This feature prepares a signalling anchor such that it is ready to receive and process an access transfer request for the current session .
The preparation takes place during session establishment. The notification is in the form of a SIP request. It includes the ID of the SIP dialog for the access leg to be transferred.
Feature cheat sheet
B2BUA Instance | SAS Support | Originating / Terminating | Point(s) in Session Plan | Network Operator Data | Subscriber Data | Stateful or Stateless | POJO or SBB Feature | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SCC |
Yes |
Both Originating and Terminating |
|
None |
None |
Stateless |
POJO |
Binds a name in |
Related features
3GPP Rel 10 Packet Switched to Circuit Switched support is implemented as a grouping of features and Sentinel capabilities.
Related features are:
Session input and output variables
Session input variables
Variable | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CallType |
Enum |
Used to determine whether originating or terminating instance behaviour should be invoked. |
EnhancedSRVCCBound |
boolean |
Indicates whether an activity context name has already been bound for this session. |
FeatureCapsManager |
FeatureCapsManager |
Management interface for controlling Feature-Caps header values on outgoing messages. |
Statistics
SCCBindEnhancedSRVCC statistics are tracked by the sentinel.volte.sip SBB and can be found under the following parameter set:
SLEE-Usage → [sentinel.volte.sip service name] → [sentinel.volte.sip SBB name] → feature.SCCBindEnhancedSRVCC
Statistic | Increments when… |
---|---|
Started |
The feature is started. |
FailedToStart |
Sentinel VoLTE encounters an error while attempting to start the feature. |
IssuedWarning |
A non-fatal problem is encountered and the feature and issues a warning. |
FailedDuringExecution |
A fatal problem is encountered and the feature cannot execute correctly. |
TimedOut |
The feature takes too long to complete and Sentinel VoLTE aborts execution. |
BoundACName |
The feature binds and activity context name using the full dialog-ID. |
BoundPartialACName |
The feature binds and activity context name using the partial dialog-ID. |
UnboundACName |
The feature unbinds a full dialog-ID activity context name. |
UnboundPartialACName |
The feature unbinds a partial dialog-ID activity context name. |
Behaviour
This feature binds an activity context name for the access dialog.
Activity Context Name Binding
The feature binds the access dialog (access leg in 3GPP terminology) to a normalised name in the Activity Context Naming Facility.
The binding takes place once a non-100 provisional or a success response is received for the initial INVITE
.
The feature does not attempt to bind more than once per session.
Once the name is bound successfully, the feature sets the session output variable enhancedSRVCCBound
to true
.
The access dialog is as follows:
-
for an originating B2BUA instance, the access dialog is the dialog from the A party
-
for a terminating B2BUA instance, the access dialog is the dialog towards the B party.
Therefore when acting as an originating anchor, the feature obtains the full SIP Dialog ID from the response in SessionState.latestCallingPartyResponse
.
When acting as a terminating anchor, the feature obtains the full SIP Dialog ID from the response in SessionState.latestCalledPartyResponse
.
Procedure for normalising the name to use
The normalised name string is comprised of four parts:
-
the CallID header in string form (for example,
me03a0s09a2sdfgjk1491777
) -
the remote tag parameter value (for example,
774321
) -
the local tag parameter value (for example,
64727891
) -
a string to help with readability (for example,
esr
indicating “enhanced SRVCC”).
For the originating SCC B2BUA instance, the local tag is the For the terminating SCC B2BUA instance, the local tag is the |
These are then normalised into a single string form as follows:
-
CallID value followed by a semi-colon, then
-
r=
followed by the value of the remote tag parameter, followed by a semi-colon, then -
l=
followed by the value of the local tag parameter, followed by a semi-colon, then -
esr;
So, given the following:
-
CallID of
me03a0s09a2sdfgjk1491777
-
remote tag parameter value of
774321
-
local tag parameter value of
64727891
We generate the following normalised string:
me03a0s09a2sdfgjk1491777;r=774321;l=64727891;esr;
The rationale for choosing a format like this is so that an administrator can look at the string, and see:
-
esr
means it is enhanced SRVCC as opposed to SRVCC (because our BindSRVCC feature usessr
notesr
) -
r
andl
are easy short hand forremote
andlocal
.