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rfc:rfc8130

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) V. Demjanenko Request for Comments: 8130 D. Satterlee Category: Standards Track VOCAL Technologies, Ltd. ISSN: 2070-1721 March 2017

                         RTP Payload Format
 for the Mixed Excitation Linear Prediction Enhanced (MELPe) Codec

Abstract

 This document describes the RTP payload format for the Mixed
 Excitation Linear Prediction Enhanced (MELPe) speech coder.  MELPe's
 three different speech encoding rates and sample frame sizes are
 supported.  Comfort noise procedures and packet loss concealment are
 described in detail.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8130.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2017 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.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................2
    1.1. Conventions ................................................2
 2. Background ......................................................3
 3. Payload Format ..................................................4
    3.1. MELPe Bitstream Definitions ................................5
         3.1.1. 2400 bps Bitstream Structure ........................6
         3.1.2. 1200 bps Bitstream Structure ........................9
         3.1.3. 600 bps Bitstream Structure ........................13
    3.2. MELPe Comfort Noise Bitstream Definition ..................18
    3.3. Multiple MELPe Frames in an RTP Packet ....................20
    3.4. Congestion Control Considerations .........................21
 4. Payload Format Parameters ......................................22
    4.1. Media Type Definitions ....................................22
    4.2. Mapping to SDP ............................................23
    4.3. Declarative SDP Considerations ............................25
    4.4. Offer/Answer SDP Considerations ...........................25
 5. Discontinuous Transmissions ....................................26
 6. Packet Loss Concealment ........................................26
 7. IANA Considerations ............................................26
 8. Security Considerations ........................................27
 9. References .....................................................27
    9.1. Normative References ......................................27
    9.2. Informative References ....................................29
 Authors' Addresses ................................................30

1. Introduction

 This document describes how compressed Mixed Excitation Linear
 Prediction Enhanced (MELPe) speech as produced by the MELPe codec
 may be formatted for use as an RTP payload.  Details are provided to
 packetize the three different codec bitrate data frames (2400, 1200,
 and 600) into RTP packets.  The sender may send one or more codec
 data frames per packet, depending on the application scenario or
 based on transport network conditions, bandwidth restrictions, delay
 requirements, and packet loss tolerance.

1.1. Conventions

 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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
 Best current practices for writing an RTP payload format
 specification were followed [RFC2736].

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

2. Background

 The MELP speech coder was developed by the US military as an upgrade
 from the LPC-based CELP standard vocoder for low-bitrate
 communications [MELP].  ("LPC" stands for "Linear-Predictive Coding",
 and "CELP" stands for "Code-Excited Linear Prediction".)  MELP was
 further enhanced and subsequently adopted by NATO as MELPe for use by
 its members and Partnership for Peace countries for military and
 other governmental communications [MELPE].  The MELP speech coder
 algorithm was developed by Atlanta Signal Processing (ASPI), Texas
 Instruments (TI), SignalCom (now Microsoft), and Thales
 Communications, with noise preprocessor contributions from AT&T,
 under contract with NSA/DOD as international NATO Standard
 STANAG 4591 [MELPE].
 Commercial/civilian applications have arisen because of the
 low-bitrate property of MELPe with its (relatively) high
 intelligibility.  As such, MELPe is being used in a variety of wired
 and radio communications systems.  Voice over IP (VoIP) / SIP systems
 need to transport MELPe without decoding and re-encoding in order to
 preserve its intelligibility.  Hence, it is desirable and necessary
 to define the proper payload formatting and use conventions of MELPe
 in RTP payloads.
 The MELPe codec [MELPE] supports three different vocoder bitrates:
 2400, 1200, and 600 bps.  The basic 2400 bps bitrate vocoder uses a
 22.5 ms frame of speech consisting of 180 8000-Hz, 16-bit speech
 samples.  The 1200 and 600 bps bitrate vocoders each use three and
 four 22.5 ms frames of speech, respectively.  These reduced-bitrate
 vocoders internally use multiple 2400 bps parameter sets with further
 processing to strategically remove redundancy.  The payload sizes for
 each of the bitrates are 54, 81, and 54 bits for the 2400, 1200, and
 600 bps frames, respectively.  Dynamic bitrate switching is permitted
 but only if supported by both endpoints.
 The MELPe algorithm distinguishes between voiced and unvoiced speech
 and encodes each differently.  Unvoiced speech can be coded with
 fewer information bits for the same quality.  Forward error
 correction (FEC) is applied to the 2400 bps codec unvoiced speech for
 better protection of the subtle differences in signal reconstruction.
 The lower-bitrate coders do not allocate any bits for FEC and rely on
 strong error protection and correction in the communications channel.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 Comfort noise handling for MELPe follows the procedures in Appendix B
 of SCIP-210 [SCIP210].  After Voice Activity Detection (VAD)
 no longer indicates the presence of speech/voice, a minimum of two
 comfort noise vocoder frames (serving as a grace period) are to be
 transmitted.  The contents of the comfort noise frames are described
 in the next section.
 Packet loss concealment (PLC) exploits the FEC (and, more precisely,
 any combination of two set bits in the pitch/voicing parameter) of
 the 2400 bps speech coder.  The pitch/voicing parameter has a sparse
 set of permitted values.  A value of zero indicates a non-voiced
 frame.  At least three bits are set for all valid pitch parameters.
 The PLC erasure indication utilizes any errored/erasure encodings of
 the pitch/voicing parameter with exactly two set bits, as described
 below.

3. Payload Format

 The MELPe codec uses 22.5, 67.5, or 90 ms frames with a sampling rate
 clock of 8 kHz, so the RTP timestamp MUST be in units of 1/8000 of a
 second.
 The RTP payload for MELPe has the format shown in Figure 1.  No
 additional header specific to this payload format is needed.  This
 format is intended for situations where the sender and the receiver
 send one or more codec data frames per packet.
 0                   1                   2                   3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                         RTP Header                            |
 +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
 |                                                               |
 +                  one or more frames of MELPe                  |
 |                                                               |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
                    Figure 1: Packet Format Diagram
 The RTP header of the packetized encoded MELPe speech has the
 expected values as described in [RFC3550].  The usage of the M bit
 SHOULD be as specified in the applicable RTP profile -- for example,
 [RFC3551], where [RFC3551] specifies that if the sender does not
 suppress silence (i.e., sends a frame on every frame interval), the
 M bit will always be zero.  When more than one codec data frame is
 present in a single RTP packet, the timestamp is, as always, that of
 the oldest data frame represented in the RTP packet.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 The assignment of an RTP payload type for this new packet format is
 outside the scope of this document and will not be specified here.
 It is expected that the RTP profile for a particular class of
 applications will assign a payload type for this encoding, or if that
 is not done, then a payload type in the dynamic range shall be chosen
 by the sender.

3.1. MELPe Bitstream Definitions

 The total number of bits used to describe one frame of 2400 bps
 speech is 54, which fits in 7 octets (with two unused bits).  For
 1200 bps speech, the total number of bits used is 81, which fits in
 11 octets (with seven unused bits).  For 600 bps speech, the total
 number of bits used is 54, which fits in 7 octets (with two unused
 bits).  Unused bits, shown below as RSVA, RSVB, etc., are coded as
 described in Section 3.3 in support of dynamic bitrate switching.
 In the MELPe bitstream definitions, the most significant bits are
 considered priority bits.  The intention was that these bits receive
 greater protection in the underlying communications channel.  For IP
 networks, such additional protection is irrelevant.  However, for the
 convenience of interoperable gateway devices, the bitstreams will be
 presented identically in IP networks.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

3.1.1. 2400 bps Bitstream Structure

 According to Table 3 of [MELPE], the 2400 bps MELPe bit transmission
 order (for clarity, the bit priority is not shown) is as follows:
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  Bit   |    Voiced   |   Unvoiced  |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_01  |       g20   |       g20   |
              |  B_02  |       BP0   |     FEC10   |
              |  B_03  |        P0   |        P0   |
              |  B_04  |     LSF20   |     LSF20   |
              |  B_05  |     LSF30   |     LSF30   |
              |  B_06  |       g23   |       g23   |
              |  B_07  |       g24   |       g24   |
              |  B_08  |     LSF35   |     LSF35   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_09  |       g21   |       g21   |
              |  B_10  |       g22   |       g22   |
              |  B_11  |        P4   |        P4   |
              |  B_12  |     LSF34   |     LSF34   |
              |  B_13  |        P5   |        P5   |
              |  B_14  |        P1   |        P1   |
              |  B_15  |        P2   |        P2   |
              |  B_16  |     LSF40   |     LSF40   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_17  |        P6   |        P6   |
              |  B_18  |     LSF10   |     LSF10   |
              |  B_19  |     LSF16   |     LSF16   |
              |  B_20  |     LSF45   |     LSF45   |
              |  B_21  |        P3   |        P3   |
              |  B_22  |     LSF15   |     LSF15   |
              |  B_23  |     LSF14   |     LSF14   |
              |  B_24  |     LSF25   |     LSF25   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_25  |       BP3   |     FEC13   |
              |  B_26  |     LSF13   |     LSF13   |
              |  B_27  |     LSF12   |     LSF12   |
              |  B_28  |     LSF24   |     LSF24   |
              |  B_29  |     LSF44   |     LSF44   |
              |  B_30  |       FM0   |     FEC40   |
              |  B_31  |     LSF11   |     LSF11   |
              |  B_32  |     LSF23   |     LSF23   |

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_33  |       FM7   |     FEC22   |
              |  B_34  |       FM6   |     FEC21   |
              |  B_35  |       FM5   |     FEC20   |
              |  B_36  |       g11   |       g11   |
              |  B_37  |       g10   |       g10   |
              |  B_38  |       BP2   |     FEC12   |
              |  B_39  |       BP1   |     FEC11   |
              |  B_40  |     LSF21   |     LSF21   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_41  |     LSF33   |     LSF33   |
              |  B_42  |     LSF22   |     LSF22   |
              |  B_43  |     LSF32   |     LSF32   |
              |  B_44  |     LSF31   |     LSF31   |
              |  B_45  |     LSF43   |     LSF43   |
              |  B_46  |     LSF42   |     LSF42   |
              |  B_47  |        AF   |     FEC42   |
              |  B_48  |     LSF41   |     LSF41   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              |  B_49  |       FM4   |     FEC32   |
              |  B_50  |       FM3   |     FEC31   |
              |  B_51  |       FM2   |     FEC30   |
              |  B_52  |       FM1   |     FEC41   |
              |  B_53  |       g12   |       g12   |
              |  B_54  |      SYNC   |      SYNC   |
              +--------+-------------+-------------+
              Notes:
              g = Gain
              BP = Bandpass Voicing
              P = Pitch/Voicing
              LSF = Line Spectral Frequencies
              FEC = Forward Error Correction Parity Bits
              FM = Fourier Magnitudes
              AF = Aperiodic Flag
              B_01 = least significant bit of data set
           Table 1: Bitstream Definition for MELPe 2400 bps

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 The 2400 bps MELPe RTP payload is constructed as per Figure 2.  Note
 that bit B_01 is placed in the least significant bit (LSB) of the
 first byte with all other bits in sequence.  When filling octets, the
 least significant bits of the seventh octet are filled with bits B_49
 to B_54, respectively.
         MSB                                              LSB
          0      1      2      3      4      5      6      7
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_08 | B_07 | B_06 | B_05 | B_04 | B_03 | B_02 | B_01 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_16 | B_15 | B_14 | B_13 | B_12 | B_11 | B_10 | B_09 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_24 | B_23 | B_22 | B_21 | B_20 | B_19 | B_18 | B_17 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_32 | B_31 | B_30 | B_29 | B_28 | B_27 | B_26 | B_25 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_40 | B_39 | B_38 | B_37 | B_36 | B_35 | B_34 | B_33 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_48 | B_47 | B_46 | B_45 | B_44 | B_43 | B_42 | B_41 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | RSVA | RSVB | B_54 | B_53 | B_52 | B_51 | B_50 | B_49 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
            Figure 2: Packed MELPe 2400 bps Payload Octets

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

3.1.2. 1200 bps Bitstream Structure

 According to Tables D-9a and D-9b of [MELPE], the 1200 bps MELPe bit
 transmission order is as follows:
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  Bit   |  Modes 1-4  |   Mode 5    |
               |        |   (Voiced)  | (Unvoiced)  |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_01  |     Syn     |     Syn     |
               |  B_02  |  Pitch&UV0  |  Pitch&UV0  |
               |  B_03  |  Pitch&UV1  |  Pitch&UV1  |
               |  B_04  |  Pitch&UV2  |  Pitch&UV2  |
               |  B_05  |  Pitch&UV3  |  Pitch&UV3  |
               |  B_06  |  Pitch&UV4  |  Pitch&UV4  |
               |  B_07  |  Pitch&UV5  |  Pitch&UV5  |
               |  B_08  |  Pitch&UV6  |  Pitch&UV6  |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_09  |  Pitch&UV7  |  Pitch&UV7  |
               |  B_10  |  Pitch&UV8  |  Pitch&UV8  |
               |  B_11  |  Pitch&UV9  |  Pitch&UV9  |
               |  B_12  | Pitch&UV10  | Pitch&UV10  |
               |  B_13  | Pitch&UV11  | Pitch&UV11  |
               |  B_14  |    LSP0     |    LSP0     |
               |  B_15  |    LSP1     |    LSP1     |
               |  B_16  |    LSP2     |    LSP2     |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_17  |    LSP3     |    LSP3     |
               |  B_18  |    LSP4     |    LSP4     |
               |  B_19  |    LSP5     |    LSP5     |
               |  B_20  |    LSP6     |    LSP6     |
               |  B_21  |    LSP7     |    LSP7     |
               |  B_22  |    LSP8     |    LSP8     |
               |  B_23  |    LSP9     |    LSP9     |
               |  B_24  |    LSP10    |    LSP10    |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_25  |    LSP11    |    LSP11    |
               |  B_26  |    LSP12    |    LSP12    |
               |  B_27  |    LSP13    |    LSP13    |
               |  B_28  |    LSP14    |    LSP14    |
               |  B_29  |    LSP15    |    LSP15    |
               |  B_30  |    LSP16    |    LSP16    |
               |  B_31  |    LSP17    |    LSP17    |
               |  B_32  |    LSP18    |    LSP18    |

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_33  |    LSP19    |    LSP19    |
               |  B_34  |    LSP20    |    LSP20    |
               |  B_35  |    LSP21    |    LSP21    |
               |  B_36  |    LSP22    |    LSP22    |
               |  B_37  |    LSP23    |    LSP23    |
               |  B_38  |    LSP24    |    LSP24    |
               |  B_39  |    LSP25    |    LSP25    |
               |  B_40  |    LSP26    |    LSP26    |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_41  |    LSP27    |    GAIN0    |
               |  B_42  |    LSP28    |    GAIN1    |
               |  B_43  |    LSP29    |    GAIN2    |
               |  B_44  |    LSP30    |    GAIN3    |
               |  B_45  |    LSP31    |    GAIN4    |
               |  B_46  |    LSP32    |    GAIN5    |
               |  B_47  |    LSP33    |    GAIN6    |
               |  B_48  |    LSP34    |    GAIN7    |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_49  |    LSP35    |    GAIN8    |
               |  B_50  |    LSP36    |    GAIN9    |
               |  B_51  |    LSP37    |             |
               |  B_52  |    LSP38    |             |
               |  B_53  |    LSP39    |             |
               |  B_54  |    LSP40    |             |
               |  B_55  |    LSP41    |             |
               |  B_56  |    LSP42    |             |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_57  |    GAIN0    |             |
               |  B_58  |    GAIN1    |             |
               |  B_59  |    GAIN2    |             |
               |  B_60  |    GAIN3    |             |
               |  B_61  |    GAIN4    |             |
               |  B_62  |    GAIN5    |             |
               |  B_63  |    GAIN6    |             |
               |  B_64  |    GAIN7    |             |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_65  |    GAIN8    |             |
               |  B_66  |    GAIN9    |             |
               |  B_67  |     BP0     |             |
               |  B_68  |     BP1     |             |
               |  B_69  |     BP2     |             |
               |  B_70  |     BP3     |             |
               |  B_71  |     BP4     |             |
               |  B_72  |     BP5     |             |

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_73  |   JITTER    |             |
               |  B_74  |     FS0     |             |
               |  B_75  |     FS1     |             |
               |  B_76  |     FS2     |             |
               |  B_77  |     FS3     |             |
               |  B_78  |     FS4     |             |
               |  B_79  |     FS5     |             |
               |  B_80  |     FS6     |             |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               |  B_81  |     FS7     |             |
               +--------+-------------+-------------+
               Notes:
               BP = Bandpass voicing
               FS = Fourier magnitudes
               LSP = Line Spectral Pair
               Pitch&UV = Pitch/voicing
               GAIN = Gain
               JITTER = Jitter
           Table 2: Bitstream Definition for MELPe 1200 bps
 The 1200 bps MELPe RTP payload is constructed as per Figure 3.  Note
 that bit B_01 is placed in the LSB of the first byte with all other
 bits in sequence.  When filling octets, the least significant bit of
 the eleventh octet is filled with bit B_81.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

         MSB                                              LSB
          0      1      2      3      4      5      6      7
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_08 | B_07 | B_06 | B_05 | B_04 | B_03 | B_02 | B_01 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_16 | B_15 | B_14 | B_13 | B_12 | B_11 | B_10 | B_09 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_24 | B_23 | B_22 | B_21 | B_20 | B_19 | B_18 | B_17 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_32 | B_31 | B_30 | B_29 | B_28 | B_27 | B_26 | B_25 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_40 | B_39 | B_38 | B_37 | B_36 | B_35 | B_34 | B_33 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_48 | B_47 | B_46 | B_45 | B_44 | B_43 | B_42 | B_41 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_56 | B_55 | B_54 | B_53 | B_52 | B_51 | B_50 | B_49 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_64 | B_63 | B_62 | B_61 | B_60 | B_59 | B_58 | B_57 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_72 | B_71 | B_70 | B_69 | B_68 | B_67 | B_66 | B_65 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_80 | B_79 | B_78 | B_77 | B_76 | B_75 | B_74 | B_73 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | RSVA | RSVB | RSVC | RSV0 | RSV0 | RSV0 | RSV0 | B_81 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
            Figure 3: Packed MELPe 1200 bps Payload Octets

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

3.1.3. 600 bps Bitstream Structure

 According to Tables M-11 to M-16 of [MELPE], the 600 bps MELPe bit
 transmission order (for clarity, the bit priority is not shown) is as
 follows:
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  Bit   |    Mode 1   |    Mode 2   |    Mode 3   |
        |        |   (Voiced)  |   (voiced)  |   (voiced)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_01  | Voicing (4) | Voicing (4) | Voicing (4) |
        |  B_02  | Voicing (3) | Voicing (3) | Voicing (3) |
        |  B_03  | Voicing (2) | Voicing (2) | Voicing (2) |
        |  B_04  | Voicing (1) | Voicing (1) | Voicing (1) |
        |  B_05  | Voicing (0) | Voicing (0) | Voicing (0) |
        |  B_06  |  LSF1,4 (3) |  Pitch (5)  |  Pitch (7)  |
        |  B_07  |  LSF1,4 (2) |  Pitch (4)  |  Pitch (6)  |
        |  B_08  |  LSF1,4 (1) |  Pitch (3)  |  Pitch (5)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_09  |  LSF1,4 (0) |  Pitch (2)  |  Pitch (4)  |
        |  B_10  |  LSF1,3 (3) |  Pitch (1)  |  Pitch (3)  |
        |  B_11  |  LSF1,3 (2) |  Pitch (0)  |  Pitch (2)  |
        |  B_12  |  LSF1,3 (1) |  LSF1,3 (3) |  Pitch (1)  |
        |  B_13  |  LSF1,3 (0) |  LSF1,3 (2) |  Pitch (0)  |
        |  B_14  |  LSF1,2 (3) |  LSF1,3 (1) |  LSF1,3 (3) |
        |  B_15  |  LSF1,2 (2) |  LSF1,3 (0) |  LSF1,3 (2) |
        |  B_16  |  LSF1,2 (1) |  LSF1,2 (3) |  LSF1,3 (1) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_17  |  LSF1,2 (0) |  LSF1,2 (2) |  LSF1,3 (0) |
        |  B_18  |  LSF1,1 (5) |  LSF1,2 (1) |  LSF1,2 (4) |
        |  B_19  |  LSF1,1 (4) |  LSF1,2 (0) |  LSF1,2 (3) |
        |  B_20  |  LSF1,1 (3) |  LSF1,1 (5) |  LSF1,2 (2) |
        |  B_21  |  LSF1,1 (2) |  LSF1,1 (4) |  LSF1,2 (1) |
        |  B_22  |  LSF1,1 (1) |  LSF1,1 (3) |  LSF1,2 (0) |
        |  B_23  |  LSF1,1 (0) |  LSF1,1 (2) |  LSF1,1 (5) |
        |  B_24  |  LSF2,4 (3) |  LSF1,1 (1) |  LSF1,1 (4) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_25  |  LSF2,4 (2) |  LSF1,1 (0) |  LSF1,1 (3) |
        |  B_26  |  LSF2,4 (1) |  LSF2,3 (3) |  LSF1,1 (2) |
        |  B_27  |  LSF2,4 (0) |  LSF2,3 (2) |  LSF1,1 (1) |
        |  B_28  |  LSF2,3 (3) |  LSF2,3 (1) |  LSF1,1 (0) |
        |  B_29  |  LSF2,3 (2) |  LSF2,3 (0) |  LSF2,3 (3) |
        |  B_30  |  LSF2,3 (1) |  LSF2,2 (4) |  LSF2,3 (2) |
        |  B_31  |  LSF2,3 (0) |  LSF2,2 (3) |  LSF2,3 (1) |
        |  B_32  |  LSF2,2 (3) |  LSF2,2 (2) |  LSF2,3 (0) |

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_33  |  LSF2,2 (2) |  LSF2,2 (1) |  LSF2,2 (4) |
        |  B_34  |  LSF2,2 (1) |  LSF2,2 (0) |  LSF2,2 (3) |
        |  B_35  |  LSF2,2 (0) |  LSF2,1 (6) |  LSF2,2 (2) |
        |  B_36  |  LSF2,1 (5) |  LSF2,1 (5) |  LSF2,2 (1) |
        |  B_37  |  LSF2,1 (4) |  LSF2,1 (4) |  LSF2,2 (0) |
        |  B_38  |  LSF2,1 (3) |  LSF2,1 (3) |  LSF2,1 (5) |
        |  B_39  |  LSF2,1 (2) |  LSF2,1 (2) |  LSF2,1 (4) |
        |  B_40  |  LSF2,1 (1) |  LSF2,1 (1) |  LSF2,1 (3) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_41  |  LSF2,1 (0) |  LSF2,1 (0) |  LSF2,1 (2) |
        |  B_42  |  GAIN2 (5)  |  GAIN2 (5)  |  LSF2,1 (1) |
        |  B_43  |  GAIN2 (4)  |  GAIN2 (4)  |  LSF2,1 (0) |
        |  B_44  |  GAIN2 (3)  |  GAIN2 (3)  |  GAIN2 (4)  |
        |  B_45  |  GAIN2 (2)  |  GAIN2 (2)  |  GAIN2 (3)  |
        |  B_46  |  GAIN2 (1)  |  GAIN2 (1)  |  GAIN2 (2)  |
        |  B_47  |  GAIN2 (0)  |  GAIN2 (0)  |  GAIN2 (1)  |
        |  B_48  |  GAIN1 (6)  |  GAIN1 (6)  |  GAIN2 (0)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_49  |  GAIN1 (5)  |  GAIN1 (5)  |  GAIN1 (5)  |
        |  B_50  |  GAIN1 (4)  |  GAIN1 (4)  |  GAIN1 (4)  |
        |  B_51  |  GAIN1 (3)  |  GAIN1 (3)  |  GAIN1 (3)  |
        |  B_52  |  GAIN1 (2)  |  GAIN1 (2)  |  GAIN1 (2)  |
        |  B_53  |  GAIN1 (1)  |  GAIN1 (1)  |  GAIN1 (1)  |
        |  B_54  |  GAIN1 (0)  |  GAIN1 (0)  |  GAIN1 (0)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
     Table 3: Bitstream Definition for MELPe 600 bps (Part 1 of 2)

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 14] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  Bit   |    Mode 4   |    Mode 5   |    Mode 6   |
        |        |   (voiced)  |   (voiced)  |   (voiced)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_01  | Voicing (4) | Voicing (4) | Voicing (4) |
        |  B_02  | Voicing (3) | Voicing (3) | Voicing (3) |
        |  B_03  | Voicing (2) | Voicing (2) | Voicing (2) |
        |  B_04  | Voicing (1) | Voicing (1) | Voicing (1) |
        |  B_05  | Voicing (0) | Voicing (0) | Voicing (0) |
        |  B_06  |  Pitch (7)  |  Pitch (7)  |  Pitch (7)  |
        |  B_07  |  Pitch (6)  |  Pitch (6)  |  Pitch (6)  |
        |  B_08  |  Pitch (5)  |  Pitch (5)  |  Pitch (5)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_09  |  Pitch (4)  |  Pitch (4)  |  Pitch (4)  |
        |  B_10  |  Pitch (3)  |  Pitch (3)  |  Pitch (3)  |
        |  B_11  |  Pitch (2)  |  Pitch (2)  |  Pitch (2)  |
        |  B_12  |  Pitch (1)  |  Pitch (1)  |  Pitch (1)  |
        |  B_13  |  Pitch (0)  |  Pitch (0)  |  Pitch (0)  |
        |  B_14  |  LSF1,3 (3) |  LSF1,3 (3) |  LSF1,3 (3) |
        |  B_15  |  LSF1,3 (2) |  LSF1,3 (2) |  LSF1,3 (2) |
        |  B_16  |  LSF1,3 (1) |  LSF1,3 (1) |  LSF1,3 (1) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_17  |  LSF1,3 (0) |  LSF1,3 (0) |  LSF1,3 (0) |
        |  B_18  |  LSF1,2 (3) |  LSF1,2 (4) |  LSF1,2 (4) |
        |  B_19  |  LSF1,2 (2) |  LSF1,2 (3) |  LSF1,2 (3) |
        |  B_20  |  LSF1,2 (1) |  LSF1,2 (2) |  LSF1,2 (2) |
        |  B_21  |  LSF1,2 (0) |  LSF1,2 (1) |  LSF1,2 (1) |
        |  B_22  |  LSF1,1 (5) |  LSF1,2 (0) |  LSF1,2 (0) |
        |  B_23  |  LSF1,1 (4) |  LSF1,1 (5) |  LSF1,1 (6) |
        |  B_24  |  LSF1,1 (3) |  LSF1,1 (4) |  LSF1,1 (5) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_25  |  LSF1,1 (2) |  LSF1,1 (3) |  LSF1,1 (4) |
        |  B_26  |  LSF1,1 (1) |  LSF1,1 (2) |  LSF1,1 (3) |
        |  B_27  |  LSF1,1 (0) |  LSF1,1 (1) |  LSF1,1 (2) |
        |  B_28  |  LSF2,3 (3) |  LSF1,1 (0) |  LSF1,1 (1) |
        |  B_29  |  LSF2,3 (2) |  LSF2,3 (3) |  LSF1,1 (0) |
        |  B_30  |  LSF2,3 (1) |  LSF2,3 (2) |  LSF2,3 (3) |
        |  B_31  |  LSF2,3 (0) |  LSF2,3 (1) |  LSF2,3 (2) |
        |  B_32  |  LSF2,2 (4) |  LSF2,3 (0) |  LSF2,3 (1) |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_33  |  LSF2,2 (3) |  LSF2,2 (4) |  LSF2,3 (0) |
        |  B_34  |  LSF2,2 (2) |  LSF2,2 (3) |  LSF2,2 (4) |
        |  B_35  |  LSF2,2 (1) |  LSF2,2 (2) |  LSF2,2 (3) |
        |  B_36  |  LSF2,2 (0) |  LSF2,2 (1) |  LSF2,2 (2) |
        |  B_37  |  LSF2,1 (6) |  LSF2,2 (0) |  LSF2,2 (1) |
        |  B_38  |  LSF2,1 (5) |  LSF2,1 (5) |  LSF2,2 (0) |
        |  B_39  |  LSF2,1 (4) |  LSF2,1 (4) |  LSF2,1 (6) |
        |  B_40  |  LSF2,1 (3) |  LSF2,1 (3) |  LSF2,1 (5) |

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 15] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_41  |  LSF2,1 (2) |  LSF2,1 (2) |  LSF2,1 (4) |
        |  B_42  |  LSF2,1 (1) |  LSF2,1 (1) |  LSF2,1 (3) |
        |  B_43  |  LSF2,1 (0) |  LSF2,1 (0) |  LSF2,1 (2) |
        |  B_44  |  GAIN2 (4)  |  GAIN2 (4)  |  LSF2,1 (1) |
        |  B_45  |  GAIN2 (3)  |  GAIN2 (3)  |  LSF2,1 (0) |
        |  B_46  |  GAIN2 (2)  |  GAIN2 (2)  |  GAIN1 (8)  |
        |  B_47  |  GAIN2 (1)  |  GAIN2 (1)  |  GAIN1 (7)  |
        |  B_48  |  GAIN2 (0)  |  GAIN2 (0)  |  GAIN1 (6)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        |  B_49  |  GAIN1 (5)  |  GAIN1 (5)  |  GAIN1 (5)  |
        |  B_50  |  GAIN1 (4)  |  GAIN1 (4)  |  GAIN1 (4)  |
        |  B_51  |  GAIN1 (3)  |  GAIN1 (3)  |  GAIN1 (3)  |
        |  B_52  |  GAIN1 (2)  |  GAIN1 (2)  |  GAIN1 (2)  |
        |  B_53  |  GAIN1 (1)  |  GAIN1 (1)  |  GAIN1 (1)  |
        |  B_54  |  GAIN1 (0)  |  GAIN1 (0)  |  GAIN1 (0)  |
        +--------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
        Notes:
        xxxx (0) = LSB
        xxxx (nbits-1) = MSB
        LSF1,p = MSVQ* index of the pth stage of the two first frames
        LSF2,p = MSVQ index of the pth stage of the two last frames
        GAIN1 = VQ/MSVQ index of the 1st stage
        GAIN2 = MSVQ index of the 2nd stage
        * MSVQ: Multi-Stage Vector Quantizer
     Table 4: Bitstream Definition for MELPe 600 bps (Part 2 of 2)
 The 600 bps MELPe RTP payload is constructed as per Figure 4.  Note
 that bit B_01 is placed in the LSB of the first byte with all other
 bits in sequence.  When filling octets, the least significant bits of
 the seventh octet are filled with bits B_49 to B_54, respectively.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 16] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

         MSB                                              LSB
          0      1      2      3      4      5      6      7
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_08 | B_07 | B_06 | B_05 | B_04 | B_03 | B_02 | B_01 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_16 | B_15 | B_14 | B_13 | B_12 | B_11 | B_10 | B_09 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_24 | B_23 | B_22 | B_21 | B_20 | B_19 | B_18 | B_17 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_32 | B_31 | B_30 | B_29 | B_28 | B_27 | B_26 | B_25 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_40 | B_39 | B_38 | B_37 | B_36 | B_35 | B_34 | B_33 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_48 | B_47 | B_46 | B_45 | B_44 | B_43 | B_42 | B_41 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | RSVA | RSVB | B_54 | B_53 | B_52 | B_51 | B_50 | B_49 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
             Figure 4: Packed MELPe 600 bps Payload Octets

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 17] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

3.2. MELPe Comfort Noise Bitstream Definition

 Table B.3-1 of [SCIP210] identifies the usage of MELPe 2400 bps
 parameters for conveying comfort noise.
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |           MELPe Parameter           |      Value     |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      | msvq[0] (line spectral frequencies) |  * See Note    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      | msvq[1] (line spectral frequencies) |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      | msvq[2] (line spectral frequencies) |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      | msvq[3] (line spectral frequencies) |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |      fsvq (Fourier magnitudes)      |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |            gain[0] (gain)           |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |            gain[1] (gain)           |  * See Note    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |   pitch (pitch - overall voicing)   |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |        bp (bandpass voicing)        |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |   af (aperiodic flag/jitter index)  |    Set to 0    |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      |           sync (sync bit)           |  Alternations  |
      +-------------------------------------+----------------+
      Note:
      The default values are the respective parameters from the
      vocoder frame.  It is preferred that msvq[0] and gain[1]
      values be derived by averaging the respective parameter from
      some number of previous vocoder frames.
                Table 5: MELPe Comfort Noise Parameters

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 18] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 Since only msvq[0] (also known as LSF1x or the first LSP) and gain[1]
 (also known as g2x or the second gain) are needed, the following bit
 order is used for comfort noise frames:
                     +--------+-------------+
                     |  Bit   |   Comfort   |
                     |        |    Noise    |
                     +--------+-------------+
                     |  B_01  |     LSF10   |
                     |  B_02  |     LSF11   |
                     |  B_03  |     LSF12   |
                     |  B_04  |     LSF13   |
                     |  B_05  |     LSF14   |
                     |  B_06  |     LSF15   |
                     |  B_07  |     LSF16   |
                     |  B_08  |       g20   |
                     +--------+-------------+
                     |  B_09  |       g21   |
                     |  B_10  |       g22   |
                     |  B_11  |       g23   |
                     |  B_12  |       g24   |
                     |  B_13  |      SYNC   |
                     +--------+-------------+
                     Notes:
                     g = Gain
                     LSF = Line Spectral Frequencies
         Table 6: Bitstream Definition for MELPe Comfort Noise
 The comfort noise MELPe RTP payload is constructed as per Figure 5.
 Note that bit B_01 is placed in the LSB of the first byte with all
 other bits in sequence.  When filling octets, the least significant
 bits of the second octet are filled with bits B_09 to B_13,
 respectively.
         MSB                                              LSB
          0      1      2      3      4      5      6      7
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | B_08 | B_07 | B_06 | B_05 | B_04 | B_03 | B_02 | B_01 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
      | RSVA | RSVB | RSVC | B_13 | B_12 | B_11 | B_10 | B_09 |
      +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
          Figure 5: Packed MELPe Comfort Noise Payload Octets

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 19] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

3.3. Multiple MELPe Frames in an RTP Packet

 A MELPe RTP packet MAY consist of zero or more MELPe coder frames
 followed by zero or one MELPe comfort noise frame.  The presence of a
 comfort noise frame can be deduced from the length of the RTP
 payload.  The default packetization interval is one coder frame
 (22.5, 67.5, or 90 ms) according to the coder bitrate (2400, 1200, or
 600 bps).  For some applications, a longer packetization interval is
 used to reduce the packet rate.
 A MELPe RTP packet comprised of no coder frame and no comfort noise
 frame MAY be used periodically by an endpoint to indicate
 connectivity by an otherwise idle receiver.
 All MELPe frames in a single RTP packet MUST be of the same coder
 bitrate.  Dynamic switching between frame rates within an RTP stream
 may be permitted (if supported by both ends) provided that reserved
 bits RSVA, RSVB, and RSVC are filled in as per Table 7.  If bitrate
 switching is not used, all reserved bits are encoded as 0 by the
 sender and ignored by the receiver.  (RSV0 is always coded as 0.)
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |   Coder Bitrate   | RSVA | RSVB | RSVC |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |   2400 bps        |   0  |   0  |  N/A |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |   1200 bps        |   1  |   0  |   0  |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |    600 bps        |   0  |   1  |  N/A |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |   Comfort Noise   |   1  |   0  |   1  |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
               |   (reserved)      |   1  |   1  |  N/A |
               +-------------------+------+------+------+
                Table 7: MELPe Frame Bitrate Indicators
 It is important to observe that senders have the following additional
 restrictions:
 Senders SHOULD NOT include more MELPe frames in a single RTP packet
 than will fit in the MTU of the RTP transport protocol.
 Frames MUST NOT be split between RTP packets.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 20] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 It is RECOMMENDED that the number of frames contained within an RTP
 packet be consistent with the application.  For example, in telephony
 and other real-time applications where delay is important, then the
 fewer frames per packet the lower the delay, whereas for bandwidth-
 constrained links or delay-insensitive streaming messaging
 applications, more than one frame per packet or many frames per
 packet would be acceptable.
 Information describing the number of frames contained in an RTP
 packet is not transmitted as part of the RTP payload.  The way to
 determine the number of MELPe frames is to count the total number of
 octets within the RTP packet and divide the octet count by the number
 of expected octets per frame (7/11/7 per frame).  Keep in mind that
 the last frame can be a 2-octet comfort noise frame.
 When dynamic bitrate switching is used and more than one frame is
 contained in an RTP packet, it is RECOMMENDED that the coder rate
 bits contained in the last octet be inspected.  If the coder bitrate
 indicates a comfort noise frame, then inspect the third last octet
 for the coder bitrate.  All MELPe speech frames in the RTP packet
 will be of this same coder bitrate.

3.4. Congestion Control Considerations

 The target bitrate of MELPe can be adjusted at any point in time,
 thus allowing congestion management.  Furthermore, the amount of
 encoded speech or audio data encoded in a single packet can be used
 for congestion control, since the packet rate is inversely
 proportional to the packet duration.  A lower packet transmission
 rate reduces the amount of header overhead but at the same time
 increases latency and loss sensitivity, so it ought to be used
 with care.
 Since UDP does not provide congestion control, applications that use
 RTP over UDP SHOULD implement their own congestion control above the
 UDP layer [RFC8085] and MAY also implement a transport circuit
 breaker [RFC8083].  Work in the RMCAT working group [RMCAT] describes
 the interactions and conceptual interfaces necessary between the
 application components that relate to congestion control, including
 the RTP layer, the higher-level media codec control layer, and the
 lower-level transport interface, as well as components dedicated to
 congestion control functions.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 21] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

4. Payload Format Parameters

 This RTP payload format is identified using the MELP, MELP2400,
 MELP1200, and MELP600 media subtypes, which are registered in
 accordance with RFC 4855 [RFC4855] and per the media type
 registration template from RFC 6838 [RFC6838].

4.1. Media Type Definitions

 Type name: audio
 Subtype names: MELP, MELP2400, MELP1200, and MELP600
 Required parameters: N/A
 Optional parameters:
    ptime: the recommended length of time (in milliseconds)
       represented by the media in a packet.  It SHALL use the nearest
       rounded-up ms integer packet duration.  For MELPe, this
       corresponds to the following values: 23, 45, 68, 90, 112, 135,
       156, and 180.  Larger values can be used as long as they are
       properly rounded.  See Section 6 of RFC 4566 [RFC4566].
    maxptime: the maximum length of time (in milliseconds) that can be
       encapsulated in a packet.  It SHALL use the nearest rounded-up
       ms integer packet duration.  For MELPe, this corresponds to the
       following values: 23, 45, 68, 90, 112, 135, 156, and 180.
       Larger values can be used as long as they are properly rounded.
       See Section 6 of RFC 4566 [RFC4566].
    bitrate: specifies the MELPe coder bitrates supported.  Possible
       values are a comma-separated list of rates from the following
       set: 2400, 1200, 600.  The modes are listed in order of
       preference; first is preferred.  If "bitrate" is not present,
       the fixed coder bitrate of 2400 MUST be used.  The alternate
       encoding names "MELP2400", "MELP1200", and "MELP600" directly
       specify the MELPe coder bitrates of 2400, 1200, and 600,
       respectively, and MUST NOT specify a "bitrate" parameter.
 Encoding considerations: These media subtypes are framed and binary;
    see Section 4.8 of RFC 6838 [RFC6838].
 Security considerations: Please see Section 8 of RFC 8130.
 Interoperability considerations: Early implementations used MELP2400,
    MELP1200, and MELP600 to indicate both coder type and bitrate.
    These media type names should be preserved with this registration.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 22] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 Published specification: N/A
 Applications that use this media type: N/A
 Additional information: N/A
    Deprecated alias names for this type: N/A
    Magic number(s): N/A
    File extension(s): N/A
    Macintosh file type code(s): N/A
 Person & email address to contact for further information:
    Victor Demjanenko, Ph.D.
    VOCAL Technologies, Ltd.
    520 Lee Entrance, Suite 202
    Buffalo, NY  14228
    United States of America
    Phone: +1 716 688 4675
    Email: victor.demjanenko@vocal.com
 Intended usage: COMMON
 Restrictions on usage: These media subtypes depend on RTP framing and
    hence are only defined for transfer via RTP [RFC3550].  Transport
    within other framing protocols is not defined at this time.
 Author: Victor Demjanenko
 Change controller: IETF Payload working group delegated from the
    IESG.
 Provisional registration? (standards tree only): No

4.2. Mapping to SDP

 The mapping of the above-defined payload format media subtypes and
 their parameters SHALL be done according to Section 3 of RFC 4855
 [RFC4855].

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 23] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 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.  When SDP
 is used to specify sessions employing the MELPe codec, the mapping is
 as follows:
 o  The media type ("audio") goes in SDP "m=" as the media name.
 o  The media subtype (payload format name) goes in SDP "a=rtpmap" as
    the encoding name.
 o  The parameter "bitrate" goes in the SDP "a=fmtp" attribute by
    copying it as a "bitrate=<value>" string.
 o  The parameters "ptime" and "maxptime" go in the SDP "a=ptime" and
    "a=maxptime" attributes, respectively.
 When conveying information via SDP, the encoding name SHALL be "MELP"
 (the same as the media subtype).  Alternate encoding name subtypes
 "MELP2400", "MELP1200", and "MELP600" MAY be used in SDP to convey
 fixed-bitrate configurations.  These names have been observed in
 systems that do not support dynamic frame-rate switching as specified
 by the parameter "bitrate".
 An example of the media representation in SDP for describing MELPe
 might be:
    m=audio 49120 RTP/AVP 97
    a=rtpmap:97 MELP/8000
 An alternative example of SDP for fixed-bitrate configurations
 might be:
    m=audio 49120 RTP/AVP 97 100 101 102
    a=rtpmap:97 MELP/8000
    a=rtpmap:100 MELP2400/8000
    a=rtpmap:101 MELP1200/8000
    a=rtpmap:102 MELP600/8000
 If the encoding name "MELP" is received without a "bitrate"
 parameter, the fixed coder bitrate of 2400 MUST be used.  The
 alternate encoding names "MELP2400", "MELP1200", and "MELP600"
 directly specify the MELPe coder bitrates of 2400, 1200, and 600,
 respectively, and MUST NOT specify a "bitrate" parameter.
 The optional media type parameter "bitrate", when present, MUST be
 included in the "a=fmtp" attribute in the SDP, expressed as a media
 type string in the form of a semicolon-separated list of

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 24] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 parameter=value pairs.  The string "value" can be one or more of
 2400, 1200, and 600, separated by commas (where each bitrate value
 indicates the corresponding MELPe coder).  An example of the media
 representation in SDP for describing MELPe when all three coder
 bitrates are supported might be:
    m=audio 49120 RTP/AVP 97
    a=rtpmap:97 MELP/8000
    a=fmtp:97 bitrate=2400,600,1200
 Parameter "ptime" cannot be used for the purpose of specifying the
 MELPe operating mode, due to the fact that for certain values it will
 be impossible to distinguish which mode is about to be used (e.g.,
 when ptime=68, it would be impossible to distinguish if the packet is
 carrying one frame of 67.5 ms or three frames of 22.5 ms).
 Note that the payload format (encoding) names are commonly shown in
 upper case.  Media subtypes are commonly shown in lower case.  These
 names are case insensitive in both places.  Similarly, parameter
 names are case insensitive in both the media subtype name and the
 default mapping to the SDP a=fmtp attribute.

4.3. Declarative SDP Considerations

 For declarative media, the "bitrate" parameter specifies the possible
 bitrates used by the sender.  Multiple MELPe rtpmap values (such as
 97, 98, and 99, as used below) MAY be used to convey MELPe-coded
 voice at different bitrates.  The receiver can then select an
 appropriate MELPe codec by using 97, 98, or 99.
    m=audio 49120 RTP/AVP 97 98 99
    a=rtpmap:97 MELP/8000
    a=fmtp:97 bitrate=2400
    a=rtpmap:98 MELP/8000
    a=fmtp:98 bitrate=1200
    a=rtpmap:99 MELP/8000
    a=fmtp:99 bitrate=600

4.4. Offer/Answer SDP Considerations

 In the Offer/Answer model [RFC3264], "bitrate" is a bidirectional
 parameter.  Both sides MUST use a common "bitrate" value or values.
 The offer contains the bitrates supported by the offerer, listed in
 its preferred order.  The answerer MAY agree to any bitrate by
 listing the bitrate first in the answerer response.  Additionally,
 the answerer MAY indicate any secondary bitrate or bitrates that it
 supports.  The initial bitrate used by both parties SHALL be the
 first bitrate specified in the answerer response.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 25] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 For example, if offerer bitrates are "2400,600" and answer bitrates
 are "600,2400", the initial bitrate is 600.  If other bitrates are
 provided by the answerer, any common bitrate between the offer and
 answer MAY be used at any time in the future.  Activation of these
 other common bitrates is beyond the scope of this document.
 The use of a lower bitrate is often important for a case such as when
 one endpoint utilizes a bandwidth-constrained link (e.g., 1200 bps
 radio link or slower), where only the lower coder bitrate will work.

5. Discontinuous Transmissions

 A primary application of MELPe is for radio communications of voice
 conversations, and discontinuous transmissions are normal.  When
 MELPe is used in an IP network, MELPe RTP packet transmissions may
 cease and resume frequently.  RTP synchronization source (SSRC)
 sequence number gaps indicate lost packets to be filled by PLC, while
 abrupt loss of RTP packets indicates intended discontinuous
 transmissions.
 If a MELPe coder so desires, it may send a comfort noise frame as per
 Appendix B of [SCIP210] prior to ceasing transmission.  A receiver
 may optionally use comfort noise during its silence periods.  No SDP
 negotiations are required.

6. Packet Loss Concealment

 MELPe packet loss concealment (PLC) uses the special properties and
 coding for the pitch/voicing parameter of the MELPe 2400 bps coder.
 The PLC erasure indication utilizes any of the errored encodings of a
 non-voiced frame as identified in Table 1 of [MELPE].  For the sake
 of simplicity, it is preferred that a code value of 3 for the
 pitch/voicing parameter (represented by the bits P6 to P0 in Table 1
 of this document) be used.  Hence, set bits P0 and P1 to one and bits
 P2, P3, P4, P5, and P6 to zero.
 When using PLC in 1200 bps or 600 bps mode, the MELPe 2400 bps
 decoder is called three or four times, respectively, to cover the
 loss of a MELPe frame.

7. IANA Considerations

 IANA has registered MELP, MELP2400, MELP1200, and MELP600 as
 specified in Section 4.1.  IANA has also added these media subtypes
 to the "RTP Payload Format media types" registry
 (http://www.iana.org/assignments/rtp-parameters).

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 26] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

8. Security Considerations

 RTP packets using the payload format defined in this specification
 are subject to the security considerations discussed in the RTP
 specification [RFC3550] and in any applicable RTP profile such as
 RTP/AVP [RFC3551], RTP/AVPF [RFC4585], RTP/SAVP [RFC3711], or
 RTP/SAVPF [RFC5124].  However, as discussed in [RFC7202], it is not
 an RTP payload format's responsibility to discuss or mandate what
 solutions are used to meet such basic security goals as
 confidentiality, integrity, and source authenticity for RTP in
 general.  This responsibility lies with anyone using RTP in an
 application.  They can find guidance on available security mechanisms
 and important considerations in [RFC7201].  Applications SHOULD use
 one or more appropriate strong security mechanisms.  The rest of this
 section discusses the security-impacting properties of the payload
 format itself.
 This RTP payload format and the MELPe decoder do not exhibit any
 significant non-uniformity in the receiver-side computational
 complexity for packet processing and thus are unlikely to pose a
 denial-of-service threat due to the receipt of pathological data.
 Additionally, the RTP payload format does not contain any active
 content.
 Please see the security considerations discussed in [RFC6562]
 regarding VAD and its effect on bitrates.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC2736]  Handley, M. and C. Perkins, "Guidelines for Writers of RTP
            Payload Format Specifications", BCP 36, RFC 2736,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2736, December 1999,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2736>.
 [RFC3264]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model
            with Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3264, June 2002,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3264>.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 27] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
            Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
            Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,
            July 2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.
 [RFC3551]  Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio and
            Video Conferences with Minimal Control", STD 65, RFC 3551,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3551, July 2003,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3551>.
 [RFC3711]  Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
            Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",
            RFC 3711, DOI 10.17487/RFC3711, March 2004,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3711>.
 [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
            Description Protocol", RFC 4566, DOI 10.17487/RFC4566,
            July 2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4566>.
 [RFC4855]  Casner, S., "Media Type Registration of RTP Payload
            Formats", RFC 4855, DOI 10.17487/RFC4855, February 2007,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4855>.
 [RFC5124]  Ott, J. and E. Carrara, "Extended Secure RTP Profile for
            Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback
            (RTP/SAVPF)", RFC 5124, DOI 10.17487/RFC5124,
            February 2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5124>.
 [RFC6562]  Perkins, C. and JM. Valin, "Guidelines for the Use of
            Variable Bit Rate Audio with Secure RTP", RFC 6562,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6562, March 2012,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6562>.
 [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
            Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
            RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.
 [RFC8083]  Perkins, C. and V. Singh, "Multimedia Congestion Control:
            Circuit Breakers for Unicast RTP Sessions", RFC 8083,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8083, March 2017,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8083>.
 [RFC8085]  Eggert, L., Fairhurst, G., and G. Shepherd, "UDP Usage
            Guidelines", RFC 8085, DOI 10.17487/RFC8085, March 2017,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8085>.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 28] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

 [MELP]     Department of Defense Telecommunications Standard,
            "Analog-to-Digital Conversion of Voice by 2,400 Bit/Second
            Mixed Excitation Linear Prediction (MELP)", MIL-STD-3005,
            December 1999.
 [MELPE]    North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), "The 600 Bit/S,
            1200 Bit/S and 2400 Bit/S NATO Interoperable Narrow Band
            Voice Coder", STANAG No. 4591, January 2006.
 [SCIP210]  National Security Agency, "SCIP Signaling Plan", SCIP-210,
            December 2007.

9.2. Informative References

 [RFC4585]  Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,
            "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control
            Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.
 [RFC7201]  Westerlund, M. and C. Perkins, "Options for Securing RTP
            Sessions", RFC 7201, DOI 10.17487/RFC7201, April 2014,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7201>.
 [RFC7202]  Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Securing the RTP
            Framework: Why RTP Does Not Mandate a Single Media
            Security Solution", RFC 7202, DOI 10.17487/RFC7202,
            April 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7202>.
 [RMCAT]    IETF, RTP Media Congestion Avoidance Techniques (rmcat)
            Working Group,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/rmcat/about/>.

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 29] RFC 8130 RTP Payload Format for MELPe Codec March 2017

Authors' Addresses

 Victor Demjanenko, Ph.D.
 VOCAL Technologies, Ltd.
 520 Lee Entrance, Suite 202
 Buffalo, NY  14228
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 716 688 4675
 Email: victor.demjanenko@vocal.com
 David Satterlee
 VOCAL Technologies, Ltd.
 520 Lee Entrance, Suite 202
 Buffalo, NY  14228
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 716 688 4675
 Email: david.satterlee@vocal.com

Demjanenko & Satterlee Standards Track [Page 30]

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