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Hadriel Kaplan

Open-plan Local-number Identifier Values for Enterprises (OLIVE) draft-kaplan-martini-with-olive-02. Hadriel Kaplan. The Problem. Draft-gin handles E.164 So how do we handle Local Numbers? sip:1234;phone-context=+12125551212@ssp.com. “Local Numbers”.

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Hadriel Kaplan

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  1. Open-plan Local-number Identifier Values for Enterprises (OLIVE)draft-kaplan-martini-with-olive-02 Hadriel Kaplan

  2. The Problem • Draft-gin handles E.164 • So how do we handle Local Numbers? sip:1234;phone-context=+12125551212@ssp.com

  3. “Local Numbers” • Technically RFC 3966 defines “Local Numbers” • The phone-context param defines the scope of the user portion, and the users and any other params are only known to the authority of that context • In practice, things aren’t that simple • the Local-Number syntax is only followed in specific cases; e.g., only within the SSP • the “dial-plan” and knowledge of params is not consistently nor fully in one spot • the scoping model of RFC 3966 creates two tiers of scoping: URI-user and URI level

  4. Two ways to handle it • How would this “work” if the IP-PBX sent separate, explicit REGISTERs? • In Martini we only care about IP-PBX case • We need a way to REGISTER for a Local-Number • Two ways it could have explicitly REGISTERed for a Local-Number: • It REGISTERed to a specific Domain: e.g., sip:enterprise.com or sip:enterprise.priv.ssp.com • It REGISTERed the AoR: e.g., sip:1234;phone-context=pbx.com@ssp.com

  5. So… • The first way (Register to an explicit domain) doesn’t need a new draft • Just have the IP-PBX REGISTER to that domain, separately from “public” numbers • IP-PBX uses a contact param to segregate inbound requests, if that’s an issue • The second way (Register the AoR) is what draft-olive describes • It can just re-use the draft-gin REGISTER, because there’s no name collision or confusion, so long as the whole user portion remains intact to the IP-PBX

  6. What this means… • The Request-URI reaching the PBX, and presumably any coming from it for a private plan, would be expressed as a rfc3966 Local-Number sip:1234;phone-context=pbx.com@192.1.2.3 • Is that reasonable? • I think so – it has to be distinguished somehow • It could be done with yet-another-header, but what would we set the Request-URI to anyway?

  7. Example • PBX does a draft-gin REGISTER • SSP has provisioning for *;phone-context=+5 goes to pbx123 Originator SSP PBX REGISTER sip:ssp.comTo: <sip:pbx123@ssp.com>Contact: <sip:192.1.2.3;bnc> INVITEsip:789;ph=+5@ssp.com INVITEsip:789;ph=+5@192.1.2.3

  8. Open Issues

  9. Non-context Local Numbers • But what if the PBX doesn’t know about this “phone-context” stuff? • It’s as if the PBX registered “sip:123@ssp.com” – it’s just a username to it • But not really, because 123@ssp.com may overlap with other Enterprises • Possible solutions: • Describe it as a transformation step, to remove phone-context • Or require registering to a unique domain name (e.g., enterprise.ssp.com)

  10. Other Open Issues • Vermouth handling (how to check the list of AoRs on the Registrar) • Can’t have a simple syntax, because names aren’t fully known by registrar • Answer: use wildcarding • What to do about Local-Number user parameters • Some are processed by SSP, some by PBX • In theory only the authority of the phone-context knows what to do with them, but who is that authority??

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