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Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) Extension for Streaming Feeds
Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) Extension for Streaming Feeds
draft-ietf-nntpext-streaming-06
The information below is for an old version of the document that is already published as an RFC.
| Document | Type |
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 4644.
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Ken Murchison , Jeffrey M. Vinocur | ||
| Last updated | 2018-12-20 (Latest revision 2005-06-27) | ||
| RFC stream | Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) | ||
| Intended RFC status | Proposed Standard | ||
| Formats | |||
| Additional resources | Mailing list discussion | ||
| Stream | WG state | (None) | |
| Document shepherd | (None) | ||
| IESG | IESG state | Became RFC 4644 (Proposed Standard) | |
| Action Holders |
(None)
|
||
| Consensus boilerplate | Unknown | ||
| Telechat date | (None) | ||
| Responsible AD | Scott Hollenbeck | ||
| Send notices to | (None) |
draft-ietf-nntpext-streaming-06
NNTP Extensions Working Group J. Vinocur
Internet Draft Cornell University
Updates: 2980 (if approved) K. Murchison
Expires: December 2005 Oceana Matrix Ltd.
June 2005
NNTP Extension for Streaming Feeds
draft-ietf-nntpext-streaming-06
Status of this memo
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
Abstract
This memo defines an extension to the Network News Transport
Protocol (NNTP) to provide asynchronous (otherwise known as
"streaming") transfer of articles. This allows servers to transfer
articles to other servers with much greater efficiency.
This document updates and formalizes the CHECK and TAKETHIS
commands specified in RFC 2980 and deprecates the MODE STREAM
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command.
Note to the RFC Editor
The normative reference to RFC 2234 may be replaced by
draft-crocker-abnf-rfc2234bis should it reach RFC status before
this one.
The normative reference to [NNTP] is a document which is expected
to be published simultaneously with this one and so can be replaced
by a reference to the resulting RFC.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ............................................. 3
1.1. Conventions Used in this Document ................... 3
2. The STREAMING Extension .................................. 3
2.1. Streaming Article Transfer .......................... 3
2.2. Advertising the STREAMING Extension ................. 4
2.3. MODE STREAM Command ................................. 5
2.3.1. Usage .......................................... 5
2.3.2. Description .................................... 5
2.3.3. Examples ....................................... 6
2.4. CHECK Command ....................................... 6
2.4.1. Usage .......................................... 6
2.4.2. Description .................................... 6
2.4.3. Examples ....................................... 7
2.5. TAKETHIS Command .................................... 7
2.5.1. Usage .......................................... 7
2.5.2. Description .................................... 8
2.5.3. Examples ....................................... 8
3. Augmented BNF Syntax for the STREAMING Extension ......... 9
3.1. Commands ............................................ 10
3.2. Command Datastream .................................. 10
3.3. Responses ........................................... 10
3.4. Capability Entries .................................. 10
4. Summary of Response Codes ................................ 11
5. Security Considerations .................................. 11
6. IANA Considerations ...................................... 11
7. References ............................................... 12
7.1. Normative References ................................ 12
7.2. Informative References .............................. 13
8. Authors' Addresses ....................................... 13
9. Acknowledgments .......................................... 13
10. Intellectual Property Rights ............................ 13
11. Copyright ............................................... 14
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1. Introduction
According to the NNTP specification [NNTP], a peer uses the IHAVE
command to query whether a server wants a particular article.
Because the IHAVE command cannot be pipelined, the need to stop and
wait for the remote end's response greatly restricts the throughput
that can be achieved.
The ad-hoc CHECK and TAKETHIS commands, originally documented in
[NNTP-COMMON], provide an alternative method of peer-to-peer
article transfer which permits a more effective use of network
bandwidth. Due to their proven usefulness and wide deployment,
they are formalized in this specification.
The ad-hoc MODE STREAM command, also documented in [NNTP-COMMON],
is deprecated by this specification, but due to its ubiquity is
documented here for backwards compatibility.
1.1. Conventions Used in this Document
The notational conventions used in this document are the same as
those in [NNTP] and any term not defined in this document has the
same meaning as in that one.
The key words "REQUIRED", "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD
NOT", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted
as described in "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels" [KEYWORDS].
This document assumes you are familiar with NNTP [NNTP]. In
general, the connections described below are from one peer to
another, but we will continue to use "client" to mean the initiator
of the NNTP connection, and "server" to mean the other endpoint.
In the examples, commands from the client are indicated with [C],
and responses from the server are indicated with [S].
2. The STREAMING Extension
This extension provides three new commands: MODE STREAM, CHECK, and
TAKETHIS. The capability label for this extension is STREAMING.
2.1. Streaming Article Transfer
The STREAMING extension provides the same functionality as the
IHAVE command ([NNTP] section 6.3.2) but splits the query and
transfer functionality into the CHECK and TAKETHIS commands
respectively. This allows the CHECK and TAKETHIS commands to be
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pipelined ([NNTP] section 3.5) and provides for "streaming" article
transfer.
A streaming client will often pipeline many CHECK commands and use
the responses to construct a list of articles to be sent by a
pipelined sequence of TAKETHIS commands, thus increasing the
fraction of time spent transferring articles. The CHECK and
TAKETHIS commands utilize distinct response codes so that these
commands can be intermingled in a pipeline and the response to any
single command can be definitively identified by the client.
The client MAY send articles via TAKETHIS without first querying
the server with CHECK. The client SHOULD NOT send every article in
this fashion unless explicitly configured to do so by the site
administrator based on out-of-band information. However, the
client MAY use an adaptive strategy where it initially sends CHECK
commands for all articles, but switches to using TAKETHIS without
CHECK if most articles are being accepted (over 95% acceptance
might be a reasonable metric in some configurations). If the
client uses such a strategy, it SHOULD also switch back to using
CHECK on all articles if the acceptance rate ever falls much below
the threshold.
2.2. Advertising the STREAMING Extension
A server supporting the streaming commands described in this
document will advertise the "STREAMING" capability label in
response to the CAPABILITIES command. The server MUST continue to
advertise this capability after a client has issued the MODE STREAM
command. This capability MAY be advertised both before and after
any use of MODE READER, with the same semantics.
Example of a client using CAPABILITIES and MODE STREAM on a mode-
switching server:
[C] CAPABILITIES
[S] 101 Capability list:
[S] VERSION 2
[S] MODE-READER
[S] IHAVE
[S] LIST ACTIVE
[S] STREAMING
[S] .
[C] MODE STREAM
[S] 203 Streaming permitted
[C] CAPABILITIES
[S] 101 Capability list:
[S] VERSION 2
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[S] MODE-READER
[S] IHAVE
[S] LIST ACTIVE
[S] STREAMING
[S] .
[C] MODE READER
[S] 200 Posting allowed
[C] CAPABILITIES
[S] 101 Capability list:
[S] VERSION 2
[S] READER
[S] POST
[S] LIST ACTIVE NEWSGROUPS HEADERS
[S] HDR
[S] .
2.3. MODE STREAM Command
Historically this command was used by a client to discover if a
server supported the CHECK and TAKETHIS commands. This command is
deprecated in favor of the CAPABILITIES discovery command and is
only provided here for compatibility with legacy implementations
[NNTP-COMMON] of these transport commands.
New clients SHOULD use the CAPABILITIES command to check a server
for support of the STREAMING extension but MAY use the MODE STREAM
command for backwards compatibility with legacy servers that don't
support the CAPABILITIES discovery command. Servers MUST accept
the MODE STREAM command for backwards compatibility with legacy
clients which don't use the CAPABILITIES discovery command.
NOTE: This command may be removed from a future version of this
specification, therefore clients are urged to transition to the
CAPABILITIES command wherever possible.
2.3.1. Usage
Syntax
MODE STREAM
Responses
203 Streaming permitted
2.3.2. Description
If a server supports this extension, it MUST return a 203 response
to the MODE STREAM command (or 501 if an argument is given). The
MODE STREAM command MUST NOT affect the server state in any way
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(that is, it is not a mode change despite the name), therefore this
command MAY be pipelined. A server MUST NOT require that the MODE
STREAM command be issued by the client before accepting the CHECK
or TAKETHIS commands.
2.3.3. Examples
Example of a client checking the ability to stream articles on a
server which does not support this extension:
[C] MODE STREAM
[S] 501 Unknown MODE variant
Example of a client checking the ability to stream articles on a
server which supports this extension:
[C] MODE STREAM
[S] 203 Streaming permitted
2.4. CHECK Command
2.4.1. Usage
Syntax
CHECK message-id
Responses
238 message-id Send article to be transferred
431 message-id Transfer not possible; try again later
438 message-id Article not wanted
Parameters
message-id = Article message-id
The first parameter of the 238, 431, and 438 responses MUST be the
message-id provided by the client as the parameter to CHECK.
2.4.2. Description
The CHECK command informs the server that the client has an article
with the specified message-id. If the server desires a copy of
that article, a 238 response MUST be returned, indicating that the
client may send the article using the TAKETHIS command. If the
server does not want the article (if, for example, the server
already has a copy of it), a 438 response MUST be returned,
indicating that the article is not wanted. Finally, if the article
isn't wanted immediately but the client should retry later if
possible (if, for example, another client has offered to send the
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same article to the server), a 431 response MUST be returned.
NOTE: The responses to CHECK are advisory; the server MUST NOT rely
on the client to behave as requested by these responses.
2.4.3. Examples
Example of a client checking whether the server would like a set of
articles and getting a mixture of responses:
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[S] 238 <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[S] 438 <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.defer@example.com>
[S] 431 <i.am.an.article.you.defer@example.com>
Example of pipelining the CHECK commands in the previous example:
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[C] CHECK <i.am.an.article.you.defer@example.com>
[S] 238 <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[S] 438 <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[S] 431 <i.am.an.article.you.defer@example.com>
2.5. TAKETHIS Command
2.5.1. Usage
A client MUST NOT use this command unless the server advertises the
STREAMING capability or returns a 203 response to the MODE STREAM
command.
Syntax
TAKETHIS message-id
Responses
239 message-id Article transferred OK
439 message-id Transfer rejected; do not retry
Parameters
message-id = Article message-id
The first parameter of the 239 and 439 responses MUST be the
message-id provided by the client as the parameter to TAKETHIS.
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2.5.2. Description
The TAKETHIS command is used to send an article with the specified
message-id to the server. The article is sent immediately
following the CRLF at the end of the TAKETHIS command line. The
client MUST send the entire article, including headers and body, to
the server as a multi-line data block ([NNTP] section 3.1.1). Thus
a single dot (".") on a line indicates the end of the text, and
lines starting with a dot in the original text have that dot
doubled during transmission. The server MUST return either a 239
response, indicating that the article was successfully transferred,
or a 439 response, indicating that the article was rejected. If
the server encounters a temporary error that prevents it from
processing the article but does not want to reject the article, it
MUST reply with a 400 response to the client and close the
connection.
This function differs from the POST command in that it is intended
for use in transferring already-posted articles between hosts. It
SHOULD NOT be used when the client is a personal news reading
program, since use of this command indicates that the article has
already been posted at another site and is simply being forwarded
from another host. However, despite this, the server MAY elect not
to post or forward the article if, after further examination of the
article, it deems it inappropriate to do so. Reasons for such
subsequent rejection of an article may include such problems as
inappropriate newsgroups or distributions, disk space limitations,
article lengths, garbled headers, and the like. These are
typically restrictions enforced by the server host's news software
and not necessarily the NNTP server itself.
The client SHOULD NOT assume that the article has been successfully
transferred unless it receives an affirmative response from the
server. A lack of response (such as a dropped network connection
or a network timeout) or a 400 response SHOULD be treated as a
temporary failure and cause the transfer to be tried again later if
possible.
Because some news server software may not be able immediately to
determine whether or not an article is suitable for posting or
forwarding, an NNTP server MAY acknowledge the successful transfer
of the article (with a 239 response) but later silently discard it.
2.5.3. Examples
Example of streaming two articles to another site (the first
article is accepted and the second is rejected):
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[C] TAKETHIS <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C] Path: pathost!demo!somewhere!not-for-mail
[C] From: "Demo User" <nobody@example.com>
[C] Newsgroups: misc.test
[C] Subject: I am just a test article
[C] Date: 6 Oct 1998 04:38:40 -0500
[C] Organization: An Example Com, San Jose, CA
[C] Message-ID: <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C]
[C] This is just a test article.
[C] .
[C] TAKETHIS <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[C] Path: pathost!demo!somewhere!not-for-mail
[C] From: "Demo User" <nobody@example.com>
[C] Newsgroups: misc.test
[C] Subject: I am just a test article
[C] Date: 6 Oct 1998 04:38:40 -0500
[C] Organization: An Example Com, San Jose, CA
[C] Message-ID: <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
[C]
[C] This is just a test article.
[C] .
[S] 239 <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[S] 439 <i.am.an.article.you.have@example.com>
Example of sending an article to a site where the transfer fails:
[C] TAKETHIS <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C] Path: pathost!demo!somewhere!not-for-mail
[C] From: "Demo User" <nobody@example.com>
[C] Newsgroups: misc.test
[C] Subject: I am just a test article
[C] Date: 6 Oct 1998 04:38:40 -0500
[C] Organization: An Example Com, San Jose, CA
[C] Message-ID: <i.am.an.article.you.will.want@example.com>
[C]
[C] This is just a test article.
[C] .
[S] 400 Service temporarily unavailable
[Server closes connection.]
3. Augmented BNF Syntax for the STREAMING Extension
This section describes the formal syntax of the STREAMING extension
using ABNF [ABNF]. It extends the syntax in section 9 of [NNTP],
and non-terminals not defined in this document are defined there.
The [NNTP] ABNF should be imported first before attempting to
validate these rules.
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3.1. Commands
This syntax extends the non-terminal "command", which represents an
NNTP command.
command =/ check-command /
mode-stream-command /
takethis-command
check-command = "CHECK" WS message-id
mode-stream-command = "MODE" WS "STREAM"
takethis-command = "TAKETHIS" WS message-id
3.2. Command Datastream
This syntax extends the non-terminal "command-datastream", which
represents the further material sent by the client in the case of
streaming commands.
command-datastream =/ takethis-datastream
takethis-datastream = encoded-article
3.3. Responses
This syntax extends the non-terminal "initial-response-content",
which represents an initial response line sent by the server.
initial-response-content =/ response-238-content /
response-239-content /
response-431-content /
response-438-content /
response-439-content
response-238-content = "238" SP message-id
response-239-content = "239" SP message-id
response-431-content = "431" SP message-id
response-438-content = "438" SP message-id
response-439-content = "439" SP message-id
3.4. Capability Entries
This syntax extends the non-terminal "capability-entry", which
represents a capability that may be advertised by the server.
capability-entry =/ streaming-capability
streaming-capability = "STREAMING"
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4. Summary of Response Codes
This section contains a list of every new response code defined in
this document, whether it is multi-line, which commands can
generate it, what arguments it has, and what its meaning is.
Response code 203
Generated by: MODE STREAM
Meaning: streaming permitted.
Response code 238
Generated by: CHECK
1 argument: message-id
Meaning: send article to be transferred.
Response code 239
Generated by: TAKETHIS
1 argument: message-id
Meaning: article transferred OK.
Response code 431
Generated by: CHECK
1 argument: message-id
Meaning: transfer not possible; try again later.
Response code 438
Generated by: CHECK
1 argument: message-id
Meaning: article not wanted.
Response code 439
Generated by: TAKETHIS
1 argument: message-id
Meaning: transfer rejected; do not retry.
5. Security Considerations
No new security considerations are introduced by this extension,
beyond those already described in the core specification [NNTP].
6. IANA Considerations
This section gives a formal definition of the STREAMING extension
as required by Section 3.3.3 of [NNTP] for the IANA registry.
o The STREAMING extension provides for streaming transfer of
articles.
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o The capability label for this extension is "STREAMING".
o The capability label has no arguments.
o The extension defines three new commands, MODE STREAM, CHECK,
and TAKETHIS, whose behavior, arguments, and responses are
defined in Sections 2.2, 2.3, and 2.4 respectively.
o The extension does not associate any new responses with pre-
existing NNTP commands.
o The extension does not affect the behavior of a server or client
other than via the new commands.
o The extension does not affect the maximum length of commands or
initial response lines.
o The extension does not alter pipelining, and the MODE STREAM,
CHECK and TAKETHIS command can be pipelined.
o Use of this extension does not alter the capabilities list.
o The extension does not cause any pre-existing command to produce
a 401, 480, or 483 response.
o Use of the MODE READER command on a mode-switching server may
disable this extension.
o Published Specification: This document.
o Author, Change Controller, and Contact for Further Information:
Author of this document.
7. References
7.1. Normative References
[ABNF] Crocker, D., Overell, P., "Augmented BNF for Syntax
Specifications: ABNF", RFC 2234, November 1997.
[KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[NNTP] Feather, C., "Network News Transport Protocol",
draft-ietf-nntpext-base-*.txt, Work in Progress.
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7.2. Informative References
[NNTP-COMMON] Barber, S., "Common NNTP Extensions", RFC 2980,
October 2000.
8. Authors' Addresses
Jeffrey M. Vinocur
Department of Computer Science
Upson Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
EMail: vinocur@cs.cornell.edu
Kenneth Murchison
Oceana Matrix Ltd.
21 Princeton Place
Orchard Park, NY 14127 USA
Email: ken@oceana.com
9. Acknowledgments
This document is based heavily on the relevant sections of RFC 2980
[NNTP-COMMON], by Stan Barber.
Special acknowledgment also goes to Russ Allbery, Clive Feather,
Andrew Gierth, and others who commented privately on intermediate
revisions of this document, as well as the members of the IETF NNTP
Working Group for continual (yet sporadic) insight in discussion.
10. Intellectual Property Rights
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed
to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described
in this document or the extent to which any license under such
rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that
it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights.
Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC
documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use
of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
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specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository
at http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at
ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
11. Copyright
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
retain all their rights.
This document and the information contained herein are provided on
an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE
REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND
THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT
THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR
ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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