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The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcâia-Martâin
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcâia-Martâin
Autore Camarillo Gonzalo
Edizione [3rd ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (654 p.)
Disciplina 621.38456
Altri autori (Persone) Garcâia-MartâinMiguel A
Soggetto topico Wireless communication systems
Mobile communication systems
Multimedia communications
Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem
ISBN 1-119-96441-5
1-282-12280-0
9786612122804
0-470-69513-7
0-470-69512-9
Classificazione DAT 252f
DAT 614f
DAT 680f
ELT 745f
QR 700
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Foreword by Stephen Hayes -- Foreword by Allison Mankin and Jon Peterson -- Preface to the Third Edition -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Preface to the First Edition -- Acknowledgements -- Part I Introduction to the IMS -- IMS Vision: Where Do We Want to Go? -- 1.1 The Internet -- 1.2 The Cellular World -- 1.3 Why do we need the IMS? -- 1.4 Relation between IMS and non-IMS Services -- 2 The History of the IMS Standardization -- 2.1 Relations between IMS-related Standardization Bodies -- 2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project -- 2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project 2 -- 2.5 IETF-3GPP/3GPP2 Collaboration -- 2.6 Open Mobile Alliance -- 3 General Principles of the IMS Architecture -- 3.1 From Circuit-switched to Packet-switched -- 3.2 IMS Requirements -- 3.3 Overview of Protocols used in the IMS -- 3.4 Overview of IMS Architecture -- 3.5 Identification in the IMS -- 3.6 SIM, USIM, and ISIM in 3GPP -- 3.7 Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- Part II The Signaling Plane in the IMS -- 4 Session Control on the Internet -- 4.1 SIP Functionality -- 4.2 SIP Entities -- 4.3 Message Format -- 4.4 The Start Line in SIP Responses: the Status Line -- 4.5 The Start Line in SIP Requests: the Request Line -- 4.6 Header Fields -- 4.7 Message Body -- 4.8 SIP Transactions -- 4.9 Message Flow for Session Establishment -- 4.10 SIP Dialogs -- 4.11 Extending SIP -- 4.12 Caller Preferences and User Agent Capabilities -- 4.13 Reliability of Provisional Responses -- 4.14 Preconditions -- 4.15 Event Notification -- 4.16 Signaling Compression -- 4.17 Content Indirection -- 4.18 The REFER Method -- 4.19 Globally Routable User- Agent URIs (GRUU) -- 4.20 NAT Traversal -- 5 Session Control in the IMS -- 5.1 Prerequisites for Operation in the IMS -- 5.2 IPv4 and IPv6 in the IMS -- 5.3 IP Connectivity Access Network -- 5.4 P-CSCF Discovery -- 5.5 IMS-level Registration -- 5.6 Subscription to the reg Event State -- 5.7 Basic Session Setup -- 5.8 Application Servers: Providing Services to Users.
5.9 Changes due to Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- 5.10 Interworking -- 5.11 Combinational Services -- 5.12 Basic Sessions not Requiring Resource Reservation -- 5.13 Globally Routable User-Agent URI (GRUU) in IMS -- 5.14 IMS Communication Services Identification (ICSI) -- 5.15 IMS Application Reference Identifier (IARI) -- 5.16 NAT Traversal in the IMS -- 6 AAA on the Internet -- 6.1 Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting -- 6.2 AAA Framework on the Internet -- 6.3 The Diameter Protocol -- 7 AAA in the IMS -- 7.1 Authentication and Authorization in the IMS -- 7.2 he Cx and Dx Interfaces -- 7.3 The Sh Interface -- 7.4 Accounting -- 8 Policy and Charging Control in the IMS -- 8.1 PCC Architecture -- 8.2 Charging Architecture -- 8.3 Offline Charging Architecture -- 8.4 Online Charging Architecture -- 9 Quality of Service on the Internet -- 9.1 Integrated Services -- 9.2 Differentiated Services -- 10 Quality of Service in the IMS -- 10.1 Policy Control and QoS -- 10.2 Instructions to Perform Resource Reservations -- 10.3 Reservations by the Terminals -- 10.4 QoS in the Network -- 11 Security on the Internet -- 11.1 HTTP Digest Access Authentication -- 11.2 Certificates -- 11.3 TLS -- 11.4 S/MIME -- 11.5 Authenticated Identity Body -- 11.6 IPsec -- 11.7 Privacy -- 11.8 Encrypting Media Streams -- 12 Security in the IMS -- 12.1 Access Security -- 12.2 Network Security -- 13 Emergency Calls on the Internet -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Location Acquisition -- 13.3 Identifying Emergency Calls -- 13.4 Locating the closest PSAP -- 14 Emergency Calls in the IMS -- 14.1 Architecture for Supporting Emergency Calls in IMS -- 14.2 Establishing an Emergency Call in IMS -- 14.3 IMS Registration for Emergency Calls -- 14.4 Call back from PSAP to user -- 14.5 Anonymous calls -- 14.6 Emergency Calls in Fixed Broadband Accesses -- Part III The Media Plane in the IMS -- 15 Media Encoding -- 15.1 Speech Encoding -- 15.2 Video Encoding -- 15.3 Text Encoding -- 15.4 Mandatory Codecs in the IMS.
16 Media Transport -- 16.1 Reliable Media Transport -- 16.2 Unreliable Media Transport -- 16.3 Media Transport in the IMS -- Part IV Building Services with the IMS -- 17 Service Configuration on the Internet -- 17.1 The XML Configuration Access Protocol (XCAP) -- 17.2 An Overview of XML -- 17.3 HTTP URIs that Identify XCAP Resources -- 17.4 XCAP operations -- 17.5 Entity Tags and Conditional Operations -- 17.6 Subscriptions to Changes in XML Documents -- 17.7 XML Patch Operations -- 18 Service Configuration in the IMS -- 18.1 XDM architecture -- 18.2 Downloading an XML document, attribute, or element -- 18.3 Directory Retrieval -- 18.4 Data Search with XDM -- 18.5 Subscribing to Changes in XML Documents -- 19 The Presence Service on the Internet -- 19.1 Overview of the Presence Service -- 19.2 The Presence Life Cycle -- 19.3 Presence Subscriptions and Notifications -- 19.4 Presence Publication -- 19.5 Presence Information Data Format (PIDF) -- 19.6 The Presence Data Model for SIP -- 19.7 Mapping the SIP Presence Data Model to the PIDF -- 19.8 Rich Presence Information Data Format -- 19.9 CIPID -- 19.10 Timed Presence Extension to the PIDF -- 19.11 Presence Capabilities -- 19.12 Geographical Location in Presence -- 19.13 Watcher Information -- 19.14 Watcher Authorization: Presence Authorization Rules -- 19.15 URI-list Services and Resource Lists -- 19.16 Presence Optimizations -- 20 The Presence Service in the IMS -- 20.1 The Foundation of Services -- 20.2 Presence Architecture in the IMS -- 20.3 Presence Publication -- 20.4 Watcher Subscription -- 20.5 Watcher Information and Authorization of Watchers -- 20.6 Presence Optimizations -- 20.7 OMA extensions to PIDF -- 21 Instant Messaging on the Internet -- 21.1 The im URI -- 21.2 Modes of Instant Messages -- 21.3 Pager-mode Instant Messaging -- 21.4 Session-based Instant Messaging -- 21.5 The “isComposing” Indication -- 21.6 Messaging Multiple Parties -- 21.7 File Transfer -- 22 The Instant Messaging Service in the IMS.
22.1 Pager-mode Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.2 Pager-mode Instant Messaging to Multiple Recipients -- 22.3 Session-based Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.4 File Transfer -- 23 Conferencing on the Internet -- 23.1 Conferencing Standardization at the IETF -- 23.2 The SIPPING Conferencing Framework -- 23.3 The XCON Conferencing Framework -- 23.4 The Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) -- 24 Conferencing in the IMS -- 24.1 The IMS Conferencing Service -- 24.2 Relation with the work in TISPAN and OMA -- 25 Push-to-Talk over Cellular -- 25.1 PoC Standardization -- 25.2 IETF Work Relevant to PoC -- 25.3 Architecture -- 25.4 Registration -- 25.5 PoC Server Roles -- 25.6 PoC Session Types -- 25.7 Adding Users to a PoC Session -- 25.8 Group Advertisements -- 25.9 Session Establishment Types -- 25.10 Answer Modes -- 25.11 Right-to-send-media Indication Types -- 25.12 Participant Information -- 25.13 Barring and Instant Personal Alerts -- 25.14 Full Duplex Call Follow on -- 25.15 The User Plane -- 25.16 Simultaneous PoC Sessions -- 25.17 Charging in PoC -- 26 Multimedia Telephony Services: PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 26.1 Providing Audible Announcements -- 26.2 Communication Diversion (CDIV) -- 26.3 Communication Diversion Notification (CDIVN) -- 26.4 Conference (CONF) -- 26.5 Message Waiting Indication (MWI) -- 26.6 OIP and OIR -- 26.7 TIP and TIR -- 26.8 ACRACR and CB -- 26.9 Advice of Charge (AoC) -- 26.10 CCBS and CCNR -- 26.11 Malicious Communication Identification (MCID) -- 26.12 Communication Hold (HOLD) -- 26.13 Explicit Communication Transfer (ECT) -- 26.14 User Settings in PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 27 Voice Call Continuity (VCC) -- 27.1 Overview of Voice Call Continuity -- 27.2 VCC architecture -- 27.3 Registration -- 27.4 Call origination and anchoring -- 27.5 Call termination and anchoring -- 27.6 Domain Transfer -- Appendix A List of IMS-related Specifications -- A.1 Introduction -- A.2 3GPP Specifications -- A.3 ETSI NGN Specifications -- A.4 OMA Specifications.
References -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910144432703321
Camarillo Gonzalo  
Chichester, West Sussex, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcâia-Martâin
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcâia-Martâin
Autore Camarillo Gonzalo
Edizione [3rd ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (654 p.)
Disciplina 621.38456
Altri autori (Persone) Garcâia-MartâinMiguel A
Soggetto topico Wireless communication systems
Mobile communication systems
Multimedia communications
Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem
ISBN 1-119-96441-5
1-282-12280-0
9786612122804
0-470-69513-7
0-470-69512-9
Classificazione DAT 252f
DAT 614f
DAT 680f
ELT 745f
QR 700
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Foreword by Stephen Hayes -- Foreword by Allison Mankin and Jon Peterson -- Preface to the Third Edition -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Preface to the First Edition -- Acknowledgements -- Part I Introduction to the IMS -- IMS Vision: Where Do We Want to Go? -- 1.1 The Internet -- 1.2 The Cellular World -- 1.3 Why do we need the IMS? -- 1.4 Relation between IMS and non-IMS Services -- 2 The History of the IMS Standardization -- 2.1 Relations between IMS-related Standardization Bodies -- 2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project -- 2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project 2 -- 2.5 IETF-3GPP/3GPP2 Collaboration -- 2.6 Open Mobile Alliance -- 3 General Principles of the IMS Architecture -- 3.1 From Circuit-switched to Packet-switched -- 3.2 IMS Requirements -- 3.3 Overview of Protocols used in the IMS -- 3.4 Overview of IMS Architecture -- 3.5 Identification in the IMS -- 3.6 SIM, USIM, and ISIM in 3GPP -- 3.7 Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- Part II The Signaling Plane in the IMS -- 4 Session Control on the Internet -- 4.1 SIP Functionality -- 4.2 SIP Entities -- 4.3 Message Format -- 4.4 The Start Line in SIP Responses: the Status Line -- 4.5 The Start Line in SIP Requests: the Request Line -- 4.6 Header Fields -- 4.7 Message Body -- 4.8 SIP Transactions -- 4.9 Message Flow for Session Establishment -- 4.10 SIP Dialogs -- 4.11 Extending SIP -- 4.12 Caller Preferences and User Agent Capabilities -- 4.13 Reliability of Provisional Responses -- 4.14 Preconditions -- 4.15 Event Notification -- 4.16 Signaling Compression -- 4.17 Content Indirection -- 4.18 The REFER Method -- 4.19 Globally Routable User- Agent URIs (GRUU) -- 4.20 NAT Traversal -- 5 Session Control in the IMS -- 5.1 Prerequisites for Operation in the IMS -- 5.2 IPv4 and IPv6 in the IMS -- 5.3 IP Connectivity Access Network -- 5.4 P-CSCF Discovery -- 5.5 IMS-level Registration -- 5.6 Subscription to the reg Event State -- 5.7 Basic Session Setup -- 5.8 Application Servers: Providing Services to Users.
5.9 Changes due to Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- 5.10 Interworking -- 5.11 Combinational Services -- 5.12 Basic Sessions not Requiring Resource Reservation -- 5.13 Globally Routable User-Agent URI (GRUU) in IMS -- 5.14 IMS Communication Services Identification (ICSI) -- 5.15 IMS Application Reference Identifier (IARI) -- 5.16 NAT Traversal in the IMS -- 6 AAA on the Internet -- 6.1 Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting -- 6.2 AAA Framework on the Internet -- 6.3 The Diameter Protocol -- 7 AAA in the IMS -- 7.1 Authentication and Authorization in the IMS -- 7.2 he Cx and Dx Interfaces -- 7.3 The Sh Interface -- 7.4 Accounting -- 8 Policy and Charging Control in the IMS -- 8.1 PCC Architecture -- 8.2 Charging Architecture -- 8.3 Offline Charging Architecture -- 8.4 Online Charging Architecture -- 9 Quality of Service on the Internet -- 9.1 Integrated Services -- 9.2 Differentiated Services -- 10 Quality of Service in the IMS -- 10.1 Policy Control and QoS -- 10.2 Instructions to Perform Resource Reservations -- 10.3 Reservations by the Terminals -- 10.4 QoS in the Network -- 11 Security on the Internet -- 11.1 HTTP Digest Access Authentication -- 11.2 Certificates -- 11.3 TLS -- 11.4 S/MIME -- 11.5 Authenticated Identity Body -- 11.6 IPsec -- 11.7 Privacy -- 11.8 Encrypting Media Streams -- 12 Security in the IMS -- 12.1 Access Security -- 12.2 Network Security -- 13 Emergency Calls on the Internet -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Location Acquisition -- 13.3 Identifying Emergency Calls -- 13.4 Locating the closest PSAP -- 14 Emergency Calls in the IMS -- 14.1 Architecture for Supporting Emergency Calls in IMS -- 14.2 Establishing an Emergency Call in IMS -- 14.3 IMS Registration for Emergency Calls -- 14.4 Call back from PSAP to user -- 14.5 Anonymous calls -- 14.6 Emergency Calls in Fixed Broadband Accesses -- Part III The Media Plane in the IMS -- 15 Media Encoding -- 15.1 Speech Encoding -- 15.2 Video Encoding -- 15.3 Text Encoding -- 15.4 Mandatory Codecs in the IMS.
16 Media Transport -- 16.1 Reliable Media Transport -- 16.2 Unreliable Media Transport -- 16.3 Media Transport in the IMS -- Part IV Building Services with the IMS -- 17 Service Configuration on the Internet -- 17.1 The XML Configuration Access Protocol (XCAP) -- 17.2 An Overview of XML -- 17.3 HTTP URIs that Identify XCAP Resources -- 17.4 XCAP operations -- 17.5 Entity Tags and Conditional Operations -- 17.6 Subscriptions to Changes in XML Documents -- 17.7 XML Patch Operations -- 18 Service Configuration in the IMS -- 18.1 XDM architecture -- 18.2 Downloading an XML document, attribute, or element -- 18.3 Directory Retrieval -- 18.4 Data Search with XDM -- 18.5 Subscribing to Changes in XML Documents -- 19 The Presence Service on the Internet -- 19.1 Overview of the Presence Service -- 19.2 The Presence Life Cycle -- 19.3 Presence Subscriptions and Notifications -- 19.4 Presence Publication -- 19.5 Presence Information Data Format (PIDF) -- 19.6 The Presence Data Model for SIP -- 19.7 Mapping the SIP Presence Data Model to the PIDF -- 19.8 Rich Presence Information Data Format -- 19.9 CIPID -- 19.10 Timed Presence Extension to the PIDF -- 19.11 Presence Capabilities -- 19.12 Geographical Location in Presence -- 19.13 Watcher Information -- 19.14 Watcher Authorization: Presence Authorization Rules -- 19.15 URI-list Services and Resource Lists -- 19.16 Presence Optimizations -- 20 The Presence Service in the IMS -- 20.1 The Foundation of Services -- 20.2 Presence Architecture in the IMS -- 20.3 Presence Publication -- 20.4 Watcher Subscription -- 20.5 Watcher Information and Authorization of Watchers -- 20.6 Presence Optimizations -- 20.7 OMA extensions to PIDF -- 21 Instant Messaging on the Internet -- 21.1 The im URI -- 21.2 Modes of Instant Messages -- 21.3 Pager-mode Instant Messaging -- 21.4 Session-based Instant Messaging -- 21.5 The “isComposing” Indication -- 21.6 Messaging Multiple Parties -- 21.7 File Transfer -- 22 The Instant Messaging Service in the IMS.
22.1 Pager-mode Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.2 Pager-mode Instant Messaging to Multiple Recipients -- 22.3 Session-based Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.4 File Transfer -- 23 Conferencing on the Internet -- 23.1 Conferencing Standardization at the IETF -- 23.2 The SIPPING Conferencing Framework -- 23.3 The XCON Conferencing Framework -- 23.4 The Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) -- 24 Conferencing in the IMS -- 24.1 The IMS Conferencing Service -- 24.2 Relation with the work in TISPAN and OMA -- 25 Push-to-Talk over Cellular -- 25.1 PoC Standardization -- 25.2 IETF Work Relevant to PoC -- 25.3 Architecture -- 25.4 Registration -- 25.5 PoC Server Roles -- 25.6 PoC Session Types -- 25.7 Adding Users to a PoC Session -- 25.8 Group Advertisements -- 25.9 Session Establishment Types -- 25.10 Answer Modes -- 25.11 Right-to-send-media Indication Types -- 25.12 Participant Information -- 25.13 Barring and Instant Personal Alerts -- 25.14 Full Duplex Call Follow on -- 25.15 The User Plane -- 25.16 Simultaneous PoC Sessions -- 25.17 Charging in PoC -- 26 Multimedia Telephony Services: PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 26.1 Providing Audible Announcements -- 26.2 Communication Diversion (CDIV) -- 26.3 Communication Diversion Notification (CDIVN) -- 26.4 Conference (CONF) -- 26.5 Message Waiting Indication (MWI) -- 26.6 OIP and OIR -- 26.7 TIP and TIR -- 26.8 ACRACR and CB -- 26.9 Advice of Charge (AoC) -- 26.10 CCBS and CCNR -- 26.11 Malicious Communication Identification (MCID) -- 26.12 Communication Hold (HOLD) -- 26.13 Explicit Communication Transfer (ECT) -- 26.14 User Settings in PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 27 Voice Call Continuity (VCC) -- 27.1 Overview of Voice Call Continuity -- 27.2 VCC architecture -- 27.3 Registration -- 27.4 Call origination and anchoring -- 27.5 Call termination and anchoring -- 27.6 Domain Transfer -- Appendix A List of IMS-related Specifications -- A.1 Introduction -- A.2 3GPP Specifications -- A.3 ETSI NGN Specifications -- A.4 OMA Specifications.
References -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830357003321
Camarillo Gonzalo  
Chichester, West Sussex, U.K. : , : Wiley, , 2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcia-Martin
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcia-Martin
Autore Camarillo Gonzalo
Edizione [3rd ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, NJ, : J. Wiley & Sons, 2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (654 p.)
Disciplina 621.38456
Altri autori (Persone) Garcia-MartinMiguel A
Soggetto topico Wireless communication systems
Mobile communication systems
Multimedia communications
Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem
ISBN 9786612122804
9781119964414
1119964415
9781282122802
1282122800
9780470695135
0470695137
9780470695128
0470695129
Classificazione DAT 252f
DAT 614f
DAT 680f
ELT 745f
QR 700
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Foreword by Stephen Hayes -- Foreword by Allison Mankin and Jon Peterson -- Preface to the Third Edition -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Preface to the First Edition -- Acknowledgements -- Part I Introduction to the IMS -- IMS Vision: Where Do We Want to Go? -- 1.1 The Internet -- 1.2 The Cellular World -- 1.3 Why do we need the IMS? -- 1.4 Relation between IMS and non-IMS Services -- 2 The History of the IMS Standardization -- 2.1 Relations between IMS-related Standardization Bodies -- 2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project -- 2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project 2 -- 2.5 IETF-3GPP/3GPP2 Collaboration -- 2.6 Open Mobile Alliance -- 3 General Principles of the IMS Architecture -- 3.1 From Circuit-switched to Packet-switched -- 3.2 IMS Requirements -- 3.3 Overview of Protocols used in the IMS -- 3.4 Overview of IMS Architecture -- 3.5 Identification in the IMS -- 3.6 SIM, USIM, and ISIM in 3GPP -- 3.7 Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- Part II The Signaling Plane in the IMS -- 4 Session Control on the Internet -- 4.1 SIP Functionality -- 4.2 SIP Entities -- 4.3 Message Format -- 4.4 The Start Line in SIP Responses: the Status Line -- 4.5 The Start Line in SIP Requests: the Request Line -- 4.6 Header Fields -- 4.7 Message Body -- 4.8 SIP Transactions -- 4.9 Message Flow for Session Establishment -- 4.10 SIP Dialogs -- 4.11 Extending SIP -- 4.12 Caller Preferences and User Agent Capabilities -- 4.13 Reliability of Provisional Responses -- 4.14 Preconditions -- 4.15 Event Notification -- 4.16 Signaling Compression -- 4.17 Content Indirection -- 4.18 The REFER Method -- 4.19 Globally Routable User- Agent URIs (GRUU) -- 4.20 NAT Traversal -- 5 Session Control in the IMS -- 5.1 Prerequisites for Operation in the IMS -- 5.2 IPv4 and IPv6 in the IMS -- 5.3 IP Connectivity Access Network -- 5.4 P-CSCF Discovery -- 5.5 IMS-level Registration -- 5.6 Subscription to the reg Event State -- 5.7 Basic Session Setup -- 5.8 Application Servers: Providing Services to Users.
5.9 Changes due to Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- 5.10 Interworking -- 5.11 Combinational Services -- 5.12 Basic Sessions not Requiring Resource Reservation -- 5.13 Globally Routable User-Agent URI (GRUU) in IMS -- 5.14 IMS Communication Services Identification (ICSI) -- 5.15 IMS Application Reference Identifier (IARI) -- 5.16 NAT Traversal in the IMS -- 6 AAA on the Internet -- 6.1 Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting -- 6.2 AAA Framework on the Internet -- 6.3 The Diameter Protocol -- 7 AAA in the IMS -- 7.1 Authentication and Authorization in the IMS -- 7.2 he Cx and Dx Interfaces -- 7.3 The Sh Interface -- 7.4 Accounting -- 8 Policy and Charging Control in the IMS -- 8.1 PCC Architecture -- 8.2 Charging Architecture -- 8.3 Offline Charging Architecture -- 8.4 Online Charging Architecture -- 9 Quality of Service on the Internet -- 9.1 Integrated Services -- 9.2 Differentiated Services -- 10 Quality of Service in the IMS -- 10.1 Policy Control and QoS -- 10.2 Instructions to Perform Resource Reservations -- 10.3 Reservations by the Terminals -- 10.4 QoS in the Network -- 11 Security on the Internet -- 11.1 HTTP Digest Access Authentication -- 11.2 Certificates -- 11.3 TLS -- 11.4 S/MIME -- 11.5 Authenticated Identity Body -- 11.6 IPsec -- 11.7 Privacy -- 11.8 Encrypting Media Streams -- 12 Security in the IMS -- 12.1 Access Security -- 12.2 Network Security -- 13 Emergency Calls on the Internet -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Location Acquisition -- 13.3 Identifying Emergency Calls -- 13.4 Locating the closest PSAP -- 14 Emergency Calls in the IMS -- 14.1 Architecture for Supporting Emergency Calls in IMS -- 14.2 Establishing an Emergency Call in IMS -- 14.3 IMS Registration for Emergency Calls -- 14.4 Call back from PSAP to user -- 14.5 Anonymous calls -- 14.6 Emergency Calls in Fixed Broadband Accesses -- Part III The Media Plane in the IMS -- 15 Media Encoding -- 15.1 Speech Encoding -- 15.2 Video Encoding -- 15.3 Text Encoding -- 15.4 Mandatory Codecs in the IMS.
16 Media Transport -- 16.1 Reliable Media Transport -- 16.2 Unreliable Media Transport -- 16.3 Media Transport in the IMS -- Part IV Building Services with the IMS -- 17 Service Configuration on the Internet -- 17.1 The XML Configuration Access Protocol (XCAP) -- 17.2 An Overview of XML -- 17.3 HTTP URIs that Identify XCAP Resources -- 17.4 XCAP operations -- 17.5 Entity Tags and Conditional Operations -- 17.6 Subscriptions to Changes in XML Documents -- 17.7 XML Patch Operations -- 18 Service Configuration in the IMS -- 18.1 XDM architecture -- 18.2 Downloading an XML document, attribute, or element -- 18.3 Directory Retrieval -- 18.4 Data Search with XDM -- 18.5 Subscribing to Changes in XML Documents -- 19 The Presence Service on the Internet -- 19.1 Overview of the Presence Service -- 19.2 The Presence Life Cycle -- 19.3 Presence Subscriptions and Notifications -- 19.4 Presence Publication -- 19.5 Presence Information Data Format (PIDF) -- 19.6 The Presence Data Model for SIP -- 19.7 Mapping the SIP Presence Data Model to the PIDF -- 19.8 Rich Presence Information Data Format -- 19.9 CIPID -- 19.10 Timed Presence Extension to the PIDF -- 19.11 Presence Capabilities -- 19.12 Geographical Location in Presence -- 19.13 Watcher Information -- 19.14 Watcher Authorization: Presence Authorization Rules -- 19.15 URI-list Services and Resource Lists -- 19.16 Presence Optimizations -- 20 The Presence Service in the IMS -- 20.1 The Foundation of Services -- 20.2 Presence Architecture in the IMS -- 20.3 Presence Publication -- 20.4 Watcher Subscription -- 20.5 Watcher Information and Authorization of Watchers -- 20.6 Presence Optimizations -- 20.7 OMA extensions to PIDF -- 21 Instant Messaging on the Internet -- 21.1 The im URI -- 21.2 Modes of Instant Messages -- 21.3 Pager-mode Instant Messaging -- 21.4 Session-based Instant Messaging -- 21.5 The “isComposing” Indication -- 21.6 Messaging Multiple Parties -- 21.7 File Transfer -- 22 The Instant Messaging Service in the IMS.
22.1 Pager-mode Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.2 Pager-mode Instant Messaging to Multiple Recipients -- 22.3 Session-based Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.4 File Transfer -- 23 Conferencing on the Internet -- 23.1 Conferencing Standardization at the IETF -- 23.2 The SIPPING Conferencing Framework -- 23.3 The XCON Conferencing Framework -- 23.4 The Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) -- 24 Conferencing in the IMS -- 24.1 The IMS Conferencing Service -- 24.2 Relation with the work in TISPAN and OMA -- 25 Push-to-Talk over Cellular -- 25.1 PoC Standardization -- 25.2 IETF Work Relevant to PoC -- 25.3 Architecture -- 25.4 Registration -- 25.5 PoC Server Roles -- 25.6 PoC Session Types -- 25.7 Adding Users to a PoC Session -- 25.8 Group Advertisements -- 25.9 Session Establishment Types -- 25.10 Answer Modes -- 25.11 Right-to-send-media Indication Types -- 25.12 Participant Information -- 25.13 Barring and Instant Personal Alerts -- 25.14 Full Duplex Call Follow on -- 25.15 The User Plane -- 25.16 Simultaneous PoC Sessions -- 25.17 Charging in PoC -- 26 Multimedia Telephony Services: PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 26.1 Providing Audible Announcements -- 26.2 Communication Diversion (CDIV) -- 26.3 Communication Diversion Notification (CDIVN) -- 26.4 Conference (CONF) -- 26.5 Message Waiting Indication (MWI) -- 26.6 OIP and OIR -- 26.7 TIP and TIR -- 26.8 ACRACR and CB -- 26.9 Advice of Charge (AoC) -- 26.10 CCBS and CCNR -- 26.11 Malicious Communication Identification (MCID) -- 26.12 Communication Hold (HOLD) -- 26.13 Explicit Communication Transfer (ECT) -- 26.14 User Settings in PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 27 Voice Call Continuity (VCC) -- 27.1 Overview of Voice Call Continuity -- 27.2 VCC architecture -- 27.3 Registration -- 27.4 Call origination and anchoring -- 27.5 Call termination and anchoring -- 27.6 Domain Transfer -- Appendix A List of IMS-related Specifications -- A.1 Introduction -- A.2 3GPP Specifications -- A.3 ETSI NGN Specifications -- A.4 OMA Specifications.
References -- Index.
Altri titoli varianti 3G Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem (IMS)
Record Nr. UNINA-9911019380503321
Camarillo Gonzalo  
Hoboken, NJ, : J. Wiley & Sons, 2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. García-Martín
The 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) : merging the Internet and the cellular worlds / / Gonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. García-Martín
Autore Camarillo Gonzalo
Edizione [2nd ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, , 2006
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (457 p.)
Disciplina 621.38456
Soggetto topico Wireless communication systems
Mobile communication systems
Multimedia communications
Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem
ISBN 1-280-73964-9
9786610739646
0-470-03142-5
0-470-03141-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto The 3G IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS); Contents; Foreword by Stephen Hayes; Foreword by Allison Mankin and Jon Peterson; About the Authors; Preface to the Second Edition; Preface to the First Edition; Acknowledgements; Part I Introduction to the IMS; 1 IMS Vision: Where Do We Want to Go?; 1.1 The Internet; 1.2 The Cellular World; 1.3 Why do we need the IMS?; 1.4 Relation between IMS and non-IMS Services; 2 The History of the IMS Standardization; 2.1 Relations between IMS-related Standardization Bodies; 2.2 Internet Engineering Task Force; 2.2.1 Structure of the IETF
2.2.2 Working Group Operations2.2.3 Types of RFCs; 2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project; 2.3.1 3GPP Structure; 2.3.2 3GPP Deliverables; 2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project; 2.4.1 3GPP2 Structure; 2.4.2 3GPP2 Deliverables; 2.5 IETF-3GPP/3GPP2 Collaboration; 2.5.1 Internet Area; 2.5.2 Operations and Management Area; 2.5.3 Transport Area; 2.6 Open Mobile Alliance; 2.6.1 OMA Releases and Specifications; 2.6.2 Relationship between OMA and 3GPP/3GPP2; 2.6.3 Relationship between OMA and the IETF; 3 General Principles of the IMS Architecture; 3.1 From Circuit-switched to Packet-switched
3.1.1 GSM Circuit-switched3.1.2 GSM Packet-switched; 3.2 IMS Requirements; 3.2.1 IP Multimedia Sessions; 3.2.2 QoS; 3.2.3 Interworking; 3.2.4 Roaming; 3.2.5 Service Control; 3.2.6 Rapid Service Creation; 3.2.7 Multiple Access; 3.3 Overview of Protocols used in the IMS; 3.3.1 Session Control Protocol; 3.3.2 The AAA Protocol; 3.3.3 Other Protocols; 3.4 Overview of IMS Architecture; 3.4.1 The Databases: the HSS and the SLF; 3.4.2 The CSCF; 3.4.3 The AS; 3.4.4 The MRF; 3.4.5 The BGCF; 3.4.6 The IMS-ALG and the TrGW; 3.4.7 The PSTN/CS Gateway; 3.4.8 Home and Visited Networks
3.5 Identification in the IMS3.5.1 Public User Identities; 3.5.2 Private User Identities; 3.5.3 The Relation between Public and Private User Identities; 3.5.4 Public Service Identities; 3.6 SIM, USIM, and ISIM in 3GPP; 3.6.1 SIM; 3.6.2 USIM; 3.6.3 ISIM; Part II The Signaling Plane in the IMS; 4 Session Control on the Internet; 4.1 SIP Functionality; 4.1.1 Session Descriptions and SDP; 4.1.2 The Offer/Answer Model; 4.1.3 SIP and SIPS URIs; 4.1.4 User Location; 4.2 SIP Entities; 4.2.1 Forking Proxies; 4.2.2 Redirect Servers; 4.3 Message Format
4.4 The Start Line in SIP Responses: the Status Line4.5 The Start Line in SIP Requests: the Request Line; 4.6 Header Fields; 4.7 Message Body; 4.8 SIP Transactions; 4.9 Message Flow for Session Establishment; 4.10 SIP Dialogs; 4.10.1 Record-Route, Route, and Contact Header Fields; 4.11 Extending SIP; 4.11.1 New Methods; 4.12 Caller Preferences and User Agent Capabilities; 4.13 Reliability of Provisional Responses; 4.14 Preconditions; 4.15 Event Notification; 4.15.1 High Notification Rates; 4.16 Signaling Compression; 4.16.1 SigComp Extended Operations; 4.16.2 Static SIP/SDP Dictionary
4.17 Content Indirection
Record Nr. UNISA-996210543503316
Camarillo Gonzalo  
Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, , 2006
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