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rfc:rfc7395

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) L. Stout, Ed. Request for Comments: 7395 &yet Category: Standards Track J. Moffitt ISSN: 2070-1721 Mozilla

                                                            E. Cestari
                                                      cstar industries
                                                          October 2014
An Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) Subprotocol for
                             WebSocket

Abstract

 This document defines a binding for the Extensible Messaging and
 Presence Protocol (XMPP) over a WebSocket transport layer.  A
 WebSocket binding for XMPP provides higher performance than the
 current HTTP binding for XMPP.

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 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7395.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 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.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................2
 2. Terminology .....................................................3
 3. XMPP Subprotocol ................................................3
    3.1. Handshake ..................................................3
    3.2. WebSocket Messages .........................................4
    3.3. XMPP Framing ...............................................5
         3.3.1. Framed XML Stream ...................................5
         3.3.2. Framed Stream Namespace .............................5
         3.3.3. Stream Frames .......................................5
    3.4. Stream Initiation ..........................................6
    3.5. Stream Errors ..............................................7
    3.6. Closing the Connection .....................................7
         3.6.1. see-other-uri .......................................8
    3.7. Stream Restarts ............................................9
    3.8. Pings and Keepalives .......................................9
    3.9. Use of TLS .................................................9
    3.10. Stream Management ........................................10
 4. Discovering the WebSocket Connection Method ....................10
 5. IANA Considerations ............................................11
    5.1. WebSocket Subprotocol Name ................................11
    5.2. URN Sub-namespace .........................................11
 6. Security Considerations ........................................12
 7. References .....................................................14
    7.1. Normative References ......................................14
    7.2. Informative References ....................................14
 Appendix A. XML Schema ............................................16
 Acknowledgements ..................................................17
 Authors' Addresses ................................................18

1. Introduction

 To date, applications using the Extensible Messaging and Presence
 Protocol (XMPP) (see [RFC6120] and [RFC6121]) on the Web have made
 use of Bidirectional-streams Over Synchronous HTTP (BOSH) (see
 [XEP-0124] and [XEP-0206]), an XMPP binding to HTTP.  BOSH is based
 on the HTTP "long polling" technique, and it suffers from high
 transport overhead compared to XMPP's native binding to TCP.  In
 addition, there are a number of other known issues with long polling
 [RFC6202] that have an impact on BOSH-based systems.
 In most circumstances, it would be much better to avoid tunneling
 XMPP over HTTP long-polled connections and instead use XMPP directly.
 However, the APIs and sandbox that browsers have provided do not
 allow this.  The WebSocket protocol [RFC6455] exists to solve these

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 kinds of problems and is a bidirectional protocol that provides a
 simple message-based framing layer, allowing for more robust and
 efficient communication in web applications.
 The WebSocket protocol enables two-way communication between a client
 and a server, effectively emulating TCP at the application layer and,
 therefore, overcoming many of the problems with existing long-polling
 techniques for bidirectional HTTP.  This document defines a WebSocket
 subprotocol for XMPP.
 The WebSocket binding for XMPP is designed for use by browser-based
 applications (e.g., XMPP clients written in JavaScript).  Typically,
 these applications are used to access the same information and
 communication opportunities (e.g., the same XMPP "roster" of
 contacts) as clients that connect to an XMPP server over the TCP
 binding defined in [RFC6120].  Although the only essential difference
 is the underlying transport binding, relevant implications (e.g.,
 framing methods and discovery processes) are highlighted in this
 specification.

2. Terminology

 The basic unit of framing in the WebSocket protocol is called a
 "message".  In XMPP, the basic unit is the stanza, which is a subset
 of the first-level children of each document in an XMPP stream (see
 Section 9 of [RFC6120]).  XMPP also has a concept of messages, which
 are stanzas with a top-level element of <message/>.  In this
 document, the word "message" will mean a WebSocket message, not an
 XMPP message stanza (unless otherwise noted).
 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
 [RFC2119].

3. XMPP Subprotocol

3.1. Handshake

 The XMPP subprotocol is used to transport XMPP over a WebSocket
 connection.  The client and server agree to this protocol during the
 WebSocket handshake (see Section 1.3 of [RFC6455]).
 During the WebSocket handshake, the client MUST include the value
 'xmpp' in the list of protocols for the 'Sec-WebSocket-Protocol'
 header.  The reply from the server MUST also contain 'xmpp' in its
 own 'Sec-WebSocket-Protocol' header in order for an XMPP subprotocol
 connection to be established.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 If a client receives a handshake response that does not include
 'xmpp' in the 'Sec-WebSocket-Protocol' header, then an XMPP
 subprotocol WebSocket connection was not established and the client
 MUST close the WebSocket connection.
 Once the handshake has successfully completed, WebSocket messages
 sent or received MUST conform to the protocol defined in the rest of
 this document.
 The following is an example of a WebSocket handshake, followed by
 opening an XMPP stream:
 C:  GET /xmpp-websocket HTTP/1.1
     Host: example.com
     Upgrade: websocket
     Connection: Upgrade
     Sec-WebSocket-Key: dGhlIHNhbXBsZSBub25jZQ==
     Origin: http://example.com
     ...
     Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: xmpp
     Sec-WebSocket-Version: 13
 S:  HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols
     Upgrade: websocket
     Connection: Upgrade
     ...
     Sec-WebSocket-Accept: s3pPLMBiTxaQ9kYGzzhZRbK+xOo=
     Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: xmpp
 [WebSocket connection established]
 C:  <open xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
           to="example.com"
           version="1.0" />
 S:  <open xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
           from="example.com"
           id="++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y="
           xml:lang="en"
           version="1.0" />

3.2. WebSocket Messages

 Data frame messages in the XMPP subprotocol MUST be of the text type
 and contain UTF-8 encoded data.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

3.3. XMPP Framing

 The framing method for the binding of XMPP to WebSocket differs from
 the framing method for the TCP binding as defined in [RFC6120]; in
 particular, the WebSocket binding adopts the message framing provided
 by WebSocket to delineate the stream open and close headers, stanzas,
 and other top-level stream elements.

3.3.1. Framed XML Stream

 The start of a framed XML stream is marked by the use of an opening
 "stream header", which is an <open/> element with the appropriate
 attributes and namespace declarations (see Section 3.3.2).  The
 attributes of the <open/> element are the same as those of the
 <stream/> element defined for the 'http://etherx.jabber.org/streams'
 namespace [RFC6120] and with the same semantics and restrictions.
 The end of a framed XML stream is denoted by the closing "stream
 header", which is a <close/> element with its associated attributes
 and namespace declarations (see Section 3.3.2).
 The introduction of the <open/> and <close/> elements is motivated by
 the parsable XML document framing restriction in Section 3.3.3.  As a
 consequence, note that a framed XML stream does not provide a
 wrapping <stream:stream/> [RFC6120] element encompassing the entirety
 of the XML stream.

3.3.2. Framed Stream Namespace

 The XML stream headers (the <open/> and <close/> elements) MUST be
 qualified by the namespace 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing' (the
 "framed stream namespace").  If this rule is violated, the entity
 that receives the offending stream header MUST close the stream with
 an error, which MUST be <invalid-namespace> (see Section 4.9.3.10 of
 [RFC6120]).

3.3.3. Stream Frames

 The individual frames of a framed XML stream have a one-to-one
 correspondence with WebSocket messages and MUST be parsable as
 standalone XML documents, complete with all relevant namespace and
 language declarations.  The inclusion of XML declarations, however,
 is NOT RECOMMENDED, as WebSocket messages are already mandated to be
 UTF-8 encoded.  Including declarations in each message would only
 increase the framing overhead of each message.
 The first character of each frame MUST be a '<' character.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 Every XMPP stanza or other XML element (including the stream open and
 close headers) sent directly over the XML stream MUST be sent in its
 own frame.
 Example of a WebSocket message that contains an independently
 parsable XML document:
 <message xmlns="jabber:client" xml:lang="en">
   <body>Every WebSocket message is parsable by itself.</body>
 </message>
 Note that for stream features and errors, there is no parent context
 element providing the "stream" namespace prefix as in [RFC6120], and
 thus the stream prefix MUST be declared or use an unprefixed form:
 <stream:features xmlns:stream="http://etherx.jabber.org/streams">
   <bind xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-bind"/>
 </stream:features>
  1. - OR –
 <error xmlns="http://etherx.jabber.org/streams">
   <host-unknown xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-streams'/>
 </error>

3.4. Stream Initiation

 The first message sent after the WebSocket opening handshake MUST be
 from the initiating entity and MUST be an <open/> element qualified
 by the 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing' namespace and with the
 same attributes mandated for the <stream> opening tag as described in
 Section 4.7 of [RFC6120].
 The receiving entity MUST respond with either an <open/> element
 (whose attributes match those described in Section 4.7 of [RFC6120])
 or a <close/> element (see Section 3.6.1).

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 An example of a successful stream initiation exchange:
 C:  <open xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
           to="example.com"
           version="1.0" />
 S:  <open xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
           from="example.com"
           id="++TR84Sm6A3hnt3Q065SnAbbk3Y="
           xml:lang="en"
           version="1.0" />
 Clients MUST NOT multiplex XMPP streams over the same WebSocket.

3.5. Stream Errors

 Stream-level errors in XMPP are fatal.  Should such an error occur,
 the server MUST send the stream error as a complete element in a
 message to the client.
 If the error occurs during the opening of a stream, the server MUST
 send the initial open element response, followed by the stream-level
 error in a second WebSocket message frame.  The server MUST then
 close the connection as specified in Section 3.6.

3.6. Closing the Connection

 The closing process for the XMPP subprotocol mirrors that of the XMPP
 TCP binding as defined in Section 4.4 of [RFC6120], except that a
 <close/> element is used instead of the ending </stream:stream> tag.
 Either the server or the client may close the connection at any time.
 Before closing the connection, the closing party is expected to first
 close the XMPP stream (if one has been opened) by sending a message
 with the <close/> element, qualified by the
 "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing" namespace.  The stream is
 considered closed when a corresponding <close/> element is received
 from the other party, and the XMPP session is ended.
 To then close the WebSocket connection, the closing party MUST
 initiate the WebSocket closing handshake (see Section 7.1.2 of
 [RFC6455]).

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 An example of ending an XMPP-over-WebSocket session by first closing
 the XMPP stream layer and then the WebSocket connection layer:
 Client                         (XMPP WSS)                      Server
 |  |                                                             |  |
 |  | <close xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing" />       |  |
 |  |------------------------------------------------------------>|  |
 |  |       <close xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing" /> |  |
 |  |<------------------------------------------------------------|  |
 |  |                                                             |  |
 |  |                      (XMPP Stream Closed)                   |  |
 |  +-------------------------------------------------------------+  |
 |                                                                   |
 | WS CLOSE FRAME                                                    |
 |------------------------------------------------------------------>|
 |                                                    WS CLOSE FRAME |
 |<------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |                                                                   |
 |                         (Connection Closed)                       |
 +-------------------------------------------------------------------+
 If the WebSocket connection is closed or broken without the XMPP
 stream having been closed first, then the XMPP stream is considered
 implicitly closed and the XMPP session ended; however, if the use of
 stream management resumption was negotiated (see [XEP-0198]), the
 server SHOULD consider the XMPP session still alive for a period of
 time based on server policy as specified in [XEP-0198].

3.6.1. see-other-uri

 At any point, if the server wishes to instruct the client to move to
 a different WebSocket endpoint (e.g., for load-balancing purposes),
 then a <close/> element is sent with the 'see-other-uri' attribute
 set to the URI of the new connection endpoint (which MAY be for a
 different transport method, such as BOSH (see [XEP-0124] and
 [XEP-0206])).
 Clients MUST NOT accept suggested endpoints with a lower security
 context (e.g., moving from a 'wss://' endpoint to a 'ws://' or
 'http://' endpoint).
 An example of the server closing a stream and instructing the client
 to connect at a different WebSocket endpoint:
 S: <close xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
           see-other-uri="wss://otherendpoint.example/xmpp-bind" />

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

3.7. Stream Restarts

 Whenever a stream restart is mandated (see Section 4.3.3 of
 [RFC6120]), both the server and client streams are implicitly closed
 and new streams MUST be opened, using the same process as in
 Section 3.4.
 The client MUST send a new stream <open/> element and MUST NOT send a
 closing <close/> element.
 An example of restarting the stream after successful Simple
 Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) negotiation:
 S: <success xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-sasl" />
 [Streams implicitly closed]
 C: <open xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing"
          to="example.com"
          version="1.0" />

3.8. Pings and Keepalives

 Traditionally, XMPP servers and clients often send "whitespace
 keepalives" (see Section 4.6.1 of [RFC6120]) between stanzas to
 maintain an XML stream.  However, for the XMPP subprotocol each
 message is required to start with a '<' character, and, as such,
 whitespace keepalives MUST NOT be used.
 As alternatives, the XMPP Ping extension [XEP-0199] and the XMPP
 Stream Management extension [XEP-0198] provide pinging mechanisms.
 Either of these extensions (or both) MAY be used to determine the
 state of the connection.
 Clients and servers MAY also use WebSocket ping control frames for
 this purpose, but note that some environments, such as browsers, do
 not provide access for generating or monitoring ping control frames.

3.9. Use of TLS

 Transport Layer Security (TLS) cannot be used at the XMPP subprotocol
 layer because the subprotocol does not allow for raw binary data to
 be sent.  Instead, when TLS is used, it MUST be enabled at the
 WebSocket layer using secure WebSocket connections via the 'wss' URI
 scheme.  (See Section 10.6 of [RFC6455].)

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 Because TLS is to be provided outside of the XMPP subprotocol layer,
 a server MUST NOT advertise TLS as a stream feature (see Section 4.6
 of [RFC6120]) when using the XMPP subprotocol.  Likewise, a client
 MUST ignore any advertised TLS stream feature when using the XMPP
 subprotocol.

3.10. Stream Management

 In order to alleviate the problems of temporary disconnections, the
 client MAY use the XMPP Stream Management extension [XEP-0198] to
 confirm when stanzas have been received by the server.
 In particular, the client MAY use session resumption as described in
 [XEP-0198] to recreate the same stream session state after a
 temporary network unavailability or after navigating to a new URL in
 a browser.

4. Discovering the WebSocket Connection Method

 Section 3 of [RFC6120] defines a procedure for connecting to an XMPP
 server, including ways to discover the TCP/IP address and port of the
 server using Domain Name System service (DNS SRV) records [RFC2782].
 When using the WebSocket binding as specified in this document
 (instead of the TCP binding as specified in [RFC6120]), a client
 needs an alternative way to discover information about the server's
 connection methods, since web browsers and other WebSocket-capable
 software applications typically cannot obtain such information from
 the DNS.
 The alternative lookup process uses Web-host Metadata [RFC6415] and
 Web Linking [RFC5988], where the link relation type is
 "urn:xmpp:alt-connections:websocket" as described in "Discovering
 Alternative XMPP Connection Methods" [XEP-0156].  Conceptually, the
 host-meta lookup process used for the WebSocket binding is analogous
 to the DNS SRV lookup process used for the TCP binding.  The process
 is as follows.
 1.  Send a request over secure HTTP to the path
     "/.well-known/host-meta" at an HTTP origin [RFC6454] that matches
     the XMPP service domain (e.g., a URL of
     "https://im.example.org/.well-known/host-meta" if the XMPP
     service domain is "im.example.org").

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 2.  Retrieve a host-meta document specifying a link relation type of
     "urn:xmpp:alt-connections:websocket", such as:
     <XRD xmlns='http://docs.oasis-open.org/ns/xri/xrd-1.0'>
       <Link rel="urn:xmpp:alt-connections:websocket"
             href="wss://im.example.org:443/ws" />
     </XRD>
 Servers MAY expose discovery information using host-meta documents,
 and clients MAY use such information to determine the WebSocket
 endpoint for a server.
 In cases where the XMPP service domain does not match the discovered
 web origin of the WebSocket endpoint, the Web-host Metadata SHOULD be
 used to establish trust between the XMPP server domain and the
 WebSocket endpoint as long as the host-meta request and response
 occurred over secure HTTP; this is especially relevant in multi-
 tenant situations where the same WebSocket endpoint is serving
 multiple XMPP domains (e.g., the XMPP service domains for both
 "example.com" and "im.example.org" might be serviced by the same
 WebSocket endpoint at "hosting.example.net").  See Section 6 for
 related discussion.

5. IANA Considerations

5.1. WebSocket Subprotocol Name

 IANA has registered the WebSocket XMPP subprotocol in the "WebSocket
 Subprotocol Name Registry", with the following data:
 Subprotocol Identifier:  xmpp
 Subprotocol Common Name:  WebSocket Transport for the Extensible
    Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP)
 Subprotocol Definition:  this document

5.2. URN Sub-namespace

 A URN sub-namespace for framing of Extensible Messaging and Presence
 Protocol (XMPP) streams is defined as follows.
 URI:  urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing
 Specification:  this document

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 Description:  This is the XML namespace name for framing of
    Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) streams as
    defined by RFC 7395.
 Registrant Contact:  IESG <iesg@ietf.org>

6. Security Considerations

 The WebSocket binding for XMPP differs in several respects from the
 TCP binding defined in [RFC6120]:
 1.  As described in Section 4 of this document, the method for
     discovering a connection endpoint does not use DNS SRV records as
     in the TCP binding but instead uses Web-host Metadata files
     retrieved via HTTPS from a URL at the XMPP service domain.  From
     a security standpoint, this is functionally equivalent to
     resolution via DNS SRV records (and still relies on the DNS for
     resolution of the XMPP source domain).
 2.  The method for authenticating a connection endpoint uses TLS
     (typically with PKIX certificates) as in the TCP binding, but the
     identity to be authenticated is the connection endpoint address
     instead of the XMPP service domain; delegation from the XMPP
     service domain to the connection endpoint address (if any) is
     accomplished via the discovery method described in Section 4.
     Thus, the connection endpoint is still authenticated, and the
     delegation is secure as long as the Web-host Metadata file is
     retrieved via HTTPS.  However, note that, in practice, this
     option might not be employed when user agents are configured or
     deployed for a particular delegated domain.
 3.  The framing method described in Section 3.3 follows the WebSocket
     pattern by sending one top-level XML element per WebSocket
     message, instead of using streaming XML as in the TCP binding.
     However, the framing method has no impact on the security
     properties of an XMPP session (e.g., end-to-end encryption of XML
     stanzas can be accomplished just as easily with WebSocket framing
     as with streaming XML).
 4.  In all other respects (e.g., user authentication via SASL,
     allowable characters in XMPP addresses, and reuse of various
     technologies such as Base 64, SASL mechanisms, UTF-8, and XML),
     the WebSocket binding does not differ from the TCP binding and,
     thus, does not modify the security properties of the protocol.
     In all these respects, the security considerations of [RFC6120]
     apply directly to the WebSocket binding.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 In order to ensure that communications over the WebSocket binding are
 as secure as communications over the TCP binding, an operator needs
 to (1) serve the Web-host Metadata file for the XMPP service domain
 over secure HTTP ('https' URIs) only, (2) configure the WebSocket
 connection endpoint to use TLS ('wss' URIs) only, and (3) deploy
 certificates that properly identify the XMPP service domain and
 WebSocket connection endpoint for usages (1) and (2), respectively.
 Since application-level TLS cannot be used (see Section 3.9),
 applications need to protect the privacy of XMPP traffic at the
 WebSocket or other appropriate layer.
 Browser-based applications are not able to inspect and verify, at the
 application layer, the certificate used for the WebSocket connection
 to ensure that it corresponds to the domain specified as the 'to'
 address of the XMPP stream.  There are two cases:
 1.  If the XMPP service domain matches the origin for the WebSocket
     connection, the relevant check is already performed by the
     browser.  For example, the XMPP service domain might be
     "foo.example", and the WebSocket endpoint discovered for the link
     relation type of "urn:xmpp:alt-connections:websocket" might be
     "wss://foo.example/websocket".  As long as the certificate
     provided over WebSocket or HTTPS is verified according to the
     rules defined for secure HTTP [RFC2818], then the browser will
     report the successful establishment of a secure connection to the
     application.  (However, as noted, the application is still not
     able to independently inspect and verify the certificate, and
     needs to trust the browser; this is a limitation of existing
     browser technologies and thus cannot be worked around by
     WebSocket applications.)
 2.  In situations where the user agent has to deal with delegation
     and the domain of the XMPP server does not match the web origin
     of the WebSocket endpoint (such as multi-tenant hosting
     situations), the host-meta process described in Section 4 SHOULD
     be used to delegate trust from the XMPP server domain to the
     WebSocket origin, as long as the host-meta request and response
     occurred over secure HTTP (with appropriate certificate
     verification as defined in [RFC2818]).
 When presented with a new WebSocket endpoint via the 'see-other-uri'
 attribute of a <close/> element, clients MUST NOT accept the
 suggestion if the security context of the new endpoint is lower than
 the current one in order to prevent downgrade attacks from a 'wss://'
 endpoint to 'ws://'.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 The security considerations for both WebSocket (see Section 10 of
 [RFC6455]) and XMPP (see Section 13 of [RFC6120]) apply to the
 WebSocket XMPP subprotocol.

7. References

7.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC2818]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, May 2000,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2818>.
 [RFC5988]  Nottingham, M., "Web Linking", RFC 5988, October 2010,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5988>.
 [RFC6120]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
            Protocol (XMPP): Core", RFC 6120, March 2011,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6120>.
 [RFC6415]  Hammer-Lahav, E. and B. Cook, "Web Host Metadata", RFC
            6415, October 2011,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6415>.
 [RFC6455]  Fette, I. and A. Melnikov, "The WebSocket Protocol", RFC
            6455, December 2011,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6455>.

7.2. Informative References

 [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
            specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
            February 2000, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2782>.
 [RFC6121]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
            Protocol (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence", RFC
            6121, March 2011,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6121>.
 [RFC6202]  Loreto, S., Saint-Andre, P., Salsano, S., and G. Wilkins,
            "Known Issues and Best Practices for the Use of Long
            Polling and Streaming in Bidirectional HTTP", RFC 6202,
            April 2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6202>.
 [RFC6454]  Barth, A., "The Web Origin Concept", RFC 6454,
            December 2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6454>.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 14] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

 [XEP-0124] Paterson, I., Smith, D., Saint-Andre, P., Moffitt, J.,
            Stout, L., and W. Tilanus, "Bidirectional-streams Over
            Synchronous HTTP (BOSH)", XSF XEP 0124, April 2014.
 [XEP-0156] Hildebrand, J., Saint-Andre, P., and L. Stout,
            "Discovering Alternative XMPP Connection Methods",
            XSF XEP 0156, January 2014.
 [XEP-0198] Karneges, J., Saint-Andre, P., Hildebrand, J., Forno, F.,
            Cridland, D., and M. Wild, "Stream Management",
            XSF XEP 0198, June 2011.
 [XEP-0199] Saint-Andre, P., "XMPP Ping", XSF XEP 0199, June 2009.
 [XEP-0206] Paterson, I., Saint-Andre, P., Stout, L., and W. Tilanus,
 "XMPP Over BOSH", XSF XEP 0206, April 2014.
 [XML-SCHEMA]
            Thompson, H., Beech, D., Maloney, M., and N. Mendelsohn,
            "XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition", World Wide
            Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xmlschema-1-20041028,
            October 2004,
            <http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-1-20041028>.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 15] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

Appendix A. XML Schema

 The following schema formally defines the
 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing' namespace used in this
 document, in conformance with W3C XML Schema [XML-SCHEMA].  Because
 validation of XML streams and stanzas is optional, this schema is not
 normative and is provided for descriptive purposes only.
 <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
 <xs:schema
     xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
     targetNamespace='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing'
     xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xmpp-framing'
     elementFormDefault='unqualified'>
   <xs:element name='open'>
     <xs:complexType>
       <xs:simpleContent>
         <xs:extension base='empty'>
           <xs:attribute name='from' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='id' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='to' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='version' type='xs:decimal'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang'
                         use='optional'/>
         </xs:extension>
       </xs:simpleContent>
     </xs:complexType>
   </xs:element>

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 16] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

   <xs:element name='close'>
     <xs:complexType>
       <xs:simpleContent>
         <xs:extension base='empty'>
           <xs:attribute name='from' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='id' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='see-other-uri' type='xs:anyURI'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='to' type='xs:string'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute name='version' type='xs:decimal'
                         use='optional'/>
           <xs:attribute ref='xml:lang'
                         use='optional'/>
         </xs:extension>
       </xs:simpleContent>
     </xs:complexType>
   </xs:element>
   <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
     <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
       <xs:enumeration value=''/>
     </xs:restriction>
   </xs:simpleType>
 </xs:schema>

Acknowledgements

 The authors wish to thank the following individuals for their
 feedback: Andreas Guth, Bjoern Hoerhmann, Dave Cridland, Florian
 Zeitz, Kurt Zeilenga, Matt Miller, Matthew Wild, Paul Aurich, Sergey
 Dobrov, and Waqas Hussain.
 Dan Romascanu reviewed the document on behalf of the General Area
 Review Team.
 During IESG review, Barry Leiba, Benoit Claise, Dan Romascanu, Jari
 Arkko, Juergen Schoenwaelder, Spencer Dawkins, Stephen Farrell, Ted
 Lemon, Kathleen Moriarty, and Pete Resnick caught several issues that
 needed to be addressed.
 The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Peter Saint-
 Andre as document shepherd, Ben Campbell and Joe Hildebrand as the
 working group chairs, and Richard Barnes as the sponsoring Area
 Director.

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 17] RFC 7395 XMPP over WebSocket October 2014

Authors' Addresses

 Lance Stout (editor)
 &yet
 EMail: lance@andyet.net
 Jack Moffitt
 Mozilla
 EMail: jack@metajack.im
 Eric Cestari
 cstar industries
 EMail: eric@cstar.io

Stout, et al. Standards Track [Page 18]

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