Network Working Group                                       J. Rosenberg
Request for Comments: 3263                                   dynamicsoft
Obsoletes: 2543                                           H. Schulzrinne
Category: Standards Track                                    Columbia U.
                                                              June 2002


       Session Initiation Protocol (SIP): Locating SIP Servers

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) uses DNS procedures to allow a
  client to resolve a SIP Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) into the IP
  address, port, and transport protocol of the next hop to contact.  It
  also uses DNS to allow a server to send a response to a backup client
  if the primary client has failed.  This document describes those DNS
  procedures in detail.

Table of Contents

  1          Introduction ........................................    2
  2          Problems DNS is Needed to Solve .....................    2
  3          Terminology .........................................    5
  4          Client Usage ........................................    5
  4.1        Selecting a Transport Protocol ......................    6
  4.2        Determining Port and IP Address .....................    8
  4.3        Details of RFC 2782 Process .........................    9
  4.4        Consideration for Stateless Proxies .................   10
  5          Server Usage ........................................   11
  6          Constructing SIP URIs ...............................   12
  7          Security Considerations .............................   12
  8          The Transport Determination Application .............   13
  9          IANA Considerations .................................   14
  10         Acknowledgements ....................................   14
  11         Normative References ................................   15
  12         Informative References ..............................   15



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  13         Authors' Addresses ..................................   16
  14         Full Copyright Statement ............................   17

1 Introduction

  The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) (RFC 3261 [1]) is a client-
  server protocol used for the initiation and management of
  communications sessions between users.  SIP end systems are called
  user agents, and intermediate elements are known as proxy servers.  A
  typical SIP configuration, referred to as the SIP "trapezoid", is
  shown in Figure 1.  In this diagram, a caller in domain A (UA1)
  wishes to call Joe in domain B (joe@B).  To do so, it communicates
  with proxy 1 in its domain (domain A).  Proxy 1 forwards the request
  to the proxy for the domain of the called party (domain B), which is
  proxy 2.  Proxy 2 forwards the call to the called party, UA 2.

  As part of this call flow, proxy 1 needs to determine a SIP server
  for domain B.  To do this, proxy 1 makes use of DNS procedures, using
  both SRV [2] and NAPTR [3] records.  This document describes the
  specific problems that SIP uses DNS to help solve, and provides a
  solution.

2 Problems DNS is Needed to Solve

  DNS is needed to help solve two aspects of the general call flow
  described in the Introduction.  The first is for proxy 1 to discover
  the SIP server in domain B, in order to forward the call for joe@B.
  The second is for proxy 2 to identify a backup for proxy 1 in the
  event it fails after forwarding the request.

  For the first aspect, proxy 1 specifically needs to determine the IP
  address, port, and transport protocol for the server in domain B.
  The choice of transport protocol is particularly noteworthy.  Unlike
  many other protocols, SIP can run over a variety of transport
  protocols, including TCP, UDP, and SCTP.  SIP can also use TLS.
  Currently, use of TLS is defined for TCP only.  Thus, clients need to
  be able to automatically determine which transport protocols are
  available.  The proxy sending the request has a particular set of
  transport protocols it supports and a preference for using those
  transport protocols.  Proxy 2 has its own set of transport protocols
  it supports, and relative preferences for those transport protocols.
  All proxies must implement both UDP and TCP, along with TLS over TCP,
  so that there is always an intersection of capabilities.  Some form
  of DNS procedures are needed for proxy 1 to discover the available
  transport protocols for SIP services at domain B, and the relative
  preferences of those transport protocols.  Proxy 1 intersects its
  list of supported transport protocols with those of proxy 2 and then
  chooses the protocol preferred by proxy 2.



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   ............................          ..............................
   .                          .          .                            .
   .                +-------+ .          . +-------+                  .
   .                |       | .          . |       |                  .
   .                | Proxy |------------- | Proxy |                  .
   .                |   1   | .          . |  2    |                  .
   .                |       | .          . |       |                  .
   .              / +-------+ .          . +-------+ \                .
   .             /            .          .            \               .
   .            /             .          .             \              .
   .           /              .          .              \             .
   .          /               .          .               \            .
   .         /                .          .                \           .
   .        /                 .          .                 \          .
   .       /                  .          .                  \         .
   .   +-------+              .          .                +-------+   .
   .   |       |              .          .                |       |   .
   .   |       |              .          .                |       |   .
   .   | UA 1  |              .          .                | UA 2  |   .
   .   |       |              .          .                |       |   .
   .   +-------+              .          .                +-------+   .
   .              Domain A    .          .   Domain B                 .
   ............................          ..............................

                       Figure 1: The SIP trapezoid

  It is important to note that DNS lookups can be used multiple times
  throughout the processing of a call.  In general, an element that
  wishes to send a request (called a client) may need to perform DNS
  processing to determine the IP address, port, and transport protocol
  of a next hop element, called a server (it can be a proxy or a user
  agent).  Such processing could, in principle, occur at every hop
  between elements.

  Since SIP is used for the establishment of interactive communications
  services, the time it takes to complete a transaction between a
  caller and called party is important.  Typically, the time from when
  the caller initiates a call until the time the called party is
  alerted should be no more than a few seconds.  Given that there can
  be multiple hops, each of which is doing DNS lookups in addition to
  other potentially time-intensive operations, the amount of time
  available for DNS lookups at each hop is limited.

  Scalability and high availability are important in SIP. SIP services
  scale up through clustering techniques.  Typically, in a realistic
  version of the network in Figure 1, proxy 2 would be a cluster of
  homogeneously configured proxies.  DNS needs to provide the ability




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  for domain B to configure a set of servers, along with prioritization
  and weights, in order to provide a crude level of capacity-based load
  balancing.

  SIP assures high availability by having upstream elements detect
  failures.  For example, assume that proxy 2 is implemented as a
  cluster of two proxies, proxy 2.1 and proxy 2.2.  If proxy 1 sends a
  request to proxy 2.1 and the request fails, it retries the request by
  sending it to proxy 2.2.  In many cases, proxy 1 will not know which
  domains it will ultimately communicate with.  That information would
  be known when a user actually makes a call to another user in that
  domain.  Proxy 1 may never communicate with that domain again after
  the call completes.  Proxy 1 may communicate with thousands of
  different domains within a few minutes, and proxy 2 could receive
  requests from thousands of different domains within a few minutes.
  Because of this "many-to-many" relationship, and the possibly long
  intervals between communications between a pair of domains, it is not
  generally possible for an element to maintain dynamic availability
  state for the proxies it will communicate with.  When a proxy gets
  its first call with a particular domain, it will try the servers in
  that domain in some order until it finds one that is available.  The
  identity of the available server would ideally be cached for some
  amount of time in order to reduce call setup delays of subsequent
  calls.  The client cannot query a failed server continuously to
  determine when it becomes available again, since this does not scale.
  Furthermore, the availability state must eventually be flushed in
  order to redistribute load to recovered elements when they come back
  online.

  It is possible for elements to fail in the middle of a transaction.
  For example, after proxy 2 forwards the request to UA 2, proxy 1
  fails.  UA 2 sends its response to proxy 2, which tries to forward it
  to proxy 1, which is no longer available.  The second aspect of the
  flow in the introduction for which DNS is needed, is for proxy 2 to
  identify a backup for proxy 1 that it can send the response to.  This
  problem is more realistic in SIP than it is in other transactional
  protocols.  The reason is that some SIP responses can take a long
  time to be generated, because a human user frequently needs to be
  consulted in order to generate that response.  As such, it is not
  uncommon for tens of seconds to elapse between a call request and its
  acceptance.










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3 Terminology

  In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
  "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
  and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [4] and
  indicate requirement levels for compliant SIP implementations.

4 Client Usage

  Usage of DNS differs for clients and for servers.  This section
  discusses client usage.  We assume that the client is stateful
  (either a User Agent Client (UAC) or a stateful proxy).  Stateless
  proxies are discussed in Section 4.4.

  The procedures here are invoked when a client needs to send a request
  to a resource identified by a SIP or SIPS (secure SIP) URI.  This URI
  can identify the desired resource to which the request is targeted
  (in which case, the URI is found in the Request-URI), or it can
  identify an intermediate hop towards that resource (in which case,
  the URI is found in the Route header).  The procedures defined here
  in no way affect this URI (i.e., the URI is not rewritten with the
  result of the DNS lookup), they only result in an IP address, port
  and transport protocol where the request can be sent.  RFC 3261 [1]
  provides guidelines on determining which URI needs to be resolved in
  DNS to determine the host that the request needs to be sent to.  In
  some cases, also documented in [1], the request can be sent to a
  specific intermediate proxy not identified by a SIP URI, but rather,
  by a hostname or numeric IP address.  In that case, a temporary URI,
  used for purposes of this specification, is constructed.  That URI is
  of the form sip:<proxy>, where <proxy> is the FQDN or numeric IP
  address of the next-hop proxy.  As a result, in all cases, the
  problem boils down to resolution of a SIP or SIPS URI in DNS to
  determine the IP address, port, and transport of the host to which
  the request is to be sent.

  The procedures here MUST be done exactly once per transaction, where
  transaction is as defined in [1].  That is, once a SIP server has
  successfully been contacted (success is defined below), all
  retransmissions of the SIP request and the ACK for non-2xx SIP
  responses to INVITE MUST be sent to the same host.  Furthermore, a
  CANCEL for a particular SIP request MUST be sent to the same SIP
  server that the SIP request was delivered to.

  Because the ACK request for 2xx responses to INVITE constitutes a
  different transaction, there is no requirement that it be delivered
  to the same server that received the original request (indeed, if
  that server did not record-route, it will not get the ACK).




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  We define TARGET as the value of the maddr parameter of the URI, if
  present, otherwise, the host value of the hostport component of the
  URI.  It identifies the domain to be contacted.  A description of the
  SIP and SIPS URIs and a definition of these parameters can be found
  in [1].

  We determine the transport protocol, port and IP address of a
  suitable instance of TARGET in Sections 4.1 and 4.2.

4.1 Selecting a Transport Protocol

  First, the client selects a transport protocol.

  If the URI specifies a transport protocol in the transport parameter,
  that transport protocol SHOULD be used.

  Otherwise, if no transport protocol is specified, but the TARGET is a
  numeric IP address, the client SHOULD use UDP for a SIP URI, and TCP
  for a SIPS URI.  Similarly, if no transport protocol is specified,
  and the TARGET is not numeric, but an explicit port is provided, the
  client SHOULD use UDP for a SIP URI, and TCP for a SIPS URI.  This is
  because UDP is the only mandatory transport in RFC 2543 [6], and thus
  the only one guaranteed to be interoperable for a SIP URI.  It was
  also specified as the default transport in RFC 2543 when no transport
  was present in the SIP URI.  However, another transport, such as TCP,
  MAY be used if the guidelines of SIP mandate it for this particular
  request.  That is the case, for example, for requests that exceed the
  path MTU.

  Otherwise, if no transport protocol or port is specified, and the
  target is not a numeric IP address, the client SHOULD perform a NAPTR
  query for the domain in the URI.  The services relevant for the task
  of transport protocol selection are those with NAPTR service fields
  with values "SIP+D2X" and "SIPS+D2X", where X is a letter that
  corresponds to a transport protocol supported by the domain.  This
  specification defines D2U for UDP, D2T for TCP, and D2S for SCTP.  We
  also establish an IANA registry for NAPTR service name to transport
  protocol mappings.

  These NAPTR records provide a mapping from a domain to the SRV record
  for contacting a server with the specific transport protocol in the
  NAPTR services field.  The resource record will contain an empty
  regular expression and a replacement value, which is the SRV record
  for that particular transport protocol.  If the server supports
  multiple transport protocols, there will be multiple NAPTR records,
  each with a different service value.  As per RFC 2915 [3], the client
  discards any records whose services fields are not applicable.  For
  the purposes of this specification, several rules are defined.



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  First, a client resolving a SIPS URI MUST discard any services that
  do not contain "SIPS" as the protocol in the service field.  The
  converse is not true, however.  A client resolving a SIP URI SHOULD
  retain records with "SIPS" as the protocol, if the client supports
  TLS.  Second, a client MUST discard any service fields that identify
  a resolution service whose value is not "D2X", for values of X that
  indicate transport protocols supported by the client.  The NAPTR
  processing as described in RFC 2915 will result in the discovery of
  the most preferred transport protocol of the server that is supported
  by the client, as well as an SRV record for the server.  It will also
  allow the client to discover if TLS is available and its preference
  for its usage.

  As an example, consider a client that wishes to resolve
  sip:[email protected].  The client performs a NAPTR query for that
  domain, and the following NAPTR records are returned:

  ;          order pref flags service      regexp  replacement
     IN NAPTR 50   50  "s"  "SIPS+D2T"     ""  _sips._tcp.example.com.
     IN NAPTR 90   50  "s"  "SIP+D2T"      ""  _sip._tcp.example.com
     IN NAPTR 100  50  "s"  "SIP+D2U"      ""  _sip._udp.example.com.

  This indicates that the server supports TLS over TCP, TCP, and UDP,
  in that order of preference.  Since the client supports TCP and UDP,
  TCP will be used, targeted to a host determined by an SRV lookup of
  _sip._tcp.example.com.  That lookup would return:

  ;;          Priority Weight Port   Target
      IN SRV  0        1      5060   server1.example.com
      IN SRV  0        2      5060   server2.example.com

  If a SIP proxy, redirect server, or registrar is to be contacted
  through the lookup of NAPTR records, there MUST be at least three
  records - one with a "SIP+D2T" service field, one with a "SIP+D2U"
  service field, and one with a "SIPS+D2T" service field.  The records
  with SIPS as the protocol in the service field SHOULD be preferred
  (i.e., have a lower value of the order field) above records with SIP
  as the protocol in the service field.  A record with a "SIPS+D2U"
  service field SHOULD NOT be placed into the DNS, since it is not
  possible to use TLS over UDP.

  It is not necessary for the domain suffixes in the NAPTR replacement
  field to match the domain of the original query (i.e., example.com
  above).  However, for backwards compatibility with RFC 2543, a domain
  MUST maintain SRV records for the domain of the original query, even
  if the NAPTR record is in a different domain.  As an example, even
  though the SRV record for TCP is _sip._tcp.school.edu, there MUST
  also be an SRV record at _sip._tcp.example.com.



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     RFC 2543 will look up the SRV records for the domain directly.  If
     these do not exist because the NAPTR replacement points to a
     different domain, the client will fail.

  For NAPTR records with SIPS protocol fields, (if the server is using
  a site certificate), the domain name in the query and the domain name
  in the replacement field MUST both be valid based on the site
  certificate handed out by the server in the TLS exchange.  Similarly,
  the domain name in the SRV query and the domain name in the target in
  the SRV record MUST both be valid based on the same site certificate.
  Otherwise, an attacker could modify the DNS records to contain
  replacement values in a different domain, and the client could not
  validate that this was the desired behavior or the result of an
  attack.

  If no NAPTR records are found, the client constructs SRV queries for
  those transport protocols it supports, and does a query for each.
  Queries are done using the service identifier "_sip" for SIP URIs and
  "_sips" for SIPS URIs.  A particular transport is supported if the
  query is successful.  The client MAY use any transport protocol it
  desires which is supported by the server.

     This is a change from RFC 2543.  It specified that a client would
     lookup SRV records for all transports it supported, and merge the
     priority values across those records.  Then, it would choose the
     most preferred record.

  If no SRV records are found, the client SHOULD use TCP for a SIPS
  URI, and UDP for a SIP URI.  However, another transport protocol,
  such as TCP, MAY be used if the guidelines of SIP mandate it for this
  particular request.  That is the case, for example, for requests that
  exceed the path MTU.

4.2 Determining Port and IP Address

  Once the transport protocol has been determined, the next step is to
  determine the IP address and port.

  If TARGET is a numeric IP address, the client uses that address.  If
  the URI also contains a port, it uses that port.  If no port is
  specified, it uses the default port for the particular transport
  protocol.

  If the TARGET was not a numeric IP address, but a port is present in
  the URI, the client performs an A or AAAA record lookup of the domain
  name.  The result will be a list of IP addresses, each of which can
  be contacted at the specific port from the URI and transport protocol




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  determined previously.  The client SHOULD try the first record.  If
  an attempt should fail, based on the definition of failure in Section
  4.3, the next SHOULD be tried, and if that should fail, the next
  SHOULD be tried, and so on.

     This is a change from RFC 2543.  Previously, if the port was
     explicit, but with a value of 5060, SRV records were used.  Now, A
     or AAAA records will be used.

  If the TARGET was not a numeric IP address, and no port was present
  in the URI, the client performs an SRV query on the record returned
  from the NAPTR processing of Section 4.1, if such processing was
  performed.  If it was not, because a transport was specified
  explicitly, the client performs an SRV query for that specific
  transport, using the service identifier "_sips" for SIPS URIs.  For a
  SIP URI, if the client wishes to use TLS, it also uses the service
  identifier "_sips" for that specific transport, otherwise, it uses
  "_sip".  If the NAPTR processing was not done because no NAPTR
  records were found, but an SRV query for a supported transport
  protocol was successful, those SRV records are selected. Irregardless
  of how the SRV records were determined, the procedures of RFC 2782,
  as described in the section titled "Usage rules" are followed,
  augmented by the additional procedures of Section 4.3 of this
  document.

  If no SRV records were found, the client performs an A or AAAA record
  lookup of the domain name.  The result will be a list of IP
  addresses, each of which can be contacted using the transport
  protocol determined previously, at the default port for that
  transport.  Processing then proceeds as described above for an
  explicit port once the A or AAAA records have been looked up.

4.3 Details of RFC 2782 Process

  RFC 2782 spells out the details of how a set of SRV records are
  sorted and then tried.  However, it only states that the client
  should "try to connect to the (protocol, address, service)" without
  giving any details on what happens in the event of failure.  Those
  details are described here for SIP.

  For SIP requests, failure occurs if the transaction layer reports a
  503 error response or a transport failure of some sort (generally,
  due to fatal ICMP errors in UDP or connection failures in TCP).
  Failure also occurs if the transaction layer times out without ever
  having received any response, provisional or final (i.e., timer B or
  timer F in RFC 3261 [1] fires).  If a failure occurs, the client
  SHOULD create a new request, which is identical to the previous, but




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  has a different value of the Via branch ID than the previous (and
  therefore constitutes a new SIP transaction).  That request is sent
  to the next element in the list as specified by RFC 2782.

4.4 Consideration for Stateless Proxies

  The process of the previous sections is highly stateful.  When a
  server is contacted successfully, all retransmissions of the request
  for the transaction, as well as ACK for a non-2xx final response, and
  CANCEL requests for that transaction, MUST go to the same server.

  The identity of the successfully contacted server is a form of
  transaction state.  This presents a challenge for stateless proxies,
  which still need to meet the requirement for sending all requests in
  the transaction to the same server.

  The problem is similar, but different, to the problem of HTTP
  transactions within a cookie session getting routed to different
  servers based on DNS randomization.  There, such distribution is not
  a problem.  Farms of servers generally have common back-end data
  stores, where the session data is stored.  Whenever a server in the
  farm receives an HTTP request, it takes the session identifier, if
  present, and extracts the needed state to process the request.  A
  request without a session identifier creates a new one.  The problem
  with stateless proxies is at a lower layer; it is retransmitted
  requests within a transaction that are being potentially spread
  across servers.  Since none of these retransmissions carries a
  "session identifier" (a complete dialog identifier in SIP terms), a
  new dialog would be created identically at each server.  This could,
  for example result in multiple phone calls to be made to the same
  phone.  Therefore, it is critical to prevent such a thing from
  happening in the first place.

  The requirement is not difficult to meet in the simple case where
  there were no failures when attempting to contact a server.  Whenever
  the stateless proxy receives the request, it performs the appropriate
  DNS queries as described above.  However, the procedures of RFC 2782
  are not guaranteed to be deterministic.  This is because records that
  contain the same priority have no specified order.  The stateless
  proxy MUST define a deterministic order to the records in that case,
  using any algorithm at its disposal.  One suggestion is to
  alphabetize them, or, more generally, sort them by ASCII-compatible
  encoding.  To make processing easier for stateless proxies, it is
  RECOMMENDED that domain administrators make the weights of SRV
  records with equal priority different (for example, using weights of
  1000 and 1001 if two servers are equivalent, rather than assigning
  both a weight of 1000), and similarly for NAPTR records.  If the
  first server is contacted successfully, the proxy can remain



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  stateless.  However, if the first server is not contacted
  successfully, and a subsequent server is, the proxy cannot remain
  stateless for this transaction.  If it were stateless, a
  retransmission could very well go to a different server if the failed
  one recovers between retransmissions.  As such, whenever a proxy does
  not successfully contact the first server, it SHOULD act as a
  stateful proxy.

  Unfortunately, it is still possible for a stateless proxy to deliver
  retransmissions to different servers, even if it follows the
  recommendations above.  This can happen if the DNS TTLs expire in the
  middle of a transaction, and the entries had changed.  This is
  unavoidable.  Network implementors should be aware of this
  limitation, and not use stateless proxies that access DNS if this
  error is deemed critical.

5 Server Usage

  RFC 3261 [1] defines procedures for sending responses from a server
  back to the client.  Typically, for unicast UDP requests, the
  response is sent back to the source IP address where the request came
  from, using the port contained in the Via header.  For reliable
  transport protocols, the response is sent over the connection the
  request arrived on.  However, it is important to provide failover
  support when the client element fails between sending the request and
  receiving the response.

  A server, according to RFC 3261 [1], will send a response on the
  connection it arrived on (in the case of reliable transport
  protocols), and for unreliable transport protocols, to the source
  address of the request, and the port in the Via header field.  The
  procedures here are invoked when a server attempts to send to that
  location and that response fails (the specific conditions are
  detailed in RFC 3261). "Fails" is defined as any closure of the
  transport connection the request came in on before the response can
  be sent, or communication of a fatal error from the transport layer.

  In these cases, the server examines the value of the sent-by
  construction in the topmost Via header.  If it contains a numeric IP
  address, the server attempts to send the response to that address,
  using the transport protocol from the Via header, and the port from
  sent-by, if present, else the default for that transport protocol.
  The transport protocol in the Via header can indicate "TLS", which
  refers to TLS over TCP.  When this value is present, the server MUST
  use TLS over TCP to send the response.






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  If, however, the sent-by field contained a domain name and a port
  number, the server queries for A or AAAA records with that name.  It
  tries to send the response to each element on the resulting list of
  IP addresses, using the port from the Via, and the transport protocol
  from the Via (again, a value of TLS refers to TLS over TCP).  As in
  the client processing, the next entry in the list is tried if the one
  before it results in a failure.

  If, however, the sent-by field contained a domain name and no port,
  the server queries for SRV records at that domain name using the
  service identifier "_sips" if the Via transport is "TLS", "_sip"
  otherwise, and the transport from the topmost Via header ("TLS"
  implies that the transport protocol in the SRV query is TCP).  The
  resulting list is sorted as described in [2], and the response is
  sent to the topmost element on the new list described there.  If that
  results in a failure, the next entry on the list is tried.

6 Constructing SIP URIs

  In many cases, an element needs to construct a SIP URI for inclusion
  in a Contact header in a REGISTER, or in a Record-Route header in an
  INVITE.  According to RFC 3261 [1], these URIs have to have the
  property that they resolve to the specific element that inserted
  them.  However, if they are constructed with just an IP address, for
  example:

  sip:1.2.3.4

  then should the element fail, there is no way to route the request or
  response through a backup.

  SRV provides a way to fix this.  Instead of using an IP address, a
  domain name that resolves to an SRV record can be used:

  sip:server23.provider.com

  The SRV records for a particular target can be set up so that there
  is a single record with a low value for the priority field
  (indicating the preferred choice), and this record points to the
  specific element that constructed the URI.  However, there are
  additional records with higher values of the priority field that
  point to backup elements that would be used in the event of failure.
  This allows the constraint of RFC 3261 [1] to be met while allowing
  for robust operation.







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7 Security Considerations

  DNS NAPTR records are used to allow a client to discover that the
  server supports TLS.  An attacker could potentially modify these
  records, resulting in a client using a non-secure transport when TLS
  is in fact available and preferred.

  This is partially mitigated by the presence of the sips URI scheme,
  which is always sent only over TLS.  An attacker cannot force a bid
  down through deletion or modification of DNS records.  In the worst
  case, they can prevent communication from occurring by deleting all
  records.  A sips URI itself is generally exchanged within a secure
  context, frequently on a business card or secure web page, or within
  a SIP message which has already been secured with TLS.  See RFC 3261
  [1] for details.  The sips URI is therefore preferred when security
  is truly needed, but we allow TLS to be used for requests resolved by
  a SIP URI to allow security that is better than no TLS at all.

  The bid down attack can also be mitigated through caching.  A client
  which frequently contacts the same domain SHOULD cache whether or not
  its NAPTR records contain SIPS in the services field.  If such
  records were present, but in later queries cease to appear, it is a
  sign of a potential attack.  In this case, the client SHOULD generate
  some kind of alert or alarm, and MAY reject the request.

  An additional problem is that proxies, which are intermediaries
  between the users of the system, are frequently the clients that
  perform the NAPTR queries.  It is therefore possible for a proxy to
  ignore SIPS entries even though they are present, resulting in
  downgraded security.  There is very little that can be done to
  prevent such attacks.  Clients are simply dependent on proxy servers
  for call completion, and must trust that they implement the protocol
  properly in order for security to be provided.  Falsifying DNS
  records can be done by tampering with wire traffic (in the absence of
  DNSSEC), whereas compromising and commandeering a proxy server
  requires a break-in, and is seen as the considerably less likely
  downgrade threat.

8 The Transport Determination Application

  This section more formally defines the NAPTR usage of this
  specification, using the Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)
  framework as a guide [7].  DDDS represents the evolution of the NAPTR
  resource record.  DDDS defines applications, which can make use of
  the NAPTR record for specific resolution services.  This application
  is called the Transport Determination Application, and its goal is to
  map an incoming SIP or SIPS URI to a set of SRV records for the
  various servers that can handle the URI.



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  The following is the information that DDDS requests an application to
  provide:

     Application Unique String: The Application Unique String (AUS) is
        the input to the resolution service.  For this application, it
        is the URI to resolve.

     First Well Known Rule: The first well known rule extracts a key
        from the AUS.  For this application, the first well known rule
        extracts the host portion of the SIP or SIPS URI.

     Valid Databases: The key resulting from the first well known rule
        is looked up in a single database, the DNS [8].

     Expected Output: The result of the application is an SRV record
        for the server to contact.

9 IANA Considerations

  The usage of NAPTR records described here requires well known values
  for the service fields for each transport supported by SIP.  The
  table of mappings from service field values to transport protocols is
  to be maintained by IANA.  New entries in the table MAY be added
  through the publication of standards track RFCs, as described in RFC
  2434 [5].

  The registration in the RFC MUST include the following information:

     Service Field: The service field being registered.  An example for
        a new fictitious transport protocol called NCTP might be
        "SIP+D2N".

     Protocol: The specific transport protocol associated with that
        service field.  This MUST include the name and acronym for the
        protocol, along with reference to a document that describes the
        transport protocol.  For example - "New Connectionless
        Transport Protocol (NCTP), RFC 5766".

     Name and Contact Information: The name, address, email address and
        telephone number for the person performing the registration.

  The following values have been placed into the registry:

  Services Field               Protocol
  SIP+D2T                       TCP
  SIPS+D2T                      TCP
  SIP+D2U                       UDP
  SIP+D2S                       SCTP (RFC 2960)



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10 Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to thank Randy Bush, Leslie Daigle, Patrik
  Faltstrom, Jo Hornsby, Rohan Mahy, Allison Mankin, Michael Mealling,
  Thomas Narten, and Jon Peterson for their useful comments.

11 Normative References

  [1]   Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:
        Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.

  [2]   Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P. and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
        Specifying the Location of Services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
        February 2000.

  [3]   Mealling, M. and R. Daniel, "The Naming Authority Pointer
        (NAPTR) DNS Resource Record", RFC 2915, September 2000.

  [4]   Bradner, S., "Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
        Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [5]   Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA
        Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434, October
        1998.

12 Informative References

  [6]   Handley, M., Schulzrinne, H., Schooler, E. and J. Rosenberg,
        "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 2543, March 1999.

  [7]   Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS) Part
        One: The Comprehensive DDDS Standard", Work in Progress.

  [8]   Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS) Part
        Three: The DNS Database", Work in Progress.















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13 Authors' Addresses

  Jonathan Rosenberg
  dynamicsoft
  72 Eagle Rock Avenue
  First Floor
  East Hanover, NJ 07936

  EMail: [email protected]


  Henning Schulzrinne
  Columbia University
  M/S 0401
  1214 Amsterdam Ave.
  New York, NY 10027-7003

  EMail: [email protected]

































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14  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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