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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
Updated by:7840,7852
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          B. RosenRequest for Comments: 6881                                       NeuStarBCP: 181                                                         J. PolkCategory: Best Current Practice                            Cisco SystemsISSN: 2070-1721                                               March 2013Best Current Practice for Communications Services inSupport of Emergency CallingAbstract   The IETF and other standards organizations have efforts targeted at   standardizing various aspects of placing emergency calls on IP   networks.  This memo describes best current practice on how devices,   networks, and services using IETF protocols should use such standards   to make emergency calls.Status of This Memo   This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.   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   BCPs is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   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/rfc6881.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 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.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 1]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Overview of How Emergency Calls Are Placed ......................34. Which Devices and Services Should Support Emergency Calls? ......45. Identifying an Emergency Call ...................................46. Location and Its Role in an Emergency Call ......................56.1. Types of Location Information ..............................66.2. Location Determination .....................................66.2.1. User-Entered Location Information ...................6           6.2.2. Access Network "Wire Database" Location                  Information .........................................66.2.3. End System Measured Location Information ............76.2.4. Network Measured Location Information ...............76.3. Who Adds Location?  The Endpoint, or the Proxy? ............86.4. Location and References to Location ........................86.5. End System Location Configuration ..........................86.6. When Location Should Be Configured ........................106.7. Conveying Location ........................................116.8. Location Updates ..........................................116.9. Multiple Locations ........................................126.10. Location Validation ......................................126.11. Default Location .........................................136.12. Other Location Considerations ............................137. LIS and LoST Discovery .........................................138. Routing the Call to the PSAP ...................................149. Signaling of Emergency Calls ...................................159.1. Use of TLS ................................................159.2. SIP Signaling Requirements for User Agents ................169.3. SIP Signaling Requirements for Proxy Servers ..............1710. Callbacks .....................................................1811. Mid-Call Behavior .............................................1912. Call Termination ..............................................1913. Disabling of Features .........................................1914. Media .........................................................2015. Testing .......................................................2116. Security Considerations .......................................2217. IANA Considerations ...........................................2217.1. Test Service URN .........................................2217.2. 'test' Subregistry .......................................2318. Acknowledgements ..............................................2319. References ....................................................2319.1. Normative References .....................................2319.2. Informative References ...................................27Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 2]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20131.  Introduction   This document describes how access networks, Session Initiation   Protocol [RFC3261] user agents, proxy servers, and Public Safety   Answering Points (PSAPs) support emergency calling, as outlined in   [RFC6443], which is designed to complement the present document in   section headings, numbering, and content.  Understanding [RFC6443] is   necessary to understand this document.  This Best Current Practice   (BCP) succinctly describes the requirements of end devices and   applications (requirements prefaced by "ED-"), access networks   (including enterprise access networks) (requirements prefaced by   "AN-"), service providers (requirements prefaced by "SP-"), and PSAPs   to achieve globally interoperable emergency calling on the Internet.   This document also defines requirements for "intermediate" devices   that exist between end devices or applications and the access   network.  For example, a home router is an intermediate device.   Reporting location on an emergency call (seeSection 6) may depend on   the ability of such intermediate devices to meet the requirements   prefaced by "INT-".   The access network requirements apply to those networks that may be   used to place emergency calls using IETF protocols.  Local   regulations may impact the need to support this document's access   network requirements.   Other organizations, such as the National Emergency Number   Association (NENA), define the PSAP interface.  NENA's documents   reference this document.2.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119].   This document uses terms from [RFC3261], [RFC5012], and [RFC6443].3.  Overview of How Emergency Calls Are Placed   An emergency call can be distinguished (Section 5) from any other   call by a unique service URN [RFC5031] that is placed in the call   setup signaling when a home or visited emergency dial string is   detected.  Because emergency services are local to specific   geographic regions, a caller must obtain his location (Section 6)   prior to making emergency calls.  To get this location, either a form   of measuring (e.g., GPS) ([RFC6443] Section 6.2.3) device location inRosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 3]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   the endpoint is deployed or the endpoint is configured (Section 6.5)   with its location from the access network's Location Information   Server (LIS).  The location is conveyed (Section 6.7) in the SIP   signaling with the call.  The call is routed (Section 8) based on   location using the Location-to-Service Translation (LoST) protocol   [RFC5222], which maps a location to a set of PSAP URIs.  Each URI   resolves to a PSAP or an Emergency Services Routing Proxy (ESRP) that   serves a group of PSAPs.  The call arrives at the PSAP with the   location included in the SIP INVITE request.4.  Which Devices and Services Should Support Emergency Calls?   ED-1:  A device or application that implements SIP calling SHOULD      support emergency calling.  Some jurisdictions have regulations      governing which devices need to support emergency calling, and      developers are encouraged to ensure that devices they develop meet      relevant regulatory requirements.  Unfortunately, the natural      variation in those regulations also makes it impossible to      accurately describe the cases when developers do or do not have to      support emergency calling.   SP-1:  If a device or application expects to be able to place a call      for help, the service provider that supports it MUST facilitate      emergency calling.  Some jurisdictions have regulations governing      this.   ED-2:  Devices that create media sessions and exchange real-time      audio, video, and/or text and that have the capability to      establish sessions to a wide variety of addresses and communicate      over private IP networks or the Internet SHOULD support emergency      calls.  Some jurisdictions have regulations governing this.5.  Identifying an Emergency Call   ED-3:  Endpoints SHOULD recognize dial strings of emergency calls.      If the service provider always knows the location of the device      (the correct dial string depends on which country a caller is in),      the service provider may recognize them; see SP-2.   SP-2:  Proxy servers SHOULD recognize emergency dial strings if for      some reason the endpoint does not recognize them.   ED-4/SP-3:  Emergency calls MUST be marked with a service URN in the      Request-URI of the INVITE.   ED-5/SP-4:  Geographically local dial strings MUST be recognized.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 4]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   ED-6/SP-5:  Devices MUST be able to be configured with the home      country from which the home dial string(s) can be determined.   ED-7/SP-6:  Emergency dial strings SHOULD be determined from LoST      [RFC5222].  Dial strings MAY be configured directly into the      device.   AN-1:  LoST servers MUST return dial strings for emergency services.   ED-8:  Endpoints that do not recognize emergency dial strings SHOULD      send dial strings as per [RFC4967].   SP-7:  If a proxy server recognizes dial strings on behalf of its      clients, it MUST recognize emergency dial strings represented by      [RFC4967] and SHOULD recognize the emergency dial strings      represented by a tel URI [RFC3966].   ED-9:  Endpoints SHOULD be able to have home dial strings      provisioned.   SP-8:  Service providers MAY provision home dial strings in devices.   ED-10:  Devices SHOULD NOT have one-button emergency calling      initiation.   ED-11/SP-9:  All sub-services for the 'sos' service specified in      [RFC5031] MUST be recognized.6.  Location and Its Role in an Emergency Call   Handling location for emergency calling usually involves several   steps to process, and multiple entities are involved.  In Internet   emergency calling, where the endpoint is located is determined using   a variety of measurement or wire-tracing methods.  Endpoints can be   configured with their own location by the access network.  In some   circumstances, a proxy server can insert location into the signaling   on behalf of the endpoint.  The location is mapped to the URI to send   the call to, and the location is conveyed to the PSAP (and other   entities) in the signaling.  Likewise, we employ Location   Configuration Protocols (LCPs), the Location-to-Service Mapping   Protocol, and Location Conveyance Protocols for these functions.  The   Location-to-Service Translation protocol [RFC5222] is the Location   Mapping Protocol defined by the IETF.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 5]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20136.1.  Types of Location Information   There are several forms of location.  All IETF location configuration   and location conveyance protocols support both civic and geospatial   (geo) forms.  The civic forms include both postal and jurisdictional   fields.  A cell tower/sector can be represented as a point (geo or   civic) or polygon.  Endpoints, intermediate devices, and service   providers receiving other forms of location representation MUST map   them into either a geo or civic for use in emergency calls.   ED-12/INT-1/SP-10:  Endpoints, intermediate devices, and service      providers MUST be prepared to handle location represented in      either civic or geo form.   ED-13/INT-2/SP-11/AN-2:  Entities MUST NOT convert (civic to geo or      geo to civic) from the form of location that the determination      mechanism (seeSection 6.2) supplied prior to receipt by the PSAP.6.2.  Location Determination   ED-14/INT-3/AN-3:  Any location determination mechanism MAY be used,      provided the accuracy of the location meets local requirements.6.2.1.  User-Entered Location Information   ED-15/INT-4/AN-4:  Devices, intermediate devices, and/or access      networks SHOULD support a manual method to override the location      the access network determines.  When the override location is      supplied in civic form, it MUST be possible for the resultant      Presence Information Data Format Location Object (PIDF-LO)      received at the PSAP to contain any of the elements specified in      [RFC4119] and [RFC5139].6.2.2.  Access Network "Wire Database" Location Information   AN-5:  Access networks supporting copper, fiber, or other hard-wired      IP packet services SHOULD support location configuration.  If the      network does not support location configuration, it MUST require      every device or intermediate device that connects to the network      to support end system measured location.   AN-6/INT-5:  Access networks and intermediate devices providing wire      database location information SHOULD provide interior location      data (building, floor, room, cubicle) where possible.  It is      RECOMMENDED that interior location be provided when spaces exceed      approximately 650 square meters.  See[RFC6443] Section 6.2.2 for      a discussion of how this value was determined.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 6]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   AN-7/INT-6:  Access networks and intermediate devices (including      enterprise networks) that support intermediate range wireless      connections (typically 100 m or less of range) and that do not      support a more accurate location determination mechanism such as      triangulation MUST support location configuration where the      location of the access point is reflected as the location of the      clients of that access point.   AN-8/INT-7:  Where the access network provides location      configuration, intermediate devices MUST either be transparent to      it or provide an interconnected client for the supported      configuration mechanism and a server for a configuration protocol      supported by end devices downstream of the intermediate device      such that the location provided by the access network is available      to clients as if the intermediate device was not in the path.6.2.3.  End System Measured Location Information   ED-16/INT-8:  Devices MAY support end system measured location.  See[RFC6443] Section 6 for a discussion of accuracy of location.   ED-17/INT-9/AN-9:  Devices that support endpoint measuring of      location MUST have at least a coarse location capability      (typically <1 km accuracy) for the routing of calls.  The location      mechanism MAY be a service provided by the access network.6.2.4.  Network Measured Location Information   AN-10:  Access networks MAY provide network measured location      determination.  Wireless access networks that do not supply      network measured location MUST require every device or      intermediate device connected to the network to support end system      measured location.  Uncertainty and confidence may be specified by      local regulation.  Where not specified, uncertainty of less than      100 meters with 95% confidence is RECOMMENDED for dispatch      location.   AN-11:  Access networks that provide network measured location MUST      have at least a coarse location (typically <1 km when not location      hiding) capability at all times for the routing of calls.   AN-12:  Access networks with a range of <10 meters (e.g., personal      area networks such as Bluetooth) MUST provide a location to mobile      devices connected to them.  The location provided SHOULD be that      reported by the upstream access network unless a more accurate      mechanism is available.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 7]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20136.3.  Who Adds Location?The Endpoint, or the Proxy?   ED-18/INT-10:  Endpoints SHOULD attempt to configure their own      location using the Location Configuration Protocols (LCPs) listed      in ED-21.   SP-12: Proxies MAY provide location on behalf of devices if:   o  The proxy has a relationship with all access networks the device      could connect to, and the relationship allows it to obtain      location.   o  The proxy has an identifier, such as an IP address, that can be      used by the access network to determine the location of the      endpoint, even in the presence of NAT and VPN tunnels that may      obscure the identifier between the access network and the service      provider.   ED-19/INT-11/SP-13:  Where proxies provide location on behalf of      endpoints, the service provider MUST ensure that either the end      device is provided with the local dial strings for its current      location (where the end device recognizes dial strings) or the      service provider proxy MUST detect the appropriate local dial      strings at the time of the call.6.4.  Location and References to Location   ED-20/INT-12:  Devices SHOULD be able to accept and forward location-      by-value or location-by-reference.  An end device that receives      location-by-reference (and does not also get the corresponding      value) MUST be able to perform a dereference operation to obtain a      value.6.5.  End System Location Configuration   Obtaining location from the access network may be preferable even if   the device can measure its own location, especially indoors where   most measurement mechanisms are not accurate enough.  The   requirements listed in this section do not apply to devices that can   accurately measure their own location.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 8]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   ED-21/INT-13:  Devices MUST support both the Dynamic Host      Configuration Protocol (DHCP) location options [RFC4776] [RFC6225]      and HTTP-Enabled Location Delivery (HELD) [RFC5985].  When devices      deploy a specific access network interface for which location      configuration mechanisms such as Link Layer Discovery Protocol -      Media Endpoint Discovery (LLDP-MED) [LLDP-MED] or 802.11v are      specified, the device SHOULD support the additional respective      access network specific location configuration mechanism.   AN-13/INT-14:  The access network MUST support either DHCP location      options or HELD.  The access network SHOULD support other location      configuration technologies that are specific to the type of access      network.   AN-14/INT-15:  Where a router is employed between a LAN and WAN in a      small (less than approximately 650 square meters) area, the router      MUST be transparent to the location provided by the WAN to the      LAN.  This may mean the router must obtain location as a client      from the WAN and supply an LCP server to the LAN with the location      it obtains.  Where the area is larger, the LAN MUST have a      location configuration mechanism satisfying the requirements of      this document.   ED-22/INT-16:  Endpoints SHOULD try all LCPs supported by the device      in any order or in parallel.  The first one that succeeds in      supplying location MUST be used.   AN-15/INT-17:  Access networks that support more than one LCP MUST      reply with the same location information (within the limits of the      data format for the specific LCP) for all LCPs it supports.   ED-23/INT-18/SP-14:  When HELD is the LCP, the request MUST specify a      value of "emergencyRouting" for the "responseTime" parameter and      use the resulting location for routing.  If a value for dispatch      location will be sent, another request with the "responseTime"      parameter set to "emergencyDispatch" must be completed, with the      result sent for dispatch purposes.   ED-24:  Where the operating system supporting application programs      that need location for emergency calls does not allow access to      Layer 2 and Layer 3 functions necessary for a client application      to use DHCP location options and/or other location technologies      that are specific to the type of access network, the operating      system MUST provide a published API conforming to ED-12 through      ED-23 and ED-25 through ED-32.  It is RECOMMENDED that all      operating systems provide such an API.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                 [Page 9]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20136.6.  When Location Should Be Configured   If an endpoint is manually configured, the requirements in this   section are not applicable.   ED-25/INT-19:  Endpoints SHOULD obtain location immediately after      obtaining local network configuration information.   ED-26/INT-20:  If the device is configured to use DHCP for      bootstrapping and does not use its own measurement to determine      location, it MUST include both options for location acquisition      (civic and geodetic), the option for LIS discovery, and the option      for LoST discovery as defined in [RFC4776], [RFC6225], [RFC5986],      and [RFC5223], respectively.   ED-27/INT-21:  If the device sends a DHCPINFORM message, it MUST      include both options for location acquisition (civic and      geodetic), the option for LIS discovery, and the option for LoST      discovery as defined in [RFC4776], [RFC6225], [RFC5986], and      [RFC5223], respectively.   ED-28/INT-22:  To minimize the effects of VPNs that do not allow      packets to be sent via the native hardware interface rather than      via the VPN tunnel, location configuration SHOULD be attempted      before such tunnels are established.   ED-29/INT-23:  Software that uses LCPs SHOULD locate and use the      actual hardware network interface rather than a VPN tunnel      interface to direct LCP requests to the LIS in the actual access      network.   AN-16:  Network administrators MUST take care in assigning IP      addresses such that VPN address assignments can be distinguished      from local devices (by subnet choice, for example), and LISs      SHOULD NOT attempt to provide location to addresses that arrive      via VPN connections unless they can accurately determine the      location for such addresses.   AN-17:  Placement of NAT devices where an LCP uses an IP address for      an identifier SHOULD consider the effect of the NAT on the LCP.      The address used to query the LIS MUST be able to correctly      identify the record in the LIS representing the location of the      querying device.   ED-30/INT-24:  For devices that are not expected to change location,      refreshing location on the order of once per day is RECOMMENDED.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 10]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   ED-31/INT-25:  For devices that roam, refresh of location information      SHOULD be more frequent, with the frequency related to the      mobility of the device and the ability of the access network to      support the refresh operation.  If the device detects a link state      change that might indicate having moved, for example, when it      changes access points, the device SHOULD refresh its location.   ED-32/INT-26/AN-18:  It is RECOMMENDED that location determination      not take longer than 250 ms to obtain routing location, and      systems SHOULD be designed such that the typical response time is      under 100 ms.  However, as much as 3 seconds to obtain routing      location MAY be tolerated if location accuracy can be      substantially improved over what can be obtained in 250 ms.6.7.  Conveying Location   ED-33/SP-15:  Location sent between SIP entities MUST be conveyed      using the extension described in [RFC6442].6.8.  Location Updates   ED-34/AN-19:  Where the absolute location or the accuracy of location      of the endpoint may change between the time the call is received      at the PSAP and the time dispatch is completed, location update      mechanisms MUST be implemented and used.   ED-35/AN-20:  Mobile devices MUST be provided with a mechanism to get      repeated location updates to track the motion of the device during      the complete processing of the call.   ED-36/AN-21:  The LIS SHOULD provide a location reference that      permits a subscription with appropriate filtering.   ED-37/AN-22:  For calls sent with location-by-reference, with a SIP      or Session Initiation Protocol Secure (SIPS) scheme, the server      resolving the reference MUST support a SUBSCRIBE [RFC6665] to the      presence event [RFC3856].  For other location-by-reference schemes      that do not support subscription, the PSAP will have to repeatedly      dereference the URI to determine if the device moved.   ED-38:  If location was sent by value and the endpoint gets an      updated location, it MUST send the updated location to the PSAP      via a SIP re-INVITE or UPDATE request.  Such updates SHOULD be      limited to no more than one update every 10 seconds, a value      selected to keep the load on a large PSAP manageable, and yet      provide sufficient indication to the PSAP of motion.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 11]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20136.9.  Multiple Locations   ED-39/SP-16:  If the LIS has more than one location for an endpoint,      it MUST conform to the rules inSection 3 of [RFC5491].   ED-40:  If an endpoint has more than one location available to it, it      MUST choose one location to route the call towards the PSAP.  If      multiple locations are in a single Presence Information Data      Format (PIDF), the procedures in [RFC5491] MUST be followed.  If      the endpoint has multiple PIDFs and has no reasonable basis to      choose from among them, a random choice is acceptable.   SP-17:  If a proxy inserts location on behalf of an endpoint and it      has multiple locations available for the endpoint, it MUST choose      one location to use to route the call towards the PSAP.  If      multiple locations are in a single PIDF, the procedures in      [RFC5491] MUST be followed.  If the proxy has multiple PIDFs and      has no reasonable basis to choose from among them, a random choice      is acceptable.   SP-18:  If a proxy is attempting to insert location but the endpoint      conveyed a location to it, the proxy MUST use the endpoint's      location for routing in the initial INVITE and MUST convey that      location towards the PSAP.  It MAY also include what it believes      the location to be in a separate Geolocation header.   SP-19:  All location objects received by a proxy MUST be delivered to      the PSAP.   ED-41/SP-20:  Location objects MUST be created with information about      the method by which the location was determined, such as GPS,      manually entered, or based on access network topology included in      a PIDF-LO "method" element.  In addition, the source of the      location information MUST be included in a PIDF-LO "provided-by"      element.   ED-42/SP-21:  A location with a method of "derived" MUST NOT be used      unless no other location is available.6.10.  Location Validation   AN-23:  A LIS SHOULD perform location validation of civic locations      via LoST before entering a location in its database.   ED-43:  Endpoints SHOULD validate civic locations when they receive      them from their LCP.  Validation SHOULD be performed in      conjunction with the LoST route query to minimize load on the LoST      server.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 12]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20136.11.  Default Location   AN-24:  When the access network cannot determine the actual location      of the caller, it MUST supply a default location.  The default      SHOULD be chosen to be as close to the probable location of the      device as the network can determine.  See [RFC6443].   SP-22:  Proxies handling emergency calls MUST insert a default      location in the INVITE if the incoming INVITE does not contain a      location and the proxy does not have a method for obtaining a      better location.   AN-25/SP-23:  Default locations MUST be marked with method=Default,      and the proxy MUST be identified in a PIDF-LO "provided-by"      element.6.12.  Other Location Considerations   ED-44:  If the LCP does not return location in the form of a PIDF-LO      [RFC4119], the endpoint MUST map the location information it      receives from the configuration protocol to a PIDF-LO.   ED-45/AN-26:  To prevent against spoofing of the DHCP server,      entities implementing DHCP for location configuration SHOULD use      DHCPv4 message authentication [RFC3118] or DHCPv6 message      authentication [RFC3315], although the difficulty in providing      appropriate credentials is significant.   ED-46:  If S/MIME [RFC5751] is used, the INVITE message MUST provide      enough information unencrypted for intermediate proxies to route      the call based on the location information included.  This would      include the Geolocation header and any bodies containing location      information.  Use of S/MIME with emergency calls is NOT      RECOMMENDED for this reason.   ED-47/SP-24:  Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5746] MUST be used      to protect location (but seeSection 9.1).  All SIP      implementations of this specification MUST support TLS.7.  LIS and LoST Discovery   ED-48:  Endpoints MUST support one or more mechanisms that allow them      to determine their public IP address, for example, Session      Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) [RFC5389].   ED-49:  Endpoints MUST support LIS discovery as described in      [RFC5986] and LoST discovery as described in [RFC5223].Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 13]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   ED-50:  The device MUST have a configurable default LoST server      parameter.   ED-51:  DHCP LoST discovery MUST be used, if available, in preference      to configured LoST servers.  That is, the endpoint MUST send      queries to this LoST server first, using other LoST servers only      if these queries fail.   AN-27:  Access networks that support DHCP MUST implement the LIS and      LoST discovery options in their DHCP servers and return suitable      server addresses as appropriate.8.  Routing the Call to the PSAP   ED-52:  Endpoints that obtain their own location SHOULD perform LoST      mapping to the PSAP URI.   ED-53:  Mapping SHOULD be performed at boot time and whenever a      location changes beyond the service boundary obtained from a prior      LoST mapping operation, or when the time-to-live value of that      response has expired.  The value MUST be cached for possible later      use.   ED-54:  The endpoint MUST attempt to update its location at the time      of an emergency call.  If it cannot obtain a new location quickly      (seeSection 6), it MUST use the cached value.   ED-55:  The endpoint SHOULD attempt to update the LoST mapping at the      time of an emergency call.  If it cannot obtain a new mapping      quickly, it MUST use the cached value.  If the device cannot      update the LoST mapping and does not have a cached value, it MUST      signal an emergency call without a Route header containing a PSAP      URI.   SP-25:  Networks MUST be designed so that at least one proxy in the      outbound path will recognize emergency calls with a Request URI of      the service URN in the "sos" tree.  An endpoint places a service      URN in the Request URI to indicate that the endpoint understood      the call was an emergency call.  A proxy that processes such a      call looks for the presence of a SIP Route header field with a URI      of a PSAP.  The absence of such a Route header indicates that the      endpoint was unable to invoke LoST, and the proxy MUST perform the      LoST mapping and insert a Route header field with the URI      obtained.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 14]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   SP-26:  To deal with old user agents that predate this specification      and with endpoints that do not have access to their own location      data, a proxy that recognizes a call as an emergency call that is      not marked as such (seeSection 5) MUST also perform this mapping,      with the best location it has available for the endpoint.  The      resulting PSAP URI would be placed in a Route header with the      service URN in the Request URI.   SP-27:  Proxy servers performing mapping SHOULD use location obtained      from the access network for the mapping.  If no location is      available, a default location (seeSection 6.11) MUST be supplied.   SP-28:  A proxy server that attempts mapping and fails to get a      mapping MUST provide a default mapping.  A suitable default      mapping would be the mapping obtained previously for the default      location appropriate for the caller.   ED-56/SP-29:  [RFC3261] and [RFC3263] procedures MUST be used to      route an emergency call towards the PSAP's URI.9.  Signaling of Emergency Calls9.1.  Use of TLS   ED-57/SP-30:  TLS is the primary mechanism used to secure the      signaling for emergency calls.  IPsec [RFC4301] MAY be used      instead of TLS for any hop.  Either TLS or IPsec MUST be used when      attempting to signal an emergency call.   ED-58/SP-31:  If TLS session establishment is not available or fails,      the call MUST be retried without TLS.   ED-59/SP-32:  Following the procedures described in [RFC5626] is      RECOMMENDED to maintain persistent TLS connections between      entities when one of the entities is an endpoint.  Persistent TLS      connection between proxies is RECOMMENDED using any suitable      mechanism.   ED-60/AN-28:  TLS SHOULD be used when attempting to retrieve location      (configuration or dereferencing) with HELD.  The use of the      mechanism described in [RFC5077] is RECOMMENDED to minimize the      time to establish TLS sessions without keeping server-side state.      IPsec MAY be used instead of TLS.   ED-61/AN-29:  When TLS session establishment fails, the location      retrieval MUST be retried without TLS.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 15]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 20139.2.  SIP Signaling Requirements for User Agents   ED-62: The initial SIP signaling method is an INVITE request:   1.   The Request URI SHOULD be the service URN in the "sos" tree.        If the device does not interpret local dial strings, the        Request-URI MUST be a dial string URI [RFC4967] with the dialed        digits.   2.   The To header field SHOULD be a service URN in the "sos" tree.        If the device does not interpret local dial strings, the To:        MUST be a dial string URI with the dialed digits.   3.   The From header field SHOULD contain the address of record (AoR)        of the caller.   4.   A Route header field SHOULD be present with a PSAP URI obtained        from LoST (seeSection 8).  If the device does not interpret        dial plans or was unable to obtain a route from a LoST server,        no such Route header field will be present.   5.   A Contact header field MUST be globally routable, for example, a        Globally Routable User Agent URI (GRUU) [RFC5627], and be valid        for several minutes following the termination of the call,        provided that the User Agent Client (UAC) remains registered        with the same registrar, to permit an immediate callback to the        specific device that placed the emergency call.  It is        acceptable if the UAC inserts a locally routable URI and a        subsequent back-to-back user agent (B2BUA) maps that to a        globally routable URI.   6.   Other header fields MAY be included as per normal SIP behavior.   7.   If a geolocation URI is included in the INVITE, a Supported        header field MUST be included with a 'geolocation-sip' or        'geolocation-http" option tag, as appropriate [RFC6442].   8.   If a device understands the SIP location conveyance [RFC6442]        extension and has its location available, it MUST include        location as either location-by-value or location-by-reference,        or both, according to the rules withinRFC 6442.   9.   An SDP offer SHOULD be included in the INVITE.  If voice is        supported, the offer SHOULD include the G.711 codec; seeSection 14.  As PSAPs may support a wide range of media types        and codecs, sending an offerless INVITE may result in a lengthy        return offer but is permitted.  Cautions in [RFC3261] on        offerless INVITEs should be considered before such use.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 16]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   10.  If the device includes location-by-value, the user agent (UA)        MUST support multipart message bodies, since SDP will likely be        also in the INVITE.9.3.  SIP Signaling Requirements for Proxy Servers   SP-33: SIP proxy servers processing emergency calls:   1.  If the proxy interprets dial plans on behalf of user agents, the       proxy MUST look for the local emergency dial string at the       location of the end device and MAY look for the home dial string.       If it finds it, the proxy MUST:       *  Insert a Geolocation header field.  Location-by-reference MUST          be used because proxies are not allowed to insert bodies.       *  Insert the Geolocation-Routing header with appropriate          parameters.       *  Map the location to a PSAP URI using LoST.       *  Add a Route header with the PSAP URI.       *  Replace the Request-URI, which was the dial string, with the          service URN appropriate for the emergency dial string.       *  Route the call using normal SIP routing mechanisms.   2.  If the proxy recognizes the service URN in the Request URI and       does not find a Route header, it MUST query a LoST server       immediately.  If a location was provided (which should be the       case), the proxy uses that location to query LoST.  The proxy may       have to dereference a location-by-reference to get a value.  If a       location is not present and the proxy can query a LIS that has       the location of the UA, it MUST do so.  If no location is present       and the proxy does not have access to a LIS that could provide       location, the proxy MUST supply a default location (seeSection 6.11).  The location (in the signaling, obtained from a       LIS, or default) MUST be used in a query to LoST with the service       URN received with the call.  The resulting URI MUST be placed in       a Route header added to the call.   3.  The proxy MAY add a Geolocation header field.  Such an additional       location SHOULD NOT be used for routing; the location provided by       the UA should be used.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 17]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   4.  Either a P-Asserted-Identity [RFC3325] or an Identity header       field [RFC4474], or both, SHOULD be included to identify the       sender.  For services that must support emergency calls from       unauthenticated devices, valid identity may not be available.       Proxies encountering a P-Asserted-Identity will need to pass the       header to the PSAP, which is in a different domain.  [RFC3325]       requires a "spec(T)" to determine what happens if either the "id"       privacy service or a Privacy header is present and requests       privacy.  In the absence of another spec(T), such proxies should       pass the header unmodified if and only if the connection between       the proxy and the PSAP is, as far as the proxy can determine,       protected by TLS with mutual authentication using keys reliably       known by the parties, encrypted with no less strength than AES,       and the local regulations governing the PSAP do not specify       otherwise.   5.  Proxies SHOULD NOT return a 424 error.  They should process the       INVITE as best they can.   6.  Proxies SHOULD NOT obey a Geolocation-Routing value of "no" or a       missing value if they must query LoST to obtain a route.       Emergency calls are always routed by location.10.  Callbacks   ED-63/SP-34:  Devices SHOULD have a globally routable URI in a      Contact header field that remains valid for several minutes past      the time the original call containing the URI completes, unless      the device registration expires and is not renewed.   SP-35:  Callbacks to the Contact header URI received within      30 minutes of an emergency call must reach the device regardless      of call features (e.g., do not disturb) or services (e.g., call      forwarding) that would normally cause the call to be routed to      some other entity.   SP-36:  Devices MUST have a persistent AoR URI either in a      P-Asserted-Identity header field or From protected by an Identity      header field suitable for returning a call sometime after the      original call.  Such a callback would not necessarily reach the      device that originally placed the call.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 18]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 201311.  Mid-Call Behavior   ED-64/SP-37:  During the course of an emergency call, PSAPs and      responders may need to transfer the call to some other entity.      The request for such a transfer is signaled by a REFER request      within the dialog with method=INVITE and a Refer-To header field      [RFC3515].  Devices MUST react to such a transfer request with the      appropriate INVITE.12.  Call Termination   ED-65:  Normal [RFC3261] procedures for termination MUST be used for      termination of the call.13.  Disabling of Features   ED-66/SP-38:  User agents and proxies MUST disable features that will      interrupt an ongoing emergency call, such as:   o  Call waiting   o  Call transfer   o  Three-way call   o  Hold   o  Outbound call blocking   when an emergency call is established, but see ED-65 with respect to   call waiting.  Also see ED-73 inSection 14.   ED-67/SP-39:  The emergency dial strings SHOULD NOT be permitted in      call forward numbers or speed dial lists.   ED-68/SP-40:  The user agent and proxies MUST disable call features      that would interfere with the ability of callbacks from the PSAP      to be completed, such as:   o  Do not disturb   o  Call forward (all kinds)   These features SHOULD be disabled for approximately 30 minutes   following termination of an emergency call.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 19]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   ED-69:  Callbacks SHOULD be determined by retaining the domain of the      PSAP that answers an outgoing emergency call and instantiating a      timer that starts when the call is terminated.  If a call is      received from the same domain and within the timer period, and it      is sent to the URI in a Contact header or the AoR used in the      emergency call, then it should be assumed to be a callback.  The      suggested timer period is 5 minutes.  The mechanism described in      [RFC4916] can be used by the PSAP to inform the endpoint of the      PSAP's domain.  Recognizing a callback from the domain of the PSAP      will not always work, and further standardization will be required      to give the endpoint the ability to recognize a callback.14.  Media   ED-70:  Endpoints MUST send and receive media streams on RTP      [RFC3550].   ED-71:  Normal SIP offer/answer [RFC3264] negotiations MUST be used      to agree on the media streams to be used.   ED-72/SP-41:  G.711 A-law (and mu-law if they are intended to be used      in North America) encoded voice as described in [RFC3551] MUST be      supported.  If the endpoint cannot support G.711, a transcoder      MUST be used so that the offer received at the PSAP contains      G.711.  It is desirable to include wideband codecs such as G.722      and Adaptive Multi-Rate - WideBand (AMR-WB) in the offer.  PSAPs      SHOULD support narrowband codecs common on endpoints in their area      to avoid transcoding.   ED-73:  Silence suppression (Voice Activity Detection methods) MUST      NOT be used on emergency calls.  PSAP call takers sometimes get      information on what is happening in the background to determine      how to process the call.   ED-74:  Endpoints supporting Instant Messaging (IM) MUST support      either [RFC3428] or [RFC4975].   ED-75:  Endpoints supporting real-time text MUST comply with      [RFC4103].  The expectations for emergency service support for the      real-time text medium are described in[RFC5194] Section 7.1.   ED-76:  Endpoints supporting video MUST support H.264 per [RFC6184].Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 20]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 201315.  Testing   ED-77:  INVITE requests to a service URN starting with "test."      indicate a request for an automated test, for example,      "urn:service:test.sos.fire".  As in standard SIP, a 200 (OK)      response indicates that the address was recognized and a 404 (not      found) that it was not.  A 486 (busy here) MUST be returned if the      test service is busy, and a 404 (not found) MUST be returned if      the PSAP does not support the test mechanism.   ED-78:  In its response to the test, the PSAP MAY include a text body      (text/plain) indicating the identity of the PSAP, the requested      service, and the location reported with the call.  For the latter,      the PSAP SHOULD return location-by-value even if the original      location delivered with the test was location-by-reference.  If      the location-by-reference was supplied and the dereference      requires credentials, the PSAP SHOULD use credentials supplied by      the LIS for test purposes.  This alerts the LIS that the      dereference is not for an actual emergency call, and therefore      location-hiding techniques, if they are being used, may be      employed for this dereference.  Use of SIPS for the request would      assure that the response containing the location is kept private.   ED-79:  A PSAP accepting a test call SHOULD accept a media loopback      [RFC6849] test and SHOULD support the "rtp-pkt-loopback" and      "rtp-media-loopback" options.  The user agent would specify a      loopback attribute of "loopback-source", the PSAP being the      mirror.  User agents should expect the PSAP to loop back no more      than 3 packets of each media type accepted (which limits the      duration of the test), after which the PSAP would normally send      BYE.   ED-80:  User agents SHOULD perform a full call test, including media      loopback, after a disconnect and subsequent change in IP address      not due to a reboot.  After an initial test, a full test SHOULD be      repeated approximately every 30 days with a random interval.   ED-81:  User agents MUST NOT place a test call immediately after      booting.  If the IP address changes after booting, the endpoint      should wait a random amount of time (in perhaps a 30-minute      period, sufficient for any avalanche-restart event to complete)      and then test.   ED-82:  PSAPs MAY refuse repeated requests for test from the same      device in a short period of time.  Any refusal is signaled with a      486 (busy here) or 488 (not acceptable here) response.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 21]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 201316.  Security Considerations   Security considerations for emergency calling have been documented in   [RFC5069] and [RFC6280].  This document suggests that security (TLS   or IPsec) be used hop by hop on a SIP call to protect location   information, identity, etc.  It also suggests that if the attempt to   create a security association fails the call be retried without the   security.  It's more important to get an emergency call through than   to protect the data; indeed, in many jurisdictions privacy is   explicitly waived when making emergency calls.  Placing a call   without security may reveal user information, including location.   The alternative -- failing the call if security cannot be established   -- is considered unacceptable.17.  IANA Considerations   This document registers service URNs in the Service URN Labels   registry per [RFC5031] for testing.17.1.  Test Service URN   A new entry in the URN Service Label registry has been added.  The   new service is "test", the reference is this document, and the   description is "self-test".Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 22]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 201317.2.  'test' Subregistry   A new subregistry has been created: 'test' Sub-Services.  The   registration process is Expert Review per [RFC5226].  The expert   review should consider that the entries in this registry nominally   track the entries in the 'sos' subregistry, although it is not   required that every entry in 'sos' have an entry in 'test', and it is   possible that entries in the 'test' subregistry may not necessarily   be in the 'sos' subregistry.  For example, testing of non-emergency   URNs may be allowed.  The reference is this document.  The initial   content of the subregistry is:   Service                    Reference   Description   ------------------------------------------------------------------   test.sosRFC 6881    test for sos   test.sos.ambulanceRFC 6881    test for sos.ambulance   test.sos.animal-controlRFC 6881    test for sos.animal-control   test.sos.fireRFC 6881    test for sos.fire   test.sos.gasRFC 6881    test for sos.gas   test.sos.marineRFC 6881    test for sos.marine   test.sos.mountainRFC 6881    test for sos.mountain   test.sos.physicianRFC 6881    test for sos.physician   test.sos.poisonRFC 6881    test for sos.poison   test.sos.policeRFC 6881    test for sos.police18.  Acknowledgements   Working group members participating in the creation and review of   this document include Hannes Tschofenig, Ted Hardie, Marc Linsner,   Roger Marshall, Stu Goldman, Shida Schubert, James Winterbottom,   Barbara Stark, Richard Barnes, and Peter Blatherwick.19.  References19.1.  Normative References   [LLDP-MED]  ANSI/TIA, "Link Layer Discovery Protocol - Media Endpoint               Discovery", TIA Standard, TIA-1057, April 2006.   [RFC2119]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3118]   Droms, R. and W. Arbaugh, "Authentication for DHCP               Messages",RFC 3118, June 2001.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 23]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   [RFC3261]   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.   [RFC3263]   Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Session Initiation               Protocol (SIP): Locating SIP Servers",RFC 3263,               June 2002.   [RFC3264]   Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model               with Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3264,               June 2002.   [RFC3315]   Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C.,               and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for               IPv6 (DHCPv6)",RFC 3315, July 2003.   [RFC3428]   Campbell, B., Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Huitema,               C., and D. Gurle, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)               Extension for Instant Messaging",RFC 3428,               December 2002.   [RFC3515]   Sparks, R., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer               Method",RFC 3515, April 2003.   [RFC3550]   Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.               Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time               Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.   [RFC3551]   Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio and               Video Conferences with Minimal Control", STD 65,RFC 3551, July 2003.   [RFC3856]   Rosenberg, J., "A Presence Event Package for the Session               Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3856, August 2004.   [RFC3966]   Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",RFC 3966, December 2004.   [RFC4103]   Hellstrom, G. and P. Jones, "RTP Payload for Text               Conversation",RFC 4103, June 2005.   [RFC4119]   Peterson, J., "A Presence-based GEOPRIV Location Object               Format",RFC 4119, December 2005.   [RFC4301]   Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the               Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 24]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   [RFC4474]   Peterson, J. and C. Jennings, "Enhancements for               Authenticated Identity Management in the Session               Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4474, August 2006.   [RFC4776]   Schulzrinne, H., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol               (DHCPv4 and DHCPv6) Option for Civic Addresses               Configuration Information",RFC 4776, November 2006.   [RFC4916]   Elwell, J., "Connected Identity in the Session Initiation               Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4916, June 2007.   [RFC4967]   Rosen, B., "Dial String Parameter for the Session               Initiation Protocol Uniform Resource Identifier",RFC 4967, July 2007.   [RFC4975]   Campbell, B., Mahy, R., and C. Jennings, "The Message               Session Relay Protocol (MSRP)",RFC 4975, September 2007.   [RFC5031]   Schulzrinne, H., "A Uniform Resource Name (URN) for               Emergency and Other Well-Known Services",RFC 5031,               January 2008.   [RFC5139]   Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, "Revised Civic Location               Format for Presence Information Data Format Location               Object (PIDF-LO)",RFC 5139, February 2008.   [RFC5222]   Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H.               Tschofenig, "LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation               Protocol",RFC 5222, August 2008.   [RFC5223]   Schulzrinne, H., Polk, J., and H. Tschofenig,               "Discovering Location-to-Service Translation (LoST)               Servers Using the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol               (DHCP)",RFC 5223, August 2008.   [RFC5226]   Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an               IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,               May 2008.   [RFC5389]   Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,               "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389,               October 2008.   [RFC5491]   Winterbottom, J., Thomson, M., and H. Tschofenig,               "GEOPRIV Presence Information Data Format Location Object               (PIDF-LO) Usage Clarification, Considerations, and               Recommendations",RFC 5491, March 2009.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 25]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013   [RFC5626]   Jennings, C., Mahy, R., and F. Audet, "Managing Client-               Initiated Connections in the Session Initiation Protocol               (SIP)",RFC 5626, October 2009.   [RFC5627]   Rosenberg, J., "Obtaining and Using Globally Routable               User Agent URIs (GRUUs) in the Session Initiation               Protocol (SIP)",RFC 5627, October 2009.   [RFC5746]   Rescorla, E., Ray, M., Dispensa, S., and N. Oskov,               "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Renegotiation Indication               Extension",RFC 5746, February 2010.   [RFC5751]   Ramsdell, B. and S. Turner, "Secure/Multipurpose Internet               Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.2 Message               Specification",RFC 5751, January 2010.   [RFC5985]   Barnes, M., "HTTP-Enabled Location Delivery (HELD)",RFC 5985, September 2010.   [RFC5986]   Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, "Discovering the Local               Location Information Server (LIS)",RFC 5986,               September 2010.   [RFC6184]   Wang, Y., Even, R., Kristensen, T., and R. Jesup, "RTP               Payload Format for H.264 Video",RFC 6184, May 2011.   [RFC6225]   Polk, J., Linsner, M., Thomson, M., and B. Aboba,               "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Options for               Coordinate-Based Location Configuration Information",RFC 6225, July 2011.   [RFC6442]   Polk, J., Rosen, B., and J. Peterson, "Location               Conveyance for the Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 6442, December 2011.   [RFC6665]   Roach, A., "SIP-Specific Event Notification",RFC 6665,               July 2012.   [RFC6849]   Kaplan, H., Ed., Hedayat, K., Venna, N., Jones, P., and               N. Stratton, "An Extension to the Session Description               Protocol (SDP) and Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) for               Media Loopback",RFC 6849, February 2013.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 26]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 201319.2.  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,               November 2002.   [RFC5012]   Schulzrinne, H. and R. Marshall, "Requirements for               Emergency Context Resolution with Internet Technologies",RFC 5012, January 2008.   [RFC5069]   Taylor, T., Tschofenig, H., Schulzrinne, H., and M.               Shanmugam, "Security Threats and Requirements for               Emergency Call Marking and Mapping",RFC 5069,               January 2008.   [RFC5077]   Salowey, J., Zhou, H., Eronen, P., and H. Tschofenig,               "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Session Resumption               without Server-Side State",RFC 5077, January 2008.   [RFC5194]   van Wijk, A. and G. Gybels, "Framework for Real-Time Text               over IP Using the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 5194, June 2008.   [RFC6280]   Barnes, R., Lepinski, M., Cooper, A., Morris, J.,               Tschofenig, H., and H. Schulzrinne, "An Architecture for               Location and Location Privacy in Internet Applications",BCP 160,RFC 6280, July 2011.   [RFC6443]   Rosen, B., Schulzrinne, H., Polk, J., and A. Newton,               "Framework for Emergency Calling Using Internet               Multimedia",RFC 6443, December 2011.Rosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 27]

RFC 6881                Emergency Call Phone BCP              March 2013Authors' Addresses   Brian Rosen   NeuStar   470 Conrad Dr.   Mars, PA  16046   USA   Phone: +1 724 382 1051   EMail: br@brianrosen.net   James Polk   Cisco Systems   3913 Treemont Circle   Colleyville, TX  76034   USA   Phone: +1-817-271-3552   EMail: jmpolk@cisco.comRosen & Polk              Best Current Practice                [Page 28]

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