I request assistance from these lists to better understand the conference control
options available to support SIP-oriented conference calls. My current experience with
conference control alternatives resemble the all-or-nothing alternatives described in
Section 6 of M. Handley/J. Crowcroft/C. Bormann/J. Ott's internet draft document "The
Internet Multimedia Conferencing Architecture" (see
http://search.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-mmusic-confarch-03.txt). These
alternatives (simplistically speaking) are the tightly coupled control of the H.320
series (e.g., H.323) versus the lightly coupled control of traditional MBONE
applications. However, what I seek is something in the middle, since I would prefer to
avoid the overheads associated with tightly coupled approaches as well as the
inefficiencies of loosely coupled.
More specifically, I am seeking a SIP-based solution to the "phone bridge" scenario in
which different callers -- all of whom are peers and all of whom are equally likely to
speak -- form a conference together from N different locations (N > 2). Current phone
bridges permit people to "talk over" each other. Such a possibility would be fine for
what I'm after. However, an alternative which would also meet our needs is a
"token-based" approach whereby each site requests the token in order to speak and, if
it is granted, then that site could speak, thus avoiding contention.
In any case, I am told that certain current Internet2 applications approach this need
by having each participant establish bi-directional multicast relationships with each
other. While this may work in the unique Internet2 environment, where bandwidth and
local CPU resources are plentiful, this approach is unappealing in a commercial
environment with our more humble resources. Hence my question to you all: how can the
requirements of the previous paragraph be met in a commercial environment using
SIP-based conference control? Are there any existing products or implementations doing
this?
An approach which makes sense to me is to duplicate the "phone bridge" in the SIP
world in the sense that each participant establishes a bi-directional session to a
central bridge, and the bridge distributes the call. Are there any such
implementations of this using Internet technologies? If so, how well did it work?
Thank you for your attention to this question. I would appreciate any information
which you could provide concerning how to achieve peer conference calls using SIP.
_______________________________________________
Sip-implementors mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.cs.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/sip-implementors