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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
Network Working Group                                          M. HasebeRequest for Comments: 5407                                    J. KoshikoBCP: 147                                            NTT-east CorporationCategory: Best Current Practice                                Y. Suzuki                                                         NTT Corporation                                                            T. Yoshikawa                                                    NTT-east Corporation                                                              P. Kyzivat                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                           December 2008Example Call Flows of Race Conditions in theSession Initiation Protocol (SIP)Status of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the   Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2008 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights   and restrictions with respect to this document.Abstract   This document gives example call flows of race conditions in the   Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).  Race conditions are inherently   confusing and difficult to thwart; this document shows the best   practices to handle them.  The elements in these call flows include   SIP User Agents and SIP Proxy Servers.  Call flow diagrams and   message details are given.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 1]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008Table of Contents1.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1.  General Assumptions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2.  Legend for Message Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.3.  SIP Protocol Assumptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  The Dialog State Machine for INVITE Dialog Usage . . . . . . .53.  Race Conditions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.1.  Receiving Message in the Moratorium State  . . . . . . . .11       3.1.1.  Callee Receives Initial INVITE Retransmission               (Preparative State) While in the Moratorium State  . .11       3.1.2.  Callee Receives CANCEL (Early State) While in the               Moratorium State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13       3.1.3.  Callee Receives BYE (Early State) While in the               Moratorium State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15       3.1.4.  Callee Receives re-INVITE (Established State)               While in the Moratorium State (Case 1) . . . . . . . .17       3.1.5.  Callee Receives re-INVITE (Established State)               While in the Moratorium State (Case 2) . . . . . . . .22       3.1.6.  Callee Receives BYE (Established State) While in               the Moratorium State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .263.2.  Receiving Message in the Mortal State  . . . . . . . . . .28       3.2.1.  UA Receives BYE (Established State) While in the               Mortal State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28       3.2.2.  UA Receives re-INVITE (Established State) While in               the Mortal State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30       3.2.3.  UA Receives 200 OK for re-INVITE (Established               State) While in the Mortal State . . . . . . . . . . .32       3.2.4.  Callee Receives ACK (Moratorium State) While in               the Mortal State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .353.3.  Other Race Conditions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .363.3.1.  Re-INVITE Crossover  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .363.3.2.  UPDATE and re-INVITE Crossover . . . . . . . . . . . .40       3.3.3.  Receiving REFER (Established State) While in the               Mortal State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .454.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .465.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .466.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .476.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .476.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47Appendix A.  BYE in the Early Dialog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48Appendix B.  BYE Request Overlapping with re-INVITE  . . . . . . .49Appendix C.  UA's Behavior for CANCEL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52Appendix D.  Notes on the Request in the Mortal State  . . . . . .54Appendix E.  Forking and Receiving New To Tags . . . . . . . . . .54Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 2]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20081.  Overview   The call flows shown in this document were developed in the design of   a SIP IP communications network.  These examples are of race   conditions, which stem from transitions in dialog states -- mainly   transitions during session establishment after the sending of an   INVITE.   When implementing SIP, various complex situations may arise.   Therefore, it is helpful to provide implementors of the protocol with   examples of recommended terminal and server behavior.   This document clarifies SIP User Agent (UA) behaviors when messages   cross each other as race conditions.  By clarifying the operation   under race conditions, inconsistent interpretations between   implementations are avoided and interoperability is expected to be   promoted.   It is the hope of the authors that this document will be useful for   SIP implementors, designers, and protocol researchers and will help   them achieve the goal of a standard implementation ofRFC 3261 [1].   These call flows are based on version 2.0 of SIP, defined inRFC 3261   [1], with SDP usage as described inRFC 3264 [2].   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inBCP 14,RFC 2119 [3].1.1.  General Assumptions   A number of architectural, network, and protocol assumptions underlie   the call flows in this document.  Note that these assumptions are not   requirements.  They are outlined in this section so that they may be   taken into consideration and help understanding of the call flow   examples.   These flows do not assume specific underlying transport protocols   such as TCP, TLS, and UDP.  See the discussion inRFC 3261 [1] for   details of the transport issues for SIP.1.2.  Legend for Message Flows   Dashed lines (---) and slash lines (/, \) represent signaling   messages that are mandatory to the call scenario.  (X) represents the   crossover of signaling messages. (->x, x<-) indicate that the packet   is lost.  The arrow indicates the direction of message flow.  Double   dashed lines (===) represent media paths between network elements.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 3]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Messages are identified in the figures as F1, F2, etc.  These numbers   are used for references to the message details that follow the   figure.  Comments in the message details are shown in the following   form:   /* Comments.  */1.3.  SIP Protocol Assumptions   This document does not prescribe the flows precisely as they are   shown, but rather illustrates the principles for best practice.  They   are best practice usages (orderings, syntax, selection of features   for the purpose, or handling of errors) of SIP methods, headers, and   parameters.  Note: The flows in this document must not be copied   as-is by implementors because additional annotations have been   incorporated into this document for ease of explanation.  To sum up,   the procedures described in this document represent well-reviewed   examples of SIP usage, which exemplify best common practice according   to IETF consensus.   For reasons of simplicity in reading and editing the document, there   are a number of differences between some of the examples and actual   SIP messages.  For instance, Call-IDs are often replicated, CSeq   often begins at 1, header fields are usually shown in the same order,   usually only the minimum required header field set is shown, and   other headers that would usually be included, such as Accept, Allow,   etc., are not shown.   Actors:   Element     Display Name  URI                            IP Address   -------     ------------  ---                            ----------   User Agent  Alice         sip:alice@atlanta.example.com  192.0.2.101   User Agent  Bob           sip:bob@biloxi.example.com     192.0.2.201   User Agent  Carol         sip:carol@chicago.example.com  192.0.2.202   Proxy Server              ss.atlanta.example.com         192.0.2.111   The term "session" is used in this document in the same way it is   used in Sections13-15 ofRFC 3261 [1] (which differs somewhat from   the definition of the term inRFC 3261).RFC 5057 [6] introduces   another term, "invite dialog usage", which is more precisely defined.   The term "session" used herein is almost, but not quite, identical to   the term "invite dialog usage".  The two have differing definitions   of when the state ends -- the session ends earlier, when BYE is sent   or received.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 4]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20082.  The Dialog State Machine for INVITE Dialog Usage   Race conditions are generated when the dialog state of the receiving   side differs from that of the sending side.   For instance, a race condition occurs when a UAC (User Agent Client)   sends a CANCEL in the Early state while the UAS (User Agent Server)   is transitioning from the Early state to the Confirmed state by   sending a 200 OK to an initial INVITE (indicated as "ini-INVITE"   hereafter).  The DSM (dialog state machine) for the INVITE dialog   usage is presented as follows to help understanding of the UA's   behavior in race conditions.   The DSM clarifies the UA's behavior by subdividing the dialog state   shown inRFC 3261 [1] into various internal states.  We call the   state before the establishment of a dialog the Preparative state.   The Confirmed state is subdivided into two substates, the Moratorium   and the Established states, and the Terminated state is subdivided   into the Mortal and Morgue states.  Messages that are the triggers   for the state transitions between these states are indicated with   arrows.  In this figure, messages that are not related to state   transition are omitted.   Below are the DSMs, first for the caller and then for the callee.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 5]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008    INV +-----------------------------------------------+    --->|                 Preparative                   |        +-----------------------------------------------+          |                    |                      |          | 3xx-6xx            | 1xx-tag              | 2xx          |                    |                      |          |                    |        1xx-tag       |          |                    V        w/new tag     |          |         +-----------------+  [new DSM]    |          | 3xx-6xx |                 |   | (new DSM  |          +<--------|      Early      |   |  instance |          |         |                 |<--+  created) |          |         +-----------------+               |          |            |             |                |  2xx w/new tag          |            | BYE         | 2xx            |   [new DSM]          |            |             +------------>+<-+      | (new DSM          |            |                           |         |  instance    +-----C------------C-----+         +-----------C------+  |  created)    |     | Terminated |     |         | Confirmed |      |  |    |     |            +<----C---------|           |      |  |    |     |            |     | BYE(sr) |           |      |  |    |     |            V     |         |           V      |  |    | 2xx |  +-----------+   |         |   +-----------+  |  |    | +---C--|           |---C-+       |   |           |  |  |    | |   |  |   Mortal  |   | | BYE(r)|   | Moratorium|<-C--+    | +---C->|           |<--C-+       |   |           |  |    | ACK |  +-----------+   |         |   +-----------+  |    |     |    |             |         |         |        |    |     |    | Timeout     |         |         | ACK    |    |     |    |             |         |         |        |    |     V    V             |         |         V        |    |   +---------------+    |         |   +-----------+  |    |   |               |    |         |   |           |--C-+    |   |     Morgue    |    |         |   |Established|  | | 2xx,ACK    |   |               |    |         |   |           |<-C-+    |   +---------------+    |         |   +-----------+  |    |                        |         |                  |    +------------------------+         +------------------+    (r): indicates that only reception is allowed.         Where (r) is not used as an indicator, "response" means         receive, and "request" means send.    (sr): indicates that both sending and reception are allowed.              Figure 1: DSM for INVITE dialog usage (caller)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 6]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Figure 1 represents the caller's DSM for the INVITE dialog usage.   The caller MAY send a BYE in the Early state, even though this   behavior is not recommended.  A BYE sent in the Early state   terminates the early dialog using a specific To tag.  That is, when a   proxy is performing forking, the BYE is only able to terminate the   early dialog with a particular UA.  If the caller wants to terminate   all early dialogs instead of that with a particular UA, it needs to   send CANCEL, not BYE.  However, it is not illegal to send BYE in the   Early state to terminate a specific early dialog if this is the   caller's intent.  Moreover, until the caller receives a final   response and terminates the INVITE transaction, the caller MUST be   prepared to establish a dialog by receiving a new response to the   INVITE even if it has already sent a CANCEL or BYE and terminated the   dialog (seeAppendix A).Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 7]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008    INV +-----------------------------------------------+    --->|                 Preparative                   |        +-----------------------------------------------+          |                         |                 |          | 3xx-6xx                 | 1xx-tag         | 2xx          |                         |                 |          |                         V                 |          |         +------------------+              |          | 3xx-6xx |                  |              |          +<--------|      Early       |              |          |         |                  |              |          |         +------------------+              |          |            |             |                |          |            |BYE/487(INV) | 2xx            |          |            |             +------------>+<-+          |            |                           |    +-----C------------C-----+         +-----------C------+    |     | Terminated |     |         | Confirmed |      |    |     |            +<----C---------|           |      |    |     |            |     | BYE(sr) |           |      |    |     |            V     |         |           V      |    |     | +------------+   |         |   +-----------+  |    |     | |            |---C-+       |   |           |--C-+    |     | |   Mortal   |   | | BYE   |   | Moratorium|  | | 2xx    |     | |            |<--C-+       |   |           |<-C-+ if ACK not    |     | +------------+   |         |   +-----------+  |   received    |     |   |              |         |         |        |    |     |   | Timeout      |         |         | ACK    |    |     |   |              |         |         |        |    |     V   V              |         |         V        |    |   +---------------+    |         |   +-----------+  |    |   |               |    |         |   |           |  |    |   |     Morgue    |    |         |   |Established|  |    |   |               |    |         |   |           |  |    |   +---------------+    |         |   +-----------+  |    |                        |         |                  |    +------------------------+         +------------------+     (sr): indicates that both sending and reception are allowed.          Where (sr) is not used as an indicator, "response" means send,          and "request" means receive.              Figure 2: DSM for INVITE dialog usage (callee)   Figure 2 represents the callee's DSM for the INVITE dialog usage.   The figure does not illustrate the state transition related to CANCEL   requests.  A CANCEL request does not cause a dialog state transition.   However, the callee terminates the dialog and triggers the dialogHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 8]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   transition by sending a 487 immediately after the reception of the   CANCEL.  This behavior upon the reception of the CANCEL request is   further explained inAppendix C.   The UA's behavior in each state is as follows.   Preparative (Pre):  The Preparative state is in effect until the      early dialog is established by sending or receiving a provisional      response with a To tag after an ini-INVITE is sent or received.      The dialog does not yet exist in the Preparative state.  If the UA      sends or receives a 2xx response, the dialog state transitions      from the Preparative state to the Moratorium state, which is a      substate of the Confirmed state.  In addition, if the UA sends or      receives a 3xx-6xx response, the dialog state transitions to the      Morgue state, which is a substate of the Terminated state.      Sending an ACK for a 3xx-6xx response and retransmissions of 3xx-      6xx are not shown on the DSMs because they are sent by the INVITE      transaction.   Early (Ear):  The early dialog is established by sending or receiving      a provisional response except 100 Trying.  The early dialog exists      even though the dialog does not exist in this state yet.  The      dialog state transitions from the Early state to the Moratorium      state, a substate of the Confirmed state, by sending or receiving      a 2xx response.  In addition, the dialog state transitions to the      Morgue state, a substate of the Terminated state, by sending or      receiving a 3xx-6xx response.  Sending an ACK for a 3xx-6xx      response and retransmissions of 3xx-6xx are not shown on this DSM      because they are automatically processed on the transaction layer      and don't influence the dialog state.  The UAC may send a CANCEL      in the Early state.  The UAC may also send a BYE (although it is      not recommended).  The UAS may send a 1xx-6xx response.  The      sending or receiving of a CANCEL request does not have a direct      influence on the dialog state.  The UA's behavior upon the      reception of the CANCEL request is explained further inAppendixC.   Confirmed (Con):  The sending or receiving of a 2xx final response      establishes a dialog.  The dialog starts in this state.  The      Confirmed state transitions to the Mortal state, a substate of the      Terminated state, by sending or receiving a BYE request.  The      Confirmed state has two substates, the Moratorium and the      Established states, which are different with regard to the      messages that UAs are allowed to send.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                  [Page 9]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Moratorium (Mora):  The Moratorium state is a substate of the      Confirmed state and inherits its behavior.  The Moratorium state      transitions to the Established state by sending or receiving an      ACK request.  The UAC may send an ACK and the UAS may send a 2xx      final response.   Established (Est):  The Established state is a substate of the      Confirmed state and inherits its behavior.  Both caller and callee      may send various messages that influence a dialog.  The caller      supports the transmission of ACK to the retransmission of a 2xx      response to an ini-INVITE.   Terminated (Ter):  The Terminated state is subdivided into two      substates, the Mortal and Morgue states, to cover the behavior      when a dialog is being terminated.  In this state, the UA holds      information about the dialog that is being terminated.   Mortal (Mort):  The caller and callee enter the Mortal state by      sending or receiving a BYE.  The UA MUST NOT send any new requests      within the dialog because there is no dialog.  (Here, the new      requests do not include ACK for 2xx and BYE for 401 or 407, as      further explained inAppendix D below.)  In the Mortal state, BYE      can be accepted, and the other messages in the INVITE dialog usage      are responded to with an error.  This addresses the case where a      caller and a callee exchange reports about the session when it is      being terminated.  Therefore, the UA possesses dialog information      for internal processing but the dialog shouldn't be externally      visible.  The UA stops managing its dialog state and changes it to      the Morgue state when the BYE transaction is terminated.   Morgue (Morg):  The dialog no longer exists in this state.  The      sending or receiving of signaling that influences a dialog is not      performed.  (A dialog is literally terminated.)  The caller and      callee enter the Morgue state via the termination of the BYE or      INVITE transaction.3.  Race Conditions   This section details a race condition between two SIP UAs, Alice and   Bob.  Alice (sip:alice@atlanta.example.com) and Bob   (sip:bob@biloxi.example.com) are assumed to be SIP phones or SIP-   enabled devices.  Only significant signaling is illustrated.  Dialog   state transitions caused by the sending or receiving of SIP messages   are shown, and race conditions are indicated by '*race*'.  (For   abbreviations for the dialog state transitions, refer toSection 2.)   '*race*' indicates the moment when a race condition occurs.   Examples of race conditions are described below.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 10]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.1.  Receiving Message in the Moratorium State   This section shows some examples of call flow race conditions when   receiving messages from other states while in the Moratorium state.3.1.1.  Callee Receives Initial INVITE Retransmission (Preparative        State) While in the Moratorium State   State  Alice                               Bob  State          |                                     |          |            ini-INVITE F1            |          |------------------------------------>|     Pre  |         180 F2(Packet loss)         |  Pre          |            x<-----------------------|          |                                     |  Ear          | ini-INVITE F4(=F1)           200 F3 |          |------------------     --------------|          |                   \ /               |  Mora          |                    X                |          |                   / \               |          |<-----------------     ------------->|  *race*    Mora  |                ACK F5               |          |------------------------------------>|     Est  |                                     |  Est          |                                     |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives a Preparative message while in the Moratorium state.  All   provisional responses to the initial INVITE (ini-INVITE F1) are lost,   and the UAC retransmits an ini-INVITE (F4).  At the same time as this   retransmission, the UAS generates a 200 OK (F3) to the ini-INVITE and   terminates the INVITE server transaction, according toSection13.3.1.4 of RFC 3261 [1].   However, it is reported that terminating an INVITE server transaction   when sending a 200 OK is an essential correction to SIP [7].   Therefore, the INVITE server transaction is not terminated by F3, and   F4 MUST be handled properly as a retransmission.   InRFC 3261 [1], it is not specified whether the UAS retransmits 200   to the retransmission of ini-INVITE.  Considering the retransmission   of 200 triggered by a timer (the transaction user (TU) keeps   retransmitting 200 based on T1 and T2 until it receives an ACK),   according toSection 13.3.1.4 of RFC 3261 [1], it seems unnecessary   to retransmit 200 when the UAS receives the retransmission of the   ini-INVITE.  (For implementation, it does not matter if the UAS sends   the retransmission of 200, since the 200 does not cause any problem.)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 11]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   /* 180 response is lost and does not reach Alice.  */   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   /* According toSection 13.3.1.4 of RFC 3261 [1], the INVITE server      transaction is terminated at this point.  However, this has been      reported as an essential correction to SIP, and the UAS MUST      correctly recognize the ini-INVITE (F4) as a retransmission.  */   F4 INVITE (retransmission) Alice -> Bob   /* F4 is a retransmission of F1.  They are exactly the same INVITE      request.  For UAs that have not dealt with the correction [7] (an      INVITE server transaction is terminated when sending 200 to      INVITE), this request does not match the transaction as well as      the dialog since it does not have a To tag.  However, Bob must      recognize the retransmitted INVITE correctly, without treating it      as a new INVITE.  */   F5 ACK Alice -> BobHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 12]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.1.2.  Callee Receives CANCEL (Early State) While in the Moratorium        State   State  Alice                        Bob  State          |                              |          |          INVITE F1           |          |----------------------------->|     Pre  |       180 Ringing F2         |  Pre          |<-----------------------------|     Ear  |                              |  Ear          |CANCEL F3       200(INVITE) F4|          |------------     -------------|          |             \ /              |  Mora          |              X               |          |             / \              |          |<-----------     ------------>|  *race*    Mora  |                              |          | ACK F6         200(CANCEL) F5|          |------------     -------------|     Est  |             \ /              |          |              X               |          |             / \              |          |<-----------     ------------>|          |                              |  Est          |       One Way RTP Media      |          | (Two Way RTP Media possible) |          |<=============================|          |            BYE F7            |          |----------------------------->|    Mort  |            200 F8            |  Mort          |<-----------------------------|          | ^                          ^ |          | | Timer K                  | |          | V                          | |    Morg  |                    Timer J | |          |                            V |          |                              |  Morg          |                              |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Early message, CANCEL, while in the Moratorium state.   Alice sends a CANCEL, and Bob sends a 200 OK response to the initial   INVITE message at the same time.  As described in the previous   section, according toRFC 3261 [1], an INVITE server transaction is   supposed to be terminated by a 200 response, but this has been   corrected in [7].Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   This section describes a case in which an INVITE server transaction   is not terminated by a 200 response to the INVITE request.  In this   case, there is an INVITE transaction that the CANCEL request matches,   so a 200 response to the request is sent.  This 200 response simply   means that the next hop receives the CANCEL request (successful   CANCEL (200) does not mean the INVITE was actually canceled).  When a   UAS has not dealt with the correction [7], the UAC MAY receive a 481   response to the CANCEL since there is no transaction that the CANCEL   request matches.  This 481 simply means that there is no matching   INVITE server transaction and CANCEL is not sent to the next hop.   Regardless of the success/failure of the CANCEL, Alice checks the   final response to the INVITE, and if she receives 200 to the INVITE   request she immediately sends a BYE and terminates the dialog.  (SeeSection 15,RFC 3261 [1].)   From the time F1 is received by Bob until the time that F8 is sent by   Bob, media may be flowing one way from Bob to Alice.  From the time   that an answer is received by Alice from Bob, there is the   possibility that media may flow from Alice to Bob as well.  However,   once Alice has decided to cancel the call, she presumably will not   send media, so practically speaking the media stream will remain one   way.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 CANCEL Alice -> Bob   /* Alice sends a CANCEL in the Early state.  */   F4 200 OK (INVITE) Bob -> Alice   /* Alice receives a 200 to INVITE (F1) in the Moratorium state.      Alice has the potential to send as well as receive media, but in      practice will not send because there is an intent to end the      call.  */   F5 200 OK (CANCEL) Bob -> Alice   /* 200 to CANCEL simply means that the CANCEL was received.  The 200      response is sent, since this case assumes the correction [7] has      been made.  If an INVITE server transaction is terminated      according to the procedure stated inRFC 3261 [1], the UAC MAY      receive a 481 response instead of 200.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 14]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   F6 ACK Alice -> Bob   /* INVITE is successful, and the CANCEL becomes invalid.  Bob      establishes RTP streams.  However, the next BYE request      immediately terminates the dialog and session.  */   F7 BYE Alice -> Bob   F8 200 OK Bob -> Alice3.1.3.  Callee Receives BYE (Early State) While in the Moratorium State   State  Alice                          Bob  State          |                                |          |         ini-INVITE F1          |          |------------------------------->|     Pre  |            180 F2              |  Pre          |<-------------------------------|     Ear  |                                |  Ear          |    BYE F4        200(INVITE) F3|          |-------------     --------------|    Mort  |              \ /               |  Mora          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|  *race*          |                                |  Mort          |    ACK F5         200(BYE) F6  |          |-------------     --------------|          |              \ /            ^  |          |               X             |  |          |              / \            |  |          |<------------     ------------->|          | ^                           |  |          | | Timer K                   |  |          | V                           |  |    Morg  |                     Timer J |  |          |                             V  |          |                                |  Morg          |                                |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Early message, BYE, while in the Moratorium state.  Alice   sends a BYE in the Early state, and Bob sends a 200 OK to the initial   INVITE request at the same time.  Bob receives the BYE in the   Confirmed dialog state although Alice sent the request in the Early   state (as explained inSection 2 andAppendix A, this behavior is not   recommended).  When a proxy is performing forking, the BYE is only   able to terminate the early dialog with a particular UA.  If theHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 15]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   caller wants to terminate all early dialogs instead of only that with   a particular UA, it needs to send CANCEL, not BYE.  However, it is   not illegal to send BYE in the Early state to terminate a specific   early dialog if that is the caller's intent.   The BYE functions normally even if it is received after the INVITE   transaction termination because BYE differs from CANCEL, and is sent   not to the request but to the dialog.  Alice enters the Mortal state   on sending the BYE request, and remains Mortal until the Timer K   timeout occurs.  In the Mortal state, the UAC does not establish a   session even though it receives a 200 response to the INVITE.  Even   so, the UAC sends an ACK to 200 in order to complete the INVITE   transaction.  The ACK is always sent to complete the three-way   handshake of the INVITE transaction (further explained inAppendix D   below).   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK (ini-INVITE) Bob -> Alice   F4 BYE Alice -> Bob   /* Alice transitions to the Mortal state upon sending BYE.      Therefore, after this, she does not begin a session even though      she receives a 200 response with an answer.  */   F5 ACK Alice -> Bob   F6 200 OK (BYE) Bob -> AliceHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 16]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.1.4.  Callee Receives re-INVITE (Established State)While in the        Moratorium State (Case 1)   State  Alice                          Bob  State          |                                |          |    ini-INVITE w/offer1 F1      |          |------------------------------->|     Pre  |             180 F2             |  Pre          |<-------------------------------|     Ear  |                                |  Ear          |   200(ini-INV) w/answer1 F3    |          |<-------------------------------|    Mora  |       ACK F4(packet loss)      |  Mora          |-------------------->x          |     Est  |                                |          | re-INVITE F6      200 F5(=F3)  |          |   w/offer2         w/answer1   |          |-------------     --------------|          |              \ /               |          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|  *race*          |                  200(re-INV) F8|          | ACK F7(=F4)        w/answer2   |          |-------------     --------------|          |              \ /               |          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|          |         ACK (re-INV) F9        |  Est          |------------------------------->|          |                                |          |                                |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when a UAS   in the Moratorium state receives a re-INVITE sent by a UAC in the   Established state.   The UAS receives a re-INVITE (with offer2) before receiving an ACK   for the ini-INVITE (with offer1).  The UAS sends a 200 OK (with   answer2) to the re-INVITE (F8) because it has sent a 200 OK (with   answer1) to the ini-INVITE (F3, F5) and the dialog has already been   established.  (Because F5 is a retransmission of F3, SDP negotiation   is not performed here.)   As can be seen inSection 3.3.2 below, the 491 response seems to be   closely related to session establishment, even in cases other than   INVITE crossover.  This example recommends that 200 be sent insteadHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 17]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   of 491 because it does not have an influence on the session.   However, a 491 response can also lead to the same outcome, so either   response can be used.   Moreover, if the UAS doesn't receive an ACK for a long time, it   should send a BYE and terminate the dialog.  Note that ACK F7 has the   same CSeq number as ini-INVITE F1 (seeSection 13.2.2.4 of RFC 3261   [1]).  The UA should not reject or drop the ACK on grounds of the   CSeq number.   Note: Implementation issues are outside the scope of this document,   but the following tip is provided for avoiding race conditions of   this type.  The caller can delay sending re-INVITE F6 for some period   of time (2 seconds, perhaps), after which the caller can reasonably   assume that its ACK has been received.  Implementors can decouple the   actions of the user (e.g., pressing the hold button) from the actions   of the protocol (the sending of re-INVITE F6), so that the UA can   behave like this.  In this case, it is the implementor's choice as to   how long to wait.  In most cases, such an implementation may be   useful to prevent the type of race condition shown in this section.   This document expresses no preference about whether or not they   should wait for an ACK to be delivered.  After considering the impact   on user experience, implementors should decide whether or not to wait   for a while, because the user experience depends on the   implementation and has no direct bearing on protocol behavior.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Contact: <sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com;transport=udp>   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 137   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844526 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 18]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   /* Detailed messages are shown for the sequence to illustrate the      offer and answer examples.  */   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   SIP/2.0 180 Ringing   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   ;received=192.0.2.101   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Contact: <sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com;transport=udp>   Content-Length: 0   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   SIP/2.0 200 OK   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   ;received=192.0.2.101   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Contact: <sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com;transport=udp>   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 133   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   ACK sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd8   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 ACK   Content-Length: 0Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 19]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   /* The ACK request is lost.  */   F5(=F3) 200 OK Bob -> Alice (retransmission)   /* The UAS retransmits a 200 OK to the ini-INVITE since it has not      received an ACK.  */   F6 re-INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf91   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonly   F7(=F4) ACK Alice -> Bob (retransmission)   /* "(=F4)" of ACK F7 shows that it is equivalent to F4 in that it is      an ACK for F3.  This doesn't mean that F4 and F7 must be equal in      Via-branch value.  Although it is ambiguous inRFC 3261 whether      the Via-branch of ACK F7 differs from that of F4, it doesn't      affect the UAS's behavior. */   F8 200 OK (re-INVITE) Bob -> Alice   SIP/2.0 200 OK   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf91   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Length: 143Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 20]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844528 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=recvonly   F9 ACK (re-INVITE) Alice -> Bob   ACK sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK230f21   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 ACK   Content-Length: 0Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 21]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.1.5.  Callee Receives re-INVITE (Established State) While in the        Moratorium State (Case 2)   State  Alice                          Bob  State          |                                |          |    ini-INVITE (no offer) F1    |          |------------------------------->|     Pre  |             180 F2             |  Pre          |<-------------------------------|     Ear  |                                |  Ear          |    200(ini-INV) w/offer1 F3    |          |<-------------------------------|    Mora  |  ACK w/answer1 F4(packet loss) |  Mora          |-------------------->x          |     Est  |                                |          | re-INVITE F6      200 F5(=F3)  |          |   w/offer2         w/offer1    |          |-------------     --------------|          |              \ /               |          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|          | ACK F7(=F4)      491(re-INV) F8|          |-------------     --------------|          |              \ /               |          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|          |        ACK (re-INV) F9         |  Est          |------------------------------->|          |                                |          |                                |   This scenario is basically the same as that ofSection 3.1.4, but   differs in sending an offer in the 200 and an answer in the ACK.  In   contrast to the previous case, the offer in the 200 (F3) and the   offer in the re-INVITE (F6) collide with each other.   Bob sends a 491 to the re-INVITE (F6) since he is not able to   properly handle a new request until he receives an answer.  (Note:   500 with a Retry-After header may be returned if the 491 response is   understood to indicate request collision.  However, 491 is   recommended here because 500 applies to so many cases that it is   difficult to determine what the real problem was.)  The same result   will be reached if F6 is an UPDATE with offer.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 22]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Note: As noted inSection 3.1.4, the caller may delay sending a re-   INVITE F6 for some period of time (2 seconds, perhaps), after which   the caller may reasonably assume that its ACK has been received, to   prevent this type of race condition.  This document expresses no   preference about whether or not they should wait for an ACK to be   delivered.  After considering the impact on user experience,   implementors should decide whether or not to wait for a while,   because the user experience depends on the implementation and has no   direct bearing on protocol behavior.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Contact: <sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com;transport=udp>   Content-Length: 0   /* The request does not contain an offer.  Detailed messages are      shown for the sequence to illustrate offer and answer      examples.  */   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   SIP/2.0 200 OK   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   ;received=192.0.2.101   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Contact: <sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com;transport=udp>   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 133   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 23]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   /* An offer is made in 200.  */   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   ACK sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd8   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 ACK   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 137   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844526 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   /* The request contains an answer, but the request is lost.  */   F5(=F3) 200 OK Bob -> Alice (retransmission)   /* The UAS retransmits a 200 OK to the ini-INVITE since it has not      received an ACK.  */   F6 re-INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf91   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 24]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonly   /* The request contains an offer.  */   F7(=F4) ACK Alice -> Bob (retransmission)   /* A retransmission triggered by the reception of a retransmitted      200. "(=F4)" of ACK F7 shows that it is equivalent to the F4 in      that it is an ACK for F3.  This doesn't mean that F4 and F7 are      necessarily equal in Via-branch value.  Although it is ambiguous      inRFC 3261 whether the Via-branch of ACK F7 differs from that of      F4, it doesn't affect the UAS's behavior.  */   F8 491 (re-INVITE) Bob -> Alice   /* Bob sends 491 (Request Pending), since Bob has a pending      offer.  */   F9 ACK (re-INVITE) Alice -> BobHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 25]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.1.6.  Callee Receives BYE (Established State) While in the Moratorium        State   State  Alice                     Bob  State          |                           |          |         INVITE F1         |          |-------------------------->|     Pre  |      180 Ringing F2       |  Pre          |<--------------------------|     Ear  |                           |  Ear          |         200 OK F3         |          |<--------------------------|    Mora  |    ACK F4(packet loss)    |  Mora          |--------------->x          |     Est  |   Both Way RTP Media      |          |<=========================>|          |   BYE F6       200 F5(=F3)|          |-----------     -----------|    Mort  |            \ /            |          |             X             |          |            / \            |          |<----------     ---------->|  *race*          |ACK F7(=F4)     200(BYE) F8|  Mort          |-----------     -----------|          |            \ /            |          |             X             |          |            / \            |          |<----------     ---------->|          | ^                       ^ |          | | Timer K               | |          | V                       | |    Morg  |                 Timer J | |          |                         V |          |                           |  Morg          |                           |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, BYE, while in the Moratorium state.   An ACK request for a 200 OK response is lost (or delayed).  Bob   retransmits the 200 OK to the ini-INVITE, and at the same time Alice   sends a BYE request and terminates the session.  Upon receipt of the   retransmitted 200 OK, Alice's UA might be inclined to reestablish the   session.  But that is wrong -- the session should not be   reestablished when the dialog is in the Mortal state.  Moreover, in   the case where the UAS sends an offer in a 200 OK, the UAS should not   start a session again, for the same reason, if the UAS receives a   retransmitted ACK after receiving a BYE.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 26]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Note: As noted inSection 3.1.4, implementation issues are outside   the scope of this document, but the following tip is provided for   avoiding race conditions of this type.  The caller can delay sending   BYE F6 for some period of time (2 seconds, perhaps), after which the   caller can reasonably assume that its ACK has been received.   Implementors can decouple the actions of the user (e.g., hanging up)   from the actions of the protocol (the sending of BYE F6), so that the   UA can behave like this.  In this case, it is the implementor's   choice as to how long to wait.  In most cases, such an implementation   may be useful to prevent the type of race condition shown in this   section.  This document expresses no preference about whether or not   they should wait for an ACK to be delivered.  After considering the   impact on user experience, implementors should decide whether or not   to wait for a while, because the user experience depends on the   implementation and has no direct bearing on protocol behavior.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   /* ACK request is lost.  */   F5(=F3) 200 OK Bob -> Alice   /* The UAS retransmits a 200 OK to the ini-INVITE since it has not      received an ACK.  */   F6 BYE Alice -> Bob   /* Bob retransmits a 200 OK and Alice sends a BYE at the same time.      Alice transitions to the Mortal state, so she does not begin a      session after this even though she receives a 200 response to the      re-INVITE.  */   F7(=F4) ACK Alice -> Bob   /* "(=F4)" of ACK F7 shows that it is equivalent to the F4 in that it      is an ACK for F3.  This doesn't mean that F4 and F7 must be equal      in Via-branch value.  Although it is ambiguous inRFC 3261 whether      the Via-branch of ACK F7 differs from that of F4, it doesn't      affect the UAS's behavior.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 27]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   F8 200 OK (BYE) Bob -> Alice   /* Bob sends a 200 OK to the BYE.  */3.2.  Receiving Message in the Mortal State   This section shows some examples of call flow race conditions when   receiving messages from other states while in the Mortal state.3.2.1.  UA Receives BYE (Established State) While in the Mortal State   State  Alice                  Bob  State          |                        |          |       INVITE F1        |          |----------------------->|     Pre  |    180 Ringing F2      |  Pre          |<-----------------------|     Ear  |                        |  Ear          |       200 OK F3        |          |<-----------------------|    Mora  |         ACK F4         |  Mora          |----------------------->|     Est  |   Both Way RTP Media   |  Est          |<======================>|          |                        |          | BYE F5         BYE F6  |          |---------     ----------|    Mort  |          \ /           |  Mort          |           X            |          |          / \           |          |<--------     --------->|  *race*          |                        |          | 200 F8         200 F7  |          |---------     ----------|          |          \ /           |          |           X            |          |          / \           |          |<--------     --------->|          | ^                    ^ |          | | Timer K            | |          | V                    | |    Morg  |              Timer J | |          |                      V |          |                        |  Morg          |                        |Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 28]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, BYE, while in the Mortal state.   Alice and Bob send a BYE at the same time.  A dialog and session are   ended shortly after a BYE request is passed to a client transaction.   As shown inSection 2, the UA remains in the Mortal state.   UAs in the Mortal state return error responses to the requests that   operate within a dialog or session, such as re-INVITE, UPDATE, or   REFER.  However, the UA shall return a 200 OK to the BYE taking the   use case into consideration where a caller and a callee exchange   reports about the session when it is being terminated.  (Since the   dialog and the session both terminate when a BYE is sent, the choice   of sending a 200 or an error response upon receiving a BYE while in   the Mortal state does not affect the resulting termination.   Therefore, even though this example uses a 200 response, other   responses can also be used.)   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 BYE Alice -> Bob   /* The session is terminated at the moment Alice sends a BYE.  The      dialog still exists then, but it is certain to be terminated in a      short period of time.  The dialog is completely terminated when      the timeout of the BYE request occurs.  */   F6 BYE Bob -> Alice   /* Bob has also transmitted a BYE simultaneously with Alice.  Bob      terminates the session and the dialog.  */   F7 200 OK Bob -> Alice   /* Since the dialog is in the Moratorium state, Bob responds with a      200 to the BYE request.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 29]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   F8 200 OK Alice -> Bob   /* Since Alice has transitioned from the Established state to the      Mortal state by sending a BYE, Alice responds with a 200 to the      BYE request.  */3.2.2.  UA Receives re-INVITE (Established State) While in the Mortal        State    State  Alice                  Bob  State           |                        |           |       INVITE F1        |           |----------------------->|      Pre  |    180 Ringing F2      |  Pre           |<-----------------------|      Ear  |                        |  Ear           |       200 OK F3        |           |<-----------------------|     Mora  |         ACK F4         |  Mora           |----------------------->|      Est  |   Both Way RTP Media   |  Est           |<======================>|           |                        |           | BYE F5     re-INVITE F6|           |---------     ----------|     Mort  |          \ /           |           |           X            |           |          / \           |   *race*  |<--------     --------->|           |                        |  Mort           | 481 F8         200 F7  |           | (re-INV)       (BYE)   |           |---------     ----------|           |          \ /           |^           |           X            ||           |          / \           ||Timer J           |<--------     --------->||          ^|    ACK (re-INV) F9     ||          ||<-----------------------||   Timer K||                        ||          V|                        ||     Morg  |                        |V           |                        |  Morg           |                        |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, re-INVITE, while in the Mortal   state.  Bob sends a re-INVITE, and Alice sends a BYE at the sameHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 30]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   time.  The re-INVITE receives a 481 response since the TU of Alice   has transitioned from the Established state to the Mortal state by   sending BYE.  Bob sends an ACK for the 481 response because the ACK   for error responses is handled by the transaction layer and, at the   point of receiving the 481, the INVITE client transaction still   remains (even though the dialog has been terminated).   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 BYE Alice -> Bob   /* Alice sends a BYE and terminates the session, and transitions from      the Established state to the Mortal state.  */   F6 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   /* Alice sends a BYE, and Bob sends a re-INVITE at the same time.      The dialog state transitions to the Mortal state at the moment      Alice sends the BYE, but Bob does not know this until he receives      the BYE.  Therefore, the dialog is in the Terminated state from      Alice's point of view, but in the Confirmed state from Bob's point      of view.  A race condition occurs.  */   F7 200 OK (BYE) Bob -> Alice   F8 481 Call/Transaction Does Not Exist (re-INVITE) Alice -> Bob   /* Since Alice is in the Mortal state, she responds with a 481 to the      re-INVITE.  */   F9 ACK (re-INVITE) Bob -> Alice   /* ACK for an error response is handled by Bob's INVITE client      transaction.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 31]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.2.3.  UA Receives 200 OK for re-INVITE (Established State) While in        the Mortal State   State  Alice                  Bob  State          |                        |          |       INVITE F1        |          |----------------------->|     Pre  |    180 Ringing F2      |  Pre          |<-----------------------|     Ear  |                        |  Ear          |       200 OK F3        |          |<-----------------------|    Mora  |         ACK F4         |  Mora          |----------------------->|     Est  |   Both Way RTP Media   |  Est          |<======================>|          |                        |          |      re-INVITE F5      |          |<-----------------------|          | 200 F7         BYE F6  |          |---------     ----------|          |          \ /           |  Mort          |           X            |          |          / \           |          |<--------     --------->|  *race*    Mort  | 200 F8         ACK F9  |          | (BYE)         (re-INV) |          |---------     ----------|          | ^        \ /           |          | |         X            |          | |        / \           |          |<--------     --------->|          | |                    ^ |          | |            Timer K | |          | |                    V |          | | Timer J              |  Morg          | V                      |    Morg  |                        |          |                        |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, 200 to a re-INVITE, while in the   Mortal state.  Bob sends a BYE immediately after sending a re-INVITE.   (For example, in the case of a telephone application, it is possible   that a user hangs up the phone immediately after refreshing the   session.)  Bob sends an ACK for a 200 response to INVITE while in the   Mortal state, completing the INVITE transaction.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 32]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Note: As noted inSection 3.1.4, implementation issues are outside   the scope of this document, but the following tip is provided for   avoiding race conditions of this type.  The UAC can delay sending a   BYE F6 until the re-INVITE transaction F5 completes.  Implementors   can decouple the actions of the user (e.g., hanging up) from the   actions of the protocol (the sending of BYE F6), so that the UA can   behave like this.  In this case, it is the implementor's choice as to   how long to wait.  In most cases, such an implementation may be   useful in preventing the type of race condition described in this   section.  This document expresses no preference about whether or not   they should wait for an ACK to be delivered.  After considering the   impact on user experience, implementors should decide whether or not   to wait for a while, because the user experience depends on the   implementation and has no direct bearing on protocol behavior.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   INVITE sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd7   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   Supported: timer   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Content-Length: 0   /* Some detailed messages are shown for the sequence to illustrate      that the re-INVITE is handled in the usual manner in the Mortal      state.  */   F6 BYE Bob -> Alice   /* Bob sends BYE immediately after sending the re-INVITE.  Bob      terminates the session and transitions from the Established state      to the Mortal state.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 33]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   F7 200 OK (re-INVITE) Alice -> Bob   SIP/2.0 200 OK   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd7   ;received=192.0.2.201   Require: timer   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Content-Length: 0   /* Bob sends BYE, and Alice responds with a 200 OK to the re-INVITE.      A race condition occurs.  */   F8 200 OK (BYE) Alice -> Bob   F9 ACK (re-INVITE) Bob -> Alice   ACK sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74b44   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 ACK   Content-Length: 0   /* Bob sends ACK in the Mortal state to complete the three-way      handshake of the INVITE transaction.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 34]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.2.4.  Callee Receives ACK (Moratorium State) While in the Mortal State   State  Alice                          Bob  State          |                                |          |         ini-INVITE F1          |          |------------------------------->|     Pre  |            180 F2              |  Pre          |<-------------------------------|     Ear  |            200 F3              |  Ear          |<-------------------------------|    Mora  |                                |  Mora          |    ACK F4            BYE F5    |          |-------------     --------------|     Est  |              \ /               |  Mort          |               X                |          |              / \               |          |<------------     ------------->|  *race*    Mort  |            200 F6              |          |------------------------------->|          | ^                            ^ |          | |                    Timer K | |          | |                            V |          | | Timer J                      |  Morg          | V                              |    Morg  |                                |          |                                |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, ACK to 200, while in the Mortal   state.  Alice sends an ACK and Bob sends a BYE at the same time.   When the offer is in a 2xx, and the answer is in an ACK, there is a   race condition.  A session is not started when the ACK is received   because Bob has already terminated the session by sending a BYE.  The   answer in the ACK request is just ignored.   Note: As noted inSection 3.1.4, implementation issues are outside   the scope of this document, but the following tip is provided for   avoiding race conditions of this type.  Implementors can decouple the   actions of the user (e.g., hanging up) from the actions of the   protocol (the sending of BYE F5), so that the UA can behave like   this.  In this case, it is the implementor's choice as to how long to   wait.  In most cases, such an implementation may be useful in   preventing the type of race condition described in this section.   This document expresses no preference about whether or not they   should wait for an ACK to be delivered.  After considering the impact   on user experience, implementors should decide whether or not to wait   for a while, because the user experience depends on the   implementation and has no direct bearing on protocol behavior.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 35]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   /* RTP streams are established between Alice and Bob.  */   F5 BYE Alice -> Bob   F6 200 OK Bob -> Alice   /* Alice sends a BYE and terminates the session and dialog.  */3.3.  Other Race Conditions   This section shows examples of race conditions that are not directly   related to dialog state transition.  In SIP, processing functions are   deployed in three layers: dialog, session, and transaction.  They are   related to each other, but have to be treated separately.Section 17   of RFC 3261 [1] details the processing of transactions.  This   document has tried so far to clarify the processing on dialogs.  This   section explains race conditions that are related to sessions   established with SIP.3.3.1.  Re-INVITE Crossover   Alice                         Bob     |                            |     |         INVITE F1          |     |--------------------------->|     |      180 Ringing F2        |     |<---------------------------|     |          200 OK F3         |     |<---------------------------|     |           ACK F4           |     |--------------------------->|     |     Both Way RTP Media     |     |<==========================>|     |                            |     |re-INVITE F5   re-INVITE F6 |     |------------   -------------|Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 36]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008     |            \ /             |     |             X              |     |            / \             |     |<-----------   ------------>|     |   491 F8        491 F7     |     |------------   -------------|     |            \ /             |     |             X              |     |            / \             |     |<-----------   ------------>|     |  ^ ACK F9         ^ ACK F10|     |--|---------   ----|--------|     |  |          \ /   |        |     |  |           X    |        |     |  |          / \   |        |     |<-|----------   ---|------->|     |  |                |        |     |  |0-2.0 sec       |        |     |  |                |        |     |  v  re-INVITE F11(=F6)     |     |<------------------|--------|     |     200 OK F12    |        |     |-------------------|------->|     |       ACK F13     |        |     |<------------------|--------|     |                   |        |     |                   |2.1-4.0 sec     |                   |        |     |re-INVITE F14(=F5) v        |     |--------------------------->|     |         200 OK F15         |     |<---------------------------|     |          ACK F16           |     |--------------------------->|     |                            |     |                            |   In this scenario, Alice and Bob send re-INVITEs at the same time.   When two re-INVITEs cross in the same dialog, they are retried, each   after a different interval, according toSection 14.1 of RFC 3261   [1].  When Alice sends the re-INVITE and it crosses with Bob's, the   re-INVITE will be retried after 2.1-4.0 seconds because she owns the   Call-ID (she generated it).  Bob will retry his INVITE again after   0.0-2.0 seconds, because Bob isn't the owner of the Call-ID.   Therefore, each User Agent must remember whether or not it has   generated the Call-ID of the dialog, in case an INVITE may cross with   another INVITE.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 37]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   In this example, Alice's re-INVITE is for session modification and   Bob's re-INVITE is for session refresh.  In this case, after the 491   responses, Bob retries the re-INVITE for session refresh earlier than   Alice.  If Alice was to retry her re-INVITE (that is, if she was not   the owner of Call-ID), the request would refresh and modify the   session at the same time.  Then Bob would know that he does not need   to retry his re-INVITE to refresh the session.   In another instance, where two re-INVITEs for session modification   cross over, retrying the same re-INVITE again after a 491 by the   Call-ID owner (the UA that retries its re-INVITE after the other UA)   may result in unintended behavior, so the UA must decide if the retry   of the re-INVITE is necessary.  (For example, when a call hold and an   addition of video media cross over, mere retry of the re-INVITE at   the firing of the timer may result in the situation where the video   is transmitted immediately after the holding of the audio.  This   behavior is probably not intended by the users.)   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 re-INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonlyHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 38]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   /* Some detailed messages are shown for the sequence to illustrate      what sort of INVITE requests crossed over each other.  */   F6 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   INVITE sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd7   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   Supported: timer   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITE   Content-Length: 0   /* A re-INVITE request for a session refresh and another for a call      hold are sent at the same time.  */   F7 491 Request Pending Bob -> Alice   /* Since a re-INVITE is in progress, a 491 response is returned.  */   F8 491 Request Pending Alice -> Bob   F9 ACK (INVITE) Alice -> Bob   F10 ACK (INVITE) Bob -> Alice   F11 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   INVITE sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd71   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   Supported: timer   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 133   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 39]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   /* Since Bob is not the owner of the Call-ID, he sends a re-INVITE      again after 0.0-2.0 seconds.  */   F12 200 OK Alice -> Bob   F13 ACK Bob -> Alice   F14 re-INVITE Alice -> Bob   INVITE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf91   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 3 INVITE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonly   /* Since Alice is the owner of the Call-ID, Alice sends a re-INVITE      again after 2.1-4.0 seconds.  */   F15 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F16 ACK Alice -> Bob3.3.2.  UPDATE and re-INVITE Crossover   Alice                         Bob     |                            |     |         INVITE F1          |     |--------------------------->|     |      180 Ringing F2        |     |<---------------------------|     |                            |     |          200 OK F3         |Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 40]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008     |<---------------------------|     |           ACK F4           |     |--------------------------->|     |     Both Way RTP Media     |     |<==========================>|     |                            |     |  UPDATE F5    re-INVITE F6 |     |------------   -------------|     |            \ /             |     |             X              |     |            / \             |     |<-----------   ------------>|     |   491 F8        491 F7     |     |   (re-INVITE)   (UPDATE)   |     |------------   -------------|     |            \ /             |     |             X              |     |            / \             |     |<-----------   ------------>|     |  ^       ACK F9   ^        |     |<-|----------------|--------|     |  |                |        |     |  |0-2.0 sec       |        |     |  |                |        |     |  v  re-INVITE F10 |        |     |<------------------|--------|     |     200 OK F11    |        |     |-------------------|------->|     |       ACK F12     |        |     |<------------------|--------|     |                   |        |     |                   |2.1-4.0 sec     |                   |        |     |      UPDATE F13   v        |     |--------------------------->|     |         200 OK F14         |     |<---------------------------|     |                            |     |                            |   In this scenario, the UPDATE contains an SDP offer; therefore, the   UPDATE and re-INVITE are both responded to with 491 as in the case of   "re-INVITE crossover".  When an UPDATE for session refresh that   doesn't contain a session description and a re-INVITE cross each   other, both requests succeed with 200 (491 means that a UA has a   pending request).  The same is true for UPDATE crossover.  In the   former case where either UPDATE contains a session description, the   requests fail with 491; in the latter cases, they succeed with 200.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 41]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Note: A 491 response is sent because an SDP offer is pending, and 491   is an error that is related to matters that impact the session   established by SIP.   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 UPDATE Alice -> Bob   UPDATE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 UPDATE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonly   /* Some detailed messages are shown for the sequence to illustrate      messages crossing over each other.  */   F6 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   INVITE sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd7   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   Supported: timer   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 1 INVITEHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 42]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 133   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   /* This is a case where a re-INVITE for a session refresh and an      UPDATE for a call hold are sent at the same time.  */   F7 491 Request Pending (UPDATE) Bob -> Alice   /* Since a re-INVITE is in process, a 491 response is returned.  */   F8 491 Request Pending (re-INVITE) Alice -> Bob   F9 ACK (re-INVITE) Alice -> Bob   F10 re-INVITE Bob -> Alice   INVITE sip:alice@client.atlanta.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.biloxi.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bKnashd71   Session-Expires: 300;refresher=uac   Supported: timer   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   To: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 2 INVITE   Content-Type: application/sdp   Content-Length: 133   v=0   o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 client.biloxi.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.201   t=0 0   m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   /* Since Bob is not the owner of the Call-ID, Bob sends an INVITE      again after 0.0-2.0 seconds.  */Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 43]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   F11 200 OK Alice -> Bob   F12 ACK Bob -> Alice   F13 UPDATE Alice -> Bob   UPDATE sip:sip:bob@client.biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   Via: SIP/2.0/UDP client.atlanta.example.com:5060;branch=z9hG4bK74bf91   Max-Forwards: 70   From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl   To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=8321234356   Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com   CSeq: 3 UPDATE   Content-Length: 147   v=0   o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 client.atlanta.example.com   s=-   c=IN IP4 192.0.2.101   t=0 0   m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0   a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000   a=sendonly   /* Since Alice is the owner of the Call-ID, Alice sends the UPDATE      again after 2.1-4.0 seconds.  */   F14 200 OK Bob -> AliceHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 44]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20083.3.3.  Receiving REFER (Established State) While in the Mortal State    State  Alice                  Bob  State           |                        |           |       INVITE F1        |           |----------------------->|      Pre  |    180 Ringing F2      |  Pre           |<-----------------------|      Ear  |                        |  Ear           |       200 OK F3        |           |<-----------------------|     Mora  |         ACK F4         |  Mora           |----------------------->|      Est  |   Both Way RTP Media   |  Est           |<======================>|           |                        |           | BYE F5        REFER F6 |           |---------     ----------|     Mort  |          \ /           |           |           X            |           |          / \           |   *race*  |<--------     --------->|           |                        |  Mort           | 481 F8         200 F7  |           | (REFER)        (BYE)   |           |---------     ----------|           |          \ /         ^ |           |           X          | |           |          / \         | |           |<--------     --------->|           | ^                    | |           | | Timer K            | |           | V            Timer J | |     Morg  |                      V |           |                        |  Morg           |                        |   This scenario illustrates the race condition that occurs when the UAS   receives an Established message, REFER, while in the Mortal state.   Bob sends a REFER, and Alice sends a BYE at the same time.  Bob sends   the REFER in the same dialog.  Alice's dialog state moves to the   Mortal state at the point of sending BYE.  In the Mortal state, the   UA possesses dialog information for an internal process but the   dialog shouldn't exist outwardly.  Therefore, the UA sends an error   response to the REFER, which is transmitted as a mid-dialog request.   So Alice, in the Mortal state, sends an error response to the REFER.   However, Bob has already started the SUBSCRIBE usage with REFER, soHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 45]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   the dialog continues until the SUBSCRIBE usage terminates, even   though the INVITE dialog usage terminates by receiving BYE.  Bob's   behavior in this case needs to follow the procedures inRFC 5057 [6].   Message Details   F1 INVITE Alice -> Bob   F2 180 Ringing Bob -> Alice   F3 200 OK Bob -> Alice   F4 ACK Alice -> Bob   F5 BYE Alice -> Bob   /* Alice sends a BYE request and terminates the session, and      transitions from the Confirmed state to the Terminated state.  */   F6 REFER Bob -> Alice   /* Alice sends a BYE, and Bob sends a REFER at the same time.  Bob      sends the REFER on the INVITE dialog.  The dialog state      transitions to the Mortal state at the moment Alice sends the BYE,      but Bob doesn't know this until he receives the BYE.  A race      condition occurs.  */   F7 200 OK (BYE) Bob -> Alice   F8 481 Call/Transaction Does Not Exist (REFER) Alice -> Bob   /* Alice in the Mortal state sends a 481 to the REFER.  */4.  Security Considerations   This document contains clarifications of behavior specified inRFC3261 [1],RFC 3264 [2], andRFC 3515 [4].  The security   considerations of those documents continue to apply after the   application of these clarifications.5.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Robert Sparks, Dean Willis, Cullen   Jennings, James M. Polk, Gonzalo Camarillo, Kenichi Ogami, Akihiro   Shimizu, Mayumi Munakata, Yasunori Inagaki, Tadaatsu Kidokoro,   Kenichi Hiragi, Dale Worley, Vijay K. Gurbani, and Anders Kristensen   for their comments on this document.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 46]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 20086.  References6.1.  Normative References   [1]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, "SIP:        Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.   [2]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model with        Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3264, June 2002.   [3]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [4]  Sparks, R., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer        Method",RFC 3515, April 2003.   [5]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Reliability of Provisional        Responses in Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3262,        June 2002.6.2.  Informative References   [6]  Sparks, R., "Multiple Dialog Usages in the Session Initiation        Protocol",RFC 5057, November 2007.   [7]  Sparks, R., "Correct transaction handling for 200 responses to        Session Initiation Protocol INVITE requests", Work in Progress,        July 2008.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 47]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008Appendix A.  BYE in the Early Dialog   This section, related toSection 3.1.3, explains why BYE is not   recommended in the Early state, illustrating a case in which a BYE in   the early dialog triggers confusion.   Alice            Proxy               Bob   Carol     |                |                  |      |     |   INVITE F1    |                  |      |     |--------------->|    INVITE F2     |      |     |     100 F3     |----------------->|      |     |<---------------| 180(To tag=A) F4 |      |     |    180(A) F5   |<-----------------|      |     |<---------------|                  |      |     |                |       INVITE(Fork) F6   |     |                |------------------------>|     |                |                100 F7   |     |    BYE(A) F8   |<------------------------|     |--------------->|    BYE(A) F9     |      |     |                |----------------->|      |     |                |  200(A,BYE) F10  |      |     | 200(A,BYE) F11 |<-----------------|      |     |<---------------|  487(A,INV) F12  |      |     |                |<-----------------|      |     |                |    ACK(A) F13    |      |     |                |----------------->|      |     |                |                  |      |     |                |                         |     |                |     200(To tag=B) F13   |     |   200(B) F14   |<------------------------|     |<---------------|                         |     |   ACK(B) F15   |                         |     |--------------->|            ACK(B) F16   |     |                |------------------------>|     |   BYE(B) F17   |                         |     |--------------->|            BYE(B) F18   |     |                |------------------------>|     |                |            200(B) F19   |     |   200(B) F20   |<------------------------|     |<---------------|                         |     |                |                         |     |                |                         |   Care is advised in sending BYE in the Early state when forking by a   proxy is expected.  In this example, the BYE request progresses   normally, and it succeeds in correctly terminating the dialog with   Bob.  After Bob terminates the dialog by receiving the BYE, he sends   a 487 to the ini-INVITE.  According toSection 15.1.2 of RFC 3261Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 48]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   [1], it is RECOMMENDED for the UAS to generate a 487 to any pending   requests after receiving a BYE.  In this example, Bob sends a 487 to   the ini-INVITE since he receives the BYE while the ini-INVITE is in   pending state.   However, Alice receives a final response to the INVITE (a 200 from   Carol) even though she has successfully terminated the dialog with   Bob.  This means that, regardless of the success/failure of the BYE   in the Early state, Alice MUST be prepared for the establishment of a   new dialog until receiving the final response for the INVITE and   terminating the INVITE transaction.   It is not illegal to send a BYE in the Early state to terminate a   specific early dialog -- it may satisfy the intent of some callers.   However, the choice of BYE or CANCEL in the Early state must be made   carefully.  CANCEL is appropriate when the goal is to abandon the   call attempt entirely.  BYE is appropriate when the goal is to   abandon a particular early dialog while allowing the call to be   completed with other destinations.  When using either BYE or CANCEL,   the UAC must be prepared for the possibility that a call may still be   established to one or more destinations.Appendix B.  BYE Request Overlapping with re-INVITE     UAC                    UAS      |                      |   The session has been already established     ==========================      |   re-INVITE F1       |      |--------------------->|      |   BYE F2             |      |--------------------->|      |   200(BYE) F3        |      |<---------------------|      |   INVITE F4(=F1)     |      |--------------------->|      |                      |      |                      |   This case could look similar to the one inSection 3.2.3.  However,   it is not a race condition.  This case describes the behavior when   there is no response to the INVITE for some reason.  The appendix   explains the behavior in this case and its rationale, since this case   is likely to cause confusion.   First of all, it is important not to confuse the behavior of the   transaction layer and that of the dialog layer.RFC 3261 [1] details   the transaction layer behavior.  The dialog layer behavior isHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 49]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   explained in this document.  It has to be noted that these two   behaviors are independent of each other, even though both layers may   be triggered to change their states by sending or receiving the same   SIP messages.  (A dialog can be terminated even though a transaction   still remains, and vice versa.)   In the sequence above, there is no response to F1, and F2 (BYE) is   sent immediately after F1.  (F1 is a mid-dialog request.  If F1 was   an ini-INVITE, BYE could not be sent before the UAC received a   provisional response to the request with a To tag.)   Below is a figure that illustrates the UAC's dialog state and the   transaction state.   BYE   INV  dialog UAC                    UAS                :     |                      |                :     |                      |                |     |   re-INVITE F1       |          o     |     |--------------------->|          |     |     |   BYE F2             |    o     |  (Mortal) |--------------------->|    |     |     |     |   200(BYE) F3        |    |     |     |     |<---------------------|    |     |     |     |   INVITE F4(=F1)     |    |     |     |     |--------------------->|    |     |     |     |   481(INV) F5        |    |     |     |     |<---------------------|    |     |     |     |   ACK(INV) F6        |    |     |     |     |--------------------->|    |     |     |     |                      |    o     |     o     |                      |          |           |                      |          o           |                      |                      |                      |   For the UAC, the INVITE client transaction begins at the point F1 is   sent.  The UAC sends BYE (F2) immediately after F1.  This is a   legitimate behavior.  (Usually, the usage of each SIP method is   independent, for BYE and others.  However, it should be noted that it   is prohibited to send a request with an SDP offer while the previous   offer is in progress.)   After that, F2 triggers the BYE client transaction.  At the same   time, the dialog state transitions to the Mortal state and then only   a BYE or a response to a BYE can be handled.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 50]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   It is permitted to send F4 (a retransmission of INVITE) in the Mortal   state because the retransmission of F1 is handled by the transaction   layer, and the INVITE transaction has not yet transitioned to the   Terminated state.  As is mentioned above, the dialog and the   transaction behave independently each other.  Therefore, the   transaction handling has to be continued even though the dialog has   moved to the Terminated state.   Note: As noted inSection 3.1.4, implementation issues are outside   the scope of this document, but the following tip is provided for   avoiding race conditions of this type.  The UAC can delay sending BYE   F2 until the re-INVITE transaction F1 completes.  Implementors can   decouple the actions of the user (e.g., hanging up) from the actions   of the protocol (the sending of BYE F2), so that the UA can behave   like this.  In this case, it is the implementor's choice as to how   long to wait.  In most cases, such an implementation may be useful to   prevent this case.  This document expresses no preference about   whether or not they should wait for an ACK to be delivered.  After   considering the impact on user experience, implementors should decide   whether or not to wait for a while, because the user experience   depends on the implementation and has no direct bearing on protocol   behavior.   Next, the UAS's state is shown below.   UAC                    UAS dialog  INV   BYE    |                      |     :    |                      |     :    |   re-INVITE F1       |     |    |-------------->x      |     |    |   BYE F2             |     |    |--------------------->|     |           o    |   200(BYE) F3        |  (Mortal)       |    |<---------------------|     |           |<-Start Timer J    |   INVITE F4(=F1)     |     |           |    |--------------------->|     |     o     |    |   4xx/5xx(INV) F5    |     o     |     o    |<---------------------|           |    |   ACK(INV) F6        |           |    |--------------------->|           |<-Start Timer I    |                      |           |    |                      |           |    |                      |           o    |                      |   For the UAS, it can be considered that packet F1 is lost or delayed   (here, the behavior is explained for the case that the UAS receives   F2 BYE before F1 INVITE).  Therefore, F2 triggers the BYE transactionHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 51]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   for the UAS, and simultaneously the dialog moves to the Mortal state.   Then, upon the reception of F4, the INVITE server transaction begins.   (It is permitted to start the INVITE server transaction in the Mortal   state.  The INVITE server transaction begins to handle the received   SIP request regardless of the dialog state.)  The UAS's TU sends an   appropriate error response for the F4 INVITE, either 481 (because the   TU knows that the dialog that matches the INVITE is in the Terminated   state) or 500 (because the re-sent F4 has an out-of-order CSeq).  (It   is mentioned above that INVITE message F4 (and F1) is a mid-dialog   request.  Mid-dialog requests have a To tag.  It should be noted that   the UAS's TU does not begin a new dialog upon the reception of INVITE   with a To tag.)Appendix C.  UA's Behavior for CANCEL   This section explains the CANCEL behaviors that indirectly impact the   dialog state transition in the Early state.  CANCEL does not have any   influence on the UAC's dialog state.  However, the request has an   indirect influence on the dialog state transition because it has a   significant effect on ini-INVITE.  For the UAS, the CANCEL request   has more direct effects on the dialog than on the sending of a CANCEL   by the UAC, because it can be a trigger to send the 487 response.   Figure 3 explains the UAS's behavior in the Early state.  This flow   diagram is only an explanatory figure, and the actual dialog state   transition is as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2.   In the flow, full lines are related to dialog state transition, and   dotted lines are involved with CANCEL. (r) represents the reception   of signaling, and (s) means sending.  There is no dialog state for   CANCEL, but here the Cancelled state is handled virtually just for   the ease of understanding of the UA's behavior when it sends and   receives CANCEL.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 52]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008                  +-------------+                  | Preparative |---+                  +-------------+   |                    :   | 1xx(s)    |                    :   V           |                    : +-------+     | 2xx(s)                    : | Early |-----+------+                    : +-------+            |                    :     :                V                    :     :           +-----------+                    :     :           | Confirmed |<...                    :.....:           +-----------+   :                       :                   |  :       :                       :             BYE(r)|  :       :                       : CANCEL(r)         |  :.......:                       V                   |    CANCEL(r)                   .............           |                   : Cancelled :           |                   :...........:           |                      | 487(s)             |                      |                    |                      +--------------------+                                 |                                 V                           +------------+                           | Terminated |                           +------------+                   Figure 3: CANCEL flow diagram for UAS   There are two behaviors for the UAS depending on the state when it   receives a CANCEL.   The first behavior is when the UAS receives a CANCEL in the Early   state.  In this case, the UAS immediately sends a 487 for the INVITE,   and the dialog transitions to the Terminated state.   The other is the case in which the UAS receives a CANCEL while in the   Confirmed state.  In this case, the dialog state transition does not   occur, because the UAS has already sent a final response to the   INVITE to which the CANCEL is targeted.  (Note that, because of the   UAC's behavior, a UAS that receives a CANCEL in the Confirmed state   can expect to receive a BYE immediately and move to the Terminated   state.  However, the UAS's state does not transition until it   actually receives a BYE.)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 53]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008Appendix D.  Notes on the Request in the Mortal State   This section describes the UA's behavior in the Mortal state, which   needs careful attention.  Note that every transaction completes   independently of others, following the principle ofRFC 3261 [1].   In the Mortal state, only a BYE can be accepted, and the other   messages in the INVITE dialog usage are responded to with an error.   However, sending of ACK and the authentication procedure for BYE are   conducted in this state.  (The handling of messages concerning   multiple dialog usages is out of the scope of this document.  Refer   toRFC 5057 [6] for further information.)   ACK for error responses is handled by the transaction layer, so the   handling is not related to the dialog state.  Unlike the ACK for   error responses, ACK for 2xx responses is a request newly generated   by a TU.  However, the ACK for 2xx and the ACK for error responses   are both part of the INVITE transaction, even though their handling   differs (Section 17.1.1.1,RFC 3261 [1]).  Therefore, the INVITE   transaction is completed by the three-way handshake, which includes   ACK, even in the Mortal state.   Considering actual implementation, the UA needs to keep the INVITE   dialog usage until the Mortal state finishes, so that it is able to   send ACK for a 2xx response in the Mortal state.  If a 2xx to INVITE   is received in the Mortal state, the duration of the INVITE dialog   usage will be extended to 64*T1 seconds after the receipt of the 2xx,   to cope with the possible 2xx retransmission.  (The duration of the   2xx retransmission is 64*T1, so the UA needs to be prepared to handle   the retransmission for this duration.)  However, the UA shall send an   error response to other requests, since the INVITE dialog usage in   the Mortal state is kept only for the sending of ACK for 2xx.   The BYE authentication procedure shall be processed in the Mortal   state.  When authentication is requested by a 401 or 407 response,   the UAC resends BYE with appropriate credentials.  Also, the UAS   handles the retransmission of the BYE for which it requested   authentication.Appendix E.  Forking and Receiving New To Tags   This section details the behavior of the TU when it receives multiple   responses with different To tags to the ini-INVITE.   When an INVITE is forked inside a SIP network, there is a possibility   that the TU receives multiple responses to the ini-INVITE with   differing To tags (see Sections12.1,13.1,13.2.2.4,16.7,19.3,Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 54]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   etc., ofRFC 3261 [1]).  If the TU receives multiple 1xx responses   with different To tags, the original DSM forks and a new DSM instance   is created.  As a consequence, multiple early dialogs are generated.   If one of the multiple early dialogs receives a 2xx response, it   naturally transitions to the Confirmed state.  No DSM state   transition occurs for the other early dialogs, and their sessions   (early media) terminate.  The TU of the UAC terminates the INVITE   transaction after 64*T1 seconds, starting at the point of receiving   the first 2xx response.  Moreover, all mortal early dialogs that do   not transition to the Established state are terminated (seeSection13.2.2.4 of RFC 3261 [1]).  By "mortal early dialog", we mean any   early dialog that the UA will terminate when another early dialog is   confirmed.   Below is an example sequence in which two 180 responses with   different To tags are received, and then a 200 response for one of   the early dialogs (dialog A) is received.  Dotted lines (..) in the   sequences are auxiliary lines to represent the influence on dialog B.Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 55]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008                                   UAC                    dialog(A)       |    INVITE F1                     Pre o          |------------------------->                         |          |    100 F2                         |          |<-------------------------                         |          |    180(To tag=A) F3                     Ear |          |<-------------------------          dialog(B)      |          |      forked new DSM     |          |    180(To tag=B) F4          Ear o..........|..........|<-------------------------              |          |          |              |          |          |    200(A) F5   terminate->|.....Mora |..........|<-------------------------     early    |          | ^        |    ACK(A) F6      media   |      Est | |        |------------------------->              |          | |        |              |          | |64*T1   |              |          | |(13.2.2.4 ofRFC 3261 [1])              |          | |        |              |          | |        |              |          | V        |              o..........|.(terminate INVITE transaction)          terminated     |          |           dialog(B)     |          |                         |          |         Figure 4: Receiving 1xx responses with different To tags   The figure above shows the DSM inside a SIP TU.  Triggered by the   reception of a provisional response with a different To tag (F4   180(To tag=B)), the DSM forks and the early dialog B is generated.   64*T1 seconds later, dialog A receives a 200 OK response.  Dialog B,   which does not transition to the Established state, terminates.   Next, the behavior of a TU that receives multiple 2xx responses with   different To tags is explained.  When a mortal early dialog that did   not match the first 2xx response that the TU received receives   another 2xx response that matches its To tag before the 64*T1 INVITE   transaction timeout, its DSM transitions to the Confirmed state.   However, the session on the mortal early dialog is terminated when   the TU receives the first 2xx to establish a dialog, so no session is   established for the mortal early dialog.  Therefore, when the mortal   early dialog receives a 2xx response, the TU sends an ACK and,   immediately after, the TU usually sends a BYE to terminate the DSM.   (In special cases, e.g., if a UA intends to establish multiple   dialogs, the TU may not send the BYE.)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 56]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   The handling of the second early dialog after receiving the 200 for   the first dialog is quite appropriate for a typical device, such as a   phone.  It is important to note that what is being shown is a typical   useful action and not the only valid one.  Some devices might want to   handle things differently.  For instance, a conference focus that has   sent out an INVITE that forks may want to accept and mix all the   dialogs it gets.  In that case, no early dialog is treated as mortal.   Below is an example sequence in which two 180 responses with a   different To tag are received and then a 200 response for each of the   early dialogs is received.                                   UAC                    dialog(A)       |    INVITE F1                     Pre o          |----------------------->                         |          |    100 F2                         |          |<-----------------------                         |          |    180(To tag=A) F3         dialog(B)   Ear |          |<-----------------------     forked new DSM      |          |    180(To tag=B) F4          Ear o..........|..........|<-----------------------              |          |          |              |          |          |    200(A) F5   terminate->|.....Mora |..........|<-----------------------     early    |          | ^        |    ACK(A) F6      media   |      Est | |        |----------------------->              |          | |64*T1   |              |          | |        |    200(B) F7         Mora |..........|.|........|<-----------------------              |          | |        |    ACK(B) F8          Est |..........|.|........|----------------------->              |          | |        |    BYE(B) F9         Mort |..........|.|........|----------------------->          ^   |          | |        |    200(B) F10          |   |          | |        |<-----------------------          |Timer K       | |        |          |   |          | V        |          |   |          | (terminate INVITE transaction)          V   |          |          |         Morg o          |          |                         |          |     Figure 5: Receiving 1xx and 2xx responses with different To tags   Below is an example sequence when a TU receives multiple 200   responses with different To tags before the 64*T1 timeout of the   INVITE transaction in the absence of a provisional response.  Even   though a TU does not receive a provisional response, the TU needs toHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 57]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   process the 2xx responses (seeSection 13.2.2.4 of RFC 3261 [1]).  In   that case, the DSM state is forked at the Confirmed state, and then   the TU sends an ACK for the 2xx response and, immediately after, the   TU usually sends a BYE.  (In special cases, e.g., if a UA intends to   establish multiple dialogs, the TU may not send the BYE.)                                 UAC                  dialog(A)       |    INVITE F1                   Pre o          |----------------------->                       |          |    100 F2                       |          |<-----------------------                       |          |    180(To tag=A) F3                   Ear |          |<-----------------------                       |          |                       |          |    200(A) F4                  Mora |..........|<-----------------------                       | ^        |    ACK(A) F5                   Est | |        |----------------------->                       | |        |       dialog(B)       | |64*T1   |   forked new DSM      | |        |    200(To tag=B) F6       Mora o..........|.|........|<-----------------------            |          | |        |    ACK(B) F7        Est |..........|.|........|----------------------->            |          | |        |    BYE(B) F8       Mort |..........|.|........|----------------------->        ^   |          | |        |    200(B) F9        |   |          | |        |<-----------------------        |   |          | V        |        |Timer K       | (terminate INVITE transaction)        |   |          |          |        V   |          |          |       Morg o          |          |                       |          |         Figure 6: Receiving 2xx responses with different To tags   Below is an example sequence in which the option tag 100rel (RFC 3262   [5]) is required by a 180.   If a forking proxy supports 100rel, it transparently transmits to the   UAC a provisional response that contains a Require header with the   value of 100rel.  Upon receiving a provisional response with 100rel,   the UAC establishes the early dialog (B) and sends PRACK (Provisional   Response Acknowledgement).  (Here, also, every transaction completes   independently of others.)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 58]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008   As in Figure 4, the early dialog (B) terminates at the same time the   INVITE transaction terminates.  In the case where a proxy does not   support 100rel, the provisional response will be handled in the usual   way (a provisional response with 100rel is discarded by the proxy,   not to be transmitted to the UAC).                                UAC                 dialog(A)       |    INVITE F1                  Pre o          |------------------------->                      |          |    100 F2                      |          |<-------------------------                      |          |    180(To tag=A) F3                  Ear |          |<-------------------------                      |          |    200(A) F4                 Mora |..........|<-------------------------                      | ^        |    ACK(A) F5                  Est | |        |------------------------->       dialog(B)      | |        |   forked new DSM     | |        |    180(To tag=B) w/100rel F6       Ear o..........|.|........|<-------------------------           |          | |        |    PRACK(B) F7           |          | |        |------------------------->           |          | |        |    200(B,PRACK) F8           |          | |        |<-------------------------           |          | |64*T1   |           |          | |(13.2.2.4 ofRFC 3261 [1])           |          | |        |           |          | |        |           |          | |        |           |          | V        |           o..........|.(terminate INVITE transaction)       terminated     |          |        dialog(B)     |          |                      |          |         Figure 7: Receiving 1xx responses with different To tags   when using the mechanism for reliable provisional responses (100rel)Hasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 59]

RFC 5407         Example Call Flows of Race Conditions     December 2008Authors' Addresses   Miki Hasebe   NTT-east Corporation   19-2 Nishi-shinjuku 3-chome   Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo  163-8019   JP   EMail: hasebe.miki@east.ntt.co.jp   Jun Koshiko   NTT-east Corporation   19-2 Nishi-shinjuku 3-chome   Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo  163-8019   JP   EMail: j.koshiko@east.ntt.co.jp   Yasushi Suzuki   NTT Corporation   9-11, Midori-cho 3-Chome   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   JP   EMail: suzuki.yasushi@lab.ntt.co.jp   Tomoyuki Yoshikawa   NTT-east Corporation   19-2 Nishi-shinjuku 3-chome   Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo  163-8019   JP   EMail: tomoyuki.yoshikawa@east.ntt.co.jp   Paul H. Kyzivat   Cisco Systems, Inc.   1414 Massachusetts Avenue   Boxborough, MA  01719   US   EMail: pkyzivat@cisco.comHasebe, et al.           Best Current Practice                 [Page 60]

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