1. Introduction,
Office Professional Product Key
1.one. Motivation
1.two. Concepts
one.3. Prerequisites
2. Process Flows
2.1. Sender-to-Server
2.one.one. Discovery
2.1.two. Specifying Semantics
2.two. Server Processing
2.two.one. Validating Semantics
2.two.2. Determine Default Action
2.2.three. Method Rules
two.two.four. Execute Decided Action
two.2.5. Return Event
3. Conditions and Actions
3.one. Rule Problem Guidelines
3.2. Rule Action Guidelines
three.3. Defined Conditions
three.three.1. deliver
3.3.2. expire-at
three.three.three. match-resource
3.4. Defined Actions
three.four.one. alert
3.four.two. drop
three.four.3. error
three.four.4. notify
3.five. Description of Condition/Action Combinations
3.five.1. Supply Rules
three.five.2. Expire-at Rules
three.5.three. Match-resource Rules
4. Formal Description
four.1. <amp/> Root Element
four.2. <rule/> Element
5. Example Scenarios
five.1. Reliable Data Transport
five.2. Time-Sensitive Messages
5.three. Transient Messages
6. Error Handling
6.one. Conditions
6.2. Examples
6.two.one. Unsupported Action
6.2.2. Unsupported Condition
6.two.three. Not Acceptable
6.2.four. Service Unavailable
6.two.five. Undefined Condition
7. Implementation Notes
8. Stream Feature
9. Security Considerations
10. IANA Considerations
11. XMPP Registrar Considerations
11.one. Protocol Namespaces
11.2. Stream Features
11.3. Well-Known Service Discovery Nodes
11.four. Registries
11.four.one. Rule Circumstances Registry
11.4.one.one. Process
11.four.1.two. Initial Submission
11.4.2. Rule Actions Registry
11.four.two.one. Process
11.4.2.two. Initial Submission
12. XML Schemas
12.one. AMP
12.2. Errors
12.3. Stream Feature
13. Acknowledgements
Appendices
A: Document Information
B: Author Information
C: Legal Notices
D: Relation to XMPP
E: Discussion Venue
F: Requirements Conformance
G: Notes
H: Revision History