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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        A.B. RoachRequest for Comments: 5989                                       TekelecCategory: Standards Track                                   October 2010ISSN: 2070-1721A SIP Event Package for Subscribing to Changes to an HTTP ResourceAbstract   The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is increasingly being used in   systems that are tightly coupled with Hypertext Transport Protocol   (HTTP) servers for a variety of reasons.  In many of these cases,   applications can benefit from being able to discover, in near real-   time, when a specific HTTP resource is created, changed, or deleted.   This document proposes a mechanism, based on the SIP Event Framework,   for doing so.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/rfc5989.Copyright 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.Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Associating Monitoring SIP URIs with HTTP URLs ..................33.1. Monitoring a Single HTTP Resource ..........................43.2. Monitoring Multiple HTTP Resources .........................54. HTTP Change Event Package .......................................64.1. Event Package Name .........................................64.2. Event Package Parameters ...................................64.3. SUBSCRIBE Bodies ...........................................74.4. Subscription Duration ......................................74.5. NOTIFY Bodies ..............................................84.5.1. Use of message/http in HTTP Monitor Event Package ...84.6. Notifier Processing of SUBSCRIBE Requests ..................94.7. Notifier Generation of NOTIFY Requests .....................94.8. Subscriber Processing of NOTIFY Requests ...................94.9. Handling of Forked Requests ...............................104.10. Rate of Notifications ....................................104.11. State Agents .............................................105. Example Message Flow ...........................................106. Security Considerations ........................................147. IANA Considerations ............................................157.1. New Link Relations ........................................157.1.1. New Link Relation: monitor .........................157.1.2. New Link Relation: monitor-group ...................167.2. New SIP Event Package: http-monitor .......................167.3. New Event Header Field Parameter: body ....................168. Acknowledgements ...............................................169. References .....................................................179.1. Normative References ......................................179.2. Informative References ....................................18Appendix A.  Rationale: Other Approaches Considered ...............19Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20101.  Introduction   The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [3] is increasingly being used   in systems that are tightly coupled with Hypertext Transport Protocol   (HTTP) [2] servers for a variety of reasons.  In many of these cases,   applications can benefit from learning of changes to specified HTTP   resources in near real-time.  For example, user agent terminals may   elect to store service-related data in an HTTP tree.  When such   configuration information is stored and retrieved using HTTP, clients   may need to be informed when information changes, so as to make   appropriate changes to their local behavior and user interface.   This document defines a mechanism, based on the SIP Event Framework   [4], for subscribing to changes in the resource referenced by an HTTP   server.  Such subscriptions do not necessarily carry the content   associated with the resource.  In the cases that the content is not   conveyed, the HTTP protocol is still used to transfer the contents of   HTTP resources.  This document further defines a mechanism by which   the proper SIP and/or Session Initiation Protocol Secure (SIPS) URI   to be used for such subscriptions can be determined from the HTTP   server.2.  Terminology   The capitalized terms "MUST", "SHOULD", "MAY", "SHOULD NOT", and   "MUST NOT" in this document are to be interpreted as described inRFC2119 [1].   Note that this document discusses both SIP messages and HTTP   messages.  Because SIP's syntax was heavily based on HTTP's, the   components of these messages have similar or identical names.  When   referring to message payloads, HTTP documents have historically   preferred the hyphenated form "message-body", while SIP documents   favor the unhyphenated form "message body".  This document conforms   to both conventions, using the hyphenated form for HTTP, and the   unhyphenated form for SIP.3.  Associating Monitoring SIP URIs with HTTP URLs   One of the key challenges in subscribing to the changes of a resource   indicated by an HTTP URL is determining which SIP URI corresponds to   a specific HTTP URL.  This specification takes the approach of having   the HTTP server responsible for the URL in question select an   appropriate SIP URI for the corresponding resource and return that   URI within an HTTP transaction.Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   In particular, HTTP servers use link relations -- such as the HTTP   Link header field [10], the HTML <link/> element [11], and the Atom   <atom:link/> element [5] -- to convey the URI or URIs that can be   used to discover changes to the resource.  This document defines two   new link relation types ("monitor" and "monitor-group") for this   purpose, and specifies behavior for SIP and SIPS URIs in link   relations of these types.  Handling for other URI schemes is out of   scope for the current document, although we expect future   specifications to define procedures for monitoring via other   protocols.   Clients making use of the mechanism described in this document MUST   support the HTTP Link header field.  Those clients that support   processing of HTML documents SHOULD support the HTML <link/> element;   those that support processing of Atom documents SHOULD support Atom   <atom:link/> elements.  These requirements are not intended to   preclude the use of any other means of conveying link relations.   The service that provides HTTP access to a resource might provide   monitoring of that resource using multiple protocols, so it is   perfectly legal for an HTTP response to contain multiple link   relationships with relations that allow for monitoring of changes   (see [10]).  Implementors are cautioned to process all link relations   to locate one that corresponds with their preferred change monitoring   protocol.   These link relations are scoped to a single HTTP entity.  When an   HTTP resource is associated with multiple entities (for example, to   facilitate content negotiation), the "monitor" and "monitor-group"   link relations will generally be different for each entity.3.1.  Monitoring a Single HTTP Resource   If an HTTP server wishes to offer the ability to subscribe to changes   in a resource's value using this event package, it returns a link   relation containing a SIP or SIPS URI with a relation type of   "monitor" in a successful response to a GET or HEAD request on that   resource.  If the server supports both SIP and SIPS access, it MAY   return link relations for both kinds of access.   A client wishing to subscribe to the state change of an HTTP resource   obtains a SIP or SIPS URI by sending a GET or HEAD request to the   HTTP URL it wishes to monitor.  This SIP or SIPS URI is then used in   a SUBSCRIBE request, according to the event package defined inSection 4.Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20103.2.  Monitoring Multiple HTTP Resources   If a client wishes to subscribe to the state of multiple HTTP   resources, it is free to make use of the mechanisms defined inRFC4662 [6] and/orRFC 5367 [9].  This requires no special support by   the server that provides resource state information.  These   approaches, however, require the addition of a Resource List Server   (RLS) as defined inRFC 4662, which will typically subscribe to the   state of resources on behalf of the monitoring user.  In many cases,   this is not a particularly efficient means of monitoring several   resources, particularly when such resources reside on the same HTTP   server.   As a more efficient alternative, if an HTTP server wishes to offer   the ability to subscribe to the state of several HTTP resources in a   single SUBSCRIBE request, it returns a link relation containing a SIP   or SIPS URI with a relation type of "monitor-group" in a successful   response to a GET or HEAD request on any monitorable resource.  In   general, this monitor-group URI will be the same for all resources on   the same HTTP server.   The monitor-group URI corresponds to an RLS service associated with   the HTTP server.  This RLS service MUST support subscriptions to   request-contained resource lists, as defined inRFC 5367 [9].  This   RLS service MAY, but is not required to, accept URI lists that   include monitoring URIs that are not associated with resources served   by its related HTTP server.  Not requiring such functionality allows   the RLS to be implemented without requiring back-end subscriptions.   If a server wishes to reject such requests, the "403" (Forbidden)   response code is appropriate.  Any "403" responses generated for this   reason SHOULD contain a message body of type "application/   resource-lists+xml"; this message body lists the offending URI or   URIs.  SeeRFC 4826 [7] for the definition of the "application/   resource-lists+xml" MIME type.   The HTTP server MUST also return a SIP and/or SIPS link relation with   a relation type of "monitor" whenever it returns a SIP and/or SIPS   link relation with a relation type of "monitor-group".  The monitor-   group URI corresponds only to an RLS, and never an HTTP resource or   fixed set of HTTP resources.   If a client wishes to subscribe to the state of multiple HTTP   resources, and has received monitor-group URIs for each of them, it   may use the monitor-group URIs to subscribe to multiple resources in   the same subscription.  To do so, it starts with the set of HTTP   resources it wishes to monitor.  It then groups these resources by   their respective monitor-group URIs.  Finally, for each such group,Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   it initiates a subscription to the group's monitor-group URI; this   subscription includes a URI list, as described inRFC 5367.  The URI   list contains all of the URIs in the group.      For example: consider the case in which a client wishes to monitor      the resources http://www.example.com/goat,      http://www.example.com/sheep, http://www.example.org/llama, and      http://www.example.org/alpaca.  It would use HTTP to perform HEAD      and/or GET operations on these resources.  The responses to these      operations will contain link relations for both monitor and      monitor-type for each of the four resources.  Assume the monitor      link for http://www.example.com/goat is sip:a94aa000@example.com;      for http://www.example.com/sheep, sip:23ec24c5@example.com; for      http://www.example.org/llama,      sip:yxbO-UHYxyizU2H3dnEerQ@example.org; and for      http://www.example.org/alpaca,      sip:-J0piC0ihB9hfNaJc7GCBg@example.org.  Further, assume the      monitor-group link for http://www.example.com/goat and      http://www.example.com/sheep are both sip:httpmon@rls.example.com,      while the monitor-group link for http://www.example.org/llama and      http://www.example.org/alpaca are both sip:rls@example.org.      Because they share a common monitor-group link, the client would      group together http://www.example.com/goat and      http://www.example.com/sheep in a single subscription.  It sends      this subscription to the monitor-group URI      (sip:httpmon@rls.example.com), with a resource-list containing the      relevant monitor URIs (sip:a94aa000@example.com and      sip:23ec24c5@example.com).  It then repeats this process for the      remaining two HTTP resources, using their monitor-group and      monitor URIs in the same way.4.  HTTP Change Event Package4.1.  Event Package Name   The name of this event package is "http-monitor".4.2.  Event Package Parameters   This event package defines a single parameter to be used with the   Event header field.  The syntax for this parameter is shown below,   using the ABNF format defined inRFC 5234 [8].  The use of the   construction "EQUAL" is as defined byRFC 3261 [3].     body-event-param = "body" EQUAL ( "true" / "false" )Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   If present and set to "true" in a SUBSCRIBE request, this parameter   indicates to the server that the client wishes to receive a message-   body component in the message/http message bodies sent in NOTIFY   messages.   If a server receives a SUBSCRIBE message with an Event header field   "body" parameter set to "true", it MAY choose to include a message-   body component in the message/http message bodies that it sends in   NOTIFY messages.  Alternatively, it MAY decline to send such message-   bodies, even when this parameter is present, based on local policy.   In particular, it would be quite reasonable for servers to have a   policy of not including HTTP message-bodies larger than a relatively   small number of bytes.   When absent, the value of this parameter is assumed to be "false".      Note that this parameter refers to the message-body component of      the HTTP message, not the message body component of the SIP      message.4.3.  SUBSCRIBE Bodies   This event package defines no message bodies to be used in the   SUBSCRIBE message.4.4.  Subscription Duration   Reasonable values for the duration of subscriptions to the http-   monitor event package vary widely with the nature of the HTTP   resource being monitored.  Some HTTP resources change infrequently   (if ever), while others can change comparatively rapidly.  For   rapidly changing documents, the ability to recover more rapidly from   a subscription failure is relatively important, so implementations   will be well served by selecting smaller durations for their   subscriptions, on the order of 1800 to 3600 seconds (30 minutes to an   hour).   Subscriptions to slower-changing resources lack this property, and   the need to periodically refresh subscriptions render short   subscriptions wasteful.  For these types of subscriptions,   expirations as long as 604800 seconds (one week) or even longer may   well make sense.   The subscriber is responsible for selecting an expiration time that   is appropriate for its purposes, taking the foregoing considerations   into account.  Keep in mind that the goal behind selecting   subscription durations is to balance server load against time toRoach                        Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   recover in the case of a failure.  In particular, short subscription   expiration times guard against the loss of subscription server state,   albeit at the expense of additional load on the server.   In the absence of an expires value in a subscription, the notifier   can assume a default expiration period according to local policy.   This local policy might choose to take various aspects of the   monitored resource into account, such as its age and presumed period   of validity.  Absent any other information, it would not be   unreasonable for a server to assume a default expiration value of   86400 seconds (one day) when the client fails to provide one.4.5.  NOTIFY Bodies   By default, the message bodies of NOTIFY messages for the http-   monitor event package will be of content-type "message/http," as   defined inRFC 2616 [2].4.5.1.  Use of message/http in HTTP Monitor Event Package   The message/http NOTIFY message bodies used in the HTTP monitor event   package reflect a subset of the response that would be returned if   the client performed an HTTP HEAD operation on the HTTP resource.   An example of a message/http message body as used in this event   package is shown below.     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Date: Sat, 13 Nov 2010 17:18:52 GMT     ETag: 38fe6-58b-1840e7d0     Content-MD5: 4e3b50421829c7c379a5c6154e560449     Last-Modified: Sat, 13 Nov 2010 03:29:00 GMT     Accept-Ranges: bytes     Content-Location: http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/     Content-Length: 12511     Content-Type: text/html   When used in the HTTP monitor event package defined in this document,   the message/http SHOULD contain at least one of an ETag or Content-   MD5 header field, unless returning a null state as described inSection 4.7.  Inclusion of a Last-Modified header field is also   RECOMMENDED.  Additionally, the message/http message body MUST   contain a Content-Location field that identifies the resource being   monitored.  Note that this is not necessarily the same URL from which   the link association was originally obtained; seeRFC 2616 [2] for   details.Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   Except for the foregoing normative requirements, the decision   regarding which HTTP header fields to include is at the discretion of   the notifier.   When used in the HTTP monitor event package, the message/http MUST   NOT contain a message-body component, unless the corresponding   subscription has explicitly indicated the desire to receive such   bodies as described inSection 4.2.   If the change to the resource being communicated represents a   renaming of the HTTP resource, the message/http start line will   contain the same 3xx-class HTTP response that would be returned if a   user agent attempted to access the relocated HTTP resource with a   HEAD request (e.g., "301 Moved Permanently").  The message/http also   SHOULD contain a Location header field that communicates the new name   of the resource.   If the change to the resource being communicated represents a   deletion of the HTTP resource, the start line will contain the same   4xx-class HTTP response that would be returned if a user agent   attempted to access the missing HTTP resource with a HEAD request   (e.g., "404 Not Found" or "410 Gone").4.6.  Notifier Processing of SUBSCRIBE Requests   Upon receipt of a SUBSCRIBE request, the notifier applies   authorization according to local policy.  Typically, this policy will   be aligned with the HTTP server authorization policies regarding   access to the resource whose change state is being requested.4.7.  Notifier Generation of NOTIFY Requests   NOTIFY messages are generated whenever the underlying resource   indicated by the corresponding HTTP URL has been modified.   In the case that the notifier has insufficient information to return   any useful information about the underlying HTTP resource, it MUST   return a message body that is zero bytes long (subject to any   mechanisms that would suppress sending of a NOTIFY message).4.8.  Subscriber Processing of NOTIFY Requests   Upon receipt of a NOTIFY message, the subscriber applies any   information in the message/http to update its view of the underlying   HTTP resource.  In most cases, this results in an invalidation of its   view of the HTTP resource.  It is up to the subscriber implementation   to decide whether it is appropriate to fetch a new copy of the HTTP   resource as a reaction to a NOTIFY message.Roach                        Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20104.9.  Handling of Forked Requests   Multiple notifiers for a single HTTP resource is semantically   nonsensical.  In the aberrant circumstance that a SUBSCRIBE request   is forked, the subscriber SHOULD terminate all but one subscription,   as described inSection 4.4.9 of RFC 3265 [4].4.10.  Rate of Notifications   Because the data stored in HTTP for the purpose of SIP services may   change rapidly due to user input, and because it may potentially be   rendered to users and/or used to impact call routing, a high degree   of responsiveness is appropriate.  However, for the protection of the   network, notifiers for the http-monitor event package SHOULD NOT send   notifications more frequently than once every second.4.11.  State Agents   Decomposition of the authority for the HTTP resource into an HTTP   server and a SIP Events server is likely to be useful, due to the   potentially different scaling properties associated with serving HTTP   resources and managing subscriptions.  In the case of such   decomposition, implementors are encouraged to familiarize themselves   with the PUBLISH mechanism described inRFC 3903 [14].5.  Example Message Flow   The following is a simple example message flow, to aid in   understanding how this event package can be used.  It is included for   illustrative purposes only, and does not form any portion of the   specification of the mechanisms defined in this document.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010          Client            HTTP Server      SIP Events Server             |                   |                   |             |                   |                   |             |(1) HTTP GET       |                   |             |------------------>|                   |             |(2) HTTP 200 OK    |                   |             |<------------------|                   |             |(3) SIP SUBSCRIBE  |                   |             |-------------------------------------->|             |(4) SIP 200 OK     |                   |             |<--------------------------------------|             |(5) SIP NOTIFY     |                   |             |<--------------------------------------|             |(6) SIP 200 OK     |                   |             |-------------------------------------->|             |                   |                   |             |                   |                   |             |        [HTTP document changes]        |             |                   |                   |             |                   |                   |             |                   |(7) SIP PUBLISH    |             |                   |------------------>|             |                   |(8) SIP 200 OK     |             |                   |<------------------|             |(9) SIP NOTIFY     |                   |             |<--------------------------------------|             |(10) SIP 200       |                   |             |-------------------------------------->|             |                   |                   |             |                   |                   |   The following messages illustrate only the portions of the messages   that are relevant to the example.  They intentionally elide fields   that, while typical or mandatory, are not key to understanding the   foregoing message flow.   1. The client issues a GET request to retrieve the document      identified by the URL      "http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/".     GET /pet-profiles/alpacas/ HTTP/1.1     Host: www.example.com   2. The HTTP server responds with the document, and several relevant      pieces of meta-data.  Of key interest for this example is the Link      header field with a "rel" parameter of "monitor".  This is the SIP      URL that the client will use to monitor changes to the state of      the HTTP resource.  Note that, since the message-bodyRoach                        Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010      is an HTML document, the "monitor" link relation could alternately      be indicated in the HTML document itself, through the use of a      <link/> element.      Note also the presence of the ETag, Content-MD5, and Last-      Modified header fields.  These can be used by the client to      identify the version of the entity returned by the HTTP server.     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     ETag: 38fe6-58b-1840e7d0     Content-MD5: 4e3b50421829c7c379a5c6154e560449     Last-Modified: Sat, 13 Nov 2010 03:29:00 GMT     Content-Location: http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/     Link: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>; rel="monitor"     Link: <sip:httpmon@rls.example.com>; rel="monitor-group"     Content-Length: 12511     Content-Type: text/html     [HTML message-body]   3. The client sends a SUBSCRIBE request to the SIP URI indicated in      the "monitor" link relation, indicating an event type of "http-      monitor".     SUBSCRIBE sip:23ec24c5@example.com SIP/2.0     To: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>     From: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     Event: http-monitor     Contact: <sip:adam@198.51.100.17:2487>   4. The SIP Events server acknowledges receipt of the subscription      request, and establishes a dialog for the resulting subscription.     SIP/2.0 200 OK     To: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>;tag=907A953576E6     From: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     Contact: <sip:23ec24c5@203.0.113.72>   5. The SIP Events server sends a NOTIFY message containing the      current state of the HTTP resource.  The client can compare the      contents of the ETag, Content-MD5, or Last-Modified header fields      against those received in the HTTP "200" response to verify that      it has the most recent version of the entity.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010     NOTIFY sip:adam@198.51.100.17:2487 SIP/2.0     To: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     From: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>;tag=907A953576E6     Contact: <sip:23ec24c5@203.0.113.72>     Event: http-monitor     Subscription-State: active     Content-Type: message/http     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     ETag: 38fe6-58b-1840e7d0     Content-MD5: 4e3b50421829c7c379a5c6154e560449     Last-Modified: Sat, 13 Nov 2010 03:29:00 GMT     Content-Location: http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/     Content-Length: 12511     Content-Type: text/html   6. The client acknowledges receipt of the NOTIFY message.     SIP/2.0 200 OK     To: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     From: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>;tag=907A953576E6     Contact: <sip:adam@198.51.100.17:2487>   7. At some point after the subscription has been established, the      entity hosted by the HTTP server changes.  It can convey this      information to a SIP Events server using a SIP PUBLISH request.      The PUBLISH message body contains information regarding the state      of the entity.      Note that SIP PUBLISH is one of many ways such information could      be conveyed -- any other means of communicating this information      would also be valid.     PUBLISH sip:23ec24c5@example.com SIP/2.0     To: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>     From: <sip:webserver@example.com>;tag=03-5gbK652_jNMr-b8-11Z_G-NsLR     Contact: <sip:webserver@203.0.113.99>     Event: http-monitor     Content-Type: message/http     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     ETag: 3238e-1a3-b83be580     Content-MD5: 10a1ef5b223577059fafba867829abf8     Last-Modified: Sat, 17 Nov 2010 08:17:39 GMT     Content-Location: http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/     Content-Length: 17481     Content-Type: text/htmlRoach                        Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   8. The SIP Events server acknowledges the changed entity state.  Note      that the value of the SIP-ETag header field is not related to the      ETag header field associated with the HTTP entity.     SIP/2.0 200 OK     To: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>     From: <sip:webserver@example.com>;tag=03-5gbK652_jNMr-b8-11Z_G-NsLR     SIP-ETag: 3psbqi1o5633   9. The SIP events server informs the client of the change in state      for the subscribed resource using a NOTIFY message.     NOTIFY sip:adam@198.51.100.17:2487 SIP/2.0     To: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     From: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>;tag=907A953576E6     Contact: <sip:23ec24c5@203.0.113.72>     Event: http-monitor     Subscription-State: active     Content-Type: message/http     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     ETag: 3238e-1a3-b83be580     Content-MD5: 10a1ef5b223577059fafba867829abf8     Last-Modified: Sat, 17 Nov 2010 08:17:39 GMT     Content-Location: http://www.example.com/pet-profiles/alpacas/     Content-Length: 17481     Content-Type: text/html  10. The client acknowledges receipt of the changed state.  At this      point, the client may choose to retrieve a fresh copy of the      document so that it can act on the new content.  Alternately, it      may simply mark the previously retrieved document as out of date      or discard it, choosing to retrieve a new copy at a later point in      time.     SIP/2.0 200 OK     To: <sip:adam@example.org>;tag=57dac993-0b5b-4f04     From: <sip:23ec24c5@example.com>;tag=907A953576E6     Contact: <sip:adam@198.51.100.17:2487>6.  Security Considerations   Unless secured using Transport Layer Security (TLS), IPsec, or a   similar technology, the content of the Link header field is not   secure, private, or integrity-protected.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010   Because an unencrypted Link header field can be intercepted, server   implementations are cautioned not to use the value sent in the Link   header field as a security token that authenticates a subscriber, or   that demonstrates authorization to subscribe to a particular   resource.   Because an unsecured Link header field can be tampered with -- or   inserted -- in transit, client implementations need to consider the   interaction between their application and a forged set of   notifications.  This issue becomes particularly problematic when the   change notifications include entity state (using "body=true").   This mechanism introduces the means to learn information about the   state of an HTTP resource using an alternate protocol, and   potentially a different server.  If the HTTP resource is restricted   using some form of access control, special care MUST be taken to   ensure that the SIP means of subscribing to the resource state is   also restricted in the same way.  Otherwise, unauthorized users may   learn information that was intended to be confidential (including the   actual resource value, in some cases).   Similarly, if the HTTP resource is encrypted or integrity protected   in transit -- for example, by using HTTP over TLS [12] -- then the   SIP means of subscribing to the HTTP resource MUST also have   appropriate encryption or integrity protection applied.  Examples of   mechanisms for providing such protection include the use of the SIPS   URI scheme [17], and the use of S/MIME bodies [13].7.  IANA Considerations7.1.  New Link Relations   The following entries have been added to the "Link Relation Types"   registry, as created by the "Web Linking" specification [10].7.1.1.  New Link Relation: monitor   o  Relation Name: monitor   o  Description: Refers to a resource that can be used to monitor      changes in an HTTP resource.   o  Reference:RFC 5989Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20107.1.2.  New Link Relation: monitor-group   o  Relation Name: monitor-group   o  Description: Refers to a resource that can be used to monitor      changes in a specified group of HTTP resources.   o  Reference:RFC 59897.2.  New SIP Event Package: http-monitor   The following entry is to be added to the "SIP Events" registry, as   created by the SIP Event Framework [4].   Package Name:  http-monitor   Type:  package   Contact:  Adam Roach, adam@nostrum.com   Reference:RFC 59897.3.  New Event Header Field Parameter: body   The following entry is to be added to the SIP "Header Field   Parameters and Parameter Values" registry, as created by the SIP   Change Framework [15].   Header Field:  Event   Parameter Name:  body   Predefined Values:  yes   Reference:RFC 59898.  Acknowledgements   Thanks to Lisa Dusseault and Mark Nottingham for significant input on   the mechanisms to bind an HTTP URL to a SIP URI.  Thanks also to Mark   Nottingham and Theo Zourzouvillys for thorough feedback on early   versions of this document.  Thanks to Martin Thompson, Shida   Schubert, John Elwell, and Scott Lawrence for their careful reviews   and feedback.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20109.  References9.1.  Normative References   [1]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]   Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., Masinter, L.,         Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --         HTTP/1.1",RFC 2616, June 1999.   [3]   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.   [4]   Roach, A., "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event         Notification",RFC 3265, June 2002.   [5]   Nottingham, M., Ed. and R. Sayre, Ed., "The Atom Syndication         Format",RFC 4287, December 2005.   [6]   Roach, A., Campbell, B., and J. Rosenberg, "A Session         Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Notification Extension for         Resource Lists",RFC 4662, August 2006.   [7]   Rosenberg, J., "Extensible Markup Language (XML) Formats for         Representing Resource Lists",RFC 4826, May 2007.   [8]   Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax         Specifications: ABNF", STD 68,RFC 5234, January 2008.   [9]   Camarillo, G., Roach, A., and O. Levin, "Subscriptions to         Request-Contained Resource Lists in the Session Initiation         Protocol (SIP)",RFC 5367, October 2008.   [10]  Nottingham, M., "Web Linking",RFC 5988, October 2010.   [11]  Jacobs, I., Hors, A., and D. Raggett, "HTML 4.01         Specification", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-         html401-19991224, December 1999,         <http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224>.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 20109.2.  Informative References   [12]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS",RFC 2818, May 2000.   [13]  Ramsdell, B. and S. Turner, "Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail         Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.2 Message Specification",RFC 5751, January 2010.   [14]  Niemi, A., "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for         Event State Publication",RFC 3903, October 2004.   [15]  Camarillo, G., "The Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA)         Header Field Parameter Registry for the Session Initiation         Protocol (SIP)",BCP 98,RFC 3968, December 2004.   [16]  Dusseault, L., "HTTP Extensions for Web Distributed Authoring         and Versioning (WebDAV)",RFC 4918, June 2007.   [17]  Audet, F., "The Use of the SIPS URI Scheme in the Session         Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 5630, October 2009.   [18]  Wachob, G., Reed, D., Chasen, L., Tan, W., and S. Churchill,         "Extensible Resource Identifier (XRI) Resolution V2.0",         February 2008, <http://docs.oasis-open.org/xri/2.0/specs/xri-resolution-V2.0.html>.Roach                        Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5989                 SIP HTTP Subscriptions             October 2010Appendix A.  Rationale: Other Approaches Considered   Several potential mechanisms for retrieving the SIP URI from the HTTP   server were evaluated.  Of them, link relations were determined to   have the most favorable set of properties.  Two key candidates that   were considered but rejected in favor of link relations are discussed   below.   The HTTP PROPFIND method ([16], Section 9.1) can be used to retrieve   the value of a specific property associated with an HTTP URL.   However, this cannot be done in conjunction with retrieval of the   document itself, which is usually desirable.  If a PROPFIND approach   is employed, clients will typically perform both a GET and a PROPFIND   on resources of interest.  Additionally, the use of PROPFIND requires   support of the PROPFIND method in HTTP user agents -- which, although   fairly well implemented, still lacks the penetration of GET   implementations.   Similar to PROPFIND, XRDS (Extensible Resource Descriptor Sequence)   [18] can be used to retrieve properties associated with an HTTP URL.   It has the advantage of using GET instead of PROPFIND; however, it   suffers from both the two-round-trip issue discussed above, as well   as an unfortunately large number of options in specifying how to   retrieve the properties.Author's Address   Adam Roach   Tekelec   17210 Campbell Rd.   Suite 250   Dallas, TX  75252   US   EMail: adam@nostrum.comRoach                        Standards Track                   [Page 19]

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