A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-06
Revision differences
Document history
Date | Rev. | By | Action |
---|---|---|---|
2015-10-14
|
06 | (System) | Notify list changed from sip-chairs@ietf.org, draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide@ietf.org to (None) |
2009-02-05
|
06 | Amy Vezza | State Changes to RFC Published from RFC Ed Queue by Amy Vezza |
2009-02-05
|
06 | Amy Vezza | [Note]: 'RFC 5411' added by Amy Vezza |
2009-02-04
|
06 | (System) | RFC published |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | State Changes to RFC Ed Queue from Approved-announcement sent by Amy Vezza |
2008-11-07
|
06 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to No IC from In Progress |
2008-11-07
|
06 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to In Progress |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | IESG state changed to Approved-announcement sent |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | IESG has approved the document |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | IESG state changed to Approved-announcement sent |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | IESG has approved the document |
2008-11-07
|
06 | Amy Vezza | Closed "Approve" ballot |
2008-11-03
|
06 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-06.txt |
2008-10-24
|
06 | (System) | Removed from agenda for telechat - 2008-10-23 |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Amy Vezza | State Changes to Approved-announcement to be sent::Point Raised - writeup needed from IESG Evaluation by Amy Vezza |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Jari Arkko | [Ballot comment] Review by Christian Vogt: Review of draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-05 The SIP Hitchhikers Guide is a very useful synopsis of important SIP-related specifications. The RFC numbering … [Ballot comment] Review by Christian Vogt: Review of draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-05 The SIP Hitchhikers Guide is a very useful synopsis of important SIP-related specifications. The RFC numbering scheme makes it difficult to identify specifications of a common subject, so documents such as this are of great help for navigating through large protocol suits such as that of SIP. This Hitchhiker's Guide certainly has publication quality, and it should be published as soon as possible. I do, however, have three suggestions for increasing the usefulness of this document even further. Perhaps these could be taken into account before publication: - The scoping of the Hitchhiker's Guide in section 2, which identifies the types of documents that are considered by the guide, is a bit complex because it consists of several rules and several exceptions. I would assume that the average reader couldn't tell, after all, whether documents for a particular purpose are in-scope or not. Of course, I do acknowledge that, with the large set of SIP-related documents, it is not easy to come up with a crisp definition of which documents are "relevant" and which are not. But perhaps a very simple approach would do the job: I would suggest to simply state that those documents are included that are relevant to SIP or SDP in general, or to a large class of applications, and documents for a specific application are not. - Why are neither requirements nor architecture documents in-scope of the Hitchhiker's Guide? Requirements can be essential for defining the applicability of a method. Architectures are important to understand how multiple methods fit together. Shouldn't requirements and architecture documents therefore be in-scope of the Hitchhiker's Guide? Of course, not all such documents can be listed due to their large number. But perhaps the most relevant can. - The first bullet in section 2 defines a SIP "extension" as a mechnanism that "changes or updates" SIP. Since this definition differs from the common meaning of the word "extension", I suggest using the term "modification" instead. This would also avoid confusion with later parts of the Hitchhiker's Guide, where the term "extension" is used in its common meaning. |
2008-10-23
|
06 | David Ward | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Yes, has been recorded by David Ward |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Tim Polk | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Tim Polk |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Mark Townsley | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Mark Townsley |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Ron Bonica | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Yes, has been recorded by Ron Bonica |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Chris Newman | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Chris Newman |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Russ Housley | [Ballot comment] The Gen-ART Review from Suresh Krishnan said: "This document is well written and well categorized. I do have a nagging feeling that … [Ballot comment] The Gen-ART Review from Suresh Krishnan said: "This document is well written and well categorized. I do have a nagging feeling that this document will be outdated by the time it will be published." So, the inclusion of some introduction text that warns readers that this is a It is possible to include some text that says something like snapshot of the relevant specifications and that updated versions of this document will be published periodically. |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Russ Housley | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Russ Housley |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot comment] I believe that this is a very useful document. The following comments would IMO give more clarity: 1. The document refers to a … [Ballot comment] I believe that this is a very useful document. The following comments would IMO give more clarity: 1. The document refers to a number of work-in-progress specifications, and for this reason I think that defining it in the Introduction as 'a guide to the SIP RFC series' is slightly mis-leading without noting that the document reflects a snapshot of the SIP standardization at the time of the publication and that some of the specifications refered here are work-in-progress and thus subject to change if and until they become RFCs. 2. I think that it would be useful to provide more clarity to the last paragraph in the introduction that makes clear what the document is not. > This document itself is not an update to RFC 3261 or an extension to SIP. It is an informational document, meant to guide newcomers, implementors and deployers to the many of the specifications associated with SIP. I would suggest to add something on the lines of 'This document does not define any minimal or maximal or other kind of profile for compliance for SIP or SIP-based applications'. 3. I think that the references sections would benefit from some kind of sorting. For a document that tries to make some order in the SIP jungle it is odd thaty there are like eight pages of references without any sorting (or any sorting I could make sense of). Sorting RFCs according to numbers and I-Ds alphabetically would ease the task of the reader who tries to find a reference without necessarily using t3ext search. 4. Section 11 should also include the SIP MIB (RFC 4780) |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Magnus Westerlund | [Ballot comment] Regarding RFC 3890, we know it is broken from a offer/answer perspective. Becuase TIAS values only makes fully sense in a sending … [Ballot comment] Regarding RFC 3890, we know it is broken from a offer/answer perspective. Becuase TIAS values only makes fully sense in a sending direction and the reference to the handling of the other b= parameters makes it becomes a what I can receive. The text should maybe mention this. |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Magnus Westerlund | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Magnus Westerlund |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Yes, has been recorded by Dan Romascanu |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot comment] I believe that this is a very useful document. The following comments would IMO give more clarity: 1. The document refers to a … [Ballot comment] I believe that this is a very useful document. The following comments would IMO give more clarity: 1. The document refers to a number of work-in-progress specifications, and for this reason I think that defining it in the Introduction as 'a guide to the SIP RFC series' is slightly mis-leading without noting that the document reflects a snapshot of the SIP standardization at the time of the publication and that some of the specifications refered here are work-in-progress and thus subject to change if and until they become RFCs. 2. I think that it would be useful to provide more clarity to the last paragraph in the introduction that makes clear what the document is not. > This document itself is not an update to RFC 3261 or an extension to SIP. It is an informational document, meant to guide newcomers, implementors and deployers to the many of the specifications associated with SIP. I would suggest to add something on the lines of 'This document does not define any minimal or maximal or other kind of profile for compliance for SIP or SIP-based applications'. 3. I think that the references sections would benefit from some kind of sorting. For a document that tries to make some order in the SIP jungle it is odd thaty there are like eight pages of references without any sorting (or any sorting I could make sense of). Sorting RFCs according to numbers and I-Ds alphabetically would ease the task of the reader who tries to find a reference without necessarily using t3ext search. |
2008-10-23
|
06 | Jari Arkko | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Jari Arkko |
2008-10-22
|
06 | Pasi Eronen | [Ballot comment] Excellent work! One comment about Section 15 (security mechanisms): should it mention Digest AKA (RFC 3310/4169)? Although technically it's an HTTP … [Ballot comment] Excellent work! One comment about Section 15 (security mechanisms): should it mention Digest AKA (RFC 3310/4169)? Although technically it's an HTTP authentication mechanism, all the examples in RFC 3310 use SIP (and it has some details that don't actually work so well with HTTP). For someone trying to understand the SIP security better, other important pieces of information would be e.g. the "ipsec-3gpp" mechanism (defined in 33.203 but mentioned in RFC 3329), MIKEY, Kerberos/NTLM authentication for SIP (publicly documented, but not in IETF document AFAIK), and RFC 5090 (with many SIP-specific parts) -- but I guess the scope has to be limited somehow (covering all SIP-related 3GPP specs would certainly reach the critical mass for a black hole :-) |
2008-10-22
|
06 | Pasi Eronen | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Pasi Eronen |
2008-10-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | State Changes to IESG Evaluation from Waiting for AD Go-Ahead by Cullen Jennings |
2008-10-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | Placed on agenda for telechat - 2008-10-23 by Cullen Jennings |
2008-10-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Yes, has been recorded for Cullen Jennings |
2008-10-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | Ballot has been issued by Cullen Jennings |
2008-10-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | Created "Approve" ballot |
2008-10-10
|
06 | (System) | State has been changed to Waiting for AD Go-Ahead from In Last Call by system |
2008-10-09
|
06 | Samuel Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR Completed. Reviewer: Charlie Kaufman. |
2008-10-08
|
06 | Amanda Baber | [Note]: 'Keith Drage is proto Shepherd.' added by Amanda Baber |
2008-10-08
|
06 | Amanda Baber | IANA Last Call comments: As described in the IANA Considerations section, we understand this document to have NO IANA Actions. |
2008-09-26
|
06 | Samuel Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR is assigned to Charlie Kaufman |
2008-09-26
|
06 | Samuel Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR is assigned to Charlie Kaufman |
2008-09-26
|
06 | Cindy Morgan | Last call sent |
2008-09-26
|
06 | Cindy Morgan | State Changes to In Last Call from Last Call Requested by Cindy Morgan |
2008-09-25
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | [Note]: 'Keith Drage is proto Shepherd. ' added by Cullen Jennings |
2008-09-25
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | State Changes to Last Call Requested from AD Evaluation by Cullen Jennings |
2008-09-25
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | Last Call was requested by Cullen Jennings |
2008-09-25
|
06 | (System) | Ballot writeup text was added |
2008-09-25
|
06 | (System) | Last call text was added |
2008-09-25
|
06 | (System) | Ballot approval text was added |
2008-09-17
|
06 | Cullen Jennings | State Changes to AD Evaluation from Publication Requested by Cullen Jennings |
2008-07-03
|
06 | Cindy Morgan | PROTO writeup for http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide- 05: "A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)" (1.a) Who is the Document Shepherd for this document? Has … PROTO writeup for http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide- 05: "A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)" (1.a) Who is the Document Shepherd for this document? Has the Document Shepherd personally reviewed this version of the document and, in particular, does he or she believe this version is ready for forwarding to the IESG for publication? Keith Drage The document has been reviewed and is ready for forwarding to IESG for publication. (1.b) Has the document had adequate review both from key WG members and from key non-WG members? Does the Document Shepherd have any concerns about the depth or breadth of the reviews that have been performed? Document history: - draft-rosenberg-sip-hitchhikers-guide-00 was submitted 27th February 2006 and expired 31st August 2006. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-00 was submitted 21st June 2006 and expired 21st December 2007. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-01 was submitted 9th October 2006 and expired 19th April 2007. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-02 was submitted 8th March 2007 and expired 8th September 2007. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-03 was submitted 5th July 2007 and expired 6th January 2008. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-04 was submitted 15th November 2007 and expired 18th May 2008. - draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-05 was submitted 24th February 2008 and expires 27th August 2008. WGLC was initiated in the SIP WG on draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-03 on 15th October 2007 with comments requested by 29th October 2007. Review was made and comments were received from: Francois Audet, Mary Barnes, Andrew Booth, Spencer Dawkins, Martin Dolly, John Elwell, Avshalom Houri, Cullen Jennings, Joerg Ott, Brian Stucker, Abigail West. During the course of the work comments have also been made by: Diego Besprosvan, Spencer Dawkins, Keith Drage, John Elwell, Cary Fitzgerald, Miguel Garcia, Vijay Gurbani, Michael Hammer, Alan Hawrylyshen, Paul Kyzivat, Dave Oran, Dan Romascanu, Brian Rosen, Henning Schulzrinne, Henry Sinnreich, Samir Srivastava, Hannes Tschofenig, M Vasudeva, Dean Willis. It should be noted that once published as an RFC, this is a document that will need to be regularly revised, as and when sufficient new SIP material is published to justify a new version. There has been a key discussion on the which documents should be included. In particular example documents like draft-ietf-sipping-service-examples have been specifically excluded. This received some discussion in the WGLC and RAI review without consensus being obtained. As this document is probably subject to revision in the future, if experience proves that the decision to exclude these documents was wrong, then it can be reversed in the next published version. There is a fine line in some cases as to whether to include a draft/RFC or not. In these cases we are looking to the reader community to address the positioning of this line in future editions. Attention is drawn to the following statement in the document: It is very difficult to enumerate the set of SIP specifications. This is because there are many protocols that are intimately related to SIP and used by nearly all SIP implementations, but are not formally SIP extensions. As such, this document formally defines a o RFC 3261 and any specification that defines an extension to it, where an extension is a mechanism that changes or updates in some way a behavior specified there. o The basic SDP specification, RFC 4566 [RFC4566], and any specification that defines an extension to SDP whose primary purpose is to support SIP. o Any specification that defines a MIME object whose primary purpose is to support SIP Excluded from this list are requirements, architectures, registry definitions, non-normative frameworks, and processes. Best Current Practices are included when they normatively define mechanisms for accomplishing a task, or provide significant description of the usage of the normative specifications, such as call flows. The SIP change process [RFC3427] defines two types of extensions to SIP. These are normal extensions and the so-called P-headers (where P stands for "preliminary", "private", or "proprietary", and the "P-" prefix is included in the header field name), which are meant to be used in areas of limited applicability. P-headers cannot be defined in the standards track. For the most part, P-headers are not included in the listing here, with the exception of those which have seen general usage despite their P-header status. Attention is drawn to the fact that an Informational RFC, RFC 3325, is listed as a core SIP specification. This received widespread discussion on the list at the time it was included, and there was unanimous consensus that it should be so listed. (1.c) Does the Document Shepherd have concerns that the document needs more review from a particular or broader perspective, e.g., security, operational complexity, someone familiar with AAA, internationalization, or XML? While the document indicates documents outside the SIP WG, the document underwent the RAI review process in parallel with working group last call, and during this was extensively reviewed by experts from those other groups. The document shepherd considers that no further external review from an external specialist is necessary. (1.d) Does the Document Shepherd have any specific concerns or issues with this document that the Responsible Area Director and/or the IESG should be aware of? For example, perhaps he or she is uncomfortable with certain parts of the document, or has concerns whether there really is a need for it. In any event, if the WG has discussed those issues and has indicated that it still wishes to advance the document, detail those concerns here. Has an IPR disclosure related to this document been filed? If so, please include a reference to the disclosure and summarize the WG discussion and conclusion on this issue. The document summarises a large number of SIP protocol related documents and does not introduce new technical requirements. The document shepherd therefore has no concerns with the document. There have been no IPR disclosures on this document. (1.e) How solid is the WG consensus behind this document? Does it represent the strong concurrence of a few individuals, with others being silent, or does the WG as a whole understand and agree with it? The needs for such a document has been well indicated on the SIP mailing list. It may be concluded that there is strong support throughout the working group, and throughout the RAI area, for such a document. (1.f) Has anyone threatened an appeal or otherwise indicated extreme discontent? If so, please summarize the areas of conflict in separate email messages to the Responsible Area Director. (It should be in a separate email because this questionnaire is entered into the ID Tracker.) None indicated. (1.g) Has the Document Shepherd personally verified that the document satisfies all ID nits? (See http://www.ietf.org/ID-Checklist.html and http://tools.ietf.org/tools/idnits/.) Boilerplate checks are not enough; this check needs to be thorough. Has the document met all formal review criteria it needs to, such as the MIB Doctor, media type, and URI type reviews? If the document does not already indicate its intended status at the top of the first page, please indicate the intended status here. The document has been reviewed against the guidelines in RFC 4485 and it is believed that the document is conformant with those guidelines. For ID-NITS the checks against idnits 2.08.10 reports the following. It should be noted that these are significantly outdated references to drafts. As the intent is that the document is published with whatever the latest version is that applies, it does not seem relevant to publish a new version to allow IESG and IETF review. The WG did investigate leaving the version number off altogether, but this creates problems in XML2RFC to do this easily. Drafts continue to be published in later versions. Checking boilerplate required by RFC 3978 and 3979, updated by RFC 4748: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- No issues found here. Checking nits according to http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-guidelines.txt: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- No issues found here. Checking nits according to http://www.ietf.org/ID-Checklist.html: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- No issues found here. Miscellaneous warnings: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- == Line 1080 has weird spacing: '...ions in the S...' Checking references for intended status: Informational ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Obsolete informational reference (is this intentional?): RFC 2543 (Obsoleted by RFC 3261, RFC 3262, RFC 3263, RFC 3264, RFC 3265) -- Obsolete informational reference (is this intentional?): RFC 2915 (Obsoleted by RFC 3401, RFC 3402, RFC 3403, RFC 3404) == Outdated reference: A later version (-15) exists of draft-ietf-sip-outbound-11 == Outdated reference: A later version (-07) exists of draft-ietf-sip-answermode-06 == Outdated reference: A later version (-06) exists of draft-ietf-mmusic-ice-tcp-05 == Outdated reference: A later version (-06) exists of draft-ietf-sip-certs-05 == Outdated reference: A later version (-05) exists of draft-ietf-sipping-pending-additions-03 == Outdated reference: A later version (-03) exists of draft-ietf-mmusic-sdp-media-capabilities-02 == Outdated reference: A later version (-08) exists of draft-ietf-mmusic-file-transfer-mech-06 == Outdated reference: A later version (-02) exists of draft-ietf-sip-record-route-fix-01 == Outdated reference: A later version (-02) exists of draft-ietf-sip-subnot-etags-01 == Outdated reference: A later version (-08) exists of draft-ietf-sip-sips-07 == Outdated reference: draft-ietf-rohc-sigcomp-sip has been published as RFC 5049 == Outdated reference: A later version (-02) exists of draft-ietf-simple-simple-01 == Outdated reference: A later version (-01) exists of draft-ietf-sip-dtls-srtp-framework-00 == Outdated reference: A later version (-05) exists of draft-ietf-ecrit-framework-04 -- Obsolete informational reference (is this intentional?): RFC 2833 (Obsoleted by RFC 4733, RFC 4734) == Outdated reference: A later version (-04) exists of draft-ietf-sipping-update-pai-00 == Outdated reference: A later version (-02) exists of draft-ietf-sip-ipv6-abnf-fix-00 == Outdated reference: A later version (-01) exists of draft-ietf-sip-ua-privacy-00 == Outdated reference: A later version (-02) exists of draft-ietf-sip-body-handling-01 == Outdated reference: A later version (-03) exists of draft-ietf-sip-session-policy-framework-02 == Outdated reference: A later version (-10) exists of draft-ietf-sip-connect-reuse-09 == Outdated reference: A later version (-07) exists of draft-ietf-sipping-consent-format-05 == Outdated reference: A later version (-10) exists of draft-ietf-sip-location-conveyance-09 Summary: 0 errors (**), 23 warnings (==), 3 comments (--). (1.h) Has the document split its references into normative and informative? Are there normative references to documents that are not ready for advancement or are otherwise in an unclear state? If such normative references exist, what is the strategy for their completion? Are there normative references that are downward references, as described in [RFC3967]? If so, list these downward references to support the Area Director in the Last Call procedure for them [RFC3967]. The document is an informational RFC, contains no RFC 2119 language, and all the references are therefore correctly informative. (1.i) Has the Document Shepherd verified that the document's IANA Considerations section exists and is consistent with the body of the document? If the document specifies protocol extensions, are reservations requested in appropriate IANA registries? Are the IANA registries clearly identified? If the document creates a new registry, does it define the proposed initial contents of the registry and an allocation procedure for future registrations? Does it suggest a reasonable name for the new registry? See [RFC2434]. If the document describes an Expert Review process, has the Document Shepherd conferred with the Responsible Area Director so that the IESG can appoint the needed Expert during IESG Evaluation? There are, correctly, no IANA considerations from this document. (1.j) Has the Document Shepherd verified that sections of the document that are written in a formal language, such as XML code, BNF rules, MIB definitions, etc., validate correctly in an automated checker? The document contains no material written in a formal language, and as such there are no validation requirements. (1.k) The IESG approval announcement includes a Document Announcement Write-Up. Please provide such a Document Announcement Write-Up. Recent examples can be found in the "Action" announcements for approved documents. The approval announcement contains the following sections: Technical Summary Relevant content can frequently be found in the abstract and/or introduction of the document. If not, this may be an indication that there are deficiencies in the abstract or introduction. Working Group Summary Was there anything in the WG process that is worth noting? For example, was there controversy about particular points or were there decisions where the consensus was particularly rough? Document Quality Are there existing implementations of the protocol? Have a significant number of vendors indicated their plan to implement the specification? Are there any reviewers that merit special mention as having done a thorough review, e.g., one that resulted in important changes or a conclusion that the document had no substantive issues? If there was a MIB Doctor, Media Type, or other Expert Review, what was its course (briefly)? In the case of a Media Type Review, on what date was the request posted? Personnel Who is the Document Shepherd for this document? Who is the Responsible Area Director? If the document requires IANA experts(s), insert 'The IANA Expert(s) for the registries in this document are .' Technical summary. The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is the subject of numerous specifications that have been produced by the IETF. It can be difficult to locate the right document, or even to determine the set of Request for Comments (RFC) about SIP. This specification serves as a guide to the SIP RFC series. It lists the specifications under the SIP umbrella, briefly summarizes each, and groups them into categories. Working group summary. There is strong consensus in the working group to publish this document. Document Quality This document is a summary or compendium of the IETF publications relating to SIP, and as such, contains no requirements or RFC 2119 language, and as such there is no requirement for implementation of this document. The document underwent thorough review by a number of experts in both working group last call, and through the RAI area review process. It should be noted that once published as an RFC, this is a document that will need to be regularly revised, as and when sufficient new SIP material is published to justify a new version. Personnel The document shepherd for this document was Keith Drage. The responsible Area Director was Cullen Jennings. The IANA Expert(s) for the registries in this document are . |
2008-07-03
|
06 | Cindy Morgan | Draft Added by Cindy Morgan in state Publication Requested |
2008-02-24
|
05 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-05.txt |
2007-11-15
|
04 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-04.txt |
2007-07-06
|
03 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-03.txt |
2007-03-08
|
02 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-02.txt |
2006-10-20
|
01 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-01.txt |
2006-06-21
|
00 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-sip-hitchhikers-guide-00.txt |