RFC 6910






Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         D. Worley
Request for Comments: 6910               Ariadne Internet Services, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                  M. Huelsemann
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                R. Jesske
                                                        Deutsche Telekom
                                                           D. Alexeitsev
                                                               TeleFLASH
                                                              April 2013


     Completion of Calls for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)

Abstract



   The "completion of calls" feature defined in this specification
   allows the caller of a failed call to be notified when the callee
   becomes available to receive a call.

   For the realization of a basic solution without queuing, this
   document references the usage of the dialog event package (RFC 4235)
   that is described as 'Automatic Redial' in "Session Initiation
   Protocol Service Examples" (RFC 5359).

   For the realization of a more comprehensive solution with queuing,
   this document introduces an architecture for implementing these
   features in the Session Initiation Protocol where "completion of
   calls" implementations associated with the caller's and callee's
   endpoints cooperate to place the caller's request for completion of
   calls into a queue at the callee's endpoint; when a caller's request
   is ready to be serviced, re-attempt of the original, failed call is
   then made.

   The architecture is designed to interoperate well with existing
   completion of calls solutions in other networks.

Status of This Memo



   This is an Internet Standards Track document.

   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
   received public review and has been approved for publication by the
   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
   Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
   http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6910.



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Copyright Notice



   Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
   described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents



   1. Introduction ....................................................3
   2. Requirements Terminology ........................................4
   3. Terminology .....................................................4
   4. Solution ........................................................6
      4.1. CC Architecture ............................................6
      4.2. CC Procedures ..............................................8
      4.3. Automatic Redial as a Fallback ............................11
      4.4. Differences from SS7 ......................................11
   5. CC Queue Model .................................................12
   6. Caller's Agent Behavior ........................................13
      6.1. Receiving the CC Possible Indication ......................13
      6.2. Subscribing to CC .........................................13
      6.3. Receiving a CC Recall Notification ........................14
      6.4. Initiating a CC Call ......................................15
      6.5. Suspending CC .............................................15
      6.6. Resuming CC ...............................................15
   7. Callee's Monitor Behavior ......................................16
      7.1. Sending the CC Possible Indication ........................16
      7.2. Receiving a CC Subscription ...............................17
      7.3. Sending a CC Notification .................................18
      7.4. Receiving a CC Call .......................................19
      7.5. Receiving a CC Suspension .................................19
      7.6. Receiving a CC Resumption .................................20
   8. Examples .......................................................20
   9. 'call-completion' Event Package ................................24
      9.1. Event Package Name ........................................24
      9.2. Event Package Parameters ..................................24
      9.3. SUBSCRIBE Bodies ..........................................25
      9.4. Subscribe Duration ........................................25
      9.5. NOTIFY Bodies .............................................26
      9.6. Subscriber Generation of SUBSCRIBE Requests ...............26



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      9.7. Notifier Processing of SUBSCRIBE Requests .................26
      9.8. Notifier Generation of NOTIFY Requests ....................27
      9.9. Subscriber Processing of NOTIFY Requests ..................27
      9.10. Handling of Forked Requests ..............................28
      9.11. Rate of Notifications ....................................28
      9.12. State Agents .............................................28
   10. CC Information Format .........................................28
      10.1. CC Status ................................................29
      10.2. CC Service-Retention Indication ..........................29
      10.3. CC URI ...................................................29
   11. Security Considerations .......................................29
   12. IANA Considerations ...........................................31
      12.1. SIP Event Package Registration for CC ....................31
      12.2. MIME Registration for application/call-completion ........31
      12.3. SIP/SIPS URI Parameter 'm' ...............................32
      12.4. The 'purpose' Parameter Value 'call-completion' ..........33
      12.5. 'm' Header Parameter for Call-Info .......................33
   13. Acknowledgements ..............................................33
   14. References ....................................................34
      14.1. Normative References .....................................34
      14.2. Informative References ...................................35
   Appendix A. Example Caller's Agent ................................36
   Appendix B. Example Callee's Monitor ..............................36

1.  Introduction



   The Completion of Calls (CC) feature allows the caller of a failed
   call to have the call completed without having to make a new call
   attempt while guessing when the callee becomes available.  When the
   caller requests the use of the CC feature, the callee will be
   monitored for its availability.  When the callee becomes available,
   the callee will be given a certain time frame for initiating a call.
   If the callee does not initiate a new call within this time frame,
   then the caller will be recalled.  When the caller accepts the CC
   recall, then a CC call to the callee will automatically start.  If
   several callers have requested the CC feature on the same callee,
   they will be recalled in a predefined order, which is usually the
   order in which they have requested the CC feature.

   This document defines the following CC features:

   Completion of Calls to Busy Subscriber (CCBS):  The callee is busy.
      The caller is recalled after the callee is no longer busy.

   Completion of Calls on No Reply (CCNR):  The callee does not answer
      the call.  The caller is recalled after the callee has completed a
      new call.




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   Completion of Calls on Not Logged-in (CCNL):  The callee is not
      registered.  The caller is recalled after the callee has
      registered again.

2.  Requirements Terminology



   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].

   This document uses terms from [RFC3261].

3.  Terminology



   For the purpose of this service, we provide the following
   terminology:

   Callee:  a destination of the original call, and a target of the CC
      call.

   Caller:  the initiator of the original call and the CC request.  The
      user on whose behalf the CC call is made.

   Callee's monitor:  a logical component that implements the CC queue
      for destination user(s)/UA(s) (User Agent(s)) and performs the
      associated tasks, including sending CC recall events, analogous to
      the destination local exchange's role in Signaling System 7
      (SS7) CC.

   Caller's agent:  a logical component that makes CC requests and
      responds to CC recall events on behalf of originating
      user(s)/UA(s), analogous to the originating local exchange's role
      in SS7 CC.

   CC, or Completion of Calls:  a service that allows a caller who
      failed to reach a desired callee to be notified when the callee
      becomes available to receive a call.

   CC activation:  the indication by the caller to the caller's agent
      that the caller desires CC for a failed original call; this
      implies an indication transmitted from the caller's agent to the
      callee's monitor of the desire for CC processing.

   CCBS, or Completion of Calls to Busy Subscriber:  a CC service
      provided when the initial failure was that the destination UA was
      busy.





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   CCNR, or Completion of Calls on No Reply:  a CC service provided when
      the initial failure was that the destination UA did not answer.

   CCNL, or Completion of Calls on Not Logged-in:  a CC service provided
      when the initial failure was that the destination UA was not
      registered.

   CC call:  a call from the caller to the callee, triggered by the CC
      service when it has determined that the callee is available.

   CC indicator:  an indication in the CC call INVITE used to prioritize
      the call at the destination.

   CC possible indication:  the data in responses to the INVITE of the
      original call that indicate that CC is available for the call.

   CC recall:  the action of the callee's monitor selecting a particular
      CC request for initiation of a CC call, resulting in an indication
      from the caller's agent to the caller that it is now possible to
      initiate a CC call.

   CC recall events:  event notifications of event package
      "call-completion", sent by the callee's monitor to the caller's
      agent to inform it of the status of its CC request.

   CC recall timer:  maximum time the callee's monitor will wait for the
      caller's response to a CC recall.

   CC request:  the entry in the callee's monitor queue representing the
      caller's request for CC processing, that is, the caller's CC
      subscription.

   CC service duration timer:  maximum time a CC request may remain
      active within the network.

   CC queue:  a buffer at the callee's monitor that stores incoming
      calls that are targets for CC.  Note: This buffer may or may not
      be organized as a queue.  The use of the term "queue" is analogous
      to SS7 usage.

   CCE, or CC Entity:  the representation of a CC request, or,
      equivalently, an existing CC subscription within the queue of a
      callee's monitor.








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   Failed call:  a call that does not reach a desired callee, from the
      caller's point of view.  Note that a failed call may be successful
      from the SIP point of view; e.g., if the call reached the callee's
      voicemail but the caller desired to speak to the callee in real
      time, the INVITE receives a 200 response, but the caller considers
      the call to have failed.

   Notifier:  the UA that generates NOTIFY requests for the purpose of
      notifying subscribers of the callee's availability; for the CC
      service, this is the task of the callee's monitor.

   Original call:  the initial call that failed to reach a desired
      destination.

   Retain option:  a characteristic of the CC service; if supported, CC
      calls that again encounter a busy callee will not be queued again,
      but the position of the caller's entry in the queue is retained.
      Note that SIP CC always operates with the retain option active; a
      failed CC call does not cause the CC request to lose its position
      in the queue.

   Signaling System 7, or SS7:  the signaling protocol of the public
      switched telephone network, defined by ITU-T Recommendations Q.700
      through Q.849.

   Subscriber:  the UA that receives NOTIFY requests with information of
      the callee's availability; for the CC service, this is the task of
      the caller's agent.

   Suspended CC request:  a CC request that is temporarily not to be
      selected for CC recall.

4.  Solution



4.1.  CC Architecture



   The CC architecture augments each caller's UA (or User Agent Client
   (UAC)) wishing to use the CC features with a "CC agent" (also written
   as "caller's agent").

   It augments each callee's UA (or User Agent Server (UAS)) wishing to
   be the target of the CC features with a "CC monitor" (also written as
   "callee's monitor").

   The caller's agent and callee's monitor functions can be integrated
   into the respective UAs, be independent end-systems, or be provided
   by centralized application servers.  The two functions, though
   associated with the two UAs (caller and callee), also may be provided



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   as services by the endpoints' home proxies or by other network
   elements.  Though it is expected that a UA that implements CC will
   have both functions so that it can participate in CC as both caller
   and callee, the two functions are independent of each other.

   A caller's agent may service more than one UA as a collective group
   if a caller or population of users will be shared between the UAs,
   and especially if the UAs share an address of record (AOR).

   The caller's agent monitors calls made from the caller's UA(s) in
   order to determine their destinations and (potentially) their final
   response statuses, and the Call-Info header fields of provisional and
   final responses to invoke the CC feature.

   A callee's monitor may service more than one UA as a collective group
   if a callee or population of users will be shared between the UAs,
   and especially if the UAs share an AOR.  The callee's monitor may
   supply the callee's UAS(s) with Call-Info header field values for
   provisional and final responses.

   The callee's monitor also instantiates a presence server used to
   monitor the caller's availability for CC recall.

   The callees using the UA(s) may be able to indicate to the callee's
   monitor when they wish to receive CC calls.

   In order to allow flexibility and innovation, most of the interaction
   between the caller's agent, the caller(s) (user(s)), and the caller's
   UA(s) is out of the scope of this document.  Similarly, most of the
   interaction between the callee's monitor, the callee(s), and the
   callee's UA(s) is out of the scope of this document, as is the policy
   by which the callee's monitor arbitrates between multiple CC
   requests.

   The caller's agent must be capable of performing a number of
   functions relative to the UA(s).  The method by which it does so is
   outside the scope of this document, but an example method is
   described in Appendix A.  The callee's monitor must be capable of
   performing a number of functions relative to the UA(s).  The method
   by which it does so is outside the scope of this document, but an
   example method is described in Appendix B.

   As a proof of concept, simple caller's agents and callee's monitors
   can be devised that interact with users and UAs entirely through
   standard SIP mechanisms [RFC6665] [RFC4235] [RFC3515], as described
   in the Appendices.





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   The callers using the UA(s) can indicate to the caller's agent when
   they wish to avail themselves of CC for a recently made call that the
   callers determined to be unsuccessful.  The caller's agent monitors
   the status of the caller's UA(s) to determine when they are available
   to be used for a CC recall.  The caller's agent can communicate to
   the caller's UA(s) that a CC recall is in progress and inquire if the
   relevant caller is available for the CC recall.

   The callee's monitor may utilize several methods to monitor the
   status of the callee's UA(s) and/or their users for availability to
   receive a CC call.  This can be achieved through monitoring calls
   made to the callee's UA(s) to determine the callee's status, the
   identity of callers, and the final responses for incoming calls.  And
   in a system with rich presence information, the presence information
   may directly provide this status.  In a more restricted system, this
   determination can depend on the mode of the CC call in question,
   which is provided by the URI 'm' parameter.  For example, a UA is
   considered available for CCBS ("m=BS") when it is not busy, but a UA
   is considered available for CCNR ("m=NR") when it becomes not busy
   after being busy with an established call.

   The callee's monitor maintains information about the set of INVITEs
   received by the callee's UA(s) considered unsuccessful by the caller.
   In practice, the callee's monitor may remove knowledge about an
   incoming dialog from its set if local policy at the callee's monitor
   establishes that the dialog is no longer eligible for CC activations.

4.2.  CC Procedures



   The caller's UA sends an INVITE to a request-URI.  One or more forks
   of this request reach one or more of the callee's UAs.  If the CC
   feature is available, the callee's monitor (note there can be a
   monitor for each of the callee's UAs) inserts a Call-Info header
   field with its URI and with "purpose=call-completion" in appropriate
   non-100 provisional or final responses to the initial INVITE and
   forwards them to the caller.  The provisional response SHOULD be sent
   reliably if the INVITE contained a Supported header field with the
   option tag 100rel.  On receipt of a non-100 provisional or a final
   response with the indication that the CC feature is available, the
   calling user can invoke the CC feature.

   The caller indicates to the caller's agent that he wishes to invoke
   CC services on the recent call.  Note that from the SIP point of
   view, the INVITE may have been successful, but from the user's point
   of view, the call may have been unsuccessful.  For example, the call
   may have connected to the callee's voicemail, which would return a
   200 status to the INVITE but from the caller's point of view is "no
   reply".



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   In order to receive information necessary for the caller to complete
   the call at the callee, the caller's agent subscribes to the
   call-completion event package at the callee's monitor.

   The possibility of the caller completing the call at the callee is
   also known as the CC state (cc-state) of the caller.  The cc-states
   comprehend the values "queued" and "ready" (for CC).

   In order to receive information from all destinations where the
   callee will be reachable, the caller's agent sends a SUBSCRIBE
   request for the call-completion event package to the original
   destination URI of the call and to all known URIs of the callees'
   monitors (which are provided by Call-Info header fields in
   provisional and final responses to the INVITE).  Each callee's
   monitor uses the subscription as an indication that the caller is
   interested in using the CC feature with regard to the particular
   callee.

   Each callee's monitor keeps a list or queue of subscriptions from
   callers' agents, representing the requests from the callers' agents
   to the callee's monitor for CC services.  These subscriptions are
   created, refreshed, and terminated according to the procedures of
   [RFC6665].

   Upon receiving a SUBSCRIBE request from the caller's agent, the
   callee's monitor instantiates a presence state for the caller's UA
   that can be modified by the caller's UA to indicate its availability
   for the CC call.  Upon instantiation, the caller's presence status at
   the callee's monitor is "open".

   When the callee's monitor determines that the callee and/or callee's
   UA is available for a CC call, it selects a caller to execute the CC
   call and sends a CC event update ("cc-state: ready") via a NOTIFY
   request to the selected subscription of the caller's agent, telling
   it to begin the CC call to the callee's UA.

   When the caller's agent receives this update, it initiates a CC
   recall by calling the caller's UA and then starts the CC call to the
   callee's UA, using third-party call control procedures in accordance
   with [RFC3725].  The caller's agent can also check by other means
   whether the caller is available to initiate the CC call to the
   callee's UA.  If the caller is available, the caller's agent directs
   the caller's UA to initiate the CC call to the callee's UA.

   The caller's agent marks the CC call as such by adding a specific SIP
   URI parameter to the Request-URI, so it can be given precedence by
   the callee's monitor in reaching the callee's UA.




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   If the caller is not available on receipt of the "ready for recall"
   notification, the caller's agent suspends the CC request at the
   callee's monitor by sending a PUBLISH request containing presence
   information to the presence server of the callee's monitor, informing
   the server that the presence status is "closed".  Once the caller
   becomes available for a CC call again, the caller's agent resumes the
   CC request by sending another PUBLISH request to the callee's
   monitor, informing the monitor that the presence status is "open".

   On receipt of the suspension request, the callee's monitor performs
   the monitoring for the next non-suspended CC request in the queue.
   On receipt of the resume from the previously suspended caller's agent
   that was at the top of the queue, the callee's monitor performs the
   callee monitoring for this caller's agent.

   When the CC call fails, there are two possible options: the CC
   feature has to be activated again by the caller's agent subscribing
   to the callee's monitor, or CC remains activated and the original CC
   request retains its position in the queue if the retain option is
   supported.

   The retain option (see Section 3) determines the behavior of the
   callee's monitor when a CC call fails.  If the retain option is
   supported, CC remains activated, and the original CC request
   retains its position in the queue.  Otherwise, the CC feature is
   deactivated, and the caller's agent would have to subscribe again to
   reactivate it.

   A monitor that supports the retain option provides the
   cc-service-retention header in its CC events.  A caller's agent that
   also supports the retain option uses the presence of this header to
   know not to generate a new CC request after a failed CC call.

   Monitors not supporting the retain option do not provide the
   cc-service-retention header.  A failed CC call causes the CC request
   to be deleted from the queue, and these monitors will terminate the
   corresponding subscription of the caller's agent to inform that agent
   that its CC request is no longer in the queue.  A caller's agent that
   does not support the retain option can also terminate its
   subscription when a CC call fails, so it is possible that both the
   caller's agent and the callee's monitor may be signaling the
   termination of the subscription concurrently.  This is a normal SIP
   events [RFC6665] scenario.  After the subscription is terminated, the
   caller's agent may create a new subscription (as described in
   Section 6.2) to reactivate the CC feature for the original call.






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4.3.  Automatic Redial as a Fallback



   Automatic Redial is a simple end-to-end design.  An Automatic Redial
   scenario is described in [RFC5359], Section 2.17.  This solution is
   based on the usage of the dialog event package.  If the callee is
   busy when the call arrives, then the caller subscribes to the
   callee's call state.  The callee's UA sends a notification when the
   callee's call state changes.  This means the caller is also notified
   when the callee's call state changes to 'terminated'.  The caller is
   alerted, then the caller's UA starts a call establishment to the
   callee again.  If several callers have subscribed to a busy callee's
   call state, they will be notified at the same time that the call
   state has changed to 'terminated'.  The problem with this solution is
   that it might happen that several recalls are started at the same
   time.  This means it is a heuristic approach with no guarantee of
   success.

   There is no interaction between CC and Automatic Redial, as there is
   a difference in the behavior of the callee's monitor and the caller
   when using the dialog event package for receiving dialog information
   or for aggregating a CC state.

4.4.  Differences from SS7



   SIP CC differs in some ways from the CCBS and CCNR features of SS7
   (which is used in the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)).  For
   ease of understanding, we enumerate some of the differences here.

   As there is no equivalent to the forking mechanism in SS7, in the
   PSTN, calls can be clearly differentiated as successful or
   unsuccessful.  Due to the complex forking situations that are
   possible in SIP, a call may fail from the point of view of the user
   and yet have a success response from SIP's point of view.  (This can
   happen even in simple situations: e.g., a call to a busy user that
   fails over to his voicemail receives a SIP success response, even
   though the caller may consider it "busy subscriber".)  Thus, the
   caller must be able to invoke CC even when the original call appeared
   to succeed.  To support this, the caller's agent must record
   successful calls as well as unsuccessful calls.

   In SIP, only the caller's UA or service system on the originating
   side and the callee's UA or service system on the terminating side
   need to support CC for CC to work successfully between the UAs.
   Intermediate SIP systems (proxies or back-to-back user agents
   (B2BUAs)) do not need to implement CC; they only need to be
   transparent to the usual range of SIP messages.  In the PSTN,
   additionally, intermediate nodes like media gateway controllers have
   to implement the CC service.



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5.  CC Queue Model



   The callee's monitor manages CC for a single URI.  This URI is likely
   to be a published AOR, or more likely "non-voicemail AOR", but it may
   be as narrowly scoped as a single UA's contact URI.  The callee's
   monitor manages a dynamic set of CC entities (called "CCEs"), which
   represent CC requests, or equivalently, the existing incoming CC
   subscriptions.  This set is also called a queue, because a queue data
   structure often aids in implementing the policies of the callee's
   monitor for selecting CCEs for CC recall.

   Each CCE has an availability state, determined through the caller's
   presence status at the callee's monitor.  A presence status of "open"
   represents a CCE's availability state of "available", and a presence
   status of "closed" represents a CCE's availability state of
   "unavailable".

   Each CCE has a recall state that is visible via subscriptions.  The
   recall state is either "queued" or "ready".

   Each CCE carries the From URI of the SUBSCRIBE request that caused
   its creation.

   CC subscriptions arrive at the callee's monitor by addressing the
   URIs the callee's monitor returns in Call-Info header fields.  The
   request-URI of the SUBSCRIBE request determines the queue to which
   the resulting CCE is added.  The resulting subscription reports the
   status of the queue.  The base event data is the status of all the
   CCEs in the queue, but the data returned by each subscription is
   filtered to report only the status of that subscription's CCE.
   (Further standardization may define means for obtaining more
   comprehensive information about a queue.)

   When a CCE is created, it is given the availability state "available"
   and recall state "queued".

   When the callee's monitor receives Presence Information Data Format
   (PIDF) bodies [RFC3863] via PUBLISH requests [RFC3903], these PUBLISH
   requests are expected to be sent by subscribers to indirectly suspend
   and resume their CC requests by modifying its CCE availability state.
   A CCE is identified by the request-URI (if it was taken from a CC
   event notification that identifies the CCE) or the From URI of the
   request (matching the From URI recorded in the CCE).  Receipt of a
   PUBLISH with status "open" sets the availability state of the CCE to
   "available" (resume); status "closed" sets the availability state of
   the CCE to "unavailable" (suspend).





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   A CC request is eligible for recall only when its CCE's availability
   state is "available" and the "m" value of the CCE also indicates an
   available state.  The callee's monitor MUST NOT select for recall any
   CC requests that fail to meet those criteria.  Within that
   constraint, the selections made by the callee's monitor are
   determined by its local policy.  Often, a callee's monitor will
   choose the acceptable CCE that has been in the queue the longest.
   When the callee's monitor has selected a CCE for recall, it changes
   the CCE's recall state from "queued" to "ready", which triggers a
   notification on the CCE's subscription.

   If a selected subscriber then suspends its request by sending a
   PUBLISH with the presence status "closed", the CCE becomes
   "unavailable", and the callee's monitor changes the CCE's recall
   state to "queued".  This may cause another CCE (e.g., a CCE that has
   been in the queue for less time) to be selected for recall.

   The caller's presence status at the callee's monitor is terminated
   when the caller completes its CC call or when the subscription of the
   caller's agent at the callee's monitor is terminated.

6.  Caller's Agent Behavior



6.1.  Receiving the CC Possible Indication



   The caller's agent MUST record the From URI and SHOULD record the
   final request status that the caller's UA received along with the
   contents of Call-Info header fields of provisional and final
   responses.

   Note that receiving a CC possible indication also depends on the
   aggregation of final responses by proxies; in the case of 4xx
   responses, some 4xx responses are more likely to be sent to the
   caller.

6.2.  Subscribing to CC



   For CC activation, the caller's agent MUST send a SUBSCRIBE to all
   known callee's monitor URIs.  A callee's monitor URI may be provided
   in the Call-Info header field in provisional and final responses to
   the INVITE sent back by the callee's monitor(s).  Additionally, the
   caller's agent SHOULD include the original request-URI that it sent
   the original INVITE to, in its set of callee's monitor URIs, when it
   is unclear if the call has forked to additional callees whose
   responses the caller has not seen.  A SUBSCRIBE to the original
   request-URI alone is used in cases where the caller's agent has not
   received or does not remember any callee's monitor URI.  The caller's
   agent SHOULD add an 'm' parameter to these URIs in order to indicate



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   to the callee's monitor the desired CC mode.  The 'm' parameter
   SHOULD have the value of the 'm' parameter received in the Call-Info
   header field of the responses to the original INVITE.

   To minimize redundant subscriptions, these SUBSCRIBEs SHOULD be
   presented as forks of the same transaction, as defined by
   Section 8.2.2.2 of [RFC3261], if the caller's agent is capable of
   doing so.

   The agent MUST NOT maintain more than one CC request for a single
   caller and directed to a single original destination URI.  If a
   caller requests CC a second time for the same destination URI, the
   agent MUST consolidate the new request with the existing CC request
   by either reusing the existing CC subscriptions or terminating and
   then recreating them.  For this purpose, equality of callers is
   determined by comparing callers' AORs and equality of destination
   URIs is determined by comparing them per [RFC3261] Section 19.1.4.

   When generating these SUBSCRIBEs, the From URI MUST be the caller's
   AOR.  The To URI SHOULD be the destination URI of the original call
   (if the agent knows that and can insert it into the To header) and
   otherwise MUST be the request-URI of the SUBSCRIBE.

   The SUBSCRIBE SHOULD have header fields to optimize its routing.  In
   particular, it SHOULD contain "Request-Disposition: parallel" and an
   Accept-Contact header field to eliminate callee UAs that are not
   acceptable to the caller.

   The caller's agent MUST be prepared to receive multiple responses for
   multiple forks of the SUBSCRIBE and to have multiple subscriptions
   established.  The caller's agent must also be prepared to have the
   SUBSCRIBE fail; in which case, CC cannot be invoked for this original
   call.

   If the caller's agent no longer wants to initiate the CC call (e.g.,
   because the caller has deactivated CC), the caller's agent terminates
   the subscription in accordance with [RFC6665] or suspends the
   subscription(s) as specified in Section 6.5.

6.3.  Receiving a CC Recall Notification



   When receiving a NOTIFY with the cc-state set to "ready", the
   caller's agent SHOULD suspend all other subscriptions to CC, by
   following the step in Section 6.5, in order to prevent any other CC
   requests from this caller from receiving CC recalls.  The caller's
   agent starts the CC recall to the caller by confirming that the
   caller would be able to initiate a CC call, e.g., by calling the
   caller's UA(s).



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6.4.  Initiating a CC Call



   If the caller is available for the CC call and willing to initiate
   the CC call, the caller's agent causes the caller's UA to generate a
   new INVITE towards the callee.  The caller's UA MAY add an 'm' URI
   parameter with the value of the 'm' parameter received in the
   Call-Info header in the response to the original INVITE, in order to
   specify his preferences in CC processing and to prioritize the CC
   call.  The INVITE SHOULD be addressed to the URI specified in the
   cc-URI of the NOTIFY, or, if that's not available, it SHOULD use the
   URI in the Call-Info header field of the response to the original
   INVITE; if that's not available, it MAY use the request-URI of the
   original INVITE, if this URI was recorded.  Note that the latter
   choice may not provide ideal routing, but, in simple cases, it is
   likely to reach the desired callee or callee's monitor.

6.5.  Suspending CC



   If the caller is not available for the CC recall, the CC request
   SHALL be suspended by the caller's agent until the caller becomes
   available again or if the conditions relevant to the local suspension
   policy of the caller's agent have changed.  To suspend the CC
   request, the caller's agent SHALL publish the caller's presence state
   by sending a PUBLISH request to each callee's monitor where the
   presence server for CC resides in accordance with the procedures
   described in [RFC3903], giving the PIDF state "closed" for the
   caller's identity as presentity.  The PUBLISH request SHOULD contain
   an Expires header field with a value that corresponds to the current
   value of the remaining CC subscription duration.

   Each PUBLISH SHOULD be sent to the CC URI as received in the NOTIFY,
   or within the corresponding SUBSCRIBE dialog, or if that is not
   possible, to the corresponding callee's monitor URI received in the
   Call-Info header field of the NOTIFY, or if one is not available, the
   Contact address of the subscription.

6.6.  Resuming CC



   When the caller is no longer busy, or if the conditions relevant to
   the suspension policy of the caller's agent have changed, then the CC
   request SHALL be resumed by the caller's agent.  To resume a CC
   request, the caller's agent SHALL publish the caller's presence state
   by sending a PUBLISH request to each callee's monitor in accordance
   with the procedures described in [RFC3903], informing each monitor
   that the PIDF state is "open"; this request will otherwise be
   constructed in the same way as the suspend PUBLISH request.





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   In the case where the caller's agent has sent several CC suspension
   requests to different callee's monitors and the caller becomes
   available again, as determined by the local resumption policy of the
   caller's agent, the caller's agent MAY send a PUBLISH to resume a CC
   request to each callee's monitor for which there is a suspended CC
   request.  Note that the resumption policy of the caller's agent may
   prescribe a manual resumption; thus, a suspended CC request should
   not be automatically resumed.

7.  Callee's Monitor Behavior



7.1.  Sending the CC Possible Indication



   The callee's monitor MUST record the From URI and MAY record the
   final request status(es) returned by the callee's UA(s).

   If the callee's monitor wants to enable the caller to make use of the
   CC service, it MUST insert a Call-Info header field with
   "purpose=call-completion" in the final response message (e.g., in a
   486 to enable CC due to busy subscriber) and at least one non-100
   provisional response message (e.g., in a 180 due to no response) to
   the initial INVITE when forwarding it to the caller.  The non-100
   provisional response message SHOULD be sent reliably if the INVITE
   contained a Supported header field with the option tag 100rel.  The
   Call-Info header field values defined in this specification
   positively indicate that CC is available for the failed fork of the
   call.

   The callee's monitor SHOULD insert a URI in the Call-Info header
   field where the caller's agent should subscribe for CC.  Ideally, it
   is a globally routable URI [RFC5627] for the callee's monitor.  In
   practice, it may be the callee's AOR, and the SUBSCRIBE will be
   routed to the callee's monitor only because it specifies "Event:
   call-completion".

   In order to enable CC, the Call-Info header field MUST be set up
   according to the following scheme:

   Call-Info: monitor-URI;purpose=call-completion;m=XX

   The 'm' parameter defines the "mode" of CC.  The "m=NR" parameter
   indicates that it failed due to lack of response, the "m=BS"
   parameter indicates that it failed due to busy subscriber, and the
   "m=NL" parameter indicates that it failed due to non-registered
   subscriber (no devices are registered for the AOR contacted).  The
   'm' parameter is useful for PSTN interworking and assessing presence
   information in the callee's monitor.  It is possible that other
   values will be defined in future.  It is also permissible to omit the



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   'm' parameter entirely.  Implementations MUST accept CC operations in
   which the 'm' parameter is missing or has an unknown value, and
   execute them as best they can in their environment (which is likely
   to be a degraded service, especially when interoperating with SS7).

7.2.  Receiving a CC Subscription



   The callee's monitor MUST be prepared to receive SUBSCRIBEs for the
   call-completion event package directed to the URIs of UA(s) that it
   is servicing and any URIs that the callee's monitor provides in
   Call-Info header fields.  The SUBSCRIBEs MUST be processed in
   accordance with the procedures defined in [RFC6665], establishing
   subscriptions.  These subscriptions represent the request from the
   caller's agent for CC services.

   If the monitor receives two or more SUBSCRIBEs that have the same
   Call-Id header field value and the monitor considers the request-URIs
   of the received SUBSCRIBEs to request the status of the same set of
   UAs, then they are redundant forks of one SUBSCRIBE request, and the
   monitor SHOULD reject all but one of the requests with 482 (Merged
   Request) responses.

   The monitor MAY determine that an incoming CC SUBSCRIBE is a
   duplicate of an existing CC subscription if (1) the Call-Id header
   field values are different, (2) the From URIs (i.e., the caller's
   AORs) are the same (per [RFC3261] Section 19.1.4), (3) the To URIs
   (which should be the request-URI of the original call) have the same
   user and hostport components, and (4) the monitor considers the
   request-URIs of the received SUBSCRIBEs to request the status of the
   same set of UAs.

   If the monitor determines that a new subscription is a duplicate of
   an existing subscription, it MAY terminate the existing subscription
   in accordance with the procedures defined in [RFC6665].  In any case,
   it MUST establish the new subscription.

   The callee's monitor may apply restrictions as to which caller's
   agents may subscribe.

   The continuation of the subscription of the caller's agent indicates
   to the callee's monitor that the caller's agent is prepared to
   initiate the CC call if it is selected for the "ready" state.  If the
   callee's monitor becomes aware of a subscription that cannot be
   selected for a CC recall, it SHOULD terminate the subscription in
   accordance with [RFC6665].






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7.3.  Sending a CC Notification



   The call-completion event package returns various points of
   information to the caller's agent, but the vital datum it contains is
   the cc-state of the CC request of the caller's agent as stored in the
   CC queue; in the beginning, this cc-state is "queued".  When the
   cc-state of the agent's request changes, the callee's monitor MUST
   send a NOTIFY for a CC event to the caller's agent.  The notification
   SHOULD also contain a URI that can be used for suspension requests.
   Ideally, it is a globally routable URI [RFC5627] for the callee's
   monitor.  In practice, it may be the callee's AOR, and the SUBSCRIBE
   will be routed to the callee's monitor only because it specifies
   "Event: call-completion".

   The call-completion event package provides limited information about
   the policy of the callee's monitor.  In particular, as in the PSTN,
   the "cc-service-retention" datum gives an indication of the "service
   retention" attribute, which indicates whether the CC request can be
   continued to a later time if the CC call fails due to the callee's
   UA(s) being busy.  If the callee's monitor supports the
   service-retention option, the callee's monitor SHOULD include the
   cc-service-retention parameter.

   The callee's monitor has a policy regarding when and how it selects
   CC requests for the recall.  This policy may take into account the
   type of the requests (e.g., CCNR vs. CCBS), the state of the callee's
   UA(s), the order in which the CC requests arrived, the length of time
   the CC requests have been active, and any previous attempts of CC
   activations for the same original call.  The callee's monitor will
   usually choose only one CC request for the recall at a time, but if
   the callee's UA(s) can support multiple calls, it may choose more
   than one.  The callee's monitor will usually choose the oldest active
   request.

   When the callee's monitor changes the state datum for the chosen
   subscription from "queued" to "ready", the callee's monitor MUST send
   a NOTIFY for the subscription of the caller's agent with the cc-state
   set to "ready" (recall notification).  The NOTIFY SHOULD also contain
   in the cc-URI a URI to be used in the CC call.  In practice, this may
   be the AOR of the callee.

   Upon sending the recall notification, the callee's monitor MUST start
   a recall timer.  It is RECOMMENDED to use a value between 10 and
   20 seconds, which corresponds to the recommendation for the CC
   services in the ETSI [ETS300.356-18] and ITU-T [ITU-T.Q.733]
   documents.





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7.4.  Receiving a CC Call



   The callee's UA(s) and the callee's monitor may give the CC call
   precedence over non-CC calls by evaluating the presence of the 'm'
   URI parameter and the From header of the INVITE request.  The
   callee's monitor supervises the receiving of the CC call.  Upon
   arrival of the CC call, the recall timer MUST be stopped.  If the CC
   call does not arrive at the callee's UA(s) before the expiry of the
   recall timer, the callee's monitor SHOULD stop processing the recall
   and change the value of the cc-state datum to "queued" if it supports
   the retain option, and terminate the subscription if it doesn't
   support the retain option.  Similarly, if the CC call is not
   accepted, the callee's monitor will stop the CC recall processing.
   Depending on its policy, the same original call may be selected again
   for a CC recall at a later time.  If the CC call succeeds, the
   callee's monitor MUST terminate the relevant subscription in
   accordance with [RFC6665] and MUST remove any associated presence
   event state used for suspend and resume for the caller of the CC
   call.

   Once the CC call has been terminated, successfully or unsuccessfully,
   the policy of the callee's monitor MAY specify that another CC
   request for a recall be selected.  Note also that according to the
   policy of the callee's monitor several recalls may be processed at
   the same time.

7.5.  Receiving a CC Suspension



   The monitor may receive PUBLISH requests to suspend CC requests from
   the caller's agent as described in Section 6.5.  The PUBLISH requests
   may be received via the URI it manages, any URI that it inserts into
   a Call-Info header, any contact URI it uses as a notifier for
   "call-completion" events, or any URI it returns as the "URI" line of
   the call-completion event packages.

   The receipt of the PUBLISH request initiates a presence event state
   for the caller's identity at the presence server of the callee's
   monitor as specified in [RFC3903], together with a logical presence
   server if this has not been done before for another call.

   Note: The presence server may initiate a presence event state for the
   caller's identity on receipt of a SUBSCRIBE request as well,
   dependent on the implementation.

   The monitor SHOULD identify the addressed CCE by the request-URI of
   the PUBLISH request, or if that is not possible, by the From URI.





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   If the processing of a CC request results in suspending that CC
   request by receiving a PUBLISH request from the caller's agent as
   described in Section 6.5, the callee's monitor MUST stop the recall
   timer and MUST ensure that the request is set to a "queued" state,
   and then the callee's monitor MUST attempt to process another CC
   request in the queue according to its local policy.

7.6.  Receiving a CC Resumption



   When a CC request has been resumed after the callee's monitor has
   received a PUBLISH request from the caller's agent as described in
   Section 6.6, the presence event state for the caller's identity at
   the presence server of the CC monitor MUST be modified as described
   in [RFC3903].  If the callee is not busy and there is no entry in the
   CC queue that is currently being processed, the callee's monitor MUST
   process the queue as described in Section 7.3 above.

8.  Examples



   A basic call flow, with only the most significant messages of a CC
   activation and invocation shown, is as follows (please note that this
   is an example, and there may be variations in the failure responses):





























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       Caller                     Callee
       sip:123@a.com              sip:456@b.com
         |                          |
         | INVITE sip:456@b.com     |         [original call]
         | From: sip:123@a.com      |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | 487                      |
         | Call-Info:<sip:456@z.b.com>;purpose=call-completion;m=NR
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | SUBSCRIBE sip:456@z.b.com;m=NR     [initial SUBSCRIBE]
         | From: sip:123@a.com      |
         | Contact: sip:123@y.a.com |
         | Request-Disposition: parallel
         | Call-Id: abcd-efgh       |
         | Event: call-completion   |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | 200                      |
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | NOTIFY sip:123@y.a.com   |         [initial NOTIFY]
         | Body: cc-state: queued   |
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | SUBSCRIBE sip:456@b.com;m=NR       [another init. SUB.]
         | From: sip:foo@example.com|
         | Request-Disposition: parallel
         | Call-Id: abcd-efgh       |
         | Event: call-completion   |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | 482                      |         [duplicate SUB. rej.]
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | NOTIFY sip:123@y.a.com   |         [CC invoked]
         | Body: cc-state: ready    |
         |        URI: sip:recall@z.b.com
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | INVITE sip:recall@z.b.com;m=NR     [CC call]
         | From: sip:foo@example.com|
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | NOTIFY sip:123@y.a.com   |         [CC terminated]
         | Expires = 0              |
         |<-------------------------|



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   The original call is an ordinary INVITE.  It fails due to no-response
   (ring-no-answer).  In this case, the callee's governing proxy
   generates a 487 response because the proxy canceled the INVITE to the
   UA when it rang too long without an answer.  The 487 response carries
   a Call-Info header field with "purpose=call-completion".  The
   Call-Info header field positively indicates that CC is available for
   this failed fork of the call.  The "m=NR" parameter indicates that it
   failed due to no-response, which is useful for PSTN interworking and
   assessing presence information in the callee's monitor.

   The URI in the Call-Info header field (<sip:456@z.b.com>) is where
   the caller's agent should subscribe for CC processing.  Ideally, it
   is a globally routable URI for the callee's monitor.  In practice, it
   may be the callee's AOR, and the SUBSCRIBE will be routed to the
   callee's monitor only because it specifies "Event: call-completion".

   CC is activated by sending a SUBSCRIBE to all known callee's monitor
   URIs.  These can be provided by the Call-Info header field in the
   response to the INVITE.

   Additionally, the caller's agent needs to include the original
   request-URI in its set of callee's monitor URIs, because the call may
   have forked to additional callees whose responses the caller has not
   seen.  (A SUBSCRIBE to the request-URI alone is used in cases where
   the caller's agent has not received or cannot remember any callee's
   monitor URI.)

   The caller's agent adds to these URIs an 'm' parameter (if possible).
   In this case, the caller's agent forks the SUBSCRIBE to two
   destinations as defined by Section 8.2.2.2 of [RFC3261], with
   appropriate Request-Disposition.  The first SUBSCRIBE is to the URI
   from Call-Info.

   The second SUBSCRIBE is to the original request-URI and reaches the
   same callee's monitor.  Because it has the same Call-Id as the
   SUBSCRIBE that has already reached the callee's monitor, the callee's
   monitor rejects it with a 482, thus avoiding redundant subscriptions.

   The initial NOTIFY for the successful SUBSCRIBE has "cc-state:
   queued" in its body.  Eventually, this caller is selected for CC and
   is informed of this via a NOTIFY containing "cc-state: ready".  This
   NOTIFY carries a URI to which the INVITE for the CC call should be
   sent.  In practice, this may be the AOR of the callee.

   The caller generates a new INVITE to the URI specified in the NOTIFY,
   or if there was no such URI or if the caller's agent cannot remember
   it, it may use the original request-URI.  The caller adds the 'm'
   parameters (if possible), to specify CC processing.



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   Finally, the subscription for the CC request is terminated by the
   callee's monitor.

   Another flow, with only the most significant messages of CC
   suspension and resumption shown, is as follows:

       Caller                     Callee
       sip:123@a.com              sip:456@b.com
         |                          |
         | NOTIFY sip:123@y.a.com   |      [CC notification, caller not
         | Body: cc-state: ready    |      available for CC recall]
         |        URI: sip:recall@z.b.com
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         | 200                      |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | PUBLISH sip:456@z.b.com  |      [non-availability for recall
         | From: sip:123@a.com      |       is published]
         | Contact: sip:123@y.a.com |
         | Event: presence          |
         | Content-Type: 'app/pidf' |
         | Body: status=closed      |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | 200                      |
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |
         |                          |      [caller becomes available
         |                          |       again]
         |                          |
         | PUBLISH sip:456@z.b.com  |      [availability for recall
         | From: sip:123@a.com      |       is published]
         | Contact: sip:123@y.a.com |
         | Event: presence          |
         | Content-Type: 'app/pidf' |
         | Body: status=open        |
         |------------------------->|
         |                          |
         | 200                      |
         |<-------------------------|
         |                          |

   The caller is selected for CC and is informed of this via a NOTIFY
   request containing "cc-state: ready".  At this time, the caller is
   not available for the CC recall.





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   For updating its presence event state at the callee's presence
   server, the caller sends a PUBLISH request informing the presence
   server that the PIDF state is "closed".  The PUBLISH request is sent
   (in order of preference) as follows: (1) out-of-dialog to the CC URI
   as received in the NOTIFY, (2) within the corresponding SUBSCRIBE
   dialog, (3) out-of-dialog to the corresponding callee's monitor URI
   received in the Call-Info header field of the NOTIFY, or (4) out-of-
   dialog to the remote Contact address of the corresponding SUBSCRIBE
   dialog.

   When the caller is again available for the CC recall, the caller
   updates his presence event state at the callee's presence server by
   generating a PUBLISH request informing the server that the PIDF state
   is "open"; this request will otherwise be constructed in the same way
   as the suspend PUBLISH request.

9.  'call-completion' Event Package



   This section specifies the call-completion event package, in
   accordance with Section 5.4 of [RFC6665].  The call-completion event
   package has the media type "application/call-completion".

   Note that if the callee has a caller-queuing facility, the callee's
   monitor may want to treat the CC queue as part of the queuing
   facility and include in the event package information regarding the
   state of the queue.  How this information is conveyed is left for
   further standardization.

9.1.  Event Package Name



   The SIP events specification [RFC6665] requires package definitions
   to specify the name of their package or template-package.  The name
   of this package is "call-completion".  This value appears in the
   Event and Allow-Events header fields.

9.2.  Event Package Parameters



   No package-specific Event header field parameters are defined for
   this event package.












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9.3.  SUBSCRIBE Bodies



   [RFC6665] requires package definitions to define the usage, if any,
   of bodies in SUBSCRIBE requests.

   The SUBSCRIBE request MAY contain an Accept header field.  If no
   such header field is present, it has a default value of
   "application/call-completion".  If the header field is present, it
   MUST include "application/call-completion".

   A SUBSCRIBE request for a CC package MAY contain a body.  This body
   defines a filter to be applied to the subscription.  Filter documents
   are not specified in this document and may be the subject of future
   standardization activity.

   A SUBSCRIBE request requests CC information regarding calls recently
   made from the same caller to the callee UA(s) serviced by the
   notifier.  Calls are defined to be "from the same caller" if the
   URI-part of the From header field value in the INVITE is the same as
   the URI-part of the From header field value in the SUBSCRIBE.

9.4.  Subscribe Duration



   [RFC6665] requires package definitions to define a default value for
   subscription durations and to discuss reasonable choices for
   durations when they are explicitly specified.

   If a SUBSCRIBE does not explicitly request a duration, the default
   requested duration is 3600 seconds, as that is the highest service
   duration timer value recommended for the CC services in the ETSI
   [ETS300.356-18] and ITU-T [ITU-T.Q.733] documents.  Because the
   subscription duration means that no explicit timer is needed, and the
   subscription duration can be seen as an equivalent to the SS7 service
   duration timer, this specification refers to the subscription
   duration also as the service duration timer.  It is RECOMMENDED that
   subscribers request, and that notifiers grant, a subscription time of
   at least 3600 seconds.

   If a notifier can determine that, according to its policy, after a
   certain duration the requested subscription can no longer proceed to
   the "ready" state, it SHOULD reduce the granted subscription time to
   that duration.  If a notifier can determine that, according to its
   policy, the requested subscription can never proceed to the "ready"
   state, it should refuse the subscription.







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9.5.  NOTIFY Bodies



   [RFC6665] requires package definitions to describe the allowed set of
   body types in NOTIFY requests and to specify the default value to be
   used when there is no Accept header field in the SUBSCRIBE request.
   A NOTIFY for a call-completion event package MUST contain a body that
   describes the CC states.

   As described in [RFC6665], the NOTIFY message will contain bodies
   that describe the state of the subscribed resource.  This body is in
   a format listed in the Accept header field of the SUBSCRIBE, or in a
   package-specific default format if the Accept header field was
   omitted from the SUBSCRIBE.

   In this event package, the body of the notification contains a CC
   document.  All subscribers and notifiers MUST support the
   "application/call-completion" data format described in Section 10.
   The SUBSCRIBE request MAY contain an Accept header field.  If no
   such header field is present, it has a default value of
   "application/call-completion".  If the header field is present, it
   MUST include "application/call-completion".  Of course, the
   notifications generated by the server MUST be in one of the formats
   specified in the Accept header field in the SUBSCRIBE request.

9.6.  Subscriber Generation of SUBSCRIBE Requests



   Subscribers MUST generate SUBSCRIBE requests when they want to
   subscribe to the call-completion event package at the terminating
   side in order to receive CC notifications.  The generation of
   SUBSCRIBE requests can imply the usage of a CC service-specific timer
   as described in Section 9.4.

9.7.  Notifier Processing of SUBSCRIBE Requests



   Upon receiving a subscription refresh, the notifier MUST set the
   "expires" parameter of the Subscription-State header field to a value
   not higher than the current remaining duration of the subscription,
   regardless of the value received in the Expires header field (if
   present) of the subscription refresh.

   If a subscription is not successful because the CC queue has reached
   the maximum allowed number of entries (short-term denial), the
   notifier MUST send a 480 Temporarily Unavailable response to the
   subscriber, possibly with a retry-after parameter in accordance with
   the notifier's policy.  If a subscription is not successful because a
   condition has occurred that prevents and will continue to prevent the
   CC service (long-term denial), the notifier MUST send a 403 Forbidden
   response to the subscriber.



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   A notifier MAY receive multiple forks of the same SUBSCRIBE, as
   defined by Section 8.2.2.2 of [RFC3261].  In such a case, the
   notifier MUST reject all but one of the SUBSCRIBEs with a 482 Merged
   Request response, unless some other failure response applies.

   The CC information can be sensitive.  Therefore, all subscriptions
   SHOULD be handled with consideration of the security considerations
   discussed in Section 11, in particular for verifying the identity of
   the subscriber.

9.8.  Notifier Generation of NOTIFY Requests



   Notifiers MUST generate NOTIFY requests when the CC request's state
   changes to "queued" or to "ready (for CC)".  A NOTIFY that is sent
   with non-zero expiration MUST contain the "cc-state" parameter.  The
   parameter's value MUST be "queued" if the CC request represented by
   the subscription is not at this time selected by the callee's monitor
   for CC recall, and the parameter's value MUST be "ready" if the
   request is at this time selected by the callee's monitor for CC
   recall.

   A NOTIFY sent with a zero expiration (e.g., as a confirmation of a
   request to unsubscribe) MAY contain the "cc-state" parameter.

   When the callee's monitor withdraws the selection of the request for
   the CC recall (e.g., because the caller's agent has not initiated the
   CC recall INVITE before the CC recall timer expires, or because the
   agent has suspended the request from being considered for CC recall),
   the notifier MUST send a NOTIFY to the subscription of the selected
   request.  This NOTIFY MUST contain the "cc-state" parameter set to
   "queued".

   If the CC subscription was successful and the retain option is
   supported at the callee, the NOTIFY MUST contain the
   "cc-service-retention" parameter.

9.9.  Subscriber Processing of NOTIFY Requests



   When receiving a NOTIFY request with the cc-state set to "ready",
   subscribers SHOULD suspend all other CC subscriptions for the
   original call at other notifiers.  The receipt of a NOTIFY request
   with the cc-state set to "ready" by the subscriber will also cause an
   interaction with the instances at the subscriber's side that are
   responsible for starting the CC recall.







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9.10.  Handling of Forked Requests



   Forked requests are expected to be common for the CC event type.  The
   subscriber MUST be prepared to process NOTIFY requests from multiple
   notifiers and to coordinate its processing of the information
   obtained from them in accordance with the procedures in this
   document.

9.11.  Rate of Notifications



   The CC service typically involves a single notification, per notifier
   and per subscription, regarding the change to "ready" (for CC) but
   MAY involve several notifications about the change to the "ready"
   state, separated by a CC call that failed due to a busy callee.
   Typically, notifications will be separated by at least tens of
   seconds.  Notifiers SHOULD NOT generate more than three notifications
   for one subscription in any ten-second interval.  Since it is
   important to avoid useless recalls, a notifier SHOULD send state
   changes to "queued" from "ready" promptly.  Thus, a notifier SHOULD
   NOT
send a state change to "ready" as the third notification in a
   ten-second interval, as that would make it impossible to promptly
   send a further state change to "queued".

9.12.  State Agents



   State agents have no defined role in the handling of the
   call-completion event package.

10.  CC Information Format



   The following syntax specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur
   Form (ABNF) as described in [RFC5234].  The formal syntax for the
   application/call-completion MIME type is described below.  In
   general, the CC body is to be interpreted in the same way as SIP
   headers: (1) the names of the lines are case-insensitive, (2) the
   lines can be continued over line boundaries if the succeeding lines
   start with horizontal white space, and (3) lines with unknown names
   are to be ignored.  The header lines defined in this document can
   occur at most once in any given CC information format document.

   call-completion = 1*(cc-header CRLF)

   cc-header = cc-state / cc-service-retention / cc-URI /
               extension-header

   The above rules whose names start with "cc-" are described below.
   Other rules are described in [RFC3261].




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10.1.  CC Status



   The cc-state line indicates the CC status of a particular user with
   an entry in a CC queue.  It MUST be present, unless the expiration
   time indicated in the NOTIFY is zero.

   cc-state = "cc-state" HCOLON ( "queued" / "ready" )

   The value "queued" indicates that a subscriber's entry in the CC
   queue is not selected for CC recall.  The value "ready" indicates
   that a user's entry in the CC queue has been selected for CC recall.

10.2.  CC Service-Retention Indication



   The service-retention line indicates the support of the retain
   option.  The retain option, if supported at the callee, will maintain
   the entry in the CC queue, if a CC call has failed due to a callee
   busy condition.  If present, this parameter indicates that the retain
   option is supported; otherwise, it is not supported.  This parameter
   MAY be present in NOTIFY requests.

   cc-service-retention = "cc-service-retention" HCOLON "true"

10.3.  CC URI



   The cc-URI line provides a URI that the agent SHOULD use as the
   request-URI of the CC recall INVITE and the suspend/resume PUBLISH.
   It SHOULD be provided in all NOTIFYs.  The URI SHOULD be globally
   routable and SHOULD uniquely identify the CCE in question.  The
   syntax provides for generic-params in the value, but this document
   defines no such parameters.  Parameters that are not understood by
   the subscriber MUST be retained with the URI.

   cc-URI = "cc-URI" HCOLON addr-spec

11.  Security Considerations



   The CC facility allows the caller's agent to determine some status
   information regarding the callee.  This information intrinsically
   diminishes the privacy of the callee; in order to protect
   sufficiently the privacy of the callee, the overall amount of
   disclosure must be limited, and the amount of disclosure to any
   single caller must be limited.

   Of course, if a caller is not permitted to call the callee, that
   caller should not be allowed to establish a CC subscription.  Callers
   that are particularly sensitive about their privacy may reject all CC
   subscriptions.  But in the ordinary case, the optimal protection is



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   to permit any caller to subscribe but prevent any caller from
   subscribing for too long, or too often, or in a pattern that does not
   reveal to the callee (through CC calls) that the subscriptions are
   taking place.

   In legitimate use, CC event subscriptions will be made in stereotyped
   ways that limit the disclosure of status information:

   1.  When a subscriber is selected for CC, a call should arrive
       promptly for the callee, or the subscription should be
       terminated.  This expectation may be violated by a race condition
       between selection of the subscription for CC and the caller
       becoming unavailable, but it should be rare that a single
       subscription will exhibit the race condition more than once.

   2.  Subscriptions should not remain suspended for longer than the
       expected duration of a call (a call by the caller to a third
       party).

   3.  Subscriptions should be initiated only shortly after failed
       incoming calls.

   4.  Most of the time, a callee should have no queued subscriptions.

   Violations of these expectations should be detected by the callee's
   monitor and reported as possible attempts at privacy violation.

   The CC facility may enhance the effectiveness of Spam over Internet
   Telephony (SPIT) via the following technique: the caller makes calls
   to a group of callees.  The caller then requests CC for the calls
   that do not connect to the callees.  The resultant CC calls are
   probably more likely to reach the callees than original calls to a
   further group of targets.

   In order to prevent senders of SUBSCRIBE and PUBLISH requests from
   causing Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks and suspending other CC
   entries than their own, a mechanism to correlate the identity of the
   original caller and the sender of SUBSCRIBE and PUBLISH requests is
   needed.  The RECOMMENDED mechanism to authenticate the identity of
   the originator of requests relevant to CC is the SIP Identity
   mechanism [RFC4474].  Alternatively, CC agents and monitors within an
   administrative domain or federation of domains MAY use the mechanism
   described in [RFC3325] to authenticate their identities with a
   P-Asserted-Identity header field.

   Furthermore, the use of the presence server to suspend or resume
   SHOULD be limited to a caller that has an active queue in the
   callee's monitor.  This can be achieved first by monitoring and



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   logging incoming calls to the callee and the destination where CC
   indication was sent, then to ensure that subscription to the
   call-completion event package is permitted only within a short time
   frame after the initial call failed and to only accept PUBLISH
   requests to the presence server if there is an active queue for the
   caller in question.

   Note that regarding authentication/authorization/billing logic
   subject to operator policy, CC calls or subscriptions do not differ
   from other basic calls or event subscriptions.

12.  IANA Considerations



12.1.  SIP Event Package Registration for CC



   This specification registers an event package, based on the
   registration procedures defined in [RFC6665].  The following
   information is required for such a registration:

   Package name: call-completion

   Is this registration for a Template-Package: No.

   Published specification: RFC 6910.

   Person & email address to contact for further information: Martin
   Huelsemann, martin.huelsemann@telekom.de

12.2.  MIME Registration for application/call-completion



   MIME media type name: application

   MIME subtype name: call-completion

   Required parameters: none.

   Optional parameters: none.

   Encoding considerations: Consists of lines of UTF-8-encoded
   characters, ended with CRLF.

   Security considerations: There are no security considerations
   internal to the media type.  Its typical usage involves the security
   considerations described in RFC 6910.

   Interoperability considerations: See RFC 6910.

   Published specification: RFC 6910.



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   Applications that use this media type: The implementations of the CC
   features of the Session Initiation Protocol.

   Additional information:

      Magic number(s): none

      File extension(s): Not expected to be stored in files.

      Macintosh file type code(s): Not expected to be stored in files.

   Person & email address to contact for further information:
   Martin Huelsemann, martin.huelsemann@telekom.de

   Intended usage: LIMITED USE

   Restrictions on usage: none

   Author/Change controller: The IETF

12.3.  SIP/SIPS URI Parameter 'm'



   This specification defines one new SIP/SIPS URI parameter 'm' as per
   the registry created by [RFC3969].  It is used to identify that an
   INVITE request is a CC call, or to further identify that a SUBSCRIBE
   request is for the call-completion event package.  The parameter may
   have a value that describes the type of the CC operation, as
   described in this specification.

   Name of the parameter: m

   Predefined values: yes

   Reference: [RFC6910]

















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12.4.  The 'purpose' Parameter Value 'call-completion'



   This specification adds a new predefined value "call-completion" for
   the 'purpose' header field parameter of the Call-Info header field.
   This modifies the registry header field parameters and parameter
   values by adding this RFC as a reference to the line for header field
   "Call-Info" and parameter name 'purpose':

   Header field: Call-Info

   Parameter name: purpose

   Predefined values: yes

   Reference: [RFC3261] [RFC5367] [RFC6910]

12.5.  'm' Header Parameter for Call-Info



   This specification extends [RFC3261] to add a new header field
   parameter 'm' to the Call-Info header field.  This adds a row to the
   registry header field parameters and parameter values:

   Header field: Call-Info

   Parameter name: m

   Predefined values: yes

   Reference: [RFC6910]

   The predefined values are 'BS', 'NR', and 'NL'.

13.  Acknowledgements



   Thanks to Paul Kyzivat, John Elwell, Keith Drage, Andrew Hutton,
   Thomas Stach, Dennis Luebbers, and Christer Holmberg, who provided
   helpful comments, feedback, and suggestions.














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14.  References



14.1.  Normative References



   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
              A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
              Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
              June 2002.

   [RFC3515]  Sparks, R., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer
              Method", RFC 3515, April 2003.

   [RFC3863]  Sugano, H., Fujimoto, S., Klyne, G., Bateman, A., Carr,
              W., and J. Peterson, "Presence Information Data Format
              (PIDF)", RFC 3863, August 2004.

   [RFC3903]  Niemi, A., "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension
              for Event State Publication", RFC 3903, October 2004.

   [RFC3969]  Camarillo, G., "The Internet Assigned Number Authority
              (IANA) Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Parameter
              Registry for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",
              BCP 99, RFC 3969, December 2004.

   [RFC4235]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and R. Mahy, "An INVITE-
              Initiated Dialog Event Package for the Session Initiation
              Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4235, November 2005.

   [RFC4474]  Peterson, J. and C. Jennings, "Enhancements for
              Authenticated Identity Management in the Session
              Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4474, August 2006.

   [RFC5234]  Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
              Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.

   [RFC5367]  Camarillo, G., Roach, A.B., and O. Levin, "Subscriptions
              to Request-Contained Resource Lists in the Session
              Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 5367, October 2008.

   [RFC5627]  Rosenberg, J., "Obtaining and Using Globally Routable User
              Agent URIs (GRUUs) in the Session Initiation Protocol
              (SIP)", RFC 5627, October 2009.

   [RFC6665]  Roach, A.B., "SIP-Specific Event Notification", RFC 6665,
              July 2012.



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14.2.  Informative References



   [ETS300.356-18]
              European Telecommunications Standards Institute,
              "Completion of Calls to Busy Subscriber (CCBS)
              supplementary service", February 1995.

   [ITU-T.Q.733]
              International Telecommunication Union, "Description for
              Call Completion Supplementary Services Using SS No. 7",
              February 1995.

   [RFC3325]  Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, "Private
              Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for
              Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks", RFC 3325,
              November 2002.

   [RFC3725]  Rosenberg, J., Peterson, J., Schulzrinne, H., and G.
              Camarillo, "Best Current Practices for Third Party Call
              Control (3pcc) in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",
              BCP 85, RFC 3725, April 2004.

   [RFC5359]  Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and
              K. Summers, "Session Initiation Protocol Service
              Examples", BCP 144, RFC 5359, October 2008.


























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Appendix A.  Example Caller's Agent



   This section outlines how an autonomous caller's agent can operate
   using only standard SIP features to interact with the caller's UA.
   This example is suitable only as a learning aid, as its performance
   is poor.

   The agent monitors calls made from the UA(s) by subscribing to the
   dialog event package of the UA(s).

   The UA(s) or their proxy routes calls made with either of two special
   dial sequences to the agent, which interprets the INVITEs as
   indications to make a CC request with BS or NR or NL mode for the
   latest call made by the UA.

   The agent monitors the status of the UA(s) for availability to be
   used for a CC call by examining the dialog events.

   The agent indicates to the UA(s) that CC recall is in progress by
   making call to the UA(s).  If the UA is answered, the agent assumes
   that the caller is available and plays pre-recorded audio to indicate
   that CC recall is in progress.

   After playing the pre-recorded audio, the caller's agent uses REFER
   to order the UA to make the CC call to the callee.

Appendix B.  Example Callee's Monitor



   This section outlines how an autonomous callee's monitor can operate
   using only standard SIP features to interact with the callee's UA.
   This example is suitable only as a learning aid, as its performance
   is poor.

   The callee's monitor monitors calls made to the UA(s) by subscribing
   to the dialog events of the UA(s).  This enables it to determine
   their Call-Ids and their final response statuses.

   The proxy for the UA(s) routes to the callee's monitor any SUBSCRIBEs
   for the call-completion event package directed to the URIs serviced
   by the UA(s).

   The callee's monitor monitors the status of the UA(s) to determine
   when they are in a suitable state to receive a CC call by watching
   the busy/not-busy status of the UA(s): for example, a UA is available
   for CCBS when it is not busy, but a UA is available for CCNR when it
   becomes not busy after being busy with an established call.





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Authors' Addresses



   Dale R. Worley
   Ariadne Internet Services, Inc.
   738 Main St.
   Waltham, MA  02451
   US

   Phone: +1 781 647 9199
   EMail: worley@ariadne.com


   Martin Huelsemann
   Deutsche Telekom
   Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse 3-7
   Darmstadt  64307
   Germany

   Phone: +4961515812765
   EMail: martin.huelsemann@telekom.de
   URI:   http://www.telekom.de


   Roland Jesske
   Deutsche Telekom
   Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse 3-7
   Darmstadt  64307
   Germany

   Phone: +4961515812766
   EMail: r.jesske@telekom.de
   URI:   http://www.telekom.de


   Denis Alexeitsev
   TeleFLASH
   Mainzer Landstrasse 47
   Frankfurt  60329
   Germany

   Phone: +49-69-257-378-230
   EMail: alexeitsev@teleflash.com
   URI:   http://www.teleflash.com








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