Hi Paul,
BTW, It is 2010 already!
Happy New Year.
First of all I do agree that we
need to do something about this issue.
The status today is that we need
to “guess” what the peer is going to do with if such a Facility
message.
It is good if the Facility is just
ignored, however, what if the peer crashes?
Currently the only way we know
to deal with this is to consult (before sending the message) a list of vendor
and product IDs which
are known to implement this procedure.
It would be a little more straightforward
to include some kind of more specific feature ID in SETUP/CONNECT messages.
Regards,
Sasha
From: itu-sg16-bounces@lists.packetizer.com
[mailto:itu-sg16-bounces@lists.packetizer.com] On Behalf Of Paul E.
Jones
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 8:51 PM
To: itu-sg16@lists.packetizer.com; h323implementers@lists.packetizer.com
Subject: [itu-sg16] Facility-based call transfer in H.323
Folks,
For years – perhaps since the first release of H.323
– many vendors have supported a means of doing a simple call transfer by
sending a Facility message. The problem is that, while it’s
extremely trivial to implement, some devices didn’t because it was not
officially supported in H.323.
Cisco took a proposal to the ITU years ago (D.345 from
February 2000) proposing that we standardize it by adding it to H.323v4
officially. Unfortunately, it was rejected in favor of keeping a single
mechanism for doing call transfer: H.450.2. However, it was not
immediately dismissed: there were at least some who felt that it might be
useful, but rather than introducing a new “callTransfer” reason,
re-used “callForwarded” as is commonly (though not universally)
implemented. Ultimately, though, the proposal went nowhere.
The issue has not gone away, though, and it’s now
2009. I believe we still need to introduce this procedure formally to
H.323. I would not want to propose changes to the ASN.1, but I would like
to legitimize sending Facility with a reason of “callForwarded” in
order to perform a call transfer. Some devices may not support it, but
that’s the way things are today. My hope would be that at least
more people would know about it. As an undocumented behavior, we have
inconsistency in devices.
What is the opinion of others? I’d be glad to
submit a formal contribution to the next Q2/16 meeting if there is interest,
but I’d like to hear from people both for or against the proposed
change. If introduced, it would be an Amendment to H.323v7.
To write this contribution, though, we probably need some guidance
on what to do when a device does not respond to the Facility message. How
do devices behave today? Do they assume the transfer failed if a Release
Complete is not received within n seconds?
In any case, please give me your opinion.
Paul