Projects: GlassFish and SailFin

Projects: GlassFish and SailFin

SailFin - IMS Application Server supporting JSR 289 SIP servlets technology For details see: SailFin website, http://sailfin.java.net/ Links to an external site.

For an application built using this technology see [Peterström 2009]. There is an example of a Click to Dial service in GlassFish at: https://wikis.oracle.com/display/GlassFish/SipClickToDialExample2 Links to an external site.


Slide Notes

GlassFish >> SailFin, website, last accessed 20 August 2009 https://sailfin.dev.java.net/ Links to an external site.

Dan Peterström, IP Multimedia for Municipalities: The supporting architecture,TRITA-ICT-EX-2009:103, August 2009 http://web.it.kth.se/~maguire/DEGREE-PROJECT-REPORTS/090818-Dan_Peterstrom-with-cover.pdf


Transcript

[slide343] There are two projects that you might be interested in, one called GlassFish, the other one called SailFin. SailFin is basically an IMS implementation, so the 3GPP's version of SIP in Java, and Dan Peterström did a thesis in 2009 about it, and there's an example of a click-to-dial service The huge idea here was to convince people to start writing applications for IMS. So if you have the SIP infrastructure, and all the 3GPP infrastructure providers are increasingly moving to IMS, they want applications. So they made the software to do this open source and available. And I think we'll stop here today, and we'll resume tomorrow talking about user preferences. Any questions for today? I know it was very fast. But the idea is between today and tomorrow to give you enough of an overview that you'll find something where you say, that's what I want to learn more about. So hopefully you saw something maybe that was interesting. But you saw basically the underlying technology is not complex. It's pretty straightforward. But the devil's in the details. The things like security. The interactions between these different protocol layers. That's where the complexity really gets quite interesting. Even though at the top level it seems like it's a really simple architecture. Okay, no further questions? Have a nice evening.