Message precedence

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Message precedence is an indicator attached to a message indicating its level of urgency, and used in the exchange of

Email header fields
can also provide a precedence flag.

Early telegraphic procedures

In the early days of telegraphy and radiotelegraphy, individual countries, and sometimes individual states, sometimes set their own regulations. For example, in the period around 1909, California required that "messages must, if practicable, be transmitted immediately on and in order of receipt; if not practicable, then in the following order:"[1]

  1. Messages from public agents of the State or of the United States on public business.
  2. Messages for immediate publication in newspapers, and not for any secret use.
  3. Message relating to sickness or death.
  4. Other messages in the order of filing.

International regulation

Later in the development of telegraphy and radiotelegraphy, message precedence was nominally set by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Various ITU Regulations provide for the following priorities:[2][3]

Service Indicator Morse code precedence code Meaning
Etat Priorité Nations S Telegram to or from the United Nations
Etat Priorité S Government telegram with priority
Etat F Government telegram without priority
OBS Meteorological telegram
Urgent Urgent private telegram
A Urgent Urgent service telegram or advice.
RCT Telegram concerning persons protected in wartime by the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949
Presse Press telegram
SVH Telegram relating to the safety of life
A Ordinary service telegram or advice
ADG Service telegram or advice relating to an interruption of communications

The U.S. Code of Federal Regulations, Title 47, has included the following priorities:[4]

  • ETAT PRIORITE
  • FLASH EMERGENCY
  • IMMEDIATE EMERGENCY
  • PRIORITY EMERGENCY
  • URGENT

The current U.S. Title 47 specifies these precedence designators for radiograms:[5]

Federal Government Domestic public correspondence and international telephone calls
Flash Flash emergency
Immediate Immediate emergency
Priority Priority emergency
Routine (No domestic equivalent.)

CCEB military precedence

The

Combined Communications Electronics Board (CCEB), a five-nation joint military communications-electronics organization (consisting of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States
), uses the following message precedence designators, in descending order of importance:

Amateur radio message precedence

The American Amateur radio community uses EMERGENCY, PRIORITY, WELFARE and ROUTINE precedence levels for ARRL Radiograms sent through National Traffic System nets.

See also

  • Multilevel precedence and preemption
  • IP precedence

References

  1. ^ "The Railroad Telegrapher, Volume 26". 1909.
  2. ^ States, United (1959). "United States Treaties and Other International Agreements, Volume 10, Part 3".
  3. ^ "ITU Administrative Telegraph and Telephone Conference (Geneva, 1958) Document No. 301-E" (PDF).
  4. ^ "Code of Federal Regulations: 1949-1984". 1970.
  5. ^ "47 CFR 213.5 - Precedence designators".

External links