Ulteriori informazioni
Klappentext Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) was conceived in 1996 as a signaling protocol for inviting users to multimedia conferences. With this development, the next big Internet revolution silently started. That was the revolution which would end up converting the Internet into a total communication system which would allow people to talk to each other, see each other, work collaboratively or send messages in real time. Internet telephony and, in general, Internet multimedia, is the new revolution today and SIP is the key protocol which allows this revolution to grow. The book explains, in tutorial fashion, the underlying technologies that enable real-time IP multimedia communication services in the Internet (voice, video, presence, instant messaging, online picture sharing, white-boarding, etc). Focus is on session initiation protocol (SIP) but also covers session description protocol (SDP), Real-time transport protocol (RTP), and message session relay protocol (MSRP). In addition, it will Zusammenfassung Explains the underlying technologies that enable real-time IP multimedia communication services in the Internet. This book focuses on session initiation protocol (SIP) and also covers session description protocol (SDP)! Real-time transport protocol (RTP)! and message session relay protocol (MSRP). Inhaltsverzeichnis PART 1. Fundamentals1. Introduction2. A bit of history3. IP multimedia fundamental4. SIP overview5. SIP programming overviewPART 2. Core protocols6. SIP protocol operation7. SIP protocol structure8. Programming practice with SIP9. Session description10. The media plane11. The IP soft-phone project12. SIP proxies13. SIP securityPART 3. Advanced topics14. SIP extensions15. SIP call control16. Media servers and conferencing17. Instant messaging and presence18. Quality of service19. NAT traversal20. SIP networks21. The path to IMS22. Peer to peer SIP
Sommario
PART 1. Fundamentals1. Introduction2. A bit of history3. IP multimedia fundamental4. SIP overview5. SIP programming overviewPART 2. Core protocols6. SIP protocol operation7. SIP protocol structure8. Programming practice with SIP9. Session description10. The media plane11. The IP soft-phone project12. SIP proxies13. SIP securityPART 3. Advanced topics14. SIP extensions15. SIP call control16. Media servers and conferencing17. Instant messaging and presence18. Quality of service19. NAT traversal20. SIP networks21. The path to IMS22. Peer to peer SIP
Relazione
"The book will be a good addition to the currently available titles on this topic.... There are currently no books that concentrate on IP multimedia communications with SIP in the way Mr. Martinez intends to do. There are books on SIP, IMS, Internet, etc., but Mr. Martinez' proposed book will bring it all together.... [and] will serve as very useful reference guide for engineers embarking on such task." --Rogier Noldus, Network Engineer, Ericsson