A Session Initiation Protocol Response Code for Rejected Calls
RFC 8688, “A Session Initiation Protocol Response Code for Rejected Calls”, is a Proposed Standard document published in December 2019 by E.W. Burger, B. Nagda. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This document defines the 608 (Rejected) Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) response code. This response code enables calling parties to learn that an intermediary rejected their call attempt. No one will deliver, and thus answer, the call. As a 6xx code, the caller will be aware that future attempts to contact the same User Agent Server will likely fail. The initial use case driving the need for the 608 response code is when the intermediary is an analytics engine. In this case, the rejection is by a machine or other process. This contrasts with the 607 (Unwanted) SIP response code in which a human at the target User Agent Server indicates the user did not want the call. In some jurisdictions, this distinction is important. This document also defines the use of the Call-Info header field in 608 responses to enable rejected callers to contact entities that blocked their calls in error. This provides a remediation mechanism for legal callers that find their calls blocked.
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.
The canonical text of RFC 8688 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in HTML,TXT,PDF,XML.
- RFC 8687 OSPF Routing with Cross-Address Family Traffic Engineering Tunnels
- RFC 8689 SMTP Require TLS Option
- RFC 8690 Clarification of Segment ID Sub-TLV Length for RFC 8287
- RFC 8685 Path Computation Element Communication Protocol Extensions for the Hierarchical Path Computation Element Architecture
- RFC 8691 Basic Support for IPv6 Networks Operating Outside the Context of a Basic Service Set over IEEE Std 802.11
- RFC 8692 Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Additional Algorithm Identifiers for RSASSA-PSS and ECDSA Using SHAKEs
- RFC 8683 Additional Deployment Guidelines for NAT64/464XLAT in Operator and Enterprise Networks
- RFC 8694 Applicability of the Path Computation Element to Inter-area and Inter-AS MPLS and GMPLS Traffic Engineering