TOC 
BLISSA. Johnston, Ed.
Internet-DraftAvaya
Expires: May 7, 2009M. Soroushnejad
 V. Venkataramanan
 Sylantro Systems Corp
 November 03, 2008


Shared Appearances of a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Address of Record (AOR)
draft-ietf-bliss-shared-appearances-01

Status of this Memo

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Abstract

This document describes the requirements and implementation of a group telephony feature commonly known as Bridged Line Appearance (BLA) or Multiple Line Appearance (MLA), or Shared Call/Line Appearance (SCA). When implemented using the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), it is referred to as Shared Appearances (SA) of an Address of Record (AOR) since SIP does not have the concept of lines. This feature is commonly offered in IP Centrex services and IP-PBX offerings and is likely to be implemented on SIP IP telephones and SIP feature servers used in a business environment. This document lists requirements and compares implementation options for this feature. Extensions to the SIP dialog event package are proposed.



Table of Contents

1.  Introduction
2.  Conventions used in this document
3.  Usage Scenarios
    3.1.  Executive/Assistant Arrangement
    3.2.  Call Group
    3.3.  Single Line Extension
4.  Requirements
5.  Normative Description
    5.1.  Implementation
    5.2.  Shared Appearance Dialog Package Extensions
        5.2.1.  The <appearance> element
        5.2.2.  The <exclusive> element
        5.2.3.  The <joined-dialog> element
        5.2.4.  The <replaced-dialog> element
    5.3.  Shared Appearance User Agents
    5.4.  Appearance Agent
6.  XML Schema Definition
7.  User Interface Considerations
    7.1.  Appearance Number Rendering
        7.1.1.  Single Appearance UAs
        7.1.2.  Dual Appearance UAs
        7.1.3.  Shared Appearance UAs with Fixed Appearance Number
        7.1.4.  Shared Appearance UAs with Variable Appearance Number
    7.2.  Call State Rendering
8.  Interop with non-Shared Appearance UAs
    8.1.  Appearance Assignment
    8.2.  Appearance Release
    8.3.  UAs Supporting Dialog Events but Not Shared Appearance
9.  Provisioning Considerations
10.  Example Message Flows
    10.1.  Registration and Subscription
    10.2.  Appearance Selection for Incoming Call
    10.3.  Outgoing Call with Without Appearance Pre-Selection
    10.4.  Outgoing Call with Appearance Selection
    10.5.  Outgoing Call without using an Appearance Number
    10.6.  Appearance Release
    10.7.  Appearance Pickup
    10.8.  Calls between UAs within the Group
    10.9.  Consultation Hold with Appearances
    10.10.  Joining or Bridging an Appearance
    10.11.  Appearance Allocation - Loss of Appearance
    10.12.  Appearance Selection Contention Race Condition
11.  IANA Considerations
    11.1.  SIP Event Package Parameter: shared
    11.2.  URN Sub-Namespace Registration: sa-dialog-info
    11.3.  XML Schema Registration
12.  Appendix A - Incoming Appearance Assignment
13.  Appendix B - Implementation Options Discussion
    13.1.  Appearance Implementation Options
        13.1.1.  URI parameter Approach
        13.1.2.  Dialog Package Parameter
        13.1.3.  Appearance Selections Mechanisms
    13.2.  Comparison
        13.2.1.  Comparison of Appearance Selection Methods
14.  Acknowledgements
15.  Security Considerations
16.  Informative References
§  Authors' Addresses
§  Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements




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1.  Introduction

The feature and functionality requirements for SIP user agents (UAs) supporting business telephony applications differ greatly from basic SIP user agents, both in terms of services and end user experience. In addition to basic SIP support [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.), many of the services in a business environment require the support for SIP extensions such as REFER [RFC3515] (Sparks, R., “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer Method,” April 2003.), SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY primitives [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.), PUBLISH [RFC3903] (Niemi, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Event State Publication,” October 2004.), the SIP Replaces [RFC3891] (Mahy, R., Biggs, B., and R. Dean, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Replaces" Header,” September 2004.), and Join [RFC3911] (Mahy, R. and D. Petrie, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Join" Header,” October 2004.), header fields, etc. Many of the popular business services have been documented in the SIP Service Examples [I‑D.ietf‑sipping‑service‑examples] (Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and K. Summers, “Session Initiation Protocol Service Examples,” July 2008.).

This specification details a method for implementing a group telephony feature known in telephony as Bridged Line Appearance (BLA) or Multiple Line Appearances (MLA), one of the more popular advanced features expected of SIP IP telephony devices in a business environment. Other names for this feature include Shared Call/Line Appearance (SCA), Shared Call Status and Multiple Call Appearance (MCA). A variant of this feature is known as Single Line Extension.

This document looks at how this feature can be implemented using standard SIP [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) in conjunction with [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) and [RFC3903] (Niemi, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Event State Publication,” October 2004.) for exchanging status among user agents, and the SIP dialog state event package [RFC4235] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and R. Mahy, “An INVITE-Initiated Dialog Event Package for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” November 2005.) to exchange dialog state information to achieve the same. Different approaches will be discussed including the use of URI parameters, feature tags, and dialog package extensions along with the strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches.

A call flow for Single Line Extension was formerly included in the SIP Service Examples [I‑D.ietf‑sipping‑service‑examples] (Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and K. Summers, “Session Initiation Protocol Service Examples,” July 2008.). However, the attempt to implement using standard SIP primitives ultimately failed, leading to its removal from that document. This document defines SIP extensions to implement this service.

In traditional telephony, the line is physical. A common scenario in telephony is for a number of business telephones to share a single or a small number of lines. The sharing or appearance of these lines between a number of phones is what gives this feature its. A common scenario in SIP is for a number of business telephones to share a single or a small number of Address of Record (AOR) URIs. In addition, an AOR can have multiple appearances on a single UA in terms of the user interface. The appearance number relates to the user interface for the telephone - typically each appearance or an AOR has a visual display (lamp that can change color or blink) and a button (used to select the appearance). The telephony concept of line appearance is still relevant to SIP due to the user interface considerations. It is important to keep the appearance number construct because:

  1. Human users are used to the concept and will expect it in replacement systems (e.g. an overhead page announcement says "Joe pickup line 3").
  2. It is a useful structure for user interface representation.

In this document, we will use the term "appearance" rather than "line appearance" since SIP does not have the concept of lines. Note that this does not mean that a conventional telephony user interface (lamps and buttons) must be used - implementations may use another metaphor as long as the appearance number is readily apparent to the user. Each AOR has a separate appearance numbering space. As a result, a given UA user interface may have multiple occurrences of the same appearance number, but they will be for different AORs.



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2.  Conventions used in this document

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 RFC-2119 [RFC2119] (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.) and indicate requirement levels for compliant mechanisms.



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3.  Usage Scenarios

The following examples are common applications of the Shared Appearances feature and are mentioned here as informative use cases. All these example usages can be supported by the Shared Appearances feature described in this document. The differences relate to the user interface considerations of the device.



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3.1.  Executive/Assistant Arrangement

The appearances on the executive's UA also appear on the assistant's UA. The assistant may answer incoming calls to the executive and then place the call on hold for the executive to pick up. The assistant can always see the state of all calls on the executive's UA. An assistant can make outgoing calls using the identity of either the executive or their own.



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3.2.  Call Group

Users with similar business needs or tasks can be assigned to specific groups and share the line appearances of each other on each others SIP telephony devices. For example, an IT department staff of five might answer a help line which has three appearances on each phone in the IT work area. A call answered on one phone can be put on hold and picked up on another phone. A shout or an IM to another staff member can result in them taking over a call on a particular appearance. Another phone can request to be added to an appearance resulting in a conference call.



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3.3.  Single Line Extension

In this scenario, incoming calls are offered to a group of UAs. When one answers, the other UAs are informed. If another UA in the group selects the line (i.e. goes off hook), it is immediately bridged or joined in with the call. This mimics the way residential telephone extensions usually operate.



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4.  Requirements

The basic requirements of the shared appearance feature can be summarized as follows:

REQ-1 Incoming calls to the AOR must be offered to a group of UAs and can be answered by any of them.

REQ-2 Each UA in the group must be able to learn the call status of the others in the group for the purpose of rendering this information to the user.

REQ-3 Calls can be joined (also called bridged or conferenced together) or can be picked up (taken) by another UA in the group in a secure way.

REQ-4 The mechanism should require the minimal amount of configuration. UAs registering against the group AOR should be able to learn about each other and join the appearance group.

REQ-5 The mechanism must scale for large numbers of appearances, n, and large numbers of UAs, N, without introducing excessive messaging traffic.

REQ-6 Each call or session (incoming or outgoing) must be assigned a common "appearance" number from a managed pool administered for the AOR group. Once the session has terminated, the appearance number is released back into the pool and can be reused by another incoming or outgoing session.

REQ-7 Each UA in the group must be able to learn the appearance status of the the group.

REQ-8 There must be mechanisms to resolve appearance contention among the UAs in the group.

REQ-9 The mechanism must allow all UAs receiving an incoming session request to select the same appearance number at the time of alerting.

REQ-10 The mechanism must have a way of reconstructing appearance state after an outage that does not result in excessive traffic and processing.

REQ-11 The mechanism must have backwards compatibility such that a UA which is unaware of the feature can still register against the group AOR and make and receive calls.

REQ-12 The mechanism must not allow UAs outside the group to select or manipulate appearance numbers.

REQ-13 For privacy reasons, there must be a mechanism so that appearance information is not leaked outside the group of UAs. (e.g. "So who do you have on line 1?")

REQ-14 The mechanism must support a way for UAs to request exclusivity on a line appearance. Exclusivity means that the UA requesting it desires to have a private conversation with the external party and other UAs must not be allowed to be joined or taken. Exclusivity may be requested at the start of an incoming or outgoing session or during the session. An exclusivity request may be accepted or rejected by the entity providing the shared appearance service. Therefore, the mechanism must provide a way of communicating the result back to the requester UA.

REQ-15 The mechanism should support a way for a UA to select a particular appearance number for outgoing requests prior to sending the actual request. This is often called seizure.

REQ-16 The mechanism should support a way for a UA to select a particular appearance number and also send the request at the same time. This is needed when a ringdown feature is combined with shared appearances - in this case, seizing the line is the same thing as dialing.

OPEN ISSUE: This requirement is no longer supported by the proposed solution. Is this OK?



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5.  Normative Description

This section normatively describes the shared appearance feature extensions. For a discussion of various approaches to implement this feature, see Appendix B.



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5.1.  Implementation

Many of the requirements for this service can be met using standard SIP mechanisms such as:

- A SIP Forking Proxy and Registrar/Location Service meets REQ-1.

- The SIP Dialog Package meets REQ-2.

- The SIP Replaces and Join header fields meets REQ-3.

- The SIP Registration Package meets REQ-4.

- The use of a State Agent for the Dialog Package meets REQ-5.

REQ-6 suggests the need for an entity which manages the appearance resource. Just as conferencing systems commonly have a single point of control, known as a focus, a Shared Appearance group has a single point of control of the appearance shared resource. This is defined as an Appearance Agent for a group. While an Appearance Agent can be part of a centralized server, it could also be co-resident in a member User Agent who has taken on this functionality for a group. The Appearance Agent learns the group state either dialog state publications from members.

While the appearance resource could be managed co-operatively by a group of UAs without any central control, this is not discussed in this draft, but instead is left as a research project for future standardization. It is also possible that the Appearance Agent logic could be distributed in all UAs in the group. For example, rules that govern assigning appearance numbers for incoming requests (e.g. lowest available appearance number) and rules for contention handling (e.g. when two UAs request the use of the same appearance number, hash dialog identifiers and compare with the lowest hash winning) would need to be defined and implemented.

Figure 1 illustrates the SIP components involved in supporting these common requirements of the Shared Appearance using standard SIP messages including REGISTER, INVITE, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, and PUBLISH.


+----------------------------+                            +----+
|                            |                            |    |
|     Appearance Agent       |                            | UA |
|                            |                            |    |
+----------------------------+                            +----+
    ^ ^ |1)SUBSCRIBE  ^  ^    4)NOTIFY            INVITE     |
    | | |(Event:reg)  |  | registration sip:alice@example.com|
    | | V             |  |     events                        V
    | | +--------------------+        +----------+7)Query+--------+
    | | |    (example.com)   |        |          |<===== |        |
    | | |                    |3) Store| Location |       | Proxy  |
    | | |     Registrar      |=======>|  Service |       |        |
    | | |                    |        |          |=====> |        |
    | | +--------------------+        +----------+8)Resp +--------+
    | |     ^       ^                                       |  |
    | |     |       |  2) REGISTER (alice)                  |  |
    | |     |       |                                       |  |
    | |   +----+ +----+                                     |  |
    | |   |    | |    |                                     |  |
    | |   |UA1 | |UA2 |                                     |  |
    | |   |    | |    |                                     |  |
    | |   +----+ +----+                                     |  |
    | |    ^  ^    ^ ^                                      |  |
    | |    |  |    | |                                      |  |
    | +----+  |    | |                                      |  |
    |         |    | +--------------------------------------+  |
    |         +----+-------------------------------------------+
    |              |              8) INVITE
    +--------------+            sip:alice@example.com
    5-7) SUBSCRIBE and/or PUBLISH
         (Event:dialog)

OPEN ISSUE: This figure still shows the use of the registration event package by the Appearance Agent - do we still need this?

Figure 1.

The next section discusses normal SIP operations used to implement parts of the shared appearance feature.

  1. The Appearance Agent SUBSCRIBEs to the registration event package as outlined in [RFC3680] (Rosenberg, J., “A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Registrations,” March 2004.) for contacts registered to the group AOR. Thus, it has knowledge of all User Agents registered against the AOR at any point of time.
  2. UAs (UA1 and UA2 in Figure 1) belong to the appearance group and, after authentication, register against the same AOR (e.g., sip:alice@example.com).
  3. Each registration is stored in the Location Service.
  4. The registrar notifies the Appearance Agent of successful registration at each UA.
  5. UAs PUBLISH their dialog state to the State Agent in the Appearance Agent.
  6. The UAs SUBSCRIBE to the Appearance Agent for the state of all dialogs as defined in [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.). The Request-URI of the SUBSCRIBE could be either the AOR of the group or a provisioned URI.
  7. The UAs PUBLISH their dialog information to the Appearance Agent every time their dialog state changes (i.e. send an INVITE, enter alerting state, answer a call, terminate a call, etc.), pickups or joins a call, or seizes/selects an appearance.
  8. The Forking Proxy forks an incoming INVITE for the AOR address to the registered user agents.

The Appearance Agent can select the appearance number for an incoming call

OPEN ISSUE: Do we want to define another mode of operation in which UAs only PUBLISH to seize an appearance? This assumes the Appearance Agent already knows about all dialogs related to the AOR and could publish that information to the UAs in the shared appearance group. This approach would simply UA operation and reduce the number of SIP messages sent and received. If a different SIP option tag was defined for this server mode, an Appearance Agent could indicate support for this feature by including it in a Supported in NOTIFYs. The UA could also include the option tag in a Require header field in the initial PUBLISH. A 200 OK response to the PUBLISH would confirm that the UA does not need to PUBLISH any more state for the dialog.



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5.2.  Shared Appearance Dialog Package Extensions

This specification defines four new elements as extensions to the SIP Dialog Event package [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.). The schema is defined in Section 6 (XML Schema Definition). The elements are <appearance>, <exclusive>, <joined-dialog>, and <replaced-dialog> which are sub-elements of the <dialog> element.



 TOC 

5.2.1.  The <appearance> element

The <appearance> element is used convey the appearance number. The appearance number is a non-negative integer. When sent in a notification in state Trying to the Appearance Agent, it is used to request an appearance number. When sent by the Appearance Agent, it indicates that the appearance number is associated with a dialog.



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5.2.2.  The <exclusive> element

The <exclusive> element is a boolean used to indicate whether the UA will accept Join or Replaces INVITEs for this dialog. For example, some shared appearance systems only allow call pickup when the call is on hold. In this case, the <exclusive> element should be used to explicitly indicate this, rather than implicitly by the hold state.

It is important to note that this element is a hint. Although a UA may set exclusive to true, the UA must still be ready to reject an INVITE Join relating to this dialog. Also, an INVITE Replaces might be sent to the non-shared appearance UA to take the call. For this reason, a UA MAY also not report full dialog identifier information to the Appearance Agent for calls set to exclusive. If these dialog identifiers have already been shared with the Appearance Agent, the UA could send an INVITE Replaces to change them and then not report the new ones to the Appearance Agent.

If the proxy knows which dialogs are marked exclusive, the proxy MAY enforce this exclusivity by rejecting INVITE Join and INVITE Replaces requests containing those dialog identifiers with a 403 Forbidden response.



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5.2.3.  The <joined-dialog> element

The <joined-dialog> element is used convey dialog identifiers of any other dialogs which are joined (mixed or bridged) with the dialog. Only the UA which is performing the actual media mixing should include this element in notifications to the Appearance Agent. Note that this element should still be used even when the Join header field was not used to join the dialogs. For example, two separate dialogs on a UA could be joined without any SIP call control operations. Joined dialogs will share the same appearance number.



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5.2.4.  The <replaced-dialog> element

The <replaced-dialog> element is used convey dialog identifiers of any other dialogs which will be or have been replaced with this dialog. For example, a UA in the group picking up a call on another UA by sending an INVITE with Replaces would include this element for the replacing dialog. Replaced dialogs will share the same appearance number.



 TOC 

5.3.  Shared Appearance User Agents

User Agents that support the Shared Appearance feature MUST support the dialog state package [RFC4235] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and R. Mahy, “An INVITE-Initiated Dialog Event Package for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” November 2005.) with the shared appearance extensions and the 'shared' dialog event package parameter defined in this draft.

User Agents MUST use the dialog package extensions in Section 5.2 (Shared Appearance Dialog Package Extensions) along with the PUBLISH [RFC3903] (Niemi, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Event State Publication,” October 2004.) method to send local status to the Appearance Agent, and SUBSCRIBE [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) to the Appearance Agent to learn the status of other User Agents in the group. SUBSCRIBE requests MUST include the 'shared' Event package parameter.

The presence of the 'shared' Event package parameter in the SUBSCRIBE tells the Appearance Agent that this UA supports this specification.

PUBLISH requests SHOULD include the 'shared' Event package parameter, except when specified otherwise. The publication URI is either a provisioned value or the default username 'appearance-agent'. For example, a UA in the domain of example.com would publish dialog state to sip:appearance-agent@example.com.

OPEN ISSUE: Should a UA be able to publish to the group AOR?

User Agents SHOULD support sending and receiving an INVITE with a Replaces [RFC3891] (Mahy, R., Biggs, B., and R. Dean, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Replaces" Header,” September 2004.) header to allow the Call Pickup operation. User Agents MUST support sending an INVITE a Join [RFC3911] (Mahy, R. and D. Petrie, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Join" Header,” October 2004.) header to initiate bridging. User Agents MUST support receiving an INVITE with a Join header, though they are not obligated to support bridging of calls, either through policy, preference, or implementation limitations such as bandwidth or hardware constraints.

When publishing dialog package information, a UA MUST include all dialog identification available at the time of publication, with the exception that a UA may omit information if it wishes to prevent other UAs from joining or picking up a call. Dialog identification includes local and remote target URIs, call-id, to-tag, and from-tag. When calls are placed on hold, the "+sip.rendering=no" feature tag MUST be included in dialog package notifications.

The accurate rendering of the idle/active/alerting/hold state of other UAs in the group is an important part of the shared appearance feature.

A UA SHOULD render the appearance number to the user or display appearance status information to the user in a way that preserves the appearance order.

A UA SHOULD send dialog package PUBLISH requests for the following events:

  1. When going selecting an appearance number (i.e. going "off-hook" if the UA's user interface uses this metaphor),
  2. When sending an outgoing INVITE,
  3. When receiving a 18x response,
  4. When sending or receiving a 2xx response to an INVITE,
  5. When sending or receiving a BYE

A UA SHOULD NOT send dialog package PUBLISH requests when receiving an incoming INVITE or when sending a 18x response.

A large group of UAs publishing in these conditions when an INVITE has forked will generate significant dialog package PUBLISH and NOTIFY traffic that actually conveys no new information to other UAs in the group.

UAs can tell that a set of dialogs are joined (bridged or mixed) together by the presence of one or more <joined-dialog> elements containing other SIP dialog identifiers.

Prior to placing an outbound call, UAs may select or "seize" an appearance number by sending a PUBLISH to the Appearance Agent identifying the appearance number selected in an <appearance> element. In traditional telephony terms, this corresponds to "going off hook" with an analog telephone. Note that when a UA selects an appearance prior to establishment of a dialog, not all dialog information will be available. In particular, when a UA publishes an attempt to select an appearance prior to knowing the destination very minimal dialog information may be available. For example, a minimal set might be just the local target URI for the call. Only after receiving the 200 OK to the PUBLISH SHOULD the INVITE be sent. If no dialog identification information was present in the initial PUBLISH, the UA MUST PUBLISH again after receiving the 100 Trying.

For an emergency call, a UA MUST never wait for a confirmed seizure before sending an INVITE. Instead, the emergency call MUST proceed regardless of the status of PUBLISH transaction. This requirement applies to both clients and servers implementing this feature.

A UA that does not need to select a particular appearance number (or doesn't care) would just send an INVITE as normal to place an outbound call. The UA placing the call SHOULD PUBLISH after receiving a 1xx response to the INVITE. If the appearance number is not known, the 'appearance' element is not included in the publication and the 'shared' event package parameter SHOULD NOT be included. Once the appearance number is known, it should be included in all publications for this dialog and the 'shared' event package parameter included in the PUBLISH.

The publication without the 'shared' event package parameter looks identical to a publication from a UA which does not understand the shared appearance feature. In both these cases, the Appearance Agent will assign an appearance number for this dialog.

A UA wanting to place a call but not have an appearance number assigned publishes before sending the INVITE without an 'appearance' element but with the 'shared' event package parameter present. If the Appearance Agent policy does not allow calls without an assigned appearance number, a 409 Conflict response will be received, and the UA will republish either selecting an appearance number or without one, in which case the Appearance Agent will assign one.

The publication with 'shared' event package parameter allows the Appearance Agent to determine that no appearance number should be allocated.

OPEN ISSUE: The only use case we have for this is consultation hold. Are there other use cases? Is that use case important enough or should we remove this mechanism?

When an INVITE is generated to attempt to bridge or take a call (i.e. contains Join or Replaces with a dialog identifier of another dialog in the shared appearance group), the appearance number of the joined or replaced call SHOULD be used. In this case, the PUBLISH MUST be sent prior to sending the INVITE. The publication MUST contain the appearance number of the dialog to be joined or replaced and the dialog identifier in the 'joined-dialog' or 'replaced-dialog' elements. The INVITE is sent after the receipt of a 200 OK to the PUBLISH.

For inbound calls which contain a reference to an appearance number in the INVITE, a UA MUST PUBLISH the use of an appearance number after it responds with a 2xx to establish a dialog.

A UA SHOULD register against the AOR only if it is likely the UA will be answering incoming calls. If the UA is mainly going to be monitoring the status of the shared appearance group calls and picking or joining calls, the UA SHOULD only subscribe to the Appearance Agent and not register against the AOR.

All subscribed UAs will received NOTIFYs of Trying state for incoming INVITEs.



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5.4.  Appearance Agent

An Appearance Agent defined in this specification MUST implement a dialog package state agent for the UAs registered against the AOR. The Appearance Agent MUST support the appearance dialog package extensions defined in Section 5.2 (Shared Appearance Dialog Package Extensions). The Appearance Agent MUST support publications and subscriptions for this event package.

The Appearance Agent MUST have a way of discovering the dialog identifiers of incoming INVITEs. The Appearance Agent MUST allocate an appearance number for all incoming calls and send immediate notifications to the UAs subscribed to the shared group AOR. An Appearance Agent MAY assign an appearance number to an INVITE if a PUBLISH is not received for the dialog within a reasonable period of time. If the appearance group has non-shared appearance UAs, the Appearance Agent MUST allocate appearance numbers for INVITEs sent by those UAs.

Note that in general, the Appearance Agent makes appearance allocation decisions based on publications rather than on INVITEs.

An Appearance Agent receiving a PUBLISH with an appearance number checks to make sure the publication is valid. An appearance number can be assigned to only one dialog unless there is a 'joined-dialog' or 'replaced-dialog' element indicating that the dialog will be/has been replaced or joined. A 409 Conflict response is returned if the chosen appearance number is invalid, and an immediate NOTIFY should be sent to the UA.

An Appearance Agent receiving a PUBLISH without an appearance number and without the 'shared' event package parameter checks to see if the dialog already has an appearance number assigned to it. If it does, it replies with 200 OK and updates the dialog information. If it does not, the Appearance Agent assigns an available appearance number, returns a 200 OK and NOTIFYs the other UAs in the group.

Note that this case could be a shared appearance unaware UA or a UA that does not care what appearance number is used for the dialog.

An Appearance Agent receiving a PUBLISH without an appearance number but with the 'shared' event package parameter present interprets this as a request by the UA to not assign an appearance number. If the Appearance Agent policy does not allow this, a 409 Conflict response is returned. If policy does allow this, a 200 OK response is returned and no appearance number is allocated.

The Appearance Agent controls the rate of dialog state publication using the Expires header field in 200 OK responses to PUBLISH requests. The Appearance Agent MAY vary the expiration interval depending on the type of publication, or, an Appearance Agent MAY just use the same interval for all publications. For publications of trying, alerting, or connected state, an interval of 3 minutes is RECOMMENDED.

During dynamic situations, such as during a call pickup or join action, the Appearance Agent MAY choose to implement rate limiting to reduce the amount of notification traffic. For example, an Appearance Agent may choose not to generate immediate NOTIFYs upon receipt of PUBLISHes. Instead, a single NOTIFY can convey the effects of a number of PUBLISHes, thus reducing the NOTIFY traffic within the group.

If an INVITE is sent and no appearance number is available, the proxy MAY reject the INVITE with a 403 Forbidden response code.



 TOC 

6.  XML Schema Definition

The 'appearance', 'joined-dialog', 'replaced-dialog', and 'exclusive' elements are defined within a new XML namespace URI. This namespace is "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info". The schema for these elements is:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <xs:schema
    targetNamespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info-info"
    xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
    xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
    elementFormDefault="qualified">


   <xs:element name="joined-dialog" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">
          <xs:complexType>
            <xs:attribute name="call-id" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
            <xs:attribute name="local-tag" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
            <xs:attribute name="remote-tag" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
           </xs:complexType>
        </xs:element>

   <xs:element name="replaced-dialog" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">
          <xs:complexType>
            <xs:attribute name="call-id" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
            <xs:attribute name="local-tag" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
            <xs:attribute name="remote-tag" type="xs:string"
              use="mandatory"/>
           </xs:complexType>
        </xs:element>

        <xs:element name="appearance" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1">
          <xs:simpleType type="xs:integer">
          </xs:simpleType>
        </xs:element>

        <xs:element name="exclusive" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1">
         <xs:simpleType type="xs:boolean">
         </xs:simpleType>
        </xs:element>
  </xs:schema>



 TOC 

7.  User Interface Considerations

The "appearance number" allocated to a call is an important concept that enables calls to be handled by multiple devices with heterogeneous user interfaces in a manner that still allows users to see a consistent model. Careful treatment of the appearance number is essential to meet the expectations of the users. Also, rendering the correct call/appearance state to users is also important.



 TOC 

7.1.  Appearance Number Rendering

Since different UAs have different user interface capabilities, it is usual to find that some UAs have restrictions that others do not. Perfect interoperability across all UAs is clearly not possible, but by careful design, interoperability up to the limits of each UA can be achieved.

The following guidelines suggest how the appearance number should be handled in three typical user interface implementations.



 TOC 

7.1.1.  Single Appearance UAs

These devices are constrained by only having the capability of displaying status indications for a single appearance. Despite this, it is important that devices of this type do not ignore the appearance number. The UA should still send messages annotated with an appropriate appearance number (i.e. "0"). Any call indications for appearances other than for number "0" should be rejected with a 486 or 480 response.



 TOC 

7.1.2.  Dual Appearance UAs

These devices are essentially single appearance phones that implement call waiting. They have a very simple user interface that allows them to switch between two appearances (toggle or flash hook) and perhaps audible tones to indicate the status of the other appearance.



 TOC 

7.1.3.  Shared Appearance UAs with Fixed Appearance Number

This UA is the typical 'business-class' hard-phone. A number of appearances are typically configured statically and labeled on buttons, and calls may be managed using these configured appearances. Any calls outside this range should be ignored, and not mapped to a free button. Users of these devices often select specific appearance numbers for outgoing calls, and the UA will need to select the appearance number and wait for confirmation from the Appearance Agent before proceeding with calls.



 TOC 

7.1.4.  Shared Appearance UAs with Variable Appearance Number

This UA is typically a soft-phone or graphically rich user interface hard-phone. In these cases, even the idea of an appearance index may seem unnecessary. However, for these phones to be able to interwork successfully with other phone types, it is important that they still use the appearance index to govern the order of appearance of calls in progress. No specific guidance on presentation is given except that the order should be consistent. Thought should also be given to how an appearance number that has no call associated with it should be rendered to the user. These devices can typically make calls without waiting for confirmation from the Appearance Agent on the appearance number.

The problems faced by each style of user interface are readily seen in this example:

  1. A call arrives at the shared appearance group, and is assigned an appearance number of 0. All UAs should be able to render to the user the arrival of this call.
  2. Another call arrives at the shared appearance group, and is assigned an appearance number of 1. The single appearance UA should not present this call to the user. Other user agents should have no problems presenting this call distinctly from the first call.
  3. The first call clears, releasing appearance number "0". The single appearance UA should now be indicating no calls since it is unable to manage calls other than on the first appearance. Both shared appearance UAs should clearly show that appearance number 0 is now free, but that there is still a call on appearance number 1.
  4. A third call arrives, and is assigned the appearance number of 0. All UAs should be able to render the arrival of this new call to the user. Multiple appearnce UAs should continue to indicate the presence of the second call, and should also ensure that the presentation order is related to the appearance number and not the order of call arrival.


 TOC 

7.2.  Call State Rendering

UAs that implement the shared appearance feature typically have a user interface that provides the state of other appearances in the group. As dialog state NOTIFYs from the Appearance Agent are processed, this information can be rendered. Even the simplest user interface typically has three states: idle, active, and hold. The idle state, usually indicated by lamp off, is indicated for an appearance when the appearance number is not associated with any dialogs, as reported by the Appearance Agent. The active state, usually indicated by a lamp on, is indicated by an appearance number being associated with at least one dialog, as reported by the Appearance Agent. The hold state, often indicated by a blinking lamp, means the call state from the perspective of the UA in the shared appearance group is hold. This can be determined by the presence of the "sip+rendering=no" feature tag [RFC3840] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat, “Indicating User Agent Capabilities in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” August 2004.) with the local target URI. Note that the hold state of the remote target URI is not relevant to this display. For joined dialogs, the state is rendered as hold only if all local target URIs are indicated with the "sip+rendering=no" feature tag.



 TOC 

8.  Interop with non-Shared Appearance UAs

EDITOR'S NOTE: This section needs to be reviewed in light of recent changes in the specification.

It is desirable to allow a basic UA that does not directly support shared appearance to be part of a shared appearance group. To support this the Proxy must collaborate with the Appearance Agent. This is not required in the basic shared appearance architecture, consequently shared appearance interop with non-shared appearance UAs will not be available in all shared appearance deployments.

First, a UA which does not support dialog events or the shared appearance feature will be discussed. Then, a UA which does support dialog events but not the shared appearance feature will be discussed.



 TOC 

8.1.  Appearance Assignment

A UA that has no knowledge of appearances must have appearance numbers assigned by the Appearance Agent for both incoming and outgoing calls. If the non-shared appearance UA does not support Join or Replaces, all dialogs could be marked "exclusive" to indicate that these options are not available.



 TOC 

8.2.  Appearance Release

In all cases the Appearance Agent must be aware of dialog lifetime to release appearances back into the group.

It is also desirable that any dialog state changes (such as hold, etc) be made available to other UAs in the group through the Dialog Event Package. If the Appearance Agent includes a proxy which Record-Routes for dialogs from the non-shared appearance aware UA, the Appearance Agent will know about the state of dialogs including hold, etc. This information could be determined from inspection of INVITE and re-INVITE messages and added to the dialog information conveyed to other UAs.



 TOC 

8.3.  UAs Supporting Dialog Events but Not Shared Appearance

Interoperability with UAs which support dialog events but not the shared appearance feature is more straightforward. As before, all appearance number assignment must be done by the Appearance Agent. This type of UA will be detected by the Appearance Agent by the absence of the ma event parameter in SUBSCRIBE or PUBLISH messages. The Appearance Agent can include appearance information in NOTIFYs - this UA will simply ignore this extra information. This type of UA will ignore appearance number limitations and may attempt to Join or Replace dialogs marked exclusive. As a result, the Proxy or UAs may need to reject such requests.

The need for close cooperation between the Proxy and the Appearance Agent is not needed as the Appearance Agent will learn about all dialogs from the UA itself.



 TOC 

9.  Provisioning Considerations

TBD.



 TOC 

10.  Example Message Flows

The next section shows call flow and message examples. The flows and descriptions are non-normative.



 TOC 

10.1.  Registration and Subscription

Bob and Alice are in an appearance group identified by Alice's AOR. Bob REGISTERs using contact sip:bob@ua2.example.com. Alice REGISTERs with contact sip:alice@ua1.example.com.

User Agents for Alice and Bob subscribe to the dialog package for the appearance AOR and publish dialog state to the Appearance Agent. Message exchanges between the Registrar, Appearance Agent, Alice, and Bob are shown below. The call flow examples below do not show the authentication of subscriptions, publications, and notifications. It should be noted that for security purposes, all subscriptions must be authorized before the same is accepted.

Also note that registrations and subscriptions must all be refreshed by Alice at intervals determined by the expiration intervals returned by the Registrar or Appearance Agent.

Registrar     Appearance Agent          Alice
|                    |                    |
|                    |                    |
|<--------------------------- REGISTER F1<|
|                    |                    |
|>F2 200 OK ----------------------------->|
|                    |                    |
|                    |<----- SUBSCRIBE F3<|
|                    |                    |
|                    |>F4 202 Accepted -->|
|                    |                    |
|                    |>F5 NOTIFY -------->|
|                    |                    |
|                    |<-------- 200 OK F6<|
|                    |                    |

Figure 2.

F1-F2: Alice registers AOR with contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>

F1 Alice ----> Registrar

REGISTER sip:registrar.example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK527b54da8ACC7B09
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=CDF9A668-909E2BDD
To: <sip:alice@example.com>
CSeq: 2 REGISTER
Call-ID: d3281184-518783de-cc23d6bb@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
Max-Forwards: 70
Expires: 3600
Content-Length: 0


F2 Registrar ----> Alice

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKfbf176ef7F1D5FA2
CSeq: 2 REGISTER
Call-ID: d3281184-518783de-cc23d6bb@ua1.example.com
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=CDF9A668-909E2BDD
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=1664573879820199
Contact:  <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
Expires:  3600
Content-Length: 0


F3 to F6: Alice also subscribes to the events associated with the
Appearance AOR. Appearance Agent also notifies Alice of the status.

F3 Alice ----> Appearance Agent

SUBSCRIBE sip:alice@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKf10fac97E7A76D6A
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=925A3CAD-CEBB276E
To: <sip:alice@example.com>
CSeq: 1 SUBSCRIBE
Call-ID: ef4704d9-bb68aa0b-474c9d94@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Accept: application/dialog-info+xml
Max-Forwards: 70
Expires: 3700
Content-Length: 0


F4 Appearance Agent ----> Alice

SIP/2.0 202 Accepted
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKf10fac97E7A76D6A
CSeq: 1 SUBSCRIBE
Call-ID: ef4704d9-bb68aa0b-474c9d94@ua1.example.com
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=925A3CAD-CEBB276E
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=1636248422222257
Allow-Events: dialog
Expires: 3700
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: 0


F5 Appearance Agent ----> Alice

NOTIFY sip:alice@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=1636248422222257
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=925A3CAD-CEBB276E
Call-ID: ef4704d9-bb68aa0b-474c9d94@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 2 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1846984327225734
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             version="40"
             state="full"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
</dialog-info>


F6 Alice ----> Appearance Agent

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1846984327225734
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=1636248422222257
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=925A3CAD-CEBB276E
CSeq: 2 NOTIFY
Call-ID: ef4704d9-bb68aa0b-474c9d94@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Content-Length: 0



 TOC 

10.2.  Appearance Selection for Incoming Call

In the call flow below Bob and Alice are in an appearance group. Carol places a call to the appearance group AOR. The Appearance Agent sends NOTIFYs to Alice and Bob telling them what appearance the call is using. Both Alice and Bob's devices are alerted of the incoming call. Bob answers the call. He then places Carol on hold. Alice picks up the held call and has a established session with Carol. Finally, Carol terminates the session.

Note that it is possible that both Alice and Bob answer the call and send 200 OK responses to Carol. Alice and Bob will also both publish to the Appearance Agent indicating that the selected appearance is in use by their respective dialogs. The Appearance Agent can detect this since the Call-ID and remote-tag will be the same in both publications and should allow this for a period of time. It is up to Carol to resolve this situation. Typically, Carol will send ACKs to both 200 OKs but send a BYE to terminate one of the dialogs. As a result, either Alice or Bob will receive the BYE and publish that their dialog is over. However, if Carol answers both Alice and Bob and keeps both dialogs active, then the Appearance Agent will need to resolve the situation by moving either Alice or Bob's dialog to a different appearance.

OPEN ISSUE: What if Carol answers both calls and then performs local mixing? In this case, Alice and Bob are effectively using the same appearance and the Appearance Agent does not need to move one of the dialogs. However, how does anyone know besides Carol that this is happening?

All NOTIFY messages in the call flow below carry dialog events and only dialog states are mentioned for simplicity. For brevity, the details of some messages are not shown below.

           Forking     Appearance
Carol      Proxy         Agent         Alice      Bob
|            |             |             |         |
|>F1 INVITE >|             |             |         |
|            |< - - - - - >|             |         |
|            |             |>F2 NOTIFY ----------->|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |<F3 200 OK -----------<|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |>F4 NOTIFY ->|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |<-200 OK F5-<|         |
|<- 100 F6 -<|             |             |         |
|            |>F7 INVITE (appearance=1) ---------->|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |>F8 INVITE (appearance=1) >|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |<-------------------- Ringing 180 F9<|
|< 180 F10 -<|             |             |         |
|            |<--------- 180 Ringing F11<|         |
|< 180 F12 -<|             |             |         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |<------------------------ 200 OK F13<|
|< 200 F14 -<|             |             |         |
|            |             |<--------- PUBLISH F15<|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |>F16 200 OK ---------->|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |>F17 CANCEL -------------->|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |<-------------- 200 OK F18<|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |<Request Cancelled 487 F19<|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |>F20 ACK ----------------->|         |
|>F21 ACK -->|             |             |         |
|            |>F22 ACK --------------------------->|
|            |             |             |         |
|<=============Both way RTP established===========>|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |>F23 NOTIFY >|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |<- 200 F24 -<|         |
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |>F25 NOTIFY ---------->|
|            |             |             |         |
|            |             |<F26 200 OK ----------<|
|            |             |                       |

Figure 3.


F4 Appearance Agent ----> Alice

NOTIFY sip:alice@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=151702541050937
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=18433323-C3D237CE
Call-ID: 1e361d2f-a9f51109-bafe31d4@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 12 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK14031499568413
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="13"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
   <dialog id="2a7294823093f5274e3fd2ec54a2d76c"
        call-id="14-1541707345@example.com"
        remote-tag="44BAD75D-E3128D42"
        direction="recipient">
      <sa:appearance>1</appearance>
      <state>trying</state>
      <remote>
        <identity>sip:carol@ua.example.com</identity>
      </remote>
   </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F7 Proxy ----> Bob

INVITE sip:alice@ua3.example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua3.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK4324ea695b5B376A
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP proxy.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK38432ji
From: <sip:carol@example.com>;tag=44BAD75D-E3128D42
To: <sip:alice@example.com>
CSeq: 106 INVITE
Call-ID: 14-1541707345@example.com
Contact: <sip:carol@ua3.example.com>
Max-Forwards: 69
Alert-Info: <file://ring.pcm>;alert=normal;appearance=1
Content-Type: application/sdp
Content-Length: 223

v=0
o=- 1102980499 1102980499 IN IP4 ua3.example.com
s=
c=IN IP4 ua3.example.com
t=0 0
a=sendrecv
m=audio 2238 RTP/AVP 0 8 101
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000


F8 Proxy ----> Alice

INVITE sip:alice@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua3.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK4324ea695b5B376A
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP proxy.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK348281
From: <sip:carol@example.com>;tag=44BAD75D-E3128D42
To: <sip:alice@example.com>
CSeq: 106 INVITE
Call-ID: 14-1541707345@example.com
Contact: <sip:carol@ua3.example.com>
Max-Forwards: 69
Alert-Info: <file://ring.pcm>;alert=normal;appearance=1
Content-Type: application/sdp
Content-Length: 223

v=0
o=- 1102980499 1102980499 IN IP4 ua3.example.com
s=
c=IN IP4 ua3.example.com
t=0 0
a=sendrecv
m=audio 2238 RTP/AVP 0 8 101
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000


F15: Bob notifies the Appearance Agent with dialog state
payload indicating the dialog in confirmed state. Appearance
Agent notifies Alice of the status of the dialog at Bob.

F15 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLILSH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK58a0dd68C2D63263
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=558C18F7-DB9DF7BC
To: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=1894685100249086
CSeq: 14 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 77-505889516@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
       xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
       version="13"
       state="partial"
       entity="sip:alice@example.com">
   <dialog id="ida0f8dc17"
        call-id="14-1541707345@example.com"
        local-tag="44BAD75D-E3128D42"
        remote-tag="d3b06488-1dd1-11b2-88c5-b03162323164+d3e48f4c"
        direction="recipient">
      <sa:appearance>1</appearance>
      <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
      <state>confirmed</state>
      <local>
        <target uri="sip:alice@ua1.example.com">
            <param pname="+sip.rendering" pval="yes"/>
        </target>
      </local>
      <remote>
        <identity>sip:carol@ua.example.com</identity>
      </remote>
   </dialog>
</dialog-info>


 TOC 

10.3.  Outgoing Call with Without Appearance Pre-Selection

In this scenario, Bob's UA places a call without first selecting an appearance number. After sending the INVITE, Bob sends out a dialog event PUBLISH with state (trying) but does not include an appearance number or the 'shared' dialog event parameter. As a result, the Appearance agent treats the publish as if it were sent by an shared appearance-unaware UA and assigns an appearance number for it. The NOTIFY from the appearance agent tells Bob what appearance number to use. Bob also publishes on receipt of the 180 Ringing and 200 OK responses. Note that NOTIFYs F16 and F25 do not tell Bob any new information and could be suppressed by the Appearance Agent.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------- INVITE F1<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F2 100 Trying --------------------------------->|
|<-- INVITE F3<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F4<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F5 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F6<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F7 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |------- NOTIFY F8>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F9 200 OK ------<|
|>F10 180  --->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F11 180 Ringing ------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F12<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F13 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F14<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F15 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F16>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F17 200 OK -----<|
|>F18 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F19 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F20<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F21 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F22<|
|<---- ACK F23<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F24<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F25 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F26>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F27 200 OK -----<|
|              |               |              |                  |

Figure 4.


F1 Bob ----> Proxy

INVITE sip:carol@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK98c87c52123A08BF
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=15A3DE7C-9283203B
To: <sip:carol@example.com>
CSeq: 1 INVITE
Call-ID: f3b3cbd0-a2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/sdp
Content-Length: 223

v=0
o=- 1102980499 1102980499 IN IP4 ua2.example.com
s=IP SIP UA
c=IN IP4 ua2.example.com
t=0 0
a=sendrecv
m=audio 2236 RTP/AVP 0 8 101
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000


F4 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 7 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="6"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="id3d4f9c83" direction="initiator">
        <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
        <state>trying</state>
        <local>
            <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
            </target>
        </local>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F5 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
CSeq: 7 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
Allow-Events: dialog
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Expires: 60
Content-Length: 0


F8 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

NOTIFY sip:bob@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="27"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="fa02538339df3ce597f9e3e3699e28fc" direction="initiator">
            <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
            <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
	       <state>trying</state>
	        <local>
		    <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
 		    </target>
		   </local>
	</dialog>
</dialog-info>


F9 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua1.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Content-Length: 0


F20 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa39d3f69D4E20602
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 9 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="8"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="id3d4f9c83"
            call-id="f3b3cbd0-a2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
            local-tag="15A3DE7C-9283203B"
            remote-tag="65a98f7c-1dd2-11b2-88c6-b03162323164+65a98f7c"
            direction="initiator">
          <state>confirmed</state>
          <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
          <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
          <local>
            <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
               <param pname="+sip.rendering" pval="yes"/>
            </target>
          </local>
          <remote>
            <identity>sip:carol@example.com</identity>
              <target uri="sip:carol@example.com" />
          </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>



 TOC 

10.4.  Outgoing Call with Appearance Selection

In this scenario, Bob's UA sends out a dialog event PUBLISH with state (trying) selecting an appearance number before sending the INVITE. After receiving the 200 OK from the Appearance Agent confirming the appearance number, Bob's UA sends the INVITE to Carol and establishes a session. For brevity, details of some of the messages are not included in the message flows.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F1<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F2 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------- INVITE F3<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F4 100 Trying --------------------------------->|
|<-- INVITE F5<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F6<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F7 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |------- NOTIFY F8>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F9 200 OK ------<|
|>F10 180  --->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F11 180 Ringing ------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F12<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F13 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F14<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F15 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F16>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F17 200 OK -----<|
|>F18 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F19 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F20<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F21 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F22<|
|<---- ACK F23<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F24<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F25 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F26>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F27 200 OK -----<|
|              |               |              |                  |

Figure 5.

F1 to F4: Bob uses the shared appearance appearance of Alice on his UA to place an outgoing call (e.g., he goes off-hook). Before sending the outgoing INVITE request, Bob publishes to the state agent that Alice line appearance is in (trying) state. The Appearance Agent notifies Alice of the same event by forwarding the NOTIFY payload provided by Bob after appropriately changing the dialog id field in the XML payload to a unique value towards each of the entities it is forwarding to (Alice in this example). Note the shortened expiration interval in F2 of 60 seconds. As long as Bob is using the appearance number, he must refresh the publication every 60 seconds or loose the appearance.


F1 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 7 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="6"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="id3d4f9c83" direction="initiator">
        <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
        <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
        <state>trying</state>
        <local>
            <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
            </target>
        </local>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F2 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
CSeq: 7 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
Allow-Events: dialog
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Expires: 60
Content-Length: 0


F8 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

NOTIFY sip:bob@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="27"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="fa02538339df3ce597f9e3e3699e28fc" direction="initiator">
            <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
            <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
	       <state>trying</state>
	        <local>
		    <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
 		    </target>
		   </local>
	</dialog>
</dialog-info>


F9 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua1.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Content-Length: 0



 TOC 

10.5.  Outgoing Call without using an Appearance Number

In this scenario, Bob's UA sends out a dialog event PUBLISH with state (trying) indicating that he does not want to utilize an appearance number for this dialog. The PUBLISH does not have an appearance element but does have the 'shared' dialog event parameter. As a result, the Appearance Agent knows the UA does not wish to use an appearance number for this call. If the Appearance Agent does not wish to allow this, it would reject the PUBLISH with a 409 Conflict response and the UA would know to re-PUBLISH selecting an appearance number.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F1<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F2 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------- INVITE F3<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F4 100 Trying --------------------------------->|
|<-- INVITE F5<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F6<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F7 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |------- NOTIFY F8>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F9 200 OK ------<|
|>F10 180  --->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F11 180 Ringing ------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F12<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F13 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F14<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F15 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F16>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F17 200 OK -----<|
|>F18 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F19 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F20<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F21 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F22<|
|<---- ACK F23<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F24<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F25 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F26>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F27 200 OK -----<|
|              |               |              |                  |

Figure 6.


F1 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 7 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="6"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="id3d4f9c83" direction="initiator">
        <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
        <state>trying</state>
        <local>
            <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
            </target>
        </local>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


 TOC 

10.6.  Appearance Release

Bob and Carol are in a dialog, created in one of the previous two call flows. Carol sends a BYE to Bob to terminate the dialog. Bob publishes the termination of the dialog and the Appearance Agent de-allocates the appearance number used.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|>F28 BYE ---->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F29 BYE --------------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------ 200 OK F30<|
|<--200 OK F31<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F32<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F33 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F34<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F35 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F36>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F37 200 OK -----<|

Figure 7.

F32 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK61314d6446383E79
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 37 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 65144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="6"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
    <dialog id="id3d4f9c83" direction="initiator">
        <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
        <state>terminated</state>
        <local>
            <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
            </target>
        </local>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


 TOC 

10.7.  Appearance Pickup

In this scenario, Bob has an established dialog with Carol created using the call flows of Figure 2 or Figure 3. Bob then places Carol on hold. Alice receives a notification of this and renders this on Alice's UI. Alice subsequently picks up the held call and has a established session with Carol. Finally, Carol hangs up.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------(hold) INVITE F28<|
|<- INVITE F29<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|>F30 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F31 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F32<|
|<---- ACK F33<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F34<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F35 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F36<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F37 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F38 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F39<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |  Alice decides to pick up the call              |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F40 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- 200 OK F41<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F42<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F43 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F44 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F45<|
|              |<-- INVITE F46<|              |                  |
|<- INVITE F47<|(w/ Replaces)  |              |                  |
|( w/ Replaces)|               |              |                  |
|>F48 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F49 200 OK -->|              |                  |
|              |               |>F50 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- 200 OK F51<|                  |
|              |               |              |>F52 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F53<|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F54<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F55 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<----- ACK F56<|              |                  |
|<---- ACK F57<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|<= Both way RTP established =>|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|>F58 BYE ---->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F59 BYE --------------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------ OK 200 F60<|
|<- 200 OK F61<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F62<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F63 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F64<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F65 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F66 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F67<|

Figure 8.

F28 to F33: Bob places Carol on hold.

F34 to F39: Bob notifies Appearance Agent of the status of the dialog to
indicate the held state. It indicates this by setting the sip.rendering
parameter in the NOTIFY payload to (no). Appearance Agent notifies
Alice of the same.

F34 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa5d6cf61F5FBC05A
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 11 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83"
         call-id="f3b3cbd0-a2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
         local-tag="15A3DE7C-9283203B"
         remote-tag="65a98f7c-1dd2-11b2-88c6-b03162323164+65a98f7c"
         direction="initiator">
         <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
         <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
         <state>active</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
             <param pname="+sip.rendering" pval="yes"/>
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
           <identity>sip:carol@example.com</identity>
           <target uri="sip:carol@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F40 Alice ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa5d6cf61F5FBC05A
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 11 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83">
         <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
         <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
         <sa:replaced-dialog
             call-id="f3b3cbd0-a2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
             from-tag="15A3DE7C-9283203B"
             to-tag="65a98f7c-1dd2-11b2-88c6-b03162323164+65a98f7c" />
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:alice@ua1.example.com">
             <param pname="+sip.rendering" pval="yes"/>
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
             <target uri="sip:carol@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F46: Alice picks up the held call by sending an INVITE with
Replaces: header . Session is established between Alice and
Carol. The dialog between Carol and Bob is terminated.

F46 Bob ----> Proxy

INVITE sip:carol@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK4ea695b5B376A60C
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=8C4183CB-BCEAB710
To: <sip:carol@example.com:5075>
CSeq: 1 INVITE
Call-ID: 3d57cd17-47deb849-dca8b6c6@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
<all-one-line>
Replaces: f3b3cbd0-a2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com;to-tag=65a98f7c
-1dd2-11b2-88c6-b03162323164+65a98f7c;from-tag=15A3DE7C-9283203B
</all-one-line>
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/sdp
Content-Length: 223

v=0
o=- 1102980497 1102980497 IN IP4 ua1.example.com
s=IP SIP UA
c=IN IP4 ua1.example.com
t=0 0
a=sendrecv
m=audio 2238 RTP/AVP 0 8 101
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000




 TOC 

10.8.  Calls between UAs within the Group

In this scenario, Bob calls Alice who is also in the Appearance group. He chooses to allocate an appearance.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------  INVITE (to Alice's UA) F1<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F2<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F3 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F4<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F5 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F6 NOTIFY ------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<------ 200 OK F7<|
|              |>F8 INVITE --->|              |                  |
|              | (appearance=1)|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------ 180 F9<|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F10 180  -------------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F11<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F12 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F13<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F14 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F15 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F16<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<-- 200 OK F17<|              |                  |
|              |               |>F18 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- 200 OK F19<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F20<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F21 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F22 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F23<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F24 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F25<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F26 ACK ----->|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<======= RTP established =======>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F27<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F28 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F29<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F30 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F31 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F32<|
|              |               |              |                  |

Figure 9.

F2 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa5d6cf61F5FBC05A
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 11 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83"
           call-id="b3cbd0-ad2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
           local-tag="3153DE7C-928203B"
           direction="initiator">
         <sa:exclusive>true</exclusive>
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
           <identity>sip:alice@example.com</identity>
           <target uri="sip:alice@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F6 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

NOTIFY sip:bob@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="3xdsd4f9c83"
           call-id="b3cbd0-ad2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
           local-tag="3153DE7C-928203B"
           direction="initiator">
         <sa:exclusive>true</exclusive>
         <sa:appearance>1</appearance>
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
           <identity>sip:alice@example.com</identity>
           <target uri="sip:alice@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


 TOC 

10.9.  Consultation Hold with Appearances

In this scenario, Bob has a call with Carol. Bob makes a consultation call to Alice by putting Carol on hold and calling Alice. Bob chooses not to have an appearance number for the call to Alice since he is treating it as part of the call to Carol. He indicates this in his PUBLISH F34 which is sent before the INVITE to Alice to ensure no appearance number is assigned by the Appearance Agent. Finally, Bob hangs up with Alice and resumes the call with Carol.

Note that if Carol hangs up while Bob is consulting with Alice, Bob can decide if he wants to reuse the appearance number used with Carol for the call with Alice. If not, Bob publishes the termination of the dialog with Carol and the Appearance Agent will re-allocate the appearance. If he wants to keep the appearance, Bob will publish the termination of the dialog with Carol and also publish the appearance with the dialog with Alice. This will result in Bob keeping the appearance number until he reports the dialog with Alice terminated.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------(hold) INVITE F28<|
|<- INVITE F29<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|>F30 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F31 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F32<|
|<---- ACK F33<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F34<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F35 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F36<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F37 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F38 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F39<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |  Bob makes a consultation call to Alice         |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F40<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F41 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------ INVITE F42<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F43<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F44 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F45 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F46<|
|              |>F47 INVITE -->|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<-- 200 OK F48<|              |                  |
|              |               |>F49 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- 200 OK F50<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F51<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F52 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F53 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F54<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F55 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F56<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F57 ACK ----->|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<======= RTP established =======>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F58<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F59 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F60<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F61 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F62 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F63<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |            Bob hangs up with Alice              |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- BYE F64<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F65<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F66 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F67<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F68 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F69 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F70<|
|              |>F71 BYE ----->|              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<-- 200 OK F72<|              |                  |
|              |               |>F73 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- 200 OK F74<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F75<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F76 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F77 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F78<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F79 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F80<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F81 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F82<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F83 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F84 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F85<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<----------------------------(unhold) INVITE F86<|
|<- INVITE F87<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|>F88 200 OK ->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F89 200 OK ------------------------------------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<--------------------------------------- ACK F90<|
|<---- ACK F91<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<---- PUBLISH F92<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F93 200 OK ----->|
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F94<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F95 200 OK ->|                  |
|              |               |              |>F96 NOTIFY ----->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- 200 OK F97<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|<================= Both way RTP established ===================>|
|              |               |              |                  |

Figure 10.

F40 Bob ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa5d6cf61F5FBC05A
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 11 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 144-1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:bob@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83"
           call-id="b3cbd0-ad2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
           local-tag="3153DE7C-928203B"
           direction="initiator">
         <sa:exclusive>true</exclusive>
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
           <identity>sip:alice@example.com</identity>
           <target uri="sip:alice@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F45 Appearance Agent ----> Bob

NOTIFY sip:bob@ua1.example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=497585728578386
To: <sip:bob@example.com>;tag=633618CF-B9C2EDA4
Call-ID: a7d559db-d6d7dcad-311c9e3a@ua1.example.com
CSeq: 7 NOTIFY
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP stateagent.example.com;branch=z9hG4bK1711759878512309
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Event: dialog;shared
Subscription-State: active
Contact: <sip:appearance-agent@stateagent.example.com>
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="3xdsd4f9c83"
           call-id="b3cbd0-ad2c5775e-5df9f8d5@ua2.example.com"
           local-tag="3153DE7C-928203B"
           direction="initiator">
         <sa:exclusive>true</exclusive>
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@ua2.example.com">
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
           <identity>sip:alice@example.com</identity>
           <target uri="sip:alice@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


 TOC 

10.10.  Joining or Bridging an Appearance

In this call flow, a call answered by Bob is joined by Alice or "bridged". The Join header field is used by Alice to request this bridging. If Bob did not support media mixing, Bob could obtain conferencing resources as described in [RFC4579] (Johnston, A. and O. Levin, “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents,” August 2006.).

Carol    Forking Proxy Appearance Agent  Alice      Bob
  |            |             |             |         |
  |<=============Both way RTP established===========>|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< PUBLISH F28|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F29 200 OK >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |<---- INVITE (w/ Join) F30<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |>F31 INVITE (w/Join)---------------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F32 NOTIFY >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< 200 OK F33<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F34 NOTIFY ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<F35 200 OK ----------<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |<---- OK 200 Contact:Bob;isfocus F36<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<--------- PUBLISH F37<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F38 200 OK ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F39 NOTIFY >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< 200 OK F40<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F41 NOTIFY ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<F42 200 OK ----------<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |>F43 200 OK Contact:B----->|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< PUBLISH F44|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F45 200 OK >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F46 NOTIFY >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< 200 OK F47<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F48 NOTIFY ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<F49 200 OK ----------<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |<----------------- ACK F50<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |>ACK F51---------------------------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |<-----INVITE Contact:Bob;isfocus F52<|
  |<-INVITE F53|             |             |         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |>F54 200 -->|             |             |         |
  |            |>F55 200 OK ------------------------>|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |<--------------------------- ACK F56<|
  |<--- ACK F57|             |             |         |
  |            |             |             |<==RTP==>|
  |<=============Both way RTP established===========>|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<--------- PUBLISH F58<|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F59 200 OK ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F60 NOTIFY >|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |< 200 OK F61<|         |
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |>F62 NOTIFY ---------->|
  |            |             |             |         |
  |            |             |<F63 200 OK ----------<|
  |            |             |             |         |

Figure 11.

F28 Alice ----> Appearance Agent

PUBLISH sip:appearance-agent@example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua2.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKa5d6cf61F5FBC05A
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=44150CC6-A7B7919D
To: <sip:appearance-agent@example.com>;tag=428765950880801
CSeq: 11 PUBLISH
Call-ID: 1289338424@example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua2.example.com>
Event: dialog;shared
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/dialog-info+xml
Content-Length: ...

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="10"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com:5060">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83">
         <sa:appearance>0</appearance>
         <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
         <sa:joined-dialog
             call-id="14-1541707345@example.com"
             from-tag="44BAD75D-E3128D42"
             to-tag="d3b06488-1dd1-11b2-88c5-b03162323164+d3e48f4c" />
         <state>trying</state>
         <local>
           <target uri="sip:alice@ua1.example.com">
           </target>
         </local>
         <remote>
             <target uri="sip:bob@example.com" />
         </remote>
    </dialog>
</dialog-info>


F20 Alice ----> Proxy

INVITE sip:bob@ua.example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP ua1.example.com;branch=z9hG4bKcc9d727c2C29BE31
From: <sip:alice@example.com>;tag=605AD957-1F6305C2
To: <sip:bob@ua.example.com>
CSeq: 2 INVITE
Call-ID: dc95da63-60db1abd-d5a74b48@ua1.example.com
Contact: <sip:alice@ua1.example.com>
<all-one-line>
Join: 14-1541707345@example.com;to-tag=d3b06488-1dd1-11b2-88c5
-b03162323164+d3e48f4c;from-tag=44BAD75D-E3128D42
</all-one-line>
Max-Forwards: 70
Content-Type: application/sdp
Content-Length: 223

v=0
o=- 1103061265 1103061265 IN IP4 ua1.example.com
s=IP SIP UA
c=IN IP4 ua1.example.com
t=0 0
a=sendrecv
m=audio 2236 RTP/AVP 0 8 101
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000


 TOC 

10.11.  Appearance Allocation - Loss of Appearance

Bob reserves an appearance with a PUBLISH, sends an INVITE to Carol, then becomes unreachable. When he fails to refresh his publication to the appearance agent, the Appearance Agent declares the dialog terminated and frees up the appearance using NOTIFYs R24 and F26. After retransmitting the NOTIFY F26 to Bob, the subscription is terminated.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F1<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F2 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------- INVITE F3<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F4 100 Trying --------------------------------->|
|<-- INVITE F5<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F6<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F7 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |------- NOTIFY F8>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F9 200 OK ------<|
|>F10 180  --->|               |              |                  |
|              |>F11 180 Ringing ------------------------------->|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              | Bob goes offline
|              |               |              |
|              |               | Appearance selection times out
|              |               |              |
|              |               |              |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F24<|
|              |               |              |
|              |               |>F25 200 OK ->|
|              |               |              |------ NOTIFY F26>
|              |               |              |
|              |               |   NOTIFY is retransmitted

Figure 12.



 TOC 

10.12.  Appearance Selection Contention Race Condition

Bob and Alice both try to reserve appearance 2 by publishing at the same time. The Appearance Agent allocates the appearance to Bob by sending a 200 OK and denies it to Alice by sending a 409 Conflict. After the NOTIFY F24, Alice learns that Bob is using appearance 2. Alice republishes for appearance 3 which is accepted.

Carol        Proxy           Alice     Appearance Agent         Bob
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<----- PUBLISH F1<|
|              |               |              |        (appearance=2)
|              |               |>F2 PUBLISH ->|                  |
|              |               |     (appearance=2)              |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |>F2 200 OK ------>|
|              |               |<---- F3 409 <|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<-- NOTIFY F4<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F5 200 OK -->|                  |
|              |               |              |------- NOTIFY F6>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F7 200 OK ------<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |<------------------------------------- INVITE F8<|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F9 100 Trying --------------------------------->|
|<- INVITE F10<|               |              |                  |
|              |               |>F11 PUBLISH->|                  |
|              |               |     (appearance=3)              |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<--- F12 200 <|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |<- NOTIFY F13<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
               |               |>F14 200 OK ->|                  |
Dave           |               |              |------ NOTIFY F15>|
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |               |              |<F16 200 OK -----<|
|              |<----------------- INVITE F17<|                  |
|              |               |              |                  |
|              |>F18 100 Trying ------------->|                  |
|<- INVITE F19<|               |              |                  |

Figure 13.



 TOC 

11.  IANA Considerations

This section registers the SIP Alert-Info header field parameter "appearance" and the XML namespace extensions to the SIP Dialog Package.



 TOC 

11.1.  SIP Event Package Parameter: shared

This specification also defines a new event parameter 'shared' for the Dialog Package. When used in a NOTIFY, it indicates that the notifier supports the shared appearance feature. When used in a PUBLISH, it indicates that the publisher has explicit appearance information contained in the message body. If not present in a PUBLISH, the Appearance Agent MAY assign an appearance number to any new dialogs in the message body.



 TOC 

11.2.  URN Sub-Namespace Registration: sa-dialog-info


   This section registers a new XML namespace per the procedures in
   [RFC3688].

   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info.

   Registrant Contact: IETF BLISS working group, <bliss@ietf.org>,
   Alan Johnston <alan@sipstation.com>

   XML:

   BEGIN
      <?xml version="1.0"?>
      <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.0//EN"
                "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-basic/xhtml-basic10.dtd">
      <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      <head>
        <meta http-equiv="content-type"
           content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1"/>
        <title>Shared Appearance Dialog Information Namespace</title>
      </head>
      <body>
        <h1>Namespace for Shared Appearance Dialog Information</h1>
        <h2>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info</h2>
        <p>See <a href="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfcXXXX.txt">
             RFCXXXX</a>.</p>
      </body>
      </html>
   END


 TOC 

11.3.  XML Schema Registration

   This section registers an XML schema per the procedures in [RFC3688].

   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:schesa:sa-dialog-info.

   Registrant Contact: IETF BLISS working group, <bliss@ietf.org>,
    Alan Johnston <alan@sipstation.com>

   The XML for this schema can be found in <xref target='schema' />.



 TOC 

12.  Appendix A - Incoming Appearance Assignment

To best meet REQ-9, the appearance number for an incoming INVITE should be contained in the INVITE itself.

For the dialog package parameter approach, REQ-9 could be met in two ways. When an incoming request is received, the Appearance Agent could send out a NOTIFY with state trying and include the appearance number to be used for this request. Upon receipt of this NOTIFY, the UAs could begin alerting using the appearance number selected. This approach is sub-optimal since the UAs could receive the INVITE but be unable to begin alerting if the NOTIFY from the Appearance Agent is delayed or lost

An alternative approach is to define an extension parameter for the Alert-Info header field in RFC 3261 such as:

Alert-Info: <file://ring.pcm>;alert=normal;appearance=0

This Alert-Info header would indicate to place the call on the first line appearance instance.

OPEN ISSUE: What URI do we use if no special ring is requested?

The determination as to what value to use in the appearance parameter can be done at the proxy that forks the incoming request to all the registered UAs. There are a variety of ways the proxy can use to determine what value it should use to populate this parameter. For example, the proxy could fetch this information by initiating a SUBSCRIBE request with Expires: 0 to the Appearance Agent for the AOR to fetch the list of lines that are in use. Alternatively, it could act like a UA that is a part of the appearance group and SUBSCRIBE to the State-Agent like any other UA. This would ensure that the active dialog information is available without having to poll on a need basis. It could keep track of the list of active calls for the appearance AOR based on how many unique INVITE requests it has forked to or received from the appearance AOR. Another approach would be for the Proxy to first send the incoming INVITE to the Appearance Agent which would redirect to the appearance group URI and escape the proper Alert-Info header field for the Proxy to recurse and distribute to the other UAs in the group.

The Appearance Agent needs to know about all incoming requests to the AOR in order to select the appearance number. One way in which this could be done is for the Appearance Agent to register against the AOR with a higher q value. This will result in the INVITE being sent to the Appearance Agent first, then being offered to the UAs in the group.

The changes to RFC 3261 ABNF would be:

alert-param = LAQUOT absoluteURI RAQUOT *( SEMI (generic-param / appearance-param) )

appearance-param = "appearance" EQUAL *DIGIT



 TOC 

13.  Appendix B - Implementation Options Discussion

This section discusses some options on how to implement the Shared Appearances feature in SIP. This section is non-normative.



 TOC 

13.1.  Appearance Implementation Options

This section discusses and compares two methods of implementing, conveying, and selecting appearances in SIP while meeting the requirements of Section 4. One approach involves a URI parameter and is discussed in section 5.1.1. The other approach uses a SIP dialog package extension parameter and is discussed in section 5.1.2. Both approaches assume the common elements and operations of Figure 1. In addition, this section discusses approaches for incoming appearance indication, REQ-9, and appearance contention, REQ-8. These approaches will be discussed for an example appearance group of N phones each with n line appearances. The usage of the word phone does not imply that this feature is limited to telephony devices.



 TOC 

13.1.1.  URI parameter Approach

Some implementations of this feature utilize a URI parameter such as "line=3" on the Contact URI. Each appearance is effectively a logical UA, so each line appearance requires a separate registration. The number of line appearances needs to be provisioned on each phone. Each appearance also requires a separate dialog package subscription. Even using a State Agent for the dialog package, each phone must maintain n subscriptions to the dialog package.

This results in 2nN total subscriptions and nN registrations for this implementation.

Since Contact URI parameters will be conveyed by the dialog package, REQ-7 is met.

REQ-10 can be met by having the Appearance Agent send a SUBSCRIBE to each UA and line number to obtain the current dialog state - this will result in nN SUBSCRIBEs and NOTIFYs.

It is not obvious how to meet REQ-11 with this approach. A UA registering against the AOR but does not implement the appearance URI parameter will not include a line appearance number in Contact URIs and dialog package NOTIFYs. The Appearance Agent will have no way of indicating to the other UAs the appearance number being used by this UA, as adding a parameter to the Contact URI would cause call control operations such as Replaces and Join to fail.

REQs 12 and 13 are difficult to meet with this approach as the line appearance number will be present in the Request-URI of incoming requests and the Contact URI in INVITE and 200 OK messages. This approach will require integrity protection of all dialog creating requests and responses, and privacy mechanisms to hide the Contact URI from other UAs.

Also, this approach will require mechanisms to protect against another UA sending an INVITE directly to a group member with the line appearance number already set.



 TOC 

13.1.2.  Dialog Package Parameter

Instead of the URI parameter approach, consider an extension parameter "appearance" to the SIP dialog package. The e.g.:


<?xml version="1.0"?>
<dialog-info xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:dialog-info"
             xmlns:sa="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:sa-dialog-info"
             version="6"
             state="partial"
             entity="sip:alice@example.com">
   <dialog id="id3d4f9c83" from-tag="3423" to-tag="a3f423j88uju1"
                                                     direction="initiator">
       <sa:appearance>2</appearance>
       <sa:exclusive>false</exclusive>
       <sa:joined-dialog call-id="sdfg" from-tag="832d1" to-tag="4542454" />
       <sa:joined-dialog call-id="873287876" from-tag="433" to-tag="jwjwuf5" />
       <state>connected</state>
       <local>
           <target uri="sip:bob@pc.example.com" />
       </local>
   </dialog>
</dialog-info>
...

In this approach, the appearance number is never carried in a Request-URI or Contact URI. Instead, it is only present in dialog package NOTIFY and PUBLISH messages. As a result, only a single registration per AOR is required. Also, only a single dialog package subscription in each direction per AOR.

This results in 2N total subscriptions and N registrations for this approach.

If the dialog package is extended to carry the appearance number, then REQ-7 is met.

REQ-10 can be met by having the Appearance Agent send a SUBSCRIBE to each UA and line number to obtain the current dialog state - this will result in N SUBSCRIBEs and NOTIFYs.

REQ-11 can be met by this approach. Even though a UA does not provide an appearance number in dialog package NOTIFYs, the Appearance Agent can assign one and include it in NOTIFYs to the other UAs. This parameter would simply be ignored by the UAs that did not understand the parameter, and have no impact on call control operations.

REQs 12 and 13 are met because the appearance number is only conveyed in dialog package NOTIFYs. Integrity and privacy of NOTIFY bodies can be achieved using normal SIP mechanisms independent of the security mechanisms used for other requests.

The dialog-package [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) describes a mechanism whereby shared-line privacy REQ-14 can be accomplished by suppressing certain dialog information from being presented to the UAs. The reasoning behind that is if the UAs were unaware of a dialog's call-id, local-tag and remote-tag then they will be unable to create requests such as INVITE with Replaces [RFC3891] (Mahy, R., Biggs, B., and R. Dean, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Replaces" Header,” September 2004.) and Join [RFC3911] (Mahy, R. and D. Petrie, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Join" Header,” October 2004.) header fields to barge-in or pickup the line appearance. Below is a quote from section 3.6 of dialog-package[RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) that describes this approach:

Note that many implementations of "shared-lines" have a feature that allows details of calls on a shared address-of-record to be made private. This is a completely reasonable authorization policy that could result in notifications that contain only the id attribute of the dialog element and the state element when shared-line privacy is requested, and notifications with more complete information when shared-line privacy is not requested.

There are certain fundamental drawbacks in the privacy-by-obscurity approach described in [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) . It models exclusivity as a static property of the appearance AOR. There are situations where exclusivity needs to be a dynamic property (e.g. boss does not want secretary to listen-in on a particular part of the conversation). In addition, [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.) does not address how a UA can request exclusivity at the start of a session or mid-session and how that request will be granted or rejected.

Exclusivity being a dynamic property means that a UA can request it to be turned on or off in the middle of a session. When exclusivity is turned off all the UAs that share the line AOR will need to see the complete dialog information. Once they have that information it can not be taken back from them. This will not allow exclusivity to be turned on later on in the dialog lifetime. Therefore, there needs to be a centralized entity that will actually enforce exclusivity.

The approach proposed for meeting REQ-14 is to include an exclusivity parameter to the dialog package. This allows a UA to request exclusivity, by setting the exclusive parameter in notifications. This could be done prior to a call being made or answered, or during a call at any time. A UA can remove exclusivity by sending a notification at any time during a call and setting "exclusive=no". It also allows a UA to learn that a particular dialog is exclusive by the presence of this parameter in a NOTIFY. In addition, a UA can still apply policy to any INVITE Join or Replaces requests it receives, as per normal SIP call control mechanisms.

With this approach, the number of appearances is centrally managed and controlled by the Appearance Agent. For UAs with soft keys or buttons, this gives a great deal of flexibility in system management.

The User Agents in the group could SUBSCRIBE to each other and NOTIFY dialog state events, but in a large group the User Agents have to manage a larger number of SUBSCRIPTIONS and NOTIFICATIONS. The State Agent in the Appearance Agent helps in managing large groups better. Further, the State Agent can filter dialog state events and NOTIFY User Agents of the dialog state events which are required for the application or feature. The State Agent can also SUBSCRIBE to dialog state events with filters to reduce the number of NOTIFY messages exchanged between the State Agent and the user agents in the group. This allows a group of N UAs to each only establish a pair of dialog state subscriptions (one in each direction) to learn the dialog state of all other group members. This results in 2N total subscriptions for the entire group. A full mesh of subscriptions without a state agent would result in N(N-1) total subscriptions.



 TOC 

13.1.3.  Appearance Selections Mechanisms

Regardless of how the appearance number is conveyed by UAs, there is still the issue of how appearance numbers are selected. For example, some UAs might have actual buttons and lamps, and pressing a particular button requires the UA to reserve a particular appearance number. For devices with this type of user interface, the selection must be done before the user continues with the call and dials digits or a URI. Other UAs with different user interfaces can be flexible at the time of dialing, updating the display with the appearance number at a later date. For devices which require advance appearance selection, there are three options discussed in the following sections for meeting REQ-15.



 TOC 

13.1.3.1.  Floor Control Appearance Selection Mechanism

This approach models each appearance number as a floor (shared resource) and uses a floor control server to arbitrate exclusive access (seizure of a particular appearance number). This approach uses a standard SIP Event State Compositor (ESC), a standard Floor Control Server that uses the Appearance Agent as Moderator. The Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) is used between the UAs and the Floor Control Server. A Registrar/Forking Proxy Server talks to Appearance Agent about incoming calls. The Appearance Agent acts as a Moderator for the floor control server and tells forking proxy to insert the appearance number in incoming and outgoing requests.

Appearance numbers are allocated/selected/reserved in two ways:

For incoming calls, the Forking Proxy interacts with the Appearance Agent. The Appearance Agent selects an appearance by taking a particular floor and marking it "moderator controlled". This appearance number is then included by the Forking Proxy in INVITEs using the Alert-Info parameter. When a UA answers the call, it takes the appearance number from the Alert-Info and includes it in the dialog state publication. It then requests the floor associated with the appearance number from the floor control server, which forwards the request to the Appearance Agent (moderator). The Appearance Agent correlates the floor control request with the dialog state notification with the dialog ID from the INVITE with the Alert-Info. If they match, the floor is granted. If they do not match, it means the floor request is not an answer of the call but is a random appearance selection by the UA and will be rejected.

For outgoing calls, the UA sends an INVITE and requests a particular floor from the floor control server. Depending on the User Interface requirements, the floor request can be done before or after sending the INVITE. The floor grant policy for most appearances is set to "first come first serve". Once the floor has been granted and the call answered, the dialog state publication by the UA will include the appearance number.

When a call has ended, the UA releases the floor to the floor control server and this appearance is now available for incoming and outgoing calls.

When a UA in the group which does not support BFCP is in a call, the Appearance Agent will grant the floor associated with that appearance to that UA. When that call is over, the Appearance Agent will release the floor. Since the UA will not publish the appearance number to the ESC, the Appearance Agent will need to do that on their behalf. If the UA does publish dialog state but without the appearance number, the Appearance Agent will still need to re-publish the dialog state including the appearance number. UAs in the group will be able to recognize these two dialogs as one since they will have the same SIP dialog ID.



 TOC 

13.1.3.2.  INVITE Appearance Selection Mechanism

This is an alternative approach that utilizes sending an INVITE to select/reserve/seize an appearance number.

A UA that does not need to select a particular appearance number (or doesn't care) would just send an INVITE as normal. The Appearance Agent would tell the proxy which appearance number was being used by inserting this information in a header field in the first non-100 provisional response sent back to the calling UA. The UA would then PUBLISH this appearance number to the Dialog Event State Compositor for the AOR which would distribute details of the dialog and the appearance number to the other UAs in the group.

If an INVITE is sent and no appearance number is available, the proxy would reject the INVITE with a suitable response code and perhaps a header field indication.

A UA that does need to select a particular appearance number would use an approach similar to overlap dialing (multi-stage dialing). An INVITE would be sent when the appearance number is requested (i.e. when the button is pressed, before dialing begins). The appearance number selected would be carried in the INVITE, in a header field or in the Request-URI, for example. The proxy would reject the INVITE with a 484 Address Incomplete response (see RFC 3578) if the appearance number is Available and start a timer. The UA could then resend the INVITE after the URI has been dialed and then PUBLISH this appearance number to the ESC. If the appearance number is not available, another response code such as 403 would be sent. The user could then select a different appearance number and resend the INVITE. If no INVITE with a matching Call-ID is received before the timer expires, the appearance seizure is cancelled and is made available for other calls.

Note that this approach does not actually require a B2BUA, but it does require a proxy that can act as a UAS and communicate with an Appearance Agent which keeps track of appearance number allocations.



 TOC 

13.1.3.3.  PUBLISH Appearance Selection Mechanism

The approach used in previous versions of this draft is to use the PUBLISH to the event state compositor to select an appearance number. This approach requires a special event state compositor and special behavior on the part of the UA.

In the selection of an appearance for requests initiated by UAs in the group, there is the possibility of contention where more than one UA select the same appearance number.

One way to solve this and meet REQ-8 is to require UAs to send a notification (trying) to the Appearance Agent indicating the appearance number to be used for the session. The Appearance Agent would confirm the allocation of the appearance number in a NOTIFY sent to the group UAs. Should the appearance number be unavailable or otherwise not allowed, there are two options:

- The notification could be rejected with a 500 response and a Retry-After header field. The Appearance Agent would send an immediate NOTIFY indicating that the appearance is unavailable. If the NOTIFY is received before the expiration of the Retry-After time, the notification state information would become out of date and would be discarded without resending. The UA would select another appearance number and send another notification.

- The notification could be accepted but an immediate NOTIFY generated by the Appearance Agent indicating that the appearance is unavailable. The UA would then select another appearance number and PUBLISH again.

UAs would wait for a notification from the Appearance Agent before sending the INVITE.



 TOC 

13.2.  Comparison

In comparing the URI parameter and the dialog package parameter, there are clear differences in the number of registrations and subscriptions, with the dialog package approach requiring n times fewer in both cases.

The security model for the dialog package parameter approach is much cleaner, since only NOTIFY and PUBLISH requests need integrity and privacy. The security model for the URI parameter approach would likely require a B2BUA which introduces many undesirable properties.

The dialog package parameter approach has better backwards compatibility than the URI parameter approach.

In summary, the dialog package parameter approach better meets REQs 5, 10, 11, 12, and 13 while the URI parameter approach better meets REQ-9. However, the combined dialog package parameter approach and the Alert-Info parameter approach meets REQ-9.



 TOC 

13.2.1.  Comparison of Appearance Selection Methods

All three approaches meet REQ-15 and REQ-16.

Previous versions of this draft proposed the publish/notify method of appearance selection. The advantage of this approach is that the appearance number is only carried in one place (dialog package XML documents) and the same protocol/mechanism is used to select and learn appearance numbers. The disadvantage of this approach is that a specialized event state compositor must be used, since it is aware of appearance numbers. Also, concerns have been raised about whether this approach defines new semantics for publish/notify beyond that in RFC 3265.

The floor control approach makes good reuse of existing protocols such as Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) and cleanly models the state. However, while BFCP can be used in conferencing applications, it is unlikely most UAs implementing shared appearances would utilize the protocol. Also, having appearance state in two places (dialog package XML documents and floor control messages) complicates the application. Also, BFCP only runs over TCP and requires a separate offer/answer exchange to establish the connection, making operation through NATs and firewalls more difficult. The BFCP approach is also radically different from all current implementations of this feature. As a result, standardizing this approach would likely result in an increase in feature interoperability rather than a decrease.

The INVITE selection mechanism is based on overlap dialing. Overlap dialing is supported in very few SIP UAs and is regarded as a somewhat archaic leftover from the PSTN. As such, it is not regarded as a good starting point for a common feature such as shared appearances.

The PUBLISH selection mechanism reuses the SIP events extensions which already must be implemented by UAs supporting this feature. In fact, it results in no additional messages or round trips. It is also very similar to many current feature implementations today. Standardizing this approach is likely to increase overall interoperability of this feature.

The rest of this document will only discuss the PUBLISH appearance selection mechanism.



 TOC 

14.  Acknowledgements

The following individuals were part of the shared appearance Design team and have provided input and text to the document (in alphabetical order):

Martin Dolly, Andrew Hutton, Raj Jain, Fernando Lombardo, Derek MacDonald, Bill Mitchell, Michael Procter, Theo Zowzouvillys.

Thanks to Chris Boulton for helping with the XML schema.

Much of the material has been drawn from previous work by Mohsen Soroushnejad, Venkatesh Venkataramanan, Paul Pepper and Anil Kumar, who in turn received assistance from:

Kent Fritz, John Weald, and Sunil Veluvali of Sylantro Systems, Steve Towlson, and Michael Procter of Citel Technologies, Rob Harder and Hong Chen of Polycom Inc, John Elwell, J D Smith of Siemens Communications, Dale R. Worley of Pingtel, Graeme Dollar of Yahoo Inc.

Also thanks to Geoff Devine, Paul Kyzivat, Jerry Yin, John Elwell, Dan York, Spenser Dawkins, Martin Dolly, and Brett Tate for their comments.



 TOC 

15.  Security Considerations

Since multiple line appearance features are implemented using semantics provided by [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.), Event Package for Dialog State as define in , and Event Notification [RFC3265] (Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” June 2002.), [RFC3903] (Niemi, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Event State Publication,” October 2004.), security considerations in these documents apply to this draft as well.

Specifically, since dialog state information and the dialog identifiers are supplied by UA's in an appearance group to other members, the same is prone to "call hijacks". For example, a rogue UA could snoop for these identifiers and send an INVITE with Replaces header containing these call details to take over the call. As such INVITES with Replaces header MUST be authenticated using the standard mechanism (like Digest or S/MIME) described in [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.). before it is accepted. NOTIFY or PUBLISH message bodies that provide the dialog state information and the dialog identifiers MAY be encrypted end-to-end using the standard mechanics. All SUBSCRIBES between the UA's and the Appearance Agent MUST be authenticated.



 TOC 

16. Informative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[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 (TXT).
[RFC3515] Sparks, R., “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer Method,” RFC 3515, April 2003 (TXT).
[RFC3265] Roach, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification,” RFC 3265, June 2002 (TXT).
[RFC3903] Niemi, A., “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Event State Publication,” RFC 3903, October 2004 (TXT).
[RFC3891] Mahy, R., Biggs, B., and R. Dean, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Replaces" Header,” RFC 3891, September 2004 (TXT).
[I-D.ietf-sipping-service-examples] Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and K. Summers, “Session Initiation Protocol Service Examples,” draft-ietf-sipping-service-examples-15 (work in progress), July 2008 (TXT).
[RFC4235] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and R. Mahy, “An INVITE-Initiated Dialog Event Package for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” RFC 4235, November 2005 (TXT).
[RFC3680] Rosenberg, J., “A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Registrations,” RFC 3680, March 2004 (TXT).
[RFC3911] Mahy, R. and D. Petrie, “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) "Join" Header,” RFC 3911, October 2004 (TXT).
[RFC3325] Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, “Private Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks,” RFC 3325, November 2002 (TXT).
[RFC4579] Johnston, A. and O. Levin, “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents,” BCP 119, RFC 4579, August 2006 (TXT).
[RFC3840] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat, “Indicating User Agent Capabilities in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” RFC 3840, August 2004 (TXT).


 TOC 

Authors' Addresses

  Alan Johnston (editor)
  Avaya
  St. Louis, MO 63124
Email:  alan@sipstation.com
  
  Mohsen Soroushnejad
  Sylantro Systems Corp
Email:  mohsen.soroush@sylantro.com
  
  Venkatesh Venkataramanan
  Sylantro Systems Corp
Email:  vvenkatar@gmail.com


 TOC 

Full Copyright Statement

Intellectual Property