Archive for the ‘SIP Forum’ Category

SIPit 29 Registration Open – October 24-28, 2011, in Monte Carlo, Monaco

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011
Sipit29

Today SIPit coordinator Robert Sparks announced to several mailing lists that registration is open for SIPit 29, to be held October 24-28, 2011, in Monte Carlo, Monaco. The event has its own website at:

http://www.etsi.org/plugtests/SIPIT29/

and the “About” page gives a bit more detail.

I’ve written about SIPit events before – and we as a company have found them immensely valuable. They are a great place to bring your latest SIP software and hardware and test it against a wide range of other SIP implementations. Basically it’s an inexpensive way to get a week’s use of a better interoperability test lab than you will probably ever be able to build on your own.

The SIPit events also are great for our industry in that they help vendors make their equipment work better together… and the more we have of that the sooner we’ll be able to move beyond the PSTN and get the full value of rich communication possible in a pure IP communications environment.

I do hope many of you will consider going to SIPit 29!


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New IPv6 Mailing List From SIP Forum For Discussing SIP/VoIP Issues With IPv6

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

SipforumInterested in learning more about how IPv6 impacts SIP and other VoIP protocols? Want to help advance the state of SIP usage and tools over IPv6? Or just interested in monitoring what is going on with IPv6 and SIP?

If so, you can now join a new “ipv6″ mailing list created by the SIP Forum. To join the list, just visit:

http://sipforum.org/mailman/listinfo/ipv6

At SIPNOC 2011 last week, one of the actions that came out of the IPv6 BOF session I moderated was the creation of this mailing list. I’ll post my notes from the session soon… but a key point was to get a public mailing list set up that could be used to communicate with people interested in the topic. At the BOF we identified several actions that the SIP Forum could undertake… we’ll use that mailing list as a way to talk about those possible actions and figure out what makes sense for the group to do (and who can do it).

If you are interested in IPv6 and SIP, please do join the mailing list!

P.S. To prevent spammers from joining the list, each subscription request is manually approved by the SIP Forum’s Marc Robins. Depending upon when you subscribe and when Marc is checking his email, there may be a slight delay in getting approved for the list.


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Photos: The Many Faces of SIPNOC 2011

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

While at SIPNOC 2011 last week in Herndon, VA, I shot a good number of photos of the presenters and attendees. I’ve uploaded some of the better shots to our Flickr account and you can view the SIPNOC set there:

Sipnoc2011

I tried to capture most all of the presenters there. The images are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license which essentially means that you are welcome to use them as long as you link back to the photo (if online) or provide an attribution link in written material.

If you are in any of the photos and want a higher resolution version for your own usage, please just email me and can get one to you.

For photography geeks, almost all of the photos were taken with my Nikon D90. A few were taken with my iPhone 4. Most were not altered but a few had the “Enhance” edit done in iPhoto.


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SIPNOC 2011 Coming Up April 25-27 – Schedule and Speakers Now Posted

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Sipnoc2011As I mentioned before, this year the SIP Forum is holding its first ever SIPNOC: The SIP Network Operators Conference event on April 25-27 in Herndon, Virginia, just outside of Washington, DC. The abstract of the event is:

SIPNOC is a unique event for service providers and carriers to gather to discuss the challenges of deploying and implementing SIP-based communications technology, and to learn the best-practices and strategies that enable the successful and profitable operation of SIP-based services and applications. SIPNOC is not a sales event, a marketing event, nor an event for corporate positioning.

The tentative schedule is now out and as I note over on our page for the event, I’ll be speaking twice at the event. In one panel I’ll be wearing my VOIP Security Alliance hat and talking about communications security. In the other session I’ll be speaking about some of the lessons we’ve learned at Voxeo in building the large-scale, global carrier-grade SIP infrastructure we operate.

It should be a fun event and I’m very much looking forward to being down there in DC with the SIP Forum crowd! If you can join us there, it should be a great event for anyone operating a network using the SIP protocol.


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SIPit 27 announced for Nov 15-19, 2010, in Taiwan

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

SIPit27.jpgThe SIP Forum today announced that the next SIPit interoperability test event will be held November 15-19, 2010, in Taiwan, Taipei.  A website for the event is now up at:

http://www.etsi.org/plugtests/SIPit27/SIPit27.htm

As I’ve written about in the past and recorded a video interview about, these SIPit events are critical, in my opinion, to helping drive the overall adoption of SIP and open standards in communication systems.

If you are a creator of software or hardware devices that use the SIP protocol, SIPit events are a great way to test how well your equipment works with other SIP implementations. There is a fee, but it’s small for the week-long testing you get to do. More info can be found on the registration page.

P.S. You’ll note that this SIPit event is the week following IETF 79 in Beijing, China… so if you can make the travel work, it’s a great way to combine two weeks of open standards / SIP – related events.


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SIPit 26 happens May 17-21 in Stockholm, Sweden – SIP interop testing… and IPv6, too!

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

sipit26logo.jpgDo you create hardware or software that uses the SIP protocol? If so, what are you doing the week of May 17-21, 2010? Over in Stockholm, Sweden, many vendors will be gathering for the SIPit 26 interoperability testing event – and registration is still open if you are interested in attending. I’ve written in the past about SIPit events and even recorded a video interview last fall about why SIP interop matters. These events are important… and if you develop SIP-related software, I strongly encourage you to attend.

This SIPit26 event is, as always, organized by the SIP Forum and hosted by Edvina in cooperation with Tandberg, Intertex, Ingate and .se! More info can be found at the SIPit 26 site at:

http://sipit.edvina.se/

Courtesy of organizer Olle Johansson, this SIPit 26 event can also be found on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. Olle, coming out of the Asterisk community, also wrote up a great post on “why SIP testing is important to Asterisk and to you“… the reasons he lays out are the same for really any of us working with SIP-related products and services.

This particular SIPit 26 event will have an additional aspect to it… the SIP Forum has partnered with the IPv6 Forum to promote testing of SIP over IPv6. Actually, the partnership is larger than that… but a specific outcome is that part of the drive of SIPit 26 will be to test how well SIP implementations work over IPv6. All good stuff… and help move along real-time communication over the Internet.

If you do have a SIP-based product or service, check out SIPit 26 and get there if you can… it’s a great opportunity to test your products and see how they work with other SIP-based products and services.


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SIPconnect 1.1 Technical Working Group meeting getting underway today in Colorado

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

SIPconnect-1.jpgIn a few minutes out in Louisville, Colorado, at the headquarters of Cable Labs, a meeting of the SIP Forum Technical Working Group will be getting underway to work on the SIPconnect 1.1 specification. There will be about 25 people there in person ranging from SIP Forum board members to representatives of telcos, cable providers, SIP equipment vendors and even someone from Microsoft. I won’t be there in person but I’ll be joining about 15 others on a conference call connected into the room there in Colorado.

For the next day-and-a-half, we’ll be basically stepping through the SIPconnect 1.1 specification paragraph by paragraph to ensure that we can come to some degree of consensus on the various points and come out with a specification that can work for the market. You can see some of the documents created by various vendors in the SIP Forum repository although the actual document we’ll be working through is one that was sent out on the mailing list on September 22 integrating a variety of comments. (The message is in the list archive, but the attachments aren’t.)

It may sound like tedious work… and in truth some parts of it undoubtedly will be… but the end goal is to arrive at a SIPconnect specification that can be widely used in the marketplace to drive more SIP connectivity.

WHAT IS SIPconnect?

So what is SIPconnect, anyway? Essentially, it is a specification for how to connect a SIP-based system on a company’s premise (such as an IP-PBX) to a SIP Service Provider. We’re now commonly calling such a connection a “SIP trunk”. The majority of such connections will be to provide PSTN connectivity to the on-premise system.

The ultimate goal is that you will be able to purchase a “SIPconnect-compliant” premise system (like an IP-PBX) and easily connect it to a “SIPconnect-compliant” Service Provider without spending huge amounts of time doing interoperability testing (as you often need to do today). Essentially SIPconnect specifies an agreed-upon set of RFCs related to SIP that both sides agree to implement in certain ways.

SIPconnect 1.1 is in process because while SIPconnect 1.0 is out now, some issues have been identified and the SIP Forum would like to address those issues so that the SIPconnect specification can gain wider usage.

WHAT IS THE VOXEO ANGLE?

We’re interested really from both viewpoints. On the one side, we’re interested in looking at SIPconnect for Prophecy so that customers can install our software on their premise and be able to rapidly connect to a SIP Service Provider. On the other side, we’re interested in how customers can connect their on-premise IP-PBXs to our hosted application platform to be able to interact with applications running on our platform. We also have an interest on our back-end in making SIP interop easier between our SIP cloud and that of the SIP Service Providers that we connect to.

So we’re interested in SIPconnect from a variety of angles. Does this mean we’re committed to becoming “SIPconnect-compliant”? Well, not yet… we need to see how the specification comes out. But we are definitely interested in anything that makes SIP interoperability work better.

Stay tuned for more info…

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SIPit 23 coming up Oct 13-17 in Lannion, France – registration closes soon

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

sipit.jpgThe next SIPit SIP interoperability testing event, SIPit 23 will be October 13-17 over in Lannion, France. More information about the event – and the registration info – can be found on the ETSI page for SIPit23 (ETSI is the host for this SIPit.) We’re a big fan of interoperability test events like this because in the end they only help all of our products grow stronger and help SIP advance as a communication protocol. We’re currently planning to have someone from Voxeo over there… perhaps maybe even more than one.

If you have a SIP-based product, do consider attending – and maybe we’ll be able to test some interop together when we’re over there.

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SIPit 22 summary now available

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

sipit.jpgAs we mentioned previously, SIPit22 was held April 14-18, 2008, up at the University of New Hampshire Interoperability Lab. SIPit coordinator Robert Sparks has now posted a SIPit22 Summary which provides a view into the types of products that were being tested.

Now the summary is based on surveys filled out by individual vendors, so it relies on their accuracy (i.e. the information is not independently verified) but it makes for interesting reading. (I was personally struck by the fact that 42% of the SIP implementations indicated they had IPv6 support!) These summaries (older ones available, too) are useful in seeing what vendors are actually deploying and developing versus what we are discussing in the IETF. As noted in Robert’s final paragraph, the issue of NAT traversal for SIP still continues to be one of the most challenging aspects of interoperability.

For our part, attending SIPit 22 was very worthwhile as it gave one of our lead developers a chance to really test the improvements we are making to our SIP stack in an upcoming release of Prophecy. Stay tuned for more on that in the months ahead.

If you do have a product that works with SIP, we do strongly recommend that you do consider attending a SIPit event with your product. We’re a huge believer in open standards… and there’s no better way to test how “standard” your implementation is than to be testing it with a wide range of other vendors!

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Notes from the SIP Forum SIPconnect Compliance Workshop

Friday, January 25th, 2008

1B3DCB2E-8184-471F-878D-12C1E30C7FC6.jpgToday here at the Internet Telephony Expo in Miami Beach, Florida, the SIP Forum held a “SIPconnect Compliance Workshop” to help people understand the newly announced SIPconnect 1.0 specification. What follows are some notes about the session. There were about 40 people in attendance.

NOTE: I recorded the session and at some point the audio recording will be made available through the SIP Forum website.


The session began at 10:00am with SIP Forum Managing Director Marc Robins provided an overview of the SIP Forum, its activities and its members. There are now over 4,000 individual “Participant” members (membership is free) and 36 “Full” members who financially sponsor the SIP Forum. Marc also hinted at several major announcements coming up in the next weeks.

Marc next outlined the value proposition for SIPconnect. One of his main points was that “1st generation IP PBXs are dumbed down” in that they have to connect to the PSTN and can’t do direct peering. The ideal is really to connect directly into VoIP service providers. SIP is the industry standard for VoIP, but it’s difficult for people to understand which of the many pieces of SIP are relevant and necessary.

Marc stated that the industry needs an “industry-accepted interconnection method”. “SIPconnect” specifies a reference architecture – it specifies the minimum IETF and ITU specifications required to have successful interconnection between an IP-PBX and VoIP service provider. The point is really to be a “universal approach to SIP trunking”. Everyone who is certified as “SIPconnect compliant” has gone through an engineering exercise to ensure that they are truly interoperable.

Marc indicated that for SIPconnect delivers customer cost savings, enables transparent feature transport, optimizes quality of service and provides security. For IP-PBX manufacturers, Marc indicated that it can provide a competitive advantage, eliminate proprietary interfaces and generally a more seamless selling proposition for customers. For Service Providers, they get improved QoS and security, the ability to offer higher quality services for IP-PBXs and the ability to forge strong relationships with IP-PBX vendors and new relationships with distribution channels. Customers save money by not having to purchase a TDM gateway, improves voice quality by removing gateway latency and most importantly they get a foundation for future applications and services. For distributors and VARS they eliminate all the PSTN interconnection woes, they have the ability to manage QoS and also to move security issues from the customer premise into the service provider’s cloud.

Next up was Chris Gatch, the CTO of CBeyond, who provided an overview of the SIPconnect Compliance Process: What is the SIPconnect Compliant program? What does it cost? How do I join? How do I maintain my status in the program?

Steps to become SIPconnect Compliant:

  • (optional) Join the SIP Forum to get a reduction in the licensing fee ($2500/yr versus $5000/yr).

  • Download and complete the application.
  • Complete the Compliance Survey
  • Execute the Licensing and Compliance Agreement

Your application is then reviewed by a SIP Forum Certification Committee to determine compliance. Chris noted that they will work with folks because the goal is to help people to become compliant. To maintain compliance, you have to pay the annual $2500 licensing fee and keep up with the standards.

Chris provided some links and noted that the consolidated survey results are available that give some insight into how compliant products are. He noted that there are currently 7 companies who have certified 10 products. The two IP-PBX vendors who have certified are Digium and Avaya. Chris noted that it’s not about getting feeds but rather in driving interoperability and compatibility. It needs to be as meaningful as saying “FXS” or “PRI”.

Next up was Mark Enstrom from Broadsoft who discussed the “Lessons Learned” from companies as they became SIPconnect compliant. He spoke of information they gathered from informal conversations with companies that became SIPconnect compliant. Mark’s suggestions for service providers included:

  • Document your processes.

  • Standardize PBX configurations.
  • Provide configuration guides.
  • Provide an external interface for partner self-certification. (Example)

The question was raised by a participant of whether you could take a SIPconnect compliant IP-PBX and just connect it to a SIPconnect-compliant Service Provider. The answer is that this is the ideal to which the standard is a step. You still should need to do interoperability testing but it should be faster with SIPconnect-compliant products. The goal is to get to that point where it is as easy as connecting in a PRI.

For IP-PBX vendors, Mark suggested these guidelines:

  • Become SIPconnect compliant

  • Promote the program with service providers
  • Implement the DIGEST authentication method
    • TLS is required by SIPconnect (has become a general exception for most Compliant participants)
    • DIGEST is used in deployments
  • Implement optional REGISTER method (versus using static registrations)
    • Saves headaches in interop and deployment
    • Use master registration
    • Less configuration on the SBC
    • Reduces/eliminates downtime due to static registration address changes.

Mark then discussed issues around supporting fax and modem deployments, basically indicating that services providers today really need to explicitly test fax/modem deployments and document/support only a few configurations. Many service providers are still using separate interfaces for fax/modem traffic.

Mark moved into NAT and firewall issues. Service providers need to document what they support and train their customers and channels. Most firewalls are not SIP-aware. If you can use a SIP-aware firewall, you’ll be better off. Optionally, you can use port-forwarding or far-end NAT traversal if you understand the security issues.

Next Mark reminded service providers that they need to NOT forget back office integration. BSS/OSS integration needs to be factored into planning. Don’t forget to include billing systems: “If you can’t bill for it, it’s just a hobby!”

As far as the economics, the cost savings are very real with the elimination of PSTN gateways. Going direct with IP allows additional revenue opportunities, such as providing DN/DID services to smaller companies and delivering services to individual end users.

After a break, Chris Gatch came back to do a “deep dive” walking through the SIPconnect technical recommendation line-by-line with the 10 or so folks who remained. (And I stopped recording notes to focus on the spec.)

Chris later discussed some ideas around what SIPconnect 1.1 might focus on. Some of the possible areas of work include:

  • Update to use RFCs since the time of SIPconnect 1.0

  • Clarify DIGEST vs. TLS
  • Address “Off-Net Call Flows”
  • More specific recommendations around NAT and firewall issues
  • Provisioning Schema Standard
  • Redundancy/Recovery Use Cases
  • Re-visit requirements around media capabilities

Chris emphasized that these are only ideas about what might go into the SIPconnect 1.1 spec. The workgroup for SIPconnect 1.1 is only forming now, so the scope of the 1.1 work is yet to be defined.

The meeting concluded around 1:10pm with some final remarks by SIP Forum Managing Director Marc Robins encouraging people to become more involved with the SIP Forum.

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