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rfc:rfc5167

Network Working Group M. Dolly Request for Comments: 5167 AT&T Labs Category: Informational R. Even

                                                               Polycom
                                                            March 2008
             Media Server Control Protocol Requirements

Status of This Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
 not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
 memo is unlimited.

Abstract

 This document addresses the communication between an application
 server and media server.  The current work in IETF working groups
 shows these logical entities, but it does not address the physical
 decomposition and the protocol between the entities.
 This document presents the requirements for a Media Server Control
 Protocol (MCP) that enables an application server to use a media
 server.  It will address the aspects of announcements, Interactive
 Voice Response, and conferencing media services.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 2.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 3.  Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
   3.1.  Media Control Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
   3.2.  Media mixing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
   3.3.  IVR Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
   3.4.  Operational Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 4.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 5.  Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
 6.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 1] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

1. Introduction

 The IETF conferencing framework in RFC 4353 [CARCH] presents an
 architecture that is built of several functional entities.  RFC 4353
 [CARCH] does not specify the protocols between the functional
 entities since it is considered out of scope.
 Based on RFC 4353 [CARCH], this document defines the requirements for
 a protocol that will enable one functional entity, known as an
 Application Server (AS), that includes the conference/media policy
 server, the notification server, and the focus, all defined in RFC
 4353 [CARCH], to interact with one or more functional entities,
 called Media Server (MS), that serves as mixer or media server.
 The media server can also be used for announcements and Interactive
 Voice Response (IVR) functions.
 Application servers host one or more instances of a communication
 application.  Media servers provide real time media processing
 functions.  An example of the decomposition of a media server and an
 application server is described in the media control framework
 document [MEDIACTRL-FW].
 This document presents the requirements for a Media Server Control
 Protocol (MCP) that enables an application server to control a media
 server.  It will address the aspects of announcements, IVR, and
 conferencing media services.
 The requirements are for the protocol and do not address the AS or MS
 functionality discussed in the media control framework.
 Since the media server is a centralized component, the charter of the
 working group states that this work will not investigate distributed
 media processing algorithms or control protocols.

2. Terminology

 The media server work uses, when appropriate, and expands on the
 terminology introduced in the conferencing framework [CARCH] and
 Centralized Conferencing (XCON) framework [XCON-FRMWRK].  The
 following additional terms are defined:
 Application Server (AS) - A functional entity that hosts one or more
 instances of a communication application.  The application server may
 include the conference policy server, the focus, and the conference
 notification server, as defined in [CARCH].  Also, it may include
 communication applications that use IVR or announcement services.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 2] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

 Media Server (MS) - The media server includes the mixer as defined in
 [CARCH].  The media server plays announcements, it processes media
 streams for functions like Dual Tone Multi-Frequency (DTMF) detection
 and transcoding.  The media server may also record media streams for
 supporting IVR functions like announcing participants
 Media Resource Broker (MRB) - A logical entity that is responsible
 for both the collection of appropriate published Media Server (MS)
 information and supplying of appropriate MS information to consuming
 entities.  The MRB is an optional entity and will be discussed in a
 separate document.
 Notification - A notification is used when there is a need to report
 event-related information from the MS to the AS.
 Request - A request is sent from the controlling entity, such as an
 application server, to another resource, such as a media server,
 asking that a particular type of operation be executed.
 Response - A response is used to signal information, such as an
 acknowledgement or error code in reply to a previously issued
 request.

3. Requirements

3.1. Media Control Requirements

 The following are the media control requirements:
 REQ-MCP-01 -  The MS Control Protocol shall enable one or more
    application servers to request media services from one or more
    media servers.
 REQ-MCP-02 -   The MS Control Protocol shall use a reliable transport
    protocol.
 REQ-MCP-03 -  The applications supported by the protocol shall
    include conferencing and Interactive Voice Response media
    services.
 Note: Though the protocol enables these services, the functionality
 is invoked through other mechanisms.
 REQ-MCP-04 -  Media types supported in the context of the
    applications shall include audio, tones, text, and video.  Tones
    media include in-band audio or RFC 4733 payload.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 3] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

 REQ-MCP-05 -  The MS control protocol should allow, but must not
    require, a media resource broker (MRB) or intermediate proxy to
    exist with the application server and media server.
 REQ-MCP-06 -  On the MS control channel, there shall be requests to
    the MS, responses from the MS, and notifications to the AS.
 REQ-MCP-07 -  SIP/SDP (Session Initiation Protocol / Session
    Description Protocol) shall be used to establish and modify media
    connections to a media server.
 REQ-MCP-08 -  It should be possible to support a single conference
    spanning multiple media servers.
    Note: It is probable that spanning multiple MSs can be
    accomplished by the AS and does not require anything in the
    protocol for the scenarios we have in mind.  However, the concern
    is that if this requirement is treated too lightly, one may end up
    with a protocol that precludes its support.
 REQ-MCP-09 -  It must be possible to split call legs individually, or
    in groups, away from a main conference on a given media server,
    without performing re-establishment of the call legs to the MS
    (e.g., for purposes such as performing IVR with a single call leg
    or creating sub-conferences, not for creating entirely new
    conferences).
 REQ-MCP-10 -  The MS control protocol should be extendable,
    facilitating forward and backward compatibility.
 REQ-MCP-11 -  The MS control protocol shall include an authentication
    component to ensure that only an authorized AS can communicate
    with the MS, and vice versa.
 REQ-MCP-12 -  The MS control protocol shall use some form of
    transport protection to ensure the confidentiality and integrity
    of the data between the AS and MS.
 REQ-MCP-13 -  Different application servers may have different
    privileges for using an MS.  The protocol should prevent the AS
    from doing unauthorized operations on a MS.
 REQ-MCP-14 -  The MS control protocol requires mechanisms to protect
    the MS resources used by one AS from another AS since the solution
    needs to support multiple ASs controlling one MS.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 4] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

 REQ-MCP-15 -  During session establishment, there shall be a
    capability to negotiate parameters that are associated with media
    streams.  This requirement should also enable an AS managing
    conference to specify the media streams allowed in the conference.
 REQ-MCP-16 -  The AS shall be able to instruct the MS to perform
    stream operations like mute and gain control.
 REQ-MCP-17 -  The AS shall be able to instruct the MS to play a
    specific announcement.
 REQ-MCP-18 -  The AS shall be able to request the MS to create,
    delete, and manipulate a mixing, IVR, or announcement session.
 REQ-MCP-19 -  The AS shall be able to instruct the MS to play
    announcements to a single user or to a conference mix.
 REQ-MCP-20 -  The MS control protocol should enable the AS to ask the
    MS for a session summary report.  The report may include resource
    usage and quality metrics.
 REQ-MCP-21 -  The MS shall be able to notify the AS of events
    received in the media stream if requested by the AS.  (Examples -
    STUN request, Flow Control, etc.)

3.2. Media mixing Requirements

 REQ-MCP-22 -  The AS shall be able to define a conference mix; the MS
    may offer different mixing topologies.  The conference mix may be
    defined on a conference or user level.
 REQ-MCP-23 -  The AS may be able to define a custom video layout
    built of rectangular sub-windows.
 REQ-MCP-24 -  For video, the AS shall be able to map a stream to a
    specific sub-window or to define to the MS how to decide which
    stream will go to each sub-window.
 REQ-MCP-25 -  The MS shall be able to notify the ASs of who the
    active sources of the media are; for example, who the active
    speaker is or who is being viewed in a conference.  The speaker
    and the video source may be different, for example, a person
    describing a video stream from a remote camera managed by a
    different user.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 5] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

 REQ-MCP-26 -  The MS shall be able to inform the AS which layouts it
    supports.
 REQ-MCP-27 -  The MS control protocol should enable the AS to
    instruct the MS to record a specific conference mix.

3.3. IVR Requirements

 REQ-MCP-28 -  The AS shall be able to instruct the MS to perform one
    or more IVR scripts and receive the results.  The script may be in
    a server or contained in the control message.
 REQ-MCP-29 -  The AS shall be able to manage the IVR session by
    sending requests to play announcements to the MS and receiving the
    response (e.g., DTMF).  The IVR session flow, in this case, is
    handled by the AS by starting a next phase based on the response
    it receives from the MS on the current phase.
 REQ-MCP-30 -  The AS should be able to instruct the MS to record a
    short participant stream and play it back.  This is not a
    recording requirement.

3.4. Operational Requirements

 These requirements may be applicable to the MRB, but they can be used
 by an AS if it has a one-to-one connection to the MS.
 REQ-MCP-31 -  The MS control protocol must allow the AS to audit the
    MS state during an active session.
 REQ-MCP-32 -  The MS shall be able to inform the AS about its status
    during an active session.

4. Security Considerations

 This document discusses high-level requirements for MCP.  The MCP has
 some specific security requirements, which will be summarized here at
 a very high level.
 All of the operations and functions described in this document need
 to be authorized by an MS or an AS.  It is expected that MS resources
 will be governed by a set of authorization rules defined as part of
 the AS / MS policy.  In order for the policy to be implemented, the
 MS needs to be able to authenticate requests.  Normal SIP mechanisms,
 including Digest authentication and certificates, can be used as
 specified in RFC 3261 [RFC3261].  These MCP security requirements
 will be discussed in detail in the framework and protocol documents.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 6] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

5. Acknowledgments

 This RFC represents the work from two previous personal works in
 progress, "Media Control Protocol Requirements" and "Requirements for
 a Media Server Control Protocol".  The authors would like to
 acknowledge the work of Gary Munson from AT&T Labs, and James
 Rafferty from Cantata who helped write "Media Control Protocol
 Requirements", on which this work is based.

6. Informative References

 [CARCH]         Rosenberg, J., "A Framework for Conferencing with the
                 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4353,
                 February 2006.
 [MEDIACTRL-FW]  Melanchuk, T., Ed., "An Architectural Framework for
                 Media Server Control", Work in Progress,
                 February 2008.
 [RFC3261]       Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G.,
                 Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M.,
                 and E. Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",
                 RFC 3261, June 2002.
 [XCON-FRMWRK]   Barnes, M., Boulton, C., and O. Levin, "A Framework
                 for Centralized Conferencing", Work in Progress,
                 November 2007.

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 7] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

Authors' Addresses

 Martin Dolly
 AT&T Labs
 200 Laurel Avenue
 Middletown, NJ  07748
 USA
 Phone:
 EMail: mdolly@att.com
 URI:
 Roni Even
 Polycom
 94 Derech Em Hamoshavot
 Petach Tikva  49130
 Israel
 EMail: roni.even@polycom.co.il

Dolly & Even Informational [Page 8] RFC 5167 MCP Requirements March 2008

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 contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
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Dolly & Even Informational [Page 9]

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