RTCWEB Working Group A.Wang
Internet Draft China Telecom
B.Liu
Huawei Technologies
J.Uberti
Google
Peng.Ding
China Telecom
Intended status: Standard Track March 13, 2017
Expires: September 12, 2017
Operator-Assisted Relay Service Architecture (OARS)
draft-wang-rtcweb-oars-01.txt
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Internet-Draft Operator-Assisted Relay Service Architecture (OARS)
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Abstract
This document proposes a new relay-based NAT traversal architecture
called OARS which could simplify the data communication process
between two hosts that locates behind some non-BEHAVE compliant
[RFC4787] [RFC5382] NAT devices. The key mechanism in OARS is the
newly defined "Couple" operation (using STUN [RFC5389] message
format) which allows the Relay servers to be easily incorporated
into existing CGN/CDN nodes which are already deployed within the
network in a distributed manner.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ................................................ 3
1.1. Motivations ............................................ 3
1.2. Relationship with TURN.................................. 5
2. Conventions used in this document............................ 5
3. Solution Overview ........................................... 6
3.1. Reference Architecture of OARS ..........................6
3.2. Solution Rationale...................................... 7
3.2.1. Relay Selector Reflection and Selection ............7
3.2.2. Relay Selection.................................... 8
3.2.3. Forming "Couple" Command........................... 9
3.2.4. Data Relay......................................... 9
4. New STUN Method Definition .................................. 10
4.1. Couple Operation ....................................... 10
4.2. Couple Operation Packet Format ......................... 10
5. Detailed Example ............................................ 12
5.1. Procedures of Communication Traversing Symmetric NATs... 12
5.2. Procedures of IPv4 and IPv6 Host Communication.......... 13
6. OARS Benefits ............................................... 14
7. OARS Deployment Considerations............................... 16
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8. Security Considerations..................................... 16
9. IANA Considerations ........................................ 16
10. Conclusions ............................................... 16
11. Acknowledgements .......................................... 17
12. References ................................................ 17
12.1. Normative References.................................. 17
12.2. Informative References................................ 17
1. Introduction
1.1. Motivations
This document proposes a new relay-based NAT traversal architecture
called OARS based on the following motivations.
1) Leverage ISPs' infrastructures
Currently, the deployment of TURN [RFC5766] is very limited and most
of the application providers use their own platform to transfer the
data between two hosts that behind NATs and to translate the
communication packets between two hosts in different address families.
The relay devices deployed centrally by various application providers
often lead to inefficient data transmit between two hosts and it must
deal with complex network layer problems which the application
providers are not familiar with.
On the other hand, service providers have deployed many CGN/CDN nodes
in a distributed manner within their networks. If the service
providers can use these CGN devices/CDN nodes as the relay devices
for communication between two hosts behind NATs or that from
different address family, and provide their data
translation/forwarding capability to the application providers, the
host to host communication will be more efficient. Given most of the
CGNs are capable of translating packets between IPv4 and IPv6, the
adoption of IPv6 technology will also be accelerated.
2) Simplify the communication procedures
OARS needs less communication procedures than TURN of which the
procedures are considered very complex to be integrated into the
ISPs' infrastructure, for example:
o TURN solution has to closely interact with ICE
Within current TURN solution, there are scenarios where the ICE
or other NAT-hole punching procedures must be included for the
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success of communication via TURN servers. The key point is
that TURN allocates different relay transport address-port
pairs for different hosts.
Each client must first use TURN allocation request to get their
transport relay address-port pairs, and then must use ICE
procedure (connectivity check) or other similar signaling to
punch holes for these transport relay addresses on the
alongside NAT devices. Or else the relayed UDP/TCP packet will
be blocked.
Even with the above procedures, there still exist some risks
that the packets be rejected by TURN server due to the
permission list that created by client via "CreatePermission
Request" before it sending data to the peer. In order to
mitigate such issues, current TURN solution requires the TURN
servers only check the IP address part of the relay transport
address, and ignore the port portion. But this will again
introduce some attack risks because different host may share one
public IP address when the CGN device is deployed within network.
o IPv4/IPv6 Relay Address/Port Reservation and Allocation
Another drawback of different relay transport addresses for
different host is that the TURN server must reserve some IPv4/
IPv6 address block for the allocation and plan the TCP/UDP port
usage for each host. When TURN servers are deployed in a
distribute manner (For example when they are incorporated into
the CGN devices), there will be much coordination work to do
for the address/port reservation and allocation on the TURN
servers.
o Simultaneous TCP/UDP connections burden on TURN server
Current TURN solution requires the TURN servers to open and
listen on many TCP/UDP ports at the same time, Under TURN solution
for TCP[RFC6062], each host requires two connections to the TURN
server. This will increase the burden on TURN server and the
complexity to incorporate them into the CGN/CDN devices.
o Different procedures for TCP/UDP communication
Current TURN solution adopts different procedures for the TCP
and UDP communication channel. So for one TURN server to
provide the TCP/UDP relay function, it must implement two
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different procedures. This again increases the complexity of
the TURN server implementation, especially in CGN devices.
o Communication complexity between two different TURN servers
Current TURN solution cannot assure two hosts select the same
TURN server, and then it must deal with the communication
situation between two different TURN servers. This scenario
has not been covered by the current TURN related drafts. The client
must reuse the XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute to include the relay
address of the peer to reach the second TURN server.
On the other hand, because the hosts select their own TURN
server, there is no mechanism to assure the relayed path is
most optimal for them. The application latency will be
increased when this occurs.
OARS solution will simplify the above mentioned complexity and make
the TCP/UDP data relay function be easily incorporated into the
existing distributed CGN devices or other kinds distributed devices
i.e. the CDN nodes etc.
1.2. Relationship with TURN
This document doesn't intent to replace TURN with OARS, but
consider OARS as a complementary solution along with TURN for some
specific scenarios.
If one SP wants to open its infrastructure to accelerate their
customers' (mainly regarding to application providers) client-to-
client communications within the SP's domain, OARS could be a good
candidate.
2. Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
O Relay Selector: which is in charge of selecting a proper relay
device (CGN or CDN nodes) for the communicating hosts behind NATs.
Normally, the RS is a function located in the network's management
plane and possibly a part of the NMS server
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O OARS: Operator-Assisted Relay Service. Compared with the relay
services that implemented independently by each TURN client, OARS can
simplify the relay procedures in central control mode via the
assistance of network operator.
o OARS Client: The client that initiated the "Couple" command to bind
two TCP/UDP sessions on one relay device or two different relay
devices.
.
o OARS Server: The server that implemented the "Couple" command to
bind two TCP/UDP sessions on one relay device or two different relay
devices.
3. Solution Overview
3.1. Reference Architecture of OARS
+-----------+----------+
| RS |
| (Relay Selector) |
+-----------+----------+
/ | \
/ | \
/ | \
/ | \
+------------------+ +---------+--------+ +------------------+
| CGN-1 | | CGN-2 | | CGN-N |
| (OARS Server) | | (OARS Server) |...| (OARS Server) |
+-------------+----+ +------------------+ +----+-------------+
| |
| |
| |
+----+----+ +----+----+
| | | |
| NAT | | NAT |
| | | |
+----+----+ +----+----+
| |
+----+---+ +---+----+
| Host 1 | | Host 2 |
|(v4/v6) | |(v4/v6) |
+--------+ +--------+
(OARS Client) (OARS Client)
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Fig. 3-1: OARS Architecture
As depicted in above figure, the application clients that located on
hosts act as the OARS clients while the CGNs act as OARS Servers.
There is a Relay Selector (RS) for choosing a proper CGN to relay
traffic between the two hosts. In practice, the RS could be a
dedicated server or a function located in the management plane
servers such as NMS server.
RS has the intelligent route selection capability to choose a proper
CGN for a given host pair. RS sends the data relay indication to the
selected CGN devices/CDN node via the newly defined "Couple" method.
BEHAVE compliant and non-BEHAVE compliant NAT traverse [RFC4787]
[RFC5382] is supported in OARS. IPv6 and IPv4 host communication is
also supported.
3.2. Solution Rationale
The solution could be briefly described in the following sections.
3.2.1. Relay Selector Reflection and Selection
Each host that wants to communicate with the other host should send
STUN message to the RS (Relay Selector), and get their reflex
addresses to the RS (here we refer to REFLX-RS).
The application provider needs to select a suitable RS and informs it
to the hosts (e.g. via application specific client-server protocol).
The detailed RS selection mechanism and criteria are out of the scope
of this document, but some general considerations are as the
following.
- If the hosts locate in the same ISP/administrative domain, then
the RS selection is fairly easy since normally there is only one
RS in one ISP; even there are multiple RSes in one ISP, the
application provider should also be able to select a suitable RS
based on the addresses of the two hosts.
- If the hosts locate in two ISPs/administrative domains (assuming
both of the ISPs providing OARS service), the application provider
can select one RS based on pre-defined policies (the simplest way
is just arbitrarily choosing one RS in one of the ISPs).
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- The application provider can also select two RS to deal with the
communication between two hosts that located in different service
provider. Under such situation, the application provider will send
one extend "Couple" command to each RS, let the RS tunnel the
customer's data to another RS. The detail process of this
situation will be provided further. Currently, we focus only the
one ISP scenario.
3.2.2. Relay Selection
If two hosts want to communicate, one of them will send the two
hosts' REFLX-RS addresses to the selected RS, to let the RS select
one appropriate relay device to relay the traffic.
Generally, the RS can select the appropriate relay device based
solely on the REFLX-RS addresses of these two hosts, for example,
select one relay device that locate in the middle of the
communication path. This approach is possible since the relay
behavior is within one ISP's domain that the RS could be possible to
learn the knowledge of all CGNs (relays) within that domain.
The selection criteria can also be expanded to include other factors,
such as the privacy concern of the communication peers, the linkage
usage information between the host and the relay device etc. For
example, RS can select one relay device that locates far from the
communication peer to hide the location of the peer. This might
sacrifice the communication efficiency but increase the protection of
the host privacy. Anyway, RS has more flexible control over the
relay selection, upon the requirement of communication hosts, or the
consideration of relay service provider.
After the relay device selection, the RS will respond the IP address
of the selected relay device to the communication peer, together with
the well known port that used by every relay device. The combination
of this relay IP address and the well-known port form the relay
transport address of the communication peers, each peer will use this
relay transport address to communicate.
When two hosts located within one administration domain, the
centralized relay point selection and control architecture can easily
achieve one low latency communication path because it knows the whole
network condition of its own. When two hosts located within different
administration domains, the OARS solution will also work except that
some end-to-end communication efficiency might be sacrificed unless
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there is some coordination between these two administration domains.
3.2.3. Forming "Couple" Command
Each host will send again one STUN message to the selected relay
transport address, get the new reflex address(here we refer to REFLX-
Relay) to the selected relay device, and reports it to the RS,
together with the previous reflex address to the RS (which is REFLX-
RS).
The RS will use the REFLX-RS addresses to find out which two peers
will communicate (such communication pair information is gotten from
Section 3.2.2). RS will retrieve the corresponding REFLX-Relay
address of the communication peer, forms the "Couple" command based
on such information, and sends the "Couple" command to the selected
relay transport address.
Upon receiving the "Couple" command, the relay device will add one
item to its forwarding table. The forwarding table will bind the
reflex addresses of the two peers, the required transport protocol
and other additional information.
3.2.4. Data Relay
Each host will then send the data traffic directly to the unique
relay transport address. The source address of this packet will be
changed by the alongside NAT devices that located between the host
and the relay device.
When this packet arrives to the relay address, its source address
will be one of the RFLEX-Relay addresses. The relay device will
search the forwarding table that formed in Section 3.2.3. If the
REFLX-Relay address in one item match the source address of the
received packet, then the other REFLX-Relay address will be retrieved
and be used as the destination address of the application packet, the
packet's source address will be changed to the relay transport
address.
After the conversion, the packet will be sent by the relay device.
This packet will be routed to the corresponding peer, according to
its REFLX-Relay address.
The application return packet will be sent again back to the same
relay device via the relay transport address. The similar search
process and convert work will be done by the relay device. The
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converted return packet will then be routed to the packet originator.
4. New STUN Method Definition
In order to let the CGN device to build one Couple item upon the
request of RS, it is needed to define one general Couple message to
transfer the related information.
4.1. Couple Operation
The Couple request defines the relationship between two TCP or UDP
half-connections, the translation rule that converts both the source
address and destination address of pass through packet in both
directions.
Couple Opcode: It defines how to bind two half-connections that ends
at the CGN's well-known relay transport address together. When CGN
device receives the Couple request, it will create one map table item
that includes the reflex IP address/port [REFLX-Relay] of both hosts
that lies behind the NAT device and the protocol that the host will
use to communicate.
When the CGN device receives the packet from one host, it will use
the reflex source address/port to lookup the map table item; converts
the source address/port of this packet to the relay transport address
of the CGN device and converts the destination address/port of this
packet to the reflex address [REFLX-Relay] that results from the map
table lookup action.
The converted packet will be routed to NAT side of the other host,
converted by the NAT device and then to the other host. The return
packet will be delivered to the relay transport address of CGN/CDN
device and be converted in reverse accordingly.
4.2. Couple Operation Packet Format
The Couple Opcode allows RS to create a new explicit couple table on
the CGN device(OARS Server), instructs the CGN device to accomplish
the related translation work.
The following diagram shows the Opcode layout for the Couple Opcode
request/response format.
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| STUN Message Type | Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Magic Cookie |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
| Transaction ID(96 bits) |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS attribute |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| XOR-PEER-ADDRESS attribute |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| REQUESTED-TRANSPORT attribute |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
STUN Message Type Couple method: value TBD.
only request/response semantics
Decouple method: value TBD.
only request/response semantics
Length The same definition as STUN prococol
[RFC5389]
Magic Cookie The same definition as STUN prococol
[RFC5389]
Transaction ID The same definition as STUN prococol
[RFC5389]
XOR-MAPPED-ADDRESS The same definition as STUN prococol
[RFC5389]. The value should be the
RFLX-Relay address of the host.
XOR-PEER-ADDRESS The same definition as TURN prococol
[RFC5766]. The value should be the
RFLX-Relay address of the peer.
REQUESTED-TRANSPORT The same definition as TURN prococol
[RFC5766]. the value of the
"protocol" fiel should be TCP or UDP.
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Fig.4-1: Couple Opcode Request/Response Format
5. Detailed Example
5.1. Procedures of Communication Traversing Symmetric NATs
When one of the communication hosts located behind the symmetric NAT
device, the host-to-host communication must via one relay device.
Below are the key procedures of OARS solution, we use the Fig3-1 to
describe the example.
Please note the communication procedures between the hosts and the
application server are out of the scope of this document, we only
focus on the key procedure proposed by this document.
1) If Host 1 and Host 2 want to communicate with each other, they
will send STUN binding message to the RS IPv4 address/port, get
their reflex address to RS[REFLX-RS].
2) RS will select one CGN device to relay the packet, based on the
RS addresses information of the two peers. Here we assume it
select CGN-1 as the relay device. RS will notify Host 1 and Host
2 of their relay transport address, both will use the same relay
IP address/port on CGN-1.
3) Host 1 and Host 2 will send STUN binding message to CGN-1, get
their relay address to CGN-1[REFLX-Relay] and report them to RS,
together with RS addresses gotten in step 1). Here we assume the
[REFLX-Relay] address of Host 1 is 192.0.2.1:7000, and [REFLX-
Relay] address of Host 2 is 192.0.2.150:32102.
4) RS will form the "Couple" message, which include mainly the
[REFLX-Relay] addresses of Host 1 and Host 2 and their
communication protocol, here we assume they use TCP to
communicate.
5) Upon receiving the "Couple" message, the CGN-1 device will form
one forwarding table that look like below:
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Reflextive transport | Reflextive transport | Transport|
| address of Host1 | address of Host2 | Protocol |
+-------------------------|------------------------|----------+
| 192.0.2.1:7000 | 192.0.2.150:32102 | TCP |
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+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Table 5-1: Couple Table Example (symmetric case)
6) Host1 will send the application data to the relay transport
address in CGN-1.
7) CGN device will look up the Couple table, use the source address
of received packet(192.0.2.1:7000 in this example) to get the
reflex IPv4 address of Host 2.
8) It then will change the source address of the packet to the relay
transport address in CGN device, the destination address of this
packet to the IPv4 reflex address of Host 2. The translated
packet will be forwarded to Host 2.
9) The return traffic will also be sent to the same relay transport
address in CGN-1, converted by the CGN device, and sent back to
Host 1.
5.2. Procedures of IPv4 and IPv6 Host Communication
If Host 1 is one IPv4 node and Host 2 is one IPv6 node. The
communication process are similar, except the relay address that is
sent to the Host 1 is the IPv4 address of the CGN-1 and the relay
address that is sent to the Host 2 is the IPv6 address of the CGN-1.
Host 1 and Host 2 will not notice that they are talking to one node
that in different address family.
The relay device selection process is same as the above example.
Here we describe the procedure from step 3.
3) Host 1 and Host 2 will send STUN binding message to CGN-1, get
their relay address to CGN-1[REFLX-Relay] and report them to RS,
together with RS addresses gotten in step 1). Here we assume the
[REFLX-Relay] address of Host 1 is 192.0.2.1:7000, and [REFLX-
Relay] address of Host 2 is 2001:c68:300:105::1[49191].
4) RS will form the "Couple" message, which include mainly the
[REFLX-Relay] addresses of Host 1 and Host 2 and their
communication protocol, here we assume they use TCP to
communicate.
5) Upon receiving the "Couple" message, the CGN-1 device will form
one forwarding table that look like below:
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Reflextive transport | Reflextive transport | Transport|
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| address of Host1 | address of Host2 | Protocol |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| 192.0.2.1:7000 | 2001:c68:300:105::1[49191] UDP |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Table 5-2: Couple Table Example (different address families case)
6) Host1 will send the application data to the relay transport
address in CGN-1.
7) CGN device will look up the Couple table, use the source address
of received packet(192.0.2.1:7000 in this example) to get the
reflex IPv6 address of Host 2.
8) It then will change the source address of the packet to the relay
transport IPv6 address in CGN device, the destination address of
this packet to the IPv6 reflex address of Host 2. The translated
packet will be forwarded to Host 2.
9) The return traffic will also be sent to the same relay transport
address in CGN-1, converted by the CGN device, and sent back to
Host 1.
6. OARS Benefits
Comparing to TURN, OARS could provide following benefits:
o Decoupled from ICE
TURN is tightly coupled with ICE. Operations like NAT punching,
create permission .etc all require ICE connectivity check packets.
Benefited from the couple operation, OARS doesn't necessarily need
ICE interaction.
o Avoid the Create Permission issues in TURN
In the OARS solution, each communication pair will use the same relay
server and the same relay address. The relay permission action
required by TURN solution is replaced with the "Couple" command.
There is no ambiguity for the relay permission because "Couple"
command use the ip address and port information of the communication
pair simultaneously. There are also no possible attacks due to the
loose control of the current TURN permission treaments.
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o Less Relay Address/Port Consumption and Management
OARS doesn't need to allocate different address-port pair for each
session initiated from the hosts. Thus, it could obviously reduce
the resource consumption and the human burden for planning the
resource allocation.
o Simplified Procedures
Theoretically, it requires only two commands to accomplish the
relay function, compared with over eight commands that required
by TURN solution. Due to every host communicate with the well-
known relay address, there is no additional requirement for
punching holes in the NAT devices, which is indispensable for
the current TURN solution.
+-----------+-----------------------+-------------------+
| | TURN Solution | OARS Solution|
|-----------|-----------------------|-------------------|
| | 1. Binding | 1. Binding |
|Required | 2. Allocate | 2. Couple |
|Commands | 3. Send | |
| | 4. Data | |
| | 5. Channel Bind | |
| | 6. Connect | |
| | 7. ConnectionBind | |
| | 8. ConnectionAttempt| |
+-----------+-----------------------+-------------------+
Table 6-1: Procedures comparison between TURN and OARS
o Unified solution for TCP/UDP and IPv4(6)-IPv6(4) data relay
OARS supports the data relay for the communication betweentwo hosts,
uses same mechanism for TCP and UDP transport protocol, even for the
communication between different address families.
o Support for optimal relay selection
Because of the central deployed RS could have the whole
network's routing/path knowledge, OARS is more likely to
achieve an optimal relay (OARS server) selection based on
various information such as the reflective transport addresses
of the two communicating peers, the link usage information
between two peers and the load status of the candidate TURN-
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Lite servers etc.
With the RS's knowledge, OARS is also more likely to achieve better
relay selection for some specific requirements.For example, if one
peer wants to hide its ip address to protect its privacy, the RS in
OARS architecture could possibly select one OARS server that located
far away from the host.
7. OARS Deployment Considerations
The OARS Server can be deployed in distributed manner. The most
appropriate devices for incorporating this function are the CGN
devices that have been deployed distributed by the service provider.
Each distributed OARS Server has one unique public IPv4/IPv6
transport address.
The RS can select the appropriate OARS Server based on the
proximity of the OARS server with the communication hosts and can
also use other criteria to influence the selection procedure, as
described in Section 3.
8. Security Considerations
The additional requirement of OARS is authenticating the couple
operation from the RS. When the communication channel between the RS
and the OARS server is secured, such security risks can be mitigated
accordingly.
9. IANA Considerations
This draft requires IANA to allocate following STUN methods:
Couple: value TBD.
Decouple: value TBD.
10. Conclusions
Currently, the communication between two hosts that located behind
NAT devices, especially that behind the symmetric NAT devices is
emerging. With the development of IPv6 technology, the communication
between two hosts that in different address families needs also be
considered. Under the OARS architecture, the communication requests
for IPv4/IPv4, IPv4/IPv6 scenario can be met in one general solution.
Such solution can alleviate the burden of various CP/SP to deploy the
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TURN server by themselves, exploit and open the capabilities of CGN
device that deployed by service provider to the third party(CP/SP),
make the host-to-host communication more efficient.
11. Acknowledgements
Many valuable comments were received from Brandon Williams, Oleg
Moskalenko, Jonathan Rosenberg, and Dan Wing etc.
This document was produced using the xml2rfc tool [RFC2629].
12. References
12.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, July 1997.
[RFC2629] Rose, M., "Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML", RFC 2629,
June 1999.
[RFC5389] Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,
"Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC 5389,
October 2008.
[RFC5766] Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and J. Rosenberg, "Traversal Using
Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session
Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC 5766, April 2010.
12.2. Informative References
[RFC4787] Audet, F. and C. Jennings, "Network Address Translation
(NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast UDP", BCP 127,
RFC 4787, January 2007.
[RFC5382] Guha, S., Biswas, K., Ford, B., Sivakumar, S., and P.
Srisuresh, "NAT Behavioral Requirements for TCP", BCP 142,
RFC 5382, October 2008.
[RFC6062] Perreault, S. and J. Rosenberg, "Traversal Using Relays
around NAT (TURN) Extensions for TCP Allocations", RFC
6062, November 2010.
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Authors' Addresses
Aijun Wang
China Telecom
Beiqijia Town, Changping District
Beijing, 102209
Email: wangaj.bri@chinatelecom.cn
Bing Liu
Huawei Technologies
Q14, Huawei Campus, No.156 Beiqing Road, Hai-Dian District
Beijing, 100095
P.R. China
Email: leo.liubing@huawei.com
Justin Uberti
Google
747 6th Ave S
Kirkland, WA 98033
USA
Email: justin@uberti.name
Peng Ding
China Telecom
Beiqijia Town, Changping District
Beijing, 102209
Email: dingpeng.bri@chinatelecom.cn
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