RFC 5923 · PROPOSED STANDARD · 2010

Connection Reuse in the Session Initiation Protocol

Overview

RFC 5923, “Connection Reuse in the Session Initiation Protocol”, is a Proposed Standard document published in June 2010 by V. Gurbani, R. Mahy, B. Tate. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.

Abstract

This document enables a pair of communicating proxies to reuse a congestion-controlled connection between themselves for sending requests in the forwards and backwards direction. Because the connection is essentially aliased for requests going in the backwards direction, reuse is predicated upon both the communicating endpoints authenticating themselves using X.509 certificates through Transport Layer Security (TLS). For this reason, we only consider connection reuse for TLS over TCP and TLS over Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP). This document also provides guidelines on connection reuse and virtual SIP servers and the interaction of connection reuse and DNS SRV lookups in SIP. [STANDARDS-TRACK]

Abstract as published in the RFC, via rfc-editor.org.

What “Proposed Standard” means

An entry-level standards-track specification: stable, peer-reviewed and a solid basis for implementation, though it may still evolve before becoming an Internet Standard.

Read this RFC

The canonical text of RFC 5923 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.

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