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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 22, 2008.
The IETF has several efforts targeted at standardizing various aspects of placing emergency calls. This document describes how all of those component parts are used to support emergency calls from citizens and visitors to authorities.
1.
Terminology
2.
Introduction
3.
Overview of how emergency calls are placed
4.
Which devices and services should support
emergency calls
5.
Identifying an emergency call
6.
Location and its role in an emergency call
6.1.
Types of location information
6.2.
Location Determination
6.2.1.
User-entered location information
6.2.2.
Access network "wire database" location information
6.2.3.
End-system measured location information
6.2.4.
Network measured location information
6.3.
Who adds location, endpoint or proxy
6.4.
Location and references to location
6.5.
End system location configuration
6.6.
When location should be configured
6.7.
Conveying location in SIP
6.8.
Location updates
6.9.
Multiple locations
6.10.
Location validation
6.11.
Default location
6.12.
Other location considerations
6.13.
LIS and LoST Discovery
7.
Uninitialized devices
8.
Routing the call to the PSAP
9.
Signaling of emergency calls
9.1.
Use of TLS
9.2.
SIP signaling requirements for
User Agents
9.3.
SIP signaling requirements for proxy servers
10.
Call backs
11.
Mid-call behavior
12.
Call termination
13.
Disabling of features
14.
Media
15.
Testing
16.
Security Considerations
17.
Acknowledgements
18.
References
18.1.
Normative References
18.2.
Informative References
§
Authors' Addresses
§
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements
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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] (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.).
This document uses terms from [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) and [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑requirements] (Schulzrinne, H. and R. Marshall, “Requirements for Emergency Context Resolution with Internet Technologies,” March 2007.). In addition the following terms are used:
- Access network:
- The network that supplies IP packet service to an endpoint. In a residential or small business environment, this might be a DSL or cable modem or WiMax service. In a large enterprise environment, this would be the enterprise network. In a mobile environment, this might be a mobile (cellular) data network or a WiFi network
- (Emergency) Call taker:
- The person who answers an emergency call at the PSAP
- Confidence
- The mathematically derived statistical estimate indicating how sure the measuring system is that the location data estimate is accurate, within the bounds defined by the Uncertainty value. This is expressed as a percentage, such as 90%, or 45% etc.
- Dispatch Location
- Location used for dispatching responders to the person in need of assistance. Must be precise as opposed to that needed for Routing Location.
- Emergency services routing proxy (ESRP):
- A proxy server that provides routing services for a group of PSAPs
- Location configuration:
- The process where an endpoint learns its physical location
- Location conveyance:
- The process of sending location to another element
- Location determination:
- The process of finding where an endpoint is physically. For example, the endpoint may contain a GPS receiver used to measure its own location or location may be determined by administration using a wiremap database or similar
- Location Information Server (LIS):
- An element that stores location information for retrieval by an authorized entity
- Mobile device:
- User agent that changes geographic location and possibly its network attachment point during an emergency call
- NENA (National Emergency Number Association):
- A North American organization of public safety focused individuals defining emergency calling specifications and procedures
- Nomadic device (user):
- User agent that is connected to the network temporarily, for relatively short durations, but does not move significantly during the lifetime of a network connection or during the emergency call. Examples include a laptop using an IEEE 802.11 hotspot or a desk IP phone that is moved from one cubicle to another
- Routing Location:
- The location of an endpoint that is used for routing an emergency call. May not be as precise as the Dispatch Location.
- Stationary device:
- An immobile user agent that is connected to the network at a fixed, long-term-stable geographic location. Examples include a home PC or a pay phone
- Uncertainty
- The mathematically derived statistical estimate, expressed in meters, indicating the size of the area used in the calculation of Confidence.
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Requesting help in an emergency using a communications device such as a telephone or mobile is an accepted practice in most of the world. As communications devices increasingly utilize the Internet to interconnect and communicate, users will continue to expect to use such devices to request help, regardless of whether or not they communicate using IP. This document describes establishment of a communications session by a user to a "Public Safety Answering Point" (PSAP) that is a call center established by response agencies to accept emergency calls. Such citizen/visitor-to-authority calls can be distinguished from those that are created by responders (authority-to-authority) using public communications infrastructure often involving some kind of priority access as defined in Emergency Telecommunications Service (ETS) in IP Telephony [RFC4190] (Carlberg, K., Brown, I., and C. Beard, “Framework for Supporting Emergency Telecommunications Service (ETS) in IP Telephony,” November 2005.). They also can be distinguished from emergency warning systems that are authority-to-citizen.
Supporting emergency calling requires cooperation by a number of elements, their vendors and service providers. It discusses how end device and applications create emergency calls, how access networks supply location for some of these devices, how service providers assist the establishment and routing, and how PSAPs receive calls from the Internet.
The emergency response community will have to upgrade their facilities to support the wider range of communications services, but cannot be expected to handle wide variation in device and service capability. New devices and services are being made available that could be used to make a request for help that are not traditional telephones, and users are increasingly expecting them to be used to place emergency calls. However, many of the technical advantages of Internet multimedia require re-thinking of the traditional emergency calling architecture. This challenge also offers an opportunity to improve the operation of emergency calling technology, while potentially lowering its cost and complexity.
It is beyond the scope of this document to enumerate and discuss all the differences between traditional (Public Switched Telephone Network) and IP based telephony, but calling on the Internet is characterized by:
This document focuses on how devices using the Internet can place emergency calls and how PSAPs can handle Internet multimedia emergency calls natively, rather than describing how circuit-switched PSAPs can handle VoIP calls. In many cases, PSAPs making the transition from circuit-switched interfaces to packet-switched interfaces may be able to use some of the mechanisms described here, in combination with gateways that translate packet-switched calls into legacy interfaces, e.g., to continue to be able to use existing call taker equipment. There are many legacy telephone networks that will persist long after most systems have been upgraded to IP origination and termination of emergency calls. There will be PSAPs that require new systems to terminate to existing mechanisms for some time. Many of these legacy systems use telephone number based routing. Gateways and conversions between existing systems and newer systems defined by this document will be required. Since existing systems are governed primarily by local government regulations and national standards, the gateway and conversion details will be governed by national standards and thus are out of scope for this document.
Existing emergency call systems are organized locally or nationally; there are currently no international standards. However, the Internet crosses national boundaries, and thus international standards for equipment and software are required. To further complicate matters, VoIP endpoints can be connected through tunneling mechanisms such as virtual private networks (VPNs). Tunnels can obscure the identity of the actual access network that knows the location. This significantly complicates emergency calling, because the location of the caller and the first element that routes emergency calls can be on different continents, with different conventions and processes for handling of emergency calls.
The IETF has historically refused to create national variants of its standards. Thus, this document attempts to take into account best practices that have evolved for circuit switched PSAPs, but makes no assumptions on particular operating practices currently in use, numbering schemes or organizational structures.
This document discusses the use of the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) by PSAPs and calling parties. While other inter-domain call signaling protocols may be used for emergency calling, SIP is ubiquitous and possesses the proper support of this use case. Only protocols such as H.323, XMPP/Jingle, ISUP and SIP are suitable for inter-domain communications, ruling out MGC protocols such as MGCP or H.248/Megaco. The latter protocols can naturally be used by the enterprise or carrier placing the call, but any such call would reach the PSAP through a media gateway controller, similar to how inter-domain VoIP calls would be placed. Other signaling protocols may also use protocol translation to communicate with a SIP-enabled PSAP.
Existing emergency services rely exclusively on voice and conventional text telephony ("TTY") media streams. However, more choices of media offer additional ways to communicate and evaluate the situation as well as to assist callers and call takers in handling emergency calls. For example, instant messaging and video could improve the ability to communicate and evaluate the situation and to provide appropriate instruction prior to arrival of emergency crews. Thus, the architecture described here supports the creation of sessions of any media type, negotiated between the caller and PSAP using existing SIP protocol mechanisms [RFC3264] (Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, “An Offer/Answer Model with Session Description Protocol (SDP),” June 2002.).
As a framework document, no normative behavior is contained herein. A companion document, [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑phonebcp] (Rosen, B. and J. Polk, “Best Current Practice for Communications Services in support of Emergency Calling,” January 2010.) describes Best Current Practice for this subject and contains normative language for devices, access and calling network elements.
Supporting emergency calling does not require any specialized SIP header fields, request methods, status codes, message bodies, or event packages, but does require that existing mechanisms be used in certain specific ways, as described below. User agents unaware of the recommendations in this draft may be able to place emergency calls, but functionality may be impaired. For example, if the UA does not implement the location mechanisms described, an emergency call may not be routed to the correct PSAP, and if the caller is unable to supply his exact location, dispatch of emergency responders may be delayed. Suggested behavior for both endpoints and servers is provided.
From the point of view of the PSAP three essential elements characterize an emergency call:
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An emergency call can be distinguished (Section 5 (Identifying an emergency call)) from any other call by a unique Service URN [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑service‑urn] (Schulzrinne, H., “A Uniform Resource Name (URN) for Emergency and Other Well-Known Services,” August 2007.), that is placed in the call set-up signaling when a home or visited emergency dial string is detected. Because emergency services are local to specific geographic regions, a caller must obtain his location (Section Section 6 (Location and its role in an emergency call)) prior to making emergency calls. To get this location, either a form of measuring (e.g., GPS) (Section 6.2.3 (End-system measured location information)) device location in the endpoint is deployed, or the endpoint is configured (Section 6.5 (End system location configuration)) with its location from the access network's Location Information Server (LIS). The location is conveyed (Section 6.7 (Conveying location in SIP)) in the SIP signaling with the call. The call is routed (Section 8 (Routing the call to the PSAP)) based on location using the LoST protocol [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.), that maps a location to a set of PSAP or URIs. Each URI resolves to a PSAP or an Emergency Services Routing Proxy (ESRP) that serves an incoming proxy for group of PSAPs. The call arrives at the PSAP with the location included in the INVITE request.
The following is a quick overview for a typical Ethernet connected telephone using SIP signaling. It illustrates one set of choices for various options presented later in this document.
Configuration Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +--------+ +----------+ . . +--------+ | +----------+ | . . | LIS | | | SIP | | . . | |-+ | Registrar|-+ . . +--------+ +----------+ . . ^ ^ . . . | . . . . . . . | . . . . . . | | |[M1][M4] |[M2] | | +--------+ |+--------------+ +--------+ | || | LoST | | ||+-------------------->| Servers|-+ ||| [M3][M5] +--------+ +-------+ ||| | PSAP2 | ||| +-------+ ||| ||| [M6] +-------+ [M7]+------+ [M8]+-------+ Alice ------>| Proxy |---->| ESRP |---->| PSAP1 |-----> Call-Taker +-------+ +------+ +-------+ +-------+ | PSAP3 | +-------+
Figure 1: Emergency Call Component Topology |
The typical message flow would be: [M1] Alice -> LIS LCP Request(s) (ask for location) LIS -> ALICE LCP Reply(s) (replies with location) [M2] Alice -> Registrar SIP REGISTER Registrar -> Alice SIP 200 OK (REGISTER) [M3] Alice -> LoST Server Initial LoST Query (contains location) Lost Server -> Alice Initial LoST Response (contains PSAP-URI and dial string) *** Some time later, Alice dials/initiates emergency call *** [M4] Alice -> LIS LCP Request (update location) LIS -> ALICE LCP Reply (replies with location) [M5] Alice -> LoST Server Update LoST Query (contains location) Lost Server -> Alice LoST Response (contains PSAP-URI) [M6] Alice to Outgoing Proxy INVITE (service URN, Location and PSAP URI) Outgoing Proxy to ESRP INVITE (service URN, Location and PSAP URI) ESRP to PSAP INVITE (service URN, Location and PSAP URI) *** 200 OK and ACK propogated back from PSAP to Alice ***
Figure 2: Emergency Call Message Flow |
Figure 1 shows emergency call component topology and the text above shows call establishment. These include the following:
Generally, Alice's UA either has location configured manually, has an integral location measurement mechanism, or it runs a LCP [M1] to obtain location from the access (broadband) network. For most devices, a LCP will be used, for example a DHCPREQUEST message or another location acquisition mechanism. Alice's UA then will most likely register [M2] with a SIP domain. This allows her to be contacted by other SIP entities. Next, her UA will perform an initial LoST query [M3] to learn a URI for use if the LoST query fails during an emergency call, or to use to test the emergency call mechanism. The LoST response may contain the dial string for emergency calls appropriate for the location provided.
At some time after her device has booted, Alice initiates an emergency call. She may do this by dialing an emergency dial string valid for her current ("local") location, or for her "home" location.
The UA recognizes the dial string. The UA attempts to refresh its location [M4], and with that location, to refresh the LoST mapping [M5], in order to get the most accurate information to use for routing the call. If the location request or the LoST request fails, or takes too long, the UA uses values it has cached.
The UA creates a SIP INVITE [M6] request that includes the location. [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑location‑conveyance] (Polk, J. and B. Rosen, “Location Conveyance for the Session Initiation Protocol,” March 2009.) defines a SIP Geolocation header that contains either a location-by-reference URI or a [RFC2396] (Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, “Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax,” August 1998.) "cid" URL indicating where in the message body the location-by-value is.
The INVITE message is routed to the ESRP [M7], that is the first inbound proxy for the emergency services domain. This message is then routed by the ESRP towards the most appropriate PSAP for Alice's location [M8], as determined by PSAP state, location and other information.
A proxy in the PSAP chooses an available call taker and extends the call to its UA.
The 200 OK response to the INVITE request traverses the path in reverse, from call taker UA to PSAP proxy to ESRP to originating network proxy to Alice's UA. The ACK completes the call set-up and the emergency call is established, allowing the PSAP call-taker to talk to Alice about Alice's emergency.
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Support for voice calls and real-time text calls placed through PSTN facilities or systems connected to the PSTN is found in present PSAPs. Future PSAPs will however support Internet connectivity and a wider range of media types and provide higher functionality. In general, if a user could reasonably expect to be able to place a call for help with the device, then the device or service should support emergency calling. Certainly, any device or service that looks like and works like a telephone (wired or mobile) should support emergency calling, but increasingly, users have expectations that other devices and services should work.
Certainly, any device or service that looks like and works like a telephone (wired or mobile) should support emergency calling, but increasingly, users have expectations that other devices and services should work.
Using current (evolving) standards, devices that create media sessions and exchange audio, video and/or text, and have the capability to establish sessions to a wide variety of addresses, and communicate over private IP networks or the Internet, should support emergency calls.
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Using the PSTN, emergency help can often be summoned by dialing a nationally designated, widely known number, regardless of where the telephone was purchased. The appropriate number is determined by the infrastructure the telephone is connected to. However, this number differs between localities, even though it is often the same for a country or region, as it is in many countries in the European Union. In some countries, there is a single digit sequence that is used for all types of emergencies. In others, there are several sequences that are specific to the type of responder needed, e.g., one for police, another for fire. For end systems, on the other hand, it is desirable to have a universal identifier, independent of location, to allow the automated inclusion of location information and to allow the device and other entities in the call path to perform appropriate processing within the signaling protocol in an emergency call set-up.
Since there is no such universal identifier, as part of the overall emergency calling architecture, common emergency call URNs are defined in [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑service‑urn] (Schulzrinne, H., “A Uniform Resource Name (URN) for Emergency and Other Well-Known Services,” August 2007.). An example, for a single number environment is "urn:service:sos". Users are not expected to "dial" an emergency URN. Rather, appropriate emergency dial strings is translated to corresponding service URNs, carried in the Request-URI of the INVITE. Such translation is best done by the endpoint, because emergency calls convey location in the signaling, but non emergency calls do not normally do that. If the device recognizes the emergency call, it can include location. Dial string recognition could be performed in a signaling intermediary (proxy server) if for some reason, the endpoint does not recognize it. For devices that are mobile or nomadic, an issue arises of whether the home or visited dialing strings should be used. Many users would prefer that their home dialing sequences work no matter where they are. Local laws and regulations may require the visited dialing sequence(s) always work. Having the home dial string work is optional.
The mechanism for obtaining the dialing sequences for a given location is provided by LoST [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.). If the endpoint does not support the translation of dial strings to telephone numbers, the dialing sequence would be represented as a dial string [RFC4967] (Rosen, B., “Dial String Parameter for the Session Initiation Protocol Uniform Resource Identifier,” July 2007.) and the outgoing proxy would recognize the dial string and translate to the service URN. To determine the local dial string, the proxy needs the location of the endpoint. This may be difficult in situations where the user can roam or be nomadic. Endpoint recognition of emergency dial strings is therefore preferred, and in fact if a service provider is unable to guarantee that it can correctly determine local emergency dialstrings then it is required that the endpoint do the recognition.
Note: It is undesirable to have a single "button" emergency call user interface element. These mechanisms tend to result in a very high rate of false or accidental emergency calls. In order to minimize this rate, devices SHOULD only initiate emergency calls based on entry of specific emergency call dial strings.
While in some countries there is a single 3 digit dial string that is used for all emergency calls (i.e. 9-1-1 in North America), in some countries there are several 3 digit numbers used for different types of calls. For example, in Switzerland, 1-1-7 is used to call police, 1-1-8 is used to call the fire brigade, and 1-4-4 is used for emergency medical assistance. In other countries, there are no "short codes" or "service codes" for 3 digit dialing of emergency services and local (PSTN) numbers are used.
[I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑service‑urn] (Schulzrinne, H., “A Uniform Resource Name (URN) for Emergency and Other Well-Known Services,” August 2007.) introduces a universal emergency service URN scheme. On the wire, emergency calls include this type of URI in the Request-URI [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.). The scheme includes a single emergency URN (urn:service:sos) for use in countries with a single emergency dial string, and responder-specific ones (urn:service:sos.police) for countries where the user dials each service with separate numbers. Using the service:sos URN scheme, emergency calls can be recognized as such throughout the Internet.
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Location is central to the operation of emergency services. It is frequently the case that the user in an emergency is unable to provide a unique, valid location themselves. For this reason, location provided by the endpoint or the access network is needed. For practical reasons, each PSAP generally handles only calls for a certain geographic area, with overload arrangements between PSAPs to handle each others calls. Other calls that reach it by accident must be manually re-routed (transferred) to the most appropriate PSAP, increasing call handling delay and the chance for errors. The area covered by each PSAP differs by jurisdiction, where some countries have only a small number of PSAPs, while others decentralize PSAP responsibilities to the level of counties or municipalities.
In most cases, PSAPs cover at least a city or town, but there are some areas where PSAP coverage areas follow old telephone rate center boundaries and may straddle more than one city. Irregular boundaries are common, often for historical reasons. Routing must be done based on PSAP service boundaries, the closest PSAP, or the PSAP that serves the nominal city name provided in the location may not be the correct PSAP.
Accuracy of routing location is a complex subject. Calls must be routed quickly, but accurately, and location determination is often a time/accuracy tradeoff, especially with mobile devices or self measuring mechanisms. It is considered acceptable to base a routing decision on an accuracy equal to the area of one sector of a mobile cell site if no more accurate routing location is available.
Routing to the most appropriate PSAP is always calculated on the location of the caller, despite the fact that some emergency calls are placed on behalf of someone else, and the location of the incident is sometimes not the location of the caller. In some cases, there are other factors that enter into the choice of the PSAP that gets the call, which may include factors other than location (such as caller media and language preference, PSAP state, etc.). However, location of the caller is the primary input to the routing decision.
Routing is but one of two uses for location in an emergency call. The other is for dispatch of a responder. Many mechanisms used to locate a caller have a relatively long "cold start" time. To get a location accurate enough for dispatch may take as much as 30 seconds. This is too long to wait for emergencies. Accordingly, it is common, especially in mobile systems to use a coarse location, for example, the cell site and sector serving the call, for routing purposes, and then to update the location when a more precise value is known prior to dispatch. In this document we use "routing location" and "dispatch location" when the distinction matters.
Accuracy of dispatch location is sometimes determined by local regulation, and is constrained by available technology. The actual requirement exceeds available technology. It is required that a device making an emergency call close to the "demising" or separation wall between two apartments in a high rise apartment building report location with sufficient accuracy to determine on what side of the wall it is on. This implies perhaps a 3 cm accuracy requirement. As of the date of this memo, typical assisted GPS uncertainty with 95% confidence is 100 m. As technology advances, the accuracy requirements for location will need to be increased. Wired systems using wire tracing mechanisms can provide location to a wall jack in specific room on a floor in a building, and may even specify a cubicle or even smaller resolution. As this discussion illustrates, emergency call systems demand the most stringent location accuracy available.
Location usually involves several steps to process and multiple elements are involved. In Internet emergency calling, where the endpoint is located is "Determined" using a variety of measurement or wire-tracing methods. Endpoints may be "Configured" with their own location by the access network. In some circumstances, a proxy server may insert location into the signaling on behalf of the endpoint. The location is "Mapped" to the URI to send the call to, and the location is "Conveyed" to the PSAP (and other elements) in the signaling. Likewise, we employ Location Configuration Protocols, Location Mapping Protocols, and Location Conveyance Protocols for these functions. The Location-to-Service Translation protocol [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.) is the Location Mapping Protocol defined by the IETF.
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There are several ways location can be specified:
- Civic
- Civic location information describes the location of a person or object by a street address that corresponds to a building or other structure. Civic location may include more finely grained location information such as floor, room and cubicle. Civic information comes in two forms:
- Jurisdictional
- This refers to a civic location using actual political subdivisions, especially for the community name.
- Postal
- This refers to a civic location for mail delivery. The name of the post office sometimes does not correspond to the community name and a postal address may contain post office boxes or street addresses that do not correspond to an actual building. Postal addresses are generally unsuitable for emergency call dispatch because the post office conventions (for community name, for example) do not match those known by the responders. The fact that they are unique can sometimes be exploited to provide a mapping between a postal address and a civic address suitable to dispatch a responder to. In IETF location protocols, there is a element (Postal Community Name) that can be included in a location to provide the post office name as well as the actual jurisdictional community name. There is no other accommodation for postal addresses in these protocols.
- Geospatial (geo):
- Geospatial addresses contain longitude, latitude and altitude information based on an understood datum and earth shape model. While there have been many datums developed over time, most modern systems are using or moving towards the WGS84[WGS84] (NIMA, “NIMA Technical Report TR8350.2, Department of Defense World Geodetic System 1984, Its Definition and Relationships With Local Geodetic Systems, Third Edition,” July 1997.) datum.
- Cell tower/sector:
- Cell tower/sector is often used for identifying the location of a mobile handset, especially for routing of emergency calls. Cell tower and sectors identify the cell tower and the antenna sector that a mobile device is currently using. Traditionally, the tower location is represented as a point chosen to be within a certain PSAP service boundary who agrees to take calls originating from that tower/sector, and routing decisions are made on that point. Cell/sector information could also be represented as an irregularly shaped polygon of geospatial coordinates reflecting the likely geospatial location of the mobile device. Whatever representation is used must route correctly in the LoST database, where "correct" is determined by local PSAP management.
In IETF protocols, civic and geospatial forms are both supported. The civic forms include both postal and jurisdictional fields. A cell tower/sector can be represented as a point (geo or civic) or polygon. Other forms of location representation must be mapped into either a geo or civic for use in emergency calls.
For emergency call purposes, conversion of location information from civic to geo or vice versa prior to conveyance is not desirable. The location should be sent in the form it was determined. Conversion between geo and civic requires a database. PSAPs may need to convert from whatever form they receive to another for responder purposes. They have a suitable database. However, if a conversion is done before the PSAP, and the database used is not exactly the one the PSAP uses, the double conversion has a high probability of introducing an error.
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Location information can be entered by the user or installer of a device ("manual configuration"), measured by the end system, can be delivered to the end system by some protocol or measured by a third party and inserted into the call signaling. Choice of location determination mechanisms and their properties are out of scope for this document.
In some cases, an entity may have multiple sources of location information, possibly partially contradictory. This is particularly likely if the location information is determined both by the end system and a third party. Although self measured location (e.g. GPS) is attractive, access network provided location could be much more accurate, and more reliable in some environments (indoor high rise in dense urban areas for example). In general, the closer an entity is to the source of location, the more it is in the best position to determine which location is "best" for a particular purpose. In emergency calling, the PSAP is the least likely to be able to appropriately choose which location when multiple conflicting locations are presented to it.
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Location information can be maintained by the end user or the installer of an endpoint in the endpoint itself, or in a database.
Location information provided by end users is almost always less reliable than measured or wire database information, as users may mistype location information or may enter civic address information that does not correspond to a recognized (i.e. valid, see Section Section 6.10 (Location validation)) address. Users can neglect to change the data when the location of a device changes during or after movement.
All that said, there are always a small number of cases where the automated mechanisms used by the access network to determine location fail to accurately reflect the actual location of the endpoint. For example, the user may deploy his own WAN behind an access network, effectively removing an endpoint some distance from the access network's notion of its location. There must be some mechanism provided to provision a location for an endpoint by the user or by the access network on behalf of a user. The use of the mechanism introduces the possibility of users falsely declaring themselves to be somewhere they are not. As an aside, normally, if an emergency caller insists that he is at a location different from what any automatic location determination system reports he is, responders will always be sent to the user's self-declared location. However this is a matter of local policy and is outside the scope of this document.
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Location information can be maintained by the access network, relating some form of identifier for the end subscriber or device to a location database ("wire database"). In enterprise LANs, wiremap databases map Ethernet switch ports to building locations. In DSL installations, the local telephone carrier maintains a mapping of wire-pairs to subscriber addresses.
Accuracy of location historically has been to a street address level. However, this is not sufficient for larger structures. The PIDF-LO [RFC4119] (Peterson, J., “A Presence-based GEOPRIV Location Object Format,” December 2005.) with a recent extension [I‑D.ietf‑geopriv‑revised‑civic‑lo] (Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, “Revised Civic Location Format for PIDF-LO,” December 2007.) permits interior building/floor/room and even finer specification of location within a street address. When possible, interior location should be supported.
The threshold for when interior location is needed is approximately 650 m2 (that is derived from fire brigade recommendations of spacing of alarm pull stations) should have, but interior space layout, construction materials and other factors should be considered. The ultimate goal is to be able to find the person in need quickly if responders arrive at the location given.
Even for IEEE 802.11 wireless access points, wire databases may provide sufficient location resolution. The location of the access point as determined by the wiremap may be supplied as the location for each of the clients of the access point. However, this may not be true for larger-scale systems such as IEEE 802.16 (WiMAX) and IEEE 802.22 that typically have larger cells than those of IEEE 802.11. The civic location of an IEEE 802.16 base station may be of little use to emergency personnel, since the endpoint could be several kilometers away from the base station.
Wire databases to the home are likely to be the most promising solution for residential users where a service provider knows the customer's service address. The service provider can then perform address validation (see Section 6.10 (Location validation)), similar to the current system in some jurisdictions.
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Global Positioning System (GPS) and similar satellite based (e.g. Galileo) receivers may be embedded directly in the end device. GPS produces relatively high precision location fixes in open-sky conditions, but the technology still faces several challenges in terms of performance (time-to-fix and time-to-first-fix), as well as obtaining successful location fixes within shielded structures, or underground. It also requires all devices to be equipped with the appropriate GPS capability. GPS-derived locations are currently accurate to tens of meters. Many mobile devices require using some kind of "assist", that may be operated by the access network (A-GPS) or by a government (WAAS).
GPS systems may be always on; where location will always be available accurately (assuming the device can "see" enough satellites). Mobile devices may not be able to sustain the power levels required to keep the measuring system active. This means that when location is needed, the device has to start up the measurement mechanism. This typically takes tens of seconds, far too long to wait to be able to route an emergency call. For this reason, devices that don't have end-system measured location mechanisms always on need another way to get a routing location. Typically this would be a location associated with a radio link (cell site/sector).
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The access network may locate end devices. Techniques include:
- Wireless triangulation:
- Elements in the network infrastructure triangulate end systems based on signal strength, angle of arrival or time of arrival. Common mechanisms deployed include:
Sometimes multiple mechanisms are combined, for example A-GPS with AFLT
- Time Difference Of Arrival - TDOA
- Uplink Time Difference Of Arrival - U-TDOA
- Angle of Arrival - AOA
- RF-Fingerprinting
- Advanced Forward Link Trilateration - AFLT
- Enhanced Forward Link Trilateration - EFLT
- Location beacons:
- A short range wireless beacon, e.g., using Bluetooth or infrared, announces its location to mobile devices in the vicinity. This allows devices to get location from the beacon source's location.
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The IETF emergency call architecture prefers endpoints to learn their location and supply it on the call. Outbound proxies that support devices that do not support location may have to add location to emergency calls at a proxy server. Some calling networks have relationships with all access networks the device may be connected to, and that may allow the proxy to accurately determine location of the endpoint. However NATs and other middleboxes often make it impossible to determine a reference identifier the access network could use to determine the location. Systems designers are discouraged from relying on proxies to add location. The technique may be useful in some limited circumstances as devices are upgraded to meet the requirements of this document, or where relationships between access networks and calling networks are feasible and can be relied upon to get accurate location.
Proxy insertion of location complicates dial string recognition. As noted in Section Section 6 (Location and its role in an emergency call), local dial strings depend on the location of the caller. If the device does not know its own location, it cannot use the LoST service to learn the local emergency dial strings. The calling network must provide another way for the device to learn the local dial string (and update it when the user moves to a location where the dial string(s) change) or do the dial string determination itself.
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Location information may be expressed as the actual civic or geospatial value but can be transmitted as by value (wholly contained within the signaling message) or by reference (a URI pointing to the value residing on a remote node waiting to be dereferenced). Each form is better suited to some applications than others.
When location is transmitted by value, the location information is available to each device; on the other hand, location objects can be large, and only represent a single snapshot of the device's location. Location references are small and can be used to represent a time-varying location, but the added complexity of the dereference step introduces a risk that location will not be available to parties that need it.
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Unless a user agent has access to provisioned or locally measured location information, it must obtain it from the access network. There are several location configuration protocols (LCPs) that can be used for this purpose such as:
- DHCP
- DHCP can deliver civic [RFC4676] (Schulzrinne, H., “Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCPv4 and DHCPv6) Option for Civic Addresses Configuration Information,” October 2006.) or geospatial [RFC3825] (Polk, J., Schnizlein, J., and M. Linsner, “Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Option for Coordinate-based Location Configuration Information,” July 2004.) information. User agents need to support both formats. Note that a user agent can use DHCP, via the DHCP REQUEST or INFORM messages, even if it uses other means to acquire its IP address.
- HELD
- HELD [I‑D.ietf‑geopriv‑http‑location‑delivery] (Barnes, M., Winterbottom, J., Thomson, M., and B. Stark, “HTTP Enabled Location Delivery (HELD),” August 2009.) can deliver a civic or geo, by value or by reference, as a layer 7 protocol. The query typically uses the IP address of the requestor as an identifier and returns the location value or reference associated with that identifier. HELD is typically transported on HTTP.
- Link-Layer Discovery Protocol
- Layer Discovery Protocol [LLDP] (IEEE, “IEEE802.1ab Station and Media Access Control,” Dec 2004.) with Media Endpoint Device extensions [LLDP‑MED] (TIA, “ANSI/TIA-1057 Link Layer Discovery Protocol - Media Endpoint Discovery,” .) can be used to deliver location information directly from the Layer 2 network infrastructure, and also supports both civic and geospatial formats identical in format to DHCP methods.
Each LCP has limitations in the kinds of networks that can reasonably support it. For this reason, it is not possible to choose a single mandatory-to-deploy LCP. For endpoints with common network connections (such as an Ethernet jack or a WiFi connection) serious incompatibilities would ensue unless every network supported every protocol, or alternatively, every device supported every protocol. For this reason, a list of LCPs is established in [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑phonebcp] (Rosen, B. and J. Polk, “Best Current Practice for Communications Services in support of Emergency Calling,” January 2010.). Every endpoint that could be used to place emergency calls must implement all of the protocols on the list. Every access network must deploy at least one of them. It is recognized that this is an onerous requirement, that it would be desirable to eliminate. However, since it is the variability of the networks that prevent a single protocol from being acceptable, it must be the endpoints that implement all of them, and to accommodate a wide range of devices, networks must deploy at least one of them.
Often, network operators and device designers believe that they have a simpler environment and some other network specific mechanism can be used to provide location. Unfortunately, it is very rare to actually be able to limit the range of devices that may be connected to a network.
For example, existing mobile networks are being used to support routers and LANs behind a wireless data network WAN connection, with Ethernet connected phones connected to that. It is possible that the access network could support a protocol not on the list, and require every handset in that network to use that protocol for emergency calls. However, the Ethernet connected phone won't be able to acquire location, and the user of the phone is unlikely to be dissuaded from placing an emergency call on that phone. The widespread availability of gateways, routers and other network-broadening devices means that indirectly connected endpoints are possible on nearly every network. Network operators and vendors are cautioned that shortcuts to meeting this requirement are seldom successful.
Location for non-mobile devices is normally expected to be acquired at network attachment time and retained by the device. It should be refreshed when the cached value becomes invalid. For example, if DHCP is the acquisition protocol, refresh of location may occur when the IP address lease is renewed. At the time of an emergency call, the location should be refreshed, with the retained location used if the location acquisition does not immediately return a value. Mobile devices may determine location at network attachment time and periodically thereafter as a backup in case location determination at the time of call does not work. Mobile device location may be refreshed when a TTL expires, the device moves beyond some boundaries (as provided by [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.)). Normally, mobile devices will acquire its location at call time for use in an emergency call routing. See Section Section 6.8 (Location updates) for a further discussion on location updates for dispatch location.
There are many examples of end devices which are applications running on a more general purpose device, such as a personal computer. In some circumstances, it is not possible for application programs to access the network device at a level necessary to implement the LLDP-MED protocol, and in other cases, obtaining location via DHCP may be impossible. In any case it is desirable for an operating system which could be used for any application which could make emergency calls to have an API which provides the location of the device for use by any application.
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Devices should get routing location immediately after obtaining local network configuration information. The presence of NAT and VPN tunnels (that assign new IP addresses to communications) can obscure identifiers used by LCPs to determine location, especially using HELD. In some cases, such as residential NAT devices, the NAT is before the access network demarcation point and thus the IP address seen by the access network is the right identifier for location of the residence. In many enterprise environments, VPN tunnels can obscure the actual IP address. Some VPN mechanisms can be bypassed (a query to the LCP can be designated to go through the direct IP path, using the correct IP address, and not through the tunnel). In other cases, no bypass is possible. Of course, LCPs that use Layer 2 mechanisms (DHCP Location options and LLDP-MED) are usually immune from such problems because they do not use the IP address as the identifier for the device seeking location.
It is desirable that routing location information be periodically refreshed. A LIS supporting a million subscribers each refreshing once per day would need to support a query rate of 1,000,00 / (24 * 60 * 60) = 12 queries per second.
It is desirable for routing location information to be requested immediately before placing an emergency call. However, if there is any significant delay in getting more recent location, the call should be placed with the most recent location information the device has. In mobile handsets, routing is often accomplished with the cell site and sector of the tower serving the call, because it can take many seconds to start up the location determination mechanism and obtain an accurate location.
There is a tradeoff between the time it takes to get a routing location and the accuracy (technically, confidence and uncertainty) obtained. Routing an emergency call quickly is required. However, if location can be substantially improved by waiting a short time (e.g. for some sort of "quick fix"), it's preferable to wait. 3 seconds, that is the current nominal time for a quick fix, is a very long time to wait for help, and systems designers should attempt to provide accurate routing location in much less time.
NENA recommends IP based systems complete calls in two seconds (last dial press to ring at PSAP).
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When an emergency call is placed, the endpoint should put location in the signaling with the call. That is referred to as "conveyance" to distinguish it from "configuration". In SIP, the location information is conveyed following the procedures in [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑location‑conveyance] (Polk, J. and B. Rosen, “Location Conveyance for the Session Initiation Protocol,” March 2009.). The form of the location information obtained by the acquisition protocol may not be the same as the conveyance protocol uses (PIDF-LO [RFC4119] (Peterson, J., “A Presence-based GEOPRIV Location Object Format,” December 2005.)). Mapping by the endpoint to PIDF may be required.
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As discussed above, it make take some time for some measurement mechanisms to get a location accurate enough for dispatch, and a routing location with less accuracy may be provided to get the call established early. The PSAP needs the dispatch location before it sends the call to the responder. This requires an update of the location.
In addition, the location of a mobile caller, e.g., in a vehicle or aircraft, can change significantly during the emergency call. While most often this change is not significant, the PSAP must be able to get updated location information while it is processing the call.
Subscription is preferred so that the LIS notifies the PSAP when accurate location is updated rather than requiring a poll operation from the PSAP to the LIS.
A PSAP has no way to request an update of a location-by-value. If the UAC gets new location, it must reINVITE or UPDATE to supply the new location.
Generally, the PSAP can wait for an accurate location for dispatch. However, there is no fixed limit known in advance; it depends on the nature of the emergency. At some point the PSAP must dispatch. In a subscription environment, the PSAP could update the parameters in the filter (immediate response required). In a HELD dereference, there is no way to cancel and the PSAP will have to choose a ResponseTime that it will wait for even if it wants to dispatch sooner than that. (Change as the discussion on ResponseTime evolves).
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Handling multiple locations is discussed in [I‑D.ietf‑geopriv‑pdif‑lo‑profile] (Winterbottom, J., Thomson, M., and H. Tschofenig, “GEOPRIV PIDF-LO Usage Clarification, Considerations and Recommendations,” November 2008.). Conflicting location information is particularly harmful if different routes (PSAPs) result from LoST queries for the multiple locations. Guidelines for dealing with multiple locations are also given in [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.). Generally, if a UA gets multiple locations, it must choose the one to use. If a proxy is inserting location and has multiple locations, it must choose the one to use.
The ability of the UA or proxy to understand how and from whom it learned its location, and include this information element in the location object that is sent to the PSAP, provides the call-taker with many pieces of information to make decisions upon, and guidance for what to ask the caller and what to tell the responders.
The call should indicate the location information that has been used for routing, so that the same location information is used for all call routing decisions. The location conveyance mechanism [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑location‑conveyance] (Polk, J. and B. Rosen, “Location Conveyance for the Session Initiation Protocol,” March 2009.) contains a parameter for this purpose.
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It is recommended that location must be validated prior to a device placing an actual emergency call; some jurisdictions require that this be done. Validation in this context means both that there is a mapping from the address to a PSAP and that the PSAP understands how to direct responders to the location. Determining the addresses that are valid can be difficult. There are, for example, many cases of two names for the same street, or two streets with the same name in a city. In some countries, the current system provides validation. For example, in the United States, the Master Street Address Guide (MSAG) records all valid street addresses and is used to ensure that the service addresses in phone billing records correspond to valid emergency service street addresses. Validation is normally a concern for civic addresses, although there could be a concern that a given geo is within at least one PSAP service boundary; that is, a "valid" geo is one where there is a mapping.
LoST [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.) includes a location validation function. Validation should ideally be performed when a location is entered into a Location Information Server. It should be confirmed periodically, because the mapping database undergoes slow change; new streets are added or removed, community names change, postal codes change, etc. Endpoints may wish to validate locations they receive from the access network, and will need to validate manually entered locations. Proxies that insert location may wish to validate locations they receive from a LIS. Test functions (Section 15 (Testing)) should also re-validate.
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Occasionally, the access network cannot determine the actual location of the caller. In these cases, it must supply a default location. The default location should be as accurate as the network can determine. For example, in a cable network, a default location for each Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS), with a representative location for all cable modems served by that CMTS could be provided if the network is unable to resolve the subscriber to any unit less than the CMTS. Default locations must be marked as such so that the PSAP knows that the location is not accurate.
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The endpoint is responsible for mapping any form of location it receives from an LCP into PIDF-LO form if the LCP did not directly return a PIDF.
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If endpoints are to get their location and determine the routing of emergency calls, they must be able to discover a LIS (if the HELD protocol is used), and a LoST server. DHCP options are defined for this purpose: [I‑D.thomson‑geopriv‑lis‑discovery] (Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, “Discovering the Local Location Information Server (LIS),” September 2007.) and [I‑D.thomson‑geopriv‑lis‑discovery] (Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, “Discovering the Local Location Information Server (LIS),” September 2007.)
In some cases, it may be necessary for the service provider to provision a LoST server address in the device.
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Support of devices that are not registered, or that don't have valid call back identifiers is complex. In some jurisdictions, for some services, support of emergency calls from so-called "uninitialized" devices is required. For example, cellular providers in the United States must support calls to 9-1-1 from a mobile phone that does not have an active service contract. It is attractive for such devices to be able to be used in an emergency. However, the requirement to do so has caused a huge number of prank calls to the emergency service. In some countries, it is common to attempt to place an emergency call from an unitialized device in the local bazaars to prove to a would-be purchaser that the phone works. For this reason, PSAP authorities discourage support for unititialized devices.
An unitialized device that can place an emergency call must supply location the same as a fully enabled device, must carry a call back URI that can be used to call the device back, and should have identifiers in the signaling that can be used to identify the device.
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Emergency calls are routed based on one or more of the following criteria expressed in the call setup request (INVITE):
- Location:
- Since each PSAP serves a limited geographic region and transferring existing calls delays the emergency response, calls need to be routed to the most appropriate PSAP. In this architecture, emergency call setup requests contain location information, expressed in civic or geospatial coordinates, that allows such routing. If there is no or imprecise (e.g., cell tower and sector) information at call setup time, an on-going emergency call may also be transferred to another PSAP based on location information that becomes available in mid-call.
- Type of emergency service:
- In some jurisdictions, emergency calls for fire, police, ambulance or mountain rescue are directed to just those emergency-specific PSAPs. This mechanism is supported by marking emergency calls with the proper service identifier [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑service‑urn] (Schulzrinne, H., “A Uniform Resource Name (URN) for Emergency and Other Well-Known Services,” August 2007.).
- Media capabilities of caller:
- In some cases, emergency call centers for specific caller media preferences, such as typed text or video, are separate from PSAPs serving voice calls. Routing based on media would be accomplished at an ESRP. Also, even if media capability does not affect the selection of the PSAP, there may be call takers within the PSAP that are specifically trained, e.g., in interactive text or sign language communications, where routing within the PSAP based on the media offer would be provided.
Routing for calls by location and by service is the primary function LoST [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑lost] (Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, “LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol,” May 2008.) provides. LoST accepts a query with location (by-value) in either civic or geospatial form, plus a service identifier, and returns a URI (or set of URIs) to route the call to. Normal SIP [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) routing functions are used to resolve the URI to a next hop destination.
The endpoint can complete the LoST mapping from its location at boot time, and periodically thereafter. It should attempt to obtain a "fresh" location, and from that a current mapping when it places an emergency call. If accessing either its location acquisition or mapping functions fail, it should use this cached value. The call would follow its normal outbound call processing.
Determining when the device leaves the area provided by the LoST service can tax small mobile devices. For this reason, the LoST server should return a simple (small number of points) polygon for geo reported location [I‑D.ietf‑geopriv‑pdif‑lo‑profile] (Winterbottom, J., Thomson, M., and H. Tschofenig, “GEOPRIV PIDF-LO Usage Clarification, Considerations and Recommendations,” November 2008.). This can be an enclosing subset of the area when the reported point is not near an edge or a smaller edge section when the reported location is near an edge. Civic location is uncommon for mobile devices, but reporting that the same mapping is good within a community name, or even a street, may be very helpful for WiFi connected devices that roam and obtain civic location from the AP they are connected to.
Networks that support devices that do not implement LoST mapping themselves would have the outbound proxy do the mapping. The proxy must have the location of the endpoint, that is often difficult for the calling network to accurately determine. The endpoint may have its location, but would not normally include it on the call signaling. There is no mechanism provided in [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑location‑conveyance] (Polk, J. and B. Rosen, “Location Conveyance for the Session Initiation Protocol,” March 2009.) to allow a proxy to require the endpoint supply location, because that would open the endpoint to an attack by any proxy on the path to get it to reveal location. The Proxy can redirect a call to the service URN that, if the device recognized the significance, would include location in the redirected call. All networks should detect emergency calls and supply default location and/or routing if it is not already performed.
With the URI obtained from mapping, whether by the endpoint or the proxy, the proxy routes the call. Normal SIP [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) and [RFC3263] (Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP): Locating SIP Servers,” June 2002.) mechanisms are used to route calls to the URI obtained from the LoST query.
Often, the SIP routing of an emergency call will first route to an incoming call proxy in the domain operated by the emergency service. That proxy is called an "Emergency Services Routing Proxy" (ESRP). The ESRP, which is a normal SIP proxy server, may use a variety of PSAP state information, the location of the caller, and other criteria to onward route the call to the PSAP. In order for the ESRP to route on media choice, the initial INVITE has to supply an SDP Offer.
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As discussed above, location is carried in all emergency calls in the call signaling. Since emergency calls carry privacy-sensitive information, they are subject to the requirements for geospatial protocols [RFC3693] (Cuellar, J., Morris, J., Mulligan, D., Peterson, J., and J. Polk, “Geopriv Requirements,” February 2004.). In particular, signaling information should be carried in TLS, i.e., in 'sips' mode. Although there are exceptions in [RFC3693] (Cuellar, J., Morris, J., Mulligan, D., Peterson, J., and J. Polk, “Geopriv Requirements,” February 2004.) for emergency calls (for example, local policy may dictate that location is sent with an emergency call even if the user's policy would otherwise prohibit that), it is unacceptable to have an emergency call fail to complete because a TLS connection was not created for any reason. Thus the call should be attempted with TLS, but if the TLS session establishment fails, the call should be automatically retried without TLS. [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑sips] (Audet, F., “The use of the SIPS URI Scheme in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” November 2008.) recommends that to achieve this effect the target request a sip URI, but use TLS on the outbound connection. An element that recieves a request over a TLS connection should attempt to create a TLS connection to the next hop.
Location may be used for routing by multiple proxy servers on the path. Confidentiality mechanisms such as S/MIME encryption of SIP signaling [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) cannot be used because they obscure location. Only hop-by-hop mechanisms such as TLS should be used. Many SIP devices do not support TLS. Implementing location conveyance in SIP mandates inclusion of TLS support.
In many cases, persistent TLS connections can be maintained between elements to minimize the time needed to establish them [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑outbound] (Jennings, C., “Managing Client Initiated Connections in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” June 2009.). In other circumstances, use of session resumption [RFC4507] (Salowey, J., Zhou, H., Eronen, P., and H. Tschofenig, “Transport Layer Security (TLS) Session Resumption without Server-Side State,” May 2006.) is recommended. IPSEC [RFC2401] (Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, “Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol,” November 1998.) is an acceptable alternative to TLS.
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SIP UAs that do local dial string interpretation, location, and emergency call route will create SIP INVITE messages with the Service URN in the Request URI, the LoST-determined URI for the PSAP in a Route header, and the location in a Geolocation header. The INVITE must also have appropriate call back identifiers To enable media sensitive routing, the call should include an SDP offer.
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SIP Proxy servers in the path of an emergency call must be able to assist UAs that are unable to provide any of the location based routing steps and recognition of dial strings. They are also expected to provide identity information for the caller.
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The call-taker must be able to reach the emergency caller if the original call is disconnected. In traditional emergency calls, wireline and wireless emergency calls include a callback identifier for this purpose. In SIP systems, the caller must include a Contact header field indicating its device URI, if globally routable, or possibly a GRUU [I‑D.ietf‑sip‑gruu] (Rosenberg, J., “Obtaining and Using Globally Routable User Agent (UA) URIs (GRUU) in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” October 2007.) if calls need to be routed via a proxy. This identifier would be used to initiate call-backs immediately by the call-taker if, for example, the call is prematurely dropped. This is a change from [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) where Contact: is optional.
In addition, a call-back identifier must be included either as the URI in the From header field [RFC3261] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, “SIP: Session Initiation Protocol,” June 2002.) verified by SIP Identity [RFC4474] (Peterson, J. and C. Jennings, “Enhancements for Authenticated Identity Management in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” August 2006.) , or as a network asserted URI [RFC3325] (Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, “Private Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks,” November 2002.). This identifier would be used to initiate a call-back at a later time and may reach the caller, not necessarily on the same device (and at the same location) as the original emergency call as per normal SIP rules.
Emergency authorities generally discourage support of unitialized devices (see Section 7 (Uninitialized devices). If an uninitialized device does place an emergency call, some kind of call back URI must be provided (e.g. a GRUU) in the Contact: header. It is useful to be able to call the device back some time later as well by including some form of URI in a network asserted identity.
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A PSAP may need to REFER [RFC3515] (Sparks, R., “The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Refer Method,” April 2003.) a call to a bridge for conferencing. The caller should also be prepared to have the call transferred (usually attended, but possibly blind) as per [I‑D.ietf‑sipping‑service‑examples] (Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and K. Summers, “Session Initiation Protocol Service Examples,” July 2008.). PSAPs often include dispatchers, responders or specialists on a call. Some responder's dispatchers are not located in the primary PSAP. The call may have to be transferred to another PSAP. Most often this will be an attended transfer, or a bridged transfer. Relay services for communication with people with disabilities may be included in the call in this way.
SIP Caller Preferences [RFC3841] (Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat, “Caller Preferences for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP),” August 2004.) can be used to signal how the PSAP should handle the call. For example, a language preference expressed in an Accept-Language header may be used as a hint to cause the PSAP to route the call to a call taker who speaks the requested language. SIP Caller Preferences may also be used to indicate a need to invoke a relay service for communication with people with disabilities in the call.
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It is undesirable for the caller to terminate an emergency call. PSAP call termination is accomplished with normal SIP call termination procedures.
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Certain features that can be invoked while a normal call is active are not permitted when the call is an emergency call. Services such as Call Waiting, Call Transfer, Three Way Call and Flash Hold should be disabled.
Certain features can interfere with calls from a PSAP and should be disabled. The domain of a PSAP can be determined from the domain answering an emergency call. A time limit after an emergency call should be established during which any call from the same domain and directed to the supplied Contact: or AoR should be accepted as a call-back from the PSAP.
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PSAPs should always accept RTP media streams [RFC3550] (Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V. Jacobson, “RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications,” July 2003.). Traditionally, voice has been the only media stream accepted by PSAPs. In some countries, text, in the form of BAUDOT codes or similar tone encoded signaling within a voiceband is accepted ("TTY") for persons who have hearing disabilities. With the Internet comes a wider array of potential media that a PSAP should accept. Using SIP signaling includes the capability to negotiate media. Normal SIP offer/answer [RFC3264] (Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, “An Offer/Answer Model with Session Description Protocol (SDP),” June 2002.) negotiations should be used to agree on the media streams to be used. PSAPs should accept real-time text [RFC4103] (Hellstrom, G. and P. Jones, “RTP Payload for Text Conversation,” June 2005.). All PSAPs should accept G.711 A law (and mu Law in North America) encoded voice as described in [RFC3551] (Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, “RTP Profile for Audio and Video Conferences with Minimal Control,” July 2003.). Newer text forms are rapidly appearing, with Instant Messaging now very common, PSAPs should accept IM with at least [RFC3428] (Campbell, B., Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Huitema, C., and D. Gurle, “Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for Instant Messaging,” December 2002.) as well as [RFC3920] (Saint-Andre, P., Ed., “Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP): Core,” October 2004.). Video may be important to support Video Relay Service (Sign language interpretation) as well as modern video phones.
While it is desirable for media to be kept secure, preferably by use of Secure RTP [RFC3711] (Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K. Norrman, “The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP),” March 2004.), there is not yet consensus on how best to signal keying material for SRTP. As a consequence, no recommendation to support SRTP can yet be made for emergency calls.
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Since the emergency calling architecture consists of a number of pieces operated by independent entities, it is important to be able to test whether an emergency call is likely to succeed without actually occupying the human resources at a PSAP. Both signaling and media paths need to be tested since NATs and firewalls may allow the session setup request to reach the PSAP, while preventing the exchange of media.
[I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑phonebcp] (Rosen, B. and J. Polk, “Best Current Practice for Communications Services in support of Emergency Calling,” January 2010.) includes a description of an automated test procedure that validates routing, signaling and media path continuity. This test would be used at boot time, and whenever the device location changes enough that a new PSAP mapping is returned from LoST. A manual operation for the test should also be possible.
The PSAP needs to be able to control frequency and duration of the test, and since the process could be overused, it may temporarily or permanently suspend its operation.
There is a concern associated with testing during a so-called "avalanche-restart" event where, for example a large power outage affects a large number of endpoints, that, when power is restored, all attempt to reboot and, possibly, test. Devices need to randomize their initiation of a boot time test to avoid the problem.
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Security considerations for emergency calling have been documented in [I‑D.ietf‑ecrit‑security‑threats] (Taylor, T., “Security Threats and Requirements for Emergency Call Marking and Mapping,” August 2007.), and [I‑D.barnes‑geopriv‑lo‑sec] (Barnes, R., Lepinski, M., Cooper, A., Morris, J., Tschofenig, H., and H. Schulzrinne, “An Architecture for Location and Location Privacy in Internet Applications,” March 2009.).
Ed. Note: go through that doc and make sure any actions needed are captured in the BCP text.
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This draft was created from a draft-schulzrinne-sipping-emergency-arch-02 together with sections from draft-polk-newton-ecrit-arch-considerations-02.
Design Team members participating in this draft creation include Hannes Tschofenig, Ted Hardie, Martin Dolly, Marc Linsner, Roger Marshall, Stu Goldman, Shida Schubert and Tom Taylor. Further comments and input was provided by Richard Barnes, Barbara Stark and James Winterbottom.
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[I-D.ietf-sipping-service-examples] | Johnston, A., Sparks, R., Cunningham, C., Donovan, S., and K. Summers, “Session Initiation Protocol Service Examples,” draft-ietf-sipping-service-examples-15 (work in progress), July 2008 (TXT). |
[RFC3966] | Schulzrinne, H., “The tel URI for Telephone Numbers,” RFC 3966, December 2004 (TXT). |
[WGS84] | NIMA, “NIMA Technical Report TR8350.2, Department of Defense World Geodetic System 1984, Its Definition and Relationships With Local Geodetic Systems, Third Edition,” July 1997. |
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Brian Rosen | |
NeuStar, Inc. | |
470 Conrad Dr | |
Mars, PA 16046 | |
US | |
Email: | br@brianrosen.net |
Henning Schulzrinne | |
Columbia University | |
Department of Computer Science | |
450 Computer Science Building | |
New York, NY 10027 | |
US | |
Phone: | +1 212 939 7042 |
Email: | hgs@cs.columbia.edu |
URI: | http://www.cs.columbia.edu |
James Polk | |
Cisco Systems | |
3913 Treemont Circle | |
Colleyville, Texas 76034 | |
US | |
Phone: | +1-817-271-3552 |
Email: | jmpolk@cisco.com |
Andrew Newton | |
TranTech/MediaSolv | |
4900 Seminary Road | |
Alexandria, VA 22311 | |
US | |
Phone: | +1 703 845 0656 |
Email: | andy@hxr.us |
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