Network Working Group                                         P. Calhoun
Request for Comments: 3588                               Airespace, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                    J. Loughney
                                                                  Nokia
                                                             E. Guttman
                                                 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
                                                                G. Zorn
                                                    Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                               J. Arkko
                                                               Ericsson
                                                         September 2003


                        Diameter Base Protocol

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 (2003).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  The Diameter base protocol is intended to provide an Authentication,
  Authorization and Accounting (AAA) framework for applications such as
  network access or IP mobility.  Diameter is also intended to work in
  both local Authentication, Authorization & Accounting and roaming
  situations.  This document specifies the message format, transport,
  error reporting, accounting and security services to be used by all
  Diameter applications.  The Diameter base application needs to be
  supported by all Diameter implementations.

Conventions Used In This Document

  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 BCP 14, RFC 2119
  [KEYWORD].







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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction.................................................   6
      1.1.   Diameter Protocol.....................................   9
             1.1.1.   Description of the Document Set..............  10
      1.2.   Approach to Extensibility.............................  11
             1.2.1.   Defining New AVP Values......................  11
             1.2.2.   Creating New AVPs............................  11
             1.2.3.   Creating New Authentication Applications.....  11
             1.2.4.   Creating New Accounting Applications.........  12
             1.2.5.   Application Authentication Procedures........  14
      1.3.   Terminology...........................................  14
  2.  Protocol Overview............................................  18
      2.1.   Transport.............................................  20
             2.1.1.   SCTP Guidelines..............................  21
      2.2.   Securing Diameter Messages............................  21
      2.3.   Diameter Application Compliance.......................  21
      2.4.   Application Identifiers...............................  22
      2.5.   Connections vs. Sessions..............................  22
      2.6.   Peer Table............................................  23
      2.7.   Realm-Based Routing Table.............................  24
      2.8.   Role of Diameter Agents...............................  25
             2.8.1.   Relay Agents.................................  26
             2.8.2.   Proxy Agents.................................  27
             2.8.3.   Redirect Agents..............................  28
             2.8.4.   Translation Agents...........................  29
      2.9.   End-to-End Security Framework.........................  30
      2.10.  Diameter Path Authorization...........................  30
  3.  Diameter Header..............................................  32
      3.1.   Command Codes.........................................  35
      3.2.   Command Code ABNF specification.......................  36
      3.3.   Diameter Command Naming Conventions...................  38
  4.  Diameter AVPs................................................  38
      4.1.   AVP Header............................................  39
             4.1.1.   Optional Header Elements.....................  41
      4.2.   Basic AVP Data Formats................................  41
      4.3.   Derived AVP Data Formats..............................  42
      4.4.   Grouped AVP Values....................................  49
             4.4.1.   Example AVP with a Grouped Data Type.........  50
      4.5.   Diameter Base Protocol AVPs...........................  53
  5.  Diameter Peers...............................................  56
      5.1.   Peer Connections......................................  56
      5.2.   Diameter Peer Discovery...............................  56
      5.3.   Capabilities Exchange.................................  59
             5.3.1.   Capabilities-Exchange-Request................  60
             5.3.2.   Capabilities-Exchange-Answer.................  60
             5.3.3.   Vendor-Id AVP................................  61
             5.3.4.   Firmware-Revision AVP........................  61



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


             5.3.5.   Host-IP-Address AVP..........................  62
             5.3.6.   Supported-Vendor-Id AVP......................  62
             5.3.7.   Product-Name AVP.............................  62
      5.4.   Disconnecting Peer Connections........................  62
             5.4.1.   Disconnect-Peer-Request......................  63
             5.4.2.   Disconnect-Peer-Answer.......................  63
             5.4.3.   Disconnect-Cause AVP.........................  63
      5.5.   Transport Failure Detection...........................  64
             5.5.1.   Device-Watchdog-Request......................  64
             5.5.2.   Device-Watchdog-Answer.......................  64
             5.5.3.   Transport Failure Algorithm..................  65
             5.5.4.   Failover and Failback Procedures.............  65
      5.6.   Peer State Machine....................................  66
             5.6.1.   Incoming connections.........................  68
             5.6.2.   Events.......................................  69
             5.6.3.   Actions......................................  70
             5.6.4.   The Election Process.........................  71
  6.  Diameter Message Processing..................................  71
      6.1.   Diameter Request Routing Overview.....................  71
             6.1.1.   Originating a Request........................  73
             6.1.2.   Sending a Request............................  73
             6.1.3.   Receiving Requests...........................  73
             6.1.4.   Processing Local Requests....................  73
             6.1.5.   Request Forwarding...........................  74
             6.1.6.   Request Routing..............................  74
             6.1.7.   Redirecting Requests.........................  74
             6.1.8.   Relaying and Proxying Requests...............  75
      6.2.   Diameter Answer Processing............................  76
             6.2.1.   Processing Received Answers..................  77
             6.2.2.   Relaying and Proxying Answers................  77
      6.3.   Origin-Host AVP.......................................  77
      6.4.   Origin-Realm AVP......................................  78
      6.5.   Destination-Host AVP..................................  78
      6.6.   Destination-Realm AVP.................................  78
      6.7.   Routing AVPs..........................................  78
             6.7.1.   Route-Record AVP.............................  79
             6.7.2.   Proxy-Info AVP...............................  79
             6.7.3.   Proxy-Host AVP...............................  79
             6.7.4.   Proxy-State AVP..............................  79
      6.8.   Auth-Application-Id AVP...............................  79
      6.9.   Acct-Application-Id AVP...............................  79
      6.10.  Inband-Security-Id AVP................................  79
      6.11.  Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP....................  80
      6.12.  Redirect-Host AVP.....................................  80
      6.13.  Redirect-Host-Usage AVP...............................  80
      6.14.  Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP...........................  81
      6.15.  E2E-Sequence AVP......................................  82




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  7.  Error Handling...............................................  82
      7.1.   Result-Code AVP.......................................  84
             7.1.1.   Informational................................  84
             7.1.2.   Success......................................  84
             7.1.3.   Protocol Errors..............................  85
             7.1.4.   Transient Failures...........................  86
             7.1.5.   Permanent Failures...........................  86
      7.2.   Error Bit.............................................  88
      7.3.   Error-Message AVP.....................................  89
      7.4.   Error-Reporting-Host AVP..............................  89
      7.5.   Failed-AVP AVP........................................  89
      7.6.   Experimental-Result AVP...............................  90
      7.7.   Experimental-Result-Code AVP..........................  90
  8.  Diameter User Sessions.......................................  90
      8.1.   Authorization Session State Machine...................  92
      8.2.   Accounting Session State Machine......................  96
      8.3.   Server-Initiated Re-Auth.............................. 101
             8.3.1.   Re-Auth-Request.............................. 102
             8.3.2.   Re-Auth-Answer............................... 102
      8.4.   Session Termination................................... 103
             8.4.1.   Session-Termination-Request.................. 104
             8.4.2.   Session-Termination-Answer................... 105
      8.5.   Aborting a Session.................................... 105
             8.5.1.   Abort-Session-Request........................ 106
             8.5.2.   Abort-Session-Answer......................... 106
      8.6.   Inferring Session Termination from Origin-State-Id.... 107
      8.7.   Auth-Request-Type AVP................................. 108
      8.8.   Session-Id AVP........................................ 108
      8.9.   Authorization-Lifetime AVP............................ 109
      8.10.  Auth-Grace-Period AVP................................. 110
      8.11.  Auth-Session-State AVP................................ 110
      8.12.  Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP.............................. 110
      8.13.  Session-Timeout AVP................................... 111
      8.14.  User-Name AVP......................................... 111
      8.15.  Termination-Cause AVP................................. 111
      8.16.  Origin-State-Id AVP................................... 112
      8.17.  Session-Binding AVP................................... 113
      8.18.  Session-Server-Failover AVP........................... 113
      8.19.  Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP.............................. 114
      8.20.  Class AVP............................................. 114
      8.21.  Event-Timestamp AVP................................... 115
  9.  Accounting................................................... 115
      9.1.   Server Directed Model................................. 115
      9.2.   Protocol Messages..................................... 116
      9.3.   Application Document Requirements..................... 116
      9.4.   Fault Resilience...................................... 116
      9.5.   Accounting Records.................................... 117
      9.6.   Correlation of Accounting Records..................... 118



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


      9.7.   Accounting Command-Codes.............................. 119
             9.7.1.   Accounting-Request........................... 119
             9.7.2.   Accounting-Answer............................ 120
      9.8.   Accounting AVPs....................................... 121
             9.8.1.   Accounting-Record-Type AVP................... 121
             9.8.2.   Acct-Interim-Interval AVP.................... 122
             9.8.3.   Accounting-Record-Number AVP................. 123
             9.8.4.   Acct-Session-Id AVP.......................... 123
             9.8.5.   Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP.................... 123
             9.8.6.   Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP................ 123
             9.8.7.   Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP............. 123
  10. AVP Occurrence Table......................................... 124
      10.1.  Base Protocol Command AVP Table....................... 124
      10.2.  Accounting AVP Table.................................. 126
  11. IANA Considerations.......................................... 127
      11.1.  AVP Header............................................ 127
             11.1.1.  AVP Code..................................... 127
             11.1.2.  AVP Flags.................................... 128
      11.2.  Diameter Header....................................... 128
             11.2.1.  Command Codes................................ 128
             11.2.2.  Command Flags................................ 129
      11.3.  Application Identifiers............................... 129
      11.4.  AVP Values............................................ 129
             11.4.1.  Result-Code AVP Values....................... 129
             11.4.2.  Accounting-Record-Type AVP Values............ 130
             11.4.3.  Termination-Cause AVP Values................. 130
             11.4.4.  Redirect-Host-Usage AVP Values............... 130
             11.4.5.  Session-Server-Failover AVP Values........... 130
             11.4.6.  Session-Binding AVP Values................... 130
             11.4.7.  Disconnect-Cause AVP Values.................. 130
             11.4.8.  Auth-Request-Type AVP Values................. 130
             11.4.9.  Auth-Session-State AVP Values................ 130
             11.4.10. Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP Values.............. 131
             11.4.11. Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP Values...... 131
      11.5.  Diameter TCP/SCTP Port Numbers........................ 131
      11.6.  NAPTR Service Fields.................................. 131
  12. Diameter Protocol Related Configurable Parameters............ 131
  13. Security Considerations...................................... 132
      13.1.  IPsec Usage........................................... 133
      13.2.  TLS Usage............................................. 134
      13.3.  Peer-to-Peer Considerations........................... 134
  14. References................................................... 136
      14.1.  Normative References.................................. 136
      14.2.  Informative References................................ 138
  15. Acknowledgements............................................. 140
  Appendix A.  Diameter Service Template........................... 141
  Appendix B.  NAPTR Example....................................... 142
  Appendix C.  Duplicate Detection................................. 143



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Appendix D.  Intellectual Property Statement..................... 145
  Authors' Addresses............................................... 146
  Full Copyright Statement......................................... 147

1.  Introduction

  Authentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA) protocols such as
  TACACS [TACACS] and RADIUS [RADIUS] were initially deployed to
  provide dial-up PPP [PPP] and terminal server access.  Over time,
  with the growth of the Internet and the introduction of new access
  technologies, including wireless, DSL, Mobile IP and Ethernet,
  routers and network access servers (NAS) have increased in complexity
  and density, putting new demands on AAA protocols.

  Network access requirements for AAA protocols are summarized in
  [AAAREQ].  These include:

  Failover
     [RADIUS] does not define failover mechanisms, and as a result,
     failover behavior differs between implementations.  In order to
     provide well defined failover behavior, Diameter supports
     application-layer acknowledgements, and defines failover
     algorithms and the associated state machine.  This is described in
     Section 5.5 and [AAATRANS].

  Transmission-level security
     [RADIUS] defines an application-layer authentication and integrity
     scheme that is required only for use with Response packets.  While
     [RADEXT] defines an additional authentication and integrity
     mechanism, use is only required during Extensible Authentication
     Protocol (EAP) sessions.  While attribute-hiding is supported,
     [RADIUS] does not provide support for per-packet confidentiality.
     In accounting, [RADACCT] assumes that replay protection is
     provided by the backend billing server, rather than within the
     protocol itself.

     While [RFC3162] defines the use of IPsec with RADIUS, support for
     IPsec is not required.  Since within [IKE] authentication occurs
     only within Phase 1 prior to the establishment of IPsec SAs in
     Phase 2, it is typically not possible to define separate trust or
     authorization schemes for each application.  This limits the
     usefulness of IPsec in inter-domain AAA applications (such as
     roaming) where it may be desirable to define a distinct
     certificate hierarchy for use in a AAA deployment.  In order to
     provide universal support for transmission-level security, and
     enable both intra- and inter-domain AAA deployments, IPsec support
     is mandatory in Diameter, and TLS support is optional.  Security
     is discussed in Section 13.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Reliable transport
     RADIUS runs over UDP, and does not define retransmission behavior;
     as a result, reliability varies between implementations.  As
     described in [ACCMGMT], this is a major issue in accounting, where
     packet loss may translate directly into revenue loss.  In order to
     provide well defined transport behavior, Diameter runs over
     reliable transport mechanisms (TCP, SCTP) as defined in
     [AAATRANS].

  Agent support
     [RADIUS] does not provide for explicit support for agents,
     including Proxies, Redirects and Relays.  Since the expected
     behavior is not defined, it varies between implementations.
     Diameter defines agent behavior explicitly; this is described in
     Section 2.8.

  Server-initiated messages
     While RADIUS server-initiated messages are defined in [DYNAUTH],
     support is optional.  This makes it difficult to implement
     features such as unsolicited disconnect or
     reauthentication/reauthorization on demand across a heterogeneous
     deployment.  Support for server-initiated messages is mandatory in
     Diameter, and is described in Section 8.

  Auditability
     RADIUS does not define data-object security mechanisms, and as a
     result, untrusted proxies may modify attributes or even packet
     headers without being detected.  Combined with lack of support for
     capabilities negotiation, this makes it very difficult to
     determine what occurred in the event of a dispute.  While
     implementation of data object security is not mandatory within
     Diameter, these capabilities are supported, and are described in
     [AAACMS].

  Transition support
     While Diameter does not share a common protocol data unit (PDU)
     with RADIUS, considerable effort has been expended in enabling
     backward compatibility with RADIUS, so that the two protocols may
     be deployed in the same network.  Initially, it is expected that
     Diameter will be deployed within new network devices, as well as
     within gateways enabling communication between legacy RADIUS
     devices and Diameter agents.  This capability, described in
     [NASREQ], enables Diameter support to be added to legacy networks,
     by addition of a gateway or server speaking both RADIUS and
     Diameter.






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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  In addition to addressing the above requirements, Diameter also
  provides support for the following:

  Capability negotiation
     RADIUS does not support error messages, capability negotiation, or
     a mandatory/non-mandatory flag for attributes.  Since RADIUS
     clients and servers are not aware of each other's capabilities,
     they may not be able to successfully negotiate a mutually
     acceptable service, or in some cases, even be aware of what
     service has been implemented.  Diameter includes support for error
     handling (Section 7), capability negotiation (Section 5.3), and
     mandatory/non-mandatory attribute-value pairs (AVPs) (Section
     4.1).

  Peer discovery and configuration
     RADIUS implementations typically require that the name or address
     of servers or clients be manually configured, along with the
     corresponding shared secrets.  This results in a large
     administrative burden, and creates the temptation to reuse the
     RADIUS shared secret, which can result in major security
     vulnerabilities if the Request Authenticator is not globally and
     temporally unique as required in [RADIUS].  Through DNS, Diameter
     enables dynamic discovery of peers.  Derivation of dynamic session
     keys is enabled via transmission-level security.

  Roaming support
     The ROAMOPS WG provided a survey of roaming implementations
     [ROAMREV], detailed roaming requirements [ROAMCRIT], defined the
     Network Access Identifier (NAI) [NAI], and documented existing
     implementations (and imitations) of RADIUS-based roaming
     [PROXYCHAIN].  In order to improve scalability, [PROXYCHAIN]
     introduced the concept of proxy chaining via an intermediate
     server, facilitating roaming between providers.  However, since
     RADIUS does not provide explicit support for proxies, and lacks
     auditability and transmission-level security features, RADIUS-
     based roaming is vulnerable to attack from external parties as
     well as susceptible to fraud perpetrated by the roaming partners
     themselves.  As a result, it is not suitable for wide-scale
     deployment on the Internet [PROXYCHAIN].  By providing explicit
     support for inter-domain roaming and message routing (Sections 2.7
     and 6), auditability [AAACMS], and transmission-layer security
     (Section 13) features, Diameter addresses these limitations and
     provides for secure and scalable roaming.

  In the decade since AAA protocols were first introduced, the
  capabilities of Network Access Server (NAS) devices have increased
  substantially.  As a result, while Diameter is a considerably more
  sophisticated protocol than RADIUS, it remains feasible to implement



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  within embedded devices, given improvements in processor speeds and
  the widespread availability of embedded IPsec and TLS
  implementations.

1.1.  Diameter Protocol

  The Diameter base protocol provides the following facilities:

  -  Delivery of AVPs (attribute value pairs)
  -  Capabilities negotiation
  -  Error notification
  -  Extensibility, through addition of new commands and AVPs (required
     in [AAAREQ]).
  -  Basic services necessary for applications, such as handling of
     user sessions or accounting

  All data delivered by the protocol is in the form of an AVP.  Some of
  these AVP values are used by the Diameter protocol itself, while
  others deliver data associated with particular applications that
  employ Diameter.  AVPs may be added arbitrarily to Diameter messages,
  so long as the required AVPs are included and AVPs that are
  explicitly excluded are not included.  AVPs are used by the base
  Diameter protocol to support the following required features:

  -  Transporting of user authentication information, for the purposes
     of enabling the Diameter server to authenticate the user.

  -  Transporting of service specific authorization information,
     between client and servers, allowing the peers to decide whether a
     user's access request should be granted.

  -  Exchanging resource usage information, which MAY be used for
     accounting purposes, capacity planning, etc.

  -  Relaying, proxying and redirecting of Diameter messages through a
     server hierarchy.

  The Diameter base protocol provides the minimum requirements needed
  for a AAA protocol, as required by [AAAREQ].  The base protocol may
  be used by itself for accounting purposes only, or it may be used
  with a Diameter application, such as Mobile IPv4 [DIAMMIP], or
  network access [NASREQ].  It is also possible for the base protocol
  to be extended for use in new applications, via the addition of new
  commands or AVPs.  At this time the focus of Diameter is network
  access and accounting applications.  A truly generic AAA protocol
  used by many applications might provide functionality not provided by
  Diameter.  Therefore, it is imperative that the designers of new
  applications understand their requirements before using Diameter.



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  See Section 2.4 for more information on Diameter applications.

  Any node can initiate a request.  In that sense, Diameter is a peer-
  to-peer protocol.  In this document, a Diameter Client is a device at
  the edge of the network that performs access control, such as a
  Network Access Server (NAS) or a Foreign Agent (FA).  A Diameter
  client generates Diameter messages to request authentication,
  authorization, and accounting services for the user.  A Diameter
  agent is a node that does not authenticate and/or authorize messages
  locally; agents include proxies, redirects and relay agents.  A
  Diameter server performs authentication and/or authorization of the
  user.  A Diameter node MAY act as an agent for certain requests while
  acting as a server for others.

  The Diameter protocol also supports server-initiated messages, such
  as a request to abort service to a particular user.

1.1.1.  Description of the Document Set

  Currently, the Diameter specification consists of a base
  specification (this document), Transport Profile [AAATRANS] and
  applications: Mobile IPv4 [DIAMMIP], and NASREQ [NASREQ].

  The Transport Profile document [AAATRANS] discusses transport layer
  issues that arise with AAA protocols and recommendations on how to
  overcome these issues.  This document also defines the Diameter
  failover algorithm and state machine.

  The Mobile IPv4 [DIAMMIP] application defines a Diameter application
  that allows a Diameter server to perform AAA functions for Mobile
  IPv4 services to a mobile node.

  The NASREQ [NASREQ] application defines a Diameter Application that
  allows a Diameter server to be used in a PPP/SLIP Dial-Up and
  Terminal Server Access environment.  Consideration was given for
  servers that need to perform protocol conversion between Diameter and
  RADIUS.

  In summary, this document defines the base protocol specification for
  AAA, which includes support for accounting.  The Mobile IPv4 and the
  NASREQ  documents describe applications that use this base
  specification for Authentication, Authorization and Accounting.









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1.2.  Approach to Extensibility

  The Diameter protocol is designed to be extensible, using several
  mechanisms, including:

     -  Defining new AVP values
     -  Creating new AVPs
     -  Creating new authentication/authorization applications
     -  Creating new accounting applications
     -  Application authentication procedures

  Reuse of existing AVP values, AVPs and Diameter applications are
  strongly recommended.  Reuse simplifies standardization and
  implementation and avoids potential interoperability issues.  It is
  expected that command codes are reused; new command codes can only be
  created by IETF Consensus (see Section 11.2.1).

1.2.1.  Defining New AVP Values

  New applications should attempt to reuse AVPs defined in existing
  applications when possible, as opposed to creating new AVPs.  For
  AVPs of type Enumerated, an application may require a new value to
  communicate some service-specific information.

  In order to allocate a new AVP value, a request MUST be sent to IANA
  [IANA], along with an explanation of the new AVP value.  IANA
  considerations for Diameter are discussed in Section 11.

1.2.2.  Creating New AVPs

  When no existing AVP can be used, a new AVP should be created.  The
  new AVP being defined MUST use one of the data types listed in
  Section 4.2.

  In the event that a logical grouping of AVPs is necessary, and
  multiple "groups" are possible in a given command, it is recommended
  that a Grouped AVP be used (see Section 4.4).

  In order to create a new AVP, a request MUST be sent to IANA, with a
  specification for the AVP.  The request MUST include the commands
  that would make use of the AVP.

1.2.3.  Creating New Authentication Applications

  Every Diameter application specification MUST have an IANA assigned
  Application Identifier (see Section 2.4) or a vendor specific
  Application Identifier.




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  Should a new Diameter usage scenario find itself unable to fit within
  an existing application without requiring major changes to the
  specification, it may be desirable to create a new Diameter
  application.  Major changes to an application include:

  -  Adding new AVPs to the command, which have the "M" bit set.

  -  Requiring a command that has a different number of round trips to
     satisfy a request (e.g., application foo has a command that
     requires one round trip, but new application bar has a command
     that requires two round trips to complete).

  -  Adding support for an authentication method requiring definition
     of new AVPs for use with the application.  Since a new EAP
     authentication method can be supported within Diameter without
     requiring new AVPs, addition of EAP methods does not require the
     creation of a new authentication application.

  Creation of a new application should be viewed as a last resort.  An
  implementation MAY add arbitrary non-mandatory AVPs to any command
  defined in an application, including vendor-specific AVPs without
  needing to define a new application.  Please refer to Section 11.1.1
  for details.

  In order to justify allocation of a new application identifier,
  Diameter applications MUST define one Command Code, or add new
  mandatory AVPs to the ABNF.

  The expected AVPs MUST be defined in an ABNF [ABNF] grammar (see
  Section 3.2).  If the Diameter application has accounting
  requirements, it MUST also specify the AVPs that are to be present in
  the Diameter Accounting messages (see Section 9.3).  However, just
  because a new authentication application id is required, does not
  imply that a new accounting application id is required.

  When possible, a new Diameter application SHOULD reuse existing
  Diameter AVPs, in order to avoid defining multiple AVPs that carry
  similar information.

1.2.4.  Creating New Accounting Applications

  There are services that only require Diameter accounting.  Such
  services need to define the AVPs carried in the Accounting-Request
  (ACR)/ Accounting-Answer (ACA) messages, but do not need to define
  new command codes.  An implementation MAY add arbitrary non-mandatory
  AVPs (AVPs with the "M" bit not set) to any command defined in an





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  application, including vendor-specific AVPs, without needing to
  define a new accounting application.  Please refer to Section 11.1.1
  for details.

  Application Identifiers are still required for Diameter capability
  exchange.  Every Diameter accounting application specification MUST
  have an IANA assigned Application Identifier (see Section 2.4) or a
  vendor specific Application Identifier.

  Every Diameter implementation MUST support accounting.  Basic
  accounting support is sufficient to handle any application that uses
  the ACR/ACA commands defined in this document, as long as no new
  mandatory AVPs are added.  A mandatory AVP is defined as one which
  has the "M" bit set when sent within an accounting command,
  regardless of whether it is required or optional within the ABNF for
  the accounting application.

  The creation of a new accounting application should be viewed as a
  last resort and MUST NOT be used unless a new command or additional
  mechanisms (e.g., application defined state machine) is defined
  within the application, or new mandatory AVPs are added to the ABNF.

  Within an accounting command, setting the "M" bit implies that a
  backend server (e.g., billing server) or the accounting server itself
  MUST understand the AVP in order to compute a correct bill.  If the
  AVP is not relevant to the billing process, when the AVP is included
  within an accounting command, it MUST NOT have the "M" bit set, even
  if the "M" bit is set when the same AVP is used within other Diameter
  commands (i.e., authentication/authorization commands).

  A DIAMETER base accounting implementation MUST be configurable to
  advertise supported accounting applications in order to prevent the
  accounting server from accepting accounting requests for unbillable
  services.  The combination of the home domain and the accounting
  application Id can be used in order to route the request to the
  appropriate accounting server.

  When possible, a new Diameter accounting application SHOULD attempt
  to reuse existing AVPs, in order to avoid defining multiple AVPs that
  carry similar information.

  If the base accounting is used without any mandatory AVPs, new
  commands or additional mechanisms (e.g., application defined state
  machine), then the base protocol defined standard accounting
  application Id (Section 2.4) MUST be used in ACR/ACA commands.






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1.2.5.  Application Authentication Procedures

  When possible, applications SHOULD be designed such that new
  authentication methods MAY be added without requiring changes to the
  application.  This MAY require that new AVP values be assigned to
  represent the new authentication transform, or any other scheme that
  produces similar results.  When possible, authentication frameworks,
  such as Extensible Authentication Protocol [EAP], SHOULD be used.

1.3.  Terminology

  AAA
     Authentication, Authorization and Accounting.

  Accounting
     The act of collecting information on resource usage for the
     purpose of capacity planning, auditing, billing or cost
     allocation.

  Accounting Record
     An accounting record represents a summary of the resource
     consumption of a user over the entire session.  Accounting servers
     creating the accounting record may do so by processing interim
     accounting events or accounting events from several devices
     serving the same user.

  Authentication
     The act of verifying the identity of an entity (subject).

  Authorization
     The act of determining whether a requesting entity (subject) will
     be allowed access to a resource (object).

  AVP
     The Diameter protocol consists of a header followed by one or more
     Attribute-Value-Pairs (AVPs).  An AVP includes a header and is
     used to encapsulate protocol-specific data (e.g., routing
     information) as well as authentication, authorization or
     accounting information.

  Broker
     A broker is a business term commonly used in AAA infrastructures.
     A broker is either a relay, proxy or redirect agent, and MAY be
     operated by roaming consortiums.  Depending on the business model,
     a broker may either choose to  deploy relay agents or proxy
     agents.





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  Diameter Agent
     A Diameter Agent is a Diameter node that provides either relay,
     proxy, redirect or translation services.

  Diameter Client
     A Diameter Client is a device at the edge of the network that
     performs access control.  An example of a Diameter client is a
     Network Access Server (NAS) or a Foreign Agent (FA).

  Diameter Node
     A Diameter node is a host process that implements the Diameter
     protocol, and acts either as a Client, Agent or Server.

  Diameter Peer
     A Diameter Peer is a Diameter Node to which a given Diameter Node
     has a direct transport connection.

  Diameter Security Exchange
     A Diameter Security Exchange is a process through which two
     Diameter nodes establish end-to-end security.

  Diameter Server
     A Diameter Server is one that handles authentication,
     authorization and accounting requests for a particular realm.  By
     its very nature, a Diameter Server MUST support Diameter
     applications in addition to the base protocol.

  Downstream
     Downstream is used to identify the direction of a particular
     Diameter message from the home server towards the access device.

  End-to-End Security
     TLS and IPsec provide hop-by-hop security, or security across a
     transport connection.  When relays or proxy are involved, this
     hop-by-hop security does not protect the entire Diameter user
     session.  End-to-end security is security between two Diameter
     nodes, possibly communicating through Diameter Agents.  This
     security protects the entire Diameter communications path from the
     originating Diameter node to the terminating Diameter node.

  Home Realm
     A Home Realm is the administrative domain with which the user
     maintains an account relationship.

  Home Server
     See Diameter Server.





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  Interim accounting
     An interim accounting message provides a snapshot of usage during
     a user's session.  It is typically implemented in order to provide
     for partial accounting of a user's session in the case of a device
     reboot or other network problem prevents the reception of a
     session summary message or session record.

  Local Realm
     A local realm is the administrative domain providing services to a
     user.  An administrative domain MAY act as a local realm for
     certain users, while being a home realm for others.

  Multi-session
     A multi-session represents a logical linking of several sessions.
     Multi-sessions are tracked by using the Acct-Multi-Session-Id.  An
     example of a multi-session would be a Multi-link PPP bundle.  Each
     leg of the bundle would be a session while the entire bundle would
     be a multi-session.

  Network Access Identifier
     The Network Access Identifier, or NAI [NAI], is used in the
     Diameter protocol to extract a user's identity and realm.  The
     identity is used to identify the user during authentication and/or
     authorization, while the realm is used for message routing
     purposes.

  Proxy Agent or Proxy
     In addition to forwarding requests and responses, proxies make
     policy decisions relating to resource usage and provisioning.
     This is typically accomplished by tracking the state of NAS
     devices.  While proxies typically do not respond to client
     Requests prior to receiving a Response from the server, they may
     originate Reject messages in cases where policies are violated.
     As a result, proxies need to understand the semantics of the
     messages passing through them, and may not support all Diameter
     applications.

  Realm
     The string in the NAI that immediately follows the '@' character.
     NAI realm names are required to be unique, and are piggybacked on
     the administration of the DNS namespace.  Diameter makes use of
     the realm, also loosely referred to as domain, to determine
     whether messages can be satisfied locally, or whether they must be
     routed or redirected.  In RADIUS, realm names are not necessarily
     piggybacked on the DNS namespace but may be independent of it.






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  Real-time Accounting
     Real-time accounting involves the processing of information on
     resource usage within a defined time window.  Time constraints are
     typically imposed in order to limit financial risk.

  Relay Agent or Relay
     Relays forward requests and responses based on routing-related
     AVPs and realm routing table entries.  Since relays do not make
     policy decisions, they do not examine or alter non-routing AVPs.
     As a result, relays never originate messages, do not need to
     understand the semantics of messages or non-routing AVPs, and are
     capable of handling any Diameter application or message type.
     Since relays make decisions based on information in routing AVPs
     and realm forwarding tables they do not keep state on NAS resource
     usage or sessions in progress.

  Redirect Agent
     Rather than forwarding requests and responses between clients and
     servers, redirect agents refer clients to servers and allow them
     to communicate directly.  Since redirect agents do not sit in the
     forwarding path, they do not alter any AVPs transiting between
     client and server.  Redirect agents do not originate messages and
     are capable of handling any message type, although they may be
     configured only to redirect messages of certain types, while
     acting as relay or proxy agents for other types.  As with proxy
     agents, redirect agents do not keep state with respect to sessions
     or NAS resources.

  Roaming Relationships
     Roaming relationships include relationships between companies and
     ISPs, relationships among peer ISPs within a roaming consortium,
     and relationships between an ISP and a roaming consortium.

  Security Association
     A security association is an association between two endpoints in
     a Diameter session which allows the endpoints to communicate with
     integrity and confidentially, even in the presence of relays
     and/or proxies.

  Session
     A session is a related progression of events devoted to a
     particular activity.  Each application SHOULD provide guidelines
     as to when a session begins and ends.  All Diameter packets with
     the same Session-Identifier are considered to be part of the same
     session.






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  Session state
     A stateful agent is one that maintains session state information,
     by keeping track of all authorized active sessions.  Each
     authorized session is bound to a particular service, and its state
     is considered active either until it is notified otherwise, or by
     expiration.

  Sub-session
     A sub-session represents a distinct service (e.g., QoS or data
     characteristics) provided to a given session.  These services may
     happen concurrently (e.g., simultaneous voice and data transfer
     during the same session) or serially.  These changes in sessions
     are tracked with the Accounting-Sub-Session-Id.

  Transaction state
     The Diameter protocol requires that agents maintain transaction
     state, which is used for failover purposes.  Transaction state
     implies that upon forwarding a request, the Hop-by-Hop identifier
     is saved; the field is replaced with a locally unique identifier,
     which is restored to its original value when the corresponding
     answer is received.  The request's state is released upon receipt
     of the answer.  A stateless agent is one that only maintains
     transaction state.

  Translation Agent
     A translation agent is a stateful Diameter node that performs
     protocol translation between Diameter and another AAA protocol,
     such as RADIUS.

  Transport Connection
     A transport connection is a TCP or SCTP connection existing
     directly between two Diameter peers, otherwise known as a Peer-
     to-Peer Connection.

  Upstream
     Upstream is used to identify the direction of a particular
     Diameter message from the access device towards the home server.

  User
     The entity requesting or using some resource, in support of which
     a Diameter client has generated a request.

2.  Protocol Overview

  The base Diameter protocol may be used by itself for accounting
  applications, but for use in authentication and authorization it is
  always extended for a particular application.  Two Diameter
  applications are defined by companion documents:  NASREQ [NASREQ],



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  Mobile IPv4 [DIAMMIP].  These applications are introduced in this
  document but specified elsewhere.  Additional Diameter applications
  MAY be defined in the future (see Section 11.3).

  Diameter Clients MUST support the base protocol, which includes
  accounting.  In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
  application that is needed to implement the client's service, e.g.,
  NASREQ and/or Mobile IPv4.  A Diameter Client that does not support
  both NASREQ and Mobile IPv4, MUST be referred to as "Diameter X
  Client" where X is the application which it supports, and not a
  "Diameter Client".

  Diameter Servers MUST support the base protocol, which includes
  accounting.  In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
  application that is needed to implement the intended service, e.g.,
  NASREQ and/or Mobile IPv4.  A Diameter Server that does not support
  both NASREQ and Mobile IPv4, MUST be referred to as "Diameter X
  Server" where X is the application which it supports, and not a
  "Diameter Server".

  Diameter Relays and redirect agents are, by definition, protocol
  transparent, and MUST transparently support the Diameter base
  protocol, which includes accounting, and all Diameter applications.

  Diameter proxies MUST support the base protocol, which includes
  accounting.  In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
  application that is needed to implement proxied services, e.g.,
  NASREQ and/or Mobile IPv4.  A Diameter proxy which does not support
  also both NASREQ and Mobile IPv4, MUST be referred to as "Diameter X
  Proxy" where X is the application which it supports, and not a
  "Diameter Proxy".

  The base Diameter protocol concerns itself with capabilities
  negotiation, how messages are sent and how peers may eventually be
  abandoned.  The base protocol also defines certain rules that apply
  to all exchanges of messages between Diameter nodes.

  Communication between Diameter peers begins with one peer sending a
  message to another Diameter peer.  The set of AVPs included in the
  message is determined by a particular Diameter application.  One AVP
  that is included to reference a user's session is the Session-Id.

  The initial request for authentication and/or authorization of a user
  would include the Session-Id.  The Session-Id is then used in all
  subsequent messages to identify the user's session (see Section 8 for
  more information).  The communicating party may accept the request,
  or reject it by returning an answer message with the Result-Code AVP




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  set to indicate an error occurred.  The specific behavior of the
  Diameter server or client receiving a request depends on the Diameter
  application employed.

  Session state (associated with a Session-Id) MUST be freed upon
  receipt of the Session-Termination-Request, Session-Termination-
  Answer, expiration of authorized service time in the Session-Timeout
  AVP, and according to rules established in a particular Diameter
  application.

2.1.  Transport

  Transport profile is defined in [AAATRANS].

  The base Diameter protocol is run on port 3868 of both TCP [TCP] and
  SCTP [SCTP] transport protocols.

  Diameter clients MUST support either TCP or SCTP, while agents and
  servers MUST support both.  Future versions of this specification MAY
  mandate that clients support SCTP.

  A Diameter node MAY initiate connections from a source port other
  than the one that it declares it accepts incoming connections on, and
  MUST be prepared to receive connections on port 3868.  A given
  Diameter instance of the peer state machine MUST NOT use more than
  one transport connection to communicate with a given peer, unless
  multiple instances exist on the peer in which case a separate
  connection per process is allowed.

  When no transport connection exists with a peer, an attempt to
  connect SHOULD be periodically made.  This behavior is handled via
  the Tc timer, whose recommended value is 30 seconds.  There are
  certain exceptions to this rule, such as when a peer has terminated
  the transport connection stating that it does not wish to
  communicate.

  When connecting to a peer and either zero or more transports are
  specified, SCTP SHOULD be tried first, followed by TCP.  See Section
  5.2 for more information on peer discovery.

  Diameter implementations SHOULD be able to interpret ICMP protocol
  port unreachable messages as explicit indications that the server is
  not reachable, subject to security policy on trusting such messages.
  Diameter implementations SHOULD also be able to interpret a reset
  from the transport and timed-out connection attempts.






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  If Diameter receives data up from TCP that cannot be parsed or
  identified as a Diameter error made by the peer, the stream is
  compromised and cannot be recovered.  The transport connection MUST
  be closed using a RESET call (send a TCP RST bit) or an SCTP ABORT
  message (graceful closure is compromised).

2.1.1.  SCTP Guidelines

  The following are guidelines for Diameter implementations that
  support SCTP:

  1. For interoperability: All Diameter nodes MUST be prepared to
     receive Diameter messages on any SCTP stream in the association.

  2. To prevent blocking: All Diameter nodes SHOULD utilize all SCTP
     streams available to the association to prevent head-of-the-line
     blocking.

2.2.  Securing Diameter Messages

  Diameter clients, such as Network Access Servers (NASes) and Mobility
  Agents MUST support IP Security [SECARCH], and MAY support TLS [TLS].
  Diameter servers MUST support TLS and IPsec.  The Diameter protocol
  MUST NOT be used without any security mechanism (TLS or IPsec).

  It is suggested that IPsec can be used primarily at the edges and in
  intra-domain traffic, such as using pre-shared keys between a NAS a
  local AAA proxy.  This also eases the requirements on the NAS to
  support certificates.  It is also suggested that inter-domain traffic
  would primarily use TLS.  See Sections 13.1 and 13.2 for more details
  on IPsec and TLS usage.

2.3.  Diameter Application Compliance

  Application Identifiers are advertised during the capabilities
  exchange phase (see Section 5.3).  For a given application,
  advertising support of an application implies that the sender
  supports all command codes, and the AVPs specified in the associated
  ABNFs, described in the specification.

  An implementation MAY add arbitrary non-mandatory AVPs to any command
  defined in an application, including vendor-specific AVPs.  Please
  refer to Section 11.1.1 for details.








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2.4.  Application Identifiers

  Each Diameter application MUST have an IANA assigned Application
  Identifier (see Section 11.3).  The base protocol does not require an
  Application Identifier since its support is mandatory.  During the
  capabilities exchange, Diameter nodes inform their peers of locally
  supported applications.  Furthermore, all Diameter messages contain
  an Application Identifier, which is used in the message forwarding
  process.

  The following Application Identifier values are defined:

     Diameter Common Messages      0
     NASREQ                        1 [NASREQ]
     Mobile-IP                     2 [DIAMMIP]
     Diameter Base Accounting      3
     Relay                         0xffffffff

  Relay and redirect agents MUST advertise the Relay Application
  Identifier, while all other Diameter nodes MUST advertise locally
  supported applications.  The receiver of a Capabilities Exchange
  message advertising Relay service MUST assume that the sender
  supports all current and future applications.

  Diameter relay and proxy agents are responsible for finding an
  upstream server that supports the application of a particular
  message.  If none can be found, an error message is returned with the
  Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.

2.5.  Connections vs. Sessions

  This section attempts to provide the reader with an understanding of
  the difference between connection and session, which are terms used
  extensively throughout this document.

  A connection is a transport level connection between two peers, used
  to send and receive Diameter messages.  A session is a logical
  concept at the application layer, and is shared between an access
  device and a server, and is identified via the Session-Id AVP












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         +--------+          +-------+          +--------+
         | Client |          | Relay |          | Server |
         +--------+          +-------+          +--------+
                  <---------->       <---------->
               peer connection A   peer connection B

                  <----------------------------->
                          User session x

              Figure 1: Diameter connections and sessions

  In the example provided in Figure 1, peer connection A is established
  between the Client and its local Relay.  Peer connection B is
  established between the Relay and the Server.  User session X spans
  from the Client via the Relay to the Server.  Each "user" of a
  service causes an auth request to be sent, with a unique session
  identifier. Once accepted by the server, both the client and the
  server are aware of the session.  It is important to note that there
  is no relationship between a connection and a session, and that
  Diameter messages for multiple sessions are all multiplexed through a
  single connection.

2.6.  Peer Table

  The Diameter Peer Table is used in message forwarding, and referenced
  by the Realm Routing Table.  A Peer Table entry contains the
  following fields:

  Host identity
     Following the conventions described for the DiameterIdentity
     derived AVP data format in Section 4.4. This field contains the
     contents of the Origin-Host (Section 6.3) AVP found in the CER or
     CEA message.

  StatusT
     This is the state of the peer entry, and MUST match one of the
     values listed in Section 5.6.

  Static or Dynamic
     Specifies whether a peer entry was statically configured, or
     dynamically discovered.

  Expiration time
     Specifies the time at which dynamically discovered peer table
     entries are to be either refreshed, or expired.






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  TLS Enabled
     Specifies whether TLS is to be used when communicating with the
     peer.

  Additional security information, when needed (e.g., keys,
  certificates)

2.7.  Realm-Based Routing Table

  All Realm-Based routing lookups are performed against what is
  commonly known as the Realm Routing Table (see Section 12).  A Realm
  Routing Table Entry contains the following fields:

  Realm Name
     This is the field that is typically used as a primary key in the
     routing table lookups.  Note that some implementations perform
     their lookups based on longest-match-from-the-right on the realm
     rather than requiring an exact match.

  Application Identifier
     An application is identified by a vendor id and an application id.
     For all IETF standards track Diameter applications, the vendor id
     is zero.  A route entry can have a different destination based on
     the application identification AVP of the message.  This field
     MUST be used as a secondary key field in routing table lookups.

  Local Action
     The Local Action field is used to identify how a message should be
     treated.  The following actions are supported:

     1. LOCAL - Diameter messages that resolve to a route entry with
        the Local Action set to Local can be satisfied locally, and do
        not need to be routed to another server.

     2. RELAY - All Diameter messages that fall within this category
        MUST be routed to a next hop server, without modifying any
        non-routing AVPs.  See Section 6.1.8 for relaying guidelines

     3. PROXY - All Diameter messages that fall within this category
        MUST be routed to a next hop server.  The local server MAY
        apply its local policies to the message by including new AVPs
        to the message prior to routing.  See Section 6.1.8 for
        proxying guidelines.

     4. REDIRECT - Diameter messages that fall within this category
        MUST have the identity of the home Diameter server(s) appended,
        and returned to the sender of the message.  See Section 6.1.7
        for redirect guidelines.



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  Server Identifier
     One or more servers the message is to be routed to.  These servers
     MUST also be present in the Peer table. When the Local Action is
     set to RELAY or PROXY, this field contains the identity of the
     server(s) the message must be routed to.  When the Local Action
     field is set to REDIRECT, this field contains the identity of one
     or more servers the message should be redirected to.

  Static or Dynamic
     Specifies whether a route entry was statically configured, or
     dynamically discovered.

  Expiration time
     Specifies the time which a dynamically discovered route table
     entry expires.

  It is important to note that Diameter agents MUST support at least
  one of the LOCAL, RELAY, PROXY or REDIRECT modes of operation.
  Agents do not need to support all modes of operation in order to
  conform with the protocol specification, but MUST follow the protocol
  compliance guidelines in Section 2.  Relay agents MUST NOT reorder
  AVPs, and proxies MUST NOT reorder AVPs.

  The routing table MAY include a default entry that MUST be used for
  any requests not matching any of the other entries.  The routing
  table MAY consist of only such an entry.

  When a request is routed, the target server MUST have advertised the
  Application Identifier (see Section 2.4) for the given message, or
  have advertised itself as a relay or proxy agent.  Otherwise, an
  error is returned with the Result-Code AVP set to
  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.

2.8.  Role of Diameter Agents

  In addition to client and servers, the Diameter protocol introduces
  relay, proxy, redirect, and translation agents, each of which is
  defined in Section 1.3.  These Diameter agents are useful for several
  reasons:

  -  They can distribute administration of systems to a configurable
     grouping, including the maintenance of security associations.

  -  They can be used for concentration of requests from an number of
     co-located or distributed NAS equipment sets to a set of like user
     groups.

  -  They can do value-added processing to the requests or responses.



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  -  They can be used for load balancing.

  -  A complex network will have multiple authentication sources, they
     can sort requests and forward towards the correct target.

  The Diameter protocol requires that agents maintain transaction
  state, which is used for failover purposes.  Transaction state
  implies that upon forwarding a request, its Hop-by-Hop identifier is
  saved; the field is replaced with a locally unique identifier, which
  is restored to its original value when the corresponding answer is
  received.  The request's state is released upon receipt of the
  answer.  A stateless agent is one that only maintains transaction
  state.

  The Proxy-Info AVP allows stateless agents to add local state to a
  Diameter request, with the guarantee that the same state will be
  present in the answer.  However, the protocol's failover procedures
  require that agents maintain a copy of pending requests.

  A stateful agent is one that maintains session state information; by
  keeping track of all authorized active sessions.  Each authorized
  session is bound to a particular service, and its state is considered
  active either until it is notified otherwise, or by expiration.  Each
  authorized session has an expiration, which is communicated by
  Diameter servers via the Session-Timeout AVP.

  Maintaining session state MAY be useful in certain applications, such
  as:

  -  Protocol translation (e.g., RADIUS <-> Diameter)

  -  Limiting resources authorized to a particular user

  -  Per user or transaction auditing

  A Diameter agent MAY act in a stateful manner for some requests and
  be stateless for others.  A Diameter implementation MAY act as one
  type of agent for some requests, and as another type of agent for
  others.

2.8.1.  Relay Agents

  Relay Agents are Diameter agents that accept requests and route
  messages to other Diameter nodes based on information found in the
  messages (e.g., Destination-Realm).  This routing decision is
  performed using a list of supported realms, and known peers.  This is
  known as the Realm Routing Table, as is defined further in Section
  2.7.



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  Relays MAY be used to aggregate requests from multiple Network Access
  Servers (NASes) within a common geographical area (POP).  The use of
  Relays is advantageous since it eliminates the need for NASes to be
  configured with the necessary security information they would
  otherwise require to communicate with Diameter servers in other
  realms.  Likewise, this reduces the configuration load on Diameter
  servers that would otherwise be necessary when NASes are added,
  changed or deleted.

  Relays modify Diameter messages by inserting and removing routing
  information, but do not modify any other portion of a message.
  Relays SHOULD NOT maintain session state but MUST maintain
  transaction state.

   +------+    --------->     +------+     --------->    +------+
   |      |    1. Request     |      |     2. Request    |      |
   | NAS  |                   | DRL  |                   | HMS  |
   |      |    4. Answer      |      |     3. Answer     |      |
   +------+    <---------     +------+     <---------    +------+
  example.net                example.net                example.com

                 Figure 2: Relaying of Diameter messages

  The example provided in Figure 2 depicts a request issued from NAS,
  which is an access device, for the user [email protected].  Prior to
  issuing the request, NAS performs a Diameter route lookup, using
  "example.com" as the key, and determines that the message is to be
  relayed to DRL, which is a Diameter Relay.  DRL performs the same
  route lookup as NAS, and relays the message to HMS, which is
  example.com's Home Diameter Server.  HMS identifies that the request
  can be locally supported (via the realm), processes the
  authentication and/or authorization request, and replies with an
  answer, which is routed back to NAS using saved transaction state.

  Since Relays do not perform any application level processing, they
  provide relaying services for all Diameter applications, and
  therefore MUST advertise the Relay Application Identifier.

2.8.2.  Proxy Agents

  Similarly to relays, proxy agents route Diameter messages using the
  Diameter Routing Table.  However, they differ since they modify
  messages to implement policy enforcement.  This requires that proxies
  maintain the state of their downstream peers (e.g., access devices)
  to enforce resource usage, provide admission control, and
  provisioning.





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  It is important to note that although proxies MAY provide a value-add
  function for NASes, they do not allow access devices to use end-to-
  end security, since modifying messages breaks authentication.

  Proxies MAY be used in call control centers or access ISPs that
  provide outsourced connections, they can monitor the number and types
  of ports in use, and make allocation and admission decisions
  according to their configuration.

  Proxies that wish to limit resources MUST maintain session state.
  All proxies MUST maintain transaction state.

  Since enforcing policies requires an understanding of the service
  being provided, Proxies MUST only advertise the Diameter applications
  they support.

2.8.3.  Redirect Agents

  Redirect agents are useful in scenarios where the Diameter routing
  configuration needs to be centralized.  An example is a redirect
  agent that provides services to all members of a consortium, but does
  not wish to be burdened with relaying all messages between realms.
  This scenario is advantageous since it does not require that the
  consortium provide routing updates to its members when changes are
  made to a member's infrastructure.

  Since redirect agents do not relay messages, and only return an
  answer with the information necessary for Diameter agents to
  communicate directly, they do not modify messages.  Since redirect
  agents do not receive answer messages, they cannot maintain session
  state.  Further, since redirect agents never relay requests, they are
  not required to maintain transaction state.

  The example provided in Figure 3 depicts a request issued from the
  access device, NAS, for the user [email protected].  The message is
  forwarded by the NAS to its relay, DRL, which does not have a routing
  entry in its Diameter Routing Table for example.com.  DRL has a
  default route configured to DRD, which is a redirect agent that
  returns a redirect notification to DRL, as well as HMS' contact
  information.  Upon receipt of the redirect notification, DRL
  establishes a transport connection with HMS, if one doesn't already
  exist, and forwards the request to it.









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                              +------+
                              |      |
                              | DRD  |
                              |      |
                              +------+
                               ^    |
                   2. Request  |    | 3. Redirection
                               |    |    Notification
                               |    v
   +------+    --------->     +------+     --------->    +------+
   |      |    1. Request     |      |     4. Request    |      |
   | NAS  |                   | DRL  |                   | HMS  |
   |      |    6. Answer      |      |     5. Answer     |      |
   +------+    <---------     +------+     <---------    +------+
  example.net                example.net               example.com

                Figure 3: Redirecting a Diameter Message

  Since redirect agents do not perform any application level
  processing, they provide relaying services for all Diameter
  applications, and therefore MUST advertise the Relay Application
  Identifier.

2.8.4.  Translation Agents

  A translation agent is a device that provides translation between two
  protocols (e.g., RADIUS<->Diameter, TACACS+<->Diameter).  Translation
  agents are likely to be used as aggregation servers to communicate
  with a Diameter infrastructure, while allowing for the embedded
  systems to be migrated at a slower pace.

  Given that the Diameter protocol introduces the concept of long-lived
  authorized sessions, translation agents MUST be session stateful and
  MUST maintain transaction state.

  Translation of messages can only occur if the agent recognizes the
  application of a particular request, and therefore translation agents
  MUST only advertise their locally supported applications.

   +------+    --------->     +------+     --------->    +------+
   |      |  RADIUS Request   |      |  Diameter Request |      |
   | NAS  |                   | TLA  |                   | HMS  |
   |      |  RADIUS Answer    |      |  Diameter Answer  |      |
   +------+    <---------     +------+     <---------    +------+
  example.net                example.net               example.com

               Figure 4: Translation of RADIUS to Diameter




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2.9.  End-to-End Security Framework

  End-to-end security services include confidentiality and message
  origin authentication.  These services are provided by supporting AVP
  integrity and confidentiality between two peers, communicating
  through agents.

  End-to-end security is provided via the End-to-End security
  extension, described in [AAACMS].  The circumstances requiring the
  use of end-to-end security are determined by policy on each of the
  peers. Security policies, which are not the subject of
  standardization, may be applied by next hop Diameter peer or by
  destination realm.  For example, where TLS or IPsec transmission-
  level security is sufficient, there may be no need for end-to-end
  security.

  End-to-end security policies include:

  -  Never use end-to-end security.

  -  Use end-to-end security on messages containing sensitive AVPs.
     Which AVPs are sensitive is determined by service provider policy.
     AVPs containing keys and passwords should be considered sensitive.
     Accounting AVPs may be considered sensitive.  Any AVP for which
     the P bit may be set or which may be encrypted may be considered
     sensitive.

  -  Always use end-to-end security.

  It is strongly RECOMMENDED that all Diameter implementations support
  end-to-end security.

2.10.  Diameter Path Authorization

  As noted in Section 2.2, Diameter requires transmission level
  security to be used on each connection (TLS or IPsec).  Therefore,
  each connection is authenticated, replay and integrity protected and
  confidential on a per-packet basis.

  In addition to authenticating each connection, each connection as
  well as the entire session MUST also be authorized.  Before
  initiating a connection, a Diameter Peer MUST check that its peers
  are authorized to act in their roles.  For example, a Diameter peer
  may be authentic, but that does not mean that it is authorized to act
  as a Diameter Server advertising a set of Diameter applications.






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  Prior to bringing up a connection, authorization checks are performed
  at each connection along the path.  Diameter capabilities negotiation
  (CER/CEA) also MUST be carried out, in order to determine what
  Diameter applications are supported by each peer.  Diameter sessions
  MUST be routed only through authorized nodes that have advertised
  support for the Diameter application required by the session.

  As noted in Section 6.1.8, a relay or proxy agent MUST append a
  Route-Record AVP to all requests forwarded.  The AVP contains the
  identity of the peer the request was received from.

  The home Diameter server, prior to authorizing a session, MUST check
  the Route-Record AVPs to make sure that the route traversed by the
  request is acceptable.  For example, administrators within the home
  realm may not wish to honor requests that have been routed through an
  untrusted realm.  By authorizing a request, the home Diameter server
  is implicitly indicating its willingness to engage in the business
  transaction as specified by the contractual relationship between the
  server and the previous hop.  A DIAMETER_AUTHORIZATION_REJECTED error
  message (see Section 7.1.5) is sent if the route traversed by the
  request is unacceptable.

  A home realm may also wish to check that each accounting request
  message corresponds to a Diameter response authorizing the session.
  Accounting requests without corresponding authorization responses
  SHOULD be subjected to further scrutiny, as should accounting
  requests indicating a difference between the requested and provided
  service.

  Similarly, the local Diameter agent, on receiving a Diameter response
  authorizing a session, MUST check the Route-Record AVPs to make sure
  that the route traversed by the response is acceptable.  At each
  step, forwarding of an authorization response is considered evidence
  of a willingness to take on financial risk relative to the session.
  A local realm may wish to limit this exposure, for example, by
  establishing credit limits for intermediate realms and refusing to
  accept responses which would violate those limits.  By issuing an
  accounting request corresponding to the authorization response, the
  local realm implicitly indicates its agreement to provide the service
  indicated in the authorization response.  If the service cannot be
  provided by the local realm, then a DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY error
  message MUST be sent within the accounting request; a Diameter client
  receiving an authorization response for a service that it cannot
  perform MUST NOT substitute an alternate service, and then send
  accounting requests for the alternate service instead.






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3.  Diameter Header

  A summary of the Diameter header format is shown below.  The fields
  are transmitted in network byte order.

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Version    |                 Message Length                |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  | command flags |                  Command-Code                 |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                         Application-ID                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                      Hop-by-Hop Identifier                    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                      End-to-End Identifier                    |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |  AVPs ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

  Version
     This Version field MUST be set to 1 to indicate Diameter Version
     1.

  Message Length
     The Message Length field is three octets and indicates the length
     of the Diameter message including the header fields.

  Command Flags
     The Command Flags field is eight bits.  The following bits are
     assigned:

      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |R P E T r r r r|
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

     R(equest)   - If set, the message is a request.  If cleared, the
                   message is an answer.
     P(roxiable) - If set, the message MAY be proxied, relayed or
                   redirected.  If cleared, the message MUST be
                   locally processed.
     E(rror)     - If set, the message contains a protocol error,
                   and the message will not conform to the ABNF
                   described for this command.  Messages with the 'E'





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                   bit set are commonly referred to as error
                   messages.  This bit MUST NOT be set in request
                   messages.  See Section 7.2.
     T(Potentially re-transmitted message)
                 - This flag is set after a link failover procedure,
                   to aid the removal of duplicate requests.  It is
                   set when resending requests not yet acknowledged,
                   as an indication of a possible duplicate due to a
                   link failure.  This bit MUST be cleared when
                   sending a request for the first time, otherwise
                   the sender MUST set this flag.  Diameter agents
                   only need to be concerned about the number of
                   requests they send based on a single received
                   request; retransmissions by other entities need
                   not be tracked.  Diameter agents that receive a
                   request with the T flag set, MUST keep the T flag
                   set in the forwarded request.  This flag MUST NOT
                   be set if an error answer message (e.g., a
                   protocol error) has been received for the earlier
                   message.  It can be set only in cases where no
                   answer has been received from the server for a
                   request and the request is sent again.  This flag
                   MUST NOT be set in answer messages.

     r(eserved)  - these flag bits are reserved for future use, and
                   MUST be set to zero, and ignored by the receiver.

  Command-Code
     The Command-Code field is three octets, and is used in order to
     communicate the command associated with the message.  The 24-bit
     address space is managed by IANA (see Section 11.2.1).

     Command-Code values 16,777,214 and 16,777,215 (hexadecimal values
     FFFFFE -FFFFFF) are reserved for experimental use (See Section
     11.3).

  Application-ID
     Application-ID is four octets and is used to identify to which
     application the message is applicable for.  The application can be
     an authentication application, an accounting application or a
     vendor specific application.  See Section 11.3 for the possible
     values that the application-id may use.

     The application-id in the header MUST be the same as what is
     contained in any relevant AVPs contained in the message.






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  Hop-by-Hop Identifier
     The Hop-by-Hop Identifier is an unsigned 32-bit integer field (in
     network byte order) and aids in matching requests and replies.
     The sender MUST ensure that the Hop-by-Hop identifier in a request
     is unique on a given connection at any given time, and MAY attempt
     to ensure that the number is unique across reboots.  The sender of
     an Answer message MUST ensure that the Hop-by-Hop Identifier field
     contains the same value that was found in the corresponding
     request.  The Hop-by-Hop identifier is normally a monotonically
     increasing number, whose start value was randomly generated.  An
     answer message that is received with an unknown Hop-by-Hop
     Identifier MUST be discarded.

  End-to-End Identifier
     The End-to-End Identifier is an unsigned 32-bit integer field (in
     network byte order) and is used to detect duplicate messages.
     Upon reboot implementations MAY set the high order 12 bits to
     contain the low order 12 bits of current time, and the low order
     20 bits to a random value.  Senders of request messages MUST
     insert a unique identifier on each message.  The identifier MUST
     remain locally unique for a period of at least 4 minutes, even
     across reboots.  The originator of an Answer message MUST ensure
     that the End-to-End Identifier field contains the same value that
     was found in the corresponding request.  The End-to-End Identifier
     MUST NOT be modified by Diameter agents of any kind.  The
     combination of the Origin-Host (see Section 6.3) and this field is
     used to detect duplicates.  Duplicate requests SHOULD cause the
     same answer to be transmitted (modulo the hop-by-hop Identifier
     field and any routing AVPs that may be present), and MUST NOT
     affect any state that was set when the original request was
     processed.  Duplicate answer messages that are to be locally
     consumed (see Section 6.2) SHOULD be silently discarded.

  AVPs
     AVPs are a method of encapsulating information relevant to the
     Diameter message.  See Section 4 for more information on AVPs.















Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


3.1.  Command Codes

  Each command Request/Answer pair is assigned a command code, and the
  sub-type (i.e., request or answer) is identified via the 'R' bit in
  the Command Flags field of the Diameter header.

  Every Diameter message MUST contain a command code in its header's
  Command-Code field, which is used to determine the action that is to
  be taken for a particular message.  The following Command Codes are
  defined in the Diameter base protocol:

  Command-Name             Abbrev.    Code       Reference
  --------------------------------------------------------
  Abort-Session-Request     ASR       274           8.5.1
  Abort-Session-Answer      ASA       274           8.5.2
  Accounting-Request        ACR       271           9.7.1
  Accounting-Answer         ACA       271           9.7.2
  Capabilities-Exchange-    CER       257           5.3.1
     Request
  Capabilities-Exchange-    CEA       257           5.3.2
     Answer
  Device-Watchdog-Request   DWR       280           5.5.1
  Device-Watchdog-Answer    DWA       280           5.5.2
  Disconnect-Peer-Request   DPR       282           5.4.1
  Disconnect-Peer-Answer    DPA       282           5.4.2
  Re-Auth-Request           RAR       258           8.3.1
  Re-Auth-Answer            RAA       258           8.3.2
  Session-Termination-      STR       275           8.4.1
     Request
  Session-Termination-      STA       275           8.4.2
     Answer




















Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


3.2.  Command Code ABNF specification

  Every Command Code defined MUST include a corresponding ABNF
  specification, which is used to define the AVPs that MUST or MAY be
  present.  The following format is used in the definition:

  command-def      = command-name "::=" diameter-message

  command-name     = diameter-name

  diameter-name    = ALPHA *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")

  diameter-message = header  [ *fixed] [ *required] [ *optional]
                     [ *fixed]

  header           = "<" Diameter-Header:" command-id
                     [r-bit] [p-bit] [e-bit] [application-id]">"

  application-id   = 1*DIGIT

  command-id       = 1*DIGIT
                     ; The Command Code assigned to the command

  r-bit            = ", REQ"
                     ; If present, the 'R' bit in the Command
                     ; Flags is set, indicating that the message
                     ; is a request, as opposed to an answer.

  p-bit            = ", PXY"
                     ; If present, the 'P' bit in the Command
                     ; Flags is set, indicating that the message
                     ; is proxiable.

  e-bit            = ", ERR"
                     ; If present, the 'E' bit in the Command
                     ; Flags is set, indicating that the answer
                     ; message contains a Result-Code AVP in
                     ; the "protocol error" class.

  fixed            = [qual] "<" avp-spec ">"
                     ; Defines the fixed position of an AVP

  required         = [qual] "{" avp-spec "}"
                     ; The AVP MUST be present and can appear
                     ; anywhere in the message.






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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  optional         = [qual] "[" avp-name "]"
                     ; The avp-name in the 'optional' rule cannot
                     ; evaluate to any AVP Name which is included
                     ; in a fixed or required rule.  The AVP can
                     ; appear anywhere in the message.

  qual             = [min] "*" [max]
                     ; See ABNF conventions, RFC 2234 Section 6.6.
                     ; The absence of any qualifiers depends on whether
                     ; it precedes a fixed, required, or optional
                     ; rule.  If a fixed or required rule has no
                     ; qualifier, then exactly one such AVP MUST
                     ; be present.  If an optional rule has no
                     ; qualifier, then 0 or 1 such AVP may be
                     ; present.
                     ;
                     ; NOTE:  "[" and "]" have a different meaning
                     ; than in ABNF (see the optional rule, above).
                     ; These braces cannot be used to express
                     ; optional fixed rules (such as an optional
                     ; ICV at the end).  To do this, the convention
                     ; is '0*1fixed'.

  min              = 1*DIGIT
                     ; The minimum number of times the element may
                     ; be present.  The default value is zero.

  max              = 1*DIGIT
                     ; The maximum number of times the element may
                     ; be present.  The default value is infinity.  A
                     ; value of zero implies the AVP MUST NOT be
                     ; present.

  avp-spec         = diameter-name
                     ; The avp-spec has to be an AVP Name, defined
                     ; in the base or extended Diameter
                     ; specifications.

  avp-name         = avp-spec / "AVP"
                     ; The string "AVP" stands for *any* arbitrary
                     ; AVP Name, which does not conflict with the
                     ; required or fixed position AVPs defined in
                     ; the command code definition.








Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  The following is a definition of a fictitious command code:

  Example-Request ::= < "Diameter-Header: 9999999, REQ, PXY >
                      { User-Name }
                    * { Origin-Host }
                    * [ AVP

3.3.  Diameter Command Naming Conventions

  Diameter command names typically includes one or more English words
  followed by the verb Request or Answer.  Each English word is
  delimited by a hyphen.  A three-letter acronym for both the request
  and answer is also normally provided.

  An example is a message set used to terminate a session.  The command
  name is Session-Terminate-Request and Session-Terminate-Answer, while
  the acronyms are STR and STA, respectively.

  Both the request and the answer for a given command share the same
  command code.  The request is identified by the R(equest) bit in the
  Diameter header set to one (1), to ask that a particular action be
  performed, such as authorizing a user or terminating a session.  Once
  the receiver has completed the request it issues the corresponding
  answer, which includes a result code that communicates one of the
  following:

  -  The request was successful

  -  The request failed

  -  An additional request must be sent to provide information the peer
     requires prior to returning a successful or failed answer.

  -  The receiver could not process the request, but provides
     information about a Diameter peer that is able to satisfy the
     request, known as redirect.

  Additional information, encoded within AVPs, MAY also be included in
  answer  messages.

4.  Diameter AVPs

  Diameter AVPs carry specific authentication, accounting,
  authorization, routing and security information as well as
  configuration details for the request and reply.

  Some AVPs MAY be listed more than once.  The effect of such an AVP is
  specific, and is specified in each case by the AVP description.



Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Each AVP of type OctetString MUST be padded to align on a 32-bit
  boundary, while other AVP types align naturally.  A number of zero-
  valued bytes are added to the end of the AVP Data field till a word
  boundary is reached.  The length of the padding is not reflected in
  the AVP Length field.

4.1.  AVP Header

  The fields in the AVP header MUST be sent in network byte order.  The
  format of the header is:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                           AVP Code                            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |V M P r r r r r|                  AVP Length                   |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Vendor-ID (opt)                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |    Data ...
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  AVP Code
     The AVP Code, combined with the Vendor-Id field, identifies the
     attribute uniquely.  AVP numbers 1 through 255 are reserved for
     backward compatibility with RADIUS, without setting the Vendor-Id
     field.  AVP numbers 256 and above are used for Diameter, which are
     allocated by IANA (see Section 11.1).

  AVP Flags
     The AVP Flags field informs the receiver how each attribute must
     be handled.  The 'r' (reserved) bits are unused and SHOULD be set
     to 0.  Note that subsequent Diameter applications MAY define
     additional bits within the AVP Header, and an unrecognized bit
     SHOULD be considered an error.  The 'P' bit indicates the need for
     encryption for end-to-end security.

     The 'M' Bit, known as the Mandatory bit, indicates whether support
     of the AVP is required.  If an AVP with the 'M' bit set is
     received by a Diameter client, server, proxy, or translation agent
     and either the AVP or its value is unrecognized, the message MUST
     be rejected.  Diameter Relay and redirect agents MUST NOT reject
     messages with unrecognized AVPs.







Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


     The 'M' bit MUST be set according to the rules defined for the AVP
     containing it.  In order to preserve interoperability, a Diameter
     implementation MUST be able to exclude from a Diameter message any
     Mandatory AVP which is neither defined in the base Diameter
     protocol nor in any of the Diameter Application specifications
     governing the message in which it appears.  It MAY do this in one
     of the following ways:

     1) If a message is rejected because it contains a Mandatory AVP
        which is neither defined in the base Diameter standard nor in
        any of the Diameter Application specifications governing the
        message in which it appears, the implementation may resend the
        message without the AVP, possibly inserting additional standard
        AVPs instead.

     2) A configuration option may be provided on a system wide, per
        peer, or per realm basis that would allow/prevent particular
        Mandatory AVPs to be sent.  Thus an administrator could change
        the configuration to avoid interoperability problems.

     Diameter implementations are required to support all Mandatory
     AVPs which are allowed by the message's formal syntax and defined
     either in the base Diameter standard or in one of the Diameter
     Application specifications governing the message.

     AVPs with the 'M' bit cleared are informational only and a
     receiver that receives a message with such an AVP that is not
     supported, or whose value is not supported, MAY simply ignore the
     AVP.

     The 'V' bit, known as the Vendor-Specific bit, indicates whether
     the optional Vendor-ID field is present in the AVP header.  When
     set the AVP Code belongs to the specific vendor code address
     space.

     Unless otherwise noted, AVPs will have the following default AVP
     Flags field settings:

        The 'M' bit MUST be set.  The 'V' bit MUST NOT be set.

  AVP Length
     The AVP Length field is three octets, and indicates the number of
     octets in this AVP including the AVP Code, AVP Length, AVP Flags,
     Vendor-ID field (if present) and the AVP data.  If a message is
     received with an invalid attribute length, the message SHOULD be
     rejected.





Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


4.1.1.  Optional Header Elements

  The AVP Header contains one optional field.  This field is only
  present if the respective bit-flag is enabled.

  Vendor-ID
     The Vendor-ID field is present if the 'V' bit is set in the AVP
     Flags field.  The optional four-octet Vendor-ID field contains the
     IANA assigned "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes"
     [ASSIGNNO] value, encoded in network byte order.  Any vendor
     wishing to implement a vendor-specific Diameter AVP MUST use their
     own Vendor-ID along with their privately managed AVP address
     space, guaranteeing that they will not collide with any other
     vendor's vendor-specific AVP(s), nor with future IETF
     applications.

     A vendor ID value of zero (0) corresponds to the IETF adopted AVP
     values, as managed by the IANA.  Since the absence of the vendor
     ID field implies that the AVP in question is not vendor specific,
     implementations MUST NOT use the zero (0) vendor ID.

4.2.  Basic AVP Data Formats

  The Data field is zero or more octets and contains information
  specific to the Attribute.  The format and length of the Data field
  is determined by the AVP Code and AVP Length fields.  The format of
  the Data field MUST be one of the following base data types or a data
  type derived from the base data types.  In the event that a new Basic
  AVP Data Format is needed, a new version of this RFC must be created.

  OctetString
     The data contains arbitrary data of variable length.  Unless
     otherwise noted, the AVP Length field MUST be set to at least 8
     (12 if the 'V' bit is enabled).  AVP Values of this type that are
     not a multiple of four-octets in length is followed by the
     necessary padding so that the next AVP (if any) will start on a
     32-bit boundary.

  Integer32
     32 bit signed value, in network byte order.  The AVP Length field
     MUST be set to 12 (16 if the 'V' bit is enabled).

  Integer64
     64 bit signed value, in network byte order.  The AVP Length field
     MUST be set to 16 (20 if the 'V' bit is enabled).






Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Unsigned32
     32 bit unsigned value, in network byte order.  The AVP Length
     field MUST be set to 12 (16 if the 'V' bit is enabled).

  Unsigned64
     64 bit unsigned value, in network byte order.  The AVP Length
     field MUST be set to 16 (20 if the 'V' bit is enabled).

  Float32
     This represents floating point values of single precision as
     described by [FLOATPOINT].  The 32-bit value is transmitted in
     network byte order.  The AVP Length field MUST be set to 12 (16 if
     the 'V' bit is enabled).

  Float64
     This represents floating point values of double precision as
     described by [FLOATPOINT].  The 64-bit value is transmitted in
     network byte order.  The AVP Length field MUST be set to 16 (20 if
     the 'V' bit is enabled).

  Grouped
     The Data field is specified as a sequence of AVPs.  Each of these
     AVPs follows - in the order in which they are specified -
     including their headers and padding.  The AVP Length field is set
     to 8 (12 if the 'V' bit is enabled) plus the total length of all
     included AVPs, including their headers and padding.  Thus the AVP
     length field of an AVP of type Grouped is always a multiple of 4.

4.3.  Derived AVP Data Formats

  In addition to using the Basic AVP Data Formats, applications may
  define data formats derived from the Basic AVP Data Formats.  An
  application that defines new AVP Derived Data Formats MUST include
  them in a section entitled "AVP Derived Data Formats", using the same
  format as the definitions below.  Each new definition must be either
  defined or listed with a reference to the RFC that defines the
  format.

  The below AVP Derived Data Formats are commonly used by applications.

  Address
     The Address format is derived from the OctetString AVP Base
     Format.  It is a discriminated union, representing, for example a
     32-bit (IPv4) [IPV4] or 128-bit (IPv6) [IPV6] address, most
     significant octet first.  The first two octets of the Address






Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


     AVP represents the AddressType, which contains an Address Family
     defined in [IANAADFAM].  The AddressType is used to discriminate
     the content and format of the remaining octets.

  Time
     The Time format is derived from the OctetString AVP Base Format.
     The string MUST contain four octets, in the same format as the
     first four bytes are in the NTP timestamp format.  The NTP
     Timestamp format is defined in chapter 3 of [SNTP].

     This represents the number of seconds since 0h on 1 January 1900
     with respect to the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).

     On 6h 28m 16s UTC, 7 February 2036 the time value will overflow.
     SNTP [SNTP] describes a procedure to extend the time to 2104.
     This procedure MUST be supported by all DIAMETER nodes.

  UTF8String
     The UTF8String format is derived from the OctetString AVP Base
     Format.  This is a human readable string represented using the
     ISO/IEC IS 10646-1 character set, encoded as an OctetString using
     the UTF-8 [UFT8] transformation format described in RFC 2279.

     Since additional code points are added by amendments to the 10646
     standard from time to time, implementations MUST be prepared to
     encounter any code point from 0x00000001 to 0x7fffffff.  Byte
     sequences that do not correspond to the valid encoding of a code
     point into UTF-8 charset or are outside this range are prohibited.

     The use of control codes SHOULD be avoided.  When it is necessary
     to represent a new line, the control code sequence CR LF SHOULD be
     used.

     The use of leading or trailing white space SHOULD be avoided.

     For code points not directly supported by user interface hardware
     or software, an alternative means of entry and display, such as
     hexadecimal, MAY be provided.

     For information encoded in 7-bit US-ASCII, the UTF-8 charset is
     identical to the US-ASCII charset.

     UTF-8 may require multiple bytes to represent a single character /
     code point; thus the length of an UTF8String in octets may be
     different from the number of characters encoded.

     Note that the AVP Length field of an UTF8String is measured in
     octets, not characters.



Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  DiameterIdentity
     The DiameterIdentity format is derived from the OctetString AVP
     Base Format.

        DiameterIdentity  = FQDN

     DiameterIdentity value is used to uniquely identify a Diameter
     node for purposes of duplicate connection and routing loop
     detection.

     The contents of the string MUST be the FQDN of the Diameter node.
     If multiple Diameter nodes run on the same host, each Diameter
     node MUST be assigned a unique DiameterIdentity.  If a Diameter
     node can be identified by several FQDNs, a single FQDN should be
     picked at startup, and used as the only DiameterIdentity for that
     node, whatever the connection it is sent on.

  DiameterURI

     The DiameterURI MUST follow the Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI)
     syntax [URI] rules specified below:

     "aaa://" FQDN [ port ] [ transport ] [ protocol ]

                     ; No transport security

     "aaas://" FQDN [ port ] [ transport ] [ protocol ]

                     ; Transport security used

     FQDN               = Fully Qualified Host Name

     port               = ":" 1*DIGIT

                     ; One of the ports used to listen for
                     ; incoming connections.
                     ; If absent,
                     ; the default Diameter port (3868) is
                     ; assumed.

     transport          = ";transport=" transport-protocol

                     ; One of the transports used to listen
                     ; for incoming connections.  If absent,
                     ; the default SCTP [SCTP] protocol is
                     ; assumed.  UDP MUST NOT be used when
                     ; the aaa-protocol field is set to
                     ; diameter.



Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


     transport-protocol = ( "tcp" / "sctp" / "udp" )

     protocol           = ";protocol=" aaa-protocol

                     ; If absent, the default AAA protocol
                     ; is diameter.

     aaa-protocol       = ( "diameter" / "radius" / "tacacs+" )

     The following are examples of valid Diameter host identities:

     aaa://host.example.com;transport=tcp
     aaa://host.example.com:6666;transport=tcp
     aaa://host.example.com;protocol=diameter
     aaa://host.example.com:6666;protocol=diameter
     aaa://host.example.com:6666;transport=tcp;protocol=diameter
     aaa://host.example.com:1813;transport=udp;protocol=radius

  Enumerated
     Enumerated is derived from the Integer32 AVP Base Format.  The
     definition contains a list of valid values and their
     interpretation and is described in the Diameter application
     introducing the AVP.

  IPFilterRule
     The IPFilterRule format is derived from the OctetString AVP Base
     Format.  It uses the ASCII charset.  Packets may be filtered based
     on the following information that is associated with it:

        Direction                          (in or out)
        Source and destination IP address  (possibly masked)
        Protocol
        Source and destination port        (lists or ranges)
        TCP flags
        IP fragment flag
        IP options
        ICMP types

     Rules for the appropriate direction are evaluated in order, with
     the first matched rule terminating the evaluation.  Each packet is
     evaluated once.  If no rule matches, the packet is dropped if the
     last rule evaluated was a permit, and passed if the last rule was
     a deny.








Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


     IPFilterRule filters MUST follow the format:

        action dir proto from src to dst [options]

        action       permit - Allow packets that match the rule.
                     deny   - Drop packets that match the rule.

        dir          "in" is from the terminal, "out" is to the
                     terminal.

        proto        An IP protocol specified by number.  The "ip"
                     keyword means any protocol will match.

        src and dst  <address/mask> [ports]

                     The <address/mask> may be specified as:
                     ipno       An IPv4 or IPv6 number in dotted-
                                quad or canonical IPv6 form.  Only
                                this exact IP number will match the
                                rule.
                     ipno/bits  An IP number as above with a mask
                                width of the form 1.2.3.4/24.  In
                                this case, all IP numbers from
                                1.2.3.0 to 1.2.3.255 will match.
                                The bit width MUST be valid for the
                                IP version and the IP number MUST
                                NOT have bits set beyond the mask.
                                For a match to occur, the same IP
                                version must be present in the
                                packet that was used in describing
                                the IP address.  To test for a
                                particular IP version, the bits part
                                can be set to zero.  The keyword
                                "any" is 0.0.0.0/0 or the IPv6
                                equivalent.  The keyword "assigned"
                                is the address or set of addresses
                                assigned to the terminal.  For IPv4,
                                a typical first rule is often "deny
                                in ip! assigned"

                     The sense of the match can be inverted by
                     preceding an address with the not modifier (!),
                     causing all other addresses to be matched
                     instead.  This does not affect the selection of
                     port numbers.






Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


                     With the TCP, UDP and SCTP protocols, optional
                     ports may be specified as:

                        {port/port-port}[,ports[,...]]

                     The '-' notation specifies a range of ports
                     (including boundaries).

                     Fragmented packets that have a non-zero offset
                     (i.e., not the first fragment) will never match
                     a rule that has one or more port
                     specifications.  See the frag option for
                     details on matching fragmented packets.

        options:
           frag    Match if the packet is a fragment and this is not
                   the first fragment of the datagram.  frag may not
                   be used in conjunction with either tcpflags or
                   TCP/UDP port specifications.

           ipoptions spec
                   Match if the IP header contains the comma
                   separated list of options specified in spec.  The
                   supported IP options are:

                   ssrr (strict source route), lsrr (loose source
                   route), rr (record packet route) and ts
                   (timestamp).  The absence of a particular option
                   may be denoted with a '!'.

           tcpoptions spec
                   Match if the TCP header contains the comma
                   separated list of options specified in spec.  The
                   supported TCP options are:

                   mss (maximum segment size), window (tcp window
                   advertisement), sack (selective ack), ts (rfc1323
                   timestamp) and cc (rfc1644 t/tcp connection
                   count).  The absence of a particular option may
                   be denoted with a '!'.

           established
                   TCP packets only.  Match packets that have the RST
                   or ACK bits set.

           setup   TCP packets only.  Match packets that have the SYN
                   bit set but no ACK bit.




Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


           tcpflags spec
                   TCP packets only.  Match if the TCP header
                   contains the comma separated list of flags
                   specified in spec.  The supported TCP flags are:

                   fin, syn, rst, psh, ack and urg.  The absence of a
                   particular flag may be denoted with a '!'.  A rule
                   that contains a tcpflags specification can never
                   match a fragmented packet that has a non-zero
                   offset.  See the frag option for details on
                   matching fragmented packets.

           icmptypes types
                   ICMP packets only.  Match if the ICMP type is in
                   the list types.  The list may be specified as any
                   combination of ranges or individual types
                   separated by commas.  Both the numeric values and
                   the symbolic values listed below can be used.  The
                   supported ICMP types are:

                   echo reply (0), destination unreachable (3),
                   source quench (4), redirect (5), echo request
                   (8), router advertisement (9), router
                   solicitation (10), time-to-live exceeded (11), IP
                   header bad (12), timestamp request (13),
                   timestamp reply (14), information request (15),
                   information reply (16), address mask request (17)
                   and address mask reply (18).

  There is one kind of packet that the access device MUST always
  discard, that is an IP fragment with a fragment offset of one. This
  is a valid packet, but it only has one use, to try to circumvent
  firewalls.

     An access device that is unable to interpret or apply a deny rule
     MUST terminate the session.  An access device that is unable to
     interpret or apply a permit rule MAY apply a more restrictive
     rule.  An access device MAY apply deny rules of its own before the
     supplied rules, for example to protect the access device owner's
     infrastructure.

  The rule syntax is a modified subset of ipfw(8) from FreeBSD, and the
  ipfw.c code may provide a useful base for implementations.








Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  QoSFilterRule
     The QosFilterRule format is derived from the OctetString AVP Base
     Format.  It uses the ASCII charset.  Packets may be marked or
     metered based on the following information that is associated with
     it:

        Direction                          (in or out)
        Source and destination IP address  (possibly masked)
        Protocol
        Source and destination port        (lists or ranges)
        DSCP values                        (no mask or range)

     Rules for the appropriate direction are evaluated in order, with
     the first matched rule terminating the evaluation.  Each packet is
     evaluated once.  If no rule matches, the packet is treated as best
     effort.  An access device that is unable to interpret or apply a
     QoS rule SHOULD NOT terminate the session.

  QoSFilterRule filters MUST follow the format:

  action dir proto from src to dst [options]

               tag    - Mark packet with a specific DSCP
                        [DIFFSERV].  The DSCP option MUST be
                        included.
               meter  - Meter traffic.  The metering options
                        MUST be included.

  dir          The format is as described under IPFilterRule.

               proto        The format is as described under
               IPFilterRule.

               src and dst  The format is as described under
               IPFilterRule.

4.4.  Grouped AVP Values

  The Diameter protocol allows AVP values of type 'Grouped.'  This
  implies that the Data field is actually a sequence of AVPs.  It is
  possible to include an AVP with a Grouped type within a Grouped type,
  that is, to nest them.  AVPs within an AVP of type Grouped have the
  same padding requirements as non-Grouped AVPs, as defined in Section
  4.







Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  The AVP Code numbering space of all AVPs included in a Grouped AVP is
  the same as for non-grouped AVPs.  Further, if any of the AVPs
  encapsulated within a Grouped AVP has the 'M' (mandatory) bit set,
  the Grouped AVP itself MUST also include the 'M' bit set.

  Every Grouped AVP defined MUST include a corresponding grammar, using
  ABNF [ABNF] (with modifications), as defined below.

     grouped-avp-def  = name "::=" avp

     name-fmt         = ALPHA *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")

     name             = name-fmt
                        ; The name has to be the name of an AVP,
                        ; defined in the base or extended Diameter
                        ; specifications.

     avp              = header  [ *fixed] [ *required] [ *optional]
                        [ *fixed]

     header           = "<" "AVP-Header:" avpcode [vendor] ">"

     avpcode          = 1*DIGIT
                        ; The AVP Code assigned to the Grouped AVP

     vendor           = 1*DIGIT
                        ; The Vendor-ID assigned to the Grouped AVP.
                        ; If absent, the default value of zero is
                        ; used.

4.4.1.  Example AVP with a Grouped Data type

  The Example-AVP (AVP Code 999999) is of type Grouped and is used to
  clarify how Grouped AVP values work.  The Grouped Data field has the
  following ABNF grammar:

     Example-AVP  ::= < AVP Header: 999999 >
                      { Origin-Host }
                    1*{ Session-Id }
                     *[ AVP ]

  An Example-AVP with Grouped Data follows.

  The Origin-Host AVP is required (Section 6.3).  In this case:

     Origin-Host = "example.com".





Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  One or more Session-Ids must follow.  Here there are two:

     Session-Id =
       "grump.example.com:33041;23432;893;0AF3B81"

     Session-Id =
       "grump.example.com:33054;23561;2358;0AF3B82"

  optional AVPs included are

     Recovery-Policy = <binary>
        2163bc1d0ad82371f6bc09484133c3f09ad74a0dd5346d54195a7cf0b35
        2cabc881839a4fdcfbc1769e2677a4c1fb499284c5f70b48f58503a45c5
        c2d6943f82d5930f2b7c1da640f476f0e9c9572a50db8ea6e51e1c2c7bd
        f8bb43dc995144b8dbe297ac739493946803e1cee3e15d9b765008a1b2a
        cf4ac777c80041d72c01e691cf751dbf86e85f509f3988e5875dc905119
        26841f00f0e29a6d1ddc1a842289d440268681e052b30fb638045f7779c
        1d873c784f054f688f5001559ecff64865ef975f3e60d2fd7966b8c7f92

     Futuristic-Acct-Record = <binary>
        fe19da5802acd98b07a5b86cb4d5d03f0314ab9ef1ad0b67111ff3b90a0
        57fe29620bf3585fd2dd9fcc38ce62f6cc208c6163c008f4258d1bc88b8
        17694a74ccad3ec69269461b14b2e7a4c111fb239e33714da207983f58c
        41d018d56fe938f3cbf089aac12a912a2f0d1923a9390e5f789cb2e5067
        d3427475e49968f841

  The data for the optional AVPs is represented in hex since the format
  of these AVPs is neither known at the time of definition of the
  Example-AVP group, nor (likely) at the time when the example instance
  of this AVP is interpreted - except by Diameter implementations which
  support the same set of AVPs.  The encoding example illustrates how
  padding is used and how length fields are calculated.  Also note that
  AVPs may be present in the Grouped AVP value which the receiver
  cannot interpret (here, the Recover-Policy and Futuristic-Acct-Record
  AVPs).
















Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  This AVP would be encoded as follows:

          0       1       2       3       4       5       6       7
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
    0 |     Example AVP Header (AVP Code = 999999), Length = 468      |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
    8 |     Origin-Host AVP Header (AVP Code = 264), Length = 19      |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   16 |  'e'  |  'x'  |  'a'  |  'm'  |  'p'  |  'l'  |  'e'  |  '.'  |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   24 |  'c'  |  'o'  |  'm'  |Padding|     Session-Id AVP Header     |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   32 | (AVP Code = 263), Length = 50 |  'g'  |  'r'  |  'u'  |  'm'  |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
                                    . . .
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   64 |  'A'  |  'F'  |  '3'  |  'B'  |  '8'  |  '1'  |Padding|Padding|
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   72 |     Session-Id AVP Header (AVP Code = 263), Length = 51       |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
   80 |  'g'  |  'r'  |  'u'  |  'm'  |  'p'  |  '.'  |  'e'  |  'x'  |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
                                    . . .
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  104 |  '0'  |  'A'  |  'F'  |  '3'  |  'B'  |  '8'  |  '2'  |Padding|
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  112 |   Recovery-Policy Header (AVP Code = 8341), Length = 223      |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  120 |  0x21 | 0x63  | 0xbc  | 0x1d  | 0x0a  | 0xd8  | 0x23  | 0x71  |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
                                    . . .
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  320 |  0x2f | 0xd7  | 0x96  | 0x6b  | 0x8c  | 0x7f  | 0x92  |Padding|
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  328 | Futuristic-Acct-Record Header (AVP Code = 15930), Length = 137|
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  336 |  0xfe | 0x19  | 0xda  | 0x58  | 0x02  | 0xac  | 0xd9  | 0x8b  |
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
                                    . . .
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
  464 |  0x41 |Padding|Padding|Padding|
      +-------+-------+-------+-------+









Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


4.5.  Diameter Base Protocol AVPs

  The following table describes the Diameter AVPs defined in the base
  protocol, their AVP Code values, types, possible flag values and
  whether the AVP MAY be encrypted.  For the originator of a Diameter
  message, "Encr" (Encryption) means that if a message containing that
  AVP is to be sent via a  Diameter agent (proxy, redirect or relay)
  then the message MUST NOT be sent unless there is end-to-end security
  between the originator and the recipient and integrity /
  confidentiality protection is offered for this AVP OR the originator
  has locally trusted configuration that indicates that end-to-end
  security is not needed.  Similarly, for the originator of a Diameter
  message, a "P" in the "MAY" column means that if a message containing
  that AVP is to be sent via a  Diameter agent (proxy, redirect or
  relay) then the message MUST NOT be sent unless there is end-to-end
  security between the originator and the recipient or the originator
  has locally trusted configuration that indicates that end-to-end
  security is not needed.

  Due to space constraints, the short form DiamIdent is used to
  represent DiameterIdentity.






























Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


                                           +---------------------+
                                           |    AVP Flag rules   |
                                           |----+-----+----+-----|----+
                  AVP  Section             |    |     |SHLD| MUST|    |
  Attribute Name  Code Defined  Data Type  |MUST| MAY | NOT|  NOT|Encr|
  -----------------------------------------|----+-----+----+-----|----|
  Acct-             85  9.8.2   Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Interim-Interval                       |    |     |    |     |    |
  Accounting-      483  9.8.7   Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Realtime-Required                      |    |     |    |     |    |
  Acct-            50   9.8.5   UTF8String | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Multi-Session-Id                       |    |     |    |     |    |
  Accounting-      485  9.8.3   Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Record-Number                          |    |     |    |     |    |
  Accounting-      480  9.8.1   Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Record-Type                            |    |     |    |     |    |
  Accounting-       44  9.8.4   OctetString| M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
   Session-Id                              |    |     |    |     |    |
  Accounting-      287  9.8.6   Unsigned64 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Sub-Session-Id                         |    |     |    |     |    |
  Acct-            259  6.9     Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Application-Id                         |    |     |    |     |    |
  Auth-            258  6.8     Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Application-Id                         |    |     |    |     |    |
  Auth-Request-    274  8.7     Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Type                                  |    |     |    |     |    |
  Authorization-   291  8.9     Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Lifetime                               |    |     |    |     |    |
  Auth-Grace-      276  8.10    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Period                                 |    |     |    |     |    |
  Auth-Session-    277  8.11    Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    State                                  |    |     |    |     |    |
  Re-Auth-Request- 285  8.12    Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Type                                   |    |     |    |     |    |
  Class             25  8.20    OctetString| M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
  Destination-Host 293  6.5     DiamIdent  | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Destination-     283  6.6     DiamIdent  | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Realm                                  |    |     |    |     |    |
  Disconnect-Cause 273  5.4.3   Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  E2E-Sequence AVP 300  6.15    Grouped    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
  Error-Message    281  7.3     UTF8String |    |  P  |    | V,M | N  |
  Error-Reporting- 294  7.4     DiamIdent  |    |  P  |    | V,M | N  |
    Host                                   |    |     |    |     |    |
  Event-Timestamp   55  8.21    Time       | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Experimental-    297  7.6     Grouped    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Result                                |    |     |    |     |    |
  -----------------------------------------|----+-----+----+-----|----|




Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


                                           +---------------------+
                                           |    AVP Flag rules   |
                                           |----+-----+----+-----|----+
                  AVP  Section             |    |     |SHLD| MUST|MAY |
  Attribute Name  Code Defined  Data Type  |MUST| MAY | NOT|  NOT|Encr|
  -----------------------------------------|----+-----+----+-----|----|
  Experimental-    298  7.7     Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Result-Code                           |    |     |    |     |    |
  Failed-AVP       279  7.5     Grouped    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Firmware-        267  5.3.4   Unsigned32 |    |     |    |P,V,M| N  |
    Revision                               |    |     |    |     |    |
  Host-IP-Address  257  5.3.5   Address    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Inband-Security                          | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     -Id           299  6.10    Unsigned32 |    |     |    |     |    |
  Multi-Round-     272  8.19    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Time-Out                               |    |     |    |     |    |
  Origin-Host      264  6.3     DiamIdent  | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Origin-Realm     296  6.4     DiamIdent  | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Origin-State-Id  278  8.16    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Product-Name     269  5.3.7   UTF8String |    |     |    |P,V,M| N  |
  Proxy-Host       280  6.7.3   DiamIdent  | M  |     |    | P,V | N  |
  Proxy-Info       284  6.7.2   Grouped    | M  |     |    | P,V | N  |
  Proxy-State       33  6.7.4   OctetString| M  |     |    | P,V | N  |
  Redirect-Host    292  6.12    DiamURI    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Redirect-Host-   261  6.13    Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Usage                                 |    |     |    |     |    |
  Redirect-Max-    262  6.14    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Cache-Time                            |    |     |    |     |    |
  Result-Code      268  7.1     Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Route-Record     282  6.7.1   DiamIdent  | M  |     |    | P,V | N  |
  Session-Id       263  8.8     UTF8String | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
  Session-Timeout   27  8.13    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Session-Binding  270  8.17    Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
  Session-Server-  271  8.18    Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
    Failover                               |    |     |    |     |    |
  Supported-       265  5.3.6   Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
    Vendor-Id                              |    |     |    |     |    |
  Termination-     295  8.15    Enumerated | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Cause                                 |    |     |    |     |    |
  User-Name          1  8.14    UTF8String | M  |  P  |    |  V  | Y  |
  Vendor-Id        266  5.3.3   Unsigned32 | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
  Vendor-Specific- 260  6.11    Grouped    | M  |  P  |    |  V  | N  |
     Application-Id                        |    |     |    |     |    |
  -----------------------------------------|----+-----+----+-----|----|







Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


5.  Diameter Peers

  This section describes how Diameter nodes establish connections and
  communicate with peers.

5.1.  Peer Connections

  Although a Diameter node may have many possible peers that it is able
  to communicate with, it may not be economical to have an established
  connection to all of them.  At a minimum, a Diameter node SHOULD have
  an established connection with two peers per realm, known as the
  primary and secondary peers.  Of course, a node MAY have additional
  connections, if it is deemed necessary.  Typically, all messages for
  a realm are sent to the primary peer, but in the event that failover
  procedures are invoked, any pending requests are sent to the
  secondary peer.  However, implementations are free to load balance
  requests between a set of peers.

  Note that a given peer MAY act as a primary for a given realm, while
  acting as a secondary for another realm.

  When a peer is deemed suspect, which could occur for various reasons,
  including not receiving a DWA within an allotted timeframe, no new
  requests should be forwarded to the peer, but failover procedures are
  invoked.  When an active peer is moved to this mode, additional
  connections SHOULD be established to ensure that the necessary number
  of active connections exists.

  There are two ways that a peer is removed from the suspect peer list:

  1. The peer is no longer reachable, causing the transport connection
     to be shutdown.  The peer is moved to the closed state.

  2. Three watchdog messages are exchanged with accepted round trip
     times, and the connection to the peer is considered stabilized.

     In the event the peer being removed is either the primary or
     secondary, an alternate peer SHOULD replace the deleted peer, and
     assume the role of either primary or secondary.

5.2.  Diameter Peer Discovery

  Allowing for dynamic Diameter agent discovery will make it possible
  for simpler and more robust deployment of Diameter services.  In
  order to promote interoperable implementations of Diameter peer
  discovery, the following mechanisms are described.  These are based





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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  on existing IETF standards.  The first option (manual configuration)
  MUST be supported by all DIAMETER nodes, while the latter two options
  (SRVLOC and DNS) MAY be supported.

  There are two cases where Diameter peer discovery may be performed.
  The first is when a Diameter client needs to discover a first-hop
  Diameter agent.  The second case is when a Diameter agent needs to
  discover another agent - for further handling of a Diameter
  operation.  In both cases, the following 'search order' is
  recommended:

  1. The Diameter implementation consults its list of static (manually)
     configured Diameter agent locations.  These will be used if they
     exist and respond.

  2. The Diameter implementation uses SLPv2 [SLP] to discover Diameter
     services.  The Diameter service template [TEMPLATE] is included in
     Appendix A.

     It is recommended that SLPv2 security be deployed (this requires
     distributing keys to SLPv2 agents).  This is discussed further in
     Appendix A.  SLPv2 security SHOULD be used (requiring distribution
     of keys to SLPv2 agents) in order to ensure that discovered peers
     are authorized for their roles.  SLPv2 is discussed further in
     Appendix A.

  3. The Diameter implementation performs a NAPTR query for a server in
     a particular realm.  The Diameter implementation has to know in
     advance which realm to look for a Diameter agent in.  This could
     be deduced, for example, from the 'realm' in a NAI that a Diameter
     implementation needed to perform a Diameter operation on.

     3.1 The services relevant for the task of transport protocol
         selection are those with NAPTR service fields with values
         "AAA+D2x", where x is a letter that corresponds to a transport
         protocol supported by the domain.  This specification defines
         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 [NAPTR], the client



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


         discards any records whose services fields are not applicable.
         For the purposes of this specification, several rules are
         defined.

     3.2 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
         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.

         The domain suffixes in the NAPTR replacement field SHOULD
         match the domain of the original query.

  4. If no NAPTR records are found, the requester queries for those
     address records for the destination address,
     '_diameter._sctp'.realm or '_diameter._tcp'.realm.  Address
     records include A RR's, AAAA RR's or other similar records, chosen
     according to the requestor's network protocol capabilities.  If
     the DNS server returns no address records, the requestor gives up.

     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 or IKE 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

     Also, the Diameter Peer MUST check to make sure that the
     discovered peers are authorized to act in its role.
     Authentication via IKE or TLS, or validation of DNS RRs via DNSSEC
     is not sufficient to conclude this.  For example, a web server may
     have obtained a valid TLS certificate, and secured RRs may be
     included in the DNS, but this does not imply that it is authorized
     to act as a Diameter Server.

     Authorization can be achieved for example, by configuration of a
     Diameter Server CA.  Alternatively this can be achieved by
     definition of OIDs within TLS or IKE certificates so as to signify
     Diameter Server authorization.

  A dynamically discovered peer causes an entry in the Peer Table (see
  Section 2.6) to be created.  Note that entries created via DNS MUST
  expire (or be refreshed) within the DNS TTL.  If a peer is discovered



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  outside of the local realm, a routing table entry (see Section 2.7)
  for the peer's realm is created.  The routing table entry's
  expiration MUST match the peer's expiration value.

5.3.  Capabilities Exchange

  When two Diameter peers establish a transport connection, they MUST
  exchange the Capabilities Exchange messages, as specified in the peer
  state machine (see Section 5.6).  This message allows the discovery
  of a peer's identity and its capabilities (protocol version number,
  supported Diameter applications, security mechanisms, etc.)

  The receiver only issues commands to its peers that have advertised
  support for the Diameter application that defines the command.  A
  Diameter node MUST cache the supported applications in order to
  ensure that unrecognized commands and/or AVPs are not unnecessarily
  sent to a peer.

  A receiver of a Capabilities-Exchange-Req (CER) message that does not
  have any applications in common with the sender MUST return a
  Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA) with the Result-Code AVP set to
  DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_APPLICATION, and SHOULD disconnect the transport
  layer connection.  Note that receiving a CER or CEA from a peer
  advertising itself as a Relay (see Section 2.4) MUST be interpreted
  as having common applications with the peer.

  Similarly, a receiver of a Capabilities-Exchange-Req (CER) message
  that does not have any security mechanisms in common with the sender
  MUST return a Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA) with the Result-Code
  AVP set to DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY, and SHOULD disconnect the
  transport layer connection.

  CERs received from unknown peers MAY be silently discarded, or a CEA
  MAY be issued with the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_PEER.
  In both cases, the transport connection is closed.  If the local
  policy permits receiving CERs from unknown hosts, a successful CEA
  MAY be returned.  If a CER from an unknown peer is answered with a
  successful CEA, the lifetime of the peer entry is equal to the
  lifetime of the transport connection.  In case of a transport
  failure, all the pending transactions destined to the unknown peer
  can be discarded.

  The CER and CEA messages MUST NOT be proxied, redirected or relayed.

  Since the CER/CEA messages cannot be proxied, it is still possible
  that an upstream agent receives a message for which it has no
  available peers to handle the application that corresponds to the
  Command-Code.  In such instances, the 'E' bit is set in the answer



Calhoun, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  message (see Section 7.) with the Result-Code AVP set to
  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER to inform the downstream to take action
  (e.g., re-routing request to an alternate peer).

  With the exception of the Capabilities-Exchange-Request message, a
  message of type Request that includes the Auth-Application-Id or
  Acct-Application-Id AVPs, or a message with an application-specific
  command code, MAY only be forwarded to a host that has explicitly
  advertised support for the application (or has advertised the Relay
  Application Identifier).

5.3.1.  Capabilities-Exchange-Request

  The Capabilities-Exchange-Request (CER), indicated by the Command-
  Code set to 257 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to
  exchange local capabilities.  Upon detection of a transport failure,
  this message MUST NOT be sent to an alternate peer.

  When Diameter is run over SCTP [SCTP], which allows for connections
  to span multiple interfaces and multiple IP addresses, the
  Capabilities-Exchange-Request message MUST contain one Host-IP-
  Address AVP for each potential IP address that MAY be locally used
  when transmitting Diameter messages.

  Message Format

     <CER> ::= < Diameter Header: 257, REQ >
               { Origin-Host }
               { Origin-Realm }
            1* { Host-IP-Address }
               { Vendor-Id }
               { Product-Name }
               [ Origin-State-Id ]
             * [ Supported-Vendor-Id ]
             * [ Auth-Application-Id ]
             * [ Inband-Security-Id ]
             * [ Acct-Application-Id ]
             * [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
               [ Firmware-Revision ]
             * [ AVP ]

5.3.2.  Capabilities-Exchange-Answer

  The Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA), indicated by the Command-Code
  set to 257 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent in
  response to a CER message.





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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  When Diameter is run over SCTP [SCTP], which allows connections to
  span multiple interfaces, hence, multiple IP addresses, the
  Capabilities-Exchange-Answer message MUST contain one Host-IP-Address
  AVP for each potential IP address that MAY be locally used when
  transmitting Diameter messages.

  Message Format

     <CEA> ::= < Diameter Header: 257 >
               { Result-Code }
               { Origin-Host }
               { Origin-Realm }
            1* { Host-IP-Address }
               { Vendor-Id }
               { Product-Name }
               [ Origin-State-Id ]
               [ Error-Message ]
             * [ Failed-AVP ]
             * [ Supported-Vendor-Id ]
             * [ Auth-Application-Id ]
             * [ Inband-Security-Id ]
             * [ Acct-Application-Id ]
             * [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
               [ Firmware-Revision ]
             * [ AVP ]

5.3.3.  Vendor-Id AVP

  The Vendor-Id AVP (AVP Code 266) is of type Unsigned32 and contains
  the IANA "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes" [ASSIGNNO]
  value assigned to the vendor of the Diameter application.  In
  combination with the Supported-Vendor-Id AVP (Section 5.3.6), this
  MAY be used in order to know which vendor specific attributes may be
  sent to the peer.  It is also envisioned that the combination of the
  Vendor-Id, Product-Name (Section 5.3.7) and the Firmware-Revision
  (Section 5.3.4) AVPs MAY provide very useful debugging information.

  A Vendor-Id value of zero in the CER or CEA messages is reserved and
  indicates that this field is ignored.

5.3.4.  Firmware-Revision AVP

  The Firmware-Revision AVP (AVP Code 267) is of type Unsigned32 and is
  used to inform a Diameter peer of the firmware revision of the
  issuing device.






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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  For devices that do not have a firmware revision (general purpose
  computers running Diameter software modules, for instance), the
  revision of the Diameter software module may be reported instead.

5.3.5.  Host-IP-Address AVP

  The Host-IP-Address AVP (AVP Code 257) is of type Address and is used
  to inform a Diameter peer of the sender's IP address.  All source
  addresses that a Diameter node expects to use with SCTP [SCTP] MUST
  be advertised in the CER and CEA messages by including a Host-IP-
  Address AVP for each address.  This AVP MUST ONLY be used in the CER
  and CEA messages.

5.3.6.  Supported-Vendor-Id AVP

  The Supported-Vendor-Id AVP (AVP Code 265) is of type Unsigned32 and
  contains the IANA "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes"
  [ASSIGNNO] value assigned to a vendor other than the device vendor.
  This is used in the CER and CEA messages in order to inform the peer
  that the sender supports (a subset of) the vendor-specific AVPs
  defined by the vendor identified in this AVP.

5.3.7.  Product-Name AVP

  The Product-Name AVP (AVP Code 269) is of type UTF8String, and
  contains the vendor assigned name for the product.  The Product-Name
  AVP SHOULD remain constant across firmware revisions for the same
  product.

5.4.  Disconnecting Peer connections

  When a Diameter node disconnects one of its transport connections,
  its peer cannot know the reason for the disconnect, and will most
  likely assume that a connectivity problem occurred, or that the peer
  has rebooted.  In these cases, the peer may periodically attempt to
  reconnect, as stated in Section 2.1.  In the event that the
  disconnect was a result of either a shortage of internal resources,
  or simply that the node in question has no intentions of forwarding
  any Diameter messages to the peer in the foreseeable future, a
  periodic connection request would not be welcomed.  The
  Disconnection-Reason AVP contains the reason the Diameter node issued
  the Disconnect-Peer-Request message.

  The Disconnect-Peer-Request message is used by a Diameter node to
  inform its peer of its intent to disconnect the transport layer, and
  that the peer shouldn't reconnect unless it has a valid reason to do
  so (e.g., message to be forwarded).  Upon receipt of the message, the




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Disconnect-Peer-Answer is returned, which SHOULD contain an error if
  messages have recently been forwarded, and are likely in flight,
  which would otherwise cause a race condition.

  The receiver of the Disconnect-Peer-Answer initiates the transport
  disconnect.

5.4.1.  Disconnect-Peer-Request

  The Disconnect-Peer-Request (DPR), indicated by the Command-Code set
  to 282 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to a peer to
  inform its intentions to shutdown the transport connection.  Upon
  detection of a transport failure, this message MUST NOT be sent to an
  alternate peer.

  Message Format

     <DPR>  ::= < Diameter Header: 282, REQ >
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                { Disconnect-Cause }

5.4.2.  Disconnect-Peer-Answer

  The Disconnect-Peer-Answer (DPA), indicated by the Command-Code set
  to 282 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent as a response
  to the Disconnect-Peer-Request message.  Upon receipt of this
  message, the transport connection is shutdown.

  Message Format

     <DPA>  ::= < Diameter Header: 282 >
                { Result-Code }
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ Error-Message ]
              * [ Failed-AVP ]

5.4.3.  Disconnect-Cause AVP

  The Disconnect-Cause AVP (AVP Code 273) is of type Enumerated.  A
  Diameter node MUST include this AVP in the Disconnect-Peer-Request
  message to inform the peer of the reason for its intention to
  shutdown the transport connection.  The following values are
  supported:






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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  REBOOTING                         0
     A scheduled reboot is imminent.

  BUSY                              1
     The peer's internal resources are constrained, and it has
     determined that the transport connection needs to be closed.

  DO_NOT_WANT_TO_TALK_TO_YOU        2
     The peer has determined that it does not see a need for the
     transport connection to exist, since it does not expect any
     messages to be exchanged in the near future.

5.5.  Transport Failure Detection

  Given the nature of the Diameter protocol, it is recommended that
  transport failures be detected as soon as possible.  Detecting such
  failures will minimize the occurrence of messages sent to unavailable
  agents, resulting in unnecessary delays, and will provide better
  failover performance.  The Device-Watchdog-Request and Device-
  Watchdog-Answer messages, defined in this section, are used to pro-
  actively detect transport failures.

5.5.1.  Device-Watchdog-Request

  The Device-Watchdog-Request (DWR), indicated by the Command-Code set
  to 280 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to a peer when no
  traffic has been exchanged between two peers (see Section 5.5.3).
  Upon detection of a transport failure, this message MUST NOT be sent
  to an alternate peer.

  Message Format

     <DWR>  ::= < Diameter Header: 280, REQ >
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ Origin-State-Id ]

5.5.2.  Device-Watchdog-Answer

  The Device-Watchdog-Answer (DWA), indicated by the Command-Code set
  to 280 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent as a response
  to the Device-Watchdog-Request message.









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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Message Format

     <DWA>  ::= < Diameter Header: 280 >
                { Result-Code }
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ Error-Message ]
              * [ Failed-AVP ]
                [ Original-State-Id ]

5.5.3.  Transport Failure Algorithm

  The transport failure algorithm is defined in [AAATRANS].  All
  Diameter implementations MUST support the algorithm defined in the
  specification in order to be compliant to the Diameter base protocol.

5.5.4.  Failover and Failback Procedures

  In the event that a transport failure is detected with a peer, it is
  necessary for all pending request messages to be forwarded to an
  alternate agent, if possible.  This is commonly referred to as
  failover.

  In order for a Diameter node to perform failover procedures, it is
  necessary for the node to maintain a pending message queue for a
  given peer.  When an answer message is received, the corresponding
  request is removed from the queue.  The Hop-by-Hop Identifier field
  is used to match the answer with the queued request.

  When a transport failure is detected, if possible all messages in the
  queue are sent to an alternate agent with the T flag set.  On booting
  a Diameter client or agent, the T flag is also set on any records
  still remaining to be transmitted in non-volatile storage.  An
  example of a case where it is not possible to forward the message to
  an alternate server is when the message has a fixed destination, and
  the unavailable peer is the message's final destination (see
  Destination-Host AVP).  Such an error requires that the agent return
  an answer message with the 'E' bit set and the Result-Code AVP set to
  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.

  It is important to note that multiple identical requests or answers
  MAY be received as a result of a failover.  The End-to-End Identifier
  field in the Diameter header along with the Origin-Host AVP MUST be
  used to identify duplicate messages.







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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  As described in Section 2.1, a connection request should be
  periodically attempted with the failed peer in order to re-establish
  the transport connection.  Once a connection has been successfully
  established, messages can once again be forwarded to the peer.  This
  is commonly referred to as failback.

5.6.  Peer State Machine

  This section contains a finite state machine that MUST be observed by
  all Diameter implementations.  Each Diameter node MUST follow the
  state machine described below when communicating with each peer.
  Multiple actions are separated by commas, and may continue on
  succeeding lines, as space requires.  Similarly, state and next state
  may also span multiple lines, as space requires.

  This state machine is closely coupled with the state machine
  described in [AAATRANS], which is used to open, close, failover,
  probe, and reopen transport connections.  Note in particular that
  [AAATRANS] requires the use of watchdog messages to probe
  connections.  For Diameter, DWR and DWA messages are to be used.

  I- is used to represent the initiator (connecting) connection, while
  the R- is used to represent the responder (listening) connection.
  The lack of a prefix indicates that the event or action is the same
  regardless of the connection on which the event occurred.

  The stable states that a state machine may be in are Closed, I-Open
  and R-Open; all other states are intermediate.  Note that I-Open and
  R-Open are equivalent except for whether the initiator or responder
  transport connection is used for communication.

  A CER message is always sent on the initiating connection immediately
  after the connection request is successfully completed.  In the case
  of an election, one of the two connections will shut down.  The
  responder connection will survive if the Origin-Host of the local
  Diameter entity is higher than that of the peer; the initiator
  connection will survive if the peer's Origin-Host is higher.  All
  subsequent messages are sent on the surviving connection.  Note that
  the results of an election on one peer are guaranteed to be the
  inverse of the results on the other.

  For TLS usage, a TLS handshake will begin when both ends are in the
  open state.  If the TLS handshake is successful, all further messages
  will be sent via TLS.  If the handshake fails, both ends move to the
  closed state.

  The state machine constrains only the behavior of a Diameter
  implementation as seen by Diameter peers through events on the wire.



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  Any implementation that produces equivalent results is considered
  compliant.

  state            event              action         next state
  -----------------------------------------------------------------
  Closed           Start            I-Snd-Conn-Req   Wait-Conn-Ack
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Accept,        R-Open
                                    Process-CER,
                                    R-Snd-CEA

  Wait-Conn-Ack    I-Rcv-Conn-Ack   I-Snd-CER        Wait-I-CEA
                   I-Rcv-Conn-Nack  Cleanup          Closed
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Accept,        Wait-Conn-Ack/
                                    Process-CER      Elect
                   Timeout          Error            Closed

  Wait-I-CEA       I-Rcv-CEA        Process-CEA      I-Open
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Accept,        Wait-Returns
                                    Process-CER,
                                    Elect
                   I-Peer-Disc      I-Disc           Closed
                   I-Rcv-Non-CEA    Error            Closed
                   Timeout          Error            Closed

  Wait-Conn-Ack/   I-Rcv-Conn-Ack   I-Snd-CER,Elect  Wait-Returns
  Elect            I-Rcv-Conn-Nack  R-Snd-CEA        R-Open
                   R-Peer-Disc      R-Disc           Wait-Conn-Ack
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Reject         Wait-Conn-Ack/
                                                     Elect
                   Timeout          Error            Closed

  Wait-Returns     Win-Election     I-Disc,R-Snd-CEA R-Open
                   I-Peer-Disc      I-Disc,          R-Open
                                    R-Snd-CEA
                   I-Rcv-CEA        R-Disc           I-Open
                   R-Peer-Disc      R-Disc           Wait-I-CEA
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Reject         Wait-Returns
                   Timeout          Error            Closed

  R-Open           Send-Message     R-Snd-Message    R-Open
                   R-Rcv-Message    Process          R-Open
                   R-Rcv-DWR        Process-DWR,     R-Open
                                    R-Snd-DWA
                   R-Rcv-DWA        Process-DWA      R-Open
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Reject         R-Open
                   Stop             R-Snd-DPR        Closing
                   R-Rcv-DPR        R-Snd-DPA,       Closed
                                          R-Disc



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


                   R-Peer-Disc      R-Disc           Closed
                   R-Rcv-CER        R-Snd-CEA        R-Open
                   R-Rcv-CEA        Process-CEA      R-Open

  I-Open           Send-Message     I-Snd-Message    I-Open
                   I-Rcv-Message    Process          I-Open
                   I-Rcv-DWR        Process-DWR,     I-Open
                                    I-Snd-DWA
                   I-Rcv-DWA        Process-DWA      I-Open
                   R-Conn-CER       R-Reject         I-Open
                   Stop             I-Snd-DPR        Closing
                   I-Rcv-DPR        I-Snd-DPA,       Closed
                                    I-Disc
                   I-Peer-Disc      I-Disc           Closed
                   I-Rcv-CER        I-Snd-CEA        I-Open
                   I-Rcv-CEA        Process-CEA      I-Open

  Closing          I-Rcv-DPA        I-Disc           Closed
                   R-Rcv-DPA        R-Disc           Closed
                   Timeout          Error            Closed
                   I-Peer-Disc      I-Disc           Closed
                   R-Peer-Disc      R-Disc           Closed

5.6.1.  Incoming connections

  When a connection request is received from a Diameter peer, it is
  not, in the general case, possible to know the identity of that peer
  until a CER is received from it.  This is because host and port
  determine the identity of a Diameter peer; and the source port of an
  incoming connection is arbitrary.  Upon receipt of CER, the identity
  of the connecting peer can be uniquely determined from Origin-Host.

  For this reason, a Diameter peer must employ logic separate from the
  state machine to receive connection requests, accept them, and await
  CER.  Once CER arrives on a new connection, the Origin-Host that
  identifies the peer is used to locate the state machine associated
  with that peer, and the new connection and CER are passed to the
  state machine as an R-Conn-CER event.

  The logic that handles incoming connections SHOULD close and discard
  the connection if any message other than CER arrives, or if an
  implementation-defined timeout occurs prior to receipt of CER.

  Because handling of incoming connections up to and including receipt
  of CER requires logic, separate from that of any individual state
  machine associated with a particular peer, it is described separately
  in this section rather than in the state machine above.




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


5.6.2.  Events

  Transitions and actions in the automaton are caused by events.  In
  this section, we will ignore the -I and -R prefix, since the actual
  event would be identical, but would occur on one of two possible
  connections.

  Start          The Diameter application has signaled that a
                 connection should be initiated with the peer.

  R-Conn-CER     An acknowledgement is received stating that the
                 transport connection has been established, and the
                 associated CER has arrived.

  Rcv-Conn-Ack   A positive acknowledgement is received confirming that
                 the transport connection is established.

  Rcv-Conn-Nack  A negative acknowledgement was received stating that
                 the transport connection was not established.

  Timeout        An application-defined timer has expired while waiting
                 for some event.

  Rcv-CER        A CER message from the peer was received.

  Rcv-CEA        A CEA message from the peer was received.

  Rcv-Non-CEA    A message other than CEA from the peer was received.

  Peer-Disc      A disconnection indication from the peer was received.

  Rcv-DPR        A DPR message from the peer was received.

  Rcv-DPA        A DPA message from the peer was received.

  Win-Election   An election was held, and the local node was the
                 winner.

  Send-Message   A message is to be sent.

  Rcv-Message    A message other than CER, CEA, DPR, DPA, DWR or DWA
                 was received.

  Stop           The Diameter application has signaled that a
                 connection should be terminated (e.g., on system
                 shutdown).





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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


5.6.3.  Actions

  Actions in the automaton are caused by events and typically indicate
  the transmission of packets and/or an action to be taken on the
  connection.  In this section we will ignore the I- and R-prefix,
  since the actual action would be identical, but would occur on one of
  two possible connections.

  Snd-Conn-Req   A transport connection is initiated with the peer.

  Accept         The incoming connection associated with the R-Conn-CER
                 is accepted as the responder connection.

  Reject         The incoming connection associated with the R-Conn-CER
                 is disconnected.

  Process-CER    The CER associated with the R-Conn-CER is processed.

  Snd-CER        A CER message is sent to the peer.

  Snd-CEA        A CEA message is sent to the peer.

  Cleanup        If necessary, the connection is shutdown, and any
                 local resources are freed.

  Error          The transport layer connection is disconnected, either
                 politely or abortively, in response to an error
                 condition.  Local resources are freed.

  Process-CEA    A received CEA is processed.

  Snd-DPR        A DPR message is sent to the peer.

  Snd-DPA        A DPA message is sent to the peer.

  Disc           The transport layer connection is disconnected, and
                 local resources are freed.

  Elect          An election occurs (see Section 5.6.4 for more
                 information).

  Snd-Message    A message is sent.

  Snd-DWR        A DWR message is sent.

  Snd-DWA        A DWA message is sent.

  Process-DWR    The DWR message is serviced.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Process-DWA    The DWA message is serviced.

  Process        A message is serviced.

5.6.4.  The Election Process

  The election is performed on the responder.  The responder compares
  the Origin-Host received in the CER sent by its peer with its own
  Origin-Host.  If the local Diameter entity's Origin-Host is higher
  than the peer's, a Win-Election event is issued locally.

  The comparison proceeds by considering the shorter OctetString to be
  padded with zeros so that it length is the same as the length of the
  longer, then performing an octet-by-octet unsigned comparison with
  the first octet being most significant.  Any remaining octets are
  assumed to have value 0x80.

6.  Diameter message processing

  This section describes how Diameter requests and answers are created
  and processed.

6.1.  Diameter Request Routing Overview

  A request is sent towards its final destination using a combination
  of the Destination-Realm and Destination-Host AVPs, in one of these
  three combinations:

  -  a request that is not able to be proxied (such as CER) MUST NOT
     contain either Destination-Realm or Destination-Host AVPs.

  -  a request that needs to be sent to a home server serving a
     specific realm, but not to a specific server (such as the first
     request of a series of round-trips), MUST contain a Destination-
     Realm AVP, but MUST NOT contain a Destination-Host AVP.

  -  otherwise, a request that needs to be sent to a specific home
     server among those serving a given realm, MUST contain both the
     Destination-Realm and Destination-Host AVPs.

  The Destination-Host AVP is used as described above when the
  destination of the request is fixed, which includes:

  -  Authentication requests that span multiple round trips

  -  A Diameter message that uses a security mechanism that makes use
     of a pre-established session key shared between the source and the
     final destination of the message.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  -  Server initiated messages that MUST be received by a specific
     Diameter client (e.g., access device), such as the Abort-Session-
     Request message, which is used to request that a particular user's
     session be terminated.

  Note that an agent can forward a request to a host described in the
  Destination-Host AVP only if the host in question is included in its
  peer table (see Section 2.7).  Otherwise, the request is routed based
  on the Destination-Realm only (see Sections 6.1.6).

  The Destination-Realm AVP MUST be present if the message is
  proxiable.  Request messages that may be forwarded by Diameter agents
  (proxies, redirects or relays) MUST also contain an Acct-
  Application-Id AVP, an Auth-Application-Id AVP or a Vendor-Specific-
  Application-Id AVP.  A message that MUST NOT be forwarded by Diameter
  agents (proxies, redirects or relays) MUST not include the
  Destination-Realm in its ABNF.  The value of the Destination-Realm
  AVP MAY be extracted from the User-Name AVP, or other application-
  specific methods.

  When a message is received, the message is processed in the following
  order:

  1. If the message is destined for the local host, the procedures
     listed in Section 6.1.4 are followed.

  2. If the message is intended for a Diameter peer with whom the local
     host is able to directly communicate, the procedures listed in
     Section 6.1.5 are followed.  This is known as Request Forwarding.

  3. The procedures listed in Section 6.1.6 are followed, which is
     known as Request Routing.

  4. If none of the above is successful, an answer is returned with the
     Result-Code set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER, with the E-bit set.

  For routing of Diameter messages to work within an administrative
  domain, all Diameter nodes within the realm MUST be peers.

  Note the processing rules contained in this section are intended to
  be used as general guidelines to Diameter developers.  Certain
  implementations MAY use different methods than the ones described
  here, and still comply with the protocol specification.  See Section
  7 for more detail on error handling.







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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


6.1.1.  Originating a Request

  When creating a request, in addition to any other procedures
  described in the application definition for that specific request,
  the following procedures MUST be followed:

  -  the Command-Code is set to the appropriate value

  -  the 'R' bit is set

  -  the End-to-End Identifier is set to a locally unique value

  -  the Origin-Host and Origin-Realm AVPs MUST be set to the
     appropriate values, used to identify the source of the message

  -  the Destination-Host and Destination-Realm AVPs MUST be set to the
     appropriate values as described in Section 6.1.

  -  an Acct-Application-Id AVP, an Auth-Application-Id or a Vendor-
     Specific-Application-Id AVP must be included if the request is
     proxiable.

6.1.2.  Sending a Request

  When sending a request, originated either locally, or as the result
  of a forwarding or routing operation, the following procedures MUST
  be followed:

  -  the Hop-by-Hop Identifier should be set to a locally unique value

  -  The message should be saved in the list of pending requests.

  Other actions to perform on the message based on the particular role
  the agent is playing are described in the following sections.

6.1.3.  Receiving Requests

  A relay or proxy agent MUST check for forwarding loops when receiving
  requests.  A loop is detected if the server finds its own identity in
  a Route-Record AVP.  When such an event occurs, the agent MUST answer
  with the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED.

6.1.4.  Processing Local Requests

  A request is known to be for local consumption when one of the
  following conditions occur:

  -  The Destination-Host AVP contains the local host's identity,



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  -  The Destination-Host AVP is not present, the Destination-Realm AVP
     contains a realm the server is configured to process locally, and
     the Diameter application is locally supported, or

  -  Both the Destination-Host and the Destination-Realm are not
     present.

  When a request is locally processed, the rules in Section 6.2 should
  be used to generate the corresponding answer.

6.1.5.  Request Forwarding

  Request forwarding is done using the Diameter Peer Table.  The
  Diameter peer table contains all of the peers that the local node is
  able to directly communicate with.

  When a request is received, and the host encoded in the Destination-
  Host AVP is one that is present in the peer table, the message SHOULD
  be forwarded to the peer.

6.1.6.  Request Routing

  Diameter request message routing is done via realms and applications.
  A Diameter message that may be forwarded by Diameter agents (proxies,
  redirects or relays) MUST include the target realm in the
  Destination-Realm AVP and one of the application identification AVPs
  Auth-Application-Id, Acct-Application-Id or Vendor-Specific-
  Application-Id.  The realm MAY be retrieved from the User-Name AVP,
  which is in the form of a Network Access Identifier (NAI).  The realm
  portion of the NAI is inserted in the Destination-Realm AVP.

  Diameter agents MAY have a list of locally supported realms and
  applications, and MAY have a list of externally supported realms and
  applications.  When a request is received that includes a realm
  and/or application that is not locally supported, the message is
  routed to the peer configured in the Realm Routing Table (see Section
  2.7).

6.1.7.  Redirecting requests

  When a redirect agent receives a request whose routing entry is set
  to REDIRECT, it MUST reply with an answer message with the 'E' bit
  set, while maintaining the Hop-by-Hop Identifier in the header, and
  include the Result-Code AVP to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION.  Each of
  the servers associated with the routing entry are added in separate
  Redirect-Host AVP.





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                 +------------------+
                 |     Diameter     |
                 |  Redirect Agent  |
                 +------------------+
                  ^    |    2. command + 'E' bit
   1. Request     |    |    Result-Code =
  [email protected] |    |    DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION +
                  |    |    Redirect-Host AVP(s)
                  |    v
              +-------------+  3. Request  +-------------+
              | example.com |------------->| example.net |
              |    Relay    |              |   Diameter  |
              |    Agent    |<-------------|    Server   |
              +-------------+  4. Answer   +-------------+

                    Figure 5: Diameter Redirect Agent

  The receiver of the answer message with the 'E' bit set, and the
  Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION uses the hop-by-
  hop field in the Diameter header to identify the request in the
  pending message queue (see Section 5.3) that is to be redirected.  If
  no transport connection exists with the new agent, one is created,
  and the request is sent directly to it.

  Multiple Redirect-Host AVPs are allowed.  The receiver of the answer
  message with the 'E' bit set selects exactly one of these hosts as
  the destination of the redirected message.

6.1.8.  Relaying and Proxying Requests

  A relay or proxy agent MUST append a Route-Record AVP to all requests
  forwarded.  The AVP contains the identity of the peer the request was
  received from.

  The Hop-by-Hop identifier in the request is saved, and replaced with
  a locally unique value.  The source of the request is also saved,
  which includes the IP address, port and protocol.

  A relay or proxy agent MAY include the Proxy-Info AVP in requests if
  it requires access to any local state information when the
  corresponding response is received.  Proxy-Info AVP has certain
  security implications and SHOULD contain an embedded HMAC with a
  node-local key.  Alternatively, it MAY simply use local storage to
  store state information.

  The message is then forwarded to the next hop, as identified in the
  Realm Routing Table.




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  Figure 6 provides an example of message routing using the procedures
  listed in these sections.

       (Origin-Host=nas.mno.net)    (Origin-Host=nas.mno.net)
       (Origin-Realm=mno.net)       (Origin-Realm=mno.net)
       (Destination-Realm=example.com)  (Destination-
                                        Realm=example.com)
                                    (Route-Record=nas.example.net)
   +------+      ------>      +------+      ------>      +------+
   |      |     (Request)     |      |      (Request)    |      |
   | NAS  +-------------------+ DRL  +-------------------+ HMS  |
   |      |                   |      |                   |      |
   +------+     <------       +------+     <------       +------+
  example.net    (Answer)   example.net     (Answer)   example.com
       (Origin-Host=hms.example.com)   (Origin-Host=hms.example.com)
       (Origin-Realm=example.com)      (Origin-Realm=example.com)

                 Figure 6: Routing of Diameter messages

6.2.  Diameter Answer Processing

  When a request is locally processed, the following procedures MUST be
  applied to create the associated answer, in addition to any
  additional procedures that MAY be discussed in the Diameter
  application defining the command:

  -  The same Hop-by-Hop identifier in the request is used in the
     answer.

  -  The local host's identity is encoded in the Origin-Host AVP.

  -  The Destination-Host and Destination-Realm AVPs MUST NOT be
     present in the answer message.

  -  The Result-Code AVP is added with its value indicating success or
     failure.

  -  If the Session-Id is present in the request, it MUST be included
     in the answer.

  -  Any Proxy-Info AVPs in the request MUST be added to the answer
     message, in the same order they were present in the request.

  -  The 'P' bit is set to the same value as the one in the request.

  -  The same End-to-End identifier in the request is used in the
     answer.




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  Note that the error messages (see Section 7.3) are also subjected to
  the above processing rules.

6.2.1.  Processing received Answers

  A Diameter client or proxy MUST match the Hop-by-Hop Identifier in an
  answer received against the list of pending requests.  The
  corresponding message should be removed from the list of pending
  requests.  It SHOULD ignore answers received that do not match a
  known Hop-by-Hop Identifier.

6.2.2.  Relaying and Proxying Answers

  If the answer is for a request which was proxied or relayed, the
  agent MUST restore the original value of the Diameter header's Hop-
  by-Hop Identifier field.

  If the last Proxy-Info AVP in the message is targeted to the local
  Diameter server, the AVP MUST be removed before the answer is
  forwarded.

  If a relay or proxy agent receives an answer with a Result-Code AVP
  indicating a failure, it MUST NOT modify the contents of the AVP.
  Any additional local errors detected SHOULD be logged, but not
  reflected in the Result-Code AVP.  If the agent receives an answer
  message with a Result-Code AVP indicating success, and it wishes to
  modify the AVP to indicate an error, it MUST modify the Result-Code
  AVP to contain the appropriate error in the message destined towards
  the access device as well as include the Error-Reporting-Host AVP and
  it MUST issue an STR on behalf of the access device.

  The agent MUST then send the answer to the host that it received the
  original request from.

6.3.  Origin-Host AVP

  The Origin-Host AVP (AVP Code 264) is of type DiameterIdentity, and
  MUST be present in all Diameter messages.  This AVP identifies the
  endpoint that originated the Diameter message.  Relay agents MUST NOT
  modify this AVP.

  The value of the Origin-Host AVP is guaranteed to be unique within a
  single host.

  Note that the Origin-Host AVP may resolve to more than one address as
  the Diameter peer may support more than one address.





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  This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
  possible. 6.10

6.4.  Origin-Realm AVP

  The Origin-Realm AVP (AVP Code 296) is of type DiameterIdentity.
  This AVP contains the Realm of the originator of any Diameter message
  and MUST be present in all messages.

  This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
  possible.

6.5.  Destination-Host AVP

  The Destination-Host AVP (AVP Code 293) is of type DiameterIdentity.
  This AVP MUST be present in all unsolicited agent initiated messages,
  MAY be present in request messages, and MUST NOT be present in Answer
  messages.

  The absence of the Destination-Host AVP will cause a message to be
  sent to any Diameter server supporting the application within the
  realm specified in Destination-Realm AVP.

  This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
  possible.

6.6.  Destination-Realm AVP

  The Destination-Realm AVP (AVP Code 283) is of type DiameterIdentity,
  and contains the realm the message is to be routed to.  The
  Destination-Realm AVP MUST NOT be present in Answer messages.
  Diameter Clients insert the realm portion of the User-Name AVP.
  Diameter servers initiating a request message use the value of the
  Origin-Realm AVP from a previous message received from the intended
  target host (unless it is known a priori).  When present, the
  Destination-Realm AVP is used to perform message routing decisions.

  Request messages whose ABNF does not list the Destination-Realm AVP
  as a mandatory AVP are inherently non-routable messages.

  This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
  possible.

6.7.  Routing AVPs

  The AVPs defined in this section are Diameter AVPs used for routing
  purposes.  These AVPs change as Diameter messages are processed by
  agents, and therefore MUST NOT be protected by end-to-end security.



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6.7.1.  Route-Record AVP

  The Route-Record AVP (AVP Code 282) is of type DiameterIdentity.  The
  identity added in this AVP MUST be the same as the one received in
  the Origin-Host of the Capabilities Exchange message.

6.7.2.  Proxy-Info AVP

  The Proxy-Info AVP (AVP Code 284) is of type Grouped.  The Grouped
  Data field has the following ABNF grammar:

     Proxy-Info ::= < AVP Header: 284 >
                    { Proxy-Host }
                    { Proxy-State }
                  * [ AVP ]

6.7.3.  Proxy-Host AVP

  The Proxy-Host AVP (AVP Code 280) is of type DiameterIdentity.  This
  AVP contains the identity of the host that added the Proxy-Info AVP.

6.7.4.  Proxy-State AVP

  The Proxy-State AVP (AVP Code 33) is of type OctetString, and
  contains state local information, and MUST be treated as opaque data.

6.8.  Auth-Application-Id AVP

  The Auth-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 258) is of type Unsigned32 and
  is used in order to advertise support of the Authentication and
  Authorization portion of an application (see Section 2.4).  The
  Auth-Application-Id MUST also be present in all Authentication and/or
  Authorization messages that are defined in a separate Diameter
  specification and have an Application ID assigned.

6.9.  Acct-Application-Id AVP

  The Acct-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 259) is of type Unsigned32 and
  is used in order to advertise support of the Accounting portion of an
  application (see Section 2.4).  The Acct-Application-Id MUST also be
  present in all Accounting messages.  Exactly one of the Auth-
  Application-Id and Acct-Application-Id AVPs MAY be present.

6.10.  Inband-Security-Id AVP

  The Inband-Security-Id AVP (AVP Code 299) is of type Unsigned32 and
  is used in order to advertise support of the Security portion of the
  application.



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  Currently, the following values are supported, but there is ample
  room to add new security Ids.

  NO_INBAND_SECURITY                0
     This peer does not support TLS.  This is the default value, if the
     AVP is omitted.

  TLS                               1
     This node supports TLS security, as defined by [TLS].

6.11.  Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP

  The Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 260) is of type
  Grouped and is used to advertise support of a vendor-specific
  Diameter Application.  Exactly one of the Auth-Application-Id and
  Acct-Application-Id AVPs MAY be present.

  This AVP MUST also be present as the first AVP in all experimental
  commands defined in the vendor-specific application.

  This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
  possible.

  AVP Format

  <Vendor-Specific-Application-Id> ::= < AVP Header: 260 >
                                    1* [ Vendor-Id ]
                                    0*1{ Auth-Application-Id }
                                    0*1{ Acct-Application-Id }

6.12.  Redirect-Host AVP

  One or more of instances of this AVP MUST be present if the answer
  message's 'E' bit is set and the Result-Code AVP is set to
  DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION.

  Upon receiving the above, the receiving Diameter node SHOULD forward
  the request directly to one of the hosts identified in these AVPs.
  The server contained in the selected Redirect-Host AVP SHOULD be used
  for all messages pertaining to this session.

6.13.  Redirect-Host-Usage AVP

  The Redirect-Host-Usage AVP (AVP Code 261) is of type Enumerated.
  This AVP MAY be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set and
  the Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION.





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  When present, this AVP dictates how the routing entry resulting from
  the Redirect-Host is to be used.  The following values are supported:

  DONT_CACHE                        0
     The host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP should not be cached.
     This is the default value.

  ALL_SESSION                       1
     All messages within the same session, as defined by the same value
     of the Session-ID AVP MAY be sent to the host specified in the
     Redirect-Host AVP.

  ALL_REALM                         2
     All messages destined for the realm requested MAY be sent to the
     host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.

  REALM_AND_APPLICATION             3
     All messages for the application requested to the realm specified
     MAY be sent to the host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.

  ALL_APPLICATION                   4
     All messages for the application requested MAY be sent to the host
     specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.

  ALL_HOST                          5
     All messages that would be sent to the host that generated the
     Redirect-Host MAY be sent to the host specified in the Redirect-
     Host AVP.

  ALL_USER                          6
     All messages for the user requested MAY be sent to the host
     specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.

6.14.  Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP

  The Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP (AVP Code 262) is of type Unsigned32.
  This AVP MUST be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set, the
  Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION and the
  Redirect-Host-Usage AVP set to a non-zero value.

  This AVP contains the maximum number of seconds the peer and route
  table entries, created as a result of the Redirect-Host, will be
  cached.  Note that once a host created due to a redirect indication
  is no longer reachable, any associated peer and routing table entries
  MUST be deleted.






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6.15.  E2E-Sequence AVP

  The E2E-Sequence AVP (AVP Code 300) provides anti-replay protection
  for end to end messages and is of type grouped.  It contains a random
  value (an OctetString with a nonce) and counter (an Integer).  For
  each end-to-end peer with which a node communicates (or remembers
  communicating) a different nonce value MUST be used and the counter
  is initiated at zero and increases by one each time this AVP is
  emitted to that peer.  This AVP MUST be included in all messages
  which use end-to-end protection (e.g., CMS signing or encryption).

7.  Error Handling

  There are two different types of errors in Diameter; protocol and
  application errors.  A protocol error is one that occurs at the base
  protocol level, and MAY require per hop attention (e.g., message
  routing error).  Application errors, on the other hand, generally
  occur due to a problem with a function specified in a Diameter
  application (e.g., user authentication, Missing AVP).

  Result-Code AVP values that are used to report protocol errors MUST
  only be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set.  When a
  request message is received that causes a protocol error, an answer
  message is returned with the 'E' bit set, and the Result-Code AVP is
  set to the appropriate protocol error value.  As the answer is sent
  back towards the originator of the request, each proxy or relay agent
  MAY take action on the message.

                         1. Request        +---------+ Link Broken
               +-------------------------->|Diameter |----///----+
               |     +---------------------|         |           v
        +------+--+  | 2. answer + 'E' set | Relay 2 |     +--------+
        |Diameter |<-+ (Unable to Forward) +---------+     |Diameter|
        |         |                                        |  Home  |
        | Relay 1 |--+                     +---------+     | Server |
        +---------+  |   3. Request        |Diameter |     +--------+
                     +-------------------->|         |           ^
                                           | Relay 3 |-----------+
                                           +---------+

          Figure 7:  Example of Protocol Error causing answer message

  Figure 7 provides an example of a message forwarded upstream by a
  Diameter relay.  When the message is received by Relay 2, and it
  detects that it cannot forward the request to the home server, an
  answer message is returned with the 'E' bit set and the Result-Code
  AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.  Given that this error falls




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  within the protocol error category, Relay 1 would take special
  action, and given the error, attempt to route the message through its
  alternate Relay 3.

        +---------+ 1. Request  +---------+ 2. Request  +---------+
        | Access  |------------>|Diameter |------------>|Diameter |
        |         |             |         |             |  Home   |
        | Device  |<------------|  Relay  |<------------| Server  |
        +---------+  4. Answer  +---------+  3. Answer  +---------+
                   (Missing AVP)           (Missing AVP)

             Figure 8: Example of Application Error Answer message

  Figure 8 provides an example of a Diameter message that caused an
  application error.  When application errors occur, the Diameter
  entity reporting the error clears the 'R' bit in the Command Flags,
  and adds the Result-Code AVP with the proper value.  Application
  errors do not require any proxy or relay agent involvement, and
  therefore the message would be forwarded back to the originator of
  the request.

  There are certain Result-Code AVP application errors that require
  additional AVPs to be present in the answer.  In these cases, the
  Diameter node that sets the Result-Code AVP to indicate the error
  MUST add the AVPs.  Examples are:

  -  An unrecognized AVP is received with the 'M' bit (Mandatory bit)
     set, causes an answer to be sent with the Result-Code AVP set to
     DIAMETER_AVP_UNSUPPORTED, and the Failed-AVP AVP containing the
     offending AVP.

  -  An AVP that is received with an unrecognized value causes an
     answer to be returned with the Result-Code AVP set to
     DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_VALUE, with the Failed-AVP AVP containing the
     AVP causing the error.

  -  A command is received with an AVP that is omitted, yet is
     mandatory according to the command's ABNF.  The receiver issues an
     answer with the Result-Code set to DIAMETER_MISSING_AVP, and
     creates an AVP with the AVP Code and other fields set as expected
     in the missing AVP.  The created AVP is then added to the Failed-
     AVP AVP.

  The Result-Code AVP describes the error that the Diameter node
  encountered in its processing.  In case there are multiple errors,
  the Diameter node MUST report only the first error it encountered





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  (detected possibly in some implementation dependent order).  The
  specific errors that can be described by this AVP are described in
  the following section.

7.1.  Result-Code AVP

  The Result-Code AVP (AVP Code 268) is of type Unsigned32 and
  indicates whether a particular request was completed successfully or
  whether an error occurred.  All Diameter answer messages defined in
  IETF applications MUST include one Result-Code AVP.  A non-successful
  Result-Code AVP (one containing a non 2xxx value other than
  DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION) MUST include the Error-Reporting-Host
  AVP if the host setting the Result-Code AVP is different from the
  identity encoded in the Origin-Host AVP.

  The Result-Code data field contains an IANA-managed 32-bit address
  space representing errors (see Section 11.4).  Diameter provides the
  following classes of errors, all identified by the thousands digit in
  the decimal notation:

     -  1xxx (Informational)
     -  2xxx (Success)
     -  3xxx (Protocol Errors)
     -  4xxx (Transient Failures)
     -  5xxx (Permanent Failure)

  A non-recognized class (one whose first digit is not defined in this
  section) MUST be handled as a permanent failure.

7.1.1.  Informational

  Errors that fall within this category are used to inform the
  requester that a request could not be satisfied, and additional
  action is required on its part before access is granted.

  DIAMETER_MULTI_ROUND_AUTH         1001
     This informational error is returned by a Diameter server to
     inform the access device that the authentication mechanism being
     used requires multiple round trips, and a subsequent request needs
     to be issued in order for access to be granted.

7.1.2.  Success

  Errors that fall within the Success category are used to inform a
  peer that a request has been successfully completed.

  DIAMETER_SUCCESS                   2001
     The Request was successfully completed.



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  DIAMETER_LIMITED_SUCCESS           2002
     When returned, the request was successfully completed, but
     additional processing is required by the application in order to
     provide service to the user.

7.1.3.  Protocol Errors

  Errors that fall within the Protocol Error category SHOULD be treated
  on a per-hop basis, and Diameter proxies MAY attempt to correct the
  error, if it is possible.  Note that these and only these errors MUST
  only be used in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set.

  DIAMETER_COMMAND_UNSUPPORTED       3001
     The Request contained a Command-Code that the receiver did not
     recognize or support.  This MUST be used when a Diameter node
     receives an experimental command that it does not understand.

  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER         3002
     This error is given when Diameter can not deliver the message to
     the destination, either because no host within the realm
     supporting the required application was available to process the
     request, or because Destination-Host AVP was given without the
     associated Destination-Realm AVP.

  DIAMETER_REALM_NOT_SERVED          3003
     The intended realm of the request is not recognized.

  DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY                  3004
     When returned, a Diameter node SHOULD attempt to send the message
     to an alternate peer.  This error MUST only be used when a
     specific server is requested, and it cannot provide the requested
     service.

  DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED             3005
     An agent detected a loop while trying to get the message to the
     intended recipient.  The message MAY be sent to an alternate peer,
     if one is available, but the peer reporting the error has
     identified a configuration problem.

  DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION       3006
     A redirect agent has determined that the request could not be
     satisfied locally and the initiator of the request should direct
     the request directly to the server, whose contact information has
     been added to the response.  When set, the Redirect-Host AVP MUST
     be present.

  DIAMETER_APPLICATION_UNSUPPORTED   3007
     A request was sent for an application that is not supported.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  DIAMETER_INVALID_HDR_BITS          3008
     A request was received whose bits in the Diameter header were
     either set to an invalid combination, or to a value that is
     inconsistent with the command code's definition.

  DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_BITS          3009
     A request was received that included an AVP whose flag bits are
     set to an unrecognized value, or that is inconsistent with the
     AVP's definition.

  DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_PEER              3010
     A CER was received from an unknown peer.

7.1.4.  Transient Failures

     Errors that fall within the transient failures category are used
     to inform a peer that the request could not be satisfied at the
     time it was received, but MAY be able to satisfy the request in
     the future.

  DIAMETER_AUTHENTICATION_REJECTED   4001
     The authentication process for the user failed, most likely due to
     an invalid password used by the user.  Further attempts MUST only
     be tried after prompting the user for a new password.

  DIAMETER_OUT_OF_SPACE              4002
     A Diameter node received the accounting request but was unable to
     commit it to stable storage due to a temporary lack of space.

  ELECTION_LOST                      4003
     The peer has determined that it has lost the election process and
     has therefore disconnected the transport connection.

7.1.5.  Permanent Failures

     Errors that fall within the permanent failures category are used
     to inform the peer that the request failed, and should not be
     attempted again.

  DIAMETER_AVP_UNSUPPORTED           5001
     The peer received a message that contained an AVP that is not
     recognized or supported and was marked with the Mandatory bit.  A
     Diameter message with this error MUST contain one or more Failed-
     AVP AVP containing the AVPs that caused the failure.

  DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_SESSION_ID        5002
     The request contained an unknown Session-Id.




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  DIAMETER_AUTHORIZATION_REJECTED    5003
     A request was received for which the user could not be authorized.
     This error could occur if the service requested is not permitted
     to the user.

  DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_VALUE         5004
     The request contained an AVP with an invalid value in its data
     portion.  A Diameter message indicating this error MUST include
     the offending AVPs within a Failed-AVP AVP.

  DIAMETER_MISSING_AVP               5005
     The request did not contain an AVP that is required by the Command
     Code definition.  If this value is sent in the Result-Code AVP, a
     Failed-AVP AVP SHOULD be included in the message.  The Failed-AVP
     AVP MUST contain an example of the missing AVP complete with the
     Vendor-Id if applicable.  The value field of the missing AVP
     should be of correct minimum length and contain zeroes.

  DIAMETER_RESOURCES_EXCEEDED        5006
     A request was received that cannot be authorized because the user
     has already expended allowed resources.  An example of this error
     condition is a user that is restricted to one dial-up PPP port,
     attempts to establish a second PPP connection.

  DIAMETER_CONTRADICTING_AVPS        5007
     The Home Diameter server has detected AVPs in the request that
     contradicted each other, and is not willing to provide service to
     the user.  One or more Failed-AVP AVPs MUST be present, containing
     the AVPs that contradicted each other.

  DIAMETER_AVP_NOT_ALLOWED           5008
     A message was received with an AVP that MUST NOT be present.  The
     Failed-AVP AVP MUST be included and contain a copy of the
     offending AVP.

  DIAMETER_AVP_OCCURS_TOO_MANY_TIMES 5009
     A message was received that included an AVP that appeared more
     often than permitted in the message definition.  The Failed-AVP
     AVP MUST be included and contain a copy of the first instance of
     the offending AVP that exceeded the maximum number of occurrences

  DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_APPLICATION     5010
     This error is returned when a CER message is received, and there
     are no common applications supported between the peers.

  DIAMETER_UNSUPPORTED_VERSION       5011
     This error is returned when a request was received, whose version
     number is unsupported.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY          5012
     This error is returned when a request is rejected for unspecified
     reasons.

  DIAMETER_INVALID_BIT_IN_HEADER     5013
     This error is returned when an unrecognized bit in the Diameter
     header is set to one (1).

  DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_LENGTH        5014
     The request contained an AVP with an invalid length.  A Diameter
     message indicating this error MUST include the offending AVPs
     within a Failed-AVP AVP.

  DIAMETER_INVALID_MESSAGE_LENGTH    5015
     This error is returned when a request is received with an invalid
     message length.

  DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_BIT_COMBO     5016
     The request contained an AVP with which is not allowed to have the
     given value in the AVP Flags field.  A Diameter message indicating
     this error MUST include the offending AVPs within a Failed-AVP
     AVP.

  DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY        5017
     This error is returned when a CER message is received, and there
     are no common security mechanisms supported between the peers.  A
     Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA) MUST be returned with the
     Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY.

7.2.  Error Bit

  The 'E' (Error Bit) in the Diameter header is set when the request
  caused a protocol-related error (see Section 7.1.3).  A message with
  the 'E' bit MUST NOT be sent as a response to an answer message.
  Note that a message with the 'E' bit set is still subjected to the
  processing rules defined in Section 6.2.  When set, the answer
  message will not conform to the ABNF specification for the command,
  and will instead conform to the following ABNF:













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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Message Format

  <answer-message> ::= < Diameter Header: code, ERR [PXY] >
                    0*1< Session-Id >
                       { Origin-Host }
                       { Origin-Realm }
                       { Result-Code }
                       [ Origin-State-Id ]
                       [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
                       [ Proxy-Info ]
                     * [ AVP ]

  Note that the code used in the header is the same than the one found
  in the request message, but with the 'R' bit cleared and the 'E' bit
  set.  The 'P' bit in the header is set to the same value as the one
  found in the request message.

7.3.  Error-Message AVP

  The Error-Message AVP (AVP Code 281) is of type UTF8String.  It MAY
  accompany a Result-Code AVP as a human readable error message.  The
  Error-Message AVP is not intended to be useful in real-time, and
  SHOULD NOT be expected to be parsed by network entities.

7.4.  Error-Reporting-Host AVP

  The Error-Reporting-Host AVP (AVP Code 294) is of type
  DiameterIdentity.  This AVP contains the identity of the Diameter
  host that sent the Result-Code AVP to a value other than 2001
  (Success), only if the host setting the Result-Code is different from
  the one encoded in the Origin-Host AVP.  This AVP is intended to be
  used for troubleshooting purposes, and MUST be set when the Result-
  Code AVP indicates a failure.

7.5.  Failed-AVP AVP

  The Failed-AVP AVP (AVP Code 279) is of type Grouped and provides
  debugging information in cases where a request is rejected or not
  fully processed due to erroneous information in a specific AVP.  The
  value of the Result-Code AVP will provide information on the reason
  for the Failed-AVP AVP.

  The possible reasons for this AVP are the presence of an improperly
  constructed AVP, an unsupported or unrecognized AVP, an invalid AVP
  value, the omission of a required AVP, the presence of an explicitly
  excluded AVP (see tables in Section 10), or the presence of two or
  more occurrences of an AVP which is restricted to 0, 1, or 0-1
  occurrences.



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  A Diameter message MAY contain one Failed-AVP AVP, containing the
  entire AVP that could not be processed successfully.  If the failure
  reason is omission of a required AVP, an AVP with the missing AVP
  code, the missing vendor id, and a zero filled payload of the minimum
  required length for the omitted AVP will be added.

  AVP Format

     <Failed-AVP> ::= < AVP Header: 279 >
                   1* {AVP}

7.6.  Experimental-Result AVP

  The Experimental-Result AVP (AVP Code 297) is of type Grouped, and
  indicates whether a particular vendor-specific request was completed
  successfully or whether an error occurred.  Its Data field has the
  following ABNF grammar:

  AVP Format

     Experimental-Result ::= < AVP Header: 297 >
                                { Vendor-Id }
                                { Experimental-Result-Code }

  The Vendor-Id AVP (see Section 5.3.3) in this grouped AVP identifies
  the vendor responsible for the assignment of the result code which
  follows.  All Diameter answer messages defined in vendor-specific
  applications MUST include either one Result-Code AVP or one
  Experimental-Result AVP.

7.7.  Experimental-Result-Code AVP

  The Experimental-Result-Code AVP (AVP Code 298) is of type Unsigned32
  and contains a vendor-assigned value representing the result of
  processing the request.

  It is recommended that vendor-specific result codes follow the same
  conventions given for the Result-Code AVP regarding the different
  types of result codes and the handling of errors (for non 2xxx
  values).

8.  Diameter User Sessions

  Diameter can provide two different types of services to applications.
  The first involves authentication and authorization, and can
  optionally make use of accounting.  The second only makes use of
  accounting.




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  When a service makes use of the authentication and/or authorization
  portion of an application, and a user requests access to the network,
  the Diameter client issues an auth request to its local server.  The
  auth request is defined in a service specific Diameter application
  (e.g., NASREQ).  The request contains a Session-Id AVP, which is used
  in subsequent messages (e.g., subsequent authorization, accounting,
  etc) relating to the user's session.  The Session-Id AVP is a means
  for the client and servers to correlate a Diameter message with a
  user session.

  When a Diameter server authorizes a user to use network resources for
  a finite amount of time, and it is willing to extend the
  authorization via a future request, it MUST add the Authorization-
  Lifetime AVP to the answer message.  The Authorization-Lifetime AVP
  defines the maximum number of seconds a user MAY make use of the
  resources before another authorization request is expected by the
  server.  The Auth-Grace-Period AVP contains the number of seconds
  following the expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime, after which
  the server will release all state information related to the user's
  session.  Note that if payment for services is expected by the
  serving realm from the user's home realm, the Authorization-Lifetime
  AVP, combined with the Auth-Grace-Period AVP, implies the maximum
  length of the session the home realm is willing to be fiscally
  responsible for.  Services provided past the expiration of the
  Authorization-Lifetime and Auth-Grace-Period AVPs are the
  responsibility of the access device.  Of course, the actual cost of
  services rendered is clearly outside the scope of the protocol.

  An access device that does not expect to send a re-authorization or a
  session termination request to the server MAY include the Auth-
  Session-State AVP with the value set to NO_STATE_MAINTAINED as a hint
  to the server.  If the server accepts the hint, it agrees that since
  no session termination message will be received once service to the
  user is terminated, it cannot maintain state for the session.  If the
  answer message from the server contains a different value in the
  Auth-Session-State AVP (or the default value if the AVP is absent),
  the access device MUST follow the server's directives.  Note that the
  value NO_STATE_MAINTAINED MUST NOT be set in subsequent re-
  authorization requests and answers.

  The base protocol does not include any authorization request
  messages, since these are largely application-specific and are
  defined in a Diameter application document.  However, the base
  protocol does define a set of messages that is used to terminate user
  sessions.  These are used to allow servers that maintain state
  information to free resources.





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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  When a service only makes use of the Accounting portion of the
  Diameter protocol, even in combination with an application, the
  Session-Id is still used to identify user sessions.  However, the
  session termination messages are not used, since a session is
  signaled as being terminated by issuing an accounting stop message.

8.1.  Authorization Session State Machine

  This section contains a set of finite state machines, representing
  the life cycle of Diameter sessions, and which MUST be observed by
  all Diameter implementations that make use of the authentication
  and/or authorization portion of a Diameter application.  The term
  Service-Specific below refers to a message defined in a Diameter
  application (e.g., Mobile IPv4, NASREQ).

  There are four different authorization session state machines
  supported in the Diameter base protocol.  The first two describe a
  session in which the server is maintaining session state, indicated
  by the value of the Auth-Session-State AVP (or its absence).  One
  describes the session from a client perspective, the other from a
  server perspective.  The second two state machines are used when the
  server does not maintain session state.  Here again, one describes
  the session from a client perspective, the other from a server
  perspective.

  When a session is moved to the Idle state, any resources that were
  allocated for the particular session must be released.  Any event not
  listed in the state machines MUST be considered as an error
  condition, and an answer, if applicable, MUST be returned to the
  originator of the message.

  In the state table, the event 'Failure to send X' means that the
  Diameter agent is unable to send command X to the desired
  destination.  This could be due to the peer being down, or due to the
  peer sending back a transient failure or temporary protocol error
  notification DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY or DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED in the
  Result-Code AVP of the corresponding Answer command.  The event 'X
  successfully sent' is the complement of 'Failure to send X'.













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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  The following state machine is observed by a client when state is
  maintained on the server:

                          CLIENT, STATEFUL
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Idle      Client or Device Requests      Send       Pending
            access                         service
                                           specific
                                           auth req

  Idle      ASR Received                   Send ASA   Idle
            for unknown session            with
                                           Result-Code
                                           = UNKNOWN_
                                           SESSION_ID

  Pending   Successful Service-specific    Grant      Open
            authorization answer           Access
            received with default
            Auth-Session-State value

  Pending   Successful Service-specific    Sent STR   Discon
            authorization answer received
            but service not provided

  Pending   Error processing successful    Sent STR   Discon
            Service-specific authorization
            answer

  Pending   Failed Service-specific        Cleanup    Idle
            authorization answer received

  Open      User or client device          Send       Open
            requests access to service     service
                                           specific
                                           auth req

  Open      Successful Service-specific    Provide    Open
            authorization answer received  Service

  Open      Failed Service-specific        Discon.    Idle
            authorization answer           user/device
            received.

  Open      Session-Timeout Expires on     Send STR   Discon
            Access Device




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  Open      ASR Received,                  Send ASA   Discon
            client will comply with        with
            request to end the session     Result-Code
                                           = SUCCESS,
                                           Send STR.

  Open      ASR Received,                  Send ASA   Open
            client will not comply with    with
            request to end the session     Result-Code
                                           != SUCCESS

  Open      Authorization-Lifetime +       Send STR   Discon
            Auth-Grace-Period expires on
            access device

  Discon    ASR Received                   Send ASA   Discon

  Discon    STA Received                   Discon.    Idle
                                           user/device

  The following state machine is observed by a server when it is
  maintaining state for the session:

                         SERVER, STATEFUL
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Idle      Service-specific authorization Send       Open
            request received, and          successful
            user is authorized             serv.
                                           specific answer

  Idle      Service-specific authorization Send       Idle
            request received, and          failed serv.
            user is not authorized         specific answer

  Open      Service-specific authorization Send       Open
            request received, and user     successful
            is authorized                  serv. specific
                                                 answer

  Open      Service-specific authorization Send       Idle
            request received, and user     failed serv.
            is not authorized              specific
                                           answer,
                                           Cleanup

  Open      Home server wants to           Send ASR   Discon
            terminate the service



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Open      Authorization-Lifetime (and    Cleanup    Idle
            Auth-Grace-Period) expires
            on home server.

  Open      Session-Timeout expires on     Cleanup    Idle
            home server

  Discon    Failure to send ASR            Wait,      Discon
                                           resend ASR

  Discon    ASR successfully sent and      Cleanup    Idle
            ASA Received with Result-Code

  Not       ASA Received                   None       No Change.
  Discon

  Any       STR Received                   Send STA,  Idle
                                           Cleanup.

  The following state machine is observed by a client when state is not
  maintained on the server:

                          CLIENT, STATELESS
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Idle      Client or Device Requests      Send       Pending
            access                         service
                                           specific
                                           auth req

  Pending   Successful Service-specific    Grant      Open
            authorization answer           Access
            received with Auth-Session-
            State set to
            NO_STATE_MAINTAINED

  Pending   Failed Service-specific        Cleanup    Idle
            authorization answer
            received

  Open      Session-Timeout Expires on     Discon.    Idle
            Access Device                  user/device

  Open      Service to user is terminated  Discon.    Idle
                                           user/device






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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  The following state machine is observed by a server when it is not
  maintaining state for the session:

                          SERVER, STATELESS
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Idle      Service-specific authorization Send serv. Idle
            request received, and          specific
            successfully processed         answer

8.2.  Accounting Session State Machine

  The following state machines MUST be supported for applications that
  have an accounting portion or that require only accounting services.
  The first state machine is to be observed by clients.

  See Section 9.7 for Accounting Command Codes and Section 9.8 for
  Accounting AVPs.

  The server side in the accounting state machine depends in some cases
  on the particular application.  The Diameter base protocol defines a
  default state machine that MUST be followed by all applications that
  have not specified other state machines.  This is the second state
  machine in this section described below.

  The default server side state machine requires the reception of
  accounting records in any order and at any time, and does not place
  any standards requirement on the processing of these records.
  Implementations of Diameter MAY perform checking, ordering,
  correlation, fraud detection, and other tasks based on these records.
  Both base Diameter AVPs as well as application specific AVPs MAY be
  inspected as a part of these tasks.  The tasks can happen either
  immediately after record reception or in a post-processing phase.
  However, as these tasks are typically application or even policy
  dependent, they are not standardized by the Diameter specifications.
  Applications MAY define requirements on when to accept accounting
  records based on the used value of Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP,
  credit limits checks, and so on.

  However, the Diameter base protocol defines one optional server side
  state machine that MAY be followed by applications that require
  keeping track of the session state at the accounting server.  Note
  that such tracking is incompatible with the ability to sustain long
  duration connectivity problems.  Therefore, the use of this state
  machine is recommended only in applications where the value of the
  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP is DELIVER_AND_GRANT, and hence
  accounting connectivity problems are required to cause the serviced
  user to be disconnected.  Otherwise, records produced by the client



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  may be lost by the server which no longer accepts them after the
  connectivity is re-established.  This state machine is the third
  state machine in this section.  The state machine is supervised by a
  supervision session timer Ts, which the value should be reasonably
  higher than the Acct_Interim_Interval value.  Ts MAY be set to two
  times the value of the Acct_Interim_Interval so as to avoid the
  accounting session in the Diameter server to change to Idle state in
  case of short transient network failure.

  Any event not listed in the state machines MUST be considered as an
  error condition, and a corresponding answer, if applicable, MUST be
  returned to the originator of the message.

  In the state table, the event 'Failure to send' means that the
  Diameter client is unable to communicate with the desired
  destination.  This could be due to the peer being down, or due to the
  peer sending back a transient failure or temporary protocol error
  notification DIAMETER_OUT_OF_SPACE, DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY, or
  DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED in the Result-Code AVP of the Accounting
  Answer command.

  The event 'Failed answer' means that the Diameter client received a
  non-transient failure notification in the Accounting Answer command.

  Note that the action 'Disconnect user/dev' MUST have an effect also
  to the authorization session state table, e.g., cause the STR message
  to be sent, if the given application has both
  authentication/authorization and accounting portions.

  The states PendingS, PendingI, PendingL, PendingE and PendingB stand
  for pending states to wait for an answer to an accounting request
  related to a Start, Interim, Stop, Event or buffered record,
  respectively.

                        CLIENT, ACCOUNTING
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Idle      Client or device requests      Send       PendingS
            access                         accounting
                                           start req.

  Idle      Client or device requests      Send       PendingE
            a one-time service             accounting
                                           event req

  Idle      Records in storage             Send       PendingB
                                           record




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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  PendingS  Successful accounting                     Open
            start answer received

  PendingS  Failure to send and buffer     Store      Open
            space available and realtime   Start
            not equal to DELIVER_AND_GRANT Record

  PendingS  Failure to send and no buffer             Open
            space available and realtime
            equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingS  Failure to send and no buffer  Disconnect Idle
            space available and realtime   user/dev
            not equal to
            GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingS  Failed accounting start answer            Open
            received and realtime equal
            to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingS  Failed accounting start answer Disconnect Idle
            received and realtime not      user/dev
            equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingS  User service terminated        Store      PendingS
                                           stop
                                           record

  Open      Interim interval elapses       Send       PendingI
                                           accounting
                                           interim
                                           record
  Open      User service terminated        Send       PendingL
                                           accounting
                                           stop req.

  PendingI  Successful accounting interim             Open
            answer received

  PendingI  Failure to send and (buffer    Store      Open
            space available or old record  interim
            can be overwritten) and        record
            realtime not equal to
            DELIVER_AND_GRANT

  PendingI  Failure to send and no buffer             Open
            space available and realtime
            equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE



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  PendingI  Failure to send and no buffer  Disconnect Idle
            space available and realtime   user/dev
            not equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingI  Failed accounting interim                 Open
            answer received and realtime
            equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingI  Failed accounting interim      Disconnect Idle
            answer received and realtime   user/dev
            not equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE

  PendingI  User service terminated        Store      PendingI
                                           stop
                                           record
  PendingE  Successful accounting                     Idle
            event answer received

  PendingE  Failure to send and buffer     Store      Idle
            space available                event
                                           record

  PendingE  Failure to send and no buffer             Idle
            space available

  PendingE  Failed accounting event answer            Idle
            received

  PendingB  Successful accounting answer   Delete     Idle
            received                       record

  PendingB  Failure to send                           Idle

  PendingB  Failed accounting answer       Delete     Idle
            received                       record

  PendingL  Successful accounting                     Idle
            stop answer received

  PendingL  Failure to send and buffer     Store      Idle
            space available                stop
                                           record

  PendingL  Failure to send and no buffer             Idle
            space available

  PendingL  Failed accounting stop answer             Idle
            received



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                   SERVER, STATELESS ACCOUNTING
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------

  Idle      Accounting start request       Send       Idle
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed.                     start
                                           answer

  Idle      Accounting event request       Send       Idle
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed.                     event
                                           answer

  Idle      Interim record received,       Send       Idle
            and successfully processed.    accounting
                                           interim
                                           answer

  Idle      Accounting stop request        Send       Idle
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed                      stop answer

  Idle      Accounting request received,   Send       Idle
            no space left to store         accounting
            records                        answer,
                                           Result-Code
                                           = OUT_OF_
                                           SPACE

                        SERVER, STATEFUL ACCOUNTING
  State     Event                          Action     New State
  -------------------------------------------------------------

  Idle      Accounting start request       Send       Open
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed.                     start
                                           answer,
                                           Start Ts

  Idle      Accounting event request       Send       Idle
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed.                     event
                                           answer







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  Idle      Accounting request received,   Send       Idle
            no space left to store         accounting
            records                        answer,
                                           Result-Code
                                           = OUT_OF_
                                           SPACE

  Open      Interim record received,       Send       Open
            and successfully processed.    accounting
                                           interim
                                           answer,
                                           Restart Ts

  Open      Accounting stop request        Send       Idle
            received, and successfully     accounting
            processed                      stop answer,
                                           Stop Ts

  Open      Accounting request received,   Send       Idle
            no space left to store         accounting
            records                        answer,
                                           Result-Code
                                           = OUT_OF_
                                           SPACE,
                                           Stop Ts

  Open      Session supervision timer Ts   Stop Ts    Idle
            expired

8.3.  Server-Initiated Re-Auth

  A Diameter server may initiate a re-authentication and/or re-
  authorization service for a particular session by issuing a Re-Auth-
  Request (RAR).

  For example, for pre-paid services, the Diameter server that
  originally authorized a session may need some confirmation that the
  user is still using the services.

  An access device that receives a RAR message with Session-Id equal to
  a currently active session MUST initiate a re-auth towards the user,
  if the service supports this particular feature.  Each Diameter
  application MUST state whether service-initiated re-auth is
  supported, since some applications do not allow access devices to
  prompt the user for re-auth.






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8.3.1.  Re-Auth-Request

  The Re-Auth-Request (RAR), indicated by the Command-Code set to 258
  and the message flags' 'R' bit set, may be sent by any server to the
  access device that is providing session service, to request that the
  user be re-authenticated and/or re-authorized.

  Message Format

     <RAR>  ::= < Diameter Header: 258, REQ, PXY >
                < Session-Id >
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                { Destination-Realm }
                { Destination-Host }
                { Auth-Application-Id }
                { Re-Auth-Request-Type }
                [ User-Name ]
                [ Origin-State-Id ]
              * [ Proxy-Info ]
              * [ Route-Record ]
              * [ AVP ]

8.3.2.  Re-Auth-Answer

  The Re-Auth-Answer (RAA), indicated by the Command-Code set to 258
  and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent in response to the RAR.
  The Result-Code AVP MUST be present, and indicates the disposition of
  the request.

  A successful RAA message MUST be followed by an application-specific
  authentication and/or authorization message.



















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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Message Format

     <RAA>  ::= < Diameter Header: 258, PXY >
                < Session-Id >
                { Result-Code }
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ User-Name ]
                [ Origin-State-Id ]
                [ Error-Message ]
                [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
              * [ Failed-AVP ]
              * [ Redirect-Host ]
                [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
                [ Redirect-Host-Cache-Time ]
              * [ Proxy-Info ]
              * [ AVP ]

8.4.  Session Termination

  It is necessary for a Diameter server that authorized a session, for
  which it is maintaining state, to be notified when that session is no
  longer active, both for tracking purposes as well as to allow
  stateful agents to release any resources that they may have provided
  for the user's session.  For sessions whose state is not being
  maintained, this section is not used.

  When a user session that required Diameter authorization terminates,
  the access device that provided the service MUST issue a Session-
  Termination-Request (STR) message to the Diameter server that
  authorized the service, to notify it that the session is no longer
  active.  An STR MUST be issued when a user session terminates for any
  reason, including user logoff, expiration of Session-Timeout,
  administrative action, termination upon receipt of an Abort-Session-
  Request (see below), orderly shutdown of the access device, etc.

  The access device also MUST issue an STR for a session that was
  authorized but never actually started.  This could occur, for
  example, due to a sudden resource shortage in the access device, or
  because the access device is unwilling to provide the type of service
  requested in the authorization, or because the access device does not
  support a mandatory AVP returned in the authorization, etc.

  It is also possible that a session that was authorized is never
  actually started due to action of a proxy.  For example, a proxy may
  modify an authorization answer, converting the result from success to
  failure, prior to forwarding the message to the access device.  If
  the answer did not contain an Auth-Session-State AVP with the value



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  NO_STATE_MAINTAINED, a proxy that causes an authorized session not to
  be started MUST issue an STR to the Diameter server that authorized
  the session, since the access device has no way of knowing that the
  session had been authorized.

  A Diameter server that receives an STR message MUST clean up
  resources (e.g., session state) associated with the Session-Id
  specified in the STR, and return a Session-Termination-Answer.

  A Diameter server also MUST clean up resources when the Session-
  Timeout expires, or when the Authorization-Lifetime and the Auth-
  Grace-Period AVPs expires without receipt of a re-authorization
  request, regardless of whether an STR for that session is received.
  The access device is not expected to provide service beyond the
  expiration of these timers; thus, expiration of either of these
  timers implies that the access device may have unexpectedly shut
  down.

8.4.1.  Session-Termination-Request

  The Session-Termination-Request (STR), indicated by the Command-Code
  set to 275 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent by the access
  device to inform the Diameter Server that an authenticated and/or
  authorized session is being terminated.

  Message Format

     <STR> ::= < Diameter Header: 275, REQ, PXY >
               < Session-Id >
               { Origin-Host }
               { Origin-Realm }
               { Destination-Realm }
               { Auth-Application-Id }
               { Termination-Cause }
               [ User-Name ]
               [ Destination-Host ]
             * [ Class ]
               [ Origin-State-Id ]
             * [ Proxy-Info ]
             * [ Route-Record ]
             * [ AVP ]










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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


8.4.2.  Session-Termination-Answer

  The Session-Termination-Answer (STA), indicated by the Command-Code
  set to 275 and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent by the
  Diameter Server to acknowledge the notification that the session has
  been terminated.  The Result-Code AVP MUST be present, and MAY
  contain an indication that an error occurred while servicing the STR.

  Upon sending or receipt of the STA, the Diameter Server MUST release
  all resources for the session indicated by the Session-Id AVP.  Any
  intermediate server in the Proxy-Chain MAY also release any
  resources, if necessary.

  Message Format

     <STA>  ::= < Diameter Header: 275, PXY >
                < Session-Id >
                { Result-Code }
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ User-Name ]
              * [ Class ]
                [ Error-Message ]
                [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
              * [ Failed-AVP ]
                [ Origin-State-Id ]
              * [ Redirect-Host ]
                [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
                                   ^
                [ Redirect-Max-Cache-Time ]
              * [ Proxy-Info ]
              * [ AVP ]

8.5.  Aborting a Session

  A Diameter server may request that the access device stop providing
  service for a particular session by issuing an Abort-Session-Request
  (ASR).

  For example, the Diameter server that originally authorized the
  session may be required to cause that session to be stopped for
  credit or other reasons that were not anticipated when the session
  was first authorized.  On the other hand, an operator may maintain a
  management server for the purpose of issuing ASRs to administratively
  remove users from the network.

  An access device that receives an ASR with Session-ID equal to a
  currently active session MAY stop the session.  Whether the access



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  device stops the session or not is implementation- and/or
  configuration-dependent.  For example, an access device may honor
  ASRs from certain agents only.  In any case, the access device MUST
  respond with an Abort-Session-Answer, including a Result-Code AVP to
  indicate what action it took.

  Note that if the access device does stop the session upon receipt of
  an ASR, it issues an STR to the authorizing server (which may or may
  not be the agent issuing the ASR) just as it would if the session
  were terminated for any other reason.

8.5.1.  Abort-Session-Request

  The Abort-Session-Request (ASR), indicated by the Command-Code set to
  274 and the message flags' 'R' bit set, may be sent by any server to
  the access device that is providing session service, to request that
  the session identified by the Session-Id be stopped.

  Message Format

     <ASR>  ::= < Diameter Header: 274, REQ, PXY >
                < Session-Id >
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                { Destination-Realm }
                { Destination-Host }
                { Auth-Application-Id }
                [ User-Name ]
                [ Origin-State-Id ]
              * [ Proxy-Info ]
              * [ Route-Record ]
              * [ AVP ]

8.5.2.  Abort-Session-Answer

  The Abort-Session-Answer (ASA), indicated by the Command-Code set to
  274 and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent in response to the
  ASR.  The Result-Code AVP MUST be present, and indicates the
  disposition of the request.

  If the session identified by Session-Id in the ASR was successfully
  terminated, Result-Code is set to DIAMETER_SUCCESS.  If the session
  is not currently active, Result-Code is set to
  DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_SESSION_ID.  If the access device does not stop the
  session for any other reason, Result-Code is set to
  DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY.





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  Message Format

     <ASA>  ::= < Diameter Header: 274, PXY >
                < Session-Id >
                { Result-Code }
                { Origin-Host }
                { Origin-Realm }
                [ User-Name ]
                [ Origin-State-Id ]
                [ Error-Message ]
                [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
              * [ Failed-AVP ]
              * [ Redirect-Host ]
                [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
                [ Redirect-Max-Cache-Time ]
              * [ Proxy-Info ]
              * [ AVP ]

8.6.  Inferring Session Termination from Origin-State-Id

  Origin-State-Id is used to allow rapid detection of terminated
  sessions for which no STR would have been issued, due to
  unanticipated shutdown of an access device.

  By including Origin-State-Id in CER/CEA messages, an access device
  allows a next-hop server to determine immediately upon connection
  whether the device has lost its sessions since the last connection.

  By including Origin-State-Id in request messages, an access device
  also allows a server with which it communicates via proxy to make
  such a determination.  However, a server that is not directly
  connected with the access device will not discover that the access
  device has been restarted unless and until it receives a new request
  from the access device.  Thus, use of this mechanism across proxies
  is opportunistic rather than reliable, but useful nonetheless.

  When a Diameter server receives an Origin-State-Id that is greater
  than the Origin-State-Id previously received from the same issuer, it
  may assume that the issuer has lost state since the previous message
  and that all sessions that were active under the lower Origin-State-
  Id have been terminated.  The Diameter server MAY clean up all
  session state associated with such lost sessions, and MAY also issues
  STRs for all such lost sessions that were authorized on upstream
  servers, to allow session state to be cleaned up globally.







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8.7.  Auth-Request-Type AVP

  The Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code 274) is of type Enumerated and is
  included in application-specific auth requests to inform the peers
  whether a user is to be authenticated only, authorized only or both.
  Note any value other than both MAY cause RADIUS interoperability
  issues.  The following values are defined:

  AUTHENTICATE_ONLY          1
     The request being sent is for authentication only, and MUST
     contain the relevant application specific authentication AVPs that
     are needed by the Diameter server to authenticate the user.

  AUTHORIZE_ONLY             2
     The request being sent is for authorization only, and MUST contain
     the application specific authorization AVPs that are necessary to
     identify the service being requested/offered.

  AUTHORIZE_AUTHENTICATE     3
     The request contains a request for both authentication and
     authorization.  The request MUST include both the relevant
     application specific authentication information, and authorization
     information necessary to identify the service being
     requested/offered.

8.8.  Session-Id AVP

  The Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 263) is of type UTF8String and is used
  to identify a specific session (see Section 8).  All messages
  pertaining to a specific session MUST include only one Session-Id AVP
  and the same value MUST be used throughout the life of a session.
  When present, the Session-Id SHOULD appear immediately following the
  Diameter Header (see Section 3).

  The Session-Id MUST be globally and eternally unique, as it is meant
  to uniquely identify a user session without reference to any other
  information, and may be needed to correlate historical authentication
  information with accounting information.  The Session-Id includes a
  mandatory portion and an implementation-defined portion; a
  recommended format for the implementation-defined portion is outlined
  below.

  The Session-Id MUST begin with the sender's identity encoded in the
  DiameterIdentity type (see Section 4.4).  The remainder of the
  Session-Id is delimited by a ";" character, and MAY be any sequence
  that the client can guarantee to be eternally unique; however, the
  following format is recommended, (square brackets [] indicate an
  optional element):



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  <DiameterIdentity>;<high 32 bits>;<low 32 bits>[;<optional value>]

  <high 32 bits> and <low 32 bits> are decimal representations of the
  high and low 32 bits of a monotonically increasing 64-bit value.  The
  64-bit value is rendered in two part to simplify formatting by 32-bit
  processors.  At startup, the high 32 bits of the 64-bit value MAY be
  initialized to the time, and the low 32 bits MAY be initialized to
  zero.  This will for practical purposes eliminate the possibility of
  overlapping Session-Ids after a reboot, assuming the reboot process
  takes longer than a second.  Alternatively, an implementation MAY
  keep track of the increasing value in non-volatile memory.

  <optional value> is implementation specific but may include a modem's
  device Id, a layer 2 address, timestamp, etc.

  Example, in which there is no optional value:
     accesspoint7.acme.com;1876543210;523

  Example, in which there is an optional value:
     accesspoint7.acme.com;1876543210;523;[email protected]

  The Session-Id is created by the Diameter application initiating the
  session, which in most cases is done by the client.  Note that a
  Session-Id MAY be used for both the authorization and accounting
  commands of a given application.

8.9.  Authorization-Lifetime AVP

  The Authorization-Lifetime AVP (AVP Code 291) is of type Unsigned32
  and contains the maximum number of seconds of service to be provided
  to the user before the user is to be re-authenticated and/or re-
  authorized.  Great care should be taken when the Authorization-
  Lifetime value is determined, since a low, non-zero, value could
  create significant Diameter traffic, which could congest both the
  network and the agents.

  A value of zero (0) means that immediate re-auth is necessary by the
  access device.  This is typically used in cases where multiple
  authentication methods are used, and a successful auth response with
  this AVP set to zero is used to signal that the next authentication
  method is to be immediately initiated.  The absence of this AVP, or a
  value of all ones (meaning all bits in the 32 bit field are set to
  one) means no re-auth is expected.

  If both this AVP and the Session-Timeout AVP are present in a
  message, the value of the latter MUST NOT be smaller than the
  Authorization-Lifetime AVP.




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  An Authorization-Lifetime AVP MAY be present in re-authorization
  messages, and contains the number of seconds the user is authorized
  to receive service from the time the re-auth answer message is
  received by the access device.

  This AVP MAY be provided by the client as a hint of the maximum
  lifetime that it is willing to accept.  However, the server MAY
  return a value that is equal to, or smaller, than the one provided by
  the client.

8.10.  Auth-Grace-Period AVP

  The Auth-Grace-Period AVP (AVP Code 276) is of type Unsigned32 and
  contains the number of seconds the Diameter server will wait
  following the expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime AVP before
  cleaning up resources for the session.

8.11.  Auth-Session-State AVP

  The Auth-Session-State AVP (AVP Code 277) is of type Enumerated and
  specifies whether state is maintained for a particular session.  The
  client MAY include this AVP in requests as a hint to the server, but
  the value in the server's answer message is binding.  The following
  values are supported:

  STATE_MAINTAINED              0
     This value is used to specify that session state is being
     maintained, and the access device MUST issue a session termination
     message when service to the user is terminated.  This is the
     default value.

  NO_STATE_MAINTAINED           1
     This value is used to specify that no session termination messages
     will be sent by the access device upon expiration of the
     Authorization-Lifetime.

8.12.  Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP

  The Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code 285) is of type Enumerated and
  is included in application-specific auth answers to inform the client
  of the action expected upon expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime.
  If the answer message contains an Authorization-Lifetime AVP with a
  positive value, the Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP MUST be present in an
  answer message.  The following values are defined:







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  AUTHORIZE_ONLY             0
     An authorization only re-auth is expected upon expiration of the
     Authorization-Lifetime.  This is the default value if the AVP is
     not present in answer messages that include the Authorization-
     Lifetime.

  AUTHORIZE_AUTHENTICATE     1
     An authentication and authorization re-auth is expected upon
     expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime.

8.13.  Session-Timeout AVP

  The Session-Timeout AVP (AVP Code 27) [RADIUS] is of type Unsigned32
  and contains the maximum number of seconds of service to be provided
  to the user before termination of the session.  When both the
  Session-Timeout and the Authorization-Lifetime AVPs are present in an
  answer message, the former MUST be equal to or greater than the value
  of the latter.

  A session that terminates on an access device due to the expiration
  of the Session-Timeout MUST cause an STR to be issued, unless both
  the access device and the home server had previously agreed that no
  session termination messages would be sent (see Section 8.9).

  A Session-Timeout AVP MAY be present in a re-authorization answer
  message, and contains the remaining number of seconds from the
  beginning of the re-auth.

  A value of zero, or the absence of this AVP, means that this session
  has an unlimited number of seconds before termination.

  This AVP MAY be provided by the client as a hint of the maximum
  timeout that it is willing to accept.  However, the server MAY return
  a value that is equal to, or smaller, than the one provided by the
  client.

8.14.  User-Name AVP

  The User-Name AVP (AVP Code 1) [RADIUS] is of type UTF8String, which
  contains the User-Name, in a format consistent with the NAI
  specification [NAI].

8.15.  Termination-Cause AVP

  The Termination-Cause AVP (AVP Code 295) is of type Enumerated, and
  is used to indicate the reason why a session was terminated on the
  access device.  The following values are defined:




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  DIAMETER_LOGOUT                   1
     The user initiated a disconnect

  DIAMETER_SERVICE_NOT_PROVIDED     2
     This value is used when the user disconnected prior to the receipt
     of the authorization answer message.

  DIAMETER_BAD_ANSWER               3
     This value indicates that the authorization answer received by the
     access device was not processed successfully.

  DIAMETER_ADMINISTRATIVE           4
     The user was not granted access, or was disconnected, due to
     administrative reasons, such as the receipt of a Abort-Session-
     Request message.

  DIAMETER_LINK_BROKEN              5
     The communication to the user was abruptly disconnected.

  DIAMETER_AUTH_EXPIRED             6
     The user's access was terminated since its authorized session time
     has expired.

  DIAMETER_USER_MOVED               7
     The user is receiving services from another access device.

  DIAMETER_SESSION_TIMEOUT          8
     The user's session has timed out, and service has been terminated.

8.16.  Origin-State-Id AVP

  The Origin-State-Id AVP (AVP Code 278), of type Unsigned32, is a
  monotonically increasing value that is advanced whenever a Diameter
  entity restarts with loss of previous state, for example upon reboot.
  Origin-State-Id MAY be included in any Diameter message, including
  CER.

  A Diameter entity issuing this AVP MUST create a higher value for
  this AVP each time its state is reset.  A Diameter entity MAY set
  Origin-State-Id to the time of startup, or it MAY use an incrementing
  counter retained in non-volatile memory across restarts.

  The Origin-State-Id, if present, MUST reflect the state of the entity
  indicated by Origin-Host.  If a proxy modifies Origin-Host, it MUST
  either remove Origin-State-Id or modify it appropriately as well.






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  Typically, Origin-State-Id is used by an access device that always
  starts up with no active sessions; that is, any session active prior
  to restart will have been lost.  By including Origin-State-Id in a
  message, it allows other Diameter entities to infer that sessions
  associated with a lower Origin-State-Id are no longer active.  If an
  access device does not intend for such inferences to be made, it MUST
  either not include Origin-State-Id in any message, or set its value
  to 0.

8.17.  Session-Binding AVP

  The Session-Binding AVP (AVP Code 270) is of type Unsigned32, and MAY
  be present in application-specific authorization answer messages.  If
  present, this AVP MAY inform the Diameter client that all future
  application-specific re-auth messages for this session MUST be sent
  to the same authorization server.  This AVP MAY also specify that a
  Session-Termination-Request message for this session MUST be sent to
  the same authorizing server.

  This field is a bit mask, and the following bits have been defined:

  RE_AUTH                    1
     When set, future re-auth messages for this session MUST NOT
     include the Destination-Host AVP.  When cleared, the default
     value, the Destination-Host AVP MUST be present in all re-auth
     messages for this session.

  STR                        2
     When set, the STR message for this session MUST NOT include the
     Destination-Host AVP.  When cleared, the default value, the
     Destination-Host AVP MUST be present in the STR message for this
     session.

  ACCOUNTING                 4
     When set, all accounting messages for this session MUST NOT
     include the Destination-Host AVP.  When cleared, the default
     value, the Destination-Host AVP, if known, MUST be present in all
     accounting messages for this session.

8.18.  Session-Server-Failover AVP

  The Session-Server-Failover AVP (AVP Code 271) is of type Enumerated,
  and MAY be present in application-specific authorization answer
  messages that either do not include the Session-Binding AVP or
  include the Session-Binding AVP with any of the bits set to a zero
  value.  If present, this AVP MAY inform the Diameter client that if a





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  re-auth or STR message fails due to a delivery problem, the Diameter
  client SHOULD issue a subsequent message without the Destination-Host
  AVP.  When absent, the default value is REFUSE_SERVICE.

  The following values are supported:

  REFUSE_SERVICE             0
     If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, terminate
     service with the user, and do not attempt any subsequent attempts.

  TRY_AGAIN                  1
     If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, resend
     the failed message without the Destination-Host AVP present.

  ALLOW_SERVICE              2
     If re-auth message delivery fails, assume that re-authorization
     succeeded.  If STR message delivery fails, terminate the session.

  TRY_AGAIN_ALLOW_SERVICE    3
     If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, resend
     the failed message without the Destination-Host AVP present.  If
     the second delivery fails for re-auth, assume re-authorization
     succeeded.  If the second delivery fails for STR, terminate the
     session.

8.19.  Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP

  The Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP (AVP Code 272) is of type Unsigned32,
  and SHOULD be present in application-specific authorization answer
  messages whose Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_MULTI_ROUND_AUTH.
  This AVP contains the maximum number of seconds that the access
  device MUST provide the user in responding to an authentication
  request.

8.20.  Class AVP

  The Class AVP (AVP Code 25) is of type OctetString and is used to by
  Diameter servers to return state information to the access device.
  When one or more Class AVPs are present in application-specific
  authorization answer messages, they MUST be present in subsequent
  re-authorization, session termination and accounting messages.  Class
  AVPs found in a re-authorization answer message override the ones
  found in any previous authorization answer message.  Diameter server
  implementations SHOULD NOT return Class AVPs that require more than
  4096 bytes of storage on the Diameter client.  A Diameter client that
  receives Class AVPs whose size exceeds local available storage MUST
  terminate the session.




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8.21.  Event-Timestamp AVP

  The Event-Timestamp (AVP Code 55) is of type Time, and MAY be
  included in an Accounting-Request and Accounting-Answer messages to
  record the time that the reported event occurred, in seconds since
  January 1, 1900 00:00 UTC.

9.  Accounting

  This accounting protocol is based on a server directed model with
  capabilities for real-time delivery of accounting information.
  Several fault resilience methods [ACCMGMT] have been built in to the
  protocol in order minimize loss of accounting data in various fault
  situations and under different assumptions about the capabilities of
  the used devices.

9.1.  Server Directed Model

  The server directed model means that the device generating the
  accounting data gets information from either the authorization server
  (if contacted) or the accounting server regarding the way accounting
  data shall be forwarded.  This information includes accounting record
  timeliness requirements.

  As discussed in [ACCMGMT], real-time transfer of accounting records
  is a requirement, such as the need to perform credit limit checks and
  fraud detection.  Note that batch accounting is not a requirement,
  and is therefore not supported by Diameter.  Should batched
  accounting be required in the future, a new Diameter application will
  need to be created, or it could be handled using another protocol.
  Note, however, that even if at the Diameter layer accounting requests
  are processed one by one, transport protocols used under Diameter
  typically batch several requests in the same packet under heavy
  traffic conditions.  This may be sufficient for many applications.

  The authorization server (chain) directs the selection of proper
  transfer strategy, based on its knowledge of the user and
  relationships of roaming partnerships.  The server (or agents) uses
  the Acct-Interim-Interval and Accounting-Realtime-Required AVPs to
  control the operation of the Diameter peer operating as a client.
  The Acct-Interim-Interval AVP, when present, instructs the Diameter
  node acting as a client to produce accounting records continuously
  even during a session.  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP is used to
  control the behavior of the client when the transfer of accounting
  records from the Diameter client is delayed or unsuccessful.






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  The Diameter accounting server MAY override the interim interval or
  the realtime requirements by including the Acct-Interim-Interval or
  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP in the Accounting-Answer message.
  When one of these AVPs is present, the latest value received SHOULD
  be used in further accounting activities for the same session.

9.2.  Protocol Messages

  A Diameter node that receives a successful authentication and/or
  authorization messages from the Home AAA server MUST collect
  accounting information for the session.  The Accounting-Request
  message is used to transmit the accounting information to the Home
  AAA server, which MUST reply with the Accounting-Answer message to
  confirm reception.  The Accounting-Answer message includes the
  Result-Code AVP, which MAY indicate that an error was present in the
  accounting message.  A rejected Accounting-Request message MAY cause
  the user's session to be terminated, depending on the value of the
  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP received earlier for the session in
  question.

  Each Diameter Accounting protocol message MAY be compressed, in order
  to reduce network bandwidth usage.  If IPsec and IKE are used to
  secure the Diameter session, then IP compression [IPComp] MAY be used
  and IKE [IKE] MAY be used to negotiate the compression parameters.
  If TLS is used to secure the Diameter session, then TLS compression
  [TLS] MAY be used.

9.3.  Application document requirements

  Each Diameter application (e.g., NASREQ, MobileIP), MUST define their
  Service-Specific AVPs that MUST be present in the Accounting-Request
  message in a section entitled "Accounting AVPs".  The application
  MUST assume that the AVPs described in this document will be present
  in all Accounting messages, so only their respective service-specific
  AVPs need to be defined in this section.

9.4.  Fault Resilience

  Diameter Base protocol mechanisms are used to overcome small message
  loss and network faults of temporary nature.

  Diameter peers acting as clients MUST implement the use of failover
  to guard against server failures and certain network failures.
  Diameter peers acting as agents or related off-line processing
  systems MUST detect duplicate accounting records caused by the
  sending of same record to several servers and duplication of messages





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  in transit.  This detection MUST be based on the inspection of the
  Session-Id and Accounting-Record-Number AVP pairs.  Appendix C
  discusses duplicate detection needs and implementation issues.

  Diameter clients MAY have non-volatile memory for the safe storage of
  accounting records over reboots or extended network failures, network
  partitions, and server failures.  If such memory is available, the
  client SHOULD store new accounting records there as soon as the
  records are created and until a positive acknowledgement of their
  reception from the Diameter Server has been received.  Upon a reboot,
  the client MUST starting sending the records in the non-volatile
  memory to the accounting server with appropriate modifications in
  termination cause, session length, and other relevant information in
  the records.

  A further application of this protocol may include AVPs to control
  how many accounting records may at most be stored in the Diameter
  client without committing them to the non-volatile memory or
  transferring them to the Diameter server.

  The client SHOULD NOT remove the accounting data from any of its
  memory areas before the correct Accounting-Answer has been received.
  The client MAY remove oldest, undelivered or yet unacknowledged
  accounting data if it runs out of resources such as memory.  It is an
  implementation dependent matter for the client to accept new sessions
  under this condition.

9.5.  Accounting Records

  In all accounting records, the Session-Id AVP MUST be present; the
  User-Name AVP MUST be present if it is available to the Diameter
  client.  If strong authentication across agents is required, end-to-
  end security may be used for authentication purposes.

  Different types of accounting records are sent depending on the
  actual type of accounted service and the authorization server's
  directions for interim accounting.  If the accounted service is a
  one-time event, meaning that the start and stop of the event are
  simultaneous, then the Accounting-Record-Type AVP MUST be present and
  set to the value EVENT_RECORD.

  If the accounted service is of a measurable length, then the AVP MUST
  use the values START_RECORD, STOP_RECORD, and possibly,
  INTERIM_RECORD.  If the authorization server has not directed interim
  accounting to be enabled for the session, two accounting records MUST
  be generated for each service of type session.  When the initial





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  Accounting-Request for a given session is sent, the Accounting-
  Record-Type AVP MUST be set to the value START_RECORD.  When the last
  Accounting-Request is sent, the value MUST be STOP_RECORD.

  If the authorization server has directed interim accounting to be
  enabled, the Diameter client MUST produce additional records between
  the START_RECORD and STOP_RECORD, marked INTERIM_RECORD.  The
  production of these records is directed by Acct-Interim-Interval as
  well as any re-authentication or re-authorization of the session. The
  Diameter client MUST overwrite any previous interim accounting
  records that are locally stored for delivery, if a new record is
  being generated for the same session.  This ensures that only one
  pending interim record can exist on an access device for any given
  session.

  A particular value of Accounting-Sub-Session-Id MUST appear only in
  one sequence of accounting records from a DIAMETER client, except for
  the purposes of retransmission.  The one sequence that is sent MUST
  be either one record with Accounting-Record-Type AVP set to the value
  EVENT_RECORD, or several records starting with one having the value
  START_RECORD, followed by zero or more INTERIM_RECORD and a single
  STOP_RECORD.  A particular Diameter application specification MUST
  define the type of sequences that MUST be used.

9.6.  Correlation of Accounting Records

  The Diameter protocol's Session-Id AVP, which is globally unique (see
  Section 8.8), is used during the authorization phase to identify a
  particular session.  Services that do not require any authorization
  still use the Session-Id AVP to identify sessions.  Accounting
  messages MAY use a different Session-Id from that sent in
  authorization messages.  Specific applications MAY require different
  a Session-ID for accounting messages.

  However, there are certain applications that require multiple
  accounting sub-sessions.  Such applications would send messages with
  a constant Session-Id AVP, but a different Accounting-Sub-Session-Id
  AVP.  In these cases, correlation is performed using the Session-Id.
  It is important to note that receiving a STOP_RECORD with no
  Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP when sub-sessions were originally used
  in the START_RECORD messages implies that all sub-sessions are
  terminated.

  Furthermore, there are certain applications where a user receives
  service from different access devices (e.g., Mobile IPv4), each with
  their own unique Session-Id.  In such cases, the Acct-Multi-Session-
  Id AVP is used for correlation.  During authorization, a server that




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  determines that a request is for an existing session SHOULD include
  the Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP, which the access device MUST include
  in all subsequent accounting messages.

  The Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP MAY include the value of the original
  Session-Id.  It's contents are implementation specific, but MUST be
  globally unique across other Acct-Multi-Session-Id, and MUST NOT
  change during the life of a session.

  A Diameter application document MUST define the exact concept of a
  session that is being accounted, and MAY define the concept of a
  multi-session.  For instance, the NASREQ DIAMETER application treats
  a single PPP connection to a Network Access Server as one session,
  and a set of Multilink PPP sessions as one multi-session.

9.7.  Accounting Command-Codes

  This section defines Command-Code values that MUST be supported by
  all Diameter implementations that provide Accounting services.

9.7.1.  Accounting-Request

  The Accounting-Request (ACR) command, indicated by the Command-Code
  field set to 271 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent by a
  Diameter node, acting as a client, in order to exchange accounting
  information with a peer.

  One of Acct-Application-Id and Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVPs
  MUST be present.  If the Vendor-Specific-Application-Id grouped AVP
  is present, it must have an Acct-Application-Id inside.

  The AVP listed below SHOULD include service specific accounting AVPs,
  as described in Section 9.3.


















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  Message Format

     <ACR> ::= < Diameter Header: 271, REQ, PXY >
               < Session-Id >
               { Origin-Host }
               { Origin-Realm }
               { Destination-Realm }
               { Accounting-Record-Type }
               { Accounting-Record-Number }
               [ Acct-Application-Id ]
               [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
               [ User-Name ]
               [ Accounting-Sub-Session-Id ]
               [ Acct-Session-Id ]
               [ Acct-Multi-Session-Id ]
               [ Acct-Interim-Interval ]
               [ Accounting-Realtime-Required ]
               [ Origin-State-Id ]
               [ Event-Timestamp ]
             * [ Proxy-Info ]
             * [ Route-Record ]
             * [ AVP ]

9.7.2.  Accounting-Answer

  The Accounting-Answer (ACA) command, indicated by the Command-Code
  field set to 271 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is used to
  acknowledge an Accounting-Request command.  The Accounting-Answer
  command contains the same Session-Id and includes the usage AVPs only
  if CMS is in use when sending this command.  Note that the inclusion
  of the usage AVPs when CMS is not being used leads to unnecessarily
  large answer messages, and can not be used as a server's proof of the
  receipt of these AVPs in an end-to-end fashion.  If the Accounting-
  Request was protected by end-to-end security, then the corresponding
  ACA message MUST be protected by end-to-end security.

  Only the target Diameter Server, known as the home Diameter Server,
  SHOULD respond with the Accounting-Answer command.

  One of Acct-Application-Id and Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVPs
  MUST be present.  If the Vendor-Specific-Application-Id grouped AVP
  is present, it must have an Acct-Application-Id inside.

  The AVP listed below SHOULD include service specific accounting AVPs,
  as described in Section 9.3.






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  Message Format

     <ACA> ::= < Diameter Header: 271, PXY >
               < Session-Id >
               { Result-Code }
               { Origin-Host }
               { Origin-Realm }
               { Accounting-Record-Type }
               { Accounting-Record-Number }
               [ Acct-Application-Id ]
               [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
               [ User-Name ]
               [ Accounting-Sub-Session-Id ]
               [ Acct-Session-Id ]
               [ Acct-Multi-Session-Id ]
               [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
               [ Acct-Interim-Interval ]
               [ Accounting-Realtime-Required ]
               [ Origin-State-Id ]
               [ Event-Timestamp ]
             * [ Proxy-Info ]
             * [ AVP ]

9.8.  Accounting AVPs

  This section contains AVPs that describe accounting usage information
  related to a specific session.

9.8.1.  Accounting-Record-Type AVP

  The Accounting-Record-Type AVP (AVP Code 480) is of type Enumerated
  and contains the type of accounting record being sent.  The following
  values are currently defined for the Accounting-Record-Type AVP:

  EVENT_RECORD                    1
     An Accounting Event Record is used to indicate that a one-time
     event has occurred (meaning that the start and end of the event
     are simultaneous).  This record contains all information relevant
     to the service, and is the only record of the service.

  START_RECORD                    2
     An Accounting Start, Interim, and Stop Records are used to
     indicate that a service of a measurable length has been given.  An
     Accounting Start Record is used to initiate an accounting session,
     and contains accounting information that is relevant to the
     initiation of the session.





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  INTERIM_RECORD                  3
     An Interim Accounting Record contains cumulative accounting
     information for an existing accounting session.  Interim
     Accounting Records SHOULD be sent every time a re-authentication
     or re-authorization occurs.  Further, additional interim record
     triggers MAY be defined by application-specific Diameter
     applications.  The selection of whether to use INTERIM_RECORD
     records is done by the Acct-Interim-Interval AVP.

  STOP_RECORD                     4
     An Accounting Stop Record is sent to terminate an accounting
     session and contains cumulative accounting information relevant to
     the existing session.

9.8.2.  Acct-Interim-Interval

  The Acct-Interim-Interval AVP (AVP Code 85) is of type Unsigned32 and
  is sent from the Diameter home authorization server to the Diameter
  client.  The client uses information in this AVP to decide how and
  when to produce accounting records.  With different values in this
  AVP, service sessions can result in one, two, or two+N accounting
  records, based on the needs of the home-organization.  The following
  accounting record production behavior is directed by the inclusion of
  this AVP:

  1. The omission of the Acct-Interim-Interval AVP or its inclusion
     with Value field set to 0 means that EVENT_RECORD, START_RECORD,
     and STOP_RECORD are produced, as appropriate for the service.

  2. The inclusion of the AVP with Value field set to a non-zero value
     means that INTERIM_RECORD records MUST be produced between the
     START_RECORD and STOP_RECORD records.  The Value field of this AVP
     is the nominal interval between these records in seconds.  The
     Diameter node that originates the accounting information, known as
     the client, MUST produce the first INTERIM_RECORD record roughly
     at the time when this nominal interval has elapsed from the
     START_RECORD, the next one again as the interval has elapsed once
     more, and so on until the session ends and a STOP_RECORD record is
     produced.

     The client MUST ensure that the interim record production times
     are randomized so that large accounting message storms are not
     created either among records or around a common service start
     time.







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9.8.3.  Accounting-Record-Number AVP

  The Accounting-Record-Number AVP (AVP Code 485) is of type Unsigned32
  and identifies this record within one session.  As Session-Id AVPs
  are globally unique, the combination of Session-Id and Accounting-
  Record-Number AVPs is also globally unique, and can be used in
  matching accounting records with confirmations.  An easy way to
  produce unique numbers is to set the value to 0 for records of type
  EVENT_RECORD and START_RECORD, and set the value to 1 for the first
  INTERIM_RECORD, 2 for the second, and so on until the value for
  STOP_RECORD is one more than for the last INTERIM_RECORD.

9.8.4.  Acct-Session-Id AVP

  The Acct-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 44) is of type OctetString is only
  used when RADIUS/Diameter translation occurs.  This AVP contains the
  contents of the RADIUS Acct-Session-Id attribute.

9.8.5.  Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP

  The Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 50) is of type UTF8String,
  following the format specified in Section 8.8.  The Acct-Multi-
  Session-Id AVP is used to link together multiple related accounting
  sessions, where each session would have a unique Session-Id, but the
  same Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP.  This AVP MAY be returned by the
  Diameter server in an authorization answer, and MUST be used in all
  accounting messages for the given session.

9.8.6.  Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP

  The Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 287) is of type
  Unsigned64 and contains the accounting sub-session identifier.  The
  combination of the Session-Id and this AVP MUST be unique per sub-
  session, and the value of this AVP MUST be monotonically increased by
  one for all new sub-sessions.  The absence of this AVP implies no
  sub-sessions are in use, with the exception of an Accounting-Request
  whose Accounting-Record-Type is set to STOP_RECORD.  A STOP_RECORD
  message with no Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP present will signal the
  termination of all sub-sessions for a given Session-Id.

9.8.7.  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP

  The Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP (AVP Code 483) is of type
  Enumerated and is sent from the Diameter home authorization server to
  the Diameter client or in the Accounting-Answer from the accounting
  server.  The client uses information in this AVP to decide what to do
  if the sending of accounting records to the accounting server has
  been temporarily prevented due to, for instance, a network problem.



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  DELIVER_AND_GRANT                           1
     The AVP with Value field set to DELIVER_AND_GRANT means that the
     service MUST only be granted as long as there is a connection to
     an accounting server.  Note that the set of alternative accounting
     servers are treated as one server in this sense.  Having to move
     the accounting record stream to a backup server is not a reason to
     discontinue the service to the user.

  GRANT_AND_STORE                             2
     The AVP with Value field set to GRANT_AND_STORE means that service
     SHOULD be granted if there is a connection, or as long as records
     can still be stored as described in Section 9.4.

     This is the default behavior if the AVP isn't included in the
     reply from the authorization server.

  GRANT_AND_LOSE                              3
     The AVP with Value field set to GRANT_AND_LOSE means that service
     SHOULD be granted even if the records can not be delivered or
     stored.

10.  AVP Occurrence Table

  The following tables presents the AVPs defined in this document, and
  specifies in which Diameter messages they MAY, or MAY NOT be present.
  Note that AVPs that can only be present within a Grouped AVP are not
  represented in this table.

  The table uses the following symbols:

  0     The AVP MUST NOT be present in the message.
  0+    Zero or more instances of the AVP MAY be present in the
        message.
  0-1   Zero or one instance of the AVP MAY be present in the
        message.  It is considered an error if there are more than
        one instance of the AVP.
  1     One instance of the AVP MUST be present in the message.
  1+    At least one instance of the AVP MUST be present in the
        message.

10.1.  Base Protocol Command AVP Table

  The table in this section is limited to the non-accounting Command
  Codes defined in this specification.







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                      +-----------------------------------------------+
                      |                  Command-Code                 |
                      +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
  Attribute Name      |CER|CEA|DPR|DPA|DWR|DWA|RAR|RAA|ASR|ASA|STR|STA|
  --------------------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
  Acct-Interim-       |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
    Interval          |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  Accounting-Realtime-|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
    Required          |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  Acct-Application-Id |0+ |0+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Auth-Application-Id |0+ |0+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |
  Auth-Grace-Period   |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Auth-Request-Type   |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Auth-Session-State  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Authorization-      |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
    Lifetime          |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  Class               |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0+ |0+ |
  Destination-Host    |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |0-1|0  |
  Destination-Realm   |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |
  Disconnect-Cause    |0  |0  |1  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Error-Message       |0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|
  Error-Reporting-Host|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|
  Failed-AVP          |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |
  Firmware-Revision   |0-1|0-1|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Host-IP-Address     |1+ |1+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Inband-Security-Id  |0+ |0+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Multi-Round-Time-Out|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Origin-Host         |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |
  Origin-Realm        |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |
  Origin-State-Id     |0-1|0-1|0  |0  |0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|
  Product-Name        |1  |1  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Proxy-Info          |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |
  Redirect-Host       |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |
  Redirect-Host-Usage |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|
  Redirect-Max-Cache- |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0  |0-1|0  |0-1|
    Time              |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  Result-Code         |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |1  |0  |0  |0  |1  |
  Re-Auth-Request-Type|0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Route-Record        |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |0+ |0  |
  Session-Binding     |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Session-Id          |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |1  |
  Session-Server-     |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
    Failover          |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  Session-Timeout     |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Supported-Vendor-Id |0+ |0+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
  Termination-Cause   |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |1  |0  |
  User-Name           |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|
  Vendor-Id           |1  |1  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |



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  Vendor-Specific-    |0+ |0+ |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |0  |
    Application-Id    |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
  --------------------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+

10.2.  Accounting AVP Table

  The table in this section is used to represent which AVPs defined in
  this document are to be present in the Accounting messages.  These
  AVP occurrence requirements are guidelines, which may be expanded,
  and/or overridden by application-specific requirements in the
  Diameter applications documents.

                                +-----------+
                                |  Command  |
                                |    Code   |
                                +-----+-----+
  Attribute Name                | ACR | ACA |
  ------------------------------+-----+-----+
  Acct-Interim-Interval         | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Acct-Multi-Session-Id         | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Accounting-Record-Number      | 1   | 1   |
  Accounting-Record-Type        | 1   | 1   |
  Acct-Session-Id               | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Accounting-Sub-Session-Id     | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Accounting-Realtime-Required  | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Acct-Application-Id           | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Auth-Application-Id           | 0   | 0   |
  Class                         | 0+  | 0+  |
  Destination-Host              | 0-1 | 0   |
  Destination-Realm             | 1   | 0   |
  Error-Reporting-Host          | 0   | 0+  |
  Event-Timestamp               | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Origin-Host                   | 1   | 1   |
  Origin-Realm                  | 1   | 1   |
  Proxy-Info                    | 0+  | 0+  |
  Route-Record                  | 0+  | 0+  |
  Result-Code                   | 0   | 1   |
  Session-Id                    | 1   | 1   |
  Termination-Cause             | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  User-Name                     | 0-1 | 0-1 |
  Vendor-Specific-Application-Id| 0-1 | 0-1 |
  ------------------------------+-----+-----+









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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


11.  IANA Considerations

  This section provides guidance to the Internet Assigned Numbers
  Authority (IANA) regarding registration of values related to the
  Diameter protocol, in accordance with BCP 26 [IANA].  The following
  policies are used here with the meanings defined in BCP 26: "Private
  Use", "First Come First Served", "Expert Review", "Specification
  Required", "IETF Consensus", "Standards Action".

  This section explains the criteria to be used by the IANA for
  assignment of numbers within namespaces defined within this document.

  Diameter is not intended as a general purpose protocol, and
  allocations SHOULD NOT be made for purposes unrelated to
  authentication, authorization or accounting.

  For registration requests where a Designated Expert should be
  consulted, the responsible IESG area director should appoint the
  Designated Expert.  For Designated Expert with Specification
  Required, the request is posted to the AAA WG mailing list (or, if it
  has been disbanded, a successor designated by the Area Director) for
  comment and review, and MUST include a pointer to a public
  specification. Before a period of 30 days has passed, the Designated
  Expert will either approve or deny the registration request and
  publish a notice of the decision to the AAA WG mailing list or its
  successor.  A denial notice must be justified by an explanation and,
  in the cases  where it is possible, concrete suggestions on how the
  request can be modified so as to become acceptable.

11.1.  AVP Header

  As defined in Section 4, the AVP header contains three fields that
  requires IANA namespace management; the AVP Code, Vendor-ID and Flags
  field.

11.1.1.  AVP Codes

  The AVP Code namespace is used to identify attributes.  There are
  multiple namespaces.  Vendors can have their own AVP Codes namespace
  which will be identified by their Vendor-ID (also known as
  Enterprise-Number) and they control the assignments of their vendor-
  specific AVP codes within their own namespace.  The absence of a
  Vendor-ID or a Vendor-ID value of zero (0) identifies the IETF IANA
  controlled AVP Codes namespace.  The AVP Codes and sometimes also
  possible values in an AVP are controlled and maintained by IANA.






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  AVP Code 0 is not used. AVP Codes 1-255 are managed separately as
  RADIUS Attribute Types [RADTYPE].  This document defines the AVP
  Codes 257-274, 276-285, 287, 291-300, 480, 483 and 485-486.  See
  Section 4.5 for the assignment of the namespace in this
  specification.

  AVPs may be allocated following Designated Expert with Specification
  Required [IANA].  Release of blocks of AVPs (more than 3 at a time
  for a given purpose) should require IETF Consensus.

  Note that Diameter defines a mechanism for Vendor-Specific AVPs,
  where the Vendor-Id field in the AVP header is set to a non-zero
  value.  Vendor-Specific AVPs codes are for Private Use and should be
  encouraged instead of allocation of global attribute types, for
  functions specific only to one vendor's implementation of Diameter,
  where no interoperability is deemed useful.  Where a Vendor-Specific
  AVP is implemented by more than one vendor, allocation of global AVPs
  should be encouraged instead.

11.1.2.  AVP Flags

  There are 8 bits in the AVP Flags field of the AVP header, defined in
  Section 4.  This document assigns bit 0 ('V'endor Specific), bit 1
  ('M'andatory) and bit 2 ('P'rotected).  The remaining bits should
  only be assigned via a Standards Action [IANA].

11.2.  Diameter Header

  As defined in Section 3, the Diameter header contains two fields that
  require IANA namespace management; Command Code and Command Flags.

11.2.1.  Command Codes

  The Command Code namespace is used to identify Diameter commands.
  The values 0-255 are reserved for RADIUS backward compatibility, and
  are defined as "RADIUS Packet Type Codes" in [RADTYPE].  Values 256-
  16,777,213 are for permanent, standard commands, allocated by IETF
  Consensus [IANA].  This document defines the Command Codes 257, 258,
  271, 274-275, 280 and 282.  See Section 3.1 for the assignment of the
  namespace in this specification.

  The values 16,777,214 and 16,777,215 (hexadecimal values 0xfffffe -
  0xffffff) are reserved for experimental commands.  As these codes are
  only for experimental and testing purposes, no guarantee is made for
  interoperability between Diameter peers using experimental commands,
  as outlined in [IANA-EXP].





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11.2.2.  Command Flags

  There are eight bits in the Command Flags field of the Diameter
  header.  This document assigns bit 0 ('R'equest), bit 1 ('P'roxy),
  bit 2 ('E'rror) and bit 3 ('T').  Bits 4 through 7 MUST only be
  assigned via a Standards Action [IANA].

11.3.  Application Identifiers

  As defined in Section 2.4, the Application Identifier is used to
  identify a specific Diameter Application.  There are standards-track
  application ids and vendor specific application ids.

  IANA [IANA] has assigned the range 0x00000001 to 0x00ffffff for
  standards-track applications; and 0x01000000 - 0xfffffffe for vendor
  specific applications, on a first-come, first-served basis.  The
  following values are allocated.

     Diameter Common Messages            0
     NASREQ                              1 [NASREQ]
     Mobile-IP                           2 [DIAMMIP]
     Diameter Base Accounting            3
     Relay                               0xffffffff

  Assignment of standards-track application IDs are by Designated
  Expert with Specification Required [IANA].

  Both Application-Id and Acct-Application-Id AVPs use the same
  Application Identifier space.

  Vendor-Specific Application Identifiers, are for Private Use.
  Vendor-Specific Application Identifiers are assigned on a First Come,
  First Served basis by IANA.

11.4.  AVP Values

  Certain AVPs in Diameter define a list of values with various
  meanings.  For attributes other than those specified in this section,
  adding additional values to the list can be done on a First Come,
  First Served basis by IANA.

11.4.1.  Result-Code AVP Values

  As defined in Section 7.1, the Result-Code AVP (AVP Code 268) defines
  the values 1001, 2001-2002, 3001-3010, 4001-4002 and 5001-5017.

  All remaining values are available for assignment via IETF Consensus
  [IANA].



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11.4.2.  Accounting-Record-Type AVP Values

  As defined in Section 9.8.1, the Accounting-Record-Type AVP (AVP Code
  480) defines the values 1-4.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.3.  Termination-Cause AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.15, the Termination-Cause AVP (AVP Code 295)
  defines the values 1-8.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.4.  Redirect-Host-Usage AVP Values

  As defined in Section 6.13, the Redirect-Host-Usage AVP (AVP Code
  261) defines the values 0-5.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.5.  Session-Server-Failover AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.18, the Session-Server-Failover AVP (AVP Code
  271) defines the values 0-3.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.6.  Session-Binding AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.17, the Session-Binding AVP (AVP Code 270)
  defines the bits 1-4.  All remaining bits are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.7.  Disconnect-Cause AVP Values

  As defined in Section 5.4.3, the Disconnect-Cause AVP (AVP Code 273)
  defines the values 0-2.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.8.  Auth-Request-Type AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.7, the Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code 274)
  defines the values 1-3.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.9.  Auth-Session-State AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.11, the Auth-Session-State AVP (AVP Code 277)
  defines the values 0-1.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].




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11.4.10.  Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP Values

  As defined in Section 8.12, the Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code
  285) defines the values 0-1.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.11.  Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP Values

  As defined in Section 9.8.7, the Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP
  (AVP Code 483) defines the values 1-3.  All remaining values are
  available for assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.4.12.   Inband-Security-Id AVP (code 299)

  As defined in Section 6.10, the Inband-Security-Id AVP (AVP Code 299)
  defines the values 0-1.  All remaining values are available for
  assignment via IETF Consensus [IANA].

11.5.  Diameter TCP/SCTP Port Numbers

  The IANA has assigned TCP and SCTP port number 3868 to Diameter.

11.6.  NAPTR Service Fields

  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 "AAA+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
     AAA+D2T                       TCP
     AAA+D2S                       SCTP

12.  Diameter protocol related configurable parameters

  This section contains the configurable parameters that are found
  throughout this document:



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RFC 3588                Diameter Based Protocol           September 2003


  Diameter Peer
     A Diameter entity MAY communicate with peers that are statically
     configured.  A statically configured Diameter peer would require
     that either the IP address or the fully qualified domain name
     (FQDN) be supplied, which would then be used to resolve through
     DNS.

  Realm Routing Table
     A Diameter proxy server routes messages based on the realm portion
     of a Network Access Identifier (NAI).  The server MUST have a
     table of Realm Names, and the address of the peer to which the
     message must be forwarded to.  The routing table MAY also include
     a "default route", which is typically used for all messages that
     cannot be locally processed.

  Tc timer
     The Tc timer controls the frequency that transport connection
     attempts are done to a peer with whom no active transport
     connection exists.  The recommended value is 30 seconds.

13.  Security Considerations

  The Diameter base protocol assumes that messages are secured by using
  either IPSec or TLS.  This security mechanism is acceptable in
  environments where there is no untrusted third party agent.  In other
  situations, end-to-end security is needed.

  Diameter clients, such as Network Access Servers (NASes) and Mobility
  Agents MUST support IP Security [SECARCH] and MAY support TLS [TLS].
  Diameter servers MUST support TLS and IPsec.  Diameter
  implementations MUST use transmission-level security of some kind
  (IPsec or TLS) on each connection.

  If a Diameter connection is not protected by IPsec, then the CER/CEA
  exchange MUST include an Inband-Security-ID AVP with a value of TLS.
  For TLS usage, a TLS handshake will begin when both ends are in the
  open state, after completion of the CER/CEA exchange.  If the TLS
  handshake is successful, all further messages will be sent via TLS.
  If the handshake fails, both ends move to the closed state.

  It is suggested that IPsec be used primarily at the edges for intra-
  domain exchanges.  For NAS devices without certificate support, pre-
  shared keys can be used between the NAS and a local AAA proxy.

  For protection of inter-domain exchanges, TLS is recommended.  See
  Sections 13.1 and 13.2 for more details on IPsec and TLS usage.





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13.1.  IPsec Usage

  All Diameter implementations MUST support IPsec ESP [IPsec] in
  transport mode with non-null encryption and authentication algorithms
  to provide per-packet authentication, integrity protection and
  confidentiality, and MUST support the replay protection mechanisms of
  IPsec.

  Diameter implementations MUST support IKE for peer authentication,
  negotiation of security associations, and key management, using the
  IPsec DOI [IPSECDOI].  Diameter implementations MUST support peer
  authentication using a pre-shared key, and MAY support certificate-
  based peer authentication using digital signatures.  Peer
  authentication using the public key encryption methods outlined in
  IKE's Sections 5.2 and 5.3 [IKE] SHOULD NOT be used.

  Conformant implementations MUST support both IKE Main Mode and
  Aggressive Mode.  When pre-shared keys are used for authentication,
  IKE Aggressive Mode SHOULD be used, and IKE Main Mode SHOULD NOT be
  used.  When digital signatures are used for authentication, either
  IKE Main Mode or IKE Aggressive Mode MAY be used.

  When digital signatures are used to achieve authentication, an IKE
  negotiator SHOULD use IKE Certificate Request Payload(s) to specify
  the certificate authority (or authorities) that are trusted in
  accordance with its local policy.  IKE negotiators SHOULD use
  pertinent certificate revocation checks before accepting a PKI
  certificate for use in IKE's authentication procedures.

  The Phase 2 Quick Mode exchanges used to negotiate protection for
  Diameter connections MUST explicitly carry the Identity Payload
  fields (IDci and IDcr).  The DOI provides for several types of
  identification data.  However, when used in conformant
  implementations, each ID Payload MUST carry a single IP address and a
  single non-zero port number, and MUST NOT use the IP Subnet or IP
  Address Range formats.  This allows the Phase 2 security association
  to correspond to specific TCP and SCTP connections.

  Since IPsec acceleration hardware may only be able to handle a
  limited number of active IKE Phase 2 SAs, Phase 2 delete messages may
  be sent for idle SAs, as a means of keeping the number of active
  Phase 2 SAs to a minimum.  The receipt of an IKE Phase 2 delete
  message SHOULD NOT be interpreted as a reason for tearing down a
  Diameter connection.  Rather, it is preferable to leave the
  connection up, and if additional traffic is sent on it, to bring up
  another IKE Phase 2 SA to protect it.  This avoids the potential for
  continually bringing connections up and down.




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13.2.  TLS Usage

  A Diameter node that initiates a connection to another Diameter node
  acts as a TLS client according to [TLS], and a Diameter node that
  accepts a connection acts as a TLS server.  Diameter nodes
  implementing TLS for security MUST mutually authenticate as part of
  TLS session establishment.  In order to ensure mutual authentication,
  the Diameter node acting as TLS server must request a certificate
  from the Diameter node acting as TLS client, and the Diameter node
  acting as TLS client MUST be prepared to supply a certificate on
  request.

  Diameter nodes MUST be able to negotiate the following TLS cipher
  suites:

     TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5
     TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA
     TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA

  Diameter nodes SHOULD be able to negotiate the following TLS cipher
  suite:

     TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA

  Diameter nodes MAY negotiate other TLS cipher suites.

13.3.  Peer-to-Peer Considerations

  As with any peer-to-peer protocol, proper configuration of the trust
  model within a Diameter peer is essential to security.  When
  certificates are used, it is necessary to configure the root
  certificate authorities trusted by the Diameter peer.  These root CAs
  are likely to be unique to Diameter usage and distinct from the root
  CAs that might be trusted for other purposes such as Web browsing.
  In general, it is expected that those root CAs will be configured so
  as to reflect the business relationships between the organization
  hosting the Diameter peer and other organizations.  As a result, a
  Diameter peer will typically not be configured to allow connectivity
  with any arbitrary peer.  When certificate authentication Diameter
  peers may not be known beforehand, and therefore peer discovery may
  be required.

  Note that IPsec is considerably less flexible than TLS when it comes
  to configuring root CAs.  Since use of Port identifiers is prohibited
  within IKE Phase 1, within IPsec it is not possible to uniquely
  configure trusted root CAs for each application individually; the
  same policy must be used for all applications.  This implies, for
  example, that a root CA trusted for use with Diameter must also be



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  trusted to protect SNMP.  These restrictions can be awkward at best.
  Since TLS supports application-level granularity in certificate
  policy, TLS SHOULD be used to protect Diameter connections between
  administrative domains.  IPsec is most appropriate for intra-domain
  usage when pre-shared keys are used as a security mechanism.

  When pre-shared key authentication is used with IPsec to protect
  Diameter, unique pre-shared keys are configured with Diameter peers,
  who are identified by their IP address (Main Mode), or possibly their
  FQDN (Aggressive Mode).  As a result, it is necessary for the set of
  Diameter peers to be known beforehand.  Therefore, peer discovery is
  typically not necessary.

  The following is intended to provide some guidance on the issue.

  It is recommended that a Diameter peer implement the same security
  mechanism (IPsec or TLS) across all its peer-to-peer connections.
  Inconsistent use of security mechanisms can result in redundant
  security mechanisms being used (e.g., TLS over IPsec) or worse,
  potential security vulnerabilities.  When IPsec is used with
  Diameter, a typical security policy for outbound traffic is "Initiate
  IPsec, from me to any, destination port Diameter"; for inbound
  traffic, the policy would be "Require IPsec, from any to me,
  destination port Diameter".

  This policy causes IPsec to be used whenever a Diameter peer
  initiates a connection to another Diameter peer, and to be required
  whenever an inbound Diameter connection occurs.  This policy is
  attractive, since it does not require policy to be set for each peer
  or dynamically modified each time a new Diameter connection is
  created; an IPsec SA is automatically created based on a simple
  static policy.  Since IPsec extensions are typically not available to
  the sockets API on most platforms, and IPsec policy functionality is
  implementation dependent, use of a simple static policy is the often
  the simplest route to IPsec-enabling a Diameter implementation.

  One implication of the recommended policy is that if a node is using
  both TLS and IPsec, there is not a convenient way in which to use
  either TLS or IPsec, but not both, without reserving an additional
  port for TLS usage.  Since Diameter uses the same port for TLS and
  non-TLS usage, where the recommended IPsec policy is put in place, a
  TLS-protected connection will match the IPsec policy, and both IPsec
  and TLS will be used to protect the Diameter connection.  To avoid
  this, it would be necessary to plumb peer-specific policies either
  statically or dynamically.






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  If IPsec is used to secure Diameter peer-to-peer connections, IPsec
  policy SHOULD be set so as to require IPsec protection for inbound
  connections, and to initiate IPsec protection for outbound
  connections.  This can be accomplished via use of inbound and
  outbound filter policy.

14.  References

14.1.  Normative References

  [AAATRANS]     Aboba, B. and J. Wood, "Authentication, Authorization
                 and Accounting (AAA) Transport Profile", RFC 3539,
                 June 2003.

  [ABNF]         Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
                 Specifications: ABNF", RFC 2234, November 1997.

  [ASSIGNNO]     Reynolds, J., "Assigned Numbers: RFC 1700 is Replaced
                 by an On-line Database", RFC 3232, January 2002.

  [DIFFSERV]     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.

  [DIFFSERVAF]   Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W. and J. Wroclawski,
                 "Assured Forwarding PHB Group", RFC 2597, June 1999.

  [DIFFSERVEF]   Davie, B., Charny, A., Bennet, J., Benson, K., Le
                 Boudec, J., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V. and
                 D. Stiliadis, "An Expedited Forwarding PHB", RFC 3246,
                 March 2002.

  [DNSSRV]       Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P. and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR
                 for specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",
                 RFC 2782, February 2000.

  [EAP]          Blunk, L. and J. Vollbrecht, "PPP Extensible
                 Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 2284, March 1998.

  [FLOATPOINT]   Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
                 "IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic",
                 ANSI/IEEE Standard 754-1985, August 1985.

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




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  [IANAADFAM]    IANA; "Address Family Numbers",
                 http://www.iana.org/assignments/address-family-numbers

  [IANAWEB]      IANA, "Number assignment", http://www.iana.org

  [IKE]          Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange
                 (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998.

  [IPComp]       Shacham, A., Monsour, R., Pereira, R. and M. Thomas,
                 "IP Payload Compression Protocol (IPComp)", RFC 3173,
                 September 2001.

  [IPSECDOI]     Piper, D., "The Internet IP Security Domain of
                 Interpretation for ISAKMP", RFC 2407, November 1998.

  [IPV4]         Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
                 September 1981.

  [IPV6]         Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
                 Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

  [KEYWORDS]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [NAI]          Aboba, B. and M. Beadles, "The Network Access
                 Identifier", RFC 2486, January 1999.

  [NAPTR]        Mealling, M. and R. Daniel, "The naming authority
                 pointer (NAPTR) DNS resource record," RFC 2915,
                 September 2000.

  [RADTYPE]      IANA, "RADIUS Types",
                 http://www.iana.org/assignments/radius-types

  [SCTP]         Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,
                 Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla, M.,
                 Zhang, L. and V. Paxson, "Stream Control Transmission
                 Protocol", RFC 2960, October 2000.

  [SLP]          Veizades, J., Guttman, E., Perkins, C. and M. Day,
                 "Service Location Protocol, Version 2", RFC 2165, June
                 1999.

  [SNTP]         Mills, D., "Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP)
                 Version 4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI", RFC 2030, October
                 1996.





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  [TCP]          Postel, J. "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7, RFC
                 793, January 1981.

  [TEMPLATE]     Guttman, E., Perkins, C. and J. Kempf, "Service
                 Templates and Service: Schemes", RFC 2609, June 1999.

  [TLS]          Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version
                 1.0", RFC 2246, January 1999.

  [TLSSCTP]      Jungmaier, A., Rescorla, E. and M. Tuexen, "Transport
                 Layer Security over Stream Control Transmission
                 Protocol", RFC 3436, December 2002.

  [URI]          Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R. and L. Masinter,
                 "Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax",
                 RFC 2396, August 1998.

  [UTF8]         Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
                 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.

14.2.  Informative References

  [AAACMS]       P. Calhoun, W. Bulley, S. Farrell, "Diameter CMS
                 Security Application", Work in Progress.

  [AAAREQ]       Aboba, B., Calhoun, P., Glass, S., Hiller, T., McCann,
                 P., Shiino, H., Zorn, G., Dommety, G., Perkins, C.,
                 Patil, B., Mitton, D., Manning, S., Beadles, M.,
                 Walsh, P., Chen, X., Sivalingham, S., Hameed, A.,
                 Munson, M., Jacobs, S., Lim, B., Hirschman, B., Hsu,
                 R., Xu, Y., Campbell, E., Baba, S. and E. Jaques,
                 "Criteria for Evaluating AAA Protocols for Network
                 Access", RFC 2989, November 2000.

  [ACCMGMT]      Aboba, B., Arkko, J. and D. Harrington. "Introduction
                 to Accounting Management", RFC 2975, October 2000.

  [CDMA2000]     Hiller, T., Walsh, P., Chen, X., Munson, M., Dommety,
                 G., Sivalingham, S., Lim, B., McCann, P., Shiino, H.,
                 Hirschman, B., Manning, S., Hsu, R., Koo, H., Lipford,
                 M., Calhoun, P., Lo, C., Jaques, E., Campbell, E., Xu,
                 Y., Baba, S., Ayaki, T., Seki, T. and A.  Hameed,
                 "CDMA2000 Wireless Data Requirements for AAA", RFC
                 3141, June 2001.

  [DIAMMIP]      P. Calhoun, C. Perkins, "Diameter Mobile IP
                 Application", Work in Progress.




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  [DYNAUTH]      Chiba, M., Dommety, G., Eklund, M., Mitton, D. and B.
                 Aboba, "Dynamic Authorization Extensions to Remote
                 Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)", RFC
                 3576, July 2003.

  [IANA-EXP]     T. Narten, "Assigning Experimental and Testing Numbers
                 Considered Useful", Work in Progress.

  [MIPV4]        Perkins, C., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4", RFC 3344,
                 August 2002.

  [MIPREQ]       Glass, S., Hiller, T., Jacobs, S. and C. Perkins,
                 "Mobile IP Authentication, Authorization, and
                 Accounting Requirements", RFC 2977, October 2000.

  [NASNG]        Mitton, D. and M. Beadles, "Network Access Server
                 Requirements Next Generation (NASREQNG) NAS Model",
                 RFC 2881, July 2000.

  [NASREQ]       P. Calhoun, W. Bulley, A. Rubens, J. Haag, "Diameter
                 NASREQ Application", Work in Progress.

  [NASCRIT]      Beadles, M. and D. Mitton, "Criteria for Evaluating
                 Network Access Server Protocols", RFC 3169, September
                 2001.

  [PPP]          Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD
                 51, RFC 1661, July 1994.

  [PROXYCHAIN]   Aboba, B. and J. Vollbrecht, "Proxy Chaining and
                 Policy Implementation in Roaming", RFC 2607, June
                 1999.

  [RADACCT]      Rigney, C., "RADIUS Accounting", RFC 2866, June 2000.

  [RADEXT]       Rigney, C., Willats, W. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS
                 Extensions", RFC 2869, June 2000.

  [RADIUS]       Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A. and W. Simpson,
                 "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
                 RFC 2865, June 2000.

  [ROAMREV]      Aboba, B., Lu, J., Alsop, J., Ding, J. and W. Wang,
                 "Review of Roaming Implementations", RFC 2194,
                 September 1997.

  [ROAMCRIT]     Aboba, B. and G. Zorn, "Criteria for Evaluating
                 Roaming Protocols", RFC 2477, January 1999.



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  [SECARCH]      Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for
                 the Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [TACACS]       Finseth, C., "An Access Control Protocol, Sometimes
                 Called TACACS", RFC 1492, July 1993.

15.  Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to thank Nenad Trifunovic, Tony Johansson and
  Pankaj Patel for their participation in the pre-IETF Document Reading
  Party.  Allison Mankin, Jonathan Wood and Bernard Aboba provided
  invaluable assistance in working out transport issues, and similarly
  with Steven Bellovin in the security area.

  Paul Funk and David Mitton were instrumental in getting the Peer
  State Machine correct, and our deep thanks go to them for their time.

  Text in this document was also provided by Paul Funk, Mark Eklund,
  Mark Jones and Dave Spence.  Jacques Caron provided many great
  comments as a result of a thorough review of the spec.

  The authors would also like to acknowledge the following people for
  their contribution in the development of the Diameter protocol:

  Allan C. Rubens, Haseeb Akhtar, William Bulley, Stephen Farrell,
  David Frascone, Daniel C. Fox, Lol Grant, Ignacio Goyret, Nancy
  Greene, Peter Heitman, Fredrik Johansson, Mark Jones, Martin Julien,
  Bob Kopacz, Paul Krumviede, Fergal Ladley, Ryan Moats, Victor Muslin,
  Kenneth Peirce, John Schnizlein, Sumit Vakil, John R. Vollbrecht and
  Jeff Weisberg.

  Finally, Pat Calhoun would like to thank Sun Microsystems since most
  of the effort put into this document was done while he was in their
  employ.

















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Appendix A.  Diameter Service Template

  The following service template describes the attributes used by
  Diameter servers to advertise themselves.  This simplifies the
  process of selecting an appropriate server to communicate with.  A
  Diameter client can request specific Diameter servers based on
  characteristics of the Diameter service desired (for example, an AAA
  server to use for accounting.)

  Name of submitter:  "Erik Guttman" <[email protected]> Language of
  service template:  en

  Security Considerations:
     Diameter clients and servers use various cryptographic mechanisms
     to protect communication integrity, confidentiality as well as
     perform end-point authentication.  It would thus be difficult if
     not impossible for an attacker to advertise itself using SLPv2 and
     pose as a legitimate Diameter peer without proper preconfigured
     secrets or cryptographic keys.  Still, as Diameter services are
     vital for network operation it is important to use SLPv2
     authentication to prevent an attacker from modifying or
     eliminating service advertisements for legitimate Diameter
     servers.

  Template text:
  -------------------------template begins here-----------------------
  template-type=service:diameter

  template-version=0.0

  template-description=
    The Diameter protocol is defined by RFC 3588.

  template-url-syntax=
    url-path= ; The Diameter URL format is described in Section 2.9.
              ; Example: 'aaa://aaa.example.com:1812;transport=tcp
     supported-auth-applications= string L M
     # This attribute lists the Diameter applications supported by the
     # AAA implementation.  The applications currently defined are:
     #  Application Name     Defined by
     #  ----------------     -----------------------------------
     #  NASREQ               Diameter Network Access Server Application
     #  MobileIP             Diameter Mobile IP Application
     #
     # Notes:
     #   . Diameter implementations support one or more applications.
     #   . Additional applications may be defined in the future.
     #     An updated service template will be created at that time.



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     #
     NASREQ,MobileIP

     supported-acct-applications= string L M
     # This attribute lists the Diameter applications supported by the
     # AAA implementation.  The applications currently defined are:
     #  Application Name     Defined by
     #  ----------------     -----------------------------------
     #  NASREQ               Diameter Network Access Server Application
     #  MobileIP             Diameter Mobile IP Application
     #
     # Notes:
     #   . Diameter implementations support one or more applications.
     #   . Additional applications may be defined in the future.
     #     An updated service template will be created at that time.
     #
     NASREQ,MobileIP

     supported-transports= string L M
     SCTP
     # This attribute lists the supported transports that the Diameter
     # implementation accepts.  Note that a compliant Diameter
     # implementation MUST support SCTP, though it MAY support other
     # transports, too.
     SCTP,TCP

  -------------------------template ends here-----------------------

Appendix B.  NAPTR Example

  As an example, consider a client that wishes to resolve aaa:ex.com.
  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"  "AAA+D2S"           ""
     _diameter._sctp.example.com IN NAPTR 100  50  "s"  "AAA+D2T"
     ""  _aaa._tcp.example.com

  This indicates that the server supports SCTP, and TCP, in that order.
  If the client supports over SCTP, SCTP will be used, targeted to a
  host determined by an SRV lookup of _diameter._sctp.ex.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




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Appendix C.  Duplicate Detection

  As described in Section 9.4, accounting record duplicate detection is
  based on session identifiers.  Duplicates can appear for various
  reasons:

  -  Failover to an alternate server.  Where close to real-time
     performance is required, failover thresholds need to be kept low
     and this may lead to an increased likelihood of duplicates.
     Failover can occur at the client or within Diameter agents.

  -  Failure of a client or agent after sending of a record from non-
     volatile memory, but prior to receipt of an application layer ACK
     and deletion of the record. record to be sent.  This will result
     in retransmission of the record soon after the client or agent has
     rebooted.

  -  Duplicates received from RADIUS gateways.  Since the
     retransmission behavior of RADIUS is not defined within [RFC2865],
     the likelihood of duplication will vary according to the
     implementation.

  -  Implementation problems and misconfiguration.

  The T flag is used as an indication of an application layer
  retransmission event, e.g., due to failover to an alternate server.
  It is defined only for request messages sent by Diameter clients or
  agents.  For instance, after a reboot, a client may not know whether
  it has already tried to send the accounting records in its non-
  volatile memory before the reboot occurred.  Diameter servers MAY use
  the T flag as an aid when processing requests and detecting duplicate
  messages.  However, servers that do this MUST ensure that duplicates
  are found even when the first transmitted request arrives at the
  server after the retransmitted request.  It can be used only in cases
  where no answer has been received from the Server for a request and
  the request is sent again, (e.g., due to a failover to an alternate
  peer, due to a recovered primary peer or due to a client re-sending a
  stored record from non-volatile memory such as after reboot of a
  client or agent).

  In some cases the Diameter accounting server can delay the duplicate
  detection and accounting record processing until a post-processing
  phase takes place.  At that time records are likely to be sorted
  according to the included User-Name and duplicate elimination is easy
  in this case.  In other situations it may be necessary to perform
  real-time duplicate detection, such as when credit limits are imposed
  or real-time fraud detection is desired.




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  In general, only generation of duplicates due to failover or re-
  sending of records in non-volatile storage can be reliably detected
  by Diameter clients or agents.  In such cases the Diameter client or
  agents can mark the message as possible duplicate by setting the T
  flag.  Since the Diameter server is responsible for duplicate
  detection, it can choose to make use of the T flag or not, in order
  to optimize duplicate detection.  Since the T flag does not affect
  interoperability, and may not be needed by some servers, generation
  of the T flag is REQUIRED for Diameter clients and agents, but MAY be
  implemented by Diameter servers.

  As an example, it can be usually be assumed that duplicates appear
  within a time window of longest recorded network partition or device
  fault, perhaps a day.  So only records within this time window need
  to be looked at in the backward direction.  Secondly, hashing
  techniques or other schemes, such as the use of the T flag in the
  received messages, may be used to eliminate the need to do a full
  search even in this set except for rare cases.

  The following is an example of how the T flag may be used by the
  server to detect duplicate requests.

     A Diameter server MAY check the T flag of the received message to
     determine if the record is a possible duplicate.  If the T flag is
     set in the request message, the server searches for a duplicate
     within a configurable duplication time window backward and
     forward.  This limits database searching to those records where
     the T flag is set.  In a well run network, network partitions and
     device faults will presumably be rare events, so this approach
     represents a substantial optimization of the duplicate detection
     process.  During failover, it is possible for the original record
     to be received after the T flag marked record, due to differences
     in network delays experienced along the path by the original and
     duplicate transmissions.  The likelihood of this occurring
     increases as the failover interval is decreased.  In order to be
     able to detect out of order duplicates, the Diameter server should
     use backward and forward time windows when performing duplicate
     checking for the T flag marked request.  For example, in order to
     allow time for the original record to exit the network and be
     recorded by the accounting server, the Diameter server can delay
     processing records with the T flag set until a time period
     TIME_WAIT + RECORD_PROCESSING_TIME has elapsed after the closing
     of the original transport connection.  After this time period has
     expired, then it may check the T flag marked records against the
     database with relative assurance that the original records, if
     sent, have been received and recorded.





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Appendix D.  Intellectual Property Statement

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
  has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the
  IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
  standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.  Copies of
  claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
  licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
  obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
  proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can
  be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
  rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive
  Director.






























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Authors' Addresses

  Pat R. Calhoun
  Airespace, Inc.
  110 Nortech Parkway
  San Jose, California, 95134
  USA

  Phone:  +1 408-635-2023
  Fax:  +1 408-635-2020
  EMail:  [email protected]

  John Loughney
  Nokia Research Center
  Itamerenkatu 11-13
  00180 Helsinki
  Finland

  Phone:  +358 50 483 6242
  EMail:  [email protected]

  Jari Arkko
  Ericsson
  02420 Jorvas
  Finland

  Phone: +358 40 5079256
  EMail: [email protected]

  Erik Guttman
  Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  Eichhoelzelstr. 7
  74915 Waibstadt
  Germany

  Phone:  +49 7263 911 701
  EMail:  [email protected]

  Glen Zorn
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  500 108th Avenue N.E., Suite 500
  Bellevue, WA 98004
  USA

  Phone:  +1 425 438 8218






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Full Copyright Statement

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  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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Acknowledgement

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



















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