SIP Working Group James Polk
Internet Draft Cisco Systems
Expiration: Dec 26th, 2006 Brian Rosen
NeuStar
Session Initiation Protocol Location Conveyance
draft-ietf-sip-location-conveyance-03.txt
June 26th, 2006
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
Abstract
This document defines how the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
conveys, or pushes, geographic location information from one SIP
entity to another SIP entity. SIP Location Conveyance is always end
to end, but sometimes the embedded location information can be acted
upon by SIP Servers to direct where the message goes, based on where
the user agent client is.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.1 Conventions used in this document . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Location In the Body or in a Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Requirements for SIP Location Conveyance . . . . . . . . . . 6
4. Location Conveyance Using SIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
4.1 A New Option Tag and SIP Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2 424 (Bad Location Information) Response Code . . . . . . 14
4.3 Example PIDF-LO in Geo Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4.4 Example PIDF-LO in Civic Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5. SIP Element Behavior When Conveying Location . . . . . . . . 17
5.1 Location Conveyance Using the INVITE Method . . . . . . . 17
5.2 Location Conveyance Using the MESSAGE Method . . . . . . 19
5.3 Location Conveyance Using the UPDATE Method . . . . . . . 20
5.4 Location Conveyance Using the REGISTER Method . . . . . . 20
6. Special Considerations for Emergency Calls . . . . . . . . . 20
7. Meeting RFC 3693 Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
8. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.1 IANA Registration for the SIP Location Header . . . . . . 22
9.2 IANA Registration of the Location Option Tags . . . . . . 23
9.3 IANA Registration for Response Code 424 . . . . . . . . . 23
10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
11.1 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
11.2 Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Author Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Appendix A. Changes from Prior Versions . . . . . . . . . . 24
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . 28
1. Introduction
There are several situations in which it is desired or necessary for
a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [RFC3261] user agent to convey,
or push its geographic Location Information (LI) from one SIP entity
to another. This document discusses the rules for such conveyance,
and includes the requirements to be met when a SIP UAC wants or
needs to convey its location to another SIP entity. A concept of
inheritance exists in which the conveyance of the location of a user
agent means conveying the location of a user of that user agent.
This is not an absolute in SIP, but applies for the pushing of
location using SIP. The privacy concerns of this topic are also
discussed, and need to meet the requirements laid out in RFC 3693
[RFC3693]. This document does not discuss the pulling of location
information from a remote element to learn that element's location.
This is left for a future effort.
Why would a SIP user agent (UA) push its location to another SIP UA?
There are 3 reasonable scenarios why location can be, or needs to be
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conveyed to a remote SIP element:
1) to include location in a request message seeking the nearest
instance of destination, where there could be more than one
choice; (hey, here I am, I want to talk to the nearest instance
of you? i.e. where's the nearest Pizza Hut relative to where I
am now).
2) to push the user agent's location to a server such that it can
either deal with all the inquiries, leaving the UA to do other
tasks (Presence Server), or allow the server to return
information to that UAC according to what the UAC is at this
time.
3) to inform the user of another UA where the sending user is;
(dude, he is where I am) or (I need help, here I am)
Scenario #1 revolves around the idea of a user wanting to find the
nearest instances of something else. For example, where is the
nearest pizza parlor. A chain of pizza parlors may be contacted
through a single well known URI (sip:pizzaparlor.example.com). This
by itself does not solve enough to the sending UA. The server at
this well known URI needs to know where the nearest one is to the
requester. In SIP, this could be accomplished in the initial
message by including the location of the UAC in the Request message.
This allows the SIP message to be forwarded to the closest physical
site by the pizzaparlor.com proxy server. Additionally, the
receiving site's UAS uses the UAC's location to determine the
location your delivery. A more immediate example may be: where's
the nearest (car) garage repair shop, because the user of the UAC
has a flat tire.
Scenario #2 revolves around pushing the user's location information
to an external server to deal with all location requests in the
future. This leaves a buffer layer between the user and the seeker
of the user's location. This server would typically handle all
security checks and challenges of those seeking the user's location,
as well as handling all the processing of the location target's
profile rules entered into that server. This external server
c/would be a Presence server. This scenario will not be addressed
in this document because of the prevailing Presence solutions for
conveying location information.
Alternatively, a user agent pushing location to a server can allow
that server to provide back information pertinent to that UA's
location. Perhaps replying with certain information unique to the
country or region a mobile UA resides. This would not be possible
without the server knowing where the UA is.
Scenario #3 actually has a part A and a part B to it. Both involve
the UAC including its location in the request to the UAS within a
SIP transaction. Part A simply has the user, Alice, informing
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another user, Bob, where she is. This could be the loan purpose
for this SIP message, or it could be part of another transaction -
in which location were merely included, such as within a call set-
up.
Part B of scenario #3 has a user, Alice, calling for help and
including location to inform who she's calling where she is. This
is where the called party needs to come bring help to. Within this
scenario, the UAC will need to know this is a special SIP request
message to include the UAC's location in this message. It is
envisioned that SIP elements along the path of the SIP request will
need to know where Alice's UA is for proper routing purposes. An
example of this special SIP request is an emergency call set-up.
While scenarios 1, 2 and 3A should use some form of SIP security,
typically at the wishes of the user, scenario 3B may or may not
involve SIP security measures. This is because including any
security measures may cause the SIP request to fail, and that is
likely not a good result. It is also conceivable that a first
attempt with the user's security measures enabled is tried, and if
there are any failures, the subsequent attempt or attempts do not
involve security measures. Most believe that completing the
emergency call is more important than protecting the information in
the SIP message. Obviously this is up to local and jurisdictional
policies, but is mentioned here as a hint of a rationale of a later
section of this document.
This document does not discuss how the UAC discovers or is
configured with its location. This document however will specify
how it meets the requirements for SIP qualifying as a "using
protocol" as defined in [RFC3693], in section 7.
Section 3 lists the requirements for SIP location conveyance.
Section 4 defines how SIP conveys location. Section 5 illustrates
specifics about location conveyance in certain SIP request messages.
Section 6 briefly discusses pertinent behaviors with respect to the
unique nature of emergency calling. Section 9 provides the security
considerations and Section 9 IANA registers one new SIP header, two
new option tags and one new 4XX Response codes.
The "changes from prior versions" section (the old Section 1.2) has
been moved to the lone appendix, as its size is getting too large
for efficient reading of this document.
1.1 Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described
in [RFC2119].
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2. Location In the Body or in a Header
In determining where "location" is placed in a SIP message,
consideration is taken as to where the trust model is based on the
architecture involved.
If the user agent has the location stored within it, and this user
agent wants to inform another user agent where it is, it seems
reasonable to have this accomplished by placing the location
information (coordinate or civic) in a message body (part), sending
it as part of a SIP request or response. This is location by-value.
No routing of the request based on the location contents is required
in this case, therefore no SIP Proxies between these two UAs need to
view the location information contained in the SIP message(s). The
UAC should know certain types of messages will be routed based on
the UA's location when creating a message.
RFC 3261 does not permit SIP intermediaries to modify or delete a
message body [RFC3261]. There is, however, no restriction on
intermediaries viewing message bodies. S/MIME protected message
bodies, implemented on bodies for end-to-end communications only
(i.e. between user agents), would render the location object opaque
to a proxy server from any viewing of the message body.
The location format is defined in [RFC4119] as a "Presence
Information Data Format - Location Object", or PIDF-LO. The amount
of information that is necessary to appropriately transmit location
information in a format that is understandable is larger than a SIP
header could realistically include. However, there must be a means
for both a UAC to include a reference point to where location can be
retrieved from a remote server, and in some cases, for a SIP server
to add a UAC's location to a SIP message as it is processed
by that element. This must be in a SIP header for the above stated
reason, and should therefore be in a compact form. A URI satisfies
this description. This is location-by-reference.
The idea of Location-by-Reference is to allow a UA to store its
location on a remote node, to be retrieved by who has this URI.
This concept allows the remote node to use its processing power to
handle all policy rule operations the user wants performed per
request, and all security challenges done as well.
Since location in a message body may be opaque to a routing element,
message needing to be routed based on the UAC's location should not
have said location in the message body where it may not be seen. A
UAC's Location in these cases should be in the Location header where
it can be dereferenced by a (SIP) routing element.
[RFC3693] prefers S/MIME for confidentiality and integrity of
Location Information on an end-to-end basis, and indeed S/MIME is
preferable in SIP [RFC3261] for protecting a message body.
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Accordingly, this document specifies location be carried in a body
when it is known to/stored in a user agent for end-to-end conveyance
of location. The use of SIPS [RFC3261] is orthogonal to this
discussion and should always be used.
It is conceivable that an initial attempt to communicate with
location included may fail due to the security measures used.
Subsequent requests ought to use less security. For example, if an
initial request used S/MIME and failed. A subsequent request could
downgrade the security measures used to that of TLS. A message may
be important enough, say an emergency call attempt, where TLS is not
used. This should not be a default configuration, but a fallback
usage. This is always a matter for local and jurisdictional policy.
3. Requirements for SIP Location Conveyance
The following subsections address the requirements placed on the
user agent client, the user agent server, as well as SIP proxies
when conveying location.
3.1 Requirements for a UAC Conveying Location
The following are the requirements for location conveyance by a user
agent client. There is a motivational statement below each
requirements that is not obvious in intent.
UAC-1 The SIP INVITE Method [RFC3261] MUST support Location
Conveyance.
UAC-2 The SIP MESSAGE method [RFC3428] MUST support Location
Conveyance.
UAC-3 SIP Requests within a dialog SHOULD support Location
Conveyance.
UAC-4 Other SIP Requests MAY support Location Conveyance.
UAC-5 There MUST be one, mandatory to implement means of
transmitting location confidentially.
Motivation: interoperability
UAC-6 It MUST be possible for a UAC to update location conveyed
at any time in a dialog, including during dialog
establishment.
Motivation: in case a UAC has moved prior to the establishment of a
dialog between UAs, the UAC must be able to send new location
information. In the case of location having been conveyed,
and the UA moves, it needs a means to update the conveyed to
party of this location change.
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UAC-7 The privacy and security rules established within [RFC3693]
that would categorize SIP as a 'using protocol' MUST be met.
See Section 7 for analysis.
UAC-8 The PIDF-LO [RFC4119] is a mandatory to implement format for
location conveyance within SIP, whether included by-value or
by-reference.
If location is within the message, it is a PIDF-LO by-value in a
message body (part). If location is stored on an external node, it
is dereferenced as a PIDF-LO.
Motivation: interoperability
UAC-9 A UAC MUST be capable of transmitting a SIP request without
protecting the PIDF-LO message body. It is RECOMMENDED this
not be the default configuration of any UA. This requirement
is orthogonal to the use of TLS or IPSec hop-by-hop between
SIP elements.
Motivation: If a SIP request is part of an emergency call,
therefore includes the UAC's location, the UAC may understand
through local policy or configuration that a proxy server
will need to learn the UAC's location to route the message
correctly. Using S/MIME on the PIDF-LO defeats this
capability in proxies.
UAC-10 A UAC MUST allow its user to be able to disable providing
location within any SIP request message. It is RECOMMENDED
this not is the default configuration of any UA.
Motivation: local laws may give this right to all users within a
jurisdiction, even when the request is initiating an
emergency call.
UAC-11 A UAC SHOULD NOT use the Proxy-Require header indicating a
SIP intermediary is required to act upon location within a
SIP message.
Motivation: This is because it is not expected that all SIP
elements will understand location, therefore the chances of a
message failure is high if proxies are required to support
location before forwarding a message. This will lead to
unnecessary message failures.
3.2 Requirements for a UAS Receiving Location
The following are the requirements for location conveyance by a user
agent server:
UAS-1 SIP Responses MUST support Location Conveyance.
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UAS-2 There MUST be one, mandatory to implement means of
receiving location confidentially.
Motivation: interoperability
UAS-3 The PIDF-LO [RFC4119] is a mandatory to implement format for
location conveyance within SIP, whether included by-value or
by-reference.
If location is within the message, it is a PIDF-LO by-value in a
message body (part). If location is stored on an external node, it
is dereferenced as a PIDF-LO.
Motivation: interoperability
UAS-4 There MUST be a unique 4XX error response code informing
the UAC it did not provide applicable location information.
UAS-5 UASs MUST be prepared to receive location without privacy
mechanisms enabled. It is RECOMMENDED this not be the
default configuration of any UA, however, this MUST be
possible for local laws that require this function.
Motivation: Because a SIP request can fail in transit for security
reasons, UACs are allowed to transmit, or retransmit requests
including location without any security mechanisms utilized,
even when this SIP transaction is an emergency call. UAs
must be prepared to receive the messages without confidential
location.
UAS-6 There MUST be a unique 4XX error response code informing the
UAC it did not provide applicable location information.
3.3 Requirements for SIP Proxies and Intermediaries
The following are the requirements for location conveyance by a SIP
proxies and intermediaries:
Proxy-1 Proxy servers MUST NOT modify or remove a location
message body part, and SHOULD NOT modify or remove a
location header or location header value.
Motivation: [RFC3261] forbids the removal of a message body part,
and the proxy may not have all the relevant information as
to why location was included in this message (meaning it
might need to be there), and should not remove this
critical piece of information.
Proxy-2 Proxy servers MUST be capable of adding a Location header
during processing of SIP requests.
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Motivation: If the proxy determines a message needs to have the
location of the UAC in the message, and knows the UAC's
location by-reference, it must be able to add this header
and URI to the message during processing. This SHOULD NOT
violate requirement Proxy-3 below.
Proxy-3 If a Proxy server detects "location" already exists within
a SIP message, it SHOULD NOT add another location header or
location body to the message.
Motivation: This may lead to confusion downstream. Section 4.1
explains this more.
Proxy-4 There MUST be a unique 4XX error response code informing
the UAC it did not provide applicable location information.
4. Location Conveyance Using SIP
RFC 4119 defines the PIDF-LO location object to be inside a RFC 3693
defined "using protocol" message from one entity to another entity.
For SIP location conveyance, using the PIDF-LO body satisfies the
entire format and message-handling requirements as stated in the
baseline Geopriv Requirements [RFC3693].
Although a PIDF-LO is to be used to indicate location of a UA, the
actual PIDF-LO does not need to be contained in the message itself,
it can be as a by-reference URI in a SIP header or message body
part, pointing to the PIDF-LO of that UA on a remote node.
The basic operation of location conveyance is as easy as this in
Figure 1., showing a user agent conveying its location to another
user agent:
UA Alice UA Bob
| [M1] Request (w/ Location) |
|---------------------------------->|
| [M2] Response |
|<----------------------------------|
| |
Figure 1. Basic SIP Location Conveyance
Alice wants to inform Bob where she is. She includes location
by-value (in a message body) or by-reference (in a new Location
header) in her request message towards Bob. Bob MAY choose to
include his location in a response back to Alice.
Another usage of location conveyance is for a SIP Server route the
SIP request message based on included location information, by-value
or by-reference, to an appropriate destination. Figure 2 shows this
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message flow to UAS-B, because that is determined to be the
appropriate destination for this message, based on the location of
Alice.
UA Alice SIP Server UAS-A UAS-B UAS-C
| [M1] Request (w/ Location) | | | |
|---------------------------->| | | |
| | |
| |----------------->|
| | |
| [M2] Response |
|<-----------------------------------------------|
| |
Figure 2. Message Routing based on Location Information
How a SIP Server would route a message based on the location in a
SIP message is out of scope for this document. But in Figure 2,
Alice's message could go to one of three destinations, with the SIP
server choosing destination B based on Alice's location.
A use-case for Figure 2 could be one in which Alice wants a pizza
delivered to her location, wherever she is. She calls her favorite
pizza store chain's main address, perhaps this is a single, national
URI, with her included location determining which specific store
this SIP request is routed to. In such a use-case, Alice can use
the same URI wherever she is to contact the same store chain she
prefers; never needing to look up the specifics of which store is
closest in a unfamiliar city.
Another use-case is emergency calling, in which the location of the
caller is the key trigger as to which emergency response center
receives this SIP request.
Because a person's location is generally considered to be sensitive
in nature, certain security measures need to be taken into account
when transmitting such information. Section 26 of [RFC3261] defines
the security functionality SIPS for transporting SIP messages with
either TLS or IPSec, and S/MIME for encrypting message bodies from
SIP intermediaries that would otherwise have access to reading the
clear-text bodies. SIP endpoints SHOULD implement S/MIME to encrypt
the PIDF-LO message body (part) end-to-end. The SIPS-URI from
[RFC3261] MUST be implemented for message protection (message
integrity and confidentiality) and SHOULD be used when S/MIME is not
used.
The entities sending and receiving location MUST obey the privacy
and security rules in the PIDF-LO, regarding retransmission and
retention, to be compliant with this specification.
Self-signed certificates SHOULD NOT be used for protecting PIDF-LO,
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as the sender does not have a secure identity of the recipient.
More than one location representation or format MAY be included in
the same message body part, but all MUST point at the same position
on the earth (altitude not withstanding), as this would confuse the
recipient by pointing at more than one position within the same
message body part. There MAY be a case in which part or parts of
one location format and part or parts of another format exist in the
same message body part. These complementary pieces of information
MUST point at the same position on the earth, yet are incomplete
within their own format. For example, there maybe be a latitude and
longitude in coordinate format and a civic altitude value to
complete a 3-dimensional position of a thing (i.e. which floor of a
building the UA is on in a building at a particular lat/long
coordinates pair).
There MAY be more than one PIDF-LO in the same SIP message, but each
in separate message body parts. Each location body part MAY point at
different positions on the earth (altitude not withstanding). If
the message length exceeds the maximum message length of a single
packet (1300 bytes), TCP MUST to be used for proper message
fragmentation and reassembly.
Several push-based SIP Request Methods are capable (and applicable)
of carrying location, including:
INVITE,
REGISTER,
UPDATE, and
MESSAGE,
While the authors do not yet see a reason to have location conveyed
in the ACK, PRACK, BYE, REFER and CANCEL Methods, we do not see a
reason to prevent carrying a PIDF-LO within these Method Requests as
long as the SIP message meets the requirements stated within this
document. Discussing Location in the PUBLISH Request Method will be
for another document.
SIP Methods such as SUBSCRIBE and NOTIFY are considered a pull-based
location retrieval mechanism, and are therefore not part of this
document.
A 200 OK to a SIP Request MAY carry the UAS's PIDF-LO back to the
UAC that provided its location in the original request, but this is
not something that can be required due to the timing of the request
to 200 OK messages, with potential local/user policy requiring the
called user to get involved in determining if the caller is someone
they wish to give their location to (and at what precision).
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4.1 A New Option Tag and SIP Header
This document creates and IANA registers one new option tag:
"location". This option tag is to be used, per RFC 3261 in the
Require, Supported and Unsupported headers. Whenever a UA wants to
indicate it understands this SIP extension, the location option tag
is included in a Supported header of the SIP message.
This option tag SHOULD NOT be used in the Proxy-Require header.
This document also creates and IANA registers a new SIP header:
Location. The Location header, if present, will have one of two
header values defined by this document:
o a Location-by-reference URI
o a Content-ID indicating where location is within the message body
A location-by-reference URI is a pointer to a record on a remote
node containing the PIDF-LO of a UA.
If the PIDF-LO of a UA is contained in a SIP message, a Location
header will be present in the message with a content-ID (cid-url)
[RFC2392] indicating which message body part contains location for
this UA. This is to aid a node in not having to parse the whole
message body or body parts looking for this body type.
The purpose of the Location option-tag is to indicate support for
this document in the Require, Supported and Unsupported headers.
It gives a UAS the proper means to indicate it does not support the
concept of location in an Unsupported header in a response message
that might otherwise not be clear that the lack of support for
location is the problem with the request message.
The presence of the Location option tag in a Supported header
without a Location header in the same message informs a receiving
SIP element the UAC understands the concept of location, but it does
not know its location at this time.
The new "Location" header has the following BNF syntax:
Location = "Location" HCOLON (locationURI *(COMMA
locationURI))
locationURI = absoluteURI / cidURI
cidURI = "cid:" content-id
content-id = addr-spec ; URL encoding of RFC3261 addr-spec
The content-ID (cid:) is defined in [RFC2392] to locate message body
parts. This MUST be present if location is by-value in a message.
It is envisioned that HTTP, through the http_URL in [RFC216], and
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HTTPS [RFC2818] MAY be used to dereference a location-by-reference
PIDF-LO.
The following table extends the values in Table 2&3 of RFC3261
[RFC3261].
Header field where proxy INV ACK CAN BYE REG OPT PRA
----------------------------------------------------------------
Location Rr ar o - - o o o -
Header field where proxy SUB NOT UPD MSG REF INF PUB
----------------------------------------------------------------
Location Rr ar - - o o o o -
The Location header MAY be added to, or read if present in, a
request message listed above. A proxy MAY add the Location header
in transit if one is not present. [RFC3261] states message bodies
cannot be added by proxies. A proxy MAY read the location header in
transit if present, and MAY use the contents of the location header
to make message routing decisions.
It is RECOMMENDED that only one Location header be in the same
message, but this is not mandatory. That said, there MUST NOT be
more than one cid-url pointing to the same location message body
(part) in a SIP message, regardless of how many Location headers
there are in that message.
As of the writing of this document, there is no means in a PIDF-LO
to indicate which element generated that PIDF-LO. There is a means
of indicating what the subject of the location information is within
a PIDF-LO. Meaning, if more than one location, by-value and/or
by-reference is included in a message, the recipient, whether
intermediary or destination, will not know which location entry was
inserted by which element. This can lead to confusion in some
cases. Therefore, it is RECOMMENDED that there be a single location
representation referring to the same target/subject in a SIP
message. This PIDF-LO generation indication may be fixed in the
future, resolving this limitation, but that is not part of the scope
of this document.
Here is an example INVITE request message that includes the proper
Location and Supported headers:
INVITE sip:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/TCP pc33.atlanta.example.com
;branch=z9hG4bK74bf9
Max-Forwards: 70
To: Bob <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>
From: Alice <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=9fxced76sl
Call-ID: 3848276298220188511@atlanta.example.com
Location: cid:alice123@atlanta.example.com
Supported: location
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Accept: application/sdp, application/pidf+xml
CSeq: 31862 INVITE
Contact: <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=boundary1
Content-Length: ...
--boundary1
Content-Type: application/sdp
...SDP here
--boundary1
Content-Type: application/pidf+xml
Content-ID: alice123@atlanta.example.com
...PIDF-LO here
--boundary1--
The Location header from the above INVITE:
Location: cid:alice123@atlanta.example.com
indicates the Content-ID location [RFC2392] within the multipart
message body of were location information is.
If the Location header were this instead:
Location: <server5@atlanta.example.com/alice123>
this would indicate location by-reference was included in this
message. It is expected that any node wanting to know where user
alice123 is would fetch (dereference) the PIDF-LO from the server
URI.
4.2 424 (Bad Location Information) Response Code
In the case that a UAS or SIP intermediary detects an error
in a request message specific to the location information supplied
by-value or by-reference, a new 4XX level error is created here to
indicate this is the problem with the request message. This
document creates the new error code:
424 (Bad Location Information)
The 424 (Bad Location Information) response code is a rejection of
the location contents, whether by-value or by-reference of the
original SIP Request. The server function of the recipient (UAS or
intermediary) has deemed this location by-reference or location by-
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value to be bad. No further action by the UAC is required. The UAC
can use whatever means it knows of to verify/refresh its location
information before attempting a new request that includes location.
There is no cross-transaction awareness expected by either the UAS
or SIP intermediary as a result of this error message.
This new error code will be IANA registered in Section 9.
4.3 Example PIDF-LO in Geo Format
This subsection will show a sample of what just the PIDF-LO can look
like, as defined in [RFC4119]. Having this here will first offer a
look at a location by-value message body, and secondly, give readers
an appreciation for how large a location message body is. This
section shows a coordinate position based PIDF-LO. Section 4.4
shows this same position in a civic address format. Full example
message flows will be left for another document.
Whether this PIDF-LO message body is S/MIME encrypted in the SIP
message or not, the PIDF-LO stays exactly the same. There is no
change to its format, text or characteristics. Whether TLS or IPSec
is used to encrypt this overall SIP message or not, the PIDF-LO
stays exactly the same. There is no change to its format, text or
characteristics. The examples in section 4.3 (Geo format) taken
from [RFC3825] and 4.4 (Civic format) taken from [ID-CIVIC] are for
the exact same position on the Earth. The differences between the
two formats is within the <gp:location-info> are of the examples.
Other than this portion, of each PIDF-LO, the rest the same for both
location formats.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<presence xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf"
xmlns:gp="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10"
xmlns:cl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10:civicAddr"
xmlns:gs="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10:geoShape"
entity="pres:alice@atlanta.example.com">
<tuple id="sg89ae">
<timestamp>2006-03-20T14:00:00Z</timestamp>
<status>
<gp:geopriv>
<gp:location-info>
<gml:location>
<gml:Point gml:id="point96" srsName="epsg:4326">
<gml:coordinates>33.001111N
96.68142W</gml:coordinates>
</gml:Point>
</gml:location>
</gp:location-info>
<gp:usage-rules>
<gp:retransmission-allowed>no</gp:retransmission-allowed>
<gp:retention-expiry>2006-03-24T18:00:00Z</gp:retention-
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expiry>
<gp:method>DHCP</gp:method>
<gp:provided-by>www.cisco.com</gp:provided-by>
</gp:usage-rules>
</gp:geopriv>
</status>
</tuple>
</presence>
4.4 Example PIDF-LO in Civic Format
This subsection will show a sample of what just the PIDF-LO can look
like, as defined in [RFC4119]. Having this here will first offer a
look at a location by-value message body, and secondly, give readers
an appreciation for how large a location message body. This section
shows a civic address based PIDF-LO. Section 4.3 shows this same
position in a coordinate format. Full example message flows will be
left for another document.
Whether this PIDF-LO message body is S/MIME encrypted in the SIP
message or not, the PIDF-LO stays exactly the same. There is no
change to its format, text or characteristics. Whether TLS or IPSec
is used to encrypt this overall SIP message or not, the PIDF-LO
stays exactly the same. There is no change to its format, text or
characteristics. The examples in section 4.3 (Geo format) taken
from [RFC3825] and 4.4 (Civic format) taken from [ID-CIVIC] are for
the exact same position on the Earth. The differences between the
two formats is within the <gp:location-info> are of the examples.
Other than this portion, of each PIDF-LO, the rest the same for both
location formats.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<presence xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf"
xmlns:gp="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10"
xmlns:cl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10:civicAddr"
xmlns:gs="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf:geopriv10:geoShape"
entity="pres:alice@atlanta.example.com">
<tuple id="sg89ae">
<timestamp>2006-03-20T14:00:00Z</timestamp>
<status>
<gp:geopriv>
<gp:location-info>
<cl:civilAddress>
<cl:country>US</cl:country>
<cl:A1>Texas</cl:A1>
<cl:A3>Colleyville</cl:A3>
<cl:HNO>3913</cl:HNO>
<cl:A6>Treemont</cl:A6>
<cl:STS>Circle</cl:STS>
<cl:PC>76034</cl:PC>
<cl:LMK>Polk Place</cl:LMK>
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<cl:FLR>1</cl:FLR>
<cl:civilAddress>
</gp:location-info>
<gp:usage-rules>
<gp:retransmission-allowed>no</gp:retransmission-allowed>
<gp:retention-expiry>2006-03-24T18:00:00Z</gp:retention-
expiry>
<gp:method>DHCP</gp:method>
<gp:provided-by>www.cisco.com</gp:provided-by>
</gp:usage-rules>
</gp:geopriv>
</status>
</tuple>
</presence>
5. SIP Element Behavior When Conveying Location
This specification includes requirements for the conveyance of
location information in the INVITE, REGISTER, UPDATE, and MESSAGE
request methods. The mechanisms within this specification could
presumably be used in other SIP requests types. However, since there
currently are no agreed upon requirement(s) for conveying location
in other request types, this specification only describes location
conveyance in the four request methods mentioned here.
The message flows in this document will be example messages
containing only the key headers to convey the point being made that
do not include all the requisite SIP headers. All well formed SIP
message flows are to be in a separate document for brevity here.
5.1 Location Conveyance Using the INVITE Method
Below is a common SIP session set-up sequence between two user
agents. In this example, Alice will provide Bob with her location
in the INVITE message.
UA Alice UA Bob
| [M1] INVITE |
|---------------------------------------->|
| [M2] 200 OK |
|<----------------------------------------|
| [M3] ACK |
|---------------------------------------->|
| RTP |
|<=======================================>|
| |
Figure 3. Location Conveyance in INVITE Requests
User agent Alice invites user agent Bob to a session [M1 of Figure
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1].
INVITE sips:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0
To: Bob <sips:bob@biloxi.example.com>
From: Alice <sips:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=1928301774
Supported: Location
Location: cid:alice123@atlanta.example.com
If the message were S/MIME encrypted, this would be the Content-type
header:
Content-Type: application/pkcs7-mime;
smime-type=enveloped-data; name=smime.p7m
If this INVITE were not S/MIME encrypted, this would be the
Content-Type header:
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=boundary1
The obvious reason this for a multipart/mixed Content-Type is that
this is an INVITE message and there is an SDP message body part
included. This is not mandatory, but highly likely. The cid-url in
the Location header points a parsing entity that can view the
message body to where the PIDF-LO is in the message.
Within the non-S/MIME message body is this:
--boundary1
Content-Type: application/sdp
v=0
...
--boundary1
Content-type: application/pidf+xml
PIDF-LO
--boundary1--
In the INVITE, Alice's UAC included the Supported header with the
location option tag, and the Location header with the cid:url
pointing at the by-value PIDF-LO. These two headers MAY be hidden
in the S/MIME encrypted message body next to the topmost
Content-Type header to hide the fact that this message is carrying
location in transit. Bob's UAS, the destination UA of Alice's
message, will read these headers when deciphering the overall
message body.
- If Bob's UA wants to join the call, his UA responses with a 200 OK
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[M2]. Bob can include his location in the 200 OK response, but
this shouldn't be expected to due to user timing.
A 424 (Bad Location Information) Response is the proper response if
Bob's UA understands this SIP extension (location), but somehow
determines the supplied location information is bad.
[Alternative M2(1) of Figure 3]
SIP/2.0 424 Bad Location Information
To: Bob <sips:bob@biloxi.example.com>
From: Alice <sips:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=1928301774
The 424 is expected to be more commonly sent by SIP intermediaries
along the path between Alice and Bob, than from Bob's UA.
- If Bob's UA accepts with a 200 OK message, Alice's UA replies with
an ACK and the session is set up.
- If Bob's UA does not accept the INVITE for reasons other than
location included, a 488 (Not Acceptable Here) may be the
response.
Figure 3 does not include any Proxies because in it assumed they
would not affect the session set-up with respect to whether or not
Alice's location is in a message body part, and Proxies do not react
to S/MIME encrypted bodies, making their inclusion more or less moot
and asking for more complex message flows than necessary here.
If Alice included a Require header such as this:
Require: Location
and Bob did not understand this SIP extension, Bob's appropriate
response would be a 420 (Bad Extension) with an Unsupported header
containing the Location option tag. This is shown below as an
alternative (2) to M2 in Figure 3.
[Alternative M2(2) of Figure 3]
SIP/2.0 420 Bad Extension
To: Bob <sips:bob@biloxi.example.com>
From: Alice <sips:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=1928301774
Unsupported: location
5.2 Location Conveyance Using the MESSAGE Method
There are no additional rules regarding conveying location in a
MESSAGE request verses an INVITE request.
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5.3 Location Conveyance Using the UPDATE Method
The UPDATE Method [RFC3311] is to be used any time location
information is to be updated between UAs setting up a dialog or
after the dialog has been established, no matter how long that
dialog has been operational. reINVITE is inappropriate here, and
the MESSAGE Method is for non-dialog location conveyance between UAs
only. The same security properties used in the INVITE MUST be
applied in the UPDATE message.
There are 3 conditions UPDATE is used to convey location between
UAs:
1) During dialog establishment, but before the final 200 OK
2) After dialog establishment, but no prior location information has
been convey, and
3) After dialog establishment, when a UA has determined it has moved
(not specified here)
There are no additional rules regarding conveying location in a
UPDATE request verses an INVITE request.
5.4 Location Conveyance Using the REGISTER Method
Alice's user agent MAY choose to communicate its location during
registration, the REGISTER Method is used here. This MAY be done to
inform the Registrar server where this UA is to provide it a
customized response based on the particulars of UAs in that
jurisdiction. To indicate to a Registrar Server a UAC supports this
SIP extension, but does not include location in the message,
including a Supported header with a location option tag does this.
Either transaction SHOULD an appropriate confidentiality mechanism.
6. Special Considerations for Emergency Calls
Emergency calling, such as 911, 112 and 999 calling today,
necessitates a UAC to understand the type of call it is about to
initiate with an INVITE message to a PSAP. First of all, the
purpose of calling for emergency help is to get someone to respond
to the UAC's location, therefore, location MUST be included in the
INVITE, if known by the UAC. If the UAC understands this, but does
not know its location at this time, it MUST include the location
option tag in the Supported header, and MUST NOT include the
Location header, as it would not have anything to put as a header
value.
The emergency services community strongly prefers that message
routing occur in the network with the freshest available Public
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Safety Answering Point (PSAP) information. Message routing, in this
context, means choosing which SIP(S)-URI to place in the Request-URI
field of the status line.
If a UAC knows it is generating an emergency request towards a PSAP,
there MAY be unique message handling characteristics that diminish
the level of confidentiality of the location information within the
SIP message(s). This is because emergency call routing requires
proxies to know the location of the message originating UAC in order
to make a decision on where to route the message. This is because
emergency calls are directed to the PSAP local to the caller's
location. A proxy performing this function requires that proxy to
learn the location of the UAC during message processing.
How a message is routed based on the location of the UAC, and if and
by how much the level of confidentiality of location information is
diminished when calling for emergency help are both out of scope of
this document.
Hop-by-hop confidentiality mechanisms, as defined in [RFC3261] MUST
be initially attempted by a UAC that includes location. Local
configuration MAY allow a subsequent retry, after a security related
failure, to be without hop-by-hop confidentiality. SIP elements
MUST obey the rules set forth in [RFC3261] regarding maintaining
hop-by-hop confidentiality when a message using a SIPS-URI. If a
UAC retries an emergency request as the result of a 424 (Bad
Location) response, that new request MUST NOT include message body
encryption. Further details of emergency request messages are left
to future work to define.
While many jurisdictions force a user to reveal their location
during an emergency call set-up, there is a small, but real, number
of jurisdictions that allow a user to configure their calling device
to disable providing location, even during emergency calling. This
capability MUST be configurable, but is not RECOMMENDED as the
default configuration of any UA. Local policies will dictate this
ability.
7. Meeting RFC3693 Requirements
Section 7.2 of [RFC3693] details the requirements of a "using
protocol". They are:
Req. 4. The using protocol has to obey the privacy and security
instructions coded in the Location Object and in the
corresponding Rules regarding the transmission and storage of the
LO.
This document requires, in Section 3, that SIP entities sending or
receiving location MUST obey such instructions.
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Req. 5. The using protocol will typically facilitate that the keys
associated with the credentials are transported to the respective
parties, that is, key establishment is the responsibility of the
using protocol.
[RFC3261] and the documents it references define the key establish
mechanisms.
Req. 6. (Single Message Transfer) In particular, for tracking of
small target devices, the design should allow a single
message/packet transmission of location as a complete
transaction.
This document specifies that the LO be contained in the body of a
single message, which may be fragmented via TCP, but is still not a
streaming delivery.
8. Security Considerations
Conveyance of physical location of a UAC is problematic for many
reasons. This document calls for that conveyance to normally be
accomplished through secure message body means (like S/MIME or TLS).
In cases where a session set-up is routed based on the location of
the UAC initiating the session or SIP MESSAGE, securing the location
with an end-to-end mechanism such as S/MIME is problematic, due to
the probability of a proxy from requiring the ability to read that
information to route the message appropriately. This means the use
of S/MIME may not be possible. This leaves location information of
the caller available in each proxy through to the PSAP. This may
not be a perfect solution, but may be a pill we need to swallow to
enable this functionality.
A bad implementation of SIP location conveyance would have a UAC
send location in cleartext, without hop-by-hop confidentiality, or
have any SIP element along the path towards the PSAP alter the
transport of any message carrying location to be without hop-by-hop
confidentiality between elements. The latter would be in clear
violation of RFC3261 rules surrounding the use of a SIPS-URI.
9. IANA Considerations
This section defines one new SIP header, one new option tag, and
one new 4XX error response code within the sip-parameters section of
IANA. [NOTE: RFC XXXX denotes this document].
9.1 IANA Registration for the SIP Location Header
The SIP Location header is created by this document, with its
definition and rules in Section 4 of this document.
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9.2 IANA Registration for New SIP Option Tag
The SIP option tag "Location" is created by this document, with the
definition and rule in Section 4 of this document.
9.3 IANA Registration for Response Code 4XX
Reference: RFC-XXXX (i.e. this document)
Response code: 424
Default reason phrase: Bad Location Information
This SIP Response code is defined in section 4.2 of this document.
10. Acknowledgements
To Dave Oran for helping to shape this idea. To Jon Peterson and
Dean Willis on guidance of the effort. To Henning Schulzrinne,
Jonathan Rosenberg, Dick Knight, Mike Hammer, Paul Kyzivat,
Jean-Francois Mule, Hannes Tschofenig, Marc Linsner, Jeroen van
Bemmel and Keith Drage for constructive feedback.
11. References
11.1 References - Normative
[RFC3261] J. Rosenberg, H. Schulzrinne, G. Camarillo, A. Johnston, J.
Peterson, R. Sparks, M. Handley, and E. Schooler, "SIP:
Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, May 2002.
[RFC3693] J. Cuellar, J. Morris, D. Mulligan, J. Peterson. J. Polk,
"Geopriv Requirements", RFC 3693, February 2004
[RFC2119] S. Bradner, "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997
[RFC4119] J. Peterson, "draft-ietf-geopriv-pidf-lo-03", Internet
Draft, Sept 2004, work in progress
[RFC3428] B. Campbell, Ed., J. Rosenberg, H. Schulzrinne, C. Huitema,
D. Gurle, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for
Instant Messaging" , RFC 3428, December 2002
[RFC2392] E. Levinson, " Content-ID and Message-ID Uniform Resource
Locators", RFC 2393, August 1998
[RFC2616] R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J., Mogul, H. Frystyk, L.,
Masinter, P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer
Protocol - HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999
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[RFC2818] E. Rescorla, "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, May 2000
[RFC3311] J. Rosenberg, "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) UPDATE
Method", RFC 3311, October 2002
11.2 References - Informative
[RFC3825] J. Polk, J. Schnizlein, M. Linsner, "Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol Option for Coordinate-based Location
Configuration Information", RFC 3825, July 2004
[ID-CIVIC] H. Schulzrinne, " Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
(DHCPv4 and DHCPv6) Option for Civic Addresses Configuration
Information ", draft-ietf-geopriv-dhcp-civil-09, "work in
progress", January 2006
Author Information
James Polk
Cisco Systems
3913 Treemont Circle 33.00111N
Colleyville, Texas 76034 96.68142W
Phone: +1-817-271-3552
Email: jmpolk@cisco.com
Brian Rosen
470 Conrad Dr. 40.70497N
Mars, PA 16046 80.01252W
US
Phone: +1 724 382 1051
Email: br@brianrosen.net
Appendix A. Changes from Prior Versions
[NOTE TO RFC-EDITOR: If this document is to be published as an RFC,
this Appendix is to be removed prior to that event.]
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the SIP WG
version -02 to this version -03:
- general clean-up of some of the sections
- removed the message examples from the UPDATE, MESSAGE and REGISTER
sections, as these seemed to be making the doc less readable, and
not more readable
- removed the "unknown" option tag, as it was not needed with a
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certain combination of the Supported and Location headers
- clarified the location option tag usage in Supported, Require,
Unsupported, and that it shouldn't be used in Proxy-Require, and
why not.
- Added a basic message flow to the basic operation section (Section
4) to aid in understanding of this SIP extension.
- Added a message routing flow, which is based on the location of
the requestor to show how a SIP server can make a routing decision
to a destination based on where the UAC is.
- Articulated how a UAS concludes a UAC understands this extension,
yet does not know its location to provide to the UAS. This is
helpful in those times where an intermediary will act differently
based on whether or not a UAC understands this extension, and
whether or not the UAC includes its location in the request.
- Corrected the erroneous text regarding an Unsupported header being
in a 424 response. It belongs in a 420 response. (Section 5.1)
- Corrected the BNF (I hope)
- Corrected some text in Section 5 that read like this document was
an update to RFC 3261.
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the SIP WG
version -01 to this version -02:
- streamlined the doc by removing text (ultimately removing 42 pages
of text).
- Limited the scope of this document to SIP conveyance, meaning only
how SIP can push location information.
- reduced emergency calling text to just a few paragraphs now that
the ECRIT WG is taking most of that topic on.
- greatly reduced the number of requirements in this version.
- changed the requirements groups from "UA-to-UA", "UA-to-Proxy",
etc to "UAC Reqs", "UAS-Reqs" and "Proxy-Reqs" to focus on what is
being asked of each SIP element.
- Removed the full SIP message examples.
- completed the ABNF for the Location header, including a cid-url to
point at a message body part to help in parsing for location.
- Deleted the call for a new 425 (Retry Location) response code, as
it appears this can easily be used to spoof a UA into providing
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where it is inadvertently, even if the intent is legitimate by the
UAC.
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the SIP WG
version -00 to this version -01:
- cleaned up a lot of loose ends in the text
- created a new Location header to convey many means (location is in
the body - even if not viewable, which location format is present,
which format is requested in a query, how to request more than one
location format in a query, whether the UAC understands location
at all, if the UA knows its location, how to push location from
one UA to through a second to a third UA, etc).
- added the ability to convey location by-reference, but only under
certain conditions.
- Added support for the OPTIONS Request to query a server for the
UAC's location, through the use of the new Location header.
- moved both new Response code sections forward in the document for
their meaning to be clearer, earlier for necessary discussion.
- Changed the message flows to only have the pertinent message
headers shown for brevity.
- Added text to the SUB/NOT section showing how and why the location
of a UA can be refreshed or updated with an interval, or by a
trigger.
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the SIPPING
WG version -02 to this SIP WG item document version -00:
- Changed which WG this document is in from SIPPING to SIP due to
the extension of the protocol with new Response codes (424 and
425) for when there is an error involving the LO message body.
- Moved most of the well formed SIP messages out of the main body of
this document and into separate appendixes. This should clean up
the document from a readability point of view, yet still provide
the intended decode examples to readers of this document who wish
that level of detail per flow. The first few flows still have the
decoded SIP messages (unencrypted and encrypted).
- Removed some flow examples which no longer made sense
- Changed all references of "ERC" (Emergency Response Center) to
"PSAP" (Public Safety Answering Point) as a result of discussion
within the new ECRIT WG to define a single term
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the sipping-
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01 working group version of this effort to the sipping-02 version:
- added requirements for 2 new 4XX error responses (Bad Location
Information) and (Retry Location Body)
- added "Bad Location Information" as section 8.6
- added "Retry Location Body " as section 9.3
- added support for session mode to cover packet sizes larger than
the single packet limit of 1300 bytes in the message body
- added requirement for a SIP entity to SUBSCRIBE to another for
location information
- added SUBSCRIBE and NOTIFY as section 8.5
- added requirement to have user turn off any tracking created by
subscription
- removed doubt about which method to use for updating location
after a INVITE is sent (update)
- cleaned up which method is to be used if there is no dialog
existing (message)
- removed use of reINVITE to convey location
- clarified that UAs include <provided-by> element of PIDF-LO when
placing an emergency call (to inform PSAP who supplied Location
information)
- updated list of open issues
- added to IANA Considerations section for the two new 4XX level
error responses requested in the last meeting
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the sipping-
00 working group version of this ID to the sipping-01 version:
- Added the offered solution in detail (with message flows,
appropriate SIP Methods for location conveyance, and
- Synchronized the requirements here with those from the Geopriv
Working Group's (attempting to eliminate overlap)
- Took on the task of making this effort the SIP "using protocol"
specification from Geopriv's POV
- Refined the Open Issues section to reflect the progress we've made
here, and to indicate what we have discovered needs addressing,
but has not been to date.
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This is a list of the changes that have been made from the -01
individual submission version to the sipping-00 version of this ID:
- Brian Rosen was brought on as a co-author
- Requirements that a location header were negatively received in
the previous version of this document. AD and chair advice was to
move all location information into a message body (and stay away
from headers)
- Added a section of "emergency call" specific requirements
- Added an Open Issues section to mention what hasn't been resolved
yet in this effort
This is a list of the changes that have been made from the
individual submission version -00 to the -01 version
- Added the IPR Statement section
- Adjusted a few requirements based on suggestions from the
Minneapolis meeting
- Added requirements that the UAC is to include from where it
learned its location in any transmission of its LI
- Distinguished the facts (known to date) that certain jurisdictions
relieve persons of their right to privacy when they call a PSAP,
while other jurisdictions maintain a person's right to privacy,
while still others maintain a person's right to privacy - but only
if they ask that their service be set up that way.
- Made the decision that TLS is the security mechanism for location
conveyance in emergency communications (vs. S/MIME, which is still
the mechanism for UA-to-UA non-emergency location conveyance
cases).
- Added the Open Issue of whether a Proxy can insert location
information into an emergency SIP INVITE message, and some of the
open questions surrounding the implications of that action
- added a few names to the acknowledgements section
Intellectual Property Statement
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed
to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described
in this document or the extent to which any license under such
rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that
it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights.
Polk & Rosen [Page 28]
Internet Draft SIP Location Conveyance June 26th, 2006
Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC
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Internet Society.
Polk & Rosen [Page 29]