Thank you for review, Robert.
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 6:18 AM, Robert Sparks <rjsparks@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I have reviewed this document as part of the security directorate's ongoing effort to review all IETF documents being processed by the IESG. These comments were written primarily for the benefit of the security area directors. Document editors and WG chairs should treat these comments just like any other last call comments. Summary: Ready with issues (fwiw, I also reviewed up through version -24). Section 7 (Intermediaries) should be more explicit that it's talking about an intermediary doing compression on one side and not (or doing different compression) on the other. (If that's not what it's trying to set up, please clarify).
OK. So, I'd like to change the text as follows:
When an intermediary proxies ... Per-message Compression of messages received from one peer, and then forward the messages to the other peer, if the intermediary ...
It's not clear from reading RFC6455 that the idea of intermediaries changing the contents of the websocket extension negotiation mechanism was considered - have I missed the text in that RFC that discusses that? Are there other extensions that suggest similar behavior? It's not immediately clear that the protocol mechanics do the right thing when the different negotiations on each side of the proxy fail differently.
It's not well discussed in RFC6455. Right. AFAIK, there's no such extension defined, yet.
I understand that this text (intermediary section in the I-D) works just not to disallow change of compression but there's nothing in RFC6455 that guarantees that such transformation doesn't cause any issue with other infrastructure of the WebSocket protocol.
I believe that unless any extension that interferes with the other negotiated extensions (e.g. counting the number of negotiated extensions, relying on PMCE, etc.), the core WebSocket protocol (things defined in RFC6455) should work. If such an extension is introduced, it would be just considered to be incompatible with PMCEs, or that extension should describe how to coordinate with change on PMCE in the intermediaries section of its RFC.
I think this is more reasonable than prohibiting change on Per-message Compression by intermediaries.
This also seems to put an endpoint in a position where it has no say on what an intermediary does with the traffic on the other side of it. Is that worth discussing in the document?
Ah, right. Maybe some text like:
"It's not guaranteed that the PMCE which an endpoint has negotiated in the opening handshake is preserved in the whole path to the peer endpoint."
It would be good to point to, or provide, a discussion of how the extension negotiation mechanism in WebSockets is meant to be protected.
As a general discussion to cover other extensions (if they want. by referring to this to-be-RFC) like the section defining terms to complement RFC6455 [1]?