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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:8974
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        C. BormannRequest for Comments: 8323                       Universitaet Bremen TZIUpdates:7641,7959                                             S. LemayCategory: Standards Track                             Zebra TechnologiesISSN: 2070-1721                                            H. Tschofenig                                                                ARM Ltd.                                                               K. Hartke                                                 Universitaet Bremen TZI                                                           B. Silverajan                                        Tampere University of Technology                                                          B. Raymor, Ed.                                                           February 2018CoAP (Constrained Application Protocol) over TCP, TLS, and WebSocketsAbstract   The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP), although inspired by   HTTP, was designed to use UDP instead of TCP.  The message layer of   CoAP over UDP includes support for reliable delivery, simple   congestion control, and flow control.   Some environments benefit from the availability of CoAP carried over   reliable transports such as TCP or Transport Layer Security (TLS).   This document outlines the changes required to use CoAP over TCP,   TLS, and WebSockets transports.  It also formally updatesRFC 7641   for use with these transports andRFC 7959 to enable the use of   larger messages over a reliable transport.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttps://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8323.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2018 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   (https://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 ....................................................32. Conventions and Terminology .....................................63. CoAP over TCP ...................................................73.1. Messaging Model ............................................73.2. Message Format .............................................93.3. Message Transmission ......................................113.4. Connection Health .........................................124. CoAP over WebSockets ...........................................134.1. Opening Handshake .........................................154.2. Message Format ............................................154.3. Message Transmission ......................................164.4. Connection Health .........................................175. Signaling ......................................................175.1. Signaling Codes ...........................................175.2. Signaling Option Numbers ..................................185.3. Capabilities and Settings Messages (CSMs) .................185.4. Ping and Pong Messages ....................................205.5. Release Messages ..........................................215.6. Abort Messages ............................................235.7. Signaling Examples ........................................246. Block-Wise Transfer and Reliable Transports ....................256.1. Example: GET with BERT Blocks .............................276.2. Example: PUT with BERT Blocks .............................277. Observing Resources over Reliable Transports ...................287.1. Notifications and Reordering ..............................287.2. Transmission and Acknowledgments ..........................287.3. Freshness .................................................287.4. Cancellation ..............................................29Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20188. CoAP over Reliable Transport URIs ..............................298.1. coap+tcp URI Scheme .......................................308.2. coaps+tcp URI Scheme ......................................318.3. coap+ws URI Scheme ........................................328.4. coaps+ws URI Scheme .......................................338.5. Uri-Host and Uri-Port Options .............................338.6. Decomposing URIs into Options .............................348.7. Composing URIs from Options ...............................359. Securing CoAP ..................................................359.1. TLS Binding for CoAP over TCP .............................369.2. TLS Usage for CoAP over WebSockets ........................3710. Security Considerations .......................................3710.1. Signaling Messages .......................................3711. IANA Considerations ...........................................3811.1. Signaling Codes ..........................................3811.2. CoAP Signaling Option Numbers Registry ...................3811.3. Service Name and Port Number Registration ................4011.4. Secure Service Name and Port Number Registration .........4011.5. URI Scheme Registration ..................................4111.6. Well-Known URI Suffix Registration .......................4311.7. ALPN Protocol Identifier .................................4411.8. WebSocket Subprotocol Registration .......................4411.9. CoAP Option Numbers Registry .............................4412. References ....................................................4512.1. Normative References .....................................4512.2. Informative References ...................................47Appendix A. Examples of CoAP over WebSockets ......................49   Acknowledgments ...................................................52   Contributors ......................................................52   Authors' Addresses ................................................531.  Introduction   The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) [RFC7252] was designed   for Internet of Things (IoT) deployments, assuming that UDP [RFC768]   can be used unimpeded as can the Datagram Transport Layer Security   (DTLS) protocol [RFC6347] over UDP.  The use of CoAP over UDP is   focused on simplicity, has a low code footprint, and has a small   over-the-wire message size.   The primary reason for introducing CoAP over TCP [RFC793] and TLS   [RFC5246] is that some networks do not forward UDP packets.  Complete   blocking of UDP happens in between about 2% and 4% of terrestrial   access networks, according to [EK2016].  UDP impairment is especially   concentrated in enterprise networks and networks in geographic   regions with otherwise challenged connectivity.  Some networks alsoBormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   rate-limit UDP traffic, as reported in [BK2015], and deployment   investigations related to the standardization of Quick UDP Internet   Connections (QUIC) revealed numbers around 0.3% [SW2016].   The introduction of CoAP over TCP also leads to some additional   effects that may be desirable in a specific deployment:   o  Where NATs are present along the communication path, CoAP over TCP      leads to different NAT traversal behavior than CoAP over UDP.      NATs often calculate expiration timers based on the      transport-layer protocol being used by application protocols.      Many NATs maintain TCP-based NAT bindings for longer periods based      on the assumption that a transport-layer protocol, such as TCP,      offers additional information about the session lifecycle.  UDP,      on the other hand, does not provide such information to a NAT and      timeouts tend to be much shorter [HomeGateway].  According to      [HomeGateway], the mean for TCP and UDP NAT binding timeouts is      386 minutes (TCP) and 160 seconds (UDP).  Shorter timeout values      require keepalive messages to be sent more frequently.  Hence, the      use of CoAP over TCP requires less-frequent transmission of      keepalive messages.   o  TCP utilizes mechanisms for congestion control and flow control      that are more sophisticated than the default mechanisms provided      by CoAP over UDP; these TCP mechanisms are useful for the transfer      of larger payloads.  (However, work is ongoing to add advanced      congestion control to CoAP over UDP as well; see [CoCoA].)   Note that the use of CoAP over UDP (and CoAP over DTLS over UDP) is   still the recommended transport for use in constrained node networks,   particularly when used in concert with block-wise transfer.  CoAP   over TCP is applicable for those cases where the networking   infrastructure leaves no other choice.  The use of CoAP over TCP   leads to a larger code size, more round trips, increased RAM   requirements, and larger packet sizes.  Developers implementing CoAP   over TCP are encouraged to consult [TCP-in-IoT] for guidance on   low-footprint TCP implementations for IoT devices.   Standards based on CoAP, such as Lightweight Machine to Machine   [LWM2M], currently use CoAP over UDP as a transport; adding support   for CoAP over TCP enables them to address the issues above for   specific deployments and to protect investments in existing CoAP   implementations and deployments.   Although HTTP/2 could also potentially address the need for   enterprise firewall traversal, there would be additional costs and   delays introduced by such a transition from CoAP to HTTP/2.   Currently, there are also fewer HTTP/2 implementations available forBormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   constrained devices in comparison to CoAP.  Since CoAP also supports   group communication using IP-layer multicast and unreliable   communication, IoT devices would have to support HTTP/2 in addition   to CoAP.   Furthermore, CoAP may be integrated into a web environment where the   front end uses CoAP over UDP from IoT devices to a cloud   infrastructure and then CoAP over TCP between the back-end services.   A TCP-to-UDP gateway can be used at the cloud boundary to communicate   with the UDP-based IoT device.   Finally, CoAP applications running inside a web browser may be   without access to connectivity other than HTTP.  In this case, the   WebSocket Protocol [RFC6455] may be used to transport CoAP requests   and responses, as opposed to cross-proxying them via HTTP to an   HTTP-to-CoAP cross-proxy.  This preserves the functionality of CoAP   without translation -- in particular, the Observe Option [RFC7641].   To address the above-mentioned deployment requirements, this document   defines how to transport CoAP over TCP, CoAP over TLS, and CoAP over   WebSockets.  For these cases, the reliability offered by the   transport protocol subsumes the reliability functions of the message   layer used for CoAP over UDP.  (Note that for both a reliable   transport and the message layer for CoAP over UDP, the reliability   offered is per transport hop: where proxies -- see Sections5.7 and   10 of [RFC7252] -- are involved, that layer's reliability function   does not extend end to end.)  Figure 1 illustrates the layering:     +--------------------------------+     |          Application           |     +--------------------------------+     +--------------------------------+     |  Requests/Responses/Signaling  |  CoAP (RFC 7252) / This Document     |--------------------------------|     |        Message Framing         |  This Document     +--------------------------------+     |      Reliable Transport        |     +--------------------------------+            Figure 1: Layering of CoAP over Reliable Transports   This document specifies how to access resources using CoAP requests   and responses over the TCP, TLS, and WebSocket protocols.  This   allows connectivity-limited applications to obtain end-to-end CoAP   connectivity either (1) by communicating CoAP directly with a CoAP   server accessible over a TCP, TLS, or WebSocket connection or (2) via   a CoAP intermediary that proxies CoAP requests and responses between   different transports, such as between WebSockets and UDP.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018Section 7 updates [RFC7641] ("Observing Resources in the Constrained   Application Protocol (CoAP)") for use with CoAP over reliable   transports.  [RFC7641] is an extension to CoAP that enables CoAP   clients to "observe" a resource on a CoAP server.  (The CoAP client   retrieves a representation of a resource and registers to be notified   by the CoAP server when the representation is updated.)2.  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 inBCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all   capitals, as shown here.   This document assumes that readers are familiar with the terms and   concepts that are used in [RFC6455], [RFC7252], [RFC7641], and   [RFC7959].   The term "reliable transport" is used only to refer to transport   protocols, such as TCP, that provide reliable and ordered delivery of   a byte stream.   Block-wise Extension for Reliable Transport (BERT):      Extends [RFC7959] to enable the use of larger messages over a      reliable transport.   BERT Option:      A Block1 or Block2 option that includes an SZX (block size)      value of 7.   BERT Block:      The payload of a CoAP message that is affected by a BERT Option in      descriptive usage (seeSection 2.1 of [RFC7959]).   Transport Connection:      Underlying reliable byte-stream connection, as directly provided      by TCP or indirectly provided via TLS or WebSockets.   Connection:      Transport Connection, unless explicitly qualified otherwise.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Connection Initiator:      The peer that opens a Transport Connection, i.e., the TCP active      opener, TLS client, or WebSocket client.   Connection Acceptor:      The peer that accepts the Transport Connection opened by the other      peer, i.e., the TCP passive opener, TLS server, or WebSocket      server.3.  CoAP over TCP   The request/response interaction model of CoAP over TCP is the same   as CoAP over UDP.  The primary differences are in the message layer.   The message layer of CoAP over UDP supports optional reliability by   defining four types of messages: Confirmable, Non-confirmable,   Acknowledgment, and Reset.  In addition, messages include a   Message ID to relate Acknowledgments to Confirmable messages and to   detect duplicate messages.   Management of the transport connections is left to the application,   i.e., the present specification does not describe how an application   decides to open a connection or to reopen another one in the presence   of failures (or what it would deem to be a failure; see alsoSection 5.4).  In particular, the Connection Initiator need not be   the client of the first request placed on the connection.  Some   implementations will want to implement dynamic connection management   similar to the technique described inSection 6 of [RFC7230] for   HTTP: opening a connection when the first client request is ready to   be sent, reusing that connection for subsequent messages until no   more messages are sent for a certain time period and no requests are   outstanding (possibly with a configurable idle time), and then   starting a release process (orderly shutdown) (seeSection 5.5).  In   implementations of this kind, connection releases or aborts may not   be indicated as errors to the application but may simply be handled   by automatic reconnection once the need arises again.  Other   implementations may be based on configured connections that are kept   open continuously and lead to management system notifications on   release or abort.  The protocol defined in the present specification   is intended to work with either model (or other, application-specific   connection management models).3.1.  Messaging Model   Conceptually, CoAP over TCP replaces most of the message layer of   CoAP over UDP with a framing mechanism on top of the byte stream   provided by TCP/TLS, conveying the length information for each   message that, on datagram transports, is provided by the UDP/DTLS   datagram layer.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   TCP ensures reliable message transmission, so the message layer of   CoAP over TCP is not required to support Acknowledgment messages or   to detect duplicate messages.  As a result, both the Type and   Message ID fields are no longer required and are removed from the   message format for CoAP over TCP.   Figure 2 illustrates the difference between CoAP over UDP and CoAP   over reliable transports.  The removed Type and Message ID fields are   indicated by dashes.      CoAP Client       CoAP Server     CoAP Client       CoAP Server          |                    |            |                    |          |   CON [0xbc90]     |            | (-------) [------] |          | GET /temperature   |            | GET /temperature   |          |   (Token 0x71)     |            |   (Token 0x71)     |          +------------------->|            +------------------->|          |                    |            |                    |          |   ACK [0xbc90]     |            | (-------) [------] |          |   2.05 Content     |            |   2.05 Content     |          |   (Token 0x71)     |            |   (Token 0x71)     |          |     "22.5 C"       |            |     "22.5 C"       |          |<-------------------+            |<-------------------+          |                    |            |                    |              CoAP over UDP                   CoAP over reliable                                                  transports     Figure 2: Comparison between CoAP over Unreliable Transports and                       CoAP over Reliable TransportsBormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20183.2.  Message Format   The CoAP message format defined in [RFC7252], as shown in Figure 3,   relies on the datagram transport (UDP, or DTLS over UDP) for keeping   the individual messages separate and for providing length   information.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |Ver| T |  TKL  |      Code     |          Message ID           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   Token (if any, TKL bytes) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   Options (if any) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1|    Payload (if any) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+           Figure 3: CoAP Message Format as Defined inRFC 7252   The message format for CoAP over TCP is very similar to the format   specified for CoAP over UDP.  The differences are as follows:   o  Since the underlying TCP connection provides retransmissions and      deduplication, there is no need for the reliability mechanisms      provided by CoAP over UDP.  The Type (T) and Message ID fields in      the CoAP message header are elided.   o  The Version (Vers) field is elided as well.  In contrast to the      message format of CoAP over UDP, the message format for CoAP over      TCP does not include a version number.  CoAP is defined in      [RFC7252] with a version number of 1.  At this time, there is no      known reason to support version numbers different from 1.  If      version negotiation needs to be addressed in the future,      Capabilities and Settings Messages (CSMs) (seeSection 5.3) have      been specifically designed to enable such a potential feature.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   o  In a stream-oriented transport protocol such as TCP, a form of      message delimitation is needed.  For this purpose, CoAP over TCP      introduces a length field with variable size.  Figure 4 shows the      adjusted CoAP message format with a modified structure for the      fixed header (first 4 bytes of the header for CoAP over UDP),      which includes the length information of variable size.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |  Len  |  TKL  | Extended Length (if any, as chosen by Len) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      Code     | Token (if any, TKL bytes) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |  Options (if any) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1|    Payload (if any) ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+               Figure 4: CoAP Frame for Reliable Transports   Length (Len):  4-bit unsigned integer.  A value between 0 and 12      inclusive indicates the length of the message in bytes, starting      with the first bit of the Options field.  Three values are      reserved for special constructs:      13:  An 8-bit unsigned integer (Extended Length) follows the         initial byte and indicates the length of options/payload         minus 13.      14:  A 16-bit unsigned integer (Extended Length) in network byte         order follows the initial byte and indicates the length of         options/payload minus 269.      15:  A 32-bit unsigned integer (Extended Length) in network byte         order follows the initial byte and indicates the length of         options/payload minus 65805.   The encoding of the Length field is modeled after the Option Length   field of the CoAP Options (seeSection 3.1 of [RFC7252]).   For simplicity, a Payload Marker (0xFF) is shown in Figure 4; the   Payload Marker indicates the start of the optional payload and is   absent for zero-length payloads (seeSection 3 of [RFC7252]).  (If   present, the Payload Marker is included in the message length, which   counts from the start of the Options field to the end of the Payload   field.)Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   For example, a CoAP message just containing a 2.03 code with the   Token 7f and no options or payload is encoded as shown in Figure 5.    0                   1                   2    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      0x01     |      0x43     |      0x7f     |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    Len   =    0 ------>  0x01    TKL   =    1 ___/    Code  =  2.03     --> 0x43    Token =               0x7f             Figure 5: CoAP Message with No Options or Payload   The semantics of the other CoAP header fields are left unchanged.3.3.  Message Transmission   Once a Transport Connection is established, each endpoint MUST send a   CSM (seeSection 5.3) as its first message on the connection.  This   message establishes the initial settings and capabilities for the   endpoint, such as maximum message size or support for block-wise   transfers.  The absence of options in the CSM indicates that base   values are assumed.   To avoid a deadlock, the Connection Initiator MUST NOT wait for the   Connection Acceptor to send its initial CSM before sending its own   initial CSM.  Conversely, the Connection Acceptor MAY wait for the   Connection Initiator to send its initial CSM before sending its own   initial CSM.   To avoid unnecessary latency, a Connection Initiator MAY send   additional messages after its initial CSM without waiting to receive   the Connection Acceptor's CSM; however, it is important to note that   the Connection Acceptor's CSM might indicate capabilities that impact   how the Connection Initiator is expected to communicate with the   Connection Acceptor.  For example, the Connection Acceptor's CSM   could indicate a Max-Message-Size Option (seeSection 5.3.1) that is   smaller than the base value (1152) in order to limit both buffering   requirements and head-of-line blocking.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Endpoints MUST treat a missing or invalid CSM as a connection error   and abort the connection (seeSection 5.6).   CoAP requests and responses are exchanged asynchronously over the   Transport Connection.  A CoAP client can send multiple requests   without waiting for a response, and the CoAP server can return   responses in any order.  Responses MUST be returned over the same   connection as the originating request.  Each concurrent request is   differentiated by its Token, which is scoped locally to the   connection.   The Transport Connection is bidirectional, so requests can be sent by   both the entity that established the connection (Connection   Initiator) and the remote host (Connection Acceptor).  If one side   does not implement a CoAP server, an error response MUST be returned   for all CoAP requests from the other side.  The simplest approach is   to always return 5.01 (Not Implemented).  A more elaborate mock   server could also return 4.xx responses such as 4.04 (Not Found) or   4.02 (Bad Option) where appropriate.   Retransmission and deduplication of messages are provided by TCP.3.4.  Connection Health   Empty messages (Code 0.00) can always be sent and MUST be ignored by   the recipient.  This provides a basic keepalive function that can   refresh NAT bindings.   If a CoAP client does not receive any response for some time after   sending a CoAP request (or, similarly, when a client observes a   resource and it does not receive any notification for some time), it   can send a CoAP Ping Signaling message (seeSection 5.4) to test the   Transport Connection and verify that the CoAP server is responsive.   When the underlying Transport Connection is closed or reset, the   signaling state and any observation state (seeSection 7.4)   associated with the connection are removed.  Messages that are   in flight may or may not be lost.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20184.  CoAP over WebSockets   CoAP over WebSockets is intentionally similar to CoAP over TCP;   therefore, this section only specifies the differences between the   transports.   CoAP over WebSockets can be used in a number of configurations.  The   most basic configuration is a CoAP client retrieving or updating a   CoAP resource located on a CoAP server that exposes a WebSocket   endpoint (see Figure 6).  The CoAP client acts as the WebSocket   client, establishes a WebSocket connection, and sends a CoAP request,   to which the CoAP server returns a CoAP response.  The WebSocket   connection can be used for any number of requests.            ___________                            ___________           |           |                          |           |           |          _|___      requests      ___|_          |           |   CoAP  /  \  \  ------------->  /  /  \  CoAP   |           |  Client \__/__/  <-------------  \__\__/ Server  |           |           |         responses        |           |           |___________|                          |___________|                   WebSocket  =============>  WebSocket                     Client     Connection     Server       Figure 6: CoAP Client (WebSocket Client) Accesses CoAP Server                            (WebSocket Server)   The challenge with this configuration is how to identify a resource   in the namespace of the CoAP server.  When the WebSocket Protocol is   used by a dedicated client directly (i.e., not from a web page   through a web browser), the client can connect to any WebSocket   endpoint.  Sections8.3 and8.4 define new URI schemes that enable   the client to identify both a WebSocket endpoint and the path and   query of the CoAP resource within that endpoint.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Another possible configuration is to set up a CoAP forward proxy at   the WebSocket endpoint.  Depending on what transports are available   to the proxy, it could forward the request to a CoAP server with a   CoAP UDP endpoint (Figure 7), an SMS endpoint (a.k.a. mobile phone),   or even another WebSocket endpoint.  The CoAP client specifies the   resource to be updated or retrieved in the Proxy-Uri Option.     ___________                ___________                ___________    |           |              |           |              |           |    |          _|___        ___|_         _|___        ___|_          |    |   CoAP  /  \  \ ---> /  /  \ CoAP  /  \  \ ---> /  /  \  CoAP   |    |  Client \__/__/ <--- \__\__/ Proxy \__/__/ <--- \__\__/ Server  |    |           |              |           |              |           |    |___________|              |___________|              |___________|            WebSocket ===> WebSocket      UDP            UDP              Client        Server      Client          Server       Figure 7: CoAP Client (WebSocket Client) Accesses CoAP Server       (UDP Server) via a CoAP Proxy (WebSocket Server / UDP Client)   A third possible configuration is a CoAP server running inside a web   browser (Figure 8).  The web browser initially connects to a   WebSocket endpoint and is then reachable through the WebSocket   server.  When no connection exists, the CoAP server is unreachable.   Because the WebSocket server is the only way to reach the CoAP   server, the CoAP proxy should be a reverse-proxy.     ___________                ___________                ___________    |           |              |           |              |           |    |          _|___        ___|_         _|___        ___|_          |    |   CoAP  /  \  \ ---> /  /  \ CoAP  /  /  \ ---> /  \  \  CoAP   |    |  Client \__/__/ <--- \__\__/ Proxy \__\__/ <--- \__/__/ Server  |    |           |              |           |              |           |    |___________|              |___________|              |___________|               UDP            UDP      WebSocket <=== WebSocket             Client          Server      Server        Client    Figure 8: CoAP Client (UDP Client) Accesses CoAP Server (WebSocket         Client) via a CoAP Proxy (UDP Server / WebSocket Server)   Further configurations are possible, including those where a   WebSocket connection is established through an HTTP proxy.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20184.1.  Opening Handshake   Before CoAP requests and responses are exchanged, a WebSocket   connection is established as defined inSection 4 of [RFC6455].   Figure 9 shows an example.   The WebSocket client MUST include the subprotocol name "coap" in the   list of protocols; this indicates support for the protocol defined in   this document.   The WebSocket client includes the hostname of the WebSocket server in   the Host header field of its handshake as per [RFC6455].  The Host   header field also indicates the default value of the Uri-Host Option   in requests from the WebSocket client to the WebSocket server.            GET /.well-known/coap HTTP/1.1            Host: example.org            Upgrade: websocket            Connection: Upgrade            Sec-WebSocket-Key: dGhlIHNhbXBsZSBub25jZQ==            Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: coap            Sec-WebSocket-Version: 13            HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols            Upgrade: websocket            Connection: Upgrade            Sec-WebSocket-Accept: s3pPLMBiTxaQ9kYGzzhZRbK+xOo=            Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: coap                 Figure 9: Example of an Opening Handshake4.2.  Message Format   Once a WebSocket connection is established, CoAP requests and   responses can be exchanged as WebSocket messages.  Since CoAP uses a   binary message format, the messages are transmitted in binary data   frames as specified in Sections5 and6 of [RFC6455].Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   The message format shown in Figure 10 is the same as the message   format for CoAP over TCP (seeSection 3.2), with one change: the   Length (Len) field MUST be set to zero, because the WebSocket frame   contains the length.      0                   1                   2                   3      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     | Len=0 |  TKL  |      Code     |    Token (TKL bytes) ...     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |   Options (if any) ...     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1|    Payload (if any) ...     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+              Figure 10: CoAP Message Format over WebSockets   As with CoAP over TCP, the message format for CoAP over WebSockets   eliminates the Version field defined in CoAP over UDP.  If CoAP   version negotiation is required in the future, CoAP over WebSockets   can address the requirement by defining a new subprotocol identifier   that is negotiated during the opening handshake.   Requests and responses can be fragmented as specified inSection 5.4   of [RFC6455], though typically they are sent unfragmented, as they   tend to be small and fully buffered before transmission.  The   WebSocket Protocol does not provide means for multiplexing.  If it is   not desirable for a large message to monopolize the connection,   requests and responses can be transferred in a block-wise fashion as   defined in [RFC7959].4.3.  Message Transmission   As with CoAP over TCP, each endpoint MUST send a CSM (seeSection 5.3) as its first message on the WebSocket connection.   CoAP requests and responses are exchanged asynchronously over the   WebSocket connection.  A CoAP client can send multiple requests   without waiting for a response, and the CoAP server can return   responses in any order.  Responses MUST be returned over the same   connection as the originating request.  Each concurrent request is   differentiated by its Token, which is scoped locally to the   connection.   The connection is bidirectional, so requests can be sent by both the   entity that established the connection and the remote host.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   As with CoAP over TCP, retransmission and deduplication of messages   are provided by the WebSocket Protocol.  CoAP over WebSockets   therefore does not make a distinction between Confirmable messages   and Non-confirmable messages and does not provide Acknowledgment or   Reset messages.4.4.  Connection Health   As with CoAP over TCP, a CoAP client can test the health of the   connection for CoAP over WebSockets by sending a CoAP Ping Signaling   message (Section 5.4).  To ensure that redundant maintenance traffic   is not transmitted, WebSocket Ping and unsolicited Pong frames   (Section 5.5 of [RFC6455]) SHOULD NOT be used.5.  Signaling   Signaling messages are specifically introduced only for CoAP over   reliable transports to allow peers to:   o  Learn related characteristics, such as maximum message size for      the connection.   o  Shut down the connection in an orderly fashion.   o  Provide diagnostic information when terminating a connection in      response to a serious error condition.   Signaling is a third basic kind of message in CoAP, after requests   and responses.  Signaling messages share a common structure with the   existing CoAP messages.  There are a code, a Token, options, and an   optional payload.   (SeeSection 3 of [RFC7252] for the overall structure of the message   format, option format, and option value formats.)5.1.  Signaling Codes   A code in the 7.00-7.31 range indicates a Signaling message.  Values   in this range are assigned by the "CoAP Signaling Codes" subregistry   (seeSection 11.1).   For each message, there are a sender and a peer receiving the   message.   Payloads in Signaling messages are diagnostic payloads as defined inSection 5.5.2 of [RFC7252], unless otherwise defined by a Signaling   message option.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20185.2.  Signaling Option Numbers   Option Numbers for Signaling messages are specific to the message   code.  They do not share the number space with CoAP options for   request/response messages or with Signaling messages using other   codes.   Option Numbers are assigned by the "CoAP Signaling Option Numbers"   subregistry (seeSection 11.2).   Signaling Options are elective or critical as defined inSection 5.4.1 of [RFC7252].  If a Signaling Option is critical and   not understood by the receiver, it MUST abort the connection (seeSection 5.6).  If the option is understood but cannot be processed,   the option documents the behavior.5.3.  Capabilities and Settings Messages (CSMs)   CSMs are used for two purposes:   o  Each capability option indicates one capability of the sender to      the recipient.   o  Each setting option indicates a setting that will be applied by      the sender.   One CSM MUST be sent by each endpoint at the start of the Transport   Connection.  Additional CSMs MAY be sent at any other time by either   endpoint over the lifetime of the connection.   Both capability options and setting options are cumulative.  A CSM   does not invalidate a previously sent capability indication or   setting even if it is not repeated.  A capability message without any   option is a no-operation (and can be used as such).  An option that   is sent might override a previous value for the same option.  The   option defines how to handle this case if needed.   Base values are listed below for CSM options.  These are the values   for the capability and settings before any CSMs send a modified   value.   These are not default values (as defined inSection 5.4.4 in   [RFC7252]) for the option.  Default values apply on a per-message   basis and are thus reset when the value is not present in a   given CSM.   CSMs are indicated by the 7.01 (CSM) code; see Table 1   (Section 11.1).Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20185.3.1.  Max-Message-Size Capability Option   The sender can use the elective Max-Message-Size Option to indicate   the maximum size of a message in bytes that it can receive.  The   message size indicated includes the entire message, starting from the   first byte of the message header and ending at the end of the message   payload.   (Note that there is no relationship of the message size to the   overall request or response body size that may be achievable in   block-wise transfer.  For example, the exchange depicted in Figure 13   (Section 6.1) can be performed if the CoAP client indicates a value   of around 6000 bytes for the Max-Message-Size Option, even though the   total body size transferred to the client is 3072 + 5120 + 4711 =   12903 bytes.)   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | # | C | R | Applies | Name             | Format | Length | Base   |   |   |   |   | to      |                  |        |        | Value  |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | 2 |   |   | CSM     | Max-Message-Size |   uint |    0-4 | 1152   |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+                         C=Critical, R=Repeatable   As perSection 4.6 of [RFC7252], the base value (and the value used   when this option is not implemented) is 1152.   The active value of the Max-Message-Size Option is replaced each time   the option is sent with a modified value.  Its starting value is its   base value.5.3.2.  Block-Wise-Transfer Capability Option   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | # | C | R | Applies | Name             | Format | Length | Base   |   |   |   |   | to      |                  |        |        | Value  |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | 4 |   |   | CSM     | Block-Wise-      |  empty |      0 | (none) |   |   |   |   |         | Transfer         |        |        |        |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+                         C=Critical, R=Repeatable   A sender can use the elective Block-Wise-Transfer Option to indicate   that it supports the block-wise transfer protocol [RFC7959].Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   If the option is not given, the peer has no information about whether   block-wise transfers are supported by the sender or not.  An   implementation wishing to offer block-wise transfers to its peer   therefore needs to indicate so via the Block-Wise-Transfer Option.   If a Max-Message-Size Option is indicated with a value that is   greater than 1152 (in the same CSM or a different CSM), the   Block-Wise-Transfer Option also indicates support for BERT (seeSection 6).  Subsequently, if the Max-Message-Size Option is   indicated with a value equal to or less than 1152, BERT support is no   longer indicated.  (Note that the indication of BERT support does not   oblige either peer to actually choose to make use of BERT.)   Implementation note: When indicating a value of the Max-Message-Size   Option with an intention to enable BERT, the indicating   implementation may want to (1) choose a particular BERT block size it   wants to encourage and (2) add a delta for the header and any options   that may also need to be included in the message with a BERT block of   that size.Section 4.6 of [RFC7252] adds 128 bytes to a maximum   block size of 1024 to arrive at a default message size of 1152.  A   BERT-enabled implementation may want to indicate a BERT block size of   2048 or a higher multiple of 1024 and at the same time be more   generous with the size of the header and options added (say, 256 or   512).  However, adding 1024 or more to the base BERT block size may   encourage the peer implementation to vary the BERT block size based   on the size of the options included; this type of scenario might make   it harder to establish interoperability.5.4.  Ping and Pong Messages   In CoAP over reliable transports, Empty messages (Code 0.00) can   always be sent and MUST be ignored by the recipient.  This provides a   basic keepalive function.  In contrast, Ping and Pong messages are a   bidirectional exchange.   Upon receipt of a Ping message, the receiver MUST return a Pong   message with an identical Token in response.  Unless the Ping carries   an option with delaying semantics such as the Custody Option, it   SHOULD respond as soon as practical.  As with all Signaling messages,   the recipient of a Ping or Pong message MUST ignore elective options   it does not understand.   Ping and Pong messages are indicated by the 7.02 code (Ping) and   the 7.03 code (Pong).Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Note that, as with similar mechanisms defined in [RFC6455] and   [RFC7540], the present specification does not define any specific   maximum time that the sender of a Ping message has to allow when   waiting for a Pong reply.  Any limitations on patience for this reply   are a matter of the application making use of these messages, as is   any approach to recover from a failure to respond in time.5.4.1.  Custody Option   +---+---+---+----------+----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | # | C | R | Applies  | Name           | Format | Length | Base    |   |   |   |   | to       |                |        |        | Value   |   +---+---+---+----------+----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | 2 |   |   | Ping,    | Custody        |  empty |      0 | (none)  |   |   |   |   | Pong     |                |        |        |         |   +---+---+---+----------+----------------+--------+--------+---------+                         C=Critical, R=Repeatable   When responding to a Ping message, the receiver can include an   elective Custody Option in the Pong message.  This option indicates   that the application has processed all the request/response messages   received prior to the Ping message on the current connection.  (Note   that there is no definition of specific application semantics for   "processed", but there is an expectation that the receiver of a Pong   message with a Custody Option should be able to free buffers based on   this indication.)   A sender can also include an elective Custody Option in a Ping   message to explicitly request the inclusion of an elective Custody   Option in the corresponding Pong message.  In that case, the receiver   SHOULD delay its Pong message until it finishes processing all the   request/response messages received prior to the Ping message on the   current connection.5.5.  Release Messages   A Release message indicates that the sender does not want to continue   maintaining the Transport Connection and opts for an orderly   shutdown, but wants to leave it to the peer to actually start closing   the connection.  The details are in the options.  A diagnostic   payload (seeSection 5.5.2 of [RFC7252]) MAY be included.   A peer will normally respond to a Release message by closing the   Transport Connection.  (In case that does not happen, the sender of   the release may want to implement a timeout mechanism if getting rid   of the connection is actually important to it.)Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Messages may be in flight or responses outstanding when the sender   decides to send a Release message (which is one reason the sender had   decided to wait before closing the connection).  The peer responding   to the Release message SHOULD delay the closing of the connection   until it has responded to all requests received by it before the   Release message.  It also MAY wait for the responses to its own   requests.   It is NOT RECOMMENDED for the sender of a Release message to continue   sending requests on the connection it already indicated to be   released: the peer might close the connection at any time and miss   those requests.  The peer is not obligated to check for this   condition, though.   Release messages are indicated by the 7.04 code (Release).   Release messages can indicate one or more reasons using elective   options.  The following options are defined:   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | # | C | R | Applies | Name             | Format | Length | Base   |   |   |   |   | to      |                  |        |        | Value  |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+   | 2 |   | x | Release | Alternative-     | string |  1-255 | (none) |   |   |   |   |         | Address          |        |        |        |   +---+---+---+---------+------------------+--------+--------+--------+                         C=Critical, R=Repeatable   The elective Alternative-Address Option requests the peer to instead   open a connection of the same scheme as the present connection to the   alternative transport address given.  Its value is in the form   "authority" as defined inSection 3.2 of [RFC3986].  (Existing state   related to the connection is not transferred from the present   connection to the new connection.)Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   The Alternative-Address Option is a repeatable option as defined inSection 5.4.5 of [RFC7252].  When multiple occurrences of the option   are included, the peer can choose any of the alternative transport   addresses.   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | # | C | R | Applies | Name            | Format | Length | Base    |   |   |   |   | to      |                 |        |        | Value   |   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | 4 |   |   | Release | Hold-Off        |   uint |    0-3 | (none)  |   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+                         C=Critical, R=Repeatable   The elective Hold-Off Option indicates that the server is requesting   that the peer not reconnect to it for the number of seconds given in   the value.5.6.  Abort Messages   An Abort message indicates that the sender is unable to continue   maintaining the Transport Connection and cannot even wait for an   orderly release.  The sender shuts down the connection immediately   after the Abort message (and may or may not wait for a Release   message, Abort message, or connection shutdown in the inverse   direction).  A diagnostic payload (seeSection 5.5.2 of [RFC7252])   SHOULD be included in the Abort message.  Messages may be in flight   or responses outstanding when the sender decides to send an Abort   message.  The general expectation is that these will NOT be   processed.   Abort messages are indicated by the 7.05 code (Abort).   Abort messages can indicate one or more reasons using elective   options.  The following option is defined:   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | # | C | R | Applies | Name            | Format | Length | Base    |   |   |   |   | to      |                 |        |        | Value   |   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+   | 2 |   |   | Abort   | Bad-CSM-Option  |   uint |    0-2 | (none)  |   +---+---+---+---------+-----------------+--------+--------+---------+                         C=Critical, R=RepeatableBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Bad-CSM-Option, which is elective, indicates that the sender is   unable to process the CSM option identified by its Option Number,   e.g., when it is critical and the Option Number is unknown by the   sender, or when there is a parameter problem with the value of an   elective option.  More detailed information SHOULD be included as a   diagnostic payload.   For CoAP over UDP, messages that contain syntax violations are   processed as message format errors.  As described in Sections4.2 and   4.3 of [RFC7252], such messages are rejected by sending a matching   Reset message and otherwise ignoring the message.   For CoAP over reliable transports, the recipient rejects such   messages by sending an Abort message and otherwise ignoring (not   processing) the message.  No specific Option has been defined for the   Abort message in this case, as the details are best left to a   diagnostic payload.5.7.  Signaling Examples   An encoded example of a Ping message with a non-empty Token is shown   in Figure 11.       0                   1                   2       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |      0x01     |      0xe2     |      0x42     |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Len   =    0 -------> 0x01       TKL   =    1 ___/       Code  = 7.02 Ping --> 0xe2       Token =               0x42                      Figure 11: Ping Message ExampleBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   An encoded example of the corresponding Pong message is shown in   Figure 12.       0                   1                   2       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |      0x01     |      0xe3     |      0x42     |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Len   =    0 -------> 0x01       TKL   =    1 ___/       Code  = 7.03 Pong --> 0xe3       Token =               0x42                      Figure 12: Pong Message Example6.  Block-Wise Transfer and Reliable Transports   The message size restrictions defined inSection 4.6 of [RFC7252] to   avoid IP fragmentation are not necessary when CoAP is used over a   reliable transport.  While this suggests that the block-wise transfer   protocol [RFC7959] is also no longer needed, it remains applicable   for a number of cases:   o  Large messages, such as firmware downloads, may cause undesired      head-of-line blocking when a single transport connection is used.   o  A UDP-to-TCP gateway may simply not have the context to convert a      message with a Block Option into the equivalent exchange without      any use of a Block Option (it would need to convert the entire      block-wise exchange from start to end into a single exchange).   BERT extends the block-wise transfer protocol to enable the use of   larger messages over a reliable transport.   The use of this new extension is signaled by sending Block1 or Block2   Options with SZX == 7 (a "BERT Option").  SZX == 7 is a reserved   value in [RFC7959].   In control usage, a BERT Option is interpreted in the same way as the   equivalent Option with SZX == 6, except that it also indicates the   capability to process BERT blocks.  As with the basic block-wise   transfer protocol, the recipient of a CoAP request with a BERT Option   in control usage is allowed to respond with a different SZX value,   e.g., to send a non-BERT block instead.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   In descriptive usage, a BERT Option is interpreted in the same way as   the equivalent Option with SZX == 6, except that the payload is also   allowed to contain multiple blocks.  For non-final BERT blocks, the   payload is always a multiple of 1024 bytes.  For final BERT blocks,   the payload is a multiple (possibly 0) of 1024 bytes plus a partial   block of less than 1024 bytes.   The recipient of a non-final BERT block (M=1) conceptually partitions   the payload into a sequence of 1024-byte blocks and acts exactly as   if it had received this sequence in conjunction with block numbers   starting at, and sequentially increasing from, the block number given   in the Block Option.  In other words, the entire BERT block is   positioned at the byte position that results from multiplying the   block number by 1024.  The position of further blocks to be   transferred is indicated by incrementing the block number by the   number of elements in this sequence (i.e., the size of the payload   divided by 1024 bytes).   As with SZX == 6, the recipient of a final BERT block (M=0) simply   appends the payload at the byte position that is indicated by the   block number multiplied by 1024.   The following examples illustrate BERT Options.  A value of SZX == 7   is labeled as "BERT" or as "BERT(nnn)" to indicate a payload of   size nnn.   In all these examples, a Block Option is decomposed to indicate the   kind of Block Option (1 or 2) followed by a colon, the block number   (NUM), the more bit (M), and the block size (2**(SZX + 4)) separated   by slashes.  For example, a Block2 Option value of 33 would be shown   as 2:2/0/32), or a Block1 Option value of 59 would be shown as   1:3/1/128.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20186.1.  Example: GET with BERT Blocks   Figure 13 shows a GET request with a response that is split into   three BERT blocks.  The first response contains 3072 bytes of   payload; the second, 5120; and the third, 4711.  Note how the block   number increments to move the position inside the response body   forward.   CoAP Client                             CoAP Server     |                                            |     | GET, /status                       ------> |     |                                            |     | <------   2.05 Content, 2:0/1/BERT(3072)   |     |                                            |     | GET, /status, 2:3/0/BERT           ------> |     |                                            |     | <------   2.05 Content, 2:3/1/BERT(5120)   |     |                                            |     | GET, /status, 2:8/0/BERT          ------>  |     |                                            |     | <------   2.05 Content, 2:8/0/BERT(4711)   |                      Figure 13: GET with BERT Blocks6.2.  Example: PUT with BERT Blocks   Figure 14 demonstrates a PUT exchange with BERT blocks.   CoAP Client                             CoAP Server     |                                             |     | PUT, /options, 1:0/1/BERT(8192)     ------> |     |                                             |     | <------   2.31 Continue, 1:0/1/BERT         |     |                                             |     | PUT, /options, 1:8/1/BERT(16384)    ------> |     |                                             |     | <------   2.31 Continue, 1:8/1/BERT         |     |                                             |     | PUT, /options, 1:24/0/BERT(5683)    ------> |     |                                             |     | <------   2.04 Changed, 1:24/0/BERT         |     |                                             |                      Figure 14: PUT with BERT BlocksBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20187.  Observing Resources over Reliable Transports   This section describes how the procedures defined in [RFC7641] for   observing resources over CoAP are applied (and modified, as needed)   for reliable transports.  In this section, "client" and "server"   refer to the CoAP client and CoAP server.7.1.  Notifications and Reordering   When using the Observe Option [RFC7641] with CoAP over UDP,   notifications from the server set the option value to an increasing   sequence number for reordering detection on the client, since   messages can arrive in a different order than they were sent.  This   sequence number is not required for CoAP over reliable transports,   since TCP ensures reliable and ordered delivery of messages.  The   value of the Observe Option in 2.xx notifications MAY be empty on   transmission and MUST be ignored on reception.   Implementation note: This means that a proxy from a reordering   transport to a reliable (in-order) transport (such as a UDP-to-TCP   proxy) needs to process the Observe Option in notifications according   to the rules inSection 3.4 of [RFC7641].7.2.  Transmission and Acknowledgments   For CoAP over UDP, server notifications to the client can be   Confirmable or Non-confirmable.  A Confirmable message requires the   client to respond with either an Acknowledgment message or a Reset   message.  An Acknowledgment message indicates that the client is   alive and wishes to receive further notifications.  A Reset message   indicates that the client does not recognize the Token; this causes   the server to remove the associated entry from the list of observers.   Since TCP eliminates the need for the message layer to support   reliability, CoAP over reliable transports does not support   Confirmable or Non-confirmable message types.  All notifications are   delivered reliably to the client with positive acknowledgment of   receipt occurring at the TCP level.  If the client does not recognize   the Token in a notification, it MAY immediately abort the connection   (seeSection 5.6).7.3.  Freshness   For CoAP over UDP, if a client does not receive a notification for   some time, it can send a new GET request with the same Token as the   original request to re-register its interest in a resource and verify   that the server is still responsive.  For CoAP over reliable   transports, it is more efficient to check the health of theBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   connection (and all its active observations) by sending a single CoAP   Ping Signaling message (Section 5.4) rather than individual requests   to confirm each active observation.  (Note that such a Ping/Pong only   confirms a single hop: a proxy is not obligated or expected to react   to a Ping by checking all its own registered interests or all the   connections, if any, underlying them.  A proxy MAY maintain its own   schedule for confirming the interests that it relies on being   registered toward the origin server; however, it is generally   inadvisable for a proxy to generate a large number of outgoing checks   based on a single incoming check.)7.4.  Cancellation   For CoAP over UDP, a client that is no longer interested in receiving   notifications can "forget" the observation and respond to the next   notification from the server with a Reset message to cancel the   observation.   For CoAP over reliable transports, a client MUST explicitly   deregister by issuing a GET request that has the Token field set to   the Token of the observation to be canceled and includes an Observe   Option with the value set to 1 (deregister).   If the client observes one or more resources over a reliable   transport, then the CoAP server (or intermediary in the role of the   CoAP server) MUST remove all entries associated with the client   endpoint from the lists of observers when the connection either   times out or is closed.8.  CoAP over Reliable Transport URIs   CoAP over UDP [RFC7252] defines the "coap" and "coaps" URI schemes.   This document introduces four additional URI schemes for identifying   CoAP resources and providing a means of locating the resource:   o  The "coap+tcp" URI scheme for CoAP over TCP.   o  The "coaps+tcp" URI scheme for CoAP over TCP secured by TLS.   o  The "coap+ws" URI scheme for CoAP over WebSockets.   o  The "coaps+ws" URI scheme for CoAP over WebSockets secured by TLS.   Resources made available via these schemes have no shared identity   even if their resource identifiers indicate the same authority (the   same host listening to the same TCP port).  They are hosted in   distinct namespaces because each URI scheme implies a distinct origin   server.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   In this section, the syntax for the URI schemes is specified using   the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC5234].  The definitions of   "host", "port", "path-abempty", and "query" are adopted from   [RFC3986].Section 8 ("Multicast CoAP") in [RFC7252] is not applicable to these   schemes.   As with the "coap" and "coaps" schemes defined in [RFC7252], all URI   schemes defined in this section also support the path prefix   "/.well-known/" as defined by [RFC5785] for "well-known locations" in   the namespace of a host.  This enables discovery as perSection 7 of   [RFC7252].8.1.  coap+tcp URI Scheme   The "coap+tcp" URI scheme identifies CoAP resources that are intended   to be accessible using CoAP over TCP.     coap-tcp-URI = "coap+tcp:" "//" host [ ":" port ]       path-abempty [ "?" query ]   The syntax defined inSection 6.1 of [RFC7252] applies to this URI   scheme, with the following change:   o  The port subcomponent indicates the TCP port at which the CoAP      Connection Acceptor is located.  (If it is empty or not given,      then the default port 5683 is assumed, as with UDP.)   Encoding considerations:  The scheme encoding conforms to the      encoding rules established for URIs in [RFC3986].   Interoperability considerations:  None.   Security considerations:  SeeSection 11.1 of [RFC7252].Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20188.2.  coaps+tcp URI Scheme   The "coaps+tcp" URI scheme identifies CoAP resources that are   intended to be accessible using CoAP over TCP secured with TLS.     coaps-tcp-URI = "coaps+tcp:" "//" host [ ":" port ]       path-abempty [ "?" query ]   The syntax defined inSection 6.2 of [RFC7252] applies to this URI   scheme, with the following changes:   o  The port subcomponent indicates the TCP port at which the TLS      server for the CoAP Connection Acceptor is located.  If it is      empty or not given, then the default port 5684 is assumed.   o  If a TLS server does not support the Application-Layer Protocol      Negotiation (ALPN) extension [RFC7301] or wishes to accommodate      TLS clients that do not support ALPN, it MAY offer a coaps+tcp      endpoint on TCP port 5684.  This endpoint MAY also be ALPN      enabled.  A TLS server MAY offer coaps+tcp endpoints on ports      other than TCP port 5684, which MUST be ALPN enabled.   o  For TCP ports other than port 5684, the TLS client MUST use the      ALPN extension to advertise the "coap" protocol identifier (seeSection 11.7) in the list of protocols in its ClientHello.  If the      TCP server selects and returns the "coap" protocol identifier      using the ALPN extension in its ServerHello, then the connection      succeeds.  If the TLS server either does not negotiate the ALPN      extension or returns a no_application_protocol alert, the TLS      client MUST close the connection.   o  For TCP port 5684, a TLS client MAY use the ALPN extension to      advertise the "coap" protocol identifier in the list of protocols      in its ClientHello.  If the TLS server selects and returns the      "coap" protocol identifier using the ALPN extension in its      ServerHello, then the connection succeeds.  If the TLS server      returns a no_application_protocol alert, then the TLS client MUST      close the connection.  If the TLS server does not negotiate the      ALPN extension, then coaps+tcp is implicitly selected.   o  For TCP port 5684, if the TLS client does not use the ALPN      extension to negotiate the protocol, then coaps+tcp is implicitly      selected.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Encoding considerations:  The scheme encoding conforms to the      encoding rules established for URIs in [RFC3986].   Interoperability considerations:  None.   Security considerations:  SeeSection 11.1 of [RFC7252].8.3.  coap+ws URI Scheme   The "coap+ws" URI scheme identifies CoAP resources that are intended   to be accessible using CoAP over WebSockets.     coap-ws-URI = "coap+ws:" "//" host [ ":" port ]       path-abempty [ "?" query ]   The port subcomponent is OPTIONAL.  The default is port 80.   The WebSocket endpoint is identified by a "ws" URI that is composed   of the authority part of the "coap+ws" URI and the well-known path   "/.well-known/coap" [RFC5785] [RFC8307].  Within the endpoint   specified in a "coap+ws" URI, the path and query parts of the URI   identify a resource that can be operated on by the methods defined   by CoAP:             coap+ws://example.org/sensors/temperature?u=Cel                  \______  ______/\___________  ___________/                         \/                   \/                                            Uri-Path: "sensors"       ws://example.org/.well-known/coap    Uri-Path: "temperature"                                            Uri-Query: "u=Cel"                    Figure 15: The "coap+ws" URI Scheme   Encoding considerations:  The scheme encoding conforms to the      encoding rules established for URIs in [RFC3986].   Interoperability considerations:  None.   Security considerations:  SeeSection 11.1 of [RFC7252].Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20188.4.  coaps+ws URI Scheme   The "coaps+ws" URI scheme identifies CoAP resources that are intended   to be accessible using CoAP over WebSockets secured by TLS.     coaps-ws-URI = "coaps+ws:" "//" host [ ":" port ]       path-abempty [ "?" query ]   The port subcomponent is OPTIONAL.  The default is port 443.   The WebSocket endpoint is identified by a "wss" URI that is composed   of the authority part of the "coaps+ws" URI and the well-known path   "/.well-known/coap" [RFC5785] [RFC8307].  Within the endpoint   specified in a "coaps+ws" URI, the path and query parts of the URI   identify a resource that can be operated on by the methods defined   by CoAP:             coaps+ws://example.org/sensors/temperature?u=Cel                   \______  ______/\___________  ___________/                          \/                   \/                                            Uri-Path: "sensors"       wss://example.org/.well-known/coap   Uri-Path: "temperature"                                            Uri-Query: "u=Cel"                   Figure 16: The "coaps+ws" URI Scheme   Encoding considerations:  The scheme encoding conforms to the      encoding rules established for URIs in [RFC3986].   Interoperability considerations:  None.   Security considerations:  SeeSection 11.1 of [RFC7252].8.5.  Uri-Host and Uri-Port Options   CoAP over reliable transports maintains the property fromSection 5.10.1 of [RFC7252]:      The default values for the Uri-Host and Uri-Port Options are      sufficient for requests to most servers.   Unless otherwise noted, the default value of the Uri-Host Option is   the IP literal representing the destination IP address of the request   message.  The default value of the Uri-Port Option is the destination   TCP port.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   For CoAP over TLS, these default values are the same, unless Server   Name Indication (SNI) [RFC6066] is negotiated.  In this case, the   default value of the Uri-Host Option in requests from the TLS client   to the TLS server is the SNI host.   For CoAP over WebSockets, the default value of the Uri-Host Option in   requests from the WebSocket client to the WebSocket server is   indicated by the Host header field from the WebSocket handshake.8.6.  Decomposing URIs into Options   The steps are the same as those specified inSection 6.4 of   [RFC7252], with minor changes:   This step from [RFC7252]:   3.  If |url| does not have a <scheme> component whose value, when       converted to ASCII lowercase, is "coap" or "coaps", then fail       this algorithm.   is updated to:   3.  If |url| does not have a <scheme> component whose value, when       converted to ASCII lowercase, is "coap+tcp", "coaps+tcp",       "coap+ws", or "coaps+ws", then fail this algorithm.   This step from [RFC7252]:   7.  If |port| does not equal the request's destination UDP port,       include a Uri-Port Option and let that option's value be |port|.   is updated to:   7.  If |port| does not equal the request's destination TCP port,       include a Uri-Port Option and let that option's value be |port|.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 20188.7.  Composing URIs from Options   The steps are the same as those specified inSection 6.5 of   [RFC7252], with minor changes:   This step from [RFC7252]:   1.  If the request is secured using DTLS, let |url| be the string       "coaps://".  Otherwise, let |url| be the string "coap://".   is updated to:   1.  For CoAP over TCP, if the request is secured using TLS, let |url|       be the string "coaps+tcp://".  Otherwise, let |url| be the string       "coap+tcp://".  For CoAP over WebSockets, if the request is       secured using TLS, let |url| be the string "coaps+ws://".       Otherwise, let |url| be the string "coap+ws://".   This step from [RFC7252]:   4.  If the request includes a Uri-Port Option, let |port| be that       option's value.  Otherwise, let |port| be the request's       destination UDP port.   is updated to:   4.  If the request includes a Uri-Port Option, let |port| be that       option's value.  Otherwise, let |port| be the request's       destination TCP port.9.  Securing CoAP   "Security Challenges For the Internet Of Things" [SecurityChallenges]   recommends the following:      ... it is essential that IoT protocol suites specify a mandatory      to implement but optional to use security solution.  This will      ensure security is available in all implementations, but      configurable to use when not necessary (e.g., in closed      environment). ... even if those features stretch the capabilities      of such devices.   A security solution MUST be implemented to protect CoAP over reliable   transports and MUST be enabled by default.  This document defines the   TLS binding, but alternative solutions at different layers in the   protocol stack MAY be used to protect CoAP over reliable transportsBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   when appropriate.  Note that there is ongoing work to support a data-   object-based security model for CoAP that is independent of transport   (see [OSCORE]).9.1.  TLS Binding for CoAP over TCP   The TLS usage guidance in [RFC7925] applies, including the guidance   about cipher suites in that document that are derived from the   mandatory-to-implement cipher suites defined in [RFC7252].   This guidance assumes implementation in a constrained device or for   communication with a constrained device.  However, CoAP over TCP/TLS   has a wider applicability.  It may, for example, be implemented on a   gateway or on a device that is less constrained (such as a smart   phone or a tablet), for communication with a peer that is likewise   less constrained, or within a back-end environment that only   communicates with constrained devices via proxies.  As an exception   to the previous paragraph, in this case, the recommendations in   [RFC7525] are more appropriate.   Since the guidance offered in [RFC7925] differs from the guidance   offered in [RFC7525] in terms of algorithms and credential types, it   is assumed that an implementation of CoAP over TCP/TLS that needs to   support both cases implements the recommendations offered by both   specifications.   During the provisioning phase, a CoAP device is provided with the   security information that it needs, including keying materials,   access control lists, and authorization servers.  At the end of the   provisioning phase, the device will be in one of four security modes:   NoSec:  TLS is disabled.   PreSharedKey:  TLS is enabled.  The guidance inSection 4.2 of      [RFC7925] applies.   RawPublicKey:  TLS is enabled.  The guidance inSection 4.3 of      [RFC7925] applies.   Certificate:  TLS is enabled.  The guidance inSection 4.4 of      [RFC7925] applies.   The "NoSec" mode is optional to implement.  The system simply sends   the packets over normal TCP; this is indicated by the "coap+tcp"   scheme and the TCP CoAP default port.  The system is secured only by   keeping attackers from being able to send or receive packets from the   network with the CoAP nodes.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   "PreSharedKey", "RawPublicKey", or "Certificate" is mandatory to   implement for the TLS binding, depending on the credential type used   with the device.  These security modes are achieved using TLS and   are indicated by the "coaps+tcp" scheme and TLS-secured CoAP   default port.9.2.  TLS Usage for CoAP over WebSockets   A CoAP client requesting a resource identified by a "coaps+ws" URI   negotiates a secure WebSocket connection to a WebSocket server   endpoint with a "wss" URI.  This is described inSection 8.4.   The client MUST perform a TLS handshake after opening the connection   to the server.  The guidance inSection 4.1 of [RFC6455] applies.   When a CoAP server exposes resources identified by a "coaps+ws" URI,   the guidance inSection 4.4 of [RFC7925] applies towards mandatory-   to-implement TLS functionality for certificates.  For the server-side   requirements for accepting incoming connections over an HTTPS   (HTTP over TLS) port, the guidance inSection 4.2 of [RFC6455]   applies.   Note that the guidance above formally inherits the mandatory-to-   implement cipher suites defined in [RFC5246].  However, modern   browsers usually implement cipher suites that are more recent; these   cipher suites are then automatically picked up via the JavaScript   WebSocket API.  WebSocket servers that provide secure CoAP over   WebSockets for the browser use case will need to follow the browser   preferences and MUST follow [RFC7525].10.  Security Considerations   The security considerations of [RFC7252] apply.  For CoAP over   WebSockets and CoAP over TLS-secured WebSockets, the security   considerations of [RFC6455] also apply.10.1.  Signaling Messages   The guidance given by an Alternative-Address Option cannot be   followed blindly.  In particular, a peer MUST NOT assume that a   successful connection to the Alternative-Address inherits all the   security properties of the current connection.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201811.  IANA Considerations11.1.  Signaling Codes   IANA has created a third subregistry for values of the Code field in   the CoAP header (Section 12.1 of [RFC7252]).  The name of this   subregistry is "CoAP Signaling Codes".   Each entry in the subregistry must include the Signaling Code in the   range 7.00-7.31, its name, and a reference to its documentation.   Initial entries in this subregistry are as follows:                      +------+---------+-----------+                      | Code | Name    | Reference |                      +------+---------+-----------+                      | 7.01 | CSM     |RFC 8323  |                      |      |         |           |                      | 7.02 | Ping    |RFC 8323  |                      |      |         |           |                      | 7.03 | Pong    |RFC 8323  |                      |      |         |           |                      | 7.04 | Release |RFC 8323  |                      |      |         |           |                      | 7.05 | Abort   |RFC 8323  |                      +------+---------+-----------+                       Table 1: CoAP Signaling Codes   All other Signaling Codes are Unassigned.   The IANA policy for future additions to this subregistry is   "IETF Review" or "IESG Approval" as described in [RFC8126].11.2.  CoAP Signaling Option Numbers Registry   IANA has created a subregistry for Option Numbers used in CoAP   Signaling Options within the "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE)   Parameters" registry.  The name of this subregistry is "CoAP   Signaling Option Numbers".   Each entry in the subregistry must include one or more of the codes   in the "CoAP Signaling Codes" subregistry (Section 11.1), the number   for the Option, the name of the Option, and a reference to the   Option's documentation.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Initial entries in this subregistry are as follows:         +------------+--------+---------------------+-----------+         | Applies to | Number | Name                | Reference |         +------------+--------+---------------------+-----------+         | 7.01       |      2 | Max-Message-Size    |RFC 8323 |         |            |        |                     |           |         | 7.01       |      4 | Block-Wise-Transfer |RFC 8323 |         |            |        |                     |           |         | 7.02, 7.03 |      2 | Custody             |RFC 8323 |         |            |        |                     |           |         | 7.04       |      2 | Alternative-Address |RFC 8323 |         |            |        |                     |           |         | 7.04       |      4 | Hold-Off            |RFC 8323 |         |            |        |                     |           |         | 7.05       |      2 | Bad-CSM-Option      |RFC 8323 |         +------------+--------+---------------------+-----------+                   Table 2: CoAP Signaling Option Codes   The IANA policy for future additions to this subregistry is based on   number ranges for the option numbers, analogous to the policy defined   inSection 12.2 of [RFC7252].  (The policy is analogous rather than   identical because the structure of this subregistry includes an   additional column ("Applies to"); however, the value of this column   has no influence on the policy.)   The documentation for a Signaling Option Number should specify the   semantics of an option with that number, including the following   properties:   o  Whether the option is critical or elective, as determined by the      Option Number.   o  Whether the option is repeatable.   o  The format and length of the option's value.   o  The base value for the option, if any.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201811.3.  Service Name and Port Number Registration   IANA has assigned the port number 5683 and the service name "coap",   in accordance with [RFC6335].   Service Name:      coap   Transport Protocol:      tcp   Assignee:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Description:      Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)   Reference:RFC 8323   Port Number:      568311.4.  Secure Service Name and Port Number Registration   IANA has assigned the port number 5684 and the service name "coaps",   in accordance with [RFC6335].  The port number is to address the   exceptional case of TLS implementations that do not support the ALPN   extension [RFC7301].   Service Name:      coaps   Transport Protocol:      tcp   Assignee:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Description:      Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Reference:      [RFC7301],RFC 8323   Port Number:      568411.5.  URI Scheme Registration   URI schemes are registered within the "Uniform Resource Identifier   (URI) Schemes" registry maintained at [IANA.uri-schemes].   Note: The following has been added as a note for each of the URI   schemes defined in this document:      CoAP registers different URI schemes for accessing CoAP resources      via different protocols.  This approach runs counter to the WWW      principle that a URI identifies a resource and that multiple URIs      for identifying the same resource should be avoided      <https://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/#avoid-uri-aliases>.   This is not a problem for many of the usage scenarios envisioned for   CoAP over reliable transports; additional URI schemes can be   introduced to address additional usage scenarios (as being prepared,   for example, in [Multi-Transport-URIs] and [CoAP-Alt-Transports]).11.5.1.  coap+tcp   IANA has registered the URI scheme "coap+tcp".  This registration   request complies with [RFC7595].   Scheme name:      coap+tcp   Status:      Permanent   Applications/protocols that use this scheme name:      The scheme is used by CoAP endpoints to access CoAP resources      using TCP.   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Change controller:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   Reference:Section 8.1 in RFC 8323Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201811.5.2.  coaps+tcp   IANA has registered the URI scheme "coaps+tcp".  This registration   request complies with [RFC7595].   Scheme name:      coaps+tcp   Status:      Permanent   Applications/protocols that use this scheme name:      The scheme is used by CoAP endpoints to access CoAP resources      using TLS.   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Change controller:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   Reference:Section 8.2 in RFC 832311.5.3.  coap+ws   IANA has registered the URI scheme "coap+ws".  This registration   request complies with [RFC7595].   Scheme name:      coap+ws   Status:      Permanent   Applications/protocols that use this scheme name:      The scheme is used by CoAP endpoints to access CoAP resources      using the WebSocket Protocol.   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Change controller:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   Reference:Section 8.3 in RFC 8323Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201811.5.4.  coaps+ws   IANA has registered the URI scheme "coaps+ws".  This registration   request complies with [RFC7595].   Scheme name:      coaps+ws   Status:      Permanent   Applications/protocols that use this scheme name:      The scheme is used by CoAP endpoints to access CoAP resources      using the WebSocket Protocol secured with TLS.   Contact:      IETF Chair <chair@ietf.org>   Change controller:      IESG <iesg@ietf.org>   References:Section 8.4 in RFC 832311.6.  Well-Known URI Suffix Registration   IANA has registered "coap" in the "Well-Known URIs" registry.  This   registration request complies with [RFC5785].   URI suffix:      coap   Change controller:      IETF   Specification document(s):RFC 8323   Related information:      None.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201811.7.  ALPN Protocol Identifier   IANA has assigned the following value in the "Application-Layer   Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) Protocol IDs" registry created by   [RFC7301].  The "coap" string identifies CoAP when used over TLS.   Protocol:      CoAP   Identification Sequence:      0x63 0x6f 0x61 0x70 ("coap")   Reference:RFC 832311.8.  WebSocket Subprotocol Registration   IANA has registered the WebSocket CoAP subprotocol in the "WebSocket   Subprotocol Name Registry":   Subprotocol Identifier:      coap   Subprotocol Common Name:      Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)   Subprotocol Definition:RFC 832311.9.  CoAP Option Numbers Registry   IANA has added this document as a reference for the following entries   registered by [RFC7959] in the "CoAP Option Numbers" subregistry   defined by [RFC7252]:                 +--------+--------+--------------------+                 | Number | Name   | Reference          |                 +--------+--------+--------------------+                 | 23     | Block2 |RFC 7959,RFC 8323 |                 |        |        |                    |                 | 27     | Block1 |RFC 7959,RFC 8323 |                 +--------+--------+--------------------+                       Table 3: CoAP Option NumbersBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201812.  References12.1.  Normative References   [RFC793]   Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC 793, DOI 10.17487/RFC0793, September 1981,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc793>.   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.   [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for              Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68,RFC 5234,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.   [RFC5246]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security              (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August 2008,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5246>.   [RFC5785]  Nottingham, M. and E. Hammer-Lahav, "Defining Well-Known              Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs)",RFC 5785,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5785, April 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5785>.   [RFC6066]  Eastlake 3rd, D., "Transport Layer Security (TLS)              Extensions: Extension Definitions",RFC 6066,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6066, January 2011,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6066>.   [RFC6455]  Fette, I. and A. Melnikov, "The WebSocket Protocol",RFC 6455, DOI 10.17487/RFC6455, December 2011,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6455>.   [RFC7252]  Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7252,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   [RFC7301]  Friedl, S., Popov, A., Langley, A., and E. Stephan,              "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Application-Layer Protocol              Negotiation Extension",RFC 7301, DOI 10.17487/RFC7301,              July 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7301>.   [RFC7525]  Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P. Saint-Andre,              "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer              Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security              (DTLS)",BCP 195,RFC 7525, DOI 10.17487/RFC7525,              May 2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7525>.   [RFC7595]  Thaler, D., Ed., Hansen, T., and T. Hardie, "Guidelines              and Registration Procedures for URI Schemes",BCP 35,RFC 7595, DOI 10.17487/RFC7595, June 2015,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7595>.   [RFC7641]  Hartke, K., "Observing Resources in the Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7641,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7641, September 2015,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7641>.   [RFC7925]  Tschofenig, H., Ed., and T. Fossati, "Transport Layer              Security (TLS) / Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)              Profiles for the Internet of Things",RFC 7925,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7925, July 2016,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7925>.   [RFC7959]  Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby, Ed., "Block-Wise Transfers in              the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7959,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7959, August 2016,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7959>.   [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for              Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase inRFC 2119 Key Words",BCP 14,RFC 8174,              DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.   [RFC8307]  Bormann, C., "Well-Known URIs for the WebSocket Protocol",RFC 8307, DOI 10.17487/RFC8307, January 2018,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8307>.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 201812.2.  Informative References   [BK2015]   Byrne, C. and J. Kleberg, "Advisory Guidelines for UDP              Deployment", Work in Progress,draft-byrne-opsec-udp-advisory-00, July 2015.   [CoAP-Alt-Transports]              Silverajan, B. and T. Savolainen, "CoAP Communication with              Alternative Transports", Work in Progress,draft-silverajan-core-coap-alternative-transports-10,              July 2017.   [CoCoA]    Bormann, C., Betzler, A., Gomez, C., and I. Demirkol,              "CoAP Simple Congestion Control/Advanced", Work in              Progress,draft-ietf-core-cocoa-02, October 2017.   [EK2016]   Edeline, K., Kuehlewind, M., Trammell, B., Aben, E., and              B. Donnet, "Using UDP for Internet Transport Evolution",              arXiv preprint 1612.07816, December 2016,              <https://arxiv.org/abs/1612.07816>.   [HomeGateway]              Haetoenen, S., Nyrhinen, A., Eggert, L., Strowes, S.,              Sarolahti, P., and N. Kojo, "An experimental study of home              gateway characteristics", Proceedings of the 10th ACM              SIGCOMM conference on Internet measurement,              DOI 10.1145/1879141.1879174, November 2010.   [IANA.uri-schemes]              IANA, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Schemes",              <https://www.iana.org/assignments/uri-schemes>.   [LWM2M]    Open Mobile Alliance, "Lightweight Machine to Machine              Technical Specification Version 1.0", February 2017,              <http://www.openmobilealliance.org/release/LightweightM2M/V1_0-20170208-A/OMA-TS-LightweightM2M-V1_0-20170208-A.pdf>.   [Multi-Transport-URIs]              Thaler, D.,"Using URIs With Multiple Transport Stacks",              Work in Progress,draft-thaler-appsawg-multi-transport-uris-01, July 2017.   [OSCORE]   Selander, G., Mattsson, J., Palombini, F., and L. Seitz,              "Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments              (OSCORE)", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-core-object-security-08, January 2018.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   [RFC768]   Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768,              DOI 10.17487/RFC0768, August 1980,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc768>.   [RFC6335]  Cotton, M., Eggert, L., Touch, J., Westerlund, M., and S.              Cheshire, "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)              Procedures for the Management of the Service Name and              Transport Protocol Port Number Registry",BCP 165,RFC 6335, DOI 10.17487/RFC6335, August 2011,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6335>.   [RFC6347]  Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer              Security Version 1.2",RFC 6347, DOI 10.17487/RFC6347,              January 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6347>.   [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.   [RFC7540]  Belshe, M., Peon, R., and M. Thomson, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol Version 2 (HTTP/2)",RFC 7540,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7540, May 2015,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7540>.   [SecurityChallenges]              Polk, T. and S. Turner, "Security Challenges For the              Internet Of Things", Interconnecting Smart Objects with              the Internet / IAB Workshop, February 2011,              <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2011/03/Turner.pdf>.   [SW2016]   Swett, I., "QUIC Deployment Experience @Google", IETF 96              Proceedings, Berlin, Germany, July 2016,              <https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/96/slides/slides-96-quic-3.pdf>.   [TCP-in-IoT]              Gomez, C., Crowcroft, J., and M. Scharf, "TCP Usage              Guidance in the Internet of Things (IoT)", Work in              Progress,draft-ietf-lwig-tcp-constrained-node-networks-01, October 2017.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018Appendix A.  Examples of CoAP over WebSockets   This appendix gives examples for the first two configurations   discussed inSection 4.   An example of the process followed by a CoAP client to retrieve the   representation of a resource identified by a "coap+ws" URI might be   as follows.  Figure 17 below illustrates the WebSocket and CoAP   messages exchanged in detail.   1.  The CoAP client obtains the URI       <coap+ws://example.org/sensors/temperature?u=Cel>, for example,       from a resource representation that it retrieved previously.   2.  The CoAP client establishes a WebSocket connection to the       endpoint URI composed of the authority "example.org" and the       well-known path "/.well-known/coap",       <ws://example.org/.well-known/coap>.   3.  CSMs (Section 5.3) are exchanged (not shown).   4.  The CoAP client sends a single-frame, masked, binary message       containing a CoAP request.  The request indicates the target       resource with the Uri-Path ("sensors", "temperature") and       Uri-Query ("u=Cel") Options.   5.  The CoAP client waits for the server to return a response.   6.  The CoAP client uses the connection for further requests, or the       connection is closed.Bormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018      CoAP        CoAP     Client      Server   (WebSocket  (WebSocket     Client)     Server)        |          |        |          |        +=========>|  GET /.well-known/coap HTTP/1.1        |          |  Host: example.org        |          |  Upgrade: websocket        |          |  Connection: Upgrade        |          |  Sec-WebSocket-Key: dGhlIHNhbXBsZSBub25jZQ==        |          |  Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: coap        |          |  Sec-WebSocket-Version: 13        |          |        |<=========+  HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols        |          |  Upgrade: websocket        |          |  Connection: Upgrade        |          |  Sec-WebSocket-Accept: s3pPLMBiTxaQ9kYGzzhZRbK+xOo=        |          |  Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: coap        :          :        :<-------->:  Exchange of CSMs (not shown)        |          |        +--------->|  Binary frame (opcode=%x2, FIN=1, MASK=1)        |          |    +-------------------------+        |          |    | GET                     |        |          |    | Token: 0x53             |        |          |    | Uri-Path: "sensors"     |        |          |    | Uri-Path: "temperature" |        |          |    | Uri-Query: "u=Cel"      |        |          |    +-------------------------+        |          |        |<---------+  Binary frame (opcode=%x2, FIN=1, MASK=0)        |          |    +-------------------------+        |          |    | 2.05 Content            |        |          |    | Token: 0x53             |        |          |    | Payload: "22.3 Cel"     |        |          |    +-------------------------+        :          :        :          :        +--------->|  Close frame (opcode=%x8, FIN=1, MASK=1)        |          |        |<---------+  Close frame (opcode=%x8, FIN=1, MASK=0)        |          |    Figure 17: A CoAP Client Retrieves the Representation of a Resource                       Identified by a "coap+ws" URIBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Figure 18 shows how a CoAP client uses a CoAP forward proxy with a   WebSocket endpoint to retrieve the representation of the resource   "coap://[2001:db8::1]/".  The use of the forward proxy and the   address of the WebSocket endpoint are determined by the client from   local configuration rules.  The request URI is specified in the   Proxy-Uri Option.  Since the request URI uses the "coap" URI scheme,   the proxy fulfills the request by issuing a Confirmable GET request   over UDP to the CoAP server and returning the response over the   WebSocket connection to the client.     CoAP        CoAP       CoAP    Client      Proxy      Server  (WebSocket  (WebSocket    (UDP    Client)     Server)   Endpoint)       |          |          |       +--------->|          |  Binary frame (opcode=%x2, FIN=1, MASK=1)       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |    | GET                                |       |          |          |    | Token: 0x7d                        |       |          |          |    | Proxy-Uri: "coap://[2001:db8::1]/" |       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |       |          +--------->|  CoAP message (Ver=1, T=Con, MID=0x8f54)       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |    | GET                                |       |          |          |    | Token: 0x0a15                      |       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |       |          |<---------+  CoAP message (Ver=1, T=Ack, MID=0x8f54)       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |    | 2.05 Content                       |       |          |          |    | Token: 0x0a15                      |       |          |          |    | Payload: "ready"                   |       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |       |<---------+          |  Binary frame (opcode=%x2, FIN=1, MASK=0)       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |    | 2.05 Content                       |       |          |          |    | Token: 0x7d                        |       |          |          |    | Payload: "ready"                   |       |          |          |    +------------------------------------+       |          |          |    Figure 18: A CoAP Client Retrieves the Representation of a Resource       Identified by a "coap" URI via a WebSocket-Enabled CoAP ProxyBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018Acknowledgments   We would like to thank Stephen Berard, Geoffrey Cristallo, Olivier   Delaby, Esko Dijk, Christian Groves, Nadir Javed, Michael Koster,   Achim Kraus, David Navarro, Szymon Sasin, Goeran Selander, Zach   Shelby, Andrew Summers, Julien Vermillard, and Gengyu Wei for their   feedback.   Last Call reviews from Yoshifumi Nishida, Mark Nottingham, and Meral   Shirazipour as well as several IESG reviewers provided extensive   comments; from the IESG, we would like to specifically call out Ben   Campbell, Mirja Kuehlewind, Eric Rescorla, Adam Roach, and the   responsible AD Alexey Melnikov.Contributors   Matthias Kovatsch   Siemens AG   Otto-Hahn-Ring 6   Munich  D-81739   Germany   Phone: +49-173-5288856   Email: matthias.kovatsch@siemens.com   Teemu Savolainen   Nokia Technologies   Hatanpaan valtatie 30   Tampere  FI-33100   Finland   Email: teemu.savolainen@nokia.com   Valik Solorzano Barboza   Zebra Technologies   820 W. Jackson Blvd. Suite 700   Chicago, IL  60607   United States of America   Phone: +1-847-634-6700   Email: vsolorzanobarboza@zebra.comBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018Authors' Addresses   Carsten Bormann   Universitaet Bremen TZI   Postfach 330440   Bremen  D-28359   Germany   Phone: +49-421-218-63921   Email: cabo@tzi.org   Simon Lemay   Zebra Technologies   820 W. Jackson Blvd. Suite 700   Chicago, IL  60607   United States of America   Phone: +1-847-634-6700   Email: slemay@zebra.com   Hannes Tschofenig   ARM Ltd.   110 Fulbourn Road   Cambridge  CB1 9NJ   United Kingdom   Email: Hannes.tschofenig@gmx.net   URI:http://www.tschofenig.priv.at   Klaus Hartke   Universitaet Bremen TZI   Postfach 330440   Bremen  D-28359   Germany   Phone: +49-421-218-63905   Email: hartke@tzi.orgBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 8323         TCP/TLS/WebSockets Transports for CoAP    February 2018   Bilhanan Silverajan   Tampere University of Technology   Korkeakoulunkatu 10   Tampere  FI-33720   Finland   Email: bilhanan.silverajan@tut.fi   Brian Raymor (editor)   Email: brianraymor@hotmail.comBormann, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 54]

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