【RFC 3550】

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Network Working Group                                     H. SchulzrinneRequest for Comments: 3550                           Columbia UniversityObsoletes: 1889                                               S.  CasnerCategory: Standards Track                                  Packet Design                                                            R. Frederick                                                  Blue Coat Systems Inc.                                                             V. Jacobson                                                           Packet Design                                                               July 2003          RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time ApplicationsStatus 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) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This memorandum describes RTP, the real-time transport protocol.  RTP   provides end-to-end network transport functions suitable for   applications transmitting real-time data, such as audio, video or   simulation data, over multicast or unicast network services.  RTP   does not address resource reservation and does not guarantee   quality-of-service for real-time services.  The data transport is   augmented by a control protocol (RTCP) to allow monitoring of the   data delivery in a manner scalable to large multicast networks, and   to provide minimal control and identification functionality.  RTP and   RTCP are designed to be independent of the underlying transport and   network layers.  The protocol supports the use of RTP-level   translators and mixers.   Most of the text in this memorandum is identical to RFC 1889 which it   obsoletes.  There are no changes in the packet formats on the wire,   only changes to the rules and algorithms governing how the protocol   is used.  The biggest change is an enhancement to the scalable timer   algorithm for calculating when to send RTCP packets in order to   minimize transmission in excess of the intended rate when many   participants join a session simultaneously.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 1]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003Table of Contents   1.  Introduction ................................................   4       1.1  Terminology ............................................   5   2.  RTP Use Scenarios ...........................................   5       2.1  Simple Multicast Audio Conference ......................   6       2.2  Audio and Video Conference .............................   7       2.3  Mixers and Translators .................................   7       2.4  Layered Encodings ......................................   8   3.  Definitions .................................................   8   4.  Byte Order, Alignment, and Time Format ......................  12   5.  RTP Data Transfer Protocol ..................................  13       5.1  RTP Fixed Header Fields ................................  13       5.2  Multiplexing RTP Sessions ..............................  16       5.3  Profile-Specific Modifications to the RTP Header .......  18            5.3.1  RTP Header Extension ............................  18   6.  RTP Control Protocol -- RTCP ................................  19       6.1  RTCP Packet Format .....................................  21       6.2  RTCP Transmission Interval .............................  24            6.2.1  Maintaining the Number of Session Members .......  28       6.3  RTCP Packet Send and Receive Rules .....................  28            6.3.1  Computing the RTCP Transmission Interval ........  29            6.3.2  Initialization ..................................  30            6.3.3  Receiving an RTP or Non-BYE RTCP Packet .........  31            6.3.4  Receiving an RTCP BYE Packet ....................  31            6.3.5  Timing Out an SSRC ..............................  32            6.3.6  Expiration of Transmission Timer ................  32            6.3.7  Transmitting a BYE Packet .......................  33            6.3.8  Updating we_sent ................................  34            6.3.9  Allocation of Source Description Bandwidth ......  34       6.4  Sender and Receiver Reports ............................  35            6.4.1  SR: Sender Report RTCP Packet ...................  36            6.4.2  RR: Receiver Report RTCP Packet .................  42            6.4.3  Extending the Sender and Receiver Reports .......  42            6.4.4  Analyzing Sender and Receiver Reports ...........  43       6.5  SDES: Source Description RTCP Packet ...................  45            6.5.1  CNAME: Canonical End-Point Identifier SDES Item .  46            6.5.2  NAME: User Name SDES Item .......................  48            6.5.3  EMAIL: Electronic Mail Address SDES Item ........  48            6.5.4  PHONE: Phone Number SDES Item ...................  49            6.5.5  LOC: Geographic User Location SDES Item .........  49            6.5.6  TOOL: Application or Tool Name SDES Item ........  49            6.5.7  NOTE: Notice/Status SDES Item ...................  50            6.5.8  PRIV: Private Extensions SDES Item ..............  50       6.6  BYE: Goodbye RTCP Packet ...............................  51       6.7  APP: Application-Defined RTCP Packet ...................  52   7.  RTP Translators and Mixers ..................................  53       7.1  General Description ....................................  53Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 2]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003       7.2  RTCP Processing in Translators .........................  55       7.3  RTCP Processing in Mixers ..............................  57       7.4  Cascaded Mixers ........................................  58   8.  SSRC Identifier Allocation and Use ..........................  59       8.1  Probability of Collision ...............................  59       8.2  Collision Resolution and Loop Detection ................  60       8.3  Use with Layered Encodings .............................  64   9.  Security ....................................................  65       9.1  Confidentiality ........................................  65       9.2  Authentication and Message Integrity ...................  67   10. Congestion Control ..........................................  67   11. RTP over Network and Transport Protocols ....................  68   12. Summary of Protocol Constants ...............................  69       12.1 RTCP Packet Types ......................................  70       12.2 SDES Types .............................................  70   13. RTP Profiles and Payload Format Specifications ..............  71   14. Security Considerations .....................................  73   15. IANA Considerations .........................................  73   16. Intellectual Property Rights Statement ......................  74   17. Acknowledgments .............................................  74   Appendix A.   Algorithms ........................................  75   Appendix A.1  RTP Data Header Validity Checks ...................  78   Appendix A.2  RTCP Header Validity Checks .......................  82   Appendix A.3  Determining Number of Packets Expected and Lost ...  83   Appendix A.4  Generating RTCP SDES Packets ......................  84   Appendix A.5  Parsing RTCP SDES Packets .........................  85   Appendix A.6  Generating a Random 32-bit Identifier .............  85   Appendix A.7  Computing the RTCP Transmission Interval ..........  87   Appendix A.8  Estimating the Interarrival Jitter ................  94   Appendix B.   Changes from RFC 1889 .............................  95   References ...................................................... 100   Normative References ............................................ 100   Informative References .......................................... 100   Authors' Addresses .............................................. 103   Full Copyright Statement ........................................ 104Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 3]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20031. Introduction   This memorandum specifies the real-time transport protocol (RTP),   which provides end-to-end delivery services for data with real-time   characteristics, such as interactive audio and video.  Those services   include payload type identification, sequence numbering, timestamping   and delivery monitoring.  Applications typically run RTP on top of   UDP to make use of its multiplexing and checksum services; both   protocols contribute parts of the transport protocol functionality.   However, RTP may be used with other suitable underlying network or   transport protocols (see Section 11).  RTP supports data transfer to   multiple destinations using multicast distribution if provided by the   underlying network.   Note that RTP itself does not provide any mechanism to ensure timely   delivery or provide other quality-of-service guarantees, but relies   on lower-layer services to do so.  It does not guarantee delivery or   prevent out-of-order delivery, nor does it assume that the underlying   network is reliable and delivers packets in sequence.  The sequence   numbers included in RTP allow the receiver to reconstruct the   sender's packet sequence, but sequence numbers might also be used to   determine the proper location of a packet, for example in video   decoding, without necessarily decoding packets in sequence.   While RTP is primarily designed to satisfy the needs of multi-   participant multimedia conferences, it is not limited to that   particular application.  Storage of continuous data, interactive   distributed simulation, active badge, and control and measurement   applications may also find RTP applicable.   This document defines RTP, consisting of two closely-linked parts:   o  the real-time transport protocol (RTP), to carry data that has      real-time properties.   o  the RTP control protocol (RTCP), to monitor the quality of service      and to convey information about the participants in an on-going      session.  The latter aspect of RTCP may be sufficient for "loosely      controlled" sessions, i.e., where there is no explicit membership      control and set-up, but it is not necessarily intended to support      all of an application's control communication requirements.  This      functionality may be fully or partially subsumed by a separate      session control protocol, which is beyond the scope of this      document.   RTP represents a new style of protocol following the principles of   application level framing and integrated layer processing proposed by   Clark and Tennenhouse [10].  That is, RTP is intended to be malleableSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 4]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   to provide the information required by a particular application and   will often be integrated into the application processing rather than   being implemented as a separate layer.  RTP is a protocol framework   that is deliberately not complete.  This document specifies those   functions expected to be common across all the applications for which   RTP would be appropriate.  Unlike conventional protocols in which   additional functions might be accommodated by making the protocol   more general or by adding an option mechanism that would require   parsing, RTP is intended to be tailored through modifications and/or   additions to the headers as needed.  Examples are given in Sections   5.3 and 6.4.3.   Therefore, in addition to this document, a complete specification of   RTP for a particular application will require one or more companion   documents (see Section 13):   o  a profile specification document, which defines a set of payload      type codes and their mapping to payload formats (e.g., media      encodings).  A profile may also define extensions or modifications      to RTP that are specific to a particular class of applications.      Typically an application will operate under only one profile.  A      profile for audio and video data may be found in the companion RFC      3551 [1].   o  payload format specification documents, which define how a      particular payload, such as an audio or video encoding, is to be      carried in RTP.   A discussion of real-time services and algorithms for their   implementation as well as background discussion on some of the RTP   design decisions can be found in [11].1.1 Terminology   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 BCP 14, RFC 2119 [2]   and indicate requirement levels for compliant RTP implementations.2. RTP Use Scenarios   The following sections describe some aspects of the use of RTP.  The   examples were chosen to illustrate the basic operation of   applications using RTP, not to limit what RTP may be used for.  In   these examples, RTP is carried on top of IP and UDP, and follows the   conventions established by the profile for audio and video specified   in the companion RFC 3551.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 5]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20032.1 Simple Multicast Audio Conference   A working group of the IETF meets to discuss the latest protocol   document, using the IP multicast services of the Internet for voice   communications.  Through some allocation mechanism the working group   chair obtains a multicast group address and pair of ports.  One port   is used for audio data, and the other is used for control (RTCP)   packets.  This address and port information is distributed to the   intended participants.  If privacy is desired, the data and control   packets may be encrypted as specified in Section 9.1, in which case   an encryption key must also be generated and distributed.  The exact   details of these allocation and distribution mechanisms are beyond   the scope of RTP.   The audio conferencing application used by each conference   participant sends audio data in small chunks of, say, 20 ms duration.   Each chunk of audio data is preceded by an RTP header; RTP header and   data are in turn contained in a UDP packet.  The RTP header indicates   what type of audio encoding (such as PCM, ADPCM or LPC) is contained   in each packet so that senders can change the encoding during a   conference, for example, to accommodate a new participant that is   connected through a low-bandwidth link or react to indications of   network congestion.   The Internet, like other packet networks, occasionally loses and   reorders packets and delays them by variable amounts of time.  To   cope with these impairments, the RTP header contains timing   information and a sequence number that allow the receivers to   reconstruct the timing produced by the source, so that in this   example, chunks of audio are contiguously played out the speaker   every 20 ms.  This timing reconstruction is performed separately for   each source of RTP packets in the conference.  The sequence number   can also be used by the receiver to estimate how many packets are   being lost.   Since members of the working group join and leave during the   conference, it is useful to know who is participating at any moment   and how well they are receiving the audio data.  For that purpose,   each instance of the audio application in the conference periodically   multicasts a reception report plus the name of its user on the RTCP   (control) port.  The reception report indicates how well the current   speaker is being received and may be used to control adaptive   encodings.  In addition to the user name, other identifying   information may also be included subject to control bandwidth limits.   A site sends the RTCP BYE packet (Section 6.6) when it leaves the   conference.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 6]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20032.2 Audio and Video Conference   If both audio and video media are used in a conference, they are   transmitted as separate RTP sessions.  That is, separate RTP and RTCP   packets are transmitted for each medium using two different UDP port   pairs and/or multicast addresses.  There is no direct coupling at the   RTP level between the audio and video sessions, except that a user   participating in both sessions should use the same distinguished   (canonical) name in the RTCP packets for both so that the sessions   can be associated.   One motivation for this separation is to allow some participants in   the conference to receive only one medium if they choose.  Further   explanation is given in Section 5.2.  Despite the separation,   synchronized playback of a source's audio and video can be achieved   using timing information carried in the RTCP packets for both   sessions.2.3 Mixers and Translators   So far, we have assumed that all sites want to receive media data in   the same format.  However, this may not always be appropriate.   Consider the case where participants in one area are connected   through a low-speed link to the majority of the conference   participants who enjoy high-speed network access.  Instead of forcing   everyone to use a lower-bandwidth, reduced-quality audio encoding, an   RTP-level relay called a mixer may be placed near the low-bandwidth   area.  This mixer resynchronizes incoming audio packets to   reconstruct the constant 20 ms spacing generated by the sender, mixes   these reconstructed audio streams into a single stream, translates   the audio encoding to a lower-bandwidth one and forwards the lower-   bandwidth packet stream across the low-speed link.  These packets   might be unicast to a single recipient or multicast on a different   address to multiple recipients.  The RTP header includes a means for   mixers to identify the sources that contributed to a mixed packet so   that correct talker indication can be provided at the receivers.   Some of the intended participants in the audio conference may be   connected with high bandwidth links but might not be directly   reachable via IP multicast.  For example, they might be behind an   application-level firewall that will not let any IP packets pass.   For these sites, mixing may not be necessary, in which case another   type of RTP-level relay called a translator may be used.  Two   translators are installed, one on either side of the firewall, with   the outside one funneling all multicast packets received through a   secure connection to the translator inside the firewall.  The   translator inside the firewall sends them again as multicast packets   to a multicast group restricted to the site's internal network.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 7]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Mixers and translators may be designed for a variety of purposes.  An   example is a video mixer that scales the images of individual people   in separate video streams and composites them into one video stream   to simulate a group scene.  Other examples of translation include the   connection of a group of hosts speaking only IP/UDP to a group of   hosts that understand only ST-II, or the packet-by-packet encoding   translation of video streams from individual sources without   resynchronization or mixing.  Details of the operation of mixers and   translators are given in Section 7.2.4 Layered Encodings   Multimedia applications should be able to adjust the transmission   rate to match the capacity of the receiver or to adapt to network   congestion.  Many implementations place the responsibility of rate-   adaptivity at the source.  This does not work well with multicast   transmission because of the conflicting bandwidth requirements of   heterogeneous receivers.  The result is often a least-common   denominator scenario, where the smallest pipe in the network mesh   dictates the quality and fidelity of the overall live multimedia   "broadcast".   Instead, responsibility for rate-adaptation can be placed at the   receivers by combining a layered encoding with a layered transmission   system.  In the context of RTP over IP multicast, the source can   stripe the progressive layers of a hierarchically represented signal   across multiple RTP sessions each carried on its own multicast group.   Receivers can then adapt to network heterogeneity and control their   reception bandwidth by joining only the appropriate subset of the   multicast groups.   Details of the use of RTP with layered encodings are given in   Sections 6.3.9, 8.3 and 11.3. Definitions   RTP payload: The data transported by RTP in a packet, for      example audio samples or compressed video data.  The payload      format and interpretation are beyond the scope of this document.   RTP packet: A data packet consisting of the fixed RTP header, a      possibly empty list of contributing sources (see below), and the      payload data.  Some underlying protocols may require an      encapsulation of the RTP packet to be defined.  Typically one      packet of the underlying protocol contains a single RTP packet,      but several RTP packets MAY be contained if permitted by the      encapsulation method (see Section 11).Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 8]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   RTCP packet: A control packet consisting of a fixed header part      similar to that of RTP data packets, followed by structured      elements that vary depending upon the RTCP packet type.  The      formats are defined in Section 6.  Typically, multiple RTCP      packets are sent together as a compound RTCP packet in a single      packet of the underlying protocol; this is enabled by the length      field in the fixed header of each RTCP packet.   Port: The "abstraction that transport protocols use to      distinguish among multiple destinations within a given host      computer.  TCP/IP protocols identify ports using small positive      integers." [12] The transport selectors (TSEL) used by the OSI      transport layer are equivalent to ports.  RTP depends upon the      lower-layer protocol to provide some mechanism such as ports to      multiplex the RTP and RTCP packets of a session.   Transport address: The combination of a network address and port      that identifies a transport-level endpoint, for example an IP      address and a UDP port.  Packets are transmitted from a source      transport address to a destination transport address.   RTP media type: An RTP media type is the collection of payload      types which can be carried within a single RTP session.  The RTP      Profile assigns RTP media types to RTP payload types.   Multimedia session: A set of concurrent RTP sessions among a      common group of participants.  For example, a videoconference      (which is a multimedia session) may contain an audio RTP session      and a video RTP session.   RTP session: An association among a set of participants      communicating with RTP.  A participant may be involved in multiple      RTP sessions at the same time.  In a multimedia session, each      medium is typically carried in a separate RTP session with its own      RTCP packets unless the the encoding itself multiplexes multiple      media into a single data stream.  A participant distinguishes      multiple RTP sessions by reception of different sessions using      different pairs of destination transport addresses, where a pair      of transport addresses comprises one network address plus a pair      of ports for RTP and RTCP.  All participants in an RTP session may      share a common destination transport address pair, as in the case      of IP multicast, or the pairs may be different for each      participant, as in the case of individual unicast network      addresses and port pairs.  In the unicast case, a participant may      receive from all other participants in the session using the same      pair of ports, or may use a distinct pair of ports for each.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                     [Page 9]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      The distinguishing feature of an RTP session is that each      maintains a full, separate space of SSRC identifiers (defined      next).  The set of participants included in one RTP session      consists of those that can receive an SSRC identifier transmitted      by any one of the participants either in RTP as the SSRC or a CSRC      (also defined below) or in RTCP.  For example, consider a three-      party conference implemented using unicast UDP with each      participant receiving from the other two on separate port pairs.      If each participant sends RTCP feedback about data received from      one other participant only back to that participant, then the      conference is composed of three separate point-to-point RTP      sessions.  If each participant provides RTCP feedback about its      reception of one other participant to both of the other      participants, then the conference is composed of one multi-party      RTP session.  The latter case simulates the behavior that would      occur with IP multicast communication among the three      participants.      The RTP framework allows the variations defined here, but a      particular control protocol or application design will usually      impose constraints on these variations.   Synchronization source (SSRC): The source of a stream of RTP      packets, identified by a 32-bit numeric SSRC identifier carried in      the RTP header so as not to be dependent upon the network address.      All packets from a synchronization source form part of the same      timing and sequence number space, so a receiver groups packets by      synchronization source for playback.  Examples of synchronization      sources include the sender of a stream of packets derived from a      signal source such as a microphone or a camera, or an RTP mixer      (see below).  A synchronization source may change its data format,      e.g., audio encoding, over time.  The SSRC identifier is a      randomly chosen value meant to be globally unique within a      particular RTP session (see Section 8).  A participant need not      use the same SSRC identifier for all the RTP sessions in a      multimedia session; the binding of the SSRC identifiers is      provided through RTCP (see Section 6.5.1).  If a participant      generates multiple streams in one RTP session, for example from      separate video cameras, each MUST be identified as a different      SSRC.   Contributing source (CSRC): A source of a stream of RTP packets      that has contributed to the combined stream produced by an RTP      mixer (see below).  The mixer inserts a list of the SSRC      identifiers of the sources that contributed to the generation of a      particular packet into the RTP header of that packet.  This list      is called the CSRC list.  An example application is audio      conferencing where a mixer indicates all the talkers whose speechSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 10]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      was combined to produce the outgoing packet, allowing the receiver      to indicate the current talker, even though all the audio packets      contain the same SSRC identifier (that of the mixer).   End system: An application that generates the content to be sent      in RTP packets and/or consumes the content of received RTP      packets.  An end system can act as one or more synchronization      sources in a particular RTP session, but typically only one.   Mixer: An intermediate system that receives RTP packets from one      or more sources, possibly changes the data format, combines the      packets in some manner and then forwards a new RTP packet.  Since      the timing among multiple input sources will not generally be      synchronized, the mixer will make timing adjustments among the      streams and generate its own timing for the combined stream.      Thus, all data packets originating from a mixer will be identified      as having the mixer as their synchronization source.   Translator: An intermediate system that forwards RTP packets      with their synchronization source identifier intact.  Examples of      translators include devices that convert encodings without mixing,      replicators from multicast to unicast, and application-level      filters in firewalls.   Monitor: An application that receives RTCP packets sent by      participants in an RTP session, in particular the reception      reports, and estimates the current quality of service for      distribution monitoring, fault diagnosis and long-term statistics.      The monitor function is likely to be built into the application(s)      participating in the session, but may also be a separate      application that does not otherwise participate and does not send      or receive the RTP data packets (since they are on a separate      port).  These are called third-party monitors.  It is also      acceptable for a third-party monitor to receive the RTP data      packets but not send RTCP packets or otherwise be counted in the      session.   Non-RTP means: Protocols and mechanisms that may be needed in      addition to RTP to provide a usable service.  In particular, for      multimedia conferences, a control protocol may distribute      multicast addresses and keys for encryption, negotiate the      encryption algorithm to be used, and define dynamic mappings      between RTP payload type values and the payload formats they      represent for formats that do not have a predefined payload type      value.  Examples of such protocols include the Session Initiation      Protocol (SIP) (RFC 3261 [13]), ITU Recommendation H.323 [14] and      applications using SDP (RFC 2327 [15]), such as RTSP (RFC 2326      [16]).  For simpleSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 11]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      applications, electronic mail or a conference database may also be      used.  The specification of such protocols and mechanisms is      outside the scope of this document.4. Byte Order, Alignment, and Time Format   All integer fields are carried in network byte order, that is, most   significant byte (octet) first.  This byte order is commonly known as   big-endian.  The transmission order is described in detail in [3].   Unless otherwise noted, numeric constants are in decimal (base 10).   All header data is aligned to its natural length, i.e., 16-bit fields   are aligned on even offsets, 32-bit fields are aligned at offsets   divisible by four, etc.  Octets designated as padding have the value   zero.   Wallclock time (absolute date and time) is represented using the   timestamp format of the Network Time Protocol (NTP), which is in   seconds relative to 0h UTC on 1 January 1900 [4].  The full   resolution NTP timestamp is a 64-bit unsigned fixed-point number with   the integer part in the first 32 bits and the fractional part in the   last 32 bits.  In some fields where a more compact representation is   appropriate, only the middle 32 bits are used; that is, the low 16   bits of the integer part and the high 16 bits of the fractional part.   The high 16 bits of the integer part must be determined   independently.   An implementation is not required to run the Network Time Protocol in   order to use RTP.  Other time sources, or none at all, may be used   (see the description of the NTP timestamp field in Section 6.4.1).   However, running NTP may be useful for synchronizing streams   transmitted from separate hosts.   The NTP timestamp will wrap around to zero some time in the year   2036, but for RTP purposes, only differences between pairs of NTP   timestamps are used.  So long as the pairs of timestamps can be   assumed to be within 68 years of each other, using modular arithmetic   for subtractions and comparisons makes the wraparound irrelevant.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 12]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20035. RTP Data Transfer Protocol5.1 RTP Fixed Header Fields   The RTP header has the following format:    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |V=2|P|X|  CC   |M|     PT      |       sequence number         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                           timestamp                           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |           synchronization source (SSRC) identifier            |   +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+   |            contributing source (CSRC) identifiers             |   |                             ....                              |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The first twelve octets are present in every RTP packet, while the   list of CSRC identifiers is present only when inserted by a mixer.   The fields have the following meaning:   version (V): 2 bits      This field identifies the version of RTP.  The version defined by      this specification is two (2).  (The value 1 is used by the first      draft version of RTP and the value 0 is used by the protocol      initially implemented in the "vat" audio tool.)   padding (P): 1 bit      If the padding bit is set, the packet contains one or more      additional padding octets at the end which are not part of the      payload.  The last octet of the padding contains a count of how      many padding octets should be ignored, including itself.  Padding      may be needed by some encryption algorithms with fixed block sizes      or for carrying several RTP packets in a lower-layer protocol data      unit.   extension (X): 1 bit      If the extension bit is set, the fixed header MUST be followed by      exactly one header extension, with a format defined in Section      5.3.1.   CSRC count (CC): 4 bits      The CSRC count contains the number of CSRC identifiers that follow      the fixed header.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 13]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   marker (M): 1 bit      The interpretation of the marker is defined by a profile.  It is      intended to allow significant events such as frame boundaries to      be marked in the packet stream.  A profile MAY define additional      marker bits or specify that there is no marker bit by changing the      number of bits in the payload type field (see Section 5.3).   payload type (PT): 7 bits      This field identifies the format of the RTP payload and determines      its interpretation by the application.  A profile MAY specify a      default static mapping of payload type codes to payload formats.      Additional payload type codes MAY be defined dynamically through      non-RTP means (see Section 3).  A set of default mappings for      audio and video is specified in the companion RFC 3551 [1].  An      RTP source MAY change the payload type during a session, but this      field SHOULD NOT be used for multiplexing separate media streams      (see Section 5.2).      A receiver MUST ignore packets with payload types that it does not      understand.   sequence number: 16 bits      The sequence number increments by one for each RTP data packet      sent, and may be used by the receiver to detect packet loss and to      restore packet sequence.  The initial value of the sequence number      SHOULD be random (unpredictable) to make known-plaintext attacks      on encryption more difficult, even if the source itself does not      encrypt according to the method in Section 9.1, because the      packets may flow through a translator that does.  Techniques for      choosing unpredictable numbers are discussed in [17].   timestamp: 32 bits      The timestamp reflects the sampling instant of the first octet in      the RTP data packet.  The sampling instant MUST be derived from a      clock that increments monotonically and linearly in time to allow      synchronization and jitter calculations (see Section 6.4.1).  The      resolution of the clock MUST be sufficient for the desired      synchronization accuracy and for measuring packet arrival jitter      (one tick per video frame is typically not sufficient).  The clock      frequency is dependent on the format of data carried as payload      and is specified statically in the profile or payload format      specification that defines the format, or MAY be specified      dynamically for payload formats defined through non-RTP means.  If      RTP packets are generated periodically, the nominal sampling      instant as determined from the sampling clock is to be used, not a      reading of the system clock.  As an example, for fixed-rate audio      the timestamp clock would likely increment by one for each      sampling period.  If an audio application reads blocks coveringSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 14]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      160 sampling periods from the input device, the timestamp would be      increased by 160 for each such block, regardless of whether the      block is transmitted in a packet or dropped as silent.      The initial value of the timestamp SHOULD be random, as for the      sequence number.  Several consecutive RTP packets will have equal      timestamps if they are (logically) generated at once, e.g., belong      to the same video frame.  Consecutive RTP packets MAY contain      timestamps that are not monotonic if the data is not transmitted      in the order it was sampled, as in the case of MPEG interpolated      video frames.  (The sequence numbers of the packets as transmitted      will still be monotonic.)      RTP timestamps from different media streams may advance at      different rates and usually have independent, random offsets.      Therefore, although these timestamps are sufficient to reconstruct      the timing of a single stream, directly comparing RTP timestamps      from different media is not effective for synchronization.      Instead, for each medium the RTP timestamp is related to the      sampling instant by pairing it with a timestamp from a reference      clock (wallclock) that represents the time when the data      corresponding to the RTP timestamp was sampled.  The reference      clock is shared by all media to be synchronized.  The timestamp      pairs are not transmitted in every data packet, but at a lower      rate in RTCP SR packets as described in Section 6.4.      The sampling instant is chosen as the point of reference for the      RTP timestamp because it is known to the transmitting endpoint and      has a common definition for all media, independent of encoding      delays or other processing.  The purpose is to allow synchronized      presentation of all media sampled at the same time.      Applications transmitting stored data rather than data sampled in      real time typically use a virtual presentation timeline derived      from wallclock time to determine when the next frame or other unit      of each medium in the stored data should be presented.  In this      case, the RTP timestamp would reflect the presentation time for      each unit.  That is, the RTP timestamp for each unit would be      related to the wallclock time at which the unit becomes current on      the virtual presentation timeline.  Actual presentation occurs      some time later as determined by the receiver.      An example describing live audio narration of prerecorded video      illustrates the significance of choosing the sampling instant as      the reference point.  In this scenario, the video would be      presented locally for the narrator to view and would be      simultaneously transmitted using RTP.  The "sampling instant" of a      video frame transmitted in RTP would be established by referencingSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 15]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      its timestamp to the wallclock time when that video frame was      presented to the narrator.  The sampling instant for the audio RTP      packets containing the narrator's speech would be established by      referencing the same wallclock time when the audio was sampled.      The audio and video may even be transmitted by different hosts if      the reference clocks on the two hosts are synchronized by some      means such as NTP.  A receiver can then synchronize presentation      of the audio and video packets by relating their RTP timestamps      using the timestamp pairs in RTCP SR packets.   SSRC: 32 bits      The SSRC field identifies the synchronization source.  This      identifier SHOULD be chosen randomly, with the intent that no two      synchronization sources within the same RTP session will have the      same SSRC identifier.  An example algorithm for generating a      random identifier is presented in Appendix A.6.  Although the      probability of multiple sources choosing the same identifier is      low, all RTP implementations must be prepared to detect and      resolve collisions.  Section 8 describes the probability of      collision along with a mechanism for resolving collisions and      detecting RTP-level forwarding loops based on the uniqueness of      the SSRC identifier.  If a source changes its source transport      address, it must also choose a new SSRC identifier to avoid being      interpreted as a looped source (see Section 8.2).   CSRC list: 0 to 15 items, 32 bits each      The CSRC list identifies the contributing sources for the payload      contained in this packet.  The number of identifiers is given by      the CC field.  If there are more than 15 contributing sources,      only 15 can be identified.  CSRC identifiers are inserted by      mixers (see Section 7.1), using the SSRC identifiers of      contributing sources.  For example, for audio packets the SSRC      identifiers of all sources that were mixed together to create a      packet are listed, allowing correct talker indication at the      receiver.5.2 Multiplexing RTP Sessions   For efficient protocol processing, the number of multiplexing points   should be minimized, as described in the integrated layer processing   design principle [10].  In RTP, multiplexing is provided by the   destination transport address (network address and port number) which   is different for each RTP session.  For example, in a teleconference   composed of audio and video media encoded separately, each medium   SHOULD be carried in a separate RTP session with its own destination   transport address.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 16]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Separate audio and video streams SHOULD NOT be carried in a single   RTP session and demultiplexed based on the payload type or SSRC   fields.  Interleaving packets with different RTP media types but   using the same SSRC would introduce several problems:   1. If, say, two audio streams shared the same RTP session and the      same SSRC value, and one were to change encodings and thus acquire      a different RTP payload type, there would be no general way of      identifying which stream had changed encodings.   2. An SSRC is defined to identify a single timing and sequence number      space.  Interleaving multiple payload types would require      different timing spaces if the media clock rates differ and would      require different sequence number spaces to tell which payload      type suffered packet loss.   3. The RTCP sender and receiver reports (see Section 6.4) can only      describe one timing and sequence number space per SSRC and do not      carry a payload type field.   4. An RTP mixer would not be able to combine interleaved streams of      incompatible media into one stream.   5. Carrying multiple media in one RTP session precludes: the use of      different network paths or network resource allocations if      appropriate; reception of a subset of the media if desired, for      example just audio if video would exceed the available bandwidth;      and receiver implementations that use separate processes for the      different media, whereas using separate RTP sessions permits      either single- or multiple-process implementations.   Using a different SSRC for each medium but sending them in the same   RTP session would avoid the first three problems but not the last   two.   On the other hand, multiplexing multiple related sources of the same   medium in one RTP session using different SSRC values is the norm for   multicast sessions.  The problems listed above don't apply: an RTP   mixer can combine multiple audio sources, for example, and the same   treatment is applicable for all of them.  It may also be appropriate   to multiplex streams of the same medium using different SSRC values   in other scenarios where the last two problems do not apply.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 17]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20035.3 Profile-Specific Modifications to the RTP Header   The existing RTP data packet header is believed to be complete for   the set of functions required in common across all the application   classes that RTP might support.  However, in keeping with the ALF   design principle, the header MAY be tailored through modifications or   additions defined in a profile specification while still allowing   profile-independent monitoring and recording tools to function.   o  The marker bit and payload type field carry profile-specific      information, but they are allocated in the fixed header since many      applications are expected to need them and might otherwise have to      add another 32-bit word just to hold them.  The octet containing      these fields MAY be redefined by a profile to suit different      requirements, for example with more or fewer marker bits.  If      there are any marker bits, one SHOULD be located in the most      significant bit of the octet since profile-independent monitors      may be able to observe a correlation between packet loss patterns      and the marker bit.   o  Additional information that is required for a particular payload      format, such as a video encoding, SHOULD be carried in the payload      section of the packet.  This might be in a header that is always      present at the start of the payload section, or might be indicated      by a reserved value in the data pattern.   o  If a particular class of applications needs additional      functionality independent of payload format, the profile under      which those applications operate SHOULD define additional fixed      fields to follow immediately after the SSRC field of the existing      fixed header.  Those applications will be able to quickly and      directly access the additional fields while profile-independent      monitors or recorders can still process the RTP packets by      interpreting only the first twelve octets.   If it turns out that additional functionality is needed in common   across all profiles, then a new version of RTP should be defined to   make a permanent change to the fixed header.5.3.1 RTP Header Extension   An extension mechanism is provided to allow individual   implementations to experiment with new payload-format-independent   functions that require additional information to be carried in the   RTP data packet header.  This mechanism is designed so that the   header extension may be ignored by other interoperating   implementations that have not been extended.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 18]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Note that this header extension is intended only for limited use.   Most potential uses of this mechanism would be better done another   way, using the methods described in the previous section.  For   example, a profile-specific extension to the fixed header is less   expensive to process because it is not conditional nor in a variable   location.  Additional information required for a particular payload   format SHOULD NOT use this header extension, but SHOULD be carried in   the payload section of the 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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      defined by profile       |           length              |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                        header extension                       |   |                             ....                              |   If the X bit in the RTP header is one, a variable-length header   extension MUST be appended to the RTP header, following the CSRC list   if present.  The header extension contains a 16-bit length field that   counts the number of 32-bit words in the extension, excluding the   four-octet extension header (therefore zero is a valid length).  Only   a single extension can be appended to the RTP data header.  To allow   multiple interoperating implementations to each experiment   independently with different header extensions, or to allow a   particular implementation to experiment with more than one type of   header extension, the first 16 bits of the header extension are left   open for distinguishing identifiers or parameters.  The format of   these 16 bits is to be defined by the profile specification under   which the implementations are operating.  This RTP specification does   not define any header extensions itself.6. RTP Control Protocol -- RTCP   The RTP control protocol (RTCP) is based on the periodic transmission   of control packets to all participants in the session, using the same   distribution mechanism as the data packets.  The underlying protocol   MUST provide multiplexing of the data and control packets, for   example using separate port numbers with UDP.  RTCP performs four   functions:   1. The primary function is to provide feedback on the quality of the      data distribution.  This is an integral part of the RTP's role as      a transport protocol and is related to the flow and congestion      control functions of other transport protocols (see Section 10 on      the requirement for congestion control).  The feedback may be      directly useful for control of adaptive encodings [18,19], but      experiments with IP multicasting have shown that it is alsoSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 19]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      critical to get feedback from the receivers to diagnose faults in      the distribution.  Sending reception feedback reports to all      participants allows one who is observing problems to evaluate      whether those problems are local or global.  With a distribution      mechanism like IP multicast, it is also possible for an entity      such as a network service provider who is not otherwise involved      in the session to receive the feedback information and act as a      third-party monitor to diagnose network problems.  This feedback      function is performed by the RTCP sender and receiver reports,      described below in Section 6.4.   2. RTCP carries a persistent transport-level identifier for an RTP      source called the canonical name or CNAME, Section 6.5.1.  Since      the SSRC identifier may change if a conflict is discovered or a      program is restarted, receivers require the CNAME to keep track of      each participant.  Receivers may also require the CNAME to      associate multiple data streams from a given participant in a set      of related RTP sessions, for example to synchronize audio and      video.  Inter-media synchronization also requires the NTP and RTP      timestamps included in RTCP packets by data senders.   3. The first two functions require that all participants send RTCP      packets, therefore the rate must be controlled in order for RTP to      scale up to a large number of participants.  By having each      participant send its control packets to all the others, each can      independently observe the number of participants.  This number is      used to calculate the rate at which the packets are sent, as      explained in Section 6.2.   4. A fourth, OPTIONAL function is to convey minimal session control      information, for example participant identification to be      displayed in the user interface.  This is most likely to be useful      in "loosely controlled" sessions where participants enter and      leave without membership control or parameter negotiation.  RTCP      serves as a convenient channel to reach all the participants, but      it is not necessarily expected to support all the control      communication requirements of an application.  A higher-level      session control protocol, which is beyond the scope of this      document, may be needed.   Functions 1-3 SHOULD be used in all environments, but particularly in   the IP multicast environment.  RTP application designers SHOULD avoid   mechanisms that can only work in unicast mode and will not scale to   larger numbers.  Transmission of RTCP MAY be controlled separately   for senders and receivers, as described in Section 6.2, for cases   such as unidirectional links where feedback from receivers is not   possible.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 20]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Non-normative note:  In the multicast routing approach      called Source-Specific Multicast (SSM), there is only one sender      per "channel" (a source address, group address pair), and      receivers (except for the channel source) cannot use multicast to      communicate directly with other channel members.  The      recommendations here accommodate SSM only through Section 6.2's      option of turning off receivers' RTCP entirely.  Future work will      specify adaptation of RTCP for SSM so that feedback from receivers      can be maintained.6.1 RTCP Packet Format   This specification defines several RTCP packet types to carry a   variety of control information:   SR:   Sender report, for transmission and reception statistics from         participants that are active senders   RR:   Receiver report, for reception statistics from participants         that are not active senders and in combination with SR for         active senders reporting on more than 31 sources   SDES: Source description items, including CNAME   BYE:  Indicates end of participation   APP:  Application-specific functions   Each RTCP packet begins with a fixed part similar to that of RTP data   packets, followed by structured elements that MAY be of variable   length according to the packet type but MUST end on a 32-bit   boundary.  The alignment requirement and a length field in the fixed   part of each packet are included to make RTCP packets "stackable".   Multiple RTCP packets can be concatenated without any intervening   separators to form a compound RTCP packet that is sent in a single   packet of the lower layer protocol, for example UDP.  There is no   explicit count of individual RTCP packets in the compound packet   since the lower layer protocols are expected to provide an overall   length to determine the end of the compound packet.   Each individual RTCP packet in the compound packet may be processed   independently with no requirements upon the order or combination of   packets.  However, in order to perform the functions of the protocol,   the following constraints are imposed:Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 21]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  Reception statistics (in SR or RR) should be sent as often as      bandwidth constraints will allow to maximize the resolution of the      statistics, therefore each periodically transmitted compound RTCP      packet MUST include a report packet.   o  New receivers need to receive the CNAME for a source as soon as      possible to identify the source and to begin associating media for      purposes such as lip-sync, so each compound RTCP packet MUST also      include the SDES CNAME except when the compound RTCP packet is      split for partial encryption as described in Section 9.1.   o  The number of packet types that may appear first in the compound      packet needs to be limited to increase the number of constant bits      in the first word and the probability of successfully validating      RTCP packets against misaddressed RTP data packets or other      unrelated packets.   Thus, all RTCP packets MUST be sent in a compound packet of at least   two individual packets, with the following format:   Encryption prefix:  If and only if the compound packet is to be      encrypted according to the method in Section 9.1, it MUST be      prefixed by a random 32-bit quantity redrawn for every compound      packet transmitted.  If padding is required for the encryption, it      MUST be added to the last packet of the compound packet.   SR or RR:  The first RTCP packet in the compound packet MUST      always be a report packet to facilitate header validation as      described in Appendix A.2.  This is true even if no data has been      sent or received, in which case an empty RR MUST be sent, and even      if the only other RTCP packet in the compound packet is a BYE.   Additional RRs:  If the number of sources for which reception      statistics are being reported exceeds 31, the number that will fit      into one SR or RR packet, then additional RR packets SHOULD follow      the initial report packet.   SDES:  An SDES packet containing a CNAME item MUST be included      in each compound RTCP packet, except as noted in Section 9.1.      Other source description items MAY optionally be included if      required by a particular application, subject to bandwidth      constraints (see Section 6.3.9).   BYE or APP:  Other RTCP packet types, including those yet to be      defined, MAY follow in any order, except that BYE SHOULD be the      last packet sent with a given SSRC/CSRC.  Packet types MAY appear      more than once.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 22]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   An individual RTP participant SHOULD send only one compound RTCP   packet per report interval in order for the RTCP bandwidth per   participant to be estimated correctly (see Section 6.2), except when   the compound RTCP packet is split for partial encryption as described   in Section 9.1.  If there are too many sources to fit all the   necessary RR packets into one compound RTCP packet without exceeding   the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of the network path, then only   the subset that will fit into one MTU SHOULD be included in each   interval.  The subsets SHOULD be selected round-robin across multiple   intervals so that all sources are reported.   It is RECOMMENDED that translators and mixers combine individual RTCP   packets from the multiple sources they are forwarding into one   compound packet whenever feasible in order to amortize the packet   overhead (see Section 7).  An example RTCP compound packet as might   be produced by a mixer is shown in Fig. 1.  If the overall length of   a compound packet would exceed the MTU of the network path, it SHOULD   be segmented into multiple shorter compound packets to be transmitted   in separate packets of the underlying protocol.  This does not impair   the RTCP bandwidth estimation because each compound packet represents   at least one distinct participant.  Note that each of the compound   packets MUST begin with an SR or RR packet.   An implementation SHOULD ignore incoming RTCP packets with types   unknown to it.  Additional RTCP packet types may be registered with   the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) as described in   Section 15.   if encrypted: random 32-bit integer   |   |[--------- packet --------][---------- packet ----------][-packet-]   |   |                receiver            chunk        chunk   V                reports           item  item   item  item   --------------------------------------------------------------------   R[SR #sendinfo #site1#site2][SDES #CNAME PHONE #CNAME LOC][BYE##why]   --------------------------------------------------------------------   |                                                                  |   |<-----------------------  compound packet ----------------------->|   |<--------------------------  UDP packet ------------------------->|   #: SSRC/CSRC identifier              Figure 1: Example of an RTCP compound packetSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 23]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.2 RTCP Transmission Interval   RTP is designed to allow an application to scale automatically over   session sizes ranging from a few participants to thousands.  For   example, in an audio conference the data traffic is inherently self-   limiting because only one or two people will speak at a time, so with   multicast distribution the data rate on any given link remains   relatively constant independent of the number of participants.   However, the control traffic is not self-limiting.  If the reception   reports from each participant were sent at a constant rate, the   control traffic would grow linearly with the number of participants.   Therefore, the rate must be scaled down by dynamically calculating   the interval between RTCP packet transmissions.   For each session, it is assumed that the data traffic is subject to   an aggregate limit called the "session bandwidth" to be divided among   the participants.  This bandwidth might be reserved and the limit   enforced by the network.  If there is no reservation, there may be   other constraints, depending on the environment, that establish the   "reasonable" maximum for the session to use, and that would be the   session bandwidth.  The session bandwidth may be chosen based on some   cost or a priori knowledge of the available network bandwidth for the   session.  It is somewhat independent of the media encoding, but the   encoding choice may be limited by the session bandwidth.  Often, the   session bandwidth is the sum of the nominal bandwidths of the senders   expected to be concurrently active.  For teleconference audio, this   number would typically be one sender's bandwidth.  For layered   encodings, each layer is a separate RTP session with its own session   bandwidth parameter.   The session bandwidth parameter is expected to be supplied by a   session management application when it invokes a media application,   but media applications MAY set a default based on the single-sender   data bandwidth for the encoding selected for the session.  The   application MAY also enforce bandwidth limits based on multicast   scope rules or other criteria.  All participants MUST use the same   value for the session bandwidth so that the same RTCP interval will   be calculated.   Bandwidth calculations for control and data traffic include lower-   layer transport and network protocols (e.g., UDP and IP) since that   is what the resource reservation system would need to know.  The   application can also be expected to know which of these protocols are   in use.  Link level headers are not included in the calculation since   the packet will be encapsulated with different link level headers as   it travels.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 24]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   The control traffic should be limited to a small and known fraction   of the session bandwidth: small so that the primary function of the   transport protocol to carry data is not impaired; known so that the   control traffic can be included in the bandwidth specification given   to a resource reservation protocol, and so that each participant can   independently calculate its share.  The control traffic bandwidth is   in addition to the session bandwidth for the data traffic.  It is   RECOMMENDED that the fraction of the session bandwidth added for RTCP   be fixed at 5%.  It is also RECOMMENDED that 1/4 of the RTCP   bandwidth be dedicated to participants that are sending data so that   in sessions with a large number of receivers but a small number of   senders, newly joining participants will more quickly receive the   CNAME for the sending sites.  When the proportion of senders is   greater than 1/4 of the participants, the senders get their   proportion of the full RTCP bandwidth.  While the values of these and   other constants in the interval calculation are not critical, all   participants in the session MUST use the same values so the same   interval will be calculated.  Therefore, these constants SHOULD be   fixed for a particular profile.   A profile MAY specify that the control traffic bandwidth may be a   separate parameter of the session rather than a strict percentage of   the session bandwidth.  Using a separate parameter allows rate-   adaptive applications to set an RTCP bandwidth consistent with a   "typical" data bandwidth that is lower than the maximum bandwidth   specified by the session bandwidth parameter.   The profile MAY further specify that the control traffic bandwidth   may be divided into two separate session parameters for those   participants which are active data senders and those which are not;   let us call the parameters S and R.  Following the recommendation   that 1/4 of the RTCP bandwidth be dedicated to data senders, the   RECOMMENDED default values for these two parameters would be 1.25%   and 3.75%, respectively.  When the proportion of senders is greater   than S/(S+R) of the participants, the senders get their proportion of   the sum of these parameters.  Using two parameters allows RTCP   reception reports to be turned off entirely for a particular session   by setting the RTCP bandwidth for non-data-senders to zero while   keeping the RTCP bandwidth for data senders non-zero so that sender   reports can still be sent for inter-media synchronization.  Turning   off RTCP reception reports is NOT RECOMMENDED because they are needed   for the functions listed at the beginning of Section 6, particularly   reception quality feedback and congestion control.  However, doing so   may be appropriate for systems operating on unidirectional links or   for sessions that don't require feedback on the quality of reception   or liveness of receivers and that have other means to avoid   congestion.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 25]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   The calculated interval between transmissions of compound RTCP   packets SHOULD also have a lower bound to avoid having bursts of   packets exceed the allowed bandwidth when the number of participants   is small and the traffic isn't smoothed according to the law of large   numbers.  It also keeps the report interval from becoming too small   during transient outages like a network partition such that   adaptation is delayed when the partition heals.  At application   startup, a delay SHOULD be imposed before the first compound RTCP   packet is sent to allow time for RTCP packets to be received from   other participants so the report interval will converge to the   correct value more quickly.  This delay MAY be set to half the   minimum interval to allow quicker notification that the new   participant is present.  The RECOMMENDED value for a fixed minimum   interval is 5 seconds.   An implementation MAY scale the minimum RTCP interval to a smaller   value inversely proportional to the session bandwidth parameter with   the following limitations:   o  For multicast sessions, only active data senders MAY use the      reduced minimum value to calculate the interval for transmission      of compound RTCP packets.   o  For unicast sessions, the reduced value MAY be used by      participants that are not active data senders as well, and the      delay before sending the initial compound RTCP packet MAY be zero.   o  For all sessions, the fixed minimum SHOULD be used when      calculating the participant timeout interval (see Section 6.3.5)      so that implementations which do not use the reduced value for      transmitting RTCP packets are not timed out by other participants      prematurely.   o  The RECOMMENDED value for the reduced minimum in seconds is 360      divided by the session bandwidth in kilobits/second.  This minimum      is smaller than 5 seconds for bandwidths greater than 72 kb/s.   The algorithm described in Section 6.3 and Appendix A.7 was designed   to meet the goals outlined in this section.  It calculates the   interval between sending compound RTCP packets to divide the allowed   control traffic bandwidth among the participants.  This allows an   application to provide fast response for small sessions where, for   example, identification of all participants is important, yet   automatically adapt to large sessions.  The algorithm incorporates   the following characteristics:Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 26]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  The calculated interval between RTCP packets scales linearly with      the number of members in the group.  It is this linear factor      which allows for a constant amount of control traffic when summed      across all members.   o  The interval between RTCP packets is varied randomly over the      range [0.5,1.5] times the calculated interval to avoid unintended      synchronization of all participants [20].  The first RTCP packet      sent after joining a session is also delayed by a random variation      of half the minimum RTCP interval.   o  A dynamic estimate of the average compound RTCP packet size is      calculated, including all those packets received and sent, to      automatically adapt to changes in the amount of control      information carried.   o  Since the calculated interval is dependent on the number of      observed group members, there may be undesirable startup effects      when a new user joins an existing session, or many users      simultaneously join a new session.  These new users will initially      have incorrect estimates of the group membership, and thus their      RTCP transmission interval will be too short.  This problem can be      significant if many users join the session simultaneously.  To      deal with this, an algorithm called "timer reconsideration" is      employed.  This algorithm implements a simple back-off mechanism      which causes users to hold back RTCP packet transmission if the      group sizes are increasing.   o  When users leave a session, either with a BYE or by timeout, the      group membership decreases, and thus the calculated interval      should decrease.  A "reverse reconsideration" algorithm is used to      allow members to more quickly reduce their intervals in response      to group membership decreases.   o  BYE packets are given different treatment than other RTCP packets.      When a user leaves a group, and wishes to send a BYE packet, it      may do so before its next scheduled RTCP packet.  However,      transmission of BYEs follows a back-off algorithm which avoids      floods of BYE packets should a large number of members      simultaneously leave the session.   This algorithm may be used for sessions in which all participants are   allowed to send.  In that case, the session bandwidth parameter is   the product of the individual sender's bandwidth times the number of   participants, and the RTCP bandwidth is 5% of that.   Details of the algorithm's operation are given in the sections that   follow.  Appendix A.7 gives an example implementation.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 27]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.2.1 Maintaining the Number of Session Members   Calculation of the RTCP packet interval depends upon an estimate of   the number of sites participating in the session.  New sites are   added to the count when they are heard, and an entry for each SHOULD   be created in a table indexed by the SSRC or CSRC identifier (see   Section 8.2) to keep track of them.  New entries MAY be considered   not valid until multiple packets carrying the new SSRC have been   received (see Appendix A.1), or until an SDES RTCP packet containing   a CNAME for that SSRC has been received.  Entries MAY be deleted from   the table when an RTCP BYE packet with the corresponding SSRC   identifier is received, except that some straggler data packets might   arrive after the BYE and cause the entry to be recreated.  Instead,   the entry SHOULD be marked as having received a BYE and then deleted   after an appropriate delay.   A participant MAY mark another site inactive, or delete it if not yet   valid, if no RTP or RTCP packet has been received for a small number   of RTCP report intervals (5 is RECOMMENDED).  This provides some   robustness against packet loss.  All sites must have the same value   for this multiplier and must calculate roughly the same value for the   RTCP report interval in order for this timeout to work properly.   Therefore, this multiplier SHOULD be fixed for a particular profile.   For sessions with a very large number of participants, it may be   impractical to maintain a table to store the SSRC identifier and   state information for all of them.  An implementation MAY use SSRC   sampling, as described in [21], to reduce the storage requirements.   An implementation MAY use any other algorithm with similar   performance.  A key requirement is that any algorithm considered   SHOULD NOT substantially underestimate the group size, although it   MAY overestimate.6.3 RTCP Packet Send and Receive Rules   The rules for how to send, and what to do when receiving an RTCP   packet are outlined here.  An implementation that allows operation in   a multicast environment or a multipoint unicast environment MUST meet   the requirements in Section 6.2.  Such an implementation MAY use the   algorithm defined in this section to meet those requirements, or MAY   use some other algorithm so long as it provides equivalent or better   performance.  An implementation which is constrained to two-party   unicast operation SHOULD still use randomization of the RTCP   transmission interval to avoid unintended synchronization of multiple   instances operating in the same environment, but MAY omit the "timer   reconsideration" and "reverse reconsideration" algorithms in Sections   6.3.3, 6.3.6 and 6.3.7.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 28]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   To execute these rules, a session participant must maintain several   pieces of state:   tp: the last time an RTCP packet was transmitted;   tc: the current time;   tn: the next scheduled transmission time of an RTCP packet;   pmembers: the estimated number of session members at the time tn      was last recomputed;   members: the most current estimate for the number of session      members;   senders: the most current estimate for the number of senders in      the session;   rtcp_bw: The target RTCP bandwidth, i.e., the total bandwidth      that will be used for RTCP packets by all members of this session,      in octets per second.  This will be a specified fraction of the      "session bandwidth" parameter supplied to the application at      startup.   we_sent: Flag that is true if the application has sent data      since the 2nd previous RTCP report was transmitted.   avg_rtcp_size: The average compound RTCP packet size, in octets,      over all RTCP packets sent and received by this participant.  The      size includes lower-layer transport and network protocol headers      (e.g., UDP and IP) as explained in Section 6.2.   initial: Flag that is true if the application has not yet sent      an RTCP packet.   Many of these rules make use of the "calculated interval" between   packet transmissions.  This interval is described in the following   section.6.3.1 Computing the RTCP Transmission Interval   To maintain scalability, the average interval between packets from a   session participant should scale with the group size.  This interval   is called the calculated interval.  It is obtained by combining a   number of the pieces of state described above.  The calculated   interval T is then determined as follows:Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 29]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   1. If the number of senders is less than or equal to 25% of the      membership (members), the interval depends on whether the      participant is a sender or not (based on the value of we_sent).      If the participant is a sender (we_sent true), the constant C is      set to the average RTCP packet size (avg_rtcp_size) divided by 25%      of the RTCP bandwidth (rtcp_bw), and the constant n is set to the      number of senders.  If we_sent is not true, the constant C is set      to the average RTCP packet size divided by 75% of the RTCP      bandwidth.  The constant n is set to the number of receivers      (members - senders).  If the number of senders is greater than      25%, senders and receivers are treated together.  The constant C      is set to the average RTCP packet size divided by the total RTCP      bandwidth and n is set to the total number of members.  As stated      in Section 6.2, an RTP profile MAY specify that the RTCP bandwidth      may be explicitly defined by two separate parameters (call them S      and R) for those participants which are senders and those which      are not.  In that case, the 25% fraction becomes S/(S+R) and the      75% fraction becomes R/(S+R).  Note that if R is zero, the      percentage of senders is never greater than S/(S+R), and the      implementation must avoid division by zero.   2. If the participant has not yet sent an RTCP packet (the variable      initial is true), the constant Tmin is set to 2.5 seconds, else it      is set to 5 seconds.   3. The deterministic calculated interval Td is set to max(Tmin, n*C).   4. The calculated interval T is set to a number uniformly distributed      between 0.5 and 1.5 times the deterministic calculated interval.   5. The resulting value of T is divided by e-3/2=1.21828 to compensate      for the fact that the timer reconsideration algorithm converges to      a value of the RTCP bandwidth below the intended average.   This procedure results in an interval which is random, but which, on   average, gives at least 25% of the RTCP bandwidth to senders and the   rest to receivers.  If the senders constitute more than one quarter   of the membership, this procedure splits the bandwidth equally among   all participants, on average.6.3.2 Initialization   Upon joining the session, the participant initializes tp to 0, tc to   0, senders to 0, pmembers to 1, members to 1, we_sent to false,   rtcp_bw to the specified fraction of the session bandwidth, initial   to true, and avg_rtcp_size to the probable size of the first RTCP   packet that the application will later construct.  The calculated   interval T is then computed, and the first packet is scheduled forSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 30]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   time tn = T.  This means that a transmission timer is set which   expires at time T.  Note that an application MAY use any desired   approach for implementing this timer.   The participant adds its own SSRC to the member table.6.3.3 Receiving an RTP or Non-BYE RTCP Packet   When an RTP or RTCP packet is received from a participant whose SSRC   is not in the member table, the SSRC is added to the table, and the   value for members is updated once the participant has been validated   as described in Section 6.2.1.  The same processing occurs for each   CSRC in a validated RTP packet.   When an RTP packet is received from a participant whose SSRC is not   in the sender table, the SSRC is added to the table, and the value   for senders is updated.   For each compound RTCP packet received, the value of avg_rtcp_size is   updated:      avg_rtcp_size = (1/16) * packet_size + (15/16) * avg_rtcp_size   where packet_size is the size of the RTCP packet just received.6.3.4 Receiving an RTCP BYE Packet   Except as described in Section 6.3.7 for the case when an RTCP BYE is   to be transmitted, if the received packet is an RTCP BYE packet, the   SSRC is checked against the member table.  If present, the entry is   removed from the table, and the value for members is updated.  The   SSRC is then checked against the sender table.  If present, the entry   is removed from the table, and the value for senders is updated.   Furthermore, to make the transmission rate of RTCP packets more   adaptive to changes in group membership, the following "reverse   reconsideration" algorithm SHOULD be executed when a BYE packet is   received that reduces members to a value less than pmembers:   o  The value for tn is updated according to the following formula:         tn = tc + (members/pmembers) * (tn - tc)   o  The value for tp is updated according the following formula:         tp = tc - (members/pmembers) * (tc - tp).Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 31]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  The next RTCP packet is rescheduled for transmission at time tn,      which is now earlier.   o  The value of pmembers is set equal to members.   This algorithm does not prevent the group size estimate from   incorrectly dropping to zero for a short time due to premature   timeouts when most participants of a large session leave at once but   some remain.  The algorithm does make the estimate return to the   correct value more rapidly.  This situation is unusual enough and the   consequences are sufficiently harmless that this problem is deemed   only a secondary concern.6.3.5 Timing Out an SSRC   At occasional intervals, the participant MUST check to see if any of   the other participants time out.  To do this, the participant   computes the deterministic (without the randomization factor)   calculated interval Td for a receiver, that is, with we_sent false.   Any other session member who has not sent an RTP or RTCP packet since   time tc - MTd (M is the timeout multiplier, and defaults to 5) is   timed out.  This means that its SSRC is removed from the member list,   and members is updated.  A similar check is performed on the sender   list.  Any member on the sender list who has not sent an RTP packet   since time tc - 2T (within the last two RTCP report intervals) is   removed from the sender list, and senders is updated.   If any members time out, the reverse reconsideration algorithm   described in Section 6.3.4 SHOULD be performed.   The participant MUST perform this check at least once per RTCP   transmission interval.6.3.6 Expiration of Transmission Timer   When the packet transmission timer expires, the participant performs   the following operations:   o  The transmission interval T is computed as described in Section      6.3.1, including the randomization factor.   o  If tp + T is less than or equal to tc, an RTCP packet is      transmitted.  tp is set to tc, then another value for T is      calculated as in the previous step and tn is set to tc + T.  The      transmission timer is set to expire again at time tn.  If tp + T      is greater than tc, tn is set to tp + T.  No RTCP packet is      transmitted.  The transmission timer is set to expire at time tn.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 32]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  pmembers is set to members.   If an RTCP packet is transmitted, the value of initial is set to   FALSE.  Furthermore, the value of avg_rtcp_size is updated:      avg_rtcp_size = (1/16) * packet_size + (15/16) * avg_rtcp_size   where packet_size is the size of the RTCP packet just transmitted.6.3.7 Transmitting a BYE Packet   When a participant wishes to leave a session, a BYE packet is   transmitted to inform the other participants of the event.  In order   to avoid a flood of BYE packets when many participants leave the   system, a participant MUST execute the following algorithm if the   number of members is more than 50 when the participant chooses to   leave.  This algorithm usurps the normal role of the members variable   to count BYE packets instead:   o  When the participant decides to leave the system, tp is reset to      tc, the current time, members and pmembers are initialized to 1,      initial is set to 1, we_sent is set to false, senders is set to 0,      and avg_rtcp_size is set to the size of the compound BYE packet.      The calculated interval T is computed.  The BYE packet is then      scheduled for time tn = tc + T.   o  Every time a BYE packet from another participant is received,      members is incremented by 1 regardless of whether that participant      exists in the member table or not, and when SSRC sampling is in      use, regardless of whether or not the BYE SSRC would be included      in the sample.  members is NOT incremented when other RTCP packets      or RTP packets are received, but only for BYE packets.  Similarly,      avg_rtcp_size is updated only for received BYE packets.  senders      is NOT updated when RTP packets arrive; it remains 0.   o  Transmission of the BYE packet then follows the rules for      transmitting a regular RTCP packet, as above.   This allows BYE packets to be sent right away, yet controls their   total bandwidth usage.  In the worst case, this could cause RTCP   control packets to use twice the bandwidth as normal (10%) -- 5% for   non-BYE RTCP packets and 5% for BYE.   A participant that does not want to wait for the above mechanism to   allow transmission of a BYE packet MAY leave the group without   sending a BYE at all.  That participant will eventually be timed out   by the other group members.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 33]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   If the group size estimate members is less than 50 when the   participant decides to leave, the participant MAY send a BYE packet   immediately.  Alternatively, the participant MAY choose to execute   the above BYE backoff algorithm.   In either case, a participant which never sent an RTP or RTCP packet   MUST NOT send a BYE packet when they leave the group.6.3.8 Updating we_sent   The variable we_sent contains true if the participant has sent an RTP   packet recently, false otherwise.  This determination is made by   using the same mechanisms as for managing the set of other   participants listed in the senders table.  If the participant sends   an RTP packet when we_sent is false, it adds itself to the sender   table and sets we_sent to true.  The reverse reconsideration   algorithm described in Section 6.3.4 SHOULD be performed to possibly   reduce the delay before sending an SR packet.  Every time another RTP   packet is sent, the time of transmission of that packet is maintained   in the table.  The normal sender timeout algorithm is then applied to   the participant -- if an RTP packet has not been transmitted since   time tc - 2T, the participant removes itself from the sender table,   decrements the sender count, and sets we_sent to false.6.3.9 Allocation of Source Description Bandwidth   This specification defines several source description (SDES) items in   addition to the mandatory CNAME item, such as NAME (personal name)   and EMAIL (email address).  It also provides a means to define new   application-specific RTCP packet types.  Applications should exercise   caution in allocating control bandwidth to this additional   information because it will slow down the rate at which reception   reports and CNAME are sent, thus impairing the performance of the   protocol.  It is RECOMMENDED that no more than 20% of the RTCP   bandwidth allocated to a single participant be used to carry the   additional information.  Furthermore, it is not intended that all   SDES items will be included in every application.  Those that are   included SHOULD be assigned a fraction of the bandwidth according to   their utility.  Rather than estimate these fractions dynamically, it   is recommended that the percentages be translated statically into   report interval counts based on the typical length of an item.   For example, an application may be designed to send only CNAME, NAME   and EMAIL and not any others.  NAME might be given much higher   priority than EMAIL because the NAME would be displayed continuously   in the application's user interface, whereas EMAIL would be displayed   only when requested.  At every RTCP interval, an RR packet and an   SDES packet with the CNAME item would be sent.  For a small sessionSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 34]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   operating at the minimum interval, that would be every 5 seconds on   the average.  Every third interval (15 seconds), one extra item would   be included in the SDES packet.  Seven out of eight times this would   be the NAME item, and every eighth time (2 minutes) it would be the   EMAIL item.   When multiple applications operate in concert using cross-application   binding through a common CNAME for each participant, for example in a   multimedia conference composed of an RTP session for each medium, the   additional SDES information MAY be sent in only one RTP session.  The   other sessions would carry only the CNAME item.  In particular, this   approach should be applied to the multiple sessions of a layered   encoding scheme (see Section 2.4).6.4 Sender and Receiver Reports   RTP receivers provide reception quality feedback using RTCP report   packets which may take one of two forms depending upon whether or not   the receiver is also a sender.  The only difference between the   sender report (SR) and receiver report (RR) forms, besides the packet   type code, is that the sender report includes a 20-byte sender   information section for use by active senders.  The SR is issued if a   site has sent any data packets during the interval since issuing the   last report or the previous one, otherwise the RR is issued.   Both the SR and RR forms include zero or more reception report   blocks, one for each of the synchronization sources from which this   receiver has received RTP data packets since the last report.   Reports are not issued for contributing sources listed in the CSRC   list.  Each reception report block provides statistics about the data   received from the particular source indicated in that block.  Since a   maximum of 31 reception report blocks will fit in an SR or RR packet,   additional RR packets SHOULD be stacked after the initial SR or RR   packet as needed to contain the reception reports for all sources   heard during the interval since the last report.  If there are too   many sources to fit all the necessary RR packets into one compound   RTCP packet without exceeding the MTU of the network path, then only   the subset that will fit into one MTU SHOULD be included in each   interval.  The subsets SHOULD be selected round-robin across multiple   intervals so that all sources are reported.   The next sections define the formats of the two reports, how they may   be extended in a profile-specific manner if an application requires   additional feedback information, and how the reports may be used.   Details of reception reporting by translators and mixers is given in   Section 7.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 35]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.4.1 SR: Sender Report RTCP 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       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+header |V=2|P|    RC   |   PT=SR=200   |             length            |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SSRC of sender                        |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+sender |              NTP timestamp, most significant word             |info   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |             NTP timestamp, least significant word             |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         RTP timestamp                         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                     sender's packet count                     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      sender's octet count                     |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+report |                 SSRC_1 (SSRC of first source)                 |block  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  1    | fraction lost |       cumulative number of packets lost       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           extended highest sequence number received           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      interarrival jitter                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         last SR (LSR)                         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                   delay since last SR (DLSR)                  |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+report |                 SSRC_2 (SSRC of second source)                |block  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  2    :                               ...                             :       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+       |                  profile-specific extensions                  |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The sender report packet consists of three sections, possibly   followed by a fourth profile-specific extension section if defined.   The first section, the header, is 8 octets long.  The fields have the   following meaning:   version (V): 2 bits      Identifies the version of RTP, which is the same in RTCP packets      as in RTP data packets.  The version defined by this specification      is two (2).Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 36]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   padding (P): 1 bit      If the padding bit is set, this individual RTCP packet contains      some additional padding octets at the end which are not part of      the control information but are included in the length field.  The      last octet of the padding is a count of how many padding octets      should be ignored, including itself (it will be a multiple of      four).  Padding may be needed by some encryption algorithms with      fixed block sizes.  In a compound RTCP packet, padding is only      required on one individual packet because the compound packet is      encrypted as a whole for the method in Section 9.1.  Thus, padding      MUST only be added to the last individual packet, and if padding      is added to that packet, the padding bit MUST be set only on that      packet.  This convention aids the header validity checks described      in Appendix A.2 and allows detection of packets from some early      implementations that incorrectly set the padding bit on the first      individual packet and add padding to the last individual packet.   reception report count (RC): 5 bits      The number of reception report blocks contained in this packet.  A      value of zero is valid.   packet type (PT): 8 bits      Contains the constant 200 to identify this as an RTCP SR packet.   length: 16 bits      The length of this RTCP packet in 32-bit words minus one,      including the header and any padding.  (The offset of one makes      zero a valid length and avoids a possible infinite loop in      scanning a compound RTCP packet, while counting 32-bit words      avoids a validity check for a multiple of 4.)   SSRC: 32 bits      The synchronization source identifier for the originator of this      SR packet.   The second section, the sender information, is 20 octets long and is   present in every sender report packet.  It summarizes the data   transmissions from this sender.  The fields have the following   meaning:   NTP timestamp: 64 bits      Indicates the wallclock time (see Section 4) when this report was      sent so that it may be used in combination with timestamps      returned in reception reports from other receivers to measure      round-trip propagation to those receivers.  Receivers should      expect that the measurement accuracy of the timestamp may be      limited to far less than the resolution of the NTP timestamp.  The      measurement uncertainty of the timestamp is not indicated as itSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 37]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      may not be known.  On a system that has no notion of wallclock      time but does have some system-specific clock such as "system      uptime", a sender MAY use that clock as a reference to calculate      relative NTP timestamps.  It is important to choose a commonly      used clock so that if separate implementations are used to produce      the individual streams of a multimedia session, all      implementations will use the same clock.  Until the year 2036,      relative and absolute timestamps will differ in the high bit so      (invalid) comparisons will show a large difference; by then one      hopes relative timestamps will no longer be needed.  A sender that      has no notion of wallclock or elapsed time MAY set the NTP      timestamp to zero.   RTP timestamp: 32 bits      Corresponds to the same time as the NTP timestamp (above), but in      the same units and with the same random offset as the RTP      timestamps in data packets.  This correspondence may be used for      intra- and inter-media synchronization for sources whose NTP      timestamps are synchronized, and may be used by media-independent      receivers to estimate the nominal RTP clock frequency.  Note that      in most cases this timestamp will not be equal to the RTP      timestamp in any adjacent data packet.  Rather, it MUST be      calculated from the corresponding NTP timestamp using the      relationship between the RTP timestamp counter and real time as      maintained by periodically checking the wallclock time at a      sampling instant.   sender's packet count: 32 bits      The total number of RTP data packets transmitted by the sender      since starting transmission up until the time this SR packet was      generated.  The count SHOULD be reset if the sender changes its      SSRC identifier.   sender's octet count: 32 bits      The total number of payload octets (i.e., not including header or      padding) transmitted in RTP data packets by the sender since      starting transmission up until the time this SR packet was      generated.  The count SHOULD be reset if the sender changes its      SSRC identifier.  This field can be used to estimate the average      payload data rate.   The third section contains zero or more reception report blocks   depending on the number of other sources heard by this sender since   the last report.  Each reception report block conveys statistics on   the reception of RTP packets from a single synchronization source.   Receivers SHOULD NOT carry over statistics when a source changes its   SSRC identifier due to a collision.  These statistics are:Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 38]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   SSRC_n (source identifier): 32 bits      The SSRC identifier of the source to which the information in this      reception report block pertains.   fraction lost: 8 bits      The fraction of RTP data packets from source SSRC_n lost since the      previous SR or RR packet was sent, expressed as a fixed point      number with the binary point at the left edge of the field.  (That      is equivalent to taking the integer part after multiplying the      loss fraction by 256.)  This fraction is defined to be the number      of packets lost divided by the number of packets expected, as      defined in the next paragraph.  An implementation is shown in      Appendix A.3.  If the loss is negative due to duplicates, the      fraction lost is set to zero.  Note that a receiver cannot tell      whether any packets were lost after the last one received, and      that there will be no reception report block issued for a source      if all packets from that source sent during the last reporting      interval have been lost.   cumulative number of packets lost: 24 bits      The total number of RTP data packets from source SSRC_n that have      been lost since the beginning of reception.  This number is      defined to be the number of packets expected less the number of      packets actually received, where the number of packets received      includes any which are late or duplicates.  Thus, packets that      arrive late are not counted as lost, and the loss may be negative      if there are duplicates.  The number of packets expected is      defined to be the extended last sequence number received, as      defined next, less the initial sequence number received.  This may      be calculated as shown in Appendix A.3.   extended highest sequence number received: 32 bits      The low 16 bits contain the highest sequence number received in an      RTP data packet from source SSRC_n, and the most significant 16      bits extend that sequence number with the corresponding count of      sequence number cycles, which may be maintained according to the      algorithm in Appendix A.1.  Note that different receivers within      the same session will generate different extensions to the      sequence number if their start times differ significantly.   interarrival jitter: 32 bits      An estimate of the statistical variance of the RTP data packet      interarrival time, measured in timestamp units and expressed as an      unsigned integer.  The interarrival jitter J is defined to be the      mean deviation (smoothed absolute value) of the difference D in      packet spacing at the receiver compared to the sender for a pair      of packets.  As shown in the equation below, this is equivalent to      the difference in the "relative transit time" for the two packets;Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 39]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      the relative transit time is the difference between a packet's RTP      timestamp and the receiver's clock at the time of arrival,      measured in the same units.      If Si is the RTP timestamp from packet i, and Ri is the time of      arrival in RTP timestamp units for packet i, then for two packets      i and j, D may be expressed as         D(i,j) = (Rj - Ri) - (Sj - Si) = (Rj - Sj) - (Ri - Si)      The interarrival jitter SHOULD be calculated continuously as each      data packet i is received from source SSRC_n, using this      difference D for that packet and the previous packet i-1 in order      of arrival (not necessarily in sequence), according to the formula         J(i) = J(i-1) + (|D(i-1,i)| - J(i-1))/16      Whenever a reception report is issued, the current value of J is      sampled.      The jitter calculation MUST conform to the formula specified here      in order to allow profile-independent monitors to make valid      interpretations of reports coming from different implementations.      This algorithm is the optimal first-order estimator and the gain      parameter 1/16 gives a good noise reduction ratio while      maintaining a reasonable rate of convergence [22].  A sample      implementation is shown in Appendix A.8.  See Section 6.4.4 for a      discussion of the effects of varying packet duration and delay      before transmission.   last SR timestamp (LSR): 32 bits      The middle 32 bits out of 64 in the NTP timestamp (as explained in      Section 4) received as part of the most recent RTCP sender report      (SR) packet from source SSRC_n.  If no SR has been received yet,      the field is set to zero.   delay since last SR (DLSR): 32 bits      The delay, expressed in units of 1/65536 seconds, between      receiving the last SR packet from source SSRC_n and sending this      reception report block.  If no SR packet has been received yet      from SSRC_n, the DLSR field is set to zero.      Let SSRC_r denote the receiver issuing this receiver report.      Source SSRC_n can compute the round-trip propagation delay to      SSRC_r by recording the time A when this reception report block is      received.  It calculates the total round-trip time A-LSR using the      last SR timestamp (LSR) field, and then subtracting this field to      leave the round-trip propagation delay as (A - LSR - DLSR).  ThisSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 40]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      is illustrated in Fig. 2.  Times are shown in both a hexadecimal      representation of the 32-bit fields and the equivalent floating-      point decimal representation.  Colons indicate a 32-bit field      divided into a 16-bit integer part and 16-bit fraction part.      This may be used as an approximate measure of distance to cluster      receivers, although some links have very asymmetric delays.   [10 Nov 1995 11:33:25.125 UTC]       [10 Nov 1995 11:33:36.5 UTC]   n                 SR(n)              A=b710:8000 (46864.500 s)   ---------------------------------------------------------------->                      v                 ^   ntp_sec =0xb44db705 v               ^ dlsr=0x0005:4000 (    5.250s)   ntp_frac=0x20000000  v             ^  lsr =0xb705:2000 (46853.125s)     (3024992005.125 s)  v           ^   r                      v         ^ RR(n)   ---------------------------------------------------------------->                          |<-DLSR->|                           (5.250 s)   A     0xb710:8000 (46864.500 s)   DLSR -0x0005:4000 (    5.250 s)   LSR  -0xb705:2000 (46853.125 s)   -------------------------------   delay 0x0006:2000 (    6.125 s)           Figure 2: Example for round-trip time computationSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 41]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.4.2 RR: Receiver Report RTCP 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       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+header |V=2|P|    RC   |   PT=RR=201   |             length            |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                     SSRC of packet sender                     |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+report |                 SSRC_1 (SSRC of first source)                 |block  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  1    | fraction lost |       cumulative number of packets lost       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           extended highest sequence number received           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      interarrival jitter                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         last SR (LSR)                         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                   delay since last SR (DLSR)                  |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+report |                 SSRC_2 (SSRC of second source)                |block  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  2    :                               ...                             :       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+       |                  profile-specific extensions                  |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The format of the receiver report (RR) packet is the same as that of   the SR packet except that the packet type field contains the constant   201 and the five words of sender information are omitted (these are   the NTP and RTP timestamps and sender's packet and octet counts).   The remaining fields have the same meaning as for the SR packet.   An empty RR packet (RC = 0) MUST be put at the head of a compound   RTCP packet when there is no data transmission or reception to   report.6.4.3 Extending the Sender and Receiver Reports   A profile SHOULD define profile-specific extensions to the sender   report and receiver report if there is additional information that   needs to be reported regularly about the sender or receivers.  This   method SHOULD be used in preference to defining another RTCP packet   type because it requires less overhead:   o  fewer octets in the packet (no RTCP header or SSRC field);Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 42]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  simpler and faster parsing because applications running under that      profile would be programmed to always expect the extension fields      in the directly accessible location after the reception reports.   The extension is a fourth section in the sender- or receiver-report   packet which comes at the end after the reception report blocks, if   any.  If additional sender information is required, then for sender   reports it would be included first in the extension section, but for   receiver reports it would not be present.  If information about   receivers is to be included, that data SHOULD be structured as an   array of blocks parallel to the existing array of reception report   blocks; that is, the number of blocks would be indicated by the RC   field.6.4.4 Analyzing Sender and Receiver Reports   It is expected that reception quality feedback will be useful not   only for the sender but also for other receivers and third-party   monitors.  The sender may modify its transmissions based on the   feedback; receivers can determine whether problems are local,   regional or global; network managers may use profile-independent   monitors that receive only the RTCP packets and not the corresponding   RTP data packets to evaluate the performance of their networks for   multicast distribution.   Cumulative counts are used in both the sender information and   receiver report blocks so that differences may be calculated between   any two reports to make measurements over both short and long time   periods, and to provide resilience against the loss of a report.  The   difference between the last two reports received can be used to   estimate the recent quality of the distribution.  The NTP timestamp   is included so that rates may be calculated from these differences   over the interval between two reports.  Since that timestamp is   independent of the clock rate for the data encoding, it is possible   to implement encoding- and profile-independent quality monitors.   An example calculation is the packet loss rate over the interval   between two reception reports.  The difference in the cumulative   number of packets lost gives the number lost during that interval.   The difference in the extended last sequence numbers received gives   the number of packets expected during the interval.  The ratio of   these two is the packet loss fraction over the interval.  This ratio   should equal the fraction lost field if the two reports are   consecutive, but otherwise it may not.  The loss rate per second can   be obtained by dividing the loss fraction by the difference in NTP   timestamps, expressed in seconds.  The number of packets received is   the number of packets expected minus the number lost.  The number ofSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 43]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   packets expected may also be used to judge the statistical validity   of any loss estimates.  For example, 1 out of 5 packets lost has a   lower significance than 200 out of 1000.   From the sender information, a third-party monitor can calculate the   average payload data rate and the average packet rate over an   interval without receiving the data.  Taking the ratio of the two   gives the average payload size.  If it can be assumed that packet   loss is independent of packet size, then the number of packets   received by a particular receiver times the average payload size (or   the corresponding packet size) gives the apparent throughput   available to that receiver.   In addition to the cumulative counts which allow long-term packet   loss measurements using differences between reports, the fraction   lost field provides a short-term measurement from a single report.   This becomes more important as the size of a session scales up enough   that reception state information might not be kept for all receivers   or the interval between reports becomes long enough that only one   report might have been received from a particular receiver.   The interarrival jitter field provides a second short-term measure of   network congestion.  Packet loss tracks persistent congestion while   the jitter measure tracks transient congestion.  The jitter measure   may indicate congestion before it leads to packet loss.  The   interarrival jitter field is only a snapshot of the jitter at the   time of a report and is not intended to be taken quantitatively.   Rather, it is intended for comparison across a number of reports from   one receiver over time or from multiple receivers, e.g., within a   single network, at the same time.  To allow comparison across   receivers, it is important the the jitter be calculated according to   the same formula by all receivers.   Because the jitter calculation is based on the RTP timestamp which   represents the instant when the first data in the packet was sampled,   any variation in the delay between that sampling instant and the time   the packet is transmitted will affect the resulting jitter that is   calculated.  Such a variation in delay would occur for audio packets   of varying duration.  It will also occur for video encodings because   the timestamp is the same for all the packets of one frame but those   packets are not all transmitted at the same time.  The variation in   delay until transmission does reduce the accuracy of the jitter   calculation as a measure of the behavior of the network by itself,   but it is appropriate to include considering that the receiver buffer   must accommodate it.  When the jitter calculation is used as a   comparative measure, the (constant) component due to variation in   delay until transmission subtracts out so that a change in theSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 44]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   network jitter component can then be observed unless it is relatively   small.  If the change is small, then it is likely to be   inconsequential.6.5 SDES: Source Description RTCP 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       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+header |V=2|P|    SC   |  PT=SDES=202  |             length            |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+chunk  |                          SSRC/CSRC_1                          |  1    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           SDES items                          |       |                              ...                              |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+chunk  |                          SSRC/CSRC_2                          |  2    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           SDES items                          |       |                              ...                              |       +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+   The SDES packet is a three-level structure composed of a header and   zero or more chunks, each of which is composed of items describing   the source identified in that chunk.  The items are described   individually in subsequent sections.   version (V), padding (P), length:      As described for the SR packet (see Section 6.4.1).   packet type (PT): 8 bits      Contains the constant 202 to identify this as an RTCP SDES packet.   source count (SC): 5 bits      The number of SSRC/CSRC chunks contained in this SDES packet.  A      value of zero is valid but useless.   Each chunk consists of an SSRC/CSRC identifier followed by a list of   zero or more items, which carry information about the SSRC/CSRC.   Each chunk starts on a 32-bit boundary.  Each item consists of an 8-   bit type field, an 8-bit octet count describing the length of the   text (thus, not including this two-octet header), and the text   itself.  Note that the text can be no longer than 255 octets, but   this is consistent with the need to limit RTCP bandwidth consumption.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 45]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   The text is encoded according to the UTF-8 encoding specified in RFC   2279 [5].  US-ASCII is a subset of this encoding and requires no   additional encoding.  The presence of multi-octet encodings is   indicated by setting the most significant bit of a character to a   value of one.   Items are contiguous, i.e., items are not individually padded to a   32-bit boundary.  Text is not null terminated because some multi-   octet encodings include null octets.  The list of items in each chunk   MUST be terminated by one or more null octets, the first of which is   interpreted as an item type of zero to denote the end of the list.   No length octet follows the null item type octet, but additional null   octets MUST be included if needed to pad until the next 32-bit   boundary.  Note that this padding is separate from that indicated by   the P bit in the RTCP header.  A chunk with zero items (four null   octets) is valid but useless.   End systems send one SDES packet containing their own source   identifier (the same as the SSRC in the fixed RTP header).  A mixer   sends one SDES packet containing a chunk for each contributing source   from which it is receiving SDES information, or multiple complete   SDES packets in the format above if there are more than 31 such   sources (see Section 7).   The SDES items currently defined are described in the next sections.   Only the CNAME item is mandatory.  Some items shown here may be   useful only for particular profiles, but the item types are all   assigned from one common space to promote shared use and to simplify   profile-independent applications.  Additional items may be defined in   a profile by registering the type numbers with IANA as described in   Section 15.6.5.1 CNAME: Canonical End-Point Identifier SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    CNAME=1    |     length    | user and domain name        ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The CNAME identifier has the following properties:   o  Because the randomly allocated SSRC identifier may change if a      conflict is discovered or if a program is restarted, the CNAME      item MUST be included to provide the binding from the SSRC      identifier to an identifier for the source (sender or receiver)      that remains constant.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 46]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  Like the SSRC identifier, the CNAME identifier SHOULD also be      unique among all participants within one RTP session.   o  To provide a binding across multiple media tools used by one      participant in a set of related RTP sessions, the CNAME SHOULD be      fixed for that participant.   o  To facilitate third-party monitoring, the CNAME SHOULD be suitable      for either a program or a person to locate the source.   Therefore, the CNAME SHOULD be derived algorithmically and not   entered manually, when possible.  To meet these requirements, the   following format SHOULD be used unless a profile specifies an   alternate syntax or semantics.  The CNAME item SHOULD have the format   "user@host", or "host" if a user name is not available as on single-   user systems.  For both formats, "host" is either the fully qualified   domain name of the host from which the real-time data originates,   formatted according to the rules specified in RFC 1034 [6], RFC 1035   [7] and Section 2.1 of RFC 1123 [8]; or the standard ASCII   representation of the host's numeric address on the interface used   for the RTP communication.  For example, the standard ASCII   representation of an IP Version 4 address is "dotted decimal", also   known as dotted quad, and for IP Version 6, addresses are textually   represented as groups of hexadecimal digits separated by colons (with   variations as detailed in RFC 3513 [23]).  Other address types are   expected to have ASCII representations that are mutually unique.  The   fully qualified domain name is more convenient for a human observer   and may avoid the need to send a NAME item in addition, but it may be   difficult or impossible to obtain reliably in some operating   environments.  Applications that may be run in such environments   SHOULD use the ASCII representation of the address instead.   Examples are "doe@sleepy.example.com", "doe@192.0.2.89" or   "doe@2201:056D::112E:144A:1E24" for a multi-user system.  On a system   with no user name, examples would be "sleepy.example.com",   "192.0.2.89" or "2201:056D::112E:144A:1E24".   The user name SHOULD be in a form that a program such as "finger" or   "talk" could use, i.e., it typically is the login name rather than   the personal name.  The host name is not necessarily identical to the   one in the participant's electronic mail address.   This syntax will not provide unique identifiers for each source if an   application permits a user to generate multiple sources from one   host.  Such an application would have to rely on the SSRC to further   identify the source, or the profile for that application would have   to specify additional syntax for the CNAME identifier.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 47]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   If each application creates its CNAME independently, the resulting   CNAMEs may not be identical as would be required to provide a binding   across multiple media tools belonging to one participant in a set of   related RTP sessions.  If cross-media binding is required, it may be   necessary for the CNAME of each tool to be externally configured with   the same value by a coordination tool.   Application writers should be aware that private network address   assignments such as the Net-10 assignment proposed in RFC 1918 [24]   may create network addresses that are not globally unique.  This   would lead to non-unique CNAMEs if hosts with private addresses and   no direct IP connectivity to the public Internet have their RTP   packets forwarded to the public Internet through an RTP-level   translator.  (See also RFC 1627 [25].)  To handle this case,   applications MAY provide a means to configure a unique CNAME, but the   burden is on the translator to translate CNAMEs from private   addresses to public addresses if necessary to keep private addresses   from being exposed.6.5.2 NAME: User Name SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     NAME=2    |     length    | common name of source       ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   This is the real name used to describe the source, e.g., "John Doe,   Bit Recycler".  It may be in any form desired by the user.  For   applications such as conferencing, this form of name may be the most   desirable for display in participant lists, and therefore might be   sent most frequently of those items other than CNAME.  Profiles MAY   establish such priorities.  The NAME value is expected to remain   constant at least for the duration of a session.  It SHOULD NOT be   relied upon to be unique among all participants in the session.6.5.3 EMAIL: Electronic Mail Address SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    EMAIL=3    |     length    | email address of source     ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The email address is formatted according to RFC 2822 [9], for   example, "John.Doe@example.com".  The EMAIL value is expected to   remain constant for the duration of a session.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 48]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.5.4 PHONE: Phone Number SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    PHONE=4    |     length    | phone number of source      ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The phone number SHOULD be formatted with the plus sign replacing the   international access code.  For example, "+1 908 555 1212" for a   number in the United States.6.5.5 LOC: Geographic User Location SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     LOC=5     |     length    | geographic location of site ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Depending on the application, different degrees of detail are   appropriate for this item.  For conference applications, a string   like "Murray Hill, New Jersey" may be sufficient, while, for an   active badge system, strings like "Room 2A244, AT&T BL MH" might be   appropriate.  The degree of detail is left to the implementation   and/or user, but format and content MAY be prescribed by a profile.   The LOC value is expected to remain constant for the duration of a   session, except for mobile hosts.6.5.6 TOOL: Application or Tool Name SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     TOOL=6    |     length    |name/version of source appl. ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   A string giving the name and possibly version of the application   generating the stream, e.g., "videotool 1.2".  This information may   be useful for debugging purposes and is similar to the Mailer or   Mail-System-Version SMTP headers.  The TOOL value is expected to   remain constant for the duration of the session.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 49]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20036.5.7 NOTE: Notice/Status SDES Item    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     NOTE=7    |     length    | note about the source       ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The following semantics are suggested for this item, but these or   other semantics MAY be explicitly defined by a profile.  The NOTE   item is intended for transient messages describing the current state   of the source, e.g., "on the phone, can't talk".  Or, during a   seminar, this item might be used to convey the title of the talk.  It   should be used only to carry exceptional information and SHOULD NOT   be included routinely by all participants because this would slow   down the rate at which reception reports and CNAME are sent, thus   impairing the performance of the protocol.  In particular, it SHOULD   NOT be included as an item in a user's configuration file nor   automatically generated as in a quote-of-the-day.   Since the NOTE item may be important to display while it is active,   the rate at which other non-CNAME items such as NAME are transmitted   might be reduced so that the NOTE item can take that part of the RTCP   bandwidth.  When the transient message becomes inactive, the NOTE   item SHOULD continue to be transmitted a few times at the same   repetition rate but with a string of length zero to signal the   receivers.  However, receivers SHOULD also consider the NOTE item   inactive if it is not received for a small multiple of the repetition   rate, or perhaps 20-30 RTCP intervals.6.5.8 PRIV: Private Extensions SDES Item     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    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |     PRIV=8    |     length    | prefix length |prefix string...    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    ...             |                  value string               ...    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   This item is used to define experimental or application-specific SDES   extensions.  The item contains a prefix consisting of a length-string   pair, followed by the value string filling the remainder of the item   and carrying the desired information.  The prefix length field is 8   bits long.  The prefix string is a name chosen by the person defining   the PRIV item to be unique with respect to other PRIV items this   application might receive.  The application creator might choose to   use the application name plus an additional subtype identification ifSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 50]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   needed.  Alternatively, it is RECOMMENDED that others choose a name   based on the entity they represent, then coordinate the use of the   name within that entity.   Note that the prefix consumes some space within the item's total   length of 255 octets, so the prefix should be kept as short as   possible.  This facility and the constrained RTCP bandwidth SHOULD   NOT be overloaded; it is not intended to satisfy all the control   communication requirements of all applications.   SDES PRIV prefixes will not be registered by IANA.  If some form of   the PRIV item proves to be of general utility, it SHOULD instead be   assigned a regular SDES item type registered with IANA so that no   prefix is required.  This simplifies use and increases transmission   efficiency.6.6 BYE: Goodbye RTCP 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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |V=2|P|    SC   |   PT=BYE=203  |             length            |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                           SSRC/CSRC                           |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      :                              ...                              :      +=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+(opt) |     length    |               reason for leaving            ...      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The BYE packet indicates that one or more sources are no longer   active.   version (V), padding (P), length:      As described for the SR packet (see Section 6.4.1).   packet type (PT): 8 bits      Contains the constant 203 to identify this as an RTCP BYE packet.   source count (SC): 5 bits      The number of SSRC/CSRC identifiers included in this BYE packet.      A count value of zero is valid, but useless.   The rules for when a BYE packet should be sent are specified in   Sections 6.3.7 and 8.2.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 51]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   If a BYE packet is received by a mixer, the mixer SHOULD forward the   BYE packet with the SSRC/CSRC identifier(s) unchanged.  If a mixer   shuts down, it SHOULD send a BYE packet listing all contributing   sources it handles, as well as its own SSRC identifier.  Optionally,   the BYE packet MAY include an 8-bit octet count followed by that many   octets of text indicating the reason for leaving, e.g., "camera   malfunction" or "RTP loop detected".  The string has the same   encoding as that described for SDES.  If the string fills the packet   to the next 32-bit boundary, the string is not null terminated.  If   not, the BYE packet MUST be padded with null octets to the next 32-   bit boundary.  This padding is separate from that indicated by the P   bit in the RTCP header.6.7 APP: Application-Defined RTCP 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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |V=2|P| subtype |   PT=APP=204  |             length            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                           SSRC/CSRC                           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                          name (ASCII)                         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                   application-dependent data                ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The APP packet is intended for experimental use as new applications   and new features are developed, without requiring packet type value   registration.  APP packets with unrecognized names SHOULD be ignored.   After testing and if wider use is justified, it is RECOMMENDED that   each APP packet be redefined without the subtype and name fields and   registered with IANA using an RTCP packet type.   version (V), padding (P), length:      As described for the SR packet (see Section 6.4.1).   subtype: 5 bits      May be used as a subtype to allow a set of APP packets to be      defined under one unique name, or for any application-dependent      data.   packet type (PT): 8 bits      Contains the constant 204 to identify this as an RTCP APP packet.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 52]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   name: 4 octets      A name chosen by the person defining the set of APP packets to be      unique with respect to other APP packets this application might      receive.  The application creator might choose to use the      application name, and then coordinate the allocation of subtype      values to others who want to define new packet types for the      application.  Alternatively, it is RECOMMENDED that others choose      a name based on the entity they represent, then coordinate the use      of the name within that entity.  The name is interpreted as a      sequence of four ASCII characters, with uppercase and lowercase      characters treated as distinct.   application-dependent data: variable length      Application-dependent data may or may not appear in an APP packet.      It is interpreted by the application and not RTP itself.  It MUST      be a multiple of 32 bits long.7. RTP Translators and Mixers   In addition to end systems, RTP supports the notion of "translators"   and "mixers", which could be considered as "intermediate systems" at   the RTP level.  Although this support adds some complexity to the   protocol, the need for these functions has been clearly established   by experiments with multicast audio and video applications in the   Internet.  Example uses of translators and mixers given in Section   2.3 stem from the presence of firewalls and low bandwidth   connections, both of which are likely to remain.7.1 General Description   An RTP translator/mixer connects two or more transport-level   "clouds".  Typically, each cloud is defined by a common network and   transport protocol (e.g., IP/UDP) plus a multicast address and   transport level destination port or a pair of unicast addresses and   ports.  (Network-level protocol translators, such as IP version 4 to   IP version 6, may be present within a cloud invisibly to RTP.)  One   system may serve as a translator or mixer for a number of RTP   sessions, but each is considered a logically separate entity.   In order to avoid creating a loop when a translator or mixer is   installed, the following rules MUST be observed:   o  Each of the clouds connected by translators and mixers      participating in one RTP session either MUST be distinct from all      the others in at least one of these parameters (protocol, address,      port), or MUST be isolated at the network level from the others.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 53]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  A derivative of the first rule is that there MUST NOT be multiple      translators or mixers connected in parallel unless by some      arrangement they partition the set of sources to be forwarded.   Similarly, all RTP end systems that can communicate through one or   more RTP translators or mixers share the same SSRC space, that is,   the SSRC identifiers MUST be unique among all these end systems.   Section 8.2 describes the collision resolution algorithm by which   SSRC identifiers are kept unique and loops are detected.   There may be many varieties of translators and mixers designed for   different purposes and applications.  Some examples are to add or   remove encryption, change the encoding of the data or the underlying   protocols, or replicate between a multicast address and one or more   unicast addresses.  The distinction between translators and mixers is   that a translator passes through the data streams from different   sources separately, whereas a mixer combines them to form one new   stream:   Translator: Forwards RTP packets with their SSRC identifier      intact; this makes it possible for receivers to identify      individual sources even though packets from all the sources pass      through the same translator and carry the translator's network      source address.  Some kinds of translators will pass through the      data untouched, but others MAY change the encoding of the data and      thus the RTP data payload type and timestamp.  If multiple data      packets are re-encoded into one, or vice versa, a translator MUST      assign new sequence numbers to the outgoing packets.  Losses in      the incoming packet stream may induce corresponding gaps in the      outgoing sequence numbers.  Receivers cannot detect the presence      of a translator unless they know by some other means what payload      type or transport address was used by the original source.   Mixer: Receives streams of RTP data packets from one or more      sources, possibly changes the data format, combines the streams in      some manner and then forwards the combined stream.  Since the      timing among multiple input sources will not generally be      synchronized, the mixer will make timing adjustments among the      streams and generate its own timing for the combined stream, so it      is the synchronization source.  Thus, all data packets forwarded      by a mixer MUST be marked with the mixer's own SSRC identifier.      In order to preserve the identity of the original sources      contributing to the mixed packet, the mixer SHOULD insert their      SSRC identifiers into the CSRC identifier list following the fixed      RTP header of the packet.  A mixer that is also itself a      contributing source for some packet SHOULD explicitly include its      own SSRC identifier in the CSRC list for that packet.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 54]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      For some applications, it MAY be acceptable for a mixer not to      identify sources in the CSRC list.  However, this introduces the      danger that loops involving those sources could not be detected.   The advantage of a mixer over a translator for applications like   audio is that the output bandwidth is limited to that of one source   even when multiple sources are active on the input side.  This may be   important for low-bandwidth links.  The disadvantage is that   receivers on the output side don't have any control over which   sources are passed through or muted, unless some mechanism is   implemented for remote control of the mixer.  The regeneration of   synchronization information by mixers also means that receivers can't   do inter-media synchronization of the original streams.  A multi-   media mixer could do it.         [E1]                                    [E6]          |                                       |    E1:17 |                                 E6:15 |          |                                       |   E6:15          V  M1:48 (1,17)         M1:48 (1,17)    V   M1:48 (1,17)         (M1)-------------><T1>-----------------><T2>-------------->[E7]          ^                 ^     E4:47           ^   E4:47     E2:1 |           E4:47 |                     |   M3:89 (64,45)          |                 |                     |         [E2]              [E4]     M3:89 (64,45) |                                                  |        legend:   [E3] --------->(M2)----------->(M3)------------|        [End system]          E3:64        M2:12 (64)  ^                       (Mixer)                                   | E5:45                 <Translator>                                   |                                  [E5]          source: SSRC (CSRCs)                                                ------------------->   Figure 3: Sample RTP network with end systems, mixers and translators   A collection of mixers and translators is shown in Fig. 3 to   illustrate their effect on SSRC and CSRC identifiers.  In the figure,   end systems are shown as rectangles (named E), translators as   triangles (named T) and mixers as ovals (named M).  The notation "M1:   48(1,17)" designates a packet originating a mixer M1, identified by   M1's (random) SSRC value of 48 and two CSRC identifiers, 1 and 17,   copied from the SSRC identifiers of packets from E1 and E2.7.2 RTCP Processing in Translators   In addition to forwarding data packets, perhaps modified, translators   and mixers MUST also process RTCP packets.  In many cases, they will   take apart the compound RTCP packets received from end systems toSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 55]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   aggregate SDES information and to modify the SR or RR packets.   Retransmission of this information may be triggered by the packet   arrival or by the RTCP interval timer of the translator or mixer   itself.   A translator that does not modify the data packets, for example one   that just replicates between a multicast address and a unicast   address, MAY simply forward RTCP packets unmodified as well.  A   translator that transforms the payload in some way MUST make   corresponding transformations in the SR and RR information so that it   still reflects the characteristics of the data and the reception   quality.  These translators MUST NOT simply forward RTCP packets.  In   general, a translator SHOULD NOT aggregate SR and RR packets from   different sources into one packet since that would reduce the   accuracy of the propagation delay measurements based on the LSR and   DLSR fields.   SR sender information:  A translator does not generate its own      sender information, but forwards the SR packets received from one      cloud to the others.  The SSRC is left intact but the sender      information MUST be modified if required by the translation.  If a      translator changes the data encoding, it MUST change the "sender's      byte count" field.  If it also combines several data packets into      one output packet, it MUST change the "sender's packet count"      field.  If it changes the timestamp frequency, it MUST change the      "RTP timestamp" field in the SR packet.   SR/RR reception report blocks:  A translator forwards reception      reports received from one cloud to the others.  Note that these      flow in the direction opposite to the data.  The SSRC is left      intact.  If a translator combines several data packets into one      output packet, and therefore changes the sequence numbers, it MUST      make the inverse manipulation for the packet loss fields and the      "extended last sequence number" field.  This may be complex.  In      the extreme case, there may be no meaningful way to translate the      reception reports, so the translator MAY pass on no reception      report at all or a synthetic report based on its own reception.      The general rule is to do what makes sense for a particular      translation.      A translator does not require an SSRC identifier of its own, but      MAY choose to allocate one for the purpose of sending reports      about what it has received.  These would be sent to all the      connected clouds, each corresponding to the translation of the      data stream as sent to that cloud, since reception reports are      normally multicast to all participants.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 56]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   SDES:  Translators typically forward without change the SDES      information they receive from one cloud to the others, but MAY,      for example, decide to filter non-CNAME SDES information if      bandwidth is limited.  The CNAMEs MUST be forwarded to allow SSRC      identifier collision detection to work.  A translator that      generates its own RR packets MUST send SDES CNAME information      about itself to the same clouds that it sends those RR packets.   BYE:  Translators forward BYE packets unchanged.  A translator      that is about to cease forwarding packets SHOULD send a BYE packet      to each connected cloud containing all the SSRC identifiers that      were previously being forwarded to that cloud, including the      translator's own SSRC identifier if it sent reports of its own.   APP:  Translators forward APP packets unchanged.7.3 RTCP Processing in Mixers   Since a mixer generates a new data stream of its own, it does not   pass through SR or RR packets at all and instead generates new   information for both sides.   SR sender information:  A mixer does not pass through sender      information from the sources it mixes because the characteristics      of the source streams are lost in the mix.  As a synchronization      source, the mixer SHOULD generate its own SR packets with sender      information about the mixed data stream and send them in the same      direction as the mixed stream.   SR/RR reception report blocks:  A mixer generates its own      reception reports for sources in each cloud and sends them out      only to the same cloud.  It MUST NOT send these reception reports      to the other clouds and MUST NOT forward reception reports from      one cloud to the others because the sources would not be SSRCs      there (only CSRCs).   SDES:  Mixers typically forward without change the SDES      information they receive from one cloud to the others, but MAY,      for example, decide to filter non-CNAME SDES information if      bandwidth is limited.  The CNAMEs MUST be forwarded to allow SSRC      identifier collision detection to work.  (An identifier in a CSRC      list generated by a mixer might collide with an SSRC identifier      generated by an end system.)  A mixer MUST send SDES CNAME      information about itself to the same clouds that it sends SR or RR      packets.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 57]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      Since mixers do not forward SR or RR packets, they will typically      be extracting SDES packets from a compound RTCP packet.  To      minimize overhead, chunks from the SDES packets MAY be aggregated      into a single SDES packet which is then stacked on an SR or RR      packet originating from the mixer.  A mixer which aggregates SDES      packets will use more RTCP bandwidth than an individual source      because the compound packets will be longer, but that is      appropriate since the mixer represents multiple sources.      Similarly, a mixer which passes through SDES packets as they are      received will be transmitting RTCP packets at higher than the      single source rate, but again that is correct since the packets      come from multiple sources.  The RTCP packet rate may be different      on each side of the mixer.      A mixer that does not insert CSRC identifiers MAY also refrain      from forwarding SDES CNAMEs.  In this case, the SSRC identifier      spaces in the two clouds are independent.  As mentioned earlier,      this mode of operation creates a danger that loops can't be      detected.   BYE:  Mixers MUST forward BYE packets.  A mixer that is about to      cease forwarding packets SHOULD send a BYE packet to each      connected cloud containing all the SSRC identifiers that were      previously being forwarded to that cloud, including the mixer's      own SSRC identifier if it sent reports of its own.   APP:  The treatment of APP packets by mixers is application-specific.7.4 Cascaded Mixers   An RTP session may involve a collection of mixers and translators as   shown in Fig. 3.  If two mixers are cascaded, such as M2 and M3 in   the figure, packets received by a mixer may already have been mixed   and may include a CSRC list with multiple identifiers.  The second   mixer SHOULD build the CSRC list for the outgoing packet using the   CSRC identifiers from already-mixed input packets and the SSRC   identifiers from unmixed input packets.  This is shown in the output   arc from mixer M3 labeled M3:89(64,45) in the figure.  As in the case   of mixers that are not cascaded, if the resulting CSRC list has more   than 15 identifiers, the remainder cannot be included.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 58]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20038.  SSRC Identifier Allocation and Use   The SSRC identifier carried in the RTP header and in various fields   of RTCP packets is a random 32-bit number that is required to be   globally unique within an RTP session.  It is crucial that the number   be chosen with care in order that participants on the same network or   starting at the same time are not likely to choose the same number.   It is not sufficient to use the local network address (such as an   IPv4 address) for the identifier because the address may not be   unique.  Since RTP translators and mixers enable interoperation among   multiple networks with different address spaces, the allocation   patterns for addresses within two spaces might result in a much   higher rate of collision than would occur with random allocation.   Multiple sources running on one host would also conflict.   It is also not sufficient to obtain an SSRC identifier simply by   calling random() without carefully initializing the state.  An   example of how to generate a random identifier is presented in   Appendix A.6.8.1 Probability of Collision   Since the identifiers are chosen randomly, it is possible that two or   more sources will choose the same number.  Collision occurs with the   highest probability when all sources are started simultaneously, for   example when triggered automatically by some session management   event.  If N is the number of sources and L the length of the   identifier (here, 32 bits), the probability that two sources   independently pick the same value can be approximated for large N   [26] as 1 - exp(-N**2 / 2**(L+1)).  For N=1000, the probability is   roughly 10**-4.   The typical collision probability is much lower than the worst-case   above.  When one new source joins an RTP session in which all the   other sources already have unique identifiers, the probability of   collision is just the fraction of numbers used out of the space.   Again, if N is the number of sources and L the length of the   identifier, the probability of collision is N / 2**L.  For N=1000,   the probability is roughly 2*10**-7.   The probability of collision is further reduced by the opportunity   for a new source to receive packets from other participants before   sending its first packet (either data or control).  If the new source   keeps track of the other participants (by SSRC identifier), thenSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 59]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   before transmitting its first packet the new source can verify that   its identifier does not conflict with any that have been received, or   else choose again.8.2 Collision Resolution and Loop Detection   Although the probability of SSRC identifier collision is low, all RTP   implementations MUST be prepared to detect collisions and take the   appropriate actions to resolve them.  If a source discovers at any   time that another source is using the same SSRC identifier as its   own, it MUST send an RTCP BYE packet for the old identifier and   choose another random one.  (As explained below, this step is taken   only once in case of a loop.)  If a receiver discovers that two other   sources are colliding, it MAY keep the packets from one and discard   the packets from the other when this can be detected by different   source transport addresses or CNAMEs.  The two sources are expected   to resolve the collision so that the situation doesn't last.   Because the random SSRC identifiers are kept globally unique for each   RTP session, they can also be used to detect loops that may be   introduced by mixers or translators.  A loop causes duplication of   data and control information, either unmodified or possibly mixed, as   in the following examples:   o  A translator may incorrectly forward a packet to the same      multicast group from which it has received the packet, either      directly or through a chain of translators.  In that case, the      same packet appears several times, originating from different      network sources.   o  Two translators incorrectly set up in parallel, i.e., with the      same multicast groups on both sides, would both forward packets      from one multicast group to the other.  Unidirectional translators      would produce two copies; bidirectional translators would form a      loop.   o  A mixer can close a loop by sending to the same transport      destination upon which it receives packets, either directly or      through another mixer or translator.  In this case a source might      show up both as an SSRC on a data packet and a CSRC in a mixed      data packet.   A source may discover that its own packets are being looped, or that   packets from another source are being looped (a third-party loop).   Both loops and collisions in the random selection of a source   identifier result in packets arriving with the same SSRC identifier   but a different source transport address, which may be that of the   end system originating the packet or an intermediate system.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 60]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Therefore, if a source changes its source transport address, it MAY   also choose a new SSRC identifier to avoid being interpreted as a   looped source.  (This is not MUST because in some applications of RTP   sources may be expected to change addresses during a session.)  Note   that if a translator restarts and consequently changes the source   transport address (e.g., changes the UDP source port number) on which   it forwards packets, then all those packets will appear to receivers   to be looped because the SSRC identifiers are applied by the original   source and will not change.  This problem can be avoided by keeping   the source transport address fixed across restarts, but in any case   will be resolved after a timeout at the receivers.   Loops or collisions occurring on the far side of a translator or   mixer cannot be detected using the source transport address if all   copies of the packets go through the translator or mixer, however,   collisions may still be detected when chunks from two RTCP SDES   packets contain the same SSRC identifier but different CNAMEs.   To detect and resolve these conflicts, an RTP implementation MUST   include an algorithm similar to the one described below, though the   implementation MAY choose a different policy for which packets from   colliding third-party sources are kept.  The algorithm described   below ignores packets from a new source or loop that collide with an   established source.  It resolves collisions with the participant's   own SSRC identifier by sending an RTCP BYE for the old identifier and   choosing a new one.  However, when the collision was induced by a   loop of the participant's own packets, the algorithm will choose a   new identifier only once and thereafter ignore packets from the   looping source transport address.  This is required to avoid a flood   of BYE packets.   This algorithm requires keeping a table indexed by the source   identifier and containing the source transport addresses from the   first RTP packet and first RTCP packet received with that identifier,   along with other state for that source.  Two source transport   addresses are required since, for example, the UDP source port   numbers may be different on RTP and RTCP packets.  However, it may be   assumed that the network address is the same in both source transport   addresses.   Each SSRC or CSRC identifier received in an RTP or RTCP packet is   looked up in the source identifier table in order to process that   data or control information.  The source transport address from the   packet is compared to the corresponding source transport address in   the table to detect a loop or collision if they don't match.  For   control packets, each element with its own SSRC identifier, for   example an SDES chunk, requires a separate lookup.  (The SSRC   identifier in a reception report block is an exception because itSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 61]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   identifies a source heard by the reporter, and that SSRC identifier   is unrelated to the source transport address of the RTCP packet sent   by the reporter.)  If the SSRC or CSRC is not found, a new entry is   created.  These table entries are removed when an RTCP BYE packet is   received with the corresponding SSRC identifier and validated by a   matching source transport address, or after no packets have arrived   for a relatively long time (see Section 6.2.1).   Note that if two sources on the same host are transmitting with the   same source identifier at the time a receiver begins operation, it   would be possible that the first RTP packet received came from one of   the sources while the first RTCP packet received came from the other.   This would cause the wrong RTCP information to be associated with the   RTP data, but this situation should be sufficiently rare and harmless   that it may be disregarded.   In order to track loops of the participant's own data packets, the   implementation MUST also keep a separate list of source transport   addresses (not identifiers) that have been found to be conflicting.   As in the source identifier table, two source transport addresses   MUST be kept to separately track conflicting RTP and RTCP packets.   Note that the conflicting address list should be short, usually   empty.  Each element in this list stores the source addresses plus   the time when the most recent conflicting packet was received.  An   element MAY be removed from the list when no conflicting packet has   arrived from that source for a time on the order of 10 RTCP report   intervals (see Section 6.2).   For the algorithm as shown, it is assumed that the participant's own   source identifier and state are included in the source identifier   table.  The algorithm could be restructured to first make a separate   comparison against the participant's own source identifier.      if (SSRC or CSRC identifier is not found in the source          identifier table) {          create a new entry storing the data or control source              transport address, the SSRC or CSRC and other state;      }      /* Identifier is found in the table */      else if (table entry was created on receipt of a control packet               and this is the first data packet or vice versa) {          store the source transport address from this packet;      }      else if (source transport address from the packet does not match               the one saved in the table entry for this identifier) {Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 62]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003          /* An identifier collision or a loop is indicated */          if (source identifier is not the participant's own) {              /* OPTIONAL error counter step */              if (source identifier is from an RTCP SDES chunk                  containing a CNAME item that differs from the CNAME                  in the table entry) {                  count a third-party collision;              } else {                  count a third-party loop;              }              abort processing of data packet or control element;              /* MAY choose a different policy to keep new source */          }          /* A collision or loop of the participant's own packets */          else if (source transport address is found in the list of                   conflicting data or control source transport                   addresses) {              /* OPTIONAL error counter step */              if (source identifier is not from an RTCP SDES chunk                  containing a CNAME item or CNAME is the                  participant's own) {                  count occurrence of own traffic looped;              }              mark current time in conflicting address list entry;              abort processing of data packet or control element;          }          /* New collision, change SSRC identifier */          else {              log occurrence of a collision;              create a new entry in the conflicting data or control                  source transport address list and mark current time;              send an RTCP BYE packet with the old SSRC identifier;              choose a new SSRC identifier;              create a new entry in the source identifier table with                  the old SSRC plus the source transport address from                  the data or control packet being processed;          }      }   In this algorithm, packets from a newly conflicting source address   will be ignored and packets from the original source address will be   kept.  If no packets arrive from the original source for an extended   period, the table entry will be timed out and the new source will beSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 63]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   able to take over.  This might occur if the original source detects   the collision and moves to a new source identifier, but in the usual   case an RTCP BYE packet will be received from the original source to   delete the state without having to wait for a timeout.   If the original source address was received through a mixer (i.e.,   learned as a CSRC) and later the same source is received directly,   the receiver may be well advised to switch to the new source address   unless other sources in the mix would be lost.  Furthermore, for   applications such as telephony in which some sources such as mobile   entities may change addresses during the course of an RTP session,   the RTP implementation SHOULD modify the collision detection   algorithm to accept packets from the new source transport address.   To guard against flip-flopping between addresses if a genuine   collision does occur, the algorithm SHOULD include some means to   detect this case and avoid switching.   When a new SSRC identifier is chosen due to a collision, the   candidate identifier SHOULD first be looked up in the source   identifier table to see if it was already in use by some other   source.  If so, another candidate MUST be generated and the process   repeated.   A loop of data packets to a multicast destination can cause severe   network flooding.  All mixers and translators MUST implement a loop   detection algorithm like the one here so that they can break loops.   This should limit the excess traffic to no more than one duplicate   copy of the original traffic, which may allow the session to continue   so that the cause of the loop can be found and fixed.  However, in   extreme cases where a mixer or translator does not properly break the   loop and high traffic levels result, it may be necessary for end   systems to cease transmitting data or control packets entirely.  This   decision may depend upon the application.  An error condition SHOULD   be indicated as appropriate.  Transmission MAY be attempted again   periodically after a long, random time (on the order of minutes).8.3 Use with Layered Encodings   For layered encodings transmitted on separate RTP sessions (see   Section 2.4), a single SSRC identifier space SHOULD be used across   the sessions of all layers and the core (base) layer SHOULD be used   for SSRC identifier allocation and collision resolution.  When a   source discovers that it has collided, it transmits an RTCP BYE   packet on only the base layer but changes the SSRC identifier to the   new value in all layers.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 64]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 20039. Security   Lower layer protocols may eventually provide all the security   services that may be desired for applications of RTP, including   authentication, integrity, and confidentiality.  These services have   been specified for IP in [27].  Since the initial audio and video   applications using RTP needed a confidentiality service before such   services were available for the IP layer, the confidentiality service   described in the next section was defined for use with RTP and RTCP.   That description is included here to codify existing practice.  New   applications of RTP MAY implement this RTP-specific confidentiality   service for backward compatibility, and/or they MAY implement   alternative security services.  The overhead on the RTP protocol for   this confidentiality service is low, so the penalty will be minimal   if this service is obsoleted by other services in the future.   Alternatively, other services, other implementations of services and   other algorithms may be defined for RTP in the future.  In   particular, an RTP profile called Secure Real-time Transport Protocol   (SRTP) [28] is being developed to provide confidentiality of the RTP   payload while leaving the RTP header in the clear so that link-level   header compression algorithms can still operate.  It is expected that   SRTP will be the correct choice for many applications.  SRTP is based   on the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) and provides stronger   security than the service described here.  No claim is made that the   methods presented here are appropriate for a particular security   need.  A profile may specify which services and algorithms should be   offered by applications, and may provide guidance as to their   appropriate use.   Key distribution and certificates are outside the scope of this   document.9.1 Confidentiality   Confidentiality means that only the intended receiver(s) can decode   the received packets; for others, the packet contains no useful   information.  Confidentiality of the content is achieved by   encryption.   When it is desired to encrypt RTP or RTCP according to the method   specified in this section, all the octets that will be encapsulated   for transmission in a single lower-layer packet are encrypted as a   unit.  For RTCP, a 32-bit random number redrawn for each unit MUST be   prepended to the unit before encryption.  For RTP, no prefix is   prepended; instead, the sequence number and timestamp fields are   initialized with random offsets.  This is considered to be a weakSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 65]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   initialization vector (IV) because of poor randomness properties.  In   addition, if the subsequent field, the SSRC, can be manipulated by an   enemy, there is further weakness of the encryption method.   For RTCP, an implementation MAY segregate the individual RTCP packets   in a compound RTCP packet into two separate compound RTCP packets,   one to be encrypted and one to be sent in the clear.  For example,   SDES information might be encrypted while reception reports were sent   in the clear to accommodate third-party monitors that are not privy   to the encryption key.  In this example, depicted in Fig. 4, the SDES   information MUST be appended to an RR packet with no reports (and the   random number) to satisfy the requirement that all compound RTCP   packets begin with an SR or RR packet.  The SDES CNAME item is   required in either the encrypted or unencrypted packet, but not both.   The same SDES information SHOULD NOT be carried in both packets as   this may compromise the encryption.             UDP packet                     UDP packet   -----------------------------  ------------------------------   [random][RR][SDES #CNAME ...]  [SR #senderinfo #site1 #site2]   -----------------------------  ------------------------------             encrypted                     not encrypted   #: SSRC identifier       Figure 4: Encrypted and non-encrypted RTCP packets   The presence of encryption and the use of the correct key are   confirmed by the receiver through header or payload validity checks.   Examples of such validity checks for RTP and RTCP headers are given   in Appendices A.1 and A.2.   To be consistent with existing implementations of the initial   specification of RTP in RFC 1889, the default encryption algorithm is   the Data Encryption Standard (DES) algorithm in cipher block chaining   (CBC) mode, as described in Section 1.1 of RFC 1423 [29], except that   padding to a multiple of 8 octets is indicated as described for the P   bit in Section 5.1.  The initialization vector is zero because random   values are supplied in the RTP header or by the random prefix for   compound RTCP packets.  For details on the use of CBC initialization   vectors, see [30].   Implementations that support the encryption method specified here   SHOULD always support the DES algorithm in CBC mode as the default   cipher for this method to maximize interoperability.  This method was   chosen because it has been demonstrated to be easy and practical to   use in experimental audio and video tools in operation on the   Internet.  However, DES has since been found to be too easily broken.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 66]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   It is RECOMMENDED that stronger encryption algorithms such as   Triple-DES be used in place of the default algorithm.  Furthermore,   secure CBC mode requires that the first block of each packet be XORed   with a random, independent IV of the same size as the cipher's block   size.  For RTCP, this is (partially) achieved by prepending each   packet with a 32-bit random number, independently chosen for each   packet.  For RTP, the timestamp and sequence number start from random   values, but consecutive packets will not be independently randomized.   It should be noted that the randomness in both cases (RTP and RTCP)   is limited.  High-security applications SHOULD consider other, more   conventional, protection means.  Other encryption algorithms MAY be   specified dynamically for a session by non-RTP means.  In particular,   the SRTP profile [28] based on AES is being developed to take into   account known plaintext and CBC plaintext manipulation concerns, and   will be the correct choice in the future.   As an alternative to encryption at the IP level or at the RTP level   as described above, profiles MAY define additional payload types for   encrypted encodings.  Those encodings MUST specify how padding and   other aspects of the encryption are to be handled.  This method   allows encrypting only the data while leaving the headers in the   clear for applications where that is desired.  It may be particularly   useful for hardware devices that will handle both decryption and   decoding.  It is also valuable for applications where link-level   compression of RTP and lower-layer headers is desired and   confidentiality of the payload (but not addresses) is sufficient   since encryption of the headers precludes compression.9.2 Authentication and Message Integrity   Authentication and message integrity services are not defined at the   RTP level since these services would not be directly feasible without   a key management infrastructure.  It is expected that authentication   and integrity services will be provided by lower layer protocols.10. Congestion Control   All transport protocols used on the Internet need to address   congestion control in some way [31].  RTP is not an exception, but   because the data transported over RTP is often inelastic (generated   at a fixed or controlled rate), the means to control congestion in   RTP may be quite different from those for other transport protocols   such as TCP.  In one sense, inelasticity reduces the risk of   congestion because the RTP stream will not expand to consume all   available bandwidth as a TCP stream can.  However, inelasticity also   means that the RTP stream cannot arbitrarily reduce its load on the   network to eliminate congestion when it occurs.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 67]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Since RTP may be used for a wide variety of applications in many   different contexts, there is no single congestion control mechanism   that will work for all.  Therefore, congestion control SHOULD be   defined in each RTP profile as appropriate.  For some profiles, it   may be sufficient to include an applicability statement restricting   the use of that profile to environments where congestion is avoided   by engineering.  For other profiles, specific methods such as data   rate adaptation based on RTCP feedback may be required.11. RTP over Network and Transport Protocols   This section describes issues specific to carrying RTP packets within   particular network and transport protocols.  The following rules   apply unless superseded by protocol-specific definitions outside this   specification.   RTP relies on the underlying protocol(s) to provide demultiplexing of   RTP data and RTCP control streams.  For UDP and similar protocols,   RTP SHOULD use an even destination port number and the corresponding   RTCP stream SHOULD use the next higher (odd) destination port number.   For applications that take a single port number as a parameter and   derive the RTP and RTCP port pair from that number, if an odd number   is supplied then the application SHOULD replace that number with the   next lower (even) number to use as the base of the port pair.  For   applications in which the RTP and RTCP destination port numbers are   specified via explicit, separate parameters (using a signaling   protocol or other means), the application MAY disregard the   restrictions that the port numbers be even/odd and consecutive   although the use of an even/odd port pair is still encouraged.  The   RTP and RTCP port numbers MUST NOT be the same since RTP relies on   the port numbers to demultiplex the RTP data and RTCP control   streams.   In a unicast session, both participants need to identify a port pair   for receiving RTP and RTCP packets.  Both participants MAY use the   same port pair.  A participant MUST NOT assume that the source port   of the incoming RTP or RTCP packet can be used as the destination   port for outgoing RTP or RTCP packets.  When RTP data packets are   being sent in both directions, each participant's RTCP SR packets   MUST be sent to the port that the other participant has specified for   reception of RTCP.  The RTCP SR packets combine sender information   for the outgoing data plus reception report information for the   incoming data.  If a side is not actively sending data (see Section   6.4), an RTCP RR packet is sent instead.   It is RECOMMENDED that layered encoding applications (see Section   2.4) use a set of contiguous port numbers.  The port numbers MUST be   distinct because of a widespread deficiency in existing operatingSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 68]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   systems that prevents use of the same port with multiple multicast   addresses, and for unicast, there is only one permissible address.   Thus for layer n, the data port is P + 2n, and the control port is P   + 2n + 1.  When IP multicast is used, the addresses MUST also be   distinct because multicast routing and group membership are managed   on an address granularity.  However, allocation of contiguous IP   multicast addresses cannot be assumed because some groups may require   different scopes and may therefore be allocated from different   address ranges.   The previous paragraph conflicts with the SDP specification, RFC 2327   [15], which says that it is illegal for both multiple addresses and   multiple ports to be specified in the same session description   because the association of addresses with ports could be ambiguous.   It is intended that this restriction will be relaxed in a revision of   RFC 2327 to allow an equal number of addresses and ports to be   specified with a one-to-one mapping implied.   RTP data packets contain no length field or other delineation,   therefore RTP relies on the underlying protocol(s) to provide a   length indication.  The maximum length of RTP packets is limited only   by the underlying protocols.   If RTP packets are to be carried in an underlying protocol that   provides the abstraction of a continuous octet stream rather than   messages (packets), an encapsulation of the RTP packets MUST be   defined to provide a framing mechanism.  Framing is also needed if   the underlying protocol may contain padding so that the extent of the   RTP payload cannot be determined.  The framing mechanism is not   defined here.   A profile MAY specify a framing method to be used even when RTP is   carried in protocols that do provide framing in order to allow   carrying several RTP packets in one lower-layer protocol data unit,   such as a UDP packet.  Carrying several RTP packets in one network or   transport packet reduces header overhead and may simplify   synchronization between different streams.12. Summary of Protocol Constants   This section contains a summary listing of the constants defined in   this specification.   The RTP payload type (PT) constants are defined in profiles rather   than this document.  However, the octet of the RTP header which   contains the marker bit(s) and payload type MUST avoid the reserved   values 200 and 201 (decimal) to distinguish RTP packets from the RTCP   SR and RR packet types for the header validation procedure describedSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 69]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   in Appendix A.1.  For the standard definition of one marker bit and a   7-bit payload type field as shown in this specification, this   restriction means that payload types 72 and 73 are reserved.12.1 RTCP Packet Types   abbrev.  name                 value   SR       sender report          200   RR       receiver report        201   SDES     source description     202   BYE      goodbye                203   APP      application-defined    204   These type values were chosen in the range 200-204 for improved   header validity checking of RTCP packets compared to RTP packets or   other unrelated packets.  When the RTCP packet type field is compared   to the corresponding octet of the RTP header, this range corresponds   to the marker bit being 1 (which it usually is not in data packets)   and to the high bit of the standard payload type field being 1 (since   the static payload types are typically defined in the low half).   This range was also chosen to be some distance numerically from 0 and   255 since all-zeros and all-ones are common data patterns.   Since all compound RTCP packets MUST begin with SR or RR, these codes   were chosen as an even/odd pair to allow the RTCP validity check to   test the maximum number of bits with mask and value.   Additional RTCP packet types may be registered through IANA (see   Section 15).12.2 SDES Types   abbrev.  name                            value   END      end of SDES list                    0   CNAME    canonical name                      1   NAME     user name                           2   EMAIL    user's electronic mail address      3   PHONE    user's phone number                 4   LOC      geographic user location            5   TOOL     name of application or tool         6   NOTE     notice about the source             7   PRIV     private extensions                  8   Additional SDES types may be registered through IANA (see Section   15).Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 70]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 200313.  RTP Profiles and Payload Format Specifications   A complete specification of RTP for a particular application will   require one or more companion documents of two types described here:   profiles, and payload format specifications.   RTP may be used for a variety of applications with somewhat differing   requirements.  The flexibility to adapt to those requirements is   provided by allowing multiple choices in the main protocol   specification, then selecting the appropriate choices or defining   extensions for a particular environment and class of applications in   a separate profile document.  Typically an application will operate   under only one profile in a particular RTP session, so there is no   explicit indication within the RTP protocol itself as to which   profile is in use.  A profile for audio and video applications may be   found in the companion RFC 3551.  Profiles are typically titled "RTP   Profile for ...".   The second type of companion document is a payload format   specification, which defines how a particular kind of payload data,   such as H.261 encoded video, should be carried in RTP.  These   documents are typically titled "RTP Payload Format for XYZ   Audio/Video Encoding".  Payload formats may be useful under multiple   profiles and may therefore be defined independently of any particular   profile.  The profile documents are then responsible for assigning a   default mapping of that format to a payload type value if needed.   Within this specification, the following items have been identified   for possible definition within a profile, but this list is not meant   to be exhaustive:   RTP data header: The octet in the RTP data header that contains      the marker bit and payload type field MAY be redefined by a      profile to suit different requirements, for example with more or      fewer marker bits (Section 5.3, p. 18).   Payload types: Assuming that a payload type field is included,      the profile will usually define a set of payload formats (e.g.,      media encodings) and a default static mapping of those formats to      payload type values.  Some of the payload formats may be defined      by reference to separate payload format specifications.  For each      payload type defined, the profile MUST specify the RTP timestamp      clock rate to be used (Section 5.1, p. 14).   RTP data header additions: Additional fields MAY be appended to      the fixed RTP data header if some additional functionality is      required across the profile's class of applications independent of      payload type (Section 5.3, p. 18).Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 71]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   RTP data header extensions: The contents of the first 16 bits of      the RTP data header extension structure MUST be defined if use of      that mechanism is to be allowed under the profile for      implementation-specific extensions (Section 5.3.1, p. 18).   RTCP packet types: New application-class-specific RTCP packet      types MAY be defined and registered with IANA.   RTCP report interval: A profile SHOULD specify that the values      suggested in Section 6.2 for the constants employed in the      calculation of the RTCP report interval will be used.  Those are      the RTCP fraction of session bandwidth, the minimum report      interval, and the bandwidth split between senders and receivers.      A profile MAY specify alternate values if they have been      demonstrated to work in a scalable manner.   SR/RR extension: An extension section MAY be defined for the      RTCP SR and RR packets if there is additional information that      should be reported regularly about the sender or receivers      (Section 6.4.3, p. 42 and 43).   SDES use: The profile MAY specify the relative priorities for      RTCP SDES items to be transmitted or excluded entirely (Section      6.3.9); an alternate syntax or semantics for the CNAME item      (Section 6.5.1); the format of the LOC item (Section 6.5.5); the      semantics and use of the NOTE item (Section 6.5.7); or new SDES      item types to be registered with IANA.   Security: A profile MAY specify which security services and      algorithms should be offered by applications, and MAY provide      guidance as to their appropriate use (Section 9, p. 65).   String-to-key mapping: A profile MAY specify how a user-provided      password or pass phrase is mapped into an encryption key.   Congestion: A profile SHOULD specify the congestion control      behavior appropriate for that profile.   Underlying protocol: Use of a particular underlying network or      transport layer protocol to carry RTP packets MAY be required.   Transport mapping: A mapping of RTP and RTCP to transport-level      addresses, e.g., UDP ports, other than the standard mapping      defined in Section 11, p. 68 may be specified.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 72]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Encapsulation: An encapsulation of RTP packets may be defined to      allow multiple RTP data packets to be carried in one lower-layer      packet or to provide framing over underlying protocols that do not      already do so (Section 11, p. 69).   It is not expected that a new profile will be required for every   application.  Within one application class, it would be better to   extend an existing profile rather than make a new one in order to   facilitate interoperation among the applications since each will   typically run under only one profile.  Simple extensions such as the   definition of additional payload type values or RTCP packet types may   be accomplished by registering them through IANA and publishing their   descriptions in an addendum to the profile or in a payload format   specification.14. Security Considerations   RTP suffers from the same security liabilities as the underlying   protocols.  For example, an impostor can fake source or destination   network addresses, or change the header or payload.  Within RTCP, the   CNAME and NAME information may be used to impersonate another   participant.  In addition, RTP may be sent via IP multicast, which   provides no direct means for a sender to know all the receivers of   the data sent and therefore no measure of privacy.  Rightly or not,   users may be more sensitive to privacy concerns with audio and video   communication than they have been with more traditional forms of   network communication [33].  Therefore, the use of security   mechanisms with RTP is important.  These mechanisms are discussed in   Section 9.   RTP-level translators or mixers may be used to allow RTP traffic to   reach hosts behind firewalls.  Appropriate firewall security   principles and practices, which are beyond the scope of this   document, should be followed in the design and installation of these   devices and in the admission of RTP applications for use behind the   firewall.15. IANA Considerations   Additional RTCP packet types and SDES item types may be registered   through the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).  Since these   number spaces are small, allowing unconstrained registration of new   values would not be prudent.  To facilitate review of requests and to   promote shared use of new types among multiple applications, requests   for registration of new values must be documented in an RFC or other   permanent and readily available reference such as the product of   another cooperative standards body (e.g., ITU-T).  Other requests may   also be accepted, under the advice of a "designated expert."Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 73]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   (Contact the IANA for the contact information of the current expert.)   RTP profile specifications SHOULD register with IANA a name for the   profile in the form "RTP/xxx", where xxx is a short abbreviation of   the profile title.  These names are for use by higher-level control   protocols, such as the Session Description Protocol (SDP), RFC 2327   [15], to refer to transport methods.16. Intellectual Property Rights Statement   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it   has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the   IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and   standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.  Copies of   claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of   licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to   obtain a general license or permission for the use of such   proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can   be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive   Director.17.  Acknowledgments   This memorandum is based on discussions within the IETF Audio/Video   Transport working group chaired by Stephen Casner and Colin Perkins.   The current protocol has its origins in the Network Voice Protocol   and the Packet Video Protocol (Danny Cohen and Randy Cole) and the   protocol implemented by the vat application (Van Jacobson and Steve   McCanne).  Christian Huitema provided ideas for the random identifier   generator.  Extensive analysis and simulation of the timer   reconsideration algorithm was done by Jonathan Rosenberg.  The   additions for layered encodings were specified by Michael Speer and   Steve McCanne.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 74]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003Appendix A - Algorithms   We provide examples of C code for aspects of RTP sender and receiver   algorithms.  There may be other implementation methods that are   faster in particular operating environments or have other advantages.   These implementation notes are for informational purposes only and   are meant to clarify the RTP specification.   The following definitions are used for all examples; for clarity and   brevity, the structure definitions are only valid for 32-bit big-   endian (most significant octet first) architectures.  Bit fields are   assumed to be packed tightly in big-endian bit order, with no   additional padding.  Modifications would be required to construct a   portable implementation.   /*    * rtp.h  --  RTP header file    */   #include <sys/types.h>   /*    * The type definitions below are valid for 32-bit architectures and    * may have to be adjusted for 16- or 64-bit architectures.    */   typedef unsigned char  u_int8;   typedef unsigned short u_int16;   typedef unsigned int   u_int32;   typedef          short int16;   /*    * Current protocol version.    */   #define RTP_VERSION    2   #define RTP_SEQ_MOD (1<<16)   #define RTP_MAX_SDES 255      /* maximum text length for SDES */   typedef enum {       RTCP_SR   = 200,       RTCP_RR   = 201,       RTCP_SDES = 202,       RTCP_BYE  = 203,       RTCP_APP  = 204   } rtcp_type_t;   typedef enum {       RTCP_SDES_END   = 0,       RTCP_SDES_CNAME = 1,Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 75]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003       RTCP_SDES_NAME  = 2,       RTCP_SDES_EMAIL = 3,       RTCP_SDES_PHONE = 4,       RTCP_SDES_LOC   = 5,       RTCP_SDES_TOOL  = 6,       RTCP_SDES_NOTE  = 7,       RTCP_SDES_PRIV  = 8   } rtcp_sdes_type_t;   /*    * RTP data header    */   typedef struct {       unsigned int version:2;   /* protocol version */       unsigned int p:1;         /* padding flag */       unsigned int x:1;         /* header extension flag */       unsigned int cc:4;        /* CSRC count */       unsigned int m:1;         /* marker bit */       unsigned int pt:7;        /* payload type */       unsigned int seq:16;      /* sequence number */       u_int32 ts;               /* timestamp */       u_int32 ssrc;             /* synchronization source */       u_int32 csrc[1];          /* optional CSRC list */   } rtp_hdr_t;   /*    * RTCP common header word    */   typedef struct {       unsigned int version:2;   /* protocol version */       unsigned int p:1;         /* padding flag */       unsigned int count:5;     /* varies by packet type */       unsigned int pt:8;        /* RTCP packet type */       u_int16 length;           /* pkt len in words, w/o this word */   } rtcp_common_t;   /*    * Big-endian mask for version, padding bit and packet type pair    */   #define RTCP_VALID_MASK (0xc000 | 0x2000 | 0xfe)   #define RTCP_VALID_VALUE ((RTP_VERSION << 14) | RTCP_SR)   /*    * Reception report block    */   typedef struct {       u_int32 ssrc;             /* data source being reported */       unsigned int fraction:8;  /* fraction lost since last SR/RR */Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 76]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003       int lost:24;              /* cumul. no. pkts lost (signed!) */       u_int32 last_seq;         /* extended last seq. no. received */       u_int32 jitter;           /* interarrival jitter */       u_int32 lsr;              /* last SR packet from this source */       u_int32 dlsr;             /* delay since last SR packet */   } rtcp_rr_t;   /*    * SDES item    */   typedef struct {       u_int8 type;              /* type of item (rtcp_sdes_type_t) */       u_int8 length;            /* length of item (in octets) */       char data[1];             /* text, not null-terminated */   } rtcp_sdes_item_t;   /*    * One RTCP packet    */   typedef struct {       rtcp_common_t common;     /* common header */       union {           /* sender report (SR) */           struct {               u_int32 ssrc;     /* sender generating this report */               u_int32 ntp_sec;  /* NTP timestamp */               u_int32 ntp_frac;               u_int32 rtp_ts;   /* RTP timestamp */               u_int32 psent;    /* packets sent */               u_int32 osent;    /* octets sent */               rtcp_rr_t rr[1];  /* variable-length list */           } sr;           /* reception report (RR) */           struct {               u_int32 ssrc;     /* receiver generating this report */               rtcp_rr_t rr[1];  /* variable-length list */           } rr;           /* source description (SDES) */           struct rtcp_sdes {               u_int32 src;      /* first SSRC/CSRC */               rtcp_sdes_item_t item[1]; /* list of SDES items */           } sdes;           /* BYE */           struct {               u_int32 src[1];   /* list of sources */Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 77]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003               /* can't express trailing text for reason */           } bye;       } r;   } rtcp_t;   typedef struct rtcp_sdes rtcp_sdes_t;   /*    * Per-source state information    */   typedef struct {       u_int16 max_seq;        /* highest seq. number seen */       u_int32 cycles;         /* shifted count of seq. number cycles */       u_int32 base_seq;       /* base seq number */       u_int32 bad_seq;        /* last 'bad' seq number + 1 */       u_int32 probation;      /* sequ. packets till source is valid */       u_int32 received;       /* packets received */       u_int32 expected_prior; /* packet expected at last interval */       u_int32 received_prior; /* packet received at last interval */       u_int32 transit;        /* relative trans time for prev pkt */       u_int32 jitter;         /* estimated jitter */       /* ... */   } source;A.1 RTP Data Header Validity Checks   An RTP receiver should check the validity of the RTP header on   incoming packets since they might be encrypted or might be from a   different application that happens to be misaddressed.  Similarly, if   encryption according to the method described in Section 9 is enabled,   the header validity check is needed to verify that incoming packets   have been correctly decrypted, although a failure of the header   validity check (e.g., unknown payload type) may not necessarily   indicate decryption failure.   Only weak validity checks are possible on an RTP data packet from a   source that has not been heard before:   o  RTP version field must equal 2.   o  The payload type must be known, and in particular it must not be      equal to SR or RR.   o  If the P bit is set, then the last octet of the packet must      contain a valid octet count, in particular, less than the total      packet length minus the header size.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 78]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  The X bit must be zero if the profile does not specify that the      header extension mechanism may be used.  Otherwise, the extension      length field must be less than the total packet size minus the      fixed header length and padding.   o  The length of the packet must be consistent with CC and payload      type (if payloads have a known length).   The last three checks are somewhat complex and not always possible,   leaving only the first two which total just a few bits.  If the SSRC   identifier in the packet is one that has been received before, then   the packet is probably valid and checking if the sequence number is   in the expected range provides further validation.  If the SSRC   identifier has not been seen before, then data packets carrying that   identifier may be considered invalid until a small number of them   arrive with consecutive sequence numbers.  Those invalid packets MAY   be discarded or they MAY be stored and delivered once validation has   been achieved if the resulting delay is acceptable.   The routine update_seq shown below ensures that a source is declared   valid only after MIN_SEQUENTIAL packets have been received in   sequence.  It also validates the sequence number seq of a newly   received packet and updates the sequence state for the packet's   source in the structure to which s points.   When a new source is heard for the first time, that is, its SSRC   identifier is not in the table (see Section 8.2), and the per-source   state is allocated for it, s->probation is set to the number of   sequential packets required before declaring a source valid   (parameter MIN_SEQUENTIAL) and other variables are initialized:      init_seq(s, seq);      s->max_seq = seq - 1;      s->probation = MIN_SEQUENTIAL;   A non-zero s->probation marks the source as not yet valid so the   state may be discarded after a short timeout rather than a long one,   as discussed in Section 6.2.1.   After a source is considered valid, the sequence number is considered   valid if it is no more than MAX_DROPOUT ahead of s->max_seq nor more   than MAX_MISORDER behind.  If the new sequence number is ahead of   max_seq modulo the RTP sequence number range (16 bits), but is   smaller than max_seq, it has wrapped around and the (shifted) count   of sequence number cycles is incremented.  A value of one is returned   to indicate a valid sequence number.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 79]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Otherwise, the value zero is returned to indicate that the validation   failed, and the bad sequence number plus 1 is stored.  If the next   packet received carries the next higher sequence number, it is   considered the valid start of a new packet sequence presumably caused   by an extended dropout or a source restart.  Since multiple complete   sequence number cycles may have been missed, the packet loss   statistics are reset.   Typical values for the parameters are shown, based on a maximum   misordering time of 2 seconds at 50 packets/second and a maximum   dropout of 1 minute.  The dropout parameter MAX_DROPOUT should be a   small fraction of the 16-bit sequence number space to give a   reasonable probability that new sequence numbers after a restart will   not fall in the acceptable range for sequence numbers from before the   restart.   void init_seq(source *s, u_int16 seq)   {       s->base_seq = seq;       s->max_seq = seq;       s->bad_seq = RTP_SEQ_MOD + 1;   /* so seq == bad_seq is false */       s->cycles = 0;       s->received = 0;       s->received_prior = 0;       s->expected_prior = 0;       /* other initialization */   }   int update_seq(source *s, u_int16 seq)   {       u_int16 udelta = seq - s->max_seq;       const int MAX_DROPOUT = 3000;       const int MAX_MISORDER = 100;       const int MIN_SEQUENTIAL = 2;       /*        * Source is not valid until MIN_SEQUENTIAL packets with        * sequential sequence numbers have been received.        */       if (s->probation) {           /* packet is in sequence */           if (seq == s->max_seq + 1) {               s->probation--;               s->max_seq = seq;               if (s->probation == 0) {                   init_seq(s, seq);                   s->received++;                   return 1;Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 80]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003               }           } else {               s->probation = MIN_SEQUENTIAL - 1;               s->max_seq = seq;           }           return 0;       } else if (udelta < MAX_DROPOUT) {           /* in order, with permissible gap */           if (seq < s->max_seq) {               /*                * Sequence number wrapped - count another 64K cycle.                */               s->cycles += RTP_SEQ_MOD;           }           s->max_seq = seq;       } else if (udelta <= RTP_SEQ_MOD - MAX_MISORDER) {           /* the sequence number made a very large jump */           if (seq == s->bad_seq) {               /*                * Two sequential packets -- assume that the other side                * restarted without telling us so just re-sync                * (i.e., pretend this was the first packet).                */               init_seq(s, seq);           }           else {               s->bad_seq = (seq + 1) & (RTP_SEQ_MOD-1);               return 0;           }       } else {           /* duplicate or reordered packet */       }       s->received++;       return 1;   }   The validity check can be made stronger requiring more than two   packets in sequence.  The disadvantages are that a larger number of   initial packets will be discarded (or delayed in a queue) and that   high packet loss rates could prevent validation.  However, because   the RTCP header validation is relatively strong, if an RTCP packet is   received from a source before the data packets, the count could be   adjusted so that only two packets are required in sequence.  If   initial data loss for a few seconds can be tolerated, an application   MAY choose to discard all data packets from a source until a valid   RTCP packet has been received from that source.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 81]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   Depending on the application and encoding, algorithms may exploit   additional knowledge about the payload format for further validation.   For payload types where the timestamp increment is the same for all   packets, the timestamp values can be predicted from the previous   packet received from the same source using the sequence number   difference (assuming no change in payload type).   A strong "fast-path" check is possible since with high probability   the first four octets in the header of a newly received RTP data   packet will be just the same as that of the previous packet from the   same SSRC except that the sequence number will have increased by one.   Similarly, a single-entry cache may be used for faster SSRC lookups   in applications where data is typically received from one source at a   time.A.2 RTCP Header Validity Checks   The following checks should be applied to RTCP packets.   o  RTP version field must equal 2.   o  The payload type field of the first RTCP packet in a compound      packet must be equal to SR or RR.   o  The padding bit (P) should be zero for the first packet of a      compound RTCP packet because padding should only be applied, if it      is needed, to the last packet.   o  The length fields of the individual RTCP packets must add up to      the overall length of the compound RTCP packet as received.  This      is a fairly strong check.   The code fragment below performs all of these checks.  The packet   type is not checked for subsequent packets since unknown packet types   may be present and should be ignored.      u_int32 len;        /* length of compound RTCP packet in words */      rtcp_t *r;          /* RTCP header */      rtcp_t *end;        /* end of compound RTCP packet */      if ((*(u_int16 *)r & RTCP_VALID_MASK) != RTCP_VALID_VALUE) {          /* something wrong with packet format */      }      end = (rtcp_t *)((u_int32 *)r + len);      do r = (rtcp_t *)((u_int32 *)r + r->common.length + 1);      while (r < end && r->common.version == 2);Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 82]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      if (r != end) {          /* something wrong with packet format */      }A.3 Determining Number of Packets Expected and Lost   In order to compute packet loss rates, the number of RTP packets   expected and actually received from each source needs to be known,   using per-source state information defined in struct source   referenced via pointer s in the code below.  The number of packets   received is simply the count of packets as they arrive, including any   late or duplicate packets.  The number of packets expected can be   computed by the receiver as the difference between the highest   sequence number received (s->max_seq) and the first sequence number   received (s->base_seq).  Since the sequence number is only 16 bits   and will wrap around, it is necessary to extend the highest sequence   number with the (shifted) count of sequence number wraparounds   (s->cycles).  Both the received packet count and the count of cycles   are maintained the RTP header validity check routine in Appendix A.1.      extended_max = s->cycles + s->max_seq;      expected = extended_max - s->base_seq + 1;   The number of packets lost is defined to be the number of packets   expected less the number of packets actually received:      lost = expected - s->received;   Since this signed number is carried in 24 bits, it should be clamped   at 0x7fffff for positive loss or 0x800000 for negative loss rather   than wrapping around.   The fraction of packets lost during the last reporting interval   (since the previous SR or RR packet was sent) is calculated from   differences in the expected and received packet counts across the   interval, where expected_prior and received_prior are the values   saved when the previous reception report was generated:      expected_interval = expected - s->expected_prior;      s->expected_prior = expected;      received_interval = s->received - s->received_prior;      s->received_prior = s->received;      lost_interval = expected_interval - received_interval;      if (expected_interval == 0 || lost_interval <= 0) fraction = 0;      else fraction = (lost_interval << 8) / expected_interval;   The resulting fraction is an 8-bit fixed point number with the binary   point at the left edge.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 83]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003A.4 Generating RTCP SDES Packets   This function builds one SDES chunk into buffer b composed of argc   items supplied in arrays type, value and length.  It returns a   pointer to the next available location within b.   char *rtp_write_sdes(char *b, u_int32 src, int argc,                        rtcp_sdes_type_t type[], char *value[],                        int length[])   {       rtcp_sdes_t *s = (rtcp_sdes_t *)b;       rtcp_sdes_item_t *rsp;       int i;       int len;       int pad;       /* SSRC header */       s->src = src;       rsp = &s->item[0];       /* SDES items */       for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) {           rsp->type = type[i];           len = length[i];           if (len > RTP_MAX_SDES) {               /* invalid length, may want to take other action */               len = RTP_MAX_SDES;           }           rsp->length = len;           memcpy(rsp->data, value[i], len);           rsp = (rtcp_sdes_item_t *)&rsp->data[len];       }       /* terminate with end marker and pad to next 4-octet boundary */       len = ((char *) rsp) - b;       pad = 4 - (len & 0x3);       b = (char *) rsp;       while (pad--) *b++ = RTCP_SDES_END;       return b;   }Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 84]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003A.5 Parsing RTCP SDES Packets   This function parses an SDES packet, calling functions find_member()   to find a pointer to the information for a session member given the   SSRC identifier and member_sdes() to store the new SDES information   for that member.  This function expects a pointer to the header of   the RTCP packet.   void rtp_read_sdes(rtcp_t *r)   {       int count = r->common.count;       rtcp_sdes_t *sd = &r->r.sdes;       rtcp_sdes_item_t *rsp, *rspn;       rtcp_sdes_item_t *end = (rtcp_sdes_item_t *)                               ((u_int32 *)r + r->common.length + 1);       source *s;       while (--count >= 0) {           rsp = &sd->item[0];           if (rsp >= end) break;           s = find_member(sd->src);           for (; rsp->type; rsp = rspn ) {               rspn = (rtcp_sdes_item_t *)((char*)rsp+rsp->length+2);               if (rspn >= end) {                   rsp = rspn;                   break;               }               member_sdes(s, rsp->type, rsp->data, rsp->length);           }           sd = (rtcp_sdes_t *)                ((u_int32 *)sd + (((char *)rsp - (char *)sd) >> 2)+1);       }       if (count >= 0) {           /* invalid packet format */       }   }A.6 Generating a Random 32-bit Identifier   The following subroutine generates a random 32-bit identifier using   the MD5 routines published in RFC 1321 [32].  The system routines may   not be present on all operating systems, but they should serve as   hints as to what kinds of information may be used.  Other system   calls that may be appropriate includeSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 85]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  getdomainname(),   o  getwd(), or   o  getrusage().   "Live" video or audio samples are also a good source of random   numbers, but care must be taken to avoid using a turned-off   microphone or blinded camera as a source [17].   Use of this or a similar routine is recommended to generate the   initial seed for the random number generator producing the RTCP   period (as shown in Appendix A.7), to generate the initial values for   the sequence number and timestamp, and to generate SSRC values.   Since this routine is likely to be CPU-intensive, its direct use to   generate RTCP periods is inappropriate because predictability is not   an issue.  Note that this routine produces the same result on   repeated calls until the value of the system clock changes unless   different values are supplied for the type argument.   /*    * Generate a random 32-bit quantity.    */   #include <sys/types.h>   /* u_long */   #include <sys/time.h>    /* gettimeofday() */   #include <unistd.h>      /* get..() */   #include <stdio.h>       /* printf() */   #include <time.h>        /* clock() */   #include <sys/utsname.h> /* uname() */   #include "global.h"      /* from RFC 1321 */   #include "md5.h"         /* from RFC 1321 */   #define MD_CTX MD5_CTX   #define MDInit MD5Init   #define MDUpdate MD5Update   #define MDFinal MD5Final   static u_long md_32(char *string, int length)   {       MD_CTX context;       union {           char   c[16];           u_long x[4];       } digest;       u_long r;       int i;       MDInit (&context);Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 86]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003       MDUpdate (&context, string, length);       MDFinal ((unsigned char *)&digest, &context);       r = 0;       for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {           r ^= digest.x[i];       }       return r;   }                               /* md_32 */   /*    * Return random unsigned 32-bit quantity.  Use 'type' argument if    * you need to generate several different values in close succession.    */   u_int32 random32(int type)   {       struct {           int     type;           struct  timeval tv;           clock_t cpu;           pid_t   pid;           u_long  hid;           uid_t   uid;           gid_t   gid;           struct  utsname name;       } s;       gettimeofday(&s.tv, 0);       uname(&s.name);       s.type = type;       s.cpu  = clock();       s.pid  = getpid();       s.hid  = gethostid();       s.uid  = getuid();       s.gid  = getgid();       /* also: system uptime */       return md_32((char *)&s, sizeof(s));   }                               /* random32 */A.7 Computing the RTCP Transmission Interval   The following functions implement the RTCP transmission and reception   rules described in Section 6.2.  These rules are coded in several   functions:   o  rtcp_interval() computes the deterministic calculated interval,      measured in seconds.  The parameters are defined in Section 6.3.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 87]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  OnExpire() is called when the RTCP transmission timer expires.   o  OnReceive() is called whenever an RTCP packet is received.   Both OnExpire() and OnReceive() have event e as an argument.  This is   the next scheduled event for that participant, either an RTCP report   or a BYE packet.  It is assumed that the following functions are   available:   o  Schedule(time t, event e) schedules an event e to occur at time t.      When time t arrives, the function OnExpire is called with e as an      argument.   o  Reschedule(time t, event e) reschedules a previously scheduled      event e for time t.   o  SendRTCPReport(event e) sends an RTCP report.   o  SendBYEPacket(event e) sends a BYE packet.   o  TypeOfEvent(event e) returns EVENT_BYE if the event being      processed is for a BYE packet to be sent, else it returns      EVENT_REPORT.   o  PacketType(p) returns PACKET_RTCP_REPORT if packet p is an RTCP      report (not BYE), PACKET_BYE if its a BYE RTCP packet, and      PACKET_RTP if its a regular RTP data packet.   o  ReceivedPacketSize() and SentPacketSize() return the size of the      referenced packet in octets.   o  NewMember(p) returns a 1 if the participant who sent packet p is      not currently in the member list, 0 otherwise.  Note this function      is not sufficient for a complete implementation because each CSRC      identifier in an RTP packet and each SSRC in a BYE packet should      be processed.   o  NewSender(p) returns a 1 if the participant who sent packet p is      not currently in the sender sublist of the member list, 0      otherwise.   o  AddMember() and RemoveMember() to add and remove participants from      the member list.   o  AddSender() and RemoveSender() to add and remove participants from      the sender sublist of the member list.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 88]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   These functions would have to be extended for an implementation that   allows the RTCP bandwidth fractions for senders and non-senders to be   specified as explicit parameters rather than fixed values of 25% and   75%.  The extended implementation of rtcp_interval() would need to   avoid division by zero if one of the parameters was zero.   double rtcp_interval(int members,                        int senders,                        double rtcp_bw,                        int we_sent,                        double avg_rtcp_size,                        int initial)   {       /*        * Minimum average time between RTCP packets from this site (in        * seconds).  This time prevents the reports from `clumping' when        * sessions are small and the law of large numbers isn't helping        * to smooth out the traffic.  It also keeps the report interval        * from becoming ridiculously small during transient outages like        * a network partition.        */       double const RTCP_MIN_TIME = 5.;       /*        * Fraction of the RTCP bandwidth to be shared among active        * senders.  (This fraction was chosen so that in a typical        * session with one or two active senders, the computed report        * time would be roughly equal to the minimum report time so that        * we don't unnecessarily slow down receiver reports.)  The        * receiver fraction must be 1 - the sender fraction.        */       double const RTCP_SENDER_BW_FRACTION = 0.25;       double const RTCP_RCVR_BW_FRACTION = (1-RTCP_SENDER_BW_FRACTION);       /*       /* To compensate for "timer reconsideration" converging to a        * value below the intended average.        */       double const COMPENSATION = 2.71828 - 1.5;       double t;                   /* interval */       double rtcp_min_time = RTCP_MIN_TIME;       int n;                      /* no. of members for computation */       /*        * Very first call at application start-up uses half the min        * delay for quicker notification while still allowing some time        * before reporting for randomization and to learn about other        * sources so the report interval will converge to the correct        * interval more quickly.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 89]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003        */       if (initial) {           rtcp_min_time /= 2;       }       /*        * Dedicate a fraction of the RTCP bandwidth to senders unless        * the number of senders is large enough that their share is        * more than that fraction.        */       n = members;       if (senders <= members * RTCP_SENDER_BW_FRACTION) {           if (we_sent) {               rtcp_bw *= RTCP_SENDER_BW_FRACTION;               n = senders;           } else {               rtcp_bw *= RTCP_RCVR_BW_FRACTION;               n -= senders;           }       }       /*        * The effective number of sites times the average packet size is        * the total number of octets sent when each site sends a report.        * Dividing this by the effective bandwidth gives the time        * interval over which those packets must be sent in order to        * meet the bandwidth target, with a minimum enforced.  In that        * time interval we send one report so this time is also our        * average time between reports.        */       t = avg_rtcp_size * n / rtcp_bw;       if (t < rtcp_min_time) t = rtcp_min_time;       /*        * To avoid traffic bursts from unintended synchronization with        * other sites, we then pick our actual next report interval as a        * random number uniformly distributed between 0.5*t and 1.5*t.        */       t = t * (drand48() + 0.5);       t = t / COMPENSATION;       return t;   }   void OnExpire(event e,                 int    members,                 int    senders,                 double rtcp_bw,                 int    we_sent,                 double *avg_rtcp_size,Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 90]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003                 int    *initial,                 time_tp   tc,                 time_tp   *tp,                 int    *pmembers)   {       /* This function is responsible for deciding whether to send an        * RTCP report or BYE packet now, or to reschedule transmission.        * It is also responsible for updating the pmembers, initial, tp,        * and avg_rtcp_size state variables.  This function should be        * called upon expiration of the event timer used by Schedule().        */       double t;     /* Interval */       double tn;    /* Next transmit time */       /* In the case of a BYE, we use "timer reconsideration" to        * reschedule the transmission of the BYE if necessary */       if (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_BYE) {           t = rtcp_interval(members,                             senders,                             rtcp_bw,                             we_sent,                             *avg_rtcp_size,                             *initial);           tn = *tp + t;           if (tn <= tc) {               SendBYEPacket(e);               exit(1);           } else {               Schedule(tn, e);           }       } else if (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_REPORT) {           t = rtcp_interval(members,                             senders,                             rtcp_bw,                             we_sent,                             *avg_rtcp_size,                             *initial);           tn = *tp + t;           if (tn <= tc) {               SendRTCPReport(e);               *avg_rtcp_size = (1./16.)*SentPacketSize(e) +                   (15./16.)*(*avg_rtcp_size);               *tp = tc;               /* We must redraw the interval.  Don't reuse theSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 91]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003                  one computed above, since its not actually                  distributed the same, as we are conditioned                  on it being small enough to cause a packet to                  be sent */               t = rtcp_interval(members,                                 senders,                                 rtcp_bw,                                 we_sent,                                 *avg_rtcp_size,                                 *initial);               Schedule(t+tc,e);               *initial = 0;           } else {               Schedule(tn, e);           }           *pmembers = members;       }   }   void OnReceive(packet p,                  event e,                  int *members,                  int *pmembers,                  int *senders,                  double *avg_rtcp_size,                  double *tp,                  double tc,                  double tn)   {       /* What we do depends on whether we have left the group, and are        * waiting to send a BYE (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_BYE) or an RTCP        * report.  p represents the packet that was just received.  */       if (PacketType(p) == PACKET_RTCP_REPORT) {           if (NewMember(p) && (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_REPORT)) {               AddMember(p);               *members += 1;           }           *avg_rtcp_size = (1./16.)*ReceivedPacketSize(p) +               (15./16.)*(*avg_rtcp_size);       } else if (PacketType(p) == PACKET_RTP) {           if (NewMember(p) && (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_REPORT)) {               AddMember(p);               *members += 1;           }           if (NewSender(p) && (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_REPORT)) {Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 92]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003               AddSender(p);               *senders += 1;           }       } else if (PacketType(p) == PACKET_BYE) {           *avg_rtcp_size = (1./16.)*ReceivedPacketSize(p) +               (15./16.)*(*avg_rtcp_size);           if (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_REPORT) {               if (NewSender(p) == FALSE) {                   RemoveSender(p);                   *senders -= 1;               }               if (NewMember(p) == FALSE) {                   RemoveMember(p);                   *members -= 1;               }               if (*members < *pmembers) {                   tn = tc +                       (((double) *members)/(*pmembers))*(tn - tc);                   *tp = tc -                       (((double) *members)/(*pmembers))*(tc - *tp);                   /* Reschedule the next report for time tn */                   Reschedule(tn, e);                   *pmembers = *members;               }           } else if (TypeOfEvent(e) == EVENT_BYE) {               *members += 1;           }       }   }Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 93]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003A.8 Estimating the Interarrival Jitter   The code fragments below implement the algorithm given in Section   6.4.1 for calculating an estimate of the statistical variance of the   RTP data interarrival time to be inserted in the interarrival jitter   field of reception reports.  The inputs are r->ts, the timestamp from   the incoming packet, and arrival, the current time in the same units.   Here s points to state for the source; s->transit holds the relative   transit time for the previous packet, and s->jitter holds the   estimated jitter.  The jitter field of the reception report is   measured in timestamp units and expressed as an unsigned integer, but   the jitter estimate is kept in a floating point.  As each data packet   arrives, the jitter estimate is updated:      int transit = arrival - r->ts;      int d = transit - s->transit;      s->transit = transit;      if (d < 0) d = -d;      s->jitter += (1./16.) * ((double)d - s->jitter);   When a reception report block (to which rr points) is generated for   this member, the current jitter estimate is returned:      rr->jitter = (u_int32) s->jitter;   Alternatively, the jitter estimate can be kept as an integer, but   scaled to reduce round-off error.  The calculation is the same except   for the last line:      s->jitter += d - ((s->jitter + 8) >> 4);   In this case, the estimate is sampled for the reception report as:      rr->jitter = s->jitter >> 4;Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 94]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003Appendix B - Changes from RFC 1889   Most of this RFC is identical to RFC 1889.  There are no changes in   the packet formats on the wire, only changes to the rules and   algorithms governing how the protocol is used.  The biggest change is   an enhancement to the scalable timer algorithm for calculating when   to send RTCP packets:   o  The algorithm for calculating the RTCP transmission interval      specified in Sections 6.2 and 6.3 and illustrated in Appendix A.7      is augmented to include "reconsideration" to minimize transmission      in excess of the intended rate when many participants join a      session simultaneously, and "reverse reconsideration" to reduce      the incidence and duration of false participant timeouts when the      number of participants drops rapidly.  Reverse reconsideration is      also used to possibly shorten the delay before sending RTCP SR      when transitioning from passive receiver to active sender mode.   o  Section 6.3.7 specifies new rules controlling when an RTCP BYE      packet should be sent in order to avoid a flood of packets when      many participants leave a session simultaneously.   o  The requirement to retain state for inactive participants for a      period long enough to span typical network partitions was removed      from Section 6.2.1.  In a session where many participants join for      a brief time and fail to send BYE, this requirement would cause a      significant overestimate of the number of participants.  The      reconsideration algorithm added in this revision compensates for      the large number of new participants joining simultaneously when a      partition heals.   It should be noted that these enhancements only have a significant   effect when the number of session participants is large (thousands)   and most of the participants join or leave at the same time.  This   makes testing in a live network difficult.  However, the algorithm   was subjected to a thorough analysis and simulation to verify its   performance.  Furthermore, the enhanced algorithm was designed to   interoperate with the algorithm in RFC 1889 such that the degree of   reduction in excess RTCP bandwidth during a step join is proportional   to the fraction of participants that implement the enhanced   algorithm.  Interoperation of the two algorithms has been verified   experimentally on live networks.   Other functional changes were:   o  Section 6.2.1 specifies that implementations may store only a      sampling of the participants' SSRC identifiers to allow scaling to      very large sessions.  Algorithms are specified in RFC 2762 [21].Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 95]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  In Section 6.2 it is specified that RTCP sender and non-sender      bandwidths may be set as separate parameters of the session rather      than a strict percentage of the session bandwidth, and may be set      to zero.  The requirement that RTCP was mandatory for RTP sessions      using IP multicast was relaxed.  However, a clarification was also      added that turning off RTCP is NOT RECOMMENDED.   o  In Sections 6.2, 6.3.1 and Appendix A.7, it is specified that the      fraction of participants below which senders get dedicated RTCP      bandwidth changes from the fixed 1/4 to a ratio based on the RTCP      sender and non-sender bandwidth parameters when those are given.      The condition that no bandwidth is dedicated to senders when there      are no senders was removed since that is expected to be a      transitory state.  It also keeps non-senders from using sender      RTCP bandwidth when that is not intended.   o  Also in Section 6.2 it is specified that the minimum RTCP interval      may be scaled to smaller values for high bandwidth sessions, and      that the initial RTCP delay may be set to zero for unicast      sessions.   o  Timing out a participant is to be based on inactivity for a number      of RTCP report intervals calculated using the receiver RTCP      bandwidth fraction even for active senders.   o  Sections 7.2 and 7.3 specify that translators and mixers should      send BYE packets for the sources they are no longer forwarding.   o  Rule changes for layered encodings are defined in Sections 2.4,      6.3.9, 8.3 and 11.  In the last of these, it is noted that the      address and port assignment rule conflicts with the SDP      specification, RFC 2327 [15], but it is intended that this      restriction will be relaxed in a revision of RFC 2327.   o  The convention for using even/odd port pairs for RTP and RTCP in      Section 11 was clarified to refer to destination ports.  The      requirement to use an even/odd port pair was removed if the two      ports are specified explicitly.  For unicast RTP sessions,      distinct port pairs may be used for the two ends (Sections 3, 7.1      and 11).   o  A new Section 10 was added to explain the requirement for      congestion control in applications using RTP.   o  In Section 8.2, the requirement that a new SSRC identifier MUST be      chosen whenever the source transport address is changed has been      relaxed to say that a new SSRC identifier MAY be chosen.      Correspondingly, it was clarified that an implementation MAYSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 96]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      choose to keep packets from the new source address rather than the      existing source address when an SSRC collision occurs between two      other participants, and SHOULD do so for applications such as      telephony in which some sources such as mobile entities may change      addresses during the course of an RTP session.   o  An indentation bug in the RFC 1889 printing of the pseudo-code for      the collision detection and resolution algorithm in Section 8.2      has been corrected by translating the syntax to pseudo C language,      and the algorithm has been modified to remove the restriction that      both RTP and RTCP must be sent from the same source port number.   o  The description of the padding mechanism for RTCP packets was      clarified and it is specified that padding MUST only be applied to      the last packet of a compound RTCP packet.   o  In Section A.1, initialization of base_seq was corrected to be seq      rather than seq - 1, and the text was corrected to say the bad      sequence number plus 1 is stored.  The initialization of max_seq      and other variables for the algorithm was separated from the text      to make clear that this initialization must be done in addition to      calling the init_seq() function (and a few words lost in RFC 1889      when processing the document from source to output form were      restored).   o  Clamping of number of packets lost in Section A.3 was corrected to      use both positive and negative limits.   o  The specification of "relative" NTP timestamp in the RTCP SR      section now defines these timestamps to be based on the most      common system-specific clock, such as system uptime, rather than      on session elapsed time which would not be the same for multiple      applications started on the same machine at different times.   Non-functional changes:   o  It is specified that a receiver MUST ignore packets with payload      types it does not understand.   o  In Fig. 2, the floating point NTP timestamp value was corrected,      some missing leading zeros were added in a hex number, and the UTC      timezone was specified.   o  The inconsequence of NTP timestamps wrapping around in the year      2036 is explained.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 97]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   o  The policy for registration of RTCP packet types and SDES types      was clarified in a new Section 15, IANA Considerations.  The      suggestion that experimenters register the numbers they need and      then unregister those which prove to be unneeded has been removed      in favor of using APP and PRIV.  Registration of profile names was      also specified.   o  The reference for the UTF-8 character set was changed from an      X/Open Preliminary Specification to be RFC 2279.   o  The reference for RFC 1597 was updated to RFC 1918 and the      reference for RFC 2543 was updated to RFC 3261.   o  The last paragraph of the introduction in RFC 1889, which      cautioned implementors to limit deployment in the Internet, was      removed because it was deemed no longer relevant.   o  A non-normative note regarding the use of RTP with Source-Specific      Multicast (SSM) was added in Section 6.   o  The definition of "RTP session" in Section 3 was expanded to      acknowledge that a single session may use multiple destination      transport addresses (as was always the case for a translator or      mixer) and to explain that the distinguishing feature of an RTP      session is that each corresponds to a separate SSRC identifier      space.  A new definition of "multimedia session" was added to      reduce confusion about the word "session".   o  The meaning of "sampling instant" was explained in more detail as      part of the definition of the timestamp field of the RTP header in      Section 5.1.   o  Small clarifications of the text have been made in several places,      some in response to questions from readers.  In particular:      -  In RFC 1889, the first five words of the second sentence of         Section 2.2 were lost in processing the document from source to         output form, but are now restored.      -  A definition for "RTP media type" was added in Section 3 to         allow the explanation of multiplexing RTP sessions in Section         5.2 to be more clear regarding the multiplexing of multiple         media.  That section also now explains that multiplexing         multiple sources of the same medium based on SSRC identifiers         may be appropriate and is the norm for multicast sessions.      -  The definition for "non-RTP means" was expanded to include         examples of other protocols constituting non-RTP means.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 98]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      -  The description of the session bandwidth parameter is expanded         in Section 6.2, including a clarification that the control         traffic bandwidth is in addition to the session bandwidth for         the data traffic.      -  The effect of varying packet duration on the jitter calculation         was explained in Section 6.4.4.      -  The method for terminating and padding a sequence of SDES items         was clarified in Section 6.5.      -  IPv6 address examples were added in the description of SDES         CNAME in Section 6.5.1, and "example.com" was used in place of         other example domain names.      -  The Security section added a formal reference to IPSEC now that         it is available, and says that the confidentiality method         defined in this specification is primarily to codify existing         practice.  It is RECOMMENDED that stronger encryption         algorithms such as Triple-DES be used in place of the default         algorithm, and noted that the SRTP profile based on AES will be         the correct choice in the future.  A caution about the weakness         of the RTP header as an initialization vector was added.  It         was also noted that payload-only encryption is necessary to         allow for header compression.      -  The method for partial encryption of RTCP was clarified; in         particular, SDES CNAME is carried in only one part when the         compound RTCP packet is split.      -  It is clarified that only one compound RTCP packet should be         sent per reporting interval and that if there are too many         active sources for the reports to fit in the MTU, then a subset         of the sources should be selected round-robin over multiple         intervals.      -  A note was added in Appendix A.1 that packets may be saved         during RTP header validation and delivered upon success.      -  Section 7.3 now explains that a mixer aggregating SDES packets         uses more RTCP bandwidth due to longer packets, and a mixer         passing through RTCP naturally sends packets at higher than the         single source rate, but both behaviors are valid.      -  Section 13 clarifies that an RTP application may use multiple         profiles but typically only one in a given session.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                    [Page 99]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003      -  The terms MUST, SHOULD, MAY, etc. are used as defined in RFC         2119.      -  The bibliography was divided into normative and informative         references.ReferencesNormative References   [1]  Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio and Video        Conferences with Minimal Control", RFC 3551, July 2003.   [2]  Bradner, S., "Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.   [3]  Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791, September 1981.   [4]  Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3) Specification,        Implementation and Analysis", RFC 1305, March 1992.   [5]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a Transformation Format of ISO 10646", RFC        2279, January 1998.   [6]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities", STD        13, RFC 1034, November 1987.   [7]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and        Specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.   [8]  Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts - Application and        Support", STD 3, RFC 1123, October 1989.   [9]  Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822, April 2001.Informative References   [10] Clark, D. and D. Tennenhouse, "Architectural Considerations for        a New Generation of Protocols," in SIGCOMM Symposium on        Communications Architectures and Protocols , (Philadelphia,        Pennsylvania), pp. 200--208, IEEE Computer Communications        Review, Vol. 20(4), September 1990.   [11] Schulzrinne, H., "Issues in designing a transport protocol for        audio and video conferences and other multiparticipant real-time        applications." expired Internet Draft, October 1993.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 100]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   [12] Comer, D., Internetworking with TCP/IP , vol. 1.  Englewood        Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1991.   [13] 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.   [14] International Telecommunication Union, "Visual telephone systems        and equipment for local area networks which provide a non-        guaranteed quality of service", Recommendation H.323,        Telecommunication Standardization Sector of ITU, Geneva,        Switzerland, July 2003.   [15] Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description        Protocol", RFC 2327, April 1998.   [16] Schulzrinne, H., Rao, A. and R. Lanphier, "Real Time Streaming        Protocol (RTSP)", RFC 2326, April 1998.   [17] Eastlake 3rd, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller, "Randomness        Recommendations for Security", RFC 1750, December 1994.   [18] Bolot, J.-C., Turletti, T. and I. Wakeman, "Scalable Feedback        Control for Multicast Video Distribution in the Internet", in        SIGCOMM Symposium on Communications Architectures and Protocols,        (London, England), pp. 58--67, ACM, August 1994.   [19] Busse, I., Deffner, B. and H. Schulzrinne, "Dynamic QoS Control        of Multimedia Applications Based on RTP", Computer        Communications , vol. 19, pp. 49--58, January 1996.   [20] Floyd, S. and V. Jacobson, "The Synchronization of Periodic        Routing Messages", in SIGCOMM Symposium on Communications        Architectures and Protocols (D. P. Sidhu, ed.), (San Francisco,        California), pp. 33--44, ACM, September 1993.  Also in [34].   [21] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Sampling of the Group        Membership in RTP", RFC 2762, February 2000.   [22] Cadzow, J., Foundations of Digital Signal Processing and Data        Analysis New York, New York: Macmillan, 1987.   [23] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)        Addressing Architecture", RFC 3513, April 2003.   [24] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G. and E.        Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets", RFC 1918,        February 1996.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 101]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003   [25] Lear, E., Fair, E., Crocker, D. and T. Kessler, "Network 10        Considered Harmful (Some Practices Shouldn't be Codified)", RFC        1627, July 1994.   [26] Feller, W., An Introduction to Probability Theory and its        Applications, vol. 1.  New York, New York: John Wiley and Sons,        third ed., 1968.   [27] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the        Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.   [28] Baugher, M., Blom, R., Carrara, E., McGrew, D., Naslund, M.,        Norrman, K. and D. Oran, "Secure Real-time Transport Protocol",        Work in Progress, April 2003.   [29] Balenson, D., "Privacy Enhancement for Internet Electronic Mail:        Part III", RFC 1423, February 1993.   [30] Voydock, V. and S. Kent, "Security Mechanisms in High-Level        Network Protocols", ACM Computing Surveys, vol. 15, pp. 135-171,        June 1983.   [31] Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", BCP 41, RFC 2914,        September 2000.   [32] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321, April        1992.   [33] Stubblebine, S., "Security Services for Multimedia        Conferencing", in 16th National Computer Security Conference,        (Baltimore, Maryland), pp. 391--395, September 1993.   [34] Floyd, S. and V. Jacobson, "The Synchronization of Periodic        Routing Messages", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, vol. 2,        pp. 122--136, April 1994.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 102]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003Authors' Addresses   Henning Schulzrinne   Department of Computer Science   Columbia University   1214 Amsterdam Avenue   New York, NY 10027   United States   EMail: schulzrinne@cs.columbia.edu   Stephen L. Casner   Packet Design   3400 Hillview Avenue, Building 3   Palo Alto, CA 94304   United States   EMail: casner@acm.org   Ron Frederick   Blue Coat Systems Inc.   650 Almanor Avenue   Sunnyvale, CA 94085   United States   EMail: ronf@bluecoat.com   Van Jacobson   Packet Design   3400 Hillview Avenue, Building 3   Palo Alto, CA 94304   United States   EMail: van@packetdesign.comSchulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 103]RFC 3550                          RTP                          July 2003Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Schulzrinne, et al.         Standards Track                   [Page 104]
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