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rfc:rfc8840



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) E. Ivov Request for Comments: 8840 Jitsi Category: Standards Track T. Stach ISSN: 2070-1721 Unaffiliated

                                                            E. Marocco
                                                        Telecom Italia
                                                           C. Holmberg
                                                              Ericsson
                                                          January 2021

A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Usage for Incremental Provisioning of Candidates for the Interactive Connectivity Establishment (Trickle

                                ICE)

Abstract

 The Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) protocol describes a
 Network Address Translator (NAT) traversal mechanism for UDP-based
 multimedia sessions established with the Offer/Answer model.  The ICE
 extension for Incremental Provisioning of Candidates (Trickle ICE)
 defines a mechanism that allows ICE Agents to shorten session
 establishment delays by making the candidate gathering and
 connectivity checking phases of ICE non-blocking and by executing
 them in parallel.
 This document defines usage semantics for Trickle ICE with the
 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).  The document also defines a new
 SIP Info Package to support this usage together with the
 corresponding media type.  Additionally, a new Session Description
 Protocol (SDP) "end-of-candidates" attribute and a new SIP option tag
 "trickle-ice" are defined.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8840.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2021 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
 (https://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
 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
 2.  Terminology
 3.  Protocol Overview
   3.1.  Discovery Issues
   3.2.  Relationship with the Offer/Answer Model
 4.  Incremental Signaling of ICE Candidates
   4.1.  Initial Offer/Answer Exchange
     4.1.1.  Sending the Initial Offer
     4.1.2.  Receiving the Initial Offer
     4.1.3.  Sending the Initial Answer
     4.1.4.  Receiving the Initial Answer
   4.2.  Subsequent Offer/Answer Exchanges
   4.3.  Establishing the Dialog
     4.3.1.  Establishing Dialog State through Reliable Offer/Answer
             Delivery
     4.3.2.  Establishing Dialog State through Unreliable Offer/
             Answer Delivery
     4.3.3.  Initiating Trickle ICE without an SDP Answer
   4.4.  Delivering Candidates in INFO Requests
 5.  Initial Discovery of Trickle ICE Support
   5.1.  Provisioning Support for Trickle ICE
   5.2.  Trickle ICE Discovery with Globally Routable User Agent
         URIs (GRUUs)
   5.3.  Fall Back to Half Trickle
 6.  Considerations for RTP and RTCP Multiplexing
 7.  Considerations for Media Multiplexing
 8.  SDP "end-of-candidates" Attribute
   8.1.  Definition
   8.2.  Offer/Answer Procedures
 9.  Content Type "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag"
   9.1.  Overall Description
   9.2.  Grammar
 10. Info Package
   10.1.  Rationale -- Why INFO?
   10.2.  Overall Description
   10.3.  Applicability
   10.4.  Info Package Name
   10.5.  Info Package Parameters
   10.6.  SIP Option Tags
   10.7.  INFO Request Body Parts
   10.8.  Info Package Usage Restrictions
   10.9.  Rate of INFO Requests
   10.10. Info Package Security Considerations
 11. Deployment Considerations
 12. IANA Considerations
   12.1.  SDP "end-of-candidates" Attribute
   12.2.  Media Type "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag"
   12.3.  SIP Info Package "trickle-ice"
   12.4.  SIP Option Tag "trickle-ice"
 13. Security Considerations
 14. References
   14.1.  Normative References
   14.2.  Informative References
 Acknowledgements
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 The Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) protocol [RFC8445]
 describes a mechanism for Network Address Translator (NAT) traversal
 that consists of three main phases.
 During the first phase, an agent gathers a set of candidate transport
 addresses (source IP, port, and transport protocol).  This is
 followed by a second phase where these candidates are sent to a
 remote agent within the Session Description Protocol (SDP) body of a
 SIP message.  At the remote agent, the gathering procedure is
 repeated and candidates are sent to the first agent.  Once the
 candidate information is available, a third phase starts in parallel
 where connectivity between all candidates in both sets is checked
 (connectivity checks).  Once these phases have been completed, and
 only then, both agents can begin communication.
 According to [RFC8445], the three phases above happen consecutively,
 in a blocking way, which can introduce undesirable setup delay during
 session establishment.  The Trickle ICE extension [RFC8838] defines
 generic semantics required for these ICE phases to happen in a
 parallel, non-blocking way and hence speeds up session establishment.
 This specification defines a usage of Trickle ICE with the Session
 Initiation Protocol (SIP)[RFC3261].  It describes how ICE candidates
 are to be exchanged incrementally using SIP INFO requests [RFC6086]
 and how the Half Trickle and Full Trickle modes defined in [RFC8838]
 are to be used by SIP User Agents (UAs) depending on their
 expectations for support of Trickle ICE by a remote agent.
 This document defines a new Info Package as specified in [RFC6086]
 for use with Trickle ICE together with the corresponding media type,
 SDP attribute, and SIP option tag.

2. Terminology

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.
 This specification makes use of terminology defined by the ICE
 protocol in [RFC8445] and by its Trickle ICE extension in [RFC8838].
 It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the terminology from
 both documents.
 [RFC8445] also describes how ICE makes use of the Session Traversal
 Utilities for NAT (STUN) protocol [RFC5389] and its extension
 Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) [RFC5766].

3. Protocol Overview

 When using ICE for SIP according to [RFC8839], the ICE candidates are
 exchanged solely via SDP Offer/Answer as per [RFC3264].  This
 specification defines an additional mechanism where candidates can be
 exchanged using SIP INFO messages and a newly defined Info Package
 [RFC6086].  This also allows ICE candidates to be sent in parallel to
 an ongoing Offer/Answer negotiation and/or after the completion of
 the Offer/Answer negotiation.
 Typically, in cases where Trickle ICE is fully supported, the Offerer
 sends an INVITE request containing a subset of candidates.  Once an
 early dialog is established, the Offerer can continue sending
 candidates in INFO requests within that dialog.
 Similarly, an Answerer can send ICE candidates using INFO requests
 within the dialog established by its 18x provisional response.
 Figure 1 shows such a sample exchange:
    STUN/TURN                                                STUN/TURN
     Servers          Alice                      Bob          Servers
        |               |                         |                |
        |  STUN Bi.Req. |     INVITE (Offer)      |                |
        |<--------------|------------------------>|                |
        |               |      183 (Answer)       | TURN Alloc Req |
        | STUN Bi.Resp. |<------------------------|--------------->|
        |-------------->|  INFO/OK (SRFLX Cand.)  |                |
        |               |------------------------>| TURN Alloc Resp|
        |               |  INFO/OK (Relay Cand.)  |<---------------|
        |               |<------------------------|                |
        |               |                         |                |
        |               |  More Cands & ConnChecks|                |
        |               |<=======================>|                |
        |               |                         |                |
        |               |          200 OK         |                |
        |               |<------------------------|                |
        |               |            ACK          |                |
        |               |------------------------>|                |
        |               |                         |                |
        |               |<===== MEDIA FLOWS =====>|                |
        |               |                         |                |
        Note: "SRFLX" denotes server-reflexive candidates
             Figure 1: Sample Trickle ICE Scenario with SIP

3.1. Discovery Issues

 In order to benefit from Trickle ICE's full potential and reduce
 session establishment latency to a minimum, Trickle ICE Agents need
 to generate SDP Offers and Answers that contain incomplete and
 potentially empty sets of candidates.  Such Offers and Answers can
 only be handled meaningfully by agents that actually support
 incremental candidate provisioning, which implies the need to confirm
 such support before using it.
 Contrary to other protocols, where "in advance" capability discovery
 is widely implemented, the mechanisms that allow this for SIP (i.e.,
 a combination of UA capabilities [RFC3840] and Globally Routable User
 Agent URIs (GRUUs) [RFC5627]) have only seen low levels of adoption.
 This presents an issue for Trickle ICE implementations as SIP UAs do
 not have an obvious means of verifying that their peer will support
 incremental candidate provisioning.
 The Half Trickle mode of operation defined in the Trickle ICE
 specification [RFC8838] provides one way around this, by requiring
 the first Offer to contain a complete set of local ICE candidates and
 using only incremental provisioning of remote candidates for the rest
 of the session.
 While using Half Trickle does provide a working solution, it also
 comes at the price of increased latency.  Therefore, Section 5 makes
 several alternative suggestions that enable SIP UAs to engage in Full
 Trickle right from their first Offer: Section 5.1 discusses the use
 of online provisioning as a means of allowing the use of Trickle ICE
 for all endpoints in controlled environments.  Section 5.2 describes
 anticipatory discovery for implementations that actually do support
 GRUU and UA capabilities, and Section 5.3 discusses the
 implementation and use of Half Trickle by SIP UAs where none of the
 above are an option.

3.2. Relationship with the Offer/Answer Model

 From the perspective of SIP middleboxes and proxies, the Offer/Answer
 exchange for Trickle ICE looks partly similar to the Offer/Answer
 exchange for regular ICE for SIP [RFC8839].  However, in order to
 have the full picture of the candidate exchange, the newly introduced
 INFO messages need to be considered as well.
 +-------------------------------+  +-------------------------------+
 |   Alice      +--------------+ |  | +--------------+       Bob    |
 |              | Offer/Answer | |  | | Offer/Answer |              |
 | +--------+   |    Module    | |  | |    Module    |   +--------+ |
 | |  ICE   |   +--------------+ |  | +--------------+   |  ICE   | |
 | | Module |         |          |  |        |           | Module | |
 | +--------+         |          |  |        |           +--------+ |
 +-------------------------------+  +-------------------------------+
       |              |                      |                |
       |              |    INVITE (Offer)    |                |
       |              |--------------------->|                |
       |              |     183 (Answer)     |                |
       |              |<---------------------|                |
       |              |                      |                |
       |                                                      |
       |             SIP INFO (more candidates)               |
       |----------------------------------------------------->|
       |             SIP INFO (more candidates)               |
       |<-----------------------------------------------------|
       |                                                      |
       |          STUN Binding Requests/Responses             |
       |----------------------------------------------------->|
       |          STUN Binding Requests/Responses             |
       |<-----------------------------------------------------|
       |                                                      |
      Figure 2: Distinguishing between Trickle ICE and Traditional
                               Signaling
 From an architectural viewpoint, as displayed in Figure 2, exchanging
 candidates through SIP INFO requests could be represented as
 signaling between ICE modules and not between Offer/Answer modules of
 SIP UAs.  Then, such INFO requests do not impact the state of the
 Offer/Answer transaction other than providing additional candidates.
 Consequently, INFO requests are not considered Offers or Answers.
 Nevertheless, candidates that have been exchanged using INFO requests
 SHALL be included in subsequent Offers or Answers.  The version
 number in the "o=" line of that subsequent Offer needs to be
 incremented by 1 per the rules in [RFC3264].

4. Incremental Signaling of ICE Candidates

 Trickle ICE Agents will exchange ICE descriptions compliant to
 [RFC8838] via Offer/Answer procedures and/or INFO request bodies.
 This requires the following SIP-specific extensions:
 1.  Trickle ICE Agents MUST indicate support for Trickle ICE by
     including the SIP option-tag "trickle-ice" in a SIP Supported:
     header field within all SIP INVITE requests and responses.
 2.  Trickle ICE Agents MUST indicate support for Trickle ICE by
     including the ice-option "trickle" within all SDP Offers and
     Answers in accordance to [RFC8838].
 3.  Trickle ICE Agents MAY include any number of ICE candidates,
     i.e., from zero to the complete set of candidates, in their
     initial Offer or Answer.  If the complete candidate set is
     already included in the initial Offer, it is called Half Trickle.
 4.  Trickle ICE Agents MAY exchange additional ICE candidates using
     INFO requests within an existing INVITE dialog usage (including
     an early dialog) as specified in [RFC6086].  The INFO requests
     carry an Info-Package: trickle-ice.  Trickle ICE Agents MUST be
     prepared to receive INFO requests within that same dialog usage,
     containing additional candidates and/or an indication that
     trickling of such candidates has ended.
 5.  Trickle ICE Agents MAY exchange additional ICE candidates before
     the Answerer has sent the Answer provided that an invite dialog
     usage is established at both Trickle ICE Agents.  Note that in
     case of forking, multiple early dialogs may exist.
 The following sections provide further details on how Trickle ICE
 Agents perform the initial Offer/Answer exchange (Section 4.1),
 perform subsequent Offer/Answer exchanges (Section 4.2), and
 establish the INVITE dialog usage (Section 4.3) such that they can
 incrementally trickle candidates (Section 4.4).

4.1. Initial Offer/Answer Exchange

4.1.1. Sending the Initial Offer

 If the Offerer includes candidates in its initial Offer, it MUST
 encode these candidates as specified in [RFC8839].
 If the Offerer wants to send its initial Offer before knowing any
 candidate for one or more media descriptions, it MUST set the port to
 the default value '9' for these media descriptions.  If the Offerer
 does not want to include the host IP address in the corresponding
 "c="line, e.g., due to privacy reasons, it SHOULD include a default
 address in the "c="line, which is set to the IPv4 address 0.0.0.0 or
 to the IPv6 equivalent ::.
 In this case, the Offerer obviously cannot know the RTP Control
 Protocol (RTCP) transport address; thus, it MUST NOT include the
 "rtcp" attribute [RFC3605].  This avoids potential ICE mismatch (see
 [RFC8839]) for the RTCP transport address.
 If the Offerer wants to use RTCP multiplexing [RFC5761] and/or
 exclusive RTCP multiplexing [RFC8858], it still will include the
 "rtcp-mux" and/or "rctp-mux-only" attribute in the initial Offer.
 In any case, the Offerer MUST include the "ice-options:trickle"
 attribute in accordance to [RFC8838] and MUST include in each "m="
 line a "mid" attribute in accordance to [RFC5888].  The "mid"
 attribute identifies the "m=" line to which a candidate belongs and
 helps in case of multiple "m=" lines, when candidate gathering could
 occur in an order different from the order of the "m=" lines.

4.1.2. Receiving the Initial Offer

 If the initial Offer included candidates, the Answerer uses these
 candidates to start ICE processing as specified in [RFC8838].
 If the initial Offer included the "ice-options:trickle" attribute,
 the Answerer MUST be prepared for receiving trickled candidates later
 on.
 In case of a "m/c=" line with default values, none of the eventually
 trickled candidates will match the default destination.  This
 situation MUST NOT cause an ICE mismatch (see [RFC8839]).

4.1.3. Sending the Initial Answer

 If the Answerer includes candidates in its initial Answer, it MUST
 encode these candidates as specified in [RFC8839].
 If the Answerer wants to send its initial Answer before knowing any
 candidate for one or more media descriptions, it MUST set the port to
 the default value '9' for these media descriptions.  If the Answerer
 does not want to include the host IP address in the corresponding
 "c="line, e.g., due to privacy reasons, it SHOULD include a default
 address in the "c="line, which is set to the IPv4 address 0.0.0.0 or
 to the IPv6 equivalent ::.
 In this case, the Answerer obviously cannot know the RTCP transport
 address; thus, it MUST NOT include the "rtcp" attribute [RFC6086].
 This avoids potential ICE mismatch (see [RFC8839]) for the RTCP
 transport address.
 If the Answerer accepts the use of RTCP multiplexing [RFC5761] and/or
 exclusive RTCP multiplexing [RFC8858], it will include the "rtcp-mux"
 attribute in the initial Answer.
 In any case, the Answerer MUST include the "ice-options:trickle"
 attribute in accordance to [RFC8838] and MUST include in each "m="
 line a "mid" attribute in accordance to [RFC5888].

4.1.4. Receiving the Initial Answer

 If the initial Answer included candidates, the Offerer uses these
 candidates to start ICE processing as specified in [RFC8838].
 In case of a "m/c=" line with default values, none of the eventually
 trickled candidates will match the default destination.  This
 situation MUST NOT cause an ICE mismatch (see [RFC8839]).

4.2. Subsequent Offer/Answer Exchanges

 Subsequent Offer/Answer exchanges are handled the same as regular ICE
 (see Section 4.4 of [RFC8839]).
 If an Offer or Answer needs to be sent while the ICE Agents are in
 the middle of trickling, Section 4.4 of [RFC8839] applies.  This
 means that an ICE Agent includes candidate attributes for all local
 candidates it had trickled previously for a specific media stream.

4.3. Establishing the Dialog

 In order to be able to start trickling, the following two conditions
 need to be satisfied at the SIP UAs:
  • Trickle ICE support at the peer agent MUST be confirmed.
  • A dialog MUST have been created between the peers.
 Section 5 discusses in detail the various options for satisfying the
 first of the above conditions.  However, regardless of those
 mechanisms, agents are certain to have a clear understanding of
 whether their peers support trickle ICE once an Offer and an Answer
 have been exchanged, which also allows for ICE processing to commence
 (see Figure 3).

4.3.1. Establishing Dialog State through Reliable Offer/Answer Delivery

                 Alice                      Bob
                   |                         |
                   |     INVITE (Offer)      |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |      183 (Answer)       |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |        PRACK/OK         |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |                         |
           +----------------------------------------+
           |Alice and Bob know that both can trickle|
           |and know that the dialog is in the early|
           |state. Send INFO!                       |
           +----------------------------------------+
                   |                         |
                   |  INFO/OK (+SRFLX Cand.) |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |  INFO/OK (+SRFLX Cand.) |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |                         |
         Note: "SRFLX" denotes server-reflexive candidates
   Figure 3: A SIP Offerer can freely trickle as soon as it receives
                               an Answer
 As shown in Figure 3, satisfying both conditions is relatively
 trivial for ICE Agents that have sent an Offer in an INVITE and that
 have received an Answer in a reliable provisional response.  It is
 guaranteed to have confirmed support (or lack thereof) for Trickle
 ICE at the Answerer and to have fully initialized the SIP dialog at
 both ends.  Offerers and Answerers (after receipt of the PRACK
 request) in the above situation can therefore freely commence
 trickling within the newly established dialog.

4.3.2. Establishing Dialog State through Unreliable Offer/Answer

      Delivery
 The situation is a bit more delicate for agents that have received an
 Offer in an INVITE request and have sent an Answer in an unreliable
 provisional response because, once the response has been sent, the
 Answerer does not know when or if it has been received (Figure 4).
                 Alice                      Bob
                   |                         |
                   |     INVITE (Offer)      |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |      183 (Answer)       |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |                         |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |               |Bob:  I don't know if |
                   |               |Alice got my 183 or if|
                   |               |her dialog is already |
                   |               |in the early state.   |
                   |               |  Can I send INFO???  |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |                         |
        Figure 4: A SIP UA that sent an Answer in an unreliable
    provisional response does not know if it was received or if the
     dialog at the side of the Offerer has entered the early state
 In order to clear this ambiguity as soon as possible, the Answerer
 needs to retransmit the provisional response with the exponential
 backoff timers described in [RFC3262].  These retransmissions MUST
 cease on receipt of an INFO request carrying a "trickle-ice" Info
 Package body, on receipt of any other in-dialog request from the
 Offerer, or on transmission of the Answer in a 2xx response.  The
 Offerer cannot send in-dialog requests until it receives a response,
 so the arrival of such a request proves that the response has
 arrived.  Using the INFO request for dialog confirmation is similar
 to the procedure described in Section 7.1.1 of [RFC8839], except that
 the STUN binding request is replaced by the INFO request.
 The Offerer MUST send a Trickle ICE INFO request as soon as it
 receives an SDP Answer in an unreliable provisional response.  This
 INFO request MUST repeat the candidates that were already provided in
 the Offer (as would be the case when Half Trickle is performed or
 when new candidates have not been learned since then).  The first
 case could happen when Half Trickle is used and all candidates are
 already in the initial offer.  The second case could happen when Full
 Trickle is used and the Offerer is currently gathering additional
 candidates but did not yet get them.  Also, if the initial Offer did
 not contain any candidates, depending on how the Offerer gathers its
 candidates and how long it takes to do so, this INFO could still
 contain no candidates.
 When Full Trickle is used and if newly learned candidates are
 available, the Offerer SHOULD also deliver these candidates in said
 INFO request, unless it wants to hold back some candidates in
 reserve, e.g., in case these candidates are expensive to use and
 would only be trickled if all other candidates failed.
 The Offerer SHOULD include an "end-of-candidates" attribute in case
 candidate discovery has ended in the meantime and no further
 candidates are to be trickled.
 As soon as an Answerer has received such an INFO request, the
 Answerer has an indication that a dialog is established at both ends
 and trickling can begin (Figure 5).
 Note: The "+SRFLX" in Figure 5 indicates that additional newly
 learned server-reflexive candidates are included.
                 Alice                      Bob
                   |                         |
                   |     INVITE (Offer)      |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |      183 (Answer)       |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |  INFO/OK (+SRFLX Cand.) |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |                         |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |               |Bob:  Now I know Alice|
                   |               | is ready. Send INFO! |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |  INFO/OK (+SRFLX Cand.) |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |                         |
                   |    200/ACK (Answer)     |
                   |<------------------------|
           Note: "SRFLX" denotes server-reflexive candidates
   Figure 5: A SIP UA that received an INFO request after sending an
   unreliable provisional response knows that the dialog at the side
              of the receiver has entered the early state
 When sending the Answer in the 200 OK response to the INVITE request,
 the Answerer needs to repeat exactly the same Answer that was
 previously sent in the unreliable provisional response in order to
 fulfill the corresponding requirements in [RFC3264].  Thus, the
 Offerer needs to be prepared for receiving a different number of
 candidates in that repeated Answer than previously exchanged via
 trickling and MUST ignore the candidate information in that 200 OK
 response.

4.3.3. Initiating Trickle ICE without an SDP Answer

 The ability to convey arbitrary candidates in INFO message bodies
 allows ICE Agents to initiate trickling without actually sending an
 Answer.  Trickle ICE Agents can therefore respond to an INVITE
 request with provisional responses without an SDP Answer [RFC3261].
 Such provisional responses serve for establishing an early dialog.
 Agents that choose to establish the dialog in this way MUST
 retransmit these responses with the exponential backoff timers
 described in [RFC3262].  These retransmissions MUST cease on receipt
 of an INFO request carrying a "trickle-ice" Info Package body, on
 receipt of any in-dialog requests from the Offerer, or on
 transmission of the Answer in a 2xx response.  The Offerer cannot
 send in-dialog requests until it receives a response, so the arrival
 of such a request proves that the response has arrived.  This is
 again similar to the procedure described in Section 6.1.1 of
 [RFC8839], except that an Answer is not yet provided.
 Note: The "+SRFLX" in Figure 6 indicates that additional newly
 learned server-reflexive candidates are included.
                 Alice                      Bob
                   |                         |
                   |     INVITE (Offer)      |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |      183 (-)            |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |  INFO/OK (SRFLX Cand.)  |
                   |------------------------>|
                   |                         |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |               |Bob:  Now I know again|
                   |               | that Alice is ready. |
                   |               | Send INFO!           |
                   |               +----------------------+
                   |  INFO/OK (SRFLX Cand.)  |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |    183 (Answer) opt.    |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |  INFO/OK (SRFLX Cand.)  |
                   |<------------------------|
                   |    200/ACK (Answer)     |
                   |<------------------------|
        Note: "SRFLX" denotes server-reflexive candidates
      Figure 6: A SIP UA sends an unreliable provisional response
           without an Answer for establishing an early dialog
 When sending the Answer, the agent MUST repeat all currently known
 and used candidates, if any, and MAY include all newly gathered
 candidates since the last INFO request was sent.  However, if that
 Answer was already sent in an unreliable provisional response, the
 Answerers MUST repeat exactly the same Answer in the 200 OK response
 to the INVITE request in order to fulfill the corresponding
 requirements in [RFC3264].  In case that trickling continued, an
 Offerer needs to be prepared for receiving fewer candidates in that
 repeated Answer than previously exchanged via trickling and MUST
 ignore the candidate information in that 200 OK response.

4.4. Delivering Candidates in INFO Requests

 Whenever new ICE candidates become available for sending, agents
 encode them in "candidate" attributes as described by [RFC8839].  For
 example:
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706432 200a0b:12f0::1 5000 typ host
 The use of SIP INFO requests happens within the context of the Info
 Package as defined in Section 10.  The media type [RFC6838] for their
 payload MUST be set to "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" as defined
 in Section 9.  The INFO request body adheres to the grammar as
 specified in Section 9.2.
 Since neither the "candidate" nor the "end-of-candidates" attributes
 contain information that would allow correlating them to a specific
 "m=" line, it is handled through the use of pseudo "m=" lines.
 Pseudo "m=" lines follow the SDP syntax for "m=" lines as defined in
 [RFC4566] and are linked to the corresponding "m=" line in the SDP
 Offer or Answer via the identification tag in a "mid" attribute
 [RFC5888].  A pseudo "m=" line does not provide semantics other than
 indicating to which "m=" line a candidate belongs.  Consequently, the
 receiving agent MUST ignore any remaining content of the pseudo "m="
 line, which is not defined in this document.  This guarantees that
 the "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" bodies do not interfere with
 the Offer/Answer procedures as specified in [RFC3264].
 When sending the INFO request, the agent MAY, if already known to the
 agent, include the same content into the pseudo "m=" line as for the
 "m=" line in the corresponding Offer or Answer.  However, since
 Trickle ICE might be decoupled from the Offer/Answer negotiation, the
 content might be unknown to the agent.  In this case, the agent MUST
 include the following default values:
  • The media field is set to 'audio'.
  • The port value is set to '9'.
  • The proto value is set to 'RTP/AVP'.
  • The fmt field MUST appear only once and is set to '0'.
 Agents MUST include a pseudo "m=" line and an identification tag in a
 "mid" attribute for every "m=" line whose candidate list they intend
 to update.  Such "mid" attributes MUST immediately precede the list
 of candidates for that specific "m=" line.
 All "candidate" or "end-of-candidates" attributes following a "mid"
 attribute, up until (and excluding) the next occurrence of a pseudo
 "m=" line, pertain to the "m=" line identified by that identification
 tag.
 Note, that there is no requirement that the INFO request body
 contains as many pseudo "m=" lines as the Offer/Answer contains "m="
 lines, nor that the pseudo "m=" lines be in the same order as the
 "m=" lines that they pertain to.  The correspondence can be made via
 the "mid" attributes since candidates are grouped in sections headed
 by "pseudo" "m=" lines.  These sections contain "mid" attribute
 values that point back to the true "m=" line.
 An "end-of-candidates" attribute, preceding the first pseudo "m="
 line, indicates the end of all trickling from that agent, as opposed
 to end of trickling for a specific "m=" line, which would be
 indicated by a media-level "end-of-candidates" attribute.
 Refer to Figure 7 for an example of the INFO request content.
 The use of pseudo "m=" lines allows for a structure similar to the
 one in SDP Offers and Answers where separate media-level and session-
 level sections can be distinguished.  In the current case, lines
 preceding the first pseudo "m=" line are considered to be session
 level.  Lines appearing in between or after pseudo "m=" lines will be
 interpreted as media level.
    |  Note that while this specification uses the "mid" attribute
    |  from [RFC5888], it does not define any grouping semantics.
 All INFO requests MUST carry the "ice-pwd" and "ice-ufrag" attributes
 that allow mapping them to a specific ICE generation.  An agent MUST
 discard any received INFO requests containing "ice-pwd" and "ice-
 ufrag" attributes that do not match those of the current ICE
 Negotiation Session.
 The "ice-pwd" and "ice-ufrag" attributes MUST appear at the same
 level as the ones in the Offer/Answer exchange.  In other words, if
 they were present as session-level attributes, they will also appear
 at the beginning of all INFO request payloads, i.e., preceding the
 first pseudo "m=" line.  If they were originally exchanged as media-
 level attributes, potentially overriding session-level values, then
 they will also be included in INFO request payloads following the
 corresponding pseudo "m=" lines.
 Note that when candidates are trickled, [RFC8838] requires that each
 candidate must be delivered to the receiving Trickle ICE
 implementation not more than once and in the same order as it was
 conveyed.  If the signaling protocol provides any candidate
 retransmissions, they need to be hidden from the ICE implementation.
 This requirement is fulfilled as follows.
 Since the agent is not fully aware of the state of the ICE
 Negotiation Session at its peer, it MUST include all currently known
 and used local candidates in every INFO request.  That is, the agent
 MUST repeat in the INFO request body all candidates that were
 previously sent under the same combination of "ice-pwd" and "ice-
 ufrag" in the same order as they were sent before.  In other words,
 the sequence of a previously sent list of candidates MUST NOT change
 in subsequent INFO requests, and newly gathered candidates MUST be
 added at the end of that list.  Although repeating all candidates
 creates some overhead, it also allows easier handling of problems
 that could arise from unreliable transports like, e.g., loss of
 messages and reordering, which can be detected through the CSeq:
 header field in the INFO request.
 In addition, an ICE Agent needs to adhere to Section 17 of [RFC8838]
 on preserving candidate order while trickling.
 When receiving INFO requests carrying any candidates, agents MUST
 first identify and discard the attribute lines containing candidates
 they have already received in previous INFO requests or in the Offer/
 Answer exchange preceding them.
 Such candidates are considered to be equal if their IP address port,
 transport, and component ID are the same.  After identifying and
 discarding the known candidates, the agents MUST forward the actual
 new candidates to the ICE Agents in the same order as they were
 received in the INFO request body.  The ICE Agents will then process
 the new candidates according to the rules described in [RFC8838].
 Receiving an "end-of-candidates" attribute in an INFO request body --
 with the "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd" attributes matching the current
 ICE generation -- is an indication from the peer agent that it will
 not send any further candidates.  When included at the session level,
 i.e., before any pseudo "m=" line, this indication applies to the
 whole session; when included at the media level, the indication
 applies only to the corresponding "m=" line.  Handling of such end-
 of-candidates indications is defined in [RFC8838].
 The example in Figure 7 shows the content of a candidate delivering
 INFO request.  In the example, the "end-of-candidates" attributes
 indicate that the candidate gathering is finished and that no further
 INFO requests follow.
   INFO sip:alice@example.com SIP/2.0
   ...
   Info-Package: trickle-ice
   Content-type: application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag
   Content-Disposition: Info-Package
   Content-length: 862
   a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg
   a=ice-ufrag:8hhY
   m=audio 9 RTP/AVP 0
   a=mid:1
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706432 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1 5000 typ host
   a=candidate:1 2 UDP 2130706432 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1 5001 typ host
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 192.0.2.1 5010 typ host
   a=candidate:1 2 UDP 2130706431 192.0.2.1 5011 typ host
   a=candidate:2 1 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 5010 typ srflx
      raddr 192.0.2.1 rport 8998
   a=candidate:2 2 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 5011 typ srflx
      raddr 192.0.2.1 rport 8998
   a=end-of-candidates
   m=audio 9 RTP/AVP 0
   a=mid:2
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706432 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1 6000 typ host
   a=candidate:1 2 UDP 2130706432 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1 6001 typ host
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 2130706431 192.0.2.1 6010 typ host
   a=candidate:1 2 UDP 2130706431 192.0.2.1 6011 typ host
   a=candidate:2 1 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 6010 typ srflx
      raddr 192.0.2.1 rport 9998
   a=candidate:2 2 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.3 6011 typ srflx
      raddr 192.0.2.1 rport 9998
   a=end-of-candidates
       Note: In a real INFO request, there will be no line breaks
             in the "candidate" attributes
        Figure 7: An Example for the Content of an INFO Request

5. Initial Discovery of Trickle ICE Support

 SIP UAs are required by [RFC8838] to indicate their support of and
 intent to use Trickle ICE in their Offers and Answers by using the
 "ice-options:trickle" attribute, and they MUST include the SIP
 option-tag "trickle-ice" in a SIP Supported: or Require: header
 field.  This makes discovery fairly straightforward for Answerers or
 for cases where Offers need to be generated within existing dialogs
 (i.e., when sending UPDATE or re-INVITE requests).  In both
 scenarios, prior SDP bodies will have provided the necessary
 information.
 Obviously, such information is not available at the time a first
 Offer is being constructed, and it is therefore impossible for ICE
 Agents to determine support for incremental provisioning that way.
 The following options are suggested as ways of addressing this issue.

5.1. Provisioning Support for Trickle ICE

 In certain situations, it may be possible for integrators deploying
 Trickle ICE to know in advance that some or all endpoints reachable
 from within the deployment will support Trickle ICE.  This is the
 case, for example, if Session Border Controllers (SBCs) with support
 for this specification are used to connect to UAs that do not support
 Trickle ICE.
 While the exact mechanism for allowing such provisioning is out of
 scope here, this specification encourages trickle ICE implementations
 to allow the option in the way they find most appropriate.
 However, an Offerer assuming Trickle ICE support MUST include a SIP
 Require: trickle-ice header field.  That way, if the provisioned
 assumption of Trickle ICE support ends up being incorrect, the
 failure is (a) operationally easy to track down and (b) recoverable
 by the client, i.e., they can resend the request without the SIP
 Require: header field and without the assumption of Trickle ICE
 support.

5.2. Trickle ICE Discovery with Globally Routable User Agent URIs

    (GRUUs)
 [RFC3840] provides a way for SIP UAs to query for support of specific
 capabilities using, among others, OPTIONS requests.  On the other
 hand, support for GRUU according to [RFC5627] allows SIP requests to
 be addressed to specific UAs (as opposed to arbitrary instances of an
 address of record).  Combining the two and using the "trickle-ice"
 option tag defined in Section 10.6 provides SIP UAs with a way of
 learning the capabilities of specific SIP UA instances and then
 addressing them directly with INVITE requests that require Trickle
 ICE support.
 Such learning of capabilities may happen in different ways.  One
 option for a SIP UA is to learn the GRUU instance ID of a peer
 through presence and then to query its capabilities with an OPTIONS
 request.  Alternatively, it can also just send an OPTIONS request to
 the Address of Record (AOR) it intends to contact and then inspect
 the returned response(s) for support of both GRUU and Trickle ICE
 (Figure 8).  It is noted that using the GRUU means that the INVITE
 request can go only to that particular device.  This prevents the use
 of forking for that request.
          Alice                                                Bob
            |                                                   |
            |        OPTIONS sip:b1@example.com SIP/2.0         |
            |-------------------------------------------------->|
            |                                                   |
            |                      200 OK                       |
            |    Contact: sip:b1@example.com;gr=hha9s8d-999a    |
            |            ;audio;video|;trickle-ice;...          |
            |<--------------------------------------------------|
            |                                                   |
            | INVITE sip:b1@example.com;gr=hha9s8d-999a SIP/2.0 |
            |             Supported: trickle-ice                |
            |                      (Offer)                      |
            |-------------------------------------------------->|
            |                                                   |
            |                  183 (Answer)                     |
            |<--------------------------------------------------|
            |                INFO/OK (Trickling)                |
            |<------------------------------------------------->|
            |                                                   |
            |                      ...                          |
            |                                                   |
     Figure 8: Trickle ICE Support Discovery with OPTIONS and GRUU
 Confirming support for Trickle ICE through [RFC3840] gives SIP UAs
 the option to engage in Full Trickle negotiation (as opposed to the
 more lengthy Half Trickle) from the very first Offer they send.

5.3. Fall Back to Half Trickle

 In cases where none of the other mechanisms in this section are
 acceptable, SIP UAs should use the Half Trickle mode defined in
 [RFC8838].  With Half Trickle, agents initiate sessions the same way
 they would when using ICE for SIP [RFC8839].  This means that, prior
 to actually sending an Offer, agents first gather ICE candidates in a
 blocking way and then send them all in that Offer.  The blocking
 nature of the process implies that some amount of latency will be
 accumulated, and it is advised that agents try to anticipate it where
 possible, for example, when user actions indicate a high likelihood
 for an imminent call (e.g., activity on a keypad or a phone going off
 hook).
 Using Half Trickle results in Offers that are compatible with both
 ICE SIP endpoints [RFC8839] and legacy endpoints [RFC3264].
 STUN/TURN                                                STUN/TURN
 Servers          Alice                      Bob          Servers
    |               |                             |               |
    |<--------------|                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |   Candidate   |                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |   Discovery   |                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |-------------->|       INVITE (Offer)        |               |
    |               |---------------------------->|               |
    |               |        183 (Answer)         |-------------->|
    |               |<----------------------------|               |
    |               |  INFO (repeated candidates) |               |
    |               |---------------------------->|               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |    INFO (more candidates)   |   Candidate   |
    |               |<----------------------------|               |
    |               |    Connectivity Checks      |               |
    |               |<===========================>|   Discovery   |
    |               |   INFO (more candidates)    |               |
    |               |<----------------------------|               |
    |               |    Connectivity Checks      |<--------------|
    |               |<===========================>|               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |          200 OK             |               |
    |               |<----------------------------|               |
    |               |                             |               |
    |               |<======= MEDIA FLOWS =======>|               |
    |               |                             |               |
  Figure 9: Example of a Typical (Half) Trickle ICE Exchange with SIP
 As a reminder, once a single Offer or Answer has been exchanged
 within a specific dialog, support for Trickle ICE will have been
 determined.  No further use of Half Trickle will therefore be
 necessary within that same dialog, and all subsequent exchanges can
 use the Full Trickle mode of operation.

6. Considerations for RTP and RTCP Multiplexing

 The following consideration describes options for Trickle ICE in
 order to give some guidance to implementers on how trickling can be
 optimized with respect to providing RTCP candidates.
 Handling of the "rtcp" attribute [RFC3605] and the "rtcp-mux"
 attribute for RTP/RTCP multiplexing [RFC5761] is already considered
 in Section 5.1.1.1 of [RFC8445] and in [RFC5761].  These
 considerations are still valid for Trickle ICE; however, trickling
 provides more flexibility for the sequence of candidate exchange in
 case of RTCP multiplexing.
 If the Offerer supports RTP/RTCP multiplexing exclusively as
 specified in [RFC8858], the procedures in that document apply for the
 handling of the "rtcp-mux-only", "rtcp", and "rtcp-mux" attributes.
 While a Half Trickle Offerer has to send an Offer compliant to
 [RFC8839] and [RFC5761] including candidates for all components, the
 flexibility of a Full Trickle Offerer allows the sending of only RTP
 candidates (component 1) in the initial Offer assuming that RTCP
 multiplexing is supported by the Answerer.  A Full Trickle Offerer
 would need to start gathering and trickling RTCP candidates
 (component 2) only after having received an indication in the Answer
 that the Answerer unexpectedly does not support RTCP multiplexing.
 A Trickle Answerer MAY include an "rtcp-mux" attribute [RFC5761] in
 the "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" body if it supports and uses
 RTP and RTCP multiplexing.  The Trickle Answerer needs to follow the
 guidance on the usage of the "rtcp" attribute as given in [RFC8839]
 and [RFC3605].  Receipt of this attribute at the Offerer in an INFO
 request prior to the Answer indicates that the Answerer supports and
 uses RTP and RTCP multiplexing.  The Offerer can use this
 information, e.g., for stopping the gathering of RTCP candidates and/
 or for freeing corresponding resources.
 This behavior is illustrated by the following example Offer that
 indicates support for RTP and RTCP multiplexing.
   v=0
   o=alice 2890844526 2890844526 IN IP6 atlanta.example.com
   s=
   c=IN IP6 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::3
   t=0 0
   a=ice-pwd:777uzjYhagZgasd88fgpdd
   a=ice-ufrag:Yhh8
   m=audio 5000 RTP/AVP 0
   a=mid:1
   a=rtcp-mux
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 1658497328 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::3 5000 typ host
 Once the dialog is established as described in Section 4.3, the
 Answerer sends the following INFO request.
   INFO sip:alice@example.com SIP/2.0
   ...
   Info-Package: trickle-ice
   Content-type: application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag
   Content-Disposition: Info-Package
   Content-length: 161
   a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg
   a=ice-ufrag:8hhY
   m=audio 9 RTP/AVP 0
   a=mid:1
   a=rtcp-mux
   a=candidate:1 1 UDP 1658497382 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::4 6000 typ host
 This INFO request indicates that the Answerer supports and uses RTP
 and RTCP multiplexing as well.  It allows the Offerer to omit
 gathering RTCP candidates or releasing already gathered RTCP
 candidates.  If the INFO request did not contain the "rtcp-mux"
 attribute, the Offerer has to gather RTCP candidates unless it wants
 to wait until receipt of an Answer that eventually confirms support
 or non-support for RTP and RTCP multiplexing.  In case the Offerer
 already sent RTCP candidates in a previous INFO request, it still
 needs to repeat them in subsequent INFO requests, even when that
 support for RTCP multiplexing was confirmed by the Answerer and the
 Offerer has released its RTCP candidates.

7. Considerations for Media Multiplexing

 The following considerations describe options for Trickle ICE in
 order to give some guidance to implementers on how trickling can be
 optimized with respect to providing candidates in case of Media
 Multiplexing [RFC8843].  It is assumed that the reader is familiar
 with [RFC8843].
 ICE candidate exchange is already considered in Section 10 of
 [RFC8843].  These considerations are still valid for Trickle ICE;
 however, trickling provides more flexibility for the sequence of
 candidate exchange, especially in Full Trickle mode.
 Except for bundle-only "m=" lines, a Half Trickle Offerer has to send
 an Offer with candidates for all bundled "m=" lines.  The additional
 flexibility, however, allows a Full Trickle Offerer to initially send
 only candidates for the "m=" line with the suggested Offerer BUNDLE
 address.
 On receipt of the Answer, the Offerer will detect if BUNDLE is
 supported by the Answerer and if the suggested Offerer BUNDLE address
 was selected.  In this case, the Offerer does not need to trickle
 further candidates for the remaining "m=" lines in a bundle.
 However, if BUNDLE is not supported, the Full Trickle Offerer needs
 to gather and trickle candidates for the remaining "m=" lines as
 necessary.  If the Answerer selects an Offerer BUNDLE address that is
 different from the suggested Offerer BUNDLE address, the Full Trickle
 Offerer needs to gather and trickle candidates for the "m=" line that
 carries the selected Offerer BUNDLE address.
 A Trickle Answerer SHOULD include a "group:BUNDLE" attribute
 [RFC8843] at session level in the "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag"
 body if it supports and uses bundling.  When doing so, the Answerer
 MUST include all identification-tags in the same order that is used
 or will be used in the Answer.
 Receipt of this attribute at the Offerer in an INFO request prior to
 the Answer indicates that the Answerer supports and uses bundling.
 The Offerer can use this information, e.g., for stopping the
 gathering of candidates for the remaining "m=" lines in a bundle and/
 or for freeing corresponding resources.
 This behavior is illustrated by the following example Offer that
 indicates support for Media Multiplexing.
 If the Offerer already sent candidates for "m=" lines in a bundle in
 a previous INFO request, it still needs to repeat them in subsequent
 INFO requests, even when that support for bundling was confirmed by
 the Answerer and the Offerer has released candidates that are no
 longer needed.
    v=0
    o=alice 2890844526 2890844526 IN IP6 atlanta.example.com
    s=
    c=IN IP6 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::3
    t=0 0
    a=group:BUNDLE foo bar
    a=ice-pwd:777uzjYhagZgasd88fgpdd
    a=ice-ufrag:Yhh8
    m=audio 10000 RTP/AVP 0
    a=mid:foo
    a=rtcp-mux
    a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
    a=extmap 1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
    a=candidate:1 1 UDP 1658497328 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::3 10000 typ host
    m=video 10002 RTP/AVP 31
    a=mid:bar
    a=rtcp-mux
    a=rtpmap:31 H261/90000
    a=extmap 1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
 The example Offer indicates support for RTP and RTCP multiplexing and
 contains a "candidate" attribute only for the "m=" line with the
 suggested Offerer BUNDLE address.  Once the dialog is established as
 described in Section 4.3, the Answerer sends the following INFO
 request.
    INFO sip:alice@example.com SIP/2.0
    ...
    Info-Package: trickle-ice
    Content-type: application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag
    Content-Disposition: Info-Package
    Content-length: 219
    a=group:BUNDLE foo bar
    a=ice-pwd:asd88fgpdd777uzjYhagZg
    a=ice-ufrag:8hhY
    m=audio 9 RTP/AVP 0
    a=mid:foo
    a=rtcp-mux
    a=candidate:1 1 UDP 1658497328 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::3 5000 typ host
 This INFO request indicates that the Answerer supports and uses Media
 Multiplexing as well.  Note that the Answerer only includes a single
 pseudo "m=" line since candidates matching those from the second "m="
 line in the offer are not needed from the Answerer.
 The INFO request also indicates that the Answerer accepted the
 suggested Offerer BUNDLE address.  This allows the Offerer to omit
 gathering RTP and RTCP candidates for the other "m=" lines or
 releasing already gathered candidates.  If the INFO request did not
 contain the "group:BUNDLE" attribute, the Offerer has to gather RTP
 and RTCP candidates for the other "m=" lines unless it wants to wait
 until receipt of an Answer that eventually confirms support or non-
 support for Media Multiplexing.
 Independent of using Full Trickle or Half Trickle mode, the rules
 from [RFC8859] apply to both, Offerer and Answerer, when putting
 attributes as specified in Section 9.2 in the "application/trickle-
 ice-sdpfrag" body.

8. SDP "end-of-candidates" Attribute

8.1. Definition

 This section defines the new SDP media-level and session-level
 [RFC4566] "end-of-candidates" attribute. "end-of-candidates" is a
 property attribute [RFC4566]; hence, it has no value.  By including
 this attribute in an Offer or Answer, the sending agent indicates
 that it will not trickle further candidates.  When included at the
 session level, this indication applies to the whole session; when
 included at the media level, the indication applies only to the
 corresponding media description.
    Name:  end-of-candidates
    Value:  N/A
    Usage Level:  media and session level
    Charset Dependent:  no
    Mux Category:  IDENTICAL
    Example:  a=end-of-candidates

8.2. Offer/Answer Procedures

 The Offerer or Answerer MAY include an "end-of-candidates" attribute
 in case candidate discovery has ended and no further candidates are
 to be trickled.  The Offerer or Answerer MUST provide the "end-of-
 candidates" attribute together with the "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd"
 attributes of the current ICE generation as required by [RFC8838].
 When included at the session level, this indication applies to the
 whole session; when included at the media level, the indication
 applies only to the corresponding media description.
 Receipt of an "end-of-candidates" attribute at an Offerer or Answerer
 -- with the "ice-ufrag" and "ice-pwd" attributes matching the current
 ICE generation -- indicates that the gathering of candidates has
 ended at the peer, for either the session or only the corresponding
 media description as specified above.  The receiving agent forwards
 an end-of-candidates indication to the ICE Agent, which in turn acts
 as specified in [RFC8838].

9. Content Type "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag"

9.1. Overall Description

 An "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" body is used exclusively by the
 "trickle-ice" Info Package.  Other SDP-related applications need to
 define their own media type.  The INFO request body uses a subset of
 the possible SDP lines as defined by the grammar in [RFC4566].  A
 valid body uses only pseudo "m=" lines and certain attributes that
 are needed and/or useful for trickling candidates.  The content
 adheres to the following grammar.

9.2. Grammar

 The grammar of an "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" body is based on
 the following ABNF [RFC5234].  It specifies the subset of existing
 SDP attributes that is needed or useful for trickling candidates.
 The grammar uses the indicator for case-sensitive %s, as defined in
 [RFC7405], but it also imports grammar for other SDP attributes that
 precede the production of [RFC7405].  A sender SHOULD use lower case
 for attributes from such earlier grammar, but a receiver MUST treat
 them as case insensitive.
    ;  Syntax
    trickle-ice-sdpfrag =   session-level-fields
                      pseudo-media-descriptions
    session-level-fields = *(session-level-field CRLF)
    session-level-field =  ice-lite-attribute /
                      ice-pwd-attribute /
                      ice-ufrag-attribute /
                      ice-options-attribute /
                      ice-pacing-attribute /
                      end-of-candidates-attribute /
                      bundle-group-attribute /
                      extension-attribute-fields
                                          ; for future extensions
    ice-lite-attribute     = %s"a" "=" ice-lite
    ice-pwd-attribute      = %s"a" "=" ice-pwd-att
    ice-ufrag-attribute    = %s"a" "=" ice-ufrag-att
    ice-pacing-attribute   = %s"a" "=" ice-pacing-att
    ice-options-attribute  = %s"a" "=" ice-options
    end-of-candidates-attribute  = %s"a" "=" end-of-candidates
    end-of-candidates            = %s"end-of-candidates"
    bundle-group-attribute = %s"a" "=" %s"group:" bundle-semantics
                               *(SP identification-tag)
    bundle-semantics = "BUNDLE"
    extension-attribute-fields   = attribute-fields
    pseudo-media-descriptions    =  *( media-field
                               trickle-ice-attribute-fields )
    trickle-ice-attribute-fields = *(trickle-ice-attribute-field CRLF)
    trickle-ice-attribute-field = mid-attribute /
                            candidate-attributes /
                            ice-pwd-attribute  /
                            ice-ufrag-attribute /
                            remote-candidate-attribute /
                            end-of-candidates-attribute /
                            rtcp-attribute /
                            rtcp-mux-attribute /
                            rtcp-mux-only-attribute /
                            extension-attribute-fields
                                            ; for future extensions
    rtcp-attribute                = %s"a" "=" %s"rtcp"
    rtcp-mux-attribute            = %s"a" "=" %s"rtcp-mux"
    rtcp-mux-only-attribute       = %s"a" "=" %s"rtcp-mux-only"
    candidate-attributes          = %s"a" "=" candidate-attribute
    remote-candidate-attribute    = %s"a" "=" remote-candidate-att
 ice-lite, ice-pwd-att, remote-candidate-att, ice-ufrag-att, ice-
 pacing-att, ice-options, candidate-attribute, and remote-candidate-
 att are from [RFC8839]; identification-tag and mid-attribute are from
 [RFC5888]; and media-field and attribute-fields are from [RFC4566].
 The "rtcp" attribute is defined in [RFC3605], the "rtcp-mux"
 attribute is defined in [RFC5761], and the "rtcp-mux-only" attribute
 is defined in [RFC8858].  The latter attributes lack formal grammar
 in their corresponding RFCs and are reproduced here.
 The "ice-pwd" and "ice-ufrag" attributes MUST appear at the same
 level as the ones in the Offer/Answer exchange.  In other words, if
 they were present as session-level attributes, they will also appear
 at the beginning of all INFO request payloads, i.e., preceding all
 pseudo "m=" lines.  If they were originally exchanged as media-level
 attributes, potentially overriding session-level values, then they
 will also be included in INFO request payloads following the
 corresponding pseudo "m=" lines.
 An Agent MUST ignore any received unknown extension-attribute-fields.

10. Info Package

10.1. Rationale – Why INFO?

 The decision to use SIP INFO requests as a candidate transport method
 is based primarily on their lightweight nature.  Once a dialog has
 been established, INFO requests can be exchanged both ways with no
 restrictions on timing and frequency and no risk of collision.
 A critical fact is that the sending of Trickle ICE candidates in one
 direction is entirely uncoupled from sending candidates in the other
 direction.  Thus, the sending of candidates in each direction can be
 done by a stream of INFO requests that is not correlated with the
 stream of INFO requests in the other direction.  And since each INFO
 request cumulatively includes the contents of all previous INFO
 requests in that direction, the ordering between INFO requests need
 not be preserved.  All of this permits using largely independent INFO
 requests.
 Contrarily, UPDATE or other Offer/Answer mechanisms assume that the
 messages in each direction are tightly coupled with messages in the
 other direction.  Using Offer/Answer and UPDATE requests [RFC3311]
 would introduce the following complications:
 Blocking of messages:  Offer/Answer is defined as a strictly
    sequential mechanism in [RFC3264].  There can only be a maximum of
    one active exchange at any point of time.  Both sides cannot
    simultaneously send Offers nor can they generate multiple Offers
    prior to receiving an Answer.  Using UPDATE requests for candidate
    transport would therefore imply the implementation of a candidate
    pool at every agent where candidates can be stored until it is
    once again that agent's "turn" to emit an Answer or a new Offer.
    Such an approach would introduce non-negligible complexity for no
    additional value.
 Elevated risk of glare:  The sequential nature of Offer/Answer also
    makes it impossible for both sides to send Offers simultaneously.
    What's worse is that there are no mechanisms in SIP to actually
    prevent that.  [RFC3261], where the situation of Offers crossing
    on the wire is described as "glare", only defines a procedure for
    addressing the issue after it has occurred.  According to that
    procedure, both Offers are invalidated and both sides need to
    retry the negotiation after a period between 0 and 4 seconds.  The
    high likelihood for glare and the average two-second backoff
    intervals to occur implies that the duration of Trickle ICE
    processing would not only fail to improve but actually exceed
    those of regular ICE.
 INFO messages decouple the exchange of candidates from the Offer/
 Answer negotiation and are subject to none of the glare issues
 described above, which makes them a very convenient and lightweight
 mechanism for asynchronous delivery of candidates.
 Using in-dialog INFO messages also provides a way of guaranteeing
 that candidates are delivered end to end, between the same entities
 that are actually in the process of initiating a session.  Out-of-
 dialog alternatives would have implied requiring support for GRUU
 [RFC5627] that, given GRUUs relatively low adoption levels, would
 have constituted too strong of a constraint to the adoption of
 Trickle ICE.

10.2. Overall Description

 This specification defines an Info Package for use by SIP UAs
 implementing Trickle ICE.  INFO requests carry ICE candidates
 discovered after the peer UAs have confirmed mutual support for
 Trickle ICE.

10.3. Applicability

 The purpose of the ICE protocol is to establish a media path in the
 presence of NAT and firewalls.  The candidates are transported in
 INFO requests and are part of this establishment.
 Candidates sent by a Trickle ICE Agent after the Offer follow the
 same signaling path and reach the same entity as the Offer itself.
 While it is true that GRUUs can be used to achieve this, one of the
 goals of this specification is to allow operation of Trickle ICE in
 as many environments as possible including those without GRUU
 support.  Using out-of-dialog SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY requests would not
 satisfy this goal.

10.4. Info Package Name

 This document defines a SIP Info Package as per [RFC6086].  The Info
 Package token name for this package is "trickle-ice".

10.5. Info Package Parameters

 This document does not define any Info Package parameters.

10.6. SIP Option Tags

 [RFC6086] allows Info Package specifications to define SIP option-
 tags.  This specification extends the option-tag construct of the SIP
 grammar as follows:
  option-tag /= "trickle-ice"
 SIP entities that support this specification MUST place the "trickle-
 ice" option-tag in a SIP Supported: or Require: header field within
 all SIP INVITE requests and responses.
 When responding to, or generating, a SIP OPTIONS request, a SIP
 entity MUST also include the "trickle-ice" option-tag in a SIP
 Supported: or Require: header field.

10.7. INFO Request Body Parts

 Entities implementing this specification MUST include a payload of
 type "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" in SIP INFO requests as
 defined in Section 9.2.  The payload is used to convey SDP-encoded
 ICE candidates.

10.8. Info Package Usage Restrictions

 This document does not define any Info Package Usage Restrictions.

10.9. Rate of INFO Requests

 Given that IP addresses may be gathered rapidly, a Trickle ICE Agent
 with many network interfaces might create a high rate of INFO
 requests if every newly detected candidate is trickled individually
 without aggregation.  An implementation MUST aggregate ICE candidates
 in case an unreliable transport protocol such as UDP is used.  A
 Trickle ICE Agent MUST NOT have more than one INFO request pending at
 any one time.  When INFO messages are sent over an unreliable
 transport, they are retransmitted according to the rules specified in
 [RFC3261], Section 17.1.2.1.
 If the INFO requests are sent on top of TCP, which is probably the
 standard way, it is not an issue for the network anymore, but it can
 remain one for SIP proxies and other intermediaries forwarding the
 SIP INFO messages.  Also, an endpoint may not be able to tell that it
 has congestion controlled transport all the way.

10.10. Info Package Security Considerations

 See Section 13.

11. Deployment Considerations

 Trickle ICE uses two mechanisms for the exchange of candidate
 information.  This imposes new requirements to certain middleboxes
 that are used in some networks, e.g., for monitoring purposes.  While
 the first mechanism, SDP Offers and Answers, is already used by
 regular ICE and is assumed to be supported, the second mechanism,
 INFO request bodies, needs to be considered by such middleboxes as
 well when trickle ICE is used.  Such middleboxes need to make sure
 that they remain in the signaling path of the INFO requests and
 understand the INFO request body.

12. IANA Considerations

12.1. SDP "end-of-candidates" Attribute

 This section defines a new SDP media-level and session-level
 [RFC4566] "end-of-candidates" attribute, which is a property
 attribute [RFC4566] and hence has no value.
    Name:  end-of-candidates
    Value:  N/A
    Usage Level:  media and session
    Charset Dependent:  no
    Purpose:  The sender indicates that it will not trickle further
       ICE candidates.
    O/A Procedures:  RFC 8840 defines the detailed SDP Offer/Answer
       procedures for the "end-of-candidates" attribute.
    Mux Category:  IDENTICAL
    Reference:  RFC 8840
    Example:  a=end-of-candidates

12.2. Media Type "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag"

 This document defines the new media type "application/trickle-ice-
 sdpfrag" in accordance with [RFC6838].
 Type name:  application
 Subtype name:  trickle-ice-sdpfrag
 Required parameters:  None.
 Optional parameters:  None.
 Encoding considerations:  The media contents follow the same rules as
    SDP, except as noted in this document.  The media contents are
    text, with the grammar specified in Section 9.2.
    Although the initially defined content of a trickle-ice-sdpfrag
    body does only include ASCII characters, UTF-8-encoded content
    might be introduced via extension attributes.  The "charset"
    attribute may be used to signal the presence of other character
    sets in certain parts of a trickle-ice-sdpfrag body (see
    [RFC4566]).  Arbitrary binary content cannot be directly
    represented in SDP or a trickle-ice-sdpfrag body.
 Security considerations:  See [RFC4566] and RFC 8840
 Interoperability considerations:  See RFC 8840
 Published specification:  See RFC 8840
 Applications that use this media type:  Trickle ICE
 Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A
 Additional information:
    Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A
    Magic number(s):  N/A
    File extension(s):  N/A
    Macintosh File Type Code(s):  N/A
 Person and email address to contact for further information:  The
    IESG (iesg@ietf.org)
 Intended usage:  Trickle ICE for SIP as specified in RFC 8840.
 Restrictions on usage:  N/A
 Author/Change controller:  The IESG (iesg@ietf.org)
 Provisional registration? (standards tree only):  N/A

12.3. SIP Info Package "trickle-ice"

 This document defines a new SIP Info Package named "trickle-ice" and
 updates the "Info Packages Registry" with the following entry.
 +=============+===========+
 |     Name    | Reference |
 +=============+===========+
 | trickle-ice | RFC 8840  |
 +-------------+-----------+
           Table 1

12.4. SIP Option Tag "trickle-ice"

 This specification registers a new SIP option tag "trickle-ice" as
 per the guidelines in Section 27.1 of [RFC3261] and updates the
 "Option Tags" subregistry of the SIP Parameters registry with the
 following entry:
 +=============+==============================+===========+
 |     Name    |         Description          | Reference |
 +=============+==============================+===========+
 | trickle-ice | This option tag is used to   | RFC 8840  |
 |             | indicate that a UA supports  |           |
 |             | and understands Trickle ICE. |           |
 +-------------+------------------------------+-----------+
                          Table 2

13. Security Considerations

 The Security Considerations of [RFC6086], [RFC8838], and [RFC8839]
 apply.  This document clarifies how the above specifications are used
 together for trickling candidates and does not create additional
 security risks.
 The new Info Package "trickle-ice" and the new media type
 "application/trickle-ice-sdpfrag" do not introduce additional
 security considerations when used in the context of Trickle ICE.
 Both are not intended to be used for other applications, so any
 security considerations for its use in other contexts is out of the
 scope of this document

14. References

14.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
            A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
            Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3261, June 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3261>.
 [RFC3262]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Reliability of
            Provisional Responses in Session Initiation Protocol
            (SIP)", RFC 3262, DOI 10.17487/RFC3262, June 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3262>.
 [RFC3264]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model
            with Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3264, June 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3264>.
 [RFC3605]  Huitema, C., "Real Time Control Protocol (RTCP) attribute
            in Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3605,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3605, October 2003,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3605>.
 [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
            Description Protocol", RFC 4566, DOI 10.17487/RFC4566,
            July 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4566>.
 [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
            Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.
 [RFC5761]  Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Multiplexing RTP Data and
            Control Packets on a Single Port", RFC 5761,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5761, April 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5761>.
 [RFC5888]  Camarillo, G. and H. Schulzrinne, "The Session Description
            Protocol (SDP) Grouping Framework", RFC 5888,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5888, June 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5888>.
 [RFC6086]  Holmberg, C., Burger, E., and H. Kaplan, "Session
            Initiation Protocol (SIP) INFO Method and Package
            Framework", RFC 6086, DOI 10.17487/RFC6086, January 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6086>.
 [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
            Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
            RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.
 [RFC7405]  Kyzivat, P., "Case-Sensitive String Support in ABNF",
            RFC 7405, DOI 10.17487/RFC7405, December 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7405>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
 [RFC8445]  Keranen, A., Holmberg, C., and J. Rosenberg, "Interactive
            Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network
            Address Translator (NAT) Traversal", RFC 8445,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8445, July 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8445>.
 [RFC8838]  Ivov, E., Uberti, J., and P. Saint-Andre, "Trickle ICE:
            Incremental Provisioning of Candidates for the Interactive
            Connectivity Establishment (ICE) Protocol", RFC 8838,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8838, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8838>.
 [RFC8839]  Petit-Huguenin, M., Nandakumar, S., Holmberg, C., Keränen,
            A., and R. Shpount, "Session Description Protocol (SDP)
            Offer/Answer Procedures for Interactive Connectivity
            Establishment (ICE)", RFC 8839, DOI 10.17487/RFC8839,
            January 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8839>.
 [RFC8843]  Holmberg, C., Alvestrand, H., and C. Jennings,
            "Negotiating Media Multiplexing Using the Session
            Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 8843,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8843, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8843>.
 [RFC8858]  Holmberg, C., "Indicating Exclusive Support of RTP and RTP
            Control Protocol (RTCP) Multiplexing Using the Session
            Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 8858,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8858, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8858>.
 [RFC8859]  Nandakumar, S., "A Framework for Session Description
            Protocol (SDP) Attributes When Multiplexing", RFC 8859,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8859, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8859>.

14.2. Informative References

 [RFC3311]  Rosenberg, J., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
            UPDATE Method", RFC 3311, DOI 10.17487/RFC3311, October
            2002, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3311>.
 [RFC3840]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat,
            "Indicating User Agent Capabilities in the Session
            Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 3840,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3840, August 2004,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3840>.
 [RFC5389]  Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,
            "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC 5389,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5389, October 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5389>.
 [RFC5627]  Rosenberg, J., "Obtaining and Using Globally Routable User
            Agent URIs (GRUUs) in the Session Initiation Protocol
            (SIP)", RFC 5627, DOI 10.17487/RFC5627, October 2009,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5627>.
 [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,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5766, April 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5766>.

Acknowledgements

 The authors like to thank Flemming Andreasen, Ayush Jain, Paul
 Kyzivat, Jonathan Lennox, Simon Perreault, Roman Shpount, and Martin
 Thomson for reviewing and/or making various suggestions for
 improvements and optimizations.
 The authors also like to thank Flemming Andreasen for shepherding
 this document and Ben Campbell for his AD review and suggestions.  In
 addition, the authors thank Benjamin Kaduk, Adam Roach, Mirja
 Kühlewind, and Eric Rescorla for their comments and/or text proposals
 for improving the document during IESG review.
 Many thanks to Dale Worley for the Gen-Art review and proposed
 enhancements for several sections.
 Many thanks to Joerg Ott for the TSV-Art review and suggested
 improvements.
 The authors thank Shawn Emery for the Security Directorate review.

Authors' Addresses

 Emil Ivov
 Jitsi
 67000 Strasbourg
 France
 Phone: +33 6 72 81 15 55
 Email: emcho@jitsi.org
 Thomas Stach
 Unaffiliated
 1130 Vienna
 Austria
 Email: thomass.stach@gmail.com
 Enrico Marocco
 Telecom Italia
 Via G. Reiss Romoli, 274
 10148 Turin
 Italy
 Email: enrico.marocco@telecomitalia.it
 Christer Holmberg
 Ericsson
 Hirsalantie 11
 FI-02420 Jorvas
 Finland
 Email: christer.holmberg@ericsson.com
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