Modified syntax to use 'old' and 'new' attributes.
Added one-way subscription section
Change MUST NOT to SHOULD NOT for clients auto-subscribing back; differentiate between inbound and outbound subscriptions.
Add one-way subscription comments.
Minor tweaks.
First draft.
There are a variety of reasons why a user may wish to change their JID. For example, a surname change because of marriage or simply an easier JID to remember.
This XEP defines an approach for communicating that your JID has
moved to a new JID, extending the existing subscription protocol documented
in RFC 3921
In this scenario user@example.com moves to user2@example2.com. Both the user@example.com and user2@example2.com accounts have been created and still exist. The roster for user@example2.com is empty and the user wants to populate it with their entries from user@example.com.
Because the original JID is no longer going to be used, the user SHOULD
unsubscribe from all the outbound subscriptions user@example.com had.
These can be identified as those in the 'to' or 'ask' states as
defined in the 'jabber:iq:roster' protocol in RFC 3921
To unsubscribe all outbound subscriptions for the original JID send an unsubscribe <presence/> stanza to all the old contacts with a <moved/> element containing the new JID.
There is the potential for other users to send a malicious unsubscribe containing a spoofed <moved/> JID. Therefore, clients SHOULD NOT automatically subscribe to the JID contained in the <moved/> stanza when receiving a subscribe <presence/> stanza without displaying the <moved/> JID to the user. See the Security Considerations section for details.
Because the original JID is no longer going to be used, the user SHOULD
unsubscribe from all contacts the user@example.com had an inbound
subscription from. These can be identified as those in the 'from'
subscription state as defined in in the 'jabber:iq:roster' protocol
in RFC 3921
To unsubscribe all inbound subscriptions send an unsubscribed <presence/> stanza to all the old contacts with a <moved/> element containing the new JID.
There is the potential for other users to send a malicious unsubscribed containing a spoofed <moved/> JID. Therefore, clients SHOULD NOT automatically subscribe to the JID contained in the <moved/> stanza without displaying the <moved/> JID to the user. See the Security Considerations section for details.
Once the new JID has been created on a server it is possible for the new JID to subscribe to the contacts they had on the original JID's roster. This is done by sending a new subscription request with a <moved/> element containing the new JID.
The new subscription MUST come from the new JID's server.
There is the potential for other users to send a malicious subscribe request and spoof the content of the <moved/> element identifying an original JID. Therefore, clients SHOULD NOT automatically unsubscribe an existing roster entry if is listed as the target in the <moved/> element when a subscribe is received. See the Security Consideration section for details.
Clients accepting the moved subscription SHOULD indicate to the user that that this subscription request was the result of a move operation and because of potential malicious behavior SHOULD NOT auto-accept the subscription without displaying the <moved/> JID to the user.
rfc3920bis
What this means is that a contact coming online after the rename outlined above MAY only see the <presence/> of type 'subscribe' with the <moved/> element. Clients should be aware of this behavior.
In following the principle of least surprise, it is considered good practice to send the subscribe stanza after the unsubscribe and unsubscribed stanzas.
One of the side effects of this scheme is the potential for a contact to lose the groups to which it had organized the original JID. Clients aware of the <moved/> element can mitigate this with the following rules.
As discussed in 'Contacts Offline at the Time the Rename Occurs', a server MAY automatically handle the unsubscribe and unsubscribed stanzas. If this occurs it will be impossible to preserve the original groups.
If the original JID, user@example.com, had only an inbound subscription (from or pending in), then the contact will only receive an unsubscribed <presence/> stanza. The contact's client, knowing the state of the subscription (which is 'to' or 'none' with 'ask='subscribe' from the contact's perspective), at that point MAY choose to prompt the user to subscribe to the new JID listed in the <moved/> element.
Because of the ability to spoof the <moved/> element, the client SHOULD NOT automatically subscribe to the <moved/> element target, but SHOULD present the new JID to the contact before sending out a subscription request.
If the original JID, user@example.com, had only an outbound subscription (to or ask), then the contact SHOULD only receive an unsubscribe <presence/> stanza. The contact's client, knowing the state of the subscription (which is 'from' from the contact's perspective), at that point MAY choose to prompt the user to subscribe to the new JID listed in the <moved/> element.
Because of the ability to spoof the <moved/> element, the client SHOULD NOT automatically subscribe to the <moved/> element target.
Server state | Client state (jabber:iq:roster) | Send unsubscribe from original JID | Send unsubscribed from original JID | Send subscribe from new JID |
none | none | |||
none + pending out | none + ask='subscribe' | yes | yes | |
none + pending in | n/a | yes - server only | ||
none + pending in/out | none + ask='subscribe' | yes | yes - server only | yes |
to | to | yes | yes | |
to + pending in | to | yes | yes - server only | yes |
from | from | yes | ||
from + pending out | from/none + ask='subscribe' | yes | yes | yes |
both | both | yes | yes | yes |
It is not intended for servers to strip any <moved/> elements from <presence/> stanzas sent in from a client. This allows clients as well as servers to implement these same procedures.
In order to prevent other users from maliciously altering contacts the client SHOULD NOT automatically subscribe to a <moved/> JID when it receives an unsubscribe and SHOULD NOT automatically unsubscribe to a <moved/> JID when it receives a subscribe.
The following illustrates an example malicious attack.
A similar attack can be done with a new subscribe request causing users by guessing which users are subscribed to a contact.
This document requires no interaction with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
This specification defines the following XML namespace:
Upon advancement of this specification from a status of Experimental
to a status of Draft, the XMPP Registrar
If the protocol defined in this specification undergoes a revision that is not fully backwards-compatible with an older version, the XMPP Registrar shall increment the protocol version number found at the end of the XML namespaces defined herein, as described in Section 4 of XEP-0053.
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The author wishes to thank Doug Abbink, Mikhail Belov, Peter Saint-Andre, and Peter Sheu for their feedback.