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Advanced Multimedia and Presence Services using Classical and P2P SIP

This article provides an overview of SIP, its evolution, and its role in enabling advanced multimedia and presence services. It discusses the benefits of presence, service, and session mobility and explores the philosophy and basic message flow of SIP. The article also covers SIP addressing, registration, and its application in 3G architecture.

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Advanced Multimedia and Presence Services using Classical and P2P SIP

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  1. Advanced Multimedia and Presence Services using Classical and P2P SIP Henning Schulzrinne (with Kundan Singh, Ron Shacham, Xiaotao Wu, Jonathan Lennox and others) Department of Computer Science Columbia University hgs@cs.columbia.edu Alcatel May 23, 2005 Alcatel

  2. Overview • Quick overview of SIP • Ring-and-hope  presence-mediated communications • Uses for presence: • Old: “I’m on-line” • Location-based services • Presence-derived call handling • Presence-derived trust • Presence and privacy • Service and session mobility • Application sharing Alcatel

  3. Philosophy transition One computer, many users One computer, one user mainframe era Many computers, one user ~ ubiquitous computing anywhere, any time any media right place (device), right time, right media Alcatel

  4. Evolution of VoIP “how can I make it stop ringing?” long-distance calling, ca. 1930 “does it do call transfer?” going beyond the black phone “amazing – the phone rings” catching up with the digital PBX 1996-2000 2000-2003 2004- Alcatel

  5. Collaboration in transition inter-organization multiple technology generations diverse end points intra-organization; small number of systems (meeting rooms) standards-based solutions proprietary (single-vendor) systems Alcatel

  6. SIP Overview Alcatel

  7. Internet services – the missing entry Alcatel

  8. Filling in the protocol gap Alcatel

  9. Rendezvous protocol lets users find each other by only knowing a permanent identifier Mobility enabler: personal mobility one person, multiple terminals terminal mobility one terminal, multiple IP addresses session mobility one user, multiple terminals in sequence or in parallel service mobility services move with user SIP as service enabler Alcatel

  10. What is SIP? • Session Initiation Protocol  protocol that establishes, manages (multimedia) sessions • also used for IM, presence & event notification • uses SDP to describe multimedia sessions • Developed at Columbia U. (with others) • Standardized by • IETF (RFC 3261-3265 et al) • 3GPP (for 3G wireless) • PacketCable • About 100 companies produce SIP products • Microsoft’s Windows Messenger (≥4.7) includes SIP Alcatel

  11. Philosophy • Session establishment & event notification • Any session type, from audio to circuit emulation • Provides application-layer anycast service • Provides terminal and session mobility • Based on HTTP in syntax, but different in protocol operation • Peer-to-peer system, with optional support by proxies • even stateful proxies only keep transaction state, not call (session, dialogue) state • transaction: single request + retransmissions • proxies can be completely stateless Alcatel

  12. Basic SIP message flow Alcatel

  13. SIP trapezoid destination proxy (identified by SIP URI domain) outbound proxy 1st request SIP trapezoid 2nd, 3rd, … request a@foo.com: 128.59.16.1 registrar voice traffic RTP Alcatel

  14. response request request line INVITE sip:bob@there.com SIP/2.0 SIP/2.0 200 OK Via: SIP/2.0/UDP here.com:5060 From: Alice <sip:alice@here.com> To: Bob <sip:bob@there.com> Call-ID: 1234@here.com CSeq: 1 INVITE Subject: just testing Contact: sip:alice@pc.here.com Content-Type: application/sdp Content-Length: 147 Via: SIP/2.0/UDP here.com:5060 From: Alice <sip:alice@here.com> To: Bob <sip:bob@there.com> Call-ID: 1234@here.com CSeq: 1 INVITE Subject: just testing Contact: sip:alice@pc.here.com Content-Type: application/sdp Content-Length: 134 header fields v=0 o=alice 2890844526 2890844526 IN IP4 here.com s=Session SDP c=IN IP4 100.101.102.103 t=0 0 m=audio 49172 RTP/AVP 0 a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000 v=0 o=bob 2890844527 2890844527 IN IP4 there.com s=Session SDP c=IN IP4 110.111.112.113 t=0 0 m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0 a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000 messagebody SIP message format Alcatel SDP

  15. PSTN vs. Internet Telephony PSTN: Signaling & Media Signaling & Media China Internet telephony: Signaling Signaling Media Australia Belgian customer, currently visiting US Alcatel

  16. SIP addressing • Users identified by SIP or tel URIs • sip:alice@example.com • tel: URIs describe E.164 number, not dialed digits (RFC 2806bis) • tel URIs  SIP URIs by outbound proxy • A person can have any number of SIP URIs • The same SIP URI can reach many different phones, in different networks • sequential & parallel forking • SIP URIs can be created dynamically: • GRUUs • conferences • device identifiers (sip:foo@128.59.16.15) • Registration binds SIP URIs (e.g., device addresses) to SIP “address-of-record” (AOR) tel:110 sip:sos@domain domain  128.59.16.17 via NAPTR + SRV Alcatel

  17. 3G Architecture (Registration) mobility management signaling serving interrogating interrogating CSCF proxy home IM domain registration signaling (SIP)_ visited IM domain Alcatel

  18. SIP is PBX/Centrex ready boss/admin features centrex-style features attendant features Alcatel from Rohan Mahy’s VON Fall 2003 talk

  19. A constellation of SIP RFCs Non-adjacent (3327) Symmetric resp. (3581) Service route (3608) User agent caps (3840) Caller prefs (3841) Request routing Resource mgt. (3312) Reliable prov. (3262) INFO (2976) UPDATE (3311) Reason (3326) SIP (3261) DNS for SIP (3263) Events (3265) REFER (3515) ISUP (3204) sipfrag (3240) Mostly PSTN Content types Core Digest AKA (3310) Privacy (3323) P-Asserted (3325) Agreement (3329) Media auth. (3313) AES (3853) DHCP (3361) DHCPv6 (3319) Configuration Alcatel Security & privacy

  20. An eco system, not just a protocol configures XCAP (config) XCON (conferencing) SIMPLE policy RPID …. initiates carries SIP RTSP SDP carries controls provide addresses RTP STUN TURN Alcatel

  21. SIP – a bi-cultural protocol • multimedia • IM and presence • location-based service • user-created services • decentralized operation • everyone equally suspect • overlap dialing • DTMF carriage • key systems • notion of lines • per-minute billing • early media • ISUP & BICC interoperation • trusted service providers Alcatel

  22. Context-aware communication • context = “the interrelated conditions in which something exists or occurs” • anything known about the participants in the (potential) communication relationship • both at caller and callee Alcatel

  23. GEOPRIV and SIMPLE architectures rule maker DHCP XCAP (rules) target location server location recipient notification interface publication interface GEOPRIV SUBSCRIBE presentity presence agent watcher SIP presence PUBLISH NOTIFY caller callee SIP call INVITE INVITE Alcatel

  24. Guess-and-ring high probability of failure: “telephone tag” inappropriate time (call during meeting) inappropriate media (audio in public place) current solutions: voice mail  tedious, doesn’t scale, hard to search and catalogue, no indication of when call might be returned automated call back  rarely used, too inflexible  most successful calls are now scheduled by email Presence-based facilitates unscheduled communications provide recipient-specific information only contact in real-time if destination is willing and able appropriately use synchronous vs. asynchronous communication guide media use (text vs. audio) predict availability in the near future (timed presence) The role of presence Prediction: almost all (professional) communication will be presence-initiated or pre-scheduled Alcatel

  25. Basic presence • Role of presence • initially: “can I send an instant message and expect a response?” • now: “should I use voice or IM? is my call going to interrupt a meeting? is the callee awake?” • Yahoo, MSN, Skype presence services: • on-line & off-line • useful in modem days – but many people are (technically) on-line 24x7 • thus, need to provide more context • + simple status (“not at my desk”) • entered manually  rarely correct • does not provide enough context for directing interactive communications Alcatel

  26. Presence data architecture presence sources PUBLISH raw presence document privacy filtering create view (compose) depends on watcher XCAP select best source resolve contradictions XCAP privacy policy composition policy (not defined yet) draft-ietf-simple-presence-data-model Alcatel

  27. Presence data architecture candidate presence document raw presence document post-processing composition (merging) watcher filter remove data not of interest SUBSCRIBE difference to previous notification final presence document watcher NOTIFY Alcatel

  28. Presence data model “calendar” “cell” “manual” person (presentity) (views) alice@example.com audio, video, text r42@example.com video services devices Alcatel

  29. Rich presence • More information • automatically derived from • sensors: physical presence, movement • electronic activity: calendars • Rich information: • multiple contacts per presentity • device (cell, PDA, phone, …) • service (“audio”) • activities, current and planned • surroundings (noise, privacy, vehicle, …) • contact information • composing (typing, recording audio/video IM, …) Alcatel

  30. RPID: rich presence Alcatel

  31. RPID = rich presence • Provide watchers with better information about the what, where, how of presentities • facilitate appropriate communications: • “wait until end of meeting” • “use text messaging instead of phone call” • “make quick call before flight takes off” • designed to be derivable from calendar information • or provided by sensors in the environment • allow filtering by “sphere” – the parts of our life • don’t show recreation details to colleagues Alcatel

  32. CIPID: Contact Information • More long-term identification of contacts • Elements: • card – contact Information • home page • icon – to represent user • map – pointer to map for user • sound – presentity is available Alcatel

  33. The role of presence for call routing PUBLISH • Two modes: • watcher uses presence information to select suitable contacts • advisory – caller may not adhere to suggestions and still call when you’re in a meeting • user call routing policy informed by presence • likely less flexible – machine intelligence • “if activities indicate meeting, route to tuple indicating assistant” • “try most-recently-active contact first” (seq. forking) PA NOTIFY translate RPID CPL LESS INVITE Alcatel

  34. Presence and privacy • All presence data, particularly location, is highly sensitive • Basic location object (PIDF-LO) describes • distribution (binary) • retention duration • Policy rules for more detailed access control • who can subscribe to my presence • who can see what when <tuple id="sg89ae"> <status> <gp:geopriv> <gp:location-info> <gml:location> <gml:Point gml:id="point1“ srsName="epsg:4326"> <gml:coordinates>37:46:30N 122:25:10W </gml:coordinates> </gml:Point> </gml:location> </gp:location-info> <gp:usage-rules> <gp:retransmission-allowed>no </gp:retransmission-allowed> <gp:retention-expiry>2003-06-23T04:57:29Z </gp:retention-expiry> </gp:usage-rules> </gp:geopriv> </status> <timestamp>2003-06-22T20:57:29Z</timestamp> </tuple> Alcatel

  35. Privacy policy relationships common policy geopriv-specific presence-specific future RPID CIPID Alcatel

  36. Conditions identity, sphere time of day current location identity as <uri> or <domain> + <except> Actions watcher confirmation Transformations include information reduced accuracy User gets maximum of permissions across all matching rules privacy-safe composition: removal of a rule can only reduce privileges Extendable to new presence data rich presence biological sensors mood sensors Privacy rules Alcatel

  37. Example rules document <rule id=1> <identity><id>user@example.com</id></identity> <conditions> <sub-handling>allow</sub-handling> <actions> <provide-services> <service-uri-scheme>sip</service-uri-scheme> <service-uri-scheme>mailto</service-uri-scheme> </provide-services> <provide-person>true</provide-person> <provide-activities>true</provide-activities> <provide-user-input>bare</provide-user-input> <ruleset> <transformations> Alcatel

  38. Creating and manipulating rules • Uploaded in whole or part via XCAP • XML not user-visible • Web or application UI, similar to mail filtering • Can also be location-dependent • “if at home, colleagues don’t get presence information” • Possibly implementation-defined “privacy levels” Alcatel

  39. Location-based services • Finding services based on location • physical services (stores, restaurants, ATMs, …) • electronic services (media I/O, printer, display, …) • not covered here • Using location to improve (network) services • communication • incoming communications changes based on where I am • configuration • devices in room adapt to their current users • awareness • others are (selectively) made aware of my location • security • proximity grants temporary access to local resources Alcatel

  40. Location-based SIP services • Location-aware inbound routing • do not forward call if time at callee location is [11 pm, 8 am] • only forward time-for-lunch if destination is on campus • do not ring phone if I’m in a theater • outbound call routing • contact nearest emergency call center • send delivery@pizza.com to nearest branch • location-based events • subscribe to locations, not people • Alice has entered the meeting room • subscriber may be device in room  our lab stereo changes CDs for each person that enters the room Alcatel

  41. Location detection Alcatel

  42. DHCP for locations • modified dhcpd (ISC) to generate location information • use MAC address backtracing to get location information 8:0:20:ab:d5:d DHCP server CDP + SNMP 8:0:20:ab:d5:d 458/17 DHCP answer: sta=DC loc=Rm815 lat=38.89868 long=77.03723 458/17  Rm. 815 458/18  Rm. 816 Alcatel

  43. Location-based service language NOTIFY true false action alert IM alert incoming proximity message outgoing log conditions occupancy actions events notify call message time transfer subscription join Alcatel

  44. Program location-based services Alcatel

  45. Alcatel

  46. Tracking Alcatel

  47. Internet2 WG PIC trial SUBSCRIBE to my location NOTIFY myself and others’ locations PUBLISH presence status Alcatel

  48. Example: user-adaptive device configuration “all devices that are in the building” RFC 3082? 802.11 signal strength  location SLP device controller HTTP PA REGISTER To: 815cepsr Contact: alice@cs tftp SUBSCRIBE to each room • discover room URI • REGISTER as contact for room URI SIP room 815 SUBSCRIBE to configuration for users currently in rooms Alcatel

  49. Session mobility • Walk into office, switch from cell phone to desk phone • call transfer problem  SIP REFER • related problem: split session across end devices • e.g., wall display + desk phone + PC for collaborative application • assume devices (or stand-ins) are SIP-enabled • third-party call control Alcatel

  50. How to find services? • Two complementary developments: • smaller devices carried on user instead of stationary devices • devices that can be time-shared • large plasma displays • projector • hi-res cameras • echo-canceling speaker systems • wide-area network access • Need to discover services in local environment • SLP (Service Location Protocol) allows querying for services • “find all color displays with at least XGA resolution” • slp://example.com/SrvRqst?public?type=printer • SLP in multicast mode • SLP in DA mode • Need to discover services before getting to environment • “is there a camera in the meeting room?” • SLP extension: find remote DA via DNS SRV Alcatel

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