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Dialogic 6.2 User Manual

Page 252

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Understanding the SIP Protocol

November 2009

252

In this example, Caller B decides to answer the call. When he picks

up the handset, the SIP phone sends a 200 (OK) response to indicate

that the call has been answered. The 200 (OK) contains a message

body with the SDP media description of the type of session that

Caller B is willing to establish with Caller A. As a result, there is a

two-phase exchange of SDP messages: Caller A sent one to Caller B,

and Caller B sent one back to Caller A. This two-phase exchange

provides basic negotiation capabilities and is based on a simple

offer/answer model of SDP exchange. If Caller B did not wish to

answer the call or was busy on another call, an error response would

have been sent instead of the 200 (OK), which would have resulted in

no media session being established. The 200 (OK) (message F9 in

Figure 20 on page 248

) might look like this as Caller B sends it out:

SIP/2.0 200 OK

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP server10.biloxi.com; branch=z9hG4bKnashds8;

received=192.0.2.3

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP bigbox3.site3.atlanta.com; branch=z9hG4bK77ef4c2312983.1;

received=192.0.2.2

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP pc33.atlanta.com; branch=z9hG4bK776asdhds;

received=192.0.2.1

To: b [email protected]>;tag=a6c85cf

From: A [email protected]>;tag=1928301774

Call-ID: [email protected]

CSeq: 314159 INVITE

Contact: [email protected]>

Content-Type: application/sdp

Content-Length: 131

(Caller B's SDP not shown)

The first line of the response contains the response code (200) and

the reason phrase (OK). The remaining lines contain header fields.

The Via, To, From, Call-ID, and CSeq header fields are copied from

the INVITE request. (There are three Via header field values - one

added by Caller A's SIP phone, one added by the atlanta.com proxy,

and one added by the biloxi.com proxy.) Caller B's SIP phone has

added a tag parameter to the To header field. This tag is

incorporated by both endpoints into the dialog and is included in all

future requests and responses in this call. The Contact header field

contains a URI at which Caller B can be directly reached at a SIP

phone. The Content-Type and Content-Length refer to the message

body (not shown) that contains Caller B's SDP media information.

In addition to DNS and location service lookups shown in this

example, proxy servers can make flexible “routing decisions” to

decide where to send a request. For example, if Caller B's SIP phone

returned a 486 (Busy Here) response, the biloxi.com proxy server