Figure 16.2 Emergency VoIP calling using the PSTN emergency infrastructure
Emergency Communication Services
Emergency calls, as described in the previous sections, are made to assist indi-
vidual users under normal circumstances (that is, when no general emergen-
cies occur, such as natural or man-made disasters).
During an emergency, the network resources may not be able to handle the
surge of communications, and preference must be given to rescue, govern-
ment, and military callers. Limited network resources could be the ports on
PSTN gateways, and bandwidth limitations on access links or on bandwidth
constrained global satellite links, for example. The Emergency Telecommuni-
cations Service (ETS) has been implemented in the PSTN and an excellent
overview of implementing ETS in IP telephony is provided in RFC 4190 [8].
The work on emergency services using IP and the Internet has focused on a
few critical topics, most notably:
■■ Requirements for resource priority mechanisms for SIP [9]
■■ The solutions for communications resource priority for SIP [10]
■■ SIP reason header for preemption events [11]
■■ Preemption of network resources used by SIP in government and mili-
tary networks, and in single administrative domains in generalEmergency
SIP ProxyPSTN
GWYMaster Street
Address GuideAutomatic
Line
IdentificationPSAPSIP UA or
EndpointLI
ServerVoIP
PositioningEmergency Services
Provider NetworkVoIP DomainSIPSIPLO LORouting
InfoRouting
NumbersCivic
Address
Validation of
Civic LocationCall-back and
provider infoSS7Emergency
Routing DBValidation
DatabasesEmergency
Switch (911)Emergency and Preemption Communication Services 281