Chris,
By H.323 EP, I mean an H.323 EP that must support RAS (by your
interpretation of the standard), but the RAS function can be disabled by the
user (Pauls views ). The GK is an optional H.323 entity.
>Q4. Is Charles's actual application, where one entity is registering and
> hence
> presumably (although he's consistently failed to clarify) handling RAS on
> behalf of another compliant H.323 endpoint a possibility?
> A4a (My position, with which I THINK you agree) No, on the grounds that if
> the
> gateway/IWF can find a gatekeeper and use it, so can the endpoint.
> A4b (Charles) Yes.
A4b Yes, the H.323 EP user may have disabled RAS or the H.323 EP is turned
off (i.e. SIP EP).
Regards,
charles
-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Wayman Purvis [mailto:cwp@ISDN-COMMS.CO.UK]
Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 3:36 PM
To: ITU-SG16(a)MAILBAG.INTEL.COM
Subject: Re: Third party registration/group registration
Charles,
> I am not a native English speaker (1/3), sorry for the mistake. I
> understand things better now.
I think we're getting closer now. Don't worry about not being a native
English
speaker - please persevere. I apologise if I've sometimes sounded harsh in
my
responses - it's normally because I'm trying to make points quickly! I know
communicating in a foreign language is hard - which is precisely why it's
important to make sure that nomenclature is clear and unambiguous!
> Consider the following scenario;
>
> A4:
>
> An enpoint A (first-party) is switch off or does not "speak" H.323 (it
> supports RAS). I (third-party. i.e. IWF ) may want to be able to
> register this endpoint which we will call EP A. I register this
endpoint
> with its "well-known" alias address which is binded to a transport
addresses
> (not the one this EP usually uses when it is turned on. i.e. transport
> address of an H.323 complaint device like an answering machine called AM).
> The GK will now be able to route the call for EP A to the AM. For the EP
> that does not "speak" H.323 the signaling will go to some entity that
> will be able to "speak" H.323 and bind the RAS context created by the IWF
> (this may be the IWF itself).
Ah! This is a COMPLETELY different scenario from that I was describing!
This
is simple. All you are doing here is registering an alias somewhere
different
from what you may consider its "usual home". The key to thinking about this
is
that aliases are just that - they may only bind to particular devices for
defined periods of time (the same user may use different endpoints on
different
days, but retain the same phone number). The practicalities between IWF and
the "transport address this endpoint uses when it is turned on" may get
somewhat hairy and certainly outside the remit of H.323, when it comes to
ensuring that you don't have multiple devices trying to use the same alias
in
the same zone simultaneously (sadly not permitted).
> A5: If I have a GK in my network, I may not allow "dubious" EPs to have
> direct access to my GK. <misprint corrected>
True, but not addressing the question. The question is whether it is
permitted
to separate EP and GK with a proxy. I don't know the answer to this one!
Regards,
Chris
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chris Wayman Purvis [mailto:cwp@isdn-comms.co.uk]
> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 10:31 AM
> To: Agboh, Charles
> Cc: ITU-SG16(a)mailbag.cps.intel.com
> Subject: Re: Third party registration/group registration
>
> Charles,
>
> I'll take these two mails together, as the point is the same.
>
> H.225.0 section 7.7 states which RAS messages are mandatory, optional etc.
> for
> different H.323 devices. By mandating the support of these messages, it
> mandates the support of RAS, since there is no proviso there for "when
the
> EP/entity is supporting RAS".
>
> An aside, from a famous UK 80s sitcom on the subject of "clarification":
> "You don't issue clarifications to MAKE things clear: you issue them to
put
> you
> IN the clear."
>
> Regards,
> Chris
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chris Wayman Purvis [mailto:cwp@ISDN-COMMS.CO.UK]
> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 10:46 AM
> To: ITU-SG16(a)MAILBAG.INTEL.COM
> Subject: Re: Third party registration/group registration
>
> Paul,
>
> I think we're starting to converge. Let's separate this out now, into
> separate
> questions:
>
> Q1. Are endpoint devices (in which term I include gateways etc throughout
> this
> mail) required to implement RAS?
> A1. Yes (agreed between you and me, disagreed by Charles).
>
> Q2. How does an endpoint device know whether or not a gatekeeper is
present
> in
> the system, and hence whether or not to use RAS?
> A2a (Your position as I understand it.) Configuration, discovery on
> startup,
> give up if you don't find anything then.
> A2b (My suggestion) Configuration, discovery on startup, retry at some
> reasonable frequency (hourly?), take the three seconds to attempt
gatekeeper
> discovery when someone makes a call to or from the endpoint in question.
> A2c (What we'll probably end up agreeing!) Implementation decision.
>
> Q3. What should an endpoint do if it attempts to register with all
> discovered
> gatekeepers, where there is at least one gatekeeper in the system, and
fails
> (RRJ)?
> A3a (My position) Shut itself down.
> A3b (Anybody elses) ???
>
> Q4. Is Charles's actual application, where one entity is registering and
> hence
> presumably (although he's consistently failed to clarify) handling RAS on
> behalf of another compliant H.323 endpoint a possibility?
> A4a (My position, with which I THINK you agree) No, on the grounds that if
> the
> gateway/IWF can find a gatekeeper and use it, so can the endpoint.
> A4b (Charles) Yes.
>
> This actually gives rise to a further question, which is (I believe) open,
> and
> probably shouldn't be:
> Q5. Can an endpoint be separated from its gatekeeper by a proxy?
>
> Regards,
> Chris
>
> Paul Long wrote:
> >
> > Chris,
> >
> > (You and I inadvertently replied to each other privately. I thought I'd
> > clean my email up a bit :-) and post it to the reflector.)
> >
> > As you point out, gatekeepers are optional, but an endpoint may not be
> > registered with a gatekeeper (hence, an "unregistered endpoint"). I also
> > agree with you that an endpoint must implement and be able to use RAS.
The
> > tricky part, though, is under what circumstances _shall_ an endpoint use
> > RAS, i.e., at least attempt to register with a gatekeeper. It may come
> down
> > to a rather philosophical question. If an endpoint is required to use
RAS
> in
> > any way and ultimately discover and register with a gatekeeper only if
> there
> > is a gatekeeper in the "system," how does it know whether there is a
> > gatekeeper within the system without using RAS? Look like a Catch-22,
but
> my
> > take on it is that whether a gatekeeper is in the system must be known
out
> > of band. That's the only way I know of to resolve these otherwise
> > contradictory issues.
> >
> > Smith Micro builds endpoints that can be used in systems with and
without
> > gatekeepers. Because this vendor does not know whether the system within
> > which the user will be deploying the endpoint contains a gatekeeper, the
> > user presumably knows and has the discretion as whether to use RAS via a
> > Preferences dialog in the user interface. I think that's reasonable and
> > compliant. Some vendors may build endpoints that are designed to always
be
> > used within systems that contain gatekeepers, and that's fine, too, and
> > compliant. However, IMO, besides probably being a bad marketing decision
> > :-), an endpoint that does not support RAS at all is not compliant.
> >
> > Paul Long
> > ipDialog, Inc.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Chris Wayman Purvis [mailto:cwp@ISDN-COMMS.CO.UK]
> > Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2000 7:56 AM
> > To: ITU-SG16(a)MAILBAG.INTEL.COM
> > Subject: Re: Third party registration/group registration
> >
> > Charles,
> >
> > This comes up on this list every now and again, and the answer doesn't
> > change.
> > The gatekeeper is an optional entity: TRUE.
> > RAS is optional: FALSE.
> > Endpoints (including gateways, IWFs, whatever you want to call them)
have
> a
> > responsibility of trying to find one, registering with one if it can and
> > SHUTTING ITSELF DOWN if it manages to find one or more gatekeepers but
> fails
> > to
> > register. Only if all reasonable attempts to find a gatekeeper fail
> should
> > an
> > H.323 endpoint operate without an active registration.
> >
> > Let me give you the first couple of quotations from H.323 (I'm looking
at
> v4
> > determined, but I don't believe this has ever changed) I find on the
> > subject.
> > They're in section 7.2.2:
> > "As part of their configuration process, all endpoints shall
register..."
> > "Registration shall occur before any calls are attempted and may occur
> > periodically as necessary (for example, at endpoint power-up)."
> >
> > Oh, and I suggest reading H.225.0 section 7.7 "Required Support of RAS
> > messages" as well.
> >
> > How else could things work? Consider the case where an endpoint (A) is
> > trying
> > to make a call to another endpoint (B). A issues an ARQ to its
> gatekeeper,
> > asking permission to try a call; the gatekeeper rejects the call (ARJ)
on
> > some
> > reasonable grounds (possibly a conceptual "do not disturb" notice B has
> set
> > up
> > with its gatekeeper). A thinks "stuff this", unregisters from its
> > gatekeeper
> > ("we don't want to worry about all that boring RAS stuff if it's going
to
> be
> > inconvenient to us") and sends the Setup message to B anyway - resulting
> (at
> > best) in an disgruntled B.
> > In other words, as soon as you allow endpoints to operate in the
presence
> of
> > a
> > gatekeeper without registering with it and abiding by its decisions, you
> > might
> > as well write all xRJ messages out of the protocol entirely!
> >
> > If an endpoint is going to ignore RAS (and hence the standard) then why
> > should
> > it bother having anyone else register on its behalf? I refer you to
> > "Besides,..." in my last mail (which point you still haven't addressed).
> >
> > Regards,
> > Chris
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > For help on this mail list, send "HELP ITU-SG16" in a message to
> > listserv(a)mailbag.intel.com
>
> --
> Dr Chris Purvis -- Development Manager
> ISDN Communications Ltd, The Stable Block, Ronans, Chavey Down Road
> Winkfield Row, Berkshire. RG42 6LY ENGLAND
> Phone: +44 1344 899 007
> Fax: +44 1344 899 001
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> For help on this mail list, send "HELP ITU-SG16" in a message to
> listserv(a)mailbag.intel.com
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> For help on this mail list, send "HELP ITU-SG16" in a message to
> listserv(a)mailbag.intel.com
--
Dr Chris Purvis -- Development Manager
ISDN Communications Ltd, The Stable Block, Ronans, Chavey Down Road
Winkfield Row, Berkshire. RG42 6LY ENGLAND
Phone: +44 1344 899 007
Fax: +44 1344 899 001
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For help on this mail list, send "HELP ITU-SG16" in a message to
listserv(a)mailbag.intel.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For help on this mail list, send "HELP ITU-SG16" in a message to
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