GENWiki

Premier IT Outsourcing and Support Services within the UK

User Tools

Site Tools


rfc:rfc5459

Network Working Group A. Sollaud Request for Comments: 5459 France Telecom Updates: 4749 January 2009 Category: Standards Track

                 G.729.1 RTP Payload Format Update:
              Discontinuous Transmission (DTX) Support

Status of This Memo

 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
 improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
 and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2009 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/
 license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.
 Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
 and restrictions with respect to this document.

Abstract

 This document updates the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) payload
 format to be used for the International Telecommunication Union
 (ITU-T) Recommendation G.729.1 audio codec.  It adds Discontinuous
 Transmission (DTX) support to the RFC 4749 specification, in a
 backward-compatible way.  An updated media type registration is
 included for this payload format.

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................2
 2. Background ......................................................2
 3. RTP Header Usage ................................................3
 4. Payload Format ..................................................3
 5. Payload Format Parameters .......................................4
    5.1. Media Type Registration Update .............................4
    5.2. Mapping to SDP Parameters ..................................5
         5.2.1. DTX Offer-Answer Model Considerations ...............5
         5.2.2. DTX Declarative SDP Considerations ..................6
 6. Congestion Control ..............................................6
 7. Security Considerations .........................................6
 8. IANA Considerations .............................................6
 9. References ......................................................6
    9.1. Normative References .......................................6
    9.2. Informative References .....................................7

1. Introduction

 The International Telecommunication Union (ITU-T) Recommendation
 G.729.1 [ITU-G.729.1] is a scalable and wideband extension of the
 Recommendation G.729 [ITU-G.729] audio codec.  [RFC4749] specifies
 the payload format for packetization of G.729.1-encoded audio signals
 into the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) [RFC3550].
 Annex C of G.729.1 [ITU-G.729.1-C] adds Discontinuous Transmission
 (DTX) support to G.729.1.  This document updates the RTP payload
 format to allow usage of this Annex.
 Only changes or additions to [RFC4749] will be described in the
 following sections.
 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].

2. Background

 G.729.1 supports Discontinuous Transmission (DTX), a.k.a. "silence
 suppression".  It means that the coder includes a Voice Activity
 Detection (VAD) algorithm to determine if an audio frame contains
 silence or actual audio.  During silence periods, the coder may
 significantly decrease the transmitted bit rate by sending a small
 frame called a Silence Insertion Descriptor (SID) and then stop
 transmission.  The receiver's decoder will generate comfort noise
 (CNG) according to the parameters contained in the SID.  This DTX/CNG
 scheme is specified in [ITU-G.729.1-C].

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

 The G.729.1 SID has an embedded structure.  The core SID is the same
 as the legacy G.729 SID [ITU-G.729-B].  The first enhancement layer
 adds some parameters for narrowband comfort noise, while a second
 enhancement layer adds wideband information.  The G.729.1 SID can be
 2, 3, or 6 octets long.

3. RTP Header Usage

 The fields of the RTP header must be used as described in [RFC4749],
 except for the Marker (M) bit.
 If DTX is used, the first packet of a talkspurt -- that is, the first
 packet after a silence period during which packets have not been
 transmitted contiguously -- MUST be distinguished by setting the M
 bit in the RTP data header to 1.  The M bit in all other packets MUST
 be set to 0.  The beginning of a talkspurt MAY be used to adjust the
 playout delay to reflect changing network delays.
 If DTX is not used, the M bit MUST be set to 0 in all packets.

4. Payload Format

 The payload format is the same as in [RFC4749], with the option to
 add a SID at the end.
 So the complete payload consists of a payload header of 1 octet (MBS
 (maximum bit rate supported) and FT (frame type) fields), followed by
 zero or more consecutive audio frames at the same bit rate, followed
 by zero or one SID.
    Note that this is consistent with the payload format of G.729
    described in section 4.5.6 of [RFC3551].
 To be able to transport a SID alone -- that is, without actual audio
 frames -- we assign the FT value 14 to the SID.  When using FT=14,
 only a single SID frame SHALL be included in the payload.  The actual
 SID size (2, 3, or 6 octets) is inferred from the payload size: it is
 the size of what is left after the payload header.
 When a SID is appended to actual audio frames, the FT value remains
 the one describing the encoding rate of the audio frames.  Since the
 SID is much smaller than any other frame, it can be easily detected
 at the receiver side, and it will not hinder the calculation of the
 number of frames.  The actual SID size is inferred from the payload
 size: it is the size of what is left after the audio frames.

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

 Section 5.4 of [RFC4749] mandates to ignore the remaining bytes after
 complete frames.  This document overrides that statement: the
 receiver of the payload must consider these remaining bytes as a SID
 frame.  If the size of this remainder is not a valid SID frame size
 (2, 3, or 6 octets), the receiver MUST ignore these bytes.
 The full FT table is given for convenience:
             +-------+---------------+-------------------+
             |   FT  | encoding rate |     frame size    |
             +-------+---------------+-------------------+
             |   0   |     8 kbps    |     20 octets     |
             |   1   |    12 kbps    |     30 octets     |
             |   2   |    14 kbps    |     35 octets     |
             |   3   |    16 kbps    |     40 octets     |
             |   4   |    18 kbps    |     45 octets     |
             |   5   |    20 kbps    |     50 octets     |
             |   6   |    22 kbps    |     55 octets     |
             |   7   |    24 kbps    |     60 octets     |
             |   8   |    26 kbps    |     65 octets     |
             |   9   |    28 kbps    |     70 octets     |
             |   10  |    30 kbps    |     75 octets     |
             |   11  |    32 kbps    |     80 octets     |
             | 12-13 |   (reserved)  |         -         |
             |   14  |      SID      | 2, 3, or 6 octets |
             |   15  |    NO_DATA    |         0         |
             +-------+---------------+-------------------+
 DTX has no impact on the MBS definition and use.

5. Payload Format Parameters

 Parameters defined in [RFC4749] are not modified.  We add a new
 optional parameter to configure DTX.

5.1. Media Type Registration Update

 We add a new optional parameter to the audio/G7291 media subtype:
 dtx: indicates that Discontinuous Transmission (DTX) is used or
    preferred.  Permissible values are 0 and 1. 0 means no DTX. 1
    means DTX support, as described in Annex C of ITU-T Recommendation
    G.729.1. 0 is implied if this parameter is omitted.
 When DTX is turned off, the RTP payload MUST NOT contain a SID, and
 the FT value 14 MUST NOT be used.

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

5.2. Mapping to SDP Parameters

 The information carried in the media type specification has a
 specific mapping to fields in the Session Description Protocol (SDP)
 [RFC4566], which is commonly used to describe RTP sessions.
 The mapping described in [RFC4749] remains unchanged.
 The "dtx" parameter goes in the SDP "a=fmtp" attribute.
 Some example partial SDP session descriptions utilizing G.729.1
 encodings follow.
 Example 1: default parameters (DTX off)
    m=audio 57586 RTP/AVP 96
    a=rtpmap:96 G7291/16000
 Example 2: recommended packet duration of 40 ms (=2 frames), maximum
 bit rate is 20 kbps, DTX supported and preferred.
    m=audio 49987 RTP/AVP 97
    a=rtpmap:97 G7291/16000
    a=fmtp:97 maxbitrate=20000; dtx=1
    a=ptime:40

5.2.1. DTX Offer-Answer Model Considerations

 The offer-answer model considerations of [RFC4749] fully apply.  In
 this section, we only define the management of the "dtx" parameter.
 The "dtx" parameter concerns both sending and receiving, so both
 sides of a bi-directional session MUST have the same DTX setting.  If
 one party indicates that it does not support DTX, DTX must be
 deactivated both ways.  In other words, DTX is actually activated if,
 and only if, "dtx=1" in the offer and in the answer.
 A special rule applies for multicast: the "dtx" parameter becomes
 declarative and MUST NOT be negotiated.  This parameter is fixed, and
 a participant MUST use the configuration that is provided for the
 session.
 An RTP receiver compliant with only RFC 4749 and not this
 specification will ignore the "dtx" parameter and will not include it
 in its answer, so DTX will not be activated in this case.  As a
 remark, if that happened, this kind of receiver would not be confused
 by an RTP stream with DTX because RFC 4749 requires that the bytes
 that are now used for SID frames be ignored.  But during the silence

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

 period, the receiver would then react using packet loss concealment
 instead of comfort noise generation, leading to bad audio quality.
 This justifies the use of the "dtx" parameter, even if the payload
 format is backward-compatible at the binary level.

5.2.2. DTX Declarative SDP Considerations

 The "dtx" parameter is declarative and provides the parameter that
 SHALL be used when receiving and/or sending the configured stream.

6. Congestion Control

 The congestion control considerations of [RFC4749] apply.
 The use of DTX can help congestion control by reducing the number of
 transmitted RTP packets and the average bandwidth of audio streams.

7. Security Considerations

 The security considerations of [RFC4749] apply.
 By observing the RTP flow with DTX, an attacker could see when and
 for how long people are speaking.  This is a general fact for DTX,
 and G.729.1 DTX introduces no new specific issue.

8. IANA Considerations

 IANA has assigned a new optional parameter for media subtype (audio/
 G7291); see Section 5.1.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

 [ITU-G.729.1]    International Telecommunications Union, "G.729 based
                  Embedded Variable bit-rate coder: An 8-32 kbit/s
                  scalable wideband coder bitstream interoperable with
                  G.729", ITU-T Recommendation G.729.1, May 2006.
 [ITU-G.729.1-C]  International Telecommunications Union, "G.729.1
                  DTX/CNG scheme", ITU-T Recommendation G.729.1 Annex
                  C, May 2008.
 [RFC2119]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                  Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 5459 G.729.1 DTX Support in RTP January 2009

 [RFC3550]        Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
                  Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
                  Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.
 [RFC4566]        Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP:
                  Session Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006.
 [RFC4749]        Sollaud, A., "RTP Payload Format for the G.729.1
                  Audio Codec", RFC 4749, October 2006.

9.2. Informative References

 [ITU-G.729]      International Telecommunications Union, "Coding of
                  speech at 8 kbit/s using conjugate-structure
                  algebraic-code-excited linear-prediction (CS-
                  ACELP)", ITU-T Recommendation G.729, March 1996.
 [ITU-G.729-B]    International Telecommunications Union, "A silence
                  compression scheme for G.729 optimized for terminals
                  conforming to Recommendation V.70", ITU-T
                  Recommendation G.729 Annex B, October 1996.
 [RFC3551]        Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for
                  Audio and Video Conferences with Minimal Control",
                  STD 65, RFC 3551, July 2003.

Author's Address

 Aurelien Sollaud
 France Telecom
 2 avenue Pierre Marzin
 Lannion Cedex  22307
 France
 Phone: +33 2 96 05 15 06
 EMail: aurelien.sollaud@orange-ftgroup.com

Sollaud Standards Track [Page 7]

/data/webs/external/dokuwiki/data/pages/rfc/rfc5459.txt · Last modified: 2009/01/23 17:30 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki