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SIP in 2002

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SIP in 2002 Henning Schulzrinne Dept. of Computer Science Columbia University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SIP in 2002


1
SIP in 2002
  • Henning Schulzrinne
  • Dept. of Computer Science
  • Columbia University

2
Overview
  • Where are we?
  • Uses of SIP new and old
  • Challenges
  • IM
  • 3GPP
  • Security
  • Emergency calling

3
Where are we?
  • SIP as the signaling protocol for future
    applications
  • 3GPP
  • Cable modems (DOCSIS DCS)
  • IM AOL interworking, Windows Messenger
  • but H.323 dominates videoconferencing, trunk
    replacement
  • Proprietary protocols dominate for Ethernet
    phones
  • Slow uptake of VoIP

4
Where are we?
  • Not quite what we had in mind
  • initially, for initiating multicast conferencing
  • in progress since 1992
  • still small niche
  • even the IAB and IESG meet by POTS conference
  • then VoIP
  • written-off equipment (circuit-switched) vs. new
    equipment (VoIP)
  • bandwidth is (mostly) not the problem
  • cant get new services if other end is POTS ??
    why use VoIP if I cant get new services

5
Where are we?
  • VoIP avoiding the installed base issue
  • cable modems lifeline service
  • 3GPP vaporware?
  • Finally, IM/presence and events
  • probably, first major application
  • offers real advantage interoperable IM
  • also, new service

6
SIP in the Enterprise
  • Greenfield
  • save on wiring and admin expenses
  • per-seat cost similar (500)
  • Existing installations
  • small PBX (lt 8 lines) cheap
  • cant beat 80 phones
  • move towards multi-cordless (Gigaset, etc.)

7
Where are we?
  • Number of robust SIP phones
  • not yet in Wal-Mart
  • SIP carriers terminate LAN VoIP
  • number portability?
  • 911
  • 50 vendors at SIPit
  • Building blocks media servers, unified
    messaging, conferencing, VoiceXML,

8
SIP at Home
  • Lifeline (power)
  • Multiple phones per household
  • expensive to do over PNA or 802.11
  • BlueTooth range too short
  • need wireless SIP base station handsets
  • PDAs with 802.11 and GSM? (Treo)
  • Incentives
  • SMS IM services

9
SIP phones
  • Hard to build really basic phones
  • need real multitasking OS
  • need large set of protocols
  • IP, DNS, DHCP, maybe IPsec, SNTP and SNMP
  • UDP, TCP, maybe TLS
  • HTTP (configuration), RTP, SIP
  • user-interface for entering URLs is a pain
  • see success of Internet appliances
  • PCs with handset cost 500 and still have a
    Palm-size display

10
SIP developments in 2001
  • SIP revision (RFC2534bis) almost done
  • semantically-oriented rewrite
  • layers message, transport, transaction,
    transaction user
  • SDP extracted into separate draft
  • UA and proxy have the same state machinery
  • better Route/Record-Route spec for loose routing
  • no more Basic authentication
  • few optional headers (In-Reply-To, Call-Info,
    Alert-Info, )
  • Integration of reliable provisional responses and
    server features
  • DNS SRV modifications

11
SIP developments in 2001
  • SIP revision backwards compatible
  • new messages work with RFC 2543 implementations
  • some odd allowed RFC 2543 behavior no longer
    allowed
  • CPL almost finished merger with iCal
  • sip-cgi published
  • IM presence mostly done, except for IM sessions
    (over TCP) IMTP, BEEP

12
SIP developments in 2001
  • Work continues on staples
  • early media (announcements)
  • resource reservation (COMET)
  • SIP security
  • SIP events
  • User identification
  • Call transfer and call control
  • Now three SIP working groups
  • SIP for protocol definition and extensions
  • SIPPING for applications and vetting
  • SIMPLE for IM presence

13
SIP security
  • Bar is higher than for email telephone
    expectations (albeit wrong)
  • SIP carries media encryption keys
  • Potential for nuisance phone spam at 2 am
  • Safety prevent emergency calls

14
SIP security
  • Exposes weak state of general Internet security
    tools
  • Attempt to re-use existing mechanisms
  • HTTP digest authentication, with additions to
    protect crucial headers (e.g., Contact in
    REGISTER) for e2e and proxy authentication
  • TLS and IPsec for hop-by-hop authentication and
    confidentiality
  • S/MIME for end-to-end

15
SIP security
  • Security with random strangers is hard!
  • Identities are cheap cant use for filtering
    bozos
  • often only need to verify that same good person
    as before see ssh
  • Symmetric (secret) key doesnt scale
  • Public key cryptography only modest help
  • need certification authorities
  • what is being certified?
  • CRLs
  • hard to move keys to new devices smartcard?
  • Kerberos needs extensions for interdomain

16
SIP security longer term
  • EAP for authentication (used in 3GPP)
  • Third-party signatures
  • this caller is an employee of Visa
  • REFER authentication
  • Alice (verifiable) asked Bob to call Carol

17
Other SIP standardization projects
  • Call history where has this request been?
  • Emergency calling (911/112)
  • universal number sipsos_at_domain
  • finding the emergency call center
  • PSTN interoperation
  • Emergency preparedness
  • priority access to PSTN and IP resources

18
Instant message presence
  • SIMPLE MESSAGE, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY
  • Also for various SIP-related events, e.g., in
    REFER and conferences
  • Just a special case of event notification tell
    me if something happened something happened!

19
Event notification
  • Missing new service in the Internet
  • Existing services
  • get put data, remote procedure call HTTP/SOAP
    (ftp)
  • asynchronous delivery with delayed pick-up SMTP
    ( POP, IMAP)
  • Do not address asynchronous (triggered)
    immediate

20
Event notification
  • Very common
  • operating systems (interrupts, signals, event
    loop)
  • SNMP trap
  • some research prototypes (e.g., Siena)
  • attempted, but ugly
  • periodic web-page reload
  • reverse HTTP

21
SIP event notification
  • Uses beyond SIP and IM/presence
  • Alarms (fire on Elm Street)
  • Web page has changed
  • cooperative web browsing
  • state update without Java applets
  • Network management
  • Distributed games

22
SIP doesnt have to be in a phone
23
SIP longer-term issues
  • SDPng?
  • XML-based generalization
  • better negotiation and grouping
  • API standardization
  • JAIN servlets
  • APIs for IM and presence
  • Operational issues
  • How to configure 10,000 phones without editing
    config files?

24
Conclusion
  • SIP technology vibrant, with large developer
    community
  • Deployments and awareness lag
  • VoIP as replacement technology conversion from
    analog to digital PSTN took decades
  • Not XML, but will soon be on every desktop
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