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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
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Network Working Group                                          A. VemuriRequest for Comments: 3372                          Qwest CommunicationsBCP: 63                                                      J. PetersonCategory: Best Current Practice                                  NeuStar                                                          September 2002Session Initiation Protocol for Telephones (SIP-T):Context and ArchitecturesStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the   Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   The popularity of gateways that interwork between the PSTN (Public   Switched Telephone Network) and SIP networks has motivated the   publication of a set of common practices that can assure consistent   behavior across implementations.  This document taxonomizes the uses   of PSTN-SIP gateways, provides uses cases, and identifies mechanisms   necessary for interworking.  The mechanisms detail how SIP provides   for both 'encapsulation' (bridging the PSTN signaling across a SIP   network) and 'translation' (gatewaying).Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22.  SIP-T for ISUP-SIP Interconnections  . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  SIP-T Flows  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.1 SIP Bridging (PSTN - IP - PSTN)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83.2 PSTN origination - IP termination  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.3 IP origination - PSTN termination  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114.  SIP-T Roles and Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.1 Originator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.2 Terminator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .134.3 Intermediary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.4 Behavioral Requirements Summary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .155.  Components of the SIP-T Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.1 Core SIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.2 Encapsulation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.3 Translation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 1]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 20025.4 Support for mid-call signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .176.  SIP Content Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .177.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .198.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .209.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2010  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20A.  Notes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21B.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21   Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22   Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .231. Introduction   The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP [1]) is an application-layer   control protocol that can establish, modify and terminate multimedia   sessions or calls.  These multimedia sessions include multimedia   conferences, Internet telephony and similar applications.  SIP is one   of the key protocols used to implement Voice over IP (VoIP).   Although performing telephony call signaling and transporting the   associated audio media over IP yields significant advantages over   traditional telephony, a VoIP network cannot exist in isolation from   traditional telephone networks.  It is vital for a SIP telephony   network to interwork with the PSTN.   The popularity of gateways that interwork between the PSTN and SIP   networks has motivated the publication of a set of common practices   that can assure consistent behavior across implementations.  The   scarcity of SIP expertise outside the IETF suggests that the IETF is   the best place to stage this work, especially since SIP is in a   relative state of flux compared to the core protocols of the PSTN.   Moreover, the IETF working groups that focus on SIP (SIP and SIPPING)   are best positioned to ascertain whether or not any new extensions to   SIP are justified for PSTN interworking.  This framework addresses   the overall context in which PSTN-SIP interworking gateways might be   deployed, provides use cases and identifies the mechanisms necessary   for interworking.   An important characteristic of any SIP telephony network is feature   transparency with respect to the PSTN.  Traditional telecom services   such as call waiting, freephone numbers, etc., implemented in PSTN   protocols such as Signaling System No. 7 (SS7 [6]) should be offered   by a SIP network in a manner that precludes any debilitating   difference in user experience while not limiting the flexibility of   SIP.  On the one hand, it is necessary that SIP support the   primitives for the delivery of such services where the terminating   point is a regular SIP phone (see definition inSection 2 below)   rather than a device that is fluent in SS7.  However, it is also   essential that SS7 information be available at gateways, the pointsVemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 2]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   of SS7-SIP interconnection, to ensure transparency of features not   otherwise supported in SIP.  If possible, SS7 information should be   available in its entirety and without any loss to trusted parties in   the SIP network across the PSTN-IP interface; one compelling need to   do so also arises from the fact that certain networks utilize   proprietary SS7 parameters to transmit certain information through   their networks.   Another important characteristic of a SIP telephony network is   routability of SIP requests - a SIP request that sets up a telephone   call should contain sufficient information in its headers to enable   it to be appropriately routed to its destination by proxy servers in   the SIP network.  Most commonly this entails that parameters of a   call like the dialed number should be carried over from SS7 signaling   to SIP requests.  Routing in a SIP network may in turn be influenced   by mechanisms such as TRIP [8] or ENUM [7].   The SIP-T (SIP for Telephones) effort provides a framework for the   integration of legacy telephony signaling into SIP messages.  SIP-T   provides the above two characteristics through techniques known as   'encapsulation' and 'translation' respectively.  At a SIP-ISUP   gateway, SS7 ISUP messages are encapsulated within SIP in order that   information necessary for services is not discarded in the SIP   request.  However, intermediaries like proxy servers that make   routing decisions for SIP requests cannot be expected to understand   ISUP, so simultaneously, some critical information is translated from   an ISUP message into the corresponding SIP headers in order to   determine how the SIP request will be routed.   While pure SIP has all the requisite instruments for the   establishment and termination of calls, it does not have any baseline   mechanism to carry any mid-call information (such as the ISUP INF/INR   query) along the SIP signaling path during the session.  This mid-   call information does not result in any change in the state of SIP   calls or the parameters of the sessions that SIP initiates.  A   provision to transmit such optional application-layer information is   also needed.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 3]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   Problem definition: To provide ISUP transparency across SS7-SIP   interworking   SS7-SIP Interworking Requirements     SIP-T Functions   ==================================================================   Transparency of ISUP                  Encapsulation of ISUP in the   Signaling                             SIP body   Routability of SIP messages with      Translation of ISUP information   dependencies on ISUP                  into the SIP header   Transfer of mid-call ISUP signaling   Use of the INFO Method for mid-   messages                              call signaling   Table 1: SIP-T features that fulfill PSTN-IP inter-connection            Requirements   While this document specifies the requirements above, it provide   mechanisms to satisfy them - however, this document does serve as an   framework for the documents that do provide these mechanisms, all of   which are referenced inSection 5.   Note that many modes of signaling are used in telephony (SS7 ISUP,   BTNUP, Q.931, MF etc.).  This document focuses on SS7 ISUP and aims   to specify the behavior across ISUP-SIP interfaces only.  The scope   of the SIP-T enterprise may, over time, come to encompass other   signaling systems as well.2. SIP-T for ISUP-SIP Interconnections   SIP-T is not a new protocol - it is a set of mechanisms for   interfacing traditional telephone signaling with SIP.  The purpose of   SIP-T is to provide protocol translation and feature transparency   across points of PSTN-SIP interconnection.  It intended for use where   a VoIP network (a SIP network, for the purposes of this document)   interfaces with the PSTN.   Using SIP-T, there are three basic models for how calls interact with   gateways.  Calls that originate in the PSTN can traverse a gateway to   terminate at a SIP endpoint, such as an IP phone.  Conversely, an IP   phone can make a call that traverses a gateway to terminate in the   PSTN.  Finally, an IP network using SIP may serve as a transit   network between gateways - a call may originate and terminate in the   PSTN, but cross a SIP-based network somewhere in the middle.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 4]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   The SS7 interfaces of a particular gateway determine the ISUP   variants that that gateway supports.  Whether or nor a gateway   supports a particular version of ISUP determines whether it can   provide feature transparency while terminating a call.   The following are the primary agents in a SIP-T-enabled network.   o  PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network): This refers to the      entire interconnected collection of local, long-distance and      international phone companies.  In the examples below, the term      Local Exchange Carrier (LEC) is used to denote a portion (usually,      a regional division) of the PSTN.   o  IP endpoints: Any SIP user agent that can act as an originator or      recipient of calls.  Thus, the following devices are classified as      IP endpoints:      *  Gateways: A telephony gateway provides a point of conversion         between signaling protocols (such as ISUP and SIP) as well as         circuit-switch and packet-switched audio media.  The term Media         Gateway Controller (MGC) is also used in the examples and         diagrams in this document to denote large-scale clusters of         decomposed gateways and control logic that are frequently         deployed today.  So for example, a SIP-ISUP gateway speaks ISUP         to the PSTN and SIP to the Internet and is responsible for         converting between the types of signaling, as well as         interchanging any associated bearer audio media.      *  SIP phones: The term used to represent all end-user devices         that originate or terminate SIP VoIP calls.      *  Interface points between networks where administrative policies         are enforced (potentially middleboxes, proxy servers, or         gateways).   o  Proxy Servers: A proxy server is a SIP intermediary that routes      SIP requests to their destinations.  For example, a proxy server      might direct a SIP request to another proxy, a gateway or a SIP      phone.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 5]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002                           ********************                        ***                    ***                       *                         *                      *    -------                *                     *     |proxy|                 *                    *      -------                  *                |----|                            |----|               /|MGC1|       VoIP Network         |MGC2|\              /  ----                              ----  \      SS7    /       *                               *    \ SS7            /         *           -------           *      \           /           *          |proxy|          *        \       --------         *         -------         *     ---------       | LEC1 |          **                     **      | LEC2  |       --------            *********************        ---------   Figure 1: Motivation for SIP-T in ISUP-SIP interconnection   In Figure 2 a VoIP cloud serves as a transit network for telephone   calls originating in a pair of LECs, where SIP is employed as the   VoIP protocol used to set up and tear down these VoIP calls.  At the   edge of the depicted network, an MGC converts the ISUP signals to SIP   requests,  and sends them to a proxy server which in turn routes   calls on other MGCs.  Although this figure depicts only two MGCs,   VoIP deployments would commonly have many such points of   interconnection with the PSTN (usually to diversify among PSTN rate   centers).  For a call originating from LEC1 and be terminating in   LEC2, the originator in SIP-T is the gateway that generates the SIP   request for a VoIP call, and the terminator is the gateway that is   the consumer of the SIP request; MGC1 would thus be the originator   and MGC2, the terminator.  Note that one or more proxies may be used   to route the call from the originator to the terminator.   In this flow, in order to seamlessly integrate the IP network with   the PSTN, it is important to preserve the received SS7 information   within SIP requests at the originating gateway and reuse this SS7   information when signaling to the PSTN at the terminating gateway.   By encapsulating ISUP information in the SIP signaling, a SIP network   can ensure that no SS7 information that is critical to the   instantiation of features is lost when SIP bridges calls between two   segments of the PSTN.   That much said, if only the exchange of ISUP between gateways were   relevant here, any protocol for the transport of signaling   information may be used to achieve this, obviating the need for SIP   and consequently that of SIP-T.  SIP-T is employed in order to   leverage the intrinsic benefits of utilizing SIP: request routing and   call control leveraging proxy servers (including the use of forking),Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 6]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   ease of SIP service creation, SIP's capability negotiation systems,   and so on.  Translation of information from the received ISUP message   parameters to SIP header fields enables SIP intermediaries to   consider this information as they handle requests.  SIP-T thus   facilitates call establishment and the enabling of new telephony   services over the IP network while simultaneously providing a method   of feature-rich interconnection with the PSTN.   Finally, the scenario in Figure 2 is just one of several flows in   which SIP-T can be used - voice calls do not always both originate   and terminate in the PSTN (via gateways); SIP phones can also be   endpoints in a SIP-T session.  In subsequent sections, the following   possible flows will be further detailed:   1.  PSTN origination - PSTN termination: The originating gateway       receives ISUP from the PSTN and it preserves this information       (via encapsulation and translation) in the SIP messages that it       transmits towards the terminating gateway.  The terminator       extracts the ISUP content from the SIP message that it receives       and it reuses this information in signaling sent to the PSTN.   2.  PSTN origination - IP termination: The originating gateway       receives ISUP from the PSTN and it preserves this ISUP       information in the SIP messages (via encapsulation and       translation) that it directs towards the terminating SIP user       agent.  The terminator has no use for the encapsulated ISUP and       ignores it.   3.  IP origination - PSTN termination: A SIP phone originates a VoIP       call that is routed by one or more proxy servers to the       appropriate terminating gateway.  The terminating gateway       converts to ISUP signaling and directs the call to an appropriate       PSTN interface, based on information that is present in the       received SIP header.   4.  IP origination - IP termination: This is a case for pure SIP.       SIP-T (either encapsulation or translation of ISUP) does not come       into play as there is no PSTN interworking.3. SIP-T Flows   The follow sections explore the essential SIP-T flows in detail.   Note that because proxy servers are usually responsible for routing   SIP requests (based on the Request-URI) the eventual endpoints at   which a SIP request will terminate is generally not known to the   originator.  So the originator does not select from the flowsVemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 7]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   described in this section, as a matter of static configuration or on   a per-call basis - rather, each call is routed by the SIP network   independently, and it may instantiate any of the flows below as the   routing logic of the network dictates.3.1 SIP Bridging (PSTN - IP - PSTN)                         ********************                      ***                    ***                     *                         *                    *    -------                *                   *     |proxy|                 *                  *      -------                  *               |---|                             |---|              /|MGC|       VoIP Network          |MGC|\             /  ---                               ---  \            /     *                               *     \           /       *            -------           *      \          /          *          |proxy|          *        \      --------         *         -------         *     ---------      | PSTN |          ***                    ***      | PSTN  |      --------            *********************        ---------   Figure 2: PSTN origination - PSTN termination (SIP Bridging)   A scenario in which a SIP network connects two segments of the PSTN   is referred to as 'SIP bridging'.  When a call destined for the SIP   network originates in the PSTN, an SS7 ISUP message will eventually   be received by the gateway that is the point of interconnection with   the PSTN network.  This gateway is from the perspective of the SIP   protocol the user agent client for this call setup request.   Traditional SIP routing is used in the IP network to determine the   appropriate point of termination (in this instance a gateway) and to   establish a SIP dialog and begin negotiation of a media session   between the origination and termination endpoints.  The egress   gateway then signals ISUP to the PSTN, reusing any encapsulated ISUP   present in the SIP request it receives as appropriate.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 8]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   A very elementary call-flow for SIP bridging is shown below.       PSTN            MGC#1   Proxy    MGC#2          PSTN       |-------IAM------>|       |        |              |       |                 |-----INVITE---->|              |       |                 |       |        |-----IAM----->|       |                 |<--100 TRYING---|              |       |                 |       |        |<----ACM------|       |                 |<-----18x-------|              |       |<------ACM-------|       |        |              |       |                 |       |        |<----ANM------|       |                 |<----200 OK-----|              |       |<------ANM-------|       |        |              |       |                 |------ACK------>|              |       |====================Conversation=================|       |-------REL------>|       |        |              |       |<------RLC-------|------BYE------>|              |       |                 |       |        |-----REL----->|       |                 |<----200 OK-----|              |       |                 |       |        |<----RLC------|       |                 |       |        |              |3.2 PSTN origination - IP termination                           ********************                        ***                    ***                       *                         *                      *                           *                     *                             *                    *                               *                |----|                            |-----|               /|MGC |       VoIP Network         |proxy|\              /  ----                              -----  \             /       *                               *     \            /         *                             *       \           /           *                           *         \      --------         *                         *     -------------      | PSTN |          **                     **      | SIP phone |      --------            *********************        -------------   Figure 3: PSTN origination - IP terminationVemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                  [Page 9]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   A call originates from the PSTN and terminates at a SIP phone.  Note   that in Figure 5, the proxy server acts as the registrar for the SIP   phone in question.   A simple call-flow depicting the ISUP and SIP signaling for a PSTN-   originated call terminating at a SIP endpoint follows:   PSTN           MGC                  Proxy              SIP phone     |----IAM----->|                     |                     |     |             |--------INVITE------>|                     |     |             |                     |-------INVITE------->|     |             |<------100 TRYING----|                     |     |             |                     |<-------18x----------|     |             |<---------18x--------|                     |     |<----ACM-----|                     |                     |     |             |                     |<-------200 OK-------|     |             |<-------200 OK-------|                     |     |<----ANM-----|                     |                     |     |             |---------ACK-------->|                     |     |             |                     |---------ACK-------->|     |=====================Conversation========================|     |-----REL---->|                     |                     |     |             |----------BYE------->|                     |     |<----RLC-----|                     |---------BYE-------->|     |             |                     |<-------200 OK-------|     |             |<-------200 OK-------|                     |     |             |                     |                     |Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 10]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 20023.3 IP origination - PSTN termination                          ********************                        ***                    ***                       *                         *                      *                           *                     *                             *                    *                               *               |-----|                            |----|              /|proxy|       VoIP Network         |MGC |\             /  -----                              ----  \            /       *                               *     \           /         *                             *       \          /           *                           *         \      ------------     *                         *     ---------      |SIP phone |      **                     **      | PSTN  |      ------------        *********************        ---------   Figure 4: IP origination - PSTN termination   A call originates from a SIP phone and terminates in the PSTN.   Unlike the previous two flows, there is therefore no ISUP   encapsulation in the request - the terminating gateway therefore only   performs translation on the SIP headers to derive values for ISUP   parameters.   A simple call-flow illustrating the different legs in the call is as   shown below.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 11]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002        SIP phone         Proxy                    MGC          PSTN     |-----INVITE----->|                       |             |     |                 |--------INVITE-------->|             |     |<---100 TRYING---|                       |-----IAM---->|     |                 |<------100 TRYING------|             |     |                 |                       |<----ACM-----|     |                 |<---------18x----------|             |     |<------18x-------|                       |             |     |                 |                       |<----ANM-----|     |                 |<--------200 OK--------|             |     |<-----200 OK-----|                       |             |     |-------ACK------>|                       |             |     |                 |----------ACK--------->|             |     |========================Conversation===================|     |-------BYE------>|                       |             |     |                 |----------BYE--------->|             |     |                 |                       |-----REL---->|     |                 |<--------200 OK--------|             |     |<-----200 OK-----|                       |<----RLC-----|4. SIP-T Roles and Behavior   There are three distinct sorts of elements (from a functional point   of view) in a SIP VoIP network that interconnects with the PSTN:   1.  The originators of SIP signaling   2.  The terminators of SIP signaling   3.  The intermediaries that route SIP requests from the originator to       the terminator   Behavior for theSection 4.1,Section 4.2 andSection 4.3   intermediary roles in a SIP-T call are described in the following   sections.4.1 Originator   The function of the originating user agent client is to generate the   SIP Call setup requests (i.e., INVITEs).  When a call originates in   the PSTN, a gateway is the UAC; otherwise some native SIP endpoint is   the UAC.  In either case, note that the originator generally cannot   anticipate what sort of entity the terminator will be, i.e., whether   final destination of the request is in a SIP network or the PSTN.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 12]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   In the case of calls originating in the PSTN (see Figure 3 and Figure   5), the originating gateway takes the necessary steps to preserve the   ISUP information by encapsulating it in the SIP request it creates.   The originating gateway is entrusted with the responsibility of   identifying the version of the ISUP (ETSI, ANSI, etc.) that it has   received and providing this information in the encapsulated ISUP   (usually by adding a multipart MIME body with appropriate MIME   headers).  It then formulates the headers of the SIP INVITE request   from the parameters of the ISUP that it has received from the PSTN as   appropriate (seeSection 5).  This might, for instance, entail   setting the 'To:' header field in the INVITE to the reflect dialed   number (Called Party Number) of the received ISUP IAM.   In other cases (like Figure 7), a SIP phone is the originator of a   VoIP call.  Usually, the SIP phone sends requests to a SIP proxy that   is responsible for routing the request to an appropriate destination.   There is no ISUP to encapsulate at the user agent client, as there is   no PSTN interface.  Although the call may terminate in the telephone   network and need to signal ISUP in order for that to take place, the   originator has no way to anticipate this and it would be foolhardy to   require that all SIP VoIP user agents have the capability to generate   ISUP.  It is therefore not the responsibility of an IP endpoints like   a SIP phone to generate encapsulated ISUP.  Thus, an originator must   generate the SIP signaling while performing ISUP encapsulation and   translation when possible (meaning when the call has originated in   the PSTN).   Originator requirements: encapsulate ISUP, translate information from   ISUP to SIP, multipart MIME support (for gateways only)4.2 Terminator   The SIP-T terminator is a consumer of the SIP calls.  The terminator   is a standard SIP UA that can be either a gateway that interworks   with the PSTN or a SIP phone.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   In case of PSTN terminations (see Figure 3 and Figure 7) the egress   gateway terminates the call to its PSTN interface.  The terminator   generates the ISUP appropriate for signaling to the PSTN from the   incoming SIP message.  Values for certain ISUP parameters may be   gleaned from the SIP headers or extracted directly from an   encapsulated ISUP body.  Generally speaking, a gateway uses any   encapsulated ISUP as a template for the message it will send, but it   overwrites parameter values in the template as it translates SIP   headers or adds any parameter values that reflect its local policies   (seeAppendix A item 1).   In case of an IP termination (Figure 5), the SIP UAS that receives   SIP messages with encapsulated ISUP typically disregards the ISUP   message.  This does introduce a general requirement, however, that   devices like SIP phones handle multipart MIME messages and unknown   MIME types gracefully (this is a baseline SIP requirement, but also a   place where vendors have been known to make shortcuts).   Terminator requirements: standard SIP processing, interpretation of   encapsulated ISUP (for gateways only), support for multipart MIME,   graceful handling of unknown MIME content (for non-gateways only)4.3 Intermediary   Intermediaries like proxy servers are entrusted with the task of   routing messages to one another, as well as gateways and SIP phones.   Each proxy server makes a forwarding decision for a SIP request based   on values of various headers, or 'routable elements' (including the   Request-URI, route headers, and potentially many other elements of a   SIP request).   SIP-T does introduce some additional considerations for forwarding a   request that could lead to new features and requirements for   intermediaries.  Feature transparency of ISUP is central to the   notion of SIP-T.  Compatibility between the ISUP variants of the   originating and terminating PSTN interfaces automatically leads to   feature transparency.  Thus, proxy servers might take an interest in   the variants of ISUP that are encapsulated with requests - the   variant itself could become a routable element.  The termination of a   call at a point that results in greater proximity to the final   destination (rate considerations) is also an important consideration.   The preference of one over the other results in a trade-off between   simplicity of operation and cost.  The requirement of procuring a   reasonable rate may dictate that a SIP-T call spans dissimilar PSTN   interfaces (SIP bridging across different gateways that don't support   any ISUP variants in common).  In order to optimize for maximum   feature transparency and rate, some operators of intermediaries might   want to consider practices along the following lines:Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 14]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   a) The need for ISUP feature transparency may necessitate ISUP      variant translation (conversion), i.e., conversion from one      variant of ISUP to another in order to facilitate the termination      of that call over a gateway interface that does not support the      ISUP variant of the originating PSTN interface.  (SeeAppendix A      item 2.) Although in theory conversion may be performed at any      point in the path of the request, it is optimal to perform it at a      point that is at the greatest proximity to the terminating      gateway.  This could be accomplished by delivering the call to an      application that might perform the conversion between variants.      Feature transparency in this case is contingent on the      availability of resources to perform ISUP conversion, and it      incurs an increase in the call-set up time.   b) An alternative would be to sacrifice ISUP transparency by handing      the call off to a gateway that does not support the version of the      originating ISUP.  The terminating MGC would then just ignore the      encapsulated ISUP and use the information in the SIP header to      terminate the call.   So, it may be desirable for proxy servers to have the intelligence to   make a judicious choice given the options available to it.   Proxy requirements: ability to route based on choice of routable   elements4.4 Behavioral Requirements Summary   If the SIP-T originator is a gateway that received an ISUP request,   it must always perform both encapsulation and translation ISUP,   regardless of where the originator might guess that the request will   terminate.   If the terminator does not understand ISUP, it ignores it while   performing standard SIP processing.  If the terminator does   understand ISUP, and needs to signal to the PSTN, it should reuse the   encapsulated ISUP if it understands the variant.  The terminator   should perform the following steps:   o  Extract the ISUP from the message body, and use this ISUP as a      message template.  Note that if there is no encapsulated ISUP in      the message, the gateway should use a canonical template for the      message type in question (a pre-populated ISUP message configured      in the gateway) instead.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 15]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   o  Translate the headers of the SIP request into ISUP parameters,      overwriting any values in the message template.   o  Apply any local policies in populating parameters.   An intermediary must be able to route a call based on the choice of   routable elements in the SIP headers.5. Components of the SIP-T Protocol   The mechanisms described in the following sections are the components   of SIP-T that provide the protocol functions entailed by the   requirements.5.1 Core SIP   SIP-T uses the methods and procedures of SIP as defined byRFC 3261.5.2 Encapsulation   Encapsulation of the PSTN signaling is one of the major requirements   of SIP-T.  SIP-T uses multipart MIME bodies to enable SIP messages to   contain multiple payloads (Session Description Protocol or SDP [5],   ISUP, etc.).  Numerous ISUP variants are in existence today; the ISUP   MIME type enable recipients too recognize the ISUP type (and thus   determine whether or not they support the variant) in the most   expeditious possible manner.  One scheme for performing ISUP   encapsulation using multi-part MIME has been described in [2].5.3 Translation   Translation encompasses all aspects of signaling protocol conversion   between SIP and ISUP.  There are essentially two components to the   problem of translation:   1.  ISUP SIP message mapping:  This describes a mapping between ISUP       and SIP at the message level.  In SIP-T deployments gateways are       entrusted with the task of generating a specific ISUP message for       each SIP message received and vice versa.  It is necessary to       specify the rules that govern the mapping between ISUP and SIP       messages (i.e., what ISUP messages is sent when a particular SIP       message is received: an IAM must be sent on receipt of an INVITE,       a REL for BYE, and so on).  A potential mapping between ISUP and       SIP messages has been described in [10].Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 16]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   2.  ISUP parameter-SIP header mapping:  A SIP request that is used to       set up a telephone call should contain information that enables       it to be appropriately routed to its destination by proxy servers       in the SIP network - for example, the telephone number dialed by       the originating user.  It is important to standardize a set of       practices that defines the procedure for translation of       information from ISUP to SIP (for example, the Called Party       Number in an ISUP IAM must be mapped onto the SIP 'To' header       field and Request-URI, etc.).  This issue becomes inherently more       complicated by virtue of the fact that the headers of a SIP       request (especially an INVITE) may be transformed by       intermediaries, and that consequently, the SIP headers and       encapsulated ISUP bodies come to express conflicting values -       effectively, a part of the encapsulated ISUP may be rendered       irrelevant and obsolete.5.4 Support for mid-call signaling   Pure SIP does not have any provision for carrying any mid-call   control information that is generated during a session.  The INFO [3]   method should be used for this purpose.  Note however that INFO is   not suitable for managing overlap dialing (for one way of   implementing overlap dialing see [11]).  Also note that the use of   INFO for signaling mid-call DTMF signals is not recommended (seeRFC2833 [9] for a recommended mechanism).6. SIP Content Negotiation   The originator of a SIP-T request might package both SDP and ISUP   elements into the same SIP message by using the MIME multipart   format.  Traditionally in SIP, if the terminating device does not   support a multipart payload (multipart/mixed) and/or the ISUP MIME   type, it would then reject the SIP request with a 415 Unsupported   Media Type specifying the media types it supports (by default,   'application/SDP').  The originator would subsequently have to re-   send the SIP request after stripping out the ISUP payload (i.e.  with   only the SDP payload) and this would then be accepted.   This is a rather cumbersome flow, and it is thus highly desirable to   have a mechanism by which the originator could signify which bodies   are required and which are optional so that the terminator can   silently discard optional bodies that it does not understand   (allowing a SIP phone to ignore an ISUP payload when processing ISUP   is not critical).  This is contingent upon the terminator having   support for a Content-type of multipart/mixed and access to the   Content-Disposition header to express criticality.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 17]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   1.  Support for ISUP is optional.  Therefore, UA2 accepts the INVITE       irrespective of whether it can process the ISUP.   UA1                    UA2   INVITE-->      (Content-type:multipart/mixed;      Content-type: application/sdp;      Content-disposition: session; handling=required;      Content-type: application/isup;      Content-disposition: signal; handling=optional;)                         <--18x   2.  Support for ISUP is preferred.  UA2 does not support the ISUP and       rejects the INVITE with a 415 Unsupported Media Type.  UA1 strips       off the ISUP and re-sends the INVITE with SDP only and this is       the accepted.   UA1                    UA2   INVITE--> (Content-type:multipart/mixed;      Content-type: application/sdp;      Content-disposition: session; handling=required;      Content-type: application/isup;      Content-disposition: signal; handling=required;)                           <--415                     (Accept: application/sdp)   ACK-->   INVITE-->   (Content-type: application/sdp)                           <--18x   3.  Support for ISUP is mandatory for call establishment.  UA2 does       not support the ISUP and rejects the INVITE with a 415       Unsupported Media type.  UA1 then directs its request to UA3.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 18]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   UA1                    UA2   INVITE--> (Content-type:multipart/mixed;      Content-type: application/sdp;      Content-disposition: session; handling=required;      Content-type: application/isup;      Content-disposition: signal; handling=required;)                        <--415                  (Accept: application/sdp)   ACK-->   UA1                   UA3   INVITE--> (Content-type:multipart/mixed;       Content-type: application/sdp;       Content-disposition: session; handling=required;       Content-type: application/isup;       Content-disposition: signal; handling=required;)   Note that the exchanges of messages above are not complete; only the   messages relevant to this discussion are shown.  Specifics of the   ISUP MIME type can be obtained from [2].  The 'version' and 'base'   parameters are not shown here, but must be used in accordance with   the rules of [2].7. Security Considerations   SIP-T can be employed as an interdomain signaling mechanism that may   be subject to pre-existing trust relationships between administrative   domains.  In many legal environments, distribution of ISUP is   restricted to licensed carriers; SIP-T introduces some challenges in   so far as it bridges carrier signaling with end-user signaling.  Any   administrative domain implementing SIP-T should have an adequate   security apparatus (including elements that manage any appropriate   policies to manage fraud and billing in an interdomain environment)   in place to ensure that the transmission of ISUP information does not   result in any security violations.   Transporting ISUP in SIP bodies may provide opportunities for abuse,   fraud, and privacy concerns, especially when SIP-T requests can be   generated, inspected or modified by arbitrary SIP endpoints.  ISUP   MIME bodies should be secured (preferably with S/MIME [4]) to   alleviate this concern, as is described in the Security   Considerations of the core SIP specification [1].  Authentication   properties provided by S/MIME would allow the recipient of a SIP-T   message to ensure that the ISUP MIME body was generated by anVemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 19]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   authorized entity.  Encryption would ensure that only carriers   possessing a particular decryption key are capable of inspecting   encapsulated ISUP MIME bodies in a SIP request.   SIP-T endpoints MUST support S/MIME signatures (CMS SignedData), and   SHOULD support encryption (CMS EnvelopedData).8. IANA Considerations   This document introduces no new considerations for IANA.Normative References   [1]   Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,         Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:         Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, May 2002.   [2]   Zimmerer, E., Peterson, J., Vemuri, A., Ong, L., Audet, F.,         Watson, M. and M. Zonoun, "MIME media types for ISUP and QSIG         objects",RFC 3204, December 2001.   [3]   Donovan, S., "The SIP INFO Method",RFC 2976, October 2000.   [4]   Ramsdell, B., "S/MIME Version 3 Message Specification",RFC2633, June 1999.   [5]   Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description         Protocol",RFC 2327, April 1998.Non-Normative References   [6]   International Telecommunications Union, "Signaling System No.         7; ISDN User Part Signaling procedures", ITU-T Q.764, September         1997, <http://www.itu.int>.   [7]   Faltstrom, P., "E.164 number and DNS",RFC 2916, September         2000.   [8]   Rosenberg, J., Salama, H. and M. Squire, "Telephony Routing         over IP (TRIP)",RFC 3219, January 2002.   [9]   Schulzrinne, H. and S. Petrack, "RTP Payload for DTMF Digits,         Telephony Tones and Telephony Signals",RFC 2833, May 2000.   [10]  Camarillo, G., Roach, A., Peterson, J. and L. Ong, "ISUP to SIP         Mapping",  Work in Progress.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 20]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002   [11]  Camarillo, G., Roach, A., Peterson, J. and L. Ong, "Mapping of         ISUP Overlap Signaling to SIP", Work in Progress.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 21]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002Appendix A. Notes   1.  Some terminating MGCs may alter the encapsulated ISUP in order to       remove any conditions specific to the originating circuit; for       example, continuity test flags in the Nature of Connection       Indicators, etc.   2.  Even so, the relevance of ANSI-specific information in an ETSI       network (or vice versa) is questionable.  Clearly, the strength       of SIP-T is realized when the encapsulated ISUP involves the       usage of proprietary parameters.Appendix B. Acknowledgments   We thank Andrew Dugan, Rob Maidhof, Dave Martin, Adam Roach, Jonathan   Rosenberg, Dean Willis, Robert F.  Penfield, Steve Donovan, Allison   Mankin, Scott Bradner and Steve Bellovin for their valuable comments.   The original 'SIP+' proposal for interconnecting portions of the PSTN   with SIP bridging was developed by Eric Zimmerer.Authors' Addresses   Aparna Vemuri-Pattisam   Qwest Communications   6000 Parkwood Pl   Dublin, OH  43016 US   EMail: Aparna.Vemuri@Qwest.com          vaparna10@yahoo.com   Jon Peterson   NeuStar, Inc.   1800 Sutter St   Suite 570   Concord, CA  94520 US   Phone: +1 925/363-8720   EMail: jon.peterson@neustar.biz   URI:http://www.neustar.biz/Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 22]

RFC 3372                         SIP-T                    September 2002Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Vemuri & Peterson        Best Current Practice                 [Page 23]

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