Not applicable to the SBC Software Edition (SWe).
Session recording is utilized for various telephony purposes, such as to comply with government regulations, to monitor quality of service of representatives, and for storing call information for quality analysis.
The SIPREC protocol defines the interaction between a Session Recording Client (SRC) and a Session Recording Server (SRS), and controls the recording of media transmitted in the context of a communications session (CS) between multiple user agents.
The
NICE and Media Packet Capture cannot be used simultaneously because the Splitter resource can only be configured for one feature.
The overall
The
In the above topology, the basic call is established between SIP phone 1 and SIP phone 2 through the
The two methods to trigger a call recording are:
The need to record a call is decided from the ePSX (or PSX, depending upon the configuration) based on the following criteria in the given order of priority:
The ePSX (or PSX) uses the following configurable objects when determining whether a call needs to be recorded:
Supported SIPRec features include:
Recording RTP session for a call by providing its GCID via CLI. The user provides the IP Address/port for the corresponding session recorder via the same CLI command.
Listing the calls currently being recorded using a CLI command. SBC shall display their GCID, and the RTP destinations and the SRS IP address.
Record any type of call leg (SIP, SIP-I ) by specifying the call to be recorded via CLI.
The called and calling party numbers in the recording criteria may be configured as a prefix.
PSX/ePSX support provisioning 128 Recording criteria and 128 Recorder profiles.
Sending and receiving “+sip.src” feature tag extension in the Contact URI
Options Tag “siprec” in INVITE towards SRS.
Sending and receiving the rs-call specific data in the rs-metadata XML body
If a INVITE is received from a SRS or UE with a options tag “require: siprec”, SBC rejects the request with a 4xx message.
Transparently passing the SIPRec specific feature tags from the UE to the registrar.
If the original call uses any codecs other than the above, it is assumed that the SRS will terminate the recording session. So SRC shall still continue operating the CS and RS until this happens.
SBC transparently duplicates the packets coming/going to the UE towards the SRS using the same Codec as the Original stream.
If any request except session keepalive Re-INVITE/UPDATE or BYE is received in the context of a recording session, SBC rejects the request with a 405 "Method Not Allowed" message.
If Options PING mechanism is configured on the IP peer, it is used as a keep-alive mechanism for all the recording sessions.
Troubleshooting a SIPRec recorded call using MCT is only possible when initiated via CLI.
See NICE Session Recording for the list of supported codecs.
To enable/disable SIPRec feature, use following syntax:
% set addressContext <ADDRESS-CONTEXT> zone <ZONE> sipSigPort <SIP SIGNALLING PORT> siprec <disabled|enabled>
To start/stop a recording, the following CLI syntax applies:
% request global sipRec startRecord gcid <GCID> callLeg ingress trunkGroup <TRUNK GROUP NAME> srsIpAddress <SRS IP ADDRESS> srsPort <SRS PORT> % request global sipRec stopRecord gcid <GCID>
To view SIPRec status, use CLI syntax:
% show table global sipRecStatus RECORDER RX RTP TX RTP RECORDING GCID ADDRESS ADDRESS ADDRESS LEG 1 10.11.12.13:5060 10.11.12.13:8000 10.11.12.13:8002 ingress
See zone sipSigPort - CLI and request global pages for CLI command details.