Networked Media Open Specifications

Discovery

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NMOS Discovery makes use of the DNS Service Discovery protocol as described in RFC 6763. DNS-SD specifies a mechanism for the use of Unicast or Multicast DNS for the purpose of identifying one or more endpoints on a network associated with a named service.

Three DNS-SD service types are defined by this specification:

Advertisements of the above types are accompanied by DNS TXT records as specified within the API RAML documentation.

Unicast vs. Multicast DNS-SD

Dependent on the architecture of a network, it may make sense to use one or both of unicast or multicast DNS for discovery. ‘Registered’ mode may support both of these cases, however ‘Peer to Peer’ mode only supports multicast operation. Nodes may optionally be configured to support just one of unicast or multicast service discovery, however it is recommended that both are used by default in order to make initial device configuration as configuration free as possible.

When performing a DNS-SD browse, clients should proceed as follows:

  1. Identify whether the client has been configured with DNS server addresses and a default search domain either manually or automatically via DHCP.
  2. If such configuration exists, perform a unicast DNS browse for services of type ‘_nmos-registration._tcp’ via the search domain.
  3. Perform a multicast DNS browse for services of type ‘_nmos-registration._tcp’ in the ‘.local’ domain.
  4. Merge the results of the two operations into a list, sorted using the priority values associated with each record.
  5. The above list should be maintained via the methods defined by the DNS-SD specification.

Implementation Notes

It is expected that timeouts specified by DNS-SD and DNS specifications will be abided by when maintaining a cache, however clients may wish to temporarily mark particular advertisements as invalid where they have timed out or produced HTTP 5xx errors during API interactions. In the case of multicast DNS the re-query mechanism should be used, and is particularly important for servers which cannot unregister their mDNS announcements before going offline.

Due to the caching mechanisms present within mDNS implementations, if a service disappears from the network without cleanly removing its mDNS announcement, it will still be present in the caches of browsing systems until the defined expiry time (120 seconds to 75 minutes dependent on record type). When mDNS advertised data is found to be invalid (for example by performing an HTTP request to an advertised service API and seeing a timeout), the procedure defined in RFC 6762 section 10.2 should be followed. Additionally, RFC 6762 section 10.5 may be used to pre-empt these failures.

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