Uniform Resource Identifier
(URI) Parameters for indicating the Calling Party's Category and
Originating Line Information
Nortel
Maidenhead Office Park, Westacott Way
Maidenhead
Berkshire, UK
milanpa@nortel.com
Deutsche Telekom
Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse 3-7
Darmstadt, 64307
Germany
r.jesske@telekom.de
AT&T
200 Laurel Ave
Middletown, NJ,
US
mdolly@att.com
RAI
DISPATCH Working Group
CPC
OLI
Session Initiation Protocol
This document defines two new URI parameters to describe the calling
party's category and toll class of service originating line information
which are parameters also used in SS7 ISUP and other telephony
signalling protocols. The intended use of these URI parameters is for
the tel URI address scheme.
SS7 ISUP defines a Calling Party's Category
(CPC) parameter that characterizes the station used to originate a call
and carries other important state that can describe the originating
party. One example of such information is the call may originate from a
payphone; such information can be used by the network to handle the call
in a specific way. When telephone numbers are contained in URIs, such as
the tel URI or equivalent SIP URI, it may be
desirable to communicate any CPC associated with that telephone number
or, in the context of a call, the party calling from it. This document
proposes a method of carrying CPC data in SIP messages.
In some networks (including North America), the Originating Line
Information (OLI) parameter defined in ANSI ISUP is used to carry information related to the
calling party and the class of service for a call. Legacy multifrequency
(MF) signalling networks carry this information in the ANI II Digits
.
The call can originate from a multitude of devices or stations. For
example, a coin operated phone or a phone located inside a prison can be
used to originate a call. In such cases, it can be desirable to handle
calls originating from such stations in a specific manner, or to
restrict certain services to the calling party. This document proposes a
method of carrying OLI data in SIP messages.The primary use case for
these parameters is for interworking CPC and OLI information between SIP
and ISUP. Other use cases may exist where it is useful to transfer
information about the endpoint even when interworking with the PSTN does
not occur.
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 RFC 2119 .
The Calling Party's Category (CPC) and the Originating Line
Information (OLI) are represented as URI parameters for the tel URI
scheme and the SIP URI representation of telephone numbers. The ABNF
syntax is as follows. The 'par' production is
defined in RFC 3966 . The "/=" syntax indicates
an extension of the production on the left-hand side:
par /= cpc / oli
cpc = cpc-tag "=" cpc-value
oli = oli-tag "=" oli-value
cpc-tag = "cpc"
oli-tag = "oli"
cpc-value = "ordinary" / "test" / "operator" / "payphone" /
"unknown" / "mobile-hplmn" / "mobile-vplmn" / genvalue
oli-value = 2*(DIGIT)
genvalue = 1*(alphanum / "-" / "." )
The semantics of these CPC and OLI values are described below:
ordinary: The caller has been identified, and has no special
features.
test: This is a test call that has been originated as part of a
maintenance procedure.
operator: The call was generated by an operator position.
payphone: The calling station is a payphone.
unknown: The CPC could not be ascertained.
mobile-hplmn: The call was generated by a mobile device in its
home PLMN.
mobile-vplmn: The call was generated by a mobile device in a
vistited PLMN.
The decimal coded values for "oli" are assigned and administered
NANPA and are the decimal codes used in the ANI II digits of the ANI
sequence for in-band signalling system .
The "cpc" and "oli" URI parameters are optional parameters. At the
most, one "cpc" and/or one "oli" parameter may be included in a URI of
the calling party. In SIP the calling party is generally identified by
the identity given in the From header field, or alternatively, in the
P-Asserted-Identity header field if this is used. Usage is discussed in
the following sections of this document.
An example of the syntax of the "cpc" parameter is given
below:From:
<tel:+17005554141;cpc=payphone>;tag=1928301774
Alternatively, the tel URI may be included in the P-Asserted-Identity
header field :P-Asserted-Identity: <tel:
+17005554141;cpc=payphone>
The "oli" URI parameter usage is given in the following example,
which uses the SIP URI representation of telephone numbers: From:
<sip: +1700554141;oli=29@example.com>;tag=1928301774The
"oli" parameter with value 29 indicates that the device that the call is
initiated from is located within a prison. An "oli" with value "prison"
is equally valid.
The CPC and OLI are generally useful only when describing the
originator of a telephone call or the station from where a telephone
call is originated. Therefore, when this parameter is used in an
application such as SIP, it is recommended that the parameter be applied
to URIs that characterize the originator of a call (such as a tel URI or
SIP URI in the P-Asserted-Identity header field or the From header field
of a SIP message). Note that many Calling Party's Category values from
the PSTN are intentionally excluded from the "cpc" parameter as they are
either meaningless outside of the PSTN or can be represented using
another existing concept. For example, the language of an operator can
be expressed more richly using the Accept-Language header in SIP than in
the "cpc" parameter. Similarly the priority of a call is a
characteristic of the call and not the calling party.
It is anticipated that "cpc" and "oli" URI parameters will be used
primarily by gateways that interwork ISUP or ANI II networks with SIP
networks. However, scenarios where interworking with the PSTN does not
occur are not precluded. Various SIP network intermediaries might
consult the CPC or OLI information as they make routing decisions,
although no specific behavior is prescribed in this document. While no
specific mapping of the various ISUP parameters that contain CPC or OLI
data is offered in this document, creating such a mapping would be
trivial.
While the CPC and OLI could be conveyed using the ISUP tunneling
mechanism described in RFC 3372 , this
technique is widely regarded by the implementation community as overkill
for the problem of conveying CPC and OLI information. For example, the
"cpc" and "oli" parameters provides a convenient way for SIP
intermediaries to make routing decisions based on the CPC and OLI
information without having to implement an ISUP parser. The "cpc" and
"oli" URI parameters provide a simple, convenient form of CPC and OLI
interoperability of SIP with ISUP and ANI II, which is otherwise poorly
addressed in RFC 3372. Indeed when a SIP
intermediary makes routing decisions for a call where both the
originating and the terminating gateways natively use ANI II, the ISUP
tunneling approach is especially unattractive, requiring each of the
three devices to perform a translation into an otherwise unneeded PSTN
protocol.
If the "cpc" URI parameter is not present, consumers of the CPC
information should treat the URI as if it specified a CPC of "ordinary".
If the "oli" URI parameter is not present, consumers of the OLI
information should treat the URI as if no OLI information is provided.
If a SIP intermediary does not support the "cpc" or "oli" URI parameters
and receives a SIP message where the calling party URI in the From or
P-Asserted-header fields includes a "cpc" or "oli" URI parameter, then
the SIP intermediary silently ignores the URI parameter in accordance
with RFC 3261.
At most, one instance of the "cpc" parameter and/or one instance of
the "oli" parameter can be associated with a particular URI within a SIP
request. It is recommended that the "cpc" and "oli" URI parameters are
associated with URIs included in the P-Asserted-Identity header field.
Where the P-Asserted-Identity header field is not supported or included,
another header field used to carry a URI to characterize the originator
of a call may be used. One example of such a header field is the From
header field. The following section discusses further the motivation
behind this recommendation.
There are three potential risks specific to the information provided
by the Calling Party's Category or Originating Line Information:-
leakage of potentially private information; - the threat of
tampering with the CPC or OLI to add false CPC or OLI values; and
- the threat of tampering with the CPC or OLI to remove actual
CPC or OLI values.
The information contained in the "cpc" or "oli" parameter may be of a
private nature, and it may not be appropriate for this value to be
revealed to the destination user (typically it would not be revealed in
the PSTN). However, the calling party's category is often discoverable
or easily guessable from the calling party's phone number. For that
reason it is unlikely that this information is significantly more
privacy sensitive than the telephone number itself. The same techniques
used to provide complete or partial telephone number privacy in SIP are
appropriate to apply to the "cpc" and "oli" parameters as well. For more
information about privacy issues in SIP see RFC 3323. The mechanism described in RFC 3325 may also be relevant for maintaining partial privacy
of the CPC or OLI within a trusted administrative domain or federation
of domains as described in RFC 3324.
Making a call with a falsified CPC or OLI (i.e. "operator") could
allow the caller to gain access to resources or information not
otherwise available. Likewise removing an "undesirable" CPC or OLI value
(i.e. prison or hotel) could allow the caller to bypass various
restrictions in the telephone network. For that reason, agents which
expect CPC or OLI values SHOULD take care to insure the integrity and
authenticity of the "cpc" or "oli" URI parameter. The RECOMMENDED
mechanism to protect the entire calling party address along with the
"cpc" or "oli" URI parameter is the SIP Identity mechanism . Alternatively, agents within an administrative
domain or federation of domains MAY use the mechanism described in RFC
3325 to place the "cpc" or "oli" URI parameter
in a P-Asserted-Identity header field. When such mechanism is used, the
"cpc" or "oli" URI parameter is added by a network entity or SIP
intermediary if knowledge of the calling party's category or originating
line information (class of service) is known.
When the end-device, acting as a UAC originating a call, is not
trusted, the value of a "cpc" or "oli" URI parameter included by the UAC
may be removed or modified by a trusted network entity. If a request
containing CPC or OLI is sent towards a non-trusted entity, this
information should be removed.
The SIP Identity mechanism provides a signature over the URI in the
From header field of a SIP request. It can sign a SIP URI or a tel URI
alone or a tel URI embedded in a SIP or SIPS URI, but it provides
stronger protection against tampering when the tel URI is embedded in a
SIP or SIPS URI. Because there is no direct correlation between a tel
URI and an Internet domain, the receiver can use a list of domains from
which it will trust CPC or OLI information, or a list of root
certificates which are associated with trusting CPC or OLI
information.
Otherwise, this mechanism adds no new security considerations to
those discussed in RFC 3261.
This document extends the registry of URI parameters for the Tel URI
as defined RFC 3969. Two new URI parameters for
the Tel URI scheme are defined in this document as follows:
Parameter Name: cpc, oli
Predefined Values: Yes
Reference: This document
The original version of this document was written by Jon Peterson as
a result of spliiting the appendix from draft-ietf-sip-privacy-04 and
subsequently authored by Rohan Mahy.
This document is based on draft-mahy-iptel-cpc-06.
Recommendation Q.763: Signalling System No. 7: ISDN user part
formats and codes
International Telecommunications
Union
ANSI T1.113-2000, Signaling System No. 7, ISDN User
Part
American National Standards
Institute