CORE M. Boucadair
Internet-Draft Orange
Intended status: Standards Track J. Shallow
Expires: March 27, 2021 September 23, 2020
Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) Block-Wise Transfer Options for
Faster Transmission
draft-ietf-core-new-block-01
Abstract
This document specifies alternate Constrained Application Protocol
(CoAP) Block-Wise transfer options: Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2
Options.
These options are similar to the CoAP Block1 and Block2 Options, not
a replacement for them, but do enable faster transmission rates for
large amounts of data with less packet interchanges as well as
supporting faster recovery should any of the blocks get lost in
transmission.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
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and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
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material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on March 27, 2021.
Copyright Notice
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document authors. All rights reserved.
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Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.1. Existing CoAP Block-Wise Transfer Options . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. Alternative CoAP Block-Wise Transfer Options . . . . . . 3
1.3. An Updated CoAP Response Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4. Applicability Scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. The Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.1. Properties of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options . . . 6
3.2. Structure of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options . . . 7
3.3. Using the Quick-Block1 Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.4. Using the Quick-Block2 Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.5. Working with Observe and Quick-Block2 Options . . . . . . 10
3.6. Working with Size1 and Size2 Options . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.7. Use of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options Together . . 11
4. The Use of 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code . . 11
5. The Use of Tokens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6. Congestion Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7. Caching Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8. HTTP-Mapping Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9. Examples of Selective Block Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9.1. Quick-Block1 Option: Non-Confirmable Example . . . . . . 15
9.2. Quick-Block2 Option: Non-Confirmable Example . . . . . . 16
10. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
10.1. New CoAP Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
10.2. New Content Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
11. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
12. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
13. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
13.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
13.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Appendix A. Examples with Confirmable Messages . . . . . . . . . 21
A.1. Quick-Block1 Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
A.2. Quick-Block2 Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
1. Introduction
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1.1. Existing CoAP Block-Wise Transfer Options
The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) [RFC7252], although
inspired by HTTP, was designed to use UDP instead of TCP. The
message layer of CoAP over UDP includes support for reliable
delivery, simple congestion control, and flow control. [RFC7959]
introduced the CoAP Block1 and Block2 Options to handle data records
that cannot fit in a single IP packet, so not having to rely on IP
fragmentation and further updated by [RFC8323] for use over TCP, TLS,
and Websockets.
The CoAP Block1 and Block2 Options work well in environments where
there are no or minimal packet losses. These options operate
synchronously where each block has to be requested and can only ask
for (or send) the next block when the request for the previous block
has completed. Packet, and hence block transmission rate, is
controlled by Round Trip Times (RTTs).
There is a requirement for these blocks of data to be transmitted at
higher rates under network conditions where there may be asymmetrical
transient packet loss. An example is when a network is subject to a
Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack and there is a need for
DDoS mitigation agents relying upon CoAP to communicate with each
other (e.g., [I-D.ietf-dots-telemetry]). As a reminder, [RFC7959]
recommends use of Confirmable (CON) responses to handle potential
packet loss; which does not work with a flooded pipe DDoS situation.
1.2. Alternative CoAP Block-Wise Transfer Options
This document introduces the CoAP Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2
Options. These options are similar in operation to the CoAP Block1
and Block2 Options respectively, they are not a replacement for them,
but have the following benefits:
o They can operate in environments where packet loss is highly
asymmetrical.
o They enable faster transmissions of sets of blocks of data with
less packet interchanges.
o They support faster recovery should any of the Blocks get lost in
transmission.
There are the following disadvantages over using CoAP Block 1 and
Block2 Options:
o Loss of lock-stepping so payloads are not always received in the
correct (block ascending) order.
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o Additional congestion control measures need to be put in place.
Using Non-confirmable (NON) messages, the faster transmissions occur
as all the Blocks can be transmitted serially (as are IP fragmented
packets) without having to wait for an acknowledgement or next
request from the remote CoAP peer. Recovery of missing Blocks is
faster in that multiple missing Blocks can be requested in a single
CoAP packet. Even if there is asymmetrical packet loss, a body can
still be sent and received by the peer whether the body compromises
of a single or multiple payloads assuming no recovery is required.
Note that the same performance benefits can be applied to Confirmable
messages if the value of NSTART is increased from 1 (Section 4.7 of
[RFC7252]). However, the asymmetrical packet loss is not a benefit
here. Some sample examples with Confirmable messages are provided in
Appendix A.
There is little, if any, benefit of using these options with CoAP
running over a reliable connection [RFC8323]. In this case, there is
no differentiation between Confirmable and NON as they are not used.
A CoAP endpoint can acknowledge all or a subset of the blocks.
Concretely, the receiving CoAP endpoint informs the CoAP endpoint
sender either successful receipt or reports on all blocks in the body
that have been not yet been received. The CoAP endpoint sender will
then retransmit only the blocks that have been lost in transmission.
Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options can be used instead of Block1
and Block2 Options respectively when the different transmission
semantics are required. If the option is not supported by a peer,
then transmissions can fall back to using Block1 and Block2
respectively.
The deviations from Block1 and Block2 Options are specified in
Section 3. Pointers to appropriate [RFC7959] sections are provided.
The specification refers to the base CoAP methods defined in
Section 5.8 of [RFC7252] and the new CoAP methods, FETCH, PATCH, and
iPATCH introduced in [RFC8132].
1.3. An Updated CoAP Response Code
This document updates the 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) by
defining an additional message format for reporting on payloads using
the Quick-Block1 Option that are not received by the server.
See Section 4 for more details.
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1.4. Applicability Scope
The block-wise transfer specified in [RFC7959] covers the general
case, but falls short in situations where packet loss is highly
asymmetrical. The mechanism specified in the document provides
roughly similar features to the Block1/Block2 Options. It provides
additional properties that are tailored towards the intended use
case. Concretely, this mechanism primarily targets applications such
as DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) that can't use Confirmable (CON)
responses to handle potential packet loss and that support
application-specific mechanisms to assess whether the remote peer is
able to handle the messages sent by a CoAP endpoint (e.g., DOTS
heartbeats in Section 4.7 of [RFC8782]).
The mechanism includes guards to prevent a CoAP agent from
overloading the network by adopting an aggressive sending rate.
These guards MUST be followed in addition to the existing CoAP
congestion control as specified in Section 4.7 of [RFC7252]. See
Section 6 for more details.
This mechanism is not intended for general CoAP usage, and any use
outside the intended use case should be carefully weighed against the
loss of interoperability with generic CoAP applications. It is hoped
that the experience gained with this mechanism can feed future
extensions of the block-wise mechanism that will both generally
applicable and serve this particular use case.
2. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP
14 [RFC2119][RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
Readers should be familiar with the terms and concepts defined in
[RFC7252].
The terms "payload" and "body" are defined in [RFC7959]. The term
"payload" is thus used for the content of a single CoAP message
(i.e., a single block being transferred), while the term "body" is
used for the entire resource representation that is being transferred
in a block-wise fashion.
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3. The Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options
3.1. Properties of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options
The properties of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options are shown in
Table 1. The formatting of this table follows the one used in
Table 4 of [RFC7252] (Section 5.10). The C, U, N, and R columns
indicate the properties Critical, Unsafe, NoCacheKey, and Repeatable
defined in Section 5.4 of [RFC7252]. Only C and U columns are marked
for the Quick-Block1 Option. C, U, and R columns are marked for the
Quick-Block2 Option.
+--------+---+---+---+---+--------------+--------+--------+---------+
| Number | C | U | N | R | Name | Format | Length | Default |
+========+===+===+===+===+==============+========+========+=========+
| TBA1 | x | x | | | Quick-Block1 | uint | 0-3 | (none) |
| TBA2 | x | x | | x | Quick-Block2 | uint | 0-3 | (none) |
+--------+---+---+---+---+--------------+--------+--------+---------+
Table 1: CoAP Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Option Properties
The Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options can be present in both the
request and response messages. The Quick-Block1 Option pertains to
the request payload and the Quick-Block2 Option pertains to the
response payload. The Content-Format Option applies to the body, not
to the payload (i.e., it must be the same for all payloads of the
same body).
Quick-Block1 Option is useful with the payload-bearing POST, PUT,
PATCH, and iPATCH requests and their responses (2.01 and 2.04).
Quick-Block2 Option is useful with GET, POST, PUT, FETCH, PATCH, and
iPATCH requests and their payload-bearing responses (2.01, 2.03,
2.04, and 2.05) (Section 5.5 of [RFC7252]).
To indicate support for Quick-Block2 responses, the CoAP client MUST
include the Quick-Block2 Option in a GET or similar request, or the
Quick-Block2 Option in a PUT or similar request, so that the server
knows that the client supports this Quick-Block2 functionality should
it needs to send back a body that spans multiple payloads.
Otherwise, the server would use the Block2 Option (if supported) to
send back a message body that is too large to fit into a single IP
packet [RFC7959].
If Quick-Block1 Option is present in a request or Quick-Block2 Option
in a response (i.e., in that message to the payload of which it
pertains), it indicates a block-wise transfer and describes how this
specific block-wise payload forms part of the entire body being
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transferred. If it is present in the opposite direction, it provides
additional control on how that payload will be formed or was
processed.
Implementation of the Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options is
intended to be optional. However, when it is present in a CoAP
message, it MUST be processed (or the message rejected). Therefore,
Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options are identified as Critical
options.
The Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options are unsafe to forward.
That is, a CoAP proxy that does not understand the Quick-Block1 (or
Quick-Block2) Option MUST reject the request or response that uses
either option.
The Quick-Block2 Option is repeatable when requesting re-transmission
of missing Blocks, but not otherwise. Except that case, any request
carrying multiple Quick-Block1 (or Quick-Block2) Options MUST be
handled following the procedure specified in Section 5.4.5 of
[RFC7252].
The Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options, like the Block1 and Block2
Options, are both a class E and a class U in terms of OSCORE
processing (see Section 4.1 of [RFC8613]): The Quick-Block1 (or
Quick-Block2) Option MAY be an Inner or Outer option. The Inner and
Outer values are therefore independent of each other. The Inner
option is encrypted and integrity protected between clients and
servers, and provides message body identification in case of end-to-
end fragmentation of requests. The Outer option is visible to
proxies and labels message bodies in case of hop-by-hop fragmentation
of requests.
3.2. Structure of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options
The structure of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options follows the
structure defined in Section 2.2 of [RFC7959].
There is no default value for the Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2
Options. Absence of one of these options is equivalent to an option
value of 0 with respect to the value of block number (NUM) and more
bit (M) that could be given in the option, i.e., it indicates that
the current block is the first and only block of the transfer (block
number is set to 0, M is unset). However, in contrast to the
explicit value 0, which would indicate a size of the block (SZX) of
0, and thus a size value of 16 bytes, there is no specific explicit
size implied by the absence of the option -- the size is left
unspecified. (As for any uint, the explicit value 0 is efficiently
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indicated by a zero-length option; this, therefore, is different in
semantics from the absence of the option).
3.3. Using the Quick-Block1 Option
The Quick-Block1 Option is used when the client wants to send a large
amount of data to the server using the POST, PUT, PATCH, or iPATCH
methods where the data and headers do not fit into a single packet.
When Quick-Block1 Option is used, the client MUST include a single
Request-Tag Option [I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag]. The Request-Tag
value MUST be the same for all of the blocks in the body of data that
is being transferred. It is also used to identify a particular block
of a body that needs to be re-transmitted. The Request-Tag is opaque
in nature, but it is RECOMMENDED that the client treats it as an
unsigned integer of 8 bytes in length. An implementation may want to
consider limiting this to 4 bytes to reduce packet overhead size.
The server still treats it as an opaque entity. The Request-Tag
value MUST be different for distinct bodies or sets of blocks of data
and SHOULD be incremented whenever a new body of data is being
transmitted for a CoAP session between peers. The initial Request-
Tag value SHOULD be randomly generated by the client.
For Confirmable transmission, the server MUST continue to acknowledge
each packet. NSTART will also need to be increased from the default
(1) to get faster transmission rates.
Each individual payload of the body is treated as a new request.
A 2.01 (Created) or 2.04 (Changed) Response Code indicates successful
receipt of the entire body. The 2.31 (Continue) Response Code MUST
NOT be used.
The 2.31 (Continue) Response is not used.
A 4.00 (Bad Request) Response Code MUST be returned if the request
does not include a Request-Tag Option but does include a Quick-Block1
option.
A 4.02 (Bad Option) Response Code MUST be returned if the server does
not support the Quick-Block1 Option.
A 4.13 (Request Entity Too Large) Response Code can be returned under
similar conditions to those discussed in Section 2.9.3 of [RFC7959].
A 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code returned without
Content-Type "application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq" (Section 10.2) is
handled as in Section 2.9.2 [RFC7959].
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A 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code returned with
Content-Type "application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq" indicates that
some of the payloads are missing and need to be resent. The client
then re-transmits the missing payloads using the Request-Tag and
Quick-Block1 to specify the block number, SZX, and M bit as
appropriate. The Request-Tag value to use is determined from the
payload of the 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code. If
the client does not recognize the Request-Tag, the client can ignore
this response.
If the server has not received all the payloads of a body, but one or
more payloads have been received, it SHOULD wait for up to
MAX_TRANSMIT_SPAN (Section 4.8.2 of [RFC7252]) before sending the
4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code. However, this time
MAY be reduced to two times ACK_TIMEOUT before sending a 4.08
(Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code to cover the situation
where MAX_PAYLOADS has been triggered by the client causing a break
in transmission.
If the client transmits a new body of data with a new Request-Tag to
the same resource on a server, the server MUST remove any partially
received body held for a previous Request-Tag for that resource.
If the server receives a duplicate block with the same Request-Tag,
it SHOULD silently ignore the packet.
A server SHOULD only maintain a partial body (missing payloads) for
up to EXCHANGE_LIFETIME (Section 4.8.2 of [RFC7252]).
3.4. Using the Quick-Block2 Option
In a request, for block number 0, the M bit unset indicates the
entire body is requested. If the M bit is set for block number 0,
this indicates that this is a repeat request. Otherwise for a
request, the Quick-Block2 Option MUST always have the M bit unset.
The payloads sent back from the server as a response MUST all have
the same ETag (Section 5.10.6 of [RFC7252]) for the same body. The
server MUST NOT use the same ETag value for different representations
of a resource.
The ETag is opaque in nature, but it is RECOMMENDED that the server
treats it as an unsigned integer of 8 bytes in length. An
implementation may want to consider limiting this to 4 bytes to
reduce packet overhead size. The client still treats it as an opaque
entity. The ETag value MUST be different for distinct bodies or sets
of blocks of data and SHOULD be incremented whenever a new body of
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data is being transmitted for a CoAP session between peers. The
initial ETag value SHOULD be randomly generated by the server.
If the client detects that some of the payloads are missing, the
missing payloads are requested by issuing a new GET, POST, PUT,
FETCH, PATCH, or iPATCH request that contains one or more Quick-
Block2 Options that define the missing blocks.
The ETag Option MUST NOT be used in the request as the server could
respond with a 2.03 (Valid Response) with no payload. If the server
responds with a different ETag Option value (as the resource
representation has changed), then the client SHOULD drop all the
payloads for the current body that are no longer valid.
The client may elect to request the missing blocks or just ignore the
partial body. It SHOULD wait for up to MAX_TRANSMIT_SPAN
(Section 4.8.2 of [RFC7252]) before issuing a GET, POST, PUT, FETCH,
PATCH, or iPATCH request for the missing blocks. However, this time
MAY be reduced to two times ACK_TIMEOUT before sending the request to
cover the situation where MAX_PAYLOADS has been triggered by the
server causing a break in transmission.
With NON transmission, the client only needs to indicate that some of
the payloads are missing by issuing a GET, POST, PUT, FETCH, PATCH,
or iPATCH request for the missing blocks.
For Confirmable transmission, the client SHOULD continue to
acknowledge each packet as well as issuing a separate GET, POST, PUT,
FETCH, PATCH, or iPATCH for the missing blocks.
If the server transmits a new body of data (e.g., a triggered
Observe) with a new ETag to the same client as an additional
response, the client MUST remove any partially received body held for
a previous ETag.
If the client receives a duplicate block with the same ETag, it
SHOULD silently ignore the packet.
A client SHOULD only maintain a partial body (missing payloads) for
up to EXCHANGE_LIFETIME (Section 4.8.2 of [RFC7252]) or as defined by
the Max-Age Option whichever is the less.
3.5. Working with Observe and Quick-Block2 Options
As the blocks of the body are sent without waiting for
acknowledgement of the individual blocks, the Observe value [RFC7641]
MUST be the same for all the blocks of the same body.
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If the client requests missing blocks, this is treated as a new
request. The Observe value may change but MUST still be reported.
If the ETag value changes then the previously received partial body
should be destroyed and the whole body re-requested.
3.6. Working with Size1 and Size2 Options
Section 4 of [RFC7959] defines two CoAP options: Size1 for indicating
the size of the representation transferred in requests and Size2 for
indicating the size of the representation transferred in responses.
The Size1 or Size2 option values MUST exactly represent the size of
the data on the body so that any missing data can easily be
determined.
The Size1 Option MUST be used with the Quick-Block1 Option when used
in a request. The Size2 Option MUST be used with the Quick-Block2
Option when used in a response.
If Size1 or Size2 Options are used, they MUST be used in all payloads
of the body and MUST have the same value.
3.7. Use of Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options Together
The behavior is similar to the one defined in Section 3.3 of
[RFC7959] with Quick-Block1 substituted for Block1 and Quick-Block2
for Block2.
4. The Use of 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code
4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code has a new Content-Type
"application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq" used to indicate that the
server has not received all of the blocks of the request body that it
needs to proceed.
Likely causes are the client has not sent all blocks, some blocks
were dropped during transmission, or the client has sent them
sufficiently long ago that the server has already discarded them.
The data payload of the 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response
Code is encoded as a CBOR Sequence [RFC8742]. First is CBOR encoded
Request-Tag followed by 1 or more missing CBOR encoded missing block
numbers. The missing block numbers MUST be unique in each 4.08
(Request Entity Incomplete) when created by the server; the client
SHOULD drop any duplicates in the same 4.08 (Request Entity
Incomplete) message.
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The Content-Format Option (Section 5.10.3 of [RFC7252]) MUST be used
in the 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Code. It MUST be
set to "application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq" (see Section 10.2).
The Concise Data Definition Language [RFC8610] for the data
describing these missing blocks is as follows:
payload = {request-tag, missing-block-list}
; A copy of the opaque Request-Tag value
request-tag = bstr
missing-block-list = [1 * missing-block-number]
; A unique block number not received
missing-block-number = uint
Figure 1: Structure of the Missing Blocks Payload
If the size of the 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) response packet
is larger than that defined by Section 4.6 [RFC7252], then the number
of missing blocks MUST be limited so that the response can fit into a
single packet. If this is the case, then the server can send
subsequent 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) responses containing the
missing blocks on receipt of a new request providing a missing
payload with the same Request-Tag.
5. The Use of Tokens
Each new request MUST use a unique Token (Section 4 of
[I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag]). Additional responses may use the
same Token.
6. Congestion Control
PROBING_RATE parameter in CoAP indicates the average data rate that
must not be exceeded by a CoAP endpoint in sending to a peer endpoint
that does not respond. The body of blocks will be subjected to
PROBING_RATE (Section 4.7 of [RFC7252]).
Each NON 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete) Response Codes is subjected
to PROBING_RATE.
Each NON GET or similar request using Quick-Block2 Option is
subjected to PROBING_RATE.
As the sending of many payloads of a single body may itself cause
congestion, it is RECOMMENDED that after transmission of every set of
MAX_PAYLOADS payloads of a single body, a delay is introduced of
ACK_TIMEOUT (Section 4.8.2 of [RFC7252]) before the next set of
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payload transmissions to manage potential congestion issues.
MAX_PAYLOADS should be configurable with a default value of 10.
Note: The default value is chosen for reasons similar to those
discussed in Section 5 of [RFC6928].
For NON transmissions, it is permissible, but not required, to send
the ultimate payload of a MAX_PAYLOADS set as a Confirmable packet.
If a Confirmable packet is used, then the transmitting peer MUST wait
for the ACK to be returned before sending the next set of payloads,
which can be in time terms less than the ACK_TIMEOUT delay.
Also, for NON transmissions, it is permissible, but not required, to
send a Confirmable packet for the final payload of a body (that is, M
bit unset). If a Confirmable packet is used, then the transmitting
peer MUST wait for the appropriate response to be returned for
successful transmission, or respond to requests for the missing
blocks (if any).
The sending of the set of missing blocks is subject to MAX_PAYLOADS.
7. Caching Considerations
Caching block based information is not straight forward in a proxy.
For Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options, it is expected that the
proxy will reassemble the body (using any appropriate recovery
options for packet loss) before passing on the body to the
appropriate CoAP endpoint. The onward transmission of the body does
not require the use of the Quick-Block1 or Quick-Block2 Options.
This means that the proxy must fully support the Quick-Block1 and
Quick-Block2 Options.
How the body is cached in the initial CoAP client (Quick-Block1) or
ultimate CoAP server (Quick-Block2) is implementation specific.
As the entire body is being cached in the proxy, the Quick-Block1 and
Quick-Block2 Options are not part of the cache key.
For Quick-Block2 responses, the ETag Option value is associated with
the data (and onward transmitted to the CoAP client), but is not part
of the cache key.
For requests with Quick-Block1 Option, the Request-Tag Option is
associated with the build up of the body from successive payloads,
but is not part of the cache key. For the onward transmission of the
body using CoAP, a new Request-Tag SHOULD be generated and used.
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It is possible that two or more CoAP clients are concurrently
updating the same resource through a common proxy to the same CoAP
server using Quick-Block1 (or Block1) Option. If this is the case,
the first client to complete building the body causes that body to
start transmitting to the CoAP server with an appropriate Request-Tag
value. When the next client completes building the body, any
existing partial body transmission to the CoAP server is terminated
and the new body representation transmission starts with a new
Request-Tag value.
A proxy that supports Quick-Block2 Option MUST be prepared to receive
a GET or similar message indicating one or more missing blocks. The
proxy will serve from its cache the missing blocks that are available
in its cache in the same way a server would send all the appropriate
Quick-Block2s. If the cache key matching body is not available in
the cache, the proxy MUST request the entire body from the CoAP
server using the information in the cache key.
How long a CoAP endpoint (or proxy) keeps the body in its cache is
implementation specific (e.g., it may be based on Max-Age).
8. HTTP-Mapping Considerations
As a reminder, the basic normative requirements on HTTP/CoAP mappings
are defined in Section 10 of [RFC7252]. The implementation
guidelines for HTTP/CoAP mappings are elaborated in [RFC8075].
The rules defined in Section 5 of [RFC7959] are to be followed.
9. Examples of Selective Block Recovery
This section provides some sample flows to illustrate the use of
Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Options. Figure 2 lists the
conventions that are used in the following subsections.
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T: Token value
O: Observe Option value
M: Message ID
RT: Request-Tag
ET: ETag
QB1: Quick-Block1 Option values NUM/More/SZX
QB2: Quick-Block2 Option values NUM/More/SZX
\: Trimming long lines
[[]]: Comments
-->X: Message loss
X<--: Message loss
Figure 2: Notations Used in the Figures
9.1. Quick-Block1 Option: Non-Confirmable Example
Figure 3 depicts an example of a NON PUT request conveying Quick-
Block1 Option. All the blocks are received by the server.
CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x01 T:0xf0 RT=10 QB1:0/1/1024
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x02 T:0xf1 RT=10 QB1:1/1/1024
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x03 T:0xf2 RT=10 QB1:2/1/1024
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x04 T:0xf3 RT=10 QB1:3/0/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.04 M:0xf1 T:0xf3
...
Figure 3: Example of NON Request with Quick-Block1 Option (Without
Loss)
Consider now a scenario where a new body of data is to be sent by the
client, but some blocks are dropped in transmission as illustrated in
Figure 4.
CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x05 T:0xe0 RT=11 QB1:0/1/1024
+--->X | NON PUT /path M:0x06 T:0xe1 RT=11 QB1:1/1/1024
+--->X | NON PUT /path M:0x07 T:0xe2 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x08 T:0xe3 RT=11 QB1:3/0/1024
| |
...
Figure 4: Example of NON Request with Quick-Block1 Option (With Loss)
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The server realizes that some blocks are missing and asks for the
missing ones in one go (Figure 5). It does so by indicating which
blocks have been received in the data portion of the response.
CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
...
|<---------+ NON 4.08 M:0xf2 T:0xe3 [Missing 1,2 for RT=11]
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x09 T:0xe4 RT=11 QB1:1/1/1024
+--->X | NON PUT /path M:0x0a T:0xe5 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
| |
|<---------+ NON 4.08 M:0xf3 T:0xe4 [Missing 2 for RT=11]
+--------->| NON PUT /path M:0x0b T:0xe6 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.04 M:0xf4 T:0xe6
| |
...
Figure 5: Example of NON Request with Quick-Block1 Option (Blocks
Recovery)
Under high levels of traffic loss, the client can elect not to retry
sending missing blocks of data. This decision is implementation
specific.
9.2. Quick-Block2 Option: Non-Confirmable Example
Figure 6 illustrates the example of Quick-Block2 Option. The client
sends a NON GET carrying an Observe and a Quick-Block2 Options. The
Quick-Block2 Option indicates a size hint (1024 bytes). This request
is replied by the server using four (4) blocks that are transmitted
to the client without any loss. Each of these blocks carries a
Quick-Block2 Option. The same process is repeated when an Observe is
triggered, but no loss is experienced by any of the notification
blocks.
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CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
+--------->| NON GET /path M:0x01 T:0xf0 O:0 QB2:0/0/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf1 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:0/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf2 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:1/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf3 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf4 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:3/0/1024
...
[[Observe triggered]]
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf5 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:0/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf6 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:1/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf7 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf8 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:3/0/1024
...
Figure 6: Example of NON Notifications with Quick-Block2 Option
(Without Loss)
Figure 7 shows the example of an Observe that is triggered but for
which some notification blocks are lost. The client detects the
missing blocks and request their retransmission. It does so by
indicating the blocks that were successfully received.
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CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
...
[[Observe triggered]]
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xf9 T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:0/1/1024
| X<---+ NON 2.05 M:0xfa T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:1/1/1024
| X<---+ NON 2.05 M:0xfb T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xfc T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:3/0/1024
| |
[[Client realizes blocks are missing and asks for the missing
ones in one go]]
+--------->| NON GET /path M:0x02 T:0xf1 QB2:1/0/1024\
| | QB2:2/0/1024
| X<---+ NON 2.05 M:0xfd T:0xf1 ET=23 QB2:1/1/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xfe T:0xf1 ET=23 QB2:2/1/1024
| |
[[Get the final missing block]]
+--------->| NON GET /path M:0x03 T:0xf2 QB2:1/0/1024
|<---------+ NON 2.05 M:0xff T:0xf2 ET=23 QB2:1/1/1024
...
Figure 7: Example of NON Notifications with Quick-Block2 Option
(Blocks Recovery)
Under high levels of traffic loss, the client can elect not to retry
getting missing blocks of data. This decision is implementation
specific.
10. IANA Considerations
10.1. New CoAP Options
IANA is requested to add the following entries to the "CoAP Option
Numbers" sub-registry [Options]:
+--------+------------------+-----------+
| Number | Name | Reference |
+========+==================+===========+
| TBA1 | Quick-Block1 | [RFCXXXX] |
| TBA2 | Quick-Block2 | [RFCXXXX] |
+--------+------------------+-----------+
Table 2: CoAP Quick-Block1 and Quick-Block2 Option Numbers
This document suggests 19 (TBA1) and 51 (TBA2) as a values to be
assigned for the new option numbers.
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10.2. New Content Format
This document requests IANA to register the CoAP Content-Format ID
for the "application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq" media type in the "CoAP
Content-Formats" registry [Format]:
o Media Type: application/missing-blocks+cbor-seq
o Encoding: -
o Id: TBD3
o Reference: [RFCXXXX]
11. Security Considerations
Security considerations discussed in Section 9 of [RFC7959] should be
taken into account.
Security considerations related to the use of Request-Tag are
discussed in Section 5 of [I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag].
12. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Achim Kraus and Jim Schaad for the comments on the mailing
list.
Special thanks to Christian Amsuess and Carsten Bormann for their
suggestions and several reviews, which improved this specification
significantly.
Some text from [RFC7959] is reused for readers convenience.
13. References
13.1. Normative References
[I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag]
Amsuess, C., Mattsson, J., and G. Selander, "CoAP: Echo,
Request-Tag, and Token Processing", draft-ietf-core-echo-
request-tag-10 (work in progress), July 2020.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC7252] Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained
Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7252,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.
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[RFC7641] Hartke, K., "Observing Resources in the Constrained
Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7641,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7641, September 2015,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7641>.
[RFC7959] Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby, Ed., "Block-Wise Transfers in
the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7959,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7959, August 2016,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7959>.
[RFC8075] Castellani, A., Loreto, S., Rahman, A., Fossati, T., and
E. Dijk, "Guidelines for Mapping Implementations: HTTP to
the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 8075,
DOI 10.17487/RFC8075, February 2017,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8075>.
[RFC8132] van der Stok, P., Bormann, C., and A. Sehgal, "PATCH and
FETCH Methods for the Constrained Application Protocol
(CoAP)", RFC 8132, DOI 10.17487/RFC8132, April 2017,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8132>.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[RFC8323] Bormann, C., Lemay, S., Tschofenig, H., Hartke, K.,
Silverajan, B., and B. Raymor, Ed., "CoAP (Constrained
Application Protocol) over TCP, TLS, and WebSockets",
RFC 8323, DOI 10.17487/RFC8323, February 2018,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8323>.
[RFC8613] Selander, G., Mattsson, J., Palombini, F., and L. Seitz,
"Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments
(OSCORE)", RFC 8613, DOI 10.17487/RFC8613, July 2019,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8613>.
[RFC8742] Bormann, C., "Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)
Sequences", RFC 8742, DOI 10.17487/RFC8742, February 2020,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8742>.
13.2. Informative References
[Format] , <https://www.iana.org/assignments/core-parameters/core-
parameters.xhtml#content-formats>.
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[I-D.ietf-dots-telemetry]
Boucadair, M., Reddy.K, T., Doron, E., chenmeiling, c.,
and J. Shallow, "Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
Signaling (DOTS) Telemetry", draft-ietf-dots-telemetry-11
(work in progress), July 2020.
[Options] , <https://www.iana.org/assignments/core-parameters/core-
parameters.xhtml#option-numbers>.
[RFC6928] Chu, J., Dukkipati, N., Cheng, Y., and M. Mathis,
"Increasing TCP's Initial Window", RFC 6928,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6928, April 2013,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6928>.
[RFC8610] Birkholz, H., Vigano, C., and C. Bormann, "Concise Data
Definition Language (CDDL): A Notational Convention to
Express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) and
JSON Data Structures", RFC 8610, DOI 10.17487/RFC8610,
June 2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8610>.
[RFC8782] Reddy.K, T., Ed., Boucadair, M., Ed., Patil, P.,
Mortensen, A., and N. Teague, "Distributed Denial-of-
Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel
Specification", RFC 8782, DOI 10.17487/RFC8782, May 2020,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8782>.
Appendix A. Examples with Confirmable Messages
These examples assume NSTART has been increased to at least 4.
The notations provided in Figure 2 are used in the following
subsections.
A.1. Quick-Block1 Option
Let's now consider the use Quick-Block1 Option with a CON request as
shown in Figure 8. All the blocks are acknowledged (ACK).
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CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x01 T:0xf0 RT=10 QB1:0/1/1024
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x02 T:0xf1 RT=10 QB1:1/1/1024
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x03 T:0xf2 RT=10 QB1:2/1/1024
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x04 T:0xf3 RT=10 QB1:3/0/1024
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x01
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x02
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x03
|<---------+ ACK 2.04 M:0x04
Figure 8: Example of CON Request with Quick-Block1 Option (Without
Loss)
Now, suppose that a new body of data is to sent but with some blocks
dropped in transmission as illustrated in Figure 9. The client will
retry sending blocks for which no ACK was received.
CoAP CoAP
Client Server
| |
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x05 T:0xf4 RT=11 QB1:0/1/1024
+--->X | CON PUT /path M:0x06 T:0xf5 RT=11 QB1:1/1/1024
+--->X | CON PUT /path M:0x07 T:0xf6 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x08 T:0xf7 RT=11 QB1:3/1/1024
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x05
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x08
| |
[[The client retries sending packets not acknowledged]]
+--------->| CON PUT /path M:0x06 T:0xf5 RT=11 QB1:1/1/1024
+--->X | CON PUT /path M:0x07 T:0xf6 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
|<---------+ ACK 0.00 M:0x06
| |
[[The client retransmits messages not acknowledged
(exponential backoff)]]
+--->? | CON PUT /path M:0x07 T:0xf6 RT=11 QB1:2/1/1024
| |
[[Either transmission failure (acknowledge retry timeout)
or successfully transmitted.]]
Figure 9: Example of CON Request with Quick-Block1 Option (Blocks
Recovery)
It is implementation dependent as to whether a CoAP session is
terminated following acknowledge retry timeout, or whether the CoAP
session continues to be used under such adverse traffic conditions.
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If there is likely to be the possibility of network transient losses,
then the use of Non-confirmable traffic should be considered.
A.2. Quick-Block2 Option
An example of the use of Quick-Block2 Option with Confirmable
messages is shown in Figure 10.
Client Server
| |
+--------->| CON GET /path M:0x01 T:0xf0 O:0 QB2:0/0/1024
|<---------+ ACK 2.05 M:0x01 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:0/1/1024
|<---------+ ACK 2.05 M:0xe1 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:1/1/1024
|<---------+ ACK 2.05 M:0xe2 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ ACK 2.05 M:0xe3 T:0xf0 O:1234 ET=21 QB2:3/0/1024
...
[[Observe triggered]]
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe4 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:0/1/1024
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe5 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:1/1/1024
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe6 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe7 T:0xf0 O:1235 ET=22 QB2:3/0/1024
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe4
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe5
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe6
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe7
...
[[Observe triggered]]
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe8 T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:0/1/1024
| X<---+ CON 2.05 M:0xe9 T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:1/1/1024
| X<---+ CON 2.05 M:0xea T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:2/1/1024
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xeb T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:3/0/1024
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe8
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xeb
| |
[[Server retransmits messages not acknowledged]]
|<---------+ CON 2.05 M:0xe9 T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:1/1/1024
| X<---+ CON 2.05 M:0xea T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:2/1/1024
|--------->+ ACK 0.00 M:0xe9
| |
[[Server retransmits messages not acknowledged
(exponential backoff)]]
| X<---+ CON 2.05 M:0xea T:0xf0 O:1236 ET=23 QB2:2/1/1024
| |
[[Either transmission failure (acknowledge retry timeout)
or successfully transmitted.]]
Figure 10: Example of CON Notifications with Quick-Block2 Option
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It is implementation-dependent as to whether a CoAP session is
terminated following acknowledge retry timeout, or whether the CoAP
session continues to be used under such adverse traffic conditions.
If there is likely to be the possibility of network transient losses,
then the use of Non-confirmable traffic should be considered.
Authors' Addresses
Mohamed Boucadair
Orange
Rennes 35000
France
Email: mohamed.boucadair@orange.com
Jon Shallow
United Kingdom
Email: supjps-ietf@jpshallow.com
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