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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                   R. RavindranathRequest for Comments: 7865                                 Cisco SystemsCategory: Standards Track                                   P. RavindranISSN: 2070-1721                                           Nokia Networks                                                              P. Kyzivat                                                                  Huawei                                                                May 2016Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Recording MetadataAbstract   Session recording is a critical requirement in many communications   environments, such as call centers and financial trading   organizations.  In some of these environments, all calls must be   recorded for regulatory, compliance, and consumer protection reasons.   The recording of a session is typically performed by sending a copy   of a media stream to a recording device.  This document describes the   metadata model as viewed by the Session Recording Server (SRS) and   the recording metadata format.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7865.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2016 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.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Definitions .....................................................44. Metadata Model ..................................................55. Recording Metadata Format from SRC to SRS .......................65.1. XML Data Format ............................................75.1.1. Namespace ...........................................75.1.2. 'recording' Element .................................76. Recording Metadata Classes ......................................76.1. Recording Session ..........................................86.1.1. Attributes ..........................................86.1.2. Linkages ............................................96.2. Communication Session Group ................................96.2.1. Attributes .........................................106.2.2. Linkages ...........................................106.3. Communication Session .....................................116.3.1. Attributes .........................................116.3.2. Linkages ...........................................126.4. CS-RS Association .........................................136.4.1. Attributes .........................................146.4.2. Linkages ...........................................146.5. Participant ...............................................146.5.1. Attributes .........................................156.5.2. Linkages ...........................................156.6. Participant-CS Association ................................166.6.1. Attributes .........................................176.6.2. Linkages ...........................................176.7. Media Stream ..............................................186.7.1. Attributes .........................................186.7.2. Linkages ...........................................19Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.8. Participant-Stream Association ............................196.8.1. Attributes .........................................206.8.2. Linkages ...........................................206.9. Syntax of XML Elements for Date and Time ..................216.10. Format of Unique ID ......................................216.11. Metadata Version Indicator ...............................217. Recording Metadata Snapshot Request Format .....................228. SIP Recording Metadata Examples ................................238.1. Complete SIP Recording Metadata Example ...................238.2. Partial Update of Recording Metadata XML Body .............259. XML Schema Definition for Recording Metadata ...................2610. Security Considerations .......................................3011. IANA Considerations ...........................................3111.1. SIP Recording Metadata Schema Registration ...............3112. References ....................................................3112.1. Normative References .....................................3112.2. Informative References ...................................32   Acknowledgements ..................................................34   Authors' Addresses ................................................341.  Introduction   Session recording is a critical requirement in many communications   environments, such as call centers and financial trading   organizations.  In some of these environments, all calls must be   recorded for regulatory, compliance, and consumer protection reasons.   The recording of a session is typically performed by sending a copy   of a media stream to a recording device.  This document focuses on   the recording metadata, which describes the Communication Session   (CS).  The document describes a metadata model as viewed by the   Session Recording Server (SRS) and the recording metadata format, the   requirements for which are described in [RFC6341] and the   architecture for which is described in [RFC7245].2.  Terminology   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 in [RFC2119].  This   document only uses these key words when referencing normative   statements in existing RFCs.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20163.  Definitions   Metadata model:  A metadata model is an abstract representation of      metadata using a Unified Modeling Language (UML) [UML] class      diagram.   Metadata classes:  Each block in the model represents a class.  A      class is a construct that is used as a blueprint to create      instances (called "objects") of itself.  The description of each      class also has a representation of its attributes in a second      compartment below the class name.   Attributes:  Attributes represent the elements listed in each of the      classes.  The attributes of a class are listed in the second      compartment below the class name.  Each instance of a class      conveys values for the attributes of that class.  These values get      added to the recording's metadata.   Linkages:  Linkages represent the relationship between the classes in      the model.  Each linkage represents a logical connection between      classes (or objects) in class diagrams (or object diagrams).  The      linkages used in the metadata model of this document are      associations.   This document also refers to the terminology defined in [RFC6341].Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20164.  Metadata Model   Metadata is the information that describes recorded media and the CS   to which they relate.  The diagram below shows a model for metadata   as viewed by an SRS.             +-------------------------------+ 1..*             |    Recording Session (RS)     |----+             +-------------------------------+    |                   | 1..*          | 1..*         |                   |               |              |                   |               | 0..*         |                   |        +-----------------+   |   +------------+  |        | Communication   |   |   | CS-RS      |  |        | Session Group   |   |   | Association|--+        |  (CS-Group)     |   |   |            |  |        +-----------------+   |   +------------+  |              | 0..1          |                   |              |               |                   | 0..*         | 1..*          |   +-------------------------------+              |   |   Communication Session (CS)  |              |   |                               |              |   +-------------------------------+              |         | 1..*                   | 0..1          |   +-----+                        |               |   |     | 0..*                   | 0..*          | 0..*   | +-------------+ receives +----------------+  |   | | Participant |----------|  Media Stream  |--+   | |             |0..*  0..*|                |   | |             |          |                |   | |             |          |                |   | |             |  sends   |                |   | |             |----------|                |   | |             |1.*   0..*|                |   | +-------------+          +----------------+   |        |                        |   |        |                        |   |        +------------------------+------------+   |                                              |   |                                              |   |           +------------------+    +----------------------+   |           |Participant-CS    |    |  Participant-Stream  |   +-----------|  Association     |    |    Association       |               |                  |    |                      |               +------------------+    +----------------------+Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   The metadata model is a class diagram in UML.  The model describes   the structure of metadata in general by showing the classes, their   attributes, and the relationships among the classes.  Each block in   the model above represents a class.  The linkages between the classes   represent the relationships, which can be associations or   compositions.  The metadata is conveyed from the Session Recording   Client (SRC) to the SRS.   The model allows metadata describing CSs to be communicated to the   SRS as a series of snapshots, each representing the state as seen by   a single SRC at a particular instant in time.  Metadata changes from   one snapshot to another reflect changes in what is being recorded.   For example, if a participant joins a conference, then the SRC sends   the SRS a snapshot of metadata having that participant information   (with attributes like (Name, AoR) tuple and associate-time).  (Note:   "AoR" means "Address-of-Record".)   Some of the metadata is not required to be conveyed explicitly from   the SRC to the SRS, if it can be obtained contextually by the SRS   (e.g., from SIP or Session Description Protocol (SDP) signaling).   For example, the 'label' attribute within the 'stream' XML element   references an SDP "a=label" attribute that identifies an m-line   within the Recording Session (RS) SDP.  The SRS would learn the media   properties from the media line.5.  Recording Metadata Format from SRC to SRS   This section gives an overview of the recording metadata format.   Some data from the metadata model is assumed to be made available to   the SRS through SDP [RFC4566], and therefore this data is not   represented in the XML document format specified in this document.   SDP attributes describe different media formats like audio and video.   The other metadata attributes, such as participant details, are   represented in a new recording-specific XML document of type   'application/rs-metadata+xml'.  The SDP "label" attribute [RFC4574]   provides an identifier by which a metadata XML document can refer to   a specific media description in the SDP sent from the SRC to the SRS.   The XML document format can be used to represent either the complete   metadata or a partial update to the metadata.  The latter includes   only elements that have changed compared to the previously reported   metadata.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20165.1.  XML Data Format   Every recording metadata XML document sent from the SRC to the SRS   contains a 'recording' element.  The 'recording' element acts as a   container for all other elements in this XML document.  A 'recording'   object is an XML document.  It has the XML declaration and contains   an encoding declaration in the XML declaration, e.g.,   "<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>".  If the charset parameter   of the MIME content type declaration is present and it is different   from the encoding declaration, the charset parameter takes   precedence.   Every application conforming to this specification MUST accept the   UTF-8 character encoding to ensure minimal interoperability.   Syntax and semantic errors in an XML document should be reported to   the originator, using application-specific mechanisms.5.1.1.  Namespace   With the following URN, this document defines a new namespace URI for   elements defined herein:   urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:15.1.2.  'recording' Element   The 'recording' element MUST contain an xmlns namespace attribute   with a value of urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1.  Exactly one   'recording' element MUST be present in every recording metadata XML   document.   A 'recording' element MAY contain a 'dataMode' element indicating   whether the XML document is a complete document or a partial update.   If no 'dataMode' element is present, then the default value is   "complete".6.  Recording Metadata Classes   This section describes each class of the metadata model and the   attributes of each class.  This section also describes how different   classes are linked and the XML element for each of them.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.1.  Recording Session   +-------------------------------+   | Recording Session (RS)        |   +-------------------------------+   |                               | 1..*     0..*   |     start-time                |-------------- Media Stream   |     end-time                  |   |                               |   |                               |   +-------------------------------+         | 1..*           | 1..*         |                |         | 0..*           | 0..*    Communication    Communication    Session (CS)     Session Group (CS-Group)   Each instance of an RS class, namely the RS object, represents a SIP   session created between an SRC and SRS for the purpose of recording   a CS.   The RS object is represented in the XML schema using the 'recording'   element, which in turn relies on the SIP/SDP session with which the   XML document is associated to provide the attributes of the RS   element.6.1.1.  Attributes   An RS class has the following attributes:   o  start-time - Represents the start time of an RS object.   o  end-time - Represents the end time of an RS object.   'start-time' and 'end-time' attribute values are derivable from the   Date header (if present in the SIP message) in the RS.  In cases   where the Date header is not present, 'start-time' is derivable from   the time at which the SRS receives the notification of the SIP   message to set up the RS, and 'end-time' is derivable from the time   at which the SRS receives a disconnect on the RS SIP dialog.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.1.2.  Linkages   Each instance of an RS has:   o  Zero or more instances of CS-Groups.   o  Zero or more instances of CS objects.   o  Zero or more instances of MediaStream objects.   Zero instances of CSs and CS-Groups in a 'recording' element are   allowed to accommodate persistent recording scenarios.  A persistent   RS is a SIP dialog that is set up between the SRC and the SRS, even   before any CS is set up.  The metadata sent from the SRC to the SRS   when the persistent RS SIP dialog is set up may not have any CS (and   the related CS-Group) elements in the XML, as there may not be a   session that is associated to the RS yet.  For example, a phone   acting as an SRC can set up an RS with the SRS, possibly even before   the phone is part of a CS.  Once the phone joins a CS, the same RS   would be used to convey the CS metadata.6.2.  Communication Session Group    Recording Session (RS)              | 1..*              |              | 0..*   +-------------------------------+   | Communication Session         |   |   Group (CS-Group)            |   +-------------------------------+   |  group_id                     |   |  associate-time               |   |  disassociate-time            |   |                               |   +-------------------------------+              | 0..1              |              | 1..*    Communication Session (CS)   One instance of a CS-Group class, namely the CS-Group object,   provides association or grouping of all related CSs.  For example, in   a contact center flow, a call can get transferred to multiple agents.   Each of these can trigger the setup of a new CS.  In cases where the   SRC knows the related CSs, it can group them using the CS-Group   element.  The CS-Group object is represented in the XML schema using   the 'group' element.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.2.1.  Attributes   A CS-Group has the following attributes:   o  group_id - This attribute groups different CSs that are related.      The SRC (or the SRS) is responsible for ensuring the uniqueness of      'group_id' in cases where multiple SRCs interact with the same      SRS.  The mechanism by which the SRC groups the CS is outside the      scope of this document.   o  associate-time - This is the time when a grouping is formed.  The      rules that determine how a grouping of different CS objects is      done by the SRC are outside the scope of this document.   o  disassociate-time - 'disassociate-time' for the CS-Group is      calculated by the SRC as the time when the grouping ends.6.2.2.  Linkages   The linkages between a CS-Group class and other classes are   associations.  A CS-Group is associated with the RS and CS in the   following manner:   o  There are one or more RS objects per CS-Group.   o  Each CS-Group object has to be associated with one or more RSs.      Here, each RS can be set up by the potentially different SRCs.   o  There are one or more CSs per CS-Group (for example, in cases      where the call is transferred).  A CS cannot be associated with      more than one CS-Group.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.3.  Communication Session   Recording               Communication   Session (RS)       Session Group (CS-Group)      | 1..*                 | 0..1      |                      |      | 0..*                 | 1..*   +-------------------------------+   |   Communication Session (CS)  |   +-------------------------------+   |   session_id                  |   |   sipSessionID                |   |   reason                      |   |   group-ref                   |   |   start-time                  |   |   stop-time                   |   +-------------------------------+      |                      |      | 0..*                 | 0..1      |                      |      | 0..*                 | 0..*   Participant              Media Stream   A CS class and its object in the metadata model represent the CS and   its properties as seen by the SRC.  The CS object is represented in   the XML schema using the 'session' element.6.3.1.  Attributes   A CS class has the following attributes:   o  session_id - This attribute is used to uniquely identify an      instance of a CS object, namely the 'session' XML element within      the metadata XML document.  'session_id' is generated using the      rules mentioned inSection 6.10.   o  reason - This represents the reason why a CS was terminated.  The      value for this attribute is derived from the SIP Reason header      [RFC3326] of the CS.  There MAY be multiple instances of the      'reason' XML element inside a 'session' element.  The 'reason' XML      element has 'protocol' as an attribute, which indicates the      protocol from which the reason string is derived.  The default      value for the 'protocol' attribute is "SIP".  The 'reason' element      can be derived from a SIP Reason header in the CS.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   o  sipSessionID - This attribute carries a SIP Session-ID as defined      in [SessionID].  Each CS object can have zero or more      'sipSessionID' elements.  More than one 'sipSessionID' attribute      may be present in a CS.  For example, if three participants -- A,      B, and C -- are in a conference that has a focus acting as an SRC,      the metadata sent from the SRC to the SRS will likely have three      'sipSessionID' elements that correspond to the SIP dialogs that      the focus has with each of the three participants.   o  group-ref - A 'group-ref' attribute MAY be present to indicate the      group (identified by 'group_id') to which the enclosing session      belongs.   o  start-time - This optional attribute represents the start time of      the CS as seen by the SRC.   o  stop-time - This optional attribute represents the stop time of      the CS as seen by the SRC.   This document does not specify attributes relating to what should   happen to a recording of a CS after it has been delivered to the SRS   (e.g., how long to retain the recording, what access controls to   apply).  The SRS is assumed to behave in accordance with its local   policy.  The ability of the SRC to influence this policy is outside   the scope of this document.  However, if there are implementations   where the SRC desires to specify its own policy preferences, this   information could be sent as extension data attached to the CS.6.3.2.  Linkages   A CS is linked to the CS-Group, participant, MediaStream (MS), and   RS classes by using the association relationship.  The association   between the CS and the participant allows the following:   o  A CS will have zero or more participants.   o  A participant is associated with zero or more CSs.  This includes      participants who are not directly part of any CS.  An example of      such a case is participants in a pre-mixed media stream.  The SRC      may have knowledge of such participants but not have any signaling      relationship with them.  This might arise if one participant in a      CS is a conference focus.  To summarize, even if the SRC does not      have direct signaling relationships with all participants in a CS,      it should nevertheless create a participant object for each      participant that it knows about.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   o  The model also allows participants in a CS that are not      participants in the media.  An example is the identity of a Third      Party Call Control (3pcc) that has initiated a CS to two or more      participants in the CS.  Another example is the identity of a      conference focus.  Of course, a focus is probably in the media,      but since it may only be there as a mixer, it may not report      itself as a participant in any of the media streams.   The association between the CS and the media stream allows the   following:   o  A CS will have zero or more streams.   o  A stream can be associated with at most one CS.  A stream in a      persistent RS is not required to be associated with any CS before      the CS is created, and hence the zero association is allowed.   The association between the CS and the RS allows the following:   o  Each instance of an RS has zero or more instances of CS objects.   o  Each CS has to be associated with one or more RSs.  Each RS can be      potentially set up by different SRCs.6.4.  CS-RS Association                        1..*             0..*              Recording                       Communication                Session ----------+---------- Session                                  |                                  |                                  |                      +-----------------------+                      | CS-RS Association     |                      |                       |                      +-----------------------+                      | associate-time        |                      | disassociate-time     |                      | session_id            |                      +-----------------------+   The CS-RS Association class describes the association of a CS to an   RS for a period of time.  A single CS may be associated with   different RSs (perhaps by different SRCs) and may be associated and   dissociated several times.   The CS-RS Association class is represented in XML using the   'sessionrecordingassoc' XML element.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.4.1.  Attributes   The CS-RS Association class has the following attributes:   o  associate-time - associate-time is calculated by the SRC as the      time it sees a CS associated to an RS.   o  disassociate-time - disassociate-time is calculated by the SRC as      the time it sees a CS disassociate from an RS.   o  session_id - Each instance of this class MUST have a 'session_id'      attribute that identifies the CS to which this association      belongs.6.4.2.  Linkages   The CS-RS Association class is linked to the CS and RS classes.6.5.  Participant    Communication Session (CS)              | 0..*              |              | 0..*   +-------------------------------+   |          Participant          |   +-------------------------------+   |  nameID                       |   |  participant_id               |   |                               |   +-------------------------------+           | 0..*       1..* |   receives|                 |sends           | 0..*       0..* |              Media Stream   A participant class and its objects have information about a device   that is part of a CS and/or contributes/consumes media stream(s)   belonging to a CS.   The participant object is represented in the XML schema using the   'participant' element.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.5.1.  Attributes   A participant class has two attributes:   o  nameID - This attribute is a list of (Name, AoR) tuples.  An AoR      (Section 6 of [RFC3261]) can be either a SIP/SIPS/tel URI ("SIPS"      means "SIP Secure"; the tel URI is discussed in [RFC3966]), a      Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN), or an IP address.  For      example, the AoR may be drawn from the From header field or the      P-Asserted-Identity header [RFC3325] field.  The SRC's local      policy is used to decide where to draw the AoR from.  The Name      parameter represents the participant name (SIP display name) or      dialed number (when known).  Multiple tuples are allowed for cases      where a participant has more than one AoR.  For example, a      P-Asserted-Identity header can have both SIP and tel URIs.   o  participant_id - This attribute is used to identify the      'participant' XML element within the XML document.  It is      generated using the rules mentioned inSection 6.10.  This      attribute MUST be used for all references to a participant within      a CS-Group, and MAY be used to reference the same participant more      globally.   This document does not specify other attributes relating to   participants (e.g., participant role, participant type).  An SRC that   has information regarding these attributes can provide this   information as part of extension data to the 'participant' XML   element from the SRC to the SRS.6.5.2.  Linkages   The participant class is linked to the MS and CS classes by using an   association relationship.  The association between the participant   and the MS allows the following:   o  A participant will receive zero or more media streams.   o  A participant will send zero or more media streams.  (The same      participant provides multiple streams, e.g., audio and video.)Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   o  A media stream will be received by zero or more participants.  It      is possible, though perhaps unlikely, that a stream is generated      but sent only to the SRC and SRS, not to any participant -- for      example, in conferencing where all participants are on hold and      the SRC is collocated with the focus.  Also, a media stream may be      received by multiple participants (e.g., "whisper" calls, side      conversations).   o  A media stream will be sent by one or more participants (pre-mixed      streams).   An example of a case where a participant receives zero or more   streams is where a supervisor may have a side conversation with an   agent while the agent converses with a customer.6.6.  Participant-CS Association                         1..*             0..*         Communication               Session -----------+----------- Participant                                  |                                  |                                  |                    +---------------------------+                    | Participant-CS Association|                    |                           |                    |                           |                    +---------------------------+                    | associate-time            |                    | disassociate-time         |                    | param                     |                    | participant_id            |                    | session_id                |                    +---------------------------+   The Participant-CS Association class describes the association of a   participant to a CS for a period of time.  A participant may be   associated to and dissociated from a CS several times (for example,   connecting to a conference, then disconnecting, then connecting   again).   The Participant-CS Association object is represented in the XML   schema using the 'participantsessionassoc' element.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.6.1.  Attributes   The Participant-CS Association class has the following attributes:   o  associate-time - associate-time is calculated by the SRC as the      time it sees a participant associated to a CS.   o  disassociate-time - disassociate-time is calculated by the SRC as      the time it sees a participant disassociate from a CS.  It is      possible that a given participant can have multiple associate      times / disassociate times within a given communication session.   o  param - The capabilities here are those that are indicated in the      Contact header as defined inSection 9 of [RFC3840].  For example,      in a CS (which can be a conference), you can have participants who      are playing the role of "focus".  These participants do not      contribute to media in the CS; however, they switch the media      received from one participant to every other participant in the      CS.  Indicating the capabilities of the participants (here,      "focus") would be useful for the recorder to learn about these      kinds of participants.  The capabilities are represented using the      'param' XML element in the metadata.  The 'param' XML element      encoding defined in [RFC4235] is used to represent the capability      attributes in metadata.  Each participant may have zero or more      capabilities.  A participant may use different capabilities,      depending on the role it plays at a particular instance -- for      example, if a participant moves across different CSs (e.g., due to      transfer) or is simultaneously present in different CSs with      different roles.   o  participant_id - This attribute identifies the participant to      which this association belongs.   o  session_id - This attribute identifies the session to which this      association belongs.6.6.2.  Linkages   The Participant-CS Association class is linked to the participant and   CS classes.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.7.  Media Stream                                      Participant                                  | 0..*       1..* |                          receives|                 |sends                                  | 0..*       0..* |                              +-------------------------+                              |        Media Stream     |                   0..1  0..* +-------------------------+    Communication ------------|                         |          Session             |  label                  |                              |  content-type           |                              |  stream_id              |                              |  session_id             |                              +-------------------------+                                      0..* |                                           |                                           |                                      1..* |                                     Recording Session   A MS class (and its objects) has the properties of media as seen by   the SRC and sent to the SRS.  Different snapshots of MS objects may   be sent whenever there is a change in media (e.g., a direction   change, like pause/resume, codec change, and/or participant change).   The MS object is represented in the XML schema using the 'stream'   element.6.7.1.  Attributes   A MS class has the following attributes:   o  label - The 'label' attribute within the 'stream' XML element      references an SDP "a=label" attribute that identifies an m-line      within the RS SDP.  That m-line carries the media stream from the      SRC to the SRS.   o  content-type - The content of a MS element will be described in      terms of the "a=content" attribute defined inSection 5 of      [RFC4796].  If the SRC wishes to convey the content-type to the      SRS, it does so by including an "a=content" attribute with the      m-line in the RS SDP.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   o  stream_id - Each 'stream' element has a unique 'stream_id'      attribute that helps to uniquely identify the stream.  This      identifier is generated using the rules mentioned inSection 6.10.   o  session_id - This attribute associates the stream with a specific      'session' element.   The metadata model can include media streams that are not being   delivered to the SRS.  For example, an SRC offers audio and video   towards an SRS that accepts only audio in response.  The metadata   snapshots sent from the SRC to the SRS can continue to indicate the   changes to the video stream as well.6.7.2.  Linkages   A MS class is linked to the participant and CS classes by using the   association relationship.  Details regarding associations with the   participant are described inSection 6.5.  Details regarding   associations with the CS are mentioned inSection 6.3.6.8.  Participant-Stream Association   +-------------------------+   | Participant-Stream      |   | Association             |   +-------------------------+   +-----------Participant   | associate-time          |   |       0..* | 1..* |   | disassociate-time       |---+    receives|      |sends   | send                    |   |       0..* | 0..* |   | recv                    |   |            |      |   | participant_id          |   |            |      |   +-------------------------+   |            |      |                                 +-----------Media Stream   A Participant-Stream Association class describes the association of a   participant to a MS for a period of time, as a sender or as a   receiver, or both.   This class is represented in XML using the 'participantstreamassoc'   element.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.8.1.  Attributes   A Participant-Stream Association class has the following attributes:   o  associate-time - This attribute indicates the time a participant      started contributing to a MS.   o  disassociate-time - This attribute indicates the time a      participant stopped contributing to a MS.   o  send - This attribute indicates whether a participant is      contributing to a stream or not.  This attribute has a value that      points to a stream represented by its unique_id.  The presence of      this attribute indicates that a participant is contributing to a      stream.  If a participant stops contributing to a stream due to      changes in a CS, a snapshot MUST be sent from the SRC to the SRS      with no 'send' element for that stream.   o  recv - This attribute indicates whether a participant is receiving      a media stream or not.  This attribute has a value that points to      a stream represented by its unique_id.  The presence of this      attribute indicates that a participant is receiving a stream.  If      the participant stops receiving a stream due to changes in a CS      (like hold), a snapshot MUST be sent from the SRC to the SRS with      no 'recv' element for that stream.   o  participant_id - This attribute points to the participant with      which a 'stream' element is associated.   The 'participantstreamassoc' XML element is used to represent a   participant association with a stream.  The 'send' and 'recv' XML   elements MUST be used to indicate whether a participant is   contributing to a stream or receiving a stream.  There MAY be   multiple instances of the 'send' and 'recv' XML elements inside a   'participantstreamassoc' element.  If a metadata snapshot is sent   with a 'participantstreamassoc' element that does not have any 'send'   and 'recv' elements, it means that the participant is neither   contributing to any streams nor receiving any streams.6.8.2.  Linkages   The Participant-Stream Association class is linked to the participant   and MS classes.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20166.9.  Syntax of XML Elements for Date and Time   The XML elements 'associate-time', 'disassociate-time', 'start-time',   and 'stop-time' contain strings representing the date and time.  The   value of these elements MUST follow the Instant Messaging and   Presence Protocol (IMPP) date-time format [RFC3339].  Timestamps that   contain "T" or "Z" MUST use the capitalized forms.   As a security measure, the 'timestamp' element MUST be included in   all tuples, unless the exact time of the status change cannot be   determined.6.10.  Format of Unique ID   A unique_id is generated in two steps:   o  The Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) is created using any of      the procedures mentioned in Sections4.3,4.4, and4.5 of      [RFC4122].  The algorithm MUST ensure that it does not use any      potentially personally identifying information to generate the      UUIDs.  If implementations are using a Name-Based UUID as defined      inSection 4.3 of [RFC4122], a namespace ID generated using the      guidance inSection 4.2 or 4.5 of [RFC4122] might be a good      choice.   o  The UUID is encoded using base64 as defined in [RFC4648].   The above-mentioned unique_id mechanism SHOULD be used for each   metadata element.  Multiple SRCs can refer to the same element/UUID   (how each SRC learns the UUID here is beyond the scope of this   document).  If two SRCs use the same UUID, they MUST retain the   UUID/element mapping.  If the SRS detects that a UUID is mapped to   more than one element at any point in time, it MUST treat this as an   error.  For example, the SRS may choose to reject or ignore the   portions of metadata where it detects that the same UUID is mapped to   an element that is different than the expected element (the SRS   learns the mapped UUID when it sees an element for the first time in   a metadata instance).6.11.  Metadata Version Indicator   The Metadata version is defined to help the SRC and SRS know the   version of metadata XML schema used.  SRCs and SRSs that support this   specification MUST use version 1 in the namespace   (urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1) in all the XML documents.   Implementations may not interoperate if the version implemented by   the sender is not known by the receiver.  No negotiation of versions   is provided.  The version number has no significance, althoughRavindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   documents that update or obsolete this document (possibly including   drafts of such documents) should include a higher version number if   the metadata XML schema changes.7.  Recording Metadata Snapshot Request Format   The SRS can explicitly request a metadata snapshot from the SRC.  To   request a metadata snapshot, the SRS MUST send a SIP request message   with an XML document having the namespace   urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1.  The XML document has the   following elements:   o  A 'requestsnapshot' XML element MUST be present as the top-level      element in the XML document.   o  A 'requestreason' XML element that indicates the reason (as a      string) for requesting the snapshot MAY be present as a child XML      element of 'requestsnapshot'.   The example below shows a metadata snapshot request from the SRS.   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>     <requestsnapshot xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1'>     <requestreason xml:lang="it">SRS internal error</requestreason>   </requestsnapshot>             Example Metadata Snapshot Request from SRS to SRCRavindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20168.  SIP Recording Metadata Examples8.1.  Complete SIP Recording Metadata Example   The following example provides all the tuples involved in the   recording metadata XML body.   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>     <recording xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1'>     <datamode>complete</datamode>     <group group_id="7+OTCyoxTmqmqyA/1weDAg==">       <associate-time>2010-12-16T23:41:07Z</associate-time>       <!-- Standardized extension -->       <call-center xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:callcenter'>             <supervisor>sip:alice@atlanta.com</supervisor>       </call-center>       <mydata xmlns='http://example.com/my'>             <structure>FOO!</structure>             <whatever>bar</whatever>       </mydata>     </group>     <session session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <sipSessionID>ab30317f1a784dc48ff824d0d3715d86;           remote=47755a9de7794ba387653f2099600ef2</sipSessionID>           <group-ref>7+OTCyoxTmqmqyA/1weDAg==</group-ref>           <!-- Standardized extension -->       <mydata xmlns='http://example.com/my'>             <structure>FOO!</structure>              <whatever>bar</whatever>           </mydata>     </session>     <participant participant_id="srfBElmCRp2QB23b7Mpk0w==">           <nameID aor="sip:bob@biloxi.com">              <name xml:lang="it">Bob</name>           </nameID>           <!-- Standardized extension -->           <mydata xmlns='http://example.com/my'>                   <structure>FOO!</structure>                   <whatever>bar</whatever>           </mydata>     </participant>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016     <participant participant_id="zSfPoSvdSDCmU3A3TRDxAw==">           <nameID aor="sip:Paul@biloxi.com">             <name xml:lang="it">Paul</name>           </nameID>           <!-- Standardized extension -->           <mydata xmlns='http://example.com/my'>              <structure>FOO!</structure>              <whatever>bar</whatever>           </mydata>     </participant>     <stream stream_id="UAAMm5GRQKSCMVvLyl4rFw=="             session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <label>96</label>     </stream>     <stream stream_id="i1Pz3to5hGk8fuXl+PbwCw=="              session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">            <label>97</label>     </stream>     <stream stream_id="8zc6e0lYTlWIINA6GR+3ag=="              session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <label>98</label>     </stream>     <stream stream_id="EiXGlc+4TruqqoDaNE76ag=="              session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <label>99</label>     </stream>     <sessionrecordingassoc session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">                   <associate-time>2010-12-16T23:41:07Z</associate-time>     </sessionrecordingassoc>     <participantsessionassoc          participant_id="srfBElmCRp2QB23b7Mpk0w=="          session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <associate-time>2010-12-16T23:41:07Z</associate-time>     </participantsessionassoc>     <participantsessionassoc          participant_id="zSfPoSvdSDCmU3A3TRDxAw=="          session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">              <associate-time>2010-12-16T23:41:07Z</associate-time>     </participantsessionassoc>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016     <participantstreamassoc          participant_id="srfBElmCRp2QB23b7Mpk0w==">              <send>i1Pz3to5hGk8fuXl+PbwCw==</send>              <send>UAAMm5GRQKSCMVvLyl4rFw==</send>              <recv>8zc6e0lYTlWIINA6GR+3ag==</recv>              <recv>EiXGlc+4TruqqoDaNE76ag==</recv>     </participantstreamassoc>     <participantstreamassoc          participant_id="zSfPoSvdSDCmU3A3TRDxAw==">              <send>8zc6e0lYTlWIINA6GR+3ag==</send>              <send>EiXGlc+4TruqqoDaNE76ag==</send>              <recv>UAAMm5GRQKSCMVvLyl4rFw==</recv>              <recv>i1Pz3to5hGk8fuXl+PbwCw==</recv>     </participantstreamassoc>   </recording>                 Example Metadata Snapshot from SRC to SRS8.2.  Partial Update of Recording Metadata XML Body   The following example provides a partial update in the recording   metadata XML body for the above example.  The example has a snapshot   that carries the disassociate-time for a participant from a session.   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>     <recording xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1'>       <datamode>partial</datamode>         <participant           participant_id="srfBElmCRp2QB23b7Mpk0w==">           <nameID aor="sip:bob@biloxi.com">                     <name xml:lang="it">Bob</name>               </nameID>         </participant>         <participantsessionassoc            participant_id="srfBElmCRp2QB23b7Mpk0w=="            session_id="hVpd7YQgRW2nD22h7q60JQ==">           <disassociate-time>2010-12-16T23:41:07Z</disassociate-time>         </participantsessionassoc>     </recording>             Partial Update of SIP Recording Example XML BodyRavindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 20169.  XML Schema Definition for Recording Metadata   This section defines the XML schema for the recording metadata   document.<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>   <xs:schema targetNamespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1"      xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"      xmlns:tns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1"      elementFormDefault="qualified"      attributeFormDefault="unqualified">    <!-- This import brings in the XML language attribute xml:lang -->    <xs:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace"                 schemaLocation="https://www.w3.org/2001/xml.xsd"/>    <xs:element name="recording" type="tns:recording"/>    <xs:complexType name="recording">        <xs:sequence>            <xs:element name="datamode" type="tns:dataMode"                  minOccurs="0"/>            <xs:element name="group" type="tns:group"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="session" type="tns:session"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="participant" type="tns:participant"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="stream" type="tns:stream"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="sessionrecordingassoc"                  type="tns:sessionrecordingassoc"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="participantsessionassoc"                  type="tns:participantsessionassoc"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="participantstreamassoc"                  type="tns:participantstreamassoc"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>         </xs:sequence>    </xs:complexType>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016    <xs:complexType name="group">        <xs:sequence>           <xs:element name="associate-time" type="xs:dateTime"              minOccurs="0"/>           <xs:element name="disassociate-time" type="xs:dateTime"              minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="group_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:complexType name="session">        <xs:sequence>           <xs:element name="sipSessionID" type="xs:string"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>           <xs:element name="reason" type="tns:reason"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>           <xs:element name="group-ref" type="xs:base64Binary"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>           <xs:element name="start-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>           <xs:element name="stop-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>              <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="session_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:complexType name="sessionrecordingassoc">        <xs:sequence>           <xs:element name="associate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>           <xs:element name="disassociate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>           <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="session_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016    <xs:complexType name="participant">        <xs:sequence>             <xs:element name="nameID" type="tns:nameID"                     maxOccurs='unbounded'/>        <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="participant_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:complexType name="participantsessionassoc">        <xs:sequence>        <xs:element name="associate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>        <xs:element name="disassociate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>        <xs:element name="param" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">            <xs:complexType>                <xs:attribute name="pname" type="xs:string"                  use="required"/>                <xs:attribute name="pval" type="xs:string"                  use="required"/>            </xs:complexType>        </xs:element>        <xs:any namespace='##other'                minOccurs='0'                maxOccurs='unbounded'                processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="participant_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>        <xs:attribute name="session_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016    <xs:complexType name="participantstreamassoc">        <xs:sequence>            <xs:element name="send" type="xs:base64Binary"               minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>            <xs:element name="recv" type="xs:base64Binary"               minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>               <xs:element name="associate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>            <xs:element name="disassociate-time" type="xs:dateTime"                  minOccurs="0"/>               <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="participant_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:complexType name="stream">        <xs:sequence>           <xs:element name="label" type="xs:string"               minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>            <xs:any namespace='##other'                     minOccurs='0'                     maxOccurs='unbounded'                     processContents='lax'/>        </xs:sequence>        <xs:attribute name="stream_id" type="xs:base64Binary"              use="required"/>        <xs:attribute name="session_id" type="xs:base64Binary"/>    </xs:complexType>    <xs:simpleType name="dataMode">        <xs:restriction base="xs:string">            <xs:enumeration value="complete"/>                <xs:enumeration value="partial"/>        </xs:restriction>    </xs:simpleType>    <xs:complexType name="nameID">      <xs:sequence>        <xs:element name="name" type ="tns:name" minOccurs="0"                            maxOccurs="1"/>      </xs:sequence>      <xs:attribute name="aor" type="xs:anyURI" use="required"/>    </xs:complexType>Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   <xs:complexType name="name">    <xs:simpleContent>        <xs:extension base="xs:string">           <xs:attribute ref="xml:lang" use="optional"/>        </xs:extension>    </xs:simpleContent>   </xs:complexType>   <xs:complexType name="reason">      <xs:simpleContent>       <xs:extension base="xs:string">          <xs:attribute type="xs:short" name="cause" use="required"/>          <xs:attribute type="xs:string" name="protocol" default="SIP"/>       </xs:extension>      </xs:simpleContent>   </xs:complexType>   <xs:element name="requestsnapshot" type="tns:requestsnapshot"/>    <xs:complexType name="requestsnapshot">       <xs:sequence>          <xs:element name="requestreason" type="tns:name"            minOccurs="0"/>          <xs:any namespace='##other'            minOccurs='0'            maxOccurs='unbounded'            processContents='lax'/>       </xs:sequence>    </xs:complexType></xs:schema>10.  Security Considerations   This document describes an extensive set of metadata that may be   recorded by the SRS.  Most of the metadata could be considered   private data.  The procedures mentioned in the Security   Considerations section of [RFC7866] MUST be followed by the SRC and   the SRS for mutual authentication and to protect the content of the   metadata in the RS.   An SRC MAY, by policy, choose to limit the parts of the metadata sent   to the SRS for recording.  Also, the policy of the SRS might not   require recording all the metadata it receives.  For the sake of data   minimization, the SRS MUST NOT record additional metadata that is not   explicitly required by local policy.  Metadata in storage needs to be   provided with a level of security that is comparable to that of the   recording session.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 201611.  IANA Considerations   This specification registers a new XML namespace and a new XML   schema.11.1.  SIP Recording Metadata Schema Registration   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:recording:1   Registrant Contact:  IETF SIPREC working group, Ram Mohan R      (rmohanr@cisco.com)   XML: The registered XML schema is contained inSection 9.   Its first line is <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>, and its   last line is </xs:schema>.12.  References12.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,              A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.              Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3261, June 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3261>.   [RFC3339]  Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:              Timestamps",RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3339>.   [RFC3840]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat,              "Indicating User Agent Capabilities in the Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3840,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3840, August 2004,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3840>.   [RFC4122]  Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally              Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace",RFC 4122,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session              Description Protocol",RFC 4566, DOI 10.17487/RFC4566,              July 2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4566>.   [RFC4574]  Levin, O. and G. Camarillo, "The Session Description              Protocol (SDP) Label Attribute",RFC 4574,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4574, August 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4574>.   [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data              Encodings",RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>.   [RFC4796]  Hautakorpi, J. and G. Camarillo, "The Session Description              Protocol (SDP) Content Attribute",RFC 4796,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4796, February 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4796>.   [RFC7866]  Portman, L., Lum, H., Ed., Eckel, C., Johnston, A., and A.              Hutton, "Session Recording Protocol",RFC 7866,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7866, May 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7866>.12.2.  Informative References   [RFC3325]  Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, "Private              Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for              Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks",RFC 3325,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3325, November 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3325>.   [RFC3326]  Schulzrinne, H., Oran, D., and G. Camarillo, "The Reason              Header Field for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3326, DOI 10.17487/RFC3326, December 2002,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3326>.   [RFC3966]  Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",RFC 3966, DOI 10.17487/RFC3966, December 2004,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3966>.   [RFC4235]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and R. Mahy, Ed., "An              INVITE-Initiated Dialog Event Package for the Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4235,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4235, November 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4235>.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016   [RFC6341]  Rehor, K., Ed., Portman, L., Ed., Hutton, A., and R. Jain,              "Use Cases and Requirements for SIP-Based Media Recording              (SIPREC)",RFC 6341, DOI 10.17487/RFC6341, August 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6341>.   [RFC7245]  Hutton, A., Ed., Portman, L., Ed., Jain, R., and K. Rehor,              "An Architecture for Media Recording Using the Session              Initiation Protocol",RFC 7245, DOI 10.17487/RFC7245,              May 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7245>.   [SessionID]              Jones, P., Salgueiro, G., Pearce, C., and P. Giralt,              "End-to-End Session Identification in IP-Based Multimedia              Communication Networks", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-insipid-session-id-22, April 2016.   [UML]      Object Management Group, "OMG Unified Modeling Language              (UML)", 2011, <http://www.omg.org/spec/UML/2.4/>.Ravindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 7865                 SIP Recording Metadata                 May 2016Acknowledgements   Thanks to John Elwell, Henry Lum, Leon Portman, De Villiers de Wet,   Andrew Hutton, Deepanshu Gautam, Charles Eckel, Muthu Arul Mozhi   Perumal, Michael Benenson, Hadriel Kaplan, Brian Rosen, Scott Orton,   Ofir Roth, Mary Barnes, Ken Rehor, Gonzalo Salgueiro, Yaron Pdut,   Alissa Cooper, Stephen Farrell, and Ben Campbell for their valuable   comments and inputs.   Thanks to Joe Hildebrand, Peter Saint-Andre, and Matt Miller for   helping in writing the XML schema, and to Martin Thomson for   validating the XML schema and providing comments on the same.Authors' Addresses   Ram Mohan Ravindranath   Cisco Systems   Cessna Business Park   Bangalore, Karnataka   India   Email: rmohanr@cisco.com   Parthasarathi Ravindran   Nokia Networks   Bangalore, Karnataka   India   Email: partha@parthasarathi.co.in   Paul Kyzivat   Huawei   Hudson, MA   United States   Email: pkyzivat@alum.mit.eduRavindranath, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 34]

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