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Versions: (draft-rosenberg-midcom-turn) 00 01
02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 RFC 5766
BEHAVE WG J. Rosenberg
Internet-Draft Cisco
Intended status: Standards Track R. Mahy
Expires: April 2, 2009 Plantronics
P. Matthews
(Unaffiliated)
September 29, 2008
Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session
Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)
draft-ietf-behave-turn-10
Status of this Memo
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Abstract
If a host is located behind a NAT, then in certain situations it can
be impossible for that host to communicate directly with other hosts
(peers) located behind other NATs. In these situations, it is
necessary for the host to use the services of an intermediate node
that acts as a communication relay. This specification defines a
protocol, called TURN (Traversal Using Relays around NAT), that
allows the host to control the operation of the relay and to exchange
packets with its peers using the relay.
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The TURN protocol can be used in isolation, but is more properly used
as part of the ICE (Interactive Connectivity Establishment) approach
to NAT traversal.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Overview of Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Transports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.2. Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.3. Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.4. Send Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.5. Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2.6. Other Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4. General Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5. Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
6. Creating an Allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
6.1. Sending an Allocate Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
6.2. Receiving an Allocate Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6.3. Receiving an Allocate Success Response . . . . . . . . . . 24
6.4. Receiving an Allocate Error Response . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7. Refreshing an Allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
7.1. Sending a Refresh Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
7.2. Receiving a Refresh Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
7.3. Receiving a Refresh Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
8. Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
9. CreatePermission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
9.1. Forming a CreatePermission request . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
9.2. Receiving a CreatePermission request . . . . . . . . . . . 30
9.3. Receiving a CreatePermission response . . . . . . . . . . 30
10. Send and Data Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
10.1. Forming a Send Indication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.2. Receiving a Send Indication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.3. Receiving a UDP Datagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
10.4. Receiving a Data Indication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
11. Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
11.1. Sending a ChannelBind Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.2. Receiving a ChannelBind Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
11.3. Receiving a ChannelBind Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.4. The ChannelData Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
11.5. Sending a ChannelData Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.6. Receiving a ChannelData Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
11.7. Relaying Data from the Peer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
12. IP Header Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
13. New STUN Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
14. New STUN Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
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14.1. CHANNEL-NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
14.2. LIFETIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
14.3. XOR-PEER-ADDRESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
14.4. DATA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
14.5. XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
14.6. EVEN-PORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
14.7. REQUESTED-TRANSPORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
14.8. DONT-FRAGMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
14.9. RESERVATION-TOKEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
15. New STUN Error Response Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
16. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
16.1. Outsider Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
16.1.1. Obtaining Unauthorized Allocations . . . . . . . . . 42
16.1.2. Offline Dictionary Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
16.1.3. Faked Refreshes and Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . 43
16.1.4. Fake Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
16.1.5. Impersonating a Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
16.1.6. Eavesdropping Traffic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
16.2. Firewall Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
16.2.1. Faked Permissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
16.2.2. Blacklisted IP Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
16.2.3. Running Servers on Well-Known Ports . . . . . . . . . 45
16.3. Insider Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
16.3.1. DoS Against TURN Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
16.3.2. Anonymous Relaying of Malicious Traffic . . . . . . . 46
16.3.3. Manipulating other Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . 47
16.4. Other Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
17. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
18. IAB Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
19. Open Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
20. Changes from Previous Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
20.1. Changes from -09 to -10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
20.2. Changes from -08 to -09 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
20.3. Changes from -07 to -08 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
20.4. Changes from -06 to -07 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
20.5. Changes from -05 to -06 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
20.6. Changes from -04 to -05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
21. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
22. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
22.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
22.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 60
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1. Introduction
A host behind a NAT may wish to exchange packets with other hosts,
some of which may also be behind NATs. To do this, the hosts
involved can use the ICE (Interactive Connectivity Exchange
[I-D.ietf-mmusic-ice]) protocol to discover a working communication
path. In many cases, ICE will find a direct communication path
between two hosts. However, if the NATs along the path have a
mapping behavior [RFC4787] of address or address and port dependent
mapping, then it can be extremely difficult or impossible to find a
direct path.
In these cases, it is necessary to use the services of an
intermediate host that acts as a relay for the packets. This relay
typically sits in the public Internet and relays packets between two
hosts that both sit behind NATs.
This specification defines a protocol, called TURN, that allows a
host behind a NAT (called the TURN client) to request that another
host (called the TURN server) act as a relay. The client can arrange
for the server to relay packets to certain other hosts (called peers)
and can control aspects of how the relaying is done.
Though the use of a relay to enable communication between two hosts
behind NATs is highly likely to work, it comes at a high cost to the
provider of the relay, since the relay typically needs a high
bandwidth connection to the Internet . As a consequence, it is best
to use a relay only when a direct communication path cannot be found.
When the client and a peer use the ICE protocol to determine a
communication path, ICE will search for a direct path first and only
use the relay (i.e. TURN server) when a direct path cannot be found.
TURN was originally invented to support multimedia sessions signaled
using SIP. Since SIP supports forking, TURN supports multiple peers
per client; a feature not supported by other approaches (e.g., SOCKS
[RFC1928]). However, care has been taken to make sure that TURN is
suitable for other types of applications.
TURN is an extension to the STUN (Session Traversal Utilities for NAT
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis]) protocol. Most, though not all, TURN
messages are STUN-formatted messages. A reader of this document
should be familiar with STUN.
2. Overview of Operation
This section gives an overview of the operation of TURN. It is non-
normative.
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In a typical configuration, a TURN client is connected to a private
network [RFC1918] and through one or more NATs to the public
Internet. On the public Internet is a TURN server. Elsewhere in the
Internet are one or more peers that the TURN client wishes to
communicate with. These peers may or may not be behind one or more
NATs. The client uses the server as a relay to send packets to these
peers and to receive packets from these peers.
+---------+
| |
| |
TURN / | Peer A |
Client's Server // | |
Host Transport Transport / | |
Address Address +-+ // +---------+
10.1.1.2:17240 192.0.2.15:3478 |N|/ 192.168.100.2:16400
| | |A|
| +-+ | /|T|
| | | | / +-+
| | | | / 192.0.2.210:18200
+---------+| | | |+---------+ / +---------+
| || |N| || | // | |
| TURN |v | | v| TURN |/ | |
| Client |----|A|----------| Server |------------------| Peer B |
| | | |^ | |^ ^| |
| | |T|| | || || |
+---------+ | || +---------+| |+---------+
| || | |
| || | |
+-+| | |
| | |
| | |
Client's | Peer B
Server-Reflexive Relayed Transport
Transport Address Transport Address Address
192.0.2.1:7000 192.0.2.15:9000 192.0.2.210:18200
Figure 1
Figure 1 shows a typical deployment. In this figure, the TURN client
and the TURN server are separated by a NAT, with the client on the
private side and the server on the public side of the NAT. This NAT
is assumed to be a "bad" NAT; for example, it might have a mapping
property of address-and-port-dependent mapping (see [RFC4787] for a
description of what this means).
The client talks to the server from a (IP address, port) combination
called the client's HOST TRANSPORT ADDRESS. (The combination of an
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IP address and port is called a TRANSPORT ADDRESS).
The client sends TURN messages from its host transport address to a
transport address on the TURN server which is known as the TURN
SERVER TRANSPORT ADDRESS. The client learns the server's transport
address through some unspecified means (e.g., configuration), and
this address is typically used by many clients simultaneously.
Since the client is behind a NAT, the server sees packets from the
client as coming from a transport address on the NAT itself. This
address is known as the client's SERVER-REFLEXIVE transport address;
packets sent by the server to the client's server-reflexive transport
address will be forwarded by the NAT to the client's host transport
address.
The client uses TURN commands to create and manipulate an ALLOCATION
on the server. An allocation is a data structure on the server, an
important component of which is a RELAYED TRANSPORT ADDRESS. The
relayed transport address for the allocation is a transport address
on the server which is used to send and receive packets to the peers.
Once an allocation is created, the client can send application data
to the server along with an indication of which peer the data is to
be sent to, and the server will relay this data to the appropriate
peer. The client sends the application data to the server inside a
TURN message; at the server, the data is extracted from the TURN
message and sent to the peer in a UDP datagram. In the reverse
direction, a peer can send application data in a UDP datagram to the
relayed transport address for the allocation; the server will then
encapsulate this data inside a TURN message and send it to the client
along with an indication of which peer sent the data. Since the TURN
message always contains an indication of which peer the client is
communicating with, the client can use a single allocation to
communicate with multiple peers.
Each allocation on the server belongs to a single client and has
exactly one relayed transport address which is used only by that
allocation. Thus when a packet arrives at a relayed transport
address on the server, the server knows which client the data is
intended for. However, the client may have multiple allocations on a
server at the same time.
2.1. Transports
TURN as defined in this specification always uses UDP between the
server and the peer. However, this specification allows the use of
any one of UDP, TCP, or TLS over TCP to carry the TURN messages
between the client and the server.
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+----------------------------+---------------------+
| TURN client to TURN server | TURN server to peer |
+----------------------------+---------------------+
| UDP | UDP |
| TCP | UDP |
| TLS over TCP | UDP |
+----------------------------+---------------------+
If TCP or TLS over TCP is used between the client and the server,
then the server will convert between these transports and UDP
transport when relaying data to/from the peer.
TURN supports TCP transport between the client and the server because
some firewalls are configured to block UDP entirely. These firewalls
block UDP but not TCP in part because TCP has properties that make
the intention of the nodes being protected by the firewall more
obvious to the firewall. For example, TCP has a three-way handshake
that makes in clearer that the protected node really wishes to have
that particular connection established, while for UDP the best the
firewall can do is guess which flows are desired by using filtering
rules. Also, TCP has explicit connection teardown, while for UDP the
firewall has to use timers to guess when the flow is finished.
TURN supports TLS over TCP transport between the client and the
server because TLS provides additional security properties not
provided by TURN's default digest authentication; properties which
some clients may wish to take advantage of. In particular, TLS
provides a way for the client to ascertain that it is talking to the
server that it intended to, and also provides for confidentiality of
TURN control messages. TURN does not require TLS because the
overhead of using TLS is higher than that of digest authentication;
for example, using TLS likely means that most application data will
be doubly encrypted (once by TLS and once to ensure it is still
encrypted in the UDP datagram).
There is a planned extension to TURN to add support for TCP between
the server and the peers [I-D.ietf-behave-turn-tcp]. For this
reason, allocations that use UDP between the server and the peers are
known as UDP allocations, while allocations that use TCP between the
server and the peers are known as TCP allocations. This
specification describes only UDP allocations.
TURN as defined in this specification only supports IPv4. All IP
addresses in this specification must be IPv4 addresses. However,
there is a planned extension to TURN to add support for IPv6 and for
relaying between IPv4 and IPv6 [I-D.ietf-behave-turn-ipv6].
In some applications for TURN, the client may send and received
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packets other than TURN packets on the host transport address it uses
to communicate with the server. This can happen, for example, when
using TURN with ICE. In these cases, the client can distinguish TURN
packets from other packets by examining the source address of the
arriving packet: those arriving from the TURN server will be TURN
packets.
2.2. Allocations
To create an allocation on the server, the client uses an Allocate
transaction. The client sends a Allocate request to the server, and
the server replies with an Allocate success response containing the
allocated relayed transport address. The client can include
attributes in the Allocate request that describe the type of
allocation it desires (e.g., the lifetime of the allocation). Since
relaying data may require lots of bandwidth, the server typically
requires that the client authenticate itself using STUN's long-term
credential mechanism, to show that it is authorized to use the
server.
Once a relayed transport address is allocated, a client must keep the
allocation alive. To do this, the client periodically sends a
Refresh request to the server. TURN deliberately uses a different
method (Refresh rather than Allocate) for refreshes to ensure that
the client is informed if the allocation vanishes for some reason.
The frequency of the Refresh transaction is determined by the
lifetime of the allocation. The client can request a lifetime in the
Allocate request and may modify its request in a Refresh request, and
the server always indicates the actual lifetime in the response. The
client must issue a new Refresh transaction within 'lifetime' seconds
of the previous Allocate or Refresh transaction. Once a client no
longer wishes to use an Allocation, it should delete the allocation
using a Refresh request with a requested lifetime of 0.
Both the server and client keep track of a value known as the
5-TUPLE. At the client, the 5-tuple consists of the client's host
transport address, the server transport address, and the transport
protocol used by the client to communicate with the server. At the
server, the 5-tuple value is the same except that the client's host
transport address is replaced by the client's server-reflexive
address, since that is the client's address as seen by the server.
Both the client and the server remember the 5-tuple used in the
Allocate request. Subsequent messages between the client and the
server uses the same 5-tuple. In this way, the client and server
know which allocation is being referred to. If the client wishes to
allocate a second relayed transport address, it must create a second
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allocation using a different 5-tuple (e.g., by using a different
client host address or port).
NOTE: While the terminology used in this document refers to
5-tuples, the TURN server can store whatever identifier it likes
that yields identical results. Specifically, an implementation
may use a file-descriptor in place of a 5-tuple to represent a TCP
connection
TURN TURN Peer Peer
client server A B
|-- Allocate request --------------->| | |
| | | |
|<--------------- Allocate failure --| | |
| (401 Unauthorized) | | |
| | | |
|-- Allocate request --------------->| | |
| | | |
|<---------- Allocate success resp --| | |
| (192.0.2.15:9000) | | |
// // // //
| | | |
|-- Refresh request ---------------->| | |
| | | |
|<----------- Refresh success resp --| | |
| | | |
Figure 2
In Figure 2, the client sends an Allocate request to the server
without credentials. Since the server requires that all requests be
authenticated using STUN's long-term credential mechanism, the server
rejects the request with a 401 (Unauthorized) error code. The client
then tries again, this time including credentials (not shown). This
time, the server accepts the Allocate request and returns an Allocate
success response containing (amongst other things) the relayed
transport address assigned to the allocation. Sometime later the
client decides to refresh the allocation and thus sends a Refresh
request to the server. The refresh is accepted and the server
replies with a Refresh success response.
2.3. Permissions
To ease concerns amongst enterprise IT administrators that TURN could
be used to bypass corporate firewall security, TURN includes the
notion of permissions. TURN permissions mimic the address-restricted
filtering mechanism of NATs that comply with [RFC4787].
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An allocation can have zero or more permissions. Each permission
consists of an IP address and a lifetime. When the server receives a
UDP datagram on the allocation's relayed transport address, it first
checks the list of permissions. If the source IP address of the
datagram matches a permission, the application data is relayed to the
client, otherwise the UDP datagram is silently discarded.
A permission expires after 5 minutes if it is not refreshed. There
is no way to explicitly delete a permission.
The client can install or refresh a permission using either a
CreatePermission request or a ChannelBind request. For security
reasons, permissions can only be installed or refreshed by
transactions that can be authenticated; thus Send indications and
ChannelData messages (which are used to send data to peers) do not
install or refresh any permissions.
Note that permissions are within the context of an allocation, so
adding or expiring a permission in one allocation does not affect
other allocations.
2.4. Send Mechanism
There are two mechanisms for the client and peers to exchange
application data using the TURN server. The first mechanism uses the
Send and Data methods, the second way uses channels. Common to both
ways is the ability of the client to communicate with multiple peers
using a single allocated relayed transport address; thus both ways
include a means for the client to indicate to the server which peer
to forward the data to, and for the server to indicate which peer
sent the data.
The Send mechanism uses Send and Data indications. Send indications
are used to send application data from the client to the server,
while Data indications are used to send application data from the
server to the client.
When using the Send mechanism, the client sends a Send indication to
the TURN server containing (a) an XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute specify
the transport address of the peer and (b) a DATA attribute holding
the application data. When the TURN server receives the Send
indication, it extracts the application data from the DATA attribute
and sends it in a UDP datagram to the peer, using the allocated relay
address as the source address. Note that there is no need to specify
the relayed transport address, since it is implied by the 5-tuple
used for the Send indication.
In the reverse direction, UDP datagrams arriving at the relayed
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transport address on the TURN server are converted into Data
indications and sent to the client, with the transport address of the
peer included in an XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute and the data itself in
a DATA attribute. Since the relayed transport address uniquely
identified the allocation, the server knows which client to relay the
data to.
TURN TURN Peer Peer
client server A B
| | | |
|-- CreatePermission req (Peer A) -->| | |
|<-- CreatePermission success resp --| | |
| | | |
|--- Send ind (Peer A)-------------->| | |
| |=== data ===>| |
| | | |
| |<== data ====| |
|<-------------- Data ind (Peer A) --| | |
| | | |
| | | |
|--- Send ind (Peer B)-------------->| | |
| |=== data =================>|
| | | |
| |<== data ==================|
| dropped | | |
| | | |
Figure 3
In Figure 3, the client has already created an allocation and now
wishes to send data to its peers. The client first creates a
permission by sending the server a CreatePermission request
specifying peer A's IP address in the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute;
this allows peer A to send data to the client. The client then sends
data to Peer A using a Send indication; at the server, the
application data is extracted and forwarded in a UDP datagram to Peer
A, using the relayed transport address as the source transport
address. When a UDP datagram from Peer A is received at the relayed
transport address, the contents are placed into a Data indication and
forwarded to the client. Finally, the client then uses a Send
indication to send a second data packet to Peer B; here the client
has not installed a permission for peer B, so the UDP datagram from
peer B is silently discarded by the server.
2.5. Channels
For some applications (e.g. Voice over IP), the 36 bytes of overhead
that a Send indication or Data indication adds to the application
data can substantially increase the bandwidth required between the
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client and the server. To remedy this, TURN offers a second way for
the client and server to associate data with a specific peer.
This second way uses an alternate packet format known as the
ChannelData message. The ChannelData message does not use the STUN
header used by other TURN messages, but instead has a 4-byte header
that includes a number known as a channel number. Each channel
number in use is bound to a specific peer and thus serves as a
shorthand for the peer's host transport address.
To bind a channel to a peer, the client sends a ChannelBind request
to the server, and includes an unbound channel number and the
transport address of the peer. Once the channel is bound, the client
can use a ChannelData message to send the server data destined for
the peer. Similarly, the server can relay data from that peer
towards the client using a ChannelData message.
Channel bindings last for 10 minutes unless refreshed. Channel
bindings are refreshed by sending another ChannelBind request
rebinding the channel to the peer. Like permissions (but unlike
allocations), there is no way to explicitly delete a channel binding;
the client must simply wait for it to time out.
TURN TURN Peer Peer
client server A B
| | | |
|-- ChannelBind req ---------------->| | |
| (Peer A to 0x4001) | | |
| | | |
|<---------- ChannelBind succ resp --| | |
| | | |
|-- [0x4001] data ------------------>| | |
| |=== data ===>| |
| | | |
| |<== data ====| |
|<------------------ [0x4001] data --| | |
| | | |
|--- Send ind (Peer A)-------------->| | |
| |=== data ===>| |
| | | |
| |<== data ====| |
|<------------------ [0x4001] data --| | |
| | | |
|-- Send ind (Peer B)--------------->| | |
| |=== data =================>|
| | | |
Figure 4
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Figure 4 shows the channel mechanism in use. The client has already
created an allocation and now wishes to bind a channel to peer A. To
do this, the client sends a ChannelBind request to the server,
specifying the transport address of Peer A and a channel number
(0x4001). After that, the client can send application data
encapsulated inside ChannelData messages to Peer A: this is shown as
"[0x4001] data" where 0x4001 is the channel number. When the
ChannelData message arrives at the server, the server transfers the
data to a UDP datagram and sends it to the peer A, as indicated by
the channel number. When peer A sends a UDP datagram to the relayed
transport address, the data is placed inside a ChannelData message
and sent to the client.
Once a channel has been bound, the client is free to intermix
ChannelData messages and Send indications. In the figure, the client
later decides to use a Send indication rather than a ChannelData
message to send additional data to peer A. The client might decide to
do this, for example, so it can use the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute (see
the next section). However, once a channel is bound, the server will
always use a ChannelData message, as shown in the call flow.
Note that ChannelData messages can only be used for peers to which
the client has bound a channel. In the example above, Peer A has
been bound to a channel, but Peer B has not, so application data to
and from Peer B uses the Send mechanism.
2.6. Other Features
This section describes a few other features of TURN.
Old versions of RTP [RFC3550] required that the RTP stream be on an
even port number and the associated RTCP stream, if present, be on
the next highest port. To allow clients to work with nodes that
still require this,TURN allows the client to request that the server
allocate a relayed-transport-address with an even port number, and to
optionally request the server reserve the next-highest port number
for a subsequent allocation.
If appropriate, a TURN server can reject an Allocate request with the
suggestion that the client try an alternative server.
TURN is designed so that the server can be implemented as an
application that runs in userland under commonly available operating
systems and which does not requiring special privileges. This design
decision has the following implications:
o There is no end-to-end QOS, since the value of the Diff-Serv field
is not preserved across the server;
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o There is no end-to-end TTL decrementing, since the value of the
TTL field is reset by the server;
o There is no end-to-end Explicit Congestion Notification, since the
ECN field is reset by the server;
o ICMP messages are not relayed by the server;
o Path MTU Discovery does not work, except in the limited way
available using the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute (see below); and
o There is no end-to-end fragmentation, since the packet is re-
assembled at the server.
Future work may specify alternate TURN semantics that address these
limitations.
To provide a limited form of Path MTU discovery, TURN has a DONT-
FRAGMENT attribute. The client may include this attribute in a Send
indication to specify that the server set the DF (Don't Fragment) bit
in the UDP datagram that it sends to the peer. Since some servers
may be unable to set the DF bit, the client should also include this
attribute in the Allocate request; servers that do not support this
feature will reject the Allocate request.
3. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Readers are expected to be familiar with [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis]
and the terms defined there.
The following terms are used in this document:
TURN: The protocol spoken between a TURN client and a TURN server.
It is an extension to the STUN protocol
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis]. The protocol allows a client to
allocate and use a relayed transport address.
TURN client: A STUN client that implements this specification.
TURN server: A STUN server that implements this specification. It
relays data between a TURN client and its peer(s).
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Peer: A host with which the TURN client wishes to communicate. The
TURN server relays traffic between the TURN client and its
peer(s). The peer does not interact with the TURN server using
the protocol defined in this document; rather, the peer receives
data sent by the TURN server and the peer sends data towards the
TURN server.
Transport Address: The combination of an IP address and a port.
Host Transport Address: A transport address on a client or a peer.
Server-Reflexive Transport Address: A transport address on the
"public side" of a NAT. This address is allocated by the NAT to
correspond to a specific host transport address.
Relayed Transport Address: A transport address on the TURN server
that is used for relaying packets between the client and a peer.
A peer sends to this address on the TURN server, and the packet is
then relayed to the client.
TURN Server Transport Address: A transport address on the TURN
server that is used for sending TURN messages to the server. This
is the transport address that the client uses to communicate with
the server.
Allocation: The relayed transport address granted to a client
through an Allocate request, along with related state, such as
permissions and expiration timers.
5-tuple: The combination (client IP address and port, server IP
address and port, and transport protocol (UDP or TCP)) used to
communicate between the client and the server . The 5-tuple
uniquely identifies this communication stream. The 5-tuple also
uniquely identifies the Allocation on the server.
Channel A channel number and associated peer transport address.
Once a channel number is bound to a peer's transport address, the
client and server can use the more bandwidth-efficient ChannelData
message to exchange data.
Permission: The IP address and transport protocol (but not the port)
of a peer that is permitted to send traffic to the TURN server and
have that traffic relayed to the TURN client. The TURN server
will only forward traffic to its client from peers that match an
existing permission.
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4. General Behavior
This section contains general TURN processing rules that apply to all
TURN messages.
TURN is an extension to STUN. All TURN messages, with the exception
of the ChannelData message, are STUN-formatted messages. All the
base processing rules described in [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis] apply
to STUN-formatted messages. This means that all the message-forming
and -processing descriptions in this document are implicitly prefixed
with the rules of [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis].
In addition, the server SHOULD demand that all requests from the
client be authenticated, using the Long-Term Credential mechanism
described in [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis], and the client MUST be
prepared to authenticate requests if required. Note that this
authentication mechanism applies only to requests and cannot be used
to authenticate indications, thus indications in TURN are never
authenticated. If the server requires requests to be authenticated,
then the server's administrator MUST choose a realm value that will
uniquely identify the username and password combination that the
client must use, even if the client uses multiple servers under
different administrations. The server's administrator MAY choose to
allocate a unique username to each client, or MAY choose to allocate
the same username to more than one client (for example, to all
clients from the same department or company).
When a TURN message arrives at the server from the client, the server
uses the 5-tuple in the message to identify the associated
allocation. For all TURN messages (including ChannelData) EXCEPT an
Allocate request, if the 5-tuple does not identify an existing
allocation, then the message MUST either be rejected with a 437
Allocation Mismatch error (if it is a request), or silently ignored
(if it is an indication or a ChannelData message). A client
receiving a 437 error response to a request other than Allocate MUST
assume the allocation no longer exists.
All requests after the initial Allocate must use the same username as
that used to create the allocation, to prevent attackers from
hijacking the client's allocation. Specifically, if the server
requires the use of the Long-Term Credential mechanism, and if a non-
Allocate request passes authentication under this mechanism, and if
the 5-tuple identifies an existing allocation, but the request does
not use the same username as used to create the allocation, then the
request MUST be rejected with a 441 (Wrong Credentials) error.
The client SHOULD include the SOFTWARE attribute in all Allocate and
Refresh requests and MAY include it in any other requests or
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indications. The server SHOULD include the SOFTWARE attribute in all
Allocate and Refresh responses (either success or failure) and MAY
include it in other responses or indications. The client and the
server MAY include the FINGERPRINT attribute in any STUN-formatted
messages defined in this document.
TURN does not use the backwards-compatibility mechanism described in
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis].
By default, TURN runs on the same port as STUN. However, either the
SRV procedures or the ALTERNATE-SERVER procedures described in
Section 6 may be used to run TURN on a different port.
TURN as defined in this specification only supports IPv4. The
client's IP address, the server's IP address and all IP addresses
appearing in a relayed-transport-address MUST be IPv4 addresses.
When UDP transport is used between the client and the server, the
client will retransmit a request if it does not receive a response
within a certain timeout period. Because of this, the server may
receive two (or more) requests with the same 5-tuple and same
transaction id. STUN requires that the server recognize this case
and treat the request as idempotent (see
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis]). Some implementations may choose to
meet this requirement by remembering all received requests and the
corresponding responses for 40 seconds. Other implementations may
choose to reprocess the request and arrange that such reprocessing
returns essentially the same response. To aid implementors who
choose the latter approach (the so-called "stateless stack
approach"), this specification includes some implementation notes on
how this might be done. Implementations are free to choose either
approach or choose some other approach that gives the same results.
To mitigate either intentional or unintentional denial-of-service
attacks against the server by clients with valid usernames and
passwords, it is RECOMMENDED that the server impose limits on both
the number of allocations active at one time for a given username and
on the amount of bandwidth those allocations can use. The server
should reject new allocations that would exceed the limit on the
allowed number of allocations active at one time with a 486
(Allocation Quota Exceeded) (see Section 6.2), and should discard
application data traffic that exceeds the bandwidth quota.
5. Allocations
All TURN operations revolve around allocations, and all TURN messages
are associated with an allocation. An allocation conceptually
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consists of the following state data:
o the relayed transport address
o The 5-tuple: (client's IP address, client's port, server IP
address, server port, transport protocol)
o the username and password
o the time-to-expiry
o A list of permissions
o A list of channel to peer bindings
The relayed transport address is the transport address allocated by
the server for communicating with peers, while the 5-tuple describes
the communication path between the client and the server. On the
client, the 5-tuple uses the client's host transport address, while
on the server the 5-tuple uses the client's server-reflexive
transport address.
Both the relayed-transport-address and the 5-tuple MUST be unique
across all allocations, so either one can be used to uniquely
identify the allocation.
The username and password of the allocation is the username and
password of the authenticated Allocate request that creates the
allocation. These are used both to verify subsequent requests and to
compute the message integrity of responses.
The time-to-expiry is the time in seconds left until the allocation
expires. Each Allocate or Refresh transaction sets this timer, which
then ticks down towards 0. By default, each Allocate or Refresh
transaction resets this timer to 600 seconds (10 minutes), but the
client can request a different value in the Allocate and Refresh
request. Allocations can only be refreshed using the Refresh
request; sending data to a peer does not refresh an allocation. When
an allocation expires, the state data associated with the allocation
can be freed.
The list of permissions is described in Section 8 and the list of
channels is described in Section 11.
6. Creating an Allocation
An allocation on the server is created using an Allocate transaction.
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6.1. Sending an Allocate Request
The client forms an Allocate request as follows.
The client first picks a host transport address. It is RECOMMENDED
that the client pick a currently-unused transport address, typically
by allowing the underlying OS to pick a currently-unused port for a
new socket.
The client then picks a transport protocol to use between the client
and the server. The transport protocol MUST be one of UDP, TCP, or
TLS over TCP. Since this specification only allows UDP between the
server and the peers, it is RECOMMENDED that the client pick UDP
unless it has a reason to use a different transport. One reason to
pick a different transport would be that the client believes, either
through configuration or by experiment, that it is unable to contact
any TURN server using UDP. See Section 2.1 for more discussion.
The client must also pick a server transport address. Typically,
this is done by the client learning (perhaps through configuration)
one or more domain names for TURN servers. In this case, the client
uses the DNS procedures described in [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis],
but using an SRV service name of "turn" (or "turns" for TURN over
TLS) instead of "stun" (or "stuns"). For example, to find servers in
the example.com domain, the client performs a lookup for
'_turn._udp.example.com', '_turn._tcp.example.com', and
'_turns._tcp.example.com' if the client wants to communicate with the
server using UDP, TCP, or TLS over TCP, respectively.
The client MUST include a REQUESTED-TRANSPORT attribute in the
request. This attribute specifies the transport protocol between the
server and the peers (note that this is NOT the transport protocol
that appears in the 5-tuple). In this specification, the REQUESTED-
TRANSPORT type is always UDP. This attribute is included to allow
future extensions specify other protocols.
If the client wishes the server to initialize the time-to-expiry
field of the allocation to some value other the default lifetime,
then it MAY include a LIFETIME attribute specifying its desired
value. This is just a request, and the server may elect to use a
different value. Note that the server will ignore requests to
initialize the field to less than the default value.
If the client wishes to later use the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute in one
or more Send indications on this allocation, then the client SHOULD
include the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute in the Allocate request. This
allows the client to test whether this attribute is supported by the
server.
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If the client requires the port number of the relayed-transport
address be even, the client includes the EVEN-PORT attribute. If
this attribute is not included, then the port can be even or odd. By
setting the R bit in the EVEN-PORT attribute to 1, the client can
request that the server reserve the next highest port number (on the
same IP address) for a subsequent allocation. If the R bit is 0, no
such request is made.
The client MAY also include a RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute in the
request to ask the server to use a previously reserved port for the
allocation. If the RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute is included, then the
client MUST omit the EVEN-PORT attribute.
Once constructed, the client sends the Allocate request on the
5-tuple.
6.2. Receiving an Allocate Request
When the server receives an Allocate request, it performs the
following checks:
1. The server SHOULD require that the request be authenticated using
the Long-Term Credential mechanism of
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis].
2. The server checks if the 5-tuple is currently in use by an
existing allocation. If yes, the server rejects the request with
a 437 (Allocation Mismatch) error.
3. The server checks if the request contain a REQUESTED-TRANPORT
attribute. If the REQUESTED-TRANSPORT attribute is not included
or is malformed, the server rejects the request with a 400 (Bad
Request) error. Otherwise, if the attribute is included but
specifies a protocol other that UDP, the server rejects the
request with a 442 (Unsupported Transport Protocol) error.
4. The request may contain a DONT-FRAGMENT attribute. If it does,
but the server does not support sending UDP datagrams with the DF
bit set to 1 (see Section 12), then the server treats the DONT-
FRAGMENT attribute in the Allocate request as an unknown
comprehension-required attribute.
5. The server checks if the request contains a EVEN-PORT attribute.
If yes, then the server checks that it satisfy the request. If
the server cannot satisfy the request, then the server rejects
the request with a 508 (Insufficient Port Capacity) error.
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6. The server checks if the request contains a RESERVATION-TOKEN
attribute. If yes, and the request also contains a EVEN-PORT
attribute, then the server rejects the request with a 400 (Bad
Request) error. Otherwise it checks to see if the token is valid
(i.e., the token is in range and has not expired, and the
corresponding relayed transport address is still available). If
the token is not valid for some reason, the server rejects the
request with a 508 (Insufficient Port Capacity) error.
7. At any point, the server MAY choose to reject the request with a
486 (Allocation Quota Reached) error if it feels the client is
trying to exceed some locally-defined allocation quota. The
server is free to define this allocation quota any way it wishes,
but SHOULD define it based on the username used to authenticate
the request, and not on the client's transport address.
8. Also at any point, the server MAY choose to reject the request
with a 300 (Try Alternate) error if it wishes to redirect the
client to a different server. The use of this error code and
attribute follow the specification in
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis], with the modification that a TURN
server MAY return this error code and attribute in
unauthenticated error responses as well as in authenticated error
responses..
If all the checks pass, the server creates the allocation. The
5-tuple is set to the 5-tuple from the Allocate request, while the
list of permissions and the list of channels are initially empty.
The server chooses a relayed-transport-address for the allocation as
follows:
o If the request contains an EVEN-PORT attribute with the R bit set
to 0, then the server allocates a relayed-transport-address with
an even port number.
o If the request contains an EVEN-PORT attribute with the R bit set
to 1, then the server looks for a pair of port numbers N and N+1
on the same IP address, where N is even. Port N is used in the
current allocation, while the relayed transport address with port
N+1 is assigned a token and reserved for a future allocation. The
server MUST hold this reservation for at least 30 seconds, and MAY
choose to hold longer (e.g. until the allocation with port N
expires). The server then includes the token in a RESERVATION-
TOKEN attribute in the success response.
o If the request contains a RESERVATION-TOKEN, the server uses the
previously-reserved transport address corresponding to the
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included token (if it is still available). Note that the
reservation is a server-wide reservation and is not specific to a
particular allocation, since the Allocate request containing the
RESERVATION-TOKEN uses a different 5-tuple than the Allocate
request that made the reservation. The 5-tuple for the Allocate
request containing the RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute can be any
allowed 5-tuple; it can use a different client IP address and
port, a different transport protocol, and even different server IP
address and port (provided, of course, that the server IP address
and port is one that the server is listening for TURN requests
on).
o Otherwise, the server allocates any available relayed-transport-
address.
In all cases, the server SHOULD only allocate ports from the range
49152 - 65535 (the Dynamic and/or Private Port range [Port-Numbers]),
unless the TURN server application knows, through some means not
specified here, that other applications running on the same host as
the TURN server application will not be impacted by allocating ports
outside this range. This condition can often be satisfied by running
the TURN server application on a dedicated machine and/or by
arranging that any other applications on the machine allocate ports
before the TURN server application starts. In any case, the TURN
server SHOULD NOT allocate ports in the range 0 - 1023 (the Well-
Known Port range) to discourage clients from using TURN to run
standard services.
NOTE: The IETF is currently investigating the topic of randomized
port assignments to avoid certain types of attacks (see
[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-port-randomization]). It is recommended that a
TURN implementor keep abreast of this topic and, if appropriate,
implement a randomized port assignment algorithm. This is
especially applicable to servers that choose to pre-allocate a
number of ports from the underlying OS and then later assign them
to allocations; for example, a server may choose this technique to
implement the EVEN-PORT attribute.
The server determines the initial value of the time-to-expiry field
as follows. If the request contains a LIFETIME attribute, and the
proposed lifetime value is greater than the default lifetime, and the
proposed lifetime value is otherwise acceptable to the server, then
the server uses that value. Otherwise, the server uses the default
lifetime. It is RECOMMENDED that the server impose a maximum
lifetime of no more than 3600 seconds (1 hour). Servers that
implement allocation quotas or charge users for allocations in some
way may wish to use a smaller maximum lifetime (perhaps as small as
the default lifetime) to more quickly remove orphaned allocations
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(that is, allocations where the corresponding client has crashed or
terminated or the client connection has been lost for some reason).
Also note that the time-to-expiry is recomputed with each successful
Refresh request, and thus the value computed here applies only until
the first refresh.
Once the allocation is created, the server replies with a success
response. The success response contains:
o A XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS attribute containing the relayed transport
address;
o A LIFETIME attribute containing the current value of the time-to-
expiry timer;
o A RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute (if a second relayed transport
address was reserved).
o An XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute containing the client's IP address
and port (from the 5-tuple).
NOTE: The XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute is included in the response
as a convenience to the client. TURN itself does not make use of
this value, but clients running ICE can often need this value and
can thus avoid having to do an extra Binding transaction with some
STUN server to learn it.
The response (either success or error) is sent back to the client on
the 5-tuple.
NOTE: Implementations may implement the idempotency of the
Allocate request over UDP using the so-called "stateless stack
approach" as follows. To detect retransmissions when the original
request was successful in creating an allocation, the server can
store the transaction id that created the request with the
allocation data and compare it with incoming Allocate requests on
the same 5-tuple. Once such a request is detected, the server can
stop parsing the request and immediately generate a success
response. When building this response, the value of the LIFETIME
attribute can be taken from the time-to-expiry field in the
allocate state data, even though this value may differ slightly
from the LIFETIME value originally returned. In addition, the
server may need to store an indication of any reservation token
returned in the original response, so that this may be returned in
any retransmitted responses.
For the case where the original request was unsuccessful in
creating an allocation, the server may choose to do nothing
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special. Note, however, that there is a rare case where the
server rejects the original request but accepts the retransmitted
request (because conditions have changed in the brief intervening
time period). If the client receives the first failure response,
it will ignore the second (success) response and believe that an
allocation was not created. An allocation created in this matter
will eventually timeout, since the client will not refresh it.
Furthermore, if the client later retries with the same 5-tuple but
different transaction id, it will receive a 437 (Allocation
Mismatch), which will cause it to retry with a different 5-tuple.
The server may use a smaller maximum lifetime value to minimize
the lifetime of allocations "orphaned" in this manner.
6.3. Receiving an Allocate Success Response
If the client receives an Allocate success response, then it MUST
check that the mapped address and the relayed transport address are
in an address family that the client understands and is prepared to
deal with. This specification only covers the case where these two
addresses are IPv4 addresses. If these two addresses are not in an
address family that the client is prepared to deal with, then the
client MUST delete the allocation (Section 7) and MUST NOT attempt to
create another allocation on that server until it believes the
mismatch has been fixed.
The IETF is currently considering mechanisms for transitioning
between IPv4 and IPv6 that could result in a client originating an
Allocate request over IPv6, but the request would arrive at the
server over IPv4, or vica-versa. Hence the importance of this
check.
Otherwise, the client creates its own copy of the allocation data
structure to track what is happening on the server. In particular,
the client needs to remember the actual lifetime received back from
the server, rather than the value sent to the server in the request.
The client must also remember the 5-tuple used for the request and
the username and password it used to authenticate the request to
ensure that it reuses them for subsequent messages. The client also
needs to track the channels and permissions it establishes on the
server.
The client will probably wish to send the relayed transport address
to peers (using some method not specified here) so the peers can
communicate with it. The client may also wish to use the server-
reflexive address it receives in the XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute in
its ICE processing.
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6.4. Receiving an Allocate Error Response
If the client receives an Allocate error response, then the
processing depends on the actual error code returned:
o (Request timed out): There is either a problem with the server, or
a problem reaching the server with the chosen transport. The
client considers the current transaction as having failed but MAY
choose to retry the Allocate request using a different transport
(e.g., TCP instead of UDP).
o 300 (Try Alternate): The server would like the client to use the
server specified in the ALTERNATE-SERVER attribute instead. The
client considers the current transaction as having failed, but
SHOULD try the Allocate request with the alternate server before
trying any other servers (e.g., other servers discovered using the
SRV procedures). When trying the Allocate request with the
alternate server, the client follows the ALTERNATE-SERVER
procedures specified in [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis] with the
following changes: the client SHOULD accept unauthenticated error
responses containing the 300 (Try Alternate) error code, the
client MUST ensure that the realm value received from the
alternate server is as expected, and the client MUST use the same
username and password as it would have with the original server.
The latter checks protect against an attacker sending the client
an unauthenticated Allocate error response that redirects the
client to some totally different and unexpected server.
o 400 (Bad Request): The server believes the client's request is
malformed for some reason. The client considers the current
transaction as having failed. The client MAY notify the user or
operator and SHOULD NOT retry the request with this server until
it believes the problem has been fixed.
o 401 (Unauthorized): If the client has followed the procedures of
the Long-Term Credential mechanism and still gets this error, then
the server is not accepting the client's credentials. In this
case, the client considers the current transaction as having
failed and SHOULD notify the user or operator. The client SHOULD
NOT send any further requests to this server until it believes the
problem has been fixed.
o 420 (Unknown Attribute): If the client included a DONT-FRAGMENT
attribute in the request and the server rejected the request with
a 420 error code and listed the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute in the
UNKNOWN-ATTRIBUTES attribute in the error response, then the
client now knows that the server does not support the DONT-
FRAGMENT attribute. The client considers the current transaction
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as having failed but MAY choose to retry the Allocate request
without the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute.
o 437 (Allocation Mismatch): This indicates that the client has
picked a 5-tuple which the server sees as already in use. One way
this could happen is if an intervening NAT assigned a mapped
transport address that was used by another client which recently
crashed. The client considers the current transaction as having
failed. The client SHOULD pick another client transport address
and retry the Allocate request (using a different transaction id).
The client SHOULD try three different client transport addresses
before giving up on this server. Once the client gives up on the
server, it SHOULD NOT try to create another allocation on the
server for 2 minutes.
o 438 (Stale Nonce): See the procedures for the Long-Term Credential
mechanism [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis].
o 441 (Wrong Credentials): The client should not receive this error
in response to a Allocate request. The client MAY notify the user
or operator and SHOULD NOT retry the same request with this server
until it believes the problem has been fixed.
o 442 (Unsupported Transport Address): The client should not receive
this error in response to a request for a UDP allocation. The
client MAY notify the user or operator and SHOULD NOT reattempt
the request with this server until it believes the problem has
been fixed.
o 486 (Allocation Quota Reached): The server is currently unable to
create any more allocations with this username. The client
considers the current transaction as having failed. The client
SHOULD wait at least 1 minute before trying to create any more
allocations on the server.
o 508 (Insufficient Port Capacity): The server has no more relayed
transport addresses available, or has none with the requested
properties, or the one that was reserved is no longer available.
The client considers the current operation as having failed. If
the client is using either the EVEN-PORT or the RESERVATION-TOKEN
attribute, then the client MAY choose to remove or modify this
attribute and try again immediately. Otherwise, the client SHOULD
wait at least 1 minute before trying to create any more
allocations on this server.
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7. Refreshing an Allocation
A Refresh transaction can be used to either (a) refresh an existing
allocation and update its time-to-expiry, or (b) delete an existing
allocation.
If a client wishes to continue using an allocation, then the client
MUST refresh it before it expires. It is suggested that the client
refresh the allocation roughly 1 minute before it expires. If a
client no longer wishes to use an allocation, then it SHOULD
explicitly delete the allocation. A client MAY also refresh an
allocation at any time for other reasons.
7.1. Sending a Refresh Request
If the client wishes to immediately delete an existing allocation, it
includes a LIFETIME attribute with a value of 0. All other forms of
the request refresh the allocation.
The Refresh transaction updates the time-to-expiry timer of an
allocation. If the client wishes the server to set the time-to-
expiry timer to something other than the default lifetime, it
includes a LIFETIME attribute with the requested value. The server
then computes a new time-to-expiry value in the same way as it does
for an Allocate transaction, with the exception that a requested
lifetime of 0 causes the server to immediately delete the allocation.
7.2. Receiving a Refresh Request
When the server receives a Refresh request, it processes it as
follows:
1. The server checks the credentials of the request as per the Long-
Term Credential mechanism, checks that the allocation exists, and
does the additional username check of Section 4.
2. The server computes a value called the "desired lifetime" as
follows: If the request contains a LIFETIME attribute and the
attribute value is 0, then the desired lifetime is 0. Otherwise,
if the request contains a LIFETIME attribute and the attribute
value is greater than the default lifetime, and if the attribute
value is otherwise acceptable to the server, then the desired
lifetime is the attribute value. Otherwise the desired lifetime
is the default value.
3. Subsequent processing depends on the desired lifetime value:
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* If desired lifetime is 0, then the request succeeds and the
allocation is deleted.
* If the desired lifetime is non-zero, then the request succeeds
and the allocation's time-to-expiry is set to the desired
lifetime
If the request succeeds, then server sends a success response
containing:
* A LIFETIME attribute containing the current value of the time-
to-expiry timer.
NOTE: A server need not do anything special to implement
idempotency of Refresh requests over UDP using the "stateless
stack approach". Retransmitted Refresh requests with a non-zero
desired lifetime will simply refresh the allocation. A
retransmitted Refresh request with a zero desired lifetime will
cause a 437 (Allocation Mismatch) response if the allocation has
already been deleted, but the client will treat this as equivalent
to a success response (see below).
7.3. Receiving a Refresh Response
If the client receives a success response to its Refresh request with
a non-zero lifetime, it updates its copy of the allocation data
structure with the time-to-expiry value contained in the response.
If the client receives a 437 (Allocation Mismatch) error response to
a request to delete the allocation, then the allocation no longer
exists and it should consider its request as having effectively
succeeded.
8. Permissions
For each allocation, the server keeps a list of zero or more
permissions. Each permission consists of an IP address which
uniquely identifies the permission, and an associated time-to-expiry.
The IP address describes a set of peers that are allowed to send data
to the client, and the time-to-expiry is the number of seconds until
the permission expires.
By sending either CreatePermission requests or ChannelBind requests,
the client can cause the server to install or refresh a permission
for a given IP address. This causes one of two things to happen:
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o If no permission for that IP address exists, then a permission is
created with the given IP address and a time-to-expiry equal to
the default permission lifetime.
o If a permission for that IP address already exists, then the
lifetime for that permission is reset to the default permission
lifetime.
The default permission lifetime MUST be 300 seconds (= 5 minutes).
Each permission's time-to-expiry decreases down once per second until
it reaches 0, at which point the permission expires and is deleted.
CreatePermission and ChannelBind requests may be freely intermixed on
a permission. A given permission may be installed or refreshed at
one point in time with a CreatePermission request, and then refreshed
with a ChannelBind request at a different point in time, or vica-
versa.
When a UDP datagram arrives at the relayed transport address for the
allocation, the server checks the list of permissions for that
allocation. If there is a permission with an IP address that is
equal to the source IP address of the UDP datagram, then the UDP
datagram can be relayed to the client. Otherwise, the UDP datagram
is silently discarded. Note that only IP addresses are compared;
port numbers are irrelevant.
The permissions for one allocation are totally unrelated to the
permissions for a different allocation. If an allocation expires,
all its permissions expire with it.
NOTE: Though TURN permissions expire after 5 minutes, many NATs
deployed at the time of publication expire their UDP bindings
considerably faster. Thus an application using TURN will probably
wish to send some sort of keep-alive traffic at a much faster
rate. Applications using ICE should follow the keep-alive
guidelines of ICE [I-D.ietf-mmusic-ice], and applications not
using ICE are advised to do something similar.
9. CreatePermission
TURN supports two ways for the client to install or refresh
permissions on the server. This section describes one way: the
CreatePermission request.
A CreatePermission request may be used in conjunction with either the
Send mechanismSection 10 or the Channel mechanismSection 11.
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9.1. Forming a CreatePermission request
The client who wishes to install or refresh a permission can send a
CreatePermission request to the server.
When forming a CreatePermission request, the client MUST include a
XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute. The IP address portion of the XOR-PEER-
ADDRESS attribute contains the IP address for which a permission
should be installed or refreshed. The port portion of the XOR-PEER-
ADDRESS attribute will be ignored and can be any arbitrary value.
9.2. Receiving a CreatePermission request
When the server receives the CreatePermission request, it processes
it as follows.
The message is first checked for validity. The CreatePermission
request MUST contain a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute. If this attribute
is missing or invalid, then the message is discarded and a 400 (Bad
Request) error is returned.
If the message is valid, then the server installs or refreshes a
permission for the IP address contained in the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
attribute as described in Section 8. The port portion of the
attribute is ignored and may be any arbitrary value.
The server then responds with a CreatePermission success response.
There are no mandatory attributes in the success response.
NOTE: A server need not do anything special to implement
idempotency of CreatePermission requests over UDP using the
"stateless stack approach". Retransmitted CreatePermission
requests will simply refresh the allocation.
9.3. Receiving a CreatePermission response
If the client receives a valid CreatePermission success response,
then the client updates its data structures to indicate that the
permission has been installed or refreshed.
10. Send and Data Methods
TURN supports two mechanisms for sending and receive data from peers.
This section describes the use of the Send and Data mechanism, while
Section 11 describes the use of the Channel mechanism.
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10.1. Forming a Send Indication
The client can use a Send indication to pass data to the server for
relaying to a peer. A client may use a Send indication even if a
channel is bound to that peer.
When forming a Send indication, the client MUST include a XOR-PEER-
ADDRESS attribute and a DATA attribute. The XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
attribute contains the transport address of the peer to which the
data is to be sent, and the DATA attribute contains the actual
application data to be sent to the peer.
The client MAY include a DONT-FRAGMENT attribute in the Send
indication if it wishes the server to set the DF bit on the UDP
datagram sent to the peer.
10.2. Receiving a Send Indication
When the server receives a Send indication, it processes it as
follows.
The message is first checked for validity. The Send indication MUST
contain both a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute and a DATA attribute. If
one of these attributes is missing or invalid, then the message is
discarded.
The Send indication may also contain the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute. If
the server is unable to set the DF bit on outgoing UDP datagrams when
this attribute is present, then the server acts as if the DONT-
FRAGMENT attribute is an unknown comprehension-required attribute
(and thus the Send indication is silently ignored).
If the message is valid, then the server forms a UDP datagram as
follows:
o the source transport address is the relayed transport address of
the allocation, where the allocation is determined by the 5-tuple
on which the Send indication arrived;
o the destination transport address is taken from the XOR-PEER-
ADDRESS attribute;
o the data following the UDP header is the contents of the value
field of the DATA attribute.
The handling of the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute (if present), is
described in Section 12.
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The resulting UDP datagram is then sent to the peer.
Send indications do not cause a permission to be installed or
refresh; thus it is possible for the client to send data to a peer
without installing a permission.
10.3. Receiving a UDP Datagram
When the server receives a UDP datagram at a currently allocated
relayed transport address, the server looks up the allocation
associated with the relayed transport address. It then checks to see
if relaying is permitted, as described in Section 8.
If relaying is permitted, then the server checks if there is a
channel bound to the peer that sent the UDP datagram (see
Section 11). If a channel is bound, then processing proceeds as
described in Section 11.7.
If relaying is permitted but no channel is bound to the peer, then
the server forms and sends a Data indication. The Data indication
MUST contain both a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS and a DATA attribute. The DATA
attribute is set to the value of the 'data octets' field from the
datagram, and the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute is set to the source
transport address of the received UDP datagram. The Data indication
is then sent on the 5-tuple associated with the allocation.
10.4. Receiving a Data Indication
When the client receives a Data indication, it checks that the Data
indication contains both a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS and a DATA attribute, and
discards the indication if it does not. The client SHOULD also check
that the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute value contains an IP address with
which the client believes there is an active permission, and discard
the Data indication otherwise.
NOTE: The latter check protects the client against an attacker who
somehow manages to trick the server into installing permissions
not desired by the client.
If the Data indication passes the above checks, the client delivers
the data octets inside the DATA attribute to the application, along
with an indication that they were received from the peer whose
transport address is given by the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute.
11. Channels
Channels provide a way for the client and server to send application
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data using ChannelData messages, which have less overhead than Send
and Data indications.
Channel bindings are always initiated by the client. The client can
bind a channel to a peer at any time during the lifetime of the
allocation. The client may bind a channel to a peer before
exchanging data with it, or after exchanging data with it (using Send
and Data indications) for some time, or may choose never to bind a
channel it. The client can also bind channels to some peers while
not binding channels to other peers.
Channel bindings are specific to an allocation, so that a binding in
one allocation has no relationship to a binding in any other
allocation. If an allocation expires, all its channel bindings
expire with it.
A channel binding consists of:
o A channel number;
o A transport address (of the peer);
o A time-to-expiry timer.
Within the context of an allocation, a channel binding is uniquely
identified either by the channel number or by the peer's transport
address. Thus the same channel cannot be bound to two different
transport addresses, nor can the same transport address be bound to
two different channels.
A channel binding lasts for 10 minutes unless refreshed. Refreshing
the binding (by the server receiving a ChannelBind request rebinding
the channel to the same peer) resets the time-to-expiry timer back to
10 minutes.
When the channel binding expires, the channel becomes unbound. Once
unbound, the channel number can be bound to a different transport
address, and the transport address can be bound to a different
channel number. To prevent race conditions, the client MUST wait 5
minutes after the channel binding expires before attempting to bind
the channel number to a different transport address or the transport
address to a different channel number.
When binding a channel to a peer, the client SHOULD be prepared to
receive ChannelData messages on the channel from the server as soon
as it has sent the ChannelBind request. Over UDP, it is possible for
the client to receive ChannelData messages from the server before it
receives a ChannelBind success response.
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In the other direction, the client MAY elect to send ChannelData
messages before receiving the ChannelBind success response. Doing
so, however, runs the risk of having the ChannelData messages dropped
by the server if the ChannelBind request does not succeed for some
reason (e.g., packet lost if the request is sent over UDP, or the
server being unable to fulfill the request). A client that wishes to
be safe should either queue the data, or use Send indications until
the channel binding is confirmed.
11.1. Sending a ChannelBind Request
A channel binding is created or refreshed using a ChannelBind
transaction. A ChannelBind transaction also creates or refreshes a
permission towards the peer.
To initiate the ChannelBind transaction, the client forms a
ChannelBind request. The channel to be bound is specified in a
CHANNEL-NUMBER attribute, and the peer's transport address is
specified in a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute. Section 11.2 describes
the restrictions on these attributes.
Rebinding a channel to the same transport address that it is already
bound to provides a way to refresh a channel binding and the
corresponding permission without sending data to the peer. Note
however, that permissions need to be refreshed more frequently than
channels.
11.2. Receiving a ChannelBind Request
When the server receives a ChannelBind request, it checks the
following:
o The request contains both a CHANNEL-NUMBER and a XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
attribute;
o The channel number is in the range 0x4000 to 0xFFFE (inclusive);
o The channel number is not currently bound to a different transport
address (same transport address is OK);
o The transport address is not currently bound to a different
channel number.
If any of these tests fail, the server replies with an error response
with error code 400 "Bad Request". Otherwise, the ChannelBind
request is valid and the server replies with a ChannelBind success
response. There are no required attributes in a successful
ChannelBind response.
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If ChannelBind request is valid, then the server creates or refreshes
the channel binding using the channel number in the CHANNEL-ADDRESS
attribute and the transport address in the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
attribute. The server also installs or refreshes a permission for
the IP address in the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute as described in
Section 8.
NOTE: A server need not do anything special to implement
idempotency of ChannelBind requests over UDP using the "stateless
stack approach". Retransmitted ChannelBind requests will simply
refresh the channel binding and the corresponding permission.
Furthermore, the client must wait 5 minutes before binding a
previously bound channel number or peer address to a different
channel, eliminating the possibility that the transaction would
initially fail but succeed on a retransmission.
11.3. Receiving a ChannelBind Response
When the client receives a ChannelBind success response, it updates
its data structures to record that the channel binding is now active.
It also updates its data structures to record that the corresponding
permission has been installed or refreshed.
If the client receives a ChannelBind failure response that indicates
that the channel information is out-of-sync between the client and
the server (e.g., an unexpected 400 "Bad Request" response), then it
is RECOMMENDED that the client immediately delete the allocation and
start afresh with a new allocation.
11.4. The ChannelData Message
The ChannelData message is used to carry application data between the
client and the server. It has the following format:
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Channel Number | Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
/ Application Data /
/ /
| |
| +-------------------------------+
| |
+-------------------------------+
The Channel Number field specifies the number of the channel on which
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the data is traveling, and thus the address of the peer that is
sending or is to receive the data. The channel number MUST be in the
range 0x4000 - 0xFFFF, with channel number 0xFFFF being reserved for
possible future extensions.
Channel numbers 0x0000 - 0x3FFF cannot be used because bits 0 and 1
are used to distinguish ChannelData messages from STUN-formatted
messages (i.e., Allocate, Send, Data, ChannelBind, etc). STUN-
formatted messages always have bits 0 and 1 as "00", while
ChannelData messages use combinations "01", "10", and "11".
The Length field specifies the length in bytes of the application
data field (i.e., it does not include the size of the ChannelData
header). Note that 0 is a valid length.
The Application Data field carries the data the client is trying to
send to the peer, or that the peer is sending to the client.
11.5. Sending a ChannelData Message
Once a client has bound a channel to a peer, then when the client has
data to send to that peer it may use either a ChannelData message or
a Send indication; that is, the client is not obligated to use the
channel when it exists and may freely intermix the two message types
when sending data to the peer. The server, on the other hand, MUST
use the ChannelData message if a channel has been bound to the peer.
The fields of the ChannelData message are filled in as described in
Section 11.4.
Over stream transports, the ChannelData message MUST be padded to a
multiple of four bytes in order to ensure the alignment of subsequent
messages. The padding is not reflected in the length field of the
ChannelData message, so the actual size of a ChannelData message
(including padding) is (4 + Length) rounded up to the nearest
multiple of 4. Over UDP, the padding is not required but MAY be
included.
The ChannelData message is then sent on the 5-tuple associated with
the allocation.
11.6. Receiving a ChannelData Message
The receiver of the ChannelData message uses bits 0 and 1 to
distinguish it from STUN-formatted messages, as described in
Section 11.4.
If the ChannelData message is received in a UDP datagram, and if the
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UDP datagram is too short to contain the claimed length of the
ChannelData message (i.e., the UDP header length field value is less
than the ChannelData header length field value + 4 + 8), then the
message is silently discarded.
If the ChannelData message is received over TCP or over TLS over TCP,
then the actual length of the ChannelData message is as described in
Section 11.5.
If the ChannelData message is received on a channel which is not
bound to any peer, then the message is silently discarded.
On the client, it is RECOMMENDED that the client discard the
ChannelData message if the client believes there is no active
permission towards the peer.
On the server, if no errors are detected, the server relays the
application data to the peer by forming a UDP datagram as follows:
o the source transport address is the relayed transport address of
the allocation, where the allocation is determined by the 5-tuple
on which the ChannelData message arrived;
o the destination transport address is the transport address to
which the channel is bound;
o the data following the UDP header is the contents of the data
field of the ChannelData message.
The resulting UDP datagram is then sent to the peer. Note that if
the Length field in the ChannelData message is 0, then there will be
no data in the UDP datagram, but the UDP datagram is still formed and
sent.
11.7. Relaying Data from the Peer
When the server receives a UDP datagram on the relayed transport
address associated with an allocation, the server processes it as
described in Section 10.3. If that section indicates that a
ChannelData message should be sent (because there is a channel bound
to the peer that sent to UDP datagram), then the server forms and
sends a ChannelData message as described in Section 11.5.
12. IP Header Fields
This section describes how the server sets various fields in the IP
header when relaying between the client and the peer or vica-versa.
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The descriptions in this section apply: (a) when the server sends a
UDP datagram to the peer, or (b) when the server sends a Data
indication or ChannelData message to the client over UDP transport.
The descriptions in this section do not apply to TURN messages sent
over TCP or TLS transport from the server to the client.
Time to Live (TTL) field
Set the outgoing value to the default for outgoing packets.
Diff-Serv Code Point (DSCP) field ] [RFC2474]
Set the outgoing value to a fixed value, which by default is Best
Effort unless configured otherwise.
Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) field [RFC3168]
Set the outgoing value to 00 (ECN not supported).
IPv4 Fragmentation fields
When the server sends a packet to a peer in response to a Send
indication containing the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute, then the server
MUST set the DF bit in the outgoing IP header to 1. In all other
cases (e.g., Data indication, or DONT-FRAGMENT attribute not
included in the Send indication), the server SHOULD set the DF bit
in the outgoing packet to 0.
The server sets the other fragmentation fields (Identification,
MF, Fragment Offset) as appropriate for a packet originating from
the server.
IPv4 Options
The outgoing packet is sent without any IPv4 options.
13. New STUN Methods
This section lists the codepoints for the new STUN methods defined in
this specification. See elsewhere in this document for the semantics
of these new methods.
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0x003 : Allocate (only request/response semantics defined)
0x004 : Refresh (only request/response semantics defined)
0x006 : Send (only indication semantics defined)
0x007 : Data (only indication semantics defined)
0x008 : CreatePermission (only request/response semantics defined
0x009 : ChannelBind (only request/response semantics defined)
14. New STUN Attributes
This STUN extension defines the following new attributes:
0x000C: CHANNEL-NUMBER
0x000D: LIFETIME
0x0010: Reserved (was BANDWIDTH)
0x0012: XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
0x0013: DATA
0x0016: XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS
0x0018: EVEN-PORT
0x0019: REQUESTED-TRANSPORT
0x001a: DONT-FRAGMENT
0x0021: Reserved (was TIMER-VAL)
0x0022: RESERVATION-TOKEN
14.1. CHANNEL-NUMBER
The CHANNEL-NUMBER attribute contains the number of the channel. It
is a 16-bit unsigned integer, followed by a two-octet RFFU (Reserved
For Future Use) field which MUST be set to 0 on transmission and MUST
be ignored on reception.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Channel Number | RFFU = 0 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
14.2. LIFETIME
The LIFETIME attribute represents the duration for which the server
will maintain an allocation in the absence of a refresh. It is a 32-
bit unsigned integral value representing the number of seconds
remaining until expiration.
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14.3. XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
The XOR-PEER-ADDRESS specifies the address and port of the peer as
seen from the TURN server. It is encoded in the same way as XOR-
MAPPED-ADDRESS.
14.4. DATA
The DATA attribute is present in all Send and Data indications. The
contents of DATA attribute is the application data (that is, the data
that would immediately follow the UDP header if the data was been
sent directly between the client and the peer).
14.5. XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS
The XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS is present in Allocate responses. It
specifies the address and port that the server allocated to the
client. It is encoded in the same way as XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS.
14.6. EVEN-PORT
This attribute allows the client to request that the port in the
relayed-transport-address be even, and (optionally) that the server
reserve the next-highest port number. The attribute is 8 bits long.
Its format is:
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|R| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
The attribute contains a single 1-bit flag:
R: If 1, the server is requested to reserve the next highest port
number (on the same IP address) for a subsequent allocation. If
0, no such reservation is requested.
The other 7 bits of the attribute are ignored.
14.7. REQUESTED-TRANSPORT
This attribute is used by the client to request a specific transport
protocol for the allocated transport address. It has the following
format:
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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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Protocol | RFFU |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
The Protocol field specifies the desired protocol. The codepoints
used in this field are taken from those allowed in the Protocol field
in the IPv4 header and the NextHeader field in the IPv6 header
[Protocol-Numbers]. This specification only allows the use of
codepoint 17 (User Datagram Protocol).
The RFFU field MUST be set to zero on transmission and MUST be
ignored on reception. It is reserved for future uses.
14.8. DONT-FRAGMENT
This attribute is used by the client to request that the server set
the DF (Don't Fragment) bit in the IP header when relaying the
application data onward to the peer. This attribute has no value
part and thus the attribute length field is 0.
14.9. RESERVATION-TOKEN
The RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute contains a token that uniquely
identifies a relayed transport address being held in reserve by the
server. The server includes this attribute in a success response to
tell the client about the token, and the client includes this
attribute in a subsequent Allocate request to request the server use
that relayed transport address for the allocation.
The attribute value is a 64-bit-long field containing the token
value.
15. New STUN Error Response Codes
This document defines the following new error response codes:
437 (Allocation Mismatch): A request was received by the server that
requires an allocation to be in place, but there is none, or a
request was received which requires no allocation, but there is
one.
441 (Wrong Credentials): The credentials in the (non-Allocate)
request, though otherwise acceptable to the server, do not match
those used to create the allocation.
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442 (Unsupported Transport Protocol): The Allocate request asked the
server to use a transport protocol between the server and the peer
that the server does not support. NOTE: This does NOT refer to
the transport protocol used in the 5-tuple.
486 (Allocation Quota Reached): No more allocations using this
username can be created at the present time.
508 (Insufficient Port Capacity): The server has no more relayed
transport addresses available right now, or has none with the
requested properties, or the one that corresponds to the specified
token is not available.
16. Security Considerations
This section considers attacks that are possible in a TURN
deployment, and discusses how they are mitigated by mechanisms in the
protocol or recommended practices in the implementation.
16.1. Outsider Attacks
Outsider attacks are ones where the attacker has no credentials in
the system, and is attempting to disrupt the service seen by the
client or the server.
16.1.1. Obtaining Unauthorized Allocations
An attacker might wish to obtain allocations on a TURN server for any
number of nefarious purposes. A TURN server provides a mechanism for
sending and receiving packets while cloaking the actual IP address of
the client. This makes TURN servers an attractive target for
attackers who wish to use it to mask their true identity.
An attacker might also wish to simply utilize the services of a TURN
server without paying for them. Since TURN services require
resources from the provider, it is anticipated that their usage will
come with a cost.
These attacks are prevented using the digest authentication mechanism
which allows the TURN server to determine the identity of the
requestor and whether the requestor is allowed to obtain the
allocation.
16.1.2. Offline Dictionary Attacks
The digest authentication mechanism used by TURN is subject to
offline dictionary attacks. An attacker that is capable of
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eavesdropping on a message exchange between a client and server can
determine the password by trying a number of candidate passwords and
seeing if one of them is correct. This attack works when the
passwords are low entropy, such as a word from the dictionary. This
attack can be mitigated by using strong passwords with large entropy.
In situations where even stronger mitigation is required, TLS
transport between the client and the server can be used.
16.1.3. Faked Refreshes and Permissions
An attacker might wish to attack an active allocation by sending it a
Refresh with an immediate expiration, in order to delete it and
disrupt service to the client. This is prevented by authentication
of refreshes. Similarly, an attacker wishing to send
CreatePermission requests to create permissions to undesirable
destinations is prevented from doing so through authentication. The
motivations for such an attack are described in Section 16.2.
16.1.4. Fake Data
An attacker might wish to send data to the client or the peer, as if
they came from the peer or client respectively. To do that, the
attacker can send the client a faked Data Indication or ChannelData
message, or send the TURN server a faked Send Indication or
ChannelData message.
Indeed, since indications and ChannelData messages are not
authenticated, this attack is not prevented by TURN. However, this
attack is generally present in IP-based communications and is not
substantially worsened by TURN. Consider an normal, non-TURN IP
session between hosts A and B. An attacker can send packets to B as
if they came from A by sending packets towards A with a spoofed IP
address of B. This attack requires the attacker to know the IP
addresses of A and B. With TURN, an attacker wishing to send packets
towards a client using a Data indication needs to know its IP address
(and port), the IP address and port of the TURN server, and the IP
address and port of the peer (for inclusion in the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS
attribute). To send a fake ChannelData message to a client, an
attacker needs to know the IP address and port of the client, the IP
address and port of the TURN server, and the channel number. This
particular combination is mildly more guessable than in the non-TURN
case.
These attacks are more properly mitigated by application layer
authentication techniques. In the case of real time traffic, usage
of SRTP [RFC3711] prevents these attacks completely.
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16.1.5. Impersonating a Server
When a client learns a relayed address from a TURN server, it uses
that relayed address in application protocols to receive traffic.
Therefore, an attacker wishing to intercept or redirect that traffic
might try to impersonate a TURN server and provide the client with a
faked relayed address.
This attack is prevented through the digest authentication mechanism,
which provides message integrity for responses in addition to
verifying that they came from the server. Furthermore, an attacker
cannot replay old server responses; the transaction ID in the STUN
header prevents this.
16.1.6. Eavesdropping Traffic
TURN concerns itself primarily with authentication and message
integrity. Confidentiality is only a secondary concern, as TURN
control messages do not include information that is particularly
sensitive. The primary protocol content of the messages is the IP
address of the peer. If it is important to prevent an eavesdropper
on a TURN connection from learning this, TURN can be run over TLS.
Confidentiality for the application data relayed by TURN is best
provided by the application protocol itself, since running TURN over
TLS does not protect application data between the server and the
peer. If confidentiality of application data is important, then the
application should encrypt or otherwise protect its data. For
example, for real time media, confidentiality can be provided by
using SRTP.
16.2. Firewall Considerations
A key aspect of TURN's security considerations is that it should not
weaken the protections afforded by firewalls deployed between a
client and a TURN server. It is anticipated that TURN servers will
often be present on the public Internet, and clients may often be
inside enterprise networks with corporate firewalls. If TURN servers
provide a 'backdoor' for reaching into the enterprise, TURN will be
blocked by these firewalls.
TURN servers therefore emulate the behavior of NAT devices which
implement address-dependent filtering [RFC4787], a property common in
many firewalls as well. When a NAT or firewall implements this
behavior, packets from an outside IP address are only allowed to be
sent to an internal IP address and port if the internal IP address
and port had recently sent a packet to that outside IP address. TURN
servers introduce the concept of permissions, which provide exactly
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this same behavior on the TURN server. An attacker cannot send a
packet to a TURN server and expect it to be relayed towards the
client, unless the client has tried to contact the attacker first.
It is important to note that some firewalls have policies which are
even more restrictive than address-dependent filtering. Firewalls
can also be configured with address and port dependent filtering, or
can be configured to disallow inbound traffic entirely. In these
cases, if a client is allowed to connect the TURN server,
communications to the client will be less restrictive than what the
firewall would normally allow.
16.2.1. Faked Permissions
In firewalls and NAT devices, permissions are granted implicitly
through the traversal of a packet from the inside of the network
towards the outside peer. Thus, a permission cannot, by definition,
be created by any entity except one inside the firewall or NAT. With
TURN, this restriction no longer holds. Since the TURN server sits
outside the firewall, at attacker outside the firewall can now send a
message to the TURN server and try to create a permission for itself.
This attack is prevented because all messages which create
permissions (i.e., ChannelBind and CreatePermission) are
authenticated.
16.2.2. Blacklisted IP Addresses
Many firewalls can be configured with blacklists which prevent a
client behind the firewall from sending packets to, or receiving
packets from, ranges of blacklisted IP addresses. This is
accomplished by inspecting the source and destination addresses of
packets entering and exiting the firewall, respectively.
If a client connects to a TURN server, it will be able to bypass such
blacklisting policies and communicate with IP addresses which the
firewall would otherwise restrict. This is a problem for other
protocols that provide tunneling functions, such as VPNs. It is
possible to build TURN-aware firewalls which inspect TURN messages,
and check the IP address of the correspondent. TURN messages to
offending destinations can then be rejected. TURN is designed so
that this inspection can be done statelessly.
16.2.3. Running Servers on Well-Known Ports
A malicious client behind a firewall might try to connect to a TURN
server and obtain an allocation which it then uses to run a server.
For example, a client might try to run a DNS server or FTP server.
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This is not possible in TURN. A TURN server will never accept
traffic from a peer which the client itself has not contacted. Thus,
peers cannot just connect to the allocated port in order to obtain
the service.
16.3. Insider Attacks
In insider attacks, a client has legitimate credentials but defies
the trust relationship that goes with those credentials. These
attacks cannot be prevented by cryptographic means but need to be
considered in the design of the protocol.
16.3.1. DoS Against TURN Server
A client wishing to disrupt service to other clients might obtain an
allocation and then flood it with traffic, in an attempt to swamp the
server and prevent it from servicing other legitimate clients. This
is mitigated by the recommendation that the server limit the amount
of bandwidth it will relay for a given username. This won't prevent
a client from sending a large amount of traffic, but it allows the
server to immediately discard traffic in excess.
Since each allocation uses a port number on the IP address of the
TURN server, the number of allocations on a server is finite. An
attacker might attempt to consume all of them by requesting a large
number of allocations. This is prevented by the recommendation that
the server impose a limit of the number of allocations active at a
time for a given username.
16.3.2. Anonymous Relaying of Malicious Traffic
TURN servers provide a degree of anonymization. A client can send
data to correspondent peers without revealing their own IP addresses.
TURN servers may therefore become attractive vehicles for attackers
to launch attacks against targets without fear of detection. Indeed,
it is possible for a client to chain together multiple TURN servers,
such that any number of relays can be used before a target receives a
packet.
Administrators who are worried about this attack can maintain logs
which capture the actual source IP and port of the client. This will
allow for forensic tracing to determine the original source, should
it be discovered that an attack is being relayed through a TURN
server.
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16.3.3. Manipulating other Allocations
An attacker might attempt to disrupt service to other users of the
TURN server by sending Refresh requests or CreatePermission requests
which (through source address spoofing) appear to be coming from
another user of the TURN server. TURN prevents this by requiring
that the credentials used in CreatePermission, Refresh, and
ChannelBind messages match those used to create the initial
allocation. Thus, the fake requests from the attacker will be
rejected.
16.4. Other Considerations
Any relay addresses learned through an Allocate request will not
operate properly with IPSec Authentication Header (AH) [RFC4302] in
transport or tunnel mode. However, tunnel-mode IPSec ESP [RFC4303]
should still operate.
17. IANA Considerations
Since TURN is an extension to STUN [I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis], the
methods, attributes and error codes defined in this specification are
new methods, attributes, and error codes for STUN. This section
directs IANA to add these new protocol elements to the IANA registry
of STUN protocol elements.
The codepoints for the new STUN methods defined in this specification
are listed in Section 13.
The codepoints for the new STUN attributes defined in this
specification are listed in Section 14.
The codepoints for the new STUN error codes defined in this
specification are listed in Section 15.
Extensions to TURN can be made through IETF consensus.
18. IAB Considerations
The IAB has studied the problem of "Unilateral Self Address Fixing",
which is the general process by which a client attempts to determine
its address in another realm on the other side of a NAT through a
collaborative protocol reflection mechanism [RFC3424]. The TURN
extension is an example of a protocol that performs this type of
function. The IAB has mandated that any protocols developed for this
purpose document a specific set of considerations.
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TURN is an extension of the STUN protocol. As such, the specific
usages of STUN that use the TURN extensions need to specifically
address these considerations. Currently the only STUN usage that
uses TURN is ICE [I-D.ietf-mmusic-ice], and the IAB considerations
for the ICE usage of TURN are discussed in the base ICE document.
19. Open Issues
Note to RFC Editor: Please remove this section prior to publication
of this document as an RFC.
This section lists the known issues in this version of the
specification.
(No open issues at this time)
20. Changes from Previous Versions
Note to RFC Editor: Please remove this section prior to publication
of this document as an RFC.
This section lists the changes between the various versions of this
specification.
20.1. Changes from -09 to -10
o Changed the recommendation for using the SOFTWARE attribute.
Previously its use was recommended in all requests and responses;
now it is only recommended in Allocate and Refresh requests and
responses, though it may appear elsewhere. Also, version -09
incorrectly referred to this attribute as "SOFTWARE-TYPE".
o Changed the name of the PEER-ADDRESS and RELAYED-ADDRESS
attributes to XOR-PEER-ADDRESS and XOR-RELAYED-ADDRESS
respectively for consistency with other specifications.
o Removed the concept of a "preserving" allocation. All allocations
are now non-preserving. This simplifies the base specification
and allows it to advance more rapidly; see the discussion in the
BEHAVE meeting of 29 July 2008. The concept of a preserving
allocation will be advanced as an extension to TURN. As part of
this change, the P bit in the REQUESTED-PROPS attribute, the ICMP
attribute, and ICMP message relaying was removed. Further, in
Section 12, the preferred behaviors were removed, leaving the
alternate behaviors as the specified behaviors.
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o Replaced the REQUESTED-PROPS attribute with the EVEN-PORT
attribute. The new attribute lacks the feature of the old
attribute of being an alternate way to specify new allocation
properties. As a consequence, the only way to specify a new
allocation property is to define a new attribute.
o Added text recommending that the client check that the IP address
in XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute in a received Data indication is one
with which the client believes there is an active permission.
Similarly, it is recommended that the client check that a
permission exist when receiving a ChannelData message.
o Added text recommending that the client delete the allocation if
it receives a ChannelBind failure response on an unbound channel.
o Added the CreatePermission request/response transaction which adds
or updates permissions, and removed the ability for Send
indications and ChannelBind messages to install or update
permissions. The net effect is that only authenticate-able
messages (i.e., CreatePermission requests and ChannelBind
requests) can install or refresh permissions; unauthenticate-able
Send indications and ChannelData messages do not.
o Removed all support for IPv6. All IPv6 support, including ways of
relaying between IPv4 and IPv6, will now be covered in
[I-D.ietf-behave-turn-ipv6].
o Reserved attribute code point 0x0021. This was previously used
for the TIMER-VAL attribute, which was removed when the
SetActiveDestination feature was removed.
o Added the DONT-FRAGMENT attribute which allows the client to
request that the server set the DF bit when sending the UDP
datagram to the peer. This attribute may appear in both Allocate
requests and Send indications.
o Changed how the ALTERNATE-SERVER attribute is used. The attribute
can no longer be used with any error code, but must be used with
300 (Try Alternative). It can now appear in unauthenticated
responses, however there are restrictions around how the
subsequent Allocate request is authenticated.
o Reworked the details of how idempotency of requests is handled,
making it clear that the stack can either remember all
transactions for 40 seconds, or can handle this using the so-
called "stateless stack approach". Made some changes to the
semantics of the Allocate, Refresh, and ChannelBind requests as a
consequence.
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o Added the requirement that a client cannot re-use previously bound
channel number or transport address until 5 minutes after the
channel binding expires. This avoids various race conditions.
o Removed the requirement that an allocation cannot be re-used
within 2 minutes of having been deleted. This requirement was put
in place to prevent mis-delivered packets but is no longer seen as
having any real value.
o Added a recommendation that the server impose quotas on both the
number of allocations and the amount of bandwidth a given username
can use at one time. These quotas help protect against denial-of-
service attacks.
o Completely rewrote the security considerations section.
o Made quite a few changes to the descriptive text in both the
Overview and the normative text to try to further clarify
concepts.
20.2. Changes from -08 to -09
o Added text to properly define the ICMP attribute. This attribute
was introduced in TURN-08, but not fully defined due to an
oversight. Clarified that the attribute can appear in a Data
indication, but not a Send indication. Added text to the section
on receiving a Data indication that points out that this attribute
may be present.
o Changed the wording around the handling of the DSCP field to allow
the server to set the DSCP to an arbitrary value if the next hop
is a Diff-Serv classifier and marker.
o When the server generates a 508 response due to an unsupported
flag in the REQUESTED-PROPS attribute, the server now includes the
REQUESTED-PROPS attribute in the response with all the flags it
supports set to 1. This allows the client to see if the server
does not understand one of its flags. Similarly, the client is
now allowed to immediately retry the request if it modifies the
included REQUESTED-PROPS attribute.
o Clarified that the REQUESTED-PROPS attribute can be used in
conjunction with the RESERVATION-TOKEN attribute as long as both
the E and R bits are 0. The spec previously contradicted itself
on this point.
o Clarified that when the server receives a ChannelData message with
a length field of 0, it sends a UDP Datagram to the peer that
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contains no application data.
o Rewrote some text around relaying incoming UDP Datagrams to avoid
duplication of text in the Data indication and Channel sections.
o Added a note that points out that the on-going work on randomizing
port allocations [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-port-randomization] may be
applicable to TURN.
o Clarified that the Allocate request containing a RESERVATION-TOKEN
attribute can use any 5-tuple, and that 5-tuple need not have any
specific relationship to the 5-tuple of the Allocate request that
created the reservation.
o Added a note that discusses retransmitted Allocate requests over
UDP where the first request receives a failure response, but the
second receives a success response. The server may elect to
remember transmitted failure responses to avoid this situation.
o Added text about the usage of the SOFTWARE-TYPE attribute
(formerly known as the SERVER attribute) in TURN messages.
o Rewrote the text in the Overview that motivates why TURN supports
TCP and TLS between the client and the server. The previous text
had been identified by various readers as inadequate and
misleading.
o Rewrote the section how a server handles a Refresh request to
clarify processing in various error conditions. The new text
makes it clear that it is OK to delete a non-existent allocation.
It also clarifies how to handle retransmissions of Refresh
requests over UDP.
o Renamed the "RELAY-ADDRESS" attribute to "RELAYED-ADDRESS", since
the text consistently uses the term "relayed transport address"
for the concept and ICE uses the term "relayed candidate".
o Changed the codepoint assigned to the error code "Wrong
Credentials" from 438 to 441 to avoid a conflict with the "Stale
Nonce" error code of STUN.
o Changed the text to consistently use non-capitalized "request",
"response" and "indication", except in headings, error code names,
etc.
o Added a note mentioning that TURN packets can be demuxed from
other packets arriving on the same socket by looking at the
5-tuple of the arriving packet.
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o Clarified that there are no required attributes is a ChannelBind
success response.
20.3. Changes from -07 to -08
o Removed the BANDWIDTH attribute and all associated text (including
error code 507 "Insufficient Bandwidth Capacity"), as the
requirements for this feature were not clear and it was felt the
feature could be easily added later.
o Changed the format of the REQUESTED-PROPS attribute from a one-
byte field to a set of bit flags. Changed the semantics of the
unused portion of the value from RFFU to "MUST be 0" to give a
more desirable behavior when new flags are defined.
o Introduced the concept of Preserving vs. Non-Preserving
allocations. As a result, completely revamped the rules for how
to set the fields in the IP header, and added rules for relaying
ICMP messages when the allocation is Preserving.
20.4. Changes from -06 to -07
o Rewrote the General Behavior section, making various changes in
the process.
o Changed the usage of authentication from MUST to SHOULD.
o Changed the requirement that subsequent requests use the same
username and password from MUST to SHOULD to allow for the
possibility of changing the credentials using some unspecified
mechanism.
o Introduced a 438 (Wrong Credentials) error which is used when a
non-Allocate request authenticates but does not use the same
username and password as the Allocate request. Having a separate
error code for this case avoids the client being confused over
what the error actually is.
o The server must now prevent the relayed transport address and the
5-tuple from being reused in different allocations for 2 minutes
after the allocation expires.
o Changed the usage of FINGERPRINT from MUST NOT to MAY, to allow
for the possible multiplexing of TURN with some other protocol.
o Rewrote much of the section on Allocations, splitting it into
three new sections (one on allocations in general, one on creating
an allocation, and one on refreshing an allocation).
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o Replaced the mechanism for requesting relayed transport addresses
with specific properties. The new mechanism is less powerful: a
client can request an even port, or a pair of ports, but cannot
request a single odd port or a specific port as was possible under
the old mechanism. Nor can the client request a specific IP
address.
o Changed the rules for handling ALTERNATE-SERVER, removing the
requirement that the referring server have "positive knowledge"
about the state of the alternate server. The new rules instead
rely on text in STUN to prevent referral loops.
o Changed the rules for allocation lifetimes. Allocations lifetimes
are now a minimum of 10 minutes; the client can ask for longer
values, but requests for shorter values are ignored. The text now
recommends that the client refresh an allocation one minute before
it expires.
o Put in temporary procedures for handling the BANDWIDTH attribute,
modelled on the LIFETIME attribute. These procedures are mostly
placeholders and likely to change in the next revision.
o Added a detailed description of how a client reacts to the various
errors it can receive in reply to an Allocate request. This
replaces the various descriptions that were previously scattered
throughout the document, which were inconsistent and sometimes
contradictory.
o Added a new section that gives the normative rules for
permissions.
o Changed the rules around permission lifetimes. The text used to
recommend a value of one minute; it MUST now be 5 minutes.
o Removed the errors "Channel Missing or Invalid", "Peer Address
Missing or Invalid" and "Lifetime Malformed or Invalid" and used
400 "Bad Request" instead.
o Rewrote portions of the section on Send and Data indications and
the section on Channels to try to make the client vs. server
behavior clearer.
o Channel bindings now expire after 10 minutes, and must be
refreshed to keep them alive.
o Binding a channel now installs or refreshes a permission for the
IP address of corresponding peer.
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o Changed the wording describing the situation when the client sends
a ChannelData message before receiving the ChannelBind success
response. -06 said that client SHOULD NOT do this; -07 now says
that a client MAY, but describes the consequences of doing it.
o Added a section discussing the setting of fields in the IP header.
o Replaced the REQUESTED-PORT-PROPS attribute with the REQUESTED-
PROPS attribute that has a different format and semantics, but
reuses the same code point.
o Replaced the REQUESTED-IP attribute with the RESERVATION-TOKEN
attribute, which has a different format and semantics, but reuses
the same code point.
o Removed error codes 443 and 444, and replaced them with 508
(Insufficient Port Capacity). Also changed the error text for
code 507 from "Insufficient Capacity" to "Insufficient Bandwidth
Capacity".
20.5. Changes from -05 to -06
o Changed the mechanism for allocating channels to the one proposed
by Eric Rescorla at the Dec 2007 IETF meeting.
o Removed the framing mechanism (which was used to frame all
messages) and replaced it with the ChannelData message. As part
of this change, noted that the demux of ChannelData messages from
TURN messages can be done using the first two bits of the message.
o Rewrote the sections on transmitted and receiving data as a result
of the above to changes, splitting it into a section on Send and
Data indications and a separate section on channels.
o Clarified the handling of Allocate request messages. In
particular, subsequent Allocate request messages over UDP with the
same transaction id are not an error but a retransmission.
o Restricted the range of ports available for allocation to the
Dynamic and/or Private Port range, and noted when ports outside
this range can be used.
o Changed the format of the REQUESTED-TRANSPORT attribute. The
previous version used 00 for UDP and 01 for TCP; the new version
uses protocol numbers from the IANA protocol number registry. The
format of the attribute also changed.
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o Made a large number of changes to the non-normative portion of the
document to reflect technical changes and improve the
presentation.
o Added the Issues section.
20.6. Changes from -04 to -05
o Removed the ability to allocate addresses for TCP relaying. This
is now covered in a separate document. However, communication
between the client and the server can still run over TCP or TLS/
TCP. This resulted in the removal of the Connect method and the
TIMER-VAL and CONNECT-STAT attributes.
o Added the concept of channels. All communication between the
client and the server flows on a channel. Channels are numbered
0..65535. Channel 0 is used for TURN messages, while the
remaining channels are used for sending unencapsulated data to/
from a remote peer. This concept adds a new Channel Confirmation
method and a new CHANNEL-NUMBER attribute. The new attribute is
also used in the Send and Data methods.
o The framing mechanism formally used just for stream-oriented
transports is now also used for UDP, and the former Type and
Reserved fields in the header have been replaced by a Channel
Number field. The length field is zero when running over UDP.
o TURN now runs on its own port, rather than using the STUN port.
The use of channels requires this.
o Removed the SetActiveDestination concept. This has been replaced
by the concept of channels.
o Changed the allocation refresh mechanism. The new mechanism uses
a new Refresh method, rather than repeating the Allocation
transaction.
o Changed the syntax of SRV requests for secure transport. The new
syntax is "_turns._tcp" rather than the old "_turn._tls". This
change mirrors the corresponding change in STUN SRV syntax.
o Renamed the old REMOTE-ADDRESS attribute to PEER-ADDRESS, and
changed it to use the XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS format.
o Changed the RELAY-ADDRESS attribute to use the XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS
format (instead of the MAPPED-ADDRESS format)).
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o Renamed the 437 error code from "No Binding" to "Allocation
Mismatch".
o Added a discussion of what happens if a client's public binding on
its outermost NAT changes.
o The document now consistently uses the term "peer" as the name of
a remote endpoint with which the client wishes to communicate.
o Rewrote much of the document to describe the new concepts. At the
same time, tried to make the presentation clearer and less
repetitive.
21. Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the various participants in the
BEHAVE working group for their many comments on this draft. Marc
Petit-Huguenin, Remi Denis-Courmont, Jason Fischl, Derek MacDonald,
Scott Godin, Cullen Jennings, Lars Eggert, Magnus Westerlund, Benny
Prijono, and Eric Rescorla have been particularly helpful, with Eric
also suggesting the channel allocation mechanism, and Cullen
suggesting the REQUESTED-PORT-PROPS mechanism. Christian Huitema was
an early contributor to this document and was a co-author on the
first few drafts. Finally, the authors would like to thank Dan Wing
for both his contributions to the text and his huge help in
restarting progress on this draft after work had stalled.
22. References
22.1. Normative References
[I-D.ietf-behave-rfc3489bis]
Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,
"Session Traversal Utilities for (NAT) (STUN)",
draft-ietf-behave-rfc3489bis-18 (work in progress),
July 2008.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2474] Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black,
"Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS
Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers", RFC 2474,
December 1998.
[RFC3168] Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The Addition
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of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP",
RFC 3168, September 2001.
22.2. Informative References
[RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and
E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",
BCP 5, RFC 1918, February 1996.
[RFC3424] Daigle, L. and IAB, "IAB Considerations for UNilateral
Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address
Translation", RFC 3424, November 2002.
[RFC4787] Audet, F. and C. Jennings, "Network Address Translation
(NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast UDP", BCP 127,
RFC 4787, January 2007.
[I-D.ietf-mmusic-ice]
Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment
(ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT)
Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols",
draft-ietf-mmusic-ice-19 (work in progress), October 2007.
[I-D.ietf-behave-turn-tcp]
Rosenberg, J. and R. Mahy, "Traversal Using Relays around
NAT (TURN) Extensions for TCP Allocations",
draft-ietf-behave-turn-tcp-00 (work in progress),
November 2007.
[I-D.ietf-behave-turn-ipv6]
Camarillo, G. and O. Novo, "Traversal Using Relays around
NAT (TURN) Extension for IPv4/IPv6 Transition",
draft-ietf-behave-turn-ipv6-04 (work in progress),
January 2008.
[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-udp-guidelines]
Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "Unicast UDP Usage Guidelines
for Application Designers",
draft-ietf-tsvwg-udp-guidelines-10 (work in progress),
August 2008.
[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-port-randomization]
Larsen, M. and F. Gont, "Port Randomization",
draft-ietf-tsvwg-port-randomization-02 (work in progress),
August 2008.
[RFC1928] Leech, M., Ganis, M., Lee, Y., Kuris, R., Koblas, D., and
L. Jones, "SOCKS Protocol Version 5", RFC 1928,
Rosenberg, et al. Expires April 2, 2009 [Page 57]
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March 1996.
[RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.
[RFC3711] Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",
RFC 3711, March 2004.
[RFC4302] Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 4302,
December 2005.
[RFC4303] Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
RFC 4303, December 2005.
[Port-Numbers]
"IANA Port Numbers Registry",
<http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers>.
[Protocol-Numbers]
"IANA Protocol Numbers Registry", 2005,
<http://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers>.
Authors' Addresses
Jonathan Rosenberg
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Edison, NJ
USA
Email: jdrosen@cisco.com
URI: http://www.jdrosen.net
Rohan Mahy
Plantronics, Inc.
Email: rohan@ekabal.com
Rosenberg, et al. Expires April 2, 2009 [Page 58]
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Philip Matthews
(Unaffiliated)
Fax:
Email: philip_matthews@magma.ca
URI:
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Rosenberg, et al. Expires April 2, 2009 [Page 60]
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