Network Working Group                                     P. Saint-Andre
Internet-Draft                                                     Cisco
Obsoletes: 3920 (if approved)                            August 24, 2010
Intended status: Standards Track
Expires: February 25, 2011


        Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP): Core
                       draft-ietf-xmpp-3920bis-13

Abstract

   The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is an
   application profile of the Extensible Markup Language (XML) that
   enables the near-real-time exchange of structured yet extensible data
   between any two or more network entities.  This document defines
   XMPP's core protocol methods: setup and teardown of XML streams,
   channel encryption, authentication, error handling, and communication
   primitives for messaging, network availability ("presence"), and
   request-response interactions.

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
   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute
   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-
   Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

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   and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

   This Internet-Draft will expire on February 25, 2011.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect



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   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
   described in the Simplified BSD License.


Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     1.1.   Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     1.2.   History  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     1.3.   Functional Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     1.4.   Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     1.5.   Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     1.6.   Discussion Venue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   2.  Architecture  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     2.1.   Global Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     2.2.   Presence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     2.3.   Persistent Streams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     2.4.   Structured Data  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     2.5.   Distributed Network of Clients and Servers . . . . . . .  14
   3.  TCP Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
     3.1.   Scope  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
     3.2.   Hostname Resolution  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
       3.2.1.   Preferred Process: SRV Lookup  . . . . . . . . . . .  16
       3.2.2.   Fallback Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
       3.2.3.   When Not to Use SRV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
       3.2.4.   Use of SRV Records with Add-On Services  . . . . . .  18
     3.3.   Reconnection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
     3.4.   Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   4.  XML Streams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     4.1.   Streams Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     4.2.   Stream Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
       4.2.1.   Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
       4.2.2.   Stream Features Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
       4.2.3.   Restarts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
       4.2.4.   Resending Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
       4.2.5.   Completion of Stream Negotiation . . . . . . . . . .  25
       4.2.6.   Determination of Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
       4.2.7.   Flow Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
     4.3.   Directionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
     4.4.   Closing a Stream . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
     4.5.   Handling of Silent Peers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
       4.5.1.   Dead Connection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  30
       4.5.2.   Broken Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  30
       4.5.3.   Idle Peer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  31
       4.5.4.   Use of Checking Methods  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  31
     4.6.   Stream Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  31



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       4.6.1.   from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  32
       4.6.2.   to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  33
       4.6.3.   id . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  35
       4.6.4.   xml:lang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  35
       4.6.5.   version  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  37
       4.6.6.   Summary of Stream Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . .  38
     4.7.   Namespaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  39
       4.7.1.   Streams Namespace  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  39
       4.7.2.   Default Namespace  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  39
       4.7.3.   Other Namespaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  40
       4.7.4.   Namespace Declarations and Prefixes  . . . . . . . .  40
       4.7.5.   Mandatory-to-Implement Default Namespaces  . . . . .  41
     4.8.   Stream Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  42
       4.8.1.   Rules  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  42
         4.8.1.1.  Stream Errors Are Unrecoverable . . . . . . . . .  42
         4.8.1.2.  Stream Errors Can Occur During Setup  . . . . . .  43
         4.8.1.3.  Stream Errors When the Host is Unspecified or
                   Unknown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  43
         4.8.1.4.  Where Stream Errors Are Sent  . . . . . . . . . .  44
       4.8.2.   Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  44
       4.8.3.   Defined Stream Error Conditions  . . . . . . . . . .  45
         4.8.3.1.  bad-format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  45
         4.8.3.2.  bad-namespace-prefix  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  46
         4.8.3.3.  conflict  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  47
         4.8.3.4.  connection-timeout  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  47
         4.8.3.5.  host-gone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  48
         4.8.3.6.  host-unknown  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  48
         4.8.3.7.  improper-addressing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  49
         4.8.3.8.  internal-server-error . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  50
         4.8.3.9.  invalid-from  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  50
         4.8.3.10. invalid-namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  50
         4.8.3.11. invalid-xml . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  51
         4.8.3.12. not-authorized  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  52
         4.8.3.13. policy-violation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  52
         4.8.3.14. remote-connection-failed  . . . . . . . . . . . .  53
         4.8.3.15. reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  53
         4.8.3.16. resource-constraint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  54
         4.8.3.17. restricted-xml  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  54
         4.8.3.18. see-other-host  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  55
         4.8.3.19. system-shutdown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  56
         4.8.3.20. undefined-condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  56
         4.8.3.21. unsupported-encoding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  57
         4.8.3.22. unsupported-feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  57
         4.8.3.23. unsupported-stanza-type . . . . . . . . . . . . .  58
         4.8.3.24. unsupported-version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  59
         4.8.3.25. xml-not-well-formed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  60
       4.8.4.   Application-Specific Conditions  . . . . . . . . . .  60
     4.9.   Simplified Stream Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  61



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   5.  STARTTLS Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  63
     5.1.   Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
     5.2.   Stream Negotiation Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
       5.2.1.   Mandatory-to-Negotiate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
       5.2.2.   Restart  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
       5.2.3.   Data Formatting  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  64
       5.2.4.   Order of TLS and SASL Negotiations . . . . . . . . .  65
       5.2.5.   TLS Renegotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  65
       5.2.6.   TLS Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  66
     5.3.   Process  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  66
       5.3.1.   Exchange of Stream Headers and Stream Features . . .  66
       5.3.2.   Initiation of STARTTLS Negotiation . . . . . . . . .  67
         5.3.2.1.  STARTTLS Command  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  67
         5.3.2.2.  Failure Case  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  67
         5.3.2.3.  Proceed Case  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  68
       5.3.3.   TLS Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  68
         5.3.3.1.  Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  68
         5.3.3.2.  TLS Failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  69
         5.3.3.3.  TLS Success . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  69
   6.  SASL Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
     6.1.   Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
     6.2.   Stream Negotiation Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
       6.2.1.   Mandatory-to-Negotiate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
       6.2.2.   Restart  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
       6.2.3.   Mechanism Preferences  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
       6.2.4.   Mechanism Offers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  72
       6.2.5.   Data Formatting  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
       6.2.6.   Security Layers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
       6.2.7.   Simple User Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  73
       6.2.8.   Authorization Identity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
       6.2.9.   Realms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
       6.2.10.  Round Trips  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  74
     6.3.   Process  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  75
       6.3.1.   Exchange of Stream Headers and Stream Features . . .  75
       6.3.2.   Initiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
       6.3.3.   Challenge-Response Sequence  . . . . . . . . . . . .  77
       6.3.4.   Abort  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  77
       6.3.5.   SASL Failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  78
       6.3.6.   SASL Success . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  79
     6.4.   SASL Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80
       6.4.1.   aborted  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80
       6.4.2.   account-disabled . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80
       6.4.3.   credentials-expired  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  81
       6.4.4.   encryption-required  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  81
       6.4.5.   incorrect-encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  81
       6.4.6.   invalid-authzid  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  82
       6.4.7.   invalid-mechanism  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  82
       6.4.8.   malformed-request  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  82



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       6.4.9.   mechanism-too-weak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
       6.4.10.  not-authorized . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
       6.4.11.  temporary-auth-failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
       6.4.12.  transition-needed  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84
     6.5.   SASL Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84
   7.  Resource Binding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  85
     7.1.   Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  85
     7.2.   Stream Negotiation Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
       7.2.1.   Mandatory-to-Negotiate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
       7.2.2.   Restart  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
     7.3.   Advertising Support  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
     7.4.   Generation of Resource Identifiers . . . . . . . . . . .  86
     7.5.   Server-Generated Resource Identifier . . . . . . . . . .  87
       7.5.1.   Success Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  87
       7.5.2.   Error Cases  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  87
         7.5.2.1.  Resource Constraint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  88
         7.5.2.2.  Not Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  88
     7.6.   Client-Submitted Resource Identifier . . . . . . . . . .  88
       7.6.1.   Success Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  88
       7.6.2.   Error Cases  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  89
         7.6.2.1.  Bad Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  89
         7.6.2.2.  Conflict  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  90
       7.6.3.   Retries  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  91
   8.  XML Stanzas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  91
     8.1.   Common Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  91
       8.1.1.   to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  91
         8.1.1.1.  Client-to-Server Streams  . . . . . . . . . . . .  92
         8.1.1.2.  Server-to-Server Streams  . . . . . . . . . . . .  92
       8.1.2.   from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  92
         8.1.2.1.  Client-to-Server Streams  . . . . . . . . . . . .  92
         8.1.2.2.  Server-to-Server Streams  . . . . . . . . . . . .  93
       8.1.3.   id . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  94
       8.1.4.   type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  94
       8.1.5.   xml:lang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  94
     8.2.   Basic Semantics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  95
       8.2.1.   Message Semantics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  96
       8.2.2.   Presence Semantics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  96
       8.2.3.   IQ Semantics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  96
     8.3.   Stanza Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  98
       8.3.1.   Rules  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  99
       8.3.2.   Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  99
       8.3.3.   Defined Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
         8.3.3.1.  bad-request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
         8.3.3.2.  conflict  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
         8.3.3.3.  feature-not-implemented . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
         8.3.3.4.  forbidden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
         8.3.3.5.  gone  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
         8.3.3.6.  internal-server-error . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104



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         8.3.3.7.  item-not-found  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
         8.3.3.8.  jid-malformed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
         8.3.3.9.  not-acceptable  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
         8.3.3.10. not-allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
         8.3.3.11. not-authorized  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
         8.3.3.12. payment-required  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
         8.3.3.13. policy-violation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
         8.3.3.14. recipient-unavailable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
         8.3.3.15. redirect  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
         8.3.3.16. registration-required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
         8.3.3.17. remote-server-not-found . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
         8.3.3.18. remote-server-timeout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
         8.3.3.19. resource-constraint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
         8.3.3.20. service-unavailable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
         8.3.3.21. subscription-required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
         8.3.3.22. undefined-condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
         8.3.3.23. unexpected-request  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
       8.3.4.   Application-Specific Conditions  . . . . . . . . . . 115
     8.4.   Extended Content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
   9.  Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
     9.1.   Client-to-Server Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       9.1.1.   TLS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       9.1.2.   SASL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121
       9.1.3.   Resource Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
       9.1.4.   Stanza Exchange  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
       9.1.5.   Close  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
     9.2.   Server-to-Server Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
       9.2.1.   TLS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
       9.2.2.   SASL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
       9.2.3.   Stanza Exchange  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
       9.2.4.   Close  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
   10. Server Rules for Processing XML Stanzas . . . . . . . . . . . 128
     10.1.  In-Order Processing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
     10.2.  General Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
     10.3.  No 'to' Address  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
       10.3.1.  Message  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
       10.3.2.  Presence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
       10.3.3.  IQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
     10.4.  Remote Domain  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
       10.4.1.  Existing Stream  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
       10.4.2.  No Existing Stream . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
       10.4.3.  Error Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
     10.5.  Local Domain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
       10.5.1.  Mere Domain  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
       10.5.2.  Domain with Resource . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
       10.5.3.  Localpart at Domain  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
         10.5.3.1. No Such User  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
         10.5.3.2. Bare JID  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133



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         10.5.3.3. Full JID  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
   11. XML Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
     11.1.  Restrictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
     11.2.  XML Namespace Names and Prefixes . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
     11.3.  Well-Formedness  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
     11.4.  Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
     11.5.  Inclusion of XML Declaration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
     11.6.  Character Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
     11.7.  Whitespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
     11.8.  XML Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
   12. Internationalization Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
   13. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
     13.1.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
     13.2.  Threat Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
     13.3.  Order of Layers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
     13.4.  Confidentiality and Integrity  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
     13.5.  Peer Entity Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
     13.6.  Strong Security  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
     13.7.  Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
       13.7.1.  Certificate Generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
         13.7.1.1. General Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
         13.7.1.2. Server Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
         13.7.1.3. Client Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142
         13.7.1.4. XmppAddr Identifier Type  . . . . . . . . . . . . 142
       13.7.2.  Certificate Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143
         13.7.2.1. Server Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144
         13.7.2.2. Client Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144
         13.7.2.3. Checking of Certificates in Long-Lived Streams  . 145
         13.7.2.4. Use of Certificates in XMPP Extensions  . . . . . 146
     13.8.  Mandatory-to-Implement Technologies  . . . . . . . . . . 146
     13.9.  Technology Reuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
       13.9.1.  Use of base64 in SASL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
       13.9.2.  Use of DNS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
       13.9.3.  Use of Hash Functions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
       13.9.4.  Use of SASL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
       13.9.5.  Use of TLS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
       13.9.6.  Use of UTF-8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
       13.9.7.  Use of XML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
     13.10. Information Leaks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
       13.10.1. IP Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
       13.10.2. Presence Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
     13.11. Directory Harvesting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
     13.12. Denial of Service  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
     13.13. Firewalls  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
     13.14. Interdomain Federation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
     13.15. Non-Repudiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
   14. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
     14.1.  XML Namespace Name for TLS Data  . . . . . . . . . . . . 153



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     14.2.  XML Namespace Name for SASL Data . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
     14.3.  XML Namespace Name for Stream Errors . . . . . . . . . . 154
     14.4.  XML Namespace Name for Resource Binding  . . . . . . . . 154
     14.5.  XML Namespace Name for Stanza Errors . . . . . . . . . . 154
     14.6.  GSSAPI Service Name  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
     14.7.  Port Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
   15. Conformance Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
   16. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
     16.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
     16.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
   Appendix A.  XML Schemas  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
     A.1.   Streams Namespace  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
     A.2.   Stream Error Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
     A.3.   STARTTLS Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
     A.4.   SASL Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
     A.5.   Resource Binding Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
     A.6.   Stanza Error Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
   Appendix B.  Contact Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
   Appendix C.  Account Provisioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
   Appendix D.  Differences from RFC 3920  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
   Appendix E.  Copying Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
   Author's Address  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183





























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1.  Introduction

1.1.  Overview

   The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is an
   application profile of the Extensible Markup Language [XML] that
   enables the near-real-time exchange of structured yet extensible data
   between any two or more network entities.  This document defines
   XMPP's core protocol methods: setup and teardown of XML streams,
   channel encryption, authentication, error handling, and communication
   primitives for messaging, network availability ("presence"), and
   request-response interactions.

1.2.  History

   The basic syntax and semantics of XMPP were developed originally
   within the Jabber open-source community, mainly in 1999.  In late
   2002, the XMPP Working Group was chartered with developing an
   adaptation of the core Jabber protocol that would be suitable as an
   IETF instant messaging (IM) and presence technology in accordance
   with [IMP-REQS].  In October 2004, [RFC3920] and [RFC3921] were
   published, representing the most complete definition of XMPP at that
   time.

   Since 2004 the Internet community has gained extensive implementation
   and deployment experience with XMPP, including formal
   interoperability testing carried out under the auspices of the XMPP
   Standards Foundation (XSF).  This document incorporates comprehensive
   feedback from software developers and service providers, including a
   number of backward-compatible modifications summarized under
   Appendix D.  As a result, this document reflects the rough consensus
   of the Internet community regarding the core features of XMPP 1.0,
   thus obsoleting RFC 3920.

1.3.  Functional Summary

   This non-normative section provides a developer-friendly, functional
   summary of XMPP; refer to the sections that follow for a normative
   definition of XMPP.

   The purpose of XMPP is to enable the exchange of relatively small
   pieces of structured data (called "XML stanzas") over a network
   between any two (or more) entities.  XMPP is typically implemented
   using a distributed client-server architecture, wherein a client
   needs to connect to a server in order to gain access to the network
   and thus be allowed to exchange XML stanzas with other entities
   (which can be associated with other servers).  The process whereby a
   client connects to a server, exchanges XML stanzas, and ends the



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   connection is:

   1.  Determine the hostname and port at which to connect
   2.  Open a Transmission Control Protocol [TCP] connection
   3.  Open an XML stream over TCP
   4.  Negotiate Transport Layer Security [TLS] for channel encryption
       (recommended)
   5.  Authenticate using a Simple Authentication and Security Layer
       [SASL] mechanism
   6.  Bind a resource to the stream
   7.  Exchange an unbounded number of XML stanzas with other entities
       on the network
   8.  Close the XML stream
   9.  Close the TCP connection

   Within XMPP, one server can optionally connect to another server to
   enable inter-domain or inter-server communication.  For this to
   happen, the two servers need to negotiate a connection between
   themselves and then exchange XML stanzas; the process for doing so
   is:

   1.  Determine the hostname and port at which to connect
   2.  Open a TCP connection
   3.  Open an XML stream
   4.  Negotiate TLS for channel encryption (recommended)
   5.  Authenticate using a Simple Authentication and Security Layer
       [SASL] mechanism *
   6.  Exchange an unbounded number of XML stanzas both directly for the
       servers and indirectly on behalf of entities associated with each
       server (e.g., connected clients)
   7.  Close the XML stream
   8.  Close the TCP connection

      * Implementation Note: At the time of writing, most deployed
      servers use the Server Dialback protocol [XEP-0220] to provide
      weak identity verification instead of using SASL to provide strong
      authentication, especially in cases where SASL negotiation would
      not result in strong authentication anyway (e.g., because TLS
      negotiation was not mandated by the peer server, or because the
      PKIX certificate presented by the peer server during TLS
      negotiation is self-signed and has not been previously accepted);
      for details, see [XEP-0220].

   This document specifies how clients connect to servers and specifies
   the basic semantics of XML stanzas.  However, this document does not
   define the "payloads" of the XML stanzas that might be exchanged once
   a connection is successfully established; instead, those payloads are
   defined by various XMPP extensions.  For example, [XMPP-IM] defines



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   extensions for basic instant messaging and presence functionality.
   In addition, various specifications produced in the XSF's XEP series
   [XEP-0001] define extensions for a wide range of applications.

1.4.  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
   [KEYWORDS].

   Certain security-related terms are to be understood in the sense
   defined in [SEC-TERMS]; such terms include, but are not limited to,
   "assurance", "attack", "authentication", "authorization",
   "certificate", "certification authority", "certification path",
   "confidentiality", "credential", "downgrade", "encryption",
   "fingerprint", "hash value", "identity", "integrity", "signature",
   "security perimeter", "self-signed certificate", "sign", "spoof",
   "tamper", "trust", "trust anchor", "trust chain", "validate",
   "verify".

   Certain terms related to certificates, domains, and application
   service identity are to be understood in the sense defined in
   [TLS-CERTS]; these include, but are not limited to, "PKIX
   certificate", "source domain", "target domain", and the identifier
   types "CN-ID", "DNS-ID", and "SRV-ID".

   Other security-related terms are to be understood in the sense
   defined in the referenced specifications (for example, "denial of
   service" as described in [DOS]).

   The term "whitespace" is used to refer to any character that matches
   production [3] content of [XML], i.e., any instance of SP, HT, CR, or
   LF.

   We define the following terms with regard to XML stanzas or parts
   thereof:


      deliver:  for a server, to pass the data to a connected client

      ignore:  for a client or server, to discard the data without
         acting upon it, presenting it a human user, or returning an
         error to the sender







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      route:  for a server, to pass the data to a remote server for
         subsequent delivery


   In examples, lines have been wrapped for improved readability,
   "[...]" means elision, and the following prepended strings are used
   (these prepended strings are not to be sent over the wire):

   o  C: = a client
   o  E: = any XMPP entity
   o  I: = an initiating entity
   o  P: = a peer server
   o  R: = a receiving entity
   o  S: = a server
   o  S1: = server1
   o  S2: = server2

   Following the "XML Notation" used in [IRI] to represent characters
   that cannot be rendered in ASCII-only documents, some examples in
   this document use the form "&#x...." as a notational device to
   represent [UNICODE] characters (e.g., the string "ř" stands
   for the Unicode character LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH CARON); this form
   is definitely not to be sent over the wire in XMPP systems.

   In adherence to the convention used in [URI] to represent Uniform
   Resource Indentifiers, XMPP addresses in running text are enclosed
   between '<' and '>' (despite the fact that natively they are not
   URIs).

1.5.  Acknowledgements

   Hundreds of people have provided implementation feedback, bug
   reports, requests for clarification, and suggestions for improvement
   since publication of the RFC this document supersedes.  Although the
   document editor has endeavored to address all such feedback, he is
   solely responsible for any remaining errors and ambiguities.

   Special thanks are due to Kevin Smith, Matthew Wild, Dave Cridland,
   Philipp Hancke, Waqas Hussain, Florian Zeitz, Ben Campbell, Jehan
   Pages, Paul Aurich, Justin Karneges, Kurt Zeilenga, Simon Josefsson,
   Ralph Meijer, and others for their comments during Working Group Last
   Call.

   The Working Group chairs were Ben Campbell and Joe Hildebrand.

   The responsible Area Director was Gonzalo Camarillo.





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1.6.  Discussion Venue

   The document editor and the broader XMPP developer community welcome
   discussion and comments related to the topics presented in this
   document.  The primary and preferred venue is the <xmpp@ietf.org>
   mailing list, for which archives and subscription information are
   available at <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/xmpp>.  Related
   discussions often occur on the <standards@xmpp.org> mailing list, for
   which archives and subscription information are available at
   <http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/standards>.


2.  Architecture

   XMPP provides a technology for the asynchronous, end-to-end exchange
   of structured data by means of direct, persistent XML streams among a
   distributed network of globally-addressable, presence-aware clients
   and servers.  Because this architectural style involves ubiquitous
   knowledge of network availability and a conceptually unlimited number
   of concurrent information transactions in the context of a given
   client-to-server or server-to-server session, we label it
   "Availability for Concurrent Transactions" (ACT) to distinguish it
   from the "Representational State Transfer" [REST] architectural style
   familiar from the World Wide Web. Although the architecture of XMPP
   is similar in important ways to that of email (see [EMAIL-ARCH]), it
   introduces several modifications to facilitate communication in close
   to real time.  The salient features of this ACTive architectural
   style are as follows.

2.1.  Global Addresses

   As with email, XMPP uses globally-unique addresses (based on the
   Domain Name System) in order to route and deliver messages over the
   network.  All XMPP entities are addressable on the network, most
   particularly clients and servers but also various additional services
   that can be accessed by clients and servers.  In general, server
   addresses are of the form <domain.tld> (e.g., <im.example.com>),
   accounts hosted at a server are of the form <localpart@domainpart>
   (e.g., <juliet@im.example.com>), and a particular connected device or
   resource that is currently authorized for interaction on behalf of an
   account is of the form <localpart@domainpart/resource> (e.g.,
   <juliet@im.example.com/balcony>).  For historical reasons, XMPP
   addresses are often called Jabber IDs or JIDs.  Because the formal
   specification of the XMPP address format depends on
   internationalization technologies that are in flux at the time of
   writing, the format is defined in [XMPP-ADDR] instead of this
   document.




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2.2.  Presence

   XMPP includes the ability for an entity to advertise its network
   availability or "presence" to other entities.  Such availability for
   communication is signalled end-to-end via dedicated communication
   primitives in XMPP (the <presence/> stanza).  Although knowledge of
   network availability is not strictly necessary for the exchange of
   XMPP messages, it facilitates real-time interaction because the
   originator of a message can know before initiating communication that
   the intended recipient is online and available.  End-to-end presence
   is defined in [XMPP-IM].

2.3.  Persistent Streams

   Availability for communication is also built into a point-to-point
   "hop" through the use of persistent XML streams over long-lived TCP
   connections.  These "always-on" client-to-server or server-to-server
   streams enable each party to push data to the other party at any time
   for immediate routing or delivery.  XML streams are defined under
   Section 4.

2.4.  Structured Data

   The basic protocol data unit in XMPP is not an XML stream (which
   simply provides the transport for point-to-point communication) but
   an XML "stanza", which is essentially a fragment of XML that is sent
   over a stream.  The root element of a stanza includes routing
   attributes (such as "from" and "to" addresses) and the child elements
   of the stanza contain a payload for delivery to the intended
   recipient.  XML stanzas are defined under Section 8.

2.5.  Distributed Network of Clients and Servers

   In practice, XMPP consists of a network of clients and servers that
   inter-communicate (however, communication between any two given
   deployed servers is strictly OPTIONAL).  Thus, for example, the user
   <juliet@im.example.com> associated with the server <im.example.com>
   might be able to exchange messages, presence, and other structured
   data with the user <romeo@example.net> associated with the server
   <example.net>.  This pattern is familiar from messaging protocols
   that make use of global addresses, such as the email network (see
   [SMTP] and [EMAIL-ARCH]).  As a result, end-to-end communication in
   XMPP is logically peer-to-peer but physically client-to-server-to-
   server-to-client, as illustrated in the following diagram.







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     example.net ---------------- im.example.com
        |                                |
        |                                |
   romeo@example.net           juliet@im.example.com


             Figure 1: Distributed Client-Server Architecture

      Informational Note: Architectures that employ XML streams
      (Section 4) and XML stanzas (Section 8) but that establish peer-
      to-peer connections directly between clients using technologies
      based on [LINKLOCAL] have been deployed, but such architectures
      are not defined in this specification and are best described as
      "XMPP-like"; for details, see [XEP-0174].  In addition, XML
      streams can be established end-to-end over any reliable transport,
      including extensions to XMPP itself; however, such methods are out
      of scope for this specification.

   The following paragraphs describe the responsibilities of clients and
   servers on the network.

   A client is an entity that establishes an XML stream with a server by
   authenticating using the credentials of a local account and that then
   completes resource binding (Section 7) in order to enable delivery of
   XML stanzas between the server and the client over the negotiated
   stream.  The client then uses XMPP to communicate with its server,
   other clients, and any other entities on the network, where the
   server is responsible for delivering stanzas to local entities or
   routing them to remote entities.  Multiple clients can connect
   simultaneously to a server on behalf of the same local account, where
   each client is differentiated by the resourcepart of an XMPP address
   (e.g., <juliet@im.example.com/balcony> vs.
   <juliet@im.example.com/chamber>), as defined under [XMPP-ADDR] and
   Section 7.

   A server is an entity whose primary responsibilities are to:

   o  Manage XML streams (Section 4) with local clients and deliver XML
      stanzas (Section 8) to those clients over the negotiated streams;
      this includes responsibility for ensuring that a client
      authenticates with the server before being granted access to the
      XMPP network.

   o  Subject to local service policies on server-to-server
      communication, manage XML streams (Section 4) with remote servers
      and route XML stanzas (Section 8) to those servers over the
      negotiated streams.




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   Depending on the application, the secondary responsibilities of an
   XMPP server can include:

   o  Storing data that is used by clients (e.g., contact lists for
      users of XMPP-based instant messaging and presence applications as
      defined in [XMPP-IM]); in this case, the relevant XML stanza is
      handled directly by the server itself on behalf of the client and
      is not routed to a remote server or delivered to a local entity.

   o  Hosting local services that also use XMPP as the basis for
      communication but that provide additional functionality beyond
      that defined in this document or in [XMPP-IM]; examples include
      multi-user conferencing services as specified in [XEP-0045] and
      publish-subscribe services as specified in [XEP-0060].


3.  TCP Binding

3.1.  Scope

   As XMPP is defined in this specification, an initiating entity
   (client or server) MUST open a Transmission Control Protocol [TCP]
   connection to the receiving entity (server) before it negotiates XML
   streams with the receiving entity.  The parties then maintain that
   TCP connection for as long as the XML streams are in use.  The rules
   specified in the following sections apply to the TCP binding.

      Informational Note: There is no necessary coupling of XML streams
      to TCP, and other transports are possible.  For example, two
      entities could connect to each other by means of [HTTP] as
      specified in [XEP-0124] and [XEP-0206].  However, this
      specification defines only a binding of XMPP to TCP.

3.2.  Hostname Resolution

   Because XML streams are sent over TCP, the initiating entity needs to
   determine the IPv4 or IPv6 address (and port) of the receiving
   entity's "origin domain" before it can attempt to connect to the XMPP
   network.

3.2.1.  Preferred Process: SRV Lookup

   The preferred process for hostname resolution is to use [DNS-SRV]
   records as follows:

   1.  The initiating entity constructs a DNS SRV query whose inputs
       are:




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       *  a Service of "xmpp-client" (for client-to-server connections)
          or "xmpp-server" (for server-to-server connections)
       *  a Proto of "tcp"
       *  a Name corresponding to the "origin domain" of the XMPP
          service to which the initiating entity wishes to connect
          (e.g., "example.net" or "im.example.com")

   2.  The resulting is a query such as "_xmpp-client._tcp.example.net."
       or "_xmpp-server._tcp.im.example.com.".

   3.  If a response is received, it will contain one or more
       combinations of a port and hostname, each of which is weighted
       and prioritized as described in [DNS-SRV].  However, if the
       result of the SRV lookup is a single resource record with a
       Target of ".", i.e. the root domain, then the initiating entity
       MUST abort SRV processing at this point (but SHOULD attempt the
       fallback process described in the next section).

   4.  The initiating entity chooses at least one of the returned
       hostnames to resolve (following the rules in [DNS-SRV]), which it
       does by using a DNS "A" or "AAAA" lookup on the hostname; this
       will result in an IPv4 or IPv6 address.

   5.  The initiating entity uses the IP address(es) from the first
       successfully resolved hostname (with the corresponding port
       number returned by the SRV lookup) as the connection address for
       the receiving entity.

   6.  If the initiating entity fails to connect using that IP address
       but the "A" or "AAAA" lookup returned more than one IP address,
       then the initiating entity uses the next resolved IP address for
       that hostname as the connection address.

   7.  If the initiating entity fails to connect using all resolved IP
       addresses for a given hostname, then it repeats the process of
       resolution and connection for the next hostname returned by the
       SRV lookup.

   8.  If the initiating entity fails to connect using any hostname
       returned by the SRV lookup, then it can either abort the
       connection attempt or use the fallback process described in the
       next section.

3.2.2.  Fallback Processes

   The fallback process SHOULD be a normal "A" or "AAAA" address record
   resolution to determine the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the origin
   domain, where the port used is the "xmpp-client" port of 5222 for



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   client-to-server connections or the "xmpp-server" port 5269 for
   server-to-server connections.

   For client-to-server connections, the fallback MAY be a [DNS-TXT]
   lookup for alternative connection methods, for example as described
   in [XEP-0156].

3.2.3.  When Not to Use SRV

   If the initiating entity has been explicitly configured to associate
   a particular hostname (and potentially port) with the origin domain
   of the receiving entity (say, to "hardcode" an association from an
   origin domain of example.net to a configured hostname of
   webcm.example.com:80), the initiating entity SHOULD use the
   configured name instead of performing the preferred SRV resolution
   process on the origin name.

3.2.4.  Use of SRV Records with Add-On Services

   Many XMPP servers are implemented in such a way that they can host
   add-on services (beyond those defined in this specification and
   [XMPP-IM]) at hostnames that typically are subdomains of the hostname
   of the main XMPP service (e.g., conference.example.net for a
   [XEP-0045] service associated with the example.net XMPP service) or
   subdomains of the first-level domain of the underlying host (e.g.,
   muc.example.com for a [XEP-0045] service associated with the
   im.example.com XMPP service).  If an entity from a remote domain
   wishes to use such add-on services, it would generate an appropriate
   XML stanza and the remote domain itself would attempt to resolve the
   service's hostname via an SRV lookup on resource records such as
   "_xmpp-server._tcp.conference.example.net." or "_xmpp-
   server._tcp.muc.example.com.".  Therefore if a service wishes to
   enable entities from remote domains to access these add-on services,
   it needs to advertise the appropriate "_xmpp-server" SRV records in
   addition to the "_xmpp-server" record for its main XMPP service.  The
   same fallback methods apply in case SRV records are not available.

3.3.  Reconnection

   It can happen that an XMPP server goes offline while servicing TCP
   connections from local clients and from other servers.  Because the
   number of such connections can be quite large, the reconnection
   algorithm employed by entities that seek to reconnect can have a
   significant impact on software and network performance.  If an entity
   chooses to reconnect, the following guidelines are RECOMMENDED:






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   o  The number of seconds that expire before an entity first seeks to
      reconnect SHOULD be an unpredictable number between 0 and 60
      (e.g., so that all clients do not attempt to reconnect exactly 30
      seconds after being disconnected).

   o  If the first reconnection attempt does not succeed, an entity
      SHOULD back off increasingly on the time between subsequent
      reconnection attempts (e.g., in accordance with "truncated binary
      exponential backoff" as described in [ETHERNET]).

3.4.  Reliability

   The use of long-lived TCP connections in XMPP implies that the
   sending of XML stanzas over XML streams can be unreliable, since the
   parties to a long-lived TCP connection might not discover a
   connectivity disruption in a timely manner.  At the XMPP application
   layer, long connectivity disruptions can result in undelivered
   stanzas.  Although the core XMPP technology defined in this
   specification does not contain features to overcome this lack of
   reliability, there exist XMPP extensions for doing so (e.g.,
   [XEP-0198]).


4.  XML Streams

4.1.  Streams Overview

   Two fundamental concepts make possible the rapid, asynchronous
   exchange of relatively small payloads of structured information
   between XMPP entities: XML streams and XML stanzas.  These terms are
   defined as follows.

   Definition of XML Stream:  An XML stream is a container for the
      exchange of XML elements between any two entities over a network.
      The start of an XML stream is denoted unambiguously by an opening
      STREAM HEADER (i.e., an XML <stream> tag with appropriate
      attributes and namespace declarations), while the end of the XML
      stream is denoted unambiguously by a closing XML </stream> tag.
      During the life of the stream, the entity that initiated it can
      send an unbounded number of XML elements over the stream, either
      elements used to negotiate the stream (e.g., to complete TLS
      negotiation (Section 5) or SASL negotiation (Section 6)) or XML
      stanzas.  The "initial stream" is negotiated from the initiating
      entity (typically a client or server) to the receiving entity
      (typically a server), and can be seen as corresponding to the
      initiating entity's "connection to" or "session with" the
      receiving entity.  The initial stream enables unidirectional
      communication from the initiating entity to the receiving entity;



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      in order to enable exchange of stanzas from the receiving entity
      to the initiating entity, the receiving entity MUST negotiate a
      stream in the opposite direction (the "response stream").

   Definition of XML Stanza:  An XML stanza is the basic unit of meaning
      in XMPP.  Only a first-level <message/>, <presence/>, or <iq/>
      element qualified by the default namespace is an XML stanza.  By
      contrast, a first-level XML element sent for any other purpose is
      not an XML stanza (stream errors, stream features, TLS-related
      elements, SASL-related elements, etc.).  An XML stanza typically
      contains one or more child elements (with accompanying attributes,
      elements, and XML character data) as necessary in order to convey
      the desired information, which MAY be qualified by any XML
      namespace (see [XML-NAMES] as well as Section 8.4 in this
      specification).

   Consider the example of a client's connection to a server.  The
   client initiates an XML stream by sending a stream header to the
   server, optionally preceded by a text declaration specifying the XML
   version and the character encoding supported (see Section 11.5 and
   Section 11.6).  Subject to local policies and service provisioning,
   the server then replies with a second XML stream back to the client,
   again optionally preceded by a text declaration.  Once the client has
   completed SASL negotiation (Section 6) and resource binding
   (Section 7), the client can send an unbounded number of XML stanzas
   over the stream.  When the client desires to close the stream, it
   simply sends a closing </stream> tag to the server as further
   described under Section 4.4.

   In essence, then, an XML stream acts as an envelope for all the XML
   stanzas sent during a connection.  We can represent this in a
   simplistic fashion as follows.



















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   +--------------------+
   | <stream>           |
   |--------------------|
   | <presence>         |
   |   <show/>          |
   | </presence>        |
   |--------------------|
   | <message to='foo'> |
   |   <body/>          |
   | </message>         |
   |--------------------|
   | <iq to='bar'>      |
   |   <query/>         |
   | </iq>              |
   |--------------------|
   | <iq from='bar'>    |
   |   <query/>         |
   | </iq>              |
   |--------------------|
   | [ ... ]            |
   |--------------------|
   | </stream>          |
   +--------------------+

                       Figure 2: A Simplified Stream

   Those who are accustomed to thinking of XML in a document-centric
   manner might find the following analogies useful:

   o  The two XML streams are like two "documents" (matching production
      [1] content of [XML]) that are built up through the accumulation
      of XML stanzas.
   o  The root <stream/> element is like the "document entity" for each
      "document" (as described in Section 4.8 of [XML]).
   o  The XML stanzas sent over the streams are like "fragments" of the
      "documents" (as described in [XML-FRAG]).

   However, these analogies are merely that, because XMPP does not deal
   in documents and fragments but in streams and stanzas.

   The remainder of this section defines the following aspects of XML
   streams:

   o  The stream negotation process
   o  How to close a stream
   o  How to handle peers that are silent





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   o  The XML attributes of a stream
   o  The XML namespaces of a stream

4.2.  Stream Negotiation

4.2.1.  Overview

   Because the receiving entity for a stream acts as a gatekeeper to the
   domains it services, it imposes certain conditions for connecting as
   a client or as a peer server.  At a minimum, the initiating entity
   needs to authenticate with the receiving entity before it is allowed
   to send stanzas to the receiving entity, typically using SASL as
   described under Section 6.  However, the receiving entity can
   consider conditions other than authentication to be mandatory, such
   as encryption using TLS as described under Section 5.  The receiving
   entity informs the initiating entity about such conditions by
   communicating STREAM FEATURES: the set of particular protocol
   interactions that are mandatory for the initiating entity to complete
   before the receiving entity will accept XML stanzas from the
   initiating entity (e.g., authentication), as well as any protocol
   interactions that are voluntary but that might improve the handling
   of an XML stream (e.g., establishment of application-layer
   compression as described in [XEP-0138]).

   The existence of conditions for connecting implies that streams need
   to be negotiated.  The order of layers (TCP, then TLS, then SASL,
   then XMPP; see Section 13.3) implies that stream negotiation is a
   multi-stage process.  Further structure is imposed by two factors:
   (1) a given stream feature might be offered only to certain entities
   or only after certain other features have been negotiated (e.g.,
   resource binding is offered only after SASL authentication), and (2)
   stream features can be either mandatory-to-negotiate or voluntary-to-
   negotiate.  Finally, for security reasons the parties to a stream
   need to discard knowledge that they gained during the negotiation
   process after successfully completing the protocol interactions
   defined for certain features (e.g., TLS in all cases and SASL in the
   case when a security layer might be established, as defined in the
   specification for the relevant SASL mechanism); this is done by
   flushing the old stream context and exchanging new stream headers
   over the existing TCP connection.

4.2.2.  Stream Features Format

   If the initiating entity includes the 'version' attribute set to a
   value of at least "1.0" in the initial stream header, after sending
   the response stream header the receiving entity MUST send a
   <features/> child element (prefixed by the streams namespace prefix)
   to the initiating entity in order to announce any conditions for



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   continuation of the stream negotiation process.  Each condition takes
   the form of a child element of the <features/> element, qualified by
   a namespace that is different from the streams namespace and the
   default namespace.  The <features/> element can contain one child,
   contain multiple children, or be empty.

      Implementation Note: The order of child elements contained in any
      given <features/> element is not significant.

   If a particular stream feature is or can be mandatory-to-negotiate,
   the definition of that feature needs to do one of the following:

   1.  Declare that the feature is always mandatory-to-negotiate (e.g.,
       this is true of resource binding for XMPP clients); or

   2.  Specify a way for the receiving entity to flag the feature as
       mandatory-to-negotiate for this interaction (e.g., this is done
       for TLS by including an empty <required/> element in the
       advertisement for that stream feature); it is RECOMMENDED that
       stream feature definitions for mandatory-to-negotiate features do
       so by including an empty <required/> element as is done for TLS.

      Informational Note: Because there is no generic format for
      indicating that a feature is mandatory-to-negotiate, it is
      possible that a feature which is not understood by the initiating
      entity might be considered mandatory-to-negotiate by the receiving
      entity, resulting in failure of the stream negotiation process.
      Although such an outcome would be undesirable, the working group
      deemed it rare enough that a generic format was not needed.

   For security reasons, certain stream features necessitate the
   initiating entity to send a new initial stream header upon successful
   negotiation of the feature (e.g., TLS in all cases and SASL in the
   case when a security layer might be established).  If this is true of
   a given stream feature, the definition of that feature needs to
   declare that a stream restart is expected after negotiation of the
   feature.

   A <features/> element that contains at least one mandatory-to-
   negotiate feature indicates that the stream negotiation is not
   complete and that the initiating entity MUST negotiate further
   features.

   R: <stream:features>
        <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'>
          <required/>
        </starttls>
      </stream:features>



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   A <features/> element MAY contain more than one mandatory feature.
   This means that the initiating entity can choose among the mandatory
   features.  For example, perhaps a future technology will perform
   roughly the same function as TLS, so the receiving entity might
   advertise support for both TLS and the future technology.

   A <features/> element that contains both mandatory and voluntary
   features indicates that the negotiation is not complete but that the
   initiating entity MAY complete the voluntary feature(s) before it
   attempts to negotiate the mandatory feature(s).

   R: <stream:features>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>
        <compression xmlns='http://jabber.org/features/compress'>
          <method>zlib</method>
          <method>lzw</method>
        </compression>
      </stream:features>

   A <features/> element that contains only voluntary features indicates
   that the stream negotiation is complete and that the initiating
   entity is cleared to send XML stanzas, but that the initiating entity
   MAY negotiate further features if desired.

   R: <stream:features>
        <compression xmlns='http://jabber.org/features/compress'>
          <method>zlib</method>
          <method>lzw</method>
        </compression>
      </stream:features>

   An empty <features/> element indicates that the stream negotiation is
   complete and that the initiating entity is cleared to send XML
   stanzas.

   R: <stream:features/>

4.2.3.  Restarts

   On successful negotiation of a feature that necessitates a stream
   restart, both parties MUST consider the previous stream to be
   replaced but MUST NOT terminate the underlying TCP connection;
   instead, the parties MUST reuse the existing connection, which might
   be in a new state (e.g., encrypted as a result of TLS negotiation).
   The initiating entity then MUST send a new initial stream header,
   which SHOULD be preceded by an XML declaration as described under
   Section 11.5.  When the receiving entity receives the new initial
   stream header, it MUST generate a new stream ID (instead of re-using



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   the old stream ID) before sending a new response stream header (which
   SHOULD be preceded by an XML declaration as described under
   Section 11.5).

4.2.4.  Resending Features

   The receiving entity MUST send an updated list of stream features to
   the initiating entity after a stream restart, and MAY do so after
   completing negotiation of a stream feature that does not require a
   stream restart.  The list of updated features MAY be empty if there
   are no further features to be advertised or MAY include any
   combination of features.

4.2.5.  Completion of Stream Negotiation

   The receiving entity indicates completion of the stream negotiation
   process by sending to the initiating entity either an empty
   <features/> element or a <features/> element that contains only
   voluntary features.  After doing so, the receiving entity MAY send an
   empty <features/> element (e.g., after negotiation of such voluntary
   features) but MUST NOT send additional stream features to the
   initiating entity (if the receiving entity has new features to offer,
   preferably limited to mandatory-to-negotiate or security-critical
   features, it can simply close the stream using a <reset/> stream
   error and then advertise the new features when the initiating entity
   reconnects, preferably closing existing streams in a staggered way so
   that not all of the initiating entities reconnect at once).  Once
   stream negotiation is complete, the initiating entity is cleared to
   send XML stanzas over the stream for as long as the stream is
   maintained by both parties.

      Informational Note: Resource binding as specified under Section 7
      is an historical exception to the foregoing rule, since it is
      mandatory-to-negotiate for clients but uses XML stanzas for
      negotiation purposes.

   The initiating entity MUST NOT attempt to send XML stanzas
   (Section 8) to entities other than itself (i.e., the client's
   connected resource or any other authenticated resource of the
   client's account) or the server to which it is connected until stream
   negotiation has been completed.  Even if the initiating entity does
   attempt to do so, the receiving entity MUST NOT accept such stanzas
   and MUST return a <not-authorized/> stream error.  This rule applies
   to XML stanzas only (i.e., <message/>, <presence/>, and <iq/>
   elements qualified by the default namespace) and not to XML elements
   used for stream negotiation (e.g., elements used to complete TLS
   negotiation (Section 5) or SASL negotiation (Section 6)).




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4.2.6.  Determination of Addresses

   After the parties to an XML stream have completed the appropriate
   aspects of stream negotiation (typically SASL negotiation (Section 6)
   and, for client-to-server streams, resource binding (Section 7)) the
   receiving entity for a stream MUST determine the initiating entity's
   JID.

   For client-to-server communication, the client's bare JID
   (<localpart@domainpart>) MUST be the authorization identity (as
   defined by [SASL]), either (1) as directly communicated by the client
   during SASL negotiation (Section 6) or (2) as derived by the server
   from the authentication identity if no authorization identity was
   specified during SASL negotiation.  The resourcepart of the full JID
   (<localpart@domainpart/resource>) MUST be the resource negotiated by
   the client and server during resource binding (Section 7).  A client
   MUST NOT attempt to guess at its JID but instead MUST consider its
   JID to be whatever the server returns to it during resource binding.
   The server MUST ensure that the resulting JID (including localpart,
   domainpart, resourcepart, and separator characters) conforms to the
   canonical format for XMPP addresses defined in [XMPP-ADDR]; to meet
   this restriction, the server MAY replace the JID sent by the client
   with the canonicalized JID as determined by the server and
   communicate that JID to the client during resource binding.

   For server-to-server communication, the initiating server's JID
   (<domainpart>) MUST be the authorization identity (as defined by
   [SASL]), either (1) as directly communicated by the initiating server
   during SASL negotiation (Section 6) or (2) as derived by the
   receiving server from the authentication identity if no authorization
   identity was specified during SASL negotiation; in the absence of
   SASL negotiation, the receiving server MAY consider the authorization
   identity to be an identity negotiated within the relevant
   verification protocol (e.g., the 'from' attribute of the <result/>
   element in Server Dialback [XEP-0220]).

      Security Note: Because it is possible for a third party to tamper
      with information that is sent over the stream before a security
      layer such as TLS is successfully negotiated, it is advisable for
      the receiving server to treat any such unprotected information
      with caution.

4.2.7.  Flow Chart

   We summarize the foregoing rules in the following non-normative flow
   chart for the stream negotiation process, presented from the
   perspective of the initiating entity.




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                        +------------+
                        |  open TCP  |
                        | connection |
                        +------------+
                              |
                              v
                       +---------------+
                       | send initial  |<-------------------------+
                       | stream header |                          ^
                       +---------------+                          |
                              |                                   |
                              v                                   |
                      +------------------+                        |
                      | receive response |                        |
                      | stream header    |                        |
                      +------------------+                        |
                              |                                   |
                              v                                   |
                       +----------------+                         |
                       | receive stream |                         |
   +------------------>| features       |                         |
   ^                   +----------------+                         |
   |                          |                                   |
   |                          v                                   |
   |       +<-----------------+                                   |
   |       |                                                      |
   |    {empty?} ----> {all voluntary?} ----> {some mandatory?}   |
   |       |      no          |          no         |             |
   |       | yes              | yes                 | yes         |
   |       |                  v                     v             |
   |       |           +---------------+    +----------------+    |
   |       |           | MAY negotiate |    | MUST negotiate |    |
   |       |           | any or none   |    | one feature    |    |
   |       |           +---------------+    +----------------+    |
   |       |                  |                     |             |
   |       v                  v                     |             |
   |   +----------+      +-----------+              |             |
   |   | process  |<-----| negotiate |              |             |
   |   | complete |  no  | a feature |              |             |
   |   +----------+      +-----------+              |             |
   |                          |                     |             |
   |                     yes  |                     |             |
   |                          v                     v             |
   |                          +--------->+<---------+             |
   |                                     |                        |
   |                                     v                        |
   +<-------------------------- {restart mandatory?} ------------>+
                  no                                     yes



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                  Figure 3: Stream Negotiation Flow Chart

4.3.  Directionality

   An XML stream is always unidirectional, by which is meant that XML
   stanzas can be sent in only one direction over the stream (either
   from the initiating entity to the receiving entity or from the
   receiving entity to the initiating entity).

   Depending on the type of session that has been negotiated and the
   nature of the entities involved, the entities might use:

   o  Two streams over a single TCP connection; this is typical for
      client-to-server sessions, and a server MUST allow a client to use
      the same TCP connection for both streams.

   o  Two streams over two TCP connections, where one TCP connection is
      used for the stream in which stanzas are sent from the initiating
      entity to the receiving entity and the other TCP connection is
      used for the stream in which stanzas are sent from the receiving
      entity to the initiating entity; this is typical for server-to-
      server sessions.

   o  Multiple streams over two or more TCP connections; this approach
      is sometimes used for server-to-server sessions between two large
      XMPP service providers, but is not otherwise described in this
      document.

   This concept of directionality applies only to stanzas and explicitly
   does not apply to other first-level children of the stream root, such
   as elements used for TLS negotiation, SASL negotiation, Server
   Dialback [XEP-0220], and Stream Management [XEP-0198].

   During establishment of a server-to-server session, while completing
   STARTTLS negotiation (Section 5) and SASL negotiation (Section 6) two
   servers would use one TCP connection, but after the stream
   negotiation process is done that original TCP connection would be
   used only for the initiating server to send XML stanzas to the
   receiving server.  In order for the receiving server to send XML
   stanzas to the initiating server, the receiving server would need to
   reverse the roles and negotiate an XML stream from the receiving
   server to the initiating server over a separate TCP connection.

      Implementation Note: For historical reasons, a server-to-server
      session always uses two TCP connections.  Although a future
      extension might allow servers to use a single TCP connection after
      negotiation of a suitable feature, definition of such a feature is
      out of scope for this document.



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      Informational Note: Although XMPP developers sometimes apply the
      terms "unidirectional" and "bidirectional" to the underlying TCP
      connection (e.g., calling the TCP connection for a client-to-
      server session "bidirectional" and the TCP connection for a
      server-to-server session "unidirectional"), strictly speaking a
      stream is always unidirectional (because the initiating entity and
      receiving entity always have a minimum of two streams, one in each
      direction) and a TCP connection is always bidirectional (because
      TCP traffic can be sent in both directions).  Directionality
      applies to the application-layer traffic sent over the TCP
      connection, not to the transport-layer traffic sent over the TCP
      connection itself.

4.4.  Closing a Stream

   An XML stream between two entities can be closed at any time, either
   because a specific stream error has occurred or in the absence of an
   error (e.g., when a client simply ends its session).

   A stream is closed by sending a closing </stream> tag.

   S: </stream:stream>

   The entity that sends the closing stream tag SHOULD behave as
   follows:

   1.  Wait for the other party to also close its stream before
       terminating the underlying TCP connection (this gives the other
       party an opportunity to finish transmitting any data in the
       opposite direction before the TCP connection is terminated).

   2.  Refrain from initiating the sending of further data over that
       stream but continue to process data sent by the other entity
       (and, if necessary, react to such data).

   3.  Consider both streams to be void if the other party does not send
       its closing stream tag within a reasonable amount of time (where
       the definition of "reasonable" is a matter of implementation or
       deployment).

   4.  After receiving a reciprocal closing stream tag from the other
       party or waiting a reasonable amount of time with no response,
       MUST terminate the underlying TCP connection.

4.5.  Handling of Silent Peers

   When an entity that is a party to a stream has not received any XMPP
   traffic from its stream peer for some period of time, the peer might



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   appear to be silent.  There are several reasons why this might
   happen:

   1.  The underlying TCP connection is dead.

   2.  The XML stream is broken despite the fact that the underlying TCP
       connection is alive.

   3.  The peer is idle and simply has not sent any XMPP traffic over
       its XML stream to the entity.

   These three conditions are best handled separately, as described in
   the following sections.

      Implementation Note: For the purpose of handling silent peers, we
      treat a two unidirectional TCP connections as conceptually
      equivalent to a single bidirectional TCP connection (see
      Section 4.3); however, implementers need to be aware that, in the
      case of two unidirectional TCP connections, responses to traffic
      at the XMPP application layer will come back from the peer on the
      second TCP connection.  In addition, the use of multiple streams
      in each direction (which is a common deployment choice for server-
      to-server connectivity among large XMPP service providers) further
      complicates application-level checking of XMPP streams and their
      underlying TCP connections, because there is no necessary
      correlation between any given initial stream and any given
      response stream.

4.5.1.  Dead Connection

   If the underlying TCP connection is dead, stream-level checks (e.g.,
   [XEP-0199] and [XEP-0198]) are ineffective.  Therefore it is
   unnecessary to close the stream with or without an error, and it is
   appropriate instead to simply terminate the TCP connection.

   One common method for checking the TCP connection is to send a space
   character (U+0020) between XML stanzas, which is allowed for XML
   streams as described under Section 11.7; the sending of such a space
   character is properly called a "whitespace keepalive" (the term
   "whitespace ping" is often used, despite the fact that it is not a
   ping since no "pong" is possible).

4.5.2.  Broken Stream

   Even if the underlying TCP connection is alive, the peer might never
   respond to XMPP traffic that the entity sends, whether normal stanzas
   or specialized stream-checking traffic such as the application-level
   pings defined in [XEP-0199] or the more comprehensive Stream



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   Management protocol defined in [XEP-0198].  In this case, it is
   appropriate for the entity to close a broken stream using the
   <connection-timeout/> stream error described under Section 4.8.3.4.

4.5.3.  Idle Peer

   Even if the underlying TCP connection is alive and the stream is not
   broken, the peer might have sent no stanzas for a certain period of
   time.  In this case, the peer SHOULD close the stream using the
   handshake described under Section 4.4.  If the idle peer does not
   close the stream, the other party MAY either close the stream using
   the handshake described under Section 4.4 or return a stream error
   (e.g., <resource-constraint/> if the entity has reached a limit on
   the number of open TCP connections or <policy-violation/> if the
   connection has exceeded a local timeout policy).  However, consistent
   with the order of layers (specified under Section 13.3), the other
   party is advised to verify that the underlying TCP connection is
   alive and the stream is unbroken (as described above) before
   concluding that the peer is idle.  Furthermore, it is preferable to
   be liberal in accepting idle peers, since experience has shown that
   doing so improves the reliability of communication over XMPP networks
   and that it is typically more efficient to maintain a stream between
   two servers than to aggressively timeout such a stream.

4.5.4.  Use of Checking Methods

   Implementers are advised to support whichever stream-checking and
   connection-checking methods they deem appropriate, but to carefully
   weigh the network impact of such methods against the benefits of
   discovering broken streams and dead TCP connections in a timely
   manner.  The length of time between the use of any particular check
   is very much a matter of local service policy and depends strongly on
   the network environment and usage scenarios of a given deployment and
   connection type; at the time of writing, it is RECOMMENDED that any
   such check be performed not more than once every 5 minutes and that,
   ideally, such checks will be initiated by clients rather than
   servers.  Those who implement XMPP software and deploy XMPP services
   are encouraged to seek additional advice regarding appropriate timing
   of stream-checking and connection-checking methods, particularly when
   power-constrained devices are being used (e.g., in mobile
   environments).

4.6.  Stream Attributes

   The attributes of the root <stream/> element are defined in the
   following sections.





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      Security Note: Until and unless the confidentiality and integrity
      of a stream header is ensured via Transport Layer Security as
      described under Section 5, the attributes provided in a stream
      header could be tampered with by an attacker.

      Implementation Note: The attributes of the root <stream/> element
      are not prepended by a namespace prefix because, as explained in
      [XML-NAMES], "[d]efault namespace declarations do not apply
      directly to attribute names; the interpretation of unprefixed
      attributes is determined by the element on which they appear."

4.6.1.  from

   The 'from' attribute communicates an XMPP identity of the entity
   sending the stream element.

   For initial stream headers in client-to-server communication, if the
   client knows the XMPP identity of the principal controlling the
   client (typically an account name of the form
   <localpart@domainpart>), then it SHOULD include the 'from' attribute
   and set its value to that identity once the stream is in a state in
   which it is willing to perform authentication, e.g. once TLS has been
   negotiated.  However, because the client might not know the XMPP
   identity of the principal controlling the entity (e.g., because the
   XMPP identity is assigned at a level other than the XMPP application
   layer, as in the General Security Service Application Program
   Interface [GSS-API]), inclusion of the 'from' address is OPTIONAL.

      Security Note: Including the XMPP identity before the stream is
      protected via TLS can expose that identity to eavesdroppers.

   I: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   For initial stream headers in server-to-server communication, a
   server MUST include the 'from' attribute and MUST set the value to
   the domainpart of the 'from' attribute of the stanza that caused the
   stream to be established (because the initiating entity might have
   more than one XMPP identity, e.g., in the case of a server that
   provides virtual hosting, it will need to choose an identity that is
   associated with this stream).




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   I: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='example.net'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   For response stream headers in both client-to-server and server-to-
   server communication, the receiving entity MUST include the 'from'
   attribute and MUST set the value to one of the receiving entity's
   hostnames (which MAY be a hostname other than that specified in the
   'to' attribute of the initial stream header; see Section 4.8.1.3 and
   Section 4.8.3.6).

   R: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Whether or not the 'from' attribute is included, each entity MUST
   verify the identity of the other entity before exchanging XML stanzas
   with it, as described under Section 13.5.

      Interoperability Note: It is possible that implementations based
      on [RFC3920] will not include the 'from' address on stream
      headers; an entity SHOULD be liberal in accepting such stream
      headers.

4.6.2.  to

   For initial stream headers in both client-to-server and server-to-
   server communication, the initiating entity MUST include the 'to'
   attribute and MUST set its value to a hostname that the initiating
   entity knows or expects the receiving entity to service.  (The same
   information can be provided in other ways, such as a server name
   indication during TLS negotiation as described in [TLS-EXT].)








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   I: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   For response stream headers in client-to-server communication, if the
   client included a 'from' attribute in the initial stream header then
   the server MUST include a 'to' attribute in the response stream
   header and MUST set its value to the bare JID specified in the 'from'
   attribute of the initial stream header.  If the client did not
   include a 'from' attribute in the initial stream header then the
   server MUST NOT include a 'to' attribute in the response stream
   header.

   R: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   For response stream headers in server-to-server communication, the
   receiving entity MUST include a 'to' attribute in the response stream
   header and MUST set its value to the hostname specified in the 'from'
   attribute of the initial stream header.

   R: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='g4qSvGvBxJ+xeAd7QKezOQJFFlw='
          to='example.net'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Whether or not the 'to' attribute is included, each entity MUST
   verify the identity of the other entity before exchanging XML stanzas
   with it, as described under Section 13.5.





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      Interoperability Note: It is possible that implementations based
      on [RFC3920] will not include the 'to' address on stream headers;
      an entity SHOULD be liberal in accepting such stream headers.

4.6.3.  id

   The 'id' attribute communicates a unique identifier for the stream,
   called a "stream ID".  The stream ID MUST be generated by the
   receiving entity when it sends a response stream header and MUST BE
   unique within the receiving application (normally a server).

      Security Note: The stream ID MUST be both unpredictable and non-
      repeating because it can be security-critical when re-used by an
      authentication mechanisms, as is the case for Server Dialback
      [XEP-0220] and the "XMPP 0.9" authentication mechanism used before
      RFC 3920 defined the use of SASL in XMPP; for recommendations
      regarding randomness for security purposes, see [RANDOM].

   For initial stream headers, the initiating entity MUST NOT include
   the 'id' attribute; however, if the 'id' attribute is included, the
   receiving entity MUST ignore it.

   For response stream headers, the receiving entity MUST include the
   'id' attribute.

   R: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

4.6.4.  xml:lang

   The 'xml:lang' attribute communicates an entity's preferred or
   default language for any human-readable XML character data to be sent
   over the stream (an XML stanza can also possess an 'xml:lang'
   attribute, as discussed under Section 8.1.5).  The syntax of this
   attribute is defined in Section 2.12 of [XML]; in particular, the
   value of the 'xml:lang' attribute MUST conform to the NMTOKEN
   datatype (as defined in Section 2.3 of [XML]) and MUST conform to the
   language identifier format defined in [LANGTAGS].

   For initial stream headers, the initiating entity SHOULD include the
   'xml:lang' attribute.



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   I: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   For response stream headers, the receiving entity MUST include the
   'xml:lang' attribute.  The following rules apply:

   o  If the initiating entity included an 'xml:lang' attribute in its
      initial stream header and the receiving entity supports that
      language in the human-readable XML character data that it
      generates and sends to the initiating entity (e.g., in the <text/>
      element for stream and stanza errors), the value of the 'xml:lang'
      attribute MUST be the identifier for the initiating entity's
      preferred language (e.g., "de-CH").
   o  If the receiving entity supports a language that closely matches
      the initiating entity's preferred language (e.g., "de" instead of
      "de-CH"), then the value of the 'xml:lang' attribute SHOULD be the
      identifier for the matching language (e.g., "de") but MAY be the
      identifier for the default language of the receiving entity (e.g.,
      "en").
   o  If the receiving entity does not support the initiating entity's
      preferred language or a closely matching language (or if the
      initiating entity did not include the 'xml:lang' attribute in its
      initial stream header), then the value of the 'xml:lang' attribute
      MUST be the identifier for the default language of the receiving
      entity (e.g., "en").

   R: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   If the initiating entity included the 'xml:lang' attribute in its
   initial stream header, the receiving entity SHOULD remember that
   value as the default xml:lang for all stanzas sent by the initiating
   entity over the current stream.  As described under Section 8.1.5,
   the initiating entity MAY include the 'xml:lang' attribute in any XML
   stanzas it sends over the stream.  If the initiating entity does not



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   include the 'xml:lang' attribute in any such stanza, the receiving
   entity SHOULD add the 'xml:lang' attribute to the stanza, where the
   value of the attribute MUST be the identifier for the language
   preferred by the initiating entity (even if the receiving entity does
   not support that language for human-readable XML character data it
   generates and sends to the initiating entity, such as in stream or
   stanza errors).  If the initiating entity includes the 'xml:lang'
   attribute in any such stanza, the receiving entity MUST NOT modify or
   delete it.

4.6.5.  version

   The inclusion of the version attribute set to a value of at least
   "1.0" signals support for the stream-related protocols defined in
   this specification, including TLS negotiation (Section 5), SASL
   negotiation (Section 6), stream features (Section 4.2.2), and stream
   errors (Section 4.8).

   The version of XMPP specified in this specification is "1.0"; in
   particular, XMPP 1.0 encapsulates the stream-related protocols as
   well as the basic semantics of the three defined XML stanza types
   (<message/>, <presence/>, and <iq/>).

   The numbering scheme for XMPP versions is "<major>.<minor>".  The
   major and minor numbers MUST be treated as separate integers and each
   number MAY be incremented higher than a single digit.  Thus, "XMPP
   2.4" would be a lower version than "XMPP 2.13", which in turn would
   be lower than "XMPP 12.3".  Leading zeros (e.g., "XMPP 6.01") MUST be
   ignored by recipients and MUST NOT be sent.

   The major version number will be incremented only if the stream and
   stanza formats or obligatory actions have changed so dramatically
   that an older version entity would not be able to interoperate with a
   newer version entity if it simply ignored the elements and attributes
   it did not understand and took the actions defined in the older
   specification.

   The minor version number will be incremented only if significant new
   capabilities have been added to the core protocol (e.g., a newly
   defined value of the 'type' attribute for message, presence, or IQ
   stanzas).  The minor version number MUST be ignored by an entity with
   a smaller minor version number, but MAY be used for informational
   purposes by the entity with the larger minor version number (e.g.,
   the entity with the larger minor version number would simply note
   that its correspondent would not be able to understand that value of
   the 'type' attribute and therefore would not send it).

   The following rules apply to the generation and handling of the



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   'version' attribute within stream headers:

   1.  The initiating entity MUST set the value of the 'version'
       attribute in the initial stream header to the highest version
       number it supports (e.g., if the highest version number it
       supports is that defined in this specification, it MUST set the
       value to "1.0").

   2.  The receiving entity MUST set the value of the 'version'
       attribute in the response stream header to either the value
       supplied by the initiating entity or the highest version number
       supported by the receiving entity, whichever is lower.  The
       receiving entity MUST perform a numeric comparison on the major
       and minor version numbers, not a string match on
       "<major>.<minor>".

   3.  If the version number included in the response stream header is
       at least one major version lower than the version number included
       in the initial stream header and newer version entities cannot
       interoperate with older version entities as described, the
       initiating entity SHOULD generate an <unsupported-version/>
       stream error.

   4.  If either entity receives a stream header with no 'version'
       attribute, the entity MUST consider the version supported by the
       other entity to be "0.9" and SHOULD NOT include a 'version'
       attribute in the response stream header.

4.6.6.  Summary of Stream Attributes

   The following table summarizes the attributes of the root <stream/>
   element.

   +----------+--------------------------+-------------------------+
   |          | initiating to receiving  | receiving to initiating |
   +----------+--------------------------+-------------------------+
   | to       | JID of receiver          | JID of initiator        |
   | from     | JID of initiator         | JID of receiver         |
   | id       | ignored                  | stream identifier       |
   | xml:lang | default language         | default language        |
   | version  | XMPP 1.0+ supported      | XMPP 1.0+ supported     |
   +----------+--------------------------+-------------------------+

                        Figure 4: Stream Attributes







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4.7.  Namespaces

   Readers are referred to the specification of XML namespaces
   [XML-NAMES] for a full understanding of the concepts used in this
   section.

4.7.1.  Streams Namespace

   The root <stream/> element ("stream header") MUST be qualified by the
   namespace 'http://etherx.jabber.org/streams' (the "streams
   namespace").  If this rule is violated, the entity that receives the
   offending stream header MUST return a stream error to the sending
   entity, which SHOULD be <invalid-namespace/> (although some existing
   implementations send <bad-format/> instead).

4.7.2.  Default Namespace

   An entity MAY declare a default namespace for data sent over the
   stream.  If so, (1) the default namespace MUST be other than the
   streams namespace, and (2) the default namespace MUST be the same for
   the initial stream and the response stream so that both streams are
   qualified consistently.  The default namespace applies to all first-
   level child elements sent over the stream unless explicitly qualified
   by another namespace.

   Alternatively (i.e., instead of declaring a default namespace), an
   entity MAY explicitly qualify the namespace for each first-level
   child element of the stream, using so-called "prefix-free
   canonicalization".

   When a default namespace is declared, in rough outline a stream will
   look something like the following.

   <stream:stream
       from='juliet@im.example.com'
       to='im.example.com'
       version='1.0'
       xml:lang='en'
       xmlns='jabber:client'
       xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
     <message>
       <body>foo</body>
     </message>
   </stream:stream>

   When a default namespace is not declared and so-called "prefix-free
   canonicalization" is used instead, in rough outline a stream will
   look something like the following.



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   <stream
       from='juliet@im.example.com'
       to='im.example.com'
       version='1.0'
       xml:lang='en'
       xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
     <message xmlns='jabber:client'>
       <body>foo</body>
     </message>
   </stream:stream>

   Historically, most XMPP implementations have used the default
   namespace style rather than the prefix-free canonicalization style
   for stream headers; however, both styles are acceptable since they
   are semantically equivalent.

4.7.3.  Other Namespaces

   Either party to a stream MAY send data qualified by namespaces other
   than the default namespace (if declared) and the streams namespace.
   For example, this is how data related to TLS negotiation and SASL
   negotiation are exchanged, as well as XMPP extensions such as Server
   Dialback [XEP-0220] and Stream Management [XEP-0198].

      Interoperability Note: For historical reasons, some server
      implementations expect a declaration of the 'jabber:server:
      dialback' namespace on server-to-server streams; for details, see
      [XEP-0220].

4.7.4.  Namespace Declarations and Prefixes

   Because the default namespace is other than the streams namespace, if
   a default namespace is declared then the following statements are
   true:

   1.  The stream header needs to contain a namespace declaration for
       both the default namespace and the streams namespace.

   2.  The streams namespace declaration needs to include a namespace
       prefix for the streams namespace.

      Interoperability Note: For historical reasons, an implementation
      MAY accept only the prefix 'stream' for the streams namespace
      (resulting in prefixed names such as <stream:stream> and <stream:
      features>).  If an entity receives a stream header with a streams
      namespace prefix it does not accept, it MUST return a stream error
      to the sending entity, which SHOULD be <bad-namespace-prefix/>
      (although some existing implementations send <bad-format/>



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      instead).

   By definition, the namespace declaration for the default namespace
   will not include a namespace prefix (e.g., "xmlns='jabber:client'").
   Furthermore, an implementation MUST NOT generate namespace prefixes
   for elements qualified by the default namespace if the default
   namespace is 'jabber:client' or 'jabber:server'.

   Namespaces declared in a stream header MUST apply only to that stream
   (e.g., the 'jabber:server:dialback' namespace used in Server Dialback
   [XEP-0220]).  In particular, because XML stanzas intended for routing
   or delivery over streams with other entities will lose the namespace
   context declared in the header of the stream in which those stanzas
   originated, namespaces for extended content within such stanzas MUST
   NOT be declared in that stream header (see also Section 8.4).  If
   either party to a stream declares such namespaces, the other party to
   the stream SHOULD close the stream with a stream error of <invalid-
   namespace/>.  In any case, an entity MUST ensure that such namespaces
   are properly declared (according to this section) when routing or
   delivering stanzas originating from such a stream over streams with
   other entities.

4.7.5.  Mandatory-to-Implement Default Namespaces

   XMPP as defined in this specification uses two default namespaces:
   'jabber:client' and 'jabber:server'.  These namespaces are nearly
   identical but are used in different contexts (client-to-server
   communication for 'jabber:client' and server-to-server communication
   for 'jabber:server').  The only difference between the two is that
   the 'to' and 'from' attributes are OPTIONAL on stanzas sent over XML
   streams qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace, whereas they are
   REQUIRED on stanzas sent over XML streams qualified by the 'jabber:
   server' namespace.  Support for these default namespaces implies
   support for the common attributes (Section 8.1) and basic semantics
   (Section 8.2) of all three core stanza types (message, presence, and
   IQ).

   An implementation MAY support default namespaces other than 'jabber:
   client' or 'jabber:server'.  However, because such namespaces would
   define applications other than XMPP, they are to be defined in
   separate specifications.

   An implementation MAY refuse to support any other default namespaces.
   If an entity receives a first-level child element qualified by a
   default namespace it does not support, it MUST return an <invalid-
   namespace/> stream error.

   Client implementations MUST support the 'jabber:client' default



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   namespace.

   Server implementations MUST support both the 'jabber:client' default
   namespace (when the stream is used for communication between a client
   and a server) and the 'jabber:server' default namespace (when the
   stream is used for communication between two servers).

      Implementation Note: Because a client sends stanzas over a stream
      whose default namespace is 'jabber:client', if the server to which
      the client is connected needs to route a client-generated stanza
      to another server then it MUST "re-scope" the stanza so that its
      default namespace is 'jabber:server' (i.e., it MUST NOT send a
      stanza qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace over a stream
      whose default namespace is 'jabber:server').  Similarly, a routing
      server MUST "re-scope" a stanza received over a server-to-server
      stream (whose default namespace is 'jabber:server') so that the
      stanza is qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace before
      sending it over a client-to-server stream (whose default namespace
      is 'jabber:client').

4.8.  Stream Errors

   The root stream element MAY contain an <error/> child element that is
   prefixed by the streams namespace prefix.  The error child SHALL be
   sent by a compliant entity if it perceives that a stream-level error
   has occurred.

4.8.1.  Rules

   The following rules apply to stream-level errors.

4.8.1.1.  Stream Errors Are Unrecoverable

   Stream-level errors are unrecoverable.  Therefore, if an error occurs
   at the level of the stream, the entity that detects the error MUST
   send an <error/> element with an appropriate child element that
   specifies the error condition and immediately close the stream as
   described under Section 4.4.

   C: <message><body>No closing tag!</message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <xml-not-well-formed
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

   The entity that generates the stream error then shall close the



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   stream as explained under Section 4.4.

   C: </stream:stream>

4.8.1.2.  Stream Errors Can Occur During Setup

   If the error is triggered by the initial stream header, the receiving
   entity MUST still send the opening <stream> tag, include the <error/>
   element as a child of the stream element, and send the closing
   </stream> tag (preferably all at the same time).

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://wrong.namespace.example.org/'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <invalid-namespace
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.1.3.  Stream Errors When the Host is Unspecified or Unknown

   If the initiating entity provides no 'to' attribute or provides an
   unknown host in the 'to' attribute and the error occurs during stream
   setup, the value of the 'from' attribute returned by the receiving
   entity in the stream header sent before closing the stream MUST be
   either an authoritative hostname for the receiving entity or the
   empty string.








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   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='unknown.host.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <host-unknown
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.1.4.  Where Stream Errors Are Sent

   When two TCP connections are used between the initiating entity and
   the receiving entity (one in each direction) rather than using a
   single bidirectional connection, the following rules apply:

   o  Stream-level errors related to the initial stream are returned by
      the receiving entity on the response stream via the first TCP
      connection.
   o  Stanza errors triggered by outbound stanzas sent from the
      initiating entity over the initial stream via the first TCP
      connection are returned by the receiving entity on the response
      stream via the second TCP connection (since they are inbound
      stanzas from the perspective of the initiating entity).


4.8.2.  Syntax

   The syntax for stream errors is as follows, where "defined-condition"
   is a placeholder for one of the conditions defined under
   Section 4.8.3 and XML data shown within the square brackets '[' and
   ']' is OPTIONAL.





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   <stream:error>
     <defined-condition xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
     [<text xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'
            xml:lang='langcode'>
       [ ... descriptive text ... ]
     </text>]
     [application-specific condition element]
   </stream:error>

   The <error/> element:

   o  MUST contain a child element corresponding to one of the defined
      stream error conditions (Section 4.8.3); this element MUST be
      qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams' namespace.

   o  MAY contain a <text/> child element containing XML character data
      that describes the error in more detail; this element MUST be
      qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams' namespace
      and SHOULD possess an 'xml:lang' attribute specifying the natural
      language of the XML character data.

   o  MAY contain a child element for an application-specific error
      condition; this element MUST be qualified by an application-
      defined namespace, and its structure is defined by that namespace
      (see Section 4.8.4).

   The <text/> element is OPTIONAL.  If included, it MUST be used only
   to provide descriptive or diagnostic information that supplements the
   meaning of a defined condition or application-specific condition.  It
   MUST NOT be interpreted programmatically by an application.  It MUST
   NOT be used as the error message presented to a human user, but MAY
   be shown in addition to the error message associated with the defined
   condition element (and, optionally, the application-specific
   condition element).

4.8.3.  Defined Stream Error Conditions

   The following stream-level error conditions are defined.

4.8.3.1.  bad-format

   The entity has sent XML that cannot be processed.

   (In the following example, the client sends an XMPP message that is
   not well-formed XML, which alternatively might trigger an <xml-not-
   well-formed/> stream error.)





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   C: <message>
        <body>No closing tag!
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <bad-format
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

   This error MAY be used instead of the more specific XML-related
   errors, such as <bad-namespace-prefix/>, <invalid-xml/>, <restricted-
   xml/>, <unsupported-encoding/>, and <xml-not-well-formed/>.  However,
   the more specific errors are RECOMMENDED.

4.8.3.2.  bad-namespace-prefix

   The entity has sent a namespace prefix that is unsupported, or has
   sent no namespace prefix on an element that needs such a prefix (see
   Section 11.2).

   (In the following example, the client specifies a namespace prefix of
   "foobar" for the XML streams namespace.)

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <foobar:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:foobar='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <bad-namespace-prefix
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>





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4.8.3.3.  conflict

   The server either (1) is closing the existing stream for this entity
   because a new stream has been initiated that conflicts with the
   existing stream, or (2) is refusing a new stream for this entity
   because allowing the new stream would conflict with an existing
   stream (e.g., because the server allows only a certain number of
   connections from the same IP address).

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <conflict
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.4.  connection-timeout

   One party is closing the stream because it has reason to believe that
   the other party has permanently lost the ability to communicate over
   the stream.  The lack of ability to communicate can be discovered
   using various methods, such as whitespace keepalives as specified
   under Section 4.4, XMPP-level pings as defined in [XEP-0199], and
   XMPP Stream Management as defined in [XEP-0198].

   P: <stream:error>
        <connection-timeout
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>





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      Interoperability Note: RFC 3920 specified that the <connection-
      timeout/> stream error is to be used if the peer has not generated
      any traffic over the stream for some period of time.  That
      behavior is no longer recommended; instead, the error SHOULD be
      used only if the connected client or peer server has not responded
      to data sent over the stream.

4.8.3.5.  host-gone

   The value of the 'to' attribute provided in the initial stream header
   corresponds to a hostname that is no longer serviced by the receiving
   entity.

   (In the following example, the peer specifies a 'to' address of
   "foo.im.example.com" when connecting to the "im.example.com" server,
   but the server no longer hosts a service at that address.)

   P: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='example.net'
          to='foo.im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='g4qSvGvBxJ+xeAd7QKezOQJFFlw='
          to='example.net'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <host-gone
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.6.  host-unknown

   The value of the 'to' attribute provided in the initial stream header
   does not correspond to a hostname that is serviced by the receiving
   entity.

   (In the following example, the peer specifies a 'to' address of
   "example.org" when connecting to the "im.example.com" server, but the



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   server knows nothing of that address.)

   P: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='example.net'
          to='example.org'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='g4qSvGvBxJ+xeAd7QKezOQJFFlw='
          to='example.net'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:server'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <host-unknown
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.7.  improper-addressing

   A stanza sent between two servers lacks a 'to' or 'from' attribute,
   the 'from' or 'to' attribute has no value, or the value is not a
   valid XMPP address.

   (In the following example, the peer sends a stanza without a 'to'
   address over a server-to-server stream.)

   P: <message from='juliet@im.example.com'>
        <body>Wherefore art thou?</body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <improper-addressing
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>








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4.8.3.8.  internal-server-error

   The server has experienced a misconfiguration or an otherwise-
   undefined internal error that prevents it from servicing the stream.

   S: <stream:error>
        <internal-server-error
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.9.  invalid-from

   The JID or hostname provided in a 'from' address is not a valid JID
   or does not match an authorized JID or validated domain as negotiated
   between servers via SASL or Server Dialback, or as negotiated between
   a client and a server via authentication and resource binding.

   (In the following example, a peer that has authenticated only as
   "example.net" attempts to send a stanza from an address at
   "example.org".)

   P: <message from='romeo@example.org' to='juliet@im.example.com'>
        <body>Neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike.</body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <invalid-from
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.10.  invalid-namespace

   The streams namespace name is something other than
   "http://etherx.jabber.org/streams" (see Section 11.2) or the default
   namespace is not supported (e.g., something other than "jabber:
   client" or "jabber:server").

   (In the following example, the client specifies a namespace of
   'http://wrong.namespace.example.org/' for the stream.)










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   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://wrong.namespace.example.org/'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <invalid-namespace
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.11.  invalid-xml

   The entity has sent invalid XML over the stream to a server that
   performs validation (see Section 11.4).

   (In the following example, the peer attempts to send an IQ stanza of
   type "subscribe" but the XML schema defines no such value for the
   'type' attribute.)

   P: <iq from='example.net'
          id='l3b1vs75'
          to='im.example.com'
          type='subscribe'>
        <ping xmlns='urn:xmpp:ping'/>
      </iq>

   S: <stream:error>
        <invalid-xml
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>







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4.8.3.12.  not-authorized

   The entity has attempted to send XML stanzas before the stream has
   been authenticated, or otherwise is not authorized to perform an
   action related to stream negotiation; the receiving entity MUST NOT
   process the offending stanza before sending the stream error.

   (In the following example, the client attempts to send XML stanzas
   before authenticating with the server.)

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

   C: <message to='romeo@example.net'>
        <body>Wherefore art thou?</body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <not-authorized
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.13.  policy-violation

   The entity has violated some local service policy (e.g., the stanza
   exceeds a configured size limit); the server MAY choose to specify
   the policy in the <text/> element or in an application-specific
   condition element.

   (In the following example, the client sends an XMPP message that is
   too large according to the server's local service policy.)




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   C: <message to='juliet@im.example.com' id='foo'>
        <body>[ ... the-emacs-manual ... ]</body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <policy-violation
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
        <stanza-too-big xmlns='urn:xmpp:errors'/>
      </stream:error>

   S: </stream:stream>

4.8.3.14.  remote-connection-failed

   The server is unable to properly connect to a remote entity that is
   needed for authentication or authorization, such as a remote
   authentication database.

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <remote-connection-failed
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.15.  reset

   The server is closing the stream because it has new (typically
   security-critical) features to offer, because the keys or
   certificates used to establish a secure context for the stream have
   expired or have been revoked during the life of the stream
   (Section 13.7.2.3), because the TLS sequence number has wrapped



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   (Section 5.2.5), etc.


   S: <stream:error>
        <reset
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.16.  resource-constraint

   The server lacks the system resources necessary to service the
   stream.

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <resource-constraint
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.17.  restricted-xml

   The entity has attempted to send restricted XML features such as a
   comment, processing instruction, DTD subset, or XML entity reference
   (see Section 11.1).

   (In the following example, the client sends an XMPP message
   containing an XML comment.)






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   C: <message to='juliet@im.example.com'>
        <!--<subject/>-->
        <body>This message has no subject.</body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <restricted-xml
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.18.  see-other-host

   The server will not provide service to the initiating entity but is
   redirecting traffic to another host; the XML character data of the
   <see-other-host/> element returned by the server MUST specify the
   alternate hostname or IP address at which to connect, which MUST be a
   valid domainpart or a domainpart plus port number (separated by the
   ':' character in the form "domainpart:port").  If the domainpart is
   the same as the source domain, target domain, or resolved IP address
   to which the initiating entity originally connected (differing only
   by the port number), then the initiating entity SHOULD simply attempt
   to reconnect at that address.  Otherwise, the initiating entity MUST
   resolve the hostname specified in the <see-other-host/> element as
   described under Section 3.2.


























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   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
      <stream:error>
        <see-other-host
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'>
          [2001:41D0:1:A49b::1]:9222
        </see-other-host>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.19.  system-shutdown

   The server is being shut down and all active streams are being
   closed.

   S: <stream:error>
        <system-shutdown
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.20.  undefined-condition

   The error condition is not one of those defined by the other
   conditions in this list; this error condition SHOULD be used only in
   conjunction with an application-specific condition.

   S: <stream:error>
        <undefined-condition
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
        <app-error xmlns='http://example.com/ns'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>



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4.8.3.21.  unsupported-encoding

   The initiating entity has encoded the stream in an encoding that is
   not supported by the server (see Section 11.6) or has otherwise
   improperly encoded the stream (e.g., by violating the rules of the
   [UTF-8] encoding).

   (In the following example, the client attempts to encode data using
   UTF-16 instead of UTF-8.)

   C: <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-16'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'
      <stream:error>
        <unsupported-encoding
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.22.  unsupported-feature

   The receiving entity has advertised a mandatory stream feature that
   the initiating entity does not support, and has offered no other
   mandatory feature alongside the unsupported feature.

   (In the following example, the receiving entity requires negotiation
   of an example feature but the initiating entity does not support the
   feature.)









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   R: <stream:features>
        <example xmlns='urn:xmpp:example'>
          <required/>
        </example>
      </stream:features>

   I: <stream:error>
        <unsupported-feature
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.23.  unsupported-stanza-type

   The initiating entity has sent a first-level child of the stream that
   is not supported by the server, either because the receiving entity
   does not understand the namespace or because receiving entity does
   not understand the element name for the applicable namespace (which
   might be the default namespace).

   (In the following example, the client attempts to send a first-level
   child element of <pubsub/> qualified by the 'jabber:client'
   namespace, but the schema for that namespace defines no such
   element.)



























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   C: <pubsub xmlns='jabber:client'>
        <publish node='princely_musings'>
          <item id='ae890ac52d0df67ed7cfdf51b644e901'>
            <entry xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom'>
              <title>Soliloquy</title>
              <summary>
   To be, or not to be: that is the question:
   Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
   The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
   Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
   And by opposing end them?
              </summary>
              <link rel='alternate' type='text/html'
                    href='http://denmark.example/2003/12/13/atom03'/>
              <id>tag:denmark.example,2003:entry-32397</id>
              <published>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</published>
              <updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
            </entry>
          </item>
        </publish>
      </pubsub>

   S: <stream:error>
        <unsupported-stanza-type
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.24.  unsupported-version

   The value of the 'version' attribute provided by the initiating
   entity in the stream header specifies a version of XMPP that is not
   supported by the server.


















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   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='11.0'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'
      <stream:error>
        <unsupported-version
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.3.25.  xml-not-well-formed

   The initiating entity has sent XML that violates the well-formedness
   rules of [XML] or [XML-NAMES].

   (In the following example, the client sends an XMPP message that is
   not namespace-well-formed.)

   C: <message>
        <foo:body>What is this foo?</foo:body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <xml-not-well-formed
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.8.4.  Application-Specific Conditions

   As noted, an application MAY provide application-specific stream
   error information by including a properly-namespaced child in the
   error element.  The application-specific element SHOULD supplement or
   further qualify a defined element.  Thus the <error/> element will
   contain two or three child elements.



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   C: <message>
        <body>
          My keyboard layout is:

          QWERTYUIOP{}|
          ASDFGHJKL:"
          ZXCVBNM<>?
        </body>
      </message>

   S: <stream:error>
        <xml-not-well-formed
            xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
        <text xml:lang='en' xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'>
          Some special application diagnostic information!
        </text>
        <escape-your-data xmlns='http://example.com/ns'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>

4.9.  Simplified Stream Examples

   This section contains two simplified examples of a stream-based
   connection between a client and a server; these examples are included
   for the purpose of illustrating the concepts introduced thus far.


























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   A basic connection:

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   [ ... channel encryption ... ]

   [ ... authentication ... ]

   [ ... resource binding ... ]

   C:   <message from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
                 to='romeo@example.net'
                 xml:lang='en'>
          <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>
        </message>

   S:   <message from='romeo@example.net/orchard'
                 to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
                 xml:lang='en'>
          <body>Neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike.</body>
        </message>

   C: </stream:stream>

   S: </stream:stream>









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   A connection gone bad:

   C: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='juliet@im.example.com'
          to='im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <?xml version='1.0'?>
      <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   [ ... channel encryption ... ]

   [ ... authentication ... ]

   [ ... resource binding ... ]

   C:   <message from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
                 to='romeo@example.net'
                 xml:lang='en'>
          <body>No closing tag!
        </message>

   S: <stream:error>
       <xml-not-well-formed
           xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
      </stream:error>
      </stream:stream>


   More detailed examples are provided under Section 9.


5.  STARTTLS Negotiation







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5.1.  Overview

   XMPP includes a method for securing the stream from tampering and
   eavesdropping.  This channel encryption method makes use of the
   Transport Layer Security [TLS] protocol, specifically a "STARTTLS"
   extension that is modelled after similar extensions for the [IMAP],
   [POP3], and [ACAP] protocols as described in [USINGTLS].  The XML
   namespace name for the STARTTLS extension is
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'.

   Support for STARTTLS is REQUIRED in XMPP client and server
   implementations.  An administrator of a given deployment MAY specify
   that TLS is obligatory for client-to-server communication, server-to-
   server communication, or both.  An initiating entity SHOULD use TLS
   to secure its stream with the receiving entity before proceeding with
   SASL authentication.

5.2.  Stream Negotiation Rules

5.2.1.  Mandatory-to-Negotiate

   If the receiving entity advertises only the STARTTLS feature or if
   the receiving entity includes the <required/> child element as
   explained under Section 5.3.1, the parties MUST consider TLS as
   mandatory-to-negotiate.  If TLS is mandatory-to-negotiate, the
   receiving entity SHOULD NOT advertise support for any stream feature
   except STARTTLS during the initial stage of the stream negotiation
   process, because further stream features might depend on prior
   negotiation of TLS given the order of layers in XMPP (e.g., the
   particular SASL mechanisms offered by the receiving entity will
   likely depend on whether TLS has been negotiated).

5.2.2.  Restart

   After TLS negotiation, the parties MUST restart the stream.

5.2.3.  Data Formatting

   During STARTTLS negotiation, the entities MUST NOT send any
   whitespace as separators between XML elements (i.e., from the last
   character of the <starttls/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls' namespace at depth=1 of the stream
   as sent by the initiating entity, until the last character of the
   <proceed/> element qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
   namespace at depth=1 of the stream as sent by the receiving entity).
   This prohibition helps to ensure proper security layer byte
   precision.  Any such whitespace shown in the STARTTLS examples
   provided in this document is included only for the sake of



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   readability.

5.2.4.  Order of TLS and SASL Negotiations

   If the initiating entity chooses to use TLS, STARTTLS negotiation
   MUST be completed before proceeding to SASL negotiation (Section 6);
   this order of negotiation is necessary to help safeguard
   authentication information sent during SASL negotiation, as well as
   to make it possible to base the use of the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism on
   a certificate (or other credentials) provided during prior TLS
   negotiation.

5.2.5.  TLS Renegotiation

   The TLS protocol allows either party in a TLS-protected channel to
   initiate a new handshake that establishes new cryptographic
   parameters (see [TLS-NEG]).  The cases most commonly mentioned are:

   1.  Refreshing encryption keys.

   2.  Wrapping the TLS sequence number as explained in Section 6.1 of
       [TLS].

   3.  Protecting client credentials by completing server authentication
       first and then completing client authentication over the
       protected channel.

   Because it is relatively inexpensive to establish streams in XMPP,
   for the first two cases it is preferable to use an XMPP stream reset
   (as described under Section 4.8.3.15) instead of performing TLS
   renegotiation.

   The third case has improved security characteristics when the TLS
   client (which might be an XMPP server) presents credentials to the
   TLS server.  If communicating such credentials to an unauthenticated
   server might leak private information, it can be appropriate to
   complete TLS negotiation for the purpose of server authentication and
   then attempt TLS renegotiation for the purpose of client
   authentication with the TLS server.

   However, the third case is sufficiently rare that XMPP entities
   SHOULD NOT blindly attempt TLS renegotiation.

   If an entity that does not support TLS renegotiation detects a
   renegotiation attempt, then it MUST immediately close the underlying
   TCP connection without returning a stream error (since the violation
   has occurred at the TLS layer, not the XMPP layer; see Section 13.3).




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   If an entity that supports TLS renegotiation detects a TLS
   renegotiation attempt that does not use the TLS Renegotiation
   Extension [TLS-NEG], then it MUST immediately close the underlying
   TCP connection without returning a stream error (since the violation
   has occurred at the TLS layer, not the XMPP layer; see Section 13.3).

   Support for TLS renegotiation is strictly OPTIONAL.  However,
   implementations that support TLS renegotiation MUST implement and use
   the TLS Renegotiation Extension [TLS-NEG].

5.2.6.  TLS Extensions

   Either party to a stream MAY include any TLS extension during the TLS
   negotiation itself.  This is a matter for the TLS layer, not the XMPP
   layer.

5.3.  Process

5.3.1.  Exchange of Stream Headers and Stream Features

   The initiating entity resolves the hostname of the receiving entity
   as specified under Section 3, opens a TCP connection to the
   advertised port at the resolved IP address, and sends an initial
   stream header to the receiving entity; if the initiating entity is
   capable of STARTTLS negotiation, it MUST include the 'version'
   attribute set to a value of at least "1.0" in the initial stream
   header.

   I: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   The receiving entity MUST send a response stream header to the
   initiating entity over the TCP connection opened by the initiating
   entity; if the receiving entity is capable of STARTTLS negotiation,
   it MUST include the 'version' attribute set to a value of at least
   "1.0" in the response stream header.










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   R: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='t7AMCin9zjMNwQKDnplntZPIDEI='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

   The receiving entity then MUST send stream features to the initiating
   entity.  If the receiving entity supports TLS, the stream features
   MUST include an advertisement for support of STARTTLS negotiation,
   i.e., a <starttls/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls' namespace.

   If the receiving entity considers STARTTLS negotiation to be
   mandatory, the <starttls/> element SHOULD contain an empty
   <required/> child element.

   R: <stream:features>
        <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'>
          <required/>
        </starttls>
      </stream:features>

5.3.2.  Initiation of STARTTLS Negotiation

5.3.2.1.  STARTTLS Command

   In order to begin the STARTTLS negotiation, the initiating entity
   issues the STARTTLS command (i.e., a <starttls/> element qualified by
   the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls' namespace) to instruct the
   receiving entity that it wishes to begin a STARTTLS negotiation to
   secure the stream.

   I: <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   The receiving entity MUST reply with either a <proceed/> element
   (proceed case) or a <failure/> element (failure case) qualified by
   the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls' namespace.

5.3.2.2.  Failure Case

   If the failure case occurs, the receiving entity MUST return a
   <failure/> element qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
   namespace and close the XML stream.





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   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   R: </stream:stream>

   Causes for the failure case include but are not limited to:

   1.  The initiating entity has sent a malformed STARTTLS command.

   2.  The receiving entity did not offer the STARTTLS feature in its
       stream features.

   3.  The receiving entity cannot complete STARTTLS negotiation because
       of an internal error.

      Informational Note: STARTTLS failure is not triggered by TLS
      errors such as bad_certificate or handshake_failure, which are
      generated and handled during the TLS negotiation itself as
      described in [TLS].

   If the failure case occurs, the initiating entity MAY attempt to
   reconnect as explained under Section 3.3.

5.3.2.3.  Proceed Case

   If the proceed case occurs, the receiving entity MUST return a
   <proceed/> element qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
   namespace.

   R: <proceed xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   The receiving entity MUST consider the TLS negotiation to have begun
   immediately after sending the closing '>' character of the <proceed/>
   element to the initiating entity.  The initiating entity MUST
   consider the TLS negotiation to have begun immediately after
   receiving the closing '>' character of the <proceed/> element from
   the receiving entity.

   The entities now proceed to TLS negotiation as explained in the next
   section.

5.3.3.  TLS Negotiation

5.3.3.1.  Rules

   In order to complete TLS negotiation over the TCP connection, the
   entities MUST follow the process defined in [TLS].

   The following rules apply:



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   1.  The entities MUST NOT send any further XML data until the TLS
       negotiation is complete.

   2.  When using any of the mandatory-to-implement cipher suites
       specified under Section 13.8, the receiving entity MUST present a
       certificate.

   3.  So that mutual authentication will be possible, the receiving
       entity SHOULD send a certificate request to the initiating entity
       and the initiating entity SHOULD send a certificate (if
       available) to the receiving entity.

   4.  The initiating entity MUST validate the certificate to determine
       if the TLS negotiation will succeed; see Section 13.7.2 regarding
       certificate validation procedures.

   5.  The receiving entity SHOULD choose which certificate to present
       based on the 'to' attribute of the initial stream header.

   6.  Following successful TLS negotiation, all further data
       transmitted by either party MUST be encrypted.

      Security Note: See Section 13.8 regarding ciphers that MUST be
      supported for TLS; naturally, other ciphers MAY be supported as
      well.

5.3.3.2.  TLS Failure

   If the TLS negotiation results in failure, the receiving entity MUST
   terminate the TCP connection.

   The receiving entity MUST NOT send a closing </stream> tag before
   terminating the TCP connection, since the receiving entity and
   initiating entity MUST consider the original stream to be replaced
   upon failure of the TLS negotiation.

   The initiating entity MAY attempt to reconnect as explained under
   Section 3.3, with or without attempting TLS negotiation (in
   accordance with local service policy, user-configured preferences,
   etc.).

5.3.3.3.  TLS Success

   If the TLS negotiation is successful, then the entities MUST proceed
   as follows.






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   1.  The initiating entity MUST discard any information transmitted in
       layers above TCP that it obtained from the receiving entity in an
       insecure manner before TLS took effect (e.g., the receiving
       entity's 'from' address or the stream ID and stream features
       received from the receiving entity).

   2.  The receiving entity MUST discard any information transmitted in
       layers above TCP that it obtained from the initiating entity in
       an insecure manner before TLS took effect (e.g., the initiating
       entity's 'from' address).

   3.  The initiating entity MUST send a new initial stream header to
       the receiving entity over the encrypted connection.

   I: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

       Implementation Note: The initiating entity MUST NOT send a
       closing </stream> tag before sending the new initial stream
       header, since the receiving entity and initiating entity MUST
       consider the original stream to be replaced upon success of the
       TLS negotiation.

   4.  The receiving entity MUST respond with a new response stream
       header over the encrypted connection (for which it MUST generate
       a new stream ID instead of re-using the old stream ID).

   R: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='vgKi/bkYME8OAj4rlXMkpucAqe4='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'


   5.  The receiving entity also MUST send stream features to the
       initiating entity, which MUST NOT include the STARTTLS feature
       but which SHOULD include the SASL stream feature as described
       under Section 6.





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   R: <stream:features>
        <mechanisms xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
          <mechanism>EXTERNAL</mechanism>
          <mechanism>PLAIN</mechanism>
        </mechanisms>
      </stream:features>


6.  SASL Negotiation

6.1.  Overview

   XMPP includes a method for authenticating a stream by means of an
   XMPP-specific profile of the Simple Authentication and Security Layer
   protocol (see [SASL]).  SASL provides a generalized method for adding
   authentication support to connection-based protocols, and XMPP uses
   an XML namespace profile of SASL that conforms to the profiling
   requirements of [SASL].

   Support for SASL negotiation is REQUIRED in XMPP client and server
   implementations.

6.2.  Stream Negotiation Rules

6.2.1.  Mandatory-to-Negotiate

   The parties to a stream MUST consider SASL as mandatory-to-negotiate.

6.2.2.  Restart

   After SASL negotiation, the parties MUST restart the stream.

6.2.3.  Mechanism Preferences

   Any entity that will act as a SASL client or a SASL server MUST
   maintain an ordered list of its preferred SASL mechanisms according
   to the client or server, where the list is ordered according to local
   policy or user configuration (which SHOULD be in order of perceived
   strength to enable the strongest authentication possible).  A server
   MUST offer and a client MUST try SASL mechanisms in preference order.
   For example, if the server offers the ordered list "PLAIN SCRAM-SHA-1
   GSSAPI" or "SCRAM-SHA-1 GSSAPI PLAIN" but the client's ordered list
   is "GSSAPI SCRAM-SHA-1", the client MUST try GSSAPI first and then
   SCRAM-SHA-1 but MUST never try PLAIN (since PLAIN is not on its
   list).






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6.2.4.  Mechanism Offers

   If the receiving entity considers TLS negotiation (Section 5) to be
   mandatory before it will accept authentication with a particular SASL
   mechanism, it MUST NOT advertise that mechanism in its list of
   available SASL mechanisms before TLS negotiation has been completed.

   The receiving entity SHOULD offer the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism if both
   of the following conditions hold:

   1.  During TLS negotiation the initiating entity presented a
       certificate that is acceptable to the receiving entity for
       purposes of strong identity verification in accordance with local
       service policies (e.g., because said certificate is unexpired, is
       unrevoked, and is anchored to a root trusted by the receiving
       entity).

   2.  The receiving entity expects that the initiating entity will be
       able to authenticate and authorize as the identity provided in
       the certificate; in the case of a server-to-server stream, the
       receiving entity might have such an expectation because a DNS
       domain name presented in the initiating entity's certificate
       matches the domain referenced in the 'from' attribute of the
       initial stream header, where the matching rules of [TLS-CERTS]
       apply; in the case of a client-to-server stream, the receiving
       entity might have such an expectation because the bare JID
       presented in the initiating entity's certificate matches a user
       account that is registered with the server or because other
       information contained in the initiating entity's certificate
       matches that of an entity that has permission to use the server
       for access to an XMPP network.

   However, the receiving entity MAY offer the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism
   under other circumstances, as well.

   When the receiving entity offers the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism, the
   receiving entity SHOULD list the EXTERNAL mechanism first among its
   offered SASL mechanisms and the initiating entity SHOULD attempt SASL
   negotiation using the EXTERNAL mechanism first (this preference will
   tend to increase the likelihood that the parties can negotiate mutual
   authentication).

   Section 13.8 specifies SASL mechanisms that MUST be supported;
   naturally, other SASL mechanisms MAY be supported as well.

      Informational Note: Best practices for the use of SASL in the
      context of XMPP are described in [XEP-0175] for the ANONYMOUS
      mechanism and in [XEP-0178] for the EXTERNAL mechanism.



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6.2.5.  Data Formatting

   The following data formatting rules apply to the SASL negotiation:

   1.  During SASL negotiation, the entities MUST NOT send any
       whitespace as separators between XML elements (i.e., from the
       last character of the <auth/> element qualified by the
       'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace at depth=1 of the
       stream as sent by the initiating entity, until the last character
       of the <success/> element qualified by the
       'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace at depth=1 of the
       stream as sent by the receiving entity).  This prohibition helps
       to ensure proper security layer byte precision.  Any such
       whitespace shown in the SASL examples provided in this document
       is included only for the sake of readability.

   2.  Any XML character data contained within the XML elements MUST be
       encoded using base64, where the encoding adheres to the
       definition in Section 4 of [BASE64] and where the padding bits
       are set to zero.

   3.  As formally specified in the XML schema for the
       'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace under Appendix A.4,
       the receiving entity MAY include one or more application-specific
       child elements inside the <mechanisms/> element to provide
       information that might be needed by the initiating entity in
       order to complete successful SASL negotiation using one or more
       of the offered mechanisms; however, the syntax and semantics of
       all such elements are out of scope for this specification.

6.2.6.  Security Layers

   Upon successful SASL negotiation that involves negotiation of a
   security layer, both the initiating entity and the receiving MUST
   discard any application-layer state (i.e, state from the XMPP layer,
   excluding state from the TLS negotiation or SASL negotiation).

6.2.7.  Simple User Name

   Some SASL mechanisms (e.g., CRAM-MD5, DIGEST-MD5, and SCRAM) specify
   that the authentication identity used in the context of such
   mechanisms is a "simple user name" combined with a password (see
   Section 2 of [SASL] as well as [SASLPREP]).  The exact form of the
   simple user name in any particular mechanism or deployment thereof is
   a local matter, and a simple user name does not necessarily map to an
   application identifier such as a JID or JID component (e.g., a
   localpart).  However, in the absence of local information provided by
   the server, an XMPP client SHOULD assume that the authentication



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   identity for such a SASL mechanism is the combination of a user name
   and password, where the simple user name is the localpart of the
   user's JID.

6.2.8.  Authorization Identity

   An authorization identity is an optional identity specified by the
   initiating entity; in client-to-server streams it is typically used
   by an administrator to perform some management task on behalf of
   another user, whereas in server-to-server streams it is typically
   used to specify a particular application at a service (e.g., a multi-
   user chat server at conference.example.com that is hosted by the
   example.com XMPP service).  If the initiating entity wishes to act on
   behalf of another entity and the selected SASL mechanism supports
   transmission of an authorization identity, the initiating entity
   SHOULD provide an authorization identity during SASL negotiation.  If
   the initiating entity does not wish to act on behalf of another
   entity, it SHOULD NOT provide an authorization identity.

   In the case of client-to-server communication, the value of an
   authorization identity MUST be a bare JID (<localpart@domainpart>)
   and not a full JID (<localpart@domainpart/resourcepart>).

   In the case of server-to-server communication, the value of an
   authorization identity MUST be a domainpart only (<domainpart>).

   If the initiating entity provides an authorization identity during
   SASL negotiation, the receiving entity is responsible for verifying
   that the initiating entity is in fact allowed to assume the specified
   authorization identity; if not, the receiving entity MUST return an
   <invalid-authzid/> SASL error as described under Section 6.4.6.

6.2.9.  Realms

   The receiving entity MAY include a realm when negotiating certain
   SASL mechanisms.  If the receiving entity does not communicate a
   realm, the initiating entity MUST NOT assume that any realm exists.
   The realm MUST be used only for the purpose of authentication; in
   particular, an initiating entity MUST NOT attempt to derive an XMPP
   hostname from the realm information provided by the receiving entity.

6.2.10.  Round Trips

   [SASL] specifies that a using protocol such as XMPP can define two
   methods by which the protocol can save round trips where allowed for
   the SASL mechanism:





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   1.  When the SASL client (the XMPP "initiating entity") requests an
       authentication exchange, it can include "initial response" data
       with its request if appropriate for the SASL mechanism in use.
       In XMPP this is done by including the initial response as the XML
       character data of the <auth/> element.

   2.  At the end of the authentication exchange, the SASL server (the
       XMPP "receiving entity") can include "additional data with
       success" if appropriate for the SASL mechanism in use.  In XMPP
       this is done by including the additional data as the XML
       character data of the <success/> element.

   For the sake of protocol efficiency, it is REQUIRED for clients and
   servers to support these methods and RECOMMENDED to use them; however
   clients and servers MUST support the less efficient modes as well.

6.3.  Process

   The process for SASL negotiation is as follows.

6.3.1.  Exchange of Stream Headers and Stream Features

   If SASL negotiation follows successful STARTTLS negotiation
   (Section 5), then the SASL negotiation occurs over the encrypted
   stream that has already been negotiated.  If not, the initiating
   entity resolves the hostname of the receiving entity as specified
   under Section 3, opens a TCP connection to the advertised port at the
   resolved IP address, and sends an initial stream header to the
   receiving entity; if the initiating entity is capable of SASL
   negotiation, it MUST include the 'version' attribute set to a value
   of at least "1.0" in the initial stream header.

   I: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   The receiving entity MUST send a response stream header to the
   initiating entity (for which it MUST generate a new stream ID instead
   of re-using the old stream ID); if the receiving entity is capable of
   SASL negotiation, it MUST include the 'version' attribute set to a
   value of at least "1.0" in the response stream header.






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   R: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='vgKi/bkYME8OAj4rlXMkpucAqe4='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

   The receiving entity also MUST send stream features to the initiating
   entity.  If the receiving entity supports SASL, the stream features
   SHOULD include an advertisement for support of SASL negotiation,
   i.e., a <mechanisms/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace; typically the only case
   in which support for SASL negotiation would not be advertised here is
   before STARTTLS negotiation when TLS is required.

   The <mechanisms/> element MUST contain one <mechanism/> child element
   for each authentication mechanism the receiving entity offers to the
   initiating entity.  The order of <mechanism/> elements in the XML
   indicates the preference order of the SASL mechanisms according to
   the receiving entity; however the initiating entity MUST maintain its
   own preference order independent of the preference order of the
   receiving entity.

   R: <stream:features>
        <mechanisms xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
          <mechanism>EXTERNAL</mechanism>
          <mechanism>PLAIN</mechanism>
        </mechanisms>
      </stream:features>

6.3.2.  Initiation

   In order to begin the SASL negotiation, the initiating entity sends
   an <auth/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace and includes an
   appropriate value for the 'mechanism' attribute, thus starting the
   handshake for that particular authentication mechanism.  This element
   MAY contain XML character data (in SASL terminology, the "initial
   response") if the mechanism supports or requires it; if the
   initiating entity needs to send a zero-length initial response, it
   MUST transmit the response as a single equals sign character ("="),
   which indicates that the response is present but contains no data.

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='PLAIN'>AGp1bGlldAByMG0zMG15cjBtMzA=</auth>




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   If the initiating entity subsequently sends another <auth/> element
   (even if the ongoing authentication handshake has not yet completed),
   the server SHOULD discard the ongoing handshake and begin a new
   handshake for the subsequently requested SASL mechanism.

6.3.3.  Challenge-Response Sequence

   If necessary, the receiving entity challenges the initiating entity
   by sending a <challenge/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace; this element MAY
   contain XML character data (which MUST be generated in accordance
   with the definition of the SASL mechanism chosen by the initiating
   entity).

   The initiating entity responds to the challenge by sending a
   <response/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace; this element MAY
   contain XML character data (which MUST be generated in accordance
   with the definition of the SASL mechanism chosen by the initiating
   entity).

   If necessary, the receiving entity sends more challenges and the
   initiating entity sends more responses.

   This series of challenge/response pairs continues until one of three
   things happens:

   o  The initiating entity aborts the handshake for this authentication
      mechanism.
   o  The receiving entity reports failure of the handshake.
   o  The receiving entity reports success of the handshake.

   These scenarios are described in the following sections.

6.3.4.  Abort

   The initiating entity aborts the handshake for this authentication
   mechanism by sending an <abort/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace.

   I: <abort xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>

   Upon receiving an <abort/> element, the receiving entity MUST return
   a <failure/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace and containing an
   <aborted/> child element.





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   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>
        <aborted/>
      </failure>

6.3.5.  SASL Failure

   The receiving entity reports failure of the handshake for this
   authentication mechanism by sending a <failure/> element qualified by
   the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace (the particular
   cause of failure MUST be communicated in an appropriate child element
   of the <failure/> element as defined under Section 6.4).

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <not-authorized/>
      </failure>

   Where appropriate for the chosen SASL mechanism, the receiving entity
   SHOULD allow a configurable but reasonable number of retries (at
   least 2 and no more than 5); this enables the initiating entity
   (e.g., an end-user client) to tolerate incorrectly-provided
   credentials (e.g., a mistyped password) without being forced to
   reconnect.

   If the initiating entity attempts a reasonable number of retries with
   the same SASL mechanism and all attempts fail, it MAY fall back to
   the next mechanism in its ordered list by sending a new <auth/>
   request to the receiving entity, this starting a new handshake for
   that authentication mechanism.  If all handshakes fail and there are
   no remaining mechanisms in the initiating entity's list of supported
   and acceptable mechanisms, the initiating entity SHOULD simply close
   the stream.

   If the initiating entity exceeds the number of retries, the receiving
   entity MUST return a stream error, which SHOULD be <policy-
   violation/> (although some existing implementations send <not-
   authorized/> instead).

      Implementation Note: For server-to-server streams, if the
      receiving entity cannot offer the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism or any
      other SASL mechanism based on the security context established
      during TLS negotiation, the receiving entity MAY attempt to
      complete weak identity verification using the Server Dialback
      protocol [XEP-0220]; however, if according to local service
      policies weak identity verification is insufficient then the
      receiving entity SHOULD instead close the stream with a <policy-
      violation/> stream error.





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6.3.6.  SASL Success

   The receiving entity reports success of the handshake by sending a
   <success/> element qualified by the
   'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl' namespace; this element MAY
   contain XML character data (in SASL terminology, "additional data
   with success") if the chosen SASL mechanism supports or requires it;
   if the receiving entity needs to send additional data of zero length,
   it MUST transmit the data as a single equals sign character ("=").

   R: <success xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>

      Informational Note: The authorization identity communicated during
      SASL negotiation is used to determine the canonical address for
      the initiating client according to the receiving server, as
      described under Section 4.2.6.

   Upon receiving the <success/> element, the initiating entity MUST
   initiate a new stream over the existing TCP connection by sending a
   new initial stream header to the receiving entity.

   I: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

      Implementation Note: The initiating entity MUST NOT send a closing
      </stream> tag before sending the new initial stream header, since
      the receiving entity and initiating entity MUST consider the
      original stream to be replaced upon sending or receiving the
      <success/> element.

   Upon receiving the new initial stream header from the initiating
   entity, the receiving entity MUST respond by sending a new response
   stream header to the initiating entity (for which it MUST generate a
   new stream ID instead of re-using the old stream ID).

   R: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='gPybzaOzBmaADgxKXu9UClbprp0='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>



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   The receiving entity MUST also send stream features, containing any
   further available features or containing no features (via an empty
   <features/> element).

   R: <stream:features>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>
      </stream:features>

6.4.  SASL Errors

   The syntax of SASL errors is as follows, where "defined-condition" is
   one of the SASL-related error conditions defined in the following
   sections and XML data shown within the square brackets '[' and ']' is
   OPTIONAL.

   <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
     <defined-condition/>
     [<text xml:lang='langcode'>
         OPTIONAL descriptive text
     </text>]
   </failure>

   Inclusion of a defined condition is REQUIRED.

   Inclusion of the <text/> element is OPTIONAL, and can be used to
   provide application-specific information about the error condition,
   which information MAY be displayed to a human but only as a
   supplement to the defined condition.

6.4.1.  aborted

   The receiving entity acknowledges an <abort/> element sent by the
   initiating entity; sent in reply to the <abort/> element.

   I: <abort xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <aborted/>
      </failure>

6.4.2.  account-disabled

   The account of the initiating entity has been temporarily disabled;
   sent in reply to an <auth/> element (with or without initial response
   data) or a <response/> element.






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   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='PLAIN'>AGp1bGlldAByMG0zMG15cjBtMzA=</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <account-disabled/>
        <text xml:lang='en'>Call 212-555-1212 for assistance.</text>
      </failure>

6.4.3.  credentials-expired

   The authentication failed because the initiating entity provided
   credentials that have expired; sent in reply to a <response/> element
   or an <auth/> element with initial response data.

   I: <response xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        [ ... ]
      </response>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <credentials-expired/>
      </failure>

6.4.4.  encryption-required

   The mechanism requested by the initiating entity cannot be used
   unless the underlying stream is encrypted; sent in reply to an
   <auth/> element (with or without initial response data).

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='PLAIN'>AGp1bGlldAByMG0zMG15cjBtMzA=</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <encryption-required/>
      </failure>

6.4.5.  incorrect-encoding

   The data provided by the initiating entity could not be processed
   because the [BASE64] encoding is incorrect (e.g., because the
   encoding does not adhere to the definition in Section 4 of [BASE64]);
   sent in reply to a <response/> element or an <auth/> element with
   initial response data.

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='DIGEST-MD5'>[ ... ]</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <incorrect-encoding/>



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      </failure>

6.4.6.  invalid-authzid

   The authzid provided by the initiating entity is invalid, either
   because it is incorrectly formatted or because the initiating entity
   does not have permissions to authorize that ID; sent in reply to a
   <response/> element or an <auth/> element with initial response data.

   I: <response xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        [ ... ]
      </response>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <invalid-authzid/>
      </failure>

6.4.7.  invalid-mechanism

   The initiating entity did not provide a mechanism or requested a
   mechanism that is not supported by the receiving entity; sent in
   reply to an <auth/> element.

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='CRAM-MD5'/>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <invalid-mechanism/>
      </failure>

6.4.8.  malformed-request

   The request is malformed (e.g., the <auth/> element includes initial
   response data but the mechanism does not allow that, or the data sent
   violates the syntax for the specified SASL mechanism); sent in reply
   to an <abort/>, <auth/>, <challenge/>, or <response/> element.

   (In the following example, the XML character data of the <auth/>
   element contains more than 255 UTF-8-encoded Unicode characters and
   therefore violates the "token" production for the SASL ANONYMOUS
   mechanism as specified in [ANONYMOUS].)

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='ANONYMOUS'>[ ... some-long-token ... ]</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <malformed-request/>
      </failure>



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6.4.9.  mechanism-too-weak

   The mechanism requested by the initiating entity is weaker than
   server policy permits for that initiating entity; sent in reply to an
   <auth/> element (with or without initial response data).

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='PLAIN'>AGp1bGlldAByMG0zMG15cjBtMzA=</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <mechanism-too-weak/>
      </failure>

6.4.10.  not-authorized

   The authentication failed because the initiating entity did not
   provide proper credentials or the receiving entity has detected an
   attack but wishes to disclose as little information as possible to
   the attacker; sent in reply to a <response/> element or an <auth/>
   element with initial response data.

   I: <response xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        [ ... ]
      </response>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <not-authorized/>
      </failure>

      Security Note: This error condition includes but is not limited to
      the case of incorrect credentials or a nonexistent username.  In
      order to discourage directory harvest attacks, no differentiation
      is made between incorrect credentials and a nonexistent username.

6.4.11.  temporary-auth-failure

   The authentication failed because of a temporary error condition
   within the receiving entity, and it is advisable for the initiating
   entity to try again later; sent in reply to an <auth/> element or a
   <response/> element.

   I: <response xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        [ ... ]
      </response>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <temporary-auth-failure/>
      </failure>



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6.4.12.  transition-needed

   The authentication failed because the mechanism cannot be used until
   the initiating entity provides (for one time only) a plaintext
   password so that the receiving entity can build a hashed password for
   use in future authentication attempts; sent in reply to an <auth/>
   element with or without initial response data.

   I: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
            mechanism='CRAM-MD5'>[ ... ]</auth>

   R: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <transition-needed/>
      </failure>

      Security Note: An XMPP client MUST treat a <transition-needed/>
      SASL error with extreme caution, SHOULD NOT provide a plaintext
      password over an XML stream that is not encrypted via Transport
      Layer Security, and MUST warn a human user before allowing the
      user to provide a plaintext password over an unencrypted
      connection.  Even so, the attacker could be located on the server,
      attempting to capture the plaintext password.

6.5.  SASL Definition

   The profiling requirements of [SASL] require that the following
   information be supplied by the definition of a using protocol.

   service name:  "xmpp"
   initiation sequence:  After the initiating entity provides an opening
      XML stream header and the receiving entity replies in kind, the
      receiving entity provides a list of acceptable authentication
      methods.  The initiating entity chooses one method from the list
      and sends it to the receiving entity as the value of the
      'mechanism' attribute possessed by an <auth/> element, optionally
      including an initial response to avoid a round trip.
   exchange sequence:  Challenges and responses are carried through the
      exchange of <challenge/> elements from receiving entity to
      initiating entity and <response/> elements from initiating entity
      to receiving entity.  The receiving entity reports failure by
      sending a <failure/> element and success by sending a <success/>
      element; the initiating entity aborts the exchange by sending an
      <abort/> element.  Upon successful negotiation, both sides
      consider the original XML stream to be closed and new stream
      headers are sent by both entities.






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   security layer negotiation:  The security layer takes effect
      immediately after sending the closing '>' character of the
      <success/> element for the receiving entity, and immediately after
      receiving the closing '>' character of the <success/> element for
      the initiating entity.  The order of layers is first [TCP], then
      [TLS], then [SASL], then XMPP.
   use of the authorization identity:  The authorization identity can be
      used in XMPP to denote the non-default <localpart@domainpart> of a
      client; an empty string is equivalent to an absent authorization
      identity.


7.  Resource Binding

7.1.  Overview

   After a client authenticates with a server, it MUST bind a specific
   resource to the stream so that the server can properly address the
   client.  That is, there MUST be an XMPP resource associated with the
   bare JID (<localpart@domainpart>) of the client, so that the address
   for use over that stream is a full JID of the form
   <localpart@domainpart/resource> (including the resourcepart).  This
   ensures that the server can deliver XML stanzas to and receive XML
   stanzas from the client in relation to entities other than the server
   itself or the client's account, as explained under Section 10 (the
   client could exchange stanzas with the server itself or the client's
   account before binding a resource since the full JID is needed only
   for addressing outside the context of the stream negotiated between
   the client and the server, but this is not commonly done).

   After a client has bound a resource to the stream, it is referred to
   as a "connected resource".  A server SHOULD allow an entity to
   maintain multiple connected resources simultaneously, where each
   connected resource is associated with a distinct XML stream and
   differentiated from the other connected resources by a distinct
   resourcepart.

      Security Note: A server SHOULD enable the administrator of an XMPP
      service to limit the number of connected resources in order to
      prevent certain denial of service attacks as described under
      Section 13.12.

   If, before completing the resource binding step, the client attempts
   to send an XML stanza to an entity other than the server itself or
   the client's account, the server MUST NOT process the stanza and MUST
   return a <not-authorized/> stream error to the client.

   Support for resource binding is REQUIRED in XMPP client and server



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   implementations.

7.2.  Stream Negotiation Rules

7.2.1.  Mandatory-to-Negotiate

   The parties to a stream MUST consider resource binding as mandatory-
   to-negotiate.

7.2.2.  Restart

   After resource binding, the parties MUST NOT restart the stream.

7.3.  Advertising Support

   Upon sending a new response stream header to the client after
   successful SASL negotiation, the server MUST include a <bind/>
   element qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind' namespace
   in the stream features it presents to the client.

   The server MUST NOT include the resource binding stream feature until
   after the client has authenticated, typically by means of successful
   SASL negotiation.

   S: <stream:stream
          from='im.example.com'
          id='gPybzaOzBmaADgxKXu9UClbprp0='
          to='juliet@im.example.com'
          version='1.0'
          xml:lang='en'
          xmlns='jabber:client'
          xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <stream:features>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>
      </stream:features>

   Upon being informed that resource binding is mandatory, the client
   MUST bind a resource to the stream as described in the following
   sections.

7.4.  Generation of Resource Identifiers

   A resourcepart MUST at a minimum be unique among the connected
   resources for that <localpart@domainpart>.  Enforcement of this
   policy is the responsibility of the server.





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      Security Note: A resourcepart can be security-critical.  For
      example, if a malicious entity can guess a client's resourcepart
      then it might be able to determine if the client (and therefore
      the controlling principal) is online or offline, thus resulting in
      a presence leak as described under Section 13.10.2.  To prevent
      that possibility, a client can either (1) generate a random
      resourcepart on its own or (2) ask the server to generate a
      resourcepart on its behalf, which MUST be random (see [RANDOM]).
      One method for ensuring that the resourcepart is random is to
      generate a Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) as specified in
      [UUID].

7.5.  Server-Generated Resource Identifier

   A server MUST be able to generate an XMPP resourcepart on behalf of a
   client.

7.5.1.  Success Case

   A client requests a server-generated resourcepart by sending an IQ
   stanza of type "set" (see Section 8.2.3) containing an empty <bind/>
   element qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'
   namespace.

   C: <iq id='tn281v37' type='set'>
       <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>
      </iq>

   Once the server has generated an XMPP resourcepart for the client, it
   MUST return an IQ stanza of type "result" to the client, which MUST
   include a <jid/> child element that specifies the full JID for the
   connected resource as determined by the server.

   S: <iq id='tn281v37' type='result'>
       <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
         <jid>
           juliet@im.example.com/4db06f06-1ea4-11dc-aca3-000bcd821bfb
         </jid>
       </bind>
      </iq>

7.5.2.  Error Cases

   When a client asks the server to generate a resourcepart during
   resource binding, the following stanza error conditions are defined
   (and others not specified here are possible; see under Section 8.3):





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   o  The account has reached a limit on the number of simultaneous
      connected resources allowed.
   o  The client is otherwise not allowed to bind a resource to the
      stream.

7.5.2.1.  Resource Constraint

   If the account has reached a limit on the number of simultaneous
   connected resources allowed, the server MUST return a <resource-
   constraint/> stanza error.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='error'>
        <error type='wait'>
          <resource-constraint
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

7.5.2.2.  Not Allowed

   If the client is otherwise not allowed to bind a resource to the
   stream, the server MUST return a <not-allowed/> stanza error.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <not-allowed
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

7.6.  Client-Submitted Resource Identifier

   Instead of asking the server to generate a resourcepart on its
   behalf, a client MAY attempt to submit a resourcepart that it has
   generated or that the controlling user has provided.

7.6.1.  Success Case

   A client asks its server to accept a client-submitted resourcepart by
   sending an IQ stanza of type "set" containing a <bind/> element with
   a child <resource/> element containing non-zero-length XML character
   data.

   C: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='set'>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
          <resource>balcony</resource>
        </bind>
      </iq>



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   The server SHOULD accept the client-submitted resourcepart.  It does
   so by returning an IQ stanza of type "result" to the client,
   including a <jid/> child element that specifies the full JID for the
   connected resource and contains without modification the client-
   submitted text.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='result'>
       <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
         <jid>juliet@im.example.com/balcony</jid>
       </bind>
      </iq>

   Alternatively, in accordance with local service policies the server
   MAY refuse the client-submitted resourcepart and override it with a
   resourcepart that the server generates.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='result'>
       <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
         <jid>
      juliet@im.example.com/balcony 4db06f06-1ea4-11dc-aca3-000bcd821bfb
         </jid>
       </bind>
      </iq>

7.6.2.  Error Cases

   When a client attempts to submit its own XMPP resourcepart during
   resource binding, the following stanza error conditions are defined
   in addition to those described under Section 7.5.2 (and others not
   specified here are possible; see under Section 8.3):

   o  The provided resourcepart cannot be processed by the server.
   o  The provided resourcepart is already in use.

7.6.2.1.  Bad Request

   If the provided resourcepart cannot be processed by the server (e.g.
   because it is of zero length or because it is not in accordance with
   the Resourceprep profile of stringprep specified in [XMPP-ADDR]), the
   server MAY return a <bad-request/> stanza error (but SHOULD instead
   apply the Resourceprep profile or otherwise process the resourcepart
   so that it is in conformance).

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='error'>
        <error type='modify'>
          <bad-request xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>



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7.6.2.2.  Conflict

   If there is already a connected resource of the same name, the server
   MUST do one of the following:

   1.  Not accept the resourcepart provided by the client but instead
       override it with a resourcepart that the server generates.

   2.  Disallow the newly-requested resource and maintain the current
       resource.

   3.  Terminate the current resource and allow the newly-requested
       resource.

   Which of these the server does is up to the implementation, although
   it is RECOMMENDED to implement case #1.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='result'>
       <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
         <jid>
      juliet@im.example.com/balcony 4db06f06-1ea4-11dc-aca3-000bcd821bfb
         </jid>
       </bind>
      </iq>

   In case #2, the server MUST send a <conflict/> stanza error to the
   newly-requested resource but maintain the XML stream for that
   connection so that the newly-requested resource has an opportunity to
   negotiate a non-conflicting resourcepart before sending another
   request for resource binding.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='error'>
        <error type='modify'>
          <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

   In case #3, the server MUST send a <conflict/> stream error to the
   current resource and return an IQ stanza of type "result" (indicating
   success) to the newly-requested resource.

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='result'>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
          <jid>
            juliet@im.example.com/balcony
          </jid>
        </bind>
      </iq>



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7.6.3.  Retries

   If an error occurs when a client submits a resourcepart, the server
   SHOULD allow a configurable but reasonable number of retries (at
   least 5 and no more than 10); this enables the client to tolerate
   incorrectly-provided resourceparts (e.g., bad data formats or
   duplicate text strings) without being forced to reconnect.

   After the client has reached the retry limit, the server MUST return
   a <policy-violation/> stream error to the client.


8.  XML Stanzas

   After a client and a server (or two servers) have completed stream
   negotiation, either party can send XML stanzas.  Three kinds of XML
   stanza are defined for the 'jabber:client' and 'jabber:server'
   namespaces: <message/>, <presence/>, and <iq/>.  In addition, there
   are five common attributes for these stanza types.  These common
   attributes, as well as the basic semantics of the three stanza types,
   are defined in this specification; more detailed information
   regarding the syntax of XML stanzas for instant messaging and
   presence applications is provided in [XMPP-IM], and for other
   applications in the relevant XMPP extension specifications.

   Support for the XML stanza syntax and semantics defined in this
   specification is REQUIRED in XMPP client and server implementations.

      Security Note: A server MUST NOT process a partial stanza and MUST
      NOT attach meaning to the transmission timing of any part of a
      stanza (before receipt of the close tag).

8.1.  Common Attributes

   The following five attributes are common to message, presence, and IQ
   stanzas.

8.1.1.  to

   The 'to' attribute specifies the JID of the intended recipient for
   the stanza.

   <message to='romeo@example.net'>
     <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>
   </message>

   For information about server processing of inbound and outbound XML
   stanzas based on the 'to' address, refer to Section 10.



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8.1.1.1.  Client-to-Server Streams

   The following rules apply to inclusion of the 'to' attribute in the
   context of XML streams qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace
   (i.e., client-to-server streams).

   1.  A stanza with a specific intended recipient MUST possess a 'to'
       attribute whose value is an XMPP address.

   2.  A stanza sent from a client to a server for direct processing by
       the server as described in [XMPP-IM] for rosters (e.g., presence
       sent to the server for broadcasting to other entities) MUST NOT
       possess a 'to' attribute.

8.1.1.2.  Server-to-Server Streams

   The following rules apply to inclusion of the 'to' attribute in the
   context of XML streams qualified by the 'jabber:server' namespace
   (i.e., server-to-server streams).

   1.  A stanza MUST possess a 'to' attribute whose value is an XMPP
       address; if a server receives a stanza that does not meet this
       restriction, it MUST generate an <improper-addressing/> stream
       error.

   2.  The domainpart of the JID contained in the stanza's 'to'
       attribute MUST match the hostname of the receiving server (or any
       validated domain thereof) as communicated via SASL negotiation
       (see Section 6), Server Dialback (see [XEP-0220]), or similar
       means; if a server receives a stanza that does not meet this
       restriction, it MUST generate a <host-unknown/> or <host-gone/>
       stream error.

8.1.2.  from

   The 'from' attribute specifies the JID of the sender.

   <message from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
            to='romeo@example.net'>
     <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>
   </message>

8.1.2.1.  Client-to-Server Streams

   The following rules apply to the 'from' attribute in the context of
   XML streams qualified by the 'jabber:client' namespace (i.e., client-
   to-server streams).




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   1.  When the server receives an XML stanza from a client, the server
       MUST add a 'from' attribute to the stanza or override the 'from'
       attribute specified by the client, where the value of the 'from'
       attribute is the full JID (<localpart@domainpart/resource>)
       determined by the server for the connected resource that
       generated the stanza (see Section 4.2.6), or the bare JID
       (<localpart@domainpart>) in the case of subscription-related
       presence stanzas (see [XMPP-IM]).

   2.  When the server generates a stanza from the server itself for
       delivery to the client, the stanza MUST include a 'from'
       attribute whose value is the bare JID (i.e., <domain>) of the
       server as agreed upon during stream negotiation (e.g., based on
       the 'to' attribute of the initial stream header).

   3.  When the server generates a stanza from the server for delivery
       to the client on behalf of the account of the connected client
       (e.g., in the context of data storage services provided by the
       server on behalf of the client), the stanza MUST either (a) not
       include a 'from' attribute or (b) include a 'from' attribute
       whose value is the account's bare JID (<localpart@domainpart>).

   4.  A server MUST NOT send to the client a stanza without a 'from'
       attribute if the stanza was not generated by the server (e.g., if
       it was generated by another client or another server); therefore,
       when a client receives a stanza that does not include a 'from'
       attribute, it MUST assume that the stanza is from the user's
       account on the server.

8.1.2.2.  Server-to-Server Streams

   The following rules apply to the 'from' attribute in the context of
   XML streams qualified by the 'jabber:server' namespace (i.e., server-
   to-server streams).

   1.  A stanza MUST possess a 'from' attribute whose value is an XMPP
       address; if a server receives a stanza that does not meet this
       restriction, it MUST generate an <improper-addressing/> stream
       error.

   2.  The domainpart of the JID contained in the stanza's 'from'
       attribute MUST match the hostname of the sending server (or any
       validated domain thereof) as communicated via SASL negotiation
       (see Section 6), Server Dialback (see [XEP-0220]), or similar
       means; if a server receives a stanza that does not meet this
       restriction, it MUST generate an <invalid-from/> stream error.

   Enforcement of these rules helps to prevent certain denial of service



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   attacks as described under Section 13.12.

8.1.3.  id

   The 'id' attribute is used by the entity that generates a stanza
   ("the originating entity") to track any response or error stanza that
   it might receive in relation to the generated stanza from another
   entity (such as an intermediate server or the intended recipient).

   It is up to the originating entity whether the value of the 'id'
   attribute will be unique only within its current stream or unique
   globally.

   For <message/> and <presence/> stanzas, it is RECOMMENDED for the
   originating entity to include an 'id' attribute; for <iq/> stanzas,
   it is REQUIRED.

   If the generated stanza includes an 'id' attribute then it is
   REQUIRED for the response or error stanza to also include an 'id'
   attribute, where the value of the 'id' attribute MUST match that of
   the generated stanza.

   The semantics of IQ stanzas impose additional restrictions; see
   Section 8.2.3.

8.1.4.  type

   The 'type' attribute specifies the purpose or context of the message,
   presence, or IQ stanza.  The particular allowable values for the
   'type' attribute vary depending on whether the stanza is a message,
   presence, or IQ stanza.  The defined values for message and presence
   stanzas are specific to instant messaging and presence applications
   and therefore are defined in [XMPP-IM], whereas the values for IQ
   stanzas specify the role of an IQ stanza in a structured request-
   response exchange and therefore are specified under Section 8.2.3.
   The only 'type' value common to all three stanzas is "error"; see
   Section 8.3.

8.1.5.  xml:lang

   A stanza SHOULD possess an 'xml:lang' attribute (as defined in
   Section 2.12 of [XML]) if the stanza contains XML character data that
   is intended to be presented to a human user (as explained in
   [CHARSETS], "internationalization is for humans").  The value of the
   'xml:lang' attribute specifies the default language of any such
   human-readable XML character data.





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   <presence from='romeo@example.net/orchard' xml:lang='en'>
     <show>dnd</show>
     <status>Wooing Juliet</status>
   </presence>

   The value of the 'xml:lang' attribute MAY be overridden by the 'xml:
   lang' attribute of a specific child element.

   <presence from='romeo@example.net/orchard' xml:lang='en'>
     <show>dnd</show>
     <status>Wooing Juliet</status>
     <status xml:lang='cs'>Dvo&#x0159;&#x00ED;m se Julii</status>
   </presence

   If an outbound stanza generated by a client does not possess an 'xml:
   lang' attribute, the client's server SHOULD add an 'xml:lang'
   attribute whose value is that specified for the stream as defined
   under Section 4.6.4.

   C: <presence from='romeo@example.net/orchard'>
        <show>dnd</show>
        <status>Wooing Juliet</status>
      </presence>

   S: <presence from='romeo@example.net/orchard'
                to='juliet@im.example.com'
                xml:lang='en'>
        <show>dnd</show>
        <status>Wooing Juliet</status>
      </presence>

   If an inbound stanza received by a client or server does not possess
   an 'xml:lang' attribute, an implementation MUST assume that the
   default language is that specified for the stream as defined under
   Section 4.6.4.

   The value of the 'xml:lang' attribute MUST conform to the NMTOKEN
   datatype (as defined in Section 2.3 of [XML]) and MUST conform to the
   format defined in [LANGTAGS].

   A server MUST NOT modify or delete 'xml:lang' attributes on stanzas
   it receives from other entities.

8.2.  Basic Semantics







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8.2.1.  Message Semantics

   The <message/> stanza can be seen as a "push" mechanism whereby one
   entity pushes information to another entity, similar to the
   communications that occur in a system such as email.  All message
   stanzas SHOULD possess a 'to' attribute that specifies the intended
   recipient of the message; upon receiving such a stanza, a server
   SHOULD route or deliver it to the intended recipient (see Section 10
   for general routing and delivery rules related to XML stanzas).

8.2.2.  Presence Semantics

   The <presence/> stanza can be seen as a specialized broadcast or
   "publish-subscribe" mechanism, whereby multiple entities receive
   information (in this case, network availability information) about an
   entity to which they have subscribed.  In general, a publishing
   entity (client) SHOULD send a presence stanza with no 'to' attribute,
   in which case the server to which the entity is connected SHOULD
   broadcast that stanza to all subscribed entities.  However, a
   publishing entity MAY also send a presence stanza with a 'to'
   attribute, in which case the server SHOULD route or deliver that
   stanza to the intended recipient.  See Section 10 for general routing
   and delivery rules related to XML stanzas, and [XMPP-IM] for rules
   specific to presence applications.

8.2.3.  IQ Semantics

   Info/Query, or IQ, is a request-response mechanism, similar in some
   ways to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol [HTTP].  The semantics of IQ
   enable an entity to make a request of, and receive a response from,
   another entity.  The data content of the request and response is
   defined by the schema or other structural definition associated with
   the XML namespace that qualifies the direct child element of the IQ
   element (see Section 8.4), and the interaction is tracked by the
   requesting entity through use of the 'id' attribute.  Thus, IQ
   interactions follow a common pattern of structured data exchange such
   as get/result or set/result (although an error can be returned in
   reply to a request if appropriate):













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   Requesting                  Responding
     Entity                      Entity
   ----------                  ----------
       |                            |
       | <iq id='1' type='get'>     |
       |   [ ... payload ... ]      |
       | </iq>                      |
       | -------------------------> |
       |                            |
       | <iq id='1' type='result'>  |
       |   [ ... payload ... ]      |
       | </iq>                      |
       | <------------------------- |
       |                            |
       | <iq id='2' type='set'>     |
       |   [ ... payload ... ]      |
       | </iq>                      |
       | -------------------------> |
       |                            |
       | <iq id='2' type='error'>   |
       |   [ ... condition ... ]    |
       | </iq>                      |
       | <------------------------- |
       |                            |

                     Figure 5: Semantics of IQ Stanzas

   To enforce these semantics, the following rules apply:

   1.  The 'id' attribute is REQUIRED for IQ stanzas.

   2.  The 'type' attribute is REQUIRED for IQ stanzas.  The value MUST
       be one of the following (if the value is other than one of the
       following strings, the recipient or an intermediate router MUST
       return a stanza error of <bad-request/>):
       *  get -- The stanza requests information, inquires about what
          data is needed in order to complete further operations, etc.

       *  set -- The stanza provides data that is needed for an
          operation to be completed, sets new values, replaces existing
          values, etc.

       *  result -- The stanza is a response to a successful get or set
          request.

       *  error -- The stanza reports an error that has occurred
          regarding processing or delivery of a previously-sent get or
          set request (see Section 8.3).



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   3.  An entity that receives an IQ request of type "get" or "set" MUST
       reply with an IQ response of type "result" or "error".  The
       response MUST preserve the 'id' attribute of the request (or be
       empty if the generated stanza did not include an 'id' attribute).

   4.  An entity that receives a stanza of type "result" or "error" MUST
       NOT respond to the stanza by sending a further IQ response of
       type "result" or "error"; however, the requesting entity MAY send
       another request (e.g., an IQ of type "set" to provide obligatory
       information discovered through a get/result pair).

   5.  An IQ stanza of type "get" or "set" MUST contain exactly one
       child element, which specifies the semantics of the particular
       request.

   6.  An IQ stanza of type "result" MUST include zero or one child
       elements.

   7.  An IQ stanza of type "error" MAY include the child element
       contained in the associated "get" or "set" and MUST include an
       <error/> child; for details, see Section 8.3.

8.3.  Stanza Errors

   Stanza-related errors are handled in a manner similar to stream
   errors (Section 4.8).  Unlike stream errors, stanza errors are
   recoverable; therefore they do not result in termination of the XML
   stream and underlying TCP connection.  Instead, the entity that
   discovers the error condition returns an error stanza, which is a
   stanza that:

   o  is of the same kind (message, presence, or IQ) as the generated
      stanza that triggered the error

   o  has a 'type' attribute set to a value of "error"

   o  swaps the 'from' and 'to' addresses of the generated stanza

   o  mirrors the 'id' attribute (if any) of the generated stanza that
      triggered the error

   o  contains an <error/> child element that specifies the error
      condition and therefore provides a hint regarding actions that the
      sender can take to remedy the error (if possible)







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8.3.1.  Rules

   The following rules apply to stanza errors:

   1.  The receiving or processing entity that detects an error
       condition in relation to a stanza SHOULD return an error stanza
       (and MUST do so for IQ stanzas).

   2.  The error stanza MUST simply swap the 'from' and 'to' addresses
       from the generated stanza.

   3.  If the generated stanza was <message/> or <presence/> and
       included an 'id' attribute then it is REQUIRED for the error
       stanza to also include an 'id' attribute.  If the generated
       stanza was <iq/> then the error stanza MUST include an 'id'
       attribute.  In all cases, the value of the 'id' attribute MUST
       match that of the generated stanza (or be empty if the generated
       stanza did not include an 'id' attribute).

   4.  An error stanza MUST contain an <error/> child element.

   5.  The entity that returns an error stanza MAY pass along its JID to
       the sender of the generated stanza (e.g., for diagnostic or
       tracking purposes) through the addition of a 'by' attribute to
       the <error/> child element.

   6.  The entity that returns an error stanza MAY include the original
       XML sent so that the sender can inspect and, if necessary,
       correct the XML before attempting to resend (however, this is a
       courtesy only and the originating entity MUST NOT depend on
       receiving the original payload).

   7.  An <error/> child MUST NOT be included if the 'type' attribute
       has a value other than "error" (or if there is no 'type'
       attribute).

   8.  An entity that receives an error stanza MUST NOT respond to the
       stanza with a further error stanza; this helps to prevent
       looping.

8.3.2.  Syntax

   The syntax for stanza-related errors is as follows, where XML data
   shown within the square brackets '[' and ']' is OPTIONAL, 'intended-
   recipient' is the JID of the entity to which the original stanza was
   addressed, and 'sender' is the JID of the originating entity.





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   <stanza-kind from='intended-recipient' to='sender' type='error'>
     [OPTIONAL to include sender XML here]
     <error [by='jid']
            type='error-type'>
       <defined-condition xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
       [<text xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'
              xml:lang='langcode'>
         OPTIONAL descriptive text
       </text>]
       [OPTIONAL application-specific condition element]
     </error>
   </stanza-kind>

   The "stanza-kind" MUST be one of message, presence, or iq.

   The "error-type" MUST be one of the following:

   o  auth -- retry after providing credentials
   o  cancel -- do not retry (the error cannot be remedied)
   o  continue -- proceed (the condition was only a warning)
   o  modify -- retry after changing the data sent
   o  wait -- retry after waiting (the error is temporary)

   The "defined-condition" MUST correspond to one of the stanza error
   conditions defined under Section 8.3.3.


   The <error/> element:

   o  MUST contain a defined condition element.

   o  MAY contain a <text/> child element containing XML character data
      that describes the error in more detail; this element MUST be
      qualified by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas' namespace
      and SHOULD possess an 'xml:lang' attribute specifying the natural
      language of the XML character data.

   o  MAY contain a child element for an application-specific error
      condition; this element MUST be qualified by an application-
      specific namespace that defines the syntax and semantics of the
      element.

   The <text/> element is OPTIONAL.  If included, it MUST be used only
   to provide descriptive or diagnostic information that supplements the
   meaning of a defined condition or application-specific condition.  It
   MUST NOT be interpreted programmatically by an application.  It MUST
   NOT be used as the error message presented to a human user, but MAY
   be shown in addition to the error message associated with the defined



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   condition element (and, optionally, the application-specific
   condition element).

      Interoperability Note: The syntax defined in [RFC3920] included a
      legacy 'code' attribute, whose semantics have been replaced by the
      defined condition elements; information about mapping defined
      condition elements to values of the legacy 'code' attribute can be
      found in [XEP-0086].

8.3.3.  Defined Conditions

   The following conditions are defined for use in stanza errors.

8.3.3.1.  bad-request

   The sender has sent a stanza containing XML that does not conform to
   the appropriate schema or that cannot be processed (e.g., an IQ
   stanza that includes an unrecognized value of the 'type' attribute,
   or an element that is qualified by a recognized namespace but that
   violates the defined syntax for the element); the associated error
   type SHOULD be "modify".

   C: <iq from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='zj3v142b'
          to='im.example.com'
          type='subscribe'>
        <ping xmlns='urn:xmpp:ping'/>
      </iq>

   S: <iq from='im.example.com'
          id='zj3v142b'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='modify'>
          <bad-request xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.3.2.  conflict

   Access cannot be granted because an existing resource exists with the
   same name or address; the associated error type SHOULD be "cancel".









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   C: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='set'>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
          <resource>balcony</resource>
        </bind>
      </iq>

   S: <iq id='wy2xa82b4' type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.3.3.  feature-not-implemented

   The feature represented in the XML stanza is not implemented by the
   intended recipient or an intermediate server and therefore the stanza
   cannot be processed (e.g., the entity understands the namespace but
   does not recognize the element name); the associated error type
   SHOULD be "cancel" or "modify".

   C: <iq from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='9u2bax16'
          to='pubsub.example.com'
          type='get'>
        <pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
          <subscriptions/>
        </pubsub>
      </iq>

   E: <iq from='pubsub.example.com
          id='9u2bax16'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <feature-not-implemented
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
          <unsupported
              xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub#errors'
              feature='retrieve-subscriptions'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.3.4.  forbidden

   The requesting entity does not possess the necessary permissions to
   perform the action; the associated error type SHOULD be "auth".





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   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='auth'>
          <forbidden xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.5.  gone

   The recipient or server can no longer be contacted at this address,
   typically on a permanent basis (as opposed to the <redirect/> error
   condition, which is used for temporary addressing failures); the
   associated error type SHOULD be "cancel" and the error stanza SHOULD
   include a new address (if available) as the XML character data of the
   <gone/> element (which MUST be a Uniform Resource Identifier [URI] or
   Internationalized Resource Identifier [IRI] at which the entity can
   be contacted, typically an XMPP IRI as specified in [XMPP-URI]).

   C: <message
          from='juliet@im.example.com/churchyard'
          id='sj2b371v'
          to='romeo@example.net'
          type='chat'>
        <body>Thy lips are warm.</body>
      </message>

   S: <message
          from='romeo@example.net'
          id='sj2b371v'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/churchyard'
          type='error'>
        <error by='example.net'
               type='cancel'>
          <gone xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'>
            xmpp:romeo@afterlife.example.net
          </gone>
        </error>
      </message>



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8.3.3.6.  internal-server-error

   The server could not process the stanza because of a misconfiguration
   or an otherwise-undefined internal server error; the associated error
   type SHOULD be "cancel".

   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='wait'>
          <internal-server-error
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.7.  item-not-found

   The addressed JID or item requested cannot be found; the associated
   error type SHOULD be "cancel".

   C: <presence from='userfoo@example.com/bar'
                id='pwb2n78i'
                to='nosuchroom@conference.example.org/foo'/>

   S: <presence from='nosuchroom@conference.example.org/foo'
                id='pwb2n78i'
                to='userfoo@example.com/bar'
                type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <item-not-found xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

      Security Note: An application MUST NOT return this error if doing
      so would provide information about the intended recipient's
      network availability to an entity that is not authorized to know
      such information; instead it MUST return a <service-unavailable/>
      stanza error.




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8.3.3.8.  jid-malformed

   The sending entity has provided (e.g., during resource binding) or
   communicated (e.g., in the 'to' address of a stanza) an XMPP address
   or aspect thereof that does not adhere to the syntax defined in
   [XMPP-ADDR]; the associated error type SHOULD be "modify".

   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='ch@r@cters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='ch@r@cters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error by='muc.example.com'
               type='modify'>
          <jid-malformed
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

      Implementation Note: Enforcement of the format for XMPP localparts
      is primarily the responsibility of the service at which the
      associated account or entity is located (e.g., the example.com
      service is responsible for returning <jid-malformed/> errors
      related to all JIDs of the form <localpart@example.com>), whereas
      enforcement of the format for XMPP domainparts is primarily the
      responsibility of the service that seeks to route a stanza to the
      service identified by that domainpart (e.g., the example.org
      service is responsible for returning <jid-malformed/> errors
      related to stanzas that users of that service have to tried send
      to JIDs of the form <localpart@example.com>).  However, any entity
      that detects a malformed JID MAY return this error.

8.3.3.9.  not-acceptable

   The recipient or server understands the request but cannot process it
   because the request does not meet criteria defined by the recipient
   or server (e.g., a request to subscribe to information that does not
   simultaneously include configuration parameters needed by the
   recipient); the associated error type SHOULD be "modify".





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   C: <message to='juliet@im.example.com' id='yt2vs71m'>
        <body>[ ... the-emacs-manual ... ]</body>
      </message>

   S: <message from='juliet@im.example.com' id='yt2vs71m'>
        <error type='modify'>
          <not-acceptable
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>

8.3.3.10.  not-allowed

   The recipient or server does not allow any entity to perform the
   action (e.g., sending to entities at a blacklisted domain); the
   associated error type SHOULD be "cancel".

   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <not-allowed xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.11.  not-authorized

   The sender needs to provide credentials before being allowed to
   perform the action, or has provided improper credentials; the
   associated error type SHOULD be "auth".












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   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'>
        <error type='auth'>
          <not-authorized xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.12.  payment-required

   The requesting entity is not authorized to access the requested
   service because payment is necessary; the associated error type
   SHOULD be "auth".

   C: <iq from='romeo@example.net/foo'
          id='7isf2v4'
          to='pubsub.example.com'
          type='get'>
        <pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
          <items node='my_musings'/>
        </pubsub>
      </iq>

   E: <iq from='pubsub.example.com'
          id='7isf2v4'
          to='romeo@example.net/foo'
          type='error'>
        <error type='auth'>
          <payment-required
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.3.13.  policy-violation

   The entity has violated some local service policy (e.g., a message
   contains words that are prohibited by the service); the server MAY
   choose to specify the policy in the <text/> element or in an
   application-specific condition element; the associated error type
   SHOULD be "modify" or "wait" depending on the policy being violated.



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   (In the following example, the client sends an XMPP message that is
   too large according to the server's local service policy.)

   C: <message from='romeo@example.net/foo'
               to='bill@im.example.com'
               id='vq71f4nb'>
        <body>%#&@^!!!</body>
      </message>

   S: <message from='bill@im.example.com'
               id='vq71f4nb'
               to='romeo@example.net/foo'>
        <error by='example.net' type='cancel'>
          <policy-violation
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>

8.3.3.14.  recipient-unavailable

   The intended recipient is temporarily unavailable, undergoing
   maintenance, etc.; the associated error type SHOULD be "wait".

   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'>
        <error type='wait'>
          <recipient-unavailable
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

      Security Note: An application MUST NOT return this error if doing
      so would provide information about the intended recipient's
      network availability to an entity that is not authorized to know
      such information; instead it MUST return a <service-unavailable/>
      stanza error.






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8.3.3.15.  redirect

   The recipient or server is redirecting requests for this information
   to another entity, typically in a temporary fashion (as opposed to
   the <gone/> error condition, which is used for permanent addressing
   failures); the associated error type SHOULD be "modify" and the error
   stanza SHOULD contain the alternate address in the XML character data
   of the <redirect/> element (which MUST be a URI or IRI at which the
   entity can be contacted, typically an XMPP IRI as specified in
   [XMPP-URI]).

   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          type='error'>
        <error type='modify'>
          <redirect xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'>
            xmpp:characters@conference.example.org
          </redirect>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.16.  registration-required

   The requesting entity is not authorized to access the requested
   service because prior registration is necessary; the associated error
   type SHOULD be "auth".
















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   C: <presence
          from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'>
        <x xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/muc'/>
      </presence>

   E: <presence
          from='characters@muc.example.com/JulieC'
          id='y2bs71v4'
          to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'>
        <error type='auth'>
          <registration-required
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </presence>

8.3.3.17.  remote-server-not-found

   A remote server or service specified as part or all of the JID of the
   intended recipient does not exist or cannot be resolved (e.g., there
   is no _xmpp-server._tcp DNS SRV record, the A or AAAA fallback
   resolution fails, or A/AAAA lookup succeeds but there is no response
   on the IANA-registered port 5269); the associated error type SHOULD
   be "cancel".

   C: <message
          from='romeo@example.net/home'
          id='ud7n1f4h'
          to='bar@example.org'
          type='chat'>
       <body>yt?</body>
      </message>

   E: <message
          from='bar@example.org'
          id='ud7n1f4h'
          to='romeo@example.net/home'
          type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <remote-server-not-found
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>







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8.3.3.18.  remote-server-timeout

   A remote server or service specified as part or all of the JID of the
   intended recipient (or needed to fulfill a request) was resolved but
   communications could not be established within a reasonable amount of
   time (e.g., an XML stream cannot be established at the resolved IP
   address and port, or an XML stream can be established but stream
   negotiation fails because of problems with TLS, SASL, Server
   Dialback, etc.); the associated error type SHOULD be "wait".

   C: <message
          from='romeo@example.net/home'
          id='ud7n1f4h'
          to='bar@example.org'
          type='chat'>
       <body>yt?</body>
      </message>

   E: <message
          from='bar@example.org'
          id='ud7n1f4h'
          to='romeo@example.net/home'
          type='error'>
        <error type='wait'>
          <remote-server-timeout
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>

8.3.3.19.  resource-constraint

   The server or recipient is busy or lacks the system resources
   necessary to service the request; the associated error type SHOULD be
   "wait".

















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   C: <iq from='romeo@example.net/foo'
          id='kj4vz31m'
          to='pubsub.example.com'
          type='get'>
        <pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
          <items node='my_musings'/>
        </pubsub>
      </iq>

   E: <iq from='pubsub.example.com'
          id='kj4vz31m'
          to='romeo@example.net/foo'
          type='error'>
        <error type='wait'>
          <resource-constraint
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.3.20.  service-unavailable

   The server or recipient does not currently provide the requested
   service; the associated error type SHOULD be "cancel".

   C: <message from='romeo@example.net/foo'
               to='juliet@im.example.com'>
        <body>Hello?</body>
      </message>

   S: <message from='juliet@im.example.com/foo'
               to='romeo@example.net'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <service-unavailable
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>

      Security Note: An application MUST return a <service-unavailable/>
      stanza error instead of <item-not-found/> or <recipient-
      unavailable/> if sending one of the latter errors would provide
      information about the intended recipient's network availability to
      an entity that is not authorized to know such information.

8.3.3.21.  subscription-required

   The requesting entity is not authorized to access the requested
   service because a prior subscription is necessary; the associated
   error type SHOULD be "auth".



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   C: <message
          from='romeo@example.net/orchard'
          id='pa73b4n7'
          to='playwright@shakespeare.example.com'
          type='chat'>
        <subject>ACT II, SCENE II</subject>
        <body>help, I forgot my lines!</body>
      </message>

   E: <message
          from='playwright@shakespeare.example.com'
          id='pa73b4n7'
          to='romeo@example.net/orchard'
          type='error'>
        <error type='auth'>
          <subscription-required
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </message>

8.3.3.22.  undefined-condition

   The error condition is not one of those defined by the other
   conditions in this list; any error type can be associated with this
   condition, and it SHOULD be used only in conjunction with an
   application-specific condition.

























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   C: <message
          from='northumberland@shakespeare.example'
          id='richard2-4.1.247'
          to='kingrichard@royalty.england.example'>
        <body>My lord, dispatch; read o'er these articles.</body>
        <amp xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/amp'>
          <rule action='notify'
                condition='deliver'
                value='stored'/>
        </amp>

   S: <message from='example.org'
               id='amp1'
               to='northumberland@example.net/field'
               type='error'>
        <amp xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/amp'
             from='kingrichard@example.org'
             status='error'
             to='northumberland@example.net/field'>
          <rule action='error'
                condition='deliver'
                value='stored'/>
        </amp>
        <error type='modify'>
          <undefined-condition
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
          <failed-rules xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/amp#errors'>
            <rule action='error'
                  condition='deliver'
                  value='stored'/>
          </failed-rules>
        </error>
      </message>

8.3.3.23.  unexpected-request

   The recipient or server understood the request but was not expecting
   it at this time (e.g., the request was out of order); the associated
   error type SHOULD be "wait" or "modify".












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   C: <iq from='romeo@example.net/foo'
          id='o6hsv25z'
          to='pubsub.example.com'
          type='set'>
        <pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
           <unsubscribe
               node='my_musings'
               jid='romeo@example.net'/>
        </pubsub>
      </iq>

   E: <iq from='pubsub.example.com'
          id='o6hsv25z'
          to='romeo@example.net/foo'
          type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <unexpected-request
              xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
          <not-subscribed
              xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub#errors'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

8.3.4.  Application-Specific Conditions

   As noted, an application MAY provide application-specific stanza
   error information by including a properly-namespaced child within the
   error element.  Typically, the application-specific element
   supplements or further qualifies a defined element.  Thus, the
   <error/> element will contain two or three child elements.

   <iq id='ixc3v1b9' type='error'>
     <error type='modify'>
       <bad-request xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
       <too-many-parameters xmlns='http://example.com/ns'/>
     </error>
   </iq>














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   <message type='error' id='7h3baci9'>
     <error type='modify'>
       <undefined-condition
             xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
       <text xml:lang='en'
             xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'>
         [ ... application-specific information ... ]
       </text>
       <too-many-parameters xmlns='http://example.com/ns'/>
     </error>
   </message>

   An entity that receives an application-specific error condition it
   does not understand MUST ignore that condition but appropriately
   process the rest of the error stanza.

8.4.  Extended Content

   Although the message, presence, and IQ stanzas provide basic
   semantics for messaging, availability, and request-response
   interactions, XMPP uses XML namespaces (see [XML-NAMES]) to extend
   the basic stanza syntax for the purpose of providing additional
   functionality.

   A message or presence stanza MAY contain one or more optional child
   elements specifying content that extends the meaning of the message
   (e.g., an XHTML-formatted version of the message body as described in
   [XEP-0071]), and an IQ stanza of type "get" or "set" MUST contain one
   such child element.  Such a child element MAY have any name and MUST
   possess a namespace declaration (other than "jabber:client", "jabber:
   server", or "http://etherx.jabber.org/streams") that defines the data
   contained within the child element.  Such a child element is called
   an EXTENSION ELEMENT.  An extension element can be included either at
   the direct child level of the stanza or in any mix of levels.

   Similarly, EXTENSION ATTRIBUTES are allowed.  That is: a stanza
   itself (i.e., the <iq/>, <message/>, and <presence/> elements
   qualified by the "jabber:client" or "jabber:server" namespace
   declared as the default namespace for the stream) and any child
   element of such a stanza (whether a child element qualifed by the
   default namespace or an extension element) MAY also include one or
   more attributes that are qualified by XML namespaces that are
   different from the default namespace or the reserved "xml" prefix
   (including the "empty namespace" if the attribute is not prefixed).

      Interoperability Note: For the sake of backward compatibility and
      maximum interoperability, an entity that generates a stanza SHOULD
      NOT include such attributes in the stanza itself or in child



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      elements of the stanza that are qualified by the default namespace
      (e.g., the message <body/> element).

   An extension element or extension attribute is said to be "extended
   content" and the namespace name for such an element or attribute is
   said to be an "extended namespace".

      Informational Note: Although extended namespaces for XMPP are
      commonly defined by the XMPP Standards Foundation (XSF) and by the
      IETF, no specification or IETF standards action is required to
      define extended namespaces, and any individual or organization is
      free to define XMPP extensions.

   To illustrate these concepts, several examples follow.

   The following stanza contains one direct child element whose extended
   namespace is 'jabber:iq:roster':

   <iq from='juliet@capulet.com/balcony'
       id='h83vxa4c'
       type='get'>
    <query xmlns='jabber:iq:roster'/>
   </iq>

   The following stanza contains two direct child elements with two
   different extended namespaces.

   <presence from='juliet@capulet.com/balcony'>
     <c xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/caps'
        hash='sha-1'
        node='http://code.google.com/p/exodus'
        ver='QgayPKawpkPSDYmwT/WM94uAlu0='/>
     <x xmlns='vcard-temp:x:update'>
       <photo>sha1-hash-of-image</photo>
     </x>
   </presence>

   The following stanza contains two child elements, one of which is
   qualified by the default namespace and one of which is qualified by
   an extended namespace; the extension element in turn contains a child
   element that is qualified by a different extended namespace.










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   <message to='juliet@capulet.com'>
     <body>Hello?</body>
     <html xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/xhtml-im'>
       <body xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
         <p style='font-weight:bold'>Hello?</t>
       </body>
     </html>
   </message>

   It is conventional in the XMPP community for implementations to not
   generate namespace prefixes for elements that are qualified by
   extended namespaces (outside the XMPP community, this convention is
   sometimes called "prefix-free canonicalization").  However, if an
   implementation generates such namespace prefixes then it MUST include
   the namespace declaration in the stanza itself or a child element of
   the stanza, not in the stream header (see Section 4.7.3).

   Routing entities (typically servers) SHOULD try to maintain prefixes
   when serializing XML stanzas for processing, but receiving entities
   MUST NOT depend on the prefix strings to have any particular value.

   Support for any given extended namespace is OPTIONAL on the part of
   any implementation.  If an entity does not understand such a
   namespace, the entity's expected behavior depends on whether the
   entity is (1) the recipient or (2) a server that is routing or
   delivering the stanza to the recipient.

   If a recipient receives a stanza that contains an element or
   attribute it does not understand, it MUST NOT attempt to process that
   XML data and instead MUST proceed as follows.

   o  If an entity receives a message or presence stanza that contains
      XML data qualified by a namespace it does not understand, then it
      MUST ignore the portion of the stanza qualified by the unknown
      namespace.

   o  If an entity receives a message stanza whose only child element is
      qualified by a namespace it does not understand, then it MUST
      either ignore the entire stanza or return a stanza error, which
      SHOULD be <service-unavailable/>.
   o  If an entity receives an IQ stanza of type "get" or "set"
      containing a child element qualified by a namespace it does not
      understand, then the entity MUST return an IQ stanza of type
      "error" with an error condition of <service-unavailable/>.

   If a server handles a stanza that is intended for delivery to another
   entity and that contains a child element it does not understand, it
   MUST route the stanza unmodified to a remote server or deliver the



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   stanza unmodified to a connected client associated with a local
   recipient.



9.  Examples

   The examples in this section further illustrate the protocols defined
   in this specification.  The examples are not exhaustive and not
   normative.  The alternate steps shown illustrate the handling of
   failure cases but would not necessarily be triggered by the data sent
   in the examples.

9.1.  Client-to-Server Examples

   The following examples show the XMPP data flow for a client
   negotiating an XML stream with a server, exchanging XML stanzas, and
   closing the negotiated stream.  The server is "im.example.com", the
   server requires use of TLS, the client authenticates via the SASL
   SCRAM-SHA-1 mechanism as <juliet@im.example.com>, and the client
   binds a client-submitted resource to the stream.  It is assumed that
   before sending the initial stream header, the client has already
   resolved an SRV record of _xmpp-client._tcp.im.example.com and has
   opened a TCP connection to the advertised port at the resolved IP
   address.

9.1.1.  TLS

   Step 1: Client initiates stream to server:

   C: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>














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   Step 2: Server responds by sending a response stream header to
   client:

   S: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='t7AMCin9zjMNwQKDnplntZPIDEI='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

   Step 3: Server sends stream features to client (only the STARTTLS
   extension at this point):

   S: <stream:features>
        <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'>
          <required/>
        </starttls>
      </stream:features>

   Step 4: Client sends STARTTLS command to server:

   C: <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   Step 5: Server informs client that it is allowed to proceed:

   S: <proceed xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   Step 5 (alt): Server informs client that STARTTLS negotiation has
   failed and closes both XML stream and TCP connection:

   S: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   S: </stream:stream>

   Step 6: Client and server attempt to complete TLS negotiation over
   the existing TCP connection (see [TLS] for details).

   Step 7: If TLS negotiation is successful, client initiates a new
   stream to server:

   C: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'



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        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Step 7 (alt): If TLS negotiation is unsuccessful, server closes TCP
   connection.

9.1.2.  SASL

   Step 8: Server responds by sending a stream header to client along
   with any available stream features:

   S: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='vgKi/bkYME8OAj4rlXMkpucAqe4='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'

   S: <stream:features>
        <mechanisms xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
          <mechanism>SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS</mechanism>
          <mechanism>SCRAM-SHA-1</mechanism>
          <mechanism>PLAIN</mechanism>
        </mechanisms>
      </stream:features>

   Step 9: Client selects an authentication mechanism, in this case
   SCRAM-SHA-1, including initial response data:

   C: <auth xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl"
            mechanism="SCRAM-SHA-1">
        biwsbj1qdWxpZXQscj1vTXNUQUF3QUFBQU1BQUFBTlAwVEFBQUFBQUJQVTBBQQ==
      </auth>

   The decoded base64 data is
   "n,,n=juliet,r=oMsTAAwAAAAMAAAANP0TAAAAAABPU0AA".

   Step 10: Server sends a challenge:

   S: <challenge xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl">
        cj1vTXNUQUF3QUFBQU1BQUFBTlAwVEFBQUFBQUJQVTBBQWUxMjQ2OTViLTY5Y
        TktNGRlNi05YzMwLWI1MWIzODA4YzU5ZSxzPU5qaGtZVE0wTURndE5HWTBaaT
        AwTmpkbUxUa3hNbVV0TkRsbU5UTm1ORE5rTURNeixpPTQwOTY=
      </challenge>

   The decoded base64 data is "r=oMsTAAwAAAAMAAAANP0TAAAAAABPU0AAe124695
   b-69a9-4de6-9c30-



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   b51b3808c59e,s=NjhkYTM0MDgtNGY0Zi00NjdmLTkxMmUtNDlmNTNmNDNkMDMz,i=409
   6" (line breaks not included in actual data).

   Step 11: Client sends a response:

   C: <response xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl">
        Yz1iaXdzLHI9b01zVEFBd0FBQUFNQUFBQU5QMFRBQUFBQUFCUFUwQUFlMTI0N
        jk1Yi02OWE5LTRkZTYtOWMzMC1iNTFiMzgwOGM1OWUscD1VQTU3dE0vU3ZwQV
        RCa0gyRlhzMFdEWHZKWXc9
      </response>

   The decoded base64 data is "c=biws, r=oMsTAAwAAAAMAAAANP0TAAAAAABPU0A
   Ae124695b-69a9-4de6-9c30-b51b3808c59e, p=UA57tM/
   SvpATBkH2FXs0WDXvJYw=" (line breaks not included in actual data).

   Step 12: Server informs client of success, including additional data
   with success:

   S: <success xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        dj1wTk5ERlZFUXh1WHhDb1NFaVc4R0VaKzFSU289
      </success

   The decoded base64 data is "v=pNNDFVEQxuXxCoSEiW8GEZ+1RSo=".

   Step 12 (alt): Server returns error to client:

   S: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
        <not-authorized/>
      </failure>

   Step 13: Client initiates a new stream to server:

   C: <stream:stream
        from='juliet@im.example.com'
        to='im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'












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9.1.3.  Resource Binding

   Step 14: Server responds by sending a stream header to client along
   with supported features (in this case resource binding):

   S: <stream:stream
        from='im.example.com'
        id='gPybzaOzBmaADgxKXu9UClbprp0='
        to='juliet@im.example.com'
        version='1.0'
        xml:lang='en'
        xmlns='jabber:client'
        xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S: <stream:features>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'/>
      </stream:features>

   Upon being informed that resource binding is mandatory, the client
   needs to bind a resource to the stream; here we assume that the
   client submits a human-readable text string.

   Step 15: Client binds a resource:

   C: <iq id='yhc13a95' type='set'>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
          <resource>balcony</resource>
        </bind>
      </iq>

   Step 16: Server accepts submitted resourcepart and informs client of
   successful resource binding:

   S: <iq id='yhc13a95' type='result'>
        <bind xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'>
          <jid>
            juliet@im.example.com/balcony
          </jid>
        </bind>
      </iq>











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   Step 16 (alt): Server returns error to client:

   S: <iq id='yhc13a95' type='error'>
        <error type='cancel'>
          <conflict xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'/>
        </error>
      </iq>

9.1.4.  Stanza Exchange

   Now the client is allowed to send XML stanzas over the negotiated
   stream.

   C: <message from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
               id='ju2ba41c'
               to='romeo@example.net'
               type='chat'
               xml:lang='en'>
        <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>
      </message>

   If necessary, sender's server negotiates XML streams with intended
   recipient's server (see Section 9.2).

   The intended recipient replies and the message is delivered to the
   client.

   E: <message from='romeo@example.net/orchard'
               id='ju2ba41c'
               to='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
               type='chat'
               xml:lang='en'>
        <body>Neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike.</body>
      </message>

   The client can subsequently send and receive an unbounded number of
   subsequent XML stanzas over the stream.

9.1.5.  Close

   Desiring to send no further messages, the client closes the stream
   but waits for incoming data from the server.

   C: </stream:stream>

   Consistent with Section 4.4, the server might send additional data
   and then closes the stream as well.




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   S: </stream:stream>

   The client now terminates the underlying TCP connection.

9.2.  Server-to-Server Examples

   The following examples show the data flow for a server negotiating an
   XML stream with another server, exchanging XML stanzas, and closing
   the negotiated stream.  The initiating server ("Server1") is
   im.example.com; the receiving server ("Server2") is example.net and
   it requires use of TLS; im.example.com presents a certificate and
   authenticates via the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism.  It is assumed that
   before sending the initial stream header, Server1 has already
   resolved an SRV record of _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net and has
   opened a TCP connection to the advertised port at the resolved IP
   address.  Note how Server1 uses a default namespace ("jabber:server")
   and prefixes for stream-related elements, whereas Server2 uses
   prefix-free canonicalization.

9.2.1.  TLS

   Step 1: Server1 initiates stream to Server2:

   S1: <stream:stream
         from='im.example.com'
         to='example.net'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='jabber:server'
         xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Step 2: Server2 responds by sending a response stream header to
   Server1:

   S2: <stream
         from='example.net'
         id='hTiXkW+ih9k2SqdGkk/AZi0OJ/Q='
         to='im.example.com'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Step 3: Server2 sends stream features to Server1 (only the STARTTLS
   extension at this point):

   S2: <features xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
         <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'>
           <required/>
         </starttls>
       </features>



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   Step 4: Server1 sends the STARTTLS command to Server2:

   S1: <starttls xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   Step 5: Server2 informs Server1 that it is allowed to proceed:

   S2: <proceed xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   Step 5 (alt): Server2 informs Server1 that STARTTLS negotiation has
   failed and closes stream:

   S2: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

   S2: </stream>

   Step 6: Server1 and Server2 attempt to complete TLS negotiation via
   TCP (see [TLS] for details).

   Step 7: If TLS negotiation is successful, Server1 initiates a new
   stream to Server2:

   S1: <stream:stream
         from='im.example.com'
         to='example.net'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='jabber:server'
         xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Step 7 (alt): If TLS negotiation is unsuccessful, Server2 closes TCP
   connection.

9.2.2.  SASL

   Step 8: Server2 sends a response stream header to Server1 along with
   available stream features (including a preference for the SASL
   EXTERNAL mechanism):

   S2: <stream
         from='example.net'
         id='RChdjlgj/TIBcbT9Keu31zDihH4='
         to='im.example.com'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S2: <features xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>
         <mechanisms xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
           <mechanism>EXTERNAL</mechanism>
         </mechanisms>



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       </features>

   Step 9: Server1 selects the EXTERNAL mechanism (including an empty
   response of "="):

   S1: <auth xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
             mechanism='EXTERNAL'/>=</auth>

   Step 10: Server2 returns success:

   S2: <success xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>

   Step 10 (alt): Server2 informs Server1 of failed authentication:

   S2: <failure xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'>
         <not-authorized/>
       </failure>

   S2: </stream>

   Step 11: Server1 initiates a new stream to Server2:

   S1: <stream:stream
         from='im.example.com'
         to='example.net'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='jabber:server'
         xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   Step 12: Server2 responds by sending a stream header to Server1 along
   with any additional features (or, in this case, an empty features
   element):

   S2: <stream
         from='example.net'
         id='MbbV2FeojySpUIP6J91qaa+TWHM='
         to='im.example.com'
         version='1.0'
         xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'>

   S2: <features xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'/>

9.2.3.  Stanza Exchange

   Now Server1 is allowed to send XML stanzas to Server2 over the
   negotiated stream from im.example.com to example.net; here we assume
   that the transferred stanzas are those shown earlier for client-to-
   server communication, albeit over a server-to-server stream qualified



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   by the 'jabber:server' namespace.

   Server1 sends XML stanza to Server2:

   S1: <message from='juliet@im.example.com/balcony'
                id='ju2ba41c'
                to='romeo@example.net'
                type='chat'
                xml:lang='en'>
       <body>Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?</body>
      </message>

9.2.4.  Close

   Desiring to send no further messages, Server1 closes the stream.  (In
   practice, the stream would most likely remain open for some time,
   since Server1 and Server2 do not immediately know if the stream will
   be needed for further communication.)

   S1: </stream:stream>

   Consistent with the recommended stream closing handshake, Server2
   closes the stream as well:

   S2: </stream>

   Server1 now terminates the underlying TCP connection.


10.  Server Rules for Processing XML Stanzas

   Each server implementation will contain its own logic for processing
   stanzas it receives.  Such logic determines whether the server needs
   to route a given stanza to another domain, deliver it to a local
   entity (typically a connected client associated with a local
   account), or handle it directly within the server itself.  This
   section provides general rules for processing XML stanzas.  However,
   particular XMPP applications MAY specify delivery rules that modify
   or supplement the following rules (e.g., a set of delivery rules for
   instant messaging and presence applications is defined in [XMPP-IM]).

10.1.  In-Order Processing

   An XMPP server MUST ensure in-order processing of XML stanzas between
   any two entities.  This includes stanzas sent by a client to its
   server for direct processing by the server (e.g., in-order processing
   of a roster get and initial presence as described in [XMPP-IM]).




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10.2.  General Considerations

   At high level, there are three primary considerations at play in
   server processing of XML stanzas, which sometimes are at odds but
   need to be managed in a consistent way:

   1.  It is good to deliver a stanza to the intended recipient if
       possible.

   2.  If a stanza cannot be delivered, it is helpful to inform the
       sender.

   3.  It is bad to facilitate directory harvesting attacks
       (Section 13.11) and presence leaks (Section 13.10.2).

   With regarding to possible delivery-related attacks, the following
   points need to be kept in mind:

   1.  From the perspective of an attacker, there is little if any
       effective difference between the server's (i) delivering the
       stanza or storing it offline for later delivery (see [XMPP-IM])
       and (ii) silently ignoring it (because an error is not returned
       immediately in any of those cases); therefore, in scenarios where
       a server delivers a stanza or places the stanza into offline
       storage for later delivery, it needs to silently ignore the
       stanza if that account does not exist.

   2.  How a server processes stanzas sent to the bare JID
       <localpart@domainpart> has implications for directory harvesting.

   3.  How a server processes stanzas sent to a full JID has
       implications for presence leaks.  However, the attack is less
       direct here (because the attacker needs to try many different
       resources in an attempt to find the one resource that matches) so
       it is of somewhat lesser concern.

   Naturally, presence is not leaked if the entity to which a user's
   server returns an error already knows the user's presence or is
   authorized to do so (e.g., by means of a presence subscription or
   directed presence), and a server does not enable a directory
   harvesting attack if it returns an error to an entity that already
   knows if a user exists (e.g., because the entity is in the user's
   contact list); these matters are discussed more fully in [XMPP-IM].

10.3.  No 'to' Address

   If the stanza possesses no 'to' attribute, the server MUST handle it
   directly on behalf of the entity that sent it, where the meaning of



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   "handle it directly" depends on whether the stanza is message,
   presence, or IQ.  Because all stanzas received from other servers
   MUST possess a 'to' attribute, this rule applies only to stanzas
   received from a local entity (typically a client) that is connected
   to the server.

10.3.1.  Message

   If the server receives a message stanza with no 'to' attribute, it
   MUST treat the message as if the 'to' address were the bare JID
   <localpart@domainpart> of the sending entity.

10.3.2.  Presence

   If the server receives a presence stanza with no 'to' attribute, it
   MUST broadcast it to the entities that are subscribed to the sending
   entity's presence, if applicable ([XMPP-IM] defines the semantics of
   such broadcasting for presence applications).

10.3.3.  IQ

   If the server receives an IQ stanza with no 'to' attribute, it MUST
   process the stanza on behalf of the account from which received the
   stanza, as follows:

   1.  If the IQ stanza is of type "get" or "set" and the server
       understands the namespace that qualifies the payload, the server
       MUST handle the stanza on behalf of the sending entity or return
       an appropriate error to the sending entity.  Although the meaning
       of "handle" is determined by the semantics of the qualifying
       namespace, in general the server will respond to the IQ stanza of
       type "get" or "set" by returning an appropriate IQ stanza of type
       "result" or "error", responding as if the server were the bare
       JID of the sending entity.  As an example, if the sending entity
       sends an IQ stanza of type "get" where the payload is qualified
       by the 'jabber:iq:roster' namespace (as described in [XMPP-IM]),
       then the server will return the roster associated with the
       sending entity's bare JID to the particular resource of the
       sending entity that requested the roster.

   2.  If the IQ stanza is of type "get" or "set" and the server does
       not understand the namespace that qualifies the payload, the
       server MUST return an error to the sending entity, which MUST be
       <service-unavailable/>.

   3.  If the IQ stanza is of type "error" or "result", the server MUST
       handle the error or result in accordance with the payload of the
       associated IQ stanza or type "get" of "set" (if there is no such



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       associated stanza, the server MUST ignore the error or result
       stanza).

10.4.  Remote Domain

   If the domainpart of the JID contained in the 'to' attribute does not
   match one of the configured hostnames of the server, the server
   SHOULD attempt to route the stanza to the remote domain (subject to
   local service provisioning and security policies regarding inter-
   domain communication, since such communication is optional for any
   given deployment).  As described in the following sections, there are
   two possible cases.

      Security Note: These rules apply only client-to-server streams.
      As described under Section 8.1.1.2, a server MUST NOT accept a
      stanza over a server-to-server stream if the domainpart of the JID
      in the 'to' attribute does not match a hostname serviced by the
      receiving server.

10.4.1.  Existing Stream

   If a server-to-server stream already exists between the two domains,
   the sender's server will attempt to route the stanza to the
   authoritative server for the remote domain over the existing stream.

10.4.2.  No Existing Stream

   If there exists no server-to-server stream between the two domains,
   the sender's server will proceed as follows:

   1.  Resolve the hostname of the remote domain, as described under
       Section 13.9.2).

   2.  Negotiate a server-to-server stream between the two domains (as
       defined under Section 5 and Section 6).

   3.  Route the stanza to the authoritative server for the remote
       domain over the newly-established stream.

10.4.3.  Error Handling

   If routing of a stanza to the intended recipient's server is
   unsuccessful, the sender's server MUST return an error to the sender.
   If resolution of the remote domain is unsuccessful, the stanza error
   MUST be <remote-server-not-found/>.  If resolution succeeds but
   streams cannot be negotiated, the stanza error MUST be <remote-
   server-timeout/>.




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   If stream negotiation with the intended recipient's server is
   successful but the remote server cannot deliver the stanza to the
   recipient, the remote server MUST return an appropriate error to the
   sender by way of the sender's server.

10.5.  Local Domain

   If the hostname of the domainpart of the JID contained in the 'to'
   attribute matches one of the configured hostnames of the server, the
   server MUST first determine if the hostname is serviced by the server
   itself or by a specialized local service.  If the latter, the server
   MUST route the stanza to that service.  If the former, the server
   MUST proceed as follows.

10.5.1.  Mere Domain

   If the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the form <domain>,
   then the server MUST either (a) handle the stanza as appropriate for
   the stanza kind or (b) return an error stanza to the sender.

10.5.2.  Domain with Resource

   If the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the form <domain/
   resource>, then the server MUST either (a) handle the stanza as
   appropriate for the stanza kind or (b) return an error stanza to the
   sender.

10.5.3.  Localpart at Domain

   An address of this type is normally associated with an account on the
   server.  The following rules provide some general guidelines; more
   detailed rules in the context of instant messaging and presence
   applications are provided in [XMPP-IM].

10.5.3.1.  No Such User

   If there is no local account associated with the
   <localpart@domainpart>, how the stanza is processed depends on the
   stanza type.

   o  For a message stanza, the server MUST either (a) silently ignore
      the stanza or (b) return a <service-unavailable/> stanza error to
      the sender.

   o  For a presence stanza, the server SHOULD ignore the stanza (or
      behave as described in [XMPP-IM]).





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   o  For an IQ stanza, the server MUST return a <service-unavailable/>
      stanza error to the sender.

10.5.3.2.  Bare JID

   If the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the form
   <localpart@domainpart>, how the stanza is processed depends on the
   stanza type.

   o  For a message stanza, if there exists at least one connected
      resource for the account the server SHOULD deliver it to at least
      one of the connected resources.  If there exists no connected
      resource, the server MUST either (a) store the message offline for
      delivery when the account next has a connected resource or (b)
      return a <service-unavailable/> stanza error.

   o  For a presence stanza, if there exists at least one connected
      resource that has sent initial presence (i.e., has a "presence
      session" as defined in [XMPP-IM]), the server SHOULD deliver it to
      such resources.  If there exists no connected resource, the server
      SHOULD ignore the stanza (or behave as described in [XMPP-IM]).

   o  For an IQ stanza, the server MUST handle it directly on behalf of
      the intended recipient.

10.5.3.3.  Full JID

   If the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the form
   <localpart@domainpart/resource> and there is no connected resource
   that exactly matches the full JID, the stanza SHOULD be processed as
   if the JID were of the form <localpart@domainpart>.

   If the JID contained in the 'to' attribute is of the form
   <localpart@domainpart/resource> and there is a connected resource
   that exactly matches the full JID, the server SHOULD deliver the
   stanza to that connected resource.


11.  XML Usage

11.1.  Restrictions

   XMPP defines a class of data objects called XML streams as well as
   the behavior of computer programs that process XML streams.  XMPP is
   an application profile or restricted form of the Extensible Markup
   Language [XML], and a complete XML stream (including start and end
   stream tags) is a conforming XML document.




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   However, XMPP does not deal with XML documents but with XML streams.
   Because XMPP does not require the parsing of arbitrary and complete
   XML documents, there is no requirement that XMPP needs to support the
   full feature set of [XML].  In particular, the following features of
   XML are prohibited in XMPP:

   o  comments (as defined in Section 2.5 of [XML])
   o  processing instructions (Section 2.6 therein)
   o  internal or external DTD subsets (Section 2.8 therein)
   o  internal or external entity references (Section 4.2 therein) with
      the exception of the predefined entities (Section 4.6 therein)

   An XMPP implementation MUST behave as follows with regard to these
   features:

   1.  An XMPP implementation MUST NOT inject characters matching such
       features into an XML stream.

   2.  If an XMPP implementation receives characters matching such
       features over an XML stream, it MUST return a stream error, which
       SHOULD be <restricted-xml/> (although some existing
       implementations send <bad-format/> instead).

11.2.  XML Namespace Names and Prefixes

   XML namespaces (see [XML-NAMES]) are used within XMPP streams to
   create strict boundaries of data ownership.  The basic function of
   namespaces is to separate different vocabularies of XML elements that
   are structurally mixed together.  Ensuring that XMPP streams are
   namespace-aware enables any allowable XML to be structurally mixed
   with any data element within XMPP.  XMPP-specific rules for XML
   namespace names and prefixes are defined under Section 4.7 for XML
   streams and Section 8.4 for XML stanzas.

11.3.  Well-Formedness

   There are two varieties of well-formedness:

   o  "XML-well-formedness" in accordance with the definition of "well-
      formed" from Section 2.1 of [XML].
   o  "Namespace-well-formedness" in accordance with the definition of
      "namespace-well-formed" from Section 7 of [XML-NAMES].

   The following rules apply.

   An XMPP entity MUST NOT generate data that is not XML-well-formed.
   An XMPP entity MUST NOT accept data that is not XML-well-formed;
   instead it MUST return an <xml-not-well-formed/> stream error and



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   close the stream over which the data was received.

   An XMPP entity MUST NOT generate data that is not namespace-well-
   formed.  An XMPP server MUST NOT route or deliver data that is not
   namespace-well-formed, and MUST return a stanza error of <not-
   acceptable/> or a stream error of <xml-not-well-formed/> in response
   to the receipt of such data.

      Interoperability Note: Because these restrictions were
      underspecified in [RFC3920], it is possible that implementations
      based on that specification will send data that does not comply
      with these restrictions.

11.4.  Validation

   A server is not responsible for ensuring that XML data delivered to a
   client or routed to another server is valid, in accordance with the
   definition of "valid" provided in Section 2.8 of [XML].  An
   implementation MAY choose to accept or provide only data that has
   been explicitly validated against the schemas provided in this
   document, but such behavior is OPTIONAL.  A client SHOULD NOT rely on
   the ability to send data that does not conform to the schemas, and
   SHOULD ignore any non-conformant elements or attributes on the
   incoming XML stream.

      Informational Note: The terms "valid" and "well-formed" are
      distinct in XML.

11.5.  Inclusion of XML Declaration

   Before sending a stream header, an implementation SHOULD send an XML
   declaration (matching production [23] content of [XML]).
   Applications MUST follow the rules provided in [XML] regarding the
   format of the XML declaration and the circumstances under which the
   XML declaration is included.

11.6.  Character Encoding

   Implementations MUST support the UTF-8 transformation of Universal
   Character Set [UCS2] characters, as needed for conformance with
   [CHARSETS] and as defined in [UTF-8].  Implementations MUST NOT
   attempt to use any other encoding.  If one party to an XML stream
   detects that the other party has attempted to send XML data with an
   encoding other than UTF-8, it MUST return a stream error, which
   SHOULD be <unsupported-encoding/> (although some existing
   implementations send <bad-format/> instead).





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      Implementation Note: Because it is mandatory for an XMPP
      implementation to support all and only the UTF-8 encoding and
      because UTF-8 always has the same byte order, an implementation
      MUST NOT send a byte order mark ("BOM") at the beginning of the
      data stream.  If an entity receives the [UNICODE] character U+FEFF
      anywhere in an XML stream (including as the first character of the
      stream), it MUST interpret that character as a zero width no-break
      space, not as a byte order mark.

11.7.  Whitespace

   Except where explicitly disallowed (e.g., during TLS negotiation
   (Section 5) and SASL negotiation (Section 6)), either entity MAY send
   whitespace as separators between XML stanzas or between any other
   first-level elements sent over the stream.  One common use for
   sending such whitespace is explained under Section 4.4.

11.8.  XML Versions

   XMPP is an application profile of XML 1.0.  A future version of XMPP
   might be defined in terms of higher versions of XML, but this
   specification defines XMPP only in terms of XML 1.0.


12.  Internationalization Considerations

   As specified under Section 11.6, XML streams MUST be encoded in
   UTF-8.

   As specified under Section 4.6, an XML stream SHOULD include an 'xml:
   lang' attribute specifying the default language for any XML character
   data that is intended to be presented to a human user.  As specified
   under Section 8.1.5, an XML stanza SHOULD include an 'xml:lang'
   attribute if the stanza contains XML character data that is intended
   to be presented to a human user.  A server SHOULD apply the default
   'xml:lang' attribute to stanzas it routes or delivers on behalf of
   connected entities, and MUST NOT modify or delete 'xml:lang'
   attributes on stanzas it receives from other entities.

   Internationalization of XMPP addresses is specified in [XMPP-ADDR].


13.  Security Considerations

13.1.  Overview

   XMPP technologies are typically deployed using a decentralized
   client-server architecture.  As a result, several paths are possible



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   when two XMPP entities need to communicate:

   1.  Both entities are servers.  In this case, the entities can
       establish a direct server-to-server stream between themselves.

   2.  One entity is a server and the other entity is a client whose
       account is hosted on that server.  In this case, the entities can
       establish a direct client-to-server stream between themselves.

   3.  Both entities are clients whose accounts are hosted on the same
       server.  In this case, the entities cannot establish a direct
       stream between themselves, but there is only one intermediate
       entity between them, whose policies they might understand and in
       which they might have some level of trust (e.g., the server might
       require the use of Transport Layer Security for all client
       connections).

   4.  Both entities are clients but their accounts are hosted on
       different servers.  In this case, the entities cannot establish a
       direct stream between themselves and there are two intermediate
       entities between them; each client might have some trust in the
       server that hosts its account but might know nothing about the
       policies of the server to which the other client connects.

   This specification covers only the security of a direct XML stream
   between two servers or between a client and a server (cases #1 and
   #2), where each stream can be considered a single "hop" along a
   communication path.  The goal of security for a multi-hop path (cases
   #3 and #4), although very desirable, is out of scope for this
   specification.

   In accordance with [SEC-GUIDE], this specification covers
   communication security (confidentiality, data integrity, and peer
   entity authentication), non-repudiation, and systems security
   (unauthorized usage, inappropriate usage, and denial of service).  We
   also discuss common security issues such as information leaks,
   firewalls, and directory harvesting, as well as best practices
   related to the re-use of technologies such as base64, DNS,
   cryptographic hash functions, SASL, TLS, UTF-8, and XML.

13.2.  Threat Model

   The threat model for XMPP is in essence the standard "Internet Threat
   Model" described in [SEC-GUIDE].  Attackers are assumed to be
   interested in and capable of launching the following attacks against
   unprotected XMPP systems:





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   o  Eavesdropping
   o  Sniffing passwords
   o  Breaking passwords through dictionary attacks
   o  Discovering usernames through directory harvesting attacks
   o  Replaying, inserting, deleting, or modifying stanzas
   o  Spoofing users
   o  Gaining unauthorized entry to a server or account
   o  Using a server or account inappropriately
   o  Denying service to other entities
   o  Subverting communication streams through man-in-the-middle attacks
   o  Gaining control over on-path servers

   Where appropriate, the following sections describe methods for
   protecting against these threats.

13.3.  Order of Layers

   The order of layers in which protocols MUST be stacked is as follows:

   1.  TCP
   2.  TLS
   3.  SASL
   4.  XMPP

   This order has important security characteristics, as described
   throughout these security considerations.

   Within XMPP, XML stanzas are ordered on top of XML streams, as
   described under Section 4.

13.4.  Confidentiality and Integrity

   The use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) with non-null cipher suites
   provides a reliable mechanism for the ensuring the confidentiality
   and integrity of data exchanged between a client and a server or
   between two servers.  Therefore TLS helps to protect against
   eavesdropping, password sniffing, man-in-the-middle attacks, and
   stanza replays, insertion, deletion, and modification over an XML
   stream.  XMPP clients and servers MUST support TLS as defined under
   Section 5.

      Security Note: The confidentiality and integrity of a stream can
      be ensured by methods other than TLS, e.g. by means of a SASL
      mechanism that involves negotiation of a security layer.







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13.5.  Peer Entity Authentication

   The use of the Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) for
   authentication provides a reliable mechanism for peer entity
   authentication.  Therefore SASL helps to protect against user
   spoofing, unauthorized usage, and man-in-the middle attacks.  XMPP
   clients and servers MUST support SASL as defined under Section 6.

13.6.  Strong Security

   [STRONGSEC] defines "strong security" and its importance to
   communication over the Internet.  For the purpose of XMPP
   communication over client-to-server and server-to-server streams, the
   term "strong security" refers to the use of security technologies
   that provide both mutual authentication and integrity checking (e.g.,
   a combination of TLS encryption and SASL authentication using
   appropriate SASL mechanisms).  In particular, when using certificate-
   based authentication to provide strong security, a trust chain SHOULD
   be established out-of-band, although a shared certification authority
   signing certificates could allow a previously unknown certificate to
   establish trust in-band.  See the next section regarding certificate
   validation procedures.

   Implementations MUST support strong security.  Service provisioning
   SHOULD use strong security.

   The initial stream and the response stream MUST be secured
   separately, although security in both directions MAY be established
   via mechanisms that provide mutual authentication.

13.7.  Certificates

   Channel encryption of an XML stream using Transport Layer Security as
   described under Section 5, and in some cases also authentication as
   described under Section 6, is commonly based on a digital certificate
   presented by the receiving entity (or, in the case of mutual
   authentication, both the receiving entity and the initiating entity).
   This section describes best practices regarding the generation of
   digital certificates to be presented by XMPP entities and the
   verification of digital certificates presented by XMPP entities.

   In general, the following sections rely on and extend the rules and
   guidelines provided in the [PKIX] profile of [X509], and in
   [TLS-CERTS].  The reader is referred to those specifications for a
   detailed understanding of PKIX certificates and their use in TLS.






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13.7.1.  Certificate Generation

13.7.1.1.  General Considerations

   The following rules apply to public key certificates that are issued
   to XMPP entities:

   1.  The certificate MUST conform to [PKIX].

   2.  The certificate MUST NOT contain a basicConstraints extension
       with the cA boolean set to TRUE.

   3.  The subject field MUST NOT be null.

   4.  The hash algorithm for the signature SHOULD be SHA-256 as defined
       by [PKIX-ALGO].

   5.  The certificate SHOULD include an Authority Information Access
       (AIA) extension that specifies the address of an Online
       Certificate Status Protocol [OCSP] responder.

   The following rules apply to issuers of XMPP certificates:

   1.  The certificate MUST conform to [PKIX].

   2.  The certificate MUST contain a keyUsage extension with the
       digitalSignature bit set.

   3.  The subject field MUST NOT be null.

   4.  The hash algorithm for the signature SHOULD be SHA-256 as defined
       by [PKIX-ALGO].

   5.  For issuers of public key certificates, the issuer's certificate
       MUST contain a basicConstraints extension with the cA boolean set
       to TRUE.

   6.  For issuers of access certificates, the issuer's certificate MUST
       NOT contain a basicConstraints extension with the cA boolean set
       to TRUE.

13.7.1.2.  Server Certificates

13.7.1.2.1.  Rules

   In a digital certificate to be presented by an XMPP server (i.e., a
   SERVER CERTIFICATE), it is RECOMMENDED for the certificate to include
   one or more JIDs (i.e., domainparts) associated with domains serviced



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   at the server.  The rules and guidelines defined in [TLS-CERTS] apply
   to XMPP server certificates.  XMPP client and server software
   implementations MUST be able to validate both the SRV-ID and DNS-ID
   identifier types described in [TLS-CERTS].  Certification authorities
   that issue XMPP-specific certificates MUST support the DNS-ID
   identifier type and SHOULD support the SRV-ID identifier type.
   Service providers SHOULD request and prefer certificates that include
   the SRV-ID identifier type.  Support for the XmppAddr identifier type
   (specified under Section 13.7.1.4) and the CN-ID identifier type
   (described in [TLS-CERTS]) is encouraged for the sake of backward-
   compatibility.

13.7.1.2.2.  Examples

   For our first (relatively simple) example, consider a company called
   "Example Products, Inc."  It hosts an XMPP service at
   "im.example.com" (i.e., user addresses at the service are of the form
   "user@im.example.com"), and SRV lookups for the xmpp-client and xmpp-
   server services at "im.example.com" yield one machine, called
   "x.example.com", as follows:

   _xmpp-client._tcp.im.example.com. 400 IN SRV 20 0 5222 x.example.com
   _xmpp-server._tcp.im.example.com. 400 IN SRV 20 0 5269 x.example.com

   The certificate presented by x.example.com contains the following
   representations:

   o  An otherName type of SRVName (id-on-dnsSRV) containing an
      IA5String (ASCII) string of: "_xmpp-client.im.example.com"

   o  An otherName type of SRVName (id-on-dnsSRV) containing an
      IA5String (ASCII) string of: "_xmpp-server.im.example.com"

   o  A dNSName containing an ASCII string of "im.example.com"

   o  An otherName type of XmppAddr (id-on-xmppAddr) containing a UTF-8
      string of: "im.example.com"

   o  A CN containing an ASCII string of "Example Products, Inc."

   For our second (more complex) example, consider an ISP called
   "Example Internet Services".  It hosts an XMPP service at
   "example.net" (i.e., user addresses at the service are of the form
   "user@example.net"), but SRV lookups for the xmpp-client and xmpp-
   server services at "example.net" yield two machines ("x1.example.net"
   and "x2.example.net"), as follows:





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   _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 68400 IN SRV 20 0 5222 x1.example.net.
   _xmpp-client._tcp.example.net. 68400 IN SRV 20 0 5222 x2.example.net.
   _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 68400 IN SRV 20 0 5269 x1.example.net.
   _xmpp-server._tcp.example.net. 68400 IN SRV 20 0 5269 x2.example.net.

   Example Internet Services also hosts chatrooms at chat.example.net,
   and provides an xmpp-server SRV record for that service as well (thus
   enabling entity from remote domains to access that service).  It also
   might provide other such services in the future, so it wishes to
   represent a wildcard in its certificate to handle such growth.

   The certificate presented by either x1.example.net or x2.example.net
   contains the following representations:

   o  An otherName type of SRVName (id-on-dnsSRV) containing an
      IA5String (ASCII) string of: "_xmpp-client.example.net"

   o  An otherName type of SRVName (id-on-dnsSRV) containing an
      IA5String (ASCII) string of: "_xmpp-server.example.net"

   o  An otherName type of SRVName (id-on-dnsSRV) containing an
      IA5String (ASCII) string of: "_xmpp-server.chat.example.net"

   o  A dNSName containing an ASCII string of "example.net"

   o  A dNSName containing an ASCII string of "*.example.net"

   o  An otherName type of XmppAddr (id-on-xmppAddr) containing a UTF-8
      string of: "example.net"

   o  An otherName type of XmppAddr (id-on-xmppAddr) containing a UTF-8
      string of: "chat.example.net"

   o  A CN containing an ASCII string of "Example Internet Services"

13.7.1.3.  Client Certificates

   In a digital certificate to be presented by an XMPP client controlled
   by a human user (i.e., a CLIENT CERTIFICATE), it is RECOMMENDED for
   the certificate to include one or more JIDs associated with an XMPP
   user.  If included, a JID MUST be represented as an XmppAddr as
   specified under Section 13.7.1.4.

13.7.1.4.  XmppAddr Identifier Type

   The XmppAddr identifier type is a UTF8String within an otherName
   entity inside the subjectAltName, using the [ASN.1] Object Identifier
   "id-on-xmppAddr" specified below.



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   id-pkix OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) identified-organization(3)
           dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) }

   id-on  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-pkix 8 }  -- other name forms

   id-on-xmppAddr  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-on 5 }

   XmppAddr ::= UTF8String

   As an alternative to the "id-on-xmppAddr" notation, this Object
   Identifier MAY be represented in dotted display format (i.e.,
   "1.3.6.1.5.5.7.8.5") or in the Uniform Resource Name notation
   specified in [URN-OID] (i.e., "urn:oid:1.3.6.1.5.5.7.8.5").

   Thus for example the JID <juliet@im.example.com> as included in a
   certificate could be formatted in any of the following three ways:

   id-on-xmppAddr:
      subjectAltName=otherName:id-on-xmppAddr;UTF8:juliet@im.example.com

   dotted display format:  subjectAltName=otherName:
      1.3.6.1.5.5.7.8.5;UTF8:juliet@im.example.com

   URN notation:  subjectAltName=otherName:urn:oid:
      1.3.6.1.5.5.7.8.5;UTF8:juliet@im.example.com

   Use of the "id-on-xmppAddr" format is RECOMMENDED in the generation
   of certificates, but all three formats MUST be supported for the
   purpose of certificate validation.

   The "id-on-xmppAddr" object identifier MAY be used on conjuction with
   the extended key usage extension specified in Section 4.2.1.12 of
   [PKIX] in order to explicitly define and limit the intended use of a
   certificate to the XMPP network.

13.7.2.  Certificate Validation

   When an XMPP entity is presented with a server certificate or client
   certificate by a peer for the purpose of encryption or authentication
   of XML streams as described under Section 5 and Section 6, the entity
   MUST attempt to validate the certificate to determine if the
   certificate will be considered a TRUSTED CERTIFICATE, i.e., a
   certificate that is acceptable for encryption and/or authentication
   in accordance with the XMPP entity's local service policies or
   configured settings.

   For both server certificates and client certificates, the validating
   entity MUST attempt to verify the integrity of the certificate, MUST



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   attempt to verify that the certificate has been properly signed by
   the issuing Certificate Authority, MUST attempt to validate the full
   certification path, and MUST support certificate revocation messages.
   An implementation MUST enable a human user to view information about
   the certification path.

   If these validation attempts fail, either entity MAY choose to
   unilaterally terminate the session.

   The following sections describe certificate validation rules for
   server-to-server and client-to-server streams.

13.7.2.1.  Server Certificates

   For server certificates, the rules and guidelines defined in
   [TLS-CERTS] apply.  The following preference order of identifiers is
   RECOMMENDED, where the identifier types are as described in
   [TLS-CERTS] unless otherwise noted.

   1.  SRV-ID (see also [PKIX-SRV])
   2.  DNS-ID
   3.  XmppAddr as specified under Section 13.7.1.4
   4.  CN-ID

13.7.2.2.  Client Certificates

   When an XMPP server validates a certificate presented by a client,
   there are three possible cases, as discussed in the following
   sections.

13.7.2.2.1.  Case #1

   If the client certificate appears to be certified by a certification
   path terminating in a trust anchor (as described in Section 6.1 of
   [PKIX]), the server MUST check the certificate for any instances of
   the XmppAddr as described under Section 13.7.1.4.  There are three
   possible sub-cases:

   Sub-Case #1:  The server finds one XmppAddr for which the domainpart
      of the represented JID matches one of the configured hostnames of
      the server; the server SHOULD use this represented JID as the
      validated identity of the client.

   Sub-Case #2:  The server finds more than one XmppAddr for which the
      domainpart of the represented JID matches one of the configured
      hostnames of the server; the server SHOULD use one of these
      represented JIDs as the validated identity of the client, choosing
      among them according to local service policies or based on the



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      'to' address of the initial stream header.

   Sub-Case #3:  The server finds no XmppAddrs, or finds at least one
      XmppAddr but the domainpart of the represented JID does not match
      one of the configured hostnames of the server; the server MUST NOT
      use the represented JID (if any) as the validated identity of the
      client but instead MUST either validate the identity of the client
      using other means.

13.7.2.2.2.  Case #2

   If the client certificate is certified by a Certificate Authority not
   known to the server, the server MUST proceed as under Case #1, Sub-
   Case #3.

13.7.2.2.3.  Case #3

   If the client certificate is self-signed, the server MUST proceed as
   under Case #1, Sub-Case #3.

13.7.2.3.  Checking of Certificates in Long-Lived Streams

   Because XMPP uses long-lived XML streams, it is possible that a
   certificate presented during stream negotiation might expire or be
   revoked while the stream is still live (this is especially relevant
   in the context of server-to-server streams).  Therefore, each party
   to a long-lived stream SHOULD:

   1.  Cache the expiration date of the certificate presented by the
       other party and any certificates on which that certificate
       depends (such as a root or intermediate certificate for a
       certification authority), and close the stream when any such
       certificate expires, with a stream error of <reset/>
       (Section 4.8.3.15).

   2.  Periodically query the Online Certificate Status Protocol [OCSP]
       responder listed in the Authority Information Access (AIA)
       extension of the certificate presented by the other party and any
       certificates on which that certificate depends (such as a root or
       intermediate certificate for a certification authority), and
       close the stream if any such certificate has been revoked, with a
       stream error of <reset/> (Section 4.8.3.15).

   After the stream is closed, the initiating entity from the closed
   stream will need to re-connect and the receiving entity will need to
   authenticate the initiating entity based on whatever certificate it
   presents during negotiation of the new stream.




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13.7.2.4.  Use of Certificates in XMPP Extensions

   Certificates MAY be used in extensions to XMPP for the purpose of
   application-layer encryption or authentication above the level of XML
   streams (e.g., for end-to-end encryption).  Such extensions will
   define their own certificate handling rules, which at a minimum
   SHOULD be consistent with the rules defined in this specification but
   MAY specify additional rules.

13.8.  Mandatory-to-Implement Technologies

   At a minimum, all implementations MUST support the following
   technologies:

   for authentication only:  the SASL Salted Challenge Response
      mechanism [SCRAM], in particular the SCRAM-SHA-1 variant
      (REQUIRED) and SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS variant (RECOMMENDED if channel
      binding is possible); although the SASL PLAIN mechanism [PLAIN]
      can also be used for authentication only, such usage is strongly
      discouraged

   for confidentiality only:  TLS (using the
      TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA cipher)

   for both confidentiality and authentication with passwords:  TLS plus
      SCRAM-SHA-1 (REQUIRED) or SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS (RECOMMENDED);
      alternatively, TLS plus SASL PLAIN (but see further security
      considerations under Section 13.9.4)

   for both confidentiality and authentication without passwords:  TLS
      plus the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism (see Appendix A of [SASL]) using
      the TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA cipher supporting peer
      certificates (clients SHOULD support this, and servers MUST)

   Naturally, implementations MAY support other ciphers with TLS and MAY
   support other SASL mechanisms.

      Interoperability Note: The use of the SCRAM-SHA-1 or SASL-SCRAM-
      SHA-1-PLUS mechanism replaces the SASL DIGEST-MD5 mechanism as
      XMPP's mandatory-to-implement password-based method for
      authentication only, and the use of TLS plus either of those SCRAM
      variants or TLS plus PLAIN replaces TLS plus DIGEST-MD5.  For
      backward-compatibility with existing deployed infrastructure,
      implementations are encouraged to continue supporting the DIGEST-
      MD5 mechanism as specified in [DIGEST-MD5], however there are
      known interoperability issues with DIGEST-MD5 that make it
      impractical in the long term.  The use of the SCRAM-SHA-1 and
      SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS mechanisms is strongly preferred over the SASL



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      PLAIN mechanism because of their superior security properties, and
      PLAIN is intended to be a fallback only for implementations that
      do not yet support SCRAM.  For important security considerations
      related to these SASL mechanisms, see Section 13.9.4 and also
      refer to [SCRAM] and [PLAIN].

13.9.  Technology Reuse

13.9.1.  Use of base64 in SASL

   Both the client and the server MUST verify any base64 data received
   during SASL negotiation (Section 6).  An implementation MUST reject
   (not ignore) any characters that are not explicitly allowed by the
   base64 alphabet; this helps to guard against creation of a covert
   channel that could be used to "leak" information.

   An implementation MUST NOT break on invalid input and MUST reject any
   sequence of base64 characters containing the pad ('=') character if
   that character is included as something other than the last character
   of the data (e.g., "=AAA" or "BBBB=CCC"); this helps to guard against
   buffer overflow attacks and other attacks on the implementation.

   While base 64 encoding visually hides otherwise easily recognized
   information (such as passwords), it does not provide any
   computational confidentiality.

   All uses of base 64 encoding MUST follow the definition in Section 4
   of [BASE64] and padding bits MUST be set to zero.

13.9.2.  Use of DNS

   XMPP typically relies on the Domain Name System (specifically
   [DNS-SRV] records) to resolve a fully qualified domain name to an IP
   address before a client connects to a server or before a peer server
   connects to another server.  Before attempting to negotiate an XML
   stream, the initiating entity MUST NOT proceed until it has resolved
   the DNS domain name of the peer server as specified under Section 3
   (although it is not necessary to resolve the DNS domain name before
   each connection attempt, because DNS resolution results can be
   temporarily cached in accordance with time-to-live values).  However,
   in the absence of a secure DNS option (e.g., as provided by
   [DNSSEC]), a malicious attacker with access to the DNS server data,
   or able to cause spoofed answers to be cached in a recursive
   resolver, can potentially cause the initiating entity to connect to
   any XMPP server chosen by the attacker.  Deployment and validation of
   server certificates helps to prevent such attacks.





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13.9.3.  Use of Hash Functions

   XMPP itself does not directly mandate the use of any particular hash
   function.  However, technologies on which XMPP depends (e.g., TLS and
   particular SASL mechanisms), as well as various XMPP extensions,
   might make use of hash functions.  Those who implement XMPP
   technologies or who develop XMPP extensions are advised to closely
   monitor the state of the art regarding attacks against cryptographic
   hashes in Internet protocols as they relate to XMPP.  For helpful
   guidance, refer to [HASHES].

13.9.4.  Use of SASL

   Because the initiating entity chooses an acceptable SASL mechanism
   from the list presented by the receiving entity, the initiating
   entity depends on the receiving entity's list for authentication.
   This dependency introduces the possibility of a downgrade attack if
   an attacker can gain control of the channel and therefore present a
   weak list of mechanisms.  To help prevent this attack, the parties
   SHOULD protect the channel using TLS before attempting SASL
   negotiation.

   If the initiating entity (typically a client) is willing to use SASL
   PLAIN over TLS to authenticate to an XMPP server, it MUST verify the
   server certificate.  If the server has not provided any certificate,
   or if certificate validation fails (as described under
   Section 13.7.2), the initiating entity MUST NOT attempt to
   authenticate using the SASL PLAIN mechanism.  After a successful TLS
   negotiation, the initiating entity MUST check its understanding of
   the server hostname against the server's identity as presented in the
   TLS Certificate message, in order to prevent man-in-the-middle
   attacks.  If the match fails, the client MUST NOT attempt to
   authenticate using the SASL PLAIN mechanism.  Server identity
   matching MUST follow the rules specified in [TLS-CERTS].

   The SASL framework itself does not provide a method for binding SASL
   authentication to a security layer providing confidentiality and
   integrity protection that was negotiated at a lower layer.  Such a
   binding is known as a "channel binding" (see [CHANNEL]).  Some SASL
   mechanisms provide channel bindings, which in the case of XMPP would
   typically be a binding to TLS (see [CHANNEL-TLS]).  If a SASL
   mechanism provides a channel binding (e.g., this is true of [SCRAM]),
   then XMPP entities using that mechanism SHOULD prefer the channel
   binding variant (e.g., preferring "SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS" over
   "SCRAM-SHA-1").  If a SASL mechanism does not provide a channel
   binding, then the mechanism cannot provide a way to verify that the
   source and destination end points to which the lower layer's security
   is bound are equivalent to the end points that SASL is



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   authenticating; furthermore, if the end points are not identical,
   then the lower layer's security cannot be trusted to protect data
   transmitted between the SASL-authenticated entities.  In such a
   situation, a SASL security layer SHOULD be negotiated that
   effectively ignores the presence of the lower-layer security.

   Most XMPP servers authenticate account connections by means of
   passwords.  It is well-known that most human users choose relatively
   weak passwords.  Although service provisioning is out of scope for
   this document, XMPP servers that allow password-based authentication
   SHOULD enforce minimal criteria for password strength to help prevent
   dictionary attacks.

   Some SASL mechanisms (e.g., [ANONYMOUS]) do not provide strong peer
   entity authentication of the client to the server.  Service
   administrators are advised to enable such mechanisms with caution.
   Best practices for the use of the SASL ANONYMOUS mechanism in XMPP
   are described in [XEP-0175].

13.9.5.  Use of TLS

   Implementations of TLS typically support multiple versions of the
   Transport Layer Security protocol as well as the older Secure Sockets
   Layer (SSL) protocol.  Because of known security vulnerabilities,
   XMPP servers and clients MUST NOT request, offer, or use SSL 2.0.
   See Appendix E.2 of [TLS] for further details.

13.9.6.  Use of UTF-8

   The use of UTF-8 makes it possible to transport non-ASCII characters,
   and thus enables character "spoofing" scenarios, in which a displayed
   value appears to be something other than it is.  Furthermore, there
   are known attack scenarios related to the decoding of UTF-8 data.  On
   both of these points, refer to [UTF-8] for more information.

13.9.7.  Use of XML

   Because XMPP is an application profile of the Extensible Markup
   Language [XML], many of the security considerations described in
   [XML-MEDIA] and [XML-GUIDE] also apply to XMPP.  Several aspects of
   XMPP mitigate the risks described there, such as the prohibitions
   specified under Section 11.1 and the lack of external references to
   style sheets or transformations, but these mitigating factors are by
   no means comprehensive.







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13.10.  Information Leaks

13.10.1.  IP Addresses

   A client's IP address and method of access MUST NOT be made public by
   a server.

13.10.2.  Presence Information

   One of the core aspects of XMPP is presence: information about the
   network availability of an XMPP entity (i.e., whether the entity is
   currently online or offline).  A "presence leak" occurs when an
   entity's network availability is inadvertently and involuntarily
   revealed to a second entity that is not authorized to know the first
   entity's network availability.

   Although presence is discussed more fully in [XMPP-IM], it is
   important to note that an XMPP server MUST NOT leak presence.  In
   particular at the core XMPP level, real-time addressing and network
   availability is associated with a specific connected resource;
   therefore, any disclosure of a connected resource's full JID
   comprises a presence leak.  To help prevent such a presence leak, a
   server MUST NOT return different stanza errors if a potential
   attacker sends XML stanzas to the entity's bare JID
   (<localpart@domainpart>) or full JID
   (<localpart@domainpart/resource>).

13.11.  Directory Harvesting

   If a server generates an error stanza in response to receiving a
   stanza for a user account that does not exist, using the <service-
   unavailable/> stanza error condition can help protect against
   directory harvesting attacks, since this is the same error condition
   that is returned if, for instance, the namespace of an IQ child
   element is not understood, or if offline message storage or message
   forwarding is not enabled for a domain.  However, subtle differences
   in the exact XML of error stanzas, as well as in the timing with
   which such errors are returned, can enable an attacker to determine
   the network presence of a user when more advanced blocking
   technologies are not used (see for instance [XEP-0016] and
   [XEP-0191]).  Therefore, a server that exercises a higher level of
   caution might not return any error at all in response to certain
   kinds of received stanzas, so that a non-existent user appears to
   behave like a user that has no interest in conversing with the
   sender.






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13.12.  Denial of Service

   [DOS] defines denial of service as follows:

      A Denial-of-Service (DoS) attack is an attack in which one or more
      machines target a victim and attempt to prevent the victim from
      doing useful work.  The victim can be a network server, client or
      router, a network link or an entire network, an individual
      Internet user or a company doing business using the Internet, an
      Internet Service Provider (ISP), country, or any combination of or
      variant on these.

   Some considerations discussed in this document help to prevent denial
   of service attacks (e.g., the mandate that a server MUST NOT process
   XML stanzas from clients that have not yet provided appropriate
   authentication credentials and MUST NOT process XML stanzas from peer
   servers whose identity it has not either authenticated via SASL or
   weakly verified via Server Dialback).

   In addition, [XEP-0205] provides a detailed discussion of potential
   denial of service attacks against XMPP systems and best practices for
   preventing such attacks.  The recommendations include:

   1.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the number of TCP connections that it will accept from a
       given IP address at any one time.  If an entity attempts to
       connect but the maximum number of TCP connections has been
       reached, the receiving server MUST NOT allow the new connection
       to proceed.

   2.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the number of TCP connection attempts that it will accept
       from a given IP address in a given time period.  If an entity
       attempts to connect but the maximum number of connection attempts
       has been reached, the receiving server MUST NOT allow the new
       connection to proceed.

   3.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the number of connected resources it will allow an account
       to bind at any one time.  If a client attempts to bind a resource
       but it has already reached the configured number of allowable
       resources, the receiving server MUST return a <resource-
       constraint/> stanza error.

   4.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the size of stanzas it will accept from a connected client
       or peer server (where "size" is inclusive of all XML markup as
       defined in Section 2.4 of [XML], from the opening "<" character



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       of the stanza to the closing ">" character).  An entity's maximum
       stanza size MUST NOT be smaller than 10000 bytes.  If a connected
       resource or peer server sends a stanza that violates the upper
       limit, the receiving server MUST either return a <policy-
       violation/> stanza error (thus allowing the sender to recover) or
       close the stream with a <policy-violation/> stream error.

   5.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the number of XML stanzas that a connected client is
       allowed to send to distinct recipients within a given time
       period.  If a connected client sends too many stanzas to distinct
       recipients in a given time period, the receiving server SHOULD
       NOT process the stanza and instead SHOULD return a <policy-
       violation/> stanza error.

   6.  A server implementation SHOULD enable a server administrator to
       limit the amount of bandwidth it will allow a connected client or
       peer server to use in a given time period.

   7.  A server implementation MAY enable a server administrator to
       limit the types of stanzas (based on the extended content
       "payload") that it will allow a connected resource or peer server
       send over an active connection.  Such limits and restrictions are
       a matter of deployment policy.

   8.  A server implementation MAY refuse to route or deliver any stanza
       that it considers to be abusive, with or without returning an
       error to the sender.

   For more detailed recommendations regarding denial of service attacks
   in XMPP systems, refer to [XEP-0205].

13.13.  Firewalls

   Although DNS SRV records can instruct connecting entities to use TCP
   ports other than 5222 (client-to-server) and 5269 (server-to-server),
   communication using XMPP typically occurs over those ports, which are
   registered with the IANA (see Section 14).  Use of these well-known
   ports allows administrators to easily enable or disable XMPP activity
   through existing and commonly-deployed firewalls.

13.14.  Interdomain Federation

   The term "federation" is commonly used to describe communication
   between two servers.

   Because service provisioning is a matter of policy, it is OPTIONAL
   for any given server to support federation.  If a particular server



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   enables federation, it SHOULD enable strong security as previously
   described to ensure both authentication and confidentiality;
   compliant implementations SHOULD support TLS and SASL for this
   purpose.

   Before RFC 3920 defined TLS plus SASL EXTERNAL with certificates for
   encryption and authentication of server-to-server streams, the only
   method for weak identity verification of a peer server was Server
   Dialback as defined in [XEP-0220].  Even when [DNSSEC] is used,
   Server Dialback provides only weak identity verification and provides
   no confidentiality or integrity.  At the time of writing, Server
   Dialback is still the most widely-used technique for some level of
   assurance over server-to-server streams.  This reality introduces the
   possibility of a downgrade attack from TLS + SASL EXTERNAL to Server
   Dialback if an attacker can gain control of the channel and therefore
   convince the initiating server that the receiving server does not
   support TLS or does not have an appropriate certificate.  To help
   prevent this attack, the parties SHOULD protect the channel using TLS
   before proceeding, even if the presented certificates are self-signed
   or otherwise untrusted.

13.15.  Non-Repudiation

   Systems that provide both peer entity authentication and data
   integrity have the potential to enable an entity to prove to a third
   party that another entity intended to send particular data.  Although
   XMPP systems can provide both peer entity authentication and data
   integrity, XMPP was never designed to provide non-repudiation.


14.  IANA Considerations

   The following sections update the registrations provided in
   [RFC3920].  This section is to be interpreted according to
   [IANA-GUIDE].

14.1.  XML Namespace Name for TLS Data

   A URN sub-namespace for STARTTLS negotiation data in the Extensible
   Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This
   namespace name adheres to the format defined in [XML-REG].)

   URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls
   Specification:  XXXX







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   Description:  This is the XML namespace name for STARTTLS negotiation
      data in the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as
      defined by XXXX.
   Registrant Contact:  IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmpp@ietf.org>

14.2.  XML Namespace Name for SASL Data

   A URN sub-namespace for SASL negotiation data in the Extensible
   Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This
   namespace name adheres to the format defined in [XML-REG].)

   URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl
   Specification:  XXXX
   Description:  This is the XML namespace name for SASL negotiation
      data in the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as
      defined by XXXX.
   Registrant Contact:  IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmpp@ietf.org>

14.3.  XML Namespace Name for Stream Errors

   A URN sub-namespace for stream error data in the Extensible Messaging
   and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This namespace
   name adheres to the format defined in [XML-REG].)

   URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams
   Specification:  XXXX
   Description:  This is the XML namespace name for stream error data in
      the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as defined
      by XXXX.
   Registrant Contact:  IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmpp@ietf.org>

14.4.  XML Namespace Name for Resource Binding

   A URN sub-namespace for resource binding in the Extensible Messaging
   and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This namespace
   name adheres to the format defined in [XML-REG].)

   URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind
   Specification:  XXXX
   Description:  This is the XML namespace name for resource binding in
      the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as defined
      by XXXX.
   Registrant Contact:  IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmpp@ietf.org>

14.5.  XML Namespace Name for Stanza Errors

   A URN sub-namespace for stanza error data in the Extensible Messaging
   and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined as follows.  (This namespace



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   name adheres to the format defined in [XML-REG].)

   URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas
   Specification:  XXXX
   Description:  This is the XML namespace name for stanza error data in
      the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) as defined
      by XXXX.
   Registrant Contact:  IETF, XMPP Working Group, <xmpp@ietf.org>

14.6.  GSSAPI Service Name

   The IANA has registered "xmpp" as a [GSS-API] service name, as
   defined under Section 6.5.

14.7.  Port Numbers

   The IANA has registered "xmpp-client" and "xmpp-server" as keywords
   for [TCP] ports 5222 and 5269 respectively.

   These ports SHOULD be used for client-to-server and server-to-server
   communications respectively, but other ports MAY be used.


15.  Conformance Requirements

   This section describes a protocol feature set that summarizes the
   conformance requirements of this specification.  This feature set is
   appropriate for use in software certification, interoperability
   testing, and implementation reports.  For each feature, this section
   provides the following information:

   o  A human-readable name

   o  An informational description

   o  A reference to the particular section of this document that
      normatively defines the feature

   o  Whether the feature applies to the Client role, the Server role,
      or both (where "N/A" signifies that the feature is not applicable
      to the specified role)

   o  Whether the feature MUST or SHOULD be implemented, where the
      capitalized terms are to be understood as described in [KEYWORDS]

   The feature set specified here attempts to adhere to the concepts and
   formats proposed by Larry Masinter within the IETF's NEWTRK Working
   Group in 2005, as captured in [INTEROP].  Although this feature set



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   is more detailed than called for by [REPORTS], it provides a suitable
   basis for the generation of implementation reports to be submitted in
   support of advancing this specification from Proposed Standard to
   Draft Standard in accordance with [PROCESS].

   Feature:  bind-gen
   Description:  Generate a random resource on demand.
   Section:  Section 7.5
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  bind-mtn
   Description:  Consider resource binding as mandatory-to-negotiate.
   Section:  Section 7.2.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  bind-restart
   Description:  Do not restart the stream after negotiation of resource
      binding.
   Section:  Section 7.2.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  bind-support
   Description:  Support binding of client resources to an authenticated
      stream.
   Section:  Section 7
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  sasl-errors
   Description:  Support SASL errors during the negotiation process.
   Section:  Section 6.4
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  sasl-mtn
   Description:  Consider SASL as mandatory-to-negotiate.
   Section:  Section 6.2.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  sasl-restart
   Description:  Initiate or handle a stream restart after SASL
      negotiation.
   Section:  Section 6.2.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  sasl-support







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   Description:  Support the Simple Authentication and Security Layer
      for stream authentication.
   Section:  Section 6
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  sasl-whitespace
   Description:  Ensure that no whitespace is sent between XML elements
      during SASL negotiation.
   Section:  Section 6.2.5
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-auth-plain
   Description:  Support the SASL PLAIN mechanism for authentication
      only.
   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-auth-scram
   Description:  Support the SASL Salted Challenge Response mechanism
      for authentication only.
   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-both-external
   Description:  Support TLS with SASL EXTERNAL for confidentiality and
      authentication.
   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client SHOULD, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-both-plain
   Description:  Support TLS with SASL PLAIN for confidentiality and
      authentication.
   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-both-scram
   Description:  Support TLS with SASL SCRAM for confidentiality and
      authentication.
   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  security-mti-confidentiality
   Description:  Support TLS using the TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
      cipher for confidentiality only.







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   Section:  Section 13.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-from
   Description:  Support the common 'from' attribute for all stanza
      kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.1.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-from-validate
   Description:  Validate the 'from' address of all stanzas received
      from connected clients or peer servers.
   Section:  Section 8.1.2
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-id
   Description:  Support the common 'id' attribute for all stanza kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.1.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-to
   Description:  Support the common 'to' attribute for all stanza kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.1.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-to-validate
   Description:  Ensure that all stanzas received from peer servers
      include a 'to' address.
   Section:  Section 8.1.1
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-type
   Description:  Support the common 'type' attribute for all stanza
      kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.1.4
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-attribute-xmllang
   Description:  Support the common 'xml:lang' attribute for all stanza
      kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.1.5
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-error







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   Description:  Generate and handle stanzas of type "error" for all
      stanza kinds.
   Section:  Section 8.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-error-child
   Description:  Ensure that stanzas of type "error" include an <error/>
      child element.
   Section:  Section 8.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-error-id
   Description:  Ensure that stanzas of type "error" preserve the 'id'
      provided in the triggering stanza.
   Section:  Section 8.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-error-reply
   Description:  Do not reply to a stanza of type "error" with another
      stanza of type "error".
   Section:  Section 8.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-extension
   Description:  Correctly process XML data qualified by an unsupported
      XML namespace, where "correctly process" means to ignore that
      portion of the stanza in the case of a message or presence stanza
      and return an error in the case of an IQ stanza (for the intended
      recipient), and to route or deliver the stanza (for a routing
      entity such as a server).
   Section:  Section 8.4
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-iq-child
   Description:  Include exactly one child element in an <iq/> stanza of
      type "get" or "set", zero or one child elements in an <iq/> stanza
      of type "result", and one or two child elements in an <iq/> stanza
      of type "error".
   Section:  Section 8.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-iq-id
   Description:  Ensure that all <iq/> stanzas include an 'id'
      attribute.







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   Section:  Section 8.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-iq-reply
   Description:  Reply to an <iq/> stanza of type "get" or "set" with an
      <iq/> stanza of type "result" or "error".
   Section:  Section 8.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-iq-type
   Description:  Ensure that all <iq/> stanzas include a 'type'
      attribute whose value is "get", "set", "result", or "error".
   Section:  Section 8.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-kind-iq
   Description:  Support the <iq/> stanza.
   Section:  Section 8.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-kind-message
   Description:  Support the <message/> stanza.
   Section:  Section 8.2.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stanza-kind-presence
   Description:  Support the <presence/> stanza.
   Section:  Section 8.2.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-initial-from
   Description:  Include a 'from' attribute in the initial stream
      header.
   Section:  Section 4.6.1
   Roles:  Client SHOULD, Server SHOULD.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-initial-lang
   Description:  Include an 'xml:lang' attribute in the initial stream
      header.
   Section:  Section 4.6.4
   Roles:  Client SHOULD, Server SHOULD.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-initial-to
   Description:  Include a 'to' attribute in the initial stream header.







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   Section:  Section 4.6.2
   Roles:  Client SHOULD, Server SHOULD.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-response-from
   Description:  Include a 'from' attribute in the response stream
      header.
   Section:  Section 4.6.1
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-response-id
   Description:  Include an 'id' attribute in the response stream
      header.
   Section:  Section 4.6.3
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-response-id-unique
   Description:  Ensure that the 'id' attribute in the response stream
      header is unique within the context of the receiving entity.
   Section:  Section 4.6.3
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-attribute-response-to
   Description:  Include a 'to' attribute in the response stream header.
   Section:  Section 4.6.2
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server SHOULD.

   Feature:  stream-error-generate
   Description:  Generate a stream error (followed by a closing stream
      tag and termination of the TCP connection) upon detecting a
      stream-related error condition.
   Section:  Section 4.8
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-hostname-resolution
   Description:  Resolve hostnames before opening a TCP connection.
   Section:  Section 3.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-negotiation-complete
   Description:  Do not consider the stream negotiation process to be
      complete until the receiving entity sends a stream features
      advertisement that is empty or that contains only voluntary-to-
      negotiate features.
   Section:  Section 4.2.5







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   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-negotiation-features
   Description:  Send stream features after sending a response stream
      header.
   Section:  Section 4.2.2
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-negotiation-restart
   Description:  Consider the previous stream to be replaced upon
      negotiation of a stream feature that necessitates a stream
      restart, and send or receive a new initial stream header after
      negotiation of such a stream feature.
   Section:  Section 4.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-reconnect
   Description:  Reconnect with exponential backoff if a TCP connection
      is terminated unexpectedly.
   Section:  Section 3.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  stream-tcp-binding
   Description:  Bind an XML stream to a TCP connection.
   Section:  Section 3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  tls-certs
   Description:  Check the identity specified in a certificate that is
      presented during TLS negotiation.
   Section:  Section 13.7.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  tls-mtn
   Description:  Consider TLS as mandatory-to-negotiate if STARTTLS is
      the only feature advertised or if the STARTTLS feature includes an
      empty <required/> element.
   Section:  Section 5.2.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  tls-restart
   Description:  Initiate or handle a stream restart after TLS
      negotiation.
   Section:  Section 5.2.2







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   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  tls-support
   Description:  Support Transport Layer Security for stream encryption.
   Section:  Section 5
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  tls-whitespace
   Description:  Ensure that no whitespace is sent between XML elements
      during TLS negotiation.
   Section:  Section 5.2.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-namespace-default
   Description:  Ensure that there is a default namespace for the stream
      (other than the streams namespace).
   Section:  Section 4.7.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-namespace-default-client
   Description:  Support 'jabber:client' as a default namespace.
   Section:  Section 4.7.2
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-namespace-default-server
   Description:  Support 'jabber:server' as a default namespace.
   Section:  Section 4.7.2
   Roles:  Client N/A, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-namespace-streams-declaration
   Description:  Ensure that there is a namespace declaration for the
      'http://etherx.jabber.org/streams' namespace.
   Section:  Section 4.7.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-namespace-streams-prefix
   Description:  Ensure that all elements qualified by the
      'http://etherx.jabber.org/streams' namespace are prefixed by the
      prefix defined in the namespace declaration.
   Section:  Section 4.7.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-restriction-comment
   Description:  Do not generate or accept XML comments.







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   Section:  Section 11.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-restriction-dtd
   Description:  Do not generate or accept internal or external DTD
      subsets.
   Section:  Section 11.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-restriction-pi
   Description:  Do not generate or accept XML processing instructions.
   Section:  Section 11.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-restriction-ref
   Description:  Do not generate or accept internal or external entity
      references with the exception of the predefined entities.
   Section:  Section 11.1
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-wellformed-xml
   Description:  Do not generate or accept data that is not XML-well-
      formed.
   Section:  Section 11.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.

   Feature:  xml-wellformed-ns
   Description:  Do not generate or accept data that is not namespace-
      well-formed.
   Section:  Section 11.3
   Roles:  Client MUST, Server MUST.


16.  References

16.1.  Normative References

   [BASE64]   Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
              Encodings", RFC 4648, October 2006.

   [CHARSETS]
              Alvestrand, H., "IETF Policy on Character Sets and
              Languages", BCP 18, RFC 2277, January 1998.

   [DNS-SRV]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
              specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
              February 2000.




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   [KEYWORDS]
              Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [LANGTAGS]
              Phillips, A. and M. Davis, "Tags for Identifying
              Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646, September 2009.

   [OCSP]     Myers, M., Ankney, R., Malpani, A., Galperin, S., and C.
              Adams, "X.509 Internet Public Key Infrastructure Online
              Certificate Status Protocol - OCSP", RFC 2560, June 1999.

   [PKIX]     Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
              Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
              Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
              (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, May 2008.

   [PKIX-ALGO]
              Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography
              Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications
              Version 2.1", RFC 3447, February 2003.

   [PKIX-SRV]
              Santesson, S., "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure
              Subject Alternative Name for Expression of Service Name",
              RFC 4985, August 2007.

   [PLAIN]    Zeilenga, K., "The PLAIN Simple Authentication and
              Security Layer (SASL) Mechanism", RFC 4616, August 2006.

   [RANDOM]   Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness
              Requirements for Security", BCP 106, RFC 4086, June 2005.

   [SASL]     Melnikov, A. and K. Zeilenga, "Simple Authentication and
              Security Layer (SASL)", RFC 4422, June 2006.

   [SCRAM]    Newman, C., Menon-Sen, A., Melnikov, A., and N. Williams,
              "Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism
              (SCRAM) SASL and GSS-API Mechanisms", RFC 5802, July 2010.

   [TCP]      Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,
              RFC 793, September 1981.

   [TLS]      Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
              (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008.

   [TLS-CERTS]
              Saint-Andre, P. and J. Hodges, "Representation and



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              Verification of Application Server Identity in
              Certificates Used with Transport Layer Security (TLS)",
              draft-saintandre-tls-server-id-check-09 (work in
              progress), August 2010.

   [UCS2]     International Organization for Standardization,
              "Information Technology - Universal Multiple-octet coded
              Character Set (UCS) - Amendment 2: UCS Transformation
              Format 8 (UTF-8)", ISO Standard 10646-1 Addendum 2,
              October 1996.

   [UNICODE]  The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version
              3.2.0", 2000.

              The Unicode Standard, Version 3.2.0 is defined by The
              Unicode Standard, Version 3.0 (Reading, MA, Addison-
              Wesley, 2000.  ISBN 0-201-61633-5), as amended by the
              Unicode Standard Annex #27: Unicode 3.1
              (http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr27/) and by the Unicode
              Standard Annex #28: Unicode 3.2
              (http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr28/).

   [UTF-8]    Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
              10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.

   [URI]      Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
              RFC 3986, January 2005.

   [X509]     International Telecommunications Union, "Information
              technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory:
              Public-key and attribute certificate frameworks", ITU-
              T Recommendation X.509, ISO Standard 9594-8, March 2000.

   [XML]      Maler, E., Yergeau, F., Sperberg-McQueen, C., Paoli, J.,
              and T. Bray, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth
              Edition)", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-
              xml-20081126, November 2008,
              <http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126>.

   [XML-GUIDE]
              Hollenbeck, S., Rose, M., and L. Masinter, "Guidelines for
              the Use of Extensible Markup Language (XML)
              within IETF Protocols", BCP 70, RFC 3470, January 2003.

   [XML-MEDIA]
              Murata, M., St. Laurent, S., and D. Kohn, "XML Media
              Types", RFC 3023, January 2001.



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   [XML-NAMES]
              Thompson, H., Hollander, D., Layman, A., Bray, T., and R.
              Tobin, "Namespaces in XML 1.0 (Third Edition)", World Wide
              Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xml-names-20091208,
              December 2009,
              <http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/REC-xml-names-20091208>.

   [XMPP-ADDR]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Address Format",
              draft-ietf-xmpp-address-03 (work in progress), July 2010.

16.2.  Informative References

   [ACAP]     Newman, C. and J. Myers, "ACAP -- Application
              Configuration Access Protocol", RFC 2244, November 1997.

   [ANONYMOUS]
              Zeilenga, K., "Anonymous Simple Authentication and
              Security Layer (SASL) Mechanism", RFC 4505, June 2006.

   [ASN.1]    CCITT, "Recommendation X.208: Specification of Abstract
              Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)", 1988.

   [CHANNEL]  Williams, N., "On the Use of Channel Bindings to Secure
              Channels", RFC 5056, November 2007.

   [CHANNEL-TLS]
              Altman, J., Williams, N., and L. Zhu, "Channel Bindings
              for TLS", RFC 5929, July 2010.

   [DIGEST-MD5]
              Leach, P. and C. Newman, "Using Digest Authentication as a
              SASL Mechanism", RFC 2831, May 2000.

   [DNSSEC]   Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
              Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",
              RFC 4033, March 2005.

   [DNS-TXT]  Rosenbaum, R., "Using the Domain Name System To Store
              Arbitrary String Attributes", RFC 1464, May 1993.

   [DOS]      Handley, M., Rescorla, E., and IAB, "Internet Denial-of-
              Service Considerations", RFC 4732, December 2006.

   [EMAIL-ARCH]
              Crocker, D., "Internet Mail Architecture", RFC 5598,
              July 2009.



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   [ETHERNET]
              "Information technology - Telecommunications and
              information exchange between systems - Local and
              metropolitan area networks - Specific requirements - Part
              3: Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection
              (CSMA/CD) access method and physical layer
              specifications"", IEEE Standard 802.3, September 1998.

   [GSS-API]  Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program
              Interface Version 2, Update 1", RFC 2743, January 2000.

   [HASHES]   Hoffman, P. and B. Schneier, "Attacks on Cryptographic
              Hashes in Internet Protocols", RFC 4270, November 2005.

   [HTTP]     Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
              Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
              Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.

   [IANA-GUIDE]
              Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226,
              May 2008.

   [IMAP]     Crispin, M., "INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL - VERSION
              4rev1", RFC 3501, March 2003.

   [IMP-REQS]
              Day, M., Aggarwal, S., and J. Vincent, "Instant Messaging
              / Presence Protocol Requirements", RFC 2779,
              February 2000.

   [INTEROP]  Masinter, L., "Formalizing IETF Interoperability
              Reporting", draft-ietf-newtrk-interop-reports-00 (work in
              progress), October 2005.

   [IRI]      Duerst, M. and M. Suignard, "Internationalized Resource
              Identifiers (IRIs)", RFC 3987, January 2005.

   [LINKLOCAL]
              Cheshire, S., Aboba, B., and E. Guttman, "Dynamic
              Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses", RFC 3927,
              May 2005.

   [MAILBOXES]
              Crocker, D., "MAILBOX NAMES FOR COMMON SERVICES, ROLES AND
              FUNCTIONS", RFC 2142, May 1997.

   [POP3]     Myers, J. and M. Rose, "Post Office Protocol - Version 3",



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              STD 53, RFC 1939, May 1996.

   [PROCESS]  Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
              3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.

   [REPORTS]  Dusseault, L. and R. Sparks, "Guidance on Interoperation
              and Implementation Reports for Advancement to Draft
              Standard", BCP 9, RFC 5657, September 2009.

   [REST]     Fielding, R., "Architectural Styles and the Design of
              Network-based Software Architectures",  2000.

   [RFC3920]  Saint-Andre, P., Ed., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Core", RFC 3920, October 2004.

   [RFC3921]  Saint-Andre, P., Ed., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence",
              RFC 3921, October 2004.

   [SASLPREP]
              Zeilenga, K., "SASLprep: Stringprep Profile for User Names
              and Passwords", RFC 4013, February 2005.

   [SMTP]     Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 5321,
              October 2008.

   [SEC-GUIDE]
              Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC
              Text on Security Considerations", BCP 72, RFC 3552,
              July 2003.

   [SEC-TERMS]
              Shirey, R., "Internet Security Glossary, Version 2",
              RFC 4949, August 2007.

   [STRONGSEC]
              Schiller, J., "Strong Security Requirements for Internet
              Engineering Task Force Standard Protocols", BCP 61,
              RFC 3365, August 2002.

   [TLS-EXT]  3rd, D., "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Extensions:
              Extension Definitions", draft-ietf-tls-rfc4366-bis-10
              (work in progress), July 2010.

   [TLS-NEG]  Rescorla, E., Ray, M., Dispensa, S., and N. Oskov,
              "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Renegotiation Indication
              Extension", RFC 5746, February 2010.




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   [URN-OID]  Mealling, M., "A URN Namespace of Object Identifiers",
              RFC 3061, February 2001.

   [USINGTLS]
              Newman, C., "Using TLS with IMAP, POP3 and ACAP",
              RFC 2595, June 1999.

   [UUID]     Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
              Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
              July 2005.

   [XEP-0001]
              Saint-Andre, P., "XMPP Extension Protocols", XSF XEP 0001,
              January 2008.

   [XEP-0016]
              Millard, P. and P. Saint-Andre, "Privacy Lists", XSF
              XEP 0016, February 2007.

   [XEP-0045]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Multi-User Chat", XSF XEP 0045,
              July 2007.

   [XEP-0060]
              Millard, P., Saint-Andre, P., and R. Meijer, "Publish-
              Subscribe", XSF XEP 0060, September 2008.

   [XEP-0071]
              Saint-Andre, P., "XHTML-IM", XSF XEP 0071, September 2008.

   [XEP-0077]
              Saint-Andre, P., "In-Band Registration", XSF XEP 0077,
              January 2006.

   [XEP-0086]
              Norris, R. and P. Saint-Andre, "Error Condition Mappings",
              XSF XEP 0086, February 2004.

   [XEP-0124]
              Paterson, I., Smith, D., and P. Saint-Andre,
              "Bidirectional-streams Over Synchronous HTTP (BOSH)", XSF
              XEP 0124, April 2009.

   [XEP-0138]
              Hildebrand, J. and P. Saint-Andre, "Stream Compression",
              XSF XEP 0138, May 2009.

   [XEP-0156]



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              Hildebrand, J. and P. Saint-Andre, "Discovering
              Alternative XMPP Connection Methods", XSF XEP 0156,
              June 2007.

   [XEP-0174]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Link-Local Messaging", XSF XEP 0174,
              November 2008.

   [XEP-0175]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Best Practices for Use of SASL
              ANONYMOUS", XSF XEP 0175, November 2007.

   [XEP-0178]
              Saint-Andre, P. and P. Millard, "Best Practices for Use of
              SASL EXTERNAL with Certificates", XSF XEP 0178,
              February 2007.

   [XEP-0191]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Simple Communications Blocking", XSF
              XEP 0191, February 2007.

   [XEP-0198]
              Karneges, J., Hildebrand, J., Saint-Andre, P., and F.
              Forno, "Stream Management", XSF XEP 0198, June 2009.

   [XEP-0199]
              Saint-Andre, P., "XMPP Ping", XSF XEP 0199, June 2009.

   [XEP-0205]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Best Practices to Discourage Denial of
              Service Attacks", XSF XEP 0205, January 2009.

   [XEP-0206]
              Paterson, I., "XMPP Over BOSH", XSF XEP 0206,
              October 2008.

   [XEP-0220]
              Miller, J., Saint-Andre, P., and P. Hancke, "Server
              Dialback", XSF XEP 0220, March 2010.

   [XML-FRAG]
              Grosso, P. and D. Veillard, "XML Fragment Interchange",
              World Wide Web Consortium CR CR-xml-fragment-20010212,
              February 2001,
              <http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/CR-xml-fragment-20010212>.

   [XML-REG]  Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry", BCP 81, RFC 3688,
              January 2004.



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   [XML-SCHEMA]
              Thompson, H., Maloney, M., Mendelsohn, N., and D. Beech,
              "XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition", World Wide
              Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xmlschema-1-20041028,
              October 2004,
              <http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-1-20041028>.

   [XMPP-IM]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
              Protocol (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence",
              draft-ietf-xmpp-3921bis-12 (work in progress),
              August 2010.

   [XMPP-URI]
              Saint-Andre, P., "Internationalized Resource Identifiers
              (IRIs) and Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) for the
              Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)",
              RFC 5122, February 2008.


Appendix A.  XML Schemas

   Because validation of XML streams and stanzas is optional, the
   following XML schemas are provided for descriptive purposes only.
   These schemas are not normative.

   The following schemas formally define various XML namespaces used in
   the core XMPP protocols, in conformance with [XML-SCHEMA].  For
   schemas defining the 'jabber:client' and 'jabber:server' namespaces,
   refer to [XMPP-IM].

A.1.  Streams Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'
       xmlns='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'
       elementFormDefault='unqualified'>

     <xs:import namespace='jabber:client'/>
     <xs:import namespace='jabber:server'/>
     <xs:import namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'/>
     <xs:import namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
     <xs:import namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'/>

     <xs:element name='stream'>
       <xs:complexType>



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         <xs:sequence xmlns:client='jabber:client'
                      xmlns:server='jabber:server'>
           <xs:element ref='features' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'/>
           <xs:any namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
                   minOccurs='0'
                   maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
           <xs:any namespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
                   minOccurs='0'
                   maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
           <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'>
             <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>
               <xs:element ref='client:message'/>
               <xs:element ref='client:presence'/>
               <xs:element ref='client:iq'/>
             </xs:choice>
             <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'>
               <xs:element ref='server:message'/>
               <xs:element ref='server:presence'/>
               <xs:element ref='server:iq'/>
             </xs:choice>
           </xs:choice>
           <xs:element ref='error' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'/>
         </xs:sequence>
         <xs:attribute name='from' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
         <xs:attribute name='id' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
         <xs:attribute name='to' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
         <xs:attribute name='version' type='xs:decimal' use='optional'/>
         <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:element name='features'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:any namespace='##other'
                 minOccurs='0'
                 maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:element name='error'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:sequence  xmlns:err='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'>
           <xs:group   ref='err:streamErrorGroup'/>
           <xs:element ref='err:text'
                       minOccurs='0'
                       maxOccurs='1'/>
           <xs:any     namespace='##other'
                       minOccurs='0'



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                       maxOccurs='1'/>
         </xs:sequence>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

   </xs:schema>

A.2.  Stream Error Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'
       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'
       elementFormDefault='qualified'>

     <xs:element name='bad-format' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='bad-namespace-prefix' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='conflict' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='connection-timeout' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='host-gone' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='host-unknown' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='improper-addressing' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='internal-server-error' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='invalid-from' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='invalid-id' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='invalid-namespace' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='invalid-xml' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='not-authorized' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='policy-violation' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='remote-connection-failed' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='reset' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='resource-constraint' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='restricted-xml' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='see-other-host' type='xs:string'/>
     <xs:element name='system-shutdown' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='undefined-condition' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='unsupported-encoding' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='unsupported-stanza-type' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='unsupported-version' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='xml-not-well-formed' type='empty'/>

     <xs:group name='streamErrorGroup'>
       <xs:choice>
         <xs:element ref='bad-format'/>
         <xs:element ref='bad-namespace-prefix'/>
         <xs:element ref='conflict'/>



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         <xs:element ref='connection-timeout'/>
         <xs:element ref='host-gone'/>
         <xs:element ref='host-unknown'/>
         <xs:element ref='improper-addressing'/>
         <xs:element ref='internal-server-error'/>
         <xs:element ref='invalid-from'/>
         <xs:element ref='invalid-id'/>
         <xs:element ref='invalid-namespace'/>
         <xs:element ref='invalid-xml'/>
         <xs:element ref='not-authorized'/>
         <xs:element ref='policy-violation'/>
         <xs:element ref='remote-connection-failed'/>
         <xs:element ref='reset'/>
         <xs:element ref='resource-constraint'/>
         <xs:element ref='restricted-xml'/>
         <xs:element ref='see-other-host'/>
         <xs:element ref='system-shutdown'/>
         <xs:element ref='undefined-condition'/>
         <xs:element ref='unsupported-encoding'/>
         <xs:element ref='unsupported-stanza-type'/>
         <xs:element ref='unsupported-version'/>
         <xs:element ref='xml-not-well-formed'/>
       </xs:choice>
     </xs:group>

     <xs:element name='text'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:simpleContent>
           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>
             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>
           </xs:extension>
         </xs:simpleContent>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:enumeration value=''/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

   </xs:schema>









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A.3.  STARTTLS Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-tls'
       elementFormDefault='qualified'>

     <xs:element name='starttls'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:choice minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'>
           <xs:element name='required' type='empty'/>
         </xs:choice>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:element name='proceed' type='empty'/>

     <xs:element name='failure' type='empty'/>

     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:enumeration value=''/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

   </xs:schema>

A.4.  SASL Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl'
       elementFormDefault='qualified'>

     <xs:element name='mechanisms'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:sequence>
           <xs:element name='mechanism'
                       minOccurs='1'
                       maxOccurs='unbounded'
                       type='xs:NMTOKEN'/>
           <xs:any namespace='##other'



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                   minOccurs='0'
                   minOccurs='unbounded'/>
         </xs:sequence>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:element name='abort' type='empty'/>

     <xs:element name='auth'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:simpleContent>
           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>
             <xs:attribute name='mechanism'
                           type='xs:NMTOKEN'
                           use='required'/>
           </xs:extension>
         </xs:simpleContent>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:element name='challenge' type='xs:string'/>

     <xs:element name='response' type='xs:string'/>

     <xs:element name='success' type='xs:string'/>

     <xs:element name='failure'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:sequence>
           <xs:choice minOccurs='0'>
             <xs:element name='aborted' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='account-disabled' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='credentials-expired' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='encryption-required' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='incorrect-encoding' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='invalid-authzid' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='invalid-mechanism' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='malformed-request' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='mechanism-too-weak' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='not-authorized' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='temporary-auth-failure' type='empty'/>
             <xs:element name='transition-needed' type='empty'/>
           </xs:choice>
           <xs:element ref='text' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'/>
         </xs:sequence>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>




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     <xs:element name='text'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:simpleContent>
           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>
             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>
           </xs:extension>
         </xs:simpleContent>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:enumeration value=''/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

   </xs:schema>


































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A.5.  Resource Binding Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'
       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind'
       elementFormDefault='qualified'>

     <xs:element name='bind'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:choice>
           <xs:element name='resource' type='resourceType'/>
           <xs:element name='jid' type='fullJIDType'/>
         </xs:choice>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:simpleType name='fullJIDType'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:minLength value='8'/>
         <xs:maxLength value='3071'/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

     <xs:simpleType name='resourceType'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:minLength value='1'/>
         <xs:maxLength value='1023'/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

   </xs:schema>

A.6.  Stanza Error Namespace

   <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

   <xs:schema
       xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
       targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'
       xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-stanzas'
       elementFormDefault='qualified'>

     <xs:element name='bad-request' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='conflict' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='feature-not-implemented' type='empty'/>



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     <xs:element name='forbidden' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='gone' type='xs:string'/>
     <xs:element name='internal-server-error' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='item-not-found' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='jid-malformed' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='not-acceptable' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='not-allowed' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='not-authorized' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='payment-required' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='policy-violation' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='recipient-unavailable' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='redirect' type='xs:string'/>
     <xs:element name='registration-required' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='remote-server-not-found' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='remote-server-timeout' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='resource-constraint' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='service-unavailable' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='subscription-required' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='undefined-condition' type='empty'/>
     <xs:element name='unexpected-request' type='empty'/>

     <xs:group name='stanzaErrorGroup'>
       <xs:choice>
         <xs:element ref='bad-request'/>
         <xs:element ref='conflict'/>
         <xs:element ref='feature-not-implemented'/>
         <xs:element ref='forbidden'/>
         <xs:element ref='gone'/>
         <xs:element ref='internal-server-error'/>
         <xs:element ref='item-not-found'/>
         <xs:element ref='jid-malformed'/>
         <xs:element ref='not-acceptable'/>
         <xs:element ref='not-authorized'/>
         <xs:element ref='not-allowed'/>
         <xs:element ref='payment-required'/>
         <xs:element ref='policy-violation'/>
         <xs:element ref='recipient-unavailable'/>
         <xs:element ref='redirect'/>
         <xs:element ref='registration-required'/>
         <xs:element ref='remote-server-not-found'/>
         <xs:element ref='remote-server-timeout'/>
         <xs:element ref='resource-constraint'/>
         <xs:element ref='service-unavailable'/>
         <xs:element ref='subscription-required'/>
         <xs:element ref='undefined-condition'/>
         <xs:element ref='unexpected-request'/>
       </xs:choice>
     </xs:group>



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     <xs:element name='text'>
       <xs:complexType>
         <xs:simpleContent>
           <xs:extension base='xs:string'>
             <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang' use='optional'/>
           </xs:extension>
         </xs:simpleContent>
       </xs:complexType>
     </xs:element>

     <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
       <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
         <xs:enumeration value=''/>
       </xs:restriction>
     </xs:simpleType>

   </xs:schema>


Appendix B.  Contact Addresses

   Consistent with [MAILBOXES], an organization that offers an XMPP
   service SHOULD provide an Internet mailbox of "XMPP" for inquiries
   related to that service, where the host portion of the resulting
   mailto URI MUST be the organization's domain, not the domain of the
   XMPP service itself (e.g., the XMPP service might be offered at
   im.example.com but the Internet mailbox would be <xmpp@example.com>).


Appendix C.  Account Provisioning

   Account provisioning is out of scope for this specification.
   Possible methods for account provisioning include account creation by
   a server administrator and in-band account registration using the
   'jabber:iq:register' namespace as documented in [XEP-0077].  An XMPP
   server implementation or administrative function MUST ensure that any
   JID assigned during account provisioning (including localpart,
   domainpart, resourcepart, and separator characters) conforms to the
   canonical format for XMPP addresses defined in [XMPP-ADDR].


Appendix D.  Differences from RFC 3920

   Based on consensus derived from implementation and deployment
   experience as well as formal interoperability testing, the following
   substantive modifications were made from RFC 3920.





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   o  Moved specification of the XMPP address format to a separate
      document.
   o  Recommended or mandated use of the 'from' and 'to' attributes on
      stream headers.
   o  More fully specified the stream closing handshake.
   o  Specified the recommended stream reconnection algorithm.
   o  Removed the unnecessary and unused <invalid-id/> stream error (see
      RFC 3920 for historical documentation).
   o  Specified return of the <restricted-xml/> stream error in response
      to receipt of prohibited XML features.
   o  Specified that the SASL SCRAM mechanism is a mandatory-to-
      implement technology for client-to-server streams.
   o  Specified that TLS plus the SASL PLAIN mechanism is a mandatory-
      to-implement technology for client-to-server streams.
   o  Specified that support for the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism is required
      for servers but only recommended for clients (since end-user X.509
      certificates are difficult to obtain and not yet widely deployed).
   o  Removed the hard two-connection rule for server-to-server streams.
   o  More clearly specified the certificate profile for both public key
      certificates and issuer certificates.
   o  Added the <reset/> streams error condition to handle expired/
      revoked certificates or the addition of security-critical features
      to an existing stream.
   o  Added the <account-disabled/>, <credentials-expired/>,
      <encryption-required/>, <malformed-request/>, and <transition-
      needed/> SASL error conditions to handle error flows mistakenly
      left out of RFC 3920 or discussed in RFC 4422 but not in RFC 2222.
   o  Removed unnecessary requirement for escaping of characters that
      map to certain predefined entities, which do not need to be
      escaped in XML.
   o  Clarified the process of DNS SRV lookups and fallbacks.
   o  Clarified the handling of SASL security layers.
   o  Clarified the stream negotiation process and associated flow
      chart.
   o  Clarified the handling of stream features.
   o  Added a 'by' attribute to the <error/> element for stanza errors
      so that the entity that has detected the error can include its JID
      for diagnostic or tracking purposes.
   o  Clarified the handling of data that violates the well-formedness
      definitions for XML 1.0 and XML namespaces.
   o  Specified the security considerations in more detail, especially
      with regard to presence leaks and denial of service attacks.
   o  Moved documentation of the Server Dialback protocol from this
      specification to a separate specification maintained by the XMPP
      Standards Foundation.

   In addition, numerous changes of an editorial nature were made in
   order to more fully specify and clearly explain XMPP.



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Appendix E.  Copying Conditions

   Regarding this entire document or any portion of it, the author makes
   no guarantees and is not responsible for any damage resulting from
   its use.  The author grants irrevocable permission to anyone to use,
   modify, and distribute it in any way that does not diminish the
   rights of anyone else to use, modify, and distribute it, provided
   that redistributed derivative works do not contain misleading author
   or version information.  Derivative works need not be licensed under
   similar terms.


Author's Address

   Peter Saint-Andre
   Cisco
   1899 Wyknoop Street, Suite 600
   Denver, CO  80202
   USA

   Phone: +1-303-308-3282
   Email: psaintan@cisco.com





























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