Assertion Values for Resource Priority Header and SIP Priority Header Claims in Support of Emergency Services Networks
AT&T
md3135@att.com
Comcast
Comcast Technology Center
Philadelphia
PA
19103
United States of America
chris-ietf@chriswendt.net
ART
STIR
rph
PASSporT
esnet
This document adds new assertion values for a Resource Priority Header ("rph") claim and a new SIP Priority Header ("sph") claim for protection of the "psap-callback" value as part of the "rph" Personal Assertion Token (PASSporT) extension in support of the security of emergency services networks for emergency call origination and callback.
Introduction
"Personal Assertion Token (PASSporT) Extension for Resource Priority Authorization" extended the Personal Assertion Token (PASSporT) specification defined in to allow the inclusion of cryptographically signed assertions of authorization for the values populated in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) 'Resource-Priority' header field . introduces the need and justification for the protection of both the SIP 'Resource-Priority' and 'Priority' header fields, used for categorizing the priority use of the call in the telephone network, specifically for emergency calls.
Compromise of the SIP 'Resource-Priority' or 'Priority' header fields could lead to misuse of network resources (i.e., during congestion scenarios), impacting the application services supported using the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field and the handling of Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) callbacks.
allows extensions by which an authority on the originating side verifying the authorization of a particular communication for the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field or the SIP 'Priority' header field can use PASSporT claims to cryptographically sign the information associated with either the SIP 'Resource-Priority' or the 'Priority' header field and convey assertion of those values by the signing party authorization. A signed SIP 'Resource-Priority' or 'Priority' header field will allow a receiving entity (including entities located in different network domains/boundaries) to verify the validity of assertions to act on the information with confidence that it has not been spoofed or compromised.
This document adds new "auth" array key values for a Resource Priority Header ("rph") claim defined in , in support of emergency services networks for emergency call origination and callback. This document additionally defines a new PASSporT claim, "sph", including protection of the SIP 'Priority' header field for the indication of an emergency service callback assigned the value "psap-callback", as defined in .
The use of the newly defined claim and key values corresponding to the SIP 'Resource-Priority' and 'Priority' header fields for emergency services is introduced in but otherwise is out of scope of this document. In addition, the PASSporT claims and values defined in this document are intended for use in environments where there are means to verify that the signer of the SIP 'Resource-Priority' and 'Priority' header fields is authoritative.
Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14
when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
New Assertion Values for "rph" Claim
This specification defines the ability to sign the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field namespace for local emergency communications defined in and represented by the string "esnet.x", where x is the priority level allowed in the esnet namespace. As of the writing of this specification, the priority level is between 0 and 4, inclusive, but may be extended by future specifications.
Similar to the values defined by for the "auth" JSON object key inside the "rph" claim, the string "esnet.x" with the appropriate value should be used when resource priority is required for local emergency communications corresponding and exactly matching the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field representing the namespace invoked in the call.
When using "esnet.x" as the "auth" assertion value in emergency-service-destined calls, the "orig" claim of the PASSporT MUST represent the calling party number that initiates the call to emergency services. The "dest" claim MUST be either a country- or region-specific dial string (e.g., "911" for North America or a "112" GSM-defined string used in Europe and other countries) or "urn:service:sos", as defined in , representing the emergency services destination of the call.
The following is an example of an "rph" claim for the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field with an "esnet.1" assertion:
For emergency services callbacks, the "orig" claim of the "rph" PASSporT MUST represent the Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) telephone number. The "dest" claim MUST be the telephone number representing the original calling party of the emergency service call that is being called back.
The following is an example of an "rph" claim for the SIP 'Resource-Priority' header field with an "esnet.0" assertion:
After the header and claims PASSporT objects have been constructed, their signature is generated normally per the guidance in , using the full form of PASSporT. The credentials (i.e., Certificate) used to create the signature must have authority over the namespace of the "rph" claim, and there is only one authority per claim. The authority MUST use its credentials associated with the specific service supported by the resource priority namespace in the claim. If r-values are added or dropped by the intermediaries along the path, the intermediaries must generate a new "rph" identity header and sign the claim with their own authority.
The SIP Priority Header ("sph") Claim
As defined in , the SIP 'Priority' header field may be set to the value "psap-callback" for emergency services callback calls. Because some SIP networks may act on this value and provide priority or other special routing based on this value, it is important to protect and validate the authoritative use associated with it.
Therefore, we define a new claim key as part of the "rph" PASSporT, "sph". This is an optional claim that MUST only be used with an "auth" claim with an "esnet.x" value indicating an authorized emergency callback call and corresponding to a SIP 'Priority' header field with the value "psap-callback".
The value of the "sph" claim key should only be "psap-callback", which MUST match the SIP 'Priority' header field value for authorized emergency services callbacks. If the value is anything other than "psap-callback", the PASSporT validation MUST be considered a failure case.
Note that because the intended use of this specification is only for emergency services, there is also an explicit assumption that the signer of the "rph" PASSporT can authoritatively represent both the content of the 'Resource-Priority' header field and 'Priority' header field information associated specifically with an emergency services callback case where both could exist. This document is not intended to be a general mechanism for protecting the SIP 'Priority' header fields; this could be accomplished as part of future work with a new PASSporT extension or new claim added to either an existing PASSporT or PASSporT extension usage.
The following is an example of an "sph" claim for the SIP 'Priority' header field with the value "psap-callback":
Order of Claim Keys
The order of the claim keys MUST follow the rules of , which defines the deterministic JSON serialization used for signature generation (and validation); the claim keys MUST appear in lexicographic order. Therefore, the claim keys discussed in this document appear in the PASSporT Payload in the following order:
Compact Form of PASSporT
The use of the compact form of PASSporT is not specified in this document or recommended for "rph" PASSporTs.
IANA Considerations
JSON Web Token Claims
This specification requests that the IANA add one new claim to the "JSON Web Token Claims" registry, as defined in .
- Claim Name:
- sph
- Claim Description:
- SIP Priority header field
- Change Controller:
- IESG
- Specification Document(s):
- RFC 9027
Security Considerations
The security considerations discussed in , , and are applicable here.
References
Normative References
Informative References
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank , , and for helpful suggestions, comments, and corrections.