SIP RFC2543bis

Status: Published as RFC 3261.
Date of last update: June, 2002
Authors: J. Rosenberg, H. Schulzrine, G. Camarillo, A. Johnston, J. Peterson R. Sparks, M. Handley, E. Schooler
Current Document: RFC 3261
Summary: This document describes Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), an application-layer control (signaling) protocol for creating, modifying, and terminating sessions with one or more participants. These sessions include Internet telephone calls, multimedia distribution, and multimedia conferences. SIP invitations used to create sessions carry session descriptions that allow participants to agree on a set of compatible media types. SIP makes use of elements called proxy servers to help route requests to the user's current location, authenticate and authorize users for services, implement provider call-routing policies, and provide features to users. SIP also provides a registration function that allows users to upload their current locations for use by proxy servers. SIP runs on top of several different transport protocols.
Archive of older drafts:
  1. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-09.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-09.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-09.pdf
  2. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-08.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-08.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-08.pdf
  3. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-07.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-07.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-07.pdf
  4. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-06.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-06.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-06.pdf
  5. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-05.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-05.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-05.pdf
  6. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-04.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-04.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-04.pdf
  7. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-03.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-03.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-03.pdf
  8. draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-02.txt draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-02.ps draft-ietf-sip-rfc2543bis-02.pdf

Last modified: Thu Jul 04 15:27:26 Eastern Daylight Time 2002