case, allowing ICE to run a little longer might produce   better results.  More fundamentally, however, the prioritization   defined by this specification may not yield "optimal" results.  As an   example, if the aim is to select low-latency media paths, usage of a   relay is a hint that latencies may be higher, but it is nothing more   than a hint.  An actual round-trip time (RTT) measurement could be   made, and it might demonstrate that a pair with lower priority is   actually better than one with higher priority.   Consequently, ICE assigns one of the agents in the role of the   CONTROLLING AGENT, and the other of the CONTROLLED AGENT.  The   controlling agent gets to nominate which candidate pairs will get   used for media amongst the ones that are valid.  It can do this in   one of two ways -- using REGULAR NOMINATION or AGGRESSIVE NOMINATION.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   With regular nomination, the controlling agent lets the checks   continue until at least one valid candidate pair for each media   stream is found.  Then, it picks amongst those that are valid, and   sends a second STUN request on its NOMINATED candidate pair, but this   time with a flag set to tell the peer that this pair has been   nominated for use.  This is shown in Figure 4.   L                        R   -                        -   STUN request ->             \  L's             <- STUN response  /  check              <- STUN request  \  R's   STUN response ->            /  check   STUN request + flag ->      \  L's             <- STUN response  /  check                       Figure 4: Regular Nomination   Once the STUN transaction with the flag completes, both sides cancel   any future checks for that media stream.  ICE will now send media   using this pair.  The pair an ICE agent is using for media is called   the SELECTED PAIR.   In aggressive nomination, the controlling agent puts the flag in   every STUN request it sends.  This way, once the first check   succeeds, ICE processing is complete for that media stream and the   controlling agent doesn't have to send a second STUN request.  The   selected pair will be the highest-priority valid pair whose check   succeeded.  Aggressive nomination is faster than regular nomination,   but gives less flexibility.  Aggressive nomination is shown in   Figure 5.   L                        R   -                        -   STUN request + flag ->      \  L's             <- STUN response  /  check              <- STUN request  \  R's   STUN response ->            /  check                      Figure 5: Aggressive Nomination   Once all of the media streams are completed, the controlling endpoint   sends an updated offer if the candidates in the m and c lines for the   media stream (called the DEFAULT CANDIDATES) don't match ICE's   SELECTED CANDIDATES.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Once ICE is concluded, it can be restarted at any time for one or all   of the media streams by either agent.  This is done by sending an   updated offer indicating a restart.2.7.  Lite Implementations   In order for ICE to be used in a call, both agents need to support   it.  However, certain agents will always be connected to the public   Internet and have a public IP address at which it can receive packets   from any correspondent.  To make it easier for these devices to   support ICE, ICE defines a special type of implementation called LITE   (in contrast to the normal FULL implementation).  A lite   implementation doesn't gather candidates; it includes only host   candidates for any media stream.  Lite agents do not generate   connectivity checks or run the state machines, though they need to be   able to respond to connectivity checks.  When a lite implementation   connects with a full implementation, the full agent takes the role of   the controlling agent, and the lite agent takes on the controlled   role.  When two lite implementations connect, no checks are sent.   For guidance on when a lite implementation is appropriate, see the   discussion inAppendix A.   It is important to note that the lite implementation was added to   this specification to provide a stepping stone to full   implementation.  Even for devices that are always connected to the   public Internet, a full implementation is preferable if achievable.3.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].   Readers should be familiar with the terminology defined in the offer/   answer model [RFC3264], STUN [RFC5389], and NAT Behavioral   requirements for UDP [RFC4787].   This specification makes use of the following additional terminology:   Agent:  As defined inRFC 3264, an agent is the protocol      implementation involved in the offer/answer exchange.  There are      two agents involved in an offer/answer exchange.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Peer:  From the perspective of one of the agents in a session, its      peer is the other agent.  Specifically, from the perspective of      the offerer, the peer is the answerer.  From the perspective of      the answerer, the peer is the offerer.   Transport Address:  The combination of an IP address and transport      protocol (such as UDP or TCP) port.   Candidate:  A transport address that is a potential point of contact      for receipt of media.  Candidates also have properties -- their      type (server reflexive, relayed or host), priority, foundation,      and base.   Component:  A component is a piece of a media stream requiring a      single transport address; a media stream may require multiple      components, each of which has to work for the media stream as a      whole to work.  For media streams based on RTP, there are two      components per media stream -- one for RTP, and one for RTCP.   Host Candidate:  A candidate obtained by binding to a specific port      from an IP address on the host.  This includes IP addresses on      physical interfaces and logical ones, such as ones obtained      through Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and Realm Specific IP      (RSIP) [RFC3102] (which lives at the operating system level).   Server Reflexive Candidate:  A candidate whose IP address and port      are a binding allocated by a NAT for an agent when it sent a      packet through the NAT to a server.  Server reflexive candidates      can be learned by STUN servers using the Binding request, or TURN      servers, which provides both a relayed and server reflexive      candidate.   Peer Reflexive Candidate:  A candidate whose IP address and port are      a binding allocated by a NAT for an agent when it sent a STUN      Binding request through the NAT to its peer.   Relayed Candidate:  A candidate obtained by sending a TURN Allocate      request from a host candidate to a TURN server.  The relayed      candidate is resident on the TURN server, and the TURN server      relays packets back towards the agent.   Base:  The base of a server reflexive candidate is the host candidate      from which it was derived.  A host candidate is also said to have      a base, equal to that candidate itself.  Similarly, the base of a      relayed candidate is that candidate itself.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Foundation:  An arbitrary string that is the same for two candidates      that have the same type, base IP address, protocol (UDP, TCP,      etc.), and STUN or TURN server.  If any of these are different,      then the foundation will be different.  Two candidate pairs with      the same foundation pairs are likely to have similar network      characteristics.  Foundations are used in the frozen algorithm.   Local Candidate:  A candidate that an agent has obtained and included      in an offer or answer it sent.   Remote Candidate:  A candidate that an agent received in an offer or      answer from its peer.   Default Destination/Candidate:  The default destination for a      component of a media stream is the transport address that would be      used by an agent that is not ICE aware.  For the RTP component,      the default IP address is in the c line of the SDP, and the port      is in the m line.  For the RTCP component, it is in the rtcp      attribute when present, and when not present, the IP address is in      the c line and 1 plus the port is in the m line.  A default      candidate for a component is one whose transport address matches      the default destination for that component.   Candidate Pair:  A pairing containing a local candidate and a remote      candidate.   Check, Connectivity Check, STUN Check:  A STUN Binding request      transaction for the purposes of verifying connectivity.  A check      is sent from the local candidate to the remote candidate of a      candidate pair.   Check List:  An ordered set of candidate pairs that an agent will use      to generate checks.   Ordinary Check:  A connectivity check generated by an agent as a      consequence of a timer that fires periodically, instructing it to      send a check.   Triggered Check:  A connectivity check generated as a consequence of      the receipt of a connectivity check from the peer.   Valid List:  An ordered set of candidate pairs for a media stream      that have been validated by a successful STUN transaction.   Full:  An ICE implementation that performs the complete set of      functionality defined by this specification.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Lite:  An ICE implementation that omits certain functions,      implementing only as much as is necessary for a peer      implementation that is full to gain the benefits of ICE.  Lite      implementations do not maintain any of the state machines and do      not generate connectivity checks.   Controlling Agent:  The ICE agent that is responsible for selecting      the final choice of candidate pairs and signaling them through      STUN and an updated offer, if needed.  In any session, one agent      is always controlling.  The other is the controlled agent.   Controlled Agent:  An ICE agent that waits for the controlling agent      to select the final choice of candidate pairs.   Regular Nomination:  The process of picking a valid candidate pair      for media traffic by validating the pair with one STUN request,      and then picking it by sending a second STUN request with a flag      indicating its nomination.   Aggressive Nomination:  The process of picking a valid candidate pair      for media traffic by including a flag in every STUN request, such      that the first one to produce a valid candidate pair is used for      media.   Nominated:  If a valid candidate pair has its nominated flag set, it      means that it may be selected by ICE for sending and receiving      media.   Selected Pair, Selected Candidate:  The candidate pair selected by      ICE for sending and receiving media is called the selected pair,      and each of its candidates is called the selected candidate.4.  Sending the Initial Offer   In order to send the initial offer in an offer/answer exchange, an   agent must (1) gather candidates, (2) prioritize them, (3) eliminate   redundant candidates, (4) choose default candidates, and then (5)   formulate and send the SDP offer.  All but the last of these five   steps differ for full and lite implementations.4.1.  Full Implementation Requirements4.1.1.  Gathering Candidates   An agent gathers candidates when it believes that communication is   imminent.  An offerer can do this based on a user interface cue, or   based on an explicit request to initiate a session.  Every candidateRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   is a transport address.  It also has a type and a base.  Four types   are defined and gathered by this specification -- host candidates,   server reflexive candidates, peer reflexive candidates, and relayed   candidates.  The server reflexive candidates are gathered using STUN   or TURN, and relayed candidates are obtained through TURN.  Peer   reflexive candidates are obtained in later phases of ICE, as a   consequence of connectivity checks.  The base of a candidate is the   candidate that an agent must send from when using that candidate.4.1.1.1.  Host Candidates   The first step is to gather host candidates.  Host candidates are   obtained by binding to ports (typically ephemeral) on a IP address   attached to an interface (physical or virtual, including VPN   interfaces) on the host.   For each UDP media stream the agent wishes to use, the agent SHOULD   obtain a candidate for each component of the media stream on each IP   address that the host has.  It obtains each candidate by binding to a   UDP port on the specific IP address.  A host candidate (and indeed   every candidate) is always associated with a specific component for   which it is a candidate.  Each component has an ID assigned to it,   called the component ID.  For RTP-based media streams, the RTP itself   has a component ID of 1, and RTCP a component ID of 2.  If an agent   is using RTCP, it MUST obtain a candidate for it.  If an agent is   using both RTP and RTCP, it would end up with 2*K host candidates if   an agent has K IP addresses.   The base for each host candidate is set to the candidate itself.4.1.1.2.  Server Reflexive and Relayed Candidates   Agents SHOULD obtain relayed candidates and SHOULD obtain server   reflexive candidates.  These requirements are at SHOULD strength to   allow for provider variation.  Use of STUN and TURN servers may be   unnecessary in closed networks where agents are never connected to   the public Internet or to endpoints outside of the closed network.   In such cases, a full implementation would be used for agents that   are dual stack or multihomed, to select a host candidate.  Use of   TURN servers is expensive, and when ICE is being used, they will only   be utilized when both endpoints are behind NATs that perform address   and port dependent mapping.  Consequently, some deployments might   consider this use case to be marginal, and elect not to use TURN   servers.  If an agent does not gather server reflexive or relayed   candidates, it is RECOMMENDED that the functionality be implemented   and just disabled through configuration, so that it can be re-enabled   through configuration if conditions change in the future.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   If an agent is gathering both relayed and server reflexive   candidates, it uses a TURN server.  If it is gathering just server   reflexive candidates, it uses a STUN server.   The agent next pairs each host candidate with the STUN or TURN server   with which it is configured or has discovered by some means.  If a   STUN or TURN server is configured, it is RECOMMENDED that a domain   name be configured, and the DNS procedures in [RFC5389] (using SRV   records with the "stun" service) be used to discover the STUN server,   and the DNS procedures in [RFC5766] (using SRV records with the   "turn" service) be used to discover the TURN server.   This specification only considers usage of a single STUN or TURN   server.  When there are multiple choices for that single STUN or TURN   server (when, for example, they are learned through DNS records and   multiple results are returned), an agent SHOULD use a single STUN or   TURN server (based on its IP address) for all candidates for a   particular session.  This improves the performance of ICE.  The   result is a set of pairs of host candidates with STUN or TURN   servers.  The agent then chooses one pair, and sends a Binding or   Allocate request to the server from that host candidate.  Binding   requests to a STUN server are not authenticated, and any ALTERNATE-   SERVER attribute in a response is ignored.  Agents MUST support the   backwards compatibility mode for the Binding request defined in   [RFC5389].  Allocate requests SHOULD be authenticated using a long-   term credential obtained by the client through some other means.   Every Ta milliseconds thereafter, the agent can generate another new   STUN or TURN transaction.  This transaction can either be a retry of   a previous transaction that failed with a recoverable error (such as   authentication failure), or a transaction for a new host candidate   and STUN or TURN server pair.  The agent SHOULD NOT generate   transactions more frequently than one every Ta milliseconds.  SeeSection 16 for guidance on how to set Ta and the STUN retransmit   timer, RTO.   The agent will receive a Binding or Allocate response.  A successful   Allocate response will provide the agent with a server reflexive   candidate (obtained from the mapped address) and a relayed candidate   in the XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS attribute.  If the Allocate request is   rejected because the server lacks resources to fulfill it, the agent   SHOULD instead send a Binding request to obtain a server reflexive   candidate.  A Binding response will provide the agent with only a   server reflexive candidate (also obtained from the mapped address).   The base of the server reflexive candidate is the host candidate from   which the Allocate or Binding request was sent.  The base of a   relayed candidate is that candidate itself.  If a relayed candidateRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   is identical to a host candidate (which can happen in rare cases),   the relayed candidate MUST be discarded.4.1.1.3.  Computing Foundations   Finally, the agent assigns each candidate a foundation.  The   foundation is an identifier, scoped within a session.  Two candidates   MUST have the same foundation ID when all of the following are true:   o  they are of the same type (host, relayed, server reflexive, or      peer reflexive).   o  their bases have the same IP address (the ports can be different).   o  for reflexive and relayed candidates, the STUN or TURN servers      used to obtain them have the same IP address.   o  they were obtained using the same transport protocol (TCP, UDP,      etc.).   Similarly, two candidates MUST have different foundations if their   types are different, their bases have different IP addresses, the   STUN or TURN servers used to obtain them have different IP addresses,   or their transport protocols are different.4.1.1.4.  Keeping Candidates Alive   Once server reflexive and relayed candidates are allocated, they MUST   be kept alive until ICE processing has completed, as described inSection 8.3.  For server reflexive candidates learned through a   Binding request, the bindings MUST be kept alive by additional   Binding requests to the server.  Refreshes for allocations are done   using the Refresh transaction, as described in [RFC5766].  The   Refresh requests will also refresh the server reflexive candidate.4.1.2.  Prioritizing Candidates   The prioritization process results in the assignment of a priority to   each candidate.  Each candidate for a media stream MUST have a unique   priority that MUST be a positive integer between 1 and (2**31 - 1).   This priority will be used by ICE to determine the order of the   connectivity checks and the relative preference for candidates.   An agent SHOULD compute this priority using the formula inSection 4.1.2.1 and choose its parameters using the guidelines inSection 4.1.2.2.  If an agent elects to use a different formula, ICE   will take longer to converge since both agents will not be   coordinated in their checks.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20104.1.2.1.  Recommended Formula   When using the formula, an agent computes the priority by determining   a preference for each type of candidate (server reflexive, peer   reflexive, relayed, and host), and, when the agent is multihomed,   choosing a preference for its IP addresses.  These two preferences   are then combined to compute the priority for a candidate.  That   priority is computed using the following formula:   priority = (2^24)*(type preference) +              (2^8)*(local preference) +              (2^0)*(256 - component ID)   The type preference MUST be an integer from 0 to 126 inclusive, and   represents the preference for the type of the candidate (where the   types are local, server reflexive, peer reflexive, and relayed).  A   126 is the highest preference, and a 0 is the lowest.  Setting the   value to a 0 means that candidates of this type will only be used as   a last resort.  The type preference MUST be identical for all   candidates of the same type and MUST be different for candidates of   different types.  The type preference for peer reflexive candidates   MUST be higher than that of server reflexive candidates.  Note that   candidates gathered based on the procedures ofSection 4.1.1 will   never be peer reflexive candidates; candidates of these type are   learned from the connectivity checks performed by ICE.   The local preference MUST be an integer from 0 to 65535 inclusive.   It represents a preference for the particular IP address from which   the candidate was obtained, in cases where an agent is multihomed.   65535 represents the highest preference, and a zero, the lowest.   When there is only a single IP address, this value SHOULD be set to   65535.  More generally, if there are multiple candidates for a   particular component for a particular media stream that have the same   type, the local preference MUST be unique for each one.  In this   specification, this only happens for multihomed hosts.  If a host is   multihomed because it is dual stack, the local preference SHOULD be   set equal to the precedence value for IP addresses described inRFC3484 [RFC3484].   The component ID is the component ID for the candidate, and MUST be   between 1 and 256 inclusive.4.1.2.2.  Guidelines for Choosing Type and Local Preferences   One criterion for selection of the type and local preference values   is the use of a media intermediary, such as a TURN server, VPN   server, or NAT.  With a media intermediary, if media is sent to thatRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   candidate, it will first transit the media intermediary before being   received.  Relayed candidates are one type of candidate that involves   a media intermediary.  Another are host candidates obtained from a   VPN interface.  When media is transited through a media intermediary,   it can increase the latency between transmission and reception.  It   can increase the packet losses, because of the additional router hops   that may be taken.  It may increase the cost of providing service,   since media will be routed in and right back out of a media   intermediary run by a provider.  If these concerns are important, the   type preference for relayed candidates SHOULD be lower than host   candidates.  The RECOMMENDED values are 126 for host candidates, 100   for server reflexive candidates, 110 for peer reflexive candidates,   and 0 for relayed candidates.  Furthermore, if an agent is multihomed   and has multiple IP addresses, the local preference for host   candidates from a VPN interface SHOULD have a priority of 0.   Another criterion for selection of preferences is IP address family.   ICE works with both IPv4 and IPv6.  It therefore provides a   transition mechanism that allows dual-stack hosts to prefer   connectivity over IPv6, but to fall back to IPv4 in case the v6   networks are disconnected (due, for example, to a failure in a 6to4   relay) [RFC3056].  It can also help with hosts that have both a   native IPv6 address and a 6to4 address.  In such a case, higher local   preferences could be assigned to the v6 addresses, followed by the   6to4 addresses, followed by the v4 addresses.  This allows a site to   obtain and begin using native v6 addresses immediately, yet still   fall back to 6to4 addresses when communicating with agents in other   sites that do not yet have native v6 connectivity.   Another criterion for selecting preferences is security.  If a user   is a telecommuter, and therefore connected to a corporate network and   a local home network, the user may prefer their voice traffic to be   routed over the VPN in order to keep it on the corporate network when   communicating within the enterprise, but use the local network when   communicating with users outside of the enterprise.  In such a case,   a VPN address would have a higher local preference than any other   address.   Another criterion for selecting preferences is topological awareness.   This is most useful for candidates that make use of intermediaries.   In those cases, if an agent has preconfigured or dynamically   discovered knowledge of the topological proximity of the   intermediaries to itself, it can use that to assign higher local   preferences to candidates obtained from closer intermediaries.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20104.1.3.  Eliminating Redundant Candidates   Next, the agent eliminates redundant candidates.  A candidate is   redundant if its transport address equals another candidate, and its   base equals the base of that other candidate.  Note that two   candidates can have the same transport address yet have different   bases, and these would not be considered redundant.  Frequently, a   server reflexive candidate and a host candidate will be redundant   when the agent is not behind a NAT.  The agent SHOULD eliminate the   redundant candidate with the lower priority.4.1.4.  Choosing Default Candidates   A candidate is said to be default if it would be the target of media   from a non-ICE peer; that target is called the DEFAULT DESTINATION.   If the default candidates are not selected by the ICE algorithm when   communicating with an ICE-aware peer, an updated offer/answer will be   required after ICE processing completes in order to "fix up" the SDP   so that the default destination for media matches the candidates   selected by ICE.  If ICE happens to select the default candidates, no   updated offer/answer is required.   An agent MUST choose a set of candidates, one for each component of   each in-use media stream, to be default.  A media stream is in-use if   it does not have a port of zero (which is used inRFC 3264 to reject   a media stream).  Consequently, a media stream is in-use even if it   is marked as a=inactive [RFC4566] or has a bandwidth value of zero.   It is RECOMMENDED that default candidates be chosen based on the   likelihood of those candidates to work with the peer that is being   contacted.  It is RECOMMENDED that the default candidates are the   relayed candidates (if relayed candidates are available), server   reflexive candidates (if server reflexive candidates are available),   and finally host candidates.4.2.  Lite Implementation Requirements   Lite implementations only utilize host candidates.  A lite   implementation MUST, for each component of each media stream,   allocate zero or one IPv4 candidates.  It MAY allocate zero or more   IPv6 candidates, but no more than one per each IPv6 address utilized   by the host.  Since there can be no more than one IPv4 candidate per   component of each media stream, if an agent has multiple IPv4   addresses, it MUST choose one for allocating the candidate.  If a   host is dual stack, it is RECOMMENDED that it allocate one IPv4   candidate and one global IPv6 address.  With the lite implementation,   ICE cannot be used to dynamically choose amongst candidates.   Therefore, including more than one candidate from a particular scopeRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   is NOT RECOMMENDED, since only a connectivity check can truly   determine whether to use one address or the other.   Each component has an ID assigned to it, called the component ID.   For RTP-based media streams, the RTP itself has a component ID of 1,   and RTCP a component ID of 2.  If an agent is using RTCP, it MUST   obtain candidates for it.   Each candidate is assigned a foundation.  The foundation MUST be   different for two candidates allocated from different IP addresses,   and MUST be the same otherwise.  A simple integer that increments for   each IP address will suffice.  In addition, each candidate MUST be   assigned a unique priority amongst all candidates for the same media   stream.  This priority SHOULD be equal to:   priority = (2^24)*(126) +              (2^8)*(IP precedence) +              (2^0)*(256 - component ID)   If a host is v4-only, it SHOULD set the IP precedence to 65535.  If a   host is v6 or dual stack, the IP precedence SHOULD be the precedence   value for IP addresses described inRFC 3484 [RFC3484].   Next, an agent chooses a default candidate for each component of each   media stream.  If a host is IPv4 only, there would only be one   candidate for each component of each media stream, and therefore that   candidate is the default.  If a host is IPv6 or dual stack, the   selection of default is a matter of local policy.  This default   SHOULD be chosen such that it is the candidate most likely to be used   with a peer.  For IPv6-only hosts, this would typically be a globally   scoped IPv6 address.  For dual-stack hosts, the IPv4 address is   RECOMMENDED.4.3.  Encoding the SDP   The process of encoding the SDP is identical between full and lite   implementations.   The agent will include an m line for each media stream it wishes to   use.  The ordering of media streams in the SDP is relevant for ICE.   ICE will perform its connectivity checks for the first m line first,   and consequently media will be able to flow for that stream first.   Agents SHOULD place their most important media stream, if there is   one, first in the SDP.   There will be a candidate attribute for each candidate for a   particular media stream.Section 15 provides detailed rules for   constructing this attribute.  The attribute carries the IP address,Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   port, and transport protocol for the candidate, in addition to its   properties that need to be signaled to the peer for ICE to work: the   priority, foundation, and component ID.  The candidate attribute also   carries information about the candidate that is useful for   diagnostics and other functions: its type and related transport   addresses.   STUN connectivity checks between agents are authenticated using the   short-term credential mechanism defined for STUN [RFC5389].  This   mechanism relies on a username and password that are exchanged   through protocol machinery between the client and server.  With ICE,   the offer/answer exchange is used to exchange them.  The username   part of this credential is formed by concatenating a username   fragment from each agent, separated by a colon.  Each agent also   provides a password, used to compute the message integrity for   requests it receives.  The username fragment and password are   exchanged in the ice-ufrag and ice-pwd attributes, respectively.  In   addition to providing security, the username provides disambiguation   and correlation of checks to media streams.  SeeAppendix B.4 for   motivation.   If an agent is a lite implementation, it MUST include an "a=ice-lite"   session-level attribute in its SDP.  If an agent is a full   implementation, it MUST NOT include this attribute.   The default candidates are added to the SDP as the default   destination for media.  For streams based on RTP, this is done by   placing the IP address and port of the RTP candidate into the c and m   lines, respectively.  If the agent is utilizing RTCP, it MUST encode   the RTCP candidate using the a=rtcp attribute as defined inRFC 3605   [RFC3605].  If RTCP is not in use, the agent MUST signal that using   b=RS:0 and b=RR:0 as defined inRFC 3556 [RFC3556].   The transport addresses that will be the default destination for   media when communicating with non-ICE peers MUST also be present as   candidates in one or more a=candidate lines.   ICE provides for extensibility by allowing an offer or answer to   contain a series of tokens that identify the ICE extensions used by   that agent.  If an agent supports an ICE extension, it MUST include   the token defined for that extension in the ice-options attribute.   The following is an example SDP message that includes ICE attributes   (lines folded for readability):Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010       v=0       o=jdoe 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 10.0.1.1       s=       c=IN IP4 192.0.2.3       t=0 0       a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg       a=ice-ufrag:8hhY       m=audio 45664 RTP/AVP 0       b=RS:0       b=RR:0       a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000       a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 10.0.1.1 8998 typ host       a=candidate:2 1 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 45664 typ srflx raddr   10.0.1.1 rport 8998   Once an agent has sent its offer or its answer, that agent MUST be   prepared to receive both STUN and media packets on each candidate.   As discussed inSection 11.1, media packets can be sent to a   candidate prior to its appearance as the default destination for   media in an offer or answer.5.  Receiving the Initial Offer   When an agent receives an initial offer, it will check if the offerer   supports ICE, determine its own role, gather candidates, prioritize   them, choose default candidates, encode and send an answer, and for   full implementations, form the check lists and begin connectivity   checks.5.1.  Verifying ICE Support   The agent will proceed with the ICE procedures defined in this   specification if, for each media stream in the SDP it received, the   default destination for each component of that media stream appears   in a candidate attribute.  For example, in the case of RTP, the IP   address and port in the c and m lines, respectively, appear in a   candidate attribute and the value in the rtcp attribute appears in a   candidate attribute.   If this condition is not met, the agent MUST process the SDP based on   normalRFC 3264 procedures, without using any of the ICE mechanisms   described in the remainder of this specification with the following   exceptions:   1.  The agent MUST follow the rules ofSection 10, which describe       keepalive procedures for all agents.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   2.  If the agent is not proceeding with ICE because there were       a=candidate attributes, but none that matched the default       destination of the media stream, the agent MUST include an a=ice-       mismatch attribute in its answer.   3.  If the default candidates were relayed candidates learned through       a TURN server, the agent MUST create permissions in the TURN       server for the IP addresses learned from its peer in the SDP it       just received.  If this is not done, initial packets in the media       stream from the peer may be lost.5.2.  Determining Role   For each session, each agent takes on a role.  There are two roles --   controlling and controlled.  The controlling agent is responsible for   the choice of the final candidate pairs used for communications.  For   a full agent, this means nominating the candidate pairs that can be   used by ICE for each media stream, and for generating the updated   offer based on ICE's selection, when needed.  For a lite   implementation, being the controlling agent means selecting a   candidate pair based on the ones in the offer and answer (for IPv4,   there is only ever one pair), and then generating an updated offer   reflecting that selection, when needed (it is never needed for an   IPv4-only host).  The controlled agent is told which candidate pairs   to use for each media stream, and does not generate an updated offer   to signal this information.  The sections below describe in detail   the actual procedures followed by controlling and controlled nodes.   The rules for determining the role and the impact on behavior are as   follows:   Both agents are full:  The agent that generated the offer which      started the ICE processing MUST take the controlling role, and the      other MUST take the controlled role.  Both agents will form check      lists, run the ICE state machines, and generate connectivity      checks.  The controlling agent will execute the logic inSection 8.1 to nominate pairs that will be selected by ICE, and      then both agents end ICE as described inSection 8.1.2.  In      unusual cases, described inAppendix B.11, it is possible for both      agents to mistakenly believe they are controlled or controlling.      To resolve this, each agent MUST select a random number, called      the tie-breaker, uniformly distributed between 0 and (2**64) - 1      (that is, a 64-bit positive integer).  This number is used in      connectivity checks to detect and repair this case, as described      inSection 7.1.2.2.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   One agent full, one lite:  The full agent MUST take the controlling      role, and the lite agent MUST take the controlled role.  The full      agent will form check lists, run the ICE state machines, and      generate connectivity checks.  That agent will execute the logic      inSection 8.1 to nominate pairs that will be selected by ICE, and      use the logic inSection 8.1.2 to end ICE.  The lite      implementation will just listen for connectivity checks, receive      them and respond to them, and then conclude ICE as described inSection 8.2.  For the lite implementation, the state of ICE      processing for each media stream is considered to be Running, and      the state of ICE overall is Running.   Both lite:  The agent that generated the offer which started the ICE      processing MUST take the controlling role, and the other MUST take      the controlled role.  In this case, no connectivity checks are      ever sent.  Rather, once the offer/answer exchange completes, each      agent performs the processing described inSection 8 without      connectivity checks.  It is possible that both agents will believe      they are controlled or controlling.  In the latter case, the      conflict is resolved through glare detection capabilities in the      signaling protocol carrying the offer/answer exchange.  The state      of ICE processing for each media stream is considered to be      Running, and the state of ICE overall is Running.   Once roles are determined for a session, they persist unless ICE is   restarted.  An ICE restart (Section 9.1) causes a new selection of   roles and tie-breakers.5.3.  Gathering Candidates   The process for gathering candidates at the answerer is identical to   the process for the offerer as described inSection 4.1.1 for full   implementations andSection 4.2 for lite implementations.  It is   RECOMMENDED that this process begin immediately on receipt of the   offer, prior to alerting the user.  Such gathering MAY begin when an   agent starts.5.4.  Prioritizing Candidates   The process for prioritizing candidates at the answerer is identical   to the process followed by the offerer, as described inSection 4.1.2   for full implementations andSection 4.2 for lite implementations.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20105.5.  Choosing Default Candidates   The process for selecting default candidates at the answerer is   identical to the process followed by the offerer, as described inSection 4.1.4 for full implementations andSection 4.2 for lite   implementations.5.6.  Encoding the SDP   The process for encoding the SDP at the answerer is identical to the   process followed by the offerer for both full and lite   implementations, as described inSection 4.3.5.7.  Forming the Check Lists   Forming check lists is done only by full implementations.  Lite   implementations MUST skip the steps defined in this section.   There is one check list per in-use media stream resulting from the   offer/answer exchange.  To form the check list for a media stream,   the agent forms candidate pairs, computes a candidate pair priority,   orders the pairs by priority, prunes them, and sets their states.   These steps are described in this section.5.7.1.  Forming Candidate Pairs   First, the agent takes each of its candidates for a media stream   (called LOCAL CANDIDATES) and pairs them with the candidates it   received from its peer (called REMOTE CANDIDATES) for that media   stream.  In order to prevent the attacks described inSection 18.5.2,   agents MAY limit the number of candidates they'll accept in an offer   or answer.  A local candidate is paired with a remote candidate if   and only if the two candidates have the same component ID and have   the same IP address version.  It is possible that some of the local   candidates won't get paired with remote candidates, and some of the   remote candidates won't get paired with local candidates.  This can   happen if one agent doesn't include candidates for the all of the   components for a media stream.  If this happens, the number of   components for that media stream is effectively reduced, and   considered to be equal to the minimum across both agents of the   maximum component ID provided by each agent across all components for   the media stream.   In the case of RTP, this would happen when one agent provides   candidates for RTCP, and the other does not.  As another example, the   offerer can multiplex RTP and RTCP on the same port and signals that   it can do that in the SDP through an SDP attribute [RFC5761].   However, since the offerer doesn't know if the answerer can performRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   such multiplexing, the offerer includes candidates for RTP and RTCP   on separate ports, so that the offer has two components per media   stream.  If the answerer can perform such multiplexing, it would   include just a single component for each candidate - for the combined   RTP/RTCP mux.  ICE would end up acting as if there was just a single   component for this candidate.   The candidate pairs whose local and remote candidates are both the   default candidates for a particular component is called,   unsurprisingly, the default candidate pair for that component.  This   is the pair that would be used to transmit media if both agents had   not been ICE aware.   In order to aid understanding, Figure 6 shows the relationships   between several key concepts -- transport addresses, candidates,   candidate pairs, and check lists, in addition to indicating the main   properties of candidates and candidate pairs.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010       +------------------------------------------+       |                                          |       | +---------------------+                  |       | |+----+ +----+ +----+ |   +Type          |       | || IP | |Port| |Tran| |   +Priority      |       | ||Addr| |    | |    | |   +Foundation    |       | |+----+ +----+ +----+ |   +ComponentiD   |       | |      Transport      |   +RelatedAddr   |       | |        Addr         |                  |       | +---------------------+   +Base          |       |             Candidate                    |       +------------------------------------------+       *                                         *       *    *************************************       *    *     +-------------------------------+    .|                               |     | Local     Remote              |     | +----+    +----+   +default?  |     | |Cand|    |Cand|   +valid?    |     | +----+    +----+   +nominated?|     |                    +State     |     |                               |     |                               |     |          Candidate Pair       |     +-------------------------------+     *                              *     *                  ************     *                  *     +------------------+     |  Candidate Pair  |     +------------------+     +------------------+     |  Candidate Pair  |     +------------------+     +------------------+     |  Candidate Pair  |     +------------------+            Check            List               Figure 6: Conceptual Diagram of a Check ListRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20105.7.2.  Computing Pair Priority and Ordering Pairs   Once the pairs are formed, a candidate pair priority is computed.   Let G be the priority for the candidate provided by the controlling   agent.  Let D be the priority for the candidate provided by the   controlled agent.  The priority for a pair is computed as:      pair priority = 2^32*MIN(G,D) + 2*MAX(G,D) + (G>D?1:0)   Where G>D?1:0 is an expression whose value is 1 if G is greater than   D, and 0 otherwise.  Once the priority is assigned, the agent sorts   the candidate pairs in decreasing order of priority.  If two pairs   have identical priority, the ordering amongst them is arbitrary.5.7.3.  Pruning the Pairs   This sorted list of candidate pairs is used to determine a sequence   of connectivity checks that will be performed.  Each check involves   sending a request from a local candidate to a remote candidate.   Since an agent cannot send requests directly from a reflexive   candidate, but only from its base, the agent next goes through the   sorted list of candidate pairs.  For each pair where the local   candidate is server reflexive, the server reflexive candidate MUST be   replaced by its base.  Once this has been done, the agent MUST prune   the list.  This is done by removing a pair if its local and remote   candidates are identical to the local and remote candidates of a pair   higher up on the priority list.  The result is a sequence of ordered   candidate pairs, called the check list for that media stream.   In addition, in order to limit the attacks described inSection 18.5.2, an agent MUST limit the total number of connectivity   checks the agent performs across all check lists to a specific value,   and this value MUST be configurable.  A default of 100 is   RECOMMENDED.  This limit is enforced by discarding the lower-priority   candidate pairs until there are less than 100.  It is RECOMMENDED   that a lower value be utilized when possible, set to the maximum   number of plausible checks that might be seen in an actual deployment   configuration.  The requirement for configuration is meant to provide   a tool for fixing this value in the field if, once deployed, it is   found to be problematic.5.7.4.  Computing States   Each candidate pair in the check list has a foundation and a state.   The foundation is the combination of the foundations of the local and   remote candidates in the pair.  The state is assigned once the check   list for each media stream has been computed.  There are five   potential values that the state can have:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Waiting:  A check has not been performed for this pair, and can be      performed as soon as it is the highest-priority Waiting pair on      the check list.   In-Progress:  A check has been sent for this pair, but the      transaction is in progress.   Succeeded:  A check for this pair was already done and produced a      successful result.   Failed:  A check for this pair was already done and failed, either      never producing any response or producing an unrecoverable failure      response.   Frozen:  A check for this pair hasn't been performed, and it can't      yet be performed until some other check succeeds, allowing this      pair to unfreeze and move into the Waiting state.   As ICE runs, the pairs will move between states as shown in Figure 7.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010      +-----------+      |           |      |           |      |  Frozen   |      |           |      |           |      +-----------+            |            |unfreeze            |            V      +-----------+         +-----------+      |           |         |           |      |           | perform |           |      |  Waiting  |-------->|In-Progress|      |           |         |           |      |           |         |           |      +-----------+         +-----------+                                  / |                                //  |                              //    |                            //      |                           /        |                         //         |               failure //           |success                     //             |                    /               |                  //                |                //                  |              //                    |             V                      V      +-----------+         +-----------+      |           |         |           |      |           |         |           |      |   Failed  |         | Succeeded |      |           |         |           |      |           |         |           |      +-----------+         +-----------+                         Figure 7: Pair State FSM   The initial states for each pair in a check list are computed by   performing the following sequence of steps:   1.  The agent sets all of the pairs in each check list to the Frozen       state.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   2.  The agent examines the check list for the first media stream (a       media stream is the first media stream when it is described by       the first m line in the SDP offer and answer).  For that media       stream:       *  For all pairs with the same foundation, it sets the state of          the pair with the lowest component ID to Waiting.  If there is          more than one such pair, the one with the highest priority is          used.   One of the check lists will have some number of pairs in the Waiting   state, and the other check lists will have all of their pairs in the   Frozen state.  A check list with at least one pair that is Waiting is   called an active check list, and a check list with all pairs Frozen   is called a frozen check list.   The check list itself is associated with a state, which captures the   state of ICE checks for that media stream.  There are three states:   Running:  In this state, ICE checks are still in progress for this      media stream.   Completed:  In this state, ICE checks have produced nominated pairs      for each component of the media stream.  Consequently, ICE has      succeeded and media can be sent.   Failed:  In this state, the ICE checks have not completed      successfully for this media stream.   When a check list is first constructed as the consequence of an   offer/answer exchange, it is placed in the Running state.   ICE processing across all media streams also has a state associated   with it.  This state is equal to Running while ICE processing is   under way.  The state is Completed when ICE processing is complete   and Failed if it failed without success.  Rules for transitioning   between states are described below.5.8.  Scheduling Checks   Checks are generated only by full implementations.  Lite   implementations MUST skip the steps described in this section.   An agent performs ordinary checks and triggered checks.  The   generation of both checks is governed by a timer that fires   periodically for each media stream.  The agent maintains a FIFO   queue, called the triggered check queue, which contains candidate   pairs for which checks are to be sent at the next availableRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   opportunity.  When the timer fires, the agent removes the top pair   from the triggered check queue, performs a connectivity check on that   pair, and sets the state of the candidate pair to In-Progress.  If   there are no pairs in the triggered check queue, an ordinary check is   sent.   Once the agent has computed the check lists as described inSection 5.7, it sets a timer for each active check list.  The timer   fires every Ta*N seconds, where N is the number of active check lists   (initially, there is only one active check list).  Implementations   MAY set the timer to fire less frequently than this.  Implementations   SHOULD take care to spread out these timers so that they do not fire   at the same time for each media stream.  Ta and the retransmit timer   RTO are computed as described inSection 16.  Multiplying by N allows   this aggregate check throughput to be split between all active check   lists.  The first timer fires immediately, so that the agent performs   a connectivity check the moment the offer/answer exchange has been   done, followed by the next check Ta seconds later (since there is   only one active check list).   When the timer fires and there is no triggered check to be sent, the   agent MUST choose an ordinary check as follows:   o  Find the highest-priority pair in that check list that is in the      Waiting state.   o  If there is such a pair:      *  Send a STUN check from the local candidate of that pair to the         remote candidate of that pair.  The procedures for forming the         STUN request for this purpose are described inSection 7.1.2.      *  Set the state of the candidate pair to In-Progress.   o  If there is no such pair:      *  Find the highest-priority pair in that check list that is in         the Frozen state.      *  If there is such a pair:         +  Unfreeze the pair.         +  Perform a check for that pair, causing its state to            transition to In-Progress.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010      *  If there is no such pair:         +  Terminate the timer for that check list.   To compute the message integrity for the check, the agent uses the   remote username fragment and password learned from the SDP from its   peer.  The local username fragment is known directly by the agent for   its own candidate.6.  Receipt of the Initial Answer   This section describes the procedures that an agent follows when it   receives the answer from the peer.  It verifies that its peer   supports ICE, determines its role, and for full implementations,   forms the check list and begins performing ordinary checks.   When ICE is used with SIP, forking may result in a single offer   generating a multiplicity of answers.  In that case, ICE proceeds   completely in parallel and independently for each answer, treating   the combination of its offer and each answer as an independent offer/   answer exchange, with its own set of pairs, check lists, states, and   so on.  The only case in which processing of one pair impacts another   is freeing of candidates, discussed below inSection 8.3.6.1.  Verifying ICE Support   The logic at the offerer is identical to that of the answerer as   described inSection 5.1, with the exception that an offerer would   not ever generate a=ice-mismatch attributes in an SDP.   In some cases, the answer may omit a=candidate attributes for the   media streams, and instead include an a=ice-mismatch attribute for   one or more of the media streams in the SDP.  This signals to the   offerer that the answerer supports ICE, but that ICE processing was   not used for the session because a signaling intermediary modified   the default destination for media components without modifying the   corresponding candidate attributes.  SeeSection 18 for a discussion   of cases where this can happen.  This specification provides no   guidance on how an agent should proceed in such a failure case.6.2.  Determining Role   The offerer follows the same procedures described for the answerer inSection 5.2.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20106.3.  Forming the Check List   Formation of check lists is performed only by full implementations.   The offerer follows the same procedures described for the answerer inSection 5.7.6.4.  Performing Ordinary Checks   Ordinary checks are performed only by full implementations.  The   offerer follows the same procedures described for the answerer inSection 5.8.7.  Performing Connectivity Checks   This section describes how connectivity checks are performed.  All   ICE implementations are required to be compliant to [RFC5389], as   opposed to the older [RFC3489].  However, whereas a full   implementation will both generate checks (acting as a STUN client)   and receive them (acting as a STUN server), a lite implementation   will only receive checks, and thus will only act as a STUN server.7.1.  STUN Client Procedures   These procedures define how an agent sends a connectivity check,   whether it is an ordinary or a triggered check.  These procedures are   only applicable to full implementations.7.1.1.  Creating Permissions for Relayed Candidates   If the connectivity check is being sent using a relayed local   candidate, the client MUST create a permission first if it has not   already created one previously.  It would have created one previously   if it had told the TURN server to create a permission for the given   relayed candidate towards the IP address of the remote candidate.  To   create the permission, the agent follows the procedures defined in   [RFC5766].  The permission MUST be created towards the IP address of   the remote candidate.  It is RECOMMENDED that the agent defer   creation of a TURN channel until ICE completes, in which case   permissions for connectivity checks are normally created using a   CreatePermission request.  Once established, the agent MUST keep the   permission active until ICE concludes.7.1.2.  Sending the Request   The check is generated by sending a Binding request from a local   candidate to a remote candidate.  [RFC5389] describes how Binding   requests are constructed and generated.  A connectivity check MUSTRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   utilize the STUN short-term credential mechanism.  Support for   backwards compatibility withRFC 3489 MUST NOT be used or assumed   with connectivity checks.  The FINGERPRINT mechanism MUST be used for   connectivity checks.   ICE extends STUN by defining several new attributes, including   PRIORITY, USE-CANDIDATE, ICE-CONTROLLED, and ICE-CONTROLLING.  These   new attributes are formally defined inSection 19.1, and their usage   is described in the subsections below.  These STUN extensions are   applicable only to connectivity checks used for ICE.7.1.2.1.  PRIORITY and USE-CANDIDATE   An agent MUST include the PRIORITY attribute in its Binding request.   The attribute MUST be set equal to the priority that would be   assigned, based on the algorithm inSection 4.1.2, to a peer   reflexive candidate, should one be learned as a consequence of this   check (seeSection 7.1.3.2.1 for how peer reflexive candidates are   learned).  This priority value will be computed identically to how   the priority for the local candidate of the pair was computed, except   that the type preference is set to the value for peer reflexive   candidate types.   The controlling agent MAY include the USE-CANDIDATE attribute in the   Binding request.  The controlled agent MUST NOT include it in its   Binding request.  This attribute signals that the controlling agent   wishes to cease checks for this component, and use the candidate pair   resulting from the check for this component.Section 8.1.1 provides   guidance on determining when to include it.7.1.2.2.  ICE-CONTROLLED and ICE-CONTROLLING   The agent MUST include the ICE-CONTROLLED attribute in the request if   it is in the controlled role, and MUST include the ICE-CONTROLLING   attribute in the request if it is in the controlling role.  The   content of either attribute MUST be the tie-breaker that was   determined inSection 5.2.  These attributes are defined fully inSection 19.1.7.1.2.3.  Forming Credentials   A Binding request serving as a connectivity check MUST utilize the   STUN short-term credential mechanism.  The username for the   credential is formed by concatenating the username fragment provided   by the peer with the username fragment of the agent sending the   request, separated by a colon (":").  The password is equal to the   password provided by the peer.  For example, consider the case where   agent L is the offerer, and agent R is the answerer.  Agent LRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   included a username fragment of LFRAG for its candidates and a   password of LPASS.  Agent R provided a username fragment of RFRAG and   a password of RPASS.  A connectivity check from L to R utilizes the   username RFRAG:LFRAG and a password of RPASS.  A connectivity check   from R to L utilizes the username LFRAG:RFRAG and a password of   LPASS.  The responses utilize the same usernames and passwords as the   requests (note that the USERNAME attribute is not present in the   response).7.1.2.4.  DiffServ Treatment   If the agent is using Diffserv Codepoint markings [RFC2475] in its   media packets, it SHOULD apply those same markings to its   connectivity checks.7.1.3.  Processing the Response   When a Binding response is received, it is correlated to its Binding   request using the transaction ID, as defined in [RFC5389], which then   ties it to the candidate pair for which the Binding request was sent.   This section defines additional procedures for processing Binding   responses specific to this usage of STUN.7.1.3.1.  Failure Cases   If the STUN transaction generates a 487 (Role Conflict) error   response, the agent checks whether it included the ICE-CONTROLLED or   ICE-CONTROLLING attribute in the Binding request.  If the request   contained the ICE-CONTROLLED attribute, the agent MUST switch to the   controlling role if it has not already done so.  If the request   contained the ICE-CONTROLLING attribute, the agent MUST switch to the   controlled role if it has not already done so.  Once it has switched,   the agent MUST enqueue the candidate pair whose check generated the   487 into the triggered check queue.  The state of that pair is set to   Waiting.  When the triggered check is sent, it will contain an ICE-   CONTROLLING or ICE-CONTROLLED attribute reflecting its new role.   Note, however, that the tie-breaker value MUST NOT be reselected.   A change in roles will require an agent to recompute pair priorities   (Section 5.7.2), since those priorities are a function of controlling   and controlled roles.  The change in role will also impact whether   the agent is responsible for selecting nominated pairs and generating   updated offers upon conclusion of ICE.   Agents MAY support receipt of ICMP errors for connectivity checks.   If the STUN transaction generates an ICMP error, the agent sets the   state of the pair to Failed.  If the STUN transaction generates aRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   STUN error response that is unrecoverable (as defined in [RFC5389])   or times out, the agent sets the state of the pair to Failed.   The agent MUST check that the source IP address and port of the   response equal the destination IP address and port to which the   Binding request was sent, and that the destination IP address and   port of the response match the source IP address and port from which   the Binding request was sent.  In other words, the source and   destination transport addresses in the request and responses are   symmetric.  If they are not symmetric, the agent sets the state of   the pair to Failed.7.1.3.2.  Success Cases   A check is considered to be a success if all of the following are   true:   o  The STUN transaction generated a success response.   o  The source IP address and port of the response equals the      destination IP address and port to which the Binding request was      sent.   o  The destination IP address and port of the response match the      source IP address and port from which the Binding request was      sent.7.1.3.2.1.  Discovering Peer Reflexive Candidates   The agent checks the mapped address from the STUN response.  If the   transport address does not match any of the local candidates that the   agent knows about, the mapped address represents a new candidate -- a   peer reflexive candidate.  Like other candidates, it has a type,   base, priority, and foundation.  They are computed as follows:   o  Its type is equal to peer reflexive.   o  Its base is set equal to the local candidate of the candidate pair      from which the STUN check was sent.   o  Its priority is set equal to the value of the PRIORITY attribute      in the Binding request.   o  Its foundation is selected as described inSection 4.1.1.3.   This peer reflexive candidate is then added to the list of local   candidates for the media stream.  Its username fragment and password   are the same as all other local candidates for that media stream.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   However, the peer reflexive candidate is not paired with other remote   candidates.  This is not necessary; a valid pair will be generated   from it momentarily based on the procedures inSection 7.1.3.2.2.  If   an agent wishes to pair the peer reflexive candidate with other   remote candidates besides the one in the valid pair that will be   generated, the agent MAY generate an updated offer which includes the   peer reflexive candidate.  This will cause it to be paired with all   other remote candidates.7.1.3.2.2.  Constructing a Valid Pair   The agent constructs a candidate pair whose local candidate equals   the mapped address of the response, and whose remote candidate equals   the destination address to which the request was sent.  This is   called a valid pair, since it has been validated by a STUN   connectivity check.  The valid pair may equal the pair that generated   the check, may equal a different pair in the check list, or may be a   pair not currently on any check list.  If the pair equals the pair   that generated the check or is on a check list currently, it is also   added to the VALID LIST, which is maintained by the agent for each   media stream.  This list is empty at the start of ICE processing, and   fills as checks are performed, resulting in valid candidate pairs.   It will be very common that the pair will not be on any check list.   Recall that the check list has pairs whose local candidates are never   server reflexive; those pairs had their local candidates converted to   the base of the server reflexive candidates, and then pruned if they   were redundant.  When the response to the STUN check arrives, the   mapped address will be reflexive if there is a NAT between the two.   In that case, the valid pair will have a local candidate that doesn't   match any of the pairs in the check list.   If the pair is not on any check list, the agent computes the priority   for the pair based on the priority of each candidate, using the   algorithm inSection 5.7.  The priority of the local candidate   depends on its type.  If it is not peer reflexive, it is equal to the   priority signaled for that candidate in the SDP.  If it is peer   reflexive, it is equal to the PRIORITY attribute the agent placed in   the Binding request that just completed.  The priority of the remote   candidate is taken from the SDP of the peer.  If the candidate does   not appear there, then the check must have been a triggered check to   a new remote candidate.  In that case, the priority is taken as the   value of the PRIORITY attribute in the Binding request that triggered   the check that just completed.  The pair is then added to the VALID   LIST.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20107.1.3.2.3.  Updating Pair States   The agent sets the state of the pair that *generated* the check to   Succeeded.  Note that, the pair which *generated* the check may be   different than the valid pair constructed inSection 7.1.3.2.2 as a   consequence of the response.  The success of this check might also   cause the state of other checks to change as well.  The agent MUST   perform the following two steps:   1.  The agent changes the states for all other Frozen pairs for the       same media stream and same foundation to Waiting.  Typically, but       not always, these other pairs will have different component IDs.   2.  If there is a pair in the valid list for every component of this       media stream (where this is the actual number of components being       used, in cases where the number of components signaled in the SDP       differs from offerer to answerer), the success of this check may       unfreeze checks for other media streams.  Note that this step is       followed not just the first time the valid list under       consideration has a pair for every component, but every       subsequent time a check succeeds and adds yet another pair to       that valid list.  The agent examines the check list for each       other media stream in turn:       *  If the check list is active, the agent changes the state of          all Frozen pairs in that check list whose foundation matches a          pair in the valid list under consideration to Waiting.       *  If the check list is frozen, and there is at least one pair in          the check list whose foundation matches a pair in the valid          list under consideration, the state of all pairs in the check          list whose foundation matches a pair in the valid list under          consideration is set to Waiting.  This will cause the check          list to become active, and ordinary checks will begin for it,          as described inSection 5.8.       *  If the check list is frozen, and there are no pairs in the          check list whose foundation matches a pair in the valid list          under consideration, the agent          +  groups together all of the pairs with the same foundation,             and          +  for each group, sets the state of the pair with the lowest             component ID to Waiting.  If there is more than one such             pair, the one with the highest priority is used.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20107.1.3.2.4.  Updating the Nominated Flag   If the agent was a controlling agent, and it had included a USE-   CANDIDATE attribute in the Binding request, the valid pair generated   from that check has its nominated flag set to true.  This flag   indicates that this valid pair should be used for media if it is the   highest-priority one amongst those whose nominated flag is set.  This   may conclude ICE processing for this media stream or all media   streams; seeSection 8.   If the agent is the controlled agent, the response may be the result   of a triggered check that was sent in response to a request that   itself had the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.  This case is described inSection 7.2.1.5, and may now result in setting the nominated flag for   the pair learned from the original request.7.1.3.3.  Check List and Timer State Updates   Regardless of whether the check was successful or failed, the   completion of the transaction may require updating of check list and   timer states.   If all of the pairs in the check list are now either in the Failed or   Succeeded state:   o  If there is not a pair in the valid list for each component of the      media stream, the state of the check list is set to Failed.   o  For each frozen check list, the agent      *  groups together all of the pairs with the same foundation, and      *  for each group, sets the state of the pair with the lowest         component ID to Waiting.  If there is more than one such pair,         the one with the highest priority is used.   If none of the pairs in the check list are in the Waiting or Frozen   state, the check list is no longer considered active, and will not   count towards the value of N in the computation of timers for   ordinary checks as described inSection 5.8.7.2.  STUN Server Procedures   An agent MUST be prepared to receive a Binding request on the base of   each candidate it included in its most recent offer or answer.  This   requirement holds even if the peer is a lite implementation.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   The agent MUST use a short-term credential to authenticate the   request and perform a message integrity check.  The agent MUST   consider the username to be valid if it consists of two values   separated by a colon, where the first value is equal to the username   fragment generated by the agent in an offer or answer for a session   in-progress.  It is possible (and in fact very likely) that an   offerer will receive a Binding request prior to receiving the answer   from its peer.  If this happens, the agent MUST immediately generate   a response (including computation of the mapped address as described   inSection 7.2.1.2).  The agent has sufficient information at this   point to generate the response; the password from the peer is not   required.  Once the answer is received, it MUST proceed with the   remaining steps required, namely, 7.2.1.3, 7.2.1.4, and 7.2.1.5 for   full implementations.  In cases where multiple STUN requests are   received before the answer, this may cause several pairs to be queued   up in the triggered check queue.   An agent MUST NOT utilize the ALTERNATE-SERVER mechanism, and MUST   NOT support the backwards-compatibility mechanisms toRFC 3489.  It   MUST utilize the FINGERPRINT mechanism.   If the agent is using Diffserv Codepoint markings [RFC2475] in its   media packets, it SHOULD apply those same markings to its responses   to Binding requests.  The same would apply to any layer 2 markings   the endpoint might be applying to media packets.7.2.1.  Additional Procedures for Full Implementations   This subsection defines the additional server procedures applicable   to full implementations.7.2.1.1.  Detecting and Repairing Role Conflicts   Normally, the rules for selection of a role inSection 5.2 will   result in each agent selecting a different role -- one controlling   and one controlled.  However, in unusual call flows, typically   utilizing third party call control, it is possible for both agents to   select the same role.  This section describes procedures for checking   for this case and repairing it.   An agent MUST examine the Binding request for either the ICE-   CONTROLLING or ICE-CONTROLLED attribute.  It MUST follow these   procedures:   o  If neither ICE-CONTROLLING nor ICE-CONTROLLED is present in the      request, the peer agent may have implemented a previous version of      this specification.  There may be a conflict, but it cannot be      detected.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   o  If the agent is in the controlling role, and the ICE-CONTROLLING      attribute is present in the request:      *  If the agent's tie-breaker is larger than or equal to the         contents of the ICE-CONTROLLING attribute, the agent generates         a Binding error response and includes an ERROR-CODE attribute         with a value of 487 (Role Conflict) but retains its role.      *  If the agent's tie-breaker is less than the contents of the         ICE-CONTROLLING attribute, the agent switches to the controlled         role.   o  If the agent is in the controlled role, and the ICE-CONTROLLED      attribute is present in the request:      *  If the agent's tie-breaker is larger than or equal to the         contents of the ICE-CONTROLLED attribute, the agent switches to         the controlling role.      *  If the agent's tie-breaker is less than the contents of the         ICE-CONTROLLED attribute, the agent generates a Binding error         response and includes an ERROR-CODE attribute with a value of         487 (Role Conflict) but retains its role.   o  If the agent is in the controlled role and the ICE-CONTROLLING      attribute was present in the request, or the agent was in the      controlling role and the ICE-CONTROLLED attribute was present in      the request, there is no conflict.   A change in roles will require an agent to recompute pair priorities   (Section 5.7.2), since those priorities are a function of controlling   and controlled roles.  The change in role will also impact whether   the agent is responsible for selecting nominated pairs and generated   updated offers upon conclusion of ICE.   The remaining sections inSection 7.2.1 are followed if the server   generated a successful response to the Binding request, even if the   agent changed roles.7.2.1.2.  Computing Mapped Address   For requests being received on a relayed candidate, the source   transport address used for STUN processing (namely, generation of the   XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute) is the transport address as seen by the   TURN server.  That source transport address will be present in the   XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute of a Data Indication message, if the   Binding request was delivered through a Data Indication.  If theRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Binding request was delivered through a ChannelData message, the   source transport address is the one that was bound to the channel.7.2.1.3.  Learning Peer Reflexive Candidates   If the source transport address of the request does not match any   existing remote candidates, it represents a new peer reflexive remote   candidate.  This candidate is constructed as follows:   o  The priority of the candidate is set to the PRIORITY attribute      from the request.   o  The type of the candidate is set to peer reflexive.   o  The foundation of the candidate is set to an arbitrary value,      different from the foundation for all other remote candidates.  If      any subsequent offer/answer exchanges contain this peer reflexive      candidate in the SDP, it will signal the actual foundation for the      candidate.   o  The component ID of this candidate is set to the component ID for      the local candidate to which the request was sent.   This candidate is added to the list of remote candidates.  However,   the agent does not pair this candidate with any local candidates.7.2.1.4.  Triggered Checks   Next, the agent constructs a pair whose local candidate is equal to   the transport address on which the STUN request was received, and a   remote candidate equal to the source transport address where the   request came from (which may be the peer reflexive remote candidate   that was just learned).  The local candidate will either be a host   candidate (for cases where the request was not received through a   relay) or a relayed candidate (for cases where it is received through   a relay).  The local candidate can never be a server reflexive   candidate.  Since both candidates are known to the agent, it can   obtain their priorities and compute the candidate pair priority.   This pair is then looked up in the check list.  There can be one of   several outcomes:   o  If the pair is already on the check list:      *  If the state of that pair is Waiting or Frozen, a check for         that pair is enqueued into the triggered check queue if not         already present.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010      *  If the state of that pair is In-Progress, the agent cancels the         in-progress transaction.  Cancellation means that the agent         will not retransmit the request, will not treat the lack of         response to be a failure, but will wait the duration of the         transaction timeout for a response.  In addition, the agent         MUST create a new connectivity check for that pair         (representing a new STUN Binding request transaction) by         enqueueing the pair in the triggered check queue.  The state of         the pair is then changed to Waiting.      *  If the state of the pair is Failed, it is changed to Waiting         and the agent MUST create a new connectivity check for that         pair (representing a new STUN Binding request transaction), by         enqueueing the pair in the triggered check queue.      *  If the state of that pair is Succeeded, nothing further is         done.      These steps are done to facilitate rapid completion of ICE when      both agents are behind NAT.   o  If the pair is not already on the check list:      *  The pair is inserted into the check list based on its priority.      *  Its state is set to Waiting.      *  The pair is enqueued into the triggered check queue.   When a triggered check is to be sent, it is constructed and processed   as described inSection 7.1.2.  These procedures require the agent to   know the transport address, username fragment, and password for the   peer.  The username fragment for the remote candidate is equal to the   part after the colon of the USERNAME in the Binding request that was   just received.  Using that username fragment, the agent can check the   SDP messages received from its peer (there may be more than one in   cases of forking), and find this username fragment.  The   corresponding password is then selected.7.2.1.5.  Updating the Nominated Flag   If the Binding request received by the agent had the USE-CANDIDATE   attribute set, and the agent is in the controlled role, the agent   looks at the state of the pair computed inSection 7.2.1.4:   o  If the state of this pair is Succeeded, it means that the check      generated by this pair produced a successful response.  This would      have caused the agent to construct a valid pair when that successRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010      response was received (seeSection 7.1.3.2.2).  The agent now sets      the nominated flag in the valid pair to true.  This may end ICE      processing for this media stream; seeSection 8.   o  If the state of this pair is In-Progress, if its check produces a      successful result, the resulting valid pair has its nominated flag      set when the response arrives.  This may end ICE processing for      this media stream when it arrives; seeSection 8.7.2.2.  Additional Procedures for Lite Implementations   If the check that was just received contained a USE-CANDIDATE   attribute, the agent constructs a candidate pair whose local   candidate is equal to the transport address on which the request was   received, and whose remote candidate is equal to the source transport   address of the request that was received.  This candidate pair is   assigned an arbitrary priority, and placed into a list of valid   candidates called the valid list.  The agent sets the nominated flag   for that pair to true.  ICE processing is considered complete for a   media stream if the valid list contains a candidate pair for each   component.8.  Concluding ICE Processing   This section describes how an agent completes ICE.8.1.  Procedures for Full Implementations   Concluding ICE involves nominating pairs by the controlling agent and   updating of state machinery.8.1.1.  Nominating Pairs   The controlling agent nominates pairs to be selected by ICE by using   one of two techniques: regular nomination or aggressive nomination.   If its peer has a lite implementation, an agent MUST use a regular   nomination algorithm.  If its peer is using ICE options (present in   an ice-options attribute from the peer) that the agent does not   understand, the agent MUST use a regular nomination algorithm.  If   its peer is a full implementation and isn't using any ICE options or   is using ICE options understood by the agent, the agent MAY use   either the aggressive or the regular nomination algorithm.  However,   the regular algorithm is RECOMMENDED since it provides greater   stability.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20108.1.1.1.  Regular Nomination   With regular nomination, the agent lets some number of checks   complete, each of which omit the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.  Once one   or more checks complete successfully for a component of a media   stream, valid pairs are generated and added to the valid list.  The   agent lets the checks continue until some stopping criterion is met,   and then picks amongst the valid pairs based on an evaluation   criterion.  The criteria for stopping the checks and for evaluating   the valid pairs is entirely a matter of local optimization.   When the controlling agent selects the valid pair, it repeats the   check that produced this valid pair (by enqueuing the pair that   generated the check into the triggered check queue), this time with   the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.  This check should succeed (since the   previous did), causing the nominated flag of that and only that pair   to be set.  Consequently, there will be only a single nominated pair   in the valid list for each component, and when the state of the check   list moves to completed, that exact pair is selected by ICE for   sending and receiving media for that component.   Regular nomination provides the most flexibility, since the agent has   control over the stopping and selection criteria for checks.  The   only requirement is that the agent MUST eventually pick one and only   one candidate pair and generate a check for that pair with the USE-   CANDIDATE attribute present.  Regular nomination also improves ICE's   resilience to variations in implementation (seeSection 14).  Regular   nomination is also more stable, allowing both agents to converge on a   single pair for media without any transient selections, which can   happen with the aggressive algorithm.  The drawback of regular   nomination is that it is guaranteed to increase latencies because it   requires an additional check to be done.8.1.1.2.  Aggressive Nomination   With aggressive nomination, the controlling agent includes the USE-   CANDIDATE attribute in every check it sends.  Once the first check   for a component succeeds, it will be added to the valid list and have   its nominated flag set.  When all components have a nominated pair in   the valid list, media can begin to flow using the highest priority   nominated pair.  However, because the agent included the USE-   CANDIDATE attribute in all of its checks, another check may yet   complete, causing another valid pair to have its nominated flag set.   ICE always selects the highest-priority nominated candidate pair from   the valid list as the one used for media.  Consequently, the selected   pair may actually change briefly as ICE checks complete, resulting in   a set of transient selections until it stabilizes.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20108.1.2.  Updating States   For both controlling and controlled agents, the state of ICE   processing depends on the presence of nominated candidate pairs in   the valid list and on the state of the check list.  Note that, at any   time, more than one of the following cases can apply:   o  If there are no nominated pairs in the valid list for a media      stream and the state of the check list is Running, ICE processing      continues.   o  If there is at least one nominated pair in the valid list for a      media stream and the state of the check list is Running:      *  The agent MUST remove all Waiting and Frozen pairs in the check         list and triggered check queue for the same component as the         nominated pairs for that media stream.      *  If an In-Progress pair in the check list is for the same         component as a nominated pair, the agent SHOULD cease         retransmissions for its check if its pair priority is lower         than the lowest-priority nominated pair for that component.   o  Once there is at least one nominated pair in the valid list for      every component of at least one media stream and the state of the      check list is Running:      *  The agent MUST change the state of processing for its check         list for that media stream to Completed.      *  The agent MUST continue to respond to any checks it may still         receive for that media stream, and MUST perform triggered         checks if required by the processing ofSection 7.2.      *  The agent MUST continue retransmitting any In-Progress checks         for that check list.      *  The agent MAY begin transmitting media for this media stream as         described inSection 11.1.   o  Once the state of each check list is Completed:      *  The agent sets the state of ICE processing overall to         Completed.      *  If an agent is controlling, it examines the highest-priority         nominated candidate pair for each component of each media         stream.  If any of those candidate pairs differ from theRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010         default candidate pairs in the most recent offer/answer         exchange, the controlling agent MUST generate an updated offer         as described inSection 9.  If the controlling agent is using         an aggressive nomination algorithm, this may result in several         updated offers as the pairs selected for media change.  An         agent MAY delay sending the offer for a brief interval (one         second is RECOMMENDED) in order to allow the selected pairs to         stabilize.   o  If the state of the check list is Failed, ICE has not been able to      complete for this media stream.  The correct behavior depends on      the state of the check lists for other media streams:      *  If all check lists are Failed, ICE processing overall is         considered to be in the Failed state, and the agent SHOULD         consider the session a failure, SHOULD NOT restart ICE, and the         controlling agent SHOULD terminate the entire session.      *  If at least one of the check lists for other media streams is         Completed, the controlling agent SHOULD remove the failed media         stream from the session in its updated offer.      *  If none of the check lists for other media streams are         Completed, but at least one is Running, the agent SHOULD let         ICE continue.8.2.  Procedures for Lite Implementations   Concluding ICE for a lite implementation is relatively   straightforward.  There are two cases to consider:      The implementation is lite, and its peer is full.      The implementation is lite, and its peer is lite.   The effect of ICE concluding is that the agent can free any allocated   host candidates that were not utilized by ICE, as described inSection 8.3.8.2.1.  Peer Is Full   In this case, the agent will receive connectivity checks from its   peer.  When an agent has received a connectivity check that includes   the USE-CANDIDATE attribute for each component of a media stream, the   state of ICE processing for that media stream moves from Running to   Completed.  When the state of ICE processing for all media streams is   Completed, the state of ICE processing overall is Completed.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 54]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   The lite implementation will never itself determine that ICE   processing has failed for a media stream; rather, the full peer will   make that determination and then remove or restart the failed media   stream in a subsequent offer.8.2.2.  Peer Is Lite   Once the offer/answer exchange has completed, both agents examine   their candidates and those of its peer.  For each media stream, each   agent pairs up its own candidates with the candidates of its peer for   that media stream.  Two candidates are paired up when they are for   the same component, utilize the same transport protocol (UDP in this   specification), and are from the same IP address family (IPv4 or   IPv6).   o  If there is a single pair per component, that pair is added to the      Valid list.  If all of the components for a media stream had one      pair, the state of ICE processing for that media stream is set to      Completed.  If all media streams are Completed, the state of ICE      processing is set to Completed overall.  This will always be the      case for implementations that are IPv4 only.   o  If there is more than one pair per component:      *  The agent MUST select a pair based on local policy.  Since this         case only arises for IPv6, it is RECOMMENDED that an agent         follow the procedures ofRFC 3484 [RFC3484] to select a single         pair.      *  The agent adds the selected pair for each component to the         valid list.  As described inSection 11.1, this will permit         media to begin flowing.  However, it is possible (and in fact         likely) that both agents have chosen different pairs.      *  To reconcile this, the controlling agent MUST send an updated         offer as described inSection 9.1.3, which will include the         remote-candidates attribute.      *  The agent MUST NOT update the state of ICE processing when the         offer is sent.  If this subsequent offer completes, the         controlling agent MUST change the state of ICE processing to         Completed for all media streams, and the state of ICE         processing overall to Completed.  The states for the controlled         agent are set based on the logic inSection 9.2.3.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 55]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20108.3.  Freeing Candidates8.3.1.  Full Implementation Procedures   The procedures inSection 8 require that an agent continue to listen   for STUN requests and continue to generate triggered checks for a   media stream, even once processing for that stream completes.  The   rules in this section describe when it is safe for an agent to cease   sending or receiving checks on a candidate that was not selected by   ICE, and then free the candidate.   When ICE is used with SIP, and an offer is forked to multiple   recipients, ICE proceeds in parallel and independently with each   answerer, all using the same local candidates.  Once ICE processing   has reached the Completed state for all peers for media streams using   those candidates, the agent SHOULD wait an additional three seconds,   and then it MAY cease responding to checks or generating triggered   checks on that candidate.  It MAY free the candidate at that time.   Freeing of server reflexive candidates is never explicit; it happens   by lack of a keepalive.  The three-second delay handles cases when   aggressive nomination is used, and the selected pairs can quickly   change after ICE has completed.8.3.2.  Lite Implementation Procedures   A lite implementation MAY free candidates not selected by ICE as soon   as ICE processing has reached the Completed state for all peers for   all media streams using those candidates.9.  Subsequent Offer/Answer Exchanges   Either agent MAY generate a subsequent offer at any time allowed byRFC 3264 [RFC3264].  The rules inSection 8 will cause the   controlling agent to send an updated offer at the conclusion of ICE   processing when ICE has selected different candidate pairs from the   default pairs.  This section defines rules for construction of   subsequent offers and answers.   Should a subsequent offer be rejected, ICE processing continues as if   the subsequent offer had never been made.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 56]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.1.  Generating the Offer9.1.1.  Procedures for All Implementations9.1.1.1.  ICE Restarts   An agent MAY restart ICE processing for an existing media stream.  An   ICE restart, as the name implies, will cause all previous states of   ICE processing to be flushed and checks to start anew.  The only   difference between an ICE restart and a brand new media session is   that, during the restart, media can continue to be sent to the   previously validated pair.   An agent MUST restart ICE for a media stream if:   o  The offer is being generated for the purposes of changing the      target of the media stream.  In other words, if an agent wants to      generate an updated offer that, had ICE not been in use, would      result in a new value for the destination of a media component.   o  An agent is changing its implementation level.  This typically      only happens in third party call control use cases, where the      entity performing the signaling is not the entity receiving the      media, and it has changed the target of media mid-session to      another entity that has a different ICE implementation.   These rules imply that setting the IP address in the c line to   0.0.0.0 will cause an ICE restart.  Consequently, ICE implementations   MUST NOT utilize this mechanism for call hold, and instead MUST use   a=inactive and a=sendonly as described in [RFC3264].   To restart ICE, an agent MUST change both the ice-pwd and the ice-   ufrag for the media stream in an offer.  Note that it is permissible   to use a session-level attribute in one offer, but to provide the   same ice-pwd or ice-ufrag as a media-level attribute in a subsequent   offer.  This is not a change in password, just a change in its   representation, and does not cause an ICE restart.   An agent sets the rest of the fields in the SDP for this media stream   as it would in an initial offer of this media stream (seeSection 4.3).  Consequently, the set of candidates MAY include some,   none, or all of the previous candidates for that stream and MAY   include a totally new set of candidates gathered as described inSection 4.1.1.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 57]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.1.1.2.  Removing a Media Stream   If an agent removes a media stream by setting its port to zero, it   MUST NOT include any candidate attributes for that media stream and   SHOULD NOT include any other ICE-related attributes defined inSection 15 for that media stream.9.1.1.3.  Adding a Media Stream   If an agent wishes to add a new media stream, it sets the fields in   the SDP for this media stream as if this was an initial offer for   that media stream (seeSection 4.3).  This will cause ICE processing   to begin for this media stream.9.1.2.  Procedures for Full Implementations   This section describes additional procedures for full   implementations, covering existing media streams.   The username fragments, password, and implementation level MUST   remain the same as used previously.  If an agent needs to change one   of these, it MUST restart ICE for that media stream.   Additional behavior depends on the state ICE processing for that   media stream.9.1.2.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running   If an agent generates an updated offer including a media stream that   was previously established, and for which ICE checks are in the   Running state, the agent follows the procedures defined here.   An agent MUST include candidate attributes for all local candidates   it had signaled previously for that media stream.  The properties of   that candidate as signaled in SDP -- the priority, foundation, type,   and related transport address -- SHOULD remain the same.  The IP   address, port, and transport protocol, which fundamentally identify   that candidate, MUST remain the same (if they change, it would be a   new candidate).  The component ID MUST remain the same.  The agent   MAY include additional candidates it did not offer previously, but   which it has gathered since the last offer/answer exchange, including   peer reflexive candidates.   The agent MAY change the default destination for media.  As with   initial offers, there MUST be a set of candidate attributes in the   offer matching this default destination.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 58]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.1.2.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed   If an agent generates an updated offer including a media stream that   was previously established, and for which ICE checks are in the   Completed state, the agent follows the procedures defined here.   The default destination for media (i.e., the values of the IP   addresses and ports in the m and c lines used for that media stream)   MUST be the local candidate from the highest-priority nominated pair   in the valid list for each component.  This "fixes" the default   destination for media to equal the destination ICE has selected for   media.   The agent MUST include candidate attributes for candidates matching   the default destination for each component of the media stream, and   MUST NOT include any other candidates.   In addition, if the agent is controlling, it MUST include the   a=remote-candidates attribute for each media stream whose check list   is in the Completed state.  The attribute contains the remote   candidates from the highest-priority nominated pair in the valid list   for each component of that media stream.  It is needed to avoid a   race condition whereby the controlling agent chooses its pairs, but   the updated offer beats the connectivity checks to the controlled   agent, which doesn't even know these pairs are valid, let alone   selected.  SeeAppendix B.6 for elaboration on this race condition.9.1.3.  Procedures for Lite Implementations9.1.3.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running   This section describes procedures for lite implementations for   existing streams for which ICE is running.   A lite implementation MUST include all of its candidates for each   component of each media stream in an a=candidate attribute in any   subsequent offer.  These candidates are formed identically to the   procedures for initial offers, as described inSection 4.2.   A lite implementation MUST NOT add additional host candidates in a   subsequent offer.  If an agent needs to offer additional candidates,   it MUST restart ICE.   The username fragments, password, and implementation level MUST   remain the same as used previously.  If an agent needs to change one   of these, it MUST restart ICE for that media stream.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 59]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.1.3.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed   If ICE has completed for a media stream, the default destination for   that media stream MUST be set to the remote candidate of the   candidate pair for that component in the valid list.  For a lite   implementation, there is always just a single candidate pair in the   valid list for each component of a media stream.  Additionally, the   agent MUST include a candidate attribute for each default   destination.   Additionally, if the agent is controlling (which only happens when   both agents are lite), the agent MUST include the a=remote-candidates   attribute for each media stream.  The attribute contains the remote   candidates from the candidate pairs in the valid list (one pair for   each component of each media stream).9.2.  Receiving the Offer and Generating an Answer9.2.1.  Procedures for All Implementations   When receiving a subsequent offer within an existing session, an   agent MUST reapply the verification procedures inSection 5.1 without   regard to the results of verification from any previous offer/answer   exchanges.  Indeed, it is possible that a previous offer/answer   exchange resulted in ICE not being used, but it is used as a   consequence of a subsequent exchange.9.2.1.1.  Detecting ICE Restart   If the offer contained a change in the a=ice-ufrag or a=ice-pwd   attributes compared to the previous SDP from the peer, it indicates   that ICE is restarting for this media stream.  If all media streams   are restarting, then ICE is restarting overall.   If ICE is restarting for a media stream:   o  The agent MUST change the a=ice-ufrag and a=ice-pwd attributes in      the answer.   o  The agent MAY change its implementation level in the answer.   An agent sets the rest of the fields in the SDP for this media stream   as it would in an initial answer to this media stream (seeSection 4.3).  Consequently, the set of candidates MAY include some,   none, or all of the previous candidates for that stream and MAY   include a totally new set of candidates gathered as described inSection 4.1.1.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 60]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.2.1.2.  New Media Stream   If the offer contains a new media stream, the agent sets the fields   in the answer as if it had received an initial offer containing that   media stream (seeSection 4.3).  This will cause ICE processing to   begin for this media stream.9.2.1.3.  Removed Media Stream   If an offer contains a media stream whose port is zero, the agent   MUST NOT include any candidate attributes for that media stream in   its answer and SHOULD NOT include any other ICE-related attributes   defined inSection 15 for that media stream.9.2.2.  Procedures for Full Implementations   Unless the agent has detected an ICE restart from the offer, the   username fragments, password, and implementation level MUST remain   the same as used previously.  If an agent needs to change one of   these it MUST restart ICE for that media stream by generating an   offer; ICE cannot be restarted in an answer.   Additional behaviors depend on the state of ICE processing for that   media stream.9.2.2.1.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Running and no remote-          candidates   If ICE is running for a media stream, and the offer for that media   stream lacked the remote-candidates attribute, the rules for   construction of the answer are identical to those for the offerer as   described inSection 9.1.2.1.9.2.2.2.  Existing Media Streams with ICE Completed and no remote-          candidates   If ICE is Completed for a media stream, and the offer for that media   stream lacked the remote-candidates attribute, the rules for   construction of the answer are identical to those for the offerer as   described inSection 9.1.2.2, except that the answerer MUST NOT   include the a=remote-candidates attribute in the answer.9.2.2.3.  Existing Media Streams and remote-candidates   A controlled agent will receive an offer with the a=remote-candidates   attribute for a media stream when its peer has concluded ICE   processing for that media stream.  This attribute is present in the   offer to deal with a race condition between the receipt of the offer,Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 61]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   and the receipt of the Binding response that tells the answerer the   candidate that will be selected by ICE.  SeeAppendix B.6 for an   explanation of this race condition.  Consequently, processing of an   offer with this attribute depends on the winner of the race.   The agent forms a candidate pair for each component of the media   stream by:   o  Setting the remote candidate equal to the offerer's default      destination for that component (e.g., the contents of the m and c      lines for RTP, and the a=rtcp attribute for RTCP)   o  Setting the local candidate equal to the transport address for      that same component in the a=remote-candidates attribute in the      offer.   The agent then sees if each of these candidate pairs is present in   the valid list.  If a particular pair is not in the valid list, the   check has "lost" the race.  Call such a pair a "losing pair".   The agent finds all the pairs in the check list whose remote   candidates equal the remote candidate in the losing pair:   o  If none of the pairs are In-Progress, and at least one is Failed,      it is most likely that a network failure, such as a network      partition or serious packet loss, has occurred.  The agent SHOULD      generate an answer for this media stream as if the remote-      candidates attribute had not been present, and then restart ICE      for this stream.   o  If at least one of the pairs is In-Progress, the agent SHOULD wait      for those checks to complete, and as each completes, redo the      processing in this section until there are no losing pairs.   Once there are no losing pairs, the agent can generate the answer.   It MUST set the default destination for media to the candidates in   the remote-candidates attribute from the offer (each of which will   now be the local candidate of a candidate pair in the valid list).   It MUST include a candidate attribute in the answer for each   candidate in the remote-candidates attribute in the offer.9.2.3.  Procedures for Lite Implementations   If the received offer contains the remote-candidates attribute for a   media stream, the agent forms a candidate pair for each component of   the media stream by:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 62]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   o  Setting the remote candidate equal to the offerer's default      destination for that component (e.g., the contents of the m and c      lines for RTP, and the a=rtcp attribute for RTCP).   o  Setting the local candidate equal to the transport address for      that same component in the a=remote-candidates attribute in the      offer.   It then places those candidates into the Valid list for the media   stream.  The state of ICE processing for that media stream is set to   Completed.   Furthermore, if the agent believed it was controlling, but the offer   contained the remote-candidates attribute, both agents believe they   are controlling.  In this case, both would have sent updated offers   around the same time.  However, the signaling protocol carrying the   offer/answer exchanges will have resolved this glare condition, so   that one agent is always the 'winner' by having its offer received   before its peer has sent an offer.  The winner takes the role of   controlled, so that the loser (the answerer under consideration in   this section) MUST change its role to controlled.  Consequently, if   the agent was going to send an updated offer since, based on the   rules inSection 8.2.2, it was controlling, it no longer needs to.   Besides the potential role change, change in the Valid list, and   state changes, the construction of the answer is performed   identically to the construction of an offer as described inSection 9.1.3.9.3.  Updating the Check and Valid Lists9.3.1.  Procedures for Full Implementations9.3.1.1.  ICE Restarts   The agent MUST remember the highest-priority nominated pairs in the   Valid list for each component of the media stream, called the   previous selected pairs, prior to the restart.  The agent will   continue to send media using these pairs, as described inSection 11.1.  Once these destinations are noted, the agent MUST   flush the valid and check lists, and then recompute the check list   and its states as described inSection 5.7.9.3.1.2.  New Media Stream   If the offer/answer exchange added a new media stream, the agent MUST   create a new check list for it (and an empty Valid list to start of   course), as described inSection 5.7.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 63]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 20109.3.1.3.  Removed Media Stream   If the offer/answer exchange removed a media stream, or an answer   rejected an offered media stream, an agent MUST flush the Valid list   for that media stream.  It MUST terminate any STUN transactions in   progress for that media stream.  An agent MUST remove the check list   for that media stream and cancel any pending ordinary checks for it.9.3.1.4.  ICE Continuing for Existing Media Stream   The valid list is not affected by an updated offer/answer exchange   unless ICE is restarting.   If an agent is in the Running state for that media stream, the check   list is updated (the check list is irrelevant if the state is   completed).  To do that, the agent recomputes the check list using   the procedures described inSection 5.7.  If a pair on the new check   list was also on the previous check list, and its state was Waiting,   In-Progress, Succeeded, or Failed, its state is copied over.   Otherwise, its state is set to Frozen.   If none of the check lists are active (meaning that the pairs in each   check list are Frozen), the full-mode agent sets the first pair in   the check list for the first media stream to Waiting, and then sets   the state of all other pairs in that check list for the same   component ID and with the same foundation to Waiting as well.   Next, the agent goes through each check list, starting with the   highest-priority pair.  If a pair has a state of Succeeded, and it   has a component ID of 1, then all Frozen pairs in the same check list   with the same foundation whose component IDs are not 1 have their   state set to Waiting.  If, for a particular check list, there are   pairs for each component of that media stream in the Succeeded state,   the agent moves the state of all Frozen pairs for the first component   of all other media streams (and thus in different check lists) with   the same foundation to Waiting.9.3.2.  Procedures for Lite Implementations   If ICE is restarting for a media stream, the agent MUST start a new   Valid list for that media stream.  It MUST remember the pairs in the   previous Valid list for each component of the media stream, called   the previous selected pairs, and continue to send media there as   described inSection 11.1.  The state of ICE processing for each   media stream MUST change to Running, and the state of ICE processing   MUST change to Running.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 64]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201010.  Keepalives   All endpoints MUST send keepalives for each media session.  These   keepalives serve the purpose of keeping NAT bindings alive for the   media session.  These keepalives MUST be sent regardless of whether   the media stream is currently inactive, sendonly, recvonly, or   sendrecv, and regardless of the presence or value of the bandwidth   attribute.  These keepalives MUST be sent even if ICE is not being   utilized for the session at all.  The keepalive SHOULD be sent using   a format that is supported by its peer.  ICE endpoints allow for   STUN-based keepalives for UDP streams, and as such, STUN keepalives   MUST be used when an agent is a full ICE implementation and is   communicating with a peer that supports ICE (lite or full).  An agent   can determine that its peer supports ICE by the presence of   a=candidate attributes for each media session.  If the peer does not   support ICE, the choice of a packet format for keepalives is a matter   of local implementation.  A format that allows packets to easily be   sent in the absence of actual media content is RECOMMENDED.  Examples   of formats that readily meet this goal are RTP No-Op [NO-OP-RTP], and   in cases where both sides support it, RTP comfort noise [RFC3389].   If the peer doesn't support any formats that are particularly well   suited for keepalives, an agent SHOULD send RTP packets with an   incorrect version number, or some other form of error that would   cause them to be discarded by the peer.   If there has been no packet sent on the candidate pair ICE is using   for a media component for Tr seconds (where packets include those   defined for the component (RTP or RTCP) and previous keepalives), an   agent MUST generate a keepalive on that pair.  Tr SHOULD be   configurable and SHOULD have a default of 15 seconds.  Tr MUST NOT be   configured to less than 15 seconds.  Alternatively, if an agent has a   dynamic way to discover the binding lifetimes of the intervening   NATs, it can use that value to determine Tr.  Administrators   deploying ICE in more controlled networking environments SHOULD set   Tr to the longest duration possible in their environment.   If STUN is being used for keepalives, a STUN Binding Indication is   used [RFC5389].  The Indication MUST NOT utilize any authentication   mechanism.  It SHOULD contain the FINGERPRINT attribute to aid in   demultiplexing, but SHOULD NOT contain any other attributes.  It is   used solely to keep the NAT bindings alive.  The Binding Indication   is sent using the same local and remote candidates that are being   used for media.  Though Binding Indications are used for keepalives,   an agent MUST be prepared to receive a connectivity check as well.   If a connectivity check is received, a response is generated as   discussed in [RFC5389], but there is no impact on ICE processing   otherwise.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 65]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   An agent MUST begin the keepalive processing once ICE has selected   candidates for usage with media, or media begins to flow, whichever   happens first.  Keepalives end once the session terminates or the   media stream is removed.11.  Media Handling11.1.  Sending Media   Procedures for sending media differ for full and lite   implementations.11.1.1.  Procedures for Full Implementations   Agents always send media using a candidate pair, called the selected   candidate pair.  An agent will send media to the remote candidate in   the selected pair (setting the destination address and port of the   packet equal to that remote candidate), and will send it from the   local candidate of the selected pair.  When the local candidate is   server or peer reflexive, media is originated from the base.  Media   sent from a relayed candidate is sent from the base through that TURN   server, using procedures defined in [RFC5766].   If the local candidate is a relayed candidate, it is RECOMMENDED that   an agent create a channel on the TURN server towards the remote   candidate.  This is done using the procedures for channel creation as   defined inSection 11 of [RFC5766].   The selected pair for a component of a media stream is:   o  empty if the state of the check list for that media stream is      Running, and there is no previous selected pair for that component      due to an ICE restart   o  equal to the previous selected pair for a component of a media      stream if the state of the check list for that media stream is      Running, and there was a previous selected pair for that component      due to an ICE restart   o  equal to the highest-priority nominated pair for that component in      the valid list if the state of the check list is Completed   If the selected pair for at least one component of a media stream is   empty, an agent MUST NOT send media for any component of that media   stream.  If the selected pair for each component of a media stream   has a value, an agent MAY send media for all components of that media   stream.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 66]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Note that the selected pair for a component of a media stream may not   equal the default pair for that same component from the most recent   offer/answer exchange.  When this happens, the selected pair is used   for media, not the default pair.  When ICE first completes, if the   selected pairs aren't a match for the default pairs, the controlling   agent sends an updated offer/answer exchange to remedy this   disparity.  However, until that updated offer arrives, there will not   be a match.  Furthermore, in very unusual cases, the default   candidates in the updated offer/answer will not be a match.11.1.2.  Procedures for Lite Implementations   A lite implementation MUST NOT send media until it has a Valid list   that contains a candidate pair for each component of that media   stream.  Once that happens, the agent MAY begin sending media   packets.  To do that, it sends media to the remote candidate in the   pair (setting the destination address and port of the packet equal to   that remote candidate), and will send it from the local candidate.11.1.3.  Procedures for All Implementations   ICE has interactions with jitter buffer adaptation mechanisms.  An   RTP stream can begin using one candidate, and switch to another one,   though this happens rarely with ICE.  The newer candidate may result   in RTP packets taking a different path through the network -- one   with different delay characteristics.  As discussed below, agents are   encouraged to re-adjust jitter buffers when there are changes in   source or destination address of media packets.  Furthermore, many   audio codecs use the marker bit to signal the beginning of a   talkspurt, for the purposes of jitter buffer adaptation.  For such   codecs, it is RECOMMENDED that the sender set the marker bit   [RFC3550] when an agent switches transmission of media from one   candidate pair to another.11.2.  Receiving Media   ICE implementations MUST be prepared to receive media on each   component on any candidates provided for that component in the most   recent offer/answer exchange (in the case of RTP, this would include   both RTP and RTCP if candidates were provided for both).   It is RECOMMENDED that, when an agent receives an RTP packet with a   new source or destination IP address for a particular media stream,   that the agent re-adjust its jitter buffers.RFC 3550 [RFC3550] describes an algorithm inSection 8.2 for   detecting synchronization source (SSRC) collisions and loops.  These   algorithms are based, in part, on seeing different source transportRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 67]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   addresses with the same SSRC.  However, when ICE is used, such   changes will sometimes occur as the media streams switch between   candidates.  An agent will be able to determine that a media stream   is from the same peer as a consequence of the STUN exchange that   proceeds media transmission.  Thus, if there is a change in source   transport address, but the media packets come from the same peer   agent, this SHOULD NOT be treated as an SSRC collision.12.  Usage with SIP12.1.  Latency Guidelines   ICE requires a series of STUN-based connectivity checks to take place   between endpoints.  These checks start from the answerer on   generation of its answer, and start from the offerer when it receives   the answer.  These checks can take time to complete, and as such, the   selection of messages to use with offers and answers can affect   perceived user latency.  Two latency figures are of particular   interest.  These are the post-pickup delay and the post-dial delay.   The post-pickup delay refers to the time between when a user "answers   the phone" and when any speech they utter can be delivered to the   caller.  The post-dial delay refers to the time between when a user   enters the destination address for the user and ringback begins as a   consequence of having successfully started ringing the phone of the   called party.   Two cases can be considered -- one where the offer is present in the   initial INVITE and one where it is in a response.12.1.1.  Offer in INVITE   To reduce post-dial delays, it is RECOMMENDED that the caller begin   gathering candidates prior to actually sending its initial INVITE.   This can be started upon user interface cues that a call is pending,   such as activity on a keypad or the phone going offhook.   If an offer is received in an INVITE request, the answerer SHOULD   begin to gather its candidates on receipt of the offer and then   generate an answer in a provisional response once it has completed   that process.  ICE requires that a provisional response with an SDP   be transmitted reliably.  This can be done through the existing   Provisional Response Acknowledgment (PRACK) mechanism [RFC3262] or   through an optimization that is specific to ICE.  With this   optimization, provisional responses containing an SDP answer that   begins ICE processing for one or more media streams can be sent   reliably withoutRFC 3262.  To do this, the agent retransmits the   provisional response with the exponential backoff timers described inRFC 3262.  Retransmits MUST cease on receipt of a STUN BindingRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 68]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   request for one of the media streams signaled in that SDP (because   receipt of a Binding request indicates the offerer has received the   answer) or on transmission of the answer in a 2xx response.  If the   peer agent is lite, there will never be a STUN Binding request.  In   such a case, the agent MUST cease retransmitting the 18x after   sending it four times (ICE will actually work even if the peer never   receives the 18x; however, experience has shown that sending it is   important for middleboxes and firewall traversal).  If no Binding   request is received prior to the last retransmit, the agent does not   consider the session terminated.  Despite the fact that the   provisional response will be delivered reliably, the rules for when   an agent can send an updated offer or answer do not change from those   specified inRFC 3262.  Specifically, if the INVITE contained an   offer, the same answer appears in all of the 1xx and in the 2xx   response to the INVITE.  Only after that 2xx has been sent can an   updated offer/answer exchange occur.  This optimization SHOULD NOT be   used if both agents support PRACK.  Note that the optimization is   very specific to provisional response carrying answers that start ICE   processing; it is not a general technique for 1xx reliability.   Alternatively, an agent MAY delay sending an answer until the 200 OK;   however, this results in a poor user experience and is NOT   RECOMMENDED.   Once the answer has been sent, the agent SHOULD begin its   connectivity checks.  Once candidate pairs for each component of a   media stream enter the valid list, the answerer can begin sending   media on that media stream.   However, prior to this point, any media that needs to be sent towards   the caller (such as SIP early media [RFC3960]) MUST NOT be   transmitted.  For this reason, implementations SHOULD delay alerting   the called party until candidates for each component of each media   stream have entered the valid list.  In the case of a PSTN gateway,   this would mean that the setup message into the PSTN is delayed until   this point.  Doing this increases the post-dial delay, but has the   effect of eliminating 'ghost rings'.  Ghost rings are cases where the   called party hears the phone ring, picks up, but hears nothing and   cannot be heard.  This technique works without requiring support for,   or usage of, preconditions [RFC3312], since it's a localized   decision.  It also has the benefit of guaranteeing that not a single   packet of media will get clipped, so that post-pickup delay is zero.   If an agent chooses to delay local alerting in this way, it SHOULD   generate a 180 response once alerting begins.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 69]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201012.1.2.  Offer in Response   In addition to uses where the offer is in an INVITE, and the answer   is in the provisional and/or 200 OK response, ICE works with cases   where the offer appears in the response.  In such cases, which are   common in third party call control [RFC3725], ICE agents SHOULD   generate their offers in a reliable provisional response (which MUST   utilizeRFC 3262), and not alert the user on receipt of the INVITE.   The answer will arrive in a PRACK.  This allows for ICE processing to   take place prior to alerting, so that there is no post-pickup delay,   at the expense of increased call setup delays.  Once ICE completes,   the callee can alert the user and then generate a 200 OK when they   answer.  The 200 OK would contain no SDP, since the offer/answer   exchange has completed.   Alternatively, agents MAY place the offer in a 2xx instead (in which   case the answer comes in the ACK).  When this happens, the callee   will alert the user on receipt of the INVITE, and the ICE exchanges   will take place only after the user answers.  This has the effect of   reducing call setup delay, but can cause substantial post-pickup   delays and media clipping.12.2.  SIP Option Tags and Media Feature Tags   [RFC5768] specifies a SIP option tag and media feature tag for usage   with ICE.  ICE implementations using SIP SHOULD support this   specification, which uses a feature tag in registrations to   facilitate interoperability through signaling intermediaries.12.3.  Interactions with Forking   ICE interacts very well with forking.  Indeed, ICE fixes some of the   problems associated with forking.  Without ICE, when a call forks and   the caller receives multiple incoming media streams, it cannot   determine which media stream corresponds to which callee.   With ICE, this problem is resolved.  The connectivity checks which   occur prior to transmission of media carry username fragments, which   in turn are correlated to a specific callee.  Subsequent media   packets that arrive on the same candidate pair as the connectivity   check will be associated with that same callee.  Thus, the caller can   perform this correlation as long as it has received an answer.12.4.  Interactions with Preconditions   Quality of Service (QoS) preconditions, which are defined inRFC 3312   [RFC3312] andRFC 4032 [RFC4032], apply only to the transport   addresses listed as the default targets for media in an offer/answer.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 70]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   If ICE changes the transport address where media is received, this   change is reflected in an updated offer that changes the default   destination for media to match ICE's selection.  As such, it appears   like any other re-INVITE would, and is fully treated in RFCs 3312 and   4032, which apply without regard to the fact that the destination for   media is changing due to ICE negotiations occurring "in the   background".   Indeed, an agent SHOULD NOT indicate that QoS preconditions have been   met until the checks have completed and selected the candidate pairs   to be used for media.   ICE also has (purposeful) interactions with connectivity   preconditions [SDP-PRECON].  Those interactions are described there.   Note that the procedures described inSection 12.1 describe their own   type of "preconditions", albeit with less functionality than those   provided by the explicit preconditions in [SDP-PRECON].12.5.  Interactions with Third Party Call Control   ICE works with Flows I, III, and IV as described in [RFC3725].  Flow   I works without the controller supporting or being aware of ICE.   Flow IV will work as long as the controller passes along the ICE   attributes without alteration.  Flow II is fundamentally incompatible   with ICE; each agent will believe itself to be the answerer and thus   never generate a re-INVITE.   The flows for continued operation, as described in Section 7 ofRFC3725, require additional behavior of ICE implementations to support.   In particular, if an agent receives a mid-dialog re-INVITE that   contains no offer, it MUST restart ICE for each media stream and go   through the process of gathering new candidates.  Furthermore, that   list of candidates SHOULD include the ones currently being used for   media.13.  Relationship with ANATRFC 4091 [RFC4091], the Alternative Network Address Types (ANAT)   Semantics for the SDP grouping framework, andRFC 4092 [RFC4092], its   usage with SIP, define a mechanism for indicating that an agent can   support both IPv4 and IPv6 for a media stream, and it does so by   including two m lines, one for v4 and one for v6.  This is similar to   ICE, which allows for an agent to indicate multiple transport   addresses using the candidate attribute.  However, ANAT relies on   static selection to pick between choices, rather than a dynamic   connectivity check used by ICE.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 71]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   This specification deprecatesRFC 4091 andRFC 4092.  Instead, agents   wishing to support dual stack will utilize ICE.14.  Extensibility Considerations   This specification makes very specific choices about how both agents   in a session coordinate to arrive at the set of candidate pairs that   are selected for media.  It is anticipated that future specifications   will want to alter these algorithms, whether they are simple changes   like timer tweaks or larger changes like a revamp of the priority   algorithm.  When such a change is made, providing interoperability   between the two agents in a session is critical.   First, ICE provides the a=ice-options SDP attribute.  Each extension   or change to ICE is associated with a token.  When an agent   supporting such an extension or change generates an offer or an   answer, it MUST include the token for that extension in this   attribute.  This allows each side to know what the other side is   doing.  This attribute MUST NOT be present if the agent doesn't   support any ICE extensions or changes.   At this time, no IANA registry or registration procedures are defined   for these option tags.  At time of writing, it is unclear whether ICE   changes and extensions will be sufficiently common to warrant a   registry.   One of the complications in achieving interoperability is that ICE   relies on a distributed algorithm running on both agents to converge   on an agreed set of candidate pairs.  If the two agents run different   algorithms, it can be difficult to guarantee convergence on the same   candidate pairs.  The regular nomination procedure described inSection 8 eliminates some of the tight coordination by delegating the   selection algorithm completely to the controlling agent.   Consequently, when a controlling agent is communicating with a peer   that supports options it doesn't know about, the agent MUST run a   regular nomination algorithm.  When regular nomination is used, ICE   will converge perfectly even when both agents use different pair   prioritization algorithms.  One of the keys to such convergence is   triggered checks, which ensure that the nominated pair is validated   by both agents.  Consequently, any future ICE enhancements MUST   preserve triggered checks.   ICE is also extensible to other media streams beyond RTP, and for   transport protocols beyond UDP.  Extensions to ICE for non-RTP media   streams need to specify how many components they utilize, and assign   component IDs to them, starting at 1 for the most important component   ID.  Specifications for new transport protocols must define how, if   at all, various steps in the ICE processing differ from UDP.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 72]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201015.  Grammar   This specification defines seven new SDP attributes -- the   "candidate", "remote-candidates", "ice-lite", "ice-mismatch", "ice-   ufrag", "ice-pwd", and "ice-options" attributes.15.1.  "candidate" Attribute   The candidate attribute is a media-level attribute only.  It contains   a transport address for a candidate that can be used for connectivity   checks.   The syntax of this attribute is defined using Augmented BNF as   defined inRFC 5234 [RFC5234]:   candidate-attribute   = "candidate" ":" foundation SP component-id SP                           transport SP                           priority SP                           connection-address SP     ;fromRFC 4566                           port         ;port fromRFC 4566                           SP cand-type                           [SP rel-addr]                           [SP rel-port]                           *(SP extension-att-name SP                                extension-att-value)   foundation            = 1*32ice-char   component-id          = 1*5DIGIT   transport             = "UDP" / transport-extension   transport-extension   = token              ; fromRFC 3261   priority              = 1*10DIGIT   cand-type             = "typ" SP candidate-types   candidate-types       = "host" / "srflx" / "prflx" / "relay" / token   rel-addr              = "raddr" SP connection-address   rel-port              = "rport" SP port   extension-att-name    = byte-string    ;fromRFC 4566   extension-att-value   = byte-string   ice-char              = ALPHA / DIGIT / "+" / "/"   This grammar encodes the primary information about a candidate: its   IP address, port and transport protocol, and its properties: the   foundation, component ID, priority, type, and related transport   address:   <connection-address>:  is taken fromRFC 4566 [RFC4566].  It is the      IP address of the candidate, allowing for IPv4 addresses, IPv6      addresses, and fully qualified domain names (FQDNs).  When parsing      this field, an agent can differentiate an IPv4 address and an IPv6Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 73]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010      address by presence of a colon in its value - the presence of a      colon indicates IPv6.  An agent MUST ignore candidate lines that      include candidates with IP address versions that are not supported      or recognized.  An IP address SHOULD be used, but an FQDN MAY be      used in place of an IP address.  In that case, when receiving an      offer or answer containing an FQDN in an a=candidate attribute,      the FQDN is looked up in the DNS first using an AAAA record      (assuming the agent supports IPv6), and if no result is found or      the agent only supports IPv4, using an A.  If the DNS query      returns more than one IP address, one is chosen, and then used for      the remainder of ICE processing.   <port>:  is also taken fromRFC 4566 [RFC4566].  It is the port of      the candidate.   <transport>:  indicates the transport protocol for the candidate.      This specification only defines UDP.  However, extensibility is      provided to allow for future transport protocols to be used with      ICE, such as TCP or the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol      (DCCP) [RFC4340].   <foundation>:  is composed of 1 to 32 <ice-char>s.  It is an      identifier that is equivalent for two candidates that are of the      same type, share the same base, and come from the same STUN      server.  The foundation is used to optimize ICE performance in the      Frozen algorithm.   <component-id>:  is a positive integer between 1 and 256 that      identifies the specific component of the media stream for which      this is a candidate.  It MUST start at 1 and MUST increment by 1      for each component of a particular candidate.  For media streams      based on RTP, candidates for the actual RTP media MUST have a      component ID of 1, and candidates for RTCP MUST have a component      ID of 2.  Other types of media streams that require multiple      components MUST develop specifications that define the mapping of      components to component IDs.  SeeSection 14 for additional      discussion on extending ICE to new media streams.   <priority>:  is a positive integer between 1 and (2**31 - 1).   <cand-type>:  encodes the type of candidate.  This specification      defines the values "host", "srflx", "prflx", and "relay" for host,      server reflexive, peer reflexive, and relayed candidates,      respectively.  The set of candidate types is extensible for the      future.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 74]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   <rel-addr> and <rel-port>:  convey transport addresses related to the      candidate, useful for diagnostics and other purposes. <rel-addr>      and <rel-port> MUST be present for server reflexive, peer      reflexive, and relayed candidates.  If a candidate is server or      peer reflexive, <rel-addr> and <rel-port> are equal to the base      for that server or peer reflexive candidate.  If the candidate is      relayed, <rel-addr> and <rel-port> is equal to the mapped address      in the Allocate response that provided the client with that      relayed candidate (seeAppendix B.3 for a discussion of its      purpose).  If the candidate is a host candidate, <rel-addr> and      <rel-port> MUST be omitted.   The candidate attribute can itself be extended.  The grammar allows   for new name/value pairs to be added at the end of the attribute.  An   implementation MUST ignore any name/value pairs it doesn't   understand.15.2.  "remote-candidates" Attribute   The syntax of the "remote-candidates" attribute is defined using   Augmented BNF as defined inRFC 5234 [RFC5234].  The remote-   candidates attribute is a media-level attribute only.   remote-candidate-att = "remote-candidates" ":" remote-candidate                           0*(SP remote-candidate)   remote-candidate = component-ID SP connection-address SP port   The attribute contains a connection-address and port for each   component.  The ordering of components is irrelevant.  However, a   value MUST be present for each component of a media stream.  This   attribute MUST be included in an offer by a controlling agent for a   media stream that is Completed, and MUST NOT be included in any other   case.15.3.  "ice-lite" and "ice-mismatch" Attributes   The syntax of the "ice-lite" and "ice-mismatch" attributes, both of   which are flags, is:   ice-lite               = "ice-lite"   ice-mismatch           = "ice-mismatch"   "ice-lite" is a session-level attribute only, and indicates that an   agent is a lite implementation. "ice-mismatch" is a media-level   attribute only, and when present in an answer, indicates that the   offer arrived with a default destination for a media component that   didn't have a corresponding candidate attribute.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 75]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201015.4.  "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd" Attributes   The "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd" attributes convey the username fragment   and password used by ICE for message integrity.  Their syntax is:   ice-pwd-att           = "ice-pwd" ":" password   ice-ufrag-att         = "ice-ufrag" ":" ufrag   password              = 22*256ice-char   ufrag                 = 4*256ice-char   The "ice-pwd" and "ice-ufrag" attributes can appear at either the   session-level or media-level.  When present in both, the value in the   media-level takes precedence.  Thus, the value at the session-level   is effectively a default that applies to all media streams, unless   overridden by a media-level value.  Whether present at the session or   media-level, there MUST be an ice-pwd and ice-ufrag attribute for   each media stream.  If two media streams have identical ice-ufrag's,   they MUST have identical ice-pwd's.   The ice-ufrag and ice-pwd attributes MUST be chosen randomly at the   beginning of a session.  The ice-ufrag attribute MUST contain at   least 24 bits of randomness, and the ice-pwd attribute MUST contain   at least 128 bits of randomness.  This means that the ice-ufrag   attribute will be at least 4 characters long, and the ice-pwd at   least 22 characters long, since the grammar for these attributes   allows for 6 bits of randomness per character.  The attributes MAY be   longer than 4 and 22 characters, respectively, of course, up to 256   characters.  The upper limit allows for buffer sizing in   implementations.  Its large upper limit allows for increased amounts   of randomness to be added over time.15.5.  "ice-options" Attribute   The "ice-options" attribute is a session-level attribute.  It   contains a series of tokens that identify the options supported by   the agent.  Its grammar is:   ice-options           = "ice-options" ":" ice-option-tag                             0*(SP ice-option-tag)   ice-option-tag        = 1*ice-char16.  Setting Ta and RTO   During the gathering phase of ICE (Section 4.1.1) and while ICE is   performing connectivity checks (Section 7), an agent sends STUN and   TURN transactions.  These transactions are paced at a rate of one   every Ta milliseconds, and utilize a specific RTO.  This section   describes how the values of Ta and RTO are computed.  ThisRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 76]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   computation depends on whether ICE is being used with a real-time   media stream (such as RTP) or something else.  When ICE is used for a   stream with a known maximum bandwidth, the computation inSection 16.1 MAY be followed to rate-control the ICE exchanges.  For   all other streams, the computation inSection 16.2 MUST be followed.16.1.  RTP Media Streams   The values of RTO and Ta change during the lifetime of ICE   processing.  One set of values applies during the gathering phase,   and the other, for connectivity checks.   The value of Ta SHOULD be configurable, and SHOULD have a default of:   For each media stream i:    Ta_i = (stun_packet_size / rtp_packet_size) * rtp_ptime                           1     Ta = MAX (20ms, ------------------- )                           k                         ----                         \        1                          >    ------                         /       Ta_i                         ----                          i=1   where k is the number of media streams.  During the gathering phase,   Ta is computed based on the number of media streams the agent has   indicated in its offer or answer, and the RTP packet size and RTP   ptime are those of the most preferred codec for each media stream.   Once an offer and answer have been exchanged, the agent recomputes Ta   to pace the connectivity checks.  In that case, the value of Ta is   based on the number of media streams that will actually be used in   the session, and the RTP packet size and RTP ptime are those of the   most preferred codec with which the agent will send.   In addition, the retransmission timer for the STUN transactions, RTO,   defined in [RFC5389], SHOULD be configurable and during the gathering   phase, SHOULD have a default of:     RTO = MAX (100ms, Ta * (number of pairs))   where the number of pairs refers to the number of pairs of candidates   with STUN or TURN servers.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 77]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   For connectivity checks, RTO SHOULD be configurable and SHOULD have a   default of:     RTO = MAX (100ms, Ta*N * (Num-Waiting + Num-In-Progress))   where Num-Waiting is the number of checks in the check list in the   Waiting state, and Num-In-Progress is the number of checks in the In-   Progress state.  Note that the RTO will be different for each   transaction as the number of checks in the Waiting and In-Progress   states change.   These formulas are aimed at causing STUN transactions to be paced at   the same rate as media.  This ensures that ICE will work properly   under the same network conditions needed to support the media as   well.  SeeAppendix B.1 for additional discussion and motivations.   Because of this pacing, it will take a certain amount of time to   obtain all of the server reflexive and relayed candidates.   Implementations should be aware of the time required to do this, and   if the application requires a time budget, limit the number of   candidates that are gathered.   The formulas result in a behavior whereby an agent will send its   first packet for every single connectivity check before performing a   retransmit.  This can be seen in the formulas for the RTO (which   represents the retransmit interval).  Those formulas scale with N,   the number of checks to be performed.  As a result of this, ICE   maintains a nicely constant rate, but becomes more sensitive to   packet loss.  The loss of the first single packet for any   connectivity check is likely to cause that pair to take a long time   to be validated, and instead, a lower-priority check (but one for   which there was no packet loss) is much more likely to complete   first.  This results in ICE performing sub-optimally, choosing lower-   priority pairs over higher-priority pairs.  Implementors should be   aware of this consequence, but still should utilize the timer values   described here.16.2.  Non-RTP Sessions   In cases where ICE is used to establish some kind of session that is   not real time, and has no fixed rate associated with it that is known   to work on the network in which ICE is deployed, Ta and RTO revert to   more conservative values.  Ta SHOULD be configurable, SHOULD have a   default of 500 ms, and MUST NOT be configurable to be less than 500   ms.   In addition, the retransmission timer for the STUN transactions, RTO,   SHOULD be configurable and during the gathering phase, SHOULD have a   default of:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 78]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010     RTO = MAX (500ms, Ta * (number of pairs))   where the number of pairs refers to the number of pairs of candidates   with STUN or TURN servers.   For connectivity checks, RTO SHOULD be configurable and SHOULD have a   default of:     RTO = MAX (500ms, Ta*N * (Num-Waiting + Num-In-Progress))17.  Example   The example is based on the simplified topology of Figure 8.                             +-----+                             |     |                             |STUN |                             | Srvr|                             +-----+                                |                     +---------------------+                     |                     |                     |      Internet       |                     |                     |                     |                     |                     +---------------------+                       |                |                       |                |                +---------+             |                |  NAT    |             |                +---------+             |                     |                  |                     |                  |                     |                  |                  +-----+            +-----+                  |     |            |     |                  |  L  |            |  R  |                  |     |            |     |                  +-----+            +-----+                        Figure 8: Example Topology   Two agents, L and R, are using ICE.  Both are full-mode ICE   implementations and use aggressive nomination when they are   controlling.  Both agents have a single IPv4 address.  For agent L,   it is 10.0.1.1 in private address space [RFC1918], and for agent R,   192.0.2.1 on the public Internet.  Both are configured with the same   STUN server (shown in this example for simplicity, although inRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 79]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   practice the agents do not need to use the same STUN server), which   is listening for STUN Binding requests at an IP address of 192.0.2.2   and port 3478.  TURN servers are not used in this example.  Agent L   is behind a NAT, and agent R is on the public Internet.  The NAT has   an endpoint independent mapping property and an address dependent   filtering property.  The public side of the NAT has an IP address of   192.0.2.3.   To facilitate understanding, transport addresses are listed using   variables that have mnemonic names.  The format of the name is   entity-type-seqno, where entity refers to the entity whose IP address   the transport address is on, and is one of "L", "R", "STUN", or   "NAT".  The type is either "PUB" for transport addresses that are   public, and "PRIV" for transport addresses that are private.   Finally, seq-no is a sequence number that is different for each   transport address of the same type on a particular entity.  Each   variable has an IP address and port, denoted by varname.IP and   varname.PORT, respectively, where varname is the name of the   variable.   The STUN server has advertised transport address STUN-PUB-1 (which is   192.0.2.2:3478).   In the call flow itself, STUN messages are annotated with several   attributes.  The "S=" attribute indicates the source transport   address of the message.  The "D=" attribute indicates the destination   transport address of the message.  The "MA=" attribute is used in   STUN Binding response messages and refers to the mapped address.   "USE-CAND" implies the presence of the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.   The call flow examples omit STUN authentication operations and RTCP,   and focus on RTP for a single media stream between two full   implementations.             L             NAT           STUN             R             |RTP STUN alloc.              |              |             |(1) STUN Req  |              |              |             |S=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |D=$STUN-PUB-1 |              |              |             |------------->|              |              |             |              |(2) STUN Req  |              |             |              |S=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |D=$STUN-PUB-1 |              |             |              |------------->|              |Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 80]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010             |              |(3) STUN Res  |              |             |              |S=$STUN-PUB-1 |              |             |              |D=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |MA=$NAT-PUB-1 |              |             |              |<-------------|              |             |(4) STUN Res  |              |              |             |S=$STUN-PUB-1 |              |              |             |D=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |MA=$NAT-PUB-1 |              |              |             |<-------------|              |              |             |(5) Offer     |              |              |             |------------------------------------------->|             |              |              |              |RTP STUN             alloc.             |              |              |(6) STUN Req  |             |              |              |S=$R-PUB-1    |             |              |              |D=$STUN-PUB-1 |             |              |              |<-------------|             |              |              |(7) STUN Res  |             |              |              |S=$STUN-PUB-1 |             |              |              |D=$R-PUB-1    |             |              |              |MA=$R-PUB-1   |             |              |              |------------->|             |(8) answer    |              |              |             |<-------------------------------------------|             |              |(9) Bind Req  |              |Begin             |              |S=$R-PUB-1    |              |Connectivity             |              |D=L-PRIV-1    |              |Checks             |              |<----------------------------|             |              |Dropped       |              |             |(10) Bind Req |              |              |             |S=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |D=$R-PUB-1    |              |              |             |USE-CAND      |              |              |             |------------->|              |              |             |              |(11) Bind Req |              |             |              |S=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |D=$R-PUB-1    |              |             |              |USE-CAND      |              |             |              |---------------------------->|             |              |(12) Bind Res |              |             |              |S=$R-PUB-1    |              |             |              |D=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |MA=$NAT-PUB-1 |              |             |              |<----------------------------|Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 81]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010             |(13) Bind Res |              |              |             |S=$R-PUB-1    |              |              |             |D=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |MA=$NAT-PUB-1 |              |              |             |<-------------|              |              |             |RTP flows     |              |              |             |              |(14) Bind Req |              |             |              |S=$R-PUB-1    |              |             |              |D=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |<----------------------------|             |(15) Bind Req |              |              |             |S=$R-PUB-1    |              |              |             |D=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |<-------------|              |              |             |(16) Bind Res |              |              |             |S=$L-PRIV-1   |              |              |             |D=$R-PUB-1    |              |              |             |MA=$R-PUB-1   |              |              |             |------------->|              |              |             |              |(17) Bind Res |              |             |              |S=$NAT-PUB-1  |              |             |              |D=$R-PUB-1    |              |             |              |MA=$R-PUB-1   |              |             |              |---------------------------->|             |              |              |              |RTP flows                          Figure 9: Example Flow   First, agent L obtains a host candidate from its local IP address   (not shown), and from that, sends a STUN Binding request to the STUN   server to get a server reflexive candidate (messages 1-4).  Recall   that the NAT has the address and port independent mapping property.   Here, it creates a binding of NAT-PUB-1 for this UDP request, and   this becomes the server reflexive candidate for RTP.   Agent L sets a type preference of 126 for the host candidate and 100   for the server reflexive.  The local preference is 65535.  Based on   this, the priority of the host candidate is 2130706431 and for the   server reflexive candidate is 1694498815.  The host candidate is   assigned a foundation of 1, and the server reflexive, a foundation of   2.  It chooses its server reflexive candidate as the default   candidate, and encodes it into the m and c lines.  The resulting   offer (message 5) looks like (lines folded for clarity):Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 82]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010       v=0       o=jdoe 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 $L-PRIV-1.IP       s=       c=IN IP4 $NAT-PUB-1.IP       t=0 0       a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg       a=ice-ufrag:8hhY       m=audio $NAT-PUB-1.PORT RTP/AVP 0       b=RS:0       b=RR:0       a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000       a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 $L-PRIV-1.IP $L-PRIV-1.PORT typ       host       a=candidate:2 1 UDP 1694498815 $NAT-PUB-1.IP $NAT-PUB-1.PORT typ        srflx raddr $L-PRIV-1.IP rport $L-PRIV-1.PORT   The offer, with the variables replaced with their values, will look   like (lines folded for clarity):       v=0       o=jdoe 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 10.0.1.1       s=       c=IN IP4 192.0.2.3       t=0 0       a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg       a=ice-ufrag:8hhY       m=audio 45664 RTP/AVP 0       b=RS:0       b=RR:0       a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000       a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 10.0.1.1 8998 typ host       a=candidate:2 1 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 45664 typ srflx raddr   10.0.1.1 rport 8998   This offer is received at agent R.  Agent R will obtain a host   candidate, and from it, obtain a server reflexive candidate (messages   6-7).  Since R is not behind a NAT, this candidate is identical to   its host candidate, and they share the same base.  It therefore   discards this redundant candidate and ends up with a single host   candidate.  With identical type and local preferences as L, the   priority for this candidate is 2130706431.  It chooses a foundation   of 1 for its single candidate.  Its resulting answer looks like:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 83]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010       v=0       o=bob 2808844564 2808844564 IN IP4 $R-PUB-1.IP       s=       c=IN IP4 $R-PUB-1.IP       t=0 0       a=ice-pwd:YH75Fviy6338Vbrhrlp8Yh       a=ice-ufrag:9uB6       m=audio $R-PUB-1.PORT RTP/AVP 0       b=RS:0       b=RR:0       a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000       a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 $R-PUB-1.IP $R-PUB-1.PORT typ host   With the variables filled in:       v=0       o=bob 2808844564 2808844564 IN IP4 192.0.2.1       s=       c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1       t=0 0       a=ice-pwd:YH75Fviy6338Vbrhrlp8Yh       a=ice-ufrag:9uB6       m=audio 3478 RTP/AVP 0       b=RS:0       b=RR:0       a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000       a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 192.0.2.1 3478 typ host   Since neither side indicated that it is lite, the agent that sent the   offer that began ICE processing (agent L) becomes the controlling   agent.   Agents L and R both pair up the candidates.  They both initially have   two pairs.  However, agent L will prune the pair containing its   server reflexive candidate, resulting in just one.  At agent L, this   pair has a local candidate of $L_PRIV_1 and remote candidate of   $R_PUB_1, and has a candidate pair priority of 4.57566E+18 (note that   an implementation would represent this as a 64-bit integer so as not   to lose precision).  At agent R, there are two pairs.  The highest   priority has a local candidate of $R_PUB_1 and remote candidate of   $L_PRIV_1 and has a priority of 4.57566E+18, and the second has a   local candidate of $R_PUB_1 and remote candidate of $NAT_PUB_1 and   priority 3.63891E+18.   Agent R begins its connectivity check (message 9) for the first pair   (between the two host candidates).  Since R is the controlled agent   for this session, the check omits the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.  TheRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 84]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   host candidate from agent L is private and behind a NAT, and thus   this check won't be successful, because the packet cannot be routed   from R to L.   When agent L gets the answer, it performs its one and only   connectivity check (messages 10-13).  It implements the aggressive   nomination algorithm, and thus includes a USE-CANDIDATE attribute in   this check.  Since the check succeeds, agent L creates a new pair,   whose local candidate is from the mapped address in the Binding   response (NAT-PUB-1 from message 13) and whose remote candidate is   the destination of the request (R-PUB-1 from message 10).  This is   added to the valid list.  In addition, it is marked as selected since   the Binding request contained the USE-CANDIDATE attribute.  Since   there is a selected candidate in the Valid list for the one component   of this media stream, ICE processing for this stream moves into the   Completed state.  Agent L can now send media if it so chooses.   Soon after receipt of the STUN Binding request from agent L (message   11), agent R will generate its triggered check.  This check happens   to match the next one on its check list -- from its host candidate to   agent L's server reflexive candidate.  This check (messages 14-17)   will succeed.  Consequently, agent R constructs a new candidate pair   using the mapped address from the response as the local candidate   (R-PUB-1) and the destination of the request (NAT-PUB-1) as the   remote candidate.  This pair is added to the Valid list for that   media stream.  Since the check was generated in the reverse direction   of a check that contained the USE-CANDIDATE attribute, the candidate   pair is marked as selected.  Consequently, processing for this stream   moves into the Completed state, and agent R can also send media.18.  Security Considerations   There are several types of attacks possible in an ICE system.  This   section considers these attacks and their countermeasures.  These   countermeasures include:   o  Using ICE in conjunction with secure signaling techniques, such as      SIPS.   o  Limiting the total number of connectivity checks to 100, and      optionally limiting the number of candidates they'll accept in an      offer or answer.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 85]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201018.1.  Attacks on Connectivity Checks   An attacker might attempt to disrupt the STUN connectivity checks.   Ultimately, all of these attacks fool an agent into thinking   something incorrect about the results of the connectivity checks.   The possible false conclusions an attacker can try and cause are:   False Invalid:  An attacker can fool a pair of agents into thinking a      candidate pair is invalid, when it isn't.  This can be used to      cause an agent to prefer a different candidate (such as one      injected by the attacker) or to disrupt a call by forcing all      candidates to fail.   False Valid:  An attacker can fool a pair of agents into thinking a      candidate pair is valid, when it isn't.  This can cause an agent      to proceed with a session, but then not be able to receive any      media.   False Peer Reflexive Candidate:  An attacker can cause an agent to      discover a new peer reflexive candidate, when it shouldn't have.      This can be used to redirect media streams to a Denial-of-Service      (DoS) target or to the attacker, for eavesdropping or other      purposes.   False Valid on False Candidate:  An attacker has already convinced an      agent that there is a candidate with an address that doesn't      actually route to that agent (for example, by injecting a false      peer reflexive candidate or false server reflexive candidate).  It      must then launch an attack that forces the agents to believe that      this candidate is valid.      If an attacker can cause a false peer reflexive candidate or false      valid on a false candidate, it can launch any of the attacks      described in [RFC5389].   To force the false invalid result, the attacker has to wait for the   connectivity check from one of the agents to be sent.  When it is,   the attacker needs to inject a fake response with an unrecoverable   error response, such as a 400.  However, since the candidate is, in   fact, valid, the original request may reach the peer agent, and   result in a success response.  The attacker needs to force this   packet or its response to be dropped, through a DoS attack, layer 2   network disruption, or other technique.  If it doesn't do this, the   success response will also reach the originator, alerting it to a   possible attack.  Fortunately, this attack is mitigated completely   through the STUN short-term credential mechanism.  The attacker needs   to inject a fake response, and in order for this response to be   processed, the attacker needs the password.  If the offer/answerRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 86]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   signaling is secured, the attacker will not have the password and its   response will be discarded.   Forcing the fake valid result works in a similar way.  The agent   needs to wait for the Binding request from each agent, and inject a   fake success response.  The attacker won't need to worry about   disrupting the actual response since, if the candidate is not valid,   it presumably wouldn't be received anyway.  However, like the fake   invalid attack, this attack is mitigated by the STUN short-term   credential mechanism in conjunction with a secure offer/answer   exchange.   Forcing the false peer reflexive candidate result can be done either   with fake requests or responses, or with replays.  We consider the   fake requests and responses case first.  It requires the attacker to   send a Binding request to one agent with a source IP address and port   for the false candidate.  In addition, the attacker must wait for a   Binding request from the other agent, and generate a fake response   with a XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute containing the false candidate.   Like the other attacks described here, this attack is mitigated by   the STUN message integrity mechanisms and secure offer/answer   exchanges.   Forcing the false peer reflexive candidate result with packet replays   is different.  The attacker waits until one of the agents sends a   check.  It intercepts this request, and replays it towards the other   agent with a faked source IP address.  It must also prevent the   original request from reaching the remote agent, either by launching   a DoS attack to cause the packet to be dropped, or forcing it to be   dropped using layer 2 mechanisms.  The replayed packet is received at   the other agent, and accepted, since the integrity check passes (the   integrity check cannot and does not cover the source IP address and   port).  It is then responded to.  This response will contain a XOR-   MAPPED-ADDRESS with the false candidate, and will be sent to that   false candidate.  The attacker must then receive it and relay it   towards the originator.   The other agent will then initiate a connectivity check towards that   false candidate.  This validation needs to succeed.  This requires   the attacker to force a false valid on a false candidate.  Injecting   of fake requests or responses to achieve this goal is prevented using   the integrity mechanisms of STUN and the offer/answer exchange.   Thus, this attack can only be launched through replays.  To do that,   the attacker must intercept the check towards this false candidate,   and replay it towards the other agent.  Then, it must intercept the   response and replay that back as well.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 87]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   This attack is very hard to launch unless the attacker is identified   by the fake candidate.  This is because it requires the attacker to   intercept and replay packets sent by two different hosts.  If both   agents are on different networks (for example, across the public   Internet), this attack can be hard to coordinate, since it needs to   occur against two different endpoints on different parts of the   network at the same time.   If the attacker itself is identified by the fake candidate, the   attack is easier to coordinate.  However, if SRTP is used [RFC3711],   the attacker will not be able to play the media packets, but will   only be able to discard them, effectively disabling the media stream   for the call.  However, this attack requires the agent to disrupt   packets in order to block the connectivity check from reaching the   target.  In that case, if the goal is to disrupt the media stream,   it's much easier to just disrupt it with the same mechanism, rather   than attack ICE.18.2.  Attacks on Server Reflexive Address Gathering   ICE endpoints make use of STUN Binding requests for gathering server   reflexive candidates from a STUN server.  These requests are not   authenticated in any way.  As a consequence, there are numerous   techniques an attacker can employ to provide the client with a false   server reflexive candidate:   o  An attacker can compromise the DNS, causing DNS queries to return      a rogue STUN server address.  That server can provide the client      with fake server reflexive candidates.  This attack is mitigated      by DNS security, though DNS-SEC is not required to address it.   o  An attacker that can observe STUN messages (such as an attacker on      a shared network segment, like WiFi) can inject a fake response      that is valid and will be accepted by the client.   o  An attacker can compromise a STUN server by means of a virus, and      cause it to send responses with incorrect mapped addresses.   A false mapped address learned by these attacks will be used as a   server reflexive candidate in the ICE exchange.  For this candidate   to actually be used for media, the attacker must also attack the   connectivity checks, and in particular, force a false valid on a   false candidate.  This attack is very hard to launch if the false   address identifies a fourth party (neither the offerer, answerer, nor   attacker), since it requires attacking the checks generated by each   agent in the session, and is prevented by SRTP if it identifies the   attacker themself.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 88]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   If the attacker elects not to attack the connectivity checks, the   worst it can do is prevent the server reflexive candidate from being   used.  However, if the peer agent has at least one candidate that is   reachable by the agent under attack, the STUN connectivity checks   themselves will provide a peer reflexive candidate that can be used   for the exchange of media.  Peer reflexive candidates are generally   preferred over server reflexive candidates.  As such, an attack   solely on the STUN address gathering will normally have no impact on   a session at all.18.3.  Attacks on Relayed Candidate Gathering   An attacker might attempt to disrupt the gathering of relayed   candidates, forcing the client to believe it has a false relayed   candidate.  Exchanges with the TURN server are authenticated using a   long-term credential.  Consequently, injection of fake responses or   requests will not work.  In addition, unlike Binding requests,   Allocate requests are not susceptible to replay attacks with modified   source IP addresses and ports, since the source IP address and port   are not utilized to provide the client with its relayed candidate.   However, TURN servers are susceptible to DNS attacks, or to viruses   aimed at the TURN server, for purposes of turning it into a zombie or   rogue server.  These attacks can be mitigated by DNS-SEC and through   good box and software security on TURN servers.   Even if an attacker has caused the client to believe in a false   relayed candidate, the connectivity checks cause such a candidate to   be used only if they succeed.  Thus, an attacker must launch a false   valid on a false candidate, per above, which is a very difficult   attack to coordinate.18.4.  Attacks on the Offer/Answer Exchanges   An attacker that can modify or disrupt the offer/answer exchanges   themselves can readily launch a variety of attacks with ICE.  They   could direct media to a target of a DoS attack, they could insert   themselves into the media stream, and so on.  These are similar to   the general security considerations for offer/answer exchanges, and   the security considerations inRFC 3264 [RFC3264] apply.  These   require techniques for message integrity and encryption for offers   and answers, which are satisfied by the SIPS mechanism [RFC3261] when   SIP is used.  As such, the usage of SIPS with ICE is RECOMMENDED.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 89]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201018.5.  Insider Attacks   In addition to attacks where the attacker is a third party trying to   insert fake offers, answers, or stun messages, there are several   attacks possible with ICE when the attacker is an authenticated and   valid participant in the ICE exchange.18.5.1.  The Voice Hammer Attack   The voice hammer attack is an amplification attack.  In this attack,   the attacker initiates sessions to other agents, and maliciously   includes the IP address and port of a DoS target as the destination   for media traffic signaled in the SDP.  This causes substantial   amplification; a single offer/answer exchange can create a continuing   flood of media packets, possibly at high rates (consider video   sources).  This attack is not specific to ICE, but ICE can help   provide remediation.   Specifically, if ICE is used, the agent receiving the malicious SDP   will first perform connectivity checks to the target of media before   sending media there.  If this target is a third-party host, the   checks will not succeed, and media is never sent.   Unfortunately, ICE doesn't help if its not used, in which case an   attacker could simply send the offer without the ICE parameters.   However, in environments where the set of clients is known, and is   limited to ones that support ICE, the server can reject any offers or   answers that don't indicate ICE support.18.5.2.  STUN Amplification Attack   The STUN amplification attack is similar to the voice hammer.   However, instead of voice packets being directed to the target, STUN   connectivity checks are directed to the target.  The attacker sends   an offer with a large number of candidates, say, 50.  The answerer   receives the offer, and starts its checks, which are directed at the   target, and consequently, never generate a response.  The answerer   will start a new connectivity check every Ta ms (say, Ta=20ms).   However, the retransmission timers are set to a large number due to   the large number of candidates.  As a consequence, packets will be   sent at an interval of one every Ta milliseconds, and then with   increasing intervals after that.  Thus, STUN will not send packets at   a rate faster than media would be sent, and the STUN packets persist   only briefly, until ICE fails for the session.  Nonetheless, this is   an amplification mechanism.   It is impossible to eliminate the amplification, but the volume can   be reduced through a variety of heuristics.  Agents SHOULD limit theRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 90]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   total number of connectivity checks they perform to 100.   Additionally, agents MAY limit the number of candidates they'll   accept in an offer or answer.   Frequently, protocols that wish to avoid these kinds of attacks force   the initiator to wait for a response prior to sending the next   message.  However, in the case of ICE, this is not possible.  It is   not possible to differentiate the following two cases:   o  There was no response because the initiator is being used to      launch a DoS attack against an unsuspecting target that will not      respond.   o  There was no response because the IP address and port are not      reachable by the initiator.   In the second case, another check should be sent at the next   opportunity, while in the former case, no further checks should be   sent.18.6.  Interactions with Application Layer Gateways and SIP   Application Layer Gateways (ALGs) are functions present in a NAT   device that inspect the contents of packets and modify them, in order   to facilitate NAT traversal for application protocols.  Session   Border Controllers (SBCs) are close cousins of ALGs, but are less   transparent since they actually exist as application layer SIP   intermediaries.  ICE has interactions with SBCs and ALGs.   If an ALG is SIP aware but not ICE aware, ICE will work through it as   long as the ALG correctly modifies the SDP.  A correct ALG   implementation behaves as follows:   o  The ALG does not modify the m and c lines or the rtcp attribute if      they contain external addresses.   o  If the m and c lines contain internal addresses, the modification      depends on the state of the ALG:         If the ALG already has a binding established that maps an         external port to an internal IP address and port matching the         values in the m and c lines or rtcp attribute, the ALG uses         that binding instead of creating a new one.         If the ALG does not already have a binding, it creates a new         one and modifies the SDP, rewriting the m and c lines and rtcp         attribute.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 91]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Unfortunately, many ALGs are known to work poorly in these corner   cases.  ICE does not try to work around broken ALGs, as this is   outside the scope of its functionality.  ICE can help diagnose these   conditions, which often show up as a mismatch between the set of   candidates and the m and c lines and rtcp attributes.  The ice-   mismatch attribute is used for this purpose.   ICE works best through ALGs when the signaling is run over TLS.  This   prevents the ALG from manipulating the SDP messages and interfering   with ICE operation.  Implementations that are expected to be deployed   behind ALGs SHOULD provide for TLS transport of the SDP.   If an SBC is SIP aware but not ICE aware, the result depends on the   behavior of the SBC.  If it is acting as a proper Back-to-Back User   Agent (B2BUA), the SBC will remove any SDP attributes it doesn't   understand, including the ICE attributes.  Consequently, the call   will appear to both endpoints as if the other side doesn't support   ICE.  This will result in ICE being disabled, and media flowing   through the SBC, if the SBC has requested it.  If, however, the SBC   passes the ICE attributes without modification, yet modifies the   default destination for media (contained in the m and c lines and   rtcp attribute), this will be detected as an ICE mismatch, and ICE   processing is aborted for the call.  It is outside of the scope of   ICE for it to act as a tool for "working around" SBCs.  If one is   present, ICE will not be used and the SBC techniques take precedence.19.  STUN Extensions19.1.  New Attributes   This specification defines four new attributes, PRIORITY, USE-   CANDIDATE, ICE-CONTROLLED, and ICE-CONTROLLING.   The PRIORITY attribute indicates the priority that is to be   associated with a peer reflexive candidate, should one be discovered   by this check.  It is a 32-bit unsigned integer, and has an attribute   value of 0x0024.   The USE-CANDIDATE attribute indicates that the candidate pair   resulting from this check should be used for transmission of media.   The attribute has no content (the Length field of the attribute is   zero); it serves as a flag.  It has an attribute value of 0x0025.   The ICE-CONTROLLED attribute is present in a Binding request and   indicates that the client believes it is currently in the controlled   role.  The content of the attribute is a 64-bit unsigned integer in   network byte order, which contains a random number used for tie-   breaking of role conflicts.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 92]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   The ICE-CONTROLLING attribute is present in a Binding request and   indicates that the client believes it is currently in the controlling   role.  The content of the attribute is a 64-bit unsigned integer in   network byte order, which contains a random number used for tie-   breaking of role conflicts.19.2.  New Error Response Codes   This specification defines a single error response code:   487 (Role Conflict):  The Binding request contained either the ICE-      CONTROLLING or ICE-CONTROLLED attribute, indicating a role that      conflicted with the server.  The server ran a tie-breaker based on      the tie-breaker value in the request and determined that the      client needs to switch roles.20.  Operational Considerations   This section discusses issues relevant to network operators looking   to deploy ICE.20.1.  NAT and Firewall Types   ICE was designed to work with existing NAT and firewall equipment.   Consequently, it is not necessary to replace or reconfigure existing   firewall and NAT equipment in order to facilitate deployment of ICE.   Indeed, ICE was developed to be deployed in environments where the   Voice over IP (VoIP) operator has no control over the IP network   infrastructure, including firewalls and NAT.   That said, ICE works best in environments where the NAT devices are   "behave" compliant, meeting the recommendations defined in [RFC4787]   and [RFC5766].  In networks with behave-compliant NAT, ICE will work   without the need for a TURN server, thus improving voice quality,   decreasing call setup times, and reducing the bandwidth demands on   the network operator.20.2.  Bandwidth Requirements   Deployment of ICE can have several interactions with available   network capacity that operators should take into consideration.20.2.1.  STUN and TURN Server Capacity Planning   First and foremost, ICE makes use of TURN and STUN servers, which   would typically be located in the network operator's data centers.   The STUN servers require relatively little bandwidth.  For each   component of each media stream, there will be one or more STUNRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 93]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   transactions from each client to the STUN server.  In a basic voice-   only IPv4 VoIP deployment, there will be four transactions per call   (one for RTP and one for RTCP, for both caller and callee).  Each   transaction is a single request and a single response, the former   being 20 bytes long, and the latter, 28.  Consequently, if a system   has N users, and each makes four calls in a busy hour, this would   require N*1.7bps.  For one million users, this is 1.7 Mbps, a very   small number (relatively speaking).   TURN traffic is more substantial.  The TURN server will see traffic   volume equal to the STUN volume (indeed, if TURN servers are   deployed, there is no need for a separate STUN server), in addition   to the traffic for the actual media traffic.  The amount of calls   requiring TURN for media relay is highly dependent on network   topologies, and can and will vary over time.  In a network with 100%   behave-compliant NAT, it is exactly zero.  At time of writing, large-   scale consumer deployments were seeing between 5 and 10 percent of   calls requiring TURN servers.  Considering a voice-only deployment   using G.711 (so 80 kbps in each direction), with .2 erlangs during   the busy hour, this is N*3.2 kbps.  For a population of one million   users, this is 3.2 Gbps, assuming a 10% usage of TURN servers.20.2.2.  Gathering and Connectivity Checks   The process of gathering of candidates and performing of connectivity   checks can be bandwidth intensive.  ICE has been designed to pace   both of these processes.  The gathering phase and the connectivity   check phase are meant to generate traffic at roughly the same   bandwidth as the media traffic itself.  This was done to ensure that,   if a network is designed to support multimedia traffic of a certain   type (voice, video, or just text), it will have sufficient capacity   to support the ICE checks for that media.  Of course, the ICE checks   will cause a marginal increase in the total utilization; however,   this will typically be an extremely small increase.   Congestion due to the gathering and check phases has proven to be a   problem in deployments that did not utilize pacing.  Typically,   access links became congested as the endpoints flooded the network   with checks as fast as they can send them.  Consequently, network   operators should make sure that their ICE implementations support the   pacing feature.  Though this pacing does increase call setup times,   it makes ICE network friendly and easier to deploy.20.2.3.  Keepalives   STUN keepalives (in the form of STUN Binding Indications) are sent in   the middle of a media session.  However, they are sent only in the   absence of actual media traffic.  In deployments that are notRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 94]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   utilizing Voice Activity Detection (VAD), the keepalives are never   used and there is no increase in bandwidth usage.  When VAD is being   used, keepalives will be sent during silence periods.  This involves   a single packet every 15-20 seconds, far less than the packet every   20-30 ms that is sent when there is voice.  Therefore, keepalives   don't have any real impact on capacity planning.20.3.  ICE and ICE-lite   Deployments utilizing a mix of ICE and ICE-lite interoperate   perfectly.  They have been explicitly designed to do so, without loss   of function.   However, ICE-lite can only be deployed in limited use cases.  Those   cases, and the caveats involved in doing so, are documented inAppendix A.20.4.  Troubleshooting and Performance Management   ICE utilizes end-to-end connectivity checks, and places much of the   processing in the endpoints.  This introduces a challenge to the   network operator -- how can they troubleshoot ICE deployments?  How   can they know how ICE is performing?   ICE has built-in features to help deal with these problems.  SIP   servers on the signaling path, typically deployed in the data centers   of the network operator, will see the contents of the offer/answer   exchanges that convey the ICE parameters.  These parameters include   the type of each candidate (host, server reflexive, or relayed),   along with their related addresses.  Once ICE processing has   completed, an updated offer/answer exchange takes place, signaling   the selected address (and its type).  This updated re-INVITE is   performed exactly for the purposes of educating network equipment   (such as a diagnostic tool attached to a SIP server) about the   results of ICE processing.   As a consequence, through the logs generated by the SIP server, a   network operator can observe what types of candidates are being used   for each call, and what address was selected by ICE.  This is the   primary information that helps evaluate how ICE is performing.20.5.  Endpoint Configuration   ICE relies on several pieces of data being configured into the   endpoints.  This configuration data includes timers, credentials for   TURN servers, and hostnames for STUN and TURN servers.  ICE itself   does not provide a mechanism for this configuration.  Instead, it is   assumed that this information is attached to whatever mechanism isRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 95]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   used to configure all of the other parameters in the endpoint.  For   SIP phones, standard solutions such as the configuration framework   [SIP-UA-FRMWK] have been defined.21.  IANA Considerations   This specification registers new SDP attributes, four new STUN   attributes, and one new STUN error response.21.1.  SDP Attributes   This specification defines seven new SDP attributes per the   procedures ofSection 8.2.4 of [RFC4566].  The required information   for the registrations is included here.21.1.1.  candidate Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  candidate   Long Form:  candidate   Type of Attribute:  media-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and provides one of many possible candidate      addresses for communication.  These addresses are validated with      an end-to-end connectivity check using Session Traversal Utilities      for NAT (STUN)).   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.1.2.  remote-candidates Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  remote-candidates   Long Form:  remote-candidates   Type of Attribute:  media-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 96]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and provides the identity of the remote      candidates that the offerer wishes the answerer to use in its      answer.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.1.3.  ice-lite Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  ice-lite   Long Form:  ice-lite   Type of Attribute:  session-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and indicates that an agent has the minimum      functionality required to support ICE inter-operation with a peer      that has a full implementation.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.1.4.  ice-mismatch Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  ice-mismatch   Long Form:  ice-mismatch   Type of Attribute:  session-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and indicates that an agent is ICE capable,      but did not proceed with ICE due to a mismatch of candidates with      the default destination for media signaled in the SDP.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 97]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201021.1.5.  ice-pwd Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  ice-pwd   Long Form:  ice-pwd   Type of Attribute:  session- or media-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and provides the password used to protect      STUN connectivity checks.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.1.6.  ice-ufrag Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  ice-ufrag   Long Form:  ice-ufrag   Type of Attribute:  session- or media-level   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and provides the fragments used to construct      the username in STUN connectivity checks.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.1.7.  ice-options Attribute   Contact Name:  Jonathan Rosenberg, jdrosen@jdrosen.net.   Attribute Name:  ice-options   Long Form:  ice-options   Type of Attribute:  session-levelRosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 98]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Charset Considerations:  The attribute is not subject to the charset      attribute.   Purpose:  This attribute is used with Interactive Connectivity      Establishment (ICE), and indicates the ICE options or extensions      used by the agent.   Appropriate Values:  SeeSection 15 of RFC 5245.21.2.  STUN Attributes   This section registers four new STUN attributes per the procedures in   [RFC5389].      0x0024 PRIORITY      0x0025 USE-CANDIDATE      0x8029 ICE-CONTROLLED      0x802A ICE-CONTROLLING21.3.  STUN Error Responses   This section registers one new STUN error response code per the   procedures in [RFC5389].      487   Role Conflict: The client asserted an ICE role (controlling      or            controlled) that is in conflict with the role of the server.22.  IAB Considerations   The IAB has studied the problem of "Unilateral Self-Address Fixing",   which is the general process by which a agent attempts to determine   its address in another realm on the other side of a NAT through a   collaborative protocol reflection mechanism [RFC3424].  ICE is an   example of a protocol that performs this type of function.   Interestingly, the process for ICE is not unilateral, but bilateral,   and the difference has a significant impact on the issues raised by   IAB.  Indeed, ICE can be considered a B-SAF (Bilateral Self-Address   Fixing) protocol, rather than an UNSAF protocol.  Regardless, the IAB   has mandated that any protocols developed for this purpose document a   specific set of considerations.  This section meets those   requirements.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                   [Page 99]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201022.1.  Problem Definition   >FromRFC 3424, any UNSAF proposal must provide:      Precise definition of a specific, limited-scope problem that is to      be solved with the UNSAF proposal.  A short-term fix should not be      generalized to solve other problems; this is why "short-term fixes      usually aren't".   The specific problems being solved by ICE are:      Provide a means for two peers to determine the set of transport      addresses that can be used for communication.      Provide a means for a agent to determine an address that is      reachable by another peer with which it wishes to communicate.22.2.  Exit Strategy   >FromRFC 3424, any UNSAF proposal must provide:      Description of an exit strategy/transition plan.  The better      short-term fixes are the ones that will naturally see less and      less use as the appropriate technology is deployed.   ICE itself doesn't easily get phased out.  However, it is useful even   in a globally connected Internet, to serve as a means for detecting   whether a router failure has temporarily disrupted connectivity, for   example.  ICE also helps prevent certain security attacks that have   nothing to do with NAT.  However, what ICE does is help phase out   other UNSAF mechanisms.  ICE effectively selects amongst those   mechanisms, prioritizing ones that are better, and deprioritizing   ones that are worse.  Local IPv6 addresses can be preferred.  As NATs   begin to dissipate as IPv6 is introduced, server reflexive and   relayed candidates (both forms of UNSAF addresses) simply never get   used, because higher-priority connectivity exists to the native host   candidates.  Therefore, the servers get used less and less, and can   eventually be remove when their usage goes to zero.   Indeed, ICE can assist in the transition from IPv4 to IPv6.  It can   be used to determine whether to use IPv6 or IPv4 when two dual-stack   hosts communicate with SIP (IPv6 gets used).  It can also allow a   network with both 6to4 and native v6 connectivity to determine which   address to use when communicating with a peer.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 100]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201022.3.  Brittleness Introduced by ICE   >FromRFC 3424, any UNSAF proposal must provide:      Discussion of specific issues that may render systems more      "brittle".  For example, approaches that involve using data at      multiple network layers create more dependencies, increase      debugging challenges, and make it harder to transition.   ICE actually removes brittleness from existing UNSAF mechanisms.  In   particular, classic STUN (as described inRFC 3489 [RFC3489]) has   several points of brittleness.  One of them is the discovery process   that requires an agent to try to classify the type of NAT it is   behind.  This process is error-prone.  With ICE, that discovery   process is simply not used.  Rather than unilaterally assessing the   validity of the address, its validity is dynamically determined by   measuring connectivity to a peer.  The process of determining   connectivity is very robust.   Another point of brittleness in classic STUN and any other unilateral   mechanism is its absolute reliance on an additional server.  ICE   makes use of a server for allocating unilateral addresses, but allows   agents to directly connect if possible.  Therefore, in some cases,   the failure of a STUN server would still allow for a call to progress   when ICE is used.   Another point of brittleness in classic STUN is that it assumes that   the STUN server is on the public Internet.  Interestingly, with ICE,   that is not necessary.  There can be a multitude of STUN servers in a   variety of address realms.  ICE will discover the one that has   provided a usable address.   The most troubling point of brittleness in classic STUN is that it   doesn't work in all network topologies.  In cases where there is a   shared NAT between each agent and the STUN server, traditional STUN   may not work.  With ICE, that restriction is removed.   Classic STUN also introduces some security considerations.   Fortunately, those security considerations are also mitigated by ICE.   Consequently, ICE serves to repair the brittleness introduced in   classic STUN, and does not introduce any additional brittleness into   the system.   The penalty of these improvements is that ICE increases session   establishment times.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 101]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201022.4.  Requirements for a Long-Term Solution   FromRFC 3424, any UNSAF proposal must provide:      ... requirements for longer term, sound technical solutions --      contribute to the process of finding the right longer term      solution.   Our conclusions fromRFC 3489 remain unchanged.  However, we feel ICE   actually helps because we believe it can be part of the long-term   solution.22.5.  Issues with Existing NAPT Boxes   FromRFC 3424, any UNSAF proposal must provide:      Discussion of the impact of the noted practical issues with      existing, deployed NA[P]Ts and experience reports.   A number of NAT boxes are now being deployed into the market that try   to provide "generic" ALG functionality.  These generic ALGs hunt for   IP addresses, either in text or binary form within a packet, and   rewrite them if they match a binding.  This interferes with classic   STUN.  However, the update to STUN [RFC5389] uses an encoding that   hides these binary addresses from generic ALGs.   Existing NAPT boxes have non-deterministic and typically short   expiration times for UDP-based bindings.  This requires   implementations to send periodic keepalives to maintain those   bindings.  ICE uses a default of 15 s, which is a very conservative   estimate.  Eventually, over time, as NAT boxes become compliant to   behave [RFC4787], this minimum keepalive will become deterministic   and well-known, and the ICE timers can be adjusted.  Having a way to   discover and control the minimum keepalive interval would be far   better still.23.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Dan Wing, Eric Rescorla, Flemming   Andreasen, Rohan Mahy, Dean Willis, Eric Cooper, Jason Fischl,   Douglas Otis, Tim Moore, Jean-Francois Mule, Kevin Johns, Jonathan   Lennox, and Francois Audet for their comments and input.  A special   thanks goes to Bill May, who suggested several of the concepts in   this specification, Philip Matthews, who suggested many of the key   performance optimizations in this specification, Eric Rescorla, who   drafted the text in the introduction, and Magnus Westerlund, for   doing several detailed reviews on the various revisions of this   specification.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 102]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 201024.  References24.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3605]  Huitema, C., "Real Time Control Protocol (RTCP) attribute              in Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3605,              October 2003.   [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.   [RFC3264]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model              with Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3264,              June 2002.   [RFC3556]  Casner, S., "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Bandwidth              Modifiers for RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Bandwidth",RFC 3556, July 2003.   [RFC3312]  Camarillo, G., Marshall, W., and J. Rosenberg,              "Integration of Resource Management and Session Initiation              Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3312, October 2002.   [RFC4032]  Camarillo, G. and P. Kyzivat, "Update to the Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP) Preconditions Framework",RFC 4032, March 2005.   [RFC3262]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Reliability of              Provisional Responses in Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP)",RFC 3262, June 2002.   [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session              Description Protocol",RFC 4566, July 2006.   [RFC4091]  Camarillo, G. and J. Rosenberg, "The Alternative Network              Address Types (ANAT) Semantics for the Session Description              Protocol (SDP) Grouping Framework",RFC 4091, June 2005.   [RFC4092]  Camarillo, G. and J. Rosenberg, "Usage of the Session              Description Protocol (SDP) Alternative Network Address              Types (ANAT) Semantics in the Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP)",RFC 4092, June 2005.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 103]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   [RFC3484]  Draves, R., "Default Address Selection for Internet              Protocol version 6 (IPv6)",RFC 3484, February 2003.   [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for              Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68,RFC 5234, January              2008.   [RFC5389]  Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,              "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389,              October 2008.   [RFC5766]  Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and J. Rosenberg, "Traversal Using              Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session              Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5766, April 2010.   [RFC5768]  Rosenberg, J., "Indicating Support for Interactive              Connectivity Establishment (ICE) in the Session Initiation              Protocol (SIP)",RFC 5768, April 2010.24.2.  Informative References   [RFC3489]  Rosenberg, J., Weinberger, J., Huitema, C., and R. Mahy,              "STUN - Simple Traversal of User Datagram Protocol (UDP)              Through Network Address Translators (NATs)",RFC 3489,              March 2003.   [RFC3235]  Senie, D., "Network Address Translator (NAT)-Friendly              Application Design Guidelines",RFC 3235, January 2002.   [RFC3303]  Srisuresh, P., Kuthan, J., Rosenberg, J., Molitor, A., and              A. Rayhan, "Middlebox communication architecture and              framework",RFC 3303, August 2002.   [RFC3725]  Rosenberg, J., Peterson, J., Schulzrinne, H., and G.              Camarillo, "Best Current Practices for Third Party Call              Control (3pcc) in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",BCP 85,RFC 3725, April 2004.   [RFC3102]  Borella, M., Lo, J., Grabelsky, D., and G. Montenegro,              "Realm Specific IP: Framework",RFC 3102, October 2001.   [RFC3103]  Borella, M., Grabelsky, D., Lo, J., and K. Taniguchi,              "Realm Specific IP: Protocol Specification",RFC 3103,              October 2001.   [RFC3424]  Daigle, L. and IAB, "IAB Considerations for UNilateral              Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address              Translation",RFC 3424, November 2002.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 104]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.              Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time              Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.   [RFC3711]  Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.              Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",RFC 3711, March 2004.   [RFC3056]  Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains              via IPv4 Clouds",RFC 3056, February 2001.   [RFC3389]  Zopf, R., "Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) Payload for              Comfort Noise (CN)",RFC 3389, September 2002.   [RFC3960]  Camarillo, G. and H. Schulzrinne, "Early Media and Ringing              Tone Generation in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3960, December 2004.   [RFC2475]  Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.,              and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated              Services",RFC 2475, December 1998.   [RFC1918]  Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and              E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP 5,RFC 1918, February 1996.   [RFC4787]  Audet, F. and C. Jennings, "Network Address Translation              (NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast UDP",BCP 127,RFC 4787, January 2007.   [SDP-PRECON]              Andreasen, F., Camarillo, G., Oran, D., and D. Wing,              "Connectivity Preconditions for Session Description              Protocol Media Streams", Work in Progress, March 2010.   [NO-OP-RTP]              Andreasen, F., Oran, D., and D. Wing, "A No-Op Payload              Format for RTP", Work in Progress, May 2007.   [RFC5761]  Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Multiplexing RTP Data and              Control Packets on a Single Port",RFC 5761, April 2010.   [RFC4340]  Kohler, E., Handley, M., and S. Floyd, "Datagram              Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)",RFC 4340, March 2006.   [RFC4103]  Hellstrom, G. and P. Jones, "RTP Payload for Text              Conversation",RFC 4103, June 2005.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 105]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   [RFC5626]  Jennings, C., Mahy, R., and F. Audet, "Managing Client-              Initiated Connections in the Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP)",RFC 5626, October 2009.   [RFC5382]  Guha, S., Biswas, K., Ford, B., Sivakumar, S., and P.              Srisuresh, "NAT Behavioral Requirements for TCP",BCP 142,RFC 5382, October 2008.   [SIP-UA-FRMWK]              Petrie, D. and S. Channabasappa, Ed., "A Framework for              Session Initiation Protocol User Agent Profile Delivery",              Work in Progress, February 2010.   [ICE-TCP]  Perreault, S., Ed. and J. Rosenberg, "TCP Candidates with              Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE)", Work              in Progress, October 2009.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 106]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010Appendix A.  Lite and Full Implementations   ICE allows for two types of implementations.  A full implementation   supports the controlling and controlled roles in a session, and can   also perform address gathering.  In contrast, a lite implementation   is a minimalist implementation that does little but respond to STUN   checks.   Because ICE requires both endpoints to support it in order to bring   benefits to either endpoint, incremental deployment of ICE in a   network is more complicated.  Many sessions involve an endpoint that   is, by itself, not behind a NAT and not one that would worry about   NAT traversal.  A very common case is to have one endpoint that   requires NAT traversal (such as a VoIP hard phone or soft phone) make   a call to one of these devices.  Even if the phone supports a full   ICE implementation, ICE won't be used at all if the other device   doesn't support it.  The lite implementation allows for a low-cost   entry point for these devices.  Once they support the lite   implementation, full implementations can connect to them and get the   full benefits of ICE.   Consequently, a lite implementation is only appropriate for devices   that will *always* be connected to the public Internet and have a   public IP address at which it can receive packets from any   correspondent.  ICE will not function when a lite implementation is   placed behind a NAT.   ICE allows a lite implementation to have a single IPv4 host candidate   and several IPv6 addresses.  In that case, candidate pairs are   selected by the controlling agent using a static algorithm, such as   the one inRFC 3484, which is recommended by this specification.   However, static mechanisms for address selection are always prone to   error, since they cannot ever reflect the actual topology and can   never provide actual guarantees on connectivity.  They are always   heuristics.  Consequently, if an agent is implementing ICE just to   select between its IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and none of its IP   addresses are behind NAT, usage of full ICE is still RECOMMENDED in   order to provide the most robust form of address selection possible.   It is important to note that the lite implementation was added to   this specification to provide a stepping stone to full   implementation.  Even for devices that are always connected to the   public Internet with just a single IPv4 address, a full   implementation is preferable if achievable.  A full implementation   will reduce call setup times, since ICE's aggressive mode can be   used.  Full implementations also obtain the security benefits of ICE   unrelated to NAT traversal; in particular, the voice hammer attack   described inSection 18 is prevented only for full implementations,Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 107]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   not lite.  Finally, it is often the case that a device that finds   itself with a public address today will be placed in a network   tomorrow where it will be behind a NAT.  It is difficult to   definitively know, over the lifetime of a device or product, that it   will always be used on the public Internet.  Full implementation   provides assurance that communications will always work.Appendix B.  Design Motivations   ICE contains a number of normative behaviors that may themselves be   simple, but derive from complicated or non-obvious thinking or use   cases that merit further discussion.  Since these design motivations   are not neccesary to understand for purposes of implementation, they   are discussed here in an appendix to the specification.  This section   is non-normative.B.1.  Pacing of STUN Transactions   STUN transactions used to gather candidates and to verify   connectivity are paced out at an approximate rate of one new   transaction every Ta milliseconds.  Each transaction, in turn, has a   retransmission timer RTO that is a function of Ta as well.  Why are   these transactions paced, and why are these formulas used?   Sending of these STUN requests will often have the effect of creating   bindings on NAT devices between the client and the STUN servers.   Experience has shown that many NAT devices have upper limits on the   rate at which they will create new bindings.  Experiments have shown   that once every 20 ms is well supported, but not much lower than   that.  This is why Ta has a lower bound of 20 ms.  Furthermore,   transmission of these packets on the network makes use of bandwidth   and needs to be rate limited by the agent.  Deployments based on   earlier draft versions of this document tended to overload rate-   constrained access links and perform poorly overall, in addition to   negatively impacting the network.  As a consequence, the pacing   ensures that the NAT device does not get overloaded and that traffic   is kept at a reasonable rate.   The definition of a "reasonable" rate is that STUN should not use   more bandwidth than the RTP itself will use, once media starts   flowing.  The formula for Ta is designed so that, if a STUN packet   were sent every Ta seconds, it would consume the same amount of   bandwidth as RTP packets, summed across all media streams.  Of   course, STUN has retransmits, and the desire is to pace those as   well.  For this reason, RTO is set such that the first retransmit on   the first transaction happens just as the first STUN request on the   last transaction occurs.  Pictorially:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 108]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010              First Packets              Retransmits                    |                        |                    |                        |             -------+------           -------+------            /               \        /               \           /                 \      /                 \           +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+           |A1|    |B1|    |C1|    |A2|    |B2|    |C2|           +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+    +--+        ---+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+------------ Time           0       Ta      2Ta     3Ta     4Ta     5Ta   In this picture, there are three transactions that will be sent (for   example, in the case of candidate gathering, there are three host   candidate/STUN server pairs).  These are transactions A, B, and C.   The retransmit timer is set so that the first retransmission on the   first transaction (packet A2) is sent at time 3Ta.   Subsequent retransmits after the first will occur even less   frequently than Ta milliseconds apart, since STUN uses an exponential   back-off on its retransmissions.B.2.  Candidates with Multiple BasesSection 4.1.3 talks about eliminating candidates that have the same   transport address and base.  However, candidates with the same   transport addresses but different bases are not redundant.  When can   an agent have two candidates that have the same IP address and port,   but different bases?  Consider the topology of Figure 10:Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 109]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010          +----------+          | STUN Srvr|          +----------+               |               |             -----           //     \\          |         |         |  B:net10  |          |         |           \\     //             -----               |               |          +----------+          |   NAT    |          +----------+               |               |             -----           //     \\          |    A    |         |192.168/16 |          |         |           \\     //             -----               |               |               |192.168.1.100      -----          +----------+           //     \\             +----------+          |          |          |         |            |          |          | Offerer  |---------|  C:net10  |-----------| Answerer |          |          |10.0.1.100|         | 10.0.1.101 |          |          +----------+           \\     //             +----------+                                   -----           Figure 10: Identical Candidates with Different Bases   In this case, the offerer is multihomed.  It has one IP address,   10.0.1.100, on network C, which is a net 10 private network.  The   answerer is on this same network.  The offerer is also connected to   network A, which is 192.168/16.  The offerer has an IP address of   192.168.1.100 on this network.  There is a NAT on this network,   natting into network B, which is another net 10 private network, but   not connected to network C.  There is a STUN server on network B.   The offerer obtains a host candidate on its IP address on network C   (10.0.1.100:2498) and a host candidate on its IP address on network ARosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 110]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   (192.168.1.100:3344).  It performs a STUN query to its configured   STUN server from 192.168.1.100:3344.  This query passes through the   NAT, which happens to assign the binding 10.0.1.100:2498.  The STUN   server reflects this in the STUN Binding response.  Now, the offerer   has obtained a server reflexive candidate with a transport address   that is identical to a host candidate (10.0.1.100:2498).  However,   the server reflexive candidate has a base of 192.168.1.100:3344, and   the host candidate has a base of 10.0.1.100:2498.B.3.  Purpose of the <rel-addr> and <rel-port> Attributes   The candidate attribute contains two values that are not used at all   by ICE itself -- <rel-addr> and <rel-port>.  Why is it present?   There are two motivations for its inclusion.  The first is   diagnostic.  It is very useful to know the relationship between the   different types of candidates.  By including it, an agent can know   which relayed candidate is associated with which reflexive candidate,   which in turn is associated with a specific host candidate.  When   checks for one candidate succeed and not for others, this provides   useful diagnostics on what is going on in the network.   The second reason has to do with off-path Quality of Service (QoS)   mechanisms.  When ICE is used in environments such as PacketCable   2.0, proxies will, in addition to performing normal SIP operations,   inspect the SDP in SIP messages, and extract the IP address and port   for media traffic.  They can then interact, through policy servers,   with access routers in the network, to establish guaranteed QoS for   the media flows.  This QoS is provided by classifying the RTP traffic   based on 5-tuple, and then providing it a guaranteed rate, or marking   its Diffserv codepoints appropriately.  When a residential NAT is   present, and a relayed candidate gets selected for media, this   relayed candidate will be a transport address on an actual TURN   server.  That address says nothing about the actual transport address   in the access router that would be used to classify packets for QoS   treatment.  Rather, the server reflexive candidate towards the TURN   server is needed.  By carrying the translation in the SDP, the proxy   can use that transport address to request QoS from the access router.B.4.  Importance of the STUN Username   ICE requires the usage of message integrity with STUN using its   short-term credential functionality.  The actual short-term   credential is formed by exchanging username fragments in the SDP   offer/answer exchange.  The need for this mechanism goes beyond just   security; it is actually required for correct operation of ICE in the   first place.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 111]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   Consider agents L, R, and Z.  L and R are within private enterprise   1, which is using 10.0.0.0/8.  Z is within private enterprise 2,   which is also using 10.0.0.0/8.  As it turns out, R and Z both have   IP address 10.0.1.1.  L sends an offer to Z.  Z, in its answer,   provides L with its host candidates.  In this case, those candidates   are 10.0.1.1:8866 and 10.0.1.1:8877.  As it turns out, R is in a   session at that same time, and is also using 10.0.1.1:8866 and   10.0.1.1:8877 as host candidates.  This means that R is prepared to   accept STUN messages on those ports, just as Z is.  L will send a   STUN request to 10.0.1.1:8866 and another to 10.0.1.1:8877.  However,   these do not go to Z as expected.  Instead, they go to R!  If R just   replied to them, L would believe it has connectivity to Z, when in   fact it has connectivity to a completely different user, R.  To fix   this, the STUN short-term credential mechanisms are used.  The   username fragments are sufficiently random that it is highly unlikely   that R would be using the same values as Z.  Consequently, R would   reject the STUN request since the credentials were invalid.  In   essence, the STUN username fragments provide a form of transient host   identifiers, bound to a particular offer/answer session.   An unfortunate consequence of the non-uniqueness of IP addresses is   that, in the above example, R might not even be an ICE agent.  It   could be any host, and the port to which the STUN packet is directed   could be any ephemeral port on that host.  If there is an application   listening on this socket for packets, and it is not prepared to   handle malformed packets for whatever protocol is in use, the   operation of that application could be affected.  Fortunately, since   the ports exchanged in SDP are ephemeral and usually drawn from the   dynamic or registered range, the odds are good that the port is not   used to run a server on host R, but rather is the agent side of some   protocol.  This decreases the probability of hitting an allocated   port, due to the transient nature of port usage in this range.   However, the possibility of a problem does exist, and network   deployers should be prepared for it.  Note that this is not a problem   specific to ICE; stray packets can arrive at a port at any time for   any type of protocol, especially ones on the public Internet.  As   such, this requirement is just restating a general design guideline   for Internet applications -- be prepared for unknown packets on any   port.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 112]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010B.5.  The Candidate Pair Priority Formula   The priority for a candidate pair has an odd form.  It is:      pair priority = 2^32*MIN(G,D) + 2*MAX(G,D) + (G>D?1:0)   Why is this?  When the candidate pairs are sorted based on this   value, the resulting sorting has the MAX/MIN property.  This means   that the pairs are first sorted based on decreasing value of the   minimum of the two priorities.  For pairs that have the same value of   the minimum priority, the maximum priority is used to sort amongst   them.  If the max and the min priorities are the same, the   controlling agent's priority is used as the tie-breaker in the last   part of the expression.  The factor of 2*32 is used since the   priority of a single candidate is always less than 2*32, resulting in   the pair priority being a "concatenation" of the two component   priorities.  This creates the MAX/MIN sorting.  MAX/MIN ensures that,   for a particular agent, a lower-priority candidate is never used   until all higher-priority candidates have been tried.B.6.  The remote-candidates Attribute   The a=remote-candidates attribute exists to eliminate a race   condition between the updated offer and the response to the STUN   Binding request that moved a candidate into the Valid list.  This   race condition is shown in Figure 11.  On receipt of message 4, agent   L adds a candidate pair to the valid list.  If there was only a   single media stream with a single component, agent L could now send   an updated offer.  However, the check from agent R has not yet   generated a response, and agent R receives the updated offer (message   7) before getting the response (message 9).  Thus, it does not yet   know that this particular pair is valid.  To eliminate this   condition, the actual candidates at R that were selected by the   offerer (the remote candidates) are included in the offer itself, and   the answerer delays its answer until those pairs validate.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 113]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010          Agent A               Network               Agent B             |(1) Offer            |                     |             |------------------------------------------>|             |(2) Answer           |                     |             |<------------------------------------------|             |(3) STUN Req.        |                     |             |------------------------------------------>|             |(4) STUN Res.        |                     |             |<------------------------------------------|             |(5) STUN Req.        |                     |             |<------------------------------------------|             |(6) STUN Res.        |                     |             |-------------------->|                     |             |                     |Lost                 |             |(7) Offer            |                     |             |------------------------------------------>|             |(8) STUN Req.        |                     |             |<------------------------------------------|             |(9) STUN Res.        |                     |             |------------------------------------------>|             |(10) Answer          |                     |             |<------------------------------------------|                      Figure 11: Race Condition FlowB.7.  Why Are Keepalives Needed?   Once media begins flowing on a candidate pair, it is still necessary   to keep the bindings alive at intermediate NATs for the duration of   the session.  Normally, the media stream packets themselves (e.g.,   RTP) meet this objective.  However, several cases merit further   discussion.  Firstly, in some RTP usages, such as SIP, the media   streams can be "put on hold".  This is accomplished by using the SDP   "sendonly" or "inactive" attributes, as defined inRFC 3264   [RFC3264].RFC 3264 directs implementations to cease transmission of   media in these cases.  However, doing so may cause NAT bindings to   timeout, and media won't be able to come off hold.   Secondly, some RTP payload formats, such as the payload format for   text conversation [RFC4103], may send packets so infrequently that   the interval exceeds the NAT binding timeouts.   Thirdly, if silence suppression is in use, long periods of silence   may cause media transmission to cease sufficiently long for NAT   bindings to time out.Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 114]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   For these reasons, the media packets themselves cannot be relied   upon.  ICE defines a simple periodic keepalive utilizing STUN Binding   indications.  This makes its bandwidth requirements highly   predictable, and thus amenable to QoS reservations.B.8.  Why Prefer Peer Reflexive Candidates?Section 4.1.2 describes procedures for computing the priority of   candidate based on its type and local preferences.  That section   requires that the type preference for peer reflexive candidates   always be higher than server reflexive.  Why is that?  The reason has   to do with the security considerations inSection 18.  It is much   easier for an attacker to cause an agent to use a false server   reflexive candidate than it is for an attacker to cause an agent to   use a false peer reflexive candidate.  Consequently, attacks against   address gathering with Binding requests are thwarted by ICE by   preferring the peer reflexive candidates.B.9.  Why Send an Updated Offer?Section 11.1 describes rules for sending media.  Both agents can send   media once ICE checks complete, without waiting for an updated offer.   Indeed, the only purpose of the updated offer is to "correct" the SDP   so that the default destination for media matches where media is   being sent based on ICE procedures (which will be the highest-   priority nominated candidate pair).   This begs the question -- why is the updated offer/answer exchange   needed at all?  Indeed, in a pure offer/answer environment, it would   not be.  The offerer and answerer will agree on the candidates to use   through ICE, and then can begin using them.  As far as the agents   themselves are concerned, the updated offer/answer provides no new   information.  However, in practice, numerous components along the   signaling path look at the SDP information.  These include entities   performing off-path QoS reservations, NAT traversal components such   as ALGs and Session Border Controllers (SBCs), and diagnostic tools   that passively monitor the network.  For these tools to continue to   function without change, the core property of SDP -- that the   existing, pre-ICE definitions of the addresses used for media -- the   m and c lines and the rtcp attribute -- must be retained.  For this   reason, an updated offer must be sent.B.10.  Why Are Binding Indications Used for Keepalives?   Media keepalives are described inSection 10.  These keepalives make   use of STUN when both endpoints are ICE capable.  However, rather   than using a Binding request transaction (which generates a   response), the keepalives use an Indication.  Why is that?Rosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 115]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   The primary reason has to do with network QoS mechanisms.  Once media   begins flowing, network elements will assume that the media stream   has a fairly regular structure, making use of periodic packets at   fixed intervals, with the possibility of jitter.  If an agent is   sending media packets, and then receives a Binding request, it would   need to generate a response packet along with its media packets.   This will increase the actual bandwidth requirements for the 5-tuple   carrying the media packets, and introduce jitter in the delivery of   those packets.  Analysis has shown that this is a concern in certain   layer 2 access networks that use fairly tight packet schedulers for   media.   Additionally, using a Binding Indication allows integrity to be   disabled, allowing for better performance.  This is useful for large-   scale endpoints, such as PSTN gateways and SBCs.B.11.  Why Is the Conflict Resolution Mechanism Needed?   When ICE runs between two peers, one agent acts as controlled, and   the other as controlling.  Rules are defined as a function of   implementation type and offerer/answerer to determine who is   controlling and who is controlled.  However, the specification   mentions that, in some cases, both sides might believe they are   controlling, or both sides might believe they are controlled.  How   can this happen?   The condition when both agents believe they are controlled shows up   in third party call control cases.  Consider the following flow:             A         Controller          B             |(1) INV()     |              |             |<-------------|              |             |(2) 200(SDP1) |              |             |------------->|              |             |              |(3) INV()     |             |              |------------->|             |              |(4) 200(SDP2) |             |              |<-------------|             |(5) ACK(SDP2) |              |             |<-------------|              |             |              |(6) ACK(SDP1) |             |              |------------->|                       Figure 12: Role Conflict Flow   This flow is a variation on flow III ofRFC 3725 [RFC3725].  In fact,   it works better than flow III since it produces fewer messages.  In   this flow, the controller sends an offerless INVITE to agent A, whichRosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 116]

RFC 5245                           ICE                        April 2010   responds with its offer, SDP1.  The agent then sends an offerless   INVITE to agent B, which it responds to with its offer, SDP2.  The   controller then uses the offer from each agent to generate the   answers.  When this flow is used, ICE will run between agents A and   B, but both will believe they are in the controlling role.  With the   role conflict resolution procedures, this flow will function properly   when ICE is used.   At this time, there are no documented flows that can result in the   case where both agents believe they are controlled.  However, the   conflict resolution procedures allow for this case, should a flow   arise that would fit into this category.Author's Address   Jonathan Rosenberg   jdrosen.net   Monmouth, NJ   US   Email: jdrosen@jdrosen.net   URI:http://www.jdrosen.netRosenberg                    Standards Track                  [Page 117]

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