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EXPERIMENTAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                    A. Rahman, Ed.Request for Comments: 7390              InterDigital Communications, LLCCategory: Experimental                                      E. Dijk, Ed.ISSN: 2070-1721                                         Philips Research                                                            October 2014Group Communication for the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)Abstract   The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) is a specialized web   transfer protocol for constrained devices and constrained networks.   It is anticipated that constrained devices will often naturally   operate in groups (e.g., in a building automation scenario, all   lights in a given room may need to be switched on/off as a group).   This specification defines how CoAP should be used in a group   communication context.  An approach for using CoAP on top of IP   multicast is detailed based on existing CoAP functionality as well as   new features introduced in this specification.  Also, various use   cases and corresponding protocol flows are provided to illustrate   important concepts.  Finally, guidance is provided for deployment in   various network topologies.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for examination, experimental implementation, and   evaluation.   This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering   Task Force (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF   community.  It has received public review and has been approved for   publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not   all documents approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of   Internet Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7390.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.  This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF   Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the   date of publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1.  Background  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2.  Scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.3.  Conventions and Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Protocol Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.1.  IP Multicast Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.2.  Group Definition and Naming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.3.  Port and URI Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.4.  RESTful Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.5.  Request and Response Model  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.6.  Membership Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .102.6.1.  Background  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .102.6.2.  Membership Configuration RESTful Interface  . . . . .112.7.  Request Acceptance and Response Suppression Rules . . . .172.8.  Congestion Control  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .192.9.  Proxy Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .202.10. Exceptions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.  Use Cases and Corresponding Protocol Flows  . . . . . . . . .223.1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.2.  Network Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.  Discovery of Resource Directory . . . . . . . . . . . . .253.4.  Lighting Control  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .263.5.  Lighting Control in MLD-Enabled Network . . . . . . . . .303.6.  Commissioning the Network Based on Resource Directory . .314.  Deployment Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.1.  Target Network Topologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.2.  Networks Using the MLD Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . .334.3.  Networks Using RPL Multicast without MLD  . . . . . . . .334.4.  Networks Using MPL Forwarding without MLD . . . . . . . .344.5.  6LoWPAN Specific Guidelines for the 6LBR  . . . . . . . .355.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .355.1.  Security Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .355.2.  Threats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20145.3.  Threat Mitigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .365.3.1.  WiFi Scenario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .375.3.2.  6LoWPAN Scenario  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .375.3.3.  Future Evolution  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .375.4.  Monitoring Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .385.4.1.  General Monitoring  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .385.4.2.  Pervasive Monitoring  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .386.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396.1.  New 'core.gp' Resource Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .396.2.  New 'coap-group+json' Internet Media Type . . . . . . . .397.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .417.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .417.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43Appendix A.  Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) . . . . . . . . .45   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .461.  Introduction1.1.  Background   CoAP is a web transfer protocol based on Representational State   Transfer (REST) for resource constrained devices operating in an IP   network [RFC7252].  CoAP has many similarities to HTTP [RFC7230] but   also some key differences.  Constrained devices can be large in   numbers but are often related to each other in function or by   location.  For example, all the light switches in a building may   belong to one group, and all the thermostats may belong to another   group.  Groups may be preconfigured before deployment or dynamically   formed during operation.  If information needs to be sent to or   received from a group of devices, group communication mechanisms can   improve efficiency and latency of communication and reduce bandwidth   requirements for a given application.  HTTP does not support any   equivalent functionality to CoAP group communication.1.2.  Scope   Group communication involves a one-to-many relationship between CoAP   endpoints.  Specifically, a single CoAP client can simultaneously get   (or set) resources from multiple CoAP servers using CoAP over IP   multicast.  An example would be a CoAP light switch turning on/off   multiple lights in a room with a single CoAP group communication PUT   request and handling the potential multitude of (unicast) responses.   The base protocol aspects of sending CoAP requests on top of IP   multicast and processing the (unicast IP) responses are given inSection 8 of [RFC7252].  To provide a more complete CoAP group   communication functionality, this specification introduces new CoAPRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   processing functionality (e.g., new rules for reuse of Token values,   request suppression, and proxy operation) and a new management   interface for RESTful group membership configuration.   CoAP group communication will run in the Any Source Multicast (ASM)   mode [RFC5110] of IP multicast operation.  This means that there is   no restriction on the source node that sends (originates) the CoAP   messages to the IP multicast group.  For example, the source node may   or may not be part of the IP multicast group.  Also, there is no   restriction on the number of source nodes.   WhileSection 9.1 of [RFC7252] supports various modes of security   based on Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) for CoAP over   unicast IP, it does not specify any security modes for CoAP over IP   multicast.  That is, it is assumed per [RFC7252] that CoAP over IP   multicast is not encrypted, nor authenticated, nor access controlled.   This document assumes the same security model (seeSection 5.1).   However, there are several promising security approaches being   developed that should be considered in the future for protecting CoAP   group communications (seeSection 5.3.3).1.3.  Conventions and Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119] when they appear in ALL CAPS.  When these words are not in   ALL CAPS (such as "should" or "Should"), they have their usual   English meanings and are not to be interpreted as [RFC2119] key   words.   Note that this document refers back to other RFCs, and especially   [RFC7252], to help explain overall CoAP group communication features.   However, use of [RFC2119] key words is reserved for new CoAP   functionality introduced by this specification.   This document assumes readers are familiar with the terms and   concepts that are used in [RFC7252].  In addition, this document   defines the following terminology:   Group Communication:      A source node sends a single application-layer (e.g., CoAP)      message that is delivered to multiple destination nodes, where all      destinations are identified to belong to a specific group.  The      source node itself may be part of the group.  The underlying      mechanisms for CoAP group communication are UDP/IP multicast forRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014      the requests and unicast UDP/IP for the responses.  The network      involved may be a constrained network such as a low-power, lossy      network.   Reliable Group Communication:      A special case of group communication where for each destination      node, it is guaranteed that the node either 1) eventually receives      the message sent by the source node or 2) does not receive the      message and the source node is notified of the non-reception      event.  An example of a reliable group communication protocol is      [RFC5740].   Multicast:      Sending a message to multiple destination nodes with one network      invocation.  There are various options to implement multicast,      including layer 2 (Media Access Control) and layer 3 (IP)      mechanisms.   IP Multicast:      A specific multicast approach based on the use of IP multicast      addresses as defined in "IANA Guidelines for IPv4 Multicast      Address Assignments" [RFC5771] and "IP Version 6 Addressing      Architecture" [RFC4291].  A complete IP multicast solution may      include support for managing group memberships and IP multicast      routing/forwarding (seeSection 2.1).   Low-Power and Lossy Network (LLN):      A type of constrained IP network where devices are interconnected      by low-power and lossy links.  The links may be composed of one or      more technologies such as IEEE 802.15.4, Bluetooth Low Energy      (BLE), Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunication (DECT), and      IEEE P1901.2 power-line communication.2.  Protocol Considerations2.1.  IP Multicast Background   IP multicast protocols have been evolving for decades, resulting in   standards such as Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-   SM) [RFC4601].  IP multicast is very popular in specific deployments   such as in enterprise networks (e.g., for video conferencing), smart   home networks (e.g., Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)), and carrier   IPTV deployments.  The packet economy and minimal host complexity of   IP multicast make it attractive for group communication in   constrained environments.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   To achieve IP multicast beyond link-local (LL) scope, an IP multicast   routing or forwarding protocol needs to be active on IP routers.  An   example of a routing protocol specifically for LLNs is the IPv6   Routing Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks (RPL) (Section 12   of [RFC6550]), and an example of a forwarding protocol for LLNs is   the Multicast Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks (MPL)   [MCAST-MPL].  RPL and MPL do not depend on each other; each can be   used in isolation, and both can be used in combination in a network.   Finally, PIM-SM [RFC4601] is often used for multicast routing in   traditional IP networks (i.e., networks that are not constrained).   IP multicast can also be run in an LL scope.  This means that there   is no routing involved, and an IP multicast message is only received   over the link on which it was sent.   For a complete IP multicast solution, in addition to a routing/   forwarding protocol, a "listener" protocol may be needed for the   devices to subscribe to groups (seeSection 4.2).  Also, a multicast   forwarding proxy node [RFC4605] may be required.   IP multicast is generally classified as an unreliable service in that   packets are not guaranteed to be delivered to each and every member   of the group.  In other words, it cannot be directly used as a basis   for "reliable group communication" as defined inSection 1.3.   However, the level of reliability can be increased by employing a   multicast protocol that performs periodic retransmissions as is done,   for example, in MPL.2.2.  Group Definition and Naming   A CoAP group is defined as a set of CoAP endpoints, where each   endpoint is configured to receive CoAP group communication requests   that are sent to the group's associated IP multicast address.  The   individual response by each endpoint receiver to a CoAP group   communication request is always sent back as unicast.  An endpoint   may be a member of multiple groups.  Group membership of an endpoint   may dynamically change over time.   All CoAP server nodes SHOULD join the "All CoAP Nodes" multicast   group (Section 12.8 of [RFC7252]) by default to enable CoAP   discovery.  For IPv4, the address is 224.0.1.187, and for IPv6, a   server node joins at least both the link-local scoped address   ff02::fd and the site-local scoped address ff05::fd.  IPv6 addresses   of other scopes MAY be enabled.   A CoAP group URI has the scheme 'coap' and includes in the authority   part either a group IP multicast address or a hostname (e.g., Group   Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN)) that can be resolved to the groupRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   IP multicast address.  A group URI also contains an optional CoAP   port number in the authority part.  Group URIs follow the regular   CoAP URI syntax (Section 6 of [RFC7252]).   Note: A group URI is needed to initiate CoAP group communications.   For CoAP client implementations, it is recommended to use the URI   decomposition method ofSection 6.4 of [RFC7252] in such a way that,   from a group URI, a CoAP group communication request is generated.   For sending nodes, it is recommended to use the IP multicast address   literal in a group URI.  (This is because DNS infrastructure may not   be deployed in many constrained network deployments.)  However, in   case a group hostname is used, it can be uniquely mapped to an IP   multicast address via DNS resolution (if supported).  Some examples   of hierarchical group FQDN naming (and scoping) for a building   control application are shown below:     URI authority                           Targeted group of nodes     --------------------------------------- --------------------------     all.bldg6.example.com                   "all nodes in building 6"     all.west.bldg6.example.com              "all nodes in west wing,                                              building 6"     all.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com       "all nodes in floor 1,                                              west wing, building 6"     all.bu036.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com "all nodes in office bu036,                                              floor 1, west wing,                                              building 6"   Similarly, if supported, reverse mapping (from IP multicast address   to Group FQDN) is possible using the reverse DNS resolution technique   ([RFC1033]).  Reverse mapping is important, for example, in   troubleshooting to translate IP multicast addresses back to human-   readable hostnames to show in a diagnostics user interface.2.3.  Port and URI Configuration   A CoAP server that is a member of a group listens for CoAP messages   on the group's IP multicast address, usually on the CoAP default UDP   port, 5683.  If the group uses a specified non-default UDP port, be   careful to ensure that all group members are configured to use that   same port.   Different ports for the same IP multicast address are preferably not   used to specify different CoAP groups.  If disjoint groups share the   same IP multicast address, then all the devices interested in one   group will accept IP traffic also for the other disjoint groups, only   to ultimately discard the traffic higher in their IP stack (based on   UDP port discrimination).Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   CoAP group communication will not work if there is diversity in the   authority port (e.g., different dynamic port addresses across the   group) or if other parts of the group URI such as the path, or the   query, differ on different endpoints.  Therefore, some measures must   be present to ensure uniformity in port number and resource names/   locations within a group.  All CoAP group communication requests MUST   be sent using a port number according to one of the below options:   1.  A preconfigured port number.   2.  If the client is configured to use service discovery including       URI and port discovery, it uses the port number obtained via a       service discovery lookup operation for the targeted CoAP group.   3.  Use the default CoAP UDP port (5683).   For a CoAP server node that supports resource discovery, the default   port 5683 must be supported (Section 7.1 of [RFC7252]) for the "All   CoAP Nodes" group.  Regardless of the method of selecting the port   number, the same port MUST be used across all CoAP servers in a group   and across all CoAP clients performing the group requests.   All CoAP group communication requests SHOULD operate on group URI   paths in one of the following ways:   1.  Preconfigured group URI paths, if available.  Implementers are       free to define the paths as they see fit.  However, note that       [RFC7320] prescribes that a specification must not constrain or       define the structure or semantics for any path component.  So for       this reason, a predefined URI path is not specified in this       document and also must not be provided in other specifications.   2.  If the client is configured to use default Constrained RESTful       Environments (CoRE) resource discovery, it uses URI paths       retrieved from a "/.well-known/core" lookup on a group member.       The URI paths the client will use MUST be known to be available       also in all other endpoints in the group.  The URI path       configuration mechanism on servers MUST ensure that these URIs       (identified as being supported by the group) are configured on       all group endpoints.   3.  If the client is configured to use another form of service       discovery, it uses group URI paths from an equivalent service       discovery lookup that returns the resources supported by all       group members.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   4.  If the client has received a group URI through a previous RESTful       interaction with a trusted server, it can use this URI in a CoAP       group communication request.  For example, a commissioning tool       may instruct a sensor device in this way to which target group       (group URI) it should report sensor events.   However, when the URI path is selected, the same path MUST be used   across all CoAP servers in a group and all CoAP clients performing   the group requests.2.4.  RESTful Methods   Group communication most often uses the idempotent CoAP methods GET   and PUT.  The idempotent method DELETE can also be used.  The non-   idempotent CoAP method POST may only be used for group communication   if the resource being POSTed to has been designed to cope with the   unreliable and lossy nature of IP multicast.  For example, a client   may resend a multicast POST request for additional reliability.  Some   servers will receive the request two times while others may receive   it only once.  For idempotent methods, all these servers will be in   the same state while for POST, this is not guaranteed; so, the   resource POST operation must be specifically designed to take message   loss into account.2.5.  Request and Response Model   All CoAP requests that are sent via IP multicast must be Non-   confirmable (Section 8.1 of [RFC7252]).  The Message ID in an IP   multicast CoAP message is used for optional message deduplication as   detailed inSection 4.5 of [RFC7252].   A server optionally sends back a unicast response to the CoAP group   communication request (e.g., response "2.05 Content" to a group GET   request).  The unicast responses received by the CoAP client may be a   mixture of success (e.g., 2.05 Content) and failure (e.g., 4.04 Not   Found) codes depending on the individual server processing results.   Detailed processing rules for IP multicast request acceptance and   unicast response suppression are given inSection 2.7.   A CoAP request sent over IP multicast and any unicast response it   causes must take into account the congestion control rules defined inSection 2.8.   The CoAP client can distinguish the origin of multiple server   responses by the source IP address of the UDP message containing the   CoAP response or any other available unique identifier (e.g.,Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   contained in the CoAP payload).  In case a CoAP client sent multiple   group requests, the responses are as usual matched to a request using   the CoAP Token.   For multicast CoAP requests, there are additional constraints on the   reuse of Token values, compared to the unicast case.  In the unicast   case, receiving a response effectively frees up its Token value for   reuse since no more responses will follow.  However, for multicast   CoAP, the number of responses is not bounded a priori.  Therefore,   the reception of a response cannot be used as a trigger to "free up"   a Token value for reuse.  Reusing a Token value too early could lead   to incorrect response/request matching in the client and would be a   protocol error.  Therefore, the time between reuse of Token values   used in multicast requests MUST be greater than:   NON_LIFETIME + MAX_LATENCY + MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY   where NON_LIFETIME and MAX_LATENCY are defined inSection 4.8 of   [RFC7252].  MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY is defined here as the expected   maximum response delay over all servers that the client can send a   multicast request to.  This delay includes the maximum Leisure time   period as defined inSection 8.2 of [RFC7252].  CoAP does not define   a time limit for the server response delay.  Using the default CoAP   parameters, the Token reuse time MUST be greater than 250 seconds   plus MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY.  A preferred solution to meet this   requirement is to generate a new unique Token for every multicast   request, such that a Token value is never reused.  If a client has to   reuse Token values for some reason, and also   MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY is unknown, then using   MAX_SERVER_RESPONSE_DELAY = 250 seconds is a reasonable guideline.   The time between Token reuses is in that case set to a value greater   than 500 seconds.2.6.  Membership Configuration2.6.1.  Background2.6.1.1.  Member Discovery   CoAP groups, and the membership of these groups, can be discovered   via the lookup interfaces in the Resource Directory (RD) defined in   [CoRE-RD].  This discovery interface is not required to invoke CoAP   group communications.  However, it is a potential complementary   interface useful for overall management of CoAP groups.  Other   methods to discover groups (e.g., proprietary management systems) can   also be used.  An example of doing some of the RD-based lookups is   given inSection 3.6.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20142.6.1.2.  Configuring Members   The group membership of a CoAP endpoint may be configured in one of   the following ways.  First, the group membership may be preconfigured   before node deployment.  Second, a node may be programmed to discover   (query) its group membership using a specific service discovery   means.  Third, it may be configured by another node (e.g., a   commissioning device).   In the first case, the preconfigured group information may be either   an IP multicast address or a hostname (FQDN) that is resolved later   (during operation) to an IP multicast address by the endpoint using   DNS (if supported).   For the second case, a CoAP endpoint may look up its group membership   using techniques such as DNS-based Service Discovery (DNS-SD) and RD   [CoRE-RD].   In the third case, typical in scenarios such as building control, a   dynamic commissioning tool determines to which group(s) a sensor or   actuator node belongs, and writes this information to the node, which   can subsequently join the correct IP multicast group(s) on its   network interface.  The information written per group may again be an   IP multicast address or a hostname.2.6.2.  Membership Configuration RESTful Interface   To achieve better interoperability between endpoints from different   manufacturers, an OPTIONAL CoAP membership configuration RESTful   interface for configuring endpoints with relevant group information   is described here.  This interface provides a solution for the third   case mentioned above.  To access this interface, a client will use   unicast CoAP methods (GET/PUT/POST/DELETE).  This interface is a   method of configuring group information in individual endpoints.   Also, a form of authorization (preferably making use of unicast DTLS-   secured CoAP perSection 9.1 of [RFC7252]) should be used such that   only authorized controllers are allowed by an endpoint to configure   its group membership.   It is important to note that other approaches may be used to   configure CoAP endpoints with relevant group information.  These   alternative approaches may support a subset or superset of the   membership configuration RESTful interface described in this   document.  For example, a simple interface to just read the endpoint   group information may be implemented via a classical Management   Information Base (MIB) approach (e.g., following the approach of   [RFC3433]).Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20142.6.2.1.  CoAP-Group Resource Type and Media Type   CoAP endpoints implementing the membership configuration RESTful   interface MUST support the CoAP group configuration Internet Media   Type "application/coap-group+json" (Section 6.2).   A resource offering this representation can be annotated for direct   discovery [RFC6690] using the Resource Type (rt=) Link Target   Attribute "core.gp", where "gp" is shorthand for "group"   (Section 6.1).  An authorized client uses this media type to query/   manage group membership of a CoAP endpoint as defined in the   following subsections.   The Group Configuration resource and its sub-resources have a content   format based on JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) (as indicated by   the "application/coap-group+json" media type).  The resource includes   zero or more group membership JSON objects [RFC7159] in a format as   defined inSection 2.6.2.4.  A group membership JSON object contains   one or more key/value pairs as defined below, and represents a single   IP multicast group membership for the CoAP endpoint.  Each key/value   pair is encoded as a member of the JSON object, where the key is the   member name and the value is the member's value.   Examples of four different group membership objects are as follows:      { "n": "All-Devices.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",        "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:abcd]:4567" }      { "n": "sensors.floor2.east.bldg6.example.com" }      { "n": "coap-test",        "a": "224.0.1.187:56789" }      { "a": "[ff15::c0a7:15:c001]" }   The OPTIONAL "n" key/value pair stands for "name" and identifies the   group with a hostname (and optionally the port number), for example,   an FQDN.  The OPTIONAL "a" key/value pair specifies the IP multicast   address (and optionally the port number) of the group.  It contains   an IPv4 address (in dotted-decimal notation) or an IPv6 address.  The   following ABNF rule can be used for parsing the address, referring to   the definitions inSection 3.2.2 of [RFC3986] that are also used in   the base CoAP (Section 6 of [RFC7252].      group-address = IPv4address [ ":" port ]                      / "[" IPv6address "]" [":" port ]Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   In any group membership object, if the IP address is known when the   object is created, it is included in the "a" key/value pair.  If the   "a" value cannot be provided, the "n" value MUST be included,   containing a valid hostname with an optional port number that can be   translated to an IP multicast address via DNS.      group-name = host [ ":" port ]   If the port number is not provided, then the endpoint will attempt to   look up the port number from DNS if it supports a method to do this.   The possible DNS methods include DNS SRV [RFC2782] or DNS-SD   [RFC6763].  If port lookup is not supported or not provided by DNS,   the default CoAP port (5683) is assumed.   After any change on a Group Configuration resource, the endpoint MUST   effect registration/deregistration from the corresponding IP   multicast group(s) by making use of APIs such as IPV6_RECVPKTINFO   [RFC3542].2.6.2.2.  Creating a New Multicast Group Membership (POST)   Method:       POST   URI Template: /{+gp}   Location-URI Template: /{+gp}/{index}   URI Template Variables:     gp    - Group Configuration Function Set path (mandatory).     index - Group index.  Index MUST be a string of maximum two (2)       alphanumeric ASCII characters (case insensitive).  It MUST be       locally unique to the endpoint server.  It indexes the particular       endpoint's list of group memberships.   Example:     Req: POST /coap-group          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       { "n": "All-Devices.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",         "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:abcd]:4567" }     Res: 2.01 Created          Location-Path: /coap-group/12   For the 'gp' variable, it is recommended to use the path "coap-group"   by default.  The "a" key/value pair is always used if it is given.   The "n" pair is only used when there is no "a" pair.  If only the "n"   pair is given, the CoAP endpoint performs DNS resolution to obtain   the IP multicast address from the hostname in the "n" pair.  If DNS   resolution is not successful, then the endpoint does not attempt   joining or listening to any multicast group for this case since the   IP multicast address is unknown.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   After any change on a Group Configuration resource, the endpoint MUST   effect registration/deregistration from the corresponding IP   multicast group(s) by making use of APIs such as IPV6_RECVPKTINFO   [RFC3542].  When a POST payload contains an "a", an IP multicast   address to which the endpoint is already subscribed, no change to   that subscription is needed.2.6.2.3.  Deleting a Single Group Membership (DELETE)   Method:       DELETE   URI Template: {+location}   URI Template Variables:     location - The Location-Path returned by the CoAP server       as a result of a successful group creation.   Example:     Req: DELETE /coap-group/12     Res: 2.02 Deleted2.6.2.4.  Reading All Group Memberships at Once (GET)   A (unicast) GET on the CoAP-group resource returns a JSON object   containing multiple keys and values.  The keys (member names) are   group indices, and the values (member values) are the corresponding   group membership objects.  Each group membership object describes one   IP multicast group membership.  If no group memberships are   configured, then an empty JSON object is returned.   Method: GET   URI Template: /{+gp}   URI Template Variables:   gp - seeSection 2.6.2.2   Example:     Req: GET /coap-group     Res: 2.05 Content          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       { "8" :{ "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:14ca]" },         "11":{ "n": "sensors.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",                "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:25cb]" },         "12":{ "n": "All-Devices.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",                "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:abcd]:4567" }       }Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Note: the returned IPv6 address string will represent the same IPv6   address that was originally submitted in group membership creation,   though it might be a different string because of different choices in   IPv6 string representation formatting that may be allowed for the   same address (see [RFC5952]).2.6.2.5.  Reading a Single Group Membership (GET)   Similar toSection 2.6.2.4, but only a single group membership is   read.  If the requested group index does not exist, then a 4.04 Not   Found response is returned.   Method: GET   URI Template 1: {+location}   URI Template 2: /{+gp}/{index}   URI Template Variables:   location - seeSection 2.6.2.3   gp, index - seeSection 2.6.2.2   Example:     Req: GET /coap-group/12     Res: 2.05 Content          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       {"n": "All-Devices.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",        "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:abcd]:4567"}2.6.2.6.  Creating/Updating All Group Memberships at Once (PUT)   A (unicast) PUT with a group configuration media type as payload will   replace all current group memberships in the endpoint with the new   ones defined in the PUT request.  This operation MUST only be used to   delete or update group membership objects for which the CoAP client,   invoking this operation, is responsible.  The responsibility is based   on application-level knowledge.  For example, a commissioning tool   will be responsible for any group membership objects that it created.   Method: PUT   URI Template: /{+gp}   URI Template Variables:   gp - seeSection 2.6.2.2Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Example: (replacing all existing group memberships with two new             group memberships)     Req: PUT /coap-group          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       { "1":{ "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:1234]" },         "2":{ "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:5678]" }       }     Res: 2.04 Changed   Example: (clearing all group memberships at once)     Req: PUT /coap-group          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       {}     Res: 2.04 Changed   After a successful PUT on the Group Configuration resource, the   endpoint MUST effect registration to any new IP multicast group(s)   and deregistration from any previous IP multicast group(s), i.e., not   any more present in the new memberships.  An API such as   IPV6_RECVPKTINFO [RFC3542] should be used for this purpose.  Also, it   MUST take into account the group indices present in the new resource   during the generation of any new unique group indices in the future.2.6.2.7.  Updating a Single Group Membership (PUT)   A (unicast) PUT with a group membership JSON object will replace an   existing group membership in the endpoint with the new one defined in   the PUT request.  This can be used to update the group membership.   Method: PUT   URI Template 1: {+location}   URI Template 2: /{+gp}/{index}   URI Template Variables:   location - seeSection 2.6.2.3   gp, index - seeSection 2.6.2.2   Example: (group name and IP multicast port change)     Req: PUT /coap-group/12          Content-Format: application/coap-group+json       {"n": "All-My-Devices.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com",        "a": "[ff15::4200:f7fe:ed37:abcd]"}     Res: 2.04 ChangedRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   After a successful PUT on the Group Configuration resource, the   endpoint MUST effect registration to any new IP multicast group(s)   and deregistration from any previous IP multicast group(s), i.e., not   any more present in the new membership.  An API such as   IPV6_RECVPKTINFO [RFC3542] should be used for this purpose.2.7.  Request Acceptance and Response Suppression Rules   CoRE Link Format [RFC6690] andSection 8 of CoAP [RFC7252] define   behaviors for the following:   1.  IP multicast request acceptance -- in which cases a CoAP request       is accepted and executed, and when it is not.   2.  IP multicast response suppression -- in which cases the CoAP       response to an already executed request is returned to the       requesting endpoint, and when it is not.   A CoAP response differs from a CoAP ACK; ACKs are never sent by   servers in response to an IP multicast CoAP request.  This section   first summarizes these behaviors and then presents additional   guidelines for response suppression.  Also, a number of IP multicast   example applications are given to illustrate the overall approach.   To apply any rules for request and/or response suppression, a CoAP   server must be aware that an incoming request arrived via IP   multicast by making use of APIs such as IPV6_RECVPKTINFO [RFC3542].   For IP multicast request acceptance, the behaviors are as follows:   o  A server should not accept an IP multicast request that cannot be      "authenticated" in some way (i.e, cryptographically or by some      multicast boundary limiting the potential sources); seeSection 11.3 of [RFC7252].  SeeSection 5.3 for examples of      multicast boundary limiting methods.   o  A server should not accept an IP multicast discovery request with      a query string (as defined in CoRE Link Format [RFC6690]) if      filtering [RFC6690] is not supported by the server.   o  A server should not accept an IP multicast request that acts on a      specific resource for which IP multicast support is not required.      (Note that for the resource "/.well-known/core", IP multicast      support is required if "multicast resource discovery" is supported      as specified inSection 1.2.1 of [RFC6690].)  Implementers are      advised to disable IP multicast support by default on any other      resource, until explicitly enabled by an application or by      configuration.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   o  Otherwise, accept the IP multicast request.   For IP multicast response suppression, the behaviors are as follows:   o  A server should not respond to an IP multicast discovery request      if the filter specified by the request's query string does not      match.   o  A server may choose not to respond to an IP multicast request if      there's nothing useful to respond back (e.g., error or empty      response).   The above response suppression behaviors are complemented by the   following guidelines.  CoAP servers should implement configurable   response suppression, enabling at least the following options per   resource that supports IP multicast requests:   o  Suppression of all 2.xx success responses;   o  Suppression of all 4.xx client errors;   o  Suppression of all 5.xx server errors; and   o  Suppression of all 2.05 responses with empty payload.   A number of CoAP group communication example applications are given   below to illustrate how to make use of response suppression:   o  CoAP resource discovery: Suppress 2.05 responses with empty      payload and all 4.xx and 5.xx errors.   o  Lighting control: Suppress all 2.xx responses after a lighting      change command.   o  Update configuration data in a group of devices using group      communication PUT: No suppression at all.  The client uses      collected responses to identify which group members did not      receive the new configuration and then attempts using CoAP CON      unicast to update those specific group members.  Note that in this      case, the client implements a "reliable group communication" (as      defined inSection 1.3) function using additional, non-      standardized functions above the CoAP layer.   o  IP multicast firmware update by sending blocks of data: Suppress      all 2.xx and 5.xx responses.  After having sent all IP multicast      blocks, the client checks each endpoint by unicast to identify      which data blocks are still missing in each endpoint.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   o  Conditional reporting for a group (e.g., sensors) based on a group      URI query: Suppress all 2.05 responses with empty payload (i.e.,      if a query produces no matching results).2.8.  Congestion Control   CoAP group communication requests may result in a multitude of   responses from different nodes, potentially causing congestion.   Therefore, both the sending of IP multicast requests and the sending   of the unicast CoAP responses to these multicast requests should be   conservatively controlled.   CoAP [RFC7252] reduces IP multicast-specific congestion risks through   the following measures:   o  A server may choose not to respond to an IP multicast request if      there's nothing useful to respond to (e.g., error or empty      response); seeSection 8.2 of [RFC7252].  SeeSection 2.7 for more      detailed guidelines on response suppression.   o  A server should limit the support for IP multicast requests to      specific resources where multicast operation is required      (Section 11.3 of [RFC7252]).   o  An IP multicast request must be Non-confirmable (Section 8.1 of      [RFC7252]).   o  A response to an IP multicast request should be Non-confirmable      (Section 5.2.3 of [RFC7252]).   o  A server does not respond immediately to an IP multicast request      and should first wait for a time that is randomly picked within a      predetermined time interval called the Leisure (Section 8.2 of      [RFC7252]).   Additional guidelines to reduce congestion risks defined in this   document are as follows:   o  A server in an LLN should only support group communication GET for      resources that are small.  For example, the payload of the      response is limited to approximately 5% of the IP Maximum Transmit      Unit (MTU) size, so it fits into a single link-layer frame in case      IPv6 over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks (6LoWPAN) (seeSection 4 of [RFC4944]) is used.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   o  A server can minimize the payload length in response to a group      communication GET on "/.well-known/core" by using hierarchy in      arranging link descriptions for the response.  An example of this      is given inSection 5 of [RFC6690].   o  A server can also minimize the payload length of a response to a      group communication GET (e.g., on "/.well-known/core") using CoAP      blockwise transfers [BLOCKWISE-CoAP], returning only a first block      of the CoRE Link Format description.  For this reason, a CoAP      client sending an IP multicast CoAP request to "/.well-known/core"      should support core-block.   o  A client should use CoAP group communication with the smallest      possible IP multicast scope that fulfills the application needs.      As an example, site-local scope is always preferred over global      scope IP multicast if this fulfills the application needs.      Similarly, realm-local scope is always preferred over site-local      scope if this fulfills the application needs.   More guidelines specific to the use of CoAP in 6LoWPAN networks   [RFC4919] are given inSection 4.5 of this document.2.9.  Proxy Operation   CoAP (Section 5.7.2 of [RFC7252]) allows a client to request a   forward-proxy to process its CoAP request.  For this purpose, the   client specifies either the request group URI as a string in the   Proxy-URI option or the Proxy-Scheme option with the group URI   constructed from the usual Uri-* options.  This approach works well   for unicast requests.  However, there are certain issues and   limitations of processing the (unicast) responses to a CoAP group   communication request made in this manner through a proxy.   A proxy may buffer all the individual (unicast) responses to a CoAP   group communication request and then send back only a single   (aggregated) response to the client.  However, there are some issues   with this aggregation approach:   o  Aggregation of (unicast) responses to a CoAP group communication      request in a proxy is difficult.  This is because the proxy does      not know how many members there are in the group or how many group      members will actually respond.  Also, the proxy does not know how      long to wait before deciding to send back the aggregated response      to the client.   o  There is no default format defined in CoAP for aggregation of      multiple responses into a single response.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Alternatively, if a proxy follows directly the specification for a   CoAP Proxy (Section 5.7.2 of [RFC7252]), the proxy would simply   forward all the individual (unicast) responses to a CoAP group   communication request to the client (i.e., no aggregation).  There   are also issues with this approach:   o  The client may be confused as it may not have known that the      Proxy-URI contained a group URI target.  That is, the client may      be expecting only one (unicast) response but instead receives      multiple (unicast) responses, potentially leading to fault      conditions in the application.   o  Each individual CoAP response will appear to originate (IP source      address) from the CoAP Proxy, and not from the server that      produced the response.  This makes it impossible for the client to      identify the server that produced each response.   Due to the above issues, a CoAP Proxy SHOULD NOT support processing   an IP multicast CoAP request but rather return a 501 (Not   Implemented) response in such case.  The exception case here (i.e.,   to process it) is allowed if all the following conditions are met:   o  The CoAP Proxy MUST be explicitly configured (whitelist) to allow      proxied IP multicast requests by a specific client(s).   o  The proxy SHOULD return individual (unicast) CoAP responses to the      client (i.e., not aggregated).  The exception case here occurs      when a (future) standardized aggregation format is being used.   o  It MUST be known to the person/entity doing the configuration of      the proxy, or otherwise verified in some way, that the client      configured in the whitelist supports receiving multiple responses      to a proxied unicast CoAP request.2.10.  Exceptions   CoAP group communication using IP multicast offers improved network   efficiency and latency among other benefits.  However, group   communication may not always be implementable in a given network.   The primary reason for this will be that IP multicast is not (fully)   supported in the network.   For example, if only RPL [RFC6550] is used in a network with its   optional multicast support disabled, there will be no IP multicast   routing at all.  The only multicast that works in this case is link-   local IPv6 multicast.  This implies that any CoAP group communication   request will be delivered to nodes on the local link only, regardless   of the scope value used in the IPv6 destination address.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   CoAP Observe [OBSERVE-CoAP] is a feature for a client to "observe"   resources (i.e., to retrieve a representation of a resource and keep   this representation updated by the server over a period of time).   CoAP Observe does not support a group communication mode.  CoAP   Observe only supports a unicast mode of operation.3.  Use Cases and Corresponding Protocol Flows3.1.  Introduction   The use of CoAP group communication is shown in the context of the   following two use cases and corresponding protocol flows:   o  Discovery of RD [CoRE-RD]: discovering the local CoAP RD, which      contains links to resources stored on other CoAP servers      [RFC6690].   o  Lighting Control: synchronous operation of a group of      IPv6-connected lights (e.g., 6LoWPAN [RFC4944] lights).3.2.  Network Configuration   To illustrate the use cases, we define two IPv6 network   configurations.  Both are based on the topology as shown in Figure 1.   The two configurations using this topology are as follows:   1.  Subnets are 6LoWPAN networks; the routers Rtr-1 and Rtr-2 are       6LoWPAN Border Routers (6LBRs) [RFC6775].   2.  Subnets are Ethernet links; the routers Rtr-1 and Rtr-2 are       multicast-capable Ethernet routers.   Both configurations are further specified by the following:   o  A large room (Room-A) with three lights (Light-1, Light-2, Light-      3) controlled by a light switch (Light Switch).  The devices are      organized into two subnets.  In reality, there could be more      lights (up to several hundreds) but, for clarity, only three are      shown.   o  Light-1 and the light switch are connected to a router (Rtr-1).   o  Light-2 and Light-3 are connected to another router (Rtr-2).Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   o  The routers are connected to an IPv6 network backbone (Network      Backbone) that is also multicast enabled.  In the general case,      this means the network backbone and Rtr-1/Rtr-2 support a PIM-      based multicast routing protocol and Multicast Listener Discovery      (MLD) for forming groups.   o  A CoAP RD is connected to the network backbone.   o  The DNS server (DNS Server) is optional.  If the server is there      (connected to the network backbone), then certain DNS-based      features are available (e.g., DNS resolution of the hostname to      the IP multicast address).  If the DNS server is not there, then      different provisioning of the network is required (e.g., IP      multicast addresses are hard-coded into devices, or manually      configured, or obtained via a service discovery method).   o  A controller (CoAP client) is connected to the backbone, which is      able to control various building functions including lighting.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014     ################################################     #         **********************        Room-A #     #       **  Subnet-1            **             #           Network     #     *                           **           #          Backbone     #    *     +----------+             *          #                 |     #   *      |  Light   |-------+      *         #                 |     #  *       |  Switch  |       |       *        #                 |     #  *       +----------+  +---------+  *        #                 |     #  *                     |  Rtr-1  |-----------------------------+     #  *                     +---------+  *        #                 |     #  *       +----------+        |      *        #                 |     #   *      |  Light-1 |--------+     *         #                 |     #    *     +----------+             *          #                 |     #     **                          **           #                 |     #       **************************             #                 |     #                                              #                 |     #         **********************               # +------------+  |     #       **  Subnet-2            **             # | DNS Server |  |     #     *                           **           # | (Optional) |--+     #    *     +----------+             *          # +------------+  |     #   *      |  Light-2 |-------+      *         #                 |     #  *       |          |       |       *        #                 |     #  *       +----------+  +---------+  *        #                 |     #  *                     |  Rtr-2  |-----------------------------+     #  *                     +---------+  *        #                 |     #  *       +----------+        |      *        #                 |     #   *      |  Light-3 |--------+     *         #                 |     #    *     +----------+             *          # +------------+  |     #     **                          **           # | Controller |--+     #       **************************             # | Client     |  |     ################################################ +------------+  |                                       +------------+                 |                                       |   CoAP     |                 |                                       |  Resource  |-----------------+                                       |  Directory |                                       +------------+            Figure 1: Network Topology of a Large Room (Room-A)Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20143.3.  Discovery of Resource Directory   The protocol flow for discovery of the CoAP RD for the given network   (of Figure 1) is shown in Figure 2:   o  Light-2 is installed and powered on for the first time.   o  Light-2 will then search for the local CoAP RD by sending out a      group communication GET request (with the "/.well-known/      core?rt=core.rd" request URI) to the site-local "All CoAP Nodes"      multicast address (ff05:::fd).   o  This multicast message will then go to each node in Subnet-2.      Rtr-2 will then forward it into the network backbone where it will      be received by the CoAP RD.  All other nodes in Subnet-2 will      ignore the group communication GET request because it is qualified      by the query string "?rt=core.rd" (which indicates it should only      be processed by the endpoint if it contains a resource of type      "core.rd").   o  The CoAP RD will then send back a unicast response containing the      requested content, which is a CoRE Link Format representation of a      resource of type "core.rd".   o  Note that the flow is shown only for Light-2 for clarity.  Similar      flows will happen for Light-1, Light-3, and light switch when they      are first installed.   The CoAP RD may also be discovered by other means such as by assuming   a default location (e.g., on a 6LBR), using DHCP, anycast address,   etc.  However, these approaches do not invoke CoAP group   communication so are not further discussed here.  (See [CoRE-RD] for   more details.)   For other discovery use cases such as discovering local CoAP servers,   services, or resources, CoAP group communication can be used in a   similar fashion as in the above use case.  For example, link-local,   realm-local, admin-local, or site-local scoped discovery can be done   this way.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 25]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014                                    Light                           CoAP   Light-1   Light-2    Light-3     Switch     Rtr-1     Rtr-2       RD    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    **********************************          |          |          |    *   Light-2 is installed         *          |          |          |    *   and powers on for first time *          |          |          |    **********************************          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          | COAP NON Mcast(GET                        |          |    |          |           /.well-known/core?rt=core.rd)   |          |    |          |--------->-------------------------------->|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |--------->|    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          | COAP NON (2.05 Content                    |          |    |          |         </rd>;rt="core.rd";ins="Primary") |<---------|    |          |<------------------------------------------|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |       Figure 2: Resource Directory Discovery via Multicast Request3.4.  Lighting Control   The protocol flow for a building automation lighting control scenario   for the network (Figure 1) is shown in Figure 3.  The network is   assumed to be in a 6LoWPAN configuration.  Also, it is assumed that   the CoAP servers in each light are configured to suppress CoAP   responses for any IP multicast CoAP requests related to lighting   control.  (SeeSection 2.7 for more details on response suppression   by a server.)   In addition, Figure 4 shows a protocol flow example for the case that   servers do respond to a lighting control IP multicast request with   (unicast) CoAP NON responses.  There are two success responses and   one 5.00 error response.  In this particular case, the light switch   does not check that all lights in the group received the IP multicast   request by examining the responses.  This is because the light switch   is not configured with an exhaustive list of the IP addresses of all   lights belonging to the group.  However, based on received error   responses, it could take additional action such as logging a fault or   alerting the user via its LCD display.  In case a CoAP message is   delivered multiple times to a light, the subsequent CoAP messages can   be filtered out as duplicates, based on the CoAP Message ID.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 26]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Reliability of IP multicast is not guaranteed.  Therefore, one or   more lights in the group may not have received the CoAP control   request due to packet loss.  In this use case, there is no detection   nor correction of such situations: the application layer expects that   the IP multicast forwarding/routing will be of sufficient quality to   provide on average a very high probability of packet delivery to all   CoAP endpoints in an IP multicast group.  An example protocol to   accomplish this using randomized retransmission is the MPL forwarding   protocol for LLNs [MCAST-MPL].   We assume the following steps have already occurred before the   illustrated flows:   1)  Startup phase: 6LoWPANs are formed.  IPv6 addresses are assigned       to all devices.  The CoAP network is formed.   2)  Network configuration (application independent): 6LBRs are       configured with IP multicast addresses, or address blocks, to       filter out or to pass through to/from the 6LoWPAN.   3a) Commissioning phase (application related): The IP multicast       address of the group (Room-A-Lights) has been configured in all       the lights and in the light switch.   3b) As an alternative to the previous step, when a DNS server is       available, the light switch and/or the lights have been       configured with a group hostname that each node resolves to the       above IP multicast address of the group.   Note for the Commissioning phase: the switch's 6LoWPAN/CoAP software   stack supports sending unicast, multicast, or proxied unicast CoAP   requests, including processing of the multiple responses that may be   generated by an IP multicast CoAP request.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 27]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014                                    Light                       Network   Light-1   Light-2    Light-3     Switch    Rtr-1      Rtr-2  Backbone    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          ***********************          |          |    |          |          *   User flips on     *          |          |    |          |          *   light switch to   *          |          |    |          |          *   turn on all the   *          |          |    |          |          *   lights in Room-A  *          |          |    |          |          ***********************          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |    COAP NON Mcast(PUT,         |          |    |          |          |    Payload=lights ON)          |          |    |<-------------------------------+--------->|          |          |    ON         |          |          |          |-------------------->|    |          |          |          |          |          |<---------|    |          |<---------|<-------------------------------|          |    |          ON         ON         |          |          |          |    ^          ^          ^          |          |          |          |    ***********************          |          |          |          |    *   Lights in Room-A  *          |          |          |          |    *   turn on (nearly   *          |          |          |          |    *   simultaneously)   *          |          |          |          |    ***********************          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |          Figure 3: Light Switch Sends Multicast Control MessageRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 28]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014                                    Light                       Network   Light-1   Light-2    Light-3     Switch    Rtr-1      Rtr-2  Backbone    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |     COAP NON (2.04 Changed)    |          |          |          |    |------------------------------->|          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          COAP NON (2.04 Changed)          |          |          |    |          |------------------------------------------>|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |--------->|    |          |          |          |          |<--------------------|    |          |          |          |<---------|          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |        COAP NON (5.00 Internal Server Error)         |    |          |          |------------------------------->|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |--------->|    |          |          |          |          |<--------------------|    |          |          |          |<---------|          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |      Figure 4: Lights (Optionally) Respond to Multicast CoAP Request   Another, but similar, lighting control use case is shown in Figure 5.   In this case, a controller connected to the network backbone sends a   CoAP group communication request to turn on all lights in Room-A.   Every light sends back a CoAP response to the controller after being   turned on.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 29]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014                                                     Network  Light-1   Light-2    Light-3     Rtr-1      Rtr-2  Backbone Controller   |          |          |           |          |          |        |   |          |          |           |          |    COAP NON Mcast(PUT,   |          |          |           |          |    Payload=lights ON)   |          |          |           |          |          |<-------|   |          |          |           |<----------<---------|        |   |<--------------------------------|          |          |        |   ON         |          |           |          |          |        |   |          |<----------<---------------------|          |        |   |          ON         ON          |          |          |        |   ^          ^          ^           |          |          |        |   ***********************           |          |          |        |   *   Lights in Room-A  *           |          |          |        |   *   turn on (nearly   *           |          |          |        |   *   simultaneously)   *           |          |          |        |   ***********************           |          |          |        |   |          |          |           |          |          |        |   |          |          |           |          |          |        |   |    COAP NON (2.04 Changed)      |          |          |        |   |-------------------------------->|          |          |        |   |          |          |           |-------------------->|        |   |          |  COAP NON (2.04 Changed)        |          |------->|   |          |-------------------------------->|          |        |   |          |          |           |          |--------->|        |   |          |          | COAP NON (2.04 Changed)         |------->|   |          |          |--------------------->|          |        |   |          |          |           |          |--------->|        |   |          |          |           |          |          |------->|   |          |          |           |          |          |        |     Figure 5: Controller on Backbone Sends Multicast Control Message3.5.  Lighting Control in MLD-Enabled Network   The use case in the previous section can also apply in networks where   nodes support the MLD protocol [RFC3810].  The lights then take on   the role of MLDv2 listener, and the routers (Rtr-1 and Rtr-2) are   MLDv2 routers.  In the Ethernet-based network configuration, MLD may   be available on all involved network interfaces.  Use of MLD in the   6LoWPAN-based configuration is also possible but requires MLD support   in all nodes in the 6LoWPAN.  In current 6LoWPAN implementations, MLD   is, however, not supported.   The resulting protocol flow is shown in Figure 6.  This flow is   executed after the commissioning phase, as soon as lights are   configured with a group address to listen to.  The (unicast) MLDRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 30]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Reports may require periodic refresh activity as specified by the MLD   protocol.  In the figure, 'LL' denotes link-local communication.   After the shown sequence of MLD Report messages has been executed,   both Rtr-1 and Rtr-2 are automatically configured to forward IP   multicast traffic destined to Room-A-Lights onto their connected   subnet.  Hence, no manual network configuration of routers, as   previously indicated inSection 3.4, step 2, is needed anymore.                                    Light                       Network   Light-1   Light-2    Light-3     Switch    Rtr-1      Rtr-2  Backbone    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    | MLD Report: Join    |          |          |          |          |    | Group (Room-A-Lights)          |          |          |          |    |---LL------------------------------------->|          |          |    |          |          |          |          |MLD Report: Join     |    |          |          |          |          |Group (Room-A-Lights)|    |          |          |          |          |---LL---->----LL---->|    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          | MLD Report: Join    |          |          |          |    |          | Group (Room-A-Lights)          |          |          |    |          |---LL------------------------------------->|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          | MLD Report: Join    |          |          |    |          |          | Group (Room-A-Lights)          |          |    |          |          |---LL-------------------------->|          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |MLD Report: Join     |    |          |          |          |          |Group (Room-A-Lights)|    |          |          |          |          |<--LL-----+---LL---->|    |          |          |          |          |          |          |    |          |          |          |          |          |          |                Figure 6: Joining Lighting Groups Using MLD3.6.  Commissioning the Network Based on Resource Directory   This section outlines how devices in the lighting use case (both   switches and lights) can be commissioned, making use of the RD   [CoRE-RD] and its group configuration feature.   Once the RD is discovered, the Switches and lights need to be   discovered and their groups need to be defined.  For the   commissioning of these devices, a commissioning tool can be used thatRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 31]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   defines the entries in the RD.  The commissioning tool has the   authority to change the contents of the RD and the light/switch   nodes.  DTLS-based unicast security is used by the commissioning tool   to modify operational data in RD, switches, and lights.   In our particular use case, a group of three lights is defined with   one IP multicast address and hostname:      "Room-A-Lights.floor1.west.bldg6.example.com"   The commissioning tool has a list of the three lights and the   associated IP multicast address.  For each light in the list, the   tool learns the IP address of the light and instructs the RD with   three (unicast) POST commands to store the endpoints associated with   the three lights as prescribed by the RD specification [CoRE-RD].   Finally, the commissioning tool defines the group in the RD to   contain these three endpoints.  Also the commissioning tool writes   the IP multicast address in the light endpoints with, for example,   the (unicast) POST command discussed inSection 2.6.2.2.   The light switch can discover the group in RD and thus learn the IP   multicast address of the group.  The light switch will use this   address to send CoAP group communication requests to the members of   the group.  When the message arrives, the lights should recognize the   IP multicast address and accept the message.4.  Deployment Guidelines   This section provides guidelines on how IP multicast-based CoAP group   communication can be deployed in various network configurations.4.1.  Target Network Topologies   CoAP group communication can be deployed in various network   topologies.  First, the target network may be a traditional IP   network, or an LLN such as a 6LoWPAN network, or consist of mixed   traditional/constrained network segments.  Second, it may be a single   subnet only or a multi-subnet, e.g., multiple 6LoWPAN networks joined   by a single backbone LAN.  Third, a wireless network segment may have   all its nodes reachable in a single IP hop (fully connected), or it   may require multiple IP hops for some pairs of nodes to reach each   other.   Each topology may pose different requirements on the configuration of   routers and protocol(s), in order to enable efficient CoAP group   communication.  To enable all the above target network topologies, an   implementation of CoAP group communication needs to allow the   following:Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 32]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   1.  Routing/forwarding of IP multicast packets over multiple hops.   2.  Routing/forwarding of IP multicast packets over subnet boundaries       between traditional and constrained (e.g., LLN) networks.   The remainder of this section discusses solutions to enable both   features.4.2.  Networks Using the MLD Protocol   CoAP nodes that are IP hosts (i.e., not IP routers) are generally   unaware of the specific IP multicast routing/forwarding protocol   being used.  When such a host needs to join a specific (CoAP)   multicast group, it requires a way to signal to IP multicast routers   which IP multicast traffic it wants to receive.   The MLD protocol [RFC3810] (seeAppendix A of this document) is the   standard IPv6 method to achieve this; therefore, this approach should   be used on traditional IP networks.  CoAP server nodes would then act   in the role of MLD Multicast Address Listener.   The guidelines from [RFC6636] on the tuning of MLD for mobile and   wireless networks may be useful when implementing MLD in LLNs.   However, on LLNs and 6LoWPAN networks, the use of MLD may not be   feasible at all due to constraints on code size, memory, or network   capacity.4.3.  Networks Using RPL Multicast without MLD   It is assumed in this section that the MLD protocol is not   implemented in a network, for example, due to resource constraints.   The RPL routing protocol (seeSection 12 of [RFC6550]) defines the   advertisement of IP multicast destinations using Destination   Advertisement Object (DAO) messages and routing of multicast IPv6   packets based on this.  It requires the RPL mode of operation to be 3   (Storing mode with multicast support).   Hence, RPL DAO can be used by CoAP nodes that are RPL routers, or are   RPL Leaf Nodes, to advertise IP multicast group membership to parent   routers.  Then, RPL is used to route IP multicast CoAP requests over   multiple hops to the correct CoAP servers.   The same DAO mechanism can be used to convey IP multicast group   membership information to an edge router (e.g., 6LBR), in case the   edge router is also the root of the RPL Destination-Oriented Directed   Acyclic Graph (DODAG).  This is useful because the edge router then   learns which IP multicast traffic it needs to pass through from the   backbone network into the LLN subnet.  In 6LoWPAN networks, suchRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 33]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   selective "filtering" helps to avoid congestion of a 6LoWPAN subnet   by IP multicast traffic from the traditional backbone IP network.4.4.  Networks Using MPL Forwarding without MLD   The MPL forwarding protocol [MCAST-MPL] can be used for propagation   of IPv6 multicast packets to all MPL Forwarders within a predefined   network domain, over multiple hops.  MPL is designed to work in LLNs.   In this section, it is again assumed that MLD is not implemented in   the network, for example, due to resource limitations in an LLN.   The purpose of MPL is to let a predefined group of Forwarders   collectively work towards the goal of distributing an IPv6 multicast   packet throughout an MPL Domain.  (A Forwarder node may be associated   to multiple MPL Domains at the same time.)  So, it would appear that   there is no need for CoAP servers to advertise their multicast group   membership, since any IP multicast packet that enters the MPL Domain   is distributed to all MPL Forwarders without regard to what multicast   addresses the individual nodes are listening to.   However, if an IP multicast request originates just outside the MPL   Domain, the request will not be propagated by MPL.  An example of   such a case is the network topology of Figure 1 where the subnets are   6LoWPAN subnets and for each 6LoWPAN subnet, one Realm-Local   ([RFC7346]) MPL Domain is defined.  The backbone network in this case   is not part of any MPL Domain.   This situation can become a problem in building control use cases,   for example, when the controller client needs to send a single IP   multicast request to the group Room-A-Lights.  By default, the   request would be blocked by Rtr-1 and by Rtr-2 and not enter the   Realm-Local MPL Domains associated to Subnet-1 and Subnet-2.  The   reason is that Rtr-1 and Rtr-2 do not have the knowledge that devices   in Subnet-1/2 want to listen for IP packets destined to IP multicast   group Room-A-Lights.   To solve the above issue, the following solutions could be applied:   1.  Extend the MPL Domain, e.g., in the above example, include the       network backbone to be part of each of the two MPL Domains.  Or,       in the above example, create just a single MPL Domain that       includes both 6LoWPAN subnets plus the backbone link, which is       possible since MPL is not tied to a single link-layer technology.   2.  Manual configuration of an edge router(s) as an MPL Seed(s) for       specific IP multicast traffic.  In the above example, this could       be done through the following three steps: First, configure Rtr-1       and Rtr-2 to act as MLD Address Listeners for the Room-A-LightsRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 34]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014       IP multicast group.  This step allows any (other) routers on the       backbone to learn that at least one node on the backbone link is       interested in receiving any IP multicast traffic to       Room-A-Lights.  Second, configure both routers to "inject" any IP       multicast packets destined to group Room-A-Lights into the       (Realm-Local) MPL Domain that is associated to that router.       Third, configure both routers to propagate any IPv6 multicast       packets originating from within their associated MPL Domain to       the backbone, if at least one node on the backbone has indicated       interest in receiving such IPv6 packets (for which MLD is used on       the backbone).   3.  Use an additional protocol/mechanism for injection of IP       multicast traffic from outside an MPL Domain into that MPL       Domain, based on IP multicast group subscriptions of Forwarders       within the MPL Domain.  Such a protocol is currently not defined       in [MCAST-MPL].   In conclusion, MPL can be used directly in case all sources of IP   multicast CoAP requests (CoAP clients) and also all the destinations   (CoAP servers) are inside a single MPL Domain.  Then, each source   node acts as an MPL Seed.  In all other cases, MPL can only be used   with additional protocols and/or configuration on how IP multicast   packets can be injected from outside into an MPL Domain.4.5.  6LoWPAN Specific Guidelines for the 6LBR   To support multi-subnet scenarios for CoAP group communication, it is   recommended that a 6LBR will act in an MLD router role on the   backbone link.  If this is not possible, then the 6LBR should be   configured to act as an MLD Multicast Address Listener (seeAppendix A) on the backbone link.5.  Security Considerations   This section describes the relevant security configuration for CoAP   group communication using IP multicast.  The threats to CoAP group   communication are also identified, and various approaches to mitigate   these threats are summarized.5.1.  Security Configuration   As defined in Sections8.1 and9.1 of [RFC7252], CoAP group   communication based on IP multicast will do the following:   o  Operate in CoAP NoSec (No Security) mode, until a future group      security solution is developed (see alsoSection 5.3.3).Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 35]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   o  Use the "coap" scheme.  The "coaps" scheme should only be used      when a future group security solution is developed (see alsoSection 5.3.3).   Essentially, the above configuration means that there is currently no   security at the CoAP layer for group communication.  Therefore, for   sensitive and mission-critical applications (e.g., health monitoring   systems and alarm monitoring systems), it is currently recommended to   deploy CoAP group communication with an application-layer security   mechanism (e.g., data object security) for improved security.   Application-level security has many desirable properties, including   maintaining security properties while forwarding traffic through   intermediaries (proxies).  Application-level security also tends to   more cleanly separate security from the dynamics of group membership   (e.g., the problem of distributing security keys across large groups   with many members that come and go).   Without application-layer security, CoAP group communication should   only be currently deployed in non-critical applications (e.g., read-   only temperature sensors).  Only when security solutions at the CoAP   layer are mature enough (seeSection 5.3.3) should CoAP group   communication without application-layer security be considered for   sensitive and mission-critical applications.5.2.  Threats   As noted above, there is currently no security at the CoAP layer for   group communication.  This is due to the fact that the current DTLS-   based approach for CoAP is exclusively unicast oriented and does not   support group security features such as group key exchange and group   authentication.  As a direct consequence of this, CoAP group   communication is vulnerable to all attacks mentioned inSection 11 of   [RFC7252] for IP multicast.5.3.  Threat MitigationSection 11 of [RFC7252] identifies various threat mitigation   techniques for CoAP group communication.  In addition to those   guidelines, it is recommended that for sensitive data or safety-   critical control, a combination of appropriate link-layer security   and administrative control of IP multicast boundaries should be used.   Some examples are given below.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 36]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20145.3.1.  WiFi Scenario   In a home automation scenario (using WiFi), the WiFi encryption   should be enabled to prevent rogue nodes from joining.  The Customer   Premises Equipment (CPE) that enables access to the Internet should   also have its IP multicast filters set so that it enforces multicast   scope boundaries to isolate local multicast groups from the rest of   the Internet (e.g., as per [RFC6092]).  In addition, the scope of the   IP multicast should be set to be site-local or smaller scope.  For   site-local scope, the CPE will be an appropriate multicast scope   boundary point.5.3.2.  6LoWPAN Scenario   In a building automation scenario, a particular room may have a   single 6LoWPAN network with a single edge router (6LBR).  Nodes on   the subnet can use link-layer encryption to prevent rogue nodes from   joining.  The 6LBR can be configured so that it blocks any incoming   (6LoWPAN-bound) IP multicast traffic.  Another example topology could   be a multi-subnet 6LoWPAN in a large conference room.  In this case,   the backbone can implement port authentication (IEEE 802.1X) to   ensure only authorized devices can join the Ethernet backbone.  The   access router to this secured network segment can also be configured   to block incoming IP multicast traffic.5.3.3.  Future Evolution   In the future, to further mitigate the threats, security enhancements   need to be developed at the IETF for group communications.  This will   allow introduction of a secure mode of CoAP group communication and   use of the "coaps" scheme for that purpose.   At the time of writing this specification, there are various   approaches being considered for security enhancements for group   communications.  Specifically, a lot of the current effort at the   IETF is geared towards developing DTLS-based group communication.   This is primarily motivated by the fact that unicast CoAP security is   DTLS based (Section 9.1 of [RFC7252].  For example, [MCAST-SECURITY]   proposes DTLS-based IP multicast security.  However, it is too early   to conclude if this is the best approach.  Alternatively,   [IPSEC-PAYLOAD] proposes IPsec-based IP multicast security.  This   approach also needs further investigation and validation.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 37]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20145.4.  Monitoring Considerations5.4.1.  General Monitoring   CoAP group communication is meant to be used to control a set of   related devices (e.g., simultaneously turn on all the lights in a   room).  This intrinsically exposes the group to some unique   monitoring risks that solitary devices (i.e., devices not in a group)   are not as vulnerable to.  For example, assume an attacker is able to   physically see a set of lights turn on in a room.  Then the attacker   can correlate a CoAP group communication message to that easily   observable coordinated group action even if the contents of the   message are encrypted by a future security solution (seeSection 5.3.3).  This will give the attacker side-channel information   to plan further attacks (e.g., by determining the members of the   group, then some network topology information may be deduced).   One mitigation to group communication monitoring risks that should be   explored in the future is methods to decorrelate coordinated group   actions.  For example, if a CoAP group communication GET is sent to   all the alarm sensors in a house, then their (unicast) responses   should be as decorrelated as possible.  This will introduce greater   entropy into the system and will make it harder for an attacker to   monitor and gather side-channel information.5.4.2.  Pervasive Monitoring   A key additional threat consideration for group communication is   pointed to by [RFC7258], which warns of the dangers of pervasive   monitoring.  CoAP group communication solutions that are built on top   of IP multicast need to pay particular heed to these dangers.  This   is because IP multicast is easier to intercept (e.g., and to secretly   record) compared to unicast traffic.  Also, CoAP traffic is meant for   the Internet of Things.  This means that CoAP traffic (once future   security solutions are developed as inSection 5.3.3) may be used for   the control and monitoring of critical infrastructure (e.g., lights,   alarms, etc.) that may be prime targets for attack.   For example, an attacker may attempt to record all the CoAP traffic   going over the smart grid (i.e., networked electrical utility) of a   country and try to determine critical nodes for further attacks.  For   example, the source node (controller) sends out the CoAP group   communication messages.  CoAP multicast traffic is inherently more   vulnerable (compared to a unicast packet) as the same packet may be   replicated over many links, so there is a much higher probability of   it getting captured by a pervasive monitoring system.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 38]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   One useful mitigation to pervasive monitoring is to restrict the   scope of the IP multicast to the minimal scope that fulfills the   application need.  Thus, for example, site-local IP multicast scope   is always preferred over global scope IP multicast if this fulfills   the application needs.  This approach has the added advantage that it   coincides with the guidelines for minimizing congestion control (seeSection 2.8).   In the future, even if all the CoAP multicast traffic is encrypted,   an attacker may still attempt to capture the traffic and perform an   off-line attack, though of course having the multicast traffic   protected is always desirable as it significantly raises the cost to   an attacker (e.g., to break the encryption) versus unprotected   multicast traffic.6.  IANA Considerations6.1.  New 'core.gp' Resource Type   This memo registers a new Resource Type (rt=) Link Target Attribute,   'core.gp', in the "Resource Type (rt=) Link Target Attribute Values"   subregistry under the "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE)   Parameters" registry.   Attribute Value: core.gp   Description: Group Configuration resource.  This resource is used to   query/manage the group membership of a CoAP server.   Reference: SeeSection 2.6.2.6.2.  New 'coap-group+json' Internet Media Type   This memo registers a new Internet media type for the CoAP Group   Configuration resource called 'application/coap-group+json'.   Type name: application   Subtype name: coap-group+json   Required parameters: None   Optional parameters: None   Encoding considerations: 8-bit UTF-8.   JSON to be represented using UTF-8, which is 8-bit compatible (and   most efficient for resource constrained implementations).Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 39]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   Security considerations:   Denial-of-Service attacks could be performed by constantly   (re-)setting the Group Configuration resource of a CoAP endpoint to   different values.  This will cause the endpoint to register (or   deregister) from the related IP multicast group.  To prevent this, it   is recommended that a form of authorization (making use of unicast   DTLS-secured CoAP) be used such that only authorized controllers are   allowed by an endpoint to configure its group membership.   Interoperability considerations: None   Published specification:RFC 7390   Applications that use this media type:   CoAP client and server implementations that wish to set/read the   Group Configuration resource via the 'application/coap-group+json'   payload as described inSection 2.6.2.   Fragment identifier considerations: N/A   Additional Information:      Deprecated alias names for this type: None      Magic number(s): None      File extension(s): *.json      Macintosh file type code(s): TEXT   Person and email address to contact for further information:      Esko Dijk ("Esko.Dijk@Philips.com")   Intended usage: COMMON   Restrictions on usage: None   Author: CoRE WG   Change controller: IETF   Provisional registration? (standards tree only): N/ARahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 40]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 20147.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for              specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",RFC 2782,              February 2000, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2782>.   [RFC3376]  Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.              Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version              3",RFC 3376, October 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3376>.   [RFC3433]  Bierman, A., Romascanu, D., and K. Norseth, "Entity Sensor              Management Information Base",RFC 3433, December 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3433>.   [RFC3542]  Stevens, W., Thomas, M., Nordmark, E., and T. Jinmei,              "Advanced Sockets Application Program Interface (API) for              IPv6",RFC 3542, May 2003,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3542>.   [RFC3810]  Vida, R. and L. Costa, "Multicast Listener Discovery              Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6",RFC 3810, June 2004,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3810>.   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC3986, January 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.   [RFC4291]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing              Architecture",RFC 4291, February 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4291>.   [RFC4601]  Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., and I. Kouvelas,              "Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM):              Protocol Specification (Revised)",RFC 4601, August 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4601>.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 41]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   [RFC4919]  Kushalnagar, N., Montenegro, G., and C. Schumacher, "IPv6              over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks (6LoWPANs):              Overview, Assumptions, Problem Statement, and Goals",RFC4919, August 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4919>.   [RFC4944]  Montenegro, G., Kushalnagar, N., Hui, J., and D. Culler,              "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over IEEE 802.15.4              Networks",RFC 4944, September 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4944>.   [RFC5110]  Savola, P., "Overview of the Internet Multicast Routing              Architecture",RFC 5110, January 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5110>.   [RFC5771]  Cotton, M., Vegoda, L., and D. Meyer, "IANA Guidelines for              IPv4 Multicast Address Assignments",BCP 51,RFC 5771,              March 2010, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5771>.   [RFC5952]  Kawamura, S. and M. Kawashima, "A Recommendation for IPv6              Address Text Representation",RFC 5952, August 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5952>.   [RFC6092]  Woodyatt, J., "Recommended Simple Security Capabilities in              Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) for Providing              Residential IPv6 Internet Service",RFC 6092, January              2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6092>.   [RFC6550]  Winter, T., Thubert, P., Brandt, A., Hui, J., Kelsey, R.,              Levis, P., Pister, K., Struik, R., Vasseur, JP., and R.              Alexander, "RPL: IPv6 Routing Protocol for Low-Power and              Lossy Networks",RFC 6550, March 2012,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6550>.   [RFC6636]  Asaeda, H., Liu, H., and Q. Wu, "Tuning the Behavior of              the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and              Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) for Routers in Mobile              and Wireless Networks",RFC 6636, May 2012,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6636>.   [RFC6690]  Shelby, Z., "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) Link              Format",RFC 6690, August 2012,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6690>.   [RFC6763]  Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "DNS-Based Service              Discovery",RFC 6763, February 2013,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6763>.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 42]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   [RFC6775]  Shelby, Z., Chakrabarti, S., Nordmark, E., and C. Bormann,              "Neighbor Discovery Optimization for IPv6 over Low-Power              Wireless Personal Area Networks (6LoWPANs)",RFC 6775,              November 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6775>.   [RFC7159]  Bray, T., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data              Interchange Format",RFC 7159, March 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7159>.   [RFC7230]  Fielding, R. and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol              (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",RFC 7230, June              2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.   [RFC7252]  Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7252, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.   [RFC7258]  Farrell, S. and H. Tschofenig, "Pervasive Monitoring Is an              Attack",BCP 188,RFC 7258, May 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7258>.   [RFC7320]  Nottingham, M., "URI Design and Ownership",BCP 190,RFC7320, July 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7320>.7.2.  Informative References   [RFC1033]  Lottor, M., "Domain administrators operations guide",RFC1033, November 1987,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1033>.   [RFC4605]  Fenner, B., He, H., Haberman, B., and H. Sandick,              "Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) / Multicast              Listener Discovery (MLD)-Based Multicast Forwarding              ("IGMP/MLD Proxying")",RFC 4605, August 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4605>.   [RFC5740]  Adamson, B., Bormann, C., Handley, M., and J. Macker,              "NACK-Oriented Reliable Multicast (NORM) Transport              Protocol",RFC 5740, November 2009,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5740>.   [RFC7346]  Droms, R., "IPv6 Multicast Address Scopes",RFC 7346,              August 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7346>.   [BLOCKWISE-CoAP]              Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby,"Blockwise transfers in CoAP",              Work in Progress,draft-ietf-core-block-15, July 2014.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 43]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014   [CoRE-RD]  Shelby, Z., Bormann, C., and S. Krco, "CoRE Resource              Directory", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-core-resource-directory-01, December 2013.   [OBSERVE-CoAP]              Hartke, K.,"Observing Resources in CoAP", Work in              Progress,draft-ietf-core-observe-14, June 2014.   [MCAST-MPL]              Hui, J. and R. Kelsey, "Multicast Protocol for Low power              and Lossy Networks (MPL)", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-roll-trickle-mcast-09, April 2014.   [MCAST-SECURITY]              Keoh, S., Kumar, S., Garcia-Morchon, O., Dijk, E., and A.              Rahman, "DTLS-based Multicast Security in Constrained              Environments", Work in Progress,draft-keoh-dice-multicast-security-08, July 2014.   [IPSEC-PAYLOAD]              Migault, D. and C. Bormann, "IPsec/ESP for Application              Payload", Work in Progress,draft-mglt-dice-ipsec-for-application-payload-00, July 2014.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 44]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014Appendix A.  Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD)   In order to extend the scope of IP multicast beyond link-local scope,   an IP multicast routing or forwarding protocol has to be active in   routers on an LLN.  To achieve efficient IP multicast routing (i.e.,   avoid always flooding IP multicast packets), routers have to learn   which hosts need to receive packets addressed to specific IP   multicast destinations.   The MLD protocol [RFC3810] (or its IPv4 equivalent, IGMP [RFC3376])   is today the method of choice used by a (IP multicast-enabled) router   to discover the presence of IP multicast listeners on directly   attached links, and to discover which IP multicast addresses are of   interest to those listening nodes.  MLD was specifically designed to   cope with fairly dynamic situations in which IP multicast listeners   may join and leave at any time.   Optimal tuning of the parameters of MLD/IGMP for routers for mobile   and wireless networks is discussed in [RFC6636].  These guidelines   may be useful when implementing MLD in LLNs.Acknowledgements   Thanks to Jari Arkko, Peter Bigot, Anders Brandt, Ben Campbell,   Angelo Castellani, Alissa Cooper, Spencer Dawkins, Badis Djamaa,   Adrian Farrel, Stephen Farrell, Thomas Fossati, Brian Haberman,   Bjoern Hoehrmann, Matthias Kovatsch, Guang Lu, Salvatore Loreto,   Kerry Lynn, Andrew McGregor, Kathleen Moriarty, Pete Resnick, Dale   Seed, Zach Shelby, Martin Stiemerling, Peter van der Stok, Gengyu   Wei, and Juan Carlos Zuniga for their helpful comments and   discussions that have helped shape this document.   Special thanks to Carsten Bormann and Barry Leiba for their extensive   and thoughtful Chair and AD reviews of the document.  Their reviews   helped to immeasurably improve the document quality.Rahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 45]

RFC 7390              Group Communication for CoAP          October 2014Authors' Addresses   Akbar Rahman (editor)   InterDigital Communications, LLC   1000 Sherbrooke Street West   Montreal, Quebec  H3A 3G4   Canada   EMail: Akbar.Rahman@InterDigital.com   Esko Dijk (editor)   Philips Research   High Tech Campus 34   Eindhoven  5656AE   Netherlands   EMail: esko.dijk@philips.comRahman & Dijk                 Experimental                     [Page 46]

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