In the traditional telephony context, third party call control allows
one entity (which we call the controller) to set up and manage a
communications relationship between two or more other parties. Third
party call control (referred to as 3pcc) is often used for operator
services (where an operator creates a call that connects two
participants together) and conferencing.
Similarly, many SIP services are possible through third party call
control. These include the traditional ones on the PSTN, but also
new ones such as click-to-dial. Click-to-dial allows a user to click
on a web page when they wish to speak to a customer service
representative. The web server then creates a call between the user
and a customer service representative. The call can be between two
phones, a phone and an IP host, or two IP hosts.
Third party call control is possible using only the mechanisms
specified within RFC 3261 [1]. Indeed, many different call flows are
possible, each of which will work with SIP compliant user agents.
However, there are benefits and drawbacks to each of these flows.
The usage of third party call control also becomes more complex when
aspects of the call utilize SIP extensions or optional features of
SIP. In particular, the usage of RFC 3312 [2] (used for coupling of
signaling to resource reservation) with third party call control is
non-trivial, and is discussed in Section 9. Similarly, the usage of
early media (where session data is exchanged before the call is
accepted) with third party call control is not trivial; both of them
specify the way in which user agents generate and respond to SDP, and
it is not clear how to do both at the same time. This is discussed
further in Section 8.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 2]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
This document serves as a best current practice for implementing
third party call control without usage of any extensions specifically
designed for that purpose. Section 4 presents the known call flows
that can be used to achieve third party call control, and provides
guidelines on their usage. Section 9 discusses the interactions of
RFC 3312 [2] with third party call control. Section 8 discusses the
interactions of early media with third party call control. Section
10 provides example applications that make usage of the flows
recommended here.
In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
"SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [3] and
indicate requirement levels for compliant implementations.
The following terms are used throughout this document:
3pcc: Third Party Call Control, which refers to the general ability
to manipulate calls between other parties.
Controller: A controller is a SIP User Agent that wishes to create a
session between two other user agents.
The primary primitive operation of third party call control is the
establishment of a session between participants A and B.
Establishment of this session is orchestrated by a third party,
referred to as the controller.
This section documents three call flows that the controller can
utilize in order to provide this primitive operation.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 3]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE no SDP | |
|<------------------| |
|(2) 200 offer1 | |
|------------------>| |
| |(3) INVITE offer1 |
| |------------------>|
| |(4) 200 OK answer1 |
| |<------------------|
| |(5) ACK |
| |------------------>|
|(6) ACK answer1 | |
|<------------------| |
|(7) RTP | |
|.......................................|
Figure 1
The call flow for Flow I is shown in Figure 1. The controller first
sends an INVITE A (1). This INVITE has no session description. A's
phone rings, and A answers. This results in a 200 OK (2) that
contains an offer [4]. The controller needs to send its answer in
the ACK, as mandated by [1]. To obtain the answer, it sends the
offer it got from A (offer1) in an INVITE to B (3). B's phone rings.
When B answers, the 200 OK (4) contains the answer to this offer,
answer1. The controller sends an ACK to B (5), and then passes
answer1 to A in an ACK sent to it (6). Because the offer was
generated by A, and the answer generated by B, the actual media
session is between A and B. Therefore, media flows between them (7).
This flow is simple, requires no manipulation of the SDP by the
controller, and works for any media types supported by both
endpoints. However, it has a serious timeout problem. User B may
not answer the call immediately. The result is that the controller
cannot send the ACK to A right away. This causes A to retransmit the
200 OK response periodically. As specified in RFC 3261 Section
13.3.1.4, the 200 OK will be retransmitted for 64*T1 seconds. If an
ACK does not arrive by then, the call is considered to have failed.
This limits the applicability of this flow to scenarios where the
controller knows that B will answer the INVITE immediately.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 4]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE bh sdp1 | |
|<------------------| |
|(2) 200 sdp2 | |
|------------------>| |
| |(3) INVITE sdp2 |
| |------------------>|
|(4) ACK | |
|<------------------| |
| |(5) 200 OK sdp3 |
| |<------------------|
| |(6) ACK |
| |------------------>|
|(7) INVITE sdp3 | |
|<------------------| |
|(8) 200 OK sdp2 | |
|------------------>| |
|(9) ACK | |
|<------------------| |
|(10) RTP | |
|.......................................|
Figure 2
An alternative flow, Flow II, is shown in Figure 2. The controller
first sends an INVITE to user A (1). This is a standard INVITE,
containing an offer (sdp1) with a single audio media line, one codec,
a random port number (but not zero), and a connection address of
0.0.0.0. This creates an initial media stream that is "black holed",
since no media (or RTCP packets [8]) will flow from A. The INVITE
causes A's phone to ring.
Note that the usage of 0.0.0.0, though recommended by RFC 3264,
has numerous drawbacks. It is anticipated that a future
specification will recommend usage of a domain within the .invalid
DNS top level domain instead of the 0.0.0.0 IP address. As a
result, implementors are encouraged to track such developments
once they arise.
When A answers (2), the 200 OK contains an answer, sdp2, with a valid
address in the connection line. The controller sends an ACK (4). It
then generates a second INVITE (3). This INVITE is addressed to user
B, and it contains sdp2 as the offer to B. Note that the role of sdp2
has changed. In the 200 OK (message 2), it was an answer, but in the
INVITE, it is an offer. Fortunately, all valid answers are valid
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 5]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
initial offers. This INVITE causes B's phone to ring. When it
answers, it generates a 200 OK (5) with an answer, sdp3. The
controller then generates an ACK (6). Next, it sends a re-INVITE to
A (7) containing sdp3 as the offer. Once again, there has been a
reversal of roles. sdp3 was an answer, and now it is an offer.
Fortunately, an answer to an answer recast as an offer is, in turn, a
valid offer. This re-INVITE generates a 200 OK (8) with sdp2,
assuming that A doesn't decide to change any aspects of the session
as a result of this re-INVITE. This 200 OK is ACKed (9), and then
media can flow from A to B. Media from B to A could already start
flowing once message 5 was sent.
This flow has the advantage that all final responses are immediately
ACKed. It therefore does not suffer from the timeout and message
inefficiency problems of flow 1. However, it too has troubles.
First off, it requires that the controller know the media types to be
used for the call (since it must generate a "blackhole" SDP, which
requires media lines). Secondly, the first INVITE to A (1) contains
media with a 0.0.0.0 connection address. The controller expects that
the response contains a valid, non-zero connection address for A.
However, experience has shown that many UAs respond to an offer of a
0.0.0.0 connection address with an answer containing a 0.0.0.0
connection address. The offer-answer specification [4] explicitly
tells implementors not to do this, but at the time of publication of
this document, many implementations still did. If A should respond
with a 0.0.0.0 connection address in sdp2, the flow will not work.
However, the most serious flaw in this flow is the assumption that
the 200 OK to the re-INVITE (message 8) contains the same SDP as in
message 2. This may not be the case. If it is not, the controller
needs to re-INVITE B with that SDP (say, sdp4), which may result in
getting a different SDP, sdp5, in the 200 OK from B. Then, the
controller needs to re-INVITE A again, and so on. The result is an
infinite loop of re-INVITEs. It is possible to break this cycle by
having very smart UAs which can return the same SDP whenever
possible, or really smart controllers that can analyze the SDP to
determine if a re-INVITE is really needed. However, we wish to keep
this mechanism simple, and avoid SDP awareness in the controller. As
a result, this flow is not really workable. It is therefore NOT
RECOMMENDED.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 6]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE no SDP | |
|<---------------------| |
|(2) 200 offer1 | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) ACK answer1 (bh) | |
|<---------------------| |
| |(4) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| |(5) 200 OK offer2 |
| |<---------------------|
|(6) INVITE offer2' | |
|<---------------------| |
|(7) 200 answer2' | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(8) ACK answer2 |
| |--------------------->|
|(9) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
|(10) RTP | |
|.............................................|
Figure 3
A third flow, Flow III, is shown in Figure 3.
First, the controller sends an INVITE (1) to user A without any SDP
(which is good, since it means that the controller doesn't need to
assume anything about the media composition of the session). A's
phone rings. When A answers, a 200 OK is generated (2) containing
its offer, offer1. The controller generates an immediate ACK
containing an answer (3). This answer is a "black hole" SDP, with
its connection address equal to 0.0.0.0.
The controller then sends an INVITE to B without SDP (4). This
causes B's phone to ring. When they answer, a 200 OK is sent,
containing their offer, offer2 (5). This SDP is used to create a
re-INVITE back to A (6). That re-INVITE is based on offer2, but may
need to be reorganized to match up media lines, or to trim media
lines. For example, if offer1 contained an audio and a video line,
in that order, but offer2 contained just an audio line, the
controller would need to add a video line to the offer (setting its
port to zero) to create offer2'. Since this is a re-INVITE, it
should complete quickly in the general case. That's good, since user
B is retransmitting their 200 OK, waiting for an ACK. The SDP in the
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 7]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
200 OK (7) from A, answer2', may also need to be reorganized or
trimmed before sending it an the ACK to B (8) as answer2. Finally,
an ACK is sent to A (9), and then media can flow.
This flow has many benefits. First, it will usually operate without
any spurious retransmissions or timeouts (although this may still
happen if a re-INVITE is not responded to quickly). Secondly, it
does not require the controller to guess the media that will be used
by the participants.
There are some drawbacks. The controller does need to perform SDP
manipulations. Specifically, it must take some SDP, and generate
another SDP which has the same media composition, but has connection
addresses equal to 0.0.0.0. This is needed for message 3. Secondly,
it may need to reorder and trim SDP X, so that its media lines match
up with those in some other SDP, Y. Thirdly, the offer from B
(offer2) may have no codecs or media streams in common with the offer
from A (offer 1). The controller will need to detect this condition,
and terminate the call. Finally, the flow is far more complicated
than the simple and elegant Flow I (Figure 1).
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE offer1 | |
|no media | |
|<---------------------| |
|(2) 200 answer1 | |
|no media | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
| |(4) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| |(5) 200 OK offer2 |
| |<---------------------|
|(6) INVITE offer2' | |
|<---------------------| |
|(7) 200 answer2' | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(8) ACK answer2 |
| |--------------------->|
|(9) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
|(10) RTP | |
|.............................................|
Figure 4
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 8]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
Flow IV shows a variation on Flow III that reduces its complexity.
The actual message flow is identical, but the SDP placement and
construction differs. The initial INVITE (1) contains SDP with no
media at all, meaning that there are no m lines. This is valid, and
implies that the media makeup of the session will be established
later through a re-INVITE [4]. Once the INVITE is received, user A
is alerted. When they answer the call, the 200 OK (2) has an answer
with no media either. This is acknowledged by the controller (3).
The flow from this point onwards is identical to Flow III. However,
the manipulations required to convert offer2 to offer2', and answer2'
to answer2, are much simpler. Indeed, no media manipulations are
needed at all. The only change that is needed is to modify the
origin lines, so that the origin line in offer2' is valid based on
the value in offer1 (validity requires that the version increments by
one, and that the other parameters remain unchanged).
There are some limitations associated with this flow. First, user A
will be alerted without any media having been established yet. This
means that user A will not be able to reject or accept the call based
on its media composition. Secondly, both A and B will end up
answering the call (i.e., generating a 200 OK) before it is known
whether there is compatible media. If there is no media in common,
the call can be terminated later with a BYE. However, the users will
have already been alerted, resulting in user annoyance and possibly
resulting in billing events.
Flow I (Figure 1) represents the simplest and the most efficient
flow. This flow SHOULD be used by a controller if it knows with
certainty that user B is actually an automata that will answer the
call immediately. This is the case for devices such as media
servers, conferencing servers, and messaging servers, for example.
Since we expect a great deal of third party call control to be to
automata, special casing in this scenario is reasonable.
For calls to unknown entities, or to entities known to represent
people, it is RECOMMENDED that Flow IV (Figure 4) be used for third
party call control. Flow III MAY be used instead, but it provides no
additional benefits over Flow IV. However, Flow II SHOULD NOT be
used, because of the potential for infinite ping-ponging of re-
INVITEs.
Several of these flows use a "black hole" connection address of
0.0.0.0. This is an IPv4 address with the property that packets sent
to it will never leave the host which sent them; they are just
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 9]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
discarded. Those flows are therefore specific to IPv4. For other
network or address types, an address with an equivalent property
SHOULD be used.
In most cases, including the recommended flows, user A will hear
silence while the call to B completes. This may not always be ideal.
It can be remedied by connecting the caller to a music-on-hold source
while the call to B occurs.
There are numerous error cases which merit discussion.
With all of the call flows in Section 4, one call is established to
A, and then the controller attempts to establish a call to B.
However, this call attempt may fail, for any number of reasons. User
B might be busy (resulting in a 486 response to the INVITE), there
may not be any media in common, the request may time out, and so on.
If the call attempt to B should fail, it is RECOMMENDED that the
controller send a BYE to A. This BYE SHOULD include a Reason header
[5] which carries the status code from the error response. This will
inform A of the precise reason for the failure. The information is
important from a user interface perspective. For example, if A was
calling from a black phone, and B generated a 486, the BYE will
contain a Reason code of 486, and this could be used to generate a
local busy signal so that A knows that B is busy.
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE offer1 | |
|no media | |
|<---------------------| |
|(2) 200 answer1 | |
|no media | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
| |(4) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| |(5) 180 |
| |<---------------------|
|(6) INVITE offer2 | |
|--------------------->| |
|(7) 491 | |
|<---------------------| |
|(8) ACK | |
|--------------------->| |
Figure 5
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 10]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
Another error condition worth discussion is shown in Figure 5. After
the controller establishes the dialog with A (messages 1-3) it
attempts to contact B (message 4). Contacting B may take some time.
During that interval, A could possibly attempt a re-INVITE, providing
an updated offer. However, the controller cannot pass this offer on
to B, since it has an INVITE transaction pending with it. As a
result, the controller needs to reject the request. It is
RECOMMENDED that a 491 response be used. The situation here is
similar to the glare condition described in [1], and thus the same
error handling is sensible. However, A is likely to retry its
request (as a result of the 491), and this may occur before the
exchange with B is completed. In that case, the controller would
respond with another 491.
Once the calls are established, both participants believe they are in
a single point-to-point call. However, they are exchanging media
directly with each other, rather than with the controller. The
controller is involved in two dialogs, yet sees no media.
Since the controller is still a central point for signaling, it now
has complete control over the call. If it receives a BYE from one of
the participants, it can create a new BYE and hang up with the other
participant. This is shown in Figure 6.
A Controller B
|(1) BYE | |
|------------------>| |
|(2) 200 OK | |
|<------------------| |
| |(3) BYE |
| |------------------>|
| |(4) 200 OK |
| |<------------------|
Figure 6
Similarly, if it receives a re-INVITE from one of the participants,
it can forward it to the other participant. Depending on which flow
was used, this may require some manipulation on the SDP before
passing it on.
However, the controller need not "proxy" the SIP messages received
from one of the parties. Since it is a Back-to-Back User Agent
(B2BUA), it can invoke any signaling mechanism on each dialog, as it
sees fit. For example, if the controller receives a BYE from A, it
can generate a new INVITE to a third party, C, and connect B to that
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 11]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
participant instead. A call flow for this is shown in Figure 7,
assuming the case where C represents an end user, not an automata.
Note that it is just Flow IV.
A Controller B C
|(1) BYE | | |
|--------------->| | |
|(2) 200 OK | | |
|<---------------| | |
| |(3) INV no media| |
| |-------------------------------->|
| |(4) 200 no media| |
| |<--------------------------------|
| |(5) ACK | |
| |-------------------------------->|
| |(6) INV no SDP | |
| |--------------->| |
| |(7) 200 offer3 | |
| |<---------------| |
| |(8) INV offer3' | |
| |-------------------------------->|
| |(9) 200 answer3'| |
| |<--------------------------------|
| |(10) ACK | |
| |-------------------------------->|
| |(11) ACK answer3| |
| |--------------->| |
| | |(12) RTP |
| | |................|
Figure 7
From here, new parties can be added, removed, transferred, and so on,
as the controller sees fit. In many cases, the controller will be
required to modify the SDP exchanged between the participants in
order to affect these changes. In particular, the version number in
the SDP will need to be changed by the controller in certain cases.
If the controller should issue an SDP offer on its own (for example,
to place a call on hold), it will need to increment the version
number in the SDP offer. The other participant in the call will not
know that the controller has done this, and any subsequent offer it
generates will have the wrong version number as far as its peer is
concerned. As a result, the controller will be required to modify
the version number in SDP messages to match what the recipient is
expecting.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 12]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
It is important to point out that the call need not have been
established by the controller in order for the processing of this
section to be used. Rather, the controller could have acted as a
B2BUA during a call established by A towards B (or vice versa).
Early media represents the condition where the session is established
(as a result of the completion of an offer/answer exchange), yet the
call itself has not been accepted. This is usually used to convey
tones or announcements regarding progress of the call. Handling of
early media in a third party call is straightforward.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 13]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
A Controller B
| | |
|(1) INVITE offer1 | |
|no media | |
|<---------------------| |
| | |
|<ring> | |
| | |
|<answer> | |
| | |
|(2) 200 answer1 | |
|no media | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
| |(4) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| | |<ring>
| |(5) 183 offer2 |
| |<---------------------|
|(6) INVITE offer2' | |
|<---------------------| |
|(7) 200 answer2' | |
|--------------------->| |
|(8) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
| |(9) PRACK answer2 |
| |--------------------->|
| |(10) 200 PRACK |
| |<---------------------|
|(11) RTP | |
|.............................................|
| | |<answer>
| |(12) 200 OK |
| |<---------------------|
| |(13) ACK |
| |--------------------->|
Figure 8
Figure 8 shows the case where user B generates early media before
answering the call. The flow is almost identical to Flow IV from
Figure 4. The only difference is that user B generates a reliable
provisional response (5) [6] instead of a final response, and answer2
is carried in a PRACK (9) instead of an ACK. When party B finally
does accept the call (12), there is no change in the session state,
and therefore, no signaling needs to be done with user A. The
controller simply ACKs the 200 OK (13) to confirm the dialog.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 14]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
A Controller B
| | |
|(1) INVITE offer1 | |
|no media | |
|<---------------------| |
| | |
|ring | |
| | |
|(2) 183 answer1 | |
|no media | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) PRACK | |
|<---------------------| |
|(4) 200 PRACK | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(5) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| | |ring
| | |
| | |answer
| | |
| |(6) 200 OK offer2 |
| |<---------------------|
|(7) UPDATE offer2' | |
|<---------------------| |
| | |
|(8) 200 answer2' | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(9) ACK answer2 |
| |--------------------->|
|(10) RTP | |
|.............................................|
| | |
|answer | |
| | |
|(11) 200 OK | |
|--------------------->| |
|(12) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
Figure 9
The case where user A generates early media is more complicated, and
is shown in Figure 9. The flow is based on Flow IV. The controller
sends an INVITE to user A (1), with an offer containing no media
streams. User A generates a reliable provisional response (2)
containing an answer with no media streams. The controller PRACKs
this provisional response (3). Now, the controller sends an INVITE
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 15]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
without SDP to user B (5). User B's phone rings, and they answer,
resulting in a 200 OK (6) with an offer, offer2. The controller now
needs to update the session parameters with user A. However, since
the call has not been answered, it cannot use a re-INVITE. Rather,
it uses a SIP UPDATE request (7) [7], passing the offer (after
modifying it to get the origin field correct). User A generates its
answer in the 200 OK to the UPDATE (8). This answer is passed to
user B in the ACK (9). When user A finally answers (11), there is no
change in session state, so the controller simply ACKs the 200 OK
(12).
Note that it is likely that there will be clipping of media in this
call flow. User A is likely a PSTN gateway, and has generated a
provisional response because of early media from the PSTN side. The
PSTN will deliver this media even though the gateway does not have
anywhere to send it, since the initial offer from the controller had
no media streams. When user B answers, media can begin to flow.
However, any media sent to the gateway from the PSTN up to that point
will be lost.
A SIP extension has been specified that allows for the coupling of
signaling and resource reservation [2]. This specification relies on
exchanges of session descriptions before completion of the call
setup. These flows are initiated when certain SDP parameters are
passed in the initial INVITE. As a result, the interaction of this
mechanism with third party call control is not obvious, and worth
detailing.
In one usage scenario, the controller wishes to make use of
preconditions in order to avoid the call failure scenarios documented
in Section 4.4. Specifically, the controller can use preconditions in
order to guarantee that neither party is alerted unless there is a
common set of media and codecs. It can also provide both parties
with information on the media composition of the call before they
decide to accept it.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 16]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
User A Controller Customer Service
(User B)
| | |
|(1) INVITE no SDP | |
|require precon | |
|<------------------| |
|(2) 183 offer1 | |
|optional precon | |
|------------------>| |
| | |
| |(3) INVITE offer1 |
| |------------------>|
| | |
| | |
| | |<answer>
| |(4) 200 OK answer1 |
| |no precon |
| |<------------------|
| |(5) ACK |
| |------------------>|
|(6) PRACK answer1 | |
|<------------------| |
|<ring> | |
| | |
|(7) 200 PRACK | |
|------------------>| |
|<answer> | |
| | |
|(8) 200 INVITE | |
|------------------>| |
|(9) ACK | |
|<------------------| |
Figure 10
The flow for this scenario is shown in Figure 10. In this example,
we assume that user B is an automata or agent of some sort which will
answer the call immediately. Therefore, the flow is based on Flow I.
The controller sends an INVITE to user A containing no SDP, but with
a Require header indicating that preconditions are required. This
specific scenario (an INVITE without an offer, but with a Require
header indicating preconditions) is not described in [2]. It is
RECOMMENDED that the UAS respond with an offer in a 1xx including the
media streams it wishes to use for the call, and for each, list all
preconditions it supports as optional. Of course, the user is not
alerted at this time. The controller takes this offer and passes it
to user B (3). User B does not support preconditions, or does, but
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 17]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
is not interested in them. Therefore, when it answers the call, the
200 OK contains an answer without any preconditions listed (4). This
answer is passed to user A in the PRACK (6). At this point, user A
knows that there are no preconditions actually in use for the call,
and therefore, it can alert the user. When the call is answered,
user A sends a 200 OK to the controller (8) and the call is complete.
In the event that the offer generated by user A was not acceptable to
user B (because of non-overlapping codecs or media, for example),
user B would immediately reject the INVITE (message 3). The
controller would then CANCEL the request to user A. In this
situation, neither user A nor user B would have been alerted,
achieving the desired effect. It is interesting to note that this
property is achieved using preconditions even though it doesn't
matter what specific types of preconditions are supported by user A.
It is also entirely possible that user B does actually desire
preconditions. In that case, it might generate a 1xx of its own with
an answer containing preconditions. That answer would still be
passed to user A, and both parties would proceed with whatever
measures are necessary to meet the preconditions. Neither user would
be alerted until the preconditions were met.
In Section 9.1, the controller requested the use of preconditions to
achieve a specific goal. It is also possible that the controller
doesn't care (or perhaps doesn't even know) about preconditions, but
one of the participants in the call does care. A call flow for this
case is shown in Figure 11.
A Controller B
|(1) INVITE offer1 | |
|no media | |
|<---------------------| |
|(2) 183 answer1 | |
|no media | |
|--------------------->| |
|(3) PRACK | |
|<---------------------| |
|(4) 200 OK | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(5) INVITE no SDP |
| |--------------------->|
| |(6) 183 offer2 |
| |des=sendrecv |
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=none |
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 18]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
| |<---------------------|
|(7) UPDATE offer2' | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=none | |
|<---------------------| |
|(8) 200 UPDATE | |
|answer2' | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=none | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(9) PRACK answer2 |
| |des=sendrecv |
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=none |
| |--------------------->|
| |(10) 200 PRACK |
| |<---------------------|
|(11) reservation | |
|-------------------------------------------->|
|(12) reservation | |
|<--------------------------------------------|
|(13) UPDATE offer3 | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=recv | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(14) UPDATE offer3' |
| |des=sendrecv |
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=recv |
| |--------------------->|
| |(15) 200 UPDATE |
| |answer3' |
| |des=sendrecv |
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=send |
| |<---------------------|
|(16) 200 UPDATE | |
|answer3 | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=send | |
|<---------------------| |
| | |<ring>
| |(17) UPDATE offer4 |
| |des=sendrecv |
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 19]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=sendrecv |
| |<---------------------|
|(18) UPDATE offer4' | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=sendrecv | |
|<---------------------| |
|<ring> | |
|(19) 200 UPDATE | |
|answer4' | |
|des=sendrecv | |
|conf=recv | |
|cur=sendrecv | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(20) 200 UPDATE |
| |answer4 |
| |des=sendrecv |
| |conf=recv |
| |cur=sendrecv |
| |--------------------->|
|(21) 180 INVITE | |
|--------------------->| |
| |(22) 180 INVITE |
| |<---------------------|
|<answer> | |
|(23) 200 INVITE | |
|--------------------->| |
|(24) ACK | |
|<---------------------| |
| | |<answer>
| |(25) 200 INVITE |
| |<---------------------|
| |(26) ACK |
| |--------------------->|
Figure 11
The controller follows Flow IV; it has no specific requirements for
support of the preconditions specification [2]. Therefore, it sends
an INVITE (1) with SDP that contains no media lines. User A is
interested in supporting preconditions, and does not want to ring its
phone until resources are reserved. Since there are no media streams
in the INVITE, it can't reserve resources for media streams, and
therefore it can't ring the phone until they are conveyed in a
subsequent offer and then reserved. Therefore, it generates a 183
with the answer, and doesn't alert the user (2). The controller
PRACKs this (3) and A responds to the PRACK (4).
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 20]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
At this point, the controller attempts to bring B into the call. It
sends B an INVITE without SDP (5). B is interested in having
preconditions for this call. Therefore, it generates its offer in a
183 that contains the appropriate SDP attributes (6). The controller
passes this offer to A in an UPDATE request (7). The controller uses
UPDATE because the call has not been answered yet, and therefore, it
cannot use a re-INVITE. User A sees that its peer is capable of
supporting preconditions. Since it desires preconditions for the
call, it generates an answer in the 200 OK (8) to the UPDATE. This
answer, in turn, is passed to B in the PRACK for the provisional
response (9). Now, both sides perform resource reservation. User A
succeeds first, and passes an updated session description in an
UPDATE request (13). The controller simply passes this to A (after
the manipulation of the origin field, as required in Flow IV) in an
UPDATE (14), and the answer (15) is passed back to A (16). The same
flow happens, but from B to A, when B's reservation succeeds (17-20).
Since the preconditions have been met, both sides ring (21 and 22),
and then both answer (23 and 25), completing the call.
What is important about this flow is that the controller doesn't know
anything about preconditions. It merely passes the SDP back and
forth as needed. The trick is the usage of UPDATE and PRACK to pass
the SDP when needed. That determination is made entirely based on
the offer/answer rules described in [6] and [7], and is independent
of preconditions.
The first application of this capability we discuss is click-to-dial.
In this service, a user is browsing the web page of an e-commerce
site, and would like to speak to a customer service representative.
The user clicks on a link, and a call is placed to a customer service
representative. When the representative picks up, the phone on the
user's desk rings. When the user pick up, the customer service
representative is there, ready to talk to the user.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 21]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
Customer Service Controller User's Phone User's Browser
| |(1) HTTP POST | |
| |<--------------------------------------|
| |(2) HTTP 200 OK | |
| |-------------------------------------->|
|(3) INVITE offer1 | | |
|no media | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(4) 200 answer1 | | |
|no media | | |
|------------------>| | |
|(5) ACK | | |
|<------------------| | |
| |(6) INVITE no SDP | |
| |------------------>| |
| |(7) 200 OK offer2 | |
| |<------------------| |
|(8) INVITE offer2' | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(9) 200 answer2' | | |
|------------------>| | |
| |(10) ACK answer2 | |
| |------------------>| |
|(11) ACK | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(12) RTP | | |
|.......................................| |
Figure 12
The call flow for this service is given in Figure 12. It is
identical to that of Figure 4, with the exception that the service is
triggered through an HTTP POST request when the user clicks on the
link. Normally, this POST request would contain neither the number
of the user or of the customer service representative. The user's
number would typically be obtained by the web application from back-
end databases, since the user would have presumably logged into the
site, giving the server the needed context. The customer service
number would typically be obtained through provisioning. Thus, the
HTTP POST is actually providing the server nothing more than an
indication that a call is desired.
We note that this service can be provided through other mechanisms,
namely PINT [9]. However, there are numerous differences between the
way in which the service is provided by PINT, and the way in which it
is provided here:
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 22]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
o The PINT solution enables calls only between two PSTN endpoints.
The solution described here allows calls between PSTN phones
(through SIP enabled gateways) and native IP phones.
o When used for calls between two PSTN phones, the solution here may
result in a portion of the call being routed over the Internet.
In PINT, the call is always routed only over the PSTN. This may
result in better quality calls with the PINT solution, depending
on the codec in use and QoS capabilities of the network routing
the Internet portion of the call.
o The PINT solution requires extensions to SIP (PINT is an extension
to SIP), whereas the solution described here is done with baseline
SIP.
o The PINT solution allows the controller (acting as a PINT client)
to "step out" once the call is established. The solution
described here requires the controller to maintain call state for
the entire duration of the call.
The third party call control mechanism described here can also be
used to enable mid-call announcements. Consider a service for pre-
paid calling cards. Once the pre-paid call is established, the
system needs to set a timer to fire when they run out of minutes.
When this timer fires, we would like the user to hear an announcement
which tells them to enter a credit card to continue. Once they enter
the credit card info, more money is added to the pre-paid card, and
the user is reconnected to the destination party.
We consider here the usage of third party call control just for
playing the mid-call dialog to collect the credit card information.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 23]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
Pre-Paid User Controller Called Party Media Server
| |(1) INV SDP c=bh | |
| |------------------>| |
| |(2) 200 answer1 | |
| |<------------------| |
| |(3) ACK | |
| |------------------>| |
|(4) INV no SDP | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(5) 200 offer2 | | |
|------------------>| | |
| |(6) INV offer2 | |
| |-------------------------------------->|
| |(7) 200 answer2 | |
| |<--------------------------------------|
|(8) ACK answer2 | | |
|<------------------| | |
| |(9) ACK | |
| |-------------------------------------->|
|(10) RTP | | |
|...........................................................|
| |(11) BYE | |
| |-------------------------------------->|
| |(12) 200 OK | |
| |<--------------------------------------|
| |(13) INV no SDP | |
| |------------------>| |
| |(14) 200 offer3 | |
| |<------------------| |
|(15) INV offer3' | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(16) 200 answer3' | | |
|------------------>| | |
| |(17) ACK answer3' | |
| |------------------>| |
|(18) ACK | | |
|<------------------| | |
|(19) RTP | | |
|.......................................| |
Figure 13
We assume the call is set up so that the controller is in the call as
a B2BUA. When the timer fires, we wish to connect the caller to a
media server. The flow for this is shown in Figure 13. When the
timer expires, the controller places the called party with a
connection address of 0.0.0.0 (1). This effectively "disconnects"
the called party. The controller then sends an INVITE without SDP to
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 24]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
the pre-paid caller (4). The offer returned from the caller (5) is
used in an INVITE to the media server which will be collecting digits
(6). This is an instantiation of Flow I. This flow can only be used
here because the media server is an automata, and will answer the
INVITE immediately. If the controller was connecting the pre-paid
user with another end user, Flow III would need to be used. The
media server returns an immediate 200 OK (7) with an answer, which is
passed to the caller in an ACK (8). The result is that the media
server and the pre-paid caller have their media streams connected.
The media server plays an announcement, and prompts the user to enter
a credit card number. After collecting the number, the card number
is validated. The media server then passes the card number to the
controller (using some means outside the scope of this
specification), and then hangs up the call (11).
After hanging up with the media server, the controller reconnects the
user to the original called party. To do this, the controller sends
an INVITE without SDP to the called party (13). The 200 OK (14)
contains an offer, offer3. The controller modifies the SDP (as is
done in Flow III), and passes the offer in an INVITE to the pre-paid
user (15). The pre-paid user generates an answer in a 200 OK (16)
which the controller passes to user B in the ACK (17). At this
point, the caller and called party are reconnected.
Most of the work involved in supporting third party call control is
within the controller. A standard SIP UA should be controllable
using the mechanisms described here. However, third party call
control relies on a few features that might not be implemented. As
such, we RECOMMEND that implementors of user agent servers support
the following:
o Offers and answers that contain a connection line with an address
of 0.0.0.0.
o Re-INVITE requests that change the port to which media should be
sent
o Re-INVITEs that change the connection address
o Re-INVITEs that add a media stream
o Re-INVITEs that remove a media stream (setting its port to zero)
o Re-INVITEs that add a codec amongst the set in a media stream
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 25]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
o SDP Connection address of zero
o Initial INVITE requests with a connection address of zero
o Initial INVITE requests with no SDP
o Initial INVITE requests with SDP but no media lines
o Re-INVITEs with no SDP
o The UPDATE method [7]
o Reliability of provisional responses [6]
o Integration of resource management and SIP [2].
In most uses of SIP INVITE, whether or not a call is accepted is
based on a decision made by a human when presented information about
the call, such as the identity of the caller. In other cases,
automata answer the calls, and whether or not they do so may depend
on the particular application to which SIP is applied. For example,
if a caller makes a SIP call to a voice portal service, the call may
be rejected unless the caller has previously signed up (perhaps via a
web site). In other cases, call handling policies are made based on
automated scripts, such as those described by the Call Processing
Language [11]. Frequently, those decisions are also made based on
the identity of the caller.
These authorization mechanisms would be applied to normal first party
calls and third party calls, as these two are indistinguishable. As
a result, it is important for these authorization policies to
continue to operate correctly for third party calls. Of course,
third party calls introduce a new party - the one initiating the
third party call. Do the authorization policies apply based on the
identity of that third party, or do they apply based on the
participants in the call? Ideally, the participants would be able to
know the identities of both other parties, and have authorization
policies be based on those, as appropriate. However, this is not
possible using existing mechanisms. As a result, the next best thing
is for the INVITE requests to contain the identity of the third
party. Ultimately, this is the user who is requesting communication,
and it makes sense for call authorization policies to be based on
that identity.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 26]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
This requires, in turn, that the controller authenticate itself as
that third party. This can be challenging, and the appropriate
mechanism depends on the specific application scenario.
In one common scenario, the controller is acting on behalf of one of
the participants in the call. A typical example is click-to-dial,
where the controller and the customer service representative are run
by the same administrative domain. Indeed, for the purposes of
identification, the controller can legitimately claim to be the
customer service representative. In this scenario, it would be
appropriate for the INVITE to the end user to contain a From field
identifying the customer service rep, and authenticate the request
using S/MIME (see RFC 3261 [1], Section 23) signed by the key of the
customer service rep (which is held by the controller).
This requires the controller to actually have credentials with which
it can authenticate itself as the customer support representative.
In many other cases, the controller is representing one of the
participants, but does not possess their credentials. Unfortunately,
there are currently no standardized mechanisms that allow a user to
delegate credentials to the controller in a way that limits their
usage to specific third party call control operations. In the
absence of such a mechanisms, the best that can be done is to use the
display name in the From field to indicate the identity of the user
on whose behalf the call is being made. It is RECOMMENDED that the
display name be set to "[controller] on behalf of [user]", where user
and controller are textual identities of the user and controller,
respectively. In this case, the URI in the From field would identify
the controller.
In other situations, there is no real relationship between the
controller and the participants in the call. In these situations,
ideally the controller would have a means to assert that the call is
from a particular identity (which could be one of the participants,
or even a third party, depending on the application), and to validate
that assertion with a signature using the key of the controller.
With third party call control, the controller is actually one of the
participants as far as the SIP dialog is concerned. Therefore,
encryption and integrity of the SIP messages, as provided by S/MIME,
will occur between participants and the controller, rather than
directly between participants.
However, integrity, authenticity and confidentiality of the media
sessions can be provided through a controller. End-to-end media
security is based on the exchange of keying material within SDP [10].
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 27]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
The proper operation of these mechanisms with third party call
control depends on the controller behaving properly. So long as it
is not attempting to explicitly disable these mechanisms, the
protocols will properly operate between the participants, resulting
in a secure media session that even the controller cannot eavesdrop
or modify. Since third party call control is based on a model of
trust between the users and the controller, it is reasonable to
assume it is operating in a well-behaved manner. However, there is
no cryptographic means that can prevent the controller from
interfering with the initial exchanges of keying materials. As a
result, it is trivially possibly for the controller to insert itself
as an intermediary on the media exchange, if it should so desire.
[1] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:
Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.
[2] Camarillo, G., Ed., Marshall, W., Ed. and J. Rosenberg,
"Integration of Resource Management and Session Initiation
Protocol (SIP)", RFC 3312, October 2002.
[3] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[4] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model with
Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264, June 2002.
[5] Schulzrinne, H., Oran, D. and G. Camarillo, "The Reason Header
Field for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 3326,
December 2002.
[6] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Reliability of Provisional
Responses in Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 3262, June
2002.
[7] Rosenberg, J., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) UPDATE
Method", RFC 3311, October 2002.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 28]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
[8] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobson,
"RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", RFC
3550, July 2003.
[9] Petrack, S. and L. Conroy, "The PINT Service Protocol:
Extensions to SIP and SDP for IP Access to Telephone Call
Services", RFC 2848, June 2000.
[10] Andreasen, F., Baugher, M. and D. Wing, "SDP Security
Descriptions for Media Streams", Work in Progress, October 2003.
[11] Lennox, J., Wu, X. and H. Schulzrinne, "CPL: A Language for User
Control of Internet Telephony Services", Work in Progress,
August 2003.
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 29]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
Jonathan Rosenberg
dynamicsoft
600 Lanidex Plaza
Parsippany, NJ 07054
US
Phone: +1 973 952-5000
EMail: jdrosen@dynamicsoft.com
URI: http://www.jdrosen.net
Jon Peterson
Neustar
1800 Sutter Street
Suite 570
Concord, CA 94520
US
Phone: +1 925 363-8720
EMail: jon.peterson@neustar.biz
URI: http://www.neustar.biz
Henning Schulzrinne
Columbia University
M/S 0401
1214 Amsterdam Ave.
New York, NY 10027
US
EMail: schulzrinne@cs.columbia.edu
URI: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~hgs
Gonzalo Camarillo
Ericsson
Hirsalantie 11
Jorvas 02420
Finland
EMail: Gonzalo.Camarillo@ericsson.com
Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 30]
RFC 3725 SIP 3pcc April 2004
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Rosenberg, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 31]