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rfc:rfc9132



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. Boucadair, Ed. Request for Comments: 9132 Orange Obsoletes: 8782 J. Shallow Category: Standards Track ISSN: 2070-1721 T. Reddy.K

                                                                Akamai
                                                        September 2021
 Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal
                       Channel Specification

Abstract

 This document specifies the Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
 Signaling (DOTS) signal channel, a protocol for signaling the need
 for protection against Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks
 to a server capable of enabling network traffic mitigation on behalf
 of the requesting client.
 A companion document defines the DOTS data channel, a separate
 reliable communication layer for DOTS management and configuration
 purposes.
 This document obsoletes RFC 8782.

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/rfc9132.

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.  Design Overview
   3.1.  Backward Compatibility Considerations
 4.  DOTS Signal Channel: Messages & Behaviors
   4.1.  DOTS Server(s) Discovery
   4.2.  CoAP URIs
   4.3.  Happy Eyeballs for DOTS Signal Channel
   4.4.  DOTS Mitigation Methods
     4.4.1.  Request Mitigation
       4.4.1.1.  Building Mitigation Requests
       4.4.1.2.  Server-Domain DOTS Gateways
       4.4.1.3.  Processing Mitigation Requests
     4.4.2.  Retrieve Information Related to a Mitigation
       4.4.2.1.  DOTS Servers Sending Mitigation Status
       4.4.2.2.  DOTS Clients Polling for Mitigation Status
     4.4.3.  Efficacy Update from DOTS Clients
     4.4.4.  Withdraw a Mitigation
   4.5.  DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration
     4.5.1.  Discover Configuration Parameters
     4.5.2.  Convey DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration
     4.5.3.  Configuration Freshness and Notifications
     4.5.4.  Delete DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration
   4.6.  Redirected Signaling
   4.7.  Heartbeat Mechanism
 5.  DOTS Signal Channel YANG Modules
   5.1.  Tree Structure
   5.2.  IANA DOTS Signal Channel YANG Module
   5.3.  IETF DOTS Signal Channel YANG Module
 6.  YANG/JSON Mapping Parameters to CBOR
 7.  (D)TLS Protocol Profile and Performance Considerations
   7.1.  (D)TLS Protocol Profile
   7.2.  (D)TLS 1.3 Considerations
   7.3.  DTLS MTU and Fragmentation
 8.  Mutual Authentication of DOTS Agents & Authorization of DOTS
         Clients
 9.  Error Handling
 10. IANA Considerations
   10.1.  DOTS Signal Channel UDP and TCP Port Number
   10.2.  Well-Known 'dots' URI
   10.3.  Media Type Registration
   10.4.  CoAP Content-Formats Registration
   10.5.  CBOR Tag Registration
   10.6.  DOTS Signal Channel Protocol Registry
     10.6.1.  DOTS Signal Channel CBOR Key Values Subregistry
       10.6.1.1.  Registration Template
       10.6.1.2.  Update Subregistry Content
     10.6.2.  Status Codes Subregistry
     10.6.3.  Conflict Status Codes Subregistry
     10.6.4.  Conflict Cause Codes Subregistry
     10.6.5.  Attack Status Codes Subregistry
   10.7.  DOTS Signal Channel YANG Modules
 11. Security Considerations
 12. References
   12.1.  Normative References
   12.2.  Informative References
 Appendix A.  Summary of Changes From RFC 8782
 Appendix B.  CUID Generation
 Appendix C.  Summary of Protocol Recommended/Default Values
 Acknowledgements
 Contributors
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 A Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attack is a distributed
 attempt to make machines or network resources unavailable to their
 intended users.  In most cases, sufficient scale for an effective
 attack can be achieved by compromising enough end hosts and using
 those infected hosts to perpetrate and amplify the attack.  The
 victim in this attack can be an application server, a host, a router,
 a firewall, or an entire network.
 Network applications have finite resources, like CPU cycles, the
 number of processes or threads they can create and use, the maximum
 number of simultaneous connections they can handle, the resources
 assigned to the control plane, etc.  When processing network traffic,
 such applications are supposed to use these resources to provide the
 intended functionality in the most efficient manner.  However, a DDoS
 attacker may be able to prevent an application from performing its
 intended task by making the application exhaust its finite resources.
 A TCP DDoS SYN flood [RFC4987], for example, is a memory-exhausting
 attack, while an ACK flood is a CPU-exhausting attack.  Attacks on
 the link are carried out by sending enough traffic so that the link
 becomes congested, thereby likely causing packet loss for legitimate
 traffic.  Stateful firewalls can also be attacked by sending traffic
 that causes the firewall to maintain an excessive number of states
 that may jeopardize the firewall's operation overall, in addition to
 likely performance impacts.  The firewall then runs out of memory,
 and it can no longer instantiate the states required to process
 legitimate flows.  Other possible DDoS attacks are discussed in
 [RFC4732].
 In many cases, it may not be possible for network administrators to
 determine the cause(s) of an attack.  They may instead just realize
 that certain resources seem to be under attack.  This document
 defines a lightweight protocol that allows a DOTS client to request
 mitigation from one or more DOTS servers for protection against
 detected, suspected, or anticipated attacks.  This protocol enables
 cooperation between DOTS agents to permit a highly automated network
 defense that is robust, reliable, and secure.  Note that "secure"
 means the support of the features defined in Section 2.4 of
 [RFC8612].
 In typical deployments, the DOTS client belongs to a different
 administrative domain than the DOTS server.  For example, the DOTS
 client is embedded in a firewall-protected service owned and operated
 by a customer, while the DOTS server is owned and operated by a
 different administrative entity (service provider, typically)
 providing DDoS mitigation services.  The latter might or might not
 provide connectivity services to the network hosting the DOTS client.
 The DOTS server may or may not be co-located with the DOTS mitigator.
 In typical deployments, the DOTS server belongs to the same
 administrative domain as the mitigator.  The DOTS client can
 communicate directly with a DOTS server or indirectly via a DOTS
 gateway.
 An example of a network diagram that illustrates a deployment of DOTS
 agents is shown in Figure 1.  In this example, a DOTS server is
 operating on the access network.  A DOTS client is located on the
 Local Area Network (LAN), while a DOTS gateway is embedded in the
 Customer Premises Equipment (CPE).
    Network
    Resource          CPE Router      Access Network      __________
 +-------------+   +--------------+   +-------------+    /          \
 |             |   |              |   |             |    | Internet |
 | DOTS Client +---+ DOTS Gateway +---+ DOTS Server +----+          |
 |             |   |              |   |             |    |          |
 +-------------+   +--------------+   +-------------+    \__________/
                  Figure 1: Sample DOTS Deployment (1)
 DOTS servers can also be reachable over the Internet, as depicted in
 Figure 2.
     Network                                          DDoS Mitigation
     Resource          CPE Router        _________        Service
  +-------------+   +--------------+    /         \   +-------------+
  |             |   |              |   |          |   |             |
  | DOTS Client +---+ DOTS Gateway +---+ Internet +---+ DOTS Server |
  |             |   |              |   |          |   |             |
  +-------------+   +--------------+    \_________/   +-------------+
                  Figure 2: Sample DOTS Deployment (2)
 This document adheres to the DOTS architecture [RFC8811].  The
 requirements for the DOTS signal channel protocol are documented in
 [RFC8612].  This document satisfies all the use cases discussed in
 [RFC8903].
 This document focuses on the DOTS signal channel.  This is a
 companion document of the DOTS data channel specification [RFC8783]
 that defines a configuration and a bulk data exchange mechanism
 supporting the DOTS signal channel.
 Backward compatibility (including upgrade) considerations are
 discussed in Section 3.1.

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.
 (D)TLS is used for statements that apply to both Transport Layer
 Security [RFC5246] [RFC8446] and Datagram Transport Layer Security
 [RFC6347].  Specific terms are used for any statement that applies to
 either protocol alone.
 The reader should be familiar with the terms defined in [RFC8612] and
 [RFC7252].
 The meaning of the symbols in YANG tree diagrams are defined in
 [RFC8340] and [RFC8791].

3. Design Overview

 The DOTS signal channel is built on top of the Constrained
 Application Protocol (CoAP) [RFC7252], a lightweight protocol
 originally designed for constrained devices and networks.  The many
 features of CoAP (expectation of packet loss, support for
 asynchronous Non-confirmable messaging, congestion control, small
 message overhead limiting the need for fragmentation, use of minimal
 resources, and support for (D)TLS) make it a good candidate upon
 which to build the DOTS signaling mechanism.
 DOTS clients and servers behave as CoAP endpoints.  By default, a
 DOTS client behaves as a CoAP client and a DOTS server behaves as
 CoAP server.  Nevertheless, a DOTS client (or server) behaves as a
 CoAP server (or client) for specific operations, such as DOTS
 heartbeat operations (Section 4.7).
 The DOTS signal channel is layered on existing standards (see
 Figure 3).
                        +---------------------+
                        | DOTS Signal Channel |
                        +---------------------+
                        |         CoAP        |
                        +----------+----------+
                        |   TLS    |   DTLS   |
                        +----------+----------+
                        |   TCP    |   UDP    |
                        +----------+----------+
                        |          IP         |
                        +---------------------+
   Figure 3: Abstract Layering of DOTS Signal Channel over CoAP over
                                 (D)TLS
 In some cases, a DOTS client and server may have a mutual agreement
 to use a specific port number, such as by explicit configuration or
 dynamic discovery [RFC8973].  Absent such mutual agreement, the DOTS
 signal channel MUST run over port number 4646, as defined in
 Section 10.1, for both UDP and TCP (that is, the DOTS server listens
 on port number 4646).  In order to use a distinct port number (as
 opposed to 4646), DOTS clients and servers SHOULD support a
 configurable parameter to supply the port number to use.
    |  Note: The rationale for not using the default port number 5684
    |  ((D)TLS CoAP) is to avoid the discovery of services and
    |  resources discussed in [RFC7252] and allow for differentiated
    |  behaviors in environments where both a DOTS gateway and an
    |  Internet of Things (IoT) gateway (e.g., Figure 3 of [RFC7452])
    |  are co-located.
    |  
    |  Particularly, the use of a default port number is meant to
    |  simplify DOTS deployment in scenarios where no explicit IP
    |  address configuration is required.  For example, the use of the
    |  default router as the DOTS server aims to ease DOTS deployment
    |  within LANs (in which CPEs embed a DOTS gateway, as illustrated
    |  in Figures 1 and 2) without requiring a sophisticated discovery
    |  method and configuration tasks within the LAN.  It is also
    |  possible to use anycast addresses for DOTS servers to simplify
    |  DOTS client configuration, including service discovery.  In
    |  such an anycast-based scenario, a DOTS client initiating a DOTS
    |  session to the DOTS server anycast address may, for example, be
    |  (1) redirected to the DOTS server unicast address to be used by
    |  the DOTS client following the procedure discussed in
    |  Section 4.6 or (2) relayed to a unicast DOTS server.
 The signal channel uses the "coaps" URI scheme defined in Section 6
 of [RFC7252] and the "coaps+tcp" URI scheme defined in Section 8.2 of
 [RFC8323] to identify DOTS server resources that are accessible using
 CoAP over UDP secured with DTLS and CoAP over TCP secured with TLS,
 respectively.
 The DOTS signal channel can be established between two DOTS agents
 prior to or during an attack.  The DOTS signal channel is initiated
 by the DOTS client.  The DOTS client can then negotiate, configure,
 and retrieve the DOTS signal channel session behavior with its DOTS
 peer (Section 4.5).  Once the signal channel is established, the DOTS
 agents may periodically send heartbeats to keep the channel active
 (Section 4.7).  At any time, the DOTS client may send a mitigation
 request message (Section 4.4) to a DOTS server over the active signal
 channel.  While mitigation is active (because of the higher
 likelihood of packet loss during a DDoS attack), the DOTS server
 periodically sends status messages to the client, including basic
 mitigation feedback details.  Mitigation remains active until the
 DOTS client explicitly terminates mitigation or the mitigation
 lifetime expires.  Also, the DOTS server may rely on the signal
 channel session loss to trigger mitigation for preconfigured
 mitigation requests (if any).
 DOTS signaling can use DTLS over UDP and TLS over TCP.  Likewise,
 DOTS requests may be sent using IPv4 or IPv6 transfer capabilities.
 A Happy Eyeballs procedure for the DOTS signal channel is specified
 in Section 4.3.
 A DOTS client is entitled to access only the resources it creates.
 In particular, a DOTS client cannot retrieve data related to
 mitigation requests created by other DOTS clients of the same DOTS
 client domain.
 Messages exchanged between DOTS agents are serialized using Concise
 Binary Object Representation (CBOR) [RFC8949], a binary encoding
 scheme designed for small code and message size.  CBOR-encoded
 payloads are used to carry signal-channel-specific payload messages
 that convey request parameters and response information, such as
 errors.  In order to allow the reusing of data models across
 protocols, [RFC7951] specifies the JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)
 encoding of YANG-modeled data.  A similar effort for CBOR is defined
 in [CORE-YANG-CBOR].
 DOTS agents determine that a CBOR data structure is a DOTS signal
 channel object from the application context, such as from the port
 number assigned to the DOTS signal channel.  The other method DOTS
 agents use to indicate that a CBOR data structure is a DOTS signal
 channel object is the use of the "application/dots+cbor" content type
 (Section 10.3).
 This document specifies a YANG module for representing DOTS
 mitigation scopes, DOTS signal channel session configuration data,
 and DOTS redirected signaling (Section 5).  All parameters in the
 payload of the DOTS signal channel are mapped to CBOR types, as
 specified in Table 5 (Section 6).
 In order to prevent fragmentation, DOTS agents must follow the
 recommendations documented in Section 4.6 of [RFC7252].  Refer to
 Section 7.3 for more details.
 DOTS agents MUST support GET, PUT, and DELETE CoAP methods.  The
 payload included in CoAP responses with 2.xx Response Codes MUST be
 of content type "application/dots+cbor".  CoAP responses with 4.xx
 and 5.xx error Response Codes MUST include a diagnostic payload
 (Section 5.5.2 of [RFC7252]).  The diagnostic payload may contain
 additional information to aid troubleshooting.
 In deployments where multiple DOTS clients are enabled in a single
 network and administrative domain (called DOTS client domain), the
 DOTS server may detect conflicting mitigation requests from these
 clients.  This document does not aim to specify a comprehensive list
 of conditions under which a DOTS server will characterize two
 mitigation requests from distinct DOTS clients as conflicting, nor
 does it recommend a DOTS server behavior for processing conflicting
 mitigation requests.  Those considerations are implementation and
 deployment specific.  Nevertheless, this document specifies the
 mechanisms to notify DOTS clients when conflicts occur, including the
 conflict cause (Section 4.4.1.3).
 In deployments where one or more translators (e.g., Traditional NAT
 [RFC3022], CGN [RFC6888], NAT64 [RFC6146], NPTv6 [RFC6296]) are
 enabled between the client's network and the DOTS server, any DOTS
 signal channel messages forwarded to a DOTS server MUST NOT include
 internal IP addresses/prefixes and/or port numbers; instead, external
 addresses/prefixes and/or port numbers as assigned by the translator
 MUST be used.  This document does not make any recommendations about
 possible translator discovery mechanisms.  The following are some
 (non-exhaustive) deployment examples that may be considered:
  • Port Control Protocol (PCP) [RFC6887] or Session Traversal

Utilities for NAT (STUN) [RFC8489] may be used by the client to

    retrieve the external addresses/prefixes and/or port numbers.
    Information retrieved by means of PCP or STUN will be used to feed
    the DOTS signal channel messages that will be sent to a DOTS
    server.
  • A DOTS gateway may be co-located with the translator. The DOTS

gateway will need to update the DOTS messages based upon the local

    translator's binding table.

3.1. Backward Compatibility Considerations

 The main changes to [RFC8782] are listed in Appendix A.  These
 modifications are made with the constraint to avoid changes to the
 mapping table defined in Table 5 of [RFC8782] (see also Section 6 of
 the present document).
 For both legacy [RFC8782] and implementations that follow the present
 specification, a DOTS signal channel attribute will thus have the
 same CBOR key value and CBOR major type.  The only upgrade that is
 required to [RFC8782] implementations is to handle the CBOR key value
 range "128-255" as comprehension-optional instead of comprehension-
 required.  Note that this range is anticipated to be used by the DOTS
 telemetry [DOTS-TELEMETRY] in which the following means are used to
 prevent message processing failure of a DOTS signal channel message
 enriched with telemetry data: (1) DOTS agents use dedicated (new)
 path suffixes (Section 5 of [DOTS-TELEMETRY]) and (2) a DOTS server
 won't include telemetry attributes in its responses unless it is
 explicitly told to do so by a DOTS client (Section 6.1.2 of
 [DOTS-TELEMETRY]).
 Future DOTS extensions that request a CBOR value in the range
 "128-255" MUST support means similar to the aforementioned DOTS
 telemetry ones.

4. DOTS Signal Channel: Messages & Behaviors

4.1. DOTS Server(s) Discovery

 This document assumes that DOTS clients are provisioned with the
 reachability information of their DOTS server(s) using any of a
 variety of means (e.g., local configuration or dynamic means, such as
 DHCP [RFC8973]).  The description of such means is out of scope of
 this document.
 Likewise, it is out of the scope of this document to specify the
 behavior to be followed by a DOTS client in order to send DOTS
 requests when multiple DOTS servers are provisioned (e.g., contact
 all DOTS servers, select one DOTS server among the list).  Such
 behavior is specified in other documents (e.g., [DOTS-MULTIHOMING]).

4.2. CoAP URIs

 The DOTS server MUST support the use of the path prefix of "/.well-
 known/" as defined in [RFC8615] and the registered name of "dots".
 Each DOTS operation is denoted by a path suffix that indicates the
 intended operation.  The operation path (Table 1) is appended to the
 path prefix to form the URI used with a CoAP request to perform the
 desired DOTS operation.
       +=======================+================+=============+
       | Operation             | Operation Path | Details     |
       +=======================+================+=============+
       | Mitigation            | /mitigate      | Section 4.4 |
       +-----------------------+----------------+-------------+
       | Session configuration | /config        | Section 4.5 |
       +-----------------------+----------------+-------------+
       | Heartbeat             | /hb            | Section 4.7 |
       +-----------------------+----------------+-------------+
              Table 1: Operations and Corresponding URIs

4.3. Happy Eyeballs for DOTS Signal Channel

 [RFC8612] mentions that DOTS agents will have to support both
 connectionless and connection-oriented protocols.  As such, the DOTS
 signal channel is designed to operate with DTLS over UDP and TLS over
 TCP.  Further, a DOTS client may acquire a list of IPv4 and IPv6
 addresses (Section 4.1), each of which can be used to contact the
 DOTS server using UDP and TCP.  If no list of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
 to contact the DOTS server is configured (or discovered), the DOTS
 client adds the IPv4/IPv6 addresses of its default router to the
 candidate list to contact the DOTS server.
 The following specifies the procedure to follow to select the address
 family and the transport protocol for sending DOTS signal channel
 messages.
 Such a procedure is needed to avoid experiencing long connection
 delays.  For example, if an IPv4 path to a DOTS server is functional,
 but the DOTS server's IPv6 path is nonfunctional, a dual-stack DOTS
 client may experience a significant connection delay compared to an
 IPv4-only DOTS client in the same network conditions.  The other
 problem is that if a middlebox between the DOTS client and DOTS
 server is configured to block UDP traffic, the DOTS client will fail
 to establish a DTLS association with the DOTS server; consequently,
 it will have to fall back to TLS over TCP, thereby incurring
 significant connection delays.
 To overcome these connection setup problems, the DOTS client attempts
 to connect to its DOTS server(s) using both IPv6 and IPv4, and it
 tries both DTLS over UDP and TLS over TCP following a DOTS Happy
 Eyeballs approach.  To some extent, this approach is similar to the
 Happy Eyeballs mechanism defined in [RFC8305].  The connection
 attempts are performed by the DOTS client when it initializes or, in
 general, when it has to select an address family and transport to
 contact its DOTS server.  The results of the Happy Eyeballs procedure
 are used by the DOTS client for sending its subsequent messages to
 the DOTS server.  The differences in behavior with respect to the
 Happy Eyeballs mechanism [RFC8305] are listed below:
  • The order of preference of the DOTS signal channel address family

and transport protocol (most preferred first) is the following:

    UDP over IPv6, UDP over IPv4, TCP over IPv6, and finally TCP over
    IPv4.  This order adheres to the address preference order
    specified in [RFC6724] and the DOTS signal channel preference that
    promotes the use of UDP over TCP (to avoid TCP's head of line
    blocking).
  • After successfully establishing a connection, the DOTS client MUST

cache information regarding the outcome of each connection attempt

    for a specific time period; it uses that information to avoid
    thrashing the network with subsequent attempts.  The cached
    information is flushed when its age exceeds a specific time period
    on the order of few minutes (e.g., 10 min).  Typically, if the
    DOTS client has to reestablish the connection with the same DOTS
    server within a few seconds after the Happy Eyeballs mechanism is
    completed, caching avoids thrashing the network especially in the
    presence of DDoS attack traffic.
  • If a DOTS signal channel session is established with TLS (but DTLS

failed), the DOTS client periodically repeats the mechanism to

    discover whether DOTS signal channel messages with DTLS over UDP
    become available from the DOTS server; this is so the DOTS client
    can migrate the DOTS signal channel from TCP to UDP.  Such probing
    SHOULD NOT be done more frequently than every 24 hours and MUST
    NOT be done more frequently than every 5 minutes.
 When connection attempts are made during an attack, the DOTS client
 SHOULD use a "Connection Attempt Delay" [RFC8305] set to 100 ms.
 In Figure 4, the DOTS client proceeds with the connection attempts
 following the rules in [RFC8305].  In this example, it is assumed
 that the IPv6 path is broken and UDP traffic is dropped by a
 middlebox, but this has little impact on the DOTS client because
 there is not a long delay before using IPv4 and TCP.
  +-----------+                                         +-----------+
  |DOTS Client|                                         |DOTS Server|
  +-----------+                                         +-----------+
        |                                                     |
     T0 |--DTLS ClientHello, IPv6 ---->X                      |
     T1 |--DTLS ClientHello, IPv4 ---->X                      |
     T2 |--TCP SYN, IPv6-------------->X                      |
     T3 |--TCP SYN, IPv4------------------------------------->|
        |<-TCP SYNACK-----------------------------------------|
        |--TCP ACK------------------------------------------->|
        |<------------Establish TLS Session------------------>|
        |----------------DOTS signal------------------------->|
        |                                                     |
   Note:
    * Retransmission messages are not shown.
    * T1-T0=T2-T1=T3-T2= Connection Attempt Delay.
              Figure 4: DOTS Happy Eyeballs (Sample Flow)
 A single DOTS signal channel between DOTS agents can be used to
 exchange multiple DOTS signal messages.  To reduce DOTS client and
 DOTS server workload, DOTS clients SHOULD reuse the (D)TLS session.

4.4. DOTS Mitigation Methods

 The following methods are used by a DOTS client to request, retrieve,
 or withdraw the status of mitigation requests:
 PUT:     DOTS clients use the PUT method to request mitigation from a
          DOTS server (Section 4.4.1).  During active mitigation, DOTS
          clients may use PUT requests to carry mitigation efficacy
          updates to the DOTS server (Section 4.4.3).
 GET:     DOTS clients may use the GET method to retrieve the list of
          its mitigations maintained by a DOTS server (Section 4.4.2)
          or to receive asynchronous DOTS server status messages
          (Section 4.4.2.1).
 DELETE:  DOTS clients use the DELETE method to withdraw a request for
          mitigation from a DOTS server (Section 4.4.4).
 Mitigation request and response messages are marked as Non-
 confirmable messages (Section 2.2 of [RFC7252]).
 DOTS agents MUST NOT send more than one UDP datagram per round-trip
 time (RTT) to the peer DOTS agent on average following the data
 transmission guidelines discussed in Section 3.1.3 of [RFC8085].
 Requests marked by the DOTS client as Non-confirmable messages are
 sent at regular intervals until a response is received from the DOTS
 server.  If the DOTS client cannot maintain an RTT estimate, it MUST
 NOT send more than one Non-confirmable request every 3 seconds and
 SHOULD use an even less aggressive rate whenever possible (case 2 in
 Section 3.1.3 of [RFC8085]).  Mitigation requests MUST NOT be delayed
 because of checks on probing rate (Section 4.7 of [RFC7252]).
 JSON encoding of YANG-modeled data [RFC7951] is used to illustrate
 the various methods defined in the following subsections.  Also, the
 examples use the Labels defined in Sections 10.6.2, 10.6.3, 10.6.4,
 and 10.6.5.
 The DOTS client MUST authenticate itself to the DOTS server
 (Section 8).  The DOTS server MAY use the algorithm presented in
 Section 7 of [RFC7589] to derive the DOTS client identity or username
 from the client certificate.  The DOTS client identity allows the
 DOTS server to accept mitigation requests with scopes that the DOTS
 client is authorized to manage.

4.4.1. Request Mitigation

4.4.1.1. Building Mitigation Requests

 When a DOTS client requires mitigation for some reason, the DOTS
 client uses the CoAP PUT method to send a mitigation request to its
 DOTS server(s) (Figures 5 and 6).
 If a DOTS client is entitled to solicit the DOTS service, the DOTS
 server enables mitigation on behalf of the DOTS client by
 communicating the DOTS client's request to a mitigator (which may be
 co-located with the DOTS server) and relaying the feedback of the
 thus-selected mitigator to the requesting DOTS client.
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=123"
   Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
   {
     ...
   }
            Figure 5: PUT to Convey DOTS Mitigation Requests
 The order of the Uri-Path options is important, as it defines the
 CoAP resource.  In particular, 'mid' MUST follow 'cuid'.
 The additional Uri-Path parameters to those defined in Section 4.2
 are as follows:
 cuid:  Stands for Client Unique Identifier.  A globally unique
        identifier that is meant to prevent collisions among DOTS
        clients, especially those from the same domain.  It MUST be
        generated by DOTS clients.
        For the reasons discussed in Appendix B, implementations
        SHOULD set 'cuid' using the following procedure: first, the
        DOTS client inputs one of the following into the SHA-256
        [RFC6234] cryptographic hash: the DER-encoded ASN.1
        representation of the Subject Public Key Info (SPKI) of its
        X.509 certificate [RFC5280], its raw public key [RFC7250], the
        "Pre-Shared Key (PSK) identity" it uses in the TLS 1.2
        ClientKeyExchange message, or the "identity" it uses in the
        "pre_shared_key" TLS 1.3 extension.  Then, the output of the
        cryptographic hash algorithm is truncated to 16 bytes;
        truncation is done by stripping off the final 16 bytes.  The
        truncated output is base64url encoded (Section 5 of [RFC4648])
        with the two trailing "=" removed from the encoding, and the
        resulting value used as the 'cuid'.
        The 'cuid' is intended to be stable when communicating with a
        given DOTS server, i.e., the 'cuid' used by a DOTS client
        SHOULD NOT change over time.  Distinct 'cuid' values MAY be
        used by a single DOTS client per DOTS server.
        If a DOTS client has to change its 'cuid' for some reason, it
        MUST NOT do so when mitigations are still active for the old
        'cuid'.  The 'cuid' SHOULD be 22 characters to avoid DOTS
        signal message fragmentation over UDP.  Furthermore, if that
        DOTS client created aliases and filtering entries at the DOTS
        server by means of the DOTS data channel, it MUST delete all
        the entries bound to the old 'cuid' and reinstall them using
        the new 'cuid'.
        DOTS servers MUST return 4.09 (Conflict) error code to a DOTS
        peer to notify that the 'cuid' is already in use by another
        DOTS client.  Upon receipt of that error code, a new 'cuid'
        MUST be generated by the DOTS peer (e.g., using [RFC4122]).
        Client-domain DOTS gateways MUST handle 'cuid' collision
        directly, and it is RECOMMENDED that 'cuid' collision is
        handled directly by server-domain DOTS gateways.
        DOTS gateways MAY rewrite the 'cuid' used by peer DOTS
        clients.  Triggers for such rewriting are out of scope.
        This is a mandatory Uri-Path parameter.
 mid:   Identifier for the mitigation request represented with an
        integer.  This identifier MUST be unique for each mitigation
        request bound to the DOTS client, i.e., the 'mid' parameter
        value in the mitigation request needs to be unique (per 'cuid'
        and DOTS server) relative to the 'mid' parameter values of
        active mitigation requests conveyed from the DOTS client to
        the DOTS server.
        In order to handle out-of-order delivery of mitigation
        requests, 'mid' values MUST increase monotonically.
        If the 'mid' value has reached 3/4 of (2^(32) - 1) (i.e.,
        3221225471) and no attack is detected, the DOTS client MUST
        reset 'mid' to 0 to handle 'mid' rollover.  If the DOTS client
        maintains mitigation requests with preconfigured scopes, it
        MUST recreate them with the 'mid' restarting at 0.
        This identifier MUST be generated by the DOTS client.
        This is a mandatory Uri-Path parameter.
 'cuid' and 'mid' MUST NOT appear in the PUT request message body
 (Figure 6).  The schema in Figure 6 uses the types defined in
 Section 6.  Note that this figure (and other similar figures
 depicting a schema) are non-normative sketches of the structure of
 the message.
   {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
       "scope": [
         {
           "target-prefix": [
              "string"
            ],
           "target-port-range": [
              {
                "lower-port": number,
                "upper-port": number
              }
            ],
            "target-protocol": [
              number
            ],
            "target-fqdn": [
              "string"
            ],
            "target-uri": [
              "string"
            ],
            "alias-name": [
              "string"
            ],
           "lifetime": number,
           "trigger-mitigation": true|false
         }
       ]
     }
   }
     Figure 6: PUT to Convey DOTS Mitigation Requests (Message Body
                                Schema)
 The parameters in the CBOR body (Figure 6) of the PUT request are
 described below:
 target-prefix:  A list of prefixes identifying resources under
    attack.  Prefixes are represented using Classless Inter-Domain
    Routing (CIDR) notation [RFC4632].
    The prefix length must be less than or equal to 32 for IPv4 and
    128 for IPv6.
    The prefix list MUST NOT include broadcast, loopback, or multicast
    addresses.  These addresses are considered to be invalid values.
    In addition, the DOTS server MUST validate that target prefixes
    are within the scope of the DOTS client domain.  Other validation
    checks may be supported by DOTS servers.
    This is an optional attribute.
 target-port-range:  A list of port numbers bound to resources under
    attack.
    A port range is defined by two bounds: a lower port number
    ('lower-port') and an upper port number ('upper-port').  When only
    'lower-port' is present, it represents a single port number.
    For TCP, UDP, Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)
    [RFC4960], or Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)
    [RFC4340], a range of ports can be, for example, 0-1023,
    1024-65535, or 1024-49151.
    This is an optional attribute.
 target-protocol:  A list of protocols involved in an attack.  Values
    are integers in the range of 0 to 255.  See [IANA-Proto] for
    common values.
    If 'target-protocol' is not specified, then the request applies to
    any protocol.
    This is an optional attribute.
 target-fqdn:  A list of Fully Qualified Domain Names (FQDNs)
    identifying resources under attack [RFC8499].
    How a name is passed to an underlying name resolution library is
    implementation and deployment specific.  Nevertheless, once the
    name is resolved into one or multiple IP addresses, DOTS servers
    MUST apply the same validation checks as those for 'target-
    prefix'.  These validation checks are reiterated by DOTS servers
    each time a name is passed to an underlying name resolution
    library (e.g., upon expiry of DNS TTL).
    The use of FQDNs may be suboptimal because:
  • It induces both an extra load and increased delays on the DOTS

server to handle and manage DNS resolution requests.

  • It does not guarantee that the DOTS server will resolve a name

to the same IP addresses that the DOTS client does.

    This is an optional attribute.
 target-uri:  A list of URIs [RFC3986] identifying resources under
    attack.
    The same validation checks used for 'target-fqdn' MUST be followed
    by DOTS servers to validate a target URI.
    This is an optional attribute.
 alias-name:  A list of aliases of resources for which the mitigation
    is requested.  Aliases can be created using the DOTS data channel
    (Section 6.1 of [RFC8783]), direct configuration, or other means.
    An alias is used in subsequent signal channel exchanges to refer
    more efficiently to the resources under attack.
    This is an optional attribute.
 lifetime:  Lifetime of the mitigation request in seconds.  The
    RECOMMENDED lifetime of a mitigation request is 3600 seconds; this
    value was chosen to be long enough so that refreshing is not
    typically a burden on the DOTS client while still making the
    request expire in a timely manner when the client has unexpectedly
    quit.  DOTS clients MUST include this parameter in their
    mitigation requests.
    A lifetime of '0' in a mitigation request is an invalid value.
    A lifetime of negative one (-1) indicates indefinite lifetime for
    the mitigation request.  The DOTS server MAY refuse an indefinite
    lifetime, for policy reasons; the granted lifetime value is
    returned in the response.  DOTS clients MUST be prepared to not be
    granted mitigations with indefinite lifetimes.
    The DOTS server MUST always indicate the actual lifetime in the
    response and the remaining lifetime in status messages sent to the
    DOTS client.
    Upon the expiry of the negotiated lifetime (i.e., the remaining
    lifetime reaches '0'), and if the request is not refreshed by the
    DOTS client, the mitigation request is removed by the DOTS server.
    The request can be refreshed by sending the same request again.
    This is a mandatory attribute.
 trigger-mitigation:  If the parameter value is set to 'false', DDoS
    mitigation will not be triggered for the mitigation request unless
    the DOTS signal channel session is lost.
    If the DOTS client ceases to respond to heartbeat messages, the
    DOTS server can detect that the DOTS signal channel session is
    lost.  More details are discussed in Section 4.7.
    The default value of the parameter is 'true' (that is, the
    mitigation starts immediately).  If 'trigger-mitigation' is not
    present in a request, this is equivalent to receiving a request
    with 'trigger-mitigation' set to 'true'.
    This is an optional attribute.
 Because of the complexity of handling partial failure cases, this
 specification does not allow the inclusion of multiple mitigation
 requests in the same PUT request.  Concretely, a DOTS client MUST NOT
 include multiple entries in the 'scope' array of the same PUT
 request.
 FQDN and URI mitigation scopes may be thought of as a form of scope
 alias, in which the addresses associated with the domain name or URI
 (as resolved by the DOTS server) represent the scope of the
 mitigation.  Particularly, the IP addresses to which the host
 subcomponent of authority component of a URI resolves represent the
 'target-prefix', the URI scheme represents the 'target-protocol', and
 the port subcomponent of authority component of a URI represents the
 'target-port-range'.  If the optional port information is not present
 in the authority component, the default port defined for the URI
 scheme represents the 'target-port'.
 In the PUT request, at least one of the attributes 'target-prefix',
 'target-fqdn','target-uri', or 'alias-name' MUST be present.
 Attributes and Uri-Path parameters with empty values MUST NOT be
 present in a request, as an empty value will render the entire
 request invalid.
 Figure 7 shows a PUT request example to signal that servers
 2001:db8:6401::1 and 2001:db8:6401::2 are receiving attack traffic on
 TCP port numbers 80, 8080, and 443.  The presence of 'cdid' indicates
 that a server-domain DOTS gateway has modified the initial PUT
 request sent by the DOTS client.  Note that 'cdid' MUST NOT appear in
 the PUT request message body.
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cdid=7eeaf349529eb55ed50113"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=123"
   Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
   {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
       "scope": [
         {
           "target-prefix": [
              "2001:db8:6401::1/128",
              "2001:db8:6401::2/128"
            ],
           "target-port-range": [
             {
               "lower-port": 80
             },
             {
               "lower-port": 443
             },
             {
                "lower-port": 8080
             }
            ],
            "target-protocol": [
              6
            ],
           "lifetime": 3600
         }
       ]
     }
   }
         Figure 7: PUT for DOTS Mitigation Request (An Example)
 The corresponding CBOR encoding format for the payload is shown in
 Figure 8.
    A1                                      # map(1)
       01                                   # unsigned(1)
       A1                                   # map(1)
          02                                # unsigned(2)
          81                                # array(1)
             A4                             # map(4)
                06                          # unsigned(6)
                82                          # array(2)
                   74                       # text(20)
                      323030313A6462383A363430313A3A312F313238
                   74                       # text(20)
                      323030313A6462383A363430313A3A322F313238
                07                          # unsigned(7)
                83                          # array(3)
                   A1                       # map(1)
                      08                    # unsigned(8)
                      18 50                 # unsigned(80)
                   A1                       # map(1)
                      08                    # unsigned(8)
                      19 01BB               # unsigned(443)
                   A1                       # map(1)
                      08                    # unsigned(8)
                      19 1F90               # unsigned(8080)
                0A                          # unsigned(10)
                81                          # array(1)
                   06                       # unsigned(6)
                0E                          # unsigned(14)
                19 0E10                     # unsigned(3600)
            Figure 8: PUT for DOTS Mitigation Request (CBOR)

4.4.1.2. Server-Domain DOTS Gateways

 In deployments where server-domain DOTS gateways are enabled,
 identity information about the origin source client domain ('cdid')
 SHOULD be propagated to the DOTS server.  That information is meant
 to assist the DOTS server in enforcing some policies, such as
 grouping DOTS clients that belong to the same DOTS domain, limiting
 the number of DOTS requests, and identifying the mitigation scope.
 These policies can be enforced per client, per client domain, or
 both.  Also, the identity information may be used for auditing and
 debugging purposes.
 Figure 9 shows an example of a request relayed by a server-domain
 DOTS gateway.
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cdid=7eeaf349529eb55ed50113"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=123"
   Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
   {
     ...
   }
     Figure 9: PUT for DOTS Mitigation Request as Relayed by a DOTS
                                Gateway
 A server-domain DOTS gateway SHOULD add the following Uri-Path
 parameter:
 cdid:  Stands for Client Domain Identifier.  The 'cdid' is conveyed
        by a server-domain DOTS gateway to propagate the source domain
        identity from the gateway's client-facing side to the
        gateway's server-facing side and from the gateway's server-
        facing side to the DOTS server.  'cdid' may be used by the
        final DOTS server for policy-enforcement purposes (e.g.,
        enforce a quota on filtering rules).  These policies are
        deployment specific.
        Server-domain DOTS gateways SHOULD support a configuration
        option to instruct whether the 'cdid' parameter is to be
        inserted.
        In order to accommodate deployments that require enforcing
        per-client policies, per-client domain policies, or a
        combination thereof, server-domain DOTS gateways instructed to
        insert the 'cdid' parameter MUST supply the SPKI hash of the
        DOTS client X.509 certificate, the DOTS client raw public key,
        or the hash of the "PSK identity" in the 'cdid', following the
        same rules for generating the hash conveyed in 'cuid', which
        is then used by the ultimate DOTS server to determine the
        corresponding client's domain.  The 'cdid' generated by a
        server-domain gateway is likely to be the same as the 'cuid'
        except the case in which the DOTS message was relayed by a
        client-domain DOTS gateway or the 'cuid' was generated by a
        rogue DOTS client.
        If a DOTS client is provisioned, for example, with distinct
        certificates to use to peer with distinct server-domain DOTS
        gateways that peer to the same DOTS server, distinct 'cdid'
        values may be supplied by the server-domain DOTS gateways to
        the server.  The ultimate DOTS server MUST treat those 'cdid'
        values as equivalent.
        The 'cdid' attribute MUST NOT be generated and included by
        DOTS clients.
        DOTS servers MUST ignore 'cdid' attributes that are directly
        supplied by source DOTS clients or client-domain DOTS
        gateways.  This implies that first server-domain DOTS gateways
        MUST strip 'cdid' attributes supplied by DOTS clients.  DOTS
        servers SHOULD support a configuration parameter to identify
        DOTS gateways that are trusted to supply 'cdid' attributes.
        Only single-valued 'cdid' are defined in this document.  That
        is, only the first on-path server-domain DOTS gateway can
        insert a 'cdid' value.  This specification does not allow
        multiple server-domain DOTS gateways, whenever involved in the
        path, to insert a 'cdid' value for each server-domain gateway.
        This is an optional Uri-Path.  When present, 'cdid' MUST be
        positioned before 'cuid'.
 A DOTS gateway SHOULD add the CoAP Hop-Limit Option [RFC8768].

4.4.1.3. Processing Mitigation Requests

 The DOTS server couples the DOTS signal and data channel sessions
 using the DOTS client identity and optionally the 'cdid' parameter
 value, so the DOTS server can validate whether the aliases conveyed
 in the mitigation request were indeed created by the same DOTS client
 using the DOTS data channel session.  If the aliases were not created
 by the DOTS client, the DOTS server MUST return 4.00 (Bad Request) in
 the response.
 The DOTS server couples the DOTS signal channel sessions using the
 DOTS client identity and optionally the 'cdid' parameter value, and
 the DOTS server uses 'mid' and 'cuid' Uri-Path parameter values to
 detect duplicate mitigation requests.  If the mitigation request
 contains the 'alias-name' and other parameters identifying the target
 resources (such as 'target-prefix', 'target-port-range', 'target-
 fqdn', or 'target-uri'), the DOTS server appends the parameter values
 associated with the 'alias-name' with the corresponding parameter
 values in 'target-prefix', 'target-port-range', 'target-fqdn', or
 'target-uri'.
 The DOTS server indicates the result of processing the PUT request
 using CoAP Response Codes.  CoAP 2.xx codes are success.  CoAP 4.xx
 codes are some sort of invalid requests (client errors).  CoAP 5.xx
 codes are returned if the DOTS server is in an error state or is
 currently unavailable to provide mitigation in response to the
 mitigation request from the DOTS client.
 Figure 10 shows an example response to a PUT request that is
 successfully processed by a DOTS server (i.e., CoAP 2.xx Response
 Codes).  This version of the specification forbids 'cuid' and 'cdid'
 (if used) to be returned in a response message body.
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
      "scope": [
         {
           "mid": 123,
           "lifetime": 3600
         }
       ]
    }
 }
                     Figure 10: 2.xx Response Body
 If the request is missing a mandatory attribute, does not include
 'cuid' or 'mid' Uri-Path options, includes multiple 'scope'
 parameters, or contains invalid or unknown parameters, the DOTS
 server MUST reply with 4.00 (Bad Request).  DOTS agents can safely
 ignore comprehension-optional parameters they don't understand
 (Section 10.6.1.1).
 A DOTS server that receives a mitigation request with a 'lifetime'
 set to '0' MUST reply with a 4.00 (Bad Request).
 If the DOTS server does not find the 'mid' parameter value conveyed
 in the PUT request in its configuration data, it MAY accept the
 mitigation request by sending back a 2.01 (Created) response to the
 DOTS client; the DOTS server will consequently try to mitigate the
 attack.  A DOTS server MAY reject mitigation requests when it is near
 capacity or needs to rate-limit a particular client, for example.
 The relative order of two mitigation requests with the same 'trigger-
 mitigation' type from a DOTS client is determined by comparing their
 respective 'mid' values.  If two mitigation requests with the same
 'trigger-mitigation' type have overlapping mitigation scopes, the
 mitigation request with the highest numeric 'mid' value will override
 the other mitigation request.  Two mitigation requests from a DOTS
 client have overlapping scopes if there is a common IP address, IP
 prefix, FQDN, URI, or alias.  To avoid maintaining a long list of
 overlapping mitigation requests (i.e., requests with the same
 'trigger-mitigation' type and overlapping scopes) from a DOTS client
 and to avoid error-prone provisioning of mitigation requests from a
 DOTS client, the overlapped lower numeric 'mid' MUST be automatically
 deleted and no longer available at the DOTS server.  For example, if
 the DOTS server receives a mitigation request that overlaps with an
 existing mitigation with a higher numeric 'mid', the DOTS server
 rejects the request by returning 4.09 (Conflict) to the DOTS client.
 The response MUST include enough information for a DOTS client to
 recognize the source of the conflict, as described below in the
 'conflict-information' subtree (Section 5.1), with only the relevant
 nodes listed:
 conflict-information:  Indicates that a mitigation request is
    conflicting with another mitigation request.  This attribute has
    the following structure:
    conflict-cause:  Indicates the cause of the conflict.  The
       following value MUST be returned:
       1:  Overlapping targets. 'conflict-scope' provides more details
          about the conflicting target clauses.
    conflict-scope:  Characterizes the exact conflict scope.  It may
       include a list of IP addresses, a list of prefixes, a list of
       target protocols, a list of FQDNs, a list of URIs, a list of
       aliases, or a 'mid'.  A list of port numbers may also be
       included if there is a common IP address, IP prefix, FQDN, URI,
       or alias.
 If the DOTS server receives a mitigation request that overlaps with
 an active mitigation request, but both have distinct 'trigger-
 mitigation' types, the DOTS server SHOULD deactivate (absent explicit
 policy/configuration otherwise) the mitigation request with 'trigger-
 mitigation' set to 'false'.  Particularly, if the mitigation request
 with 'trigger-mitigation' set to 'false' is active, the DOTS server
 withdraws the mitigation request (i.e., status code is set to '7' as
 defined in Table 3) and transitions the status of the mitigation
 request to '8'.
 Upon DOTS signal channel session loss with a peer DOTS client, the
 DOTS server SHOULD withdraw (absent explicit policy/configuration
 otherwise) any active mitigation requests that overlap with
 mitigation requests having 'trigger-mitigation' set to 'false' from
 that DOTS client, as the loss of the session implicitly activates
 these preconfigured mitigation requests, and they take precedence.
 Note that the active-but-terminating period is not observed for
 mitigations withdrawn at the initiative of the DOTS server.
 DOTS clients may adopt various strategies for setting the scopes of
 immediate and preconfigured mitigation requests to avoid potential
 conflicts.  For example, a DOTS client may tweak preconfigured scopes
 so that the scope of any overlapping immediate mitigation request
 will be a subset of the preconfigured scopes.  Also, if an immediate
 mitigation request overlaps with any of the preconfigured scopes, the
 DOTS client sets the scope of the overlapping immediate mitigation
 request to be a subset of the preconfigured scopes, so as to get a
 broad mitigation when the DOTS signal channel collapses and to
 maximize the chance of recovery.
 If the request conflicts with an existing mitigation request from a
 different DOTS client, the DOTS server may return 2.01 (Created) or
 4.09 (Conflict) to the requesting DOTS client.  If the DOTS server
 decides to maintain the new mitigation request, the DOTS server
 returns 2.01 (Created) to the requesting DOTS client.  If the DOTS
 server decides to reject the new mitigation request, the DOTS server
 returns 4.09 (Conflict) to the requesting DOTS client.  For both 2.01
 (Created) and 4.09 (Conflict) responses, the response MUST include
 enough information for a DOTS client to recognize the source of the
 conflict as described below:
 conflict-information:  Indicates that a mitigation request is
    conflicting with another mitigation request(s) from other DOTS
    client(s).  This attribute has the following structure:
    conflict-status:  Indicates the status of a conflicting mitigation
       request.  The following values are defined:
       1:    DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation requests
             from different DOTS clients.  This mitigation request is
             currently inactive until the conflicts are resolved.
             Another mitigation request is active.
       2:    DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation requests
             from different DOTS clients.  This mitigation request is
             currently active.
       3:    DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation requests
             from different DOTS clients.  All conflicting mitigation
             requests are inactive.
    conflict-cause:  Indicates the cause of the conflict.  The
       following values are defined:
       1:    Overlapping targets. 'conflict-scope' provides more
             details about the conflicting target clauses.
       2:    Conflicts with an existing accept-list.  This code is
             returned when the DDoS mitigation detects source
             addresses/prefixes in the accept-listed Access Control
             Lists (ACLs) are attacking the target.
       3:    CUID Collision.  This code is returned when a DOTS client
             uses a 'cuid' that is already used by another DOTS
             client.  This code is an indication that the request has
             been rejected and a new request with a new 'cuid' is to
             be re-sent by the DOTS client (see the example shown in
             Figure 11).  Note that 'conflict-status', 'conflict-
             scope', and 'retry-timer' MUST NOT be returned in the
             error response.
    conflict-scope:  Characterizes the exact conflict scope.  It may
       include a list of IP addresses, a list of prefixes, a list of
       target protocols, a list of FQDNs, a list of URIs, a list of
       aliases, or references to conflicting ACLs (by an 'acl-name',
       typically [RFC8783]).  A list of port numbers may also be
       included if there is a common IP address, IP prefix, FQDN, URI,
       or alias.
    retry-timer:  Indicates, in seconds, the time after which the DOTS
       client may reissue the same request.  The DOTS server returns
       'retry-timer' only to DOTS client(s) for which a mitigation
       request is deactivated.  Any retransmission of the same
       mitigation request before the expiry of this timer is likely to
       be rejected by the DOTS server for the same reasons.
       The 'retry-timer' SHOULD be equal to the lifetime of the active
       mitigation request resulting in the deactivation of the
       conflicting mitigation request.
       If the DOTS server decides to maintain a state for the
       deactivated mitigation request, the DOTS server updates the
       lifetime of the deactivated mitigation request to 'retry-timer
       + 45 seconds' (that is, this mitigation request remains
       deactivated for the entire duration of 'retry-timer + 45
       seconds') so that the DOTS client can refresh the deactivated
       mitigation request after 'retry-timer' seconds, but before the
       expiry of the lifetime, and check if the conflict is resolved.
   (1) Request with a conflicting 'cuid'
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=12"
   (2) Message body of the 4.09 (Conflict) response
       from the DOTS server
   {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
        "scope": [
           {
             "conflict-information": {
               "conflict-cause": "cuid-collision"
              }
           }
         ]
      }
   }
   (3) Request with a new 'cuid'
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=f30d281ce6b64fc5a0b91e"
   Uri-Path: "mid=12"
             Figure 11: Example of Generating a New 'cuid'
 As an active attack evolves, DOTS clients can adjust the scope of
 requested mitigation as necessary, by refining the scope of resources
 requiring mitigation.  This can be achieved by sending a PUT request
 with a new 'mid' value that will override the existing one with
 overlapping mitigation scopes.
 For a mitigation request to continue beyond the initial negotiated
 lifetime, the DOTS client has to refresh the current mitigation
 request by sending a new PUT request.  This PUT request MUST use the
 same 'mid' value, and it MUST repeat all the other parameters as sent
 in the original mitigation request apart from a possible change to
 the 'lifetime' parameter value.  In such a case, the DOTS server MAY
 update the mitigation request by setting the remaining lifetime to
 the newly negotiated lifetime, and a 2.04 (Changed) response is
 returned to indicate a successful update of the mitigation request.
 If this is not the case, the DOTS server MUST reject the request with
 a 4.00 (Bad Request).

4.4.2. Retrieve Information Related to a Mitigation

 A GET request is used by a DOTS client to retrieve information
 (including status) of DOTS mitigations from a DOTS server.
 'cuid' is a mandatory Uri-Path parameter for GET requests.
 Uri-Path parameters with empty values MUST NOT be present in a
 request.
 The same considerations for manipulating the 'cdid' parameter by
 server-domain DOTS gateways specified in Section 4.4.1 MUST be
 followed for GET requests.
 The 'c' Uri-Query option is used to control selection of
 configuration and non-configuration data nodes.  Concretely, the 'c'
 (content) parameter and its permitted values defined in Table 2 of
 [CORE-COMI] can be used to retrieve non-configuration data (attack
 mitigation status), configuration data, or both.  The DOTS server MAY
 support this optional filtering capability.  It can safely ignore it
 if not supported.  If the DOTS client supports the optional filtering
 capability, it SHOULD use "c=n" query (to get back only the
 dynamically changing data) or "c=c" query (to get back the static
 configuration values) when the DDoS attack is active to limit the
 size of the response.
    +=======+=====================================================+
    | Value | Description                                         |
    +=======+=====================================================+
    | c     | Return only configuration descendant data nodes     |
    +-------+-----------------------------------------------------+
    | n     | Return only non-configuration descendant data nodes |
    +-------+-----------------------------------------------------+
    | a     | Return all descendant data nodes                    |
    +-------+-----------------------------------------------------+
             Table 2: Permitted Values of the 'c' Parameter
 The DOTS client can use block-wise transfer [RFC7959] to get the list
 of all its mitigations maintained by a DOTS server; it can send a
 Block2 Option in a GET request with NUM = 0 to aid in limiting the
 size of the response.  If the representation of all the active
 mitigation requests associated with the DOTS client does not fit
 within a single datagram, the DOTS server MUST use the Block2 Option
 with NUM = 0 in the GET response.  The Size2 Option may be conveyed
 in the response to indicate the total size of the resource
 representation.  The DOTS client retrieves the rest of the
 representation by sending additional GET requests with Block2 Options
 containing NUM values greater than zero.  The DOTS client MUST adhere
 to the block size preferences indicated by the DOTS server in the
 response.  If the DOTS server uses the Block2 Option in the GET
 response, and the response is for a dynamically changing resource
 (e.g., "c=n" or "c=a" query), the DOTS server MUST include the ETag
 Option in the response.  The DOTS client MUST include the same ETag
 value in subsequent GET requests to retrieve the rest of the
 representation.
 The following examples illustrate how a DOTS client retrieves active
 mitigation requests from a DOTS server.  In particular:
  • Figure 12 shows the example of a GET request to retrieve all DOTS

mitigation requests signaled by a DOTS client.

  • Figure 13 shows the example of a GET request to retrieve a

specific DOTS mitigation request signaled by a DOTS client. The

    configuration data to be reported in the response is formatted in
    the same order as it was processed by the DOTS server in the
    original mitigation request.
 These two examples assume the default of "c=a"; that is, the DOTS
 client asks for all data to be reported by the DOTS server.
   Header: GET (Code=0.01)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Observe: 0
        Figure 12: GET to Retrieve All DOTS Mitigation Requests
   Header: GET (Code=0.01)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=12332"
   Observe: 0
     Figure 13: GET to Retrieve a Specific DOTS Mitigation Request
 If the DOTS server does not find the 'mid' Uri-Path value conveyed in
 the GET request in its configuration data for the requesting DOTS
 client, it MUST respond with a 4.04 (Not Found) error Response Code.
 Likewise, the same error MUST be returned as a response to a request
 to retrieve all mitigation records (i.e., 'mid' Uri-Path is not
 defined) of a given DOTS client if the DOTS server does not find any
 mitigation record for that DOTS client.  As a reminder, a DOTS client
 is identified by its identity (e.g., client certificate, 'cuid') and
 optionally the 'cdid'.
 Figure 14 shows a response example of all active mitigation requests
 associated with the DOTS client, as maintained by the DOTS server.
 The response indicates the mitigation status of each mitigation
 request.
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
     "scope": [
       {
         "mid": 12332,
         "mitigation-start": "1507818434",
         "target-prefix": [
              "2001:db8:6401::1/128",
              "2001:db8:6401::2/128"
         ],
         "target-protocol": [
           17
         ],
         "lifetime": 1756,
         "status": "attack-successfully-mitigated",
         "bytes-dropped": "134334555",
         "bps-dropped": "43344",
         "pkts-dropped": "333334444",
         "pps-dropped": "432432"
       },
       {
         "mid": 12333,
         "mitigation-start": "1507818393",
         "target-prefix": [
              "2001:db8:6401::1/128",
              "2001:db8:6401::2/128"
         ],
         "target-protocol": [
           6
         ],
         "lifetime": 1755,
         "status": "attack-stopped",
         "bytes-dropped": "0",
         "bps-dropped": "0",
         "pkts-dropped": "0",
         "pps-dropped": "0"
       }
     ]
   }
 }
               Figure 14: Response Body to a GET Request
 The mitigation status parameters are described below:
 mitigation-start:  Mitigation start time is expressed in seconds
    relative to 1970-01-01T00:00Z in UTC time (Section 3.4.1 of
    [RFC8949]).  The CBOR encoding is modified so that the leading tag
    1 (epoch-based date/time) MUST be omitted.
    This is a mandatory attribute when an attack mitigation is active.
    Particularly, 'mitigation-start' is not returned for a mitigation
    with 'status' code set to 8.
 lifetime:  The remaining lifetime of the mitigation request, in
    seconds.
    This is a mandatory attribute.
 status:  Status of attack mitigation.  The various possible values of
    'status' parameter are explained in Table 3.
    This is a mandatory attribute.
 bytes-dropped:  The total dropped byte count for the mitigation
    request since the attack mitigation was triggered.  The count
    wraps around when it reaches the maximum value of unsigned
    integer64.
    This is an optional attribute.
 bps-dropped:  The average number of dropped bytes per second for the
    mitigation request since the attack mitigation was triggered.
    This average SHOULD be over five-minute intervals (that is,
    measuring bytes into five-minute buckets and then averaging these
    buckets over the time since the mitigation was triggered).
    This is an optional attribute.
 pkts-dropped:  The total number of dropped packet count for the
    mitigation request since the attack mitigation was triggered.  The
    count wraps around when it reaches the maximum value of unsigned
    integer64.
    This is an optional attribute.
 pps-dropped:  The average number of dropped packets per second for
    the mitigation request since the attack mitigation was triggered.
    This average SHOULD be over five-minute intervals (that is,
    measuring packets into five-minute buckets and then averaging
    these buckets over the time since the mitigation was triggered).
    This is an optional attribute.
  +===========+====================================================+
  | Parameter | Description                                        |
  | Value     |                                                    |
  +===========+====================================================+
  | 1         | Attack mitigation setup is in progress (e.g.,      |
  |           | changing the network path to redirect the inbound  |
  |           | traffic to a DOTS mitigator).                      |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 2         | Attack is being successfully mitigated (e.g.,      |
  |           | traffic is redirected to a DDoS mitigator and      |
  |           | attack traffic is dropped).                        |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 3         | Attack has stopped and the DOTS client can         |
  |           | withdraw the mitigation request.  This status code |
  |           | will be transmitted for immediate mitigation       |
  |           | requests till the mitigation is withdrawn or the   |
  |           | lifetime expires.  For mitigation requests with    |
  |           | preconfigured scopes (i.e., 'trigger-mitigation'   |
  |           | set to 'false'), this status code will be          |
  |           | transmitted four times and then transition to '8'. |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 4         | Attack has exceeded the mitigation provider        |
  |           | capability.                                        |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 5         | DOTS client has withdrawn the mitigation request   |
  |           | and the mitigation is active but terminating.      |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 6         | Attack mitigation is now terminated.               |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 7         | Attack mitigation is withdrawn (by the DOTS        |
  |           | server).  If a mitigation request with 'trigger-   |
  |           | mitigation' set to 'false' is withdrawn because it |
  |           | overlaps with an immediate mitigation request,     |
  |           | this status code will be transmitted four times    |
  |           | and then transition to '8' for the mitigation      |
  |           | request with preconfigured scopes.                 |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
  | 8         | Attack mitigation will be triggered for the        |
  |           | mitigation request only when the DOTS signal       |
  |           | channel session is lost.                           |
  +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+
                Table 3: Values of 'status' Parameter

4.4.2.1. DOTS Servers Sending Mitigation Status

 The Observe Option defined in [RFC7641] extends the CoAP core
 protocol with a mechanism for a CoAP client to "observe" a resource
 on a CoAP server: the client retrieves a representation of the
 resource and requests this representation be updated by the server as
 long as the client is interested in the resource.  DOTS
 implementations MUST support the Observe Option for both 'mitigate'
 and 'config' (Section 4.2).
 A DOTS client conveys the Observe Option set to '0' in the GET
 request to receive asynchronous notifications of attack mitigation
 status from the DOTS server.
 Unidirectional mitigation notifications within the bidirectional
 signal channel enables asynchronous notifications between the agents.
 [RFC7641] indicates that (1) a notification can be sent in a
 Confirmable or a Non-confirmable message and (2) the message type
 used is typically application dependent and may be determined by the
 server for each notification individually.  For the DOTS server
 application, the message type MUST always be set to Non-confirmable
 even if the underlying CoAP library elects a notification to be sent
 in a Confirmable message.  This overrides the behavior defined in
 Section 4.5 of [RFC7641] to send a Confirmable message instead of a
 Non-confirmable message at least every 24 hours for the following
 reasons: First, the DOTS signal channel uses a heartbeat mechanism to
 determine if the DOTS client is alive.  Second, Confirmable messages
 are not suitable during an attack.
 Due to the higher likelihood of packet loss during a DDoS attack, the
 DOTS server periodically sends attack mitigation status to the DOTS
 client and also notifies the DOTS client whenever the status of the
 attack mitigation changes.  If the DOTS server cannot maintain an RTT
 estimate, it MUST NOT send more than one asynchronous notification
 every 3 seconds and SHOULD use an even less aggressive rate whenever
 possible (case 2 in Section 3.1.3 of [RFC8085]).
 When conflicting requests are detected, the DOTS server enforces the
 corresponding policy (e.g., accept all requests, reject all requests,
 accept only one request but reject all the others).  It is assumed
 that this policy is supplied by the DOTS server administrator or that
 it is a default behavior of the DOTS server implementation.  Then,
 the DOTS server sends a notification message(s) to the DOTS client(s)
 at the origin of the conflict (refer to the conflict parameters
 defined in Section 4.4.1).  A conflict notification message includes
 information about the conflict cause, scope, and the status of the
 mitigation request(s).  For example:
  • A notification message with 'status' code set to '7 (Attack

mitigation is withdrawn)' and 'conflict-status' set to '1' is sent

    to a DOTS client to indicate that an active mitigation request is
    deactivated because a conflict is detected.
  • A notification message with 'status' code set to '1 (Attack

mitigation is in progress)' and 'conflict-status' set to '2' is

    sent to a DOTS client to indicate that this mitigation request is
    in progress, but a conflict is detected.
 Upon receipt of a conflict notification message indicating that a
 mitigation request is deactivated because of a conflict, a DOTS
 client MUST NOT resend the same mitigation request before the expiry
 of 'retry-timer'.  It is also recommended that DOTS clients support
 the means to alert administrators about mitigation conflicts.
 A DOTS client that is no longer interested in receiving notifications
 from the DOTS server can simply "forget" the observation.  When the
 DOTS server sends the next notification, the DOTS client will not
 recognize the token in the message and, thus, will return a Reset
 message.  This causes the DOTS server to remove the associated entry.
 Alternatively, the DOTS client can explicitly de-register itself by
 issuing a GET request that has the Token field set to the token of
 the observation to be canceled and includes an Observe Option with
 the value set to '1' (de-register).  The latter is more deterministic
 and, thus, is RECOMMENDED.
 Figure 15 shows an example of a DOTS client requesting a DOTS server
 to send notifications related to a mitigation request.  Note that for
 mitigations with preconfigured scopes (i.e., 'trigger-mitigation' set
 to 'false'), the state will need to transition from '3' (attack-
 stopped) to '8' (attack-mitigation-signal-loss).
 +-----------+                              +-----------+
 |DOTS Client|                              |DOTS Server|
 +-----------+                              +-----------+
       |                                          |
       |  GET /<mid>                              |
       |  Token: 0x4a                             | Registration
       |  Observe: 0                              |
       +----------------------------------------->|
       |                                          |
       |  2.05 Content                            |
       |  Token: 0x4a                             | Notification of
       |  Observe: 12                             | the current state
       |  status: "attack-mitigation-in-progress" |
       |<-----------------------------------------+
       |                                          |
       |  2.05 Content                            |
       |  Token: 0x4a                             | Notification upon
       |  Observe: 44                             | a state change
       |  status: "attack-successfully-mitigated" |
       |<-----------------------------------------+
       |                                          |
       |  2.05 Content                            |
       |  Token: 0x4a                             | Notification upon
       |  Observe: 60                             | a state change
       |  status: "attack-stopped"                |
       |<-----------------------------------------+
       |                                          |
                          ...
          Figure 15: Notifications of Attack Mitigation Status

4.4.2.2. DOTS Clients Polling for Mitigation Status

 The DOTS client can send the GET request at frequent intervals
 without the Observe Option to retrieve the configuration data of the
 mitigation request and non-configuration data (i.e., the attack
 status).  DOTS clients MAY be configured with a policy indicating the
 frequency of polling DOTS servers to get the mitigation status.  This
 frequency MUST NOT be more than one UDP datagram per RTT, as
 discussed in Section 3.1.3 of [RFC8085].
 If the DOTS server has been able to mitigate the attack and the
 attack has stopped, the DOTS server indicates as such in the status.
 In such case, the DOTS client withdraws the mitigation request by
 issuing a DELETE request for this mitigation request (Section 4.4.4).
 A DOTS client SHOULD react to the status of the attack per the
 information sent by the DOTS server rather than performing its own
 detection that the attack has been mitigated.  This ensures that the
 DOTS client does not withdraw a mitigation request prematurely
 because it is possible that the DOTS client does not sense the DDoS
 attack on its resources, but the DOTS server could be actively
 mitigating the attack because the attack is not completely averted.

4.4.3. Efficacy Update from DOTS Clients

 While DDoS mitigation is in progress, due to the likelihood of packet
 loss, a DOTS client MAY periodically transmit DOTS mitigation
 efficacy updates to the relevant DOTS server.  A PUT request is used
 to convey the mitigation efficacy update to the DOTS server.  This
 PUT request is treated as a refresh of the current mitigation.
 The 'attack-status' parameter is a mandatory attribute when
 performing an efficacy update.  The various possible values contained
 in the 'attack-status' parameter are described in Table 4.
          +===========+=====================================+
          | Parameter | Description                         |
          | Value     |                                     |
          +===========+=====================================+
          | 1         | The DOTS client determines that it  |
          |           | is still under attack.              |
          +-----------+-------------------------------------+
          | 2         | The DOTS client determines that the |
          |           | attack is successfully mitigated    |
          |           | (e.g., attack traffic is not seen). |
          +-----------+-------------------------------------+
              Table 4: Values of 'attack-status' Parameter
 The PUT request used for the efficacy update MUST include all the
 parameters used in the PUT request to carry the DOTS mitigation
 request (Section 4.4.1) unchanged apart from the 'lifetime' parameter
 value.  If this is not the case, the DOTS server MUST reject the
 request with a 4.00 (Bad Request).
 The If-Match Option (Section 5.10.8.1 of [RFC7252]) with an empty
 value is used to make the PUT request conditional on the current
 existence of the mitigation request.  If UDP is used as transport,
 CoAP requests may arrive out of order.  For example, the DOTS client
 may send a PUT request to convey an efficacy update to the DOTS
 server followed by a DELETE request to withdraw the mitigation
 request, but the DELETE request arrives at the DOTS server before the
 PUT request.  To handle out-of-order delivery of requests, if an If-
 Match Option is present in the PUT request and the 'mid' in the
 request matches a mitigation request from that DOTS client, the
 request is processed by the DOTS server.  If no match is found, the
 PUT request is silently ignored by the DOTS server.
 An example of an efficacy update message, which includes an If-Match
 Option with an empty value, is depicted in Figure 16.
    Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
    Uri-Path: ".well-known"
    Uri-Path: "dots"
    Uri-Path: "mitigate"
    Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
    Uri-Path: "mid=123"
    If-Match:
    Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
    {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:mitigation-scope": {
       "scope": [
         {
           "target-prefix": [
              "2001:db8:6401::1/128",
              "2001:db8:6401::2/128"
            ],
           "target-port-range": [
             {
               "lower-port": 80
             },
             {
               "lower-port": 443
             },
             {
                "lower-port": 8080
             }
           ],
           "target-protocol": [
              6
           ],
           "attack-status": "under-attack"
         }
       ]
     }
    }
                Figure 16: An Example of Efficacy Update
 The DOTS server indicates the result of processing a PUT request
 using CoAP Response Codes.  The Response Code 2.04 (Changed) is
 returned if the DOTS server has accepted the mitigation efficacy
 update.  The error Response Code 5.03 (Service Unavailable) is
 returned if the DOTS server has erred or is incapable of performing
 the mitigation.  As specified in [RFC7252], 5.03 uses Max-Age Option
 to indicate the number of seconds after which to retry.

4.4.4. Withdraw a Mitigation

 DELETE requests are used to withdraw DOTS mitigation requests from
 DOTS servers (Figure 17).
 'cuid' and 'mid' are mandatory Uri-Path parameters for DELETE
 requests.
 The same considerations for manipulating the 'cdid' parameter by DOTS
 gateways, as specified in Section 4.4.1, MUST be followed for DELETE
 requests.  Uri-Path parameters with empty values MUST NOT be present
 in a request.
   Header: DELETE (Code=0.04)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "mitigate"
   Uri-Path: "cuid=dz6pHjaADkaFTbjr0JGBpw"
   Uri-Path: "mid=123"
                 Figure 17: Withdraw a DOTS Mitigation
 If the DELETE request does not include 'cuid' and 'mid' parameters,
 the DOTS server MUST reply with a 4.00 (Bad Request).
 Once the request is validated, the DOTS server immediately
 acknowledges a DOTS client's request to withdraw the DOTS mitigation
 request using a 2.02 (Deleted) Response Code with no response
 payload.  A 2.02 (Deleted) Response Code is returned even if the
 'mid' parameter value conveyed in the DELETE request does not exist
 in its configuration data before the request.
 If the DOTS server finds the 'mid' parameter value conveyed in the
 DELETE request in its configuration data for the DOTS client, then to
 protect against route or DNS flapping caused by a DOTS client rapidly
 removing a mitigation and to dampen the effect of oscillating
 attacks, the DOTS server MAY allow mitigation to continue for a
 limited period after acknowledging a DOTS client's withdrawal of a
 mitigation request.  During this period, the DOTS server status
 messages SHOULD indicate that mitigation is active but terminating
 (Section 4.4.2).
 The initial active-but-terminating period SHOULD be sufficiently long
 to absorb latency incurred by route propagation.  The active-but-
 terminating period SHOULD be set by default to 120 seconds.  If the
 client requests mitigation again before the initial active-but-
 terminating period elapses, the DOTS server MAY exponentially
 increase (the base of the exponent is 2) the active-but-terminating
 period up to a maximum of 300 seconds (5 minutes).
 Once the active-but-terminating period elapses, the DOTS server MUST
 treat the mitigation as terminated.
 If a mitigation is triggered due to a signal channel loss, the DOTS
 server relies upon normal triggers to stop that mitigation
 (typically, receipt of a valid DELETE request, expiry of the
 mitigation lifetime, or scrubbing the traffic to the attack target).
 In particular, the DOTS server MUST NOT consider the signal channel
 recovery as a trigger to stop the mitigation.

4.5. DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration

 A DOTS client can negotiate, configure, and retrieve the DOTS signal
 channel session behavior with its DOTS peers.  The DOTS signal
 channel can be used, for example, to configure the following:
 a.  Heartbeat interval ('heartbeat-interval'): DOTS agents regularly
     send heartbeats to each other after mutual authentication is
     successfully completed in order to keep the DOTS signal channel
     open.  Heartbeat messages are exchanged between DOTS agents every
     'heartbeat-interval' seconds to detect the current status of the
     DOTS signal channel session.
 b.  Missing heartbeats allowed ('missing-hb-allowed'): This variable
     indicates the maximum number of consecutive heartbeat messages
     for which a DOTS agent did not receive a response before
     concluding that the session is disconnected or defunct.
 c.  Acceptable probing rate ('probing-rate'): This parameter
     indicates the average data rate that must not be exceeded by a
     DOTS agent in sending to a peer DOTS agent that does not respond.
 d.  Acceptable signal loss ratio: Maximum retransmissions ('max-
     retransmit'), retransmission timeout value ('ack-timeout'), and
     other message transmission parameters for Confirmable messages
     over the DOTS signal channel.
 When the DOTS signal channel is established over a reliable transport
 (e.g., TCP), there is no need for the reliability mechanisms provided
 by CoAP over UDP since the underlying TCP connection provides
 retransmissions and deduplication [RFC8323].  CoAP over reliable
 transports does not support Confirmable or Non-confirmable message
 types.  As such, the transmission-related parameters ('missing-hb-
 allowed' and acceptable signal loss ratio) are negotiated only for
 DOTS over unreliable transports.
 The same or distinct configuration sets may be used during times when
 a mitigation is active ('mitigating-config') and when no mitigation
 is active ('idle-config').  This is particularly useful for DOTS
 servers that might want to reduce heartbeat frequency or cease
 heartbeat exchanges when an active DOTS client has not requested
 mitigation.  If distinct configurations are used, DOTS agents MUST
 follow the appropriate configuration set as a function of the
 mitigation activity (e.g., if no mitigation request is active (also
 referred to as 'idle' time), values related to 'idle-config' must be
 followed).  Additionally, DOTS agents MUST automatically switch to
 the other configuration upon a change in the mitigation activity
 (e.g., if an attack mitigation is launched after an 'idle' time, the
 DOTS agent switches from values related to 'idle-config' to values
 related to 'mitigating-config').
 CoAP requests and responses are indicated for reliable delivery by
 marking them as Confirmable messages.  DOTS signal channel session
 configuration requests and responses are marked as Confirmable
 messages.  As explained in Section 2.1 of [RFC7252], a Confirmable
 message is retransmitted using a default timeout and exponential
 backoff between retransmissions until the DOTS server sends an
 Acknowledgement message (ACK) with the same Message ID conveyed from
 the DOTS client.
 Message transmission parameters are defined in Section 4.8 of
 [RFC7252].  The DOTS server can either piggyback the response in the
 Acknowledgement message or, if the DOTS server cannot respond
 immediately to a request carried in a Confirmable message, it simply
 responds with an Empty Acknowledgement message so that the DOTS
 client can stop retransmitting the request.  Empty Acknowledgement
 messages are explained in Section 2.2 of [RFC7252].  When the
 response is ready, the server sends it in a new Confirmable message,
 which, in turn, needs to be acknowledged by the DOTS client (see
 Sections 5.2.1 and 5.2.2 of [RFC7252]).  Requests and responses
 exchanged between DOTS agents during 'idle' time, except heartbeat
 messages, are marked as Confirmable messages.
    |  Implementation Note: A DOTS client that receives a response in
    |  a Confirmable message may want to clean up the message state
    |  right after sending the ACK.  If that ACK is lost and the DOTS
    |  server retransmits the Confirmable message, the DOTS client may
    |  no longer have any state that would help it correlate this
    |  response; from the DOTS client's standpoint, the retransmission
    |  message is unexpected.  The DOTS client will send a Reset
    |  message so it does not receive any more retransmissions.  This
    |  behavior is normal and not an indication of an error (see
    |  Section 5.3.2 of [RFC7252] for more details).

4.5.1. Discover Configuration Parameters

 A GET request is used to obtain acceptable (e.g., minimum and maximum
 values) and current configuration parameters on the DOTS server for
 DOTS signal channel session configuration.  This procedure occurs
 between a DOTS client and its immediate peer DOTS server.  As such,
 this GET request MUST NOT be relayed by a DOTS gateway.
 Figure 18 shows how to obtain configuration parameters that the DOTS
 server will find acceptable.
   Header: GET (Code=0.01)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "config"
                Figure 18: GET to Retrieve Configuration
 The DOTS server in the 2.05 (Content) response conveys the current,
 minimum, and maximum attribute values acceptable by the DOTS server
 (Figure 19).
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:signal-config": {
     "mitigating-config": {
       "heartbeat-interval": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "missing-hb-allowed": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "probing-rate": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "max-retransmit": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "ack-timeout": {
         "max-value-decimal": "string",
         "min-value-decimal": "string",
         "current-value-decimal": "string"
       },
       "ack-random-factor": {
         "max-value-decimal": "string",
         "min-value-decimal": "string",
         "current-value-decimal": "string"
       }
     },
     "idle-config": {
       "heartbeat-interval": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "missing-hb-allowed": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "probing-rate": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "max-retransmit": {
         "max-value": number,
         "min-value": number,
         "current-value": number
       },
       "ack-timeout": {
         "max-value-decimal": "string",
         "min-value-decimal": "string",
         "current-value-decimal": "string"
       },
       "ack-random-factor": {
         "max-value-decimal": "string",
         "min-value-decimal": "string",
         "current-value-decimal": "string"
       }
     }
   }
 }
           Figure 19: GET Configuration Response Body Schema
 The parameters in Figure 19 are described below:
 mitigating-config:  Set of configuration parameters to use when a
    mitigation is active.  The following parameters may be included:
    heartbeat-interval:  Time interval in seconds between two
       consecutive heartbeat messages.
       '0' is used to disable the heartbeat mechanism.
       This is an optional attribute.
    missing-hb-allowed:  Maximum number of consecutive heartbeat
       messages for which the DOTS agent did not receive a response
       before concluding that the session is disconnected.
       This is an optional attribute.
    probing-rate:  The average data rate, in bytes/second, that must
       not be exceeded by a DOTS agent in sending to a peer DOTS agent
       that does not respond (referred to as PROBING_RATE parameter in
       CoAP).
       This is an optional attribute.
    max-retransmit:  Maximum number of retransmissions for a message
       (referred to as MAX_RETRANSMIT parameter in CoAP).
       This is an optional attribute.
    ack-timeout:  Timeout value in seconds used to calculate the
       initial retransmission timeout value (referred to as
       ACK_TIMEOUT parameter in CoAP).
       This is an optional attribute.
    ack-random-factor:  Random factor used to influence the timing of
       retransmissions (referred to as ACK_RANDOM_FACTOR parameter in
       CoAP).
       This is an optional attribute.
 idle-config:  Set of configuration parameters to use when no
    mitigation is active.  This attribute has the same structure as
    'mitigating-config'.
 Figure 20 shows an example of acceptable and current configuration
 parameters on a DOTS server for DOTS signal channel session
 configuration.  The same acceptable configuration is used during
 mitigation and idle times.
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:signal-config": {
     "mitigating-config": {
       "heartbeat-interval": {
         "max-value": 240,
         "min-value": 15,
         "current-value": 30
       },
       "missing-hb-allowed": {
         "max-value": 20,
         "min-value": 3,
         "current-value": 15
       },
       "probing-rate": {
         "max-value": 20,
         "min-value": 5,
         "current-value": 15
       },
       "max-retransmit": {
         "max-value": 15,
         "min-value": 2,
         "current-value": 3
       },
       "ack-timeout": {
         "max-value-decimal": "30.00",
         "min-value-decimal": "1.00",
         "current-value-decimal": "2.00"
       },
       "ack-random-factor": {
         "max-value-decimal": "4.00",
         "min-value-decimal": "1.10",
         "current-value-decimal": "1.50"
       }
     },
     "idle-config": {
       "heartbeat-interval": {
         "max-value": 240,
         "min-value": 15,
         "current-value": 30
       },
       "missing-hb-allowed": {
         "max-value": 20,
         "min-value": 3,
         "current-value": 15
       },
       "probing-rate": {
         "max-value": 20,
         "min-value": 5,
         "current-value": 15
       },
       "max-retransmit": {
         "max-value": 15,
         "min-value": 2,
         "current-value": 3
       },
       "ack-timeout": {
         "max-value-decimal": "30.00",
         "min-value-decimal": "1.00",
         "current-value-decimal": "2.00"
       },
       "ack-random-factor": {
         "max-value-decimal": "4.00",
         "min-value-decimal": "1.10",
         "current-value-decimal": "1.50"
       }
     }
   }
 }
          Figure 20: Example of a Configuration Response Body

4.5.2. Convey DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration

 A PUT request (Figures 21 and 22) is used to convey the configuration
 parameters for the signal channel (e.g., heartbeat interval, maximum
 retransmissions).  Message transmission parameters for CoAP are
 defined in Section 4.8 of [RFC7252].  The RECOMMENDED values of
 transmission parameter values are 'ack-timeout' (2 seconds), 'max-
 retransmit' (3), and 'ack-random-factor' (1.5).  In addition to those
 parameters, the RECOMMENDED specific DOTS transmission parameter
 values are 'heartbeat-interval' (30 seconds) and 'missing-hb-allowed'
 (15).
    |  Note: 'heartbeat-interval' should be tweaked to also assist
    |  DOTS messages for NAT traversal (SIG-011 of [RFC8612]).
    |  According to [RFC8085], heartbeat messages must not be sent
    |  more frequently than once every 15 seconds and should use
    |  longer intervals when possible.  Furthermore, [RFC4787]
    |  recommends that NATs use a state timeout of 2 minutes or
    |  longer, but experience shows that sending packets every 15 to
    |  30 seconds is necessary to prevent the majority of middleboxes
    |  from losing state for UDP flows.  From that standpoint, the
    |  RECOMMENDED minimum 'heartbeat-interval' is 15 seconds and the
    |  RECOMMENDED maximum 'heartbeat-interval' is 240 seconds.  The
    |  recommended value of 30 seconds is selected to anticipate the
    |  expiry of NAT state.
    |  
    |  A 'heartbeat-interval' of 30 seconds may be considered to be
    |  too chatty in some deployments.  For such deployments, DOTS
    |  agents may negotiate longer 'heartbeat-interval' values to
    |  prevent any network overload with too frequent heartbeats.
    |  
    |  Different heartbeat intervals can be defined for 'mitigating-
    |  config' and 'idle-config' to reduce being too chatty during
    |  idle times.  If there is an on-path translator between the DOTS
    |  client (standalone or part of a DOTS gateway) and the DOTS
    |  server, the 'mitigating-config' 'heartbeat-interval' has to be
    |  smaller than the translator session timeout.  It is recommended
    |  that the 'idle-config' 'heartbeat-interval' also be smaller
    |  than the translator session timeout to prevent translator
    |  traversal issues or that it be disabled entirely.  Means to
    |  discover the lifetime assigned by a translator are out of
    |  scope.
    |  
    |  Given that the size of the heartbeat request cannot exceed
    |  ('heartbeat-interval' * 'probing-rate') bytes, 'probing-rate'
    |  should be set appropriately to avoid slowing down heartbeat
    |  exchanges.  For example, 'probing-rate' may be set to 2 *
    |  ("size of encrypted DOTS heartbeat request"/'heartbeat-
    |  interval') or (("size of encrypted DOTS heartbeat request" +
    |  "average size of an encrypted mitigation request")/'heartbeat-
    |  interval').  Absent any explicit configuration or inability to
    |  dynamically adjust 'probing-rate' values (Section 4.8.1 of
    |  [RFC7252]), DOTS agents use 5 bytes/second as a default
    |  'probing-rate' value.
 If the DOTS agent wishes to change the default values of message
 transmission parameters, it SHOULD follow the guidance given in
 Section 4.8.1 of [RFC7252].  The DOTS agents MUST use the negotiated
 values for message transmission parameters and default values for
 non-negotiated message transmission parameters.
 The signal channel session configuration is applicable to a single
 DOTS signal channel session between DOTS agents, so the 'cuid' Uri-
 Path MUST NOT be used.
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "config"
   Uri-Path: "sid=123"
   Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
   {
    ...
   }
        Figure 21: PUT to Convey the DOTS Signal Channel Session
                           Configuration Data
 The additional Uri-Path parameter to those defined in Table 1 is as
 follows:
 sid:  Session Identifier is an identifier for the DOTS signal channel
       session configuration data represented as an integer.  This
       identifier MUST be generated by DOTS clients.  'sid' values
       MUST increase monotonically (when a new PUT is generated by a
       DOTS client to convey the configuration parameters for the
       signal channel).
       This is a mandatory attribute.
   {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:signal-config": {
       "mitigating-config": {
         "heartbeat-interval": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "missing-hb-allowed": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "probing-rate": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "max-retransmit": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "ack-timeout": {
           "current-value-decimal": "string"
         },
         "ack-random-factor": {
           "current-value-decimal": "string"
         }
       },
       "idle-config": {
         "heartbeat-interval": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "missing-hb-allowed": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "probing-rate": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "max-retransmit": {
           "current-value": number
         },
         "ack-timeout": {
           "current-value-decimal": "string"
         },
         "ack-random-factor": {
           "current-value-decimal": "string"
         }
       }
     }
   }
        Figure 22: PUT to Convey the DOTS Signal Channel Session
                Configuration Data (Message Body Schema)
 The meaning of the parameters in the CBOR body (Figure 22) is defined
 in Section 4.5.1.
 At least one of the attributes 'heartbeat-interval', 'missing-hb-
 allowed', 'probing-rate', 'max-retransmit', 'ack-timeout', and 'ack-
 random-factor' MUST be present in the PUT request.  Note that
 'heartbeat-interval', 'missing-hb-allowed', 'probing-rate', 'max-
 retransmit', 'ack-timeout', and 'ack-random-factor', if present, do
 not need to be provided for both 'mitigating-config' and 'idle-
 config' in a PUT request.  A request does not need to include both
 'mitigating-config' and 'idle-config' attributes.
 The PUT request with a higher numeric 'sid' value overrides the DOTS
 signal channel session configuration data installed by a PUT request
 with a lower numeric 'sid' value.  That is, the configuration
 parameters that are included in the PUT request with a higher numeric
 'sid' value will be used instead of the DOTS server's defaults.  To
 avoid maintaining a long list of 'sid' requests from a DOTS client,
 the lower numeric 'sid' MUST be automatically deleted and no longer
 available at the DOTS server.
 Figure 23 shows a PUT request example to convey the configuration
 parameters for the DOTS signal channel.  In this example, the
 heartbeat mechanism is disabled when no mitigation is active, while
 the heartbeat interval is set to '30' when a mitigation is active.
   Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "config"
   Uri-Path: "sid=123"
   Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
   {
     "ietf-dots-signal-channel:signal-config": {
       "mitigating-config": {
         "heartbeat-interval": {
           "current-value": 30
         },
         "missing-hb-allowed": {
           "current-value": 15
         },
         "probing-rate": {
           "current-value": 15
         },
         "max-retransmit": {
           "current-value": 3
         },
         "ack-timeout": {
           "current-value-decimal": "2.00"
         },
         "ack-random-factor": {
           "current-value-decimal": "1.50"
         }
       },
       "idle-config": {
         "heartbeat-interval": {
           "current-value": 0
         },
         "max-retransmit": {
           "current-value": 3
         },
         "ack-timeout": {
           "current-value-decimal": "2.00"
         },
         "ack-random-factor": {
           "current-value-decimal": "1.50"
         }
       }
     }
   }
         Figure 23: PUT to Convey the Configuration Parameters
 The DOTS server indicates the result of processing the PUT request
 using CoAP Response Codes:
  • If the request is missing a mandatory attribute, does not include

a 'sid' Uri-Path, or contains one or more invalid or unknown

    parameters, 4.00 (Bad Request) MUST be returned in the response.
  • If the DOTS server does not find the 'sid' parameter value

conveyed in the PUT request in its configuration data and if the

    DOTS server has accepted the configuration parameters, then a
    Response Code 2.01 (Created) MUST be returned in the response.
  • If the DOTS server finds the 'sid' parameter value conveyed in the

PUT request in its configuration data and if the DOTS server has

    accepted the updated configuration parameters, 2.04 (Changed) MUST
    be returned in the response.
  • If any of the 'heartbeat-interval', 'missing-hb-allowed',

'probing-rate', 'max-retransmit', 'target-protocol', 'ack-

    timeout', and 'ack-random-factor' attribute values are not
    acceptable to the DOTS server, 4.22 (Unprocessable Entity) MUST be
    returned in the response.  Upon receipt of this error code, the
    DOTS client SHOULD retrieve the maximum and minimum attribute
    values acceptable to the DOTS server (Section 4.5.1).
    The DOTS client may retry and send the PUT request with updated
    attribute values acceptable to the DOTS server.
 A DOTS client may issue a GET message for 'config' with a 'sid' Uri-
 Path parameter to retrieve the negotiated configuration.  The
 response does not need to include 'sid' in its message body.

4.5.3. Configuration Freshness and Notifications

 Max-Age Option (Section 5.10.5 of [RFC7252]) SHOULD be returned by a
 DOTS server to associate a validity time with a configuration it
 sends.  This feature forces the client to retrieve the updated
 configuration data if a change occurs at the DOTS server side.  For
 example, the new configuration may instruct a DOTS client to cease
 heartbeats or reduce heartbeat frequency.
 It is NOT RECOMMENDED to return a Max-Age Option set to 0.
 Returning a Max-Age Option set to 2^(32)-1 is equivalent to
 associating an infinite lifetime with the configuration.
 If a non-zero value of Max-Age Option is received by a DOTS client,
 it MUST issue a GET request with a 'sid' Uri-Path parameter to
 retrieve the current and acceptable configuration before the expiry
 of the value enclosed in the Max-Age Option.  This request is
 considered by the client and the server to be a means to refresh the
 configuration parameters for the signal channel.  When a DDoS attack
 is active, refresh requests MUST NOT be sent by DOTS clients, and the
 DOTS server MUST NOT terminate the (D)TLS session after the expiry of
 the value returned in Max-Age Option.
 If Max-Age Option is not returned in a response, the DOTS client
 initiates GET requests to refresh the configuration parameters each
 60 seconds (Section 5.10.5 of [RFC7252]).  To prevent such overload,
 it is RECOMMENDED that DOTS servers return a Max-Age Option in GET
 responses.  Considerations related to which value to use and how such
 a value is set are implementation and deployment specific.
 If an Observe Option set to 0 is included in the configuration
 request, the DOTS server sends notifications of any configuration
 change (Section 4.2 of [RFC7641]).
 If a DOTS server detects that a misbehaving DOTS client does not
 contact the DOTS server after the expiry of Max-Age to retrieve the
 signal channel configuration data, it MAY terminate the (D)TLS
 session.  A (D)TLS session is terminated by the receipt of an
 authenticated message that closes the connection (e.g., a fatal alert
 (Section 6 of [RFC8446])).

4.5.4. Delete DOTS Signal Channel Session Configuration

 A DELETE request is used to delete the installed DOTS signal channel
 session configuration data (Figure 24).
   Header: DELETE (Code=0.04)
   Uri-Path: ".well-known"
   Uri-Path: "dots"
   Uri-Path: "config"
   Uri-Path: "sid=123"
                    Figure 24: Delete Configuration
 The DOTS server resets the DOTS signal channel session configuration
 back to the default values and acknowledges a DOTS client's request
 to remove the DOTS signal channel session configuration using a 2.02
 (Deleted) Response Code.
 Upon bootstrapping or reboot, a DOTS client MAY send a DELETE request
 to set the configuration parameters to default values.  Such a
 request does not include any 'sid'.

4.6. Redirected Signaling

 Redirected DOTS signaling is discussed in detail in Section 3.2.2 of
 [RFC8811].
 To redirect a DOTS client to an alternative DOTS server, the DOTS
 server can return the error Response Code 5.03 (Service Unavailable)
 in response to a request from the DOTS client or convey the error
 Response Code 5.03 in a unidirectional notification response to the
 client.
 The DOTS server in the error response conveys the alternate DOTS
 server's FQDN, and the alternate DOTS server's IP address(es) values
 in the CBOR body (Figure 25).
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:redirected-signal": {
     "alt-server": "string",
     "alt-server-record": [
        "string"
     ]
   }
 }
        Figure 25: Redirected Server Error Response Body Schema
 The parameters are described below:
 alt-server:  FQDN of an alternate DOTS server.
    This is a mandatory attribute.
 alt-server-record:  A list of IP addresses of an alternate DOTS
    server.
    This is an optional attribute.
 The DOTS server returns the Time to Live (TTL) of the alternate DOTS
 server in a Max-Age Option.  That is, the time interval that the
 alternate DOTS server may be cached for use by a DOTS client.  A Max-
 Age Option set to 2^(32)-1 is equivalent to receiving an infinite
 TTL.  This value means that the alternate DOTS server is to be used
 until the alternate DOTS server redirects the traffic with another
 5.03 response that conveys an alternate server's FQDN.
 A Max-Age Option set to '0' may be returned for redirecting
 mitigation requests.  Such a value means that the redirection applies
 only for the mitigation request in progress.  Returning short TTL in
 a Max-Age Option may adversely impact DOTS clients on slow links.
 Returning short values should be avoided under such conditions.
 If the alternate DOTS server TTL has expired, the DOTS client MUST
 use the DOTS server(s) that was provisioned using means discussed in
 Section 4.1.  This fallback mechanism is triggered immediately upon
 expiry of the TTL, except when a DDoS attack is active.
 Requests issued by misbehaving DOTS clients that do not honor the TTL
 conveyed in the Max-Age Option or react to explicit redirect messages
 MAY be rejected by DOTS servers.
 Figure 26 shows a 5.03 response example to convey the DOTS alternate
 server 'alt-server.example' together with its IP addresses
 2001:db8:6401::1 and 2001:db8:6401::2.
 {
   "ietf-dots-signal-channel:redirected-signal": {
     "alt-server": "alt-server.example",
     "alt-server-record": [
        "2001:db8:6401::1",
        "2001:db8:6401::2"
     ]
   }
 }
      Figure 26: Example of Redirected Server Error Response Body
 When the DOTS client receives a 5.03 response with an alternate
 server included, it considers the current request to have failed, but
 it SHOULD try resending the request to the alternate DOTS server.
 During a DDoS attack, the DNS server may be the target of another
 DDoS attack; the alternate DOTS server's IP addresses conveyed in the
 5.03 response help the DOTS client skip the DNS lookup of the
 alternate DOTS server, at the cost of trusting the first DOTS server
 to provide accurate information.  The DOTS client can then try to
 establish a UDP or a TCP session with the alternate DOTS server
 (Section 4.3).  Note that state synchronization (e.g., signal session
 configuration, aliases) is assumed to be in place between the
 original and alternate DOTS servers; such synchronization means are
 out of scope.  If session configuration refresh is needed while
 redirection is in place, the DOTS client follows the procedure
 defined in Section 4.5.3.  In 'idle' time and under some conditions
 (e.g., infinite configuration lifetime, infinite redirection TTL, and
 failure to refresh the configuration), the DOTS client follows the
 procedure defined in Section 4.5.2 to negotiate the DOTS signal
 channel session configuration with the alternate server.  The DOTS
 client MAY implement a method to construct IPv4-embedded IPv6
 addresses [RFC6052]; this is required to handle the scenario where an
 IPv6-only DOTS client communicates with an IPv4-only alternate DOTS
 server.
 If the DOTS client has been redirected to a DOTS server with which it
 has already communicated within the last five (5) minutes, it MUST
 ignore the redirection and try to contact other DOTS servers listed
 in the local configuration or discovered using dynamic means, such as
 DHCP or SRV procedures [RFC8973].  It is RECOMMENDED that DOTS
 clients support the means to alert administrators about redirect
 loops.

4.7. Heartbeat Mechanism

 To provide an indication of signal health and to distinguish an
 'idle' signal channel from a 'disconnected' or 'defunct' session, the
 DOTS agent sends a heartbeat over the signal channel to maintain its
 half of the channel (also, aligned with the "consents" recommendation
 in Section 6 of [RFC8085]).  The DOTS agent similarly expects a
 heartbeat from its peer DOTS agent, and it may consider a session
 terminated in the prolonged absence of a peer agent heartbeat.
 Concretely, while the communication between the DOTS agents is
 otherwise quiescent, the DOTS client will probe the DOTS server to
 ensure it has maintained cryptographic state and vice versa.  Such
 probes can also keep the bindings of firewalls and/or stateful
 translators alive.  This probing reduces the frequency of
 establishing a new handshake when a DOTS signal needs to be conveyed
 to the DOTS server.
    |  Implementation Note: Given that CoAP roles can be multiplexed
    |  over the same session as discussed in [RFC7252] and are already
    |  supported by CoAP implementations, both the DOTS client and
    |  server can send DOTS heartbeat requests.
 The DOTS heartbeat mechanism uses Non-confirmable PUT requests
 (Figure 27) with an expected 2.04 (Changed) Response Code
 (Figure 28).  This procedure occurs between a DOTS agent and its
 immediate peer DOTS agent.  As such, this PUT request MUST NOT be
 relayed by a DOTS gateway.  The PUT request used for DOTS heartbeat
 MUST NOT have a 'cuid', 'cdid', or 'mid' Uri-Path.
      Header: PUT (Code=0.03)
      Uri-Path: ".well-known"
      Uri-Path: "dots"
      Uri-Path: "hb"
      Content-Format: "application/dots+cbor"
      {
        "ietf-dots-signal-channel:heartbeat": {
           "peer-hb-status": true
         }
      }
         Figure 27: PUT to Check Peer DOTS Agent Is Responding
 The mandatory 'peer-hb-status' attribute is set to 'true' (or
 'false') to indicate that a DOTS agent is (or is not) receiving
 heartbeat messages from its peer in the last (2 * 'heartbeat-
 interval') period.  Such information can be used by a peer DOTS agent
 to detect or confirm connectivity issues and react accordingly.  For
 example, if a DOTS client receives a 2.04 response for its heartbeat
 messages but no server-initiated heartbeat messages, the DOTS client
 sets 'peer-hb-status' to 'false' in its next heartbeat message.  Upon
 receipt of this message, the DOTS server then will need to try
 another strategy for sending the heartbeats (e.g., adjust the
 heartbeat interval or send a server-initiated heartbeat immediately
 after receiving a client-initiated heartbeat message).
      Header: (Code=2.04)
  Figure 28: Response to a DOTS Heartbeat Request (with an Empty Body)
 DOTS servers MAY trigger their heartbeat requests immediately after
 receiving heartbeat probes from peer DOTS clients.  It is the
 responsibility of DOTS clients to ensure that on-path translators/
 firewalls are maintaining a binding so that the same external IP
 address and/or port number is retained for the DOTS signal channel
 session.
 Under normal traffic conditions (i.e., no attack is ongoing), if a
 DOTS agent does not receive any response from the peer DOTS agent for
 'missing-hb-allowed' number of consecutive heartbeat messages, it
 concludes that the DOTS signal channel session is disconnected.  The
 DOTS client MUST then try to reestablish the DOTS signal channel
 session, preferably by resuming the (D)TLS session.
    |  Note: If a new DOTS signal channel session cannot be
    |  established, the DOTS client SHOULD NOT retry to establish the
    |  DOTS signal channel session more frequently than every 300
    |  seconds (5 minutes) and MUST NOT retry more frequently than
    |  every 60 seconds (1 minute).  It is recommended that DOTS
    |  clients support the means to alert administrators about the
    |  failure to establish a (D)TLS session.
 In case of a massive DDoS attack that saturates the incoming link(s)
 to the DOTS client, all traffic from the DOTS server to the DOTS
 client will likely be dropped, although the DOTS server receives
 heartbeat requests in addition to DOTS messages sent by the DOTS
 client.  In this scenario, DOTS clients MUST behave differently to
 handle message transmission and DOTS signal channel session
 liveliness during link saturation:
      The DOTS client MUST NOT consider the DOTS signal channel
      session terminated even after a maximum 'missing-hb-allowed'
      threshold is reached.  The DOTS client SHOULD keep on using the
      current DOTS signal channel session to send heartbeat requests
      over it so that the DOTS server knows the DOTS client has not
      disconnected the DOTS signal channel session.
      After the maximum 'missing-hb-allowed' threshold is reached, the
      DOTS client SHOULD try to establish a new DOTS signal channel
      session.  The DOTS client SHOULD send mitigation requests over
      the current DOTS signal channel session and, in parallel, send
      the mitigation requests over the new DOTS signal channel
      session.  This may be handled, for example, by resumption of the
      (D)TLS session or using 0-RTT mode in DTLS 1.3 to piggyback the
      mitigation request in the ClientHello message.
      As soon as the link is no longer saturated, if traffic from the
      DOTS server reaches the DOTS client over the current DOTS signal
      channel session, the DOTS client can stop the new DOTS signal
      channel session attempt or if a new DOTS signal channel session
      is successful then disconnect the current DOTS signal channel
      session.
 If the DOTS server receives traffic from the peer DOTS client (e.g.,
 peer DOTS client-initiated heartbeats) but the maximum 'missing-hb-
 allowed' threshold is reached, the DOTS server MUST NOT consider the
 DOTS signal channel session disconnected.  The DOTS server MUST keep
 on using the current DOTS signal channel session so that the DOTS
 client can send mitigation requests over the current DOTS signal
 channel session.  In this case, the DOTS server can identify that the
 DOTS client is under attack and that the inbound link to the DOTS
 client (domain) is saturated.  Furthermore, if the DOTS server does
 not receive a mitigation request from the DOTS client, it implies
 that the DOTS client has not detected the attack or, if an attack
 mitigation is in progress, it implies that the applied DDoS
 mitigation actions are not yet effectively handling the DDoS attack
 volume.
 If the DOTS server does not receive any traffic from the peer DOTS
 client during the time span required to exhaust the maximum 'missing-
 hb-allowed' threshold, the DOTS server concludes the session is
 disconnected.  The DOTS server can then trigger preconfigured
 mitigation requests for this DOTS client (if any).
 In DOTS over TCP, the sender of a DOTS heartbeat message has to allow
 up to 'heartbeat-interval' seconds when waiting for a heartbeat
 reply.  When a failure is detected by a DOTS client, it proceeds with
 the session recovery, following the same approach as the one used for
 unreliable transports.

5. DOTS Signal Channel YANG Modules

 This document defines a YANG module [RFC7950] for DOTS mitigation
 scope, DOTS signal channel session configuration data, DOTS
 redirection signaling, and DOTS heartbeats.
 This YANG module is not intended to be used via NETCONF/RESTCONF for
 DOTS server management purposes; such a module is out of the scope of
 this document.  It serves only to provide abstract data structures.
 This document uses the "structure" extension specified in [RFC8791].
 A companion YANG module is defined to include a collection of types
 defined by IANA: "iana-dots-signal-channel" (Section 5.2).

5.1. Tree Structure

 This document defines the YANG module "ietf-dots-signal-channel",
 which has the following tree structure.  A DOTS signal message can be
 a mitigation, a configuration, a redirect, or a heartbeat message.
 This tree structure obsoletes the one described in Section 5.1 of
 [RFC8782].
 module: ietf-dots-signal-channel
   structure dots-signal:
     +-- (message-type)?
        +--:(mitigation-scope)
        |  +-- scope* []
        |     +-- target-prefix*                inet:ip-prefix
        |     +-- target-port-range* [lower-port]
        |     |  +-- lower-port    inet:port-number
        |     |  +-- upper-port?   inet:port-number
        |     +-- target-protocol*              uint8
        |     +-- target-fqdn*                  inet:domain-name
        |     +-- target-uri*                   inet:uri
        |     +-- alias-name*                   string
        |     +-- lifetime?                     union
        |     +-- trigger-mitigation?           boolean
        |     +-- (direction)?
        |        +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |        |  +-- mid?                    uint32
        |        |  +-- mitigation-start?       uint64
        |        |  +-- status?
        |        |  |       iana-dots-signal:status
        |        |  +-- conflict-information
        |        |  |  +-- conflict-status?
        |        |  |  |       iana-dots-signal:conflict-status
        |        |  |  +-- conflict-cause?
        |        |  |  |       iana-dots-signal:conflict-cause
        |        |  |  +-- retry-timer?       uint32
        |        |  |  +-- conflict-scope
        |        |  |     +-- target-prefix*       inet:ip-prefix
        |        |  |     +-- target-port-range* [lower-port]
        |        |  |     |  +-- lower-port    inet:port-number
        |        |  |     |  +-- upper-port?   inet:port-number
        |        |  |     +-- target-protocol*     uint8
        |        |  |     +-- target-fqdn*         inet:domain-name
        |        |  |     +-- target-uri*          inet:uri
        |        |  |     +-- alias-name*          string
        |        |  |     +-- acl-list* [acl-name]
        |        |  |     |  +-- acl-name    leafref
        |        |  |     |  +-- acl-type?   leafref
        |        |  |     +-- mid?                 uint32
        |        |  +-- bytes-dropped?
        |        |  |       yang:zero-based-counter64
        |        |  +-- bps-dropped?            yang:gauge64
        |        |  +-- pkts-dropped?
        |        |  |       yang:zero-based-counter64
        |        |  +-- pps-dropped?            yang:gauge64
        |        +--:(client-to-server-only)
        |           +-- attack-status?
        |                   iana-dots-signal:attack-status
        +--:(signal-config)
        |  +-- mitigating-config
        |  |  +-- heartbeat-interval
        |  |  |  +-- (direction)?
        |  |  |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |  |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |  |  +-- missing-hb-allowed
        |  |  |  +-- (direction)?
        |  |  |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |  |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |  |  +-- probing-rate
        |  |  |  +-- (direction)?
        |  |  |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |  |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |  |  +-- max-retransmit
        |  |  |  +-- (direction)?
        |  |  |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |  |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |  |  |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |  |  +-- ack-timeout
        |  |  |  +-- (direction)?
        |  |  |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |  |  |     +-- max-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |  |  |  |     +-- min-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |  |  |  +-- current-value-decimal?     decimal64
        |  |  +-- ack-random-factor
        |  |     +-- (direction)?
        |  |     |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |  |     |     +-- max-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |  |     |     +-- min-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |  |     +-- current-value-decimal?     decimal64
        |  +-- idle-config
        |     +-- heartbeat-interval
        |     |  +-- (direction)?
        |     |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |     |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |     |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |     |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |     +-- missing-hb-allowed
        |     |  +-- (direction)?
        |     |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |     |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |     |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |     |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |     +-- probing-rate
        |     |  +-- (direction)?
        |     |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |     |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |     |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |     |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |     +-- max-retransmit
        |     |  +-- (direction)?
        |     |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |     |  |     +-- max-value?   uint16
        |     |  |     +-- min-value?   uint16
        |     |  +-- current-value?     uint16
        |     +-- ack-timeout
        |     |  +-- (direction)?
        |     |  |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |     |  |     +-- max-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |     |  |     +-- min-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |     |  +-- current-value-decimal?     decimal64
        |     +-- ack-random-factor
        |        +-- (direction)?
        |        |  +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |        |     +-- max-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |        |     +-- min-value-decimal?   decimal64
        |        +-- current-value-decimal?     decimal64
        +--:(redirected-signal)
        |  +-- (direction)?
        |     +--:(server-to-client-only)
        |        +-- alt-server           inet:domain-name
        |        +-- alt-server-record*   inet:ip-address
        +--:(heartbeat)
           +-- peer-hb-status             boolean

5.2. IANA DOTS Signal Channel YANG Module

 This version obsoletes the version described in Section 5.2 of
 [RFC8782].
 <CODE BEGINS> file "iana-dots-signal-channel@2021-09-02.yang"
 module iana-dots-signal-channel {
   yang-version 1.1;
   namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:iana-dots-signal-channel";
   prefix iana-dots-signal;
   organization
     "IANA";
   contact
     "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
      Postal: ICANN
           12025 Waterfront Drive, Suite 300
           Los Angeles, CA  90094-2536
           United States of America
      Tel:    +1 310 301 5800
      <mailto:iana@iana.org>";
   description
     "This module contains a collection of YANG data types defined
      by IANA and used for DOTS signal channel protocol.
      Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
      authors of the code.  All rights reserved.
      Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
      without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject
      to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License
      set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
      Relating to IETF Documents
      (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
      This version of this YANG module is part of RFC 9132; see
      the RFC itself for full legal notices.";
   revision 2021-09-02 {
     description
       "Updated the prefix used for the module.";
     reference
       "RFC 9132: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
                  Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification";
   }
   revision 2020-05-28 {
     description
       "Initial revision.";
     reference
       "RFC 8782: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
                  Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification";
   }
   typedef status {
     type enumeration {
       enum attack-mitigation-in-progress {
         value 1;
         description
           "Attack mitigation setup is in progress (e.g., changing
            the network path to reroute the inbound traffic
            to DOTS mitigator).";
       }
       enum attack-successfully-mitigated {
         value 2;
         description
           "Attack is being successfully mitigated (e.g., traffic
            is redirected to a DDoS mitigator and attack
            traffic is dropped).";
       }
       enum attack-stopped {
         value 3;
         description
           "Attack has stopped and the DOTS client can
            withdraw the mitigation request.";
       }
       enum attack-exceeded-capability {
         value 4;
         description
           "Attack has exceeded the mitigation provider
            capability.";
       }
       enum dots-client-withdrawn-mitigation {
         value 5;
         description
           "DOTS client has withdrawn the mitigation
            request and the mitigation is active but
            terminating.";
       }
       enum attack-mitigation-terminated {
         value 6;
         description
           "Attack mitigation is now terminated.";
       }
       enum attack-mitigation-withdrawn {
         value 7;
         description
           "Attack mitigation is withdrawn.";
       }
       enum attack-mitigation-signal-loss {
         value 8;
         description
           "Attack mitigation will be triggered
            for the mitigation request only when
            the DOTS signal channel session is lost.";
       }
     }
     description
       "Enumeration for status reported by the DOTS server.";
   }
   typedef conflict-status {
     type enumeration {
       enum request-inactive-other-active {
         value 1;
         description
           "DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation
            requests from different DOTS clients.
            This mitigation request is currently inactive
            until the conflicts are resolved.  Another
            mitigation request is active.";
       }
       enum request-active {
         value 2;
         description
           "DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation
            requests from different DOTS clients.
            This mitigation request is currently active.";
       }
       enum all-requests-inactive {
         value 3;
         description
           "DOTS server has detected conflicting mitigation
            requests from different DOTS clients.  All
            conflicting mitigation requests are inactive.";
       }
     }
     description
       "Enumeration for conflict status.";
   }
   typedef conflict-cause {
     type enumeration {
       enum overlapping-targets {
         value 1;
         description
           "Overlapping targets. conflict-scope provides
            more details about the exact conflict.";
       }
       enum conflict-with-acceptlist {
         value 2;
         description
           "Conflicts with an existing accept-list.
            This code is returned when the DDoS mitigation
            detects that some of the source addresses/prefixes
            listed in the accept-list ACLs are actually
            attacking the target.";
       }
       enum cuid-collision {
         value 3;
         description
           "Conflicts with the cuid used by another
            DOTS client.";
       }
     }
     description
       "Enumeration for conflict causes.";
   }
   typedef attack-status {
     type enumeration {
       enum under-attack {
         value 1;
         description
           "The DOTS client determines that it is still under
            attack.";
       }
       enum attack-successfully-mitigated {
         value 2;
         description
           "The DOTS client determines that the attack is
            successfully mitigated.";
       }
     }
     description
       "Enumeration for attack status codes.";
   }
 }
 <CODE ENDS>

5.3. IETF DOTS Signal Channel YANG Module

 This module uses the common YANG types defined in [RFC6991] and types
 defined in [RFC8783].
 This version obsoletes the version described in Section 5.3 of
 [RFC8782].
 <CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-dots-signal-channel@2021-09-02.yang"
 module ietf-dots-signal-channel {
   yang-version 1.1;
   namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-dots-signal-channel";
   prefix dots-signal;
   import ietf-inet-types {
     prefix inet;
     reference
       "Section 4 of RFC 6991";
   }
   import ietf-yang-types {
     prefix yang;
     reference
       "Section 3 of RFC 6991";
   }
   import ietf-dots-data-channel {
     prefix data-channel;
     reference
       "RFC 8783: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling
                  (DOTS) Data Channel Specification";
   }
   import iana-dots-signal-channel {
     prefix iana-dots-signal;
     reference
       "RFC 9132: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling
                  (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification";
   }
   import ietf-yang-structure-ext {
     prefix sx;
     reference
       "RFC 8791: YANG Data Structure Extensions";
   }
   organization
     "IETF DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Working Group";
   contact
     "WG Web:   <https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/dots/>
      WG List:  <mailto:dots@ietf.org>
      Editor:  Mohamed Boucadair
               <mailto:mohamed.boucadair@orange.com>
      Editor:  Jon Shallow
               <mailto:supjps-ietf@jpshallow.com>
      Author:  Konda, Tirumaleswar Reddy.K
               <mailto:kondtir@gmail.com>
      Author:  Prashanth Patil
               <mailto:praspati@cisco.com>
      Author:  Andrew Mortensen
               <mailto:amortensen@arbor.net>
      Author:  Nik Teague
               <mailto:nteague@ironmountain.co.uk>";
   description
     "This module contains YANG definition for the signaling
      messages exchanged between a DOTS client and a DOTS server.
      Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
      authors of the code.  All rights reserved.
      Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
      without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject
      to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License
      set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
      Relating to IETF Documents
      (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
      This version of this YANG module is part of RFC 9132; see
      the RFC itself for full legal notices.";
   revision 2021-09-02 {
     description
       "Updated revision to comply with RFC 8791.
        This version is not backward compatible with the version
        published in RFC 8782.";
     reference
       "RFC 9132: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
                  Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification";
   }
   revision 2020-05-28 {
     description
       "Initial revision.";
     reference
       "RFC 8782: Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
                  Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification";
   }
   /*
    * Groupings
    */
   grouping mitigation-scope {
     description
       "Specifies the scope of the mitigation request.";
     list scope {
       description
         "The scope of the request.";
       uses data-channel:target;
       leaf-list alias-name {
         type string;
         description
           "An alias name that points to a resource.";
       }
       leaf lifetime {
         type union {
           type uint32;
           type int32 {
             range "-1";
           }
         }
         units "seconds";
         default "3600";
         description
           "Indicates the lifetime of the mitigation request.
            A lifetime of '0' in a mitigation request is an
            invalid value.
            A lifetime of negative one (-1) indicates indefinite
            lifetime for the mitigation request.
            Lifetime is mandatory in a mitigation request.
            The DOTS server must always indicate the actual lifetime
            in the response to an accepted mitigation request and the
            remaining lifetime in status messages sent to the
            DOTS client.";
       }
       leaf trigger-mitigation {
         type boolean;
         default "true";
         description
           "If set to 'false', DDoS mitigation will not be
            triggered unless the DOTS signal channel
            session is lost.";
       }
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf mid {
             type uint32;
             description
               "Mitigation request identifier.
                This identifier must be unique for each mitigation
                request bound to the DOTS client.";
           }
           leaf mitigation-start {
             type uint64;
             description
               "Mitigation start time is represented in seconds
                relative to 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z in UTC time.
                This is a mandatory attribute when an attack
                mitigation is active.  It must not be returned for
                a mitigation with 'status' code set to 8.";
           }
           leaf status {
             type iana-dots-signal:status;
             description
               "Indicates the status of a mitigation request.
                It must be included in responses only.
                This is a mandatory attribute if a mitigation
                request is accepted and processed by the server.";
           }
           container conflict-information {
             description
               "Indicates that a conflict is detected.";
             leaf conflict-status {
               type iana-dots-signal:conflict-status;
               description
                 "Indicates the conflict status.";
             }
             leaf conflict-cause {
               type iana-dots-signal:conflict-cause;
               description
                 "Indicates the cause of the conflict.";
             }
             leaf retry-timer {
               type uint32;
               units "seconds";
               description
                 "The DOTS client must not resend the
                  same request that has a conflict before the expiry
                  of this timer.";
             }
             container conflict-scope {
               description
                 "Provides more information about the conflict
                  scope.";
               uses data-channel:target {
                 when "/dots-signal/scope/conflict-information/"
                    + "conflict-cause = 'overlapping-targets'";
               }
               leaf-list alias-name {
                 when "../../conflict-cause = 'overlapping-targets'";
                 type string;
                 description
                   "Conflicting alias-name.";
               }
               list acl-list {
                 when "../../conflict-cause ="
                    + " 'conflict-with-acceptlist'";
                 key "acl-name";
                 description
                   "List of conflicting ACLs, as defined in the DOTS
                    data channel.  These ACLs are uniquely defined by
                    cuid and acl-name.";
                 leaf acl-name {
                   type leafref {
                     path "/data-channel:dots-data"
                        + "/data-channel:dots-client"
                        + "/data-channel:acls"
                        + "/data-channel:acl/data-channel:name";
                   }
                   description
                     "Reference to the conflicting ACL name bound to
                      a DOTS client.";
                 }
                 leaf acl-type {
                   type leafref {
                     path "/data-channel:dots-data"
                        + "/data-channel:dots-client"
                        + "/data-channel:acls"
                        + "/data-channel:acl/data-channel:type";
                   }
                   description
                     "Reference to the conflicting ACL type bound to
                      a DOTS client.";
                 }
               }
               leaf mid {
                 when "../../conflict-cause = 'overlapping-targets'";
                 type uint32;
                 description
                   "Reference to the conflicting 'mid' bound to
                    the same DOTS client.";
               }
             }
           }
           leaf bytes-dropped {
             type yang:zero-based-counter64;
             units "bytes";
             description
               "The total dropped byte count for the mitigation
                request since the attack mitigation was triggered.
                The count wraps around when it reaches the maximum
                value of counter64 for dropped bytes.";
           }
           leaf bps-dropped {
             type yang:gauge64;
             units "bytes per second";
             description
               "The average number of dropped bytes per second for
                the mitigation request since the attack
                mitigation was triggered.  This should be over
                five-minute intervals (that is, measuring bytes
                into five-minute buckets and then averaging these
                buckets over the time since the mitigation was
                triggered).";
           }
           leaf pkts-dropped {
             type yang:zero-based-counter64;
             description
               "The total number of dropped packet count for the
                mitigation request since the attack mitigation was
                triggered.  The count wraps around when it reaches
                the maximum value of counter64 for dropped packets.";
           }
           leaf pps-dropped {
             type yang:gauge64;
             units "packets per second";
             description
               "The average number of dropped packets per second
                for the mitigation request since the attack
                mitigation was triggered.  This should be over
                five-minute intervals (that is, measuring packets
                into five-minute buckets and then averaging these
                buckets over the time since the mitigation was
                triggered).";
           }
         }
         case client-to-server-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the client to the server.";
           leaf attack-status {
             type iana-dots-signal:attack-status;
             description
               "Indicates the status of an attack as seen by the
                DOTS client.
                This is a mandatory attribute when a client
                performs an efficacy update.";
           }
         }
       }
     }
   }
   grouping config-parameters {
     description
       "Subset of DOTS signal channel session configuration.";
     container heartbeat-interval {
       description
         "DOTS agents regularly send heartbeats to each other
          after mutual authentication is successfully
          completed in order to keep the DOTS signal channel
          open.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value {
             type uint16;
             units "seconds";
             description
               "Maximum acceptable heartbeat-interval value.";
           }
           leaf min-value {
             type uint16;
             units "seconds";
             description
               "Minimum acceptable heartbeat-interval value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value {
         type uint16;
         units "seconds";
         default "30";
         description
           "Current heartbeat-interval value.
            '0' means that heartbeat mechanism is deactivated.";
       }
     }
     container missing-hb-allowed {
       description
         "Maximum number of missing heartbeats allowed.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value {
             type uint16;
             description
               "Maximum acceptable missing-hb-allowed value.";
           }
           leaf min-value {
             type uint16;
             description
               "Minimum acceptable missing-hb-allowed value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value {
         type uint16;
         default "15";
         description
           "Current missing-hb-allowed value.";
       }
     }
     container probing-rate {
       description
         "The limit for sending Non-confirmable messages with
          no response.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value {
             type uint16;
             units "byte/second";
             description
               "Maximum acceptable probing-rate value.";
           }
           leaf min-value {
             type uint16;
             units "byte/second";
             description
               "Minimum acceptable probing-rate value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value {
         type uint16;
         units "byte/second";
         default "5";
         description
           "Current probing-rate value.";
       }
     }
     container max-retransmit {
       description
         "Maximum number of retransmissions of a Confirmable
          message.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value {
             type uint16;
             description
               "Maximum acceptable max-retransmit value.";
           }
           leaf min-value {
             type uint16;
             description
               "Minimum acceptable max-retransmit value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value {
         type uint16;
         default "3";
         description
           "Current max-retransmit value.";
       }
     }
     container ack-timeout {
       description
         "Initial retransmission timeout value.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value-decimal {
             type decimal64 {
               fraction-digits 2;
             }
             units "seconds";
             description
               "Maximum ack-timeout value.";
           }
           leaf min-value-decimal {
             type decimal64 {
               fraction-digits 2;
             }
             units "seconds";
             description
               "Minimum ack-timeout value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value-decimal {
         type decimal64 {
           fraction-digits 2;
         }
         units "seconds";
         default "2";
         description
           "Current ack-timeout value.";
       }
     }
     container ack-random-factor {
       description
         "Random factor used to influence the timing of
          retransmissions.";
       choice direction {
         description
           "Indicates the communication direction in which the
            data nodes can be included.";
         case server-to-client-only {
           description
             "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
              sent from the server to the client.";
           leaf max-value-decimal {
             type decimal64 {
               fraction-digits 2;
             }
             description
               "Maximum acceptable ack-random-factor value.";
           }
           leaf min-value-decimal {
             type decimal64 {
               fraction-digits 2;
             }
             description
               "Minimum acceptable ack-random-factor value.";
           }
         }
       }
       leaf current-value-decimal {
         type decimal64 {
           fraction-digits 2;
         }
         default "1.5";
         description
           "Current ack-random-factor value.";
       }
     }
   }
   grouping signal-config {
     description
       "DOTS signal channel session configuration.";
     container mitigating-config {
       description
         "Configuration parameters to use when a mitigation
          is active.";
       uses config-parameters;
     }
     container idle-config {
       description
         "Configuration parameters to use when no mitigation
          is active.";
       uses config-parameters;
     }
   }
   grouping redirected-signal {
     description
       "Grouping for the redirected signaling.";
     choice direction {
       description
         "Indicates the communication direction in which the
          data nodes can be included.";
       case server-to-client-only {
         description
           "These data nodes appear only in a mitigation message
            sent from the server to the client.";
         leaf alt-server {
           type inet:domain-name;
           mandatory true;
           description
             "FQDN of an alternate server.";
         }
         leaf-list alt-server-record {
           type inet:ip-address;
           description
             "List of records for the alternate server.";
         }
       }
     }
   }
   /*
    * DOTS Signal Channel Structure
    */
   sx:structure dots-signal {
     description
       "Main structure for DOTS signal message.
        A DOTS signal message can be a mitigation, a configuration,
        a redirected, or a heartbeat signal message.";
     choice message-type {
       description
         "Can be a mitigation, a configuration, a redirect, or
          a heartbeat message.";
       case mitigation-scope {
         description
           "Mitigation scope of a mitigation message.";
         uses mitigation-scope;
       }
       case signal-config {
         description
           "Configuration message.";
         uses signal-config;
       }
       case redirected-signal {
         description
           "Redirected signaling.";
         uses redirected-signal;
       }
       case heartbeat {
         description
           "DOTS heartbeats.";
         leaf peer-hb-status {
           type boolean;
           mandatory true;
           description
             "Indicates whether a DOTS agent receives heartbeats
              from its peer.  The value is set to 'true' if the
              DOTS agent is receiving heartbeat messages
              from its peer.";
         }
       }
     }
   }
 }
 <CODE ENDS>

6. YANG/JSON Mapping Parameters to CBOR

 All parameters in the payload of the DOTS signal channel MUST be
 mapped to CBOR types, as shown in Table 5, and are assigned an
 integer key to save space.
    Note: Implementers must check that the mapping output provided by
    their YANG-to-CBOR encoding schemes is aligned with the content of
    Table 5.  For example, some CBOR and JSON types for enumerations
    and the 64-bit quantities can differ depending on the encoder
    used.
 The CBOR key values are divided into two types: comprehension-
 required and comprehension-optional.  DOTS agents can safely ignore
 comprehension-optional values they don't understand, but they cannot
 successfully process a request if it contains comprehension-required
 values that are not understood.  The 4.00 response SHOULD include a
 diagnostic payload describing the unknown comprehension-required CBOR
 key values.  The initial set of CBOR key values defined in this
 specification are of type comprehension-required.
 +=====================+==============+======+=============+========+
 | Parameter Name      | YANG Type    | CBOR | CBOR Major  | JSON   |
 |                     |              | Key  | Type &      | Type   |
 |                     |              |      | Information |        |
 +=====================+==============+======+=============+========+
 | ietf-dots-signal-   | container    | 1    | 5 map       | Object |
 | channel:mitigation- |              |      |             |        |
 | scope               |              |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | scope               | list         | 2    | 4 array     | Array  |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | cdid                | string       | 3    | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | cuid                | string       | 4    | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | mid                 | uint32       | 5    | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | target-prefix       | leaf-list    | 6    | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | inet:ip-     |      | 3 text      | String |
 |                     | prefix       |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | target-port-range   | list         | 7    | 4 array     | Array  |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | lower-port          | inet:port-   | 8    | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 |                     | number       |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | upper-port          | inet:port-   | 9    | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 |                     | number       |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | target-protocol     | leaf-list    | 10   | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | uint8        |      | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | target-fqdn         | leaf-list    | 11   | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | inet:domain- |      | 3 text      | String |
 |                     | name         |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | target-uri          | leaf-list    | 12   | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | inet:uri     |      | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | alias-name          | leaf-list    | 13   | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | string       |      | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | lifetime            | union        | 14   | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 |                     |              |      +-------------+--------+
 |                     |              |      | 1 negative  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | mitigation-start    | uint64       | 15   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | status              | enumeration  | 16   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | conflict-           | container    | 17   | 5 map       | Object |
 | information         |              |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | conflict-status     | enumeration  | 18   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | conflict-cause      | enumeration  | 19   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | retry-timer         | uint32       | 20   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | conflict-scope      | container    | 21   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | acl-list            | list         | 22   | 4 array     | Array  |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | acl-name            | leafref      | 23   | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | acl-type            | leafref      | 24   | 3 text      | String |
 |                     |              |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | bytes-dropped       | yang:zero-   | 25   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 |                     | based-       |      |             |        |
 |                     | counter64    |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | bps-dropped         | yang:gauge64 | 26   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | pkts-dropped        | yang:zero-   | 27   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 |                     | based-       |      |             |        |
 |                     | counter64    |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | pps-dropped         | yang:gauge64 | 28   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | attack-status       | enumeration  | 29   | 0 unsigned  | String |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | ietf-dots-signal-   | container    | 30   | 5 map       | Object |
 | channel:signal-     |              |      |             |        |
 | config              |              |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | sid                 | uint32       | 31   | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | mitigating-config   | container    | 32   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | heartbeat-interval  | container    | 33   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | max-value           | uint16       | 34   | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | min-value           | uint16       | 35   | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | current-value       | uint16       | 36   | 0 unsigned  | Number |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | missing-hb-allowed  | container    | 37   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | max-retransmit      | container    | 38   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | ack-timeout         | container    | 39   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | ack-random-factor   | container    | 40   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | max-value-decimal   | decimal64    | 41   | 6 tag 4     | String |
 |                     |              |      | [-2,        |        |
 |                     |              |      | integer]    |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | min-value-decimal   | decimal64    | 42   | 6 tag 4     | String |
 |                     |              |      | [-2,        |        |
 |                     |              |      | integer]    |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | current-value-      | decimal64    | 43   | 6 tag 4     | String |
 | decimal             |              |      | [-2,        |        |
 |                     |              |      | integer]    |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | idle-config         | container    | 44   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | trigger-mitigation  | boolean      | 45   | 7 bits 20   | False  |
 |                     |              |      +-------------+--------+
 |                     |              |      | 7 bits 21   | True   |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | ietf-dots-signal-   | container    | 46   | 5 map       | Object |
 | channel:redirected- |              |      |             |        |
 | signal              |              |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | alt-server          | inet:domain- | 47   | 3 text      | String |
 |                     | name         |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | alt-server-record   | leaf-list    | 48   | 4 array     | Array  |
 |                     +--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 |                     | inet:ip-     |      | 3 text      | String |
 |                     | address      |      | string      |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | ietf-dots-signal-   | container    | 49   | 5 map       | Object |
 | channel:heartbeat   |              |      |             |        |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | probing-rate        | container    | 50   | 5 map       | Object |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
 | peer-hb-status      | boolean      | 51   | 7 bits 20   | False  |
 |                     |              |      +-------------+--------+
 |                     |              |      | 7 bits 21   | True   |
 +---------------------+--------------+------+-------------+--------+
   Table 5: CBOR Key Values Used in DOTS Signal Channel Messages &
                   Their Mappings to JSON and YANG

7. (D)TLS Protocol Profile and Performance Considerations

7.1. (D)TLS Protocol Profile

 This section defines the (D)TLS protocol profile of DOTS signal
 channel over (D)TLS and DOTS data channel over TLS.
 There are known attacks on (D)TLS, such as man-in-the-middle and
 protocol downgrade attacks.  These are general attacks on (D)TLS and,
 as such, they are not specific to DOTS over (D)TLS; refer to the
 (D)TLS RFCs for discussion of these security issues.  DOTS agents
 MUST adhere to the (D)TLS implementation recommendations and security
 considerations of [RFC7525] except with respect to (D)TLS version.
 Because DOTS signal channel encryption relying upon (D)TLS is
 virtually a greenfield deployment, DOTS agents MUST implement only
 (D)TLS 1.2 or later.
 When a DOTS client is configured with a domain name of the DOTS
 server, and it connects to its configured DOTS server, the server may
 present it with a PKIX certificate.  In order to ensure proper
 authentication, a DOTS client MUST verify the entire certification
 path per [RFC5280].  Additionally, the DOTS client MUST use [RFC6125]
 validation techniques to compare the domain name with the certificate
 provided.  Certification authorities that issue DOTS server
 certificates SHOULD support the DNS-ID and SRV-ID identifier types.
 DOTS servers SHOULD prefer the use of DNS-ID and SRV-ID over Common
 Name ID (CN-ID) identifier types in certificate requests (as
 described in Section 2.3 of [RFC6125]), and the wildcard character
 '*' SHOULD NOT be included in the presented identifier.  DOTS doesn't
 use URI-IDs for server identity verification.
 A key challenge to deploying DOTS is the provisioning of DOTS
 clients, including the distribution of keying material to DOTS
 clients to enable the required mutual authentication of DOTS agents.
 Enrollment over Secure Transport (EST) [RFC7030] defines a method of
 certificate enrollment by which domains operating DOTS servers may
 provide DOTS clients with all the necessary cryptographic keying
 material, including a private key and a certificate, to authenticate
 themselves.  One deployment option is to have DOTS clients behave as
 EST clients for certificate enrollment from an EST server provisioned
 by the mitigation provider.  This document does not specify which EST
 or other mechanism the DOTS client uses to achieve initial
 enrollment.
 The Server Name Indication (SNI) extension [RFC6066] defines a
 mechanism for a client to tell a (D)TLS server the name of the server
 it wants to contact.  This is a useful extension for hosting
 environments where multiple virtual servers are reachable over a
 single IP address.  The DOTS client may or may not know if it is
 interacting with a DOTS server in a virtual server-hosting
 environment, so the DOTS client SHOULD include the DOTS server FQDN
 in the SNI extension.
 Implementations compliant with this profile MUST implement all of the
 following items:
  • DTLS record replay detection (Section 3.3 of [RFC6347]) or an

equivalent mechanism to protect against replay attacks.

  • DTLS session resumption without server-side state to resume

session and convey the DOTS signal.

  • At least one of raw public keys [RFC7250] or PSK handshake

[RFC4279] with (EC)DHE key exchange. This reduces the size of the

    ServerHello.  Also, this can be used by DOTS agents that cannot
    obtain certificates.
 Implementations compliant with this profile SHOULD implement all of
 the following items to reduce the delay required to deliver a DOTS
 signal channel message:
  • TLS False Start [RFC7918], which reduces round trips by allowing

the TLS client's second flight of messages (ChangeCipherSpec) to

    also contain the DOTS signal.  TLS False Start is formally defined
    for use with TLS, but the same technique is applicable to DTLS as
    well.
  • Cached Information Extension [RFC7924], which avoids transmitting

the server's certificate and certificate chain if the client has

    cached that information from a previous TLS handshake.
 Compared to UDP, DOTS signal channel over TCP requires an additional
 round-trip time (RTT) of latency to establish a TCP connection.  DOTS
 implementations are encouraged to implement TCP Fast Open [RFC7413]
 to eliminate that RTT.

7.2. (D)TLS 1.3 Considerations

 TLS 1.3 provides useful latency improvements for connection
 establishment over TLS 1.2.  The DTLS 1.3 protocol [TLS-DTLS13] is
 based upon the TLS 1.3 protocol and provides equivalent security
 guarantees.  (D)TLS 1.3 provides two basic handshake modes the DOTS
 signal channel can take advantage of:
  • A full handshake mode in which a DOTS client can send a DOTS

mitigation request message after one round trip and the DOTS

    server immediately responds with a DOTS mitigation response.  This
    assumes no packet loss is experienced.
  • 0-RTT mode in which the DOTS client can authenticate itself and

send DOTS mitigation request messages in the first message, thus

    reducing handshake latency. 0-RTT only works if the DOTS client
    has previously communicated with that DOTS server, which is very
    likely with the DOTS signal channel.
 The DOTS client has to establish a (D)TLS session with the DOTS
 server during 'idle' time and share a PSK.
 During a DDoS attack, the DOTS client can use the (D)TLS session to
 convey the DOTS mitigation request message and, if there is no
 response from the server after multiple retries, the DOTS client can
 resume the (D)TLS session in 0-RTT mode using PSK.
 DOTS servers that support (D)TLS 1.3 MAY allow DOTS clients to send
 early data (0-RTT).  DOTS clients MUST NOT send "CoAP Ping" as early
 data; such messages MUST be rejected by DOTS servers.  Section 8 of
 [RFC8446] discusses some mechanisms to implement in order to limit
 the impact of replay attacks on 0-RTT data.  If the DOTS server
 accepts 0-RTT, it MUST implement one of these mechanisms to prevent
 replay at the TLS layer.  A DOTS server can reject 0-RTT by sending a
 TLS HelloRetryRequest.
 The DOTS signal channel messages sent as early data by the DOTS
 client are idempotent requests.  As a reminder, the Message ID
 (Section 3 of [RFC7252]) is changed each time a new CoAP request is
 sent, and the Token (Section 5.3.1 of [RFC7252]) is randomized in
 each CoAP request.  The DOTS server(s) MUST use the Message ID and
 the Token in the DOTS signal channel message to detect replay of
 early data at the application layer and accept 0-RTT data at most
 once from the same DOTS client.  This anti-replay defense requires
 sharing the Message ID and the Token in the 0-RTT data between DOTS
 servers in the DOTS server domain.  DOTS servers do not rely on
 transport coordinates to identify DOTS peers.  As specified in
 Section 4.4.1, DOTS servers couple the DOTS signal channel sessions
 using the DOTS client identity and optionally the 'cdid' parameter
 value.  Furthermore, the 'mid' value is monotonically increased by
 the DOTS client for each mitigation request, thus attackers that
 replay mitigation requests with lower numeric 'mid' values and
 overlapping scopes with mitigation requests having higher numeric
 'mid' values will be rejected systematically by the DOTS server.
 Likewise, the 'sid' value is monotonically increased by the DOTS
 client for each configuration request (Section 4.5.2); attackers
 replaying configuration requests with lower numeric 'sid' values will
 be rejected by the DOTS server if it maintains a higher numeric 'sid'
 value for this DOTS client.
 Owing to the aforementioned protections, all DOTS signal channel
 requests are safe to transmit in TLS 1.3 as early data.  Refer to
 [DOTS-EARLYDATA] for more details.
 A simplified TLS 1.3 handshake with 0-RTT DOTS mitigation request
 message exchange is shown in Figure 29.
     DOTS Client                                    DOTS Server
     ClientHello
     (0-RTT DOTS signal message)
                               -------->
                                                     ServerHello
                                           {EncryptedExtensions}
                                                      {Finished}
                               <--------   [DOTS signal message]
     (end_of_early_data)
     {Finished}                -------->
     [DOTS signal message]     <------->   [DOTS signal message]
 Note that:
     () Indicates messages protected 0-RTT keys
     {} Indicates messages protected using handshake keys
     [] Indicates messages protected using 1-RTT keys
          Figure 29: A Simplified TLS 1.3 Handshake with 0-RTT

7.3. DTLS MTU and Fragmentation

 To avoid DOTS signal message fragmentation and the subsequent
 decreased probability of message delivery, the DLTS records need to
 fit within a single datagram [RFC6347].  DTLS handles fragmentation
 and reassembly only for handshake messages and not for the
 application data (Section 4.1.1 of [RFC6347]).  If the Path MTU
 (PMTU) cannot be discovered, DOTS agents MUST assume a PMTU of 1280
 bytes, as IPv6 requires that every link in the Internet have an MTU
 of 1280 octets or greater, as specified in [RFC8200].  If IPv4
 support on legacy or otherwise unusual networks is a consideration
 and the PMTU is unknown, DOTS implementations MAY assume a PMTU of
 576 bytes for IPv4 datagrams (see Section 3.3.3 of [RFC1122]).
 The DOTS client must consider the amount of record expansion expected
 by the DTLS processing when calculating the size of the CoAP message
 that fits within the PMTU.  The PMTU MUST be greater than or equal to
 [CoAP message size + DTLS 1.2 overhead of 13 octets + authentication
 overhead of the negotiated DTLS cipher suite + block padding]
 (Section 4.1.1.1 of [RFC6347]).  If the total request size exceeds
 the PMTU, then the DOTS client MUST split the DOTS signal into
 separate messages; for example, the list of addresses in the 'target-
 prefix' parameter could be split into multiple lists and each list
 conveyed in a new PUT request.
    |  Implementation Note: DOTS choice of message size parameters
    |  works well with IPv6 and with most of today's IPv4 paths.
    |  However, with IPv4, it is harder to safely make sure that there
    |  is no IP fragmentation.  If the IPv4 PMTU is unknown,
    |  implementations may want to limit themselves to more
    |  conservative IPv4 datagram sizes, such as 576 bytes, per
    |  [RFC0791].

8. Mutual Authentication of DOTS Agents & Authorization of DOTS Clients

 (D)TLS based upon client certificates can be used for mutual
 authentication between DOTS agents.  If, for example, a DOTS gateway
 is involved, DOTS clients and DOTS gateways must perform mutual
 authentication; only authorized DOTS clients are allowed to send DOTS
 signals to a DOTS gateway.  The DOTS gateway and the DOTS server must
 perform mutual authentication; a DOTS server only allows DOTS signal
 channel messages from an authorized DOTS gateway, thereby creating a
 two-link chain of transitive authentication between the DOTS client
 and the DOTS server.
 The DOTS server should support certificate-based client
 authentication.  The DOTS client should respond to the DOTS server's
 TLS CertificateRequest message with the PKIX certificate held by the
 DOTS client.  DOTS client certificate validation must be performed
 per [RFC5280], and the DOTS client certificate must conform to the
 [RFC5280] certificate profile.  If a DOTS client does not support TLS
 client certificate authentication, it must support client
 authentication based on pre-shared key or raw public key.
 +---------------------------------------------+
 |       example.com domain       +---------+  |
 |                                | AAA     |  |
 | +---------------+              | Server  |  |
 | | Application   |              +------+--+  |
 | | server        +<---------------+    ^     |
 | | (DOTS client) |                |    |     |
 | +---------------+                |    |     |
 |                                  V    V     |   example.net domain
 |                            +-----+----+--+  |    +---------------+
 | +--------------+           |             |  |    |               |
 | |   Guest      +<----x---->+    DOTS     +<----->+    DOTS       |
 | | (DOTS client)|           |    gateway  |  |    |    server     |
 | +--------------+           |             |  |    |               |
 |                            +----+--------+  |    +---------------+
 |                                 ^           |
 |                                 |           |
 | +----------------+              |           |
 | | DDoS detector  |              |           |
 | | (DOTS client)  +<-------------+           |
 | +----------------+                          |
 +---------------------------------------------+
 Figure 30: Example of Authentication and Authorization of DOTS Agents
 In the example depicted in Figure 30, the DOTS gateway and DOTS
 clients within the 'example.com' domain proceed with mutual
 authentication.  After the DOTS gateway validates the identity of a
 DOTS client, it communicates with the Authentication, Authorization,
 and Accounting (AAA) server in the 'example.com' domain to determine
 if the DOTS client is authorized to request DDoS mitigation.  If the
 DOTS client is not authorized, a 4.01 (Unauthorized) is returned in
 the response to the DOTS client.  In this example, the DOTS gateway
 only allows the application server and DDoS attack detector to
 request DDoS mitigation, but does not permit the user of type 'guest'
 to request DDoS mitigation.
 Also, DOTS gateways and servers located in different domains must
 perform mutual authentication (e.g., using certificates).  A DOTS
 server will only allow a DOTS gateway with a certificate for a
 particular domain to request mitigation for that domain.  In
 reference to Figure 30, the DOTS server only allows the DOTS gateway
 to request mitigation for the 'example.com' domain and not for other
 domains.

9. Error Handling

 This section is a summary of the Error Code responses that can be
 returned by a DOTS server.  These error responses must contain a CoAP
 4.xx or 5.xx Response Code.
 In general, there may be an additional plain text diagnostic payload
 (Section 5.5.2 of [RFC7252]) to help troubleshooting in the body of
 the response unless detailed otherwise.
 Errors returned by a DOTS server can be broken into two categories:
 those associated with CoAP itself and those generated during the
 validation of the provided data by the DOTS server.
 The following is a list of common CoAP errors that are implemented by
 DOTS servers.  This list is not exhaustive; other errors defined by
 CoAP and associated RFCs may be applicable.
 4.00 (Bad Request)  is returned by the DOTS server when the DOTS
    client has sent a request that violates the DOTS protocol
    (Section 4).
 4.01 (Unauthorized)  is returned by the DOTS server when the DOTS
    client is not authorized to access the DOTS server (Section 4).
 4.02 (Bad Option)  is returned by the DOTS server when one or more
    CoAP options are unknown or malformed by the CoAP layer [RFC7252].
 4.04 (Not Found)  is returned by the DOTS server when the DOTS client
    is requesting a 'mid' or 'sid' that is not valid (Section 4).
 4.05 (Method Not Allowed)  is returned by the DOTS server when the
    DOTS client is requesting a resource by a method (e.g., GET) that
    is not supported by the DOTS server [RFC7252].
 4.08 (Request Entity Incomplete)  is returned by the DOTS server if
    one or multiple blocks of a block transfer request is missing
    [RFC7959].
 4.09 (Conflict)  is returned by the DOTS server if the DOTS server
    detects that a request conflicts with a previous request.  The
    response body is formatted using "application/dots+cbor" and
    contains the "conflict-clause" (Section 4.4.1.3).
 4.13 (Request Entity Too Large)  may be returned by the DOTS server
    during a block transfer request [RFC7959].
 4.15 (Unsupported Content-Format)  is returned by the DOTS server
    when the Content-Format is used but the request is not formatted
    as "application/dots+cbor" (Section 4).
 4.22 (Unprocessable Entity)  is returned by the DOTS server when one
    or more session configuration parameters are not valid
    (Section 4.5).
 5.03 (Service Unavailable)  is returned by the DOTS server if the
    DOTS server is unable to handle the request (Section 4).  An
    example is the DOTS server needs to redirect the DOTS client to
    use an alternate DOTS server (Section 4.6).  The response body is
    formatted using "application/dots+cbor" and contains how to handle
    the 5.03 Response Code.
 5.08 (Hop Limit Reached)  is returned by the DOTS server if there is
    a data path loop through upstream DOTS gateways.  The response
    body is formatted using plain text and contains a list of servers
    that are in the data path loop [RFC8768].

10. IANA Considerations

10.1. DOTS Signal Channel UDP and TCP Port Number

 IANA has assigned the port number 4646 (the ASCII decimal value for
 ".." (DOTS)) to the DOTS signal channel protocol for both UDP and TCP
 from the "Service Name and Transport Protocol Port Number Registry"
 available at <https://www.iana.org/assignments/service-names-port-
 numbers/>.
 IANA has updated these entries to refer to this document and updated
 the Description as described below:
 Service Name:  dots-signal
 Port Number:  4646
 Transport Protocol:  TCP
 Description:  Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling
    (DOTS) Signal Channel Protocol.  The service name is used to
    construct the SRV service names "_dots-signal._udp" and "_dots-
    signal._tcp" for discovering DOTS servers used to establish DOTS
    signal channel.
 Assignee:  IESG
 Contact:  IETF Chair
 Registration Date:  2020-01-16
 Reference:  [RFC8973][RFC9132]
 Service Name:  dots-signal
 Port Number:  4646
 Transport Protocol:  UDP
 Description:  Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling
    (DOTS) Signal Channel Protocol.  The service name is used to
    construct the SRV service names "_dots-signal._udp" and "_dots-
    signal._tcp" for discovering DOTS servers used to establish DOTS
    signal channel.
 Assignee:  IESG
 Contact:  IETF Chair
 Registration Date:  2020-01-16
 Reference:  [RFC8973][RFC9132]

10.2. Well-Known 'dots' URI

 IANA has updated the 'dots' well-known URI (Table 6) entry in the
 "Well-Known URIs" registry [URI] as follows:
   +============+============+===========+===========+=============+
   | URI Suffix | Change     | Reference | Status    | Related     |
   |            | Controller |           |           | information |
   +============+============+===========+===========+=============+
   | dots       | IETF       | [RFC9132] | permanent | None        |
   +------------+------------+-----------+-----------+-------------+
                     Table 6: 'dots' Well-Known URI

10.3. Media Type Registration

 IANA has updated the "application/dots+cbor" media type in the "Media
 Types" registry [IANA-MediaTypes] in the manner described in
 [RFC6838], which can be used to indicate that the content is a DOTS
 signal channel object:
 Type name:  application
 Subtype name:  dots+cbor
 Required parameters:  N/A
 Optional parameters:  N/A
 Encoding considerations:  binary
 Security considerations:  See the Security Considerations section of
    RFC 9132.
 Interoperability considerations:  N/A
 Published specification:  RFC 9132
 Applications that use this media type:  DOTS agents sending DOTS
    messages over CoAP over (D)TLS.
 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 & email address to contact for further information:
    IESG, iesg@ietf.org
 Intended usage:  COMMON
 Restrictions on usage:  none
 Author:  See Authors' Addresses section.
 Change controller:  IESG
 Provisional registration?  No

10.4. CoAP Content-Formats Registration

 IANA has updated the "application/dots+cbor" media type in the "CoAP
 Content-Formats" registry [IANA-CoAP-Content-Formats] as follows:
 Media Type:  application/dots+cbor
 Encoding:  -
 ID:  271
 Reference:  [RFC9132]

10.5. CBOR Tag Registration

 This section defines the DOTS CBOR tag as another means for
 applications to declare that a CBOR data structure is a DOTS signal
 channel object.  Its use is optional and is intended for use in cases
 in which this information would not otherwise be known.  The DOTS
 CBOR tag is not required for the DOTS signal channel protocol version
 specified in this document.  If present, the DOTS tag MUST prefix a
 DOTS signal channel object.
 IANA has updated the DOTS signal channel CBOR tag in the "CBOR Tags"
 registry [IANA-CBOR-Tags] as follows:
 Tag:  271
 Data Item:  DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) signal channel object
 Semantics:  DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) signal channel object,
    as defined in [RFC9132]
 Reference:  [RFC9132]

10.6. DOTS Signal Channel Protocol Registry

 The following sections update the "Distributed Denial-of-Service Open
 Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel" subregistries [REG-DOTS].

10.6.1. DOTS Signal Channel CBOR Key Values Subregistry

 The structure of this subregistry is provided in Section 10.6.1.1.

10.6.1.1. Registration Template

 IANA has updated the allocation policy of "DOTS Signal Channel CBOR
 Key Values" registry as follows:
 Parameter name:
    Parameter name, as used in the DOTS signal channel.
 CBOR Key Value:
    Key value for the parameter.  The key value MUST be an integer in
    the 1-65535 range.
    OLD:
    +=============+=========================+========================+
    | Range       | Registration            | Note                   |
    |             | Procedures              |                        |
    +=============+=========================+========================+
    | 1-16383     | IETF Review             | comprehension-required |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 16384-32767 | Specification           | comprehension-optional |
    |             | Required                |                        |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 32768-49151 | IETF Review             | comprehension-optional |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 49152-65535 | Private Use             | comprehension-optional |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
                                 Table 7
    NEW:
    +=============+=========================+========================+
    | Range       | Registration            | Note                   |
    |             | Procedures              |                        |
    +=============+=========================+========================+
    | 1-127       | IETF Review             | comprehension-required |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 128-255     | IETF Review             | comprehension-optional |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 256-16383   | IETF Review             | comprehension-required |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 16384-32767 | Specification           | comprehension-optional |
    |             | Required                |                        |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 32768-49151 | IETF Review             | comprehension-optional |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
    | 49152-65535 | Private Use             | comprehension-optional |
    +-------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
                                 Table 8
    Registration requests for the 16384-32767 range are evaluated
    after a three-week review period on the dots-signal-reg-
    review@ietf.org mailing list, on the advice of one or more
    designated experts.  However, to allow for the allocation of
    values prior to publication, the designated experts may approve
    registration once they are satisfied that such a specification
    will be published.  New registration requests should be sent in
    the form of an email to the review mailing list; the request
    should use an appropriate subject (e.g., "Request to register CBOR
    Key Value for DOTS: example").  IANA will only accept new
    registrations from the designated experts, and it will check that
    review was requested on the mailing list in accordance with these
    procedures.
    Within the review period, the designated experts will either
    approve or deny the registration request, communicating this
    decision to the review list and IANA.  Denials should include an
    explanation and, if applicable, suggestions as to how to make the
    request successful.  Registration requests that are undetermined
    for a period longer than 21 days can be brought to the IESG's
    attention (using the iesg@ietf.org mailing list) for resolution.
    Criteria that should be applied by the designated experts include
    determining whether the proposed registration duplicates existing
    functionality, whether it is likely to be of general applicability
    or whether it is useful only for a single use case, and whether
    the registration description is clear.  IANA must only accept
    registry updates to the 16384-32767 range from the designated
    experts and should direct all requests for registration to the
    review mailing list.  It is suggested that multiple designated
    experts be appointed.  In cases where a registration decision
    could be perceived as creating a conflict of interest for a
    particular expert, that expert should defer to the judgment of the
    other experts.
 CBOR Major Type:
    CBOR Major type and optional tag for the parameter.
 Change Controller:
    For Standards Track RFCs, list the "IESG".  For others, give the
    name of the responsible party.  Other details (e.g., email
    address) may also be included.
 Specification Document(s):
    Reference to the document or documents that specify the parameter,
    preferably including URIs that can be used to retrieve copies of
    the documents.  An indication of the relevant sections may also be
    included but is not required.

10.6.1.2. Update Subregistry Content

 IANA has updated entries in the "0-51" and "49152-65535" ranges from
 the "DOTS Signal Channel CBOR Key Values" registry to refer this RFC.

10.6.2. Status Codes Subregistry

 IANA has updated the following entries from the "DOTS Signal Channel
 Status Codes" registry to refer to this RFC:
  +==============+===============+======================+===========+
  | Code         | Label         | Description          | Reference |
  +==============+===============+======================+===========+
  | 0            | Reserved      |                      | [RFC9132] |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 1            | attack-       | Attack mitigation    | [RFC9132] |
  |              | mitigation-   | setup is in progress |           |
  |              | in-progress   | (e.g., changing the  |           |
  |              |               | network path to      |           |
  |              |               | redirect the inbound |           |
  |              |               | traffic to a DOTS    |           |
  |              |               | mitigator).          |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 2            | attack-       | Attack is being      | [RFC9132] |
  |              | successfully- | successfully         |           |
  |              | mitigated     | mitigated (e.g.,     |           |
  |              |               | traffic is           |           |
  |              |               | redirected to a DDoS |           |
  |              |               | mitigator and attack |           |
  |              |               | traffic is dropped). |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 3            | attack-       | Attack has stopped   | [RFC9132] |
  |              | stopped       | and the DOTS client  |           |
  |              |               | can withdraw the     |           |
  |              |               | mitigation request.  |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 4            | attack-       | Attack has exceeded  | [RFC9132] |
  |              | exceeded-     | the mitigation       |           |
  |              | capability    | provider capability. |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 5            | dots-client-  | DOTS client has      | [RFC9132] |
  |              | withdrawn-    | withdrawn the        |           |
  |              | mitigation    | mitigation request   |           |
  |              |               | and the mitigation   |           |
  |              |               | is active but        |           |
  |              |               | terminating.         |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 6            | attack-       | Attack mitigation is | [RFC9132] |
  |              | mitigation-   | now terminated.      |           |
  |              | terminated    |                      |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 7            | attack-       | Attack mitigation is | [RFC9132] |
  |              | mitigation-   | withdrawn.           |           |
  |              | withdrawn     |                      |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 8            | attack-       | Attack mitigation    | [RFC9132] |
  |              | mitigation-   | will be triggered    |           |
  |              | signal-loss   | for the mitigation   |           |
  |              |               | request only when    |           |
  |              |               | the DOTS signal      |           |
  |              |               | channel session is   |           |
  |              |               | lost.                |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
  | 9-2147483647 | Unassigned    |                      |           |
  +--------------+---------------+----------------------+-----------+
           Table 9: Initial DOTS Signal Channel Status Codes
 New codes can be assigned via Standards Action [RFC8126].

10.6.3. Conflict Status Codes Subregistry

 IANA has updated the following entries from the "DOTS Signal Channel
 Conflict Status Codes" registry to refer to this RFC.
 +==============+===================+====================+===========+
 | Code         | Label             | Description        | Reference |
 +==============+===================+====================+===========+
 | 0            | Reserved          |                    | [RFC9132] |
 +--------------+-------------------+--------------------+-----------+
 | 1            | request-inactive- | DOTS server        | [RFC9132] |
 |              | other-active      | has detected       |           |
 |              |                   | conflicting        |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | requests from      |           |
 |              |                   | different DOTS     |           |
 |              |                   | clients.  This     |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | request is         |           |
 |              |                   | currently          |           |
 |              |                   | inactive until     |           |
 |              |                   | the conflicts      |           |
 |              |                   | are resolved.      |           |
 |              |                   | Another            |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | request is         |           |
 |              |                   | active.            |           |
 +--------------+-------------------+--------------------+-----------+
 | 2            | request-active    | DOTS server        | [RFC9132] |
 |              |                   | has detected       |           |
 |              |                   | conflicting        |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | requests from      |           |
 |              |                   | different DOTS     |           |
 |              |                   | clients.  This     |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | request is         |           |
 |              |                   | currently          |           |
 |              |                   | active.            |           |
 +--------------+-------------------+--------------------+-----------+
 | 3            | all-requests-     | DOTS server        | [RFC9132] |
 |              | inactive          | has detected       |           |
 |              |                   | conflicting        |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | requests from      |           |
 |              |                   | different DOTS     |           |
 |              |                   | clients.  All      |           |
 |              |                   | conflicting        |           |
 |              |                   | mitigation         |           |
 |              |                   | requests are       |           |
 |              |                   | inactive.          |           |
 +--------------+-------------------+--------------------+-----------+
 | 4-2147483647 | Unassigned        |                    |           |
 +--------------+-------------------+--------------------+-----------+
      Table 10: Initial DOTS Signal Channel Conflict Status Codes
 New codes can be assigned via Standards Action [RFC8126].

10.6.4. Conflict Cause Codes Subregistry

 IANA has updated the following entries from the "DOTS Signal Channel
 Conflict Cause Codes" registry to refer to this document:
  +==============+=====================+================+===========+
  | Code         | Label               | Description    | Reference |
  +==============+=====================+================+===========+
  | 0            | Reserved            |                | [RFC9132] |
  +--------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------+
  | 1            | overlapping-targets | Overlapping    | [RFC9132] |
  |              |                     | targets.       |           |
  +--------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------+
  | 2            | conflict-with-      | Conflicts with | [RFC9132] |
  |              | acceptlist          | an existing    |           |
  |              |                     | accept-list.   |           |
  |              |                     | This code is   |           |
  |              |                     | returned when  |           |
  |              |                     | the DDoS       |           |
  |              |                     | mitigation     |           |
  |              |                     | detects source |           |
  |              |                     | addresses/     |           |
  |              |                     | prefixes in    |           |
  |              |                     | the accept-    |           |
  |              |                     | listed ACLs    |           |
  |              |                     | are attacking  |           |
  |              |                     | the target.    |           |
  +--------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------+
  | 3            | cuid-collision      | CUID           | [RFC9132] |
  |              |                     | Collision.     |           |
  |              |                     | This code is   |           |
  |              |                     | returned when  |           |
  |              |                     | a DOTS client  |           |
  |              |                     | uses a 'cuid'  |           |
  |              |                     | that is        |           |
  |              |                     | already used   |           |
  |              |                     | by another     |           |
  |              |                     | DOTS client.   |           |
  +--------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------+
  | 4-2147483647 | Unassigned          |                |           |
  +--------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------+
       Table 11: Initial DOTS Signal Channel Conflict Cause Codes
 New codes can be assigned via Standards Action [RFC8126].

10.6.5. Attack Status Codes Subregistry

 IANA has updated the following entries from the "DOTS Signal Channel
 Attack Status Codes" registry to refer to this RFC:
 +==============+======================+=================+===========+
 | Code         | Label                | Description     | Reference |
 +==============+======================+=================+===========+
 | 0            | Reserved             |                 | [RFC9132] |
 +--------------+----------------------+-----------------+-----------+
 | 1            | under-attack         | The DOTS        | [RFC9132] |
 |              |                      | client          |           |
 |              |                      | determines      |           |
 |              |                      | that it is      |           |
 |              |                      | still under     |           |
 |              |                      | attack.         |           |
 +--------------+----------------------+-----------------+-----------+
 | 2            | attack-successfully- | The DOTS        | [RFC9132] |
 |              | mitigated            | client          |           |
 |              |                      | determines      |           |
 |              |                      | that the        |           |
 |              |                      | attack is       |           |
 |              |                      | successfully    |           |
 |              |                      | mitigated.      |           |
 +--------------+----------------------+-----------------+-----------+
 | 3-2147483647 | Unassigned           |                 |           |
 +--------------+----------------------+-----------------+-----------+
       Table 12: Initial DOTS Signal Channel Attack Status Codes
 New codes can be assigned via Standards Action [RFC8126].

10.7. DOTS Signal Channel YANG Modules

 IANA has registered the following URIs in the "ns" subregistry within
 the "IETF XML Registry" [RFC3688]:
 URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-dots-signal-channel
 Registrant Contact:  The IESG.
 XML:  N/A; the requested URI is an XML namespace.
 URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:iana-dots-signal-channel
 Registrant Contact:  IANA.
 XML:  N/A; the requested URI is an XML namespace.
 IANA has updated the following YANG module in the "YANG Module Names"
 subregistry [RFC6020] within the "YANG Parameters" registry.
 Name:  iana-dots-signal-channel
 Maintained by IANA:  Y
 Namespace:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:iana-dots-signal-channel
 Prefix:  iana-dots-signal
 Reference:  [RFC9132]
 IANA has registered the additional following YANG module in the "YANG
 Module Names" subregistry [RFC6020] within the "YANG Parameters"
 registry.  This obsoletes the registration in [RFC8782].
 Name:  ietf-dots-signal-channel
 Maintained by IANA:  N
 Namespace:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-dots-signal-channel
 Prefix:  dots-signal
 Reference:  [RFC9132]
 This document obsoletes the initial version of the IANA-maintained
 iana-dots-signal-channel YANG module (Section 5.2 of [RFC8782]).
 IANA is requested to maintain this note:
      Status, conflict status, conflict cause, and attack status
      values must not be directly added to the iana-dots-signal-
      channel YANG module.  They must instead be respectively added to
      the "DOTS Status Codes", "DOTS Conflict Status Codes", "DOTS
      Conflict Cause Codes", and "DOTS Attack Status Codes"
      registries.
 When a 'status', 'conflict-status', 'conflict-cause', or 'attack-
 status' value is respectively added to the "DOTS Status Codes", "DOTS
 Conflict Status Codes", "DOTS Conflict Cause Codes", or "DOTS Attack
 Status Codes" registry, a new "enum" statement must be added to the
 iana-dots-signal-channel YANG module.  The following "enum"
 statement, and substatements thereof, should be defined:
 "enum":         Replicates the label from the registry.
 "value":        Contains the IANA-assigned value corresponding to the
                 'status', 'conflict-status', 'conflict-cause', or
                 'attack-status'.
 "description":  Replicates the description from the registry.
 "reference":    Replicates the reference from the registry and adds
                 the title of the document.
 When the iana-dots-signal-channel YANG module is updated, a new
 "revision" statement must be added in front of the existing revision
 statements.
 IANA has updated this note in "DOTS Status Codes", "DOTS Conflict
 Status Codes", "DOTS Conflict Cause Codes", and "DOTS Attack Status
 Codes" registries:
      When this registry is modified, the YANG module iana-dots-
      signal-channel must be updated as defined in [RFC9132].

11. Security Considerations

 High-level DOTS security considerations are documented in [RFC8612]
 and [RFC8811].
 Authenticated encryption MUST be used for data confidentiality and
 message integrity.  The interaction between the DOTS agents requires
 Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) or Transport Layer Security
 (TLS) with a cipher suite offering confidentiality protection, and
 the guidance given in [RFC7525] MUST be followed to avoid attacks on
 (D)TLS.  The (D)TLS protocol profile used for the DOTS signal channel
 is specified in Section 7.
 If TCP is used between DOTS agents, an attacker may be able to inject
 RST packets, bogus application segments, etc., regardless of whether
 TLS authentication is used.  Because the application data is TLS
 protected, this will not result in the application receiving bogus
 data, but it will constitute a DoS on the connection.  This attack
 can be countered by using TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO)
 [RFC5925].  Although not widely adopted, if TCP-AO is used, then any
 bogus packets injected by an attacker will be rejected by the TCP-AO
 integrity check and therefore will never reach the TLS layer.
 If the 'cuid' is guessable, a misbehaving DOTS client from within the
 client's domain can use the 'cuid' of another DOTS client of the
 domain to delete or alter active mitigations.  For this attack to
 succeed, the misbehaving client's messages need to pass the security
 validation checks by the DOTS server and, if the communication
 involves a client-domain DOTS gateway, the security checks of that
 gateway.
 A similar attack can be achieved by a compromised DOTS client that
 can sniff the TLS 1.2 handshake: use the client certificate to
 identify the 'cuid' used by another DOTS client.  This attack is not
 possible if algorithms such as version 4 Universally Unique
 IDentifiers (UUIDs) in Section 4.4 of [RFC4122] are used to generate
 the 'cuid' because such UUIDs are not a deterministic function of the
 client certificate.  Likewise, this attack is not possible with TLS
 1.3 because most of the TLS handshake is encrypted and the client
 certificate is not visible to eavesdroppers.
 A compromised DOTS client can collude with a DDoS attacker to send a
 mitigation request for a target resource, get the mitigation efficacy
 from the DOTS server, and convey the mitigation efficacy to the DDoS
 attacker to possibly change the DDoS attack strategy.  Obviously,
 signaling an attack by the compromised DOTS client to the DOTS server
 will trigger attack mitigation.  This attack can be prevented by
 monitoring and auditing DOTS clients to detect misbehavior and to
 deter misuse and by only authorizing the DOTS client to request
 mitigation for specific target resources (e.g., an application server
 is authorized to request mitigation for its IP addresses, but a DDoS
 mitigator can request mitigation for any target resource in the
 network).  Furthermore, DOTS clients are typically co-located on
 network security services (e.g., firewall), and a compromised
 security service potentially can do a lot more damage to the network.
 Rate-limiting DOTS requests, including those with new 'cuid' values,
 from the same DOTS client defend against DoS attacks that would
 result in varying the 'cuid' to exhaust DOTS server resources.  Rate-
 limit policies SHOULD be enforced on DOTS gateways (if deployed) and
 DOTS servers.
 In order to prevent leaking internal information outside a client's
 domain, DOTS gateways located in the client domain SHOULD NOT reveal
 the identification information that pertains to internal DOTS clients
 (e.g., source IP address, client's hostname) unless explicitly
 configured to do so.
 DOTS servers MUST verify that requesting DOTS clients are entitled to
 trigger actions on a given IP prefix.  A DOTS server MUST NOT
 authorize actions due to a DOTS client request unless those actions
 are limited to that DOTS client's domain IP resources.  The exact
 mechanism for the DOTS servers to validate that the target prefixes
 are within the scope of the DOTS client domain is deployment
 specific.
 The presence of DOTS gateways may lead to infinite forwarding loops,
 which is undesirable.  To prevent and detect such loops, this
 document uses the Hop-Limit Option.
 When FQDNs are used as targets, the DOTS server MUST rely upon DNS
 privacy-enabling protocols (e.g., DNS over TLS [RFC7858] or DNS over
 HTTPS (DoH) [RFC8484]) to prevent eavesdroppers from possibly
 identifying the target resources protected by the DDoS mitigation
 service to ensure the target FQDN resolution is authentic (e.g.,
 DNSSEC [RFC4034]).
 CoAP-specific security considerations are discussed in Section 11 of
 [RFC7252], while CBOR-related security considerations are discussed
 in Section 10 of [RFC8949].
 This document defines YANG data structures that are meant to be used
 as an abstract representation of DOTS signal channel messages.  As
 such, the "ietf-dots-signal-channel" module does not introduce any
 new vulnerabilities beyond those specified above.

12. References

12.1. Normative References

 [RFC0791]  Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC0791, September 1981,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc791>.
 [RFC1122]  Braden, R., Ed., "Requirements for Internet Hosts -
            Communication Layers", STD 3, RFC 1122,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC1122, October 1989,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1122>.
 [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>.
 [RFC3688]  Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry", BCP 81, RFC 3688,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3688, January 2004,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3688>.
 [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
            Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
            RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.
 [RFC4279]  Eronen, P., Ed. and H. Tschofenig, Ed., "Pre-Shared Key
            Ciphersuites for Transport Layer Security (TLS)",
            RFC 4279, DOI 10.17487/RFC4279, December 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4279>.
 [RFC4632]  Fuller, V. and T. Li, "Classless Inter-domain Routing
            (CIDR): The Internet Address Assignment and Aggregation
            Plan", BCP 122, RFC 4632, DOI 10.17487/RFC4632, August
            2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4632>.
 [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
            Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>.
 [RFC5246]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
            (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5246>.
 [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
            Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
            Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
            (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>.
 [RFC6020]  Bjorklund, M., Ed., "YANG - A Data Modeling Language for
            the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6020,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6020, October 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6020>.
 [RFC6066]  Eastlake 3rd, D., "Transport Layer Security (TLS)
            Extensions: Extension Definitions", RFC 6066,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6066, January 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6066>.
 [RFC6125]  Saint-Andre, P. and J. Hodges, "Representation and
            Verification of Domain-Based Application Service Identity
            within Internet Public Key Infrastructure Using X.509
            (PKIX) Certificates in the Context of Transport Layer
            Security (TLS)", RFC 6125, DOI 10.17487/RFC6125, March
            2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6125>.
 [RFC6347]  Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer
            Security Version 1.2", RFC 6347, DOI 10.17487/RFC6347,
            January 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6347>.
 [RFC6991]  Schoenwaelder, J., Ed., "Common YANG Data Types",
            RFC 6991, DOI 10.17487/RFC6991, July 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6991>.
 [RFC7250]  Wouters, P., Ed., Tschofenig, H., Ed., Gilmore, J.,
            Weiler, S., and T. Kivinen, "Using Raw Public Keys in
            Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport
            Layer Security (DTLS)", RFC 7250, DOI 10.17487/RFC7250,
            June 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7250>.
 [RFC7252]  Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained
            Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7252,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.
 [RFC7525]  Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P. Saint-Andre,
            "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer
            Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security
            (DTLS)", BCP 195, RFC 7525, DOI 10.17487/RFC7525, May
            2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7525>.
 [RFC7641]  Hartke, K., "Observing Resources in the Constrained
            Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7641,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7641, September 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7641>.
 [RFC7918]  Langley, A., Modadugu, N., and B. Moeller, "Transport
            Layer Security (TLS) False Start", RFC 7918,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7918, August 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7918>.
 [RFC7924]  Santesson, S. and H. Tschofenig, "Transport Layer Security
            (TLS) Cached Information Extension", RFC 7924,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7924, July 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7924>.
 [RFC7950]  Bjorklund, M., Ed., "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language",
            RFC 7950, DOI 10.17487/RFC7950, August 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7950>.
 [RFC7959]  Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby, Ed., "Block-Wise Transfers in
            the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7959,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7959, August 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7959>.
 [RFC8085]  Eggert, L., Fairhurst, G., and G. Shepherd, "UDP Usage
            Guidelines", BCP 145, RFC 8085, DOI 10.17487/RFC8085,
            March 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8085>.
 [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
            Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
            RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.
 [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>.
 [RFC8200]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
            (IPv6) Specification", STD 86, RFC 8200,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8200, July 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8200>.
 [RFC8305]  Schinazi, D. and T. Pauly, "Happy Eyeballs Version 2:
            Better Connectivity Using Concurrency", RFC 8305,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8305, December 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8305>.
 [RFC8323]  Bormann, C., Lemay, S., Tschofenig, H., Hartke, K.,
            Silverajan, B., and B. Raymor, Ed., "CoAP (Constrained
            Application Protocol) over TCP, TLS, and WebSockets",
            RFC 8323, DOI 10.17487/RFC8323, February 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8323>.
 [RFC8446]  Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
            Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.
 [RFC8615]  Nottingham, M., "Well-Known Uniform Resource Identifiers
            (URIs)", RFC 8615, DOI 10.17487/RFC8615, May 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8615>.
 [RFC8768]  Boucadair, M., Reddy.K, T., and J. Shallow, "Constrained
            Application Protocol (CoAP) Hop-Limit Option", RFC 8768,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8768, March 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8768>.
 [RFC8783]  Boucadair, M., Ed. and T. Reddy.K, Ed., "Distributed
            Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Data
            Channel Specification", RFC 8783, DOI 10.17487/RFC8783,
            May 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8783>.
 [RFC8791]  Bierman, A., Björklund, M., and K. Watsen, "YANG Data
            Structure Extensions", RFC 8791, DOI 10.17487/RFC8791,
            June 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8791>.
 [RFC8949]  Bormann, C. and P. Hoffman, "Concise Binary Object
            Representation (CBOR)", STD 94, RFC 8949,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8949, December 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8949>.

12.2. Informative References

 [CORE-COMI]
            Veillette, M., Ed., Stok, P., Ed., Pelov, A., Bierman, A.,
            and I. Petrov, "CoAP Management Interface (CORECONF)",
            Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-core-comi-11,
            17 January 2021, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/
            draft-ietf-core-comi-11>.
 [CORE-YANG-CBOR]
            Veillette, M., Ed., Petrov, I., Ed., and A. Pelov, "CBOR
            Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG", Work in Progress,
            Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-core-yang-cbor-16, 25 January
            2021, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-
            core-yang-cbor-16>.
 [DOTS-EARLYDATA]
            Boucadair, M. and T. Reddy.K, "Using Early Data in DOTS",
            Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-boucadair-dots-
            earlydata-00, 29 January 2019,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-boucadair-
            dots-earlydata-00>.
 [DOTS-MULTIHOMING]
            Boucadair, M., Reddy.K, T., and W. Pan, "Multi-homing
            Deployment Considerations for Distributed-Denial-of-
            Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS)", Work in Progress,
            Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-dots-multihoming-07, 6 July
            2021, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-
            dots-multihoming-07>.
 [DOTS-TELEMETRY]
            Boucadair, M., Ed., Reddy.K, T., Ed., Doron, E., Chen, M.,
            and J. Shallow, "Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat
            Signaling (DOTS) Telemetry", Work in Progress, Internet-
            Draft, draft-ietf-dots-telemetry-16, 8 December 2020,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-dots-
            telemetry-16>.
 [IANA-CBOR-Tags]
            IANA, "Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/cbor-tags>.
 [IANA-CoAP-Content-Formats]
            IANA, "CoAP Content-Formats",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/core-parameters>.
 [IANA-MediaTypes]
            IANA, "Media Types",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types>.
 [IANA-Proto]
            IANA, "Protocol Numbers",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers>.
 [REG-DOTS] IANA, "Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling
            (DOTS) Signal Channel",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/dots>.
 [RFC3022]  Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network
            Address Translator (Traditional NAT)", RFC 3022,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3022, January 2001,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3022>.
 [RFC4034]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
            Rose, "Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions",
            RFC 4034, DOI 10.17487/RFC4034, March 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4034>.
 [RFC4122]  Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
            Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>.
 [RFC4340]  Kohler, E., Handley, M., and S. Floyd, "Datagram
            Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)", RFC 4340,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4340, March 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4340>.
 [RFC4732]  Handley, M., Ed., Rescorla, E., Ed., and IAB, "Internet
            Denial-of-Service Considerations", RFC 4732,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4732, December 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4732>.
 [RFC4787]  Audet, F., Ed. and C. Jennings, "Network Address
            Translation (NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast
            UDP", BCP 127, RFC 4787, DOI 10.17487/RFC4787, January
            2007, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4787>.
 [RFC4960]  Stewart, R., Ed., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",
            RFC 4960, DOI 10.17487/RFC4960, September 2007,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4960>.
 [RFC4987]  Eddy, W., "TCP SYN Flooding Attacks and Common
            Mitigations", RFC 4987, DOI 10.17487/RFC4987, August 2007,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4987>.
 [RFC5925]  Touch, J., Mankin, A., and R. Bonica, "The TCP
            Authentication Option", RFC 5925, DOI 10.17487/RFC5925,
            June 2010, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5925>.
 [RFC6052]  Bao, C., Huitema, C., Bagnulo, M., Boucadair, M., and X.
            Li, "IPv6 Addressing of IPv4/IPv6 Translators", RFC 6052,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6052, October 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6052>.
 [RFC6146]  Bagnulo, M., Matthews, P., and I. van Beijnum, "Stateful
            NAT64: Network Address and Protocol Translation from IPv6
            Clients to IPv4 Servers", RFC 6146, DOI 10.17487/RFC6146,
            April 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6146>.
 [RFC6234]  Eastlake 3rd, D. and T. Hansen, "US Secure Hash Algorithms
            (SHA and SHA-based HMAC and HKDF)", RFC 6234,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6234, May 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6234>.
 [RFC6296]  Wasserman, M. and F. Baker, "IPv6-to-IPv6 Network Prefix
            Translation", RFC 6296, DOI 10.17487/RFC6296, June 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6296>.
 [RFC6724]  Thaler, D., Ed., Draves, R., Matsumoto, A., and T. Chown,
            "Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6
            (IPv6)", RFC 6724, DOI 10.17487/RFC6724, September 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6724>.
 [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>.
 [RFC6887]  Wing, D., Ed., Cheshire, S., Boucadair, M., Penno, R., and
            P. Selkirk, "Port Control Protocol (PCP)", RFC 6887,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6887, April 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6887>.
 [RFC6888]  Perreault, S., Ed., Yamagata, I., Miyakawa, S., Nakagawa,
            A., and H. Ashida, "Common Requirements for Carrier-Grade
            NATs (CGNs)", BCP 127, RFC 6888, DOI 10.17487/RFC6888,
            April 2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6888>.
 [RFC7030]  Pritikin, M., Ed., Yee, P., Ed., and D. Harkins, Ed.,
            "Enrollment over Secure Transport", RFC 7030,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7030, October 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7030>.
 [RFC7413]  Cheng, Y., Chu, J., Radhakrishnan, S., and A. Jain, "TCP
            Fast Open", RFC 7413, DOI 10.17487/RFC7413, December 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7413>.
 [RFC7452]  Tschofenig, H., Arkko, J., Thaler, D., and D. McPherson,
            "Architectural Considerations in Smart Object Networking",
            RFC 7452, DOI 10.17487/RFC7452, March 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7452>.
 [RFC7589]  Badra, M., Luchuk, A., and J. Schoenwaelder, "Using the
            NETCONF Protocol over Transport Layer Security (TLS) with
            Mutual X.509 Authentication", RFC 7589,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7589, June 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7589>.
 [RFC7858]  Hu, Z., Zhu, L., Heidemann, J., Mankin, A., Wessels, D.,
            and P. Hoffman, "Specification for DNS over Transport
            Layer Security (TLS)", RFC 7858, DOI 10.17487/RFC7858, May
            2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7858>.
 [RFC7951]  Lhotka, L., "JSON Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG",
            RFC 7951, DOI 10.17487/RFC7951, August 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7951>.
 [RFC8340]  Bjorklund, M. and L. Berger, Ed., "YANG Tree Diagrams",
            BCP 215, RFC 8340, DOI 10.17487/RFC8340, March 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8340>.
 [RFC8484]  Hoffman, P. and P. McManus, "DNS Queries over HTTPS
            (DoH)", RFC 8484, DOI 10.17487/RFC8484, October 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8484>.
 [RFC8489]  Petit-Huguenin, M., Salgueiro, G., Rosenberg, J., Wing,
            D., Mahy, R., and P. Matthews, "Session Traversal
            Utilities for NAT (STUN)", RFC 8489, DOI 10.17487/RFC8489,
            February 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8489>.
 [RFC8499]  Hoffman, P., Sullivan, A., and K. Fujiwara, "DNS
            Terminology", BCP 219, RFC 8499, DOI 10.17487/RFC8499,
            January 2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8499>.
 [RFC8612]  Mortensen, A., Reddy, T., and R. Moskowitz, "DDoS Open
            Threat Signaling (DOTS) Requirements", RFC 8612,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8612, May 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8612>.
 [RFC8782]  Reddy.K, T., Ed., Boucadair, M., Ed., Patil, P.,
            Mortensen, A., and N. Teague, "Distributed Denial-of-
            Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel
            Specification", RFC 8782, DOI 10.17487/RFC8782, May 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8782>.
 [RFC8811]  Mortensen, A., Ed., Reddy.K, T., Ed., Andreasen, F.,
            Teague, N., and R. Compton, "DDoS Open Threat Signaling
            (DOTS) Architecture", RFC 8811, DOI 10.17487/RFC8811,
            August 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8811>.
 [RFC8903]  Dobbins, R., Migault, D., Moskowitz, R., Teague, N., Xia,
            L., and K. Nishizuka, "Use Cases for DDoS Open Threat
            Signaling", RFC 8903, DOI 10.17487/RFC8903, May 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8903>.
 [RFC8973]  Boucadair, M. and T. Reddy.K, "DDoS Open Threat Signaling
            (DOTS) Agent Discovery", RFC 8973, DOI 10.17487/RFC8973,
            January 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8973>.
 [TLS-DTLS13]
            Rescorla, E., Tschofenig, H., and N. Modadugu, "The
            Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Protocol Version
            1.3", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-tls-
            dtls13-43, 30 April 2021,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-tls-
            dtls13-43>.
 [URI]      IANA, "Well-Known URIs",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/well-known-uris>.

Appendix A. Summary of Changes From RFC 8782

 The main changes compared to [RFC8782] are as follows:
  • Update the "ietf-dots-signal-channel" YANG module (Section 5.3)

and the tree structure (Section 5.1) to follow the new YANG data

    structure specified in [RFC8791].  In particular:
  1. Add in 'choice' to indicate the communication direction in

which a data node applies. If no 'choice' is indicated, a data

       node can appear in both directions (i.e., from DOTS clients to
       DOTS servers and vice versa).
  1. Remove 'config' clauses. Note that 'config' statements will be

ignored (if present) anyway, according to Section 4 of

       [RFC8791].  This supersedes the references to the use of 'ro'
       and 'rw', which are now covered by 'choice' above.
  1. Remove 'cuid', 'cdid', and 'sid' data nodes from the structure

because these data nodes are included as Uri-Path options, not

       within the message body.
  1. Remove the list keys for the mitigation scope message type

(i.e., 'cuid' and 'mid'). 'mid' is not indicated as a key

       because it is included as a Uri-Path option for requests and in
       the message body for responses.  Note that Section 4 of
       [RFC8791] specifies that a list does not require to have a key
       statement defined.
  • Add a new section with a summary of the error code responses that

can be returned by a DOTS server (Section 9).

  • Update the IANA section to allocate a new range for comprehension-

optional attributes (Section 10.6.1.1). This modification is

    motivated by the need to allow for compact DOTS signal messages
    that include a long list of comprehension-optional attributes,
    e.g., DOTS telemetry messages [DOTS-TELEMETRY].
  • Add Appendix C to list recommended/default values of key DOTS

signal channel parameters.

  • Add subsections to Section 4.4.1 for better readability.

Appendix B. CUID Generation

 The document recommends the use of SPKI to generate the 'cuid'.  This
 design choice is motivated by the following reasons:
  • SPKI is globally unique.
  • It is deterministic.
  • It allows the avoidance of extra cycles that may be induced by

'cuid' collision.

  • DOTS clients do not need to store the 'cuid' in a persistent

storage.

  • It allows the detection of compromised DOTS clients that do not

adhere to the 'cuid' generation algorithm.

Appendix C. Summary of Protocol Recommended/Default Values

    +================================+===========================+
    | Parameter                      | Recommended/Default Value |
    +================================+===========================+
    | Port number                    | 4646 (tcp/udp)            |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | lifetime                       | 3600 seconds              |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | active-but-terminating         | 120 seconds               |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | maximum active-but-terminating | 300 seconds               |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | heartbeat-interval             | 30 seconds                |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | minimum 'heartbeat-interval'   | 15 seconds                |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | maximum 'heartbeat-interval'   | 240 seconds               |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | missing-hb-allowed             | 15                        |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | max-retransmit                 | 3                         |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | ack-timeout                    | 2 seconds                 |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | ack-random-factor              | 1.5                       |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | probing-rate                   | 5 bytes/second            |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
    | trigger-mitigation             | true                      |
    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+
                               Table 13

Acknowledgements

 Many thanks to Martin Björklund for the suggestion to use [RFC8791].
 Thanks to Valery Smyslov for the comments, guidance, and support.
 Thanks to Ebben Aries for the yangdoctors review, Dan Romascanu for
 the opsdir review, Michael Tuexen for the tsv-art review, Dale Worley
 for the genart review, and Donald Eastlake 3rd for the secdir review.
 Thanks to Benjamin Kaduk for the AD review.
 Thanks to Martin Duke, Lars Eggert, Erik Kline, Murray Kucherawy,
 Éric Vyncke, and Robert Wilton for the IESG review.

Acknowledgements from RFC 8782

 Thanks to Christian Jacquenet, Roland Dobbins, Roman Danyliw, Michael
 Richardson, Ehud Doron, Kaname Nishizuka, Dave Dolson, Liang Xia,
 Gilbert Clark, Xialiang Frank, Jim Schaad, Klaus Hartke, Nesredien
 Suleiman, Stephen Farrell, and Yoshifumi Nishida for the discussion
 and comments.
 The authors would like to give special thanks to Kaname Nishizuka and
 Jon Shallow for their efforts in implementing the protocol and
 performing interop testing at IETF Hackathons.
 Thanks to the core WG for the recommendations on Hop-Limit and
 redirect signaling.
 Special thanks to Benjamin Kaduk for the detailed AD review.
 Thanks to Alexey Melnikov, Adam Roach, Suresh Krishnan, Mirja
 Kuehlewind, and Alissa Cooper for the review.
 Thanks to Carsten Bormann for his review of the DOTS heartbeat
 mechanism.

Contributors

 The authors of RFC 8782 are listed below:
 Tirumaleswar Reddy.K (editor)
 McAfee, Inc.
 Embassy Golf Link Business Park
 Bangalore 560071
 Karnataka
 India
 Email: kondtir@gmail.com
 Mohamed Boucadair (editor)
 Orange
 35000 Rennes
 France
 Email: mohamed.boucadair@orange.com
 Prashanth Patil
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 Email: praspati@cisco.com
 Andrew Mortensen
 Arbor Networks, Inc.
 2727 S. State Street
 Ann Arbor, MI 48104
 United States of America
 Email: andrew@moretension.com
 Nik Teague
 Iron Mountain Data Centers
 United Kingdom
 Email: nteague@ironmountain.co.uk
 The following individuals have contributed to RFC 8782:
 Jon Shallow
 NCC Group
 Email: jon.shallow@nccgroup.trust
 Mike Geller
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 FL 33309
 United States of America
 Email: mgeller@cisco.com
 Robert Moskowitz
 HTT Consulting
 Oak Park, MI 42837
 United States of America
 Email: rgm@htt-consult.com

Authors' Addresses

 Mohamed Boucadair (editor)
 Orange
 35000 Rennes
 France
 Email: mohamed.boucadair@orange.com
 Jon Shallow
 United Kingdom
 Email: supjps-ietf@jpshallow.com
 Tirumaleswar Reddy.K
 Akamai
 Embassy Golf Link Business Park
 Bangalore 560071
 Karnataka
 India
 Email: kondtir@gmail.com
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