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The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is a signaling protocol used for controlling communication sessions such as Voice over IP telephone calls. SIP is based on request/response transactions, in a similar manner to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP).
The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is a signaling protocol used for initiating, maintaining, and terminating communication sessions that include voice, video and messaging applications. [1] SIP is used in Internet telephony, in private IP telephone systems, as well as mobile phone calling over LTE . [2]
The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is the signaling protocol selected by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) [1] [2] to create and control multimedia sessions with multiple participants in the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS). It is therefore a key element in the IMS framework.
Routing Information Protocol: RFC 1058 (v.1), RFC 1388 (v.2), RFC 1723 (v.2), RFC 2453 (v.2), RFC 2080 (v.ng) Sender Policy Framework: RFC 4408 Secure Shell-2: RFC 4251 Session Announcement Protocol: RFC 2974 Session Description Protocol: RFC 2327 Session Initiation Protocol: RFC 3261 SHA hash functions: RFC 3174, RFC 4634 Simple Authentication ...
A SIP address is written in user@domain.tld format in a similar fashion to an email address.An address like: sip:1-999-123-4567@voip-provider.example.net. instructs a SIP client to use the NAPTR and SRV schemes to look up the SIP server associated with the DNS name voip-provider.example.net and connect to that server.
The Page Mode makes use of the SIP method MESSAGE, as defined in RFC 3428. This mode establishes no sessions. The Session Mode. The Message Session Relay Protocol (RFC 4975, RFC 4976) is a text-based protocol for exchanging arbitrarily-sized content between users, at any time. An MSRP session is set up by exchanging certain information, such as ...
RFC 4028 — Session Timers in SIP; RFC 5626 — Managing Client-Initiated Connections in SIP (Outbound mechanism) RFC 5954 — Essential Correction for IPv6 ABNF and URI Comparison in RFC 3261; RFC 6026 — Correct Transaction Handling for 2xx Responses to SIP INVITE Requests; RFC 7118 — The WebSocket Protocol as a Transport for SIP
RFC 3261 — SIP: Session Initiation Protocol; RFC 3312 — Integration of Resource Management and Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) RFC 3725 — Best Current Practices for Third Party Call Control (3pcc) in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) RFC 4032 — Update to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Preconditions Framework