|| SIP - Playing nicely with other protocols
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communicate|collaborate|converge
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) has become a strong, catalytic
force shaping today's telecom industry. This IETF driven protocol
represents a key ingredient in the converging world of telecommunications
based applications. But SIP does not do everything, and it does
not solve every problem. SIP has limits, and SIP works with other
protocols to get the job done.
So what are the limits to SIP? And are we losing perspective as
an industry when we say that SIP is a one-stop-shop for convergence?
SIP is not the panacea. It was never designed that way, and that's
a good thing! Typically all-inclusive approaches (like H.323) have
been fraught with difficulty and represent the wrong kind of thinking
in today's modular network. SIP is flexible, but it sticks to doing
what it does best.
So let's have a closer look. We will see that SIP does certain
things well, and leaves other functions alone. We will see that
SIP works with a number of other protocols to get the job done
while still playing nicely with some neighbouring technologies.
|| SIP - Playing an Important Role
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SIP is an IETF application layer protocol for establishing,
manipulating, and tearing down sessions. SIPs main purpose is
to help session originators deliver invitations to potential session
participants wherever they may be. In a nut shell, that is SIPs
role.
So SIP is not the panacea - because it was never built to be that
way. Let's review two of the fundamental assumptions behind SIPs
design:
- Reusing Existing Protocols
SIP was designed to specifically
reuse as many existing protocols and protocol design concepts.
For example, SIP was modelled after HTTP, using URLs for addressing
and SDP to convey session information.
- Maximising Interoperability
SIP was also designed so that
it would be easy to bind SIP functions to existing protocols
and applications, such as e-mail and Web browsers. SIP does this
by limiting itself to a modular philosophy - just like many other
Internet protocols - and focusing on a specific set of functions.
It's actually good news that SIP does not try to solve everything single-handedly.
We can examine this statement more closely with a quick look at the H.323
approach to IP telephony. H.323 is not a single protocol but rather an entire
suite of protocols that cover everything from soup to nuts – codecs,
call control, conferencing, and many other functions in one vertically integrated
stack.
The advantage to this approach is that by strictly controlling
so many aspects of the implementation it is easier to ensure that
H.323 based systems function well together. On the down side, H.323
becomes heavy and cumbersome. Flexibility is sacrificed as one
is tied to a single family of technologies.
For a mature technology this may not be a problem, since the best
solutions are likely to have been discovered and incorporated into
standards. However for a field as young and fast changing as IP
telephony, where many problems and solutions are still under debate,
flexibility is more important. SIP is part of this flexible approach,
as it uses a wide variety of protocols, each addressing a different
aspect of the problem space. The advantage is the ability to choose
from among many competing technologies and move to newer and better
ones as they emerge. This has always been the philosophy behind
SIP and this is the approach of the IETF to IP telephony in general.
SIP is an important piece of this modular approach to IP telephony
protocols. SIP addresses the need for a protocol to deal with generalised
sessions. This involves finding potential call participants and
contacting them as they move from place to place, changing their
location and the even equipment they are using. Calls may require
the use of multiple streams of various media, and very large numbers
of participants might be involved in a call - and even joining
and leaving in a constantly changing topology! This is what SIP
does.
|| SIP - Working with other protocols
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SIP was designed to solve only a few problems and to work with
a broad spectrum of existing and future IP telephony protocols.
To this end SIP provides four basic functions. SIP allows for the
establishment of user location (i.e. translating from a user's
name to their current network address). SIP provides for feature
negotiation so that all of the participants in a session can agree
on the features to be supported among them. SIP is a mechanism
for call management - for example adding, dropping, or transferring
participants. And finally SIP allows for changing features of a
session while it is in progress. All of the other key functions
are done with other protocols.
Yes this does indeed mean that SIP is not a session description
protocol, and that SIP does not do conference control. SIP is not
a resource reservation protocol and it has nothing to do with quality
of service (QoS). SIP can work in a framework with other protocols
to make sure these roles are played out - but SIP does not do them.
SIP can function with SOAP, HTTP, XML, VXML , WSDL, UDDI, SDP and
an alphabet soup of others. Everyone has a role to play!
There is no question that SIP was designed to be a modular component
of a larger IP telephony solution and thus functions well with
a large number of these IP related protocols. But SIP is even friendlier
as it "plays nicely" with protocols that are often viewed
as overlapping in function. For the near term we can expect that
SIP will have to coexist with overlapping protocols such as H.323,
MGCP, and MEGACO.
H.323 networks are already deployed in many parts of the world.
Network operators are interested in growing network capability
with coexisting SIP networks. SIP to H.323 translation products
are already available. MGCP and MEGACO can also benefit from SIP
as by themselves they aren't enough to build a complete IP telephony
system. These protocols sit architecturally below SIP and can benefit
in functionality by in effect being controlled through SIP.
Clearly, SIP is an important protocol that is becoming widely
deployed. SIP is a catalytic protocol that delivers key signalling
elements, which can turn a voice over IP network into a true IP communications
network - a network capable of delivering next generation converged
services. SIP is powerful, and yet simple. But that power comes from
doing what it does best, and playing nicely with the rest to the
other protocols in the converged protocol sandbox!
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