CUSS K. Drage, Ed.
Internet-Draft Alcatel-Lucent
Intended status: Standards Track A. Johnston
Expires: August 18, 2014 Avaya
February 14, 2014
Interworking ISDN Call Control User Information with SIP
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-07
Abstract
The motivation and use cases for interworking and transporting ITU-T
DSS1 User-user information element data in SIP are described in the
"Problem Statement and Requirements for Transporting User to User
Call Control Information in SIP" document. As networks move to SIP
it is important that applications requiring this data can continue to
function in SIP networks as well as the ability to interwork with
this ISDN service for end-to-end transparency. This document defines
a usage (a new package) of the User-to-User header field to enable
interworking with this ISDN service.
This document covers the interworking with both public ISDN and
private ISDN capabilities, so the potential interworking with QSIG
will also be addressed.
The package is identified by a new value "isdn-uui" of the "purpose"
header field parameter.
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on August 18, 2014.
Copyright Notice
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Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
1. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3. Summary of the ISDN User-to-User Service . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3.1. The service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3.2. Impacts of the ISDN service on SIP operation . . . . . . . 5
4. Relation to SIP-T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. Transition away from ISDN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
6. ISDN Usage of the User-to-User Header Field . . . . . . . . . 7
7. UAC requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
8. UAS requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
9. UUI contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
10. Considerations for ISDN interworking gateways . . . . . . . . 11
11. Coding requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
12. Media Feature Tag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
13. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
14. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
15. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
16. Changes since previous versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
17. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
17.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
17.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
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1. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119
[RFC2119].
2. Overview
This document describes a usage of the User-to-User header field
defined in [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] to enable the transport of User to
User Information (UUI) in ISDN interworking scenarios using SIP
[RFC3261]. Specifically, this document discusses the interworking of
call control related ITU-T DSS1 User-user information element [Q931],
[Q957.1] and ITU-T Q.763 User-to-user information parameter [Q763]
data in SIP. UUI is widely used in the PSTN today in contact centers
and call centers which are transitioning away from ISDN to SIP.
This usage is not limited to scenarios where interworking will occur.
Rather it describes a usage where interworking is possible if
interworking is met. That does not preclude its usage directly
between two SIP terminals.
3. Summary of the ISDN User-to-User Service
3.1. The service
ISDN defines a number of related services. Firstly there is a user
signalling bearer service, which uses the information elements /
parameters in the signalling channel to carry the data, and does not
establish a related circuit-switched connection. For DSS1, this is
specified in ITU-T Recommendation Q.931 section 3.3 and section 7
[Q931]. It also defines a user-to-user signalling supplementary
service, which uses the information elements / parameters in the
signalling channel to carry additional data, but which is used in
conjunction with the establishment of a related circuit-switched
connection. This reuses the same information elements / parameters
as the user signalling bearer service, with the addition of other
signalling information, and for DSS1 this is specified in ITU-T
Recommendation Q.957.1 [Q957.1].
ISDN defines three variants of the user-to-user signalling
supplementary service as follows:
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UUS1: User-to-user information exchanged during the setup and
clearing phases of a call, by transporting User-to-user
information element within call control messages. This in itself
has two subvariants, UUS1 implicit and UUS1 explicit. UUS1
explicit uses additional supplementary service control information
to control the request and granting of the service, as in UUS2 and
UUS3. In UUS1 implicit, it is the presence of the user signalling
data itself that constitutes the request for the service. UUS1
explicit as a result also allows the requester to additionally
specify whether the parallel circuit-switched connection should
proceed if the UUS1 service cannot be provided (preferred or
required);
UUS2: User-to-user information exchanged from the sender's point of
view during call establishment, between the DSS1 ALERTING and DSS1
CONNECT messages, within DSS1 USER INFORMATION messages; and
UUS3: User-to-user information exchanged while a call is in the
Active state, within DSS1 USER INFORMATION messages.
The service is always requested by the calling user.
This document defines only the provision of the ISDN UUS1 implicit
supplementary service to interworking scenarios, this being the most
widely deployed and used of the various ISDN user-to-user services,
and indeed the one that matches the requirements specified in RFC
6567 [RFC6567].
The above come from the ISDN specifications defined for public
networks. There are a parallel set of ISDN specifications defined
for private networks (QSIG}. These specifications do not define a
UUS1 implicit supplementary service. However, implementation of such
a UUS1 implicit supplementary service for private networks can
readily be constructed in a proprietary fashion based on the
specifications for public networks, and evidence suggests that some
vendors have done so. On this basis, there is no reason why this
package cannot also be used to support interworking with such a
private network service, on the assumption that the constraints are
exactly the same as those for the public network.
The ISDN UUS1 service has the following additional characteristics as
to the data that can be transported:
The maximum number of octets of user information that can be
transported is 128 octets plus a protocol discriminator. It is
noted that some early ISDN implementations had a limitation of 32
octets, but it is understood that these are not currently
deployed. While this package does not prohibit longer data
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fields, the mechanism at any interworking point is to discard data
elements that are too long to handle. The handled length can
normally be assumed to be 128 octets.
The content of the user information octets is described by a
single octet protocol discriminator (see table 4-26 of ITU-T
Recommendation Q.931) [Q931]. That protocol descriminator may
describe the protocol used within the user data, the structure of
the user data, or leave it entirely open. Note that not all
values within the protocol discriminator necessarily make sense
for use in the user to user service, as the content is aligned
with the protocol discriminator that appears at the start of all
DSS1 messages (see table 4-1 of ITU-T Recommendation Q.931)
[Q931]. The protocol discriminator value has no impact on the
interworking capability.
Only a single user information can be transported in each message.
The ISDN service works without encryption or integrity protection.
The user trusts the intermediate network elements, and therefore
the operator of those elements, not to modify the data, and to
deliver all the data to the remote user. On a link by link basis,
message contents are protected at layer 2 by standard CRC
mechanisms - this allows loss on a link level basis to be
detected, but does not guard against fraudulent attacks on the
link itself. This does not prevent the use of additional
encryption or integrity protection within the UUI data itself,
although the limit on the size of the UUI data (protocol
discriminator plus 128 octets) will restrict this.
3.2. Impacts of the ISDN service on SIP operation
The ISDN service has the following impacts that need to be understood
within the SIP environment.
Call transfer: ISDN call transfer cancels all user-to-user
supplementary services. In the ISDN, if user-to-user data is
required after call transfer, then UUS3 has to be renegotiated,
which is not provided by this SIP extension. The impact of this
restriction on the SIP environment is that UUI header fields
cannot be exchanged in transactions clearing down the SIP dialog
after call transfer has occurred.
Conference: ISDN conferencing allows the user to still exchange
user-to-user data after the conference is created. As far as UUS1
is concerned, it is not permitted.
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The ISDN three-party supplementary service is similar in many ways
to conferencing, but is signalled using a different mechanism.
This means that on clearing, the controller using UUS1 implicit
does have the choice of sending data to either or both remote
users. Because SIP conferencing cannot completely emulate the
ISDN three-party supplementary service at the served user, UUS1
implicit is not possible.
Diversion: When ISDN diversion occurs, any UUS1 user-to-user data is
sent to the forwarded-to-user (assuming that the call meets
requirements for providing the service - this is impacted by the
explicit service only). If the type of diversion is such that the
call is also delivered to the forwarding user, they will also
receive any UUS1 user-to-user data.
4. Relation to SIP-T
A method of transport of ISDN UUI is to use SIP-T [RFC3372] and
transport the UUI information end-to-end, as part of an ISUP message
or QSIG message) as a MIME body. If the SIP-T method of
encapsulation of ISDN instead of interworking is used, this is a
reasonable mechanism and does not require any extensions to existing
SIP-T. However, if true ISDN interworking is being done, this
approach is not reasonable. Instead, the better approach is to
interwork the ISDN UUI using the native SIP UUI transport mechanism,
the User-to-User header field. The rest of this document describes
this approach.
5. Transition away from ISDN
This interworking usage of the SIP UUI mechanism will likely begin
with one User Agent being an ISDN gateway while the other User Agent
is a native SIP endpoint. As networks transition away from ISDN, it
is possible that both User Agents could become native SIP endpoints.
In this case, there is an opportunity to transition away from this
ISDN usage to a more general usage of [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui].
The SIP UUI mechanism provides a way to achieve this transition. As
an endpoint moves from being an ISDN gateway to a native SIP
endpoint, and a package for some form of enhanced UUI has been
standardized, the endpoint can carry the UUI data both as ISDN and as
some other package in parallel, and in the same messages or in
different messages depending on the needs of the application. This
will permit the other endpoint to use the UUI according to the ISDN
package if it is an ISDN gateway or the enhanced package if it is a
native SIP endpoint.
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6. ISDN Usage of the User-to-User Header Field
This document defines the package for the ISDN interworking of UUI
which is to interoperate with ISDN User to User Signaling (UUS), a
supplementary service in which the user is able to send/receive a
limited amount of information to/from another ISDN user over the
signalling channel in association with a call to the other ISDN user.
Two examples of ISDN UUI with redirection (transfer and diversion)
are defined in [ANSII] and [ETSI].
One objective of the design of this package has been to keep the
functionality at the interworking point as simple as possible.
Therefore responsibility for respecting the limits has been
transferred to the end UA. If an interworking point is reached, and
the limitations are not met, then the UUI data will not be
transferred, although the SIP request will otherwise be interworked.
As a result there is also only one encoding value specified.
The general principals of this package of the UUI mechanism are
therefore as follows:
That the sending application is expected to limit their sending
requirements to the subset provided by the ISDN UUI service.
That the SIP UA will not allow the reception of more that one
User-to-User header field relating to the "isdn-uui" package in
the same SIP request or response, and will only allow it in a
request or response of the appropriate method (INVITE or BYE).
What happens to User-to-User header fields relating to other
packages is outside the scope of this document.
That an interworking point trying to interwork UUI data that is
too long will discard the UUI data, but proceed with the
interworking. There is no notification of such discard back to
the sending user. If the SIP user knows that it is interworking
with the ISDN, then the UUI application at the SIP endpoint should
limit its communication to 128 octet packets plus the protocol
discriminator, in the knowledge that discard will occur if it does
not. The UUI application at the SIP endpoint has complete control
over what occurs. It should be noted that this was exactly the
envisaged operation when early ISDN implementations that only
supported 32 octets interworked with those supporting 128 octets.
It also corresponds to the interworking with ISDNs that do not
support the supplementary service at all, as discard will occur in
these circumstances as well. Note that failure to include the
user-user data into the ISDN SETUP message (when discard occurs)
will result in the service being unavailable for the remainder of
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the call when UUS1 implicit operation is used.
7. UAC requirements
The UAC MUST meet the requirements of [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] in
addition to the requirements defined in this document.
The UAC MUST only use this package of the UUI mechanism extension in
association with the initial INVITE method and the BYE method
relating to an INVITE dialog. Usage on transactions associated with
any other type of dialog, or on methods not associated with a dialog
is precluded. Usage on other methods within the INVITE dialog, and
on re-INVITE transactions with the INVITE dialog, is also precluded.
If the UAC wishes to use or permit the sending of UUI data at any
point in the dialog, the UAC MUST include in the INVITE request for
that dialog a User-to-User header field. The UAC SHOULD set the
"purpose" header field parameter to "isdn-uui". Non-inclusion of the
"purpose" header field parameter is permitted, but this is primarily
to allow earlier implementations to support this package. This
initial header field constitutes the implicit request to use the UUI
service, and is therefore included even when there is no data except
the protocol discriminator octet to send at that point in time.
The UAC MUST NOT include the User-to-User header field with a
"purpose" header field parameter set to "isdn-uui", or with no
"purpose" header field parameter", in any message of an INVITE dialog
if the original INVITE request did not include the User-to-User
header field, either with a "purpose" header field parameter set to
"isdn-uui", or with no "purpose" header field parameter included.
When sending UUI for the ISDN package, if the "purpose" header field
is included, the UAC MUST set the User-to-User "purpose" header field
parameter to "isdn-uui". The UAC MUST NOT include more than one
User-to-User header field for this package in any SIP request or
response.
When receiving UUI, when multiple User-to-User header fields are
received in the same response with the "purpose" header field
parameter to "isdn-uui", or with no "purpose" header field parameter,
or with some combination of these, the UAS MUST discard all these
header fields. There are no mechanisms for determining which was the
intended data packet so all are discarded.
The application designer will need to take into account the ISDN
service restrictions; failure to do so can result in information
being discarded at any interworking point with the ISDN. This
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document makes no further normative requirements based on those
constraints, because those constraints may vary from one ISDN to
another. It is reasonable to expect that a limitation of 128 octets
(plus a protocol discriminator) can be imposed by the ISDN, and
therefore UUI data longer than this will never reach the destination
if such interworking occurs. Note that the 128 octet limit (plus a
protocol discriminator) applies before the encoding (or after the
decoding) using the "hex" encoding. The "hex" encoding is defined in
[I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui].
[I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] defines a "uui" option tag for use with the
UUI mechanism extension. Because for the ISDN UUI service, the
service is service 1 implicit, the inclusion of the "uui" option tag
in a Supported header field conveys no additional information over
and above the presence, in the INVITE request, of the User-to-User
header field with the "purpose" header field parameter set to "isdn-
uui". While there is no harm in including the "uui" option tag, and
strictly it should be included if the extension is supported, it
performs no function. The presence of the "uui" option tag in the
Require header field of an INVITE request will cause the request to
fail if it reaches a UAS or ISDN interworking gateway that does not
support this extension; such a usage is not precluded although it
does not form part of the package.
8. UAS requirements
The UAS MUST meet the requirements of [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] in
addition to the requirements defined in this document.
The UAS MUST only use this package of the UUI mechanism extension in
association with the initial INVITE method and the BYE method
relating to an INVITE dialog. Usage on transactions associated with
any other type of dialog, or on methods not associated with a dialog
is precluded. Usage on other methods within the INVITE dialog, and
on re-INVITE transactions with the INVITE dialog, is also precluded.
The UAS MUST NOT include the User-to-User header field with a
"purpose" header field parameter set to "isdn-uui", or with no
"purpose" header field parameter", in any message of an INVITE dialog
if the original INVITE request did not include the User-to-User
header field, either with a "purpose" header field parameter set to
"isdn-uui", or with no "purpose" header field parameter included.
The UAS MAY include the User-to-User header field in responses to the
initial INVITE request, or the BYE requests or responses for the
dialog, only where the original INVITE request included a User-to-
User header field with the "purpose" header field parameter set to
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"isdn-uui", or where no "purpose" header field parameter was
included. When sending UUI for the ISDN package, the UAS SHOULD set
the User-to-User "purpose" header field parameter to "isdn-uui".
Non-inclusion of the "purpose" header field parameter is permitted,
but this is primarily to allow earlier implementations to support
this package.
When sending UUI for the ISDN package, if the "purpose" header field
is included, the UAS MUST set the User-to-User "purpose" header field
parameter to "isdn-uui". The UAS MUST NOT include more than one
User-to-User header field for this package in any SIP request or
response.
The "isdn-interwork" value for purpose parameter was used in
Internet-Drafts that have led to the publication of the present
document. Although these documents had no other status than "work in
progress", this value is implemented by some vendors. While not
defined by this document, implementations could find it useful for
interoperability purposes to support parsing and interpreting "isdn-
interwork" the same way as "isdn-uui" when receiving messages.
Where the UAS is acting as a redirect server, the UAS MUST NOT
include the User-to-User header field in the header URI parameter in
a 3xx response to an incoming request.
When receiving UUI, when a User-to-User header field is received in a
request that is not from the originating user with the "purpose"
header field parameter to "isdn-uui", or with no "purpose" header
field parameter, the UAS MUST discard this header field.
When receiving UUI, when multiple User-to-User header fields are
received from the originating user in the same request with the
"purpose" header field parameter to "isdn-uui", or with no "purpose"
header field parameter, or with some combination of these, the UAS
MUST discard all these header fields. There are no mechanisms for
determining which was the intended data packet so all are discarded.
9. UUI contents
These requirements apply when the "purpose" header field parameter is
set to "isdn-uui", or with no "purpose" header field parameter.
Processing for User-to-User header fields sent or received with
values other than this value are outside the scope of this document,
and the appropriate package document for that value applies.
The default and only content defined for this package is "isdn-uui".
When sending UUI, the sending SIP entity MAY, but need not, include a
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"content" header field with a value set to "isdn-uui". A receiving
SIP entity MUST ignore a received User-to-User header field if the
"content" header field parameter is present and the value is some
other value than "isdn-uui".
The default and only encoding defined for this package is "hex".
When sending UUI, the sending SIP entity MAY, but need not, include
an "encoding" header field with a value set to "hex". A receiving
SIP entity MUST ignore a received User-to-User header field if the
"encoding" header field parameter is present and the value is some
other value that "hex".
When sending UUI, the sending application MUST include a protocol
discriminator octet, conforming to table 4-26 of ITU-T Recommendation
Q.931 [Q931] as the first octet of the UUI data. It is up to the
receiving application what it does with this value. This document
places no other normative requirement on the use of the protocol
discriminator; it is required at interworking gateways to allow
mapping into the appropriate fields in the ISDN protocols, but
otherwise the usage is entirely up to the application, and outside
the scope of this document. Valid values are identified and
documented by ITU-T, and there is no IANA registry for these values.
10. Considerations for ISDN interworking gateways
ISDN interworking gateways MUST support the requirements defined for
UAS and UAC operation.
ISDN interworking gateways MUST support only the "isdn-uui" package
on dialogs that are interworked.
ISDN interworking gateways will take octet structured data from the
ISDN side and encode it using the "hex" encoding scheme defined in
[I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] for inclusion as the uui-data in the User-to-
User header field. In the reverse direction, it will take valid uui-
data according to the "hex" encoding scheme, and decode it to octet
structured data for sending to the ISDN side.
When mapping data content from the ISDN to the SIP signalling, or
from SIP signalling to the ISDN, the gateway needs to assume that all
content is octet structured binary, irrespective of the value of the
received protocol discriminator. There are no requirements in the
ISDN to ensure that the content matches the value of the protocol
discriminator, and it is for the application usage to sort out any
discrepancy. The same applies to the ISDN protocol discrimination
defined table 4-26 of ITU-T Recommendation Q.931 [Q931] as the first
octet of the UUI data; the interworking gateway will not perform any
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additional checking of this value.
[I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui] defines a "uui" option tag for use with the
UUI mechanism extension. The option tag is not interworked at an
ISDN interworking gateway. The ISDN interworking gateways MUST NOT
take the omission of the "uui" option tag in a received INVITE
request to indicate that interworking of a received header field is
not to be performed.
11. Coding requirements
This document defines "isdn-uui" as a new value of the User-to-User
"purpose" header field parameter. The following ABNF adds to the
production in [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui]
pkg-param-value =/ "isdn-uui"
This document defines "isdn-uui" as a new value of the User-to-User
"content" header field parameter. A content value of "isdn-uui"
indicates that the contents have a first octet that is a protocol
discriminator (see table 4-26 of ITU-T Recommendation Q.931) [Q931]
followed by uui-data that can be subject to a length limitation
(before encoding or after decoding) that is generally 128 octets.
The following ABNF adds to the production in [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui]
cont-param-value =/ "isdn-uui"
12. Media Feature Tag
This document defines a new media feature tag "sip.uui-isdn". This
feature tag indicates that this UUI package is supported by the
sender, and its usage is entirely in accordance with RFC 3840
[RFC3840]. This document makes no additional provisions for the use
of this feature tag.
13. IANA Considerations
This document adds the following row to the "UUI packages" sub-
registry of the SIP parameter registry:
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Value: isdn-uui
Description: The associated application is being used with
constraints suitable for interworking with the ISDN user-to-user
service, and therefore can be interworked at ISDN gateways.
Reference: RFCXXXX
Contact:
This document adds the following row to the "UUI content" subregistry
of the SIP parameter registry:
Value: isdn-uui
Description: The associated contents conforms to the content
associated with the ISDN user-to-user service. In the presence of
the "purpose" header field parameter set to "isdn-uui" (or the
absence of any "purpose" header field parameter) this is the
default meaning and therefore need not be included in this case.
Reference: RFCXXXX
Contact:
This document defines the following media feature tag which is added
to the features.sip-tree of the Media Feature tags registry:
Media feature-tag name: sip.uui-isdn
ASN.1 Identifier: 1.3.6.1.8.4.x
Summary of the media feature indicated by this tag: This media
feature-tag when used in a Contact header field of a SIP request
or a SIP response indicates that the entity sending the SIP
message supports the UUI package "uui-isdn".
Values appropriate for use with this feature-tag: none
Examples of typical use: Indicating that a mobile phone supports
SRVCC for calls in alerting phase.
Related standards or documents: RFCXXXX
Security Considerations: Security considerations for this media
feature-tag are discussed in section 11.1 of RFC 3840 [RFC3840]
Editor's Note: [RFCXXXX] should be replaced with the designation of
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this document.
14. Security Considerations
This document contains no specific requirements in regard to security
over and above those specified in [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui]. The
overlying use case will define the security measures required. The
underlying user-to-user extension provides a number of tools that can
meet certain security requirements. As a level of guidance, data
that is used to assist in selecting which SIP UA should respond to
the call would not be expected to carry any higher level of security
than a media feature tag. Information that might otherwise reveal
private information about an individual, or where a level of
authenticity needs to be guaranteed, may need a higher level of
protection, and may indeed not be suitable for this package,
particularly taking into account the statement in the following
paragraph.
As this capability is defined to interwork with the ISDN, if the ISDN
forms part of the route, any usage needs to assume that the security
level of the ISDN is the highest level of security available. As the
ISDN security is itself not definable on an end-to-end basis, this
can be an unknown quantity. This is because ISDN security exists on
a hop-by-hop basis, and is only as secure as the least secure
component. This can be high in some places (e.g. it can require
physical access to a secure building) and in other places it can be
low (e.g. the point where an ISDN access enters a building). If this
level of security is not sufficient, then either a different user-to-
user package, or indeed, a different method of data transfer, needs
to be selected by the application user.
15. Acknowledgements
Joanne McMillen was a major contributor and co-author of earlier
versions of this document.
Thanks to Spencer Dawkins, Vijay Gurbani, and Laura Liess for their
review of earlier versions of this document. The authors wish to
thank Francois Audet, Denis Alexeitsev, Paul Kyzivat, Cullen
Jennings, Mahalingam Mani and Celine Serrut-Valette for their
comments.
16. Changes since previous versions
Note to RFC editor: This section is to be deleted before final
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publication.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-07 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-06 version.
In the UAS requirements section, a new requirement has been added
to set the purpose parameter to "uui-isdn" if it is included.
This matches an equivalent requirement for the UAC.
In the UAS requirements section, two instances of UAC have been
corrected to UAS.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-06 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-05 version.
A new paragraph of informative material has been added in section
8 relating to older implementations generating "ISDNinterwork" as
a purpose value.
A number of editorial changes have been made.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-05 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-04 version.
ABNF provided for definition of values of package and content to
correspond to ABNF in current version of [I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui]
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-04 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-03 version.
Change of the "package" header field parameter back to the
"purpose" header field parameter in alignment with change in
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui.
Identification of the package name in the abstract.
Minor change to IANA registration of "content" header field
parameter value to align with main text such that absence of
"package" header field parameter and absence of "content" header
field parameter implies this package and therefore this content,
as a default.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-03 version from the
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draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-02 version.
Clarification added that the default content is "isdn-uui".
Clarification added that the default encoding is "hex".
Changeout of "payload" terminology to "UUI data".
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-02 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-01 version.
The inclusion of the "package" header field parameter has be
downgraded to "RECOMMENDED", with the purpose stated as being for
interworking. Changes have been made to the procedures at the
receiving side to allow for the non-inclusion of the "package"
header field parameter. The effect of this is that the absence of
the "package" header field parameter means by default the use of
the "uui-isdn" package.
Clarification that the package is not to be used on re-INVITE
transactions or on other transations within an INVITE dialog.
Further clarification on using this package in conjunction with
other packages.
Closure of the remaining open issue relating to use of UUS1 in
conjunction with the ISDN conference service - UUS1 is not
possible after the conference is created.
A number of editorial changes have been made.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-01 version from the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-00 version.
QSIG does not define a UUS service. As such changes are made to
indicate that it is possible to support a proprietary service on
QSIG based on the public ISDN standards, and interworking with
such proprietary versions is supported. The associated
contributors note regarding interactions with other QSIG services
has therefore been removed with this amendment.
Added additional paragraph above the objectives of the
interworking design.
Made clear that the 128 octets apply before encoding in "hex".
Reference added to the generic UUI document for the ecoding of
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"hex".
Indicated that it is the "content" header field parameter set to
"isdn-uui" that defines the structure of the uui-data, with the
first octet being a protocol discriminator and the remaining
octets potentially being limited to 128 octets.
Aligned the IANA registration section with the registries created
by the generic UUI document.
Added reference to the generic UUI document to the security
considerations section.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-00 version from the
draft-drage-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-01 version.
Removed overburdening of the word "application". Changed the name
of the "app" header field parameter in the mechanism draft to
"package" header field parameter. This had a consequential impact
on the ISDN document. The word "application" is now solely
reserved for the name of the functionality that passes the UUI to
the SIP functionality to send, and to which the UUI is delivered
on receipt by the SIP functionality. As well as the change of the
name of the header field parameter, this resulted in a number of
instances of the word "application" becoming "package". A couple
of instances relating to the coding of the "content" header field
parameter have become "SIP entity".
Section 5 needed substantial rewording as it no longer applied in
this manner. Modified the text to indicate that if one wants to
use an enhanced UUI where both endpoints are SIP, but still work
with the ISDN, then one will have to same information using two
different packages, one the ISDN one, and the other some enhanced
package.
In section 8, a couple of requirements relating to the "content"
header field parameter really related to the "package" header
field parameter (formerly "app" header field parameter). These
are corrected.
Updated references from "draft-johnston-cuss-sip-uui" to
"draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui".
Made clear throughout the document that the UUI payload is a
protocol discriminator plus 128 octets of data.
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Made clearer that it is the initial INVITE request and responses
and the BYE request and responses only that carry the information
in this package.
Made clear that there are no normative requirements on the
protocol discriminator. In particular text is added to the end of
section 9.
Removed the following text from section 7, as it is a duplicate of
the text in section 9:
" When sending UUI, the sending application MUST include a
protocol discriminator octet, conforming to table 4-26 of ITU-T
Recommendation Q.931 [Q931] as the first octet of the payload
information."
Defined a media feature tag specific for the package. It has been
proposed to do this for all packages. "sip.uui-isdn" has been
added.
Corrected the short title for the draft.
Changes since made in the creation of the
draft-drage-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-01 version from the
draft-drage-cuss-sip-uui-isdn-00 version.
Closure of a number of open issues identified in the -00 version
and the creation of appropriate procedures for the UAC, the UAS,
and the ISDN interworking gateway.
17. References
17.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
June 2002.
[RFC3372] Vemuri, A. and J. Peterson, "Session Initiation Protocol
for Telephones (SIP-T): Context and Architectures",
BCP 63, RFC 3372, September 2002.
[RFC3840] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat,
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"Indicating User Agent Capabilities in the Session
Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 3840, August 2004.
[I-D.ietf-cuss-sip-uui]
Johnston, A. and J. Rafferty, "A Mechanism for
Transporting User to User Call Control Information in
SIP", draft-ietf-cuss-sip-uui-12 (work in progress),
January 2014.
[Q931] "ITU-T Recommendation Q.931: Digital subscriber Signalling
System No. 1 - Network layer; ISDN user-network interface
layer 3 specification for basic call control",
http://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-Q.931-199805-I/en .
17.2. Informative References
[RFC6567] Johnston, A. and L. Liess, "Problem Statement and
Requirements for Transporting User-to-User Call Control
Information in SIP", RFC 6567, April 2012.
[Q957.1] "ITU-T Recommendation Q.957.1: Digital subscriber
Signalling System No. 1 - Stage 3 description for
supplementary services using DSS 1; Stage 3 description
for additional information transfer supplementary services
using DSS 1: User-to-User Signalling (UUS)",
http://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-Q.957.1-199607-I .
[Q763] "ITU-T Q.763 Signaling System No. 7 - ISDN user part
formats and codes",
http://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-Q.931-199805-I/en .
[ANSII] "ANSI T1.643-1995, Telecommunications-Integrated Services
Digital Network (ISDN)-Explicit Call Transfer
Supplementary Service".
[ETSI] "ETSI ETS 300 207-1 Ed.1 (1994), Integrated Services
Digital Network (ISDN); Diversion supplementary
services".
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Authors' Addresses
Keith Drage (editor)
Alcatel-Lucent
Quadrant, Stonehill Green, Westlea
Swindon
UK
Email: keith.drage@alcatel-lucent.com
Alan Johnston
Avaya
St. Louis, MO 63124
United States
Email: alan.b.johnston@gmail.com
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