The IESG has approved the following document:
- 'A Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal Mechanism for Media
   Controlled by Real-Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP)'
  (draft-ietf-mmusic-rtsp-nat-22.txt) as Proposed Standard

This document is the product of the Multiparty Multimedia Session Control
Working Group.

The IESG contact persons are Alissa Cooper and Richard Barnes.

A URL of this Internet Draft is:
http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-mmusic-rtsp-nat/





Technical Summary

The document defines a solution for Network Address Translation (NAT) traversal 
for datagram based media streams set up and controlled with Real-time Streaming 
Protocol version 2 (RTSP 2.0). It uses Interactive Connectivity Establishment 
(ICE) adapted to use RTSP as a signalling channel, defining the necessary RTSP 
extensions and procedures.

Working Group Summary

The RTSP specification (RFC 2326 and RFC2326bis) has long suffered from lack of 
a standardized NAT traversal mechanism and hence there was a desire to rectify 
that. The WG has separately investigated different approaches to RTSP NAT and 
concluded that a solution leveraging ICE was preferred. The ICE-based solution 
appeared initially in the -05 WG version of this document in 2007. Since the 
document is a companion to RTSP 2.0, progress on the document was to some 
extent gated on RTSP 2.0 progress as well as progress on the accompanying RTSP 
NAT Evaluation document, but a WGLC was issued on the -14 version in the latter 
part of 2012. Following review comments and updates, another WGLC was issued on 
-15 in the middle of 2013 with no major comments received. A few minor updates 
have been done since then as a result of active reviews from 2 people while 
waiting for RTSP 2.0 and the accompanying RTSP NAT Evalution documents to 
progress.

Document Quality

The document has been reviewed in detail several times after WGLC (incl. by one 
of the ICE-bis authors) and in preparation for the publication request and the 
authors have made various minor updates as a result of those. The document is 
considered to be of good quality at this point.

There are no known implementations of the current specification, however a 
prototype implementation of an earlier version of the spec was done a while 
back. 

There are no new media types, MIBs, etc. and hence no such reviews apply.

Personnel

Flemming Andreasen is the document shepherd. Alissa Cooper is the responsible 
area director.

RFC Editor Note

Please replace the current text in Section 11.2 with the following:

The logging of NAT translations is helpful to analysts, particularly in 
enterprises, who need to be able to map sessions when investigating possible 
issues where the NAT happens.  When using logging on the public Internet, it is 
possible that the logs are large and privacy invasive, so procedures for log 
flushing and privacy protection SHALL be in place. Care should be taken in the 
protection of these logs and consideration taken to log integrity, privacy 
protection, and purging logs (retention policies, etc.).  Also, logging of 
connection errors and other messages established by this draft can be important.



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