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SIP Today: A Look at the Current State of the Standard Amnon Gavish VP Business Development RADVISION.

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Presentation on theme: "SIP Today: A Look at the Current State of the Standard Amnon Gavish VP Business Development RADVISION."— Presentation transcript:

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2 SIP Today: A Look at the Current State of the Standard Amnon Gavish VP Business Development RADVISION

3 AGENDA  SIP – The Emerging IP Communication Protocol  SIP Protocol Overview  User Perspective - Applications and Services  Carrier perspective - Network aspects  The Future

4 Just a moment, my laptop is ringing…  There’s a video call coming in on my desktop phone.  Oops, my boss is trying to reach me on a cellular POC call.  Now who’s that instant message from?  Oh, I hope that incoming file is the report I’ve been waiting for.  My messenger shows an incoming voice call on my laptop.  So many calls, over so many devices over so many networks…  Wonder how it works?

5 Introducing the signaling protocol SIP  SIP = Session Initiation Protocol  Signaling protocol for initiating, modifying, and terminating interactive sessions  A session can be voice, video, data or any combination tied together by SIP.  SIP enables any kind of communication everywhere at any time.  SIP enables new services in parallel with old services:  Presence, IM, Click to Talk….  SIP is the glue for Convergence!  SIP is the NGN service enabler…

6 Where is SIP used? Soft switch Everywhere!

7 SIP – The emerging IP communication protocol  The communication world is experiencing a revolution!  Users want to communicate everywhere, in many ways, and anytime.  On the road, at home, at office…  Talking, seeing, chatting, gaming, data transferring, and everything together.  While working, while on vacation, while traveling...  This means:  Combining internet, cellular, wireless, and fixed networks services.  Moving to packet networks.  SIP is the glue for all this….

8 SIP – A little history  1996: started at Columbia University, submitted to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)  March 1999: IETF RFC 2543  Sep. 1999: SIP Working Group is formed at the IETF  1999-2001: Several updates of RFC 2543 are released  July 2000: Draft standard version of SIP submitted  March 2001: SIP Working Group split into two groups due to significant increase in SIP-related activity  June 2002: RFC 3261 - The basis for today’s SIP

9 SIP has been adopted by various standards bodies  SIP adopted by different Consortia  GSM/3GPP, CDMA/3GPP2 – SIP in 3G cellular networks  CableLabs – Distributed Call State (DCS) specification  International Softswitch Consortium – SIP as inter- softswitch protocol (SIP-T)  SUN/JAIN – Standard JAVA API for SIP  Other standards bodies involved in SIP  International Telecommunication Union (ITU)  International Multimedia Telecommunications Consortium (IMTC)

10 What makes SIP protocol so popular?  Uses proven Internet methods like HTTP/SMTP  Integrates with Internet services  Instant messaging, presence, and more…  Flexibility  Easily adopted for new services e.g. video, gaming…  Scalability  SIP routing, makes it scalable by using a decentralized architecture  Readability  Developers like it ….

11 SIP Overview

12 SIP Operation Registrar User Agent 1 Location service User Agent 2 ProxyRedirect Server SIP Request read update REGISTER

13 SIP Philosophy  Reuse Internet proven, rich set of concepts  Internet addressing and locating mechanisms  Internet routing  Internet protocols (HTTP, SMTP…)  Advanced security methods  Make no assumptions about the underlying packet network transmission protocol (TCP, UDP…)  SIP provides building blocks for sessions control  SIP can be read by humans; makes it more friendly to understand

14 IETF SIP working groups  SIP standardization working groups  SIP – Session initiation protocol  SIPPING - Session Initiation Proposal Investigation  SIMPLE - SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence Leveraging Extensions  IPTEL – IP telephony  Working groups with indirect connections to SIP  AVT – Audio Video Telephony  ENUM - Telephone Number Mapping  Behave - Behavior Engineering for Hindrance Avoidance  XCON - Centralized Conferencing  Many others…

15 Important Internet RFCs concerning SIP  RFC3261: Session Initiation Protocol  RFC3262: Reliability of Provisional Responses in SIP  RFC3263: SIP: Locating SIP Servers  RFC3264: An Offer/Answer Model with the Session Description Protocol  RFC3265: Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)-Specific Event Notification  RFC3892: The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Referred-By Mechanism  RFC3891: The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Replaces Header  RFC3856: A Presence Event Package for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)  RFC3857: A Watcher Information Event Template-Package for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)  RFC3824: Using E.164 numbers with the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)  RFC3764: ENUM service registration for Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Addresses-of-Record

16 Important Internet drafts relating to SIP  3rd-Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Release 5 requirements for Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)  Connection reuse  The Stream Control Transmission Protocol as a Transport for for the Session Initiation Protocol  Session Initiation Protocol Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents  Session timers  Emergency Services for Internet Telephony systems

17 User Perspective - Applications and Services

18 SIP applications – practically everywhere…  Desktop IP phones  Soft phones  PC  Laptop  Palm  Cellular phones  Instant messaging user agents  Presence user agents  Streaming clients: IP radio

19 Carrier Perspective - Network Aspects

20 SIP network elements  SIP Servers  Soft switches  Proxy  Redirect  Registrar  B2BUA  Events and Presence  IM  Application Servers  ACD, IP Centrex…  Media Servers  MCU, streaming servers, announcement servers

21 SIP usage in all networks  Cellular/wireless  IMS - the new cellular core is SIP based  Cellular endpoints use SIP for advanced features (POC…)  Endpoints and access servers over wireless networks  Fixed telephony  Softswitches  Gateways  Cable networks  SIP infrastructure in packet cable networks  Internet  Click to Talk  Net2Phone

22 SIP Future

23 The future  Cellular networks are going to be SIP end-to-end  Fixed telephony networks are going to be SIP end- to-end  Internet telephony services will be SIP-based  Packet Cables will use SIP in its backbone  SIP will be used for converged services on Handheld devices  SIP will enable Gaming applications

24 BUT, let us return to the present Reality is not that simple… There are many challenges (The “S” is not for simple…)

25 Some gaps between theory and reality  Move from fixed to mobile  Signaling bandwidth  Support for more addresses  Advanced directory services  SIP based systems starting to replace legacy systems  Robustness and reliability  Features and services  Security  Working on embedded platforms  Many operating systems (RTOS)  Footprint  Efficiency  Internetworking and cooperation with other standards  Standard is dynamic and evolving

26 Thank you ® Amnon Gavish VP Business Development, RADVISION amnong@radvision.com


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