SIP Registration

From TBwiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 6: Line 6:
 
[[Image:SIP Registration Process.jpg|400px]]
 
[[Image:SIP Registration Process.jpg|400px]]
  
Tmedia does not provide registrar functionality, therefore, a SIP client cannot register to a Tmedia. If a SIP clients communicate to another SIP clients (B2BUA) in point-to-point fashion and not through a SIP proxy, REGISTER is usually not required. In that case, the SIP clients are required to know the IP addresses or DNS of all the other clients they wish to communicate with.
+
Tmedia supports two modes for SIP Registration:
 +
* The Tmedia forwards per-user registration requests from users ([[Sip_registration_forwarding|Sip Registration Forwarding]])
 +
* The Tmedia registers itself to the SIP Proxy (per NAP)
  
== Registration ==
+
== Registration forwarding ==
 +
The Tmedia supports forwarding registration requests from individual users. Documentation is found here:
 +
* [[Sip_registration_forwarding|Explanation of Tmedia's registration forwarding]]
 +
* [[Toolpack:Creating_a_SIP_Domain_SBC_A|Configuration of Tmedia's registration forwarding]]
 +
 
 +
== Registration per NAP ==
 
The Tmedia supports to register a SIP [[NAP]] to a SIP proxy. Registration, can be used, for example, to authenticate the Tmedia Gateway IP address to a SIP provider proxy or SBC and allow the SIP traffic from the Tmedia to that SIP provider.
 
The Tmedia supports to register a SIP [[NAP]] to a SIP proxy. Registration, can be used, for example, to authenticate the Tmedia Gateway IP address to a SIP provider proxy or SBC and allow the SIP traffic from the Tmedia to that SIP provider.
 
* Registration is when Tmedia sends a SIP REGISTER to a Registrar, and gets a response which could be accepted (200 OK) or refused (4xx reason code). Upon refusal, the registration is not stopped and is retried after 5 seconds.
 
* Registration is when Tmedia sends a SIP REGISTER to a Registrar, and gets a response which could be accepted (200 OK) or refused (4xx reason code). Upon refusal, the registration is not stopped and is retried after 5 seconds.

Revision as of 05:54, 18 June 2018


Contents

SIP Registrar

A SIP registrar’s role is to accept REGISTER requests with an Address Of Record (URI) and write the associated contact bindings to a location service. The location service is a logical entity and is simply a database that contains a list of AOR to contact address bindings. Very often a registrar functions as a location service. It is also very common for a registrar/location service to be co-located with the proxy server for the same domain. The example below shows a typical registration transaction.

SIP Registration Process.jpg

Tmedia supports two modes for SIP Registration:

  • The Tmedia forwards per-user registration requests from users (Sip Registration Forwarding)
  • The Tmedia registers itself to the SIP Proxy (per NAP)

Registration forwarding

The Tmedia supports forwarding registration requests from individual users. Documentation is found here:

Registration per NAP

The Tmedia supports to register a SIP NAP to a SIP proxy. Registration, can be used, for example, to authenticate the Tmedia Gateway IP address to a SIP provider proxy or SBC and allow the SIP traffic from the Tmedia to that SIP provider.

  • Registration is when Tmedia sends a SIP REGISTER to a Registrar, and gets a response which could be accepted (200 OK) or refused (4xx reason code). Upon refusal, the registration is not stopped and is retried after 5 seconds.
  • Even if there is no call on the system, Tmedia will send SIP REGISTER
  • Sending SIP REGISTER will happen when the option "Register to Proxy?" is selected for a specific SIP NAP
  • If you apply a new configuration and the option "Register to Proxy?" is present it will start sending SIP REGISTER


Register with no answer from registrar

If it is not registered already, the Tmedia will send a new SIP REGISTER every 32 + 5 seconds interval until it receive a response from the Registrar

  • Over UDP (shown it the message flow bellow), the REGISTER request is retransmitted for 32 seconds before the request transaction timeout, then a new SIP REGISTER is sent after 5 seconds.
  • Over TCP, if the SIP registrar does not listen on the TCP port, a new TCP connection is retried every 5 seconds. If the TCP connection is established but no SIP responses returned by the Registrar, the transaction timeout after 32s and then a new SIP REGISTER is sent after 5 seconds.

SIP Register no answers.png

Register expire negotiation

The REGISTER request negotiate the contact binding expiration by adding "expires=3600" parameter to the contact header. The value is hardcoded to 3600 seconds. If the REGISTER response from the Registrar does not change the "expires" parameter:

  • The SIP REGISTER will be "valid" for 3600 seconds
  • Tmedia will send a new REGISTER (to refresh the registration) after half of the minimum registration negotiated, general use will be at 1800 seconds (3600/2)

The Registrar can change the "expires" contact parameter or the Expires header as shown in the two example below to negotiate a value different from 3600 seconds.

Negotiation uses case 1: contact expires header

In the example below, the Registrar changes the "expires" contact parameter.

SIP Register negotiated expire time example 1.png

Negotiation uses case 2: no contact expires parameter; Expires header

In the example below, the Registrar removes the "expires" contact parameter and set the Expires header.

SIP Register negotiated expire time example 2.png

Register Authentication

  • If Authentication is required, the Registrar returns a 401 Unauthorized response with a WWW-Authenticate header
  • The WWW-Authenticate header contains nonce to encrypt user’s communications password, user then sends a second REGISTER containing an Authorization header with the user's encrypted password

SIP Register 401 authentication example.png

Configuration

References

Personal tools