Internet Engineering Task Force SIP WG Internet Draft Schulzrinne/Oran/Camarillo draft-schulzrinne-sip-reason-00.txt Columbia U./Cisco/Ericsson December 17, 2001 Expires: May, 2002 The Reason Header Field for the Session Initiation Protocol STATUS OF THIS MEMO This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress". The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt To view the list Internet-Draft Shadow Directories, see http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract For creating services, it is often useful to know why a SIP request was issued. This document defines an optional informational header field, Reason, that provides this information. 1 Introduction The same SIP [1] request can be issued for a variety of reasons. For example, a SIP CANCEL request can be issued if the call has completed on another branch or was abandoned before answer. While the protocol and system behavior is the same in both cases, namely, alerting will cease, the user interface may well differ. In the second case, the call may be logged as a missed call, while this would not be appropriate if the call was picked up elsewhere. Schulzrinne/Oran/Camarillo [Page 1] Internet Draft SIP December 17, 2001 Third party call controllers sometimes generate a SIP request upon reception of a SIP response from another dialog. Gateways generate SIP requests after receiving messages from a different protocol than SIP. In both cases the client may be interested in knowing what triggered the SIP request. SIP responses already have a means of informing the user of why a request failed. The simple mechanism in this draft accomplishes something roughly similar for requests. Initially, the request header field defined here appears to be most useful for BYE and CANCEL methods, but it is defined that it can appear in any method. Clients are free to ignore this header. It has no impact on protocol processing. 1.1 Terminology In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [2] and indicate requirement levels for compliant SIP implementations. 2 The Reason Request Header Field The Reason request header field can appear in any method. Reason = "Reason" HCOLON reason-code *(SEMI reason-params) reason-code = 1*DIGIT reason-params = triggered-by | protocol-cause | reason-text | reason-extension triggered-by = "triggered" EQUAL protocol protocol = quoted-string protocol-cause = "cause" EQUAL cause cause = 1*DIGIT reason-text = "text" EQUAL text text = * reason-extension = generic-param Examples are: Reason: 1;text="Call completed elsewhere" Reason: 4;triggered=Q.850; cause=16; text="Terminated" Reason: 7;triggered=SIP/2.0; cause=600; text="Busy Everywhere" Schulzrinne/Oran/Camarillo [Page 2] Internet Draft SIP December 17, 2001 The syntax of the header field follows the standard SIP parameter syntax. The following reason codes and text phrases have been defined: 1. (Call completed elsewhere): CANCEL request; another branch completed the call. 2. (Abandoned): CANCEL request; the call attempt was abandoned. 3. (Timed out): CANCEL request; the call attempt timed out. 4. (Terminated): BYE request; the caller or callee terminated the call. 5. (Transfer completed): BYE request; the call transfer was completed. 6. (No media): BYE request; the call was terminated since the other side did not receive media for an extended period of time. 7. (Interworking): BYE and CANCEL requests; the call was terminated because a gateway or a third party call controller received an error or a release message from the other side. This reason code SHOULD only be used if none of the other reason codes is applicable. The text phrase MAY be modified, e.g., translated into different languages or enhanced with additional call-specific information, for example, Reason: 2;text="Anrufer gibt nach 30 Sekunden auf" The following values for the triggered parameter have been defined: 1. SIP/2.0: The cause parameter contains a SIP status code. 2. Q.850: It refers to the ITU-T Q.850 recommendation. The cause parameter contains a Q.850 cause value (decimal representation). Proxies generating a CANCEL request upon reception of a CANCEL from the previous hop that contains a Reason header field SHOULD copy it into the new CANCEL request. Schulzrinne/Oran/Camarillo [Page 3] Internet Draft SIP December 17, 2001 3 IANA Considerations IANA registers new reason codes. All new reason codes MUST be defined in an RFC. IANA registers new values for the triggered parameter. 4 Security Considerations While spoofing or removing the Reason header field has no impact on protocol operation, the user interface may change and end systems may provide services based on this header field. Thus, it is RECOMMENDED that this field is protected by a suitable integrity mechanism. 5 Acknowledgments We wish to thank Jonathan Rosenberg for his comments and suggestions. 6 Authors' Addresses Henning Schulzrinne Dept. of Computer Science Columbia University 1214 Amsterdam Avenue New York, NY 10027 USA electronic mail: schulzrinne@cs.columbia.edu Dave Oran Cisco Gonzalo Camarillo Ericsson Advanced Signalling Research Lab. FIN-02420 Jorvas Finland electronic mail: Gonzalo.Camarillo@ericsson.com 7 Bibliography [1] M. Handley, H. Schulzrinne, E. Schooler, and J. Rosenberg, "SIP: session initiation protocol," Request for Comments 2543, Internet Engineering Task Force, Mar. 1999. [2] S. Bradner, "Key words for use in RFCs to indicate requirement levels," Request for Comments 2119, Internet Engineering Task Force, Mar. 1997. Schulzrinne/Oran/Camarillo [Page 4] Internet Draft SIP December 17, 2001 Full Copyright Statement Copyright (c) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved. 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