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Practical Considerations for supporting Emergency Calls

Practical Considerations for supporting Emergency Calls. Brian Rosen Emergicom. Emergency calls are fundamental to deploying VoIP. Doesn’t matter if you are a service provider or an enterprise, you must have provisions for emergency calls

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Practical Considerations for supporting Emergency Calls

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  1. Practical Considerations for supporting Emergency Calls Brian Rosen Emergicom

  2. Emergency calls are fundamental to deploying VoIP • Doesn’t matter if you are a service provider or an enterprise, you must have provisions for emergency calls • There is significant liability if you don’t do something appropriate • At least after there are defined standards • As of the end of this year, in North America, there will be • The more flexibility you offer your customers/employees, the harder it is

  3. The “Sierra Leone” problem • Patron at a Starbucks café has a laptop with WiFi connection to the Internet • VPN Tunnel exists to Patron’s employer • Softclient on laptop connected to employer’s VoIP PBX • An accident happens, and the patron dials 9-1-1 for help

  4. Sierra Leone cont. – So What? • The Starbucks is in Chicago • The employer is Sierra Leone Trading Intl • Its VSP is Sierra Leone VoIP Services Pty • Its ISP is Cable and Wireless • Starbucks uses T-Mobile to supply the hotspot • There are no contractual relationships except that between S.L. Trading and S.L. VoIP • There is clearly no contractual, legal or other relationship between the Chicago PSAP and any entity in Sierra Leone

  5. How this will work (at least at i3) • The phone learns its location from the LOCAL environment • DHCP supplies location when the laptop gets it’s IP address • This is the right location, before the VPN tunnel is established • Location is carried in the signaling, with the call • There is an available routing database so that anyone, worldwide, can route the call to the correct PSAP

  6. Routing is non trivial, especially in North America • There are approximately 6,134 PSAPs in North America • Each has a service boundary • They are NOT necessarily aligned to any political (state/county/city) boundary • Call must be routed to the correct PSAP • There are databases that exist for civic and geo locations that tell you where to route the calls • But currently, access to them is restricted, and has cost associated with it • Other areas are easier (one PSAP for a country) others are harder (no existing database)

  7. Location In Enterprises • Getting to the right “address” is not enough • Think of this as the “yelling” test • All enterprises who have large facilities will need to provide more specific location information • We’re going to make this as easy as possible, but it’s still going to be some level of burden on enterprise

  8. Making Location work in Enterprise VoIP • Same basic idea – phone learns location from its local environment • Could be proprietary to your VoIP vendor • Standards based approaches are feasible now • RFC3046 describes a mechanism to determine the switch port a packet arrived on • Or check out LLDP-MED • This gives you the basis to use a (manually maintained) wiremap database (room number to switch port) to determine location – and that is where the cost is • DHCP can be used to supply this location to phones • Location to building/suite/floor/room can be specified

  9. Location for Residential VoIP • Voice Service Providers don’t have much of a role because they don’t know where the customer is AND THEY DON’T HAVE A RELATIONSHIP WITH ANYONE WHO DOES • The ISP may or may not know, but if they don’t they have a relationship with someone who does • The Access Infrastructure Provider knows where the customer is

  10. Access Infrastructure Providers • “First Mile” infrastructure owner, wireline or wireless • Wireline AIPs already have a notion of a Service Address, and a wiremap (or equivalent) database • I believe ALL AIPs, regardless of technology, and regardless of whether they offer voice/video/text services, must supply location • It’s likely that regulation will be required, and it’s likely to happen • Fixed wireless (e.g. WiMax) vendors; plan on GPS receivers or triangulation mechanisms • You heard it here first

  11. ISPs • If you are the AIP, you supply location to endpoints • If you aren’t, contract with the AIP to get it • If there is a system spec on all infrastructure including all end points, you can use any mechanism you like to get location to the endpoint • If you don’t have such control, support at least DHCP

  12. Cascaded Location • Applicable to things like WiFi • “AP” gets location from its environment, and relays it to its endpoints • If possible, supply more specific location • The “yell test” again • Works for things like café hotspots

  13. Next Up - SIP Phone Vendors • You have to get location from the environment as described • If you do digit analysis in the phone, you have to learn the local emergency call number for the environment the phone is in • We are working on standards for this • When you detect an emergency call, or the downstream proxy tells you its an emergency call, you must supply location

  14. SIP Phone Vendors, cont. • Because location is sensitive, IETF standards REQUIRE sips (TLS) for emergency calls • PLEASE implement this now, pretty please • Supply a good callback in Contact • Good as in, “reachable from the PSAP” • Implement blind and supervised transfer (REFER/Replaces) • 3rd Party Call Control (for conferencing)

  15. SIP Proxy Vendors – Your turn • For i3, you need to implement routing based on location • This is the charter of the new IETF working group • The DNS based approach will work, others may or may not, we’ll see • You have to implement TLS too • Allow callback from the PSAP • Probably more a configuration thing

  16. What if you don’t support SIP? • The standard interface to PSAPs, at least in North America, will be SIP • Other vendors will have to gateway to SIP to send emergency calls • Most vendors already support SIP, because most inter-enterprise/inter-carrier peering is SIP • Must include location, as per SIP standards on the call

  17. Voice Service Providers • For i2, you contract with a “VPC” operator and an “ESGW” operator (could be the same entity) • Three different ways to hand off calls • Unconditional SIP handoff • Query VPC, choose ESGW • SIP Handoff, with redirect back to you to select ESGW

  18. That i2 picture again

  19. More VSP Responsibilities • Deploy TLS • So, beat up your (SBC) vendors. It’s the Right Thing To Do • For i3, much simpler routing decision • Look up location in a database (DNS for example) • Forward call to where it says to • No 3rd parties • Allow callbacks to Contact header • May need identity assertions

  20. Other communications service providers have a role too • Video telephony/conferencing vendors, i3 PSAPs will take the calls • Also applies to camera phones • IM vendors, i3 PSAPs will take the calls • And for everyone, there will be a new generation of “TDD” devices based on SIP and interactive text streams. Please plan on supporting them

  21. Summary • Emergency Calls are important, and not some one else’s problem • Voluntary compliance forestalls heavy regulation • Participate in the standards work if you are interested • Plan for deployments NEXT YEAR

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