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RFC3525 - Gateway Control Protocol Version 1

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group C. Groves

Request for Comments: 3525 M. Pantaleo

Obsoletes: 3015 LM EriCsson

Category: Standards Track T. Anderson

Consultant

T. Taylor

Nortel Networks

Editors

June 2003

Gateway Control Protocol Version 1

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This document defines the protocol used between elements of a

physically decomposed multimedia gateway, i.e., a Media Gateway and a

Media Gateway Controller. The protocol presented in this document

meets the requirements for a media gateway control protocol as

presented in RFC2805.

This document replaces RFC3015. It is the result of continued

cooperation between the IETF Megaco Working Group and ITU-T Study

Group 16. It incorporates the original text of RFC3015, modified by

corrections and clarifications discussed on the Megaco

E-mail list and incorporated into the Study Group 16 Implementor's

Guide for Recommendation H.248. The present version of this document

underwent ITU-T Last Call as Recommendation H.248 Amendment 1.

Because of ITU-T renumbering, it was published by the ITU-T as

Recommendation H.248.1 (03/2002), Gateway Control Protocol Version 1.

Users of this specification are advised to consult the H.248 Sub-

series Implementors' Guide at http://www.itu.int/itudoc/itu-

t/com16/implgd for additional corrections and clarifications.

Conventions used in this document

The key Words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",

"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this

document are to be interpreted as described in RFC2119 [RFC2119].

Table of Contents

1 Scope.........................................................5

1.1 Changes From RFC3015.....................................5

1.2 Differences From ITU-T Recommendation H.248.1 (03/2002)...5

2 References....................................................6

2.1 Normative references......................................6

2.2 Informative references....................................9

3 Definitions..................................................10

4 Abbreviations................................................11

5 Conventions..................................................12

6 Connection model.............................................13

6.1 Contexts.................................................16

6.2 Terminations.............................................17

6.2.1 Termination dynamics.................................21

6.2.2 TerminationIDs.......................................21

6.2.3 Packages.............................................22

6.2.4 Termination properties and descriptors...............23

6.2.5 Root Termination.....................................25

7 Commands.....................................................26

7.1 Descriptors..............................................27

7.1.1 Specifying parameters................................27

7.1.2 Modem descriptor.....................................28

7.1.3 Multiplex descriptor.................................28

7.1.4 Media descriptor.....................................29

7.1.5 TerminationState descriptor..........................29

7.1.6 Stream descriptor....................................30

7.1.7 LocalControl descriptor..............................31

7.1.8 Local and Remote descriptors.........................32

7.1.9 Events descriptor....................................35

7.1.10 EventBuffer descriptor..............................38

7.1.11 Signals descriptor..................................38

7.1.12 Audit descriptor....................................40

7.1.13 ServiceChange descriptor............................41

7.1.14 DigitMap descriptor.................................41

7.1.15 Statistics descriptor...............................46

7.1.16 Packages descriptor.................................47

7.1.17 ObservedEvents descriptor...........................47

7.1.18 Topology descriptor.................................47

7.1.19 Error Descriptor....................................50

7.2 Command Application Programming Interface................50

7.2.1 Add..................................................51

7.2.2 Modify...............................................52

7.2.3 SuBTract.............................................53

7.2.4 Move.................................................55

7.2.5 AuditValue...........................................56

7.2.6 AuditCapabilities....................................59

7.2.7 Notify...............................................60

7.2.8 ServiceChange........................................61

7.2.9 Manipulating and Auditing Context Attributes.........65

7.2.10 Generic Command Syntax..............................66

7.3 Command Error Codes......................................66

8 Transactions.................................................66

8.1 Common parameters........................................68

8.1.1 Transaction Identifiers..............................68

8.1.2 Context Identifiers..................................68

8.2 Transaction Application Programming Interface............69

8.2.1 TransactionRequest...................................69

8.2.2 TransactionReply.....................................69

8.2.3 TransactionPending...................................71

8.3 Messages.................................................72

9 Transport....................................................72

9.1 Ordering of Commands.....................................73

9.2 Protection against Restart Avalanche.....................74

10 Security Considerations.....................................75

10.1 Protection of Protocol Connections......................75

10.2 Interim AH scheme.......................................76

10.3 Protection of Media Connections.........................77

11 MG-MGC Control Interface....................................78

11.1 Multiple Virtual MGs....................................78

11.2 Cold start..............................................79

11.3 Negotiation of protocol version.........................79

11.4 Failure of a MG.........................................80

11.5 Failure of an MGC.......................................81

12 Package definition..........................................82

12.1 Guidelines for defining packages........................82

12.1.1 Package.............................................83

12.1.2 Properties..........................................84

12.1.3 Events..............................................85

12.1.4 Signals.............................................85

12.1.5 Statistics..........................................86

12.1.6 Procedures..........................................86

12.2 Guidelines to defining Parameters to Events and Signals.86

12.3 Lists...................................................87

12.4 Identifiers.............................................87

12.5 Package registration....................................88

13 IANA Considerations.........................................88

13.1 Packages................................................88

13.2 Error codes.............................................89

13.3 ServiceChange reasons...................................89

ANNEX A Binary encoding of the protocol.......................90

A.1 Coding of wildcards......................................90

A.2 ASN.1 syntax specification...............................92

A.3 Digit maps and path names...............................111

ANNEX B Text encoding of the protocol.........................113

B.1 Coding of wildcards.....................................113

B.2 ABNF specification......................................113

B.3 Hexadecimal octet coding................................127

B.4 Hexadecimal octet sequence..............................127

ANNEX C Tags for media stream properties......................128

C.1 General media attributes................................128

C.2 Mux properties..........................................130

C.3 General bearer properties...............................130

C.4 General ATM properties..................................130

C.5 Frame Relay.............................................134

C.6 IP......................................................134

C.7 ATM AAL2................................................134

C.8 ATM AAL1................................................136

C.9 Bearer capabilities.....................................137

C.10 AAL5 properties........................................147

C.11 SDP equivalents........................................148

C.12 H.245..................................................149

ANNEX D Transport over IP.....................................150

D.1 Transport over IP/UDP using Application Level Framing ..150

D.1.1 Providing At-Most-Once functionality................150

D.1.2 Transaction identifiers and three-way handshake.....151

D.1.3 Computing retransmission timers.....................152

D.1.4 Provisional responses...............................153

D.1.5 Repeating Requests, Responses and Acknowledgements..153

D.2 Using TCP...............................................155

D.2.1 Providing the At-Most-Once functionality............155

D.2.2 Transaction identifiers and three-way handshake.....155

D.2.3 Computing retransmission timers.....................156

D.2.4 Provisional responses...............................156

D.2.5 Ordering of commands................................156

ANNEX E Basic packages.......................................157

E.1 Generic.................................................157

E.2 Base Root Package.......................................159

E.3 Tone Generator Package..................................161

E.4 Tone Detection Package..................................163

E.5 Basic DTMF Generator Package............................166

E.6 DTMF detection Package..................................167

E.7 Call Progress Tones Generator Package...................169

E.8 Call Progress Tones Detection Package...................171

E.9 Analog Line Supervision Package.........................172

E.10 Basic Continuity Package...............................175

E.11 Network Package........................................178

E.12 RTP Package............................................180

E.13 TDM Circuit Package....................................182

APPENDIX I EXAMPLE CALL FLOWS (INFORMATIVE)...................184

A.1 Residential Gateway to Residential Gateway Call.........184

A.1.1 Programming Residential GW Analog Line Terminations

for Idle Behavior...................................184

A.1.2 Collecting Originator Digits and Initiating

Termination.........................................186

APPENDIX II Changes From RFC3015............................195

Intellectual Property Rights..................................210

Acknowledgments...............................................211

Authors' Addresses............................................212

Full Copyright Statement......................................213

1 Scope

The present document, which is identical to the published version of

ITU-T Recommendation H.248.1 (03/2002) except as noted below, defines

the protocols used between elements of a physically decomposed

multimedia gateway. There are no functional differences from a

system view between a decomposed gateway, with distributed sub-

components potentially on more than one physical device, and a

monolithic gateway sUCh as described in ITU-T Recommendation H.246.

This document does not define how gateways, multipoint control units

or interactive voice response units (IVRs) work. Instead it creates

a general framework that is suitable for these applications.

Packet network interfaces may include IP, ATM or possibly others.

The interfaces will support a variety of Switched Circuit Network

(SCN) signalling systems, including tone signalling, ISDN, ISUP, QSIG

and GSM. National variants of these signalling systems will be

supported where applicable.

1.1 Changes From RFC3015

The differences between this document and RFC3015 are documented in

Appendix II.

1.2 Differences From ITU-T Recommendation H.248.1 (03/2002)

This document differs from the corresponding ITU-T publication in the

following respects:

- Added IETF front matter in place of the corresponding ITU-T

material.

- The ITU-T summary is too H.323-specific and has been omitted.

- The IETF conventions have been stated as governing this document.

As discussed in section 5 below, this gives slightly greater

strength to "should" requirements.

- The Scope section (just above) has been edited slightly to suit

its IETF context.

- Added normative references to RFCs 2026 and 2119.

- Figures 4, 5, and 6 show the centre of the context for greater

clarity. Also added Figure 6a showing an important additional

example.

- Added a paragraph in section 7.1.18 which was approved in the

Implementor's Guide but lost inadvertently in the ITU-T approved

version.

- This document incorporates corrections to the informative examples

in Appendix I which also appear in H.248.1 version 2, but which

were not picked up in H.248.1 (03/2002).

- This document includes a new Appendix II listing all the changes

from RFC3015.

- This document includes an Acknowledgements section listing the

authors of RFC3015 but also many other people who contributed to

the development of the Megaco/H.248.x protocol.

- Moved the Intellectual Property declaration to its usual place in

an IETF document and added a reference to declarations on the IETF

web site.

2 References

The following ITU-T Recommendations and other references contain

provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute

provisions of this RFC. At the time of publication, the editions

indicated were valid. All Recommendations and other references are

subject to revision; all users of this RFCare therefore encouraged

to investigate the possibility of applying the most recent edition of

the Recommendations and other references listed below. A list of the

currently valid ITU-T Recommendations is regularly published.

2.1 Normative references

- ITU-T Recommendation H.225.0 (1999), Call signalling protocols and

media stream packetization for packet-based multimedia

communication systems.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.235 (1998), Security and encryption for

H-Series (H.323 and other H.245-based) multimedia terminals.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.245 (1998), Control protocol for multimedia

communication.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.246 (1998), Interworking of H-series

multimedia terminals with H-series multimedia terminals and

voice/voiceband terminals on GSTN and ISDN.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.248.8 (2002), H.248 Error Codes and Service

Change Reasons.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.323 (1999), Packet-based multimedia

communication systems.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.363.1 (1996), B-ISDN ATM adaptation layer

(AAL) specification: Type 1 AAL.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.363.2 (1997), B-ISDN ATM adaptation layer

(AAL) specification: Type 2 AAL.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.363.5 (1996), B-ISDN ATM adaptation layer

(AAL) specification: Type 5 AAL.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.366.1 (1998), Segmentation and Reassembly

Service Specific Convergence Sublayer for the AAL type 2.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.366.2 (1999), AAL type 2 service specific

convergence sublayer for trunking.

- ITU-T Recommendation I.371 (2000), Traffic control and congestion

control in B-ISDN.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.763 (1999), Signalling System No. 7 - ISDN

user part formats and codes.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.765.5 (2001), Application transport

mechanism - Bearer independent call control (BICC).

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.931 (1998), ISDN user-network interface

layer 3 specification for basic call control.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2630.1 (1999), AAL type 2 signalling

protocol (Capability Set 1).

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2931 (1995), Digital Subscriber Signalling

System No. 2 (DSS2) - User-Network Interface (UNI) - Layer 3

specification for basic call/connection control.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2941.1 (1997), Digital Subscriber

Signalling System No. 2 - Generic identifier transport.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2961.1 (1995), Additional signalling

capabilities to support traffic parameters for the tagging option

and the sustainable call rate parameter set.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2961.2 (1997), Additional traffic

parameters: Support of ATM transfer capability in the broadband

bearer capability information element.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2965.1 (1999), Digital subscriber

signalling system No. 2 - Support of Quality of Service classes.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.2965.2 (1999), Digital subscriber

signalling system No. 2 - Signalling of individual Quality of

Service parameters.

- ITU-T Recommendation V.76 (1996), Generic multiplexer using V.42

LAPM-based procedures.

- ITU-T Recommendation X.213 (1995), Information technology - Open

Systems Interconnection - Network service definition plus

Amendment 1 (1997), Addition of the Internet protocol address

format identifier.

- ITU-T Recommendation X.680 (1997), Information technology -

Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1): Specification of basic

notation.

- ITU-T Recommendation X.690 (1997), Information Technology - ASN.1

Encoding Rules: Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER),

Canonical Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules

(DER).

- ATM Forum (1996), ATM User-Network Interface (UNI) Signalling

Specification - Version 4.0.

[RFC1006] Rose, M. and D. Cass, "ISO Transport Service on top of the

TCP, Version 3", STD 35, RFC1006, May 1987.

[RFC2026] Brander, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision

3", BCP 9, RFC2026, October 1996.

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC2119, March 1997.

[RFC2234] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax

Specifications: ABNF", RFC2234, November 1997.

[RFC2327] Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description

Protocol", RFC2327, April 1998.

[RFC2402] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Authentication Header", RFC

2402, November 1998.

[RFC2406] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Encapsulating Security

Payload (ESP)", RFC2406, November 1998.

2.2 Informative references

- ITU-T Recommendation E.180/Q.35 (1998), Technical characteristics

of tones for the telephone service.

- CCITT Recommendation G.711 (1988), Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) of

voice frequencies.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.221 (1999), Frame structure for a 64 to

1920 kbit/s channel in audiovisual teleservices.

- ITU T Recommendation H.223 (1996), Multiplexing protocol for low

bit rate multimedia communication.

- ITU-T Recommendation H.226 (1998), Channel aggregation protocol

for multilink operation on circuit-switched networks

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.724 (1998), Signalling procedures.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.764 (1999), Signalling system No. 7 - ISDN

user part signalling procedures.

- ITU-T Recommendation Q.1902.4 (2001), Bearer independent call

control protocol - Basic call procedures.

[RFC768] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6, RFC768,

August 1980.

[RFC791] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC791, September

1981.

[RFC793] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7, RFC

793, September 1981.

[RFC1661] Simpson, W., Ed., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD

51, RFC1661, July 1994.

[RFC1889] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V.

Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time

Applications", RFC1889, January 1996.

[RFC1890] Schulzrinne, H. and G. Fokus, "RTP Profile for Audio and

Video Conferences with Minimal Control", RFC1890,

January 1996.

[RFC2401] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the

Internet Protocol", RFC2401, November 1998.

[RFC2460] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6

(IPv6) Specification", RFC2460, December 1998.

[RFC2543] Handley, M., Schulzrinne, H., Schooler, E. and J.

Rosenberg, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC2543,

March 1999.

[RFC2805] Greene, N., Ramalho, M. and B. Rosen, "Media Gateway

Control Protocol Architecture and Requirements", RFC2805,

April 2000.

3 Definitions

This document defines the following terms:

Access gateway:

A type of gateway that provides a User-Network Interface (UNI) such

as ISDN.

Descriptor:

A syntactic element of the protocol that groups related properties.

For instance, the properties of a media flow on the MG can be set by

the MGC by including the appropriate descriptor in a command.

Media Gateway (MG):

The media gateway converts media provided in one type of network to

the format required in another type of network. For example, a MG

could terminate bearer channels from a switched circuit network

(e.g., DS0s) and media streams from a packet network (e.g., RTP

streams in an IP network). This gateway may be capable of processing

audio, video and T.120 alone or in any combination, and will be

capable of full duplex media translations. The MG may also play

audio/video messages and perform other IVR functions, or may perform

media conferencing.

Media Gateway Controller (MGC):

Controls the parts of the call state that pertain to connection

control for media channels in a MG.

Multipoint Control Unit (MCU):

An entity that controls the setup and coordination of a multi-user

conference that typically includes processing of audio, video and

data.

Residential gateway:

A gateway that interworks an analogue line to a packet network. A

residential gateway typically contains one or two analogue lines and

is located at the customer premises.

SCN FAS signalling gateway:

This function contains the SCN Signalling Interface that terminates

SS7, ISDN or other signalling links where the call control channel

and bearer channels are collocated in the same physical span.

SCN NFAS signalling gateway:

This function contains the SCN Signalling Interface that terminates

SS7 or other signalling links where the call control channels are

separated from bearer channels.

Stream:

Bidirectional media or control flow received/sent by a media gateway

as part of a call or conference.

Trunk:

A communication channel between two switching systems such as a DS0

on a T1 or E1 line.

Trunking gateway:

A gateway between SCN network and packet network that typically

terminates a large number of digital circuits.

4 Abbreviations

This RFCdocument uses the following abbreviations:

ALF Application Layer Framing

ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode

CAS Channel Associated Signalling

DTMF Dual Tone Multi-Frequency

FAS Facility Associated Signalling

GSM Global System for Mobile communications

GW GateWay

IANA Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (superseded by Internet

Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers - ICANN)

IP Internet Protocol

ISUP ISDN User Part

IVR Interactive Voice Response

MG Media Gateway

MGC Media Gateway Controller

NFAS Non-Facility Associated Signalling

PRI Primary Rate Interface

PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network

QoS Quality of Service

RTP Real-time Transport Protocol

SCN Switched Circuit Network

SG Signalling Gateway

SS7 Signalling System No. 7

5 Conventions

In the H.248.1 Recommendation, "SHALL" refers to a mandatory

requirement, while "SHOULD" refers to a suggested but optional

feature or procedure. The term "MAY" refers to an optional course of

action without eXPressing a preference. Note that these definition

are overridden in the present document by the RFC2119 conventions

stated at the beginning of this document. RFC2119 has a more

precise definition of "should" than is provided by the ITU-T.

6 Connection model

The connection model for the protocol describes the logical entities,

or objects, within the Media Gateway that can be controlled by the

Media Gateway Controller. The main abstractions used in the

connection model are Terminations and Contexts.

A Termination sources and/or sinks one or more streams. In a

multimedia conference, a Termination can be multimedia and sources or

sinks multiple media streams. The media stream parameters, as well

as modem, and bearer parameters are encapsulated within the

Termination.

A Context is an association between a collection of Terminations.

There is a special type of Context, the null Context, which contains

all Terminations that are not associated to any other Termination.

For instance, in a decomposed access gateway, all idle lines are

represented by Terminations in the null Context.

Following is a graphical depiction of these concepts. The diagram of

Figure 1 gives several examples and is not meant to be an

all-inclusive illustration. The asterisk box in each of the Contexts

represents the logical association of Terminations implied by the

Context.

+------------------------------------------------------+

Media Gateway

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context +-------------+

Termination

-------------

+-------------+ +-> SCN Bearer <---+->

Termination +-----+ Channel

------------- ---+ +-------------+

<-+---> RTP Stream --- *

---+ +-------------+

+-------------+ +-----+ Termination

-------------

+-> SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel

+-------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

+------------------------------+

(NULL Context) Context

+-------------+ +-------------+

Termination +-----+ Termination

------------- -------------

SCN Bearer * ------ SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel Channel

+-------------+ +-----+ +-------------+

+------------------------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context

+-------------+ +-------------+

Termination +-----+ Termination

------------- -------------

<-+---> SCN Bearer --- * ------ SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel Channel

+-------------+ +-----+ +-------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

___________________________________________________

+------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 1: Examples of Megaco/H.248 Connection Model

The example in Figure 2 shows an example of one way to accomplish a

call-waiting scenario in a decomposed access gateway, illustrating

the relocation of a Termination between Contexts. Terminations T1

and T2 belong to Context C1 in a two-way audio call. A second audio

call is waiting for T1 from Termination T3. T3 is alone in Context

C2. T1 accepts the call from T3, placing T2 on hold. This action

results in T1 moving into Context C2, as shown in Figure 3.

+------------------------------------------------------+

Media Gateway

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context C1

+-------------+ +-------------+

Term. T2 +-----+ Term. T1

------------- -------------

<-+---> RTP Stream --- * ------ SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel

+-------------+ +-----+ +-------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context C2

+-------------+

+-----+ Term. T3

-------------

* ------ SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel

+-----+ +-------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

+------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 2: Example Call Waiting Scenario / Alerting Applied to T1

+------------------------------------------------------+

Media Gateway

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context C1

+-------------+

Term. T2 +-----+

-------------

<-+---> RTP Stream --- *

+-------------+ +-----+

+-------------------------------------------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

Context C2

+-------------+ +-------------+

Term. T1 +-----+ Term. T3

------------- -------------

<-+---> SCN Bearer --- * ------ SCN Bearer <---+->

Channel Channel

+-------------+ +-----+ +-------------+

+-------------------------------------------------+

+------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 3. Example Call Waiting Scenario / Answer by T1

6.1 Contexts

A Context is an association between a number of Terminations. The

Context describes the topology (who hears/sees whom) and the media

mixing and/or switching parameters if more than two Terminations are

involved in the association.

There is a special Context called the null Context. It contains

Terminations that are not associated to any other Termination.

Terminations in the null Context can have their parameters examined

or modified, and may have events detected on them.

In general, an Add command is used to add Terminations to Contexts.

If the MGC does not specify an existing Context to which the

Termination is to be added, the MG creates a new Context. A

Termination may be removed from a Context with a Subtract command,

and a Termination may be moved from one Context to another with a

Move command. A Termination SHALL exist in only one Context at a

time.

The maximum number of Terminations in a Context is a MG property.

Media gateways that offer only point-to-point connectivity might

allow at most two Terminations per Context. Media gateways that

support multipoint conferences might allow three or more Terminations

per Context.

6.1.1 Context attributes and descriptors

The attributes of Contexts are:

- ContextID.

- The topology (who hears/sees whom).

The topology of a Context describes the flow of media between the

Terminations within a Context. In contrast, the mode of a

Termination (send/receive/...) describes the flow of the media at

the ingress/egress of the media gateway.

- The priority is used for a Context in order to provide the MG with

information about a certain precedence handling for a Context.

The MGC can also use the priority to control autonomously the

traffic precedence in the MG in a smooth way in certain

situations (e.g., restart), when a lot of Contexts must be handled

simultaneously. Priority 0 is the lowest priority and a priority

of 15 is the highest priority.

- An indicator for an emergency call is also provided to allow a

preference handling in the MG.

6.1.2 Creating, deleting and modifying Contexts

The protocol can be used to (implicitly) create Contexts and modify

the parameter values of existing Contexts. The protocol has commands

to add Terminations to Contexts, subtract them from Contexts, and to

move Terminations between Contexts. Contexts are deleted implicitly

when the last remaining Termination is subtracted or moved out.

6.2 Terminations

A Termination is a logical entity on a MG that sources and/or sinks

media and/or control streams. A Termination is described by a number

of characterizing Properties, which are grouped in a set of

Descriptors that are included in commands. Terminations have unique

identities (TerminationIDs), assigned by the MG at the time of their

creation.

Terminations representing physical entities have a semi-permanent

existence. For example, a Termination representing a TDM channel

might exist for as long as it is provisioned in the gateway.

Terminations representing ephemeral information flows, such as RTP

flows, would usually exist only for the duration of their use.

Ephemeral Terminations are created by means of an Add command. They

are destroyed by means of a Subtract command. In contrast, when a

physical Termination is Added to or Subtracted from a Context, it is

taken from or to the null Context, respectively.

Terminations may have signals applied to them (see 7.1.11).

Terminations may be programmed to detect Events, the occurrence of

which can trigger notification messages to the MGC, or action by the

MG. Statistics may be accumulated on a Termination. Statistics are

reported to the MGC upon request (by means of the AuditValue command,

see 7.2.5) and when the Termination is taken out of the call it is

in.

Multimedia gateways may process multiplexed media streams. For

example, Recommendation H.221 describes a frame structure for

multiple media streams multiplexed on a number of digital 64 kbit/s

channels. Such a case is handled in the connection model in the

following way. For every bearer channel that carries part of the

multiplexed streams, there is a physical or ephemeral "bearer

Termination". The bearer Terminations that source/sink the digital

channels are connected to a separate Termination called the

"multiplexing Termination". The multiplexing termination is an

ephemeral termination representing a frame-oriented session. The

MultiplexDescriptor for this Termination describes the multiplex used

(e.g., H.221 for an H.320 session) and indicates the order in which

the contained digital channels are assembled into a frame.

Multiplexing terminations may be cascades (e.g., H.226 multiplex of

digital channels feeding into a H.223 multiplex supporting an H.324

session).

The individual media streams carried in the session are described by

StreamDescriptors on the multiplexing Termination. These media

streams can be associated with streams sourced/sunk by Terminations

in the Context other than the bearer Terminations supporting the

multiplexing Termination. Each bearer Termination supports only a

single data stream. These data streams do not appear explicitly as

streams on the multiplexing Termination and they are hidden from the

rest of the context.

Figures 4, 5, 6, and 6a illustrate typical applications of the

multiplexing termination and Multiplex Descriptor.

+-----------------------------------+

Context +-------+

+----+

Circuit 1 --- TC1---------+ Tmux

+----+ (Str 1) Audio +-----+

+-----*-----+ -----

+----+ H.22x Stream 1

Circuit 2 --- TC2---------+ multi- TR1

+----+ (Str 1) plex (RTP)

Video

+----+ +-----*-----+ -----

Circuit 3 --- TC3---------+ Stream 2

/ +----+ (Str 1) +-----+

/ +-------+

/ +-----------------\-----------------+

Audio, video, and control signals are carried in frames Tmux is an ephemeral with two

spanning the circuits. explicit Stream Descriptors

and a Multiplex Descriptor.

Figure 4: Multiplexed Termination Scenario - Circuit to Packet

(Asterisks * denote the centre of the context)

Context

+--------------------------------------+

+-------+ +-------+

+----+ +----+

Circuit 1 ---- TC1---+ Tmux1 Audio Tmux2 +--- TC4---

+----+ +---*----+ +----+

Str 1

+----+ H.22x H.22x +----+

Circuit 2 ---- TC2---+ multi- multi-+--- TC5---

+----+ plex plex +----+

Video

+----+ +---*----+ +----+

Circuit 3 ---- TC3---+ Str 2 +--- TC6---

+----+ +----+

+-------+ +-------+

+-----------------\-----/--------------+

\ /

Tmux1 and Tmux2 are ephemerals each with two

explicit Stream Descriptors and a Multiplex Descriptor.

Figure 5: Multiplexed Termination Scenario - Circuit to Circuit

(Asterisks * denote the centre of the context)

+-----------------------------------+

Context +-------+

+----+

Circuit 1 --- TC1---------+ Tmux

+----+ (Str 1) Audio +-----+

+-----*-----+ TR1 -----

+----+ H.22x Stream 1 (RTP)

Circuit 2 --- TC2---------+ multi- +-----+

+----+ (Str 1) plex

Video +-----+

+----+ +-----*-----+ TR2 -----

Circuit 3 --- TC3---------+ Stream 2 (RTP)

/ +----+ (Str 1) +-----+

/ +-------+

/ +-----------------\-----------------+

Audio, video, and control \ Tmux is an ephemeral with two

signals are carried in frames explicit Stream Descriptors and

spanning the circuits. and a Multiplex Descriptor.

Figure 6: Multiplexed Termination Scenario - Single to Multiple

Terminations

(Asterisks * denote the centre of the context)

Context

+---------------------------------------------+

+-------+ +-------+

Cct 1 +----+ Audio +-----+

---- TC1---+ Tmux1 Tmux2 +-----*----- TR1 -----

+----+ Stream 1 (RTP)

Data +-----+

Cct 2 +----+ H.226 +-------+ H.223

---- TC2---+ multi-(Str 1) multi- Control +-----+

+----+ plex plex +-----*-----+ Tctl-----

Stream 3 +-----+

Cct 3 +----+

---- TC3---+ +-----+

+----+ +-----*-----+ TR2 -----

+-------+ Video (RTP)

+-------+ Stream 2 +-----+

+---------------------------------------------+

Tmux1 has a Multiplex Descriptor and a single data stream.

Tmux2 has a Multiplex Descriptor with a single bearer and

three explicit Stream Descriptors.

Figure 6a: Multiplexed Termination Scenario - Cascaded Multiplexes

(Asterisks * denote the centre of the context)

Note: this figure does not appear in Rec. H.248.1

Terminations may be created which represent multiplexed bearers, such

as an ATM AAL Type 2 bearer. When a new multiplexed bearer is to be

created, an ephemeral Termination is created in a Context established

for this purpose. When the Termination is subtracted, the

multiplexed bearer is destroyed.

6.2.1 Termination dynamics

The protocol can be used to create new Terminations and to modify

property values of existing Terminations. These modifications

include the possibility of adding or removing events and/or signals.

The Termination properties, and events and signals are described in

the ensuing subclauses. An MGC can only release/modify Terminations

and the resources that the Termination represents which it has

previously seized via, e.g., the Add command.

6.2.2 TerminationIDs

Terminations are referenced by a TerminationID, which is an arbitrary

schema chosen by the MG.

TerminationIDs of physical Terminations are provisioned in the Media

Gateway. The TerminationIDs may be chosen to have structure. For

instance, a TerminationID may consist of trunk group and a trunk

within the group.

A wildcarding mechanism using two types of wildcards can be used with

TerminationIDs. The two wildcards are ALL and CHOOSE. The former is

used to address multiple Terminations at once, while the latter is

used to indicate to a media gateway that it must select a Termination

satisfying the partially specified TerminationID. This allows, for

instance, that a MGC instructs a MG to choose a circuit within a

trunk group.

When ALL is used in the TerminationID of a command, the effect is

identical to repeating the command with each of the matching

TerminationIDs. The use of ALL does not address the ROOT

termination. Since each of these commands may generate a response,

the size of the entire response may be large. If individual

responses are not required, a wildcard response may be requested. In

such a case, a single response is generated, which contains the UNION

of all of the individual responses which otherwise would have been

generated, with duplicate values suppressed. For instance, given a

Termination Ta with properties p1=a, p2=b and Termination Tb with

properties p2=c, p3=d, a UNION response would consist of a wildcarded

TerminationId and the sequence of properties p1=a, p2=b,c and p3=d.

Wildcard response may be particularly useful in the Audit commands.

The encoding of the wildcarding mechanism is detailed in Annexes A

and B.

6.2.3 Packages

Different types of gateways may implement Terminations that have

widely differing characteristics. Variations in Terminations are

accommodated in the protocol by allowing Terminations to have

optional Properties, Events, Signals and Statistics implemented by

MGs.

In order to achieve MG/MGC interoperability, such options are grouped

into Packages, and typically a Termination realizes a set of such

Packages. More information on definition of packages can be found in

clause 12. An MGC can audit a Termination to determine which

Packages it realizes.

Properties, Events, Signals and Statistics defined in Packages, as

well as parameters to them, are referenced by identifiers (Ids).

Identifiers are scoped. For each package, PropertyIds, EventIds,

SignalIds, StatisticsIds and ParameterIds have unique name spaces and

the same identifier may be used in each of them. Two PropertyIds in

different packages may also have the same identifier, etc.

To support a particular package the MG must support all properties,

signals, events and statistics defined in a package. It must also

support all Signal and Event parameters. The MG may support a subset

of the values listed in a package for a particular Property or

Parameter.

When packages are extended, the properties, events, signals and

statistics defined in the base package can be referred to using

either the extended package name or the base package name. For

example, if Package A defines event e1, and Package B extends Package

A, then B/e1 is an event for a termination implementing Package B. By

definition, the MG MUST also implement the base Package, but it is

optional to publish the base package as an allowed interface. If it

does publish A, then A would be reported on the Package Descriptor

in AuditValue as well as B, and event A/e1 would be available on a

termination. If the MG does not publish A, then only B/e1 would be

available. If published through AuditValue, A/e1 and B/e1 are the

same event.

For improved interoperability and backward compatibility, an MG MAY

publish all Packages supported by its Terminations, including base

Packages from which extended Packages are derived. An exception to

this is in cases where the base packages are expressly "Designed to

be extended only".

6.2.4 Termination properties and descriptors

Terminations have properties. The properties have unique

PropertyIDs. Most properties have default values, which are

explicitly defined in this protocol specification or in a package

(see clause 12) or set by provisioning. If not provisioned

otherwise, the properties in all descriptors except TerminationState

and LocalControl default to empty/"no value" when a Termination is

first created or returned to the null Context. The default contents

of the two exceptions are described in 7.1.5 and 7.1.7.

The provisioning of a property value in the MG will override any

default value, be it supplied in this protocol specification or in a

package. Therefore if it is essential for the MGC to have full

control over the property values of a Termination, it should supply

explicit values when ADDing the Termination to a Context.

Alternatively, for a physical Termination the MGC can determine any

provisioned property values by auditing the Termination while it is

in the NULL Context.

There are a number of common properties for Terminations and

properties specific to media streams. The common properties are also

called the Termination state properties. For each media stream,

there are local properties and properties of the received and

transmitted flows.

Properties not included in the base protocol are defined in Packages.

These properties are referred to by a name consisting of the

PackageName and a PropertyId. Most properties have default values

described in the Package description. Properties may be read-only or

read/write. The possible values of a property may be audited, as can

their current values. For properties that are read/write, the MGC

can set their values. A property may be declared as "Global" which

has a single value shared by all Terminations realizing the package.

Related properties are grouped into descriptors for convenience.

When a Termination is added to a Context, the value of its read/write

properties can be set by including the appropriate descriptors as

parameters to the Add command. Similarly, a property of a

Termination in a Context may have its value changed by the Modify

command.

Properties may also have their values changed when a Termination is

moved from one Context to another as a result of a Move command. In

some cases, descriptors are returned as output from a command.

In general, if a Descriptor is completely omitted from one of the

aforementioned Commands, the properties in that Descriptor retain

their prior values for the Termination(s) upon which the Command

acts. On the other hand, if some read/write properties are omitted

from a Descriptor in a Command (i.e., the Descriptor is only

partially specified), those properties will be reset to their default

values for the Termination(s) upon which the Command acts, unless the

package specifies other behavior. For more details, see clause 7.1

dealing with the individual Descriptors.

The following table lists all of the possible descriptors and their

use. Not all descriptors are legal as input or output parameters to

every command.

Descriptor name Description

Modem Identifies modem type and properties when

applicable

Mux Describes multiplex type for multimedia

Terminations (e.g., H.221, H.223, H.225.0) and

Terminations forming the input mux

Media A list of media stream specifications (see 7.1.4)

TerminationState Properties of a Termination (which can be defined

in Packages) that are not stream specific

Stream A list of remote/local/localControl descriptors for

a single stream

Local Contains properties that specify the media flows

that the MG receives from the remote entity.

Remote Contains properties that specify the media flows

that the MG sends to the remote entity.

LocalControl Contains properties (which can be defined in

packages) that are of interest between the MG and

the MGC.

Events Describes events to be detected by the MG and what

to do when an event is detected.

EventBuffer Describes events to be detected by the MG when

Event Buffering is active.

Signals Describes signals (see 7.1.11) applied to

Terminations.

Audit In Audit commands, identifies which information is

desired.

Packages In AuditValue, returns a list of Packages realized

by Termination.

DigitMap Defines patterns against which sequences of a

specified set of events are to be matched so they

can be reported as a group rather than singly.

ServiceChange In ServiceChange, what, why service change

occurred, etc.

ObservedEvents In Notify or AuditValue, report of events observed.

Statistics In Subtract and Audit, report of Statistics kept on

a Termination.

Topology Specifies flow directions between Terminations in a

Context.

Error Contains an error code and optionally error text;

it may occur in command replies and in Notify

requests.

6.2.5 Root Termination

Occasionally, a command must refer to the entire gateway, rather than

a Termination within it. A special TerminationID, "Root" is reserved

for this purpose. Packages may be defined on Root. Root thus may

have properties, events and statistics (signals are not appropriate

for root). Accordingly, the root TerminationID may appear in:

- a Modify command - to change a property or set an event

- a Notify command - to report an event

- an AuditValue return - to examine the values of properties and

statistics implemented on root

- an AuditCapability - to determine what properties of root are

implemented

- a ServiceChange - to declare the gateway in or out of service.

Any other use of the root TerminationID is an error. Error code

410 - Incorrect identifier shall be returned in these cases.

7 Commands

The protocol provides commands for manipulating the logical entities

of the protocol connection model, Contexts and Terminations.

Commands provide control at the finest level of granularity supported

by the protocol. For example, Commands exist to add Terminations to

a Context, modify Terminations, subtract Terminations from a Context,

and audit properties of Contexts or Terminations. Commands provide

for complete control of the properties of Contexts and Terminations.

This includes specifying which events a Termination is to report,

which signals/actions are to be applied to a Termination and

specifying the topology of a Context (who hears/sees whom).

Most commands are for the specific use of the Media Gateway

Controller as command initiator in controlling Media Gateways as

command responders. The exceptions are the Notify and ServiceChange

commands: Notify is sent from Media Gateway to Media Gateway

Controller, and ServiceChange may be sent by either entity. Below is

an overview of the commands; they are explained in more detail in

7.2.

1) Add - The Add command adds a Termination to a Context. The Add

command on the first Termination in a Context is used to create a

Context.

2) Modify - The Modify command modifies the properties, events and

signals of a Termination.

3) Subtract - The Subtract command disconnects a Termination from its

Context and returns statistics on the Termination's participation

in the Context. The Subtract command on the last Termination in a

Context deletes the Context.

4) Move - The Move command atomically moves a Termination to another

Context.

5) AuditValue - The AuditValue command returns the current state of

properties, events, signals and statistics of Terminations.

6) AuditCapabilities - The AuditCapabilities command returns all the

possible values for Termination properties, events and signals

allowed by the Media Gateway.

7) Notify - The Notify command allows the Media Gateway to inform the

Media Gateway Controller of the occurrence of events in the Media

Gateway.

8) ServiceChange - The ServiceChange command allows the Media Gateway

to notify the Media Gateway Controller that a Termination or group

of Terminations is about to be taken out of service or has just

been returned to service. ServiceChange is also used by the MG to

announce its availability to a MGC (registration), and to notify

the MGC of impending or completed restart of the MG. The MGC may

announce a handover to the MG by sending it a ServiceChange

command. The MGC may also use ServiceChange to instruct the MG to

take a Termination or group of Terminations in or out of service.

These commands are detailed in 7.2.1 through 7.2.8.

7.1 Descriptors

The parameters to a command are termed Descriptors. A descriptor

consists of a name and a list of items. Some items may have values.

Many Commands share common descriptors. This subclause enumerates

these descriptors. Descriptors may be returned as output from a

command. In any such return of descriptor contents, an empty

descriptor is represented by its name unaccompanied by any list.

Parameters and parameter usage specific to a given Command type are

described in the subclause that describes the Command.

7.1.1 Specifying parameters

Command parameters are structured into a number of descriptors. In

general, the text format of descriptors is

DescriptorName=<someID>{parm=value, parm=value, ...}.

Parameters may be fully specified, overspecified or underspecified:

1) Fully specified parameters have a single, unambiguous value that

the command initiator is instructing the command responder to use

for the specified parameter.

2) Underspecified parameters, using the CHOOSE value, allow the

command responder to choose any value it can support.

3) Overspecified parameters have a list of potential values. The

list order specifies the command initiator's order of preference

of selection. The command responder chooses one value from

the offered list and returns that value to the command initiator.

If a required descriptor other than the Audit descriptor is

unspecified (i.e., entirely absent) from a command, the previous

values set in that descriptor for that Termination, if any, are

retained. In commands other than Subtract, a missing Audit

descriptor is equivalent to an empty Audit descriptor. The Behaviour

of the MG with respect to unspecified parameters within a descriptor

varies with the descriptor concerned, as indicated in succeeding

subclauses. Whenever a parameter is underspecified or overspecified,

the descriptor containing the value chosen by the responder is

included as output from the command.

Each command specifies the TerminationId the command operates on.

This TerminationId may be "wildcarded". When the TerminationId of a

command is wildcarded, the effect shall be as if the command was

repeated with each of the TerminationIds matched.

7.1.2 Modem descriptor

The Modem descriptor specifies the modem type and parameters, if any,

required for use in e.g., H.324 and text conversation. The

descriptor includes the following modem types: V.18, V.22, V.22 bis,

V.32, V.32 bis, V.34, V.90, V.91, Synchronous ISDN, and allows for

extensions. By default, no Modem descriptor is present in a

Termination.

7.1.3 Multiplex descriptor

In multimedia calls, a number of media streams are carried on a

(possibly different) number of bearers. The multiplex descriptor

associates the media and the bearers. The descriptor includes the

multiplex type:

- H.221;

- H.223;

- H.226;

- V.76;

- possible extensions,

and a set of TerminationIDs representing the multiplexed bearers, in

order. For example:

Mux = H.221{ MyT3/1/2, MyT3/2/13, MyT3/3/6, MyT3/21/22}

7.1.4 Media descriptor

The Media descriptor specifies the parameters for all the media

streams. These parameters are structured into two descriptors: a

TerminationState descriptor, which specifies the properties of a

Termination that are not stream dependent, and one or more Stream

descriptors each of which describes a single media stream.

A stream is identified by a StreamID. The StreamID is used to link

the streams in a Context that belong together. Multiple streams

exiting a Termination shall be synchronized with each other. Within

the Stream descriptor, there are up to three subsidiary descriptors:

LocalControl, Local, and Remote. The relationship between these

descriptors is thus:

Media descriptor

TerminationState Descriptor

Stream descriptor

LocalControl descriptor

Local descriptor

Remote descriptor

As a convenience, LocalControl, Local, or Remote descriptors may be

included in the Media descriptor without an enclosing Stream

descriptor. In this case, the StreamID is assumed to be 1.

7.1.5 TerminationState descriptor

The TerminationState descriptor contains the ServiceStates property,

the EventBufferControl property and properties of a Termination

(defined in Packages) that are not stream specific.

The ServiceStates property describes the overall state of the

Termination (not stream specific). A Termination can be in one of

the following states: "test", "out of service", or "in service". The

"test" state indicates that the Termination is being tested. The

state "out of service" indicates that the Termination cannot be used

for traffic. The state "in service" indicates that a Termination can

be used or is being used for normal traffic. "in service" is the

default state.

Values assigned to Properties may be simple values

(integer/string/enumeration) or may be underspecified, where more

than one value is supplied and the MG may make a choice:

- Alternative Values - multiple values in a list, one of which must

be selected

- Ranges - minimum and maximum values, any value between min and max

must be selected, boundary values included

- Greater Than/Less Than - value must be greater/less than specified

value

- CHOOSE Wildcard - the MG chooses from the allowed values for the

property

The EventBufferControl property specifies whether events are buffered

following detection of an event in the Events descriptor, or

processed immediately. See 7.1.9 for details.

7.1.6 Stream descriptor

A Stream descriptor specifies the parameters of a single

bidirectional stream. These parameters are structured into three

descriptors: one that contains Termination properties specific to a

stream and one each for local and remote flows. The Stream

Descriptor includes a StreamID which identifies the stream. Streams

are created by specifying a new StreamID on one of the Terminations

in a Context. A stream is deleted by setting empty Local and Remote

descriptors for the stream with ReserveGroup and ReserveValue in

LocalControl set to "false" on all Terminations in the Context that

previously supported that stream.

StreamIDs are of local significance between MGC and MG and they are

assigned by the MGC. Within a Context, StreamID is a means by which

to indicate which media flows are interconnected: streams with the

same StreamID are connected.

If a Termination is moved from one Context to another, the effect on

the Context to which the Termination is moved is the same as in the

case that a new Termination were added with the same StreamIDs as the

moved Termination.

7.1.7 LocalControl descriptor

The LocalControl descriptor contains the Mode property, the

ReserveGroup and ReserveValue properties and properties of a

Termination (defined in Packages) that are stream specific, and are

of interest between the MG and the MGC. Values of properties may be

underspecified as in 7.1.1.

The allowed values for the mode property are send-only, receive-only,

send/receive, inactive and loop-back. "Send" and "receive" are with

respect to the exterior of the Context, so that, for example, a

stream set to mode=sendOnly does not pass received media into the

Context. The default value for the mode property is "Inactive".

Signals and Events are not affected by mode.

The boolean-valued Reserve properties, ReserveValue and ReserveGroup,

of a Termination indicate what the MG is expected to do when it

receives a Local and/or Remote descriptor.

If the value of a Reserve property is True, the MG SHALL reserve

resources for all alternatives specified in the Local and/or Remote

descriptors for which it currently has resources available. It SHALL

respond with the alternatives for which it reserves resources. If it

cannot not support any of the alternatives, it SHALL respond with a

reply to the MGC that contains empty Local and/or Remote descriptors.

If media begins to flow while more than a single alternative is

reserved, media packets may be sent/received on any of the

alternatives and must be processed, although only a single

alternative may be active at any given time.

If the value of a Reserve property is False, the MG SHALL choose one

of the alternatives specified in the Local descriptor (if present)

and one of the alternatives specified in the Remote descriptor (if

present). If the MG has not yet reserved resources to support the

selected alternative, it SHALL reserve the resources. If, on the

other hand, it already reserved resources for the Termination

addressed (because of a prior exchange with ReserveValue and/or

ReserveGroup equal to True), it SHALL release any excess resources it

reserved previously. Finally, the MG shall send a reply to the MGC

containing the alternatives for the Local and/or Remote descriptor

that it selected. If the MG does not have sufficient resources to

support any of the alternatives specified, it SHALL respond with

error 510 (insufficient resources).

The default value of ReserveValue and ReserveGroup is False. More

information on the use of the two Reserve properties is provided in

7.1.8.

A new setting of the LocalControl Descriptor completely replaces the

previous setting of that descriptor in the MG. Thus, to retain

information from the previous setting, the MGC must include that

information in the new setting. If the MGC wishes to delete some

information from the existing descriptor, it merely resends the

descriptor (in a Modify command) with the unwanted information

stripped out.

7.1.8 Local and Remote descriptors

The MGC uses Local and Remote descriptors to reserve and commit MG

resources for media decoding and encoding for the given Stream(s) and

Termination to which they apply. The MG includes these descriptors

in its response to indicate what it is actually prepared to support.

The MG SHALL include additional properties and their values in its

response if these properties are mandatory yet not present in the

requests made by the MGC (e.g., by specifying detailed video encoding

parameters where the MGC only specified the payload type).

Local refers to the media received by the MG and Remote refers to the

media sent by the MG.

When text encoding the protocol, the descriptors consist of session

descriptions as defined in SDP (RFC2327). In session descriptions

sent from the MGC to the MG, the following exceptions to the syntax

of RFC2327 are allowed:

- the "s=", "t=" and "o=" lines are optional;

- the use of CHOOSE is allowed in place of a single parameter value;

and

- the use of alternatives is allowed in place of a single parameter

value.

A Stream Descriptor specifies a single bi-directional media stream

and so a single session description MUST NOT include more than one

media description ("m=" line). A Stream Descriptor may contain

additional session descriptions as alternatives. Each media stream

for a termination must appear in distinct Stream Descriptors. When

multiple session descriptions are provided in one descriptor, the

"v=" lines are required as delimiters; otherwise they are optional in

session descriptions sent to the MG. Implementations shall accept

session descriptions that are fully conformant to RFC2327. When

binary encoding the protocol the descriptor consists of groups of

properties (tag-value pairs) as specified in Annex C. Each such

group may contain the parameters of a session description.

Below, the semantics of the Local and Remote descriptors are

specified in detail. The specification consists of two parts. The

first part specifies the interpretation of the contents of the

descriptor. The second part specifies the actions the MG must take

upon receiving the Local and Remote descriptors. The actions to be

taken by the MG depend on the values of the ReserveValue and

ReserveGroup properties of the LocalControl descriptor.

Either the Local or the Remote descriptor or both may be:

1) unspecified (i.e., absent);

2) empty;

3) underspecified through use of CHOOSE in a property value;

4) fully specified; or

5) overspecified through presentation of multiple groups of

properties and possibly multiple property values in one or more of

these groups.

Where the descriptors have been passed from the MGC to the MG, they

are interpreted according to the rules given in 7.1.1, with the

following additional comments for clarification:

a) An unspecified Local or Remote descriptor is considered to be a

missing mandatory parameter. It requires the MG to use whatever

was last specified for that descriptor. It is possible that there

was no previously specified value, in which case the descriptor

concerned is ignored in further processing of the command.

b) An empty Local (Remote) descriptor in a message from the MGC

signifies a request to release any resources reserved for the

media flow received (sent).

c) If multiple groups of properties are present in a Local or Remote

descriptor or multiple values within a group, the order of

preference is descending.

d) Underspecified or overspecified properties within a group of

properties sent by the MGC are requests for the MG to choose one

or more values which it can support for each of those properties.

In case of an overspecified property, the list of values is in

descending order of preference.

Subject to the above rules, subsequent action depends on the values

of the ReserveValue and ReserveGroup properties in LocalControl.

If ReserveGroup is True, the MG reserves the resources required to

support any of the requested property group alternatives that it can

currently support. If ReserveValue is True, the MG reserves the

resources required to support any of the requested property value

alternatives that it can currently support.

NOTE - If a Local or Remote descriptor contains multiple groups of

properties, and ReserveGroup is True, then the MG is requested to

reserve resources so that it can decode or encode the media stream

according to any of the alternatives. For instance, if the Local

descriptor contains two groups of properties, one specifying

packetized G.711 A-law audio and the other G.723.1 audio, the MG

reserves resources so that it can decode one audio stream encoded in

either G.711 A-law format or G.723.1 format. The MG does not have to

reserve resources to decode two audio streams simultaneously, one

encoded in G.711 A-law and one in G.723.1. The intention for the use

of ReserveValue is analogous.

If ReserveGroup is true or ReserveValue is True, then the following

rules apply:

- If the MG has insufficient resources to support all alternatives

requested by the MGC and the MGC requested resources in both Local

and Remote, the MG should reserve resources to support at least

one alternative each within Local and Remote.

- If the MG has insufficient resources to support at least one

alternative within a Local (Remote) descriptor received from the

MGC, it shall return an empty Local (Remote) in response.

- In its response to the MGC, when the MGC included Local and Remote

descriptors, the MG SHALL include Local and Remote descriptors for

all groups of properties and property values it reserved resources

for. If the MG is incapable of supporting at least one of the

alternatives within the Local (Remote) descriptor received from

the MGC, it SHALL return an empty Local (Remote) descriptor.

- If the Mode property of the LocalControl descriptor is RecvOnly,

SendRecv, or LoopBack, the MG must be prepared to receive media

encoded according to any of the alternatives included in its

response to the MGC.

If ReserveGroup is False and ReserveValue is False, then the MG

SHOULD apply the following rules to resolve Local and Remote to a

single alternative each:

- The MG chooses the first alternative in Local for which it is able

to support at least one alternative in Remote.

- If the MG is unable to support at least one Local and one Remote

alternative, it returns Error 510 (Insufficient Resources).

- The MG returns its selected alternative in each of Local and

Remote.

A new setting of a Local or Remote descriptor completely replaces the

previous setting of that descriptor in the MG. Thus, to retain

information from the previous setting, the MGC must include that

information in the new setting. If the MGC wishes to delete some

information from the existing descriptor, it merely resends the

descriptor (in a Modify command) with the unwanted information

stripped out.

7.1.9 Events descriptor

The EventsDescriptor parameter contains a RequestIdentifier and a

list of events that the Media Gateway is requested to detect and

report. The RequestIdentifier is used to correlate the request with

the notifications that it may trigger. Requested events include, for

example, fax tones, continuity test results, and on-hook and off-hook

transitions. The RequestIdentifier is omitted if the

EventsDescriptor is empty (i.e., no events are specified).

Each event in the descriptor contains the Event name, an optional

streamID, an optional KeepActive flag, and optional parameters. The

Event name consists of a Package Name (where the event is defined)

and an EventID. The ALL wildcard may be used for the EventID,

indicating that all events from the specified package have to be

detected. The default streamID is 0, indicating that the event to be

detected is not related to a particular media stream. Events can

have parameters. This allows a single event description to have some

variation in meaning without creating large numbers of individual

events. Further event parameters are defined in the package.

If a digit map completion event is present or implied in the

EventsDescriptor, the EventDM parameter is used to carry either the

name or the value of the associated digit map. See 7.1.14 for

further details.

When an event is processed against the contents of an active Events

Descriptor and found to be present in that descriptor ("recognized"),

the default action of the MG is to send a Notify command to the MGC.

Notification may be deferred if the event is absorbed into the

current dial string of an active digit map (see 7.1.14). Any other

action is for further study. Moreover, event recognition may cause

currently active signals to stop, or may cause the current Events

and/or Signals descriptor to be replaced, as described at the end of

this subclause. Unless the Events Descriptor is replaced by another

Events Descriptor, it remains active after an event has been

recognized.

If the value of the EventBufferControl property equals LockStep,

following detection of such an event, normal handling of events is

suspended. Any event which is subsequently detected and occurs in

the EventBuffer descriptor is added to the end of the EventBuffer (a

FIFO queue), along with the time that it was detected. The MG SHALL

wait for a new EventsDescriptor to be loaded. A new EventsDescriptor

can be loaded either as the result of receiving a command with a new

EventsDescriptor, or by activating an embedded EventsDescriptor.

If EventBufferControl equals Off, the MG continues processing based

on the active EventsDescriptor.

In the case of an embedded EventsDescriptor being activated, the MG

continues event processing based on the newly activated

EventsDescriptor.

NOTE 1 - For purposes of EventBuffer handling, activation of an

embedded EventsDescriptor is equivalent to receipt of a new

EventsDescriptor.

When the MG receives a command with a new EventsDescriptor, one or

more events may have been buffered in the EventBuffer in the MG. The

value of EventBufferControl then determines how the MG treats such

buffered events.

Case 1

If EventBufferControl equals LockStep and the MG receives a new

EventsDescriptor, it will check the FIFO EventBuffer and take the

following actions:

1) If the EventBuffer is empty, the MG waits for detection of events

based on the new EventsDescriptor.

2) If the EventBuffer is non-empty, the MG processes the FIFO queue

starting with the first event:

a) If the event in the queue is in the events listed in the new

EventsDescriptor, the MG acts on the event and removes the

event from the EventBuffer. The time stamp of the Notify shall

be the time the event was actually detected. The MG then waits

for a new EventsDescriptor. While waiting for a new

EventsDescriptor, any events detected that appear in the

EventsBufferDescriptor will be placed in the EventBuffer. When

a new EventsDescriptor is received, the event processing will

repeat from step 1.

b) If the event is not in the new EventsDescriptor, the MG SHALL

discard the event and repeat from step 1.

Case 2

If EventBufferControl equals Off and the MG receives a new

EventsDescriptor, it processes new events with the new

EventsDescriptor.

If the MG receives a command instructing it to set the value of

EventBufferControl to Off, all events in the EventBuffer SHALL be

discarded.

The MG may report several events in a single Transaction as long as

this does not unnecessarily delay the reporting of individual events.

For procedures regarding transmitting the Notify command, refer to

the appropriate annex or Recommendation of the H.248 sub-series for

specific transport considerations.

The default value of EventBufferControl is Off.

NOTE 2 - Since the EventBufferControl property is in the

TerminationStateDescriptor, the MG might receive a command that

changes the EventBufferControl property and does not include an

EventsDescriptor.

Normally, recognition of an event shall cause any active signals to

stop. When KeepActive is specified in the event, the MG shall not

interrupt any signals active on the Termination on which the event is

detected.

An event can include an Embedded Signals descriptor and/or an

Embedded Events descriptor which, if present, replaces the current

Signals/Events descriptor when the event is recognized. It is

possible, for example, to specify that the dial-tone Signal be

generated when an off-hook Event is recognized, or that the dial-tone

Signal be stopped when a digit is recognized. A media gateway

controller shall not send EventsDescriptors with an event both marked

KeepActive and containing an embedded SignalsDescriptor.

Only one level of embedding is permitted. An embedded

EventsDescriptor SHALL NOT contain another embedded EventsDescriptor;

an embedded EventsDescriptor MAY contain an embedded

SignalsDescriptor.

An EventsDescriptor received by a media gateway replaces any previous

Events descriptor. Event notification in process shall complete, and

events detected after the command containing the new EventsDescriptor

executes, shall be processed according to the new EventsDescriptor.

An empty Events Descriptor disables all event recognition and

reporting. An empty EventBuffer Descriptor clears the EventBuffer

and disables all event accumulation in LockStep mode: the only events

reported will be those occurring while an Events Descriptor is

active. If an empty Events Descriptor is activated while the

Termination is operating in LockStep mode, the events buffer is

immediately cleared.

7.1.10 EventBuffer descriptor

The EventBuffer descriptor contains a list of events, with their

parameters if any, that the MG is requested to detect and buffer when

EventBufferControl equals LockStep (see 7.1.9).

7.1.11 Signals descriptor

Signals are MG generated media such as tones and announcements as

well as bearer-related signals such as hookswitch. More complex

signals may include a sequence of such simple signals interspersed

with and conditioned upon the receipt and analysis of media or

bearer-related signals. Examples include echoing of received data as

in Continuity Test package. Signals may also request preparation of

media content for future signals.

A SignalsDescriptor is a parameter that contains the set of signals

that the Media Gateway is asked to apply to a Termination. A

SignalsDescriptor contains a number of signals and/or sequential

signal lists. A SignalsDescriptor may contain zero signals and

sequential signal lists. Support of sequential signal lists is

optional.

Signals are defined in packages. Signals shall be named with a

Package name (in which the signal is defined) and a SignalID. No

wildcard shall be used in the SignalID. Signals that occur in a

SignalsDescriptor have an optional StreamID parameter (default is 0,

to indicate that the signal is not related to a particular media

stream), an optional signal type (see below), an optional duration

and possibly parameters defined in the package that defines the

signal. This allows a single signal to have some variation in

meaning, obviating the need to create large numbers of individual

signals.

Finally, the optional parameter "notifyCompletion" allows a MGC to

indicate that it wishes to be notified when the signal finishes

playout. The possible cases are that the signal timed out (or

otherwise completed on its own), that it was interrupted by an event,

that it was halted when a Signals descriptor was replaced, or that it

stopped or never started for other reasons. If the notifyCompletion

parameter is not included in a Signals descriptor, notification is

generated only if the signal stopped or was never started for other

reasons. For reporting to occur, the signal completion event (see

E.1.2) must be enabled in the currently active Events descriptor.

The duration is an integer value that is expressed in hundredths of a

second.

There are three types of signals:

- on/off - the signal lasts until it is turned off;

- timeout - the signal lasts until it is turned off or a specific

period of time elapses;

- brief - the signal will stop on its own unless a new Signals

descriptor is applied that causes it to stop; no timeout value is

needed.

If a signal of default type other than TO has its type overridden to

type TO in the Signals descriptor, the duration parameter must be

present.

If the signal type is specified in a SignalsDescriptor, it overrides

the default signal type (see 12.1.4). If duration is specified for

an on/off signal, it SHALL be ignored.

A sequential signal list consists of a signal list identifier and a

sequence of signals to be played sequentially. Only the trailing

element of the sequence of signals in a sequential signal list may be

an on/off signal. The duration of a sequential signal list is the

sum of the durations of the signals it contains.

Multiple signals and sequential signal lists in the same

SignalsDescriptor shall be played simultaneously.

Signals are defined as proceeding from the Termination towards the

exterior of the Context unless otherwise specified in a package.

When the same Signal is applied to multiple Terminations within one

Transaction, the MG should consider using the same resource to

generate these Signals.

Production of a Signal on a Termination is stopped by application of

a new SignalsDescriptor, or detection of an Event on the Termination

(see 7.1.9).

A new SignalsDescriptor replaces any existing SignalsDescriptor. Any

signals applied to the Termination not in the replacement descriptor

shall be stopped, and new signals are applied, except as follows.

Signals present in the replacement descriptor and containing the

KeepActive flag shall be continued if they are currently playing and

have not already completed. If a replacement signal descriptor

contains a signal that is not currently playing and contains the

KeepActive flag, that signal SHALL be ignored. If the replacement

descriptor contains a sequential signal list with the same identifier

as the existing descriptor, then

- the signal type and sequence of signals in the sequential signal

list in the replacement descriptor shall be ignored; and

- the playing of the signals in the sequential signal list in the

existing descriptor shall not be interrupted.

7.1.12 Audit descriptor

The Audit descriptor specifies what information is to be audited.

The Audit descriptor specifies the list of descriptors to be

returned. Audit may be used in any command to force the return of

any descriptor containing the current values of its properties,

events, signals and statistics even if that descriptor was not

present in the command, or had no underspecified parameters.

Possible items in the Audit descriptor are:

Modem

Mux

Events

Media

Signals

ObservedEvents

DigitMap

Statistics

Packages

EventBuffer

Audit may be empty, in which case, no descriptors are returned. This

is useful in Subtract, to inhibit return of statistics, especially

when using wildcard.

7.1.13 ServiceChange descriptor

The ServiceChangeDescriptor contains the following parameters:

. ServiceChangeMethod

. ServiceChangeReason

. ServiceChangeAddress

. ServiceChangeDelay

. ServiceChangeProfile

. ServiceChangeVersion

. ServiceChangeMGCId

. TimeStamp

. Extension

See 7.2.8.

7.1.14 DigitMap descriptor

7.1.14.1 DigitMap definition, creation, modification and deletion

A DigitMap is a dialing plan resident in the Media Gateway used for

detecting and reporting digit events received on a Termination. The

DigitMap descriptor contains a DigitMap name and the DigitMap to be

assigned. A digit map may be preloaded into the MG by management

action and referenced by name in an EventsDescriptor, may be defined

dynamically and subsequently referenced by name, or the actual

digitmap itself may be specified in the EventsDescriptor. It is

permissible for a digit map completion event within an Events

descriptor to refer by name to a DigitMap which is defined by a

DigitMap descriptor within the same command, regardless of the

transmitted order of the respective descriptors.

DigitMaps defined in a DigitMapDescriptor can occur in any of the

standard Termination manipulation Commands of the protocol. A

DigitMap, once defined, can be used on all Terminations specified by

the (possibly wildcarded) TerminationID in such a command. DigitMaps

defined on the root Termination are global and can be used on every

Termination in the MG, provided that a DigitMap with the same name

has not been defined on the given Termination. When a DigitMap is

defined dynamically in a DigitMap descriptor:

- A new DigitMap is created by specifying a name that is not yet

defined. The value shall be present.

- A DigitMap value is updated by supplying a new value for a name

that is already defined. Terminations presently using the

digitmap shall continue to use the old definition; subsequent

EventsDescriptors specifying the name, including any

EventsDescriptor in the command containing the DigitMap

descriptor, shall use the new one.

- A DigitMap is deleted by supplying an empty value for a name that

is already defined. Terminations presently using the digitmap

shall continue to use the old definition.

7.1.14.2 DigitMap Timers

The collection of digits according to a DigitMap may be protected by

three timers, viz. a start timer (T), short timer (S), and long timer

(L).

1) The start timer (T) is used prior to any digits having been

dialed. If the start timer is overridden with the value set to

zero (T=0), then the start timer shall be disabled. This implies

that the MG will wait indefinitely for digits.

2) If the Media Gateway can determine that at least one more digit is

needed for a digit string to match any of the allowed patterns in

the digit map, then the interdigit timer value should be set to a

long (L) duration (e.g., 16 seconds).

3) If the digit string has matched one of the patterns in a digit

map, but it is possible that more digits could be received which

would cause a match with a different pattern, then instead of

reporting the match immediately, the MG must apply the short timer

(S) and wait for more digits.

The timers are configurable parameters to a DigitMap. Default values

of these timers should be provisioned on the MG, but can be

overridden by values specified within the DigitMap.

7.1.14.3 DigitMap Syntax

The formal syntax of the digit map is described by the DigitMap rule

in the formal syntax description of the protocol (see Annex A and

Annex B). A DigitMap, according to this syntax, is defined either by

a string or by a list of strings. Each string in the list is an

alternative event sequence, specified either as a sequence of digit

map symbols or as a regular expression of digit map symbols. These

digit map symbols, the digits "0" through "9" and letters "A" through

a maximum value depending on the signalling system concerned, but

never exceeding "K", correspond to specified events within a package

which has been designated in the Events descriptor on the Termination

to which the digit map is being applied. (The mapping between events

and digit map symbols is defined in the documentation for packages

associated with channel-associated signalling systems such as DTMF,

MF, or R2. Digits "0" through "9" MUST be mapped to the

corresponding digit events within the signalling system concerned.

Letters should be allocated in logical fashion, facilitating the use

of range notation for alternative events.)

The letter "x" is used as a wildcard, designating any event

corresponding to symbols in the range "0"-"9". The string may also

contain explicit ranges and, more generally, explicit sets of

symbols, designating alternative events any one of which satisfies

that position of the digit map. Finally, the dot symbol "." stands

for zero or more repetitions of the event selector (event, range of

events, set of alternative events, or wildcard) that precedes it. As

a consequence of the third timing rule above, inter-event timing

while matching a terminal dot symbol uses the short timer by default.

In addition to these event symbols, the string may contain "S" and

"L" inter-event timing specifiers and the "Z" duration modifier. "S"

and "L" respectively indicate that the MG should use the short (S)

timer or the long (L) timer for subsequent events, overriding the

timing rules described above. If an explicit timing specifier is in

effect in one alternative event sequence, but none is given in any

other candidate alternative, the timer value set by the explicit

timing specifier must be used. If all sequences with explicit timing

controls are dropped from the candidate set, timing reverts to the

default rules given above. Finally, if conflicting timing specifiers

are in effect in different alternative sequences, the long timer

shall be used.

A "Z" designates a long duration event: placed in front of the

symbol(s) designating the event(s) which satisfy a given digit

position, it indicates that that position is satisfied only if the

duration of the event exceeds the long-duration threshold. The value

of this threshold is assumed to be provisioned in the MG.

7.1.14.4 DigitMap Completion Event

A digit map is active while the Events descriptor which invoked it is

active and it has not completed. A digit map completes when:

- a timer has expired; or

- an alternative event sequence has been matched and no other

alternative event sequence in the digit map could be matched

through detection of an additional event (unambiguous match); or

- an event has been detected such that a match to a complete

alternative event sequence of the digit map will be impossible no

matter what additional events are received.

Upon completion, a digit map completion event as defined in the

package providing the events being mapped into the digit map shall be

generated. At that point the digit map is deactivated. Subsequent

events in the package are processed as per the currently active event

processing mechanisms.

7.1.14.5 DigitMap Procedures

Pending completion, successive events shall be processed according to

the following rules:

1) The "current dial string", an internal variable, is initially

empty. The set of candidate alternative event sequences includes

all of the alternatives specified in the digit map.

2) At each step, a timer is set to wait for the next event, based

either on the default timing rules given above or on explicit

timing specified in one or more alternative event sequences. If

the timer expires and a member of the candidate set of

alternatives is fully satisfied, a timeout completion with full

match is reported. If the timer expires and part or none of any

candidate alternative is satisfied, a timeout completion with

partial match is reported.

3) If an event is detected before the timer expires, it is mapped to

a digit string symbol and provisionally added to the end of the

current dial string. The duration of the event (long or not long)

is noted if and only if this is relevant in the current symbol

position (because at least one of the candidate alternative event

sequences includes the "Z" modifier at this position in the

sequence).

4) The current dial string is compared to the candidate alternative

event sequences. If and only if a sequence expecting a

long-duration event at this position is matched (i.e., the event

had long duration and met the specification for this position),

then any alternative event sequences not specifying a long

duration event at this position are discarded, and the current

dial string is modified by inserting a "Z" in front of the symbol

representing the latest event. Any sequence expecting a long-

duration event at this position but not matching the observed

event is discarded from the candidate set. If alternative event

sequences not specifying a long duration event in the given

position remain in the candidate set after application of the

above rules, the observed event duration is treated as irrelevant

in assessing matches to them.

5) If exactly one candidate remains and it has been fully matched, a

completion event is generated indicating an unambiguous match. If

no candidates remain, the latest event is removed from the current

dial string and a completion event is generated indicating full

match if one of the candidates from the previous step was fully

satisfied before the latest event was detected, or partial match

otherwise. The event removed from the current dial string will

then be reported as per the currently active event processing

mechanisms.

6) If no completion event is reported out of step 5, processing

returns to step 2.

7.1.14.6 DigitMap Activation

A digit map is activated whenever a new Event descriptor is applied

to the Termination or embedded Event descriptor is activated, and

that Event descriptor contains a digit map completion event. The

digit map completion event contains an eventDM field in the requested

actions field. Each new activation of a digit map begins at step 1

of the above procedure, with a clear current dial string. Any

previous contents of the current dial string from an earlier

activation are lost.

A digit map completion event that does not contain an eventDM field

in its requested actions field is considered an error. Upon receipt

of such an event in an EventsDescriptor, a MG shall respond with an

error response, including Error 457 - Missing parameter in signal or

event.

7.1.14.7 Interaction Of DigitMap and Event Processing

While the digit map is activated, detection is enabled for all events

defined in the package containing the specified digit map completion

event. Normal event behaviour (e.g., stopping of signals unless the

digit completion event has the KeepActive flag enabled) continues to

apply for each such event detected, except that:

- the events in the package containing the specified digit map

completion event other than the completion event itself are not

individually notified and have no side-effects unless separately

enabled; and

- an event that triggers a partial match completion event is not

recognized and therefore has no side effects until reprocessed

following the recognition of the digit map completion event.

7.1.14.8 Wildcards

Note that if a package contains a digit map completion event, then an

event specification consisting of the package name with a wildcarded

ItemID (Property Name) will activate a digit map; to that end, the

event specification must include an eventDM field according to

section 7.1.14.6. If the package also contains the digit events

themselves, this form of event specification will cause the

individual events to be reported to the MGC as they are detected.

7.1.14.9 Example

As an example, consider the following dial plan:

0 Local operator

00 Long-distance operator

xxxx Local extension number (starts with 1-7)

8xxxxxxx Local number

#xxxxxxx Off-site extension

*xx Star services

91xxxxxxxxxx Long-distance number

9011 + up to 15 digits International number

If the DTMF detection package described in E.6 is used to collect the

dialed digits, then the dialing plan shown above results in the

following digit map:

(0 00[1-7]xxx8xxxxxxxFxxxxxxxExx91xxxxxxxxxx9011x.)

7.1.15 Statistics descriptor

The Statistics Descriptor provides information describing the status

and usage of a Termination during its existence within a specific

Context. There is a set of standard statistics kept for each

Termination where appropriate (number of octets sent and received for

example). The particular statistical properties that are reported

for a given Termination are determined by the Packages realized by

the Termination. By default, statistics are reported when the

Termination is Subtracted from the Context. This behaviour can be

overridden by including an empty AuditDescriptor in the Subtract

command. Statistics may also be returned from the AuditValue

command, or any Add/Move/Modify command using the Audit descriptor.

Statistics are cumulative; reporting Statistics does not reset them.

Statistics are reset when a Termination is Subtracted from a Context.

7.1.16 Packages descriptor

Used only with the AuditValue command, the PackageDescriptor returns

a list of Packages realized by the Termination.

7.1.17 ObservedEvents descriptor

ObservedEvents is supplied with the Notify command to inform the MGC

of which event(s) were detected. Used with the AuditValue command,

the ObservedEventsDescriptor returns events in the event buffer which

have not been Notified. ObservedEvents contains the

RequestIdentifier of the EventsDescriptor that triggered the

notification, the event(s) detected, optionally the detection time(s)

and any parameters of the observed event. Detection times are

reported with a precision of hundredths of a second.

7.1.18 Topology descriptor

A Topology descriptor is used to specify flow directions between

Terminations in a Context. Contrary to the descriptors in previous

subclauses, the Topology descriptor applies to a Context instead of a

Termination. The default topology of a Context is that each

Termination's transmission is received by all other Terminations.

The Topology descriptor is optional to implement. An MG that does

not support Topology descriptors, but receives a command containing

one, returns Error 444 Unsupported or unknown descriptor, and

optionally includes a string containing the name of the unsupported

Descriptor ("Topology") in the error text in the error descriptor.

The Topology descriptor occurs before the commands in an action. It

is possible to have an action containing only a Topology descriptor,

provided that the Context to which the action applies already exists.

A Topology descriptor consists of a sequence of triples of the form

(T1, T2, association). T1 and T2 specify Terminations within the

Context, possibly using the ALL or CHOOSE wildcard. The association

specifies how media flows between these two Terminations as follows.

- (T1, T2, isolate) means that the Terminations matching T2 do not

receive media from the Terminations matching T1, nor vice versa.

- (T1, T2, oneway) means that the Terminations that match T2 receive

media from the Terminations matching T1, but not vice versa. In

this case use of the ALL wildcard such that there are Terminations

that match both T1 and T2 is not allowed.

- (T1, T2, bothway) means that the Terminations matching T2 receive

media from the Terminations matching T1, and vice versa. In this

case it is allowed to use wildcards such that there are

Terminations that match both T1 and T2. However, if there is a

Termination that matches both, no loopback is introduced.

CHOOSE wildcards may be used in T1 and T2 as well, under the

following restrictions:

- the action (see clause 8) of which the topology descriptor is part

contains an Add command in which a CHOOSE wildcard is used;

- if a CHOOSE wildcard occurs in T1 or T2, then a partial name SHALL

NOT be specified.

The CHOOSE wildcard in a Topology descriptor matches the

TerminationID that the MG assigns in the first Add command that uses

a CHOOSE wildcard in the same action. An existing Termination that

matches T1 or T2 in the Context to which a Termination is added, is

connected to the newly added Termination as specified by the Topology

descriptor.

If a termination is not mentioned within a Topology Descriptor, any

topology associated with it remains unchanged. If, however, a new

termination is added into a context its association with the other

terminations within the context defaults to bothway, unless a

Topology Descriptor is given to change this (e.g., if T3 is added to

a context with T1 and T2 with topology (T3, T1, oneway) it will be

connected bothway to T2).

Figure 7 and the table following it show some examples of the effect

of including topology descriptors in actions. In these examples it

is assumed that the topology descriptors are applied in sequence.

+------------------+ +------------------+ +------------------+

+----+ +----+ +----+

T2 T2 T2

+----+ +----+ +----+

^ ^ ^ ^

+--+ +--+ +---+ +--+

v v v

+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+

T1 <--> T3 T1 <--> T3 T1 <--> T3

+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+

+------------------+ +------------------+ +------------------+

1. No Topology Desc. 2. T1, T2, Isolate 3. T3, T2, Oneway

+------------------+ +------------------+ +------------------+

+----+ +----+ +----+

T2 T2 T2

+----+ +----+ +----+

^ ^ ^

+--+ +---+ +--+ +--+

v v v v

+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+

T1 <--> T3 T1 <--> T3 T1 <--> T3

+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+

+------------------+ +------------------+ +------------------+

4. T2, T3 oneway 5. T2, T3 bothway 6. T1, T2 bothway

Note: the direction of the arrow indicates the direction of flow.

Figure 7: Example topologies

Topology Description

1 No topology descriptors When no topology descriptors are

included, all Terminations have a

bothway connection to all other

Terminations.

2 T1, T2 Isolate Removes the connection between T1 and

T2. T3 has a bothway connection with

both T1 and T2. T1 and T2 have bothway

connection to T3.

3 T3, T2 oneway A oneway connection from T3 to T2 (i.e.,

T2 receives media flow from T3). A

bothway connection between T1 and T3.

4 T2, T3 oneway A oneway connection between T2 to T3.

T1 and T3 remain bothway connected.

5 T2, T3 bothway T2 is bothway connected to T3. This

results in the same as 2.

6 T1, T2 bothway (T2, T3 All Terminations have a bothway

bothway and T1, T3 connection to all other Terminations.

bothway may be implied or

explicit).

A oneway connection must be implemented in such a way that the other

Terminations in the Context are not aware of the change in topology.

7.1.19 Error Descriptor

If a responder encounters an error when processing a transaction

request, it must include an error descriptor in its response. A

Notify request may contain an error descriptor as well.

An error descriptor consists of an IANA-registered error code,

optionally accompanied by an error text. H.248.8 contains a list of

valid error codes and error descriptions.

An error descriptor shall be specified at the "deepest level" that is

semantically appropriate for the error being described and that is

possible given any parsing problems with the original request. An

error descriptor may refer to a syntactical construct other than

where it appears. For example, Error descriptor 422 - Syntax Error

in Action, could appear within a command even though it refers to the

larger construct - the action - and not the particular command within

which it appears.

7.2 Command Application Programming Interface

Following is an Application Programming Interface (API) describing

the Commands of the protocol. This API is shown to illustrate the

Commands and their parameters and is not intended to specify

implementation (e.g., via use of blocking function calls). It

describes the input parameters in parentheses after the command name

and the return values in front of the Command. This is only for

descriptive purposes; the actual Command syntax and encoding are

specified in later subclauses. The order of parameters to commands

is not fixed. Descriptors may appear as parameters to commands in

any order. The descriptors SHALL be processed in the order in which

they appear.

Any reply to a command may contain an error descriptor; the API does

not specifically show this.

All parameters enclosed by square brackets ([. . .]) are considered

optional.

7.2.1 Add

The Add Command adds a Termination to a Context.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,DigitMapDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

[,PackagesDescriptor]

Add( TerminationID

[, MediaDescriptor]

[, ModemDescriptor]

[, MuxDescriptor]

[, EventsDescriptor]

[, EventBufferDescriptor]

[, SignalsDescriptor]

[, DigitMapDescriptor]

[, AuditDescriptor]

)

The TerminationID specifies the Termination to be added to the

Context. The Termination is either created, or taken from the null

Context. If a CHOOSE wildcard is used in the TerminationID, the

selected TerminationID will be returned. Wildcards may be used in an

Add, but such usage would be unusual. If the wildcard matches more

than one TerminationID, all possible matches are attempted, with

results reported for each one. The order of attempts when multiple

TerminationIDs match is not specified.

The optional MediaDescriptor describes all media streams.

The optional ModemDescriptor and MuxDescriptor specify a modem and

multiplexer if applicable. For convenience, if a Multiplex

descriptor is present in an Add command and lists any Terminations

that are not currently in the Context, such Terminations are added to

the Context as if individual Add commands listing the Terminations

were invoked. If an error occurs on such an implied Add, error 471 -

Implied Add for Multiplex failure shall be returned and further

processing of the command shall cease.

The EventsDescriptor parameter is optional. If present, it provides

the list of events that should be detected on the Termination.

The EventBufferDescriptor parameter is optional. If present, it

provides the list of events that the MG is requested to detect and

buffer when EventBufferControl equals LockStep.

The SignalsDescriptor parameter is optional. If present, it provides

the list of signals that should be applied to the Termination.

The DigitMapDescriptor parameter is optional. If present, it defines

a DigitMap definition that may be used in an EventsDescriptor.

The AuditDescriptor is optional. If present, the command will return

descriptors as specified in the AuditDescriptor.

All descriptors that can be modified could be returned by MG if a

parameter was underspecified or overspecified. ObservedEvents,

Statistics, and Packages, and the EventBuffer descriptors are

returned only if requested in the AuditDescriptor.

Add SHALL NOT be used on a Termination with a serviceState of

"OutofService".

7.2.2 Modify

The Modify Command modifies the properties of a Termination.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,DigitMapDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

[,PackagesDescriptor]

Modify( TerminationID

[, MediaDescriptor]

[, ModemDescriptor]

[, MuxDescriptor]

[, EventsDescriptor]

[, EventBufferDescriptor]

[, SignalsDescriptor]

[, DigitMapDescriptor]

[, AuditDescriptor]

)

The TerminationID may be specific if a single Termination in the

Context is to be modified. Use of wildcards in the TerminationID may

be appropriate for some operations. If the wildcard matches more

than one TerminationID, all possible matches are attempted, with

results reported for each one. The order of attempts when multiple

TerminationIDs match is not specified. The CHOOSE option is an

error, as the Modify command may only be used on existing

Terminations.

For convenience, if a Multiplex Descriptor is present in a Modify

command, then:

- if the new Multiplex Descriptor lists any Terminations that are

not currently in the Context, such Terminations are added to the

context as if individual commands listing the Terminations were

invoked.

- if any Terminations listed previously in the Multiplex Descriptor

are no longer present in the new Multiplex Descriptor, they are

subtracted from the context as if individual Subtract commands

listing the Terminations were invoked.

The remaining parameters to Modify are the same as those to Add.

Possible return values are the same as those to Add.

7.2.3 Subtract

The Subtract Command disconnects a Termination from its Context and

returns statistics on the Termination's participation in the Context.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,DigitMapDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

[,PackagesDescriptor]

Subtract(TerminationID

[, AuditDescriptor]

)

TerminationID in the input parameters represents the Termination that

is being subtracted. The TerminationID may be specific or may be a

wildcard value indicating that all (or a set of related) Terminations

in the Context of the Subtract Command are to be subtracted. If the

wildcard matches more than one TerminationID, all possible matches

are attempted, with results reported for each one. The order of

attempts when multiple TerminationIDs match is not specified.

The use of CHOOSE in the TerminationID is an error, as the Subtract

command may only be used on existing Terminations.

ALL may be used as the ContextID as well as the TerminationId in a

Subtract, which would have the effect of deleting all Contexts,

deleting all ephemeral Terminations, and returning all physical

Terminations to Null Context. Subtract of a termination from the

Null Context is not allowed.

For convenience, if a multiplexing Termination is the object of a

Subtract command, then any bearer Terminations listed in its

Multiplex Descriptor are subtracted from the context as if individual

Subtract commands listing the Terminations were invoked.

By default, the Statistics parameter is returned to report

information collected on the Termination or Terminations specified in

the Command. The information reported applies to the Termination's

or Terminations' existence in the Context from which it or they are

being subtracted.

The AuditDescriptor is optional. If present, the command will return

only those descriptors as specified in the AuditDescriptor, which may

be empty. If omitted, the Statistics descriptor is returned, by

default. Possible return values are the same as those to Add.

When a provisioned Termination is Subtracted from a Context, its

property values shall revert to:

- the default value, if specified for the property and not

overridden by provisioning;

- otherwise, the provisioned value.

7.2.4 Move

The Move Command moves a Termination to another Context from its

current Context in one atomic operation. The Move command is the

only command that refers to a Termination in a Context different from

that to which the command is applied. The Move command shall not be

used to move Terminations to or from the null Context.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,DigitMapDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

[,PackagesDescriptor]

Move( TerminationID

[, MediaDescriptor]

[, ModemDescriptor]

[, MuxDescriptor]

[, EventsDescriptor]

[, EventBufferDescriptor]

[, SignalsDescriptor]

[, DigitMapDescriptor]

[, AuditDescriptor]

)

The TerminationID specifies the Termination to be moved. It may be

wildcarded, but CHOOSE shall not be used in the TerminationID. If

the wildcard matches more than one TerminationID, all possible

matches are attempted, with results reported for each one. The order

of attempts when multiple TerminationIDs match is not specified. The

Context to which the Termination is moved is indicated by the target

ContextId in the Action. If the last remaining Termination is moved

out of a Context, the Context is deleted.

The Move command does not affect the properties of the Termination on

which it operates, except those properties explicitly modified by

descriptors included in the Move command. The AuditDescriptor with

the Statistics option, for example, would return statistics on the

Termination just prior to the Move. Possible descriptors returned

from Move are the same as for Add.

For convenience, if a multiplexing Termination is the object of a

Move command, then any bearer Terminations listed in its Multiplex

Descriptor are also moved as if individual Move commands listing the

Terminations were invoked.

Move SHALL NOT be used on a Termination with a serviceState of

"OutofService".

7.2.5 AuditValue

The AuditValue Command returns the current values of properties,

events, signals and statistics associated with Terminations.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,DigitMapDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

[,PackagesDescriptor]

AuditValue(TerminationID,

AuditDescriptor

)

TerminationID may be specific or wildcarded. If the wildcard matches

more than one TerminationID, all possible matches are attempted, with

results reported for each one. The order of attempts when multiple

TerminationIDs match is not specified. If a wildcarded response is

requested, only one command return is generated, with the contents

containing the union of the values of all Terminations matching the

wildcard. This convention may reduce the volume of data required to

audit a group of Terminations. Use of CHOOSE is an error.

The appropriate descriptors, with the current values for the

Termination, are returned from AuditValue. Values appearing in

multiple instances of a descriptor are defined to be alternate values

supported, with each parameter in a descriptor considered

independent.

ObservedEvents returns a list of events in the EventBuffer. If the

ObservedEventsDescriptor is audited while a DigitMap is active, the

returned ObservedEvents descriptor also includes a digit map

completion event that shows the current dial string but does not show

a Termination method.

EventBuffer returns the set of events and associated parameter values

currently enabled in the EventBufferDescriptor. PackagesDescriptor

returns a list of packages realized by the Termination.

DigitMapDescriptor returns the name or value of the current DigitMap

for the Termination. DigitMap requested in an AuditValue command

with TerminationID ALL returns all DigitMaps in the gateway.

Statistics returns the current values of all statistics being kept on

the Termination. Specifying an empty Audit descriptor results in

only the TerminationID being returned. This may be useful to get a

list of TerminationIDs when used with wildcard. Annexes A and B

provide a special syntax for presenting such a list in condensed

form, such that the AuditValue command tag does not have to be

repeated for each TerminationID.

AuditValue results depend on the Context, viz. specific, null, or

wildcarded. (Note that ContextID ALL does not include the null

Context.) The TerminationID may be specific, or wildcarded.

The following are examples of what is returned in case the context

and/or the termination is wildcarded and a wildcarded response has

been specified.

Assume that the gateway has 4 terminations: t1/1, t1/2, t2/1 and

t2/2. Assume that terminations t1/* have implemented packages aaa

and bbb and that terminations t2/* have implemented packages ccc and

ddd. Assume that Context 1 has t1/1 and t2/1 in it and that Context

2 has t1/2 and t2/2 in it.

The command:

Context=1{AuditValue=t1/1{Audit{Packages}}}

Returns:

Context=1{AuditValue=t1/1{Packages{aaa,bbb}}}

The command:

Context=*{AuditValue=t2/*{Audit{Packages}}}

Returns:

Context=1{AuditValue=t2/1{Packages{ccc,ddd}}},

Context=2{AuditValue=t2/2{Packages{ccc,ddd}}}

The command:

Context=*{W-AuditValue=t1/*{Audit{Packages}}}

Returns:

Context=*{W-AuditValue=t1/*{Packages{aaa,bbb}}}

Note: A wildcard response may also be used for other commands such as

Subtract.

The following illustrates other information that can be obtained with

the AuditValue Command:

ContextID TerminationID Information Obtained

Specific wildcard Audit of matching Terminations in a Context

Specific specific Audit of a single Termination in a Context

Null Root Audit of Media Gateway state and events

Null wildcard Audit of all matching Terminations in the

null Context

Null specific Audit of a single Termination outside of any

Context

All wildcard Audit of all matching Terminations and the

Context to which they are associated

All Root List of all ContextIds (the ContextID list

should be returned by using multiple action

replies, each containing a ContextID from

the list)

All Specific (Non-null) ContextID in which the

Termination currently exists

7.2.6 AuditCapabilities

The AuditCapabilities Command returns the possible values of

properties, events, signals and statistics associated with

Terminations.

TerminationID

[,MediaDescriptor]

[,ModemDescriptor]

[,MuxDescriptor]

[,EventsDescriptor]

[,SignalsDescriptor]

[,ObservedEventsDescriptor]

[,EventBufferDescriptor]

[,StatisticsDescriptor]

AuditCapabilities(TerminationID,

AuditDescriptor

)

The appropriate descriptors, with the possible values for the

Termination are returned from AuditCapabilities. Descriptors may be

repeated where there are multiple possible values. If a wildcarded

response is requested, only one command return is generated, with the

contents containing the union of the values of all Terminations

matching the wildcard. This convention may reduce the volume of data

required to audit a group of Terminations.

Interpretation of what capabilities are requested for various values

of ContextID and TerminationID is the same as in AuditValue.

The EventsDescriptor returns the list of possible events on the

Termination together with the list of all possible values for the

EventsDescriptor Parameters. EventBufferDescriptor returns the same

information as EventsDescriptor. The SignalsDescriptor returns the

list of possible signals that could be applied to the Termination

together with the list of all possible values for the Signals

Parameters. StatisticsDescriptor returns the names of the statistics

being kept on the termination. ObservedEventsDescriptor returns the

names of active events on the Termination. DigitMap and Packages are

not legal in AuditCapability.

The following illustrates other information that can be obtained with

the AuditCapabilties Command:

ContextID TerminationID Information Obtained

Specific wildcard Audit of matching Terminations in a Context

Specific specific Audit of a single Termination in a Context

Null Root Audit of MG state and events

Null wildcard Audit of all matching Terminations in the

Null Context

Null specific Audit of a single Termination outside of any

Context

All wildcard Audit of all matching Terminations and the

Context to which they are associated

All Root Same as for AuditValue

All Specific Same as for AuditValue

7.2.7 Notify

The Notify Command allows the Media Gateway to notify the Media

Gateway Controller of events occurring within the Media Gateway.

TerminationID

Notify(TerminationID,

ObservedEventsDescriptor,

[ErrorDescriptor]

)

The TerminationID parameter specifies the Termination issuing the

Notify Command. The TerminationID shall be a fully qualified name.

The ObservedEventsDescriptor contains the RequestID and a list of

events that the Media Gateway detected in the order that they were

detected. Each event in the list is accompanied by parameters

associated with the event and optionally an indication of the time

that the event was detected. Procedures for sending Notify commands

with RequestID equal to 0 are for further study.

Notify Commands with RequestID not equal to 0 shall occur only as the

result of detection of an event specified by an Events descriptor

which is active on the Termination concerned.

The RequestID returns the RequestID parameter of the EventsDescriptor

that triggered the Notify Command. It is used to correlate the

notification with the request that triggered it. The events in the

list must have been requested via the triggering EventsDescriptor or

embedded events descriptor unless the RequestID is 0 (which is for

further study).

The ErrorDescriptor may be sent in the Notify Command as a result of

Error 518 - Event buffer full.

7.2.8 ServiceChange

The ServiceChange Command allows the Media Gateway to notify the

Media Gateway Controller that a Termination or group of Terminations

is about to be taken out of service or has just been returned to

service. The Media Gateway Controller may indicate that

Termination(s) shall be taken out of or returned to service. The

Media Gateway may notify the MGC that the capability of a Termination

has changed. It also allows a MGC to hand over control of a MG to

another MGC.

TerminationID,

[ServiceChangeDescriptor]

ServiceChange ( TerminationID,

ServiceChangeDescriptor

)

The TerminationID parameter specifies the Termination(s) that are

taken out of or returned to service. Wildcarding of Termination

names is permitted, with the exception that the CHOOSE mechanism

shall not be used. Use of the "Root" TerminationID indicates a

ServiceChange affecting the entire Media Gateway.

The ServiceChangeDescriptor contains the following parameters as

required:

- ServiceChangeMethod

- ServiceChangeReason

- ServiceChangeDelay

- ServiceChangeAddress

- ServiceChangeProfile

- ServiceChangeVersion

- ServiceChangeMgcId

- TimeStamp

The ServiceChangeMethod parameter specifies the type of ServiceChange

that will or has occurred:

1) Graceful - indicates that the specified Terminations will be taken

out of service after the specified ServiceChangeDelay; established

connections are not yet affected, but the Media Gateway Controller

should refrain from establishing new connections and should

attempt to gracefully tear down existing connections on the

Termination(s) affected by the serviceChange command. The MG

should set Termination serviceState at the expiry of

ServiceChangeDelay or the removal of the Termination from an

active Context (whichever is first), to "out of service".

2) Forced - indicates that the specified Terminations were taken

abruptly out of service and any established connections associated

with them may be lost. For non-Root terminations, the MGC is

responsible for cleaning up the Context (if any) with which the

failed Termination is associated. At a minimum the Termination

shall be subtracted from the Context. The Termination

serviceState should be "out of service". For the root

termination, the MGC can assume that all connections are lost on

the MG and thus can consider that all the terminations have been

subtracted.

3) Restart - indicates that service will be restored on the specified

Terminations after expiration of the ServiceChangeDelay. The

serviceState should be set to "inService" upon expiry of

ServiceChangeDelay.

4) Disconnected - always applied with the Root TerminationID,

indicates that the MG lost communication with the MGC, but it was

subsequently restored to the same MGC (possibly after trying other

MGCs on a pre-provisioned list). Since MG state may have changed,

the MGC may wish to use the Audit command to resynchronize its

state with the MG's.

5) Handoff - sent from the MGC to the MG, this reason indicates that

the MGC is going out of service and a new MGC association must be

established. Sent from the MG to the MGC, this indicates that the

MG is attempting to establish a new association in accordance with

a Handoff received from the MGC with which it was previously

associated.

6) Failover - sent from MG to MGC to indicate the primary MG is out

of service and a secondary MG is taking over. This serviceChange

method is also sent from the MG to the MGC when the MG detects

that MGC has failed.

7) Another value whose meaning is mutually understood between the MG

and the MGC.

The ServiceChangeReason parameter specifies the reason why the

ServiceChange has or will occur. It consists of an alphanumeric

token (IANA registered) and, optionally, an explanatory string.

The optional ServiceChangeAddress parameter specifies the address

(e.g., IP port number for IP networks) to be used for subsequent

communications. It can be specified in the input parameter

descriptor or the returned result descriptor. ServiceChangeAddress

and ServiceChangeMgcId parameters must not both be present in the

ServiceChangeDescriptor or the ServiceChangeResultDescriptor. The

ServiceChangeAddress provides an address to be used within the

Context of the association currently being negotiated, while the

ServiceChangeMgcId provides an alternate address where the MG should

seek to establish another association. Note that the use of

ServiceChangeAddress is not encouraged. MGCs and MGs must be able to

cope with the ServiceChangeAddress being either a full address or

just a port number in the case of TCP transports.

The optional ServiceChangeDelay parameter is expressed in seconds.

If the delay is absent or set to zero, the delay value should be

considered to be null. In the case of a "graceful"

ServiceChangeMethod, a null delay indicates that the Media Gateway

Controller should wait for the natural removal of existing

connections and should not establish new connections. For "graceful"

only, a null delay means the MG must not set serviceState "out of

service" until the Termination is in the null Context.

The optional ServiceChangeProfile parameter specifies the Profile (if

any) of the protocol supported. The ServiceChangeProfile includes

the version of the profile supported.

The optional ServiceChangeVersion parameter contains the protocol

version and is used if protocol version negotiation occurs (see

11.3).

The optional TimeStamp parameter specifies the actual time as kept by

the sender. As such, it is not necessarily absolute time according

to, for example, a local time zone - it merely establishes an

arbitrary starting time against which all future timestamps

transmitted by a sender during this association shall be compared.

It can be used by the responder to determine how its notion of time

differs from that of its correspondent. TimeStamp is sent with a

precision of hundredths of a second.

The optional Extension parameter may contain any value whose meaning

is mutually understood by the MG and MGC.

A ServiceChange Command specifying the "Root" for the TerminationID

and ServiceChangeMethod equal to Restart is a registration command by

which a Media Gateway announces its existence to the Media Gateway

Controller. The Media Gateway may also announce a registration

command by specifying the "Root" for the TerminationID and

ServiceChangeMethod equal to Failover when the MG detects MGC

failures. The Media Gateway is expected to be provisioned with the

name of one primary and optionally some number of alternate Media

Gateway Controllers. Acknowledgement of the ServiceChange Command

completes the registration process, except when the MGC has returned

an alternative ServiceChangeMgcId as described in the following

paragraph. The MG may specify the transport ServiceChangeAddress to

be used by the MGC for sending messages in the ServiceChangeAddress

parameter in the input ServiceChangeDescriptor. The MG may specify

an address in the ServiceChangeAddress parameter of the ServiceChange

request, and the MGC may also do so in the ServiceChange reply. In

either case, the recipient must use the supplied address as the

destination for all subsequent transaction requests within the

association. At the same time, as indicated in clause 9, transaction

replies and pending indications must be sent to the address from

which the corresponding requests originated. This must be done even

if it implies extra messaging because commands and responses cannot

be packed together. The TimeStamp parameter shall be sent with a

registration command and its response.

The Media Gateway Controller may return a ServiceChangeMgcId

parameter that describes the Media Gateway Controller that should

preferably be contacted for further service by the Media Gateway. In

this case the Media Gateway shall reissue the ServiceChange command

to the new Media Gateway Controller. The MGC specified in a

ServiceChangeMgcId, if provided, shall be contacted before any

further alternate MGCs. On a HandOff message from MGC to MG, the

ServiceChangeMgcId is the new MGC that will take over from the

current MGC.

The return from ServiceChange is empty except when the Root

terminationID is used. In that case it includes the following

parameters as required:

- ServiceChangeAddress, if the responding MGC wishes to specify a

new destination for messages from the MG for the remainder of the

association;

- ServiceChangeMgcId, if the responding MGC does not wish to sustain

an association with the MG;

- ServiceChangeProfile, if the responder wishes to negotiate the

profile to be used for the association;

- ServiceChangeVersion, if the responder wishes to negotiate the

version of the protocol to be used for the association.

The following ServiceChangeReasons are defined. This list may be

extended by an IANA registration as outlined in 13.3.

900 Service Restored

901 Cold Boot

902 Warm Boot

903 MGC Directed Change

904 Termination malfunctioning

905 Termination taken out of service

906 Loss of lower layer connectivity (e.g., downstream sync)

907 Transmission Failure

908 MG Impending Failure

909 MGC Impending Failure

910 Media Capability Failure

911 Modem Capability Failure

912 Mux Capability Failure

913 Signal Capability Failure

914 Event Capability Failure

915 State Loss

7.2.9 Manipulating and Auditing Context Attributes

The commands of the protocol as discussed in the preceding subclauses

apply to Terminations. This subclause specifies how Contexts are

manipulated and audited.

Commands are grouped into actions (see clause 8). An action applies

to one Context. In addition to commands, an action may contain

Context manipulation and auditing instructions.

An action request sent to a MG may include a request to audit

attributes of a Context. An action may also include a request to

change the attributes of a Context.

The Context properties that may be included in an action reply are

used to return information to a MGC. This can be information

requested by an audit of Context attributes or details of the effect

of manipulation of a Context.

If a MG receives an action which contains both a request to audit

context attributes and a request to manipulate those attributes, the

response SHALL include the values of the attributes after processing

the manipulation request.

7.2.10 Generic Command Syntax

The protocol can be encoded in a binary format or in a text format.

MGCs should support both encoding formats. MGs may support both

formats.

The protocol syntax for the binary format of the protocol is defined

in Annex A. Annex C specifies the encoding of the Local and Remote

descriptors for use with the binary format.

A complete ABNF of the text encoding of the protocol per RFC2234 is

given in Annex B. SDP is used as the encoding of the Local and

Remote descriptors for use with the text encoding as modified in

7.1.8.

7.3 Command Error Codes

Errors consist of an IANA registered error code and an explanatory

string. Sending the explanatory string is optional. Implementations

are encouraged to append diagnostic information to the end of the

string.

When a MG reports an error to a MGC, it does so in an error

descriptor. An error descriptor consists of an error code and

optionally the associated explanatory string.

H.248.8 contains the error codes supported by Recommendations in the

H.248 sub-series.

8 Transactions

Commands between the Media Gateway Controller and the Media Gateway

are grouped into Transactions, each of which is identified by a

TransactionID. Transactions consist of one or more Actions. An

Action consists of a non-empty series of Commands, Context property

modifications, or Context property audits that are limited to

operating within a single Context. Consequently, each Action

typically specifies a ContextID. However, there are two

circumstances where a specific ContextID is not provided with an

Action. One is the case of modification of a Termination outside of

a Context. The other is where the controller requests the gateway to

create a new Context. Figure 8 is a graphic representation of the

Transaction, Action and Command relationships.

+----------------------------------------------------------+

Transaction x

+----------------------------------------------------+

Action 1

+---------+ +---------+ +---------+ +---------+

Command Command Command Command

1 2 3 4

+---------+ +---------+ +---------+ +---------+

+----------------------------------------------------+

+----------------------------------------------------+

Action 2

+---------+

Command

1

+---------+

+----------------------------------------------------+

+----------------------------------------------------+

Action 3

+---------+ +---------+ +---------+

Command Command Command

1 2 3

+---------+ +---------+ +---------+

+----------------------------------------------------+

+----------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 8: Transactions, Actions and Commands

Transactions are presented as TransactionRequests. Corresponding

responses to a TransactionRequest are received in a single reply,

possibly preceded by a number of TransactionPending messages (see

8.2.3).

Transactions guarantee ordered Command processing. That is, Commands

within a Transaction are executed sequentially. Ordering of

Transactions is NOT guaranteed - transactions may be executed in any

order, or simultaneously.

At the first failing Command in a Transaction, processing of the

remaining Commands in that Transaction stops. If a command contains

a wildcarded TerminationID, the command is attempted with each of the

actual TerminationIDs matching the wildcard. A response within the

TransactionReply is included for each matching TerminationID, even if

one or more instances generated an error. If any TerminationID

matching a wildcard results in an error when executed, any commands

following the wildcarded command are not attempted.

Commands may be marked as "Optional" which can override this

behaviour - if a command marked as Optional results in an error,

subsequent commands in the Transaction will be executed. If a

command fails, the MG shall as far as possible restore the state that

existed prior to the attempted execution of the command before

continuing with command processing.

A TransactionReply includes the results for all of the Commands in

the corresponding TransactionRequest. The TransactionReply includes

the return values for the Commands that were executed successfully,

and the Command and error descriptor for any Command that failed.

TransactionPending is used to periodically notify the receiver that a

Transaction has not completed yet, but is actively being processed.

Applications SHOULD implement an application level timer per

transaction. Expiration of the timer should cause a retransmission

of the request. Receipt of a Reply should cancel the timer. Receipt

of Pending should restart the timer.

8.1 Common parameters

8.1.1 Transaction Identifiers

Transactions are identified by a TransactionID, which is assigned by

sender and is unique within the scope of the sender. A response

containing an error descriptor to indicate that the TransactionID is

missing in a request shall use TransactionID 0 in the corresponding

TransactionReply.

8.1.2 Context Identifiers

Contexts are identified by a ContextID, which is assigned by the

Media Gateway and is unique within the scope of the Media Gateway.

The Media Gateway Controller shall use the ContextID supplied by the

Media Gateway in all subsequent Transactions relating to that

Context. The protocol makes reference to a distinguished value that

may be used by the Media Gateway Controller when referring to a

Termination that is currently not associated with a Context, namely

the null ContextID.

The CHOOSE wildcard is used to request that the Media Gateway create

a new Context.

The MGC may use the ALL wildcard to address all Contexts on the MG.

The null Context is not included when the ALL wildcard is used.

The MGC shall not use partially specified ContextIDs containing the

CHOOSE or ALL wildcards.

8.2 Transaction Application Programming Interface

Following is an Application Programming Interface (API) describing

the Transactions of the protocol. This API is shown to illustrate

the Transactions and their parameters and is not intended to specify

implementation (e.g., via use of blocking function calls). It will

describe the input parameters and return values expected to be used

by the various Transactions of the protocol from a very high level.

Transaction syntax and encodings are specified in later subclauses.

8.2.1 TransactionRequest

The TransactionRequest is invoked by the sender. There is one

Transaction per request invocation. A request contains one or more

Actions, each of which specifies its target Context and one or more

Commands per Context.

TransactionRequest(TransactionId {

ContextID {Command ... Command},

. . .

ContextID {Command ... Command } })

The TransactionID parameter must specify a value for later

correlation with the TransactionReply or TransactionPending response

from the receiver.

The ContextID parameter must specify a value to pertain to all

Commands that follow up to either the next specification of a

ContextID parameter or the end of the TransactionRequest, whichever

comes first.

The Command parameter represents one of the Commands mentioned in 7.2

(Command Application Programming Interface).

8.2.2 TransactionReply

The TransactionReply is invoked by the receiver. There is one reply

invocation per transaction. A reply contains one or more Actions,

each of which must specify its target Context and one or more

Responses per Context. The TransactionReply is invoked by the

responder when it has processed the TransactionRequest.

A TransactionRequest has been processed:

- when all actions in that TransactionRequest have been processed;

or

- when an error is encountered in processing that

TransactionRequest, except when the error is in an optional

command.

A command has been processed when all descriptors in that command

have been processed.

A SignalsDescriptor is considered to have been processed when it has

been established that the descriptor is syntactically valid, the

requested signals are supported and they have been queued to be

applied.

An EventsDescriptor or EventBufferDescriptor is considered to have

been processed when it has been established that the descriptor is

syntactically valid, the requested events can be observed, any

embedded signals can be generated, any embedded events can be

detected, and the MG has been brought into a state in which the

events will be detected.

TransactionReply(TransactionID {

ContextID { Response ... Response },

. . .

ContextID { Response ... Response } })

The TransactionID parameter must be the same as that of the

corresponding TransactionRequest.

The ContextID parameter must specify a value to pertain to all

Responses for the action. The ContextID may be specific, all or

null.

Each of the Response parameters represents a return value as

mentioned in 7.2, or an error descriptor if the command execution

encountered an error. Commands after the point of failure are not

processed and, therefore, Responses are not issued for them.

An exception to this occurs if a command has been marked as optional

in the Transaction request. If the optional command generates an

error, the transaction still continues to execute, so the Reply

would, in this case, have Responses after an Error.

Section 7.1.19 Error Descriptor specifies the generation of error

descriptors. The text below discusses several individual cases.

If the receiver encounters an error in processing a ContextID, the

requested Action response will consist of the Context ID and a single

error descriptor, 422 - Syntax Error in Action.

If the receiver encounters an error such that it cannot determine a

legal Action, it will return a TransactionReply consisting of the

TransactionID and a single error descriptor, 422 - Syntax Error in

Action. If the end of an action cannot be reliably determined but

one or more commands can be parsed, it will process them and then

send 422 - Syntax Error in Action as the last action for the

transaction. If the receiver encounters an error such that is cannot

determine a legal Transaction, it will return a TransactionReply with

a null TransactionID and a single error descriptor (403 - Syntax

Error in TransactionRequest).

If the end of a transaction cannot be reliably determined and one or

more Actions can be parsed, it will process them and then return 403

- Syntax Error in Transaction as the last action reply for the

transaction. If no Actions can be parsed, it will return 403 -

Syntax Error in TransactionRequest as the only reply.

If the terminationID cannot be reliably determined, it will send 442

- Syntax Error in Command as the action reply.

If the end of a command cannot be reliably determined, it will return

442 - Syntax Error in Command as the reply to the last action it can

parse.

8.2.3 TransactionPending

The receiver invokes the TransactionPending. A TransactionPending

indicates that the Transaction is actively being processed, but has

not been completed. It is used to prevent the sender from assuming

the TransactionRequest was lost where the Transaction will take some

time to complete.

TransactionPending(TransactionID { } )

The TransactionID parameter must be the same as that of the

corresponding TransactionRequest. A property of root

(normalMGExecutionTime) is settable by the MGC to indicate the

interval within which the MGC expects a response to any transaction

from the MG. Another property (normalMGCExecutionTime) is settable

by the MGC to indicate the interval within which the MG should expect

a response to any transaction from the MGC. Senders may receive more

than one TransactionPending for a command. If a duplicate request is

received when pending, the responder may send a duplicate pending

immediately, or continue waiting for its timer to trigger another

TransactionPending.

8.3 Messages

Multiple Transactions can be concatenated into a Message. Messages

have a header, which includes the identity of the sender. The

Message Identifier (MID) of a message is set to a provisioned name

(e.g., domain address/domain name/device name) of the entity

transmitting the message. Domain name is a suggested default. An

H.248.1 entity (MG/MGC) must consistently use the same MID in all

messages it originates for the duration of control association with

the peer (MGC/MG).

Every Message contains a Version Number identifying the version of

the protocol the message conforms to. Versions consist of one or two

digits, beginning with version 1 for the present version of the

protocol.

The transactions in a message are treated independently. There is no

order implied; there is no application or protocol acknowledgement of

a message. A message is essentially a transport mechanism. For

example, message X containing transaction requests A, B, and C may be

responded to with message Y containing replies to A and C and message

Z containing the reply to B. Likewise, message L containing request

D and message M containing request E may be responded to with message

N containing replies to both D and E.

9 Transport

The transport mechanism for the protocol should allow the reliable

transport of transactions between a MGC and MG. The transport shall

remain independent of what particular commands are being sent and

shall be applicable to all application states. There are several

transports defined for the protocol, which are defined in Annexes to

this RFCand other Recommendations of the H.248

sub-series. Additional Transports may be defined as additional

Recommendations of the H.248 sub-series. For transport of the

protocol over IP, MGCs shall implement both TCP and UDP/ALF, a MG

shall implement TCP or UDP/ALF or both.

The MG is provisioned with a name or address (such as DNS name or IP

address) of a primary and zero or more secondary MGCs (see 7.2.8)

that is the address the MG uses to send messages to the MGC. If TCP

or UDP is used as the protocol transport and the port to which the

initial ServiceChange request is to be sent is not otherwise known,

that request should be sent to the default port number for the

protocol. This port number is 2944 for text-encoded operation or

2945 for binary-encoded operation, for either UDP or TCP. The MGC

receives the message containing the ServiceChange request from the MG

and can determine the MG's address from it. As described in 7.2.8,

either the MG or the MGC may supply an address in the

ServiceChangeAddress parameter to which subsequent transaction

requests must be addressed, but responses (including the response to

the initial ServiceChange request) must always be sent back to the

address which was the source of the corresponding request. For

example, in IP networks, this is the source address in the IP header

and the source port number in the TCP/UDP/SCTP header.

9.1 Ordering of Commands

This RFCdoes not mandate that the underlying transport protocol

guarantees the sequencing of transactions sent to an entity. This

property tends to maximize the timeliness of actions, but it has a

few drawbacks. For example:

- Notify commands may be delayed and arrive at the MGC after the

transmission of a new command changing the EventsDescriptor.

- If a new command is transmitted before a previous one is

acknowledged, there is no guarantee that prior command will be

executed before the new one.

Media Gateway Controllers that want to guarantee consistent operation

of the Media Gateway may use the following rules. These rules are

with respect to commands that are in different transactions.

Commands that are in the same transaction are executed in order (see

clause 8).

1) When a Media Gateway handles several Terminations, commands

pertaining to the different Terminations may be sent in parallel,

for example following a model where each Termination (or group of

Terminations) is controlled by its own process or its own thread.

2) On a Termination, there should normally be at most one outstanding

command (Add or Modify or Move), unless the outstanding commands

are in the same transaction. However, a Subtract command may be

issued at any time. In consequence, a Media Gateway may sometimes

receive a Modify command that applies to a previously subtracted

Termination. Such commands should be ignored, and an error code

should be returned.

3) For transports that do not guarantee in-sequence delivery of

messages (i.e., UDP), there should normally be on a given

Termination at most one outstanding Notify command at any time.

4) In some cases, an implicitly or explicitly wildcarded Subtract

command that applies to a group of Terminations may step in front

of a pending Add command. The Media Gateway Controller should

individually delete all Terminations for which an Add command was

pending at the time of the global Subtract command. Also, new Add

commands for Terminations named by the wildcarding (or implied in

a Multiplex descriptor) should not be sent until the wildcarded

Subtract command is acknowledged.

5) AuditValue and AuditCapability are not subject to any sequencing.

6) ServiceChange shall always be the first command sent by a MG as

defined by the restart procedure. Any other command or response

must be delivered after this ServiceChange command.

These rules do not affect the command responder, which should always

respond to commands.

9.2 Protection against Restart Avalanche

In the event that a large number of Media Gateways are powered on

simultaneously and they were to all initiate a ServiceChange

transaction, the Media Gateway Controller would very likely be

swamped, leading to message losses and network congestion during the

critical period of service restoration. In order to prevent such

avalanches, the following behaviour is suggested:

1) When a Media Gateway is powered on, it should initiate a restart

timer to a random value, uniformly distributed between 0 and a

maximum waiting delay (MWD). Care should be taken to avoid

synchronicity of the random number generation between multiple

Media Gateways that would use the same algorithm.

2) The Media Gateway should then wait for either the end of this

timer or the detection of a local user activity, such as for

example an off-hook transition on a residential Media Gateway.

3) When the timer elapses, or when an activity is detected, the Media

Gateway should initiate the restart procedure.

The restart procedure simply requires the MG to guarantee that the

first message that the Media Gateway Controller sees from this MG is

a ServiceChange message informing the Media Gateway Controller about

the restart.

NOTE - The value of MWD is a configuration parameter that depends

on the type of the Media Gateway. The following reasoning may be

used to determine the value of this delay on residential gateways.

Media Gateway Controllers are typically dimensioned to handle the

peak hour traffic load, during which, in average, 10% of the lines

will be busy, placing calls whose average duration is typically 3

minutes. The processing of a call typically involves 5 to 6 Media

Gateway Controller transactions between each Media Gateway and the

Media Gateway Controller. This simple calculation shows that the

Media Gateway Controller is expected to handle 5 to 6 transactions

for each Termination, every 30 minutes on average, or, to put it

otherwise, about one transaction per Termination every 5 to 6 minutes

on average. This suggests that a reasonable value of MWD for a

residential gateway would be 10 to 12 minutes. In the absence of

explicit configuration, residential gateways should adopt a value of

600 seconds for MWD.

The same reasoning suggests that the value of MWD should be much

shorter for trunking gateways or for business gateways, because they

handle a large number of Terminations, and also because the usage

rate of these Terminations is much higher than 10% during the peak

busy hour, a typical value being 60%. These Terminations, during the

peak hour, are this expected to contribute about one transaction per

minute to the Media Gateway Controller load. A reasonable algorithm

is to make the value of MWD per "trunk" Termination six times shorter

than the MWD per residential gateway, and also inversely proportional

to the number of Terminations that are being restarted. For example

MWD should be set to 2.5 seconds for a gateway that handles a T1

line, or to 60 milliseconds for a gateway that handles a T3 line.

10 Security Considerations

This clause covers security when using the protocol in an IP

environment.

10.1 Protection of Protocol Connections

A security mechanism is clearly needed to prevent unauthorized

entities from using the protocol defined in this RFCfor setting up

unauthorized calls or interfering with authorized calls. The

security mechanism for the protocol when transported over IP networks

is IPsec [RFC2401 to RFC2411].

The AH header [RFC2402] affords data origin authentication,

connectionless integrity and optional anti-replay protection of

messages passed between the MG and the MGC. The ESP header [RFC

2406] provides confidentiality of messages, if desired. For

instance, the ESP encryption service should be requested if the

session descriptions are used to carry session keys, as defined in

SDP.

Implementations of the protocol defined in this RFCemploying the ESP

header SHALL comply with section 5 of [RFC2406], which defines a

minimum set of algorithms for integrity checking and encryption.

Similarly, implementations employing the AH header SHALL comply with

section 5 of [RFC2402], which defines a minimum set of algorithms

for integrity checking using manual keys.

Implementations SHOULD use IKE [RFC2409] to permit more robust

keying options. Implementations employing IKE SHOULD support

authentication with RSA signatures and RSA public key encryption.

10.2 Interim AH scheme

Implementation of IPsec requires that the AH or ESP header be

inserted immediately after the IP header. This cannot be easily done

at the application level. Therefore, this presents a deployment

problem for the protocol defined in this RFCwhere the underlying

network implementation does not support IPsec.

As an interim solution, an optional AH header is defined within the

H.248.1 protocol header. The header fields are exactly those of the

SPI, SEQUENCE NUMBER and DATA fields as defined in [RFC2402]. The

semantics of the header fields are the same as the "transport mode"

of [RFC2402], except for the calculation of the Integrity Check

Value (ICV). In IPsec, the ICV is calculated over the entire IP

packet including the IP header. This prevents spoofing of the IP

addresses. To retain the same functionality, the ICV calculation

should be performed across all the transactions (concatenated) in the

message prepended by a synthesized IP header consisting of a 32-bit

source IP address, a 32-bit destination address and a 16-bit UDP

destination port encoded as 20 hex digits. When the interim AH

mechanism is employed when TCP is the transport Layer, the UDP Port

above becomes the TCP port, and all other operations are the same.

Implementations of the H.248.1 protocol SHALL implement IPsec where

the underlying operating system and the transport network supports

IPsec. Implementations of the protocol using IPv4 SHALL implement

the interim AH scheme. However, this interim scheme SHALL NOT be

used when the underlying network layer supports IPsec. IPv6

implementations are assumed to support IPsec and SHALL NOT use the

interim AH scheme.

All implementations of the interim AH mechanism SHALL comply with

section 5 of RFC2402 which defines a minimum set of algorithms for

integrity checking using manual keys.

The interim AH interim scheme does not provide protection against

eavesdropping, thus forbidding third parties from monitoring the

connections set up by a given Termination. Also, it does not provide

protection against replay attacks. These procedures do not

necessarily protect against denial of service attacks by misbehaving

MGs or misbehaving MGCs. However, they will provide an

identification of these misbehaving entities, which should then be

deprived of their authorization through maintenance procedures.

10.3 Protection of Media Connections

The protocol allows the MGC to provide MGs with "session keys" that

can be used to encrypt the audio messages, protecting against

eavesdropping.

A specific problem of packet networks is "uncontrolled barge-in".

This attack can be performed by directing media packets to the IP

address and UDP port used by a connection. If no protection is

implemented, the packets must be decompressed and the signals must be

played on the "line side".

A basic protection against this attack is to only accept packets from

known sources, checking for example that the IP source address and

UDP source port match the values announced in the Remote descriptor.

This has two inconveniences: it slows down connection establishment

and it can be fooled by source spoofing:

- To enable the address-based protection, the MGC must obtain the

remote session description of the egress MG and pass it to the

ingress MG. This requires at least one network round trip, and

leaves us with a dilemma: either allow the call to proceed without

waiting for the round trip to complete, and risk for example,

"clipping" a remote announcement, or wait for the full round trip

and settle for slower call-set up procedures.

- Source spoofing is only effective if the attacker can obtain valid

pairs of source destination addresses and ports, for example by

listening to a fraction of the traffic. To fight source spoofing,

one could try to control all access points to the network. But

this is in practice very hard to achieve.

An alternative to checking the source address is to encrypt and

authenticate the packets, using a secret key that is conveyed during

the call set-up procedure. This will not slow down the call set-up,

and provides strong protection against address spoofing.

11 MG-MGC Control Interface

The control association between MG and MGC is initiated at MG cold

start, and announced by a ServiceChange message, but can be changed

by subsequent events, such as failures or manual service events.

While the protocol does not have an explicit mechanism to support

multiple MGCs controlling a physical MG, it has been designed to

support the multiple logical MG (within a single physical MG) that

can be associated with different MGCs.

11.1 Multiple Virtual MGs

A physical Media Gateway may be partitioned into one or more Virtual

MGs. A virtual MG consists of a set of statically partitioned

physical Terminations and/or sets of ephemeral Terminations. A

physical Termination is controlled by one MGC. The model does not

require that other resources be statically allocated, just

Terminations. The mechanism for allocating Terminations to virtual

MGs is a management method outside the scope of the protocol. Each

of the virtual MGs appears to the MGC as a complete MG client.

A physical MG may have only one network interface, which must be

shared across virtual MGs. In such a case, the packet/cell side

Termination is shared. It should be noted however, that in use, such

interfaces require an ephemeral instance of the Termination to be

created per flow, and thus sharing the Termination is

straightforward. This mechanism does lead to a complication, namely

that the MG must always know which of its controlling MGCs should be

notified if an event occurs on the interface.

In normal operation, the Virtual MG will be instructed by the MGC to

create network flows (if it is the originating side), or to expect

flow requests (if it is the terminating side), and no confusion will

arise. However, if an unexpected event occurs, the Virtual MG must

know what to do with respect to the physical resources it is

controlling.

If recovering from the event requires manipulation of a physical

interface's state, only one MGC should do so. These issues are

resolved by allowing any of the MGCs to create EventsDescriptors to

be notified of such events, but only one MGC can have read/write

access to the physical interface properties; all other MGCs have

read-only access. The management mechanism is used to designate

which MGC has read/write capability, and is designated the Master

MGC.

Each virtual MG has its own Root Termination. In most cases the

values for the properties of the Root Termination are independently

settable by each MGC. Where there can only be one value, the

parameter is read-only to all but the Master MGC.

ServiceChange may only be applied to a Termination or set of

Terminations partitioned to the Virtual MG or created (in the case of

ephemeral Terminations) by that Virtual MG.

11.2 Cold start

A MG is pre-provisioned by a management mechanism outside the scope

of this protocol with a primary and (optionally) an ordered list of

secondary MGCs. Upon a cold start of the MG, it will issue a

ServiceChange command with a "Restart" method, on the Root

Termination to its primary MGC. If the MGC accepts the MG, it sends

a Transaction Reply not including a ServiceChangeMgcId parameter. If

the MGC does not accept the MG's registration, it sends a Transaction

Reply, providing the address of an alternate MGC to be contacted by

including a ServiceChangeMgcId parameter.

If the MG receives a Transaction Reply that includes a

ServiceChangeMgcId parameter, it sends a ServiceChange to the MGC

specified in the ServiceChangeMgcId. It continues this process until

it gets a controlling MGC to accept its registration, or it fails to

get a reply. Upon failure to obtain a reply, either from the primary

MGC, or a designated successor, the MG tries its pre-provisioned

secondary MGCs, in order. If the MG is unable to establish a control

relationship with any MGC, it shall wait a random amount of time as

described in 9.2 and then start contacting its primary, and if

necessary, its secondary MGCs again.

It is possible that the reply to a ServiceChange with Restart will be

lost, and a command will be received by the MG prior to the receipt

of the ServiceChange response. The MG shall issue Error 505 -

Command Received before a ServiceChange Reply has been received.

11.3 Negotiation of protocol version

The first ServiceChange command from a MG shall contain the version

number of the protocol supported by the MG in the

ServiceChangeVersion parameter. Upon receiving such a message, if

the MGC supports only a lower version, then the MGC shall send a

ServiceChangeReply with the lower version and thereafter all the

messages between MG and MGC shall conform to the lower version of the

protocol. If the MG is unable to comply and it has established a

transport connection to the MGC, it should close that connection. In

any event, it should reject all subsequent requests from the MGC with

error 406 - Version Not Supported.

If the MGC supports a higher version than the MG but is able to

support the lower version proposed by the MG, it shall send a

ServiceChangeReply with the lower version and thereafter all the

messages between MG and MGC shall conform to the lower version of the

protocol. If the MGC is unable to comply, it shall reject the

association, with error 406 - Version Not Supported.

Protocol version negotiation may also occur at "handoff" and

"failover" ServiceChanges.

When extending the protocol with new versions, the following rules

should be followed:

1) Existing protocol elements, i.e., procedures, parameters,

descriptor, property, values, should not be changed unless a

protocol error needs to be corrected or it becomes necessary to

change the operation of the service that is being supported by the

protocol.

2) The semantics of a command, a parameter, a descriptor, a property,

or a value should not be changed.

3) Established rules for formatting and encoding messages and

parameters should not be modified.

4) When information elements are found to be obsolete they can be

marked as not used. However, the identifier for that information

element will be marked as reserved. In that way it can not be

used in future versions.

11.4 Failure of a MG

If a MG fails, but is capable of sending a message to the MGC, it

sends a ServiceChange with an appropriate method (graceful or forced)

and specifies the Root TerminationID. When it returns to service, it

sends a ServiceChange with a "Restart" method.

Allowing the MGC to send duplicate messages to both MGs accommodates

pairs of MGs that are capable of redundant failover of one of the

MGs. Only the Working MG shall accept or reject transactions. Upon

failover, the primary MG sends a ServiceChange command with a

"Failover" method and a "MG Impending Failure" reason. The MGC then

uses the secondary MG as the active MG. When the error condition is

repaired, the Working MG can send a "ServiceChange" with a "Restart"

method.

Note: Redundant failover MGs require a reliable transport, because

the protocol provides no means for a secondary MG running ALF to

acknowledge messages sent from the MGC.

11.5 Failure of an MGC

If the MG detects a failure of its controlling MGC, it attempts to

contact the next MGC on its pre-provisioned list. It starts its

attempts at the beginning (primary MGC), unless that was the MGC that

failed, in which case it starts at its first secondary MGC. It sends

a ServiceChange message with a "Failover" method and a "MGC Impending

Failure" reason. If the MG is unable to establish a control

relationship with any MGC, it shall wait a random amount of time as

described in section 9.2 and then start again contacting its primary,

and (if necessary) its secondary MGCs. When contacting its

previously controlling MGC, the MG sends the ServiceChange message

with "Disconnected" method.

In partial failure, or for manual maintenance reasons, an MGC may

wish to direct its controlled MGs to use a different MGC. To do so,

it sends a ServiceChange method to the MG with a "HandOff" method,

and its designated replacement in ServiceChangeMgcId. If "HandOff"

is supported, the MG shall send a ServiceChange message with a

"Handoff" method and a "MGC directed change" reason to the designated

MGC. If it fails to get a reply from the designated MGC, the MG

shall behave as if its MGC failed, and start contacting secondary

MGCs as specified in the previous paragraph. If the MG is unable to

establish a control relationship with any MGC, it shall wait a random

amount of time as described in 9.2 and then start contacting its

primary, and if necessary, its secondary MGCs again.

No recommendation is made on how the MGCs involved in the Handoff

maintain state information; this is considered to be out of scope of

this RFC. The MGC and MG may take the following steps when Handoff

occurs. When the MGC initiates a HandOff, the handover should be

transparent to Operations on the Media Gateway. Transactions can be

executed in any order, and could be in progress when the

ServiceChange is executed. Accordingly, commands in progress

continue and replies to all commands from the original MGC must be

sent to the transport address from which they were sent. If the

service relationship with the sending MGC has ended, the replies

should be discarded. The MG may receive outstanding transaction

replies from the new MGC. No new messages shall be sent to the new

MGC until the control association is established. Repeated

transaction requests shall be directed to the new MGC. The MG shall

maintain state on all Terminations and Contexts.

It is possible that the MGC could be implemented in such a way that a

failed MGC is replaced by a working MGC where the identity of the new

MGC is the same as the failed one. In such a case,

ServiceChangeMgcId would be specified with the previous value and the

MG shall behave as if the value was changed, and send a ServiceChange

message, as above.

Pairs of MGCs that are capable of redundant failover can notify the

controlled MGs of the failover by the above mechanism.

12 Package definition

The primary mechanism for extension is by means of Packages.

Packages define additional Properties, Events, Signals and Statistics

that may occur on Terminations.

Packages defined by IETF will appear in separate RFCs.

Packages defined by ITU-T may appear in the relevant Recommendations

(e.g., as Recommendations of the H.248 sub-series).

1) A public document or a standard forum document, which can be

referenced as the document that describes the package following

the guideline above, should be specified.

2) The document shall specify the version of the Package that it

describes.

3) The document should be available on a public web server and should

have a stable URL. The site should provide a mechanism to provide

comments and appropriate responses should be returned.

12.1 Guidelines for defining packages

Packages define Properties, Events, Signals, and Statistics.

Packages may also define new error codes according to the guidelines

given in 13.2. This is a matter of documentary convenience: the

package documentation is submitted to IANA in support of the error

code registration. If a package is modified, it is unnecessary to

provide IANA with a new document reference in support of the error

code unless the description of the error code itself is modified.

Names of all such defined constructs shall consist of the PackageID

(which uniquely identifies the package) and the ID of the item (which

uniquely identifies the item in that package). In the text encoding

the two shall be separated by a forward slash ("/") character.

Example: togen/playtone is the text encoding to refer to the play

tone signal in the tone generation package.

A Package will contain the following sections:

12.1.1 Package

Overall description of the package, specifying:

Package Name: only descriptive

PackageID: is an identifier

Description:

Version:

A new version of a package can only add additional Properties,

Events, Signals, Statistics and new possible values for an

existing parameter described in the original package. No

deletions or modifications shall be allowed. A version is an

integer in the range from 1 to 99.

Designed to be extended only (Optional):

This indicates that the package has been expressly designed to

be extended by others, not to be directly referenced. For

example, the package may not have any function on its own or be

nonsensical on its own. The MG SHOULD NOT publish this

PackageID when reporting packages.

Extends (Optional): existing package Descriptor

A package may extend an existing package. The version of the

original package must be specified. When a package extends

another package it shall only add additional Properties,

Events, Signals, Statistics and new possible values for an

existing parameter described in the original package. An

extended package shall not redefine or overload an identifier

defined in the original package and packages it may have

extended (multiple levels of extension). Hence, if package B

version 1 extends package A version 1, version 2 of B will not

be able to extend the A version 2 if A version 2 defines a name

already in B version 1.

12.1.2 Properties

Properties defined by the package, specifying:

Property Name: only descriptive

PropertyID: is an identifier

Description:

Type: One of:

Boolean

String: UTF-8 string

Octet String: A number of octets. See Annex A and Annex B.3

for encoding

Integer: 4 byte signed integer

Double: 8 byte signed integer

Character: unicode UTF-8 encoding of a single letter. Could be

more than one octet.

Enumeration: one of a list of possible unique values (see 12.3)

Sub-list: a list of several values from a list. The type of

sub-list SHALL also be specified. The type shall be chosen

from the types specified in this section (with the exception of

sub-list). For example, Type: sub-list of enumeration. The

encoding of sub-lists is specified in Annexes A and B.3.

Possible values:

A package MUST specify either a specific set of values or a

description of how values are determined. A package MUST also

specify a default value or the default behaviour when the value

is omitted from its descriptor. For example, a package may

specify that procedures related to the property are suspended

when its value is omitted. A default value (but not

procedures)

may be specified as provisionable.

Defined in:

Which H.248.1 descriptor the property is defined in.

LocalControl is for stream dependent properties.

TerminationState is for stream independent properties. These

are expected to be the most common cases, but it is possible

for properties to be defined in other descriptors.

Characteristics: Read/Write or both, and (optionally), global:

Indicates whether a property is read-only, or read-write, and

if it is global. If Global is omitted, the property is not

global. If a property is declared as global, the value of the

property is shared by all Terminations realizing the package.

12.1.3 Events

Events defined by the package, specifying:

Event name: only descriptive

EventID: is an identifier

Description:

EventsDescriptor Parameters:

Parameters used by the MGC to configure the event, and found in

the EventsDescriptor. See 12.2.

ObservedEventsDescriptor Parameters:

Parameters returned to the MGC in Notify requests and in

replies to command requests from the MGC that audit

ObservedEventsDescriptor, and found in the

ObservedEventsDescriptor. See 12.2.

12.1.4 Signals

Signals defined by the package, specifying:

Signal Name: only descriptive

SignalID: is an identifier. SignalID is used in a

SignalsDescriptor

Description

SignalType: one of:

OO (On/Off)

TO (TimeOut)

BR (Brief)

NOTE - SignalType may be defined such that it is dependent on the

value of one or more parameters. The package MUST specify a

default signal type. If the default type is TO, the package MUST

specify a default duration which may be provisioned. A default

duration is meaningless for BR.

Duration: in hundredths of seconds

Additional Parameters: see 12.2

12.1.5 Statistics

Statistics defined by the package, specifying:

Statistic name: only descriptive

StatisticID: is an identifier

StatisticID is used in a StatisticsDescriptor

Description:

Units: unit of measure, e.g., milliseconds, packets

12.1.6 Procedures

Additional guidance on the use of the package.

12.2 Guidelines to defining Parameters to Events and Signals

Parameter Name: only descriptive

ParameterID: is an identifier. The textual ParameterID of parameters

to Events and Signals shall not start with "EPA" and "SPA",

respectively. The textual ParameterID shall also not be "ST",

"Stream", "SY", "SignalType", "DR", "Duration", "NC",

"NotifyCompletion", "KA", "Keepactive", "EB", "Embed", "DM" or

"DigitMap".

Type: One of:

Boolean

String: UTF-8 octet string

Octet String: A number of octets. See Annex A and Annex B.3 for

encoding

Integer: 4-octet signed integer

Double: 8-octet signed integer

Character: unicode UTF-8 encoding of a single letter. Could be

more than one octet.

Enumeration: one of a list of possible unique values (see 12.3)

Sub-list: a list of several values from a list (not supported for

statistics). The type of sub-list SHALL also be specified. The

type shall be chosen from the types specified in this section

(with the exception of sub-list). For example, Type: sub-list of

enumeration. The encoding of sub-lists is specified in Annexes A

and B.3.

Possible values:

A package MUST specify either a specific set of values or a

description of how values are determined. A package MUST also

specify a default value or the default behavior when the value is

omitted from its descriptor. For example, a package may specify

that procedures related to the parameter are suspended when it

value is omitted. A default value (but not procedures) may be

specified as provisionable.

Description:

12.3 Lists

Possible values for parameters include enumerations. Enumerations

may be defined in a list. It is recommended that the list be IANA

registered so that packages that extend the list can be defined

without concern for conflicting names.

12.4 Identifiers

Identifiers in text encoding shall be strings of up to 64 characters,

containing no spaces, starting with an alphabetic character and

consisting of alphanumeric characters and/or digits, and possibly

including the special character underscore ("_").

Identifiers in binary encoding are 2 octets long.

Both text and binary values shall be specified for each identifier,

including identifiers used as values in enumerated types.

12.5 Package registration

A package can be registered with IANA for interoperability reasons.

See clause 13 for IANA Considerations.

13 IANA Considerations

13.1 Packages

The following considerations SHALL be met to register a package with

IANA:

1) A unique string name, unique serial number and version number is

registered for each package. The string name is used with text

encoding. The serial number shall be used with binary encoding.

Serial Numbers 0x8000 to 0xFFFF are reserved for private use.

Serial number 0 is reserved.

2) A contact name, email and postal addresses for that contact shall

be specified. The contact information shall be updated by the

defining organization as necessary.

3) A reference to a document that describes the package, which should

be public:

The document shall specify the version of the Package that it

describes.

If the document is public, it should be located on a public web

server and should have a stable URL. The site should provide a

mechanism to provide comments and appropriate responses should be

returned.

4) Packages registered by other than recognized standards bodies

shall have a minimum package name length of 8 characters.

5) All other package names are first come-first served if all other

conditions are met.

13.2 Error codes

The following considerations SHALL be met to register an error code

with IANA:

1) An error number and a one-line (80-character maximum) string is

registered for each error.

2) A complete description of the conditions under which the error is

detected shall be included in a publicly available document. The

description shall be sufficiently clear to differentiate the error

from all other existing error codes.

3) The document should be available on a public web server and should

have a stable URL.

4) Error numbers registered by recognized standards bodies shall have

3- or 4-character error numbers.

5) Error numbers registered by all other organizations or individuals

shall have 4-character error numbers.

6) An error number shall not be redefined nor modified except by the

organization or individual that originally defined it, or their

successors or assigns.

13.3 ServiceChange reasons

The following considerations SHALL be met to register service change

reason with IANA:

1) A one-phrase, 80-character maximum, unique reason code is

registered for each reason.

2) A complete description of the conditions under which the reason is

used is detected shall be included in a publicly available

document. The description shall be sufficiently clear to

differentiate the reason from all other existing reasons.

3) The document should be available on a public web server and should

have a stable URL.

ANNEX A - Binary encoding of the protocol

This annex specifies the syntax of messages using the notation

defined in Recommendation X.680; Information technology - Abstract

Syntax Notation One (ASN.1): Specification of basic notation.

Messages shall be encoded for transmission by applying the basic

encoding rules specified in Recommendation X.690, Information

Technology - ASN.1 Encoding Rules: Specification of Basic Encoding

Rules (BER), Canonical Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished

Encoding Rules.

A.1 Coding of wildcards

The use of wildcards ALL and CHOOSE is allowed in the protocol. This

allows a MGC to partially specify Termination IDs and to let the MG

choose from the values that conform to the partial specification.

Termination IDs may encode a hierarchy of names. This hierarchy is

provisioned. For instance, a TerminationID may consist of a trunk

group, a trunk within the group and a circuit. Wildcarding must be

possible at all levels. The following paragraphs explain how this is

achieved.

The ASN.1 description uses octet strings of up to 8 octets in length

for Termination IDs. This means that Termination IDs consist of at

most 64 bits. A fully specified Termination ID may be preceded by a

sequence of wildcarding fields. A wildcarding field is one octet in

length. Bit 7 (the most significant bit) of this octet specifies

what type of wildcarding is invoked: if the bit value equals 1, then

the ALL wildcard is used; if the bit value if 0, then the CHOOSE

wildcard is used. Bit 6 of the wildcarding field specifies whether

the wildcarding pertains to one level in the hierarchical naming

scheme (bit value 0) or to the level of the hierarchy specified in

the wildcarding field plus all lower levels (bit value 1). Bits 0

through 5 of the wildcarding field specify the bit position in the

Termination ID at which the wildcarding starts.

We illustrate this scheme with some examples. In these examples, the

most significant bit in a string of bits appears on the left hand

side.

Assume that Termination IDs are three octets long and that each octet

represents a level in a hierarchical naming scheme. A valid

Termination ID is:

00000001 00011110 01010101.

Addressing ALL names with prefix 00000001 00011110 is done as

follows:

wildcarding field: 10000111

Termination ID: 00000001 00011110 xxxxxxxx.

The values of the bits labeled "x" is irrelevant and shall be ignored

by the receiver.

Indicating to the receiver that it must choose a name with 00011110

as the second octet is done as follows:

wildcarding fields: 00010111 followed by 00000111

Termination ID: xxxxxxxx 00011110 xxxxxxxx.

The first wildcard field indicates a CHOOSE wildcard for the level in

the naming hierarchy starting at bit 23, the highest level in our

assumed naming scheme. The second wildcard field indicates a CHOOSE

wildcard for the level in the naming hierarchy starting at bit 7, the

lowest level in our assumed naming scheme.

Finally, a CHOOSE-wildcarded name with the highest level of the name

equal to 00000001 is specified as follows:

wildcard field: 01001111

Termination ID: 0000001 xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx .

Bit value 1 at bit position 6 of the first octet of the wildcard

field indicates that the wildcarding pertains to the specified level

in the naming hierarchy and all lower levels.

Context IDs may also be wildcarded. In the case of Context IDs,

however, specifying partial names is not allowed. Context ID 0x0

SHALL be used to indicate the NULL Context, Context ID 0xFFFFFFFE

SHALL be used to indicate a CHOOSE wildcard, and Context ID

0xFFFFFFFF SHALL be used to indicate an ALL wildcard.

TerminationID 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF SHALL be used to indicate the ROOT

Termination.

A.2 ASN.1 syntax specification

This subclause contains the ASN.1 specification of the H.248.1

protocol syntax.

NOTE 1 - In case a transport mechanism is used that employs

application level framing, the definition of Transaction below

changes. Refer to the annex or to the Recommendation of the H.248

sub-series defining the transport mechanism for the definition that

applies in that case.

NOTE 2 - The ASN.1 specification below contains a clause defining

TerminationIDList as a sequence of TerminationIDs. The length of

this sequence SHALL be one, except possibly when used in

contextAuditResult.

NOTE 3 - This syntax specification does not enforce all

restrictions on element inclusions and values. Some additional

restrictions are stated in comments and other restrictions appear

in the text of this RFC. These additional restrictions

are part of the protocol even though not enforced by this

specification.

NOTE 4 - The ASN.1 module in this Annex uses octet string types to

encode values for property parameter, signal parameter and event

parameter values and statistics. The actual types of these values

vary and are specified in Annex C or the relevant package

definition.

A value is first BER-encoded based on its type using the table below.

The result of this BER-encoding is then encoded as an ASN.1 octet

string, "double wrapping" the value. The format specified in Annex C

or the package relates to BER encoding according to the following

table:

Type Specified in Package ASN.1 BER Type

String IA5String or UTF8String (Note 4)

Integer (4 Octet) INTEGER

Double (8 octet signed int) INTEGER (Note 3)

Character (UTF-8, Note 1) IA5String

Enumeration ENUMERATED

Boolean BOOLEAN

Unsigned Integer (Note 2) INTEGER (Note 3)

Octet (String) OCTET STRING

Note 1: Can be more than one byte

Note 2: Unsigned integer is referenced in Annex C

Note 3: The BER encoding of INTEGER does not imply the use of 4

bytes.

Note 4: String should be encoded as IA5String when the contents

are all ASCII characters, but as UTF8String if it contains any

Non-ASCII characters.

See ITU-T Rec. X.690, 8.7, for the definition of the encoding of an

octet string value.

MEDIA-GATEWAY-CONTROL DEFINITIONS AUTOMATIC TAGS::=

BEGIN

MegacoMessage ::= SEQUENCE

{

authHeader AuthenticationHeader OPTIONAL,

mess Message

}

AuthenticationHeader ::= SEQUENCE

{

secParmIndex SecurityParmIndex,

seqNum SequenceNum,

ad AuthData

}

SecurityParmIndex ::= OCTET STRING(SIZE(4))

SequenceNum ::= OCTET STRING(SIZE(4))

AuthData ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE (12..32))

Message ::= SEQUENCE

{

version INTEGER(0..99),

-- The version of the protocol defined here is equal to 1.

mId MId, -- Name/address of message originator

messageBody CHOICE

{

messageError ErrorDescriptor,

transactions SEQUENCE OF Transaction

},

...

}

MId ::= CHOICE

{

ip4Address IP4Address,

ip6Address IP6Address,

domainName DomainName,

deviceName PathName,

mtpAddress OCTET STRING(SIZE(2..4)),

-- Addressing structure of mtpAddress:

-- 25 - 15 0

-- PC NI

-- 24 - 14 bits 2 bits

-- Note: 14 bits are defined for international use.

-- Two national options exist where the point code is 16 or 24

-- bits.

-- To octet align the mtpAddress, the MSBs shall be encoded as 0s.

...

}

DomainName ::= SEQUENCE

{

name IA5String,

-- The name starts with an alphanumeric digit followed by a

-- sequence of alphanumeric digits, hyphens and dots. No two

-- dots shall occur consecutively.

portNumber INTEGER(0..65535) OPTIONAL

}

IP4Address ::= SEQUENCE

{

address OCTET STRING (SIZE(4)),

portNumber INTEGER(0..65535) OPTIONAL

}

IP6Address ::= SEQUENCE

{

address OCTET STRING (SIZE(16)),

portNumber INTEGER(0..65535) OPTIONAL

}

PathName ::= IA5String(SIZE (1..64))

-- See A.3

Transaction ::= CHOICE

{

transactionRequest TransactionRequest,

transactionPending TransactionPending,

transactionReply TransactionReply,

transactionResponseAck TransactionResponseAck,

-- use of response acks is dependent on underlying transport

...

}

TransactionId ::= INTEGER(0..4294967295) -- 32-bit unsigned integer

TransactionRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

transactionId TransactionId,

actions SEQUENCE OF ActionRequest,

...

}

TransactionPending ::= SEQUENCE

{

transactionId TransactionId,

...

}

TransactionReply ::= SEQUENCE

{

transactionId TransactionId,

immAckRequired NULL OPTIONAL,

transactionResult CHOICE

{

transactionError ErrorDescriptor,

actionReplies SEQUENCE OF ActionReply

},

...

}

TransactionResponseAck ::= SEQUENCE OF TransactionAck

TransactionAck ::= SEQUENCE

{

firstAck TransactionId,

lastAck TransactionId OPTIONAL

}

ErrorDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

errorCode ErrorCode,

errorText ErrorText OPTIONAL

}

ErrorCode ::= INTEGER(0..65535)

-- See clause 13 for IANA Considerations with respect to error codes

ErrorText ::= IA5String

ContextID ::= INTEGER(0..4294967295)

-- Context NULL Value: 0

-- Context CHOOSE Value: 4294967294 (0xFFFFFFFE)

-- Context ALL Value: 4294967295 (0xFFFFFFFF)

ActionRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

contextId ContextID,

contextRequest ContextRequest OPTIONAL,

contextAttrAuditReq ContextAttrAuditRequest OPTIONAL,

commandRequests SEQUENCE OF CommandRequest

}

ActionReply ::= SEQUENCE

{

contextId ContextID,

errorDescriptor ErrorDescriptor OPTIONAL,

contextReply ContextRequest OPTIONAL,

commandReply SEQUENCE OF CommandReply

}

ContextRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

priority INTEGER(0..15) OPTIONAL,

emergency BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

topologyReq SEQUENCE OF TopologyRequest OPTIONAL,

...

}

ContextAttrAuditRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

topology NULL OPTIONAL,

emergency NULL OPTIONAL,

priority NULL OPTIONAL,

...

}

CommandRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

command Command,

optional NULL OPTIONAL,

wildcardReturn NULL OPTIONAL,

...

}

Command ::= CHOICE

{

addReq AmmRequest,

moveReq AmmRequest,

modReq AmmRequest,

-- Add, Move, Modify requests have the same parameters

subtractReq SubtractRequest,

auditCapRequest AuditRequest,

auditValueRequest AuditRequest,

notifyReq NotifyRequest,

serviceChangeReq ServiceChangeRequest,

...

}

CommandReply ::= CHOICE

{

addReply AmmsReply,

moveReply AmmsReply,

modReply AmmsReply,

subtractReply AmmsReply,

-- Add, Move, Modify, Subtract replies have the same parameters

auditCapReply AuditReply,

auditValueReply AuditReply,

notifyReply NotifyReply,

serviceChangeReply ServiceChangeReply,

...

}

TopologyRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationFrom TerminationID,

terminationTo TerminationID,

topologyDirection ENUMERATED

{

bothway(0),

isolate(1),

oneway(2)

},

...

}

AmmRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

descriptors SEQUENCE OF AmmDescriptor,

-- At most one descriptor of each type (see AmmDescriptor)

-- allowed in the sequence.

...

}

AmmDescriptor ::= CHOICE

{

mediaDescriptor MediaDescriptor,

modemDescriptor ModemDescriptor,

muxDescriptor MuxDescriptor,

eventsDescriptor EventsDescriptor,

eventBufferDescriptor EventBufferDescriptor,

signalsDescriptor SignalsDescriptor,

digitMapDescriptor DigitMapDescriptor,

auditDescriptor AuditDescriptor,

...

}

AmmsReply ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

terminationAudit TerminationAudit OPTIONAL,

...

}

SubtractRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

auditDescriptor AuditDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

AuditRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationID,

auditDescriptor AuditDescriptor,

...

}

AuditReply ::= CHOICE

{

contextAuditResult TerminationIDList,

error ErrorDescriptor,

auditResult AuditResult,

...

}

AuditResult ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationID,

terminationAuditResult TerminationAudit

}

TerminationAudit ::= SEQUENCE OF AuditReturnParameter

AuditReturnParameter ::= CHOICE

{

errorDescriptor ErrorDescriptor,

mediaDescriptor MediaDescriptor,

modemDescriptor ModemDescriptor,

muxDescriptor MuxDescriptor,

eventsDescriptor EventsDescriptor,

eventBufferDescriptor EventBufferDescriptor,

signalsDescriptor SignalsDescriptor,

digitMapDescriptor DigitMapDescriptor,

observedEventsDescriptor ObservedEventsDescriptor,

statisticsDescriptor StatisticsDescriptor,

packagesDescriptor PackagesDescriptor,

emptyDescriptors AuditDescriptor,

...

}

AuditDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

auditToken BIT STRING

{

muxToken(0), modemToken(1), mediaToken(2),

eventsToken(3), signalsToken(4),

digitMapToken(5), statsToken(6),

observedEventsToken(7),

packagesToken(8), eventBufferToken(9)

} OPTIONAL,

...

}

NotifyRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

observedEventsDescriptor ObservedEventsDescriptor,

errorDescriptor ErrorDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

NotifyReply ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

errorDescriptor ErrorDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

ObservedEventsDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

requestId RequestID,

observedEventLst SEQUENCE OF ObservedEvent

}

ObservedEvent ::= SEQUENCE

{

eventName EventName,

streamID StreamID OPTIONAL,

eventParList SEQUENCE OF EventParameter,

timeNotation TimeNotation OPTIONAL,

...

}

EventName ::= PkgdName

EventParameter ::= SEQUENCE

{

eventParameterName Name,

value Value,

-- For use of extraInfo see the comment related to PropertyParm

extraInfo CHOICE

{

relation Relation,

range BOOLEAN,

sublist BOOLEAN

} OPTIONAL,

...

}

ServiceChangeRequest ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

serviceChangeParms ServiceChangeParm,

...

}

ServiceChangeReply ::= SEQUENCE

{

terminationID TerminationIDList,

serviceChangeResult ServiceChangeResult,

...

}

-- For ServiceChangeResult, no parameters are mandatory. Hence the

-- distinction between ServiceChangeParm and ServiceChangeResParm.

ServiceChangeResult ::= CHOICE

{

errorDescriptor ErrorDescriptor,

serviceChangeResParms ServiceChangeResParm

}

WildcardField ::= OCTET STRING(SIZE(1))

TerminationID ::= SEQUENCE

{

wildcard SEQUENCE OF WildcardField,

id OCTET STRING(SIZE(1..8)),

...

}

-- See A.1 for explanation of wildcarding mechanism.

-- Termination ID 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF indicates the ROOT Termination.

TerminationIDList ::= SEQUENCE OF TerminationID

MediaDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

termStateDescr TerminationStateDescriptor OPTIONAL,

streams CHOICE

{

oneStream StreamParms,

multiStream SEQUENCE OF StreamDescriptor

} OPTIONAL,

...

}

StreamDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

streamID StreamID,

streamParms StreamParms

}

StreamParms ::= SEQUENCE

{

localControlDescriptor LocalControlDescriptor OPTIONAL,

localDescriptor LocalRemoteDescriptor OPTIONAL,

remoteDescriptor LocalRemoteDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

LocalControlDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

streamMode StreamMode OPTIONAL,

reserveValue BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

reserveGroup BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

propertyParms SEQUENCE OF PropertyParm,

...

}

StreamMode ::= ENUMERATED

{

sendOnly(0),

recvOnly(1),

sendRecv(2),

inactive(3),

loopBack(4),

...

}

-- In PropertyParm, value is a SEQUENCE OF octet string. When sent

-- by an MGC the interpretation is as follows:

-- empty sequence means CHOOSE

-- one element sequence specifies value

-- If the sublist field is not selected, a longer sequence means

-- "choose one of the values" (i.e., value1 OR value2 OR ...)

-- If the sublist field is selected,

-- a sequence with more than one element encodes the value of a

-- list-valued property (i.e., value1 AND value2 AND ...).

-- The relation field may only be selected if the value sequence

-- has length 1. It indicates that the MG has to choose a value

-- for the property. E.g., x > 3 (using the greaterThan

-- value for relation) instructs the MG to choose any value larger

-- than 3 for property x.

-- The range field may only be selected if the value sequence

-- has length 2. It indicates that the MG has to choose a value

-- in the range between the first octet in the value sequence and

-- the trailing octet in the value sequence, including the

-- boundary values.

-- When sent by the MG, only responses to an AuditCapability request

-- may contain multiple values, a range, or a relation field.

PropertyParm ::= SEQUENCE

{

name PkgdName,

value SEQUENCE OF OCTET STRING,

extraInfo CHOICE

{

relation Relation,

range BOOLEAN,

sublist BOOLEAN

} OPTIONAL,

...

}

Name ::= OCTET STRING(SIZE(2))

PkgdName ::= OCTET STRING(SIZE(4))

-- represents Package Name (2 octets) plus Property, Event,

-- Signal Names or Statistics ID. (2 octets)

-- To wildcard a package use 0xFFFF for first two octets, choose

-- is not allowed. To reference native property tag specified in

-- Annex C, use 0x0000 as first two octets.

-- To wildcard a Property, Event, Signal, or Statistics ID, use

-- 0xFFFF for last two octets, choose is not allowed.

-- Wildcarding of Package Name is permitted only if Property,

-- Event, Signal, or Statistics ID are

-- also wildcarded.

Relation ::= ENUMERATED

{

greaterThan(0),

smallerThan(1),

unequalTo(2),

...

}

LocalRemoteDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

propGrps SEQUENCE OF PropertyGroup,

...

}

PropertyGroup ::= SEQUENCE OF PropertyParm

TerminationStateDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

propertyParms SEQUENCE OF PropertyParm,

eventBufferControl EventBufferControl OPTIONAL,

serviceState ServiceState OPTIONAL,

...

}

EventBufferControl ::= ENUMERATED

{

off(0),

lockStep(1),

...

}

ServiceState ::= ENUMERATED

{

test(0),

outOfSvc(1),

inSvc(2),

...

}

MuxDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

muxType MuxType,

termList SEQUENCE OF TerminationID,

nonStandardData NonStandardData OPTIONAL,

...

}

MuxType ::= ENUMERATED

{

h221(0),

h223(1),

h226(2),

v76(3),

...

}

StreamID ::= INTEGER(0..65535) -- 16-bit unsigned integer

EventsDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

requestID RequestID OPTIONAL,

-- RequestID must be present if eventList

-- is non empty

eventList SEQUENCE OF RequestedEvent,

...

}

RequestedEvent ::= SEQUENCE

{

pkgdName PkgdName,

streamID StreamID OPTIONAL,

eventAction RequestedActions OPTIONAL,

evParList SEQUENCE OF EventParameter,

...

}

RequestedActions ::= SEQUENCE

{

keepActive BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

eventDM EventDM OPTIONAL,

secondEvent SecondEventsDescriptor OPTIONAL,

signalsDescriptor SignalsDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

EventDM ::= CHOICE

{ digitMapName DigitMapName,

digitMapValue DigitMapValue

}

SecondEventsDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

requestID RequestID OPTIONAL,

eventList SEQUENCE OF SecondRequestedEvent,

...

}

SecondRequestedEvent ::= SEQUENCE

{

pkgdName PkgdName,

streamID StreamID OPTIONAL,

eventAction SecondRequestedActions OPTIONAL,

evParList SEQUENCE OF EventParameter,

...

}

SecondRequestedActions ::= SEQUENCE

{

keepActive BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

eventDM EventDM OPTIONAL,

signalsDescriptor SignalsDescriptor OPTIONAL,

...

}

EventBufferDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE OF EventSpec

EventSpec ::= SEQUENCE

{

eventName EventName,

streamID StreamID OPTIONAL,

eventParList SEQUENCE OF EventParameter,

...

}

SignalsDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE OF SignalRequest

SignalRequest ::=CHOICE

{

signal Signal,

seqSigList SeqSigList,

...

}

SeqSigList ::= SEQUENCE

{

id INTEGER(0..65535),

signalList SEQUENCE OF Signal

}

Signal ::= SEQUENCE

{

signalName SignalName,

streamID StreamID OPTIONAL,

sigType SignalType OPTIONAL,

duration INTEGER (0..65535) OPTIONAL,

notifyCompletion NotifyCompletion OPTIONAL,

keepActive BOOLEAN OPTIONAL,

sigParList SEQUENCE OF SigParameter,

...

}

SignalType ::= ENUMERATED

{

brief(0),

onOff(1),

timeOut(2),

...

}

SignalName ::= PkgdName

NotifyCompletion ::= BIT STRING

{

onTimeOut(0), onInterruptByEvent(1),

onInterruptByNewSignalDescr(2), otherReason(3)

}

SigParameter ::= SEQUENCE

{

sigParameterName Name,

value Value,

-- For use of extraInfo see the comment related to PropertyParm

extraInfo CHOICE

{

relation Relation,

range BOOLEAN,

sublist BOOLEAN

} OPTIONAL,

...

}

-- For an AuditCapReply with all events, the RequestID SHALL be ALL.

-- ALL is represented by 0xffffffff.

RequestID ::= INTEGER(0..4294967295) -- 32-bit unsigned integer

ModemDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

mtl SEQUENCE OF ModemType,

mpl SEQUENCE OF PropertyParm,

nonStandardData NonStandardData OPTIONAL

}

ModemType ::= ENUMERATED

{

v18(0),

v22(1),

v22bis(2),

v32(3),

v32bis(4),

v34(5),

v90(6),

v91(7),

synchISDN(8),

...

}

DigitMapDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE

{

digitMapName DigitMapName OPTIONAL,

digitMapValue DigitMapValue OPTIONAL

}

DigitMapName ::= Name

DigitMapValue ::= SEQUENCE

{

startTimer INTEGER(0..99) OPTIONAL,

shortTimer INTEGER(0..99) OPTIONAL,

longTimer INTEGER(0..99) OPTIONAL,

digitMapBody IA5String,

-- Units are seconds for start, short and long timers, and

-- hundreds of milliseconds for duration timer. Thus start,

-- short, and long range from 1 to 99 seconds and duration

-- from 100 ms to 9.9 s

-- See A.3 for explanation of digit map syntax

...

}

ServiceChangeParm ::= SEQUENCE

{

serviceChangeMethod ServiceChangeMethod,

serviceChangeAddress ServiceChangeAddress OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeVersion INTEGER(0..99) OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeProfile ServiceChangeProfile OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeReason Value,

-- A serviceChangeReason consists of a numeric reason code

-- and an optional text description.

-- The serviceChangeReason SHALL be a string consisting of

-- a decimal reason code, optionally followed by a single

-- space character and a textual description string.

-- This string is first BER-encoded as an IA5String.

-- The result of this BER-encoding is then encoded as

-- an ASN.1 OCTET STRING type, "double wrapping" the

-- value as was done for package elements.

serviceChangeDelay INTEGER(0..4294967295) OPTIONAL,

-- 32-bit unsigned integer

serviceChangeMgcId MId OPTIONAL,

timeStamp TimeNotation OPTIONAL,

nonStandardData NonStandardData OPTIONAL,

...

}

ServiceChangeAddress ::= CHOICE

{

portNumber INTEGER(0..65535), -- TCP/UDP port number

ip4Address IP4Address,

ip6Address IP6Address,

domainName DomainName,

deviceName PathName,

mtpAddress OCTET STRING(SIZE(2..4)),

...

}

ServiceChangeResParm ::= SEQUENCE

{

serviceChangeMgcId MId OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeAddress ServiceChangeAddress OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeVersion INTEGER(0..99) OPTIONAL,

serviceChangeProfile ServiceChangeProfile OPTIONAL,

timestamp TimeNotation OPTIONAL,

...

}

ServiceChangeMethod ::= ENUMERATED

{

failover(0),

forced(1),

graceful(2),

restart(3),

disconnected(4),

handOff(5),

...

}

ServiceChangeProfile ::= SEQUENCE

{

profileName IA5String(SIZE (1..67))

-- 64 characters for name, 1 for "/", 2 for version to match ABNF

}

PackagesDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE OF PackagesItem

PackagesItem ::= SEQUENCE

{

packageName Name,

packageVersion INTEGER(0..99),

...

}

StatisticsDescriptor ::= SEQUENCE OF StatisticsParameter

StatisticsParameter ::= SEQUENCE

{

statName PkgdName,

statValue Value OPTIONAL

}

NonStandardData ::= SEQUENCE

{

nonStandardIdentifier NonStandardIdentifier,

data OCTET STRING

}

NonStandardIdentifier ::= CHOICE

{

object OBJECT IDENTIFIER,

h221NonStandard H221NonStandard,

experimental IA5String(SIZE(8)),

-- first two characters should be "X-" or "X+"

...

}

H221NonStandard ::= SEQUENCE

{ t35CountryCode1 INTEGER(0..255),

t35CountryCode2 INTEGER(0..255), -- country, as per T.35

t35Extension INTEGER(0..255), -- assigned nationally

manufacturerCode INTEGER(0..65535), -- assigned nationally

...

}

TimeNotation ::= SEQUENCE

{

date IA5String(SIZE(8)), -- yyyymmdd format

time IA5String(SIZE(8)) -- hhmmssss format

-- per ISO 8601:1988

}

Value ::= SEQUENCE OF OCTET STRING

END

A.3 Digit maps and path names

From a syntactic viewpoint, digit maps are strings with syntactic

restrictions imposed upon them. The syntax of valid digit maps is

specified in ABNF [RFC2234]. The syntax for digit maps presented in

this subclause is for illustrative purposes only. The definition of

digitMap in Annex B takes precedence in the case of differences

between the two.

digitMap = (digitString / LWSP "(" LWSP digitStringList LWSP ")"

LWSP)

digitStringList = digitString *( LWSP "" LWSP digitString )

digitString = 1*(digitStringElement)

digitStringElement = digitPosition [DOT]

digitPosition = digitMapLetter / digitMapRange

digitMapRange = ("x" / (LWSP "[" LWSP digitLetter LWSP "]" LWSP))

digitLetter = *((DIGIT "-" DIGIT) /digitMapLetter)

digitMapLetter = DIGIT ;digits 0-9

/ %x41-4B / %x61-6B ;a-k and A-K

/ "L"/ "S" ;Inter-event timers

;(long, short)

/ "Z" ;Long duration event

DOT = %x2E ; "."

LWSP = *(WSP / COMMENT / EOL)

WSP = SP / HTAB

COMMENT = ";" *(SafeChar / RestChar / WSP) EOL

EOL = (CR [LF]) / LF

SP = %x20

HTAB = %x09

CR = %x0D

LF = %x0A

SafeChar = DIGIT / ALPHA / "+" / "-" / "&" / "!" / "_" / "/" /

"'" / "?" / "@" / "^" / "`" / "~" / "*" / "$" / "\" /

"(" / ")" / "%" / "."

RestChar = ";" / "[" / "]" / "{" / "}" / ":" / "," / "#" /

"<" / ">" / "=" / %x22

DIGIT = %x30-39 ; digits 0 through 9

ALPHA = %x41-5A / %x61-7A; A-Z, a-z

A path name is also a string with syntactic restrictions imposed upon

it. The ABNF production defining it is copied from Annex B.

; Total length of pathNAME must not exceed 64 chars.

pathNAME = ["*"] NAME *("/" / "*"/ ALPHA / DIGIT /"_" / "$" )

["@" pathDomainName ]

; ABNF allows two or more consecutive "." although it is

; meaningless in a path domain name.

pathDomainName = (ALPHA / DIGIT / "*" )

*63(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-"

NAME = ALPHA *63(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" )

ANNEX B - Text encoding of the protocol

B.1 Coding of wildcards

In a text encoding of the protocol, while TerminationIDs are

arbitrary, by judicious choice of names, the wildcard character, "*"

may be made more useful. When the wildcard character is encountered,

it will "match" all TerminationIDs having the same previous and

following characters (if appropriate). For example, if there were

TerminationIDs of R13/3/1, R13/3/2 and R13/3/3, the TerminationID

R13/3/* would match all of them. There are some circumstances where

ALL Terminations must be referred to. The TerminationID "*"

suffices, and is referred to as ALL. The CHOOSE TerminationID "$"

may be used to signal to the MG that it has to create an ephemeral

Termination or select an idle physical Termination.

B.2 ABNF specification

The protocol syntax is presented in ABNF according to RFC2234.

Note 1 - This syntax specification does not enforce all

restrictions on element inclusions and values. Some additional

restrictions are stated in comments and other restrictions appear

in the text of this RFC. These additional restrictions are part

of the protocol even though not enforced by this specification.

Note 2 - The syntax is context-dependent. For example, "Add" can

be the AddToken or a NAME depending on the context in which it

occurs.

Everything in the ABNF and text encoding is case insensitive. This

includes TerminationIDs, digitmap Ids etc. SDP is case sensitive as

per RFC2327.

; NOTE -- The ABNF in this section uses the VALUE construct (or lists

; of VALUE constructs) to encode various package element values

; (properties, signal parameters, etc.). The types of these values

; vary and are specified the relevant package definition. Several

; such types are described in section 12.2.

;

; The ABNF specification for VALUE allows a quotedString form or a

; collection of SafeChars. The encoding of package element values

; into ABNF VALUES is specified below. If a type's encoding allows

; characters other than SafeChars, the quotedString form MUST be used

; for all values of that type, even for specific values that consist

; only of SafeChars.

;

; String: A string MUST use the quotedString form of VALUE and can

; contain anything allowable in the quotedString form.

;

; Integer, Double, and Unsigned Integer: Decimal values can be

; encoded using characters 0-9. Hexadecimal values must be prefixed

; with '0x' and can use characters 0-9,a-f,A-F. An octal format is

; not supported. Negative integers start with '-' and MUST be

; Decimal. The SafeChar form of VALUE MUST be used.

;

; Character: A UTF-8 encoding of a single letter surrounded by

; double quotes.

;

; Enumeration: An enumeration MUST use the SafeChar form of VALUE

; and can contain anything allowable in the SafeChar form.

;

; Boolean: Boolean values are encoded as "on" and "off" and are

; case insensitive. The SafeChar form of VALUE MUST be used.

;

; Future types: Any defined types MUST fit within

; the ABNF specification of VALUE. Specifically, if a type's

; encoding allows characters other than SafeChars, the quotedString

; form MUST be used for all values of that type, even for specific

; values that consist only of SafeChars.

;

; Note that there is no way to use the double quote character within

; a value.

;

; Note that SDP disallows whitespace at the beginning of a line,

; Megaco ABNF allows whitespace before the beginning of the SDP in

; the Local/Remote descriptor. Parsers should accept whitespace

; between the LBRKT following the Local/Remote token and the

; beginning of the SDP.

megacoMessage = LWSP [authenticationHeader SEP ] message

authenticationHeader = AuthToken EQUAL SecurityParmIndex COLON

SequenceNum COLON AuthData

SecurityParmIndex = "0x" 8(HEXDIG)

SequenceNum = "0x" 8(HEXDIG)

AuthData = "0x" 24*64(HEXDIG)

message = MegacopToken SLASH Version SEP mId SEP

messageBody

; The version of the protocol defined here is equal to 1.

messageBody = ( errorDescriptor / transactionList )

transactionList = 1*( transactionRequest / transactionReply /

transactionPending / transactionResponseAck )

;Use of response acks is dependent on underlying transport

transactionPending = PendingToken EQUAL TransactionID LBRKT

RBRKT

transactionResponseAck = ResponseAckToken LBRKT transactionAck

*(COMMA transactionAck) RBRKT

transactionAck = transactionID / (transactionID "-" transactionID)

transactionRequest = TransToken EQUAL TransactionID LBRKT

actionRequest *(COMMA actionRequest) RBRKT

actionRequest = CtxToken EQUAL ContextID LBRKT ((

contextRequest [COMMA commandRequestList])

/ commandRequestList) RBRKT

contextRequest = ((contextProperties [COMMA contextAudit])

/ contextAudit)

contextProperties = contextProperty *(COMMA contextProperty)

; at-most-once

contextProperty = (topologyDescriptor / priority / EmergencyToken)

contextAudit = ContextAuditToken LBRKT contextAuditProperties

*(COMMA contextAuditProperties) RBRKT

; at-most-once

contextAuditProperties = ( TopologyToken / EmergencyToken /

PriorityToken )

; "O-" indicates an optional command

; "W-" indicates a wildcarded response to a command

commandRequestList = ["O-"] ["W-"] commandRequest

*(COMMA ["O-"] ["W-"]commandRequest)

commandRequest = ( ammRequest / subtractRequest / auditRequest /

notifyRequest / serviceChangeRequest)

transactionReply = ReplyToken EQUAL TransactionID LBRKT

[ ImmAckRequiredToken COMMA]

( errorDescriptor / actionReplyList ) RBRKT

actionReplyList = actionReply *(COMMA actionReply )

actionReply = CtxToken EQUAL ContextID LBRKT

( errorDescriptor / commandReply ) /

(commandReply COMMA errorDescriptor) ) RBRKT

commandReply = (( contextProperties [COMMA commandReplyList] ) /

commandReplyList )

commandReplyList = commandReplys *(COMMA commandReplys )

commandReplys = (serviceChangeReply / auditReply / ammsReply /

notifyReply )

;Add Move and Modify have the same request parameters

ammRequest = (AddToken / MoveToken / ModifyToken ) EQUAL

TerminationID [LBRKT ammParameter *(COMMA

ammParameter) RBRKT]

;at-most-once

ammParameter = (mediaDescriptor / modemDescriptor /

muxDescriptor / eventsDescriptor /

signalsDescriptor / digitMapDescriptor /

eventBufferDescriptor / auditDescriptor)

ammsReply = (AddToken / MoveToken / ModifyToken /

SubtractToken ) EQUAL TerminationID [ LBRKT

terminationAudit RBRKT ]

subtractRequest = SubtractToken EQUAL TerminationID

[ LBRKT auditDescriptor RBRKT]

auditRequest = (AuditValueToken / AuditCapToken ) EQUAL

TerminationID LBRKT auditDescriptor RBRKT

auditReply = (AuditValueToken / AuditCapToken )

( contextTerminationAudit / auditOther)

auditOther = EQUAL TerminationID [LBRKT

terminationAudit RBRKT]

terminationAudit = auditReturnParameter *(COMMA auditReturnParameter)

contextTerminationAudit = EQUAL CtxToken ( terminationIDList /

LBRKT errorDescriptor RBRKT )

auditReturnParameter = (mediaDescriptor / modemDescriptor /

muxDescriptor / eventsDescriptor /

signalsDescriptor / digitMapDescriptor /

observedEventsDescriptor / eventBufferDescriptor /

statisticsDescriptor / packagesDescriptor /

errorDescriptor / auditItem)

auditDescriptor = AuditToken LBRKT [ auditItem

*(COMMA auditItem) ] RBRKT

notifyRequest = NotifyToken EQUAL TerminationID

LBRKT ( observedEventsDescriptor

[ COMMA errorDescriptor ] ) RBRKT

notifyReply = NotifyToken EQUAL TerminationID

[ LBRKT errorDescriptor RBRKT ]

serviceChangeRequest = ServiceChangeToken EQUAL TerminationID

LBRKT serviceChangeDescriptor RBRKT

serviceChangeReply = ServiceChangeToken EQUAL TerminationID

[LBRKT (errorDescriptor /

serviceChangeReplyDescriptor) RBRKT]

errorDescriptor = ErrorToken EQUAL ErrorCode

LBRKT [quotedString] RBRKT

ErrorCode = 1*4(DIGIT) ; could be extended

TransactionID = UINT32

mId = (( domainAddress / domainName )

[":" portNumber]) / mtpAddress / deviceName

; ABNF allows two or more consecutive "." although it is meaningless

; in a domain name.

domainName = "<" (ALPHA / DIGIT) *63(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" /

".") ">"

deviceName = pathNAME

;The values 0x0, 0xFFFFFFFE and 0xFFFFFFFF are reserved.

ContextID = (UINT32 / "*" / "-" / "$")

domainAddress = "[" (IPv4address / IPv6address) "]"

;RFC2373 contains the definition of IP6Addresses.

IPv6address = hexpart [ ":" IPv4address ]

IPv4address = V4hex DOT V4hex DOT V4hex DOT V4hex

V4hex = 1*3(DIGIT) ; "0".."255"

; this production, while occurring in RFC2373, is not referenced

; IPv6prefix = hexpart SLASH 1*2DIGIT

hexpart = hexseq "::" [ hexseq ] / "::" [ hexseq ] / hexseq

hexseq = hex4 *( ":" hex4)

hex4 = 1*4HEXDIG

portNumber = UINT16

; Addressing structure of mtpAddress:

; 25 - 15 0

; PC NI

; 24 - 14 bits 2 bits

; Note: 14 bits are defined for international use.

; Two national options exist where the point code is 16 or 24 bits.

; To octet align the mtpAddress the MSBs shall be encoded as 0s.

; An octet shall be represented by 2 hex digits.

mtpAddress = MTPToken LBRKT 4*8 (HEXDIG) RBRKT

terminationIDList = LBRKT TerminationID *(COMMA TerminationID) RBRKT

; Total length of pathNAME must not exceed 64 chars.

pathNAME = ["*"] NAME *("/" / "*"/ ALPHA / DIGIT /"_" / "$" )

["@" pathDomainName ]

; ABNF allows two or more consecutive "." although it is meaningless

; in a path domain name.

pathDomainName = (ALPHA / DIGIT / "*" )

*63(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "*" / ".")

TerminationID = "ROOT" / pathNAME / "$" / "*"

mediaDescriptor = MediaToken LBRKT mediaParm *(COMMA mediaParm) RBRKT

; at-most one terminationStateDescriptor

; and either streamParm(s) or streamDescriptor(s) but not both

mediaParm = (streamParm / streamDescriptor /

terminationStateDescriptor)

; at-most-once per item

streamParm = ( localDescriptor / remoteDescriptor /

localControlDescriptor )

streamDescriptor = StreamToken EQUAL StreamID LBRKT streamParm

*(COMMA streamParm) RBRKT

localControlDescriptor = LocalControlToken LBRKT localParm

*(COMMA localParm) RBRKT

; at-most-once per item except for propertyParm

localParm = ( streamMode / propertyParm / reservedValueMode

/ reservedGroupMode )

reservedValueMode = ReservedValueToken EQUAL ( "ON" / "OFF" )

reservedGroupMode = ReservedGroupToken EQUAL ( "ON" / "OFF" )

streamMode = ModeToken EQUAL streamModes

streamModes = (SendonlyToken / RecvonlyToken / SendrecvToken /

InactiveToken / LoopbackToken )

propertyParm = pkgdName parmValue

parmValue = (EQUAL alternativeValue/ INEQUAL VALUE)

alternativeValue = ( VALUE

/ LSBRKT VALUE *(COMMA VALUE) RSBRKT

; sublist (i.e., A AND B AND ...)

/ LBRKT VALUE *(COMMA VALUE) RBRKT

; alternatives (i.e., A OR B OR ...)

/ LSBRKT VALUE COLON VALUE RSBRKT )

; range

INEQUAL = LWSP (">" / "<" / "#" ) LWSP

LSBRKT = LWSP "[" LWSP

RSBRKT = LWSP "]" LWSP

; Note - The octet zero is not among the permitted characters in

; octet string. As the current definition is limited to SDP, and a

; zero octet would not be a legal character in SDP, this is not a

; concern.

localDescriptor = LocalToken LBRKT octetString RBRKT

remoteDescriptor = RemoteToken LBRKT octetString RBRKT

eventBufferDescriptor= EventBufferToken [ LBRKT eventSpec

*( COMMA eventSpec) RBRKT ]

eventSpec = pkgdName [ LBRKT eventSpecParameter

*(COMMA eventSpecParameter) RBRKT ]

eventSpecParameter = (eventStream / eventOther)

eventBufferControl = BufferToken EQUAL ( "OFF" / LockStepToken )

terminationStateDescriptor = TerminationStateToken LBRKT

terminationStateParm *( COMMA terminationStateParm ) RBRKT

; at-most-once per item except for propertyParm

terminationStateParm = (propertyParm / serviceStates /

eventBufferControl )

serviceStates = ServiceStatesToken EQUAL ( TestToken /

OutOfSvcToken / InSvcToken )

muxDescriptor = MuxToken EQUAL MuxType terminationIDList

MuxType = ( H221Token / H223Token / H226Token / V76Token

/ extensionParameter )

StreamID = UINT16

pkgdName = (PackageName SLASH ItemID) ;specific item

/ (PackageName SLASH "*") ;all items in package

/ ("*" SLASH "*") ; all items supported by the MG

PackageName = NAME

ItemID = NAME

eventsDescriptor = EventsToken [ EQUAL RequestID LBRKT

requestedEvent *( COMMA requestedEvent ) RBRKT ]

requestedEvent = pkgdName [ LBRKT eventParameter

*( COMMA eventParameter ) RBRKT ]

; at-most-once each of KeepActiveToken , eventDM and eventStream

;at most one of either embedWithSig or embedNoSig but not both

;KeepActiveToken and embedWithSig must not both be present

eventParameter = ( embedWithSig / embedNoSig / KeepActiveToken

/eventDM / eventStream / eventOther )

embedWithSig = EmbedToken LBRKT signalsDescriptor

[COMMA embedFirst ] RBRKT

embedNoSig = EmbedToken LBRKT embedFirst RBRKT

; at-most-once of each

embedFirst = EventsToken [ EQUAL RequestID LBRKT

secondRequestedEvent *(COMMA secondRequestedEvent) RBRKT ]

secondRequestedEvent = pkgdName [ LBRKT secondEventParameter

*( COMMA secondEventParameter ) RBRKT ]

; at-most-once each of embedSig , KeepActiveToken, eventDM or

; eventStream

; KeepActiveToken and embedSig must not both be present

secondEventParameter = ( embedSig / KeepActiveToken / eventDM /

eventStream / eventOther )

embedSig = EmbedToken LBRKT signalsDescriptor RBRKT

eventStream = StreamToken EQUAL StreamID

eventOther = eventParameterName parmValue

eventParameterName = NAME

eventDM = DigitMapToken EQUAL(( digitMapName ) /

(LBRKT digitMapValue RBRKT ))

signalsDescriptor = SignalsToken LBRKT [ signalParm

*(COMMA signalParm)] RBRKT

signalParm = signalList / signalRequest

signalRequest = signalName [ LBRKT sigParameter

*(COMMA sigParameter) RBRKT ]

signalList = SignalListToken EQUAL signalListId LBRKT

signalListParm *(COMMA signalListParm) RBRKT

signalListId = UINT16

;exactly once signalType, at most once duration and every signal

;parameter

signalListParm = signalRequest

signalName = pkgdName

;at-most-once sigStream, at-most-once sigSignalType,

;at-most-once sigDuration, every signalParameterName at most once

sigParameter = sigStream / sigSignalType / sigDuration / sigOther

/ notifyCompletion / KeepActiveToken

sigStream = StreamToken EQUAL StreamID

sigOther = sigParameterName parmValue

sigParameterName = NAME

sigSignalType = SignalTypeToken EQUAL signalType

signalType = (OnOffToken / TimeOutToken / BriefToken)

sigDuration = DurationToken EQUAL UINT16

notifyCompletion = NotifyCompletionToken EQUAL (LBRKT

notificationReason *(COMMA notificationReason) RBRKT)

notificationReason = ( TimeOutToken / InterruptByEventToken

/ InterruptByNewSignalsDescrToken

/ OtherReasonToken )

observedEventsDescriptor = ObservedEventsToken EQUAL RequestID

LBRKT observedEvent *(COMMA observedEvent) RBRKT

;time per event, because it might be buffered

observedEvent = [ TimeStamp LWSP COLON] LWSP

pkgdName [ LBRKT observedEventParameter

*(COMMA observedEventParameter) RBRKT ]

;at-most-once eventStream, every eventParameterName at most once

observedEventParameter = eventStream / eventOther

; For an AuditCapReply with all events, the RequestID should be ALL.

RequestID = ( UINT32 / "*" )

modemDescriptor = ModemToken (( EQUAL modemType) /

(LSBRKT modemType *(COMMA modemType) RSBRKT))

[ LBRKT propertyParm *(COMMA propertyParm) RBRKT ]

; at-most-once except for extensionParameter

modemType = (V32bisToken / V22bisToken / V18Token /

V22Token / V32Token / V34Token / V90Token /

V91Token / SynchISDNToken / extensionParameter)

digitMapDescriptor = DigitMapToken EQUAL

( ( LBRKT digitMapValue RBRKT ) /

(digitMapName [ LBRKT digitMapValue RBRKT ]) )

digitMapName = NAME

digitMapValue = ["T" COLON Timer COMMA] ["S" COLON Timer COMMA]

["L" COLON Timer COMMA] digitMap

Timer = 1*2DIGIT

; Units are seconds for T, S, and L timers, and hundreds of

; milliseconds for Z timer. Thus T, S, and L range from 1 to 99

; seconds and Z from 100 ms to 9.9 s

digitMap = (digitString /

LWSP "(" LWSP digitStringList LWSP ")" LWSP)

digitStringList = digitString *( LWSP "" LWSP digitString )

digitString = 1*(digitStringElement)

digitStringElement = digitPosition [DOT]

digitPosition = digitMapLetter / digitMapRange

digitMapRange = ("x" / (LWSP "[" LWSP digitLetter LWSP "]" LWSP))

digitLetter = *((DIGIT "-" DIGIT ) / digitMapLetter)

digitMapLetter = DIGIT ;Basic event symbols

/ %x41-4B / %x61-6B ; a-k, A-K

/ "L" / "S" ;Inter-event timers (long, short)

/ "Z" ;Long duration modifier

;at-most-once, and DigitMapToken and PackagesToken are not allowed

;in AuditCapabilities command

auditItem = ( MuxToken / ModemToken / MediaToken /

SignalsToken / EventBufferToken /

DigitMapToken / StatsToken / EventsToken /

ObservedEventsToken / PackagesToken )

serviceChangeDescriptor = ServicesToken LBRKT serviceChangeParm

*(COMMA serviceChangeParm) RBRKT

; each parameter at-most-once

; at most one of either serviceChangeAddress or serviceChangeMgcId

; but not both

; serviceChangeMethod and serviceChangeReason are REQUIRED

serviceChangeParm = (serviceChangeMethod / serviceChangeReason /

serviceChangeDelay / serviceChangeAddress /

serviceChangeProfile / extension / TimeStamp /

serviceChangeMgcId / serviceChangeVersion )

serviceChangeReplyDescriptor = ServicesToken LBRKT

servChgReplyParm *(COMMA servChgReplyParm) RBRKT

; at-most-once. Version is REQUIRED on first ServiceChange response

; at most one of either serviceChangeAddress or serviceChangeMgcId

; but not both

servChgReplyParm = (serviceChangeAddress / serviceChangeMgcId /

serviceChangeProfile / serviceChangeVersion /

TimeStamp)

serviceChangeMethod = MethodToken EQUAL (FailoverToken /

ForcedToken / GracefulToken / RestartToken /

DisconnectedToken / HandOffToken /

extensionParameter)

; A serviceChangeReason consists of a numeric reason code

; and an optional text description.

; A serviceChangeReason MUST be encoded using the quotedString

; form of VALUE.

; The quotedString SHALL contain a decimal reason code,

; optionally followed by a single space character and a

; textual description string.

serviceChangeReason = ReasonToken EQUAL VALUE

serviceChangeDelay = DelayToken EQUAL UINT32

serviceChangeAddress = ServiceChangeAddressToken EQUAL ( mId /

portNumber )

serviceChangeMgcId = MgcIdToken EQUAL mId

serviceChangeProfile = ProfileToken EQUAL NAME SLASH Version

serviceChangeVersion = VersionToken EQUAL Version

extension = extensionParameter parmValue

packagesDescriptor = PackagesToken LBRKT packagesItem

*(COMMA packagesItem) RBRKT

Version = 1*2(DIGIT)

packagesItem = NAME "-" UINT16

TimeStamp = Date "T" Time ; per ISO 8601:1988

; Date = yyyymmdd

Date = 8(DIGIT)

; Time = hhmmssss

Time = 8(DIGIT)

statisticsDescriptor = StatsToken LBRKT statisticsParameter

*(COMMA statisticsParameter ) RBRKT

;at-most-once per item

statisticsParameter = pkgdName [EQUAL VALUE]

topologyDescriptor = TopologyToken LBRKT topologyTriple

*(COMMA topologyTriple) RBRKT

topologyTriple = terminationA COMMA

terminationB COMMA topologyDirection

terminationA = TerminationID

terminationB = TerminationID

topologyDirection = BothwayToken / IsolateToken / OnewayToken

priority = PriorityToken EQUAL UINT16

extensionParameter = "X" ("-" / "+") 1*6(ALPHA / DIGIT)

; octetString is used to describe SDP defined in RFC2327.

; Caution should be taken if CRLF in RFC2327 is used.

; To be safe, use EOL in this ABNF.

; Whenever "}" appears in SDP, it is escaped by "\", e.g., "\}"

octetString = *(nonEscapeChar)

nonEscapeChar = ( "\}" / %x01-7C / %x7E-FF )

; Note - The double-quote character is not allowed in quotedString.

quotedString = DQUOTE *(SafeChar / RestChar/ WSP) DQUOTE

UINT16 = 1*5(DIGIT) ; %x0-FFFF

UINT32 = 1*10(DIGIT) ; %x0-FFFFFFFF

NAME = ALPHA *63(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" )

VALUE = quotedString / 1*(SafeChar)

SafeChar = DIGIT / ALPHA / "+" / "-" / "&" /

"!" / "_" / "/" / "\'" / "?" / "@" /

"^" / "`" / "~" / "*" / "$" / "\" /

"(" / ")" / "%" / "" / "."

EQUAL = LWSP %x3D LWSP ; "="

COLON = %x3A ; ":"

LBRKT = LWSP %x7B LWSP ; "{"

RBRKT = LWSP %x7D LWSP ; "}"

COMMA = LWSP %x2C LWSP ; ","

DOT = %x2E ; "."

SLASH = %x2F ; "/"

ALPHA = %x41-5A / %x61-7A ; A-Z / a-z

DIGIT = %x30-39 ; 0-9

DQUOTE = %x22 ; " (Double Quote)

HEXDIG = ( DIGIT / "A" / "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F" )

SP = %x20 ; space

HTAB = %x09 ; horizontal tab

CR = %x0D ; Carriage return

LF = %x0A ; linefeed

LWSP = *( WSP / COMMENT / EOL )

EOL = (CR [LF] / LF )

WSP = SP / HTAB ; white space

SEP = ( WSP / EOL / COMMENT) LWSP

COMMENT = ";" *(SafeChar/ RestChar / WSP / %x22) EOL

RestChar = ";" / "[" / "]" / "{" / "}" / ":" / "," / "#" /

"<" / ">" / "="

; New Tokens added to sigParameter must take the format of SPA*

; * may be of any form i.e., SPAM

; New Tokens added to eventParameter must take the form of EPA*

; * may be of any form i.e., EPAD

AddToken = ("Add" / "A")

AuditToken = ("Audit" / "AT")

AuditCapToken = ("AuditCapability" / "AC")

AuditValueToken = ("AuditValue" / "AV")

AuthToken = ("Authentication" / "AU")

BothwayToken = ("Bothway" / "BW")

BriefToken = ("Brief" / "BR")

BufferToken = ("Buffer" / "BF")

CtxToken = ("Context" / "C")

ContextAuditToken = ("ContextAudit" / "CA")

DigitMapToken = ("DigitMap" / "DM")

DisconnectedToken = ("Disconnected" / "DC")

DelayToken = ("Delay" / "DL")

DurationToken = ("Duration" / "DR")

EmbedToken = ("Embed" / "EM")

EmergencyToken = ("Emergency" / "EG")

ErrorToken = ("Error" / "ER")

EventBufferToken = ("EventBuffer" / "EB")

EventsToken = ("Events" / "E")

FailoverToken = ("Failover" / "FL")

ForcedToken = ("Forced" / "FO")

GracefulToken = ("Graceful" / "GR")

H221Token = ("H221" )

H223Token = ("H223" )

H226Token = ("H226" )

HandOffToken = ("HandOff" / "HO")

ImmAckRequiredToken = ("ImmAckRequired" / "IA")

InactiveToken = ("Inactive" / "IN")

IsolateToken = ("Isolate" / "IS")

InSvcToken = ("InService" / "IV")

InterruptByEventToken = ("IntByEvent" / "IBE")

InterruptByNewSignalsDescrToken

= ("IntBySigDescr" / "IBS")

KeepActiveToken = ("KeepActive" / "KA")

LocalToken = ("Local" / "L")

LocalControlToken = ("LocalControl" / "O")

LockStepToken = ("LockStep" / "SP")

LoopbackToken = ("Loopback" / "LB")

MediaToken = ("Media" / "M")

MegacopToken = ("MEGACO" / "!")

MethodToken = ("Method" / "MT")

MgcIdToken = ("MgcIdToTry" / "MG")

ModeToken = ("Mode" / "MO")

ModifyToken = ("Modify" / "MF")

ModemToken = ("Modem" / "MD")

MoveToken = ("Move" / "MV")

MTPToken = ("MTP")

MuxToken = ("Mux" / "MX")

NotifyToken = ("Notify" / "N")

NotifyCompletionToken = ("NotifyCompletion" / "NC")

ObservedEventsToken = ("ObservedEvents" / "OE")

OnewayToken = ("Oneway" / "OW")

OnOffToken = ("OnOff" / "OO")

OtherReasonToken = ("OtherReason" / "OR")

OutOfSvcToken = ("OutOfService" / "OS")

PackagesToken = ("Packages" / "PG")

PendingToken = ("Pending" / "PN")

PriorityToken = ("Priority" / "PR")

ProfileToken = ("Profile" / "PF")

ReasonToken = ("Reason" / "RE")

RecvonlyToken = ("ReceiveOnly" / "RC")

ReplyToken = ("Reply" / "P")

RestartToken = ("Restart" / "RS")

RemoteToken = ("Remote" / "R")

ReservedGroupToken = ("ReservedGroup" / "RG")

ReservedValueToken = ("ReservedValue" / "RV")

SendonlyToken = ("SendOnly" / "SO")

SendrecvToken = ("SendReceive" / "SR")

ServicesToken = ("Services" / "SV")

ServiceStatesToken = ("ServiceStates" / "SI")

ServiceChangeToken = ("ServiceChange" / "SC")

ServiceChangeAddressToken = ("ServiceChangeAddress" / "AD")

SignalListToken = ("SignalList" / "SL")

SignalsToken = ("Signals" / "SG")

SignalTypeToken = ("SignalType" / "SY")

StatsToken = ("Statistics" / "SA")

StreamToken = ("Stream" / "ST")

SubtractToken = ("Subtract" / "S")

SynchISDNToken = ("SynchISDN" / "SN")

TerminationStateToken = ("TerminationState" / "TS")

TestToken = ("Test" / "TE")

TimeOutToken = ("TimeOut" / "TO")

TopologyToken = ("Topology" / "TP")

TransToken = ("Transaction" / "T")

ResponseAckToken = ("TransactionResponseAck" / "K")

V18Token = ("V18")

V22Token = ("V22")

V22bisToken = ("V22b")

V32Token = ("V32")

V32bisToken = ("V32b")

V34Token = ("V34")

V76Token = ("V76")

V90Token = ("V90")

V91Token = ("V91")

VersionToken = ("Version" / "V")

B.3 Hexadecimal octet coding

Hexadecimal octet coding is a means for representing a string of

octets as a string of hexadecimal digits, with two digits

representing each octet. This octet encoding should be used when

encoding octet strings in the text version of the protocol. For each

octet, the 8-bit sequence is encoded as two hexadecimal digits. Bit

0 is the first transmitted; bit 7 is the last. Bits 7-4 are encoded

as the first hexadecimal digit, with Bit 7 as MSB and Bit 4 as LSB.

Bits 3-0 are encoded as the second hexadecimal digit, with Bit 3 as

MSB and Bit 0 as LSB. Examples:

Octet bit pattern Hexadecimal coding

00011011 D8

11100100 27

10000011 10100010 11001000 00001001 C1451390

B.4 Hexadecimal octet sequence

A hexadecimal octet sequence is an even number of hexadecimal digits,

terminated by a <CR> character.

ANNEX C - Tags for media stream properties

Parameters for Local, Remote and LocalControl descriptors are

specified as tag-value pairs if binary encoding is used for the

protocol. This annex contains the property names (PropertyID), the

tags (Property tag), type of the property (Type) and the values

(Value). Values presented in the Value field when the field contains

references shall be regarded as "information". The reference

contains the normative values. If a value field does not contain a

reference, then the values in that field can be considered as

"normative".

Tags are given as hexadecimal numbers in this annex. When setting

the value of a property, a MGC may underspecify the value according

to one of the mechanisms specified in 7.1.1.

It is optional to support the properties in this Annex or any of its

sub-sections. For example, only three properties from C.3 and only

five properties from C.8 might be implemented.

For type "enumeration" the value is represented by the value in

brackets, e.g., Send(0), Receive(1). Annex C properties with the

types "N bits" or "M Octets" should be treated as octet strings when

encoding the protocol. Properties with "N bit integer" shall be

treated as an integers. "String" shall be treated as an IA5String

when encoding the protocol.

When a type is smaller than one octet, the value shall be stored in

the low-order bits of an octet string of size 1.

C.1 General media attributes

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

Media 1001 Enumeration Audio(0), Video(1), Data(2)

Transmission 1002 Enumeration Send(0), Receive(1),

mode Send&Receive(2)

Number of 1003 Unsigned 0-255

Channels integer

Sampling 1004 Unsigned 0-2^32

rate integer

Bitrate 1005 Integer (0..4294967295)NOTE - Units of

100 bit/s.

ACodec 1006 Octet string Audio Codec Type:

Ref.: ITU-T Q.765

Non-ITU-T codecs are defined

with the appropriate standards

organization under a defined

Organizational Identifier.

Samplepp 1007 Unsigned Maximum samples or frames per

integer packet: 0..65535

Silencesupp 1008 Boolean Silence Suppression: True/False

Encrypttype 1009 Octet string Ref.: ITU-T H.245

Encryptkey 100A Octet string Encryption key

size Ref.: ITU-T H.235

(0..65535)

Echocanc 100B Not Used. See H.248.1 E.13 for

an example of possible Echo

Control properties.

Gain 100C Unsigned Gain in dB: 0..65535

integer

Jitterbuff 100D Unsigned Jitter buffer size in ms:

integer 0..65535

PropDelay 100E Unsigned Propagation Delay: 0..65535

integer Maximum propagation delay in

milliseconds for the bearer

connection between two media

gateways. The maximum delay

will be dependent on the bearer

technology.

RTPpayload 100F Integer Payload type in RTP Profile for

Audio and Video Conferences

with Minimal Control

Ref.: RFC1890

C.2 Mux properties

PropertyID Property tag Type Value

H222 2001 Octet string H222LogicalChannelParameters

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

H223 2002 Octet string H223LogicalChannelParameters

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

V76 2003 Octet string V76LogicalChannelParameters

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

H2250 2004 Octet string H2250LogicalChannelParameters

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

C.3 General bearer properties

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

Mediatx 3001 Enumeration Media Transport TypeTDM

Circuit(0), ATM(1), FR(2),

Ipv4(3), Ipv6(4), ...

BIR 3002 4 octets Value depends on transport

technology

NSAP 3003 1-20 octets See NSAP.

Ref.: Annex A/X.213

C.4 General ATM properties

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

AESA 4001 20 octets ATM End System Address

VPVC 4002 4 octets: VPCI VPCI/VCI

in first two

least Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

significant

octets, VCI in

second two

octets

SC 4003 Enumeration Service Category: CBR(0),

nrt-VBR1(1), nrt VBR2(2),

nrt-VBR3(3), rt-VBR1(4),

rt VBR2(5), rt-VBR3(6),

UBR1(7), UBR2(8), ABR(9).

Ref.: ATM Forum UNI 4.0

BCOB 4004 5-bit integer Broadband Bearer Class

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.2

BBTC 4005 7-bit integer Broadband Transfer Capability

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

ATC 4006 Enumeration I.371 ATM Traffic

CapabilityDBR(0), SBR1(1),

SBR2(2), SBR3(3), ABT/IT(4),

ABT/DT(5), ABR(6)

Ref.: ITU-T I.371

STC 4007 2 bits Susceptibility to clipping:

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 not susceptible to

clipping

0 1 susceptible to

clipping

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

UPCC 4008 2 bits User Plane Connection

configuration:

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 point-to-point

0 1 point-to-multipoint

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

PCR0 4009 24-bit integer Peak Cell Rate (For CLP = 0)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

SCR0 400A 24-bit integer Sustainable Cell Rate (For

CLP = 0)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

MBS0 400B 24-bit integer Maximum Burst Size (For CLP =

0)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

PCR1 400C 24-bit integer Peak Cell Rate (For CLP = 0 +

1)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

SCR1 400D 24-bit integer Sustainable Cell Rate (For

CLP = 0 + 1)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

MBS1 400E 24-bit integer Maximum Burst Size (For CLP =

0 + 1)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

BEI 400F Boolean Best Effort Indicator

Value 1 indicates that BEI is

to be included in the ATM

signaling; value 0 indicates

that BEI is not to be

included in the ATM

signaling.

Ref.: ATM Forum UNI 4.0

TI 4010 Boolean Tagging Indicator

Value 0 indicates that

tagging is not allowed; value

1 indicates that tagging is

requested.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2961.1

FD 4011 Boolean Frame Discard

Value 0 indicates that no

frame discard is allowed;

value 1 indicates that frame

discard is allowed.

Ref.: ATM Forum UNI 4.0

A2PCDV 4012 24-bit integer Acceptable 2-point CDV

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.2

C2PCDV 4013 24-bit integer Cumulative 2-point CDV

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.2

APPCDV 4014 24-bit integer Acceptable P-P CDV

Ref.: ATM Forum UNI 4.0

CPPCDV 4015 24-bit integer Cumulative P-P CDV

Ref.: ATM Forum UNI 4.0

ACLR 4016 8-bit integer Acceptable Cell Loss Ratio

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.2, ATM

Forum UNI 4.0

MEETD 4017 16-bit integer Maximum End-to-end transit

delay

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.2, ATM

Forum UNI 4.0

CEETD 4018 16-bit integer Cumulative End-to-end transit

delay

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.2, ATM

Forum UNI 4.0

QosClass 4019 Integer 0-5 QoS Class

QoS Class Meaning

0 Default QoS

associated

with the ATC

as defined

in ITU-T

Q.2961.2

1 Stringent

2 Tolerant

3 Bi-level

4 Unbounded

5 Stringent

Bi-level

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2965.1

AALtype 401A 1 octet AAL Type

Bits

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

---------------

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 AAL for

voice

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 AAL type 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 AAL type 2

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 AAL type

3/4

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 AAL type 5

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 user-

defined AAL

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

C.5 Frame Relay

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

DLCI 5001 Unsigned Data link connection

integer id

CID 5002 Unsigned sub-channel id

integer

SID/Noiselevel 5003 Unsigned silence insertion

integer descriptor

Primary Payload 5004 Unsigned Primary Payload Type

type integer Covers FAX and codecs

C.6 IP

PropertyID Property tag Type Value

IPv4 6001 32 bits Ipv4Address Ipv4Address

Ref.: IETF RFC791

IPv6 6002 128 bits IPv6 Address

Ref.: IETF RFC2460

Port 6003 Unsigned integer 0..65535

Porttype 6004 Enumerated TCP(0), UDP(1), SCTP(2)

C.7 ATM AAL2

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

AESA 7001 20 octets AAL2 service endpoint

address as defined in

the referenced

Recommendation.

ESEANSEA

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

BIR See C.3 4 octets Served user generated

reference as defined in

the referenced

Recommendation.

SUGR

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

ALC 7002 12 octets AAL2 link

characteristics as

defined in the

referenced

Recommendation.

Maximum/Average CPS-SDU

bit rate;

Maximum/Average CPS-SDU

size

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

SSCS 7003 I.366.2: Audio (8 Service specific

octets); Multirate (3 convergence sublayer

octets), or I.366.1: information as defined

SAR-assured (14 in:

octets);SAR-unassured - ITU-T Q.2630.1,and

(7 octets). used in:

- ITU-T I.366.2:

Audio/Multirate;

- ITU-T I.366.1: SAR-

assured/unassured.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1,

I.366.1 and I.366.2

SUT 7004 1..254 octets Served user transport

parameter as defined in

the referenced

Recommendation.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

TCI 7005 Boolean Test connection

indicator as defined in

the referenced

Recommendation.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

Timer_CU 7006 32-bit integer Timer-CU

Milliseconds to hold

partially filled cell

before sending.

MaxCPSSDU 7007 8-bit integer Maximum Common Part

Sublayer Service Data

Unit

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2630.1

CID 7008 8 bits subchannel id: 0-255

Ref.: ITU-T I.363.2

C.8 ATM AAL1

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

BIR See table 4-29 octets GIT (Generic Identifier

in C.3 Transport)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2941.1

AAL1ST 8001 1 octet AAL1 Subtype

Bits

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

---------------

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 null

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 voiceband

signal transport on 64 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 circuit

transport

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 high-quality

audio signal transport

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 video signal

transport

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

CBRR 8002 1 octet CBR Rate

Bits

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

---------------

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 64 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1544 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 6312 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 32 064 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 44 736 kbit/s

0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 97 728 kbit/s

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2048 kbit/s

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 8448 kbit/s

0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 34 368 kbit/s

0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 139 264 kbit/s

0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 n x 64 kbit/s

0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 n x 8 kbit/s

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

MULT See table Multiplier, or n x 64k/8k/300

in C.9 Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

SCRI 8003 1 octet Source Clock Frequency Recovery

Method

Bits

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

---------------

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 null

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 SRTS

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 ACM

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

ECM 8004 1 octet Error Correction Method

Bits

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

---------------

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 null

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 FEC - Loss

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 FEC - Delay

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

SDTB 8005 16-bit Structured Data Transfer

integer Blocksize

Block size of SDT CBR service

Ref.: ITU-T I.363.1

PFCI 8006 8-bit Partially filled cells identifier

integer 1-47

Ref.: ITU-T I.363.1

C.9 Bearer capabilities

The table entries referencing Recommendation Q.931 refer to the

encoding in the bearer capability information element of Q.931, not

to the low layer information element.

PropertyID Tag Type Value

TMR 9001 1 octet Transmission Medium

Requirement (Q.763)

Bits

87654321

--------

00000000 speech

00000001 spare

00000010 64 kbit/s

unrestricted

00000011 3.1 kHz audio

00000100 reserved for

alternate speech (service

2)/64 kbit/s unrestricted

(service 1)

00000101 reserved for

alternate 64 kbit/s

unrestricted (service

1)/speech (service 2)

00000110 64 kbit/s preferred

The assigned codepoints

listed below are all for

unrestricted service.

00000111 2 x 64 kbit/s

00001000 384 kbit/s

00001001 1536 kbit/s

00001010 1920 kbit/s

00001011

through

00001111 spare

00010000

through

00101010:

3 x 64 kbit/s through

29 x 64 kbit/s

except

00010011 spare

00100101 spare

00101011

through

11111111 spare

Ref.: ITU-T Q.763

TMRSR 9002 1 octet Transmission Medium

Requirement Subrate

0 unspecified

1 8 kbit/s

2 16 kbit/s

3 32 kbit/s

Contcheck 9003 Boolean Continuity Check

0 continuity check not

required on this circuit

1 continuity check

required on this circuit

Ref.: ITU-T Q.763

ITC 9004 5 bits Information Transfer

Capability

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 0 0 Speech

0 1 0 0 0 Unrestricted

digital information

0 1 0 0 1 Restricted

digital information

1 0 0 0 0 3.1 kHz audio

1 0 0 0 1 Unrestricted

digital information with

tones/announcements

1 1 0 0 0 Video

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.763

TransMode 9005 2 bits Transfer Mode

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 Circuit mode

1 0 Packet mode

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

TransRate 9006 5 bits Transfer Rate

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 0 0 This code shall

be used for packet mode calls

1 0 0 0 0 64 kbit/s

1 0 0 0 1 2 x 64 kbit/s

1 0 0 1 1 384 kbit/s

1 0 1 0 1 1536 kbit/s

1 0 1 1 1 1920 kbit/s

1 1 0 0 0 Multirate (64

kbit/s base rate)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

MULT 9007 7 bits Rate Multiplier

Any value from 2 to n

(maximum number of B-

channels)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

layer1prot 9008 5 bits User Information Layer 1

Protocol

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 0 1 ITU-T

standardized rate adaption

V.110 and X.30.

0 0 0 1 0 Recommendation

G.711 m-law

0 0 0 1 1 Recommendation

G.711 A-law

0 0 1 0 0 Recommendation

G.721 32 kbit/s ADPCM and

Recommendation I.460

0 0 1 0 1 Recommendations

H.221 and H.242

0 0 1 1 0 Recommendations

H.223 and H.245

0 0 1 1 1 Non-ITU-T

standardized rate adaption.

0 1 0 0 0 ITU-T

standardized rate adaption

V.120.

0 1 0 0 1 ITU-T

standardized rate adaption

X.31 HDLC flag stuffing

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU Recommendation

Q.931

syncasync 9009 Boolean Synchronous/Asynchronous

0 Synchronous data

1 Asynchronous data

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

negotiation 900A Boolean Negotiation

0 In-band negotiation

possible

1 In-band negotiation not

possible

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

Userrate 900B 5 bits User Rate

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 0 0 Rate is

indicated by E-bits specified

in Recommendation I.460 or

may be negotiated in-band

0 0 0 0 1 0.6 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

0 0 0 1 0 1.2 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

0 0 0 1 1 2.4 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

0 0 1 0 0 3.6 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

0 0 1 0 1 4.8 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

0 0 1 1 0 7.2 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

0 0 1 1 1 8 kbit/s

Recommendation I.460

0 1 0 0 0 9.6 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

0 1 0 0 1 14.4 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

0 1 0 1 0 16 kbit/s

Recommendation I.460

0 1 0 1 1 19.2 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

0 1 1 0 0 32 kbit/s

Recommendation I.460

0 1 1 0 1 38.4 kbit/s

Recommendation V.110

0 1 1 1 0 48 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

0 1 1 1 1 56 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

1 0 0 1 0 57.6 kbit/s

Recommendation V.14 extended

1 0 0 1 1 28.8 kbit/s

Recommendation V.110

1 0 1 0 0 24 kbit/s

Recommendation V.110

1 0 1 0 1 0.1345 kbit/s

Recommendation X.1

1 0 1 1 0 0.100 kbit/s

Recommendation X.1

1 0 1 1 1 0.075/1.2

kbit/s Recommendations V.6

and X.1

1 1 0 0 0 1.2/0.075

kbit/s Recommendations V.6

and X.1

1 1 0 0 1 0.050 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 0 1 0 0.075 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 0 1 1 0.110 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 1 0 0 0.150 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 1 0 1 0.200 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 1 1 0 0.300 kbit/s

Recommendations V.6 and X.1

1 1 1 1 1 12 kbit/s

Recommendation V.6

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

INTRATE 900C 2 bits Intermediate Rate

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 Not used

0 1 8 kbit/s

1 0 16 kbit/s

1 1 32 kbit/s

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

nictx 900D Boolean Network Independent Clock

(NIC) on transmission

0 Not required to send

data with network independent

clock

1 Required to send data

with network independent

clock

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

nicrx 900E Boolean Network independent clock

(NIC) on reception

0 Cannot accept data with

network independent clock

(i.e., sender does not support

this optional procedure)

1 Can accept data with

network independent clock

(i.e., sender does support

this optional procedure)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

flowconttx 900F Boolean Flow Control on transmission

(Tx)

0 Not required to send

data with flow control

mechanism

1 Required to send data

with flow control mechanism

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

flowcontrx 9010 Boolean Flow control on reception

(Rx)

0 Cannot accept data with

flow control mechanism (i.e.,

sender does not support this

optional procedure)

1 Can accept data with

flow control mechanism (i.e.,

sender does support this

optional procedure)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

rateadapthdr 9011 Boolean Rate adaption header/no

header

0 Rate adaption header

not included

1 Rate adaption header

included

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

multiframe 9012 Boolean Multiple frame establishment

support in data link

0 Multiple frame

establishment not supported.

Only UI frames allowed

1 Multiple frame

establishment supported

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

OPMODE 9013 Boolean Mode of operation

0 Bit transparent mode of

operation

1 Protocol sensitive mode

of operation

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

llidnegot 9014 Boolean Logical link identifier

negotiation

0 Default, LLI = 256 only

1 Full protocol

negotiation

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

assign 9015 Boolean Assignor/assignee

0 Message originator is

"default assignee"

1 Message originator is

"assignor only"

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

inbandneg 9016 Boolean In-band/out-band negotiation

0 Negotiation is done

with USER INFORMATION

messages on a temporary

signalling connection

1 Negotiation is done in-

band using logical link zero

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

stopbits 9017 2 bits Number of stop bits

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 Not used

0 1 1 bit

1 0 1.5 bits

1 1 2 bits

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

databits 9018 2 bits Number of data bits excluding

parity bit if present

Bits

2 1

---

0 0 Not used

0 1 5 bits

1 0 7 bits

1 1 8 bits

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

parity 9019 3 bits Parity information

Bits

3 2 1

------

0 0 0 Odd

0 1 0 Even

0 1 1 None

1 0 0 Forced to 0

1 0 1 Forced to 1

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

duplexmode 901A Boolean Mode duplex

0 Half duplex

1 Full duplex

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

modem 901B 6 bits Modem Type

Bits

6 5 4 3 2 1

-----------

0 0 0 0 0 0 through

0 0 0 1 0 1 National use

0 1 0 0 0 1 Rec. V.21

0 1 0 0 1 0 Rec. V.22

0 1 0 0 1 1 Rec. V.22 bis

0 1 0 1 0 0 Rec. V.23

0 1 0 1 0 1 Rec. V.26

0 1 1 0 0 1 Rec. V.26 bis

0 1 0 1 1 1 Rec. V.26 ter

0 1 1 0 0 0 Rec. V.27

0 1 1 0 0 1 Rec. V.27 bis

0 1 1 0 1 0 Rec. V.27 ter

0 1 1 0 1 1 Rec. V.29

0 1 1 1 0 1 Rec. V.32

0 1 1 1 1 0 Rec. V.34

1 0 0 0 0 0 through

1 0 1 1 1 1 National use

1 1 0 0 0 0 through

1 1 1 1 1 1 User specified

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

layer2prot 901C 5 bits User information layer 2

protocol

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 1 0 Rec. Q.921/I.441

0 0 1 1 0 Rec. X.25, link

layer

0 1 1 0 0 LAN logical link

control (ISO/IEC 8802 2)

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

layer3prot 901D 5 bits User information layer 3

protocol

Bits

5 4 3 2 1

---------

0 0 0 1 0 ITU-T Q.931

0 0 1 1 0 ITU-T X.25,

packet layer

0 1 0 1 1 ISO/IEC TR 9577

(Protocol identification in

the network layer)

All other values are

reserved.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

addlayer3prot 901E Octet Additional User Information

layer 3 protocol

Bits Bits

4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1

------- -------

1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0

Internet Protocol (RFC791)

(ISO/IEC TR 9577)

1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1

Point-to-point Protocol (RFC

1661)

Ref.: ITU-T Q.931

DialledN 901F 30 Dialled Number

octets

DiallingN 9020 30 Dialling Number

octets

ECHOCI 9021 Not Used. See H.248.1 E.13

for an example of possible

Echo Control properties.

NCI 9022 1 octet Nature of Connection

Indicators

Bits

2 1 Satellite Indicator

---

0 0 no satellite circuit

in the connection

0 1 one satellite circuit

in the connection

1 0 two satellite

circuits in the connection

1 1 spare

Bits

4 3 Continuity check

--- indicator

0 0 continuity check not

required

0 1 continuity check

required on this circuit

1 0 continuity check

performed on a previous

circuit

1 1 spare

Bit

5 Echo control device

- indicator

0 outgoing echo control

device not included

1 outgoing echo control

device included

Bits

8 7 6 Spare

Ref.: ITU-T Q.763

USI 9023 Octet User Service Information

string Ref.: ITU-T Q.763 Clause 3.57

C.10 AAL5 properties

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

FMSDU A001 32-bit Forward Maximum CPCS-SDU Size:

integer Maximum CPCS-SDU size sent in the

direction from the calling user to

the called user.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

BMSDU A002 32-bit Backwards Maximum CPCS-SDU Size:

integer Maximum CPCS-SDU size sent in the

direction from the called user to

the calling user.

Ref.: ITU-T Q.2931

SSCS See table See table See table in C.7

in C.7 in C.7 Additional values:

VPI/VCI

C.11 SDP equivalents

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

SDP_V B001 String Protocol Version

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_O B002 String Owner/creator and session ID

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_S B003 String Session name

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_I B004 String Session identifier

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_U B005 String URI of descriptor

Ref.: RFC2327

SDC_E B006 String email address

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_P B007 String phone number

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_C B008 String Connection information

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_B B009 String Bandwidth Information

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_Z B00A String Time zone adjustment

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_K B00B String Encryption Key

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_A B00C String Zero or more session attributes

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_T B00D String Active Session Time

Ref.: RFC2327

SDP_R B00E String Zero or more repeat times

Reference: RFC2327

SDP_M B00F String Media type, port, transport and format

Ref.: RFC2327

C.12 H.245

PropertyID Property Type Value

tag

OLC C001 Octet The value of H.245

OpenLogicalChannel structure.

string Ref.: ITU-T H.245

OLCack C002 Octet The value of H.245

string OpenLogicalChannelAck structure.

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

OLCcnf C003 Octet The value of H.245

string OpenLogicalChannelConfirm structure.

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

OLCrej C004 Octet The value of H.245

string OpenLogicalChannelReject structure.

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

CLC C005 Octet The value of H.245

string CloseLogicalChannel structure.

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

CLCack C006 Octet The value of H.245

string CloseLogicalChannelAck structure.

Ref.: ITU-T H.245

ANNEX D - Transport over IP

D.1 Transport over IP/UDP using Application Level Framing (ALF)

Protocol messages defined in this RFCmay be transmitted over UDP.

When no port is provided by the peer (see 7.2.8), commands should be

sent to the default port number: 2944 for text-encoded operation, or

2945 for binary-encoded operation. Responses must be sent to the

address and port from which the corresponding commands were sent.

ALF is a set of techniques that allows an application, as opposed to

a stack, to affect how messages are sent to the other side. A

typical ALF technique is to allow an application to change the order

of messages sent when there is a queue after it has queued them.

There is no formal specification for ALF. The procedures in Annex

D.1 contain a minimum suggested set of ALF behaviours

Implementors using IP/UDP with ALF should be aware of the

restrictions of the MTU on the maximum message size.

D.1.1 Providing At-Most-Once functionality

Messages, being carried over UDP, may be subject to losses. In the

absence of a timely response, commands are repeated. Most commands

are not idempotent. The state of the MG would become unpredictable

if, for example, Add commands were executed several times. The

transmission procedures shall thus provide an "At-Most-Once"

functionality.

Peer protocol entities are expected to keep in memory a list of the

responses that they sent to recent transactions and a list of the

transactions that are currently outstanding. The transaction

identifier of each incoming message is compared to the transaction

identifiers of the recent responses sent to the same MId. If a match

is found, the entity does not execute the transaction, but simply

repeats the response. If no match is found, the message will be

compared to the list of currently outstanding transactions. If a

match is found in that list, indicating a duplicate transaction, the

entity does not execute the transaction (see D.1.4 for procedures on

sending TransactionPending).

The procedure uses a long timer value, noted LONG-TIMER in the

following. The timer should be set larger than the maximum duration

of a transaction, which should take into account the maximum number

of repetitions, the maximum value of the repetition timer and the

maximum propagation delay of a packet in the network. A suggested

value is 30 seconds.

The copy of the responses may be destroyed either LONG-TIMER seconds

after the response is issued, or when the entity receives a

confirmation that the response has been received, through the

"Response Acknowledgement parameter". For transactions that are

acknowledged through this parameter, the entity shall keep a copy of

the transaction-id for LONG-TIMER seconds after the response is

issued, in order to detect and ignore duplicate copies of the

transaction request that could be produced by the network.

D.1.2 Transaction identifiers and three-way handshake

D.1.2.1 Transaction identifiers

Transaction identifiers are 32-bit integer numbers. A Media Gateway

Controller may decide to use a specific number space for each of the

MGs that they manage, or to use the same number space for all MGs

that belong to some arbitrary group. MGCs may decide to share the

load of managing a large MG between several independent processes.

These processes will share the same transaction number space. There

are multiple possible implementations of this sharing, such as having

a centralized allocation of transaction identifiers, or

pre-allocating non-overlapping ranges of identifiers to different

processes. The implementations shall guarantee that unique

transaction identifiers are allocated to all transactions that

originate from a logical MGC (identical mId). MGs can simply detect

duplicate transactions by looking at the transaction identifier and

mId only.

D.1.2.2 Three-way handshake

The TransactionResponse Acknowledgement parameter can be found in any

message. It carries a set of "confirmed transaction-id ranges".

Entities may choose to delete the copies of the responses to

transactions whose id is included in "confirmed transaction-id

ranges" received in the transaction response messages. They should

silently discard further commands when the transaction-id falls

within these ranges.

The "confirmed transaction-id ranges" values shall not be used if

more than LONG-TIMER seconds have elapsed since the MG issued its

last response to that MGC, or when a MG resumes operation. In this

situation, transactions should be accepted and processed, without any

test on the transaction-id.

Messages that carry the "Transaction Response Acknowledgement"

parameter may be transmitted in any order. The entity shall retain

the "confirmed transaction-id ranges" received for LONG-TIMER

seconds.

In the binary encoding, if only the firstAck is present in a response

acknowledgement (see A.2), only one transaction is acknowledged. If

both firstAck and lastAck are present, then the range of transactions

from firstAck to lastAck is acknowledged. In the text encoding, a

horizontal dash is used to indicate a range of transactions being

acknowledged (see B.2).

D.1.3 Computing retransmission timers

It is the responsibility of the requesting entity to provide suitable

timeouts for all outstanding transactions, and to retry transactions

when timeouts have been exceeded. Furthermore, when repeated

transactions fail to be acknowledged, it is the responsibility of the

requesting entity to seek redundant services and/or clear existing or

pending connections.

The specification purposely avoids specifying any value for the

retransmission timers. These values are typically network dependent.

The retransmission timers should normally estimate the timer value by

measuring the time spent between the sending of a command and the

return of a response. Implementations SHALL ensure that the

algorithm used to calculate retransmission timing performs an

exponentially increasing bacKOFf of the retransmission timeout for

each retransmission or repetition after the first one.

NOTE - One possibility is to use the algorithm implemented in

TCP-IP, which uses two variables:

- The average acknowledgement delay (AAD), estimated through an

exponentially smoothed average of the observed delays.

- The average deviation (ADEV), estimated through an exponentially

smoothed average of the absolute value of the difference between

the observed delay and the current average. The retransmission

timer, in TCP, is set to the sum of the average delay plus N times

the average deviation. The maximum value of the timer should

however be bounded for the protocol defined in this

RFC, in order to guarantee that no repeated packet

would be received by the gateways after LONG-TIMER seconds. A

suggested maximum value is 4 seconds.

After any retransmission, the entity SHOULD do the following:

- It should double the estimated value of the average delay, AAD.

- It should compute a random value, uniformly distributed between

0.5 AAD and AAD.

- It should set the retransmission timer to the sum of that random

value and N times the average deviation.

This procedure has two effects. Because it includes an exponentially

increasing component, it will automatically slow down the stream of

messages in case of congestion. Because it includes a random

component, it will break the potential synchronization between

notifications triggered by the same external event.

D.1.4 Provisional responses

Executing some transactions may require a long time. Long execution

times may interact with the timer-based retransmission procedure.

This may result either in an inordinate number of retransmissions, or

in timer values that become too long to be efficient. Entities that

can predict that a transaction will require a long execution time may

send a provisional response, "Transaction Pending". They SHOULD send

this response if they receive a repetition of a transaction that is

still being executed.

Entities that receive a Transaction Pending shall switch to a

different repetition timer for repeating requests. The root

Termination has a property (ProvisionalResponseTimerValue), which can

be set to the requested maximum number of milliseconds between

receipt of a command and transmission of the TransactionPending

response. Upon receipt of a final response following receipt of

provisional responses, an immediate confirmation shall be sent, and

normal repetition timers shall be used thereafter. An entity that

sends a provisional response, SHALL include the immAckRequired field

in the ensuing final response, indicating that an immediate

confirmation is expected. Receipt of a Transaction Pending after

receipt of a reply shall be ignored.

D.1.5 Repeating Requests, Responses and Acknowledgements

The protocol is organized as a set of transactions, each of which is

composed of a request and a response, commonly referred to as an

acknowledgement. The protocol messages, being carried over UDP, may

be subject to losses. In the absence of a timely response,

transactions are repeated. Entities are expected to keep in memory a

list of the responses that they sent to recent transactions, i.e., a

list of all the responses they sent over the last LONG-TIMER seconds,

and a list of the transactions that are currently being executed.

The repetition mechanism is used to guard against three types of

possible errors:

- transmission errors, when for example a packet is lost due to

noise on a line or congestion in a queue;

- component failure, when for example an interface to a entity

becomes unavailable;

- entity failure, when for example an entire entity becomes

unavailable.

The entities should be able to derive from the past history an

estimate of the packet loss rate due to transmission errors. In a

properly configured system, this loss rate should be kept very low,

typically less than 1%. If a Media Gateway Controller or a Media

Gateway has to repeat a message more than a few times, it is very

legitimate to assume that something else than a transmission error is

occurring. For example, given a loss rate of 1%, the probability

that five consecutive transmission attempts fail is 1 in 100 billion,

an event that should occur less than once every 10 days for a Media

Gateway Controller that processes 1000 transactions per second.

(Indeed, the number of repetition that is considered excessive should

be a function of the prevailing packet loss rate.) We should note

that the "suspicion threshold", which we will call "Max1", is

normally lower than the "disconnection threshold", which should be

set to a larger value.

A classic retransmission algorithm would simply count the number of

successive repetitions, and conclude that the association is broken

after retransmitting the packet an excessive number of times

(typically between 7 and 11 times.) In order to account for the

possibility of an undetected or in progress "failover", we modify

the classic algorithm so that if the Media Gateway receives a valid

ServiceChange message announcing a failover, it will start

transmitting outstanding commands to that new MGC. Responses to

commands are still transmitted to the source address of the command.

In order to automatically adapt to network load, this RFCspecifies

exponentially increasing timers. If the initial timer is set to 200

milliseconds, the loss of a fifth retransmission will be detected

after about 6 seconds. This is probably an acceptable waiting delay

to detect a failover. The repetitions should continue after that

delay not only in order to perhaps overcome a transient connectivity

problem, but also in order to allow some more time for the execution

of a failover (waiting a total delay of 30 seconds is probably

acceptable).

It is, however, important that the maximum delay of retransmissions

be bounded. Prior to any retransmission, it is checked that the time

elapsed since the sending of the initial datagram is no greater than

T-MAX. If more than T-MAX time has elapsed, the MG concludes that

the MGC has failed, and it begins its recovery process as described

in section 11.5. If the MG retries to connect to the current MGC it

shall use a ServiceChange with ServiceChangeMethod set to

Disconnected so that the new MGC will be aware that the MG lost one

or more transactions. The value T-MAX is related to the LONG-TIMER

value: the LONG-TIMER value is obtained by adding to T MAX the

maximum propagation delay in the network.

D.2 Using TCP

Protocol messages as defined in this RFCmay be transmitted over TCP.

When no port is specified by the other side (see 7.2.8), the commands

should be sent to the default port. The defined protocol has

messages as the unit of transfer, while TCP is a stream-oriented

protocol. TPKT, according to RFC1006, SHALL be used to delineate

messages within the TCP stream.

In a transaction-oriented protocol, there are still ways for

transaction requests or responses to be lost. As such, it is

recommended that entities using TCP transport implement application

level timers for each request and each response, similar to those

specified for application level framing over UDP.

D.2.1 Providing the At-Most-Once functionality

Messages, being carried over TCP, are not subject to transport

losses, but loss of a transaction request or its reply may

nonetheless be noted in real implementations. In the absence of a

timely response, commands are repeated. Most commands are not

idempotent. The state of the MG would become unpredictable if, for

example, Add commands were executed several times.

To guard against such losses, it is recommended that entities follow

the procedures in D.1.1.

D.2.2 Transaction identifiers and three-way handshake

For the same reasons, it is possible that transaction replies may be

lost even with a reliable delivery protocol such as TCP. It is

recommended that entities follow the procedures in D.1.2.2.

D.2.3 Computing retransmission timers

With reliable delivery, the incidence of loss of a transaction

request or reply is expected to be very low. Therefore, only simple

timer mechanisms are required. Exponential back-off algorithms

should not be necessary, although they could be employed where, as in

an MGC, the code to do so is already required, since MGCs must

implement ALF/UDP as well as TCP.

D.2.4 Provisional responses

As with UDP, executing some transactions may require a long time.

Entities that can predict that a transaction will require a long

execution time may send a provisional response, "Transaction

Pending". They should send this response if they receive a

repetition of a transaction that is still being executed.

Entities that receive a Transaction Pending shall switch to a longer

repetition timer for that transaction.

Entities shall retain Transactions and replies until they are

confirmed. The basic procedure of D.1.4 should be followed, but

simple timer values should be sufficient. There is no need to send

an immediate confirmation upon receipt of a final response.

D.2.5 Ordering of commands

TCP provides ordered delivery of transactions. No special procedures

are required. It should be noted that ALF/UDP allows sending entity

to modify its behaviour under congestion, and in particular, could

reorder transactions when congestion is encountered. TCP could not

achieve the same results.

ANNEX E - Basic packages

This annex contains definitions of some packages for use with

Recommendation H.248.1.

E.1 Generic

PackageID: g (0x0001)

Version: 1

Extends: None

Description:

Generic package for commonly encountered items.

E.1.1 Properties

None.

E.1.2 Events

Cause

EventID: cause (0x0001)

Generic error event

EventsDescriptor parameters: None

ObservedEvents Descriptor Parameters:

General Cause

ParameterID: Generalcause (0x0001)

This parameter groups the failures into six groups, which

the MGC may act upon.

Type: enumeration

Possible values:

"NR" Normal Release (0x0001)

"UR" Unavailable Resources (0x0002)

"FT" Failure, Temporary (0x0003)

"FP" Failure, Permanent (0x0004)

"IW" Interworking Error (0x0005)

"UN" Unsupported (0x0006)

Failure Cause

ParameterID: Failurecause (0x0002)

Possible values: OCTET STRING

Description: The Failure Cause is the value generated by the

Released equipment, i.e., a released network connection.

The concerned value is defined in the appropriate bearer

control protocol.

Signal Completion

EventID: sc (0x0002)

Indicates the termination of a signal for which the

notifyCompletion parameter was set to enable reporting of a

completion event. For further procedural description, see 7.1.1,

7.1.17 and 7.2.7.

EventsDescriptor parameters: None

ObservedEvents Descriptor parameters:

Signal Identity

ParameterID: SigID (0x0001)

This parameter identifies the signal which has terminated.

For a signal that is contained in a signal list, the signal

list identity parameter should also be returned indicating

the appropriate list.

Type: Binary: octet (string), Text: string

Possible values: a signal which has terminated. A signal

shall be identified using the pkgdName syntax without

wildcarding.

Termination Method

ParameterID: Meth (0x0002)

Indicates the means by which the signal terminated.

Type: enumeration

Possible values:

"TO" (0x0001) Signal timed out or otherwise completed on

its own

"EV" (0x0002) Interrupted by event

"SD" (0x0003) Halted by new Signals descriptor

"NC" (0x0004) Not completed, other cause

Signal List ID

ParameterID: SLID (0x0003)

Indicates to which signal list a signal belongs. The

SignalList ID is only returned in cases where the signal

resides in a signal list.

Type: integer

Possible values: any integer

E.1.3 Signals

None.

E.1.4 Statistics

None.

E.2 Base Root Package

PackageID: root (0x0002)

Version: 1

Extends: None

Description:

This package defines Gateway wide properties.

E.2.1 Properties

MaxNrOfContexts

PropertyID: maxNumberOfContexts (0x0001)

The value of this property gives the maximum number of contexts

that can exist at any time. The NULL context is not included in

this number.

Type: double

Possible values: 1 and up

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read only

MaxTerminationsPerContext

PropertyID: maxTerminationsPerContext (0x0002)

The maximum number of allowed terminations in a context, see 6.1

Type: integer

Possible values: any integer

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read only

normalMGExecutionTime

PropertyId: normalMGExecutionTime (0x0003)

Settable by the MGC to indicate the interval within which the MGC

expects a response to any transaction from the MG (exclusive of

network delay)

Type: integer

Possible values: any integer, represents milliseconds

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read / write

normalMGCExecutionTime

PropertyId: normalMGCExecutionTime (0x0004)

Settable by the MGC to indicate the interval within which the MG

should expects a response to any transaction from the MGC

(exclusive of network delay)

Type: integer

Possible values: any integer, represents milliseconds

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read / write

MGProvisionalResponseTimerValue

PropertyId: MGProvisionalResponseTimerValue (0x0005)

Indicates the time within which the MGC should expect a Pending

Response from the MG if a Transaction cannot be completed.

Initially set to normalMGExecutionTime plus network delay, but may

be lowered.

Type: Integer

Possible Values: any integer, represents milliseconds

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read / write

MGCProvisionalResponseTimerValue

PropertyId: MGCProvisionalResponseTimerValue (0x0006)

Indicates the time within which the MG should expect a Pending

Response from the MGC if a Transaction cannot be completed.

Initially set to normalMGCExecutionTime plus network delay, but

may be lowered.

Type: Integer

Possible Values: any integer, represents milliseconds

Defined in: TerminationState

Characteristics: read / write

E.2.2 Events

None.

E.2.3 Signals

None.

E.2.4 Statistics

None.

E.2.5 Procedures

None.

E.3 Tone Generator Package

PackageID: tonegen (0x0003)

Version: 1

Extends: None

Description:

This package defines signals to generate audio tones. This

package does not specify parameter values. It is intended to be

extendable. Generally, tones are defined as an individual signal

with a parameter, ind, representing "interdigit" time delay, and a

tone id to be used with playtones. A tone id should be kept

consistent with any tone generation for the same tone. MGs are

expected to be provisioned with the characteristics of appropriate

tones for the country in which the MG is located.

Designed to be extended only.

E.3.1 Properties

None.

E.3.2 Events

None.

E.3.3 Signals

Play tone

SignalID: pt (0x0001)

Plays audio tone over an audio channel

Signal Type: Brief

Duration: Provisioned

Additional parameters:

Tone id list

ParameterID: tl (0x0001)

Type: list of tone ids

List of tones to be played in sequence. The list SHALL

contain one or more tone ids.

Inter signal duration

ParameterID: ind (0x0002)

Type: integer

Timeout between two consecutive tones in milliseconds

No tone ids are specified in this package. Packages that extend this

package can add possible values for tone id as well as adding

individual tone signals.

E.3.4 Statistics

None.

E.3.5 Procedures

None.

E.4 Tone Detection Package

PackageID: tonedet (0x0004)

Version: 1

Extends: None

This Package defines events for audio tone detection. Tones are

selected by name (tone id). MGs are expected to be provisioned with

the characteristics of appropriate tones for the country in which the

MG is located.

Designed to be extended only:

This package does not specify parameter values. It is intended to

be extendable.

E.4.1 Properties

None.

E.4.2 Events

Start tone detected

EventID: std, 0x0001

Detects the start of a tone. The characteristics of positive tone

detection are implementation dependent.

EventsDescriptor parameters:

Tone id list

ParameterID: tl (0x0001)

Type: list of tone ids

Possible values: The only tone id defined in this package is

"wild card" which is "*" in text encoding and 0x0000 in

binary. Extensions to this package would add possible

values for tone id. If tl is "wild card", any tone id is

detected.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

Tone id

ParameterID: tid (0x0003)

Type: enumeration

Possible values: "wildcard" as defined above is the only

value defined in this package. Extensions to this package

would add additional possible values for tone id.

End tone detected

EventID: etd, 0x0002

Detects the end of a tone.

EventDescriptor parameters:

Tone id list

ParameterID: tl (0x0001)

Type: enumeration or list of enumerated types

Possible values: No possible values are specified in this

package. Extensions to this package would add possible

values for tone id.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

Tone id

ParameterID: tid (0x0003)

Type: enumeration

Possible values: "wildcard" as defined above is the only

value defined in this package. Extensions to this

package would add possible values for tone id.

Duration

ParameterId: dur (0x0002)

Type: integer, in milliseconds

This parameter contains the duration of the tone from

first detection until it stopped.

Long tone detected

EventID: ltd, 0x0003

Detects that a tone has been playing for at least a certain amount

of time.

EventDescriptor parameters:

Tone id list

ParameterID: tl (0x0001)

Type: enumeration or list

Possible values: "wildcard" as defined above is the only

value defined in this package. Extensions to this package

would add possible values for tone id.

Duration

ParameterID: dur (0x0002)

Type: integer, duration to test against

Possible values: any legal integer, expressed in

milliseconds

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

Tone id

ParameterID: tid (0x0003)

Type: Enumeration

Possible values: No possible values are specified in this

package. Extensions to this package would add possible

values for tone id.

E.4.3 Signals

None.

E.4.4 Statistics

None.

E.4.5 Procedures

None.

E.5 Basic DTMF Generator Package

PackageID: dg (0x0005)

Version: 1

Extends: tonegen version 1

This package defines the basic DTMF tones as signals and extends the

allowed values of parameter tl of playtone in tonegen.

E.5.1 Properties

None.

E.5.2 Events

None.

E.5.3 Signals

DTMF character 0

SignalID: d0 (0x0010)

Generate DTMF 0 tone. The physical characteristic of DTMF 0 is

defined in the gateway.

Signal Type: Brief

Duration: Provisioned

Additional parameters:

None.

Additional values:

d0 (0x0010) is defined as a tone id for playtone

The other DTMF characters are specified in exactly the same way. A

table with all signal names and signal IDs is included. Note that

each DTMF character is defined as both a signal and a tone id, thus

extending the basic tone generation package. Also note that DTMF

SignalIds are different from the names used in a digit map.

Signal name Signal ID/Tone id

DTMF character 0 d0 (0x0010)

DTMF character 1 d1 (0x0011)

DTMF character 2 d2 (0x0012)

DTMF character 3 d3 (0x0013)

DTMF character 4 d4 (0x0014)

DTMF character 5 d5 (0x0015)

DTMF character 6 d6 (0x0016)

DTMF character 7 d7 (0x0017)

DTMF character 8 d8 (0x0018)

DTMF character 9 d9 (0x0019)

DTMF character * ds (0x0020)

DTMF character # do (0x0021)

DTMF character A da (0x001a)

DTMF character B db (0x001b)

DTMF character C dc (0x001c)

DTMF character D dd (0x001d)

E.5.4 Statistics

None.

E.5.5 Procedures

None.

E.6 DTMF detection Package

PackageID: dd (0x0006)

Version: 1

Extends: tonedet version 1

This package defines the basic DTMF tones detection. This Package

extends the possible values of tone id in the "start tone detected"

"end tone detected" and "long tone detected" events.

Additional tone id values are all tone ids described in package dg

(basic DTMF generator package).

The following table maps DTMF events to digit map symbols as

described in 7.1.14.

DTMF Event Symbol

d0 "0"

d1 "1"

d2 "2"

d3 "3"

d4 "4"

d5 "5"

d6 "6"

d7 "7"

d8 "8"

d9 "9"

da "A" or "a"

db "B" or "b"

dc "C" or "c"

dd "D" or "d"

ds "E" or "e"

do "F" or "f"

E.6.1 Properties

None.

E.6.2 Events

DTMF digits

EventIds are defined with the same names as the SignalIds defined

in the table found in E.5.3.

DigitMap Completion Event

EventID: ce, 0x0004

Generated when a digit map completes as described in 7.1.14.

EventsDescriptor parameters: None.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

DigitString

ParameterID: ds (0x0001)

Type: string of digit map symbols (possibly empty) returned

as a quotedString

Possible values: a sequence of the characters "0" through

"9", "A" through "F", and the long duration modifier "Z".

Description: the portion of the current dial string as

described in 7.1.14 which matched part or all of an

alternative event sequence specified in the digit map.

Termination Method

ParameterID: Meth (0x0003)

Type: enumeration

Possible values:

"UM" (0x0001) Unambiguous match

"PM" (0x0002) Partial match, completion by timer expiry

or unmatched event

"FM" (0x0003) Full match, completion by timer expiry or

unmatched event

Description: indicates the reason for generation of the

event. See the procedures in 7.1.14.

E.6.3 Signals

None.

E.6.4 Statistics

None.

E.6.5 Procedures

Digit map processing is activated only if an events descriptor is

activated that contains a digit map completion event as defined in

Section E.6.2 and that digit map completion event contains an eventDM

field in the requested actions as defined in Section 7.1.9. Other

parameters such as KeepActive or embedded events of signals

descriptors may also be present in the events descriptor and do not

affect the activation of digit map processing.

E.7 Call Progress Tones Generator Package

PackageID: cg, 0x0007

Version: 1

Extends: tonegen version 1

This package defines the basic call progress tones as signals and

extends the allowed values of the tl parameter of playtone in

tonegen.

E.7.1 Properties

None.

E.7.2 Events

None.

E.7.3 Signals

Dial Tone

SignalID: dt (0x0030)

Generate dial tone. The physical characteristic of dial tone is

available in the gateway.

Signal Type: TimeOut

Duration: Provisioned

Additional parameters:

None.

Additional values:

dt (0x0030) is defined as a tone id for playtone

The other tones of this package are defined in exactly the same way.

A table with all signal names and signal IDs is included. Note that

each tone is defined as both a signal and a tone id, thus extending

the basic tone generation package.

Signal Name Signal ID/tone id

Dial Tone dt (0x0030)

Ringing Tone rt (0x0031)

Busy Tone bt (0x0032)

Congestion Tone ct (0x0033)

Special Information Tone sit(0x0034)

Warning Tone wt (0x0035)

Payphone Recognition Tone prt (0x0036)

Call Waiting Tone cw (0x0037)

Caller Waiting Tone cr (0x0038)

E.7.4 Statistics

None.

E.7.5 Procedures

NOTE - The required set of tone ids corresponds to those defined

in Recommendation E.180/Q.35. See Recommendation E.180/Q.35 for

definition of the meanings of these tones.

E.8 Call Progress Tones Detection Package

PackageID: cd (0x0008)

Version: 1

Extends: tonedet version 1

This package defines the basic call progress detection tones. This

package extends the possible values of tone id in the "start tone

detected", "end tone detected" and "long tone detected" events.

Additional values

toneID values are defined for start tone detected, end tone

detected and long tone detected with the same values as those in

package cg (call progress tones generation package).

The required set of tone ids corresponds to Recommendation

E.180/Q.35. See Recommendation E.180/Q.35 for definition of the

meanings of these tones.

E.8.1 Properties

None.

E.8.2 Events

Events are defined as in the call progress tones generator package

(cg) for the tones listed in the table of E.7.3.

E.8.3 Signals

None.

E.8.4 Statistics

None.

E.8.5 Procedures

None.

E.9 Analog Line Supervision Package

PackageID: al, 0x0009

Version: 1

Extends: None

This package defines events and signals for an analog line.

E.9.1 Properties

None.

E.9.2 Events

onhook

EventID: on (0x0004)

Detects handset going on hook. Whenever an events descriptor is

activated that requests monitoring for an on-hook event and the

line is already on-hook, then the MG shall behave according to the

setting of the "strict" parameter.

EventDescriptor parameters:

Strict Transition

ParameterID: strict (0x0001)

Type: enumeration

Possible values: "exact" (0x00), "state" (0x01), "failWrong"

(0x02)

"exact" means that only an actual hook state transition to

on-hook is to be recognized;

"state" means that the event is to be recognized either if

the hook state transition is detected or if the hook state

is already on-hook;

"failWrong" means that if the hook state is already

on-hook, the command fails and an error is reported.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

Initial State

ParameterID: init (0x0002)

Type: Boolean

Possible values:

"True" means that the event was reported because the line

was already on-hook when the events descriptor containing

this event was activated;

"False" means that the event represents an actual state

transition to on-hook.

offhook

EventID: of (0x0005)

Detects handset going off hook. Whenever an events descriptor is

activated that requests monitoring for an off-hook event and the

line is already off-hook, then the MG shall behave according to

the setting of the "strict" parameter.

EventDescriptor parameters:

Strict Transition

ParameterID: strict (0x0001)

Type: enumeration

Possible values: "exact" (0x00), "state" (0x01), "failWrong"

(0x02)

"exact" means that only an actual hook state transition

to off-hook is to be recognized;

"state" means that the event is to be recognized either

if the hook state transition is detected or if the hook

state is already off-hook;

"failWrong" means that if the hook state is already off-

hook, the command fails and an error is reported.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters

Initial State

ParameterID: init (0x0002)

Type: Boolean

Possible values:

"True" means that the event was reported because the line

was already off-hook when the events descriptor

containing this event was activated;

"False" means that the event represents an actual state

transition to off-hook.

flashhook

EventID: fl, 0x0006

Detects handset flash. A flash occurs when an onhook is followed

by an offhook between a minimum and maximum duration.

EventDescriptor parameters:

Minimum duration

ParameterID: mindur (0x0004)

Type: integer in milliseconds

Default value is provisioned.

Maximum duration

ParameterID: maxdur (0x0005)

Type: integer in milliseconds

Default value is provisioned.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters:

None

E.9.3 Signals

ring

SignalID: ri, 0x0002

Applies ringing on the line

Signal Type: TimeOut

Duration: Provisioned

Additional parameters:

Cadence

ParameterID: cad (0x0006)

Type: list of integers representing durations of alternating

on and off segments, constituting a complete ringing cycle

starting with an on. Units in milliseconds

Default is fixed or provisioned. Restricted function MGs

may ignore cadence values they are incapable of generating.

Frequency

ParameterID: freq (0x0007)

Type: integer in Hz

Default is fixed or provisioned. Restricted function MGs

may ignore frequency values they are incapable of

generating.

E.9.4 Statistics

None.

E.9.5 Procedures

If the MGC sets an EventsDescriptor containing a hook state

transition event (on-hook or off-hook) with the "strict" (0x0001)

parameter set to "failWrong", and the hook state is already what the

transition implies, the execution of the command containing that

EventsDescriptor fails. The MG SHALL include error code 540

"Unexpected initial hook state" in its reponse.

E.9.6 Error code

This package defines a new error code:

540 - Unexpected initial hook state

The procedure for use of this code is given in E.9.5.

E.10 Basic Continuity Package

PackageID: ct (0x000a)

Version: 1

Extends: None

This package defines events and signals for continuity test. The

continuity test includes provision of either a loopback or

transceiver functionality.

E.10.1 Properties

None.

E.10.2 Events

Completion

EventID: cmp, 0x0005

This event detects test completion of continuity test.

EventDescriptor parameters

None.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters

Result

ParameterID: res (0x0008)

Type: enumeration

Possible values: success (0x0001), failure (0x0000)

E.10.3 Signals

Continuity test

SignalID: ct (0x0003)

Initiates sending of continuity test tone on the termination to

which it is applied.

Signal Type: TimeOut

Default value is provisioned

Additional parameters:

None.

Respond

SignalID: rsp (0x0004)

The signal is used to respond to a continuity test. See E.10.5

for further explanation.

Signal Type: On/Off

Default duration is provisioned

Additional parameters:

None.

E.10.4 Statistics

None.

E.10.5 Procedures

When a MGC wants to initiate a continuity test, it sends a command to

the MG containing:

- a signals descriptor with the ct signal; and

- an events descriptor containing the cmp event.

Upon reception of a command containing the ct signal and cmp event,

the MG initiates the continuity test tone for the specified

Termination. If the return tone is detected and any other required

conditions are satisfied before the signal times out, the cmp event

shall be generated with the value of the result parameter equal to

success. In all other cases, the cmp event shall be generated with

the value of the result parameter equal to failure.

When a MGC wants the MG to respond to a continuity test, it sends a

command to the MG containing a signals descriptor with the rsp

signal. Upon reception of a command with the rsp signal, the MG

either applies a loopback or (for 2-wire circuits) awaits reception

of a continuity test tone. In the loopback case, any incoming

information shall be reflected back as outgoing information. In the

2-wire case, any time the appropriate test tone is received, the

appropriate response tone should be sent. The MGC determines when to

remove the rsp signal.

When a continuity test is performed on a Termination, no echo devices

or codecs shall be active on that Termination.

Performing voice path assurance as part of continuity testing is

provisioned by bilateral agreement between network operators.

(Informative Note) Example tones and test procedure details are

given in Q.724 sections 7 and 8, Q.764 section 2.1.8 and Q.1902.4.

E.11 Network Package

PackageID: nt (0x000b)

Version: 1

Extends: None

This package defines properties of network terminations independent

of network type.

E.11.1 Properties

Maximum Jitter Buffer

PropertyID: jit (0x0007)

This property puts a maximum size on the jitter buffer.

Type: integer in milliseconds

Possible values: This property is specified in milliseconds.

Defined in: LocalControlDescriptor

Characteristics: read/write

E.11.2 Events

network failure

EventID: netfail, 0x0005

The termination generates this event upon detection of a failure

due to external or internal network reasons.

EventDescriptor parameters

None.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters

cause

ParameterID: cs (0x0001)

Type: string

Possible values: any text string

This parameter may be included with the failure event to

provide diagnostic information on the reason of failure.

quality alert

EventID: qualert, 0x0006

This property allows the MG to indicate a loss of quality of the

network connection. The MG may do this by measuring packet loss,

interarrival jitter, propagation delay and then indicating this

using a percentage of quality loss.

EventDescriptor parameters

Threshold

ParameterId: th (0x0001)

Type: integer

Possible values: 0 to 99

Description: threshold for percent of quality loss measured,

calculated based on a provisioned method, that could take

into consideration packet loss, jitter, and delay for

example. Event is triggered when calculation exceeds the

threshold.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters

Threshold

ParameterId: th (0x0001)

Type: integer

Possible values: 0 to 99

Description: percent of quality loss measured, calculated

based on a provisioned method, that could take into

consideration packet loss, jitter, and delay for example.

E.11.3 Signals

None.

E.11.4 Statistics

Duration

StatisticsID: dur (0x0001)

Description: provides duration of time the termination has been in

the Context.

Type: double, in milliseconds

Octets Sent

StatisticID: os (0x0002)

Type: double

Possible values: any 64-bit integer

Octets Received

StatisticID: or (0x0003)

Type: double

Possible values: any 64-bit integer

E.11.5 Procedures

None.

E.12 RTP Package

PackageID: rtp (0x000c)

Version: 1

Extends: Network Package version 1

This package is used to support packet-based multimedia data transfer

by means of the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) [RFC1889].

E.12.1 Properties

None.

E.12.2 Events

Payload Transition

EventID: pltrans, 0x0001

This event detects and notifies when there is a transition of the

RTP payload format from one format to another.

EventDescriptor parameters

None.

ObservedEventsDescriptor parameters

ParameterName: rtppayload

ParameterID: rtppltype, 0x01

Type: list of enumerated types.

Possible values: The encoding method shall be specified by

using one or several valid encoding names, as defined in the

RTP AV Profile or registered with IANA.

E.12.3 Signals

None.

E.12.4 Statistics

Packets Sent

StatisticID: ps (0x0004)

Type: double

Possible values: any 64-bit integer

Packets Received

StatisticID: pr (0x0005)

Type: double

Possible values: any 64-bit integer

Packet Loss

StatisticID: pl (0x0006)

Describes the current rate of packet loss on an RTP stream, as

defined in IETF RFC1889. Packet loss is expressed as percentage

value: number of packets lost in the interval between two

reception reports, divided by the number of packets expected

during that interval.

Type: double

Possible values: a 32-bit whole number and a 32-bit fraction.

Jitter

StatisticID: jit (0x0007)

Requests the current value of the interarrival jitter on an RTP

stream as defined in IETF RFC1889. Jitter measures the variation

in interarrival time for RTP data packets.

Delay

StatisticID:delay (0x0008)

Requests the current value of packet propagation delay expressed

in timestamp units. Same as average latency.

E.12.5 Procedures

None.

E.13 TDM Circuit Package

PackageID: tdmc (0x000d)

Version: 1

Extends: Network Package version 1

This package may be used by any termination that supports gain and

echo control. It was originally intended for use on TDM circuits

but may be more widely used.

New versions or extensions of this package should take non-TDM use

into account.

E.13.1 Properties

Echo Cancellation

PropertyID: ec (0x0008)

Type: boolean

Possible values:

"on" (when the echo cancellation is requested) and

"off" (when it is turned off.)

The default is provisioned.

Defined in: LocalControlDescriptor

Characteristics: read/write

Gain Control

PropertyID: gain (0x000a)

Gain control, or usage of of signal level adaptation and

noise level reduction is used to adapt the level of the signal.

However, it is necessary, for example for modem calls, to turn

off this function.

Type: integer

Possible values:

The gain control parameter may either be specified as

"automatic" (0xffffffff), or as an explicit number of decibels

of gain (any other integer value). The default is provisioned

in the MG.

Defined in: LocalControlDescriptor

Characteristics: read/write

E.13.2 Events

None.

E.13.3 Signals

None.

E.13.4 Statistics

None.

E.13.5 Procedures

None.

APPENDIX I EXAMPLE CALL FLOWS (INFORMATIVE)

All H.248.1 implementors must read the normative part of this RFC

carefully before implementing from it. The examples in this appendix

should not be used as stand-alone explanations of how to create

protocol messages.

The examples in this appendix use SDP for encoding of the Local and

and Remote stream descriptors. SDP is defined in RFC2327. If there

is is any discrepancy between the SDP in the examples, and RFC2327,

the the RFCshould be consulted for correctness. Audio profiles used

are are those defined in IETF RFC1890, and others registered with

IANA. For example, G.711 A-law is called PCMA in SDP, and is

assigned profile 0. G.723.1 is called G723 and is profile 4; H.263 is

called H263 and is profile 34. See also

http://www.iana.org/assignments/rtp-parameters.

A.1 Residential Gateway to Residential Gateway Call

This example scenario illustrates the use of the elements of the

protocol to set up a Residential Gateway to Residential Gateway call

over an IP-based network. For simplicity, this example assumes that

both Residential Gateways involved in the call are controlled by the

same Media Gateway Controller.

A.1.1 Programming Residential GW Analog Line Terminations for Idle

Behavior

The following illustrates the API invocations from the Media Gateway

Controller and Media Gateways to get the Terminations in this

scenario programmed for idle behavior. Both the originating and

terminating Media Gateways have idle AnalogLine Terminations

programmed to look for call initiation events (i.e., -offhook) by

using the Modify Command with the appropriate parameters. The null

Context is used to indicate that the Terminations are not yet

involved in a Context. The ROOT termination is used to indicate the

entire MG instead of a termination within the MG.

In this example, MG1 has the IP address 124.124.124.222, MG2 is

125.125.125.111, and the MGC is 123.123.123.4. The default Megaco

port is 55555 for all three.

1. An MG registers with an MGC using the ServiceChange command:

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222] Transaction = 9998 {

Context = - {

ServiceChange = ROOT {Services {

Method=Restart,

ServiceChangeAddress=55555, Profile=ResGW/1}

}

} }

2. The MGC sends a reply:

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Reply = 9998 {

Context = - {ServiceChange = ROOT {

Services {ServiceChangeAddress=55555, Profile=ResGW/1} } } }

3. The MGC programs a Termination in the NULL context. The

terminationId is A4444, the streamId is 1, the requestId in the

Events descriptor is 2222. The mId is the identifier of the sender

of this message, in this case, it is the IP address and port

[123.123.123.4]:55555. Mode for this stream is set to SendReceive.

"al" is the analog line supervision package. Local and Remote are

assumed to be provisioned.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 9999 {

Context = - {

Modify = A4444 {

Media { Stream = 1 {

LocalControl {

Mode = SendReceive,

tdmc/gain=2, ; in dB,

tdmc/ec=on

},

}

},

Events = 2222 {al/of(strict=state)}

}

} }

The dialplan script could have been loaded into the MG previously.

Its function would be to wait for the OffHook, turn on dialtone and

start collecting DTMF digits. However in this example, we use the

digit map, which is put into place after the offhook is detected

(step 5 below).

Note that the embedded EventsDescriptor could have been used to

combine steps 3 and 4 with steps 8 and 9, eliminating steps 6 and 7.

4. The MG1 accepts the Modify with this reply:

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555

Reply = 9999 {

Context = - {Modify = A4444} }

5. A similar exchange happens between MG2 and the MGC, resulting in

an idle Termination called A5555.

A.1.2 Collecting Originator Digits and Initiating Termination

The following builds upon the previously shown conditions. It

illustrates the transactions from the Media Gateway Controller and

originating Media Gateway (MG1) to get the originating Termination

(A4444) through the stages of digit collection required to initiate a

connection to the terminating Media Gateway (MG2).

6. MG1 detects an offhook event from User 1 and reports it to the

Media Gateway Controller via the Notify Command.

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Transaction = 10000 {

Context = - {

Notify = A4444 {ObservedEvents =2222 {

19990729T22000000:al/of(init=false)}}

} }

7. And the Notify is acknowledged.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Reply = 10000 {

Context = - {Notify = A4444} }

8. The MGC Modifies the termination to play dial tone, to look for

digits according to Dialplan0 and to look for the on-hook event now.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 10001 {

Context = - {

Modify = A4444 {

Events = 2223 {

al/on(strict=state), dd/ce {DigitMap=Dialplan0}

},

Signals {cg/dt},

DigitMap= Dialplan0{ (0 00[1-

7]xxx8xxxxxxxFxxxxxxxExx91xxxxxxxxxx9011x.)}

}

} }

9. And the Modify is acknowledged.

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Reply = 10001 {

Context = - {Modify = A4444} }

10. Next, digits are accumulated by MG1 as they are dialed by User

1. Dialtone is stopped upon detection of the first digit. When an

appropriate match is made of collected digits against the currently

programmed Dialplan for A4444, another Notify is sent to the Media

Gateway Controller.

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Transaction = 10002 {

Context = - {

Notify = A4444 {ObservedEvents =2223 {

19990729T22010001:dd/ce{ds="916135551212",Meth=UM}}}

} }

11. And the Notify is acknowledged.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Reply = 10002 {

Context = - {Notify = A4444} }

12. The controller then analyses the digits and determines that a

connection needs to be made from MG1 to MG2. Both the TDM

termination A4444, and an RTP termination are added to a new context

in MG1. Mode is ReceiveOnly since Remote descriptor values are not

yet specified. Preferred codecs are in the MGC's preferred order of

choice.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 10003 {

Context = $ {

Add = A4444,

Add = $ {

Media {

Stream = 1 {

LocalControl {

Mode = ReceiveOnly,

nt/jit=40 ; in ms

},

Local { v=0 c=IN IP4 $ m=audio $ RTP/AVP 4

a=ptime:30 v=0 c=IN IP4 $ m=audio $ RTP/AVP 0

}

}

}

}

} }

NOTE - The MGC states its preferred parameter values as a series

of SDP blocks in Local. The MG fills in the Local Descriptor in

the Reply.

13. MG1 acknowledges the new Termination and fills in the Local IP

address and UDP port. It also makes a choice for the codec based on

the MGC preferences in Local. MG1 sets the RTP port to 2222.

MG1 -> MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Reply = 10003 {

Context = 2000 {

Add = A4444,

Add=A4445{

Media {

Stream = 1 {

Local { v=0 o=- 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4

124.124.124.222 s=- t= 0 0 c=IN IP4 124.124.124.222 m=audio 2222

RTP/AVP 4 a=ptime:30 a=recvonly

} ; RTP profile for G.723.1 is 4

}

}

}

} }

14. The MGC will now associate A5555 with a new Context on MG2, and

establish an RTP Stream (i.e., A5556 will be assigned), SendReceive

connection through to the originating user, User 1. The MGC also

sets ring on A5555.

MGC to MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 50003 {

Context = $ {

Add = A5555 { Media {

Stream = 1 {

LocalControl {Mode = SendReceive} }},

Events=1234{al/of(strict=state)},

Signals {al/ri}

},

Add = $ {Media {

Stream = 1 {

LocalControl {

Mode = SendReceive,

nt/jit=40 ; in ms

},

Local { v=0 c=IN IP4 $ m=audio $ RTP/AVP 4

a=ptime:30

},

Remote { v=0 c=IN IP4 124.124.124.222 m=audio 2222

RTP/AVP 4 a=ptime:30

} ; RTP profile for G.723.1 is 4

}

}

}

} }

15. This is acknowledged. The stream port number is different from

the control port number. In this case it is 1111 (in the SDP).

MG2 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Reply = 50003 {

Context = 5000 {

Add = A5555,

Add = A5556{

Media {

Stream = 1 {

Local { v=0 o=- 7736844526 7736842807 IN IP4

125.125.125.111 s=- t= 0 0 c=IN IP4 125.125.125.111 m=audio 1111

RTP/AVP 4 }

} ; RTP profile for G723.1 is 4

}

}

} }

16. The above IPAddr and UDPport need to be given to MG1 now.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 10005 {

Context = 2000 {

Modify = A4444 {

Signals {cg/rt}

},

Modify = A4445 {

Media {

Stream = 1 {

Remote { v=0 o=- 7736844526 7736842807 IN IP4

125.125.125.111 s=- t= 0 0 c=IN IP4 125.125.125.111 m=audio 1111

RTP/AVP 4

}

} ; RTP profile for G723.1 is 4

}

}

} }

MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Reply = 10005 {

Context = 2000 {Modify = A4444, Modify = A4445} }

17. The two gateways are now connected and User 1 hears the

RingBack. The MG2 now waits until User2 picks up the receiver and

then the two-way call is established.

From MG2 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Transaction = 50005 {

Context = 5000 {

Notify = A5555 {ObservedEvents =1234 {

19990729T22020002:al/of(init=false)}}

} }

From MGC to MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Reply = 50005 {

Context = - {Notify = A5555} }

From MGC to MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 50006 {

Context = 5000 {

Modify = A5555 {

Events = 1235 {al/on(strict=state)},

Signals { } ; to turn off ringing

}

} }

From MG2 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Reply = 50006 {

Context = 5000 {Modify = A4445} }

18. Change mode on MG1 to SendReceive, and stop the ringback.

MGC to MG1:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 10006 {

Context = 2000 {

Modify = A4445 {

Media {

Stream = 1 {

LocalControl {

Mode=SendReceive

}

}

}

},

Modify = A4444 {

Signals { }

}

} }

from MG1 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [124.124.124.222]:55555 Reply = 10006 {

Context = 2000 {Modify = A4445, Modify = A4444}}

19. The MGC decides to Audit the RTP termination on MG2.

MGC -> MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 50007 {

Context = - {AuditValue = A5556{

Audit{Media, DigitMap, Events, Signals, Packages, Statistics }}

} }

20. The MG2 replies.

MG2 -> MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Reply = 50007 {

Context = - { AuditValue = A5556 {

Media {

TerminationState { ServiceStates = InService,

Buffer = OFF },

Stream = 1 {

LocalControl { Mode = SendReceive,

nt/jit=40 },

Local { v=0 o=- 7736844526 7736842807 IN IP4

125.125.125.111 s=- t= 0 0 c=IN IP4 125.125.125.111 m=audio 1111

RTP/AVP 4 a=ptime:30

},

Remote { v=0 o=- 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4

124.124.124.222 s=- t= 0 0 c=IN IP4 124.124.124.222 m=audio 2222

RTP/AVP 4 a=ptime:30

} } },

Events,

Signals,

DigitMap,

Packages {nt-1, rtp-1},

Statistics { rtp/ps=1200, ; packets sent

nt/os=62300, ; octets sent

rtp/pr=700, ; packets received

nt/or=45100, ; octets received

rtp/pl=0.2, ; % packet loss

rtp/jit=20,

rtp/delay=40 } ; avg latency

}

} }

21. When the MGC receives an onhook signal from one of the MGs, it

brings down the call. In this example, the user at MG2 hangs up

first.

From MG2 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Transaction = 50008 {

Context = 5000 {

Notify = A5555 {ObservedEvents =1235 {

19990729T24020002:al/on(init=false)}

}

} }

From MGC to MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Reply = 50008 {

Context = - {Notify = A5555} }

22. The MGC now sends both MGs a Subtract to take down the call.

Only the subtracts to MG2 are shown here. Each termination has its

own set of statistics that it gathers. An MGC may not need to

request both to be returned. A5555 is a physical termination, and

A5556 is an RTP termination.

From MGC to MG2:

MEGACO/1 [123.123.123.4]:55555 Transaction = 50009 {

Context = 5000 {

Subtract = A5555 {Audit{Statistics}},

Subtract = A5556 {Audit{Statistics}}

} }

From MG2 to MGC:

MEGACO/1 [125.125.125.111]:55555 Reply = 50009 {

Context = 5000 {

Subtract = A5555 {

Statistics {

nt/os=45123, ; Octets Sent

nt/dur=40 ; in seconds

}

},

Subtract = A5556 {

Statistics {

rtp/ps=1245, ; packets sent

nt/os=62345, ; octets sent

rtp/pr=780, ; packets received

nt/or=45123, ; octets received

rtp/pl=10, ; % packets lost

rtp/jit=27,

rtp/delay=48 ; average latency

}

}

} }

23. The MGC now sets up both MG1 and MG2 to be ready to detect the

next off-hook event. See step 1. Note that this could be the

default state of a termination in the null context, and if this were

the case, no message need be sent from the MGC to the MG. Once a

termination returns to the null context, it goes back to the default

termination values for that termination.

APPENDIX II Changes From RFC3015

In the following table, "source" indicates when the change was first

approved. It has the following values:

IG1100: H.248 Implementor's Guide approved in November, 2000 (as TD

Plen-39, Christian Groves, editor).

IG0601: H.248 Implementor's Guide approved in June, 2001 (as TD

Plen-15, Christian Groves, editor).

IGDUB: Draft H.248 Implementor's Guide approved at the Q.3

Rapporteur's meeting held near Dublin, October 2001 (as TD-28, Terry

Anderson, editor).

GEN0202: added at the Geneva meeting, February 2002, which consented

to H.248 v1 Amendment 1 (as TD Plen-36r1, Marcello Pantaleo, editor).

ITUPOST: added in post-Geneva editing by the ITU-T.

TTPOST: added in post-approval editing by the Megaco Chair, Tom

Taylor, who assembled this document for submission.

Section Source Change

1 ITUPOST Reference changed from H.248 to H.248.1.

2.1 ITUPOST Reference added for error codes, changed from

H.248 Annex L to H.248.8 (2002).

2.1 IG1100 Corrected Q.765 reference to Q.765.5.

2.1 GEN0202 Added reference to X.690.

2.2 GEN0202 Added reference to H.226.

2.2 IGDUB Added informative references to Q.724, Q.764,

and Q.1902.4.

4 IG0601 Added expansion of ALF.

5 TTPOST Gave priority to IETF conventions (added at

start of document).

6.1.1 IG0601 Added text regarding use of wildcards for

context identifiers. (This information

already appeared in section 8.1.2. The IG

change subsequently disappeared.)

6.1.1 IG1100 Added ranking of priority values.

6.2 IGDUB Deleted definition of signals.

6.2 GEN0202 Expanded text and diagrams describing

multiplexing terminations.

6.2 TTPOST Added asterisks to multiplexing diagrams to

indicate centre of context. Added Figure 6a

showing cascading of multiplexes.

6.2.2 IG0601 Added text indicating that ALL does not

include ROOT.

6.2.3 IG1100 Added text clarifying what must be supported

to claim support of a package.

6.2.3 IG1100 Added text indicating what packages a peer can

indicate support for, when some of them are

extensions of others.

6.2.4 IG0601 Added text on ability of provisioning to

override default values, and need for MGC to

audit to learn the provisioned defaults.

6.2.4 IG0601 Added text indicating effect of omitting

specific properties from Descriptors in

commands modifying a termination.

Contradicted original text saying that omitted

properties retain their prior values (still

true for entirely-omitted Descriptors).

6.2.4 GEN0202 Modified above text to restrict it to

read/write properties, allow for default

behaviour in place of default values if so

specified in the property definition.

6.2.4 IGDUB Trimmed definition of signals Descriptor in

table and inserted cross-reference to section

7.1.11.

6.2.4 IG1100 Added Topology and Error Descriptors to table.

6.2.5 IGDUB Specified error code to return if ROOT used

inappropriately.

7.1.1 IG1100 Added qualification to explanation of effect

of missing Audit Descriptor, excepting

Subtract.

7.1.3 GEN0202 Changed "inputs" to "bearers" to be consistent

with terminology in 6.2.

7.1.4 IG0601 Small change to make clear that more than one

of Local, Remote, and LocalControl can be

included in the default streamId.

7.1.7 IG0601 Default value for Mode specified to be

Inactive.

7.1.7 GEN0202 Added text requiring processing of media in

any of the reserved formats, where more than

one has been reserved in a given stream.

7.1.8 IGDUB Added restriction to at most one m= line per

session description.

7.1.9 IG0601 Text added to omit request identifier if the

EventsDescriptor is empty. Further text added

at end to indicate the effects of an empty

EventsDescriptor and an empty

EventBufferDescriptor.

7.1.9 IG0601 Fixed typo for destination of a Notify.

7.1.9 IG1100 Added note to say event remains active after

it has been notified, so long as it is still

present in the active Events Descriptor.

7.1.11 IGDUB Added definition of signals.

7.1.11 GEN0202 Modified definition to include example of more

complex signal, and added role of signal in

media preparation for future signals.

7.1.11 IGDUB The timeout completion reason was broadened to

include other circumstances where the signal

completed on its own. Text added to indicate

that if default signal type changed to TO,

duration parameter must be provided.

7.1.11 GEN0202 Removed reference to BR signal being "so

short" it will stop on its own. Added text

indicating that if the type of a signal is

changed to TO, the Duration parameter must be

supplied.

7.1.11 IG1100 Deleted text discussing type of Signals List.

7.1.12 GEN0202 Improved wording of introductory paragraph and

added text making content of returned

Descriptor clear.

7.1.14.2 GEN0202 Added text indicating that when the start

timer is set to 0, initial digit timing is

disabled and the MG waits indefinitely for

digits.

7.1.14.2 GEN0202 Added text pointing out that default digit

timer values should be provisioned, but can be

overridden in the digit map.

7.1.14.3 GEN0202 Changed result of long-short digit timer

conflict from undefined to long.

7.1.14.6 IG1100 Clarified that the digit map is provided by

the eventDM parameter, which must be present.

7.1.14.7 GEN0202 Added text clarifying that events covered by

the digit map completion event have no side-

effects unless separately enabled.

7.1.14.8 IG0601 Added requirement that the event specification

include the eventDM parameter.

7.1.17 IGDUB Added text to indicate timestamp is optional

and to include observed event parameters in

reported content.

7.1.17 GEN0202 Deleted provision that time is expressed in

UTC (since intention was to use format, not

time zone).

7.1.18 IGDUB Added text indicating error to return if

topology option not supported.

7.1.18 IG1100 Added text clarifying effect of not mentioning

TTPOST a termination in a topology Descriptor, and

default topology for a new termination. (This

text got lost between the Dublin meeting and

the production of H.248 Amendment 1 out of the

Geneva 02/02 meeting. It has been added back

to the present document.)

7.1.19 IG1100 New section to describe Error Descriptor.

GEN0202 Slightly edited in Geneva 02/02 meeting.

ITUPOST Reference for error code documentation updated

to H.248.8.

7.1.19 IG0601 Added paragraph giving guidance on level at

which errors should be reported.

7.2 IG1100 Noted possibility of Error Descriptor in reply

to any command.

7.2.1 IG1100 Added EventBufferDescriptor as Add parameter.

7.2.1 IG1100 Removed restriction on use of CHOOSE wildcard.

7.2.2 IG1100 Added EventBufferDescriptor as Modify

parameter.

7.2.2 GEN0202 Added text on side-effects of Modify of a

multiplexing termination.

7.2.3 IG1100 Added prohibition against subtracting from the

NULL context.

7.2.3 GEN0202 Added text on side-effects of Subtract of a

multiplexing termination.

7.2.3 IGDUB Added text clarifying effect of empty

AuditDescriptor in Subtract.

7.2.4 IG1100 Added EventBufferDescriptor as Move parameter.

7.2.4 GEN0202 Removed misleading statement that Move acts as

subtract from original context.

7.2.4 IG1100 Clarified effect of Move on properties of the

moved termination.

7.2.4 GEN0202 Added text on side-effects of Move of a

multiplexing termination.

7.2.5 IG1100 Added examples showing W- wildcard usage.

7.2.5 IG1100 Noted that returning a list of all contextIDs

requires that they be returned one per

ActionReply.

7.2.5 IG1100 Added table entry (ALL, specific) to determine

context in which termination currently

resides.

7.2.6 GEN0202 Added table similar to that in 7.2.5.

7.2.7 IG0601 Added TerminationID to API.

7.2.7 IGDUB Indicated timestamp was optional in Notify, to

accord with syntax.

7.2.7 IG1100 Noted possibility of sending Error Descriptor

in Notify.

7.2.8 IG0601 Added text to description of Forced method to

indicate that Forced on ROOT indicates a cold

restart (all context state lost).

7.2.8 IGDUB Amplified explanation of Disconnected method

to emphasize return to the previously

controlling MGC.

7.2.8 IG0601 Added text for MG use of Failover method when

it detects MGC failure.

7.2.8 IG1100 Added notes discouraging use of

ServiceChangeAddress and warning that it could

be either a full address or just a port

number.

7.2.8 IG0601 Added text indicating that timestamp does not

necessarily represent absolute time, only

local clock reading.

7.2.8 IGDUB Corrected "gateway" to "MGC" in discussion of

returned ServiceChangeMgcId parameter.

7.3 IG0601 Removed error code documentation to Annex L

ITUPOST (now H.248.8).

8 IG1100 Added requirement that an Action be non-empty.

8 GEN0202 Added context properties and context property

audit requests to commands as potential

contents of actions.

8.1.2 GEN0202 Added prohibition on using partial contextIDs

with ALL wildcards.

8.2.2 IG1100 Added text clarifying when in transaction

processing the requested actions have been

completed and a reply can be sent.

8.2.2 IG1100 Added ALL as allowed contextID in

TransactionReply.

8.2.2 GEN0202 Provided general reference to section 7.1.19

for generation of error Descriptors.

8.2.2 IG0601 Corrected Actions to Commands when discussing

partially-understood action.

8.3 IG0601 Added text specifying that the same MId value

must be used by a given entity throughout the

life of a control association.

8.3 IG0601 Added text expanding on independence of

transactions from messages.

9 ITUPOST Indicated that additional transports may be

defined in separate Recommendations as well as

annexes to the primary specification.

9 IG0601 Gave specific example of "request source

address" for IP.

9.1 IG1100 Deleted restriction to one outstanding Notify

command on a termination at one time, since

this is transport-specific.

9.1 IG0601 Restored restriction, but noted that it

applied only to transport not guaranteeing

ordered delivery.

10.2 IG1100 Corrected length of synthesized address field

from 10 to 20 hex digits and indicated that

calculation should be over entire message, not

just one transaction.

11.2 IG1100 Corrected text in first two paragraphs

describing use of ServiceChangeMgcId

parameter.

11.2 IG1100 Corrected "Transaction Accept" to "Transaction

Reply".

11.4 IG0601 Noted that support of redundant MGs requires

GEN0202 use of a reliable transport and support in the

MGC. Added more explanation in Geneva.

11.5 IG0601 Added text clarifying procedure if MG unable

to establish a control relationship with any

of its eligible MGCs.

11.5 IGDUB Added text indicating that when trying to

reestablish contact with the previously

controlling MGC the MG uses the Disconnected

method.

11.5 IG1100 Clarified handoff procedure.

11.5 GEN0202 Changed text on replies to transactions in

progress during handoff. Replies now

discarded when the service relationship with

the old MGC has ended, rather than sent to the

new MGC. The new MGC could still send replies

to requests sent to the old MGC.

12.1.1 GEN0202 Added optional package designation as

"designed to be extended only".

12.1.1 IG1100 Made prohibition on overloading of identifiers

in extended packages transitive through all

ancestors of the extended package.

12.1.2 IGDUB Clarified the set of types allowed for

properties.

12.1.2 GEN0202 Added requirement to specify the base type of

a sub-list.

12.1.2 GEN0202 Provided requirements for content of the

"Possible Values" template item, including

specification of default values or behaviour.

12.1.4 GEN0202 Added requirement to specify the default

signal type, and specify a default duration

for TO signals. Also noted that duration is

meaningless for BR, and that the signal type

might be dependent on the values of other

signal parameters.

12.2 GEN0202 Fixed section title (covers only event and

signal parameters, not properties or

statistics).

12.2 IG1100 Reserved SPA and EPA prefixes, so they are not

to be used for signal and event parameter

tokens.

12.2 IG0601 Expanded list of reserved prefixes.

12.2 IGDUB Clarified the set of types allowed for signal

and event parameters.

12.2 GEN0202 Added requirement to specify the base type of

a sub-list.

12.2 GEN0202 Provided requirements for content of the

"Possible Values" template item, including

specification of default values or behaviour.

12.4 IGDUB Corrected to indicate identifiers must start

with alphabetic rather than alphanumeric

character.

13.1 IG0601 Changed private range of binary package

identifiers to convenient hex values.

A GEN0202 Removed versions from X.680 and X.690

references.

A.2 IGDUB Added note warning that the syntax alone does

not provide a complete description of the

constraints, but must be supplemented by a

reading of the text and comments.

A.2 IG0601 Added description of double wrapping of

parameters declared as OCTET STRING.

A.2 GEN0202 Some editing of double wrapping description to

use ASN.1, BER in their proper places. Added

possibility of encoding strings as UTF8String,

but only if they contain non-ASCII characters.

A.2 IGDUB Added line in table on double wrapping of true

octet strings.

A.2 IG1100 Corrected and expanded comments describing

mtpAddress form of MId. Fixed maximum length

of mtpAddress both here and in

ServiceChangeAddress.

A.2 IG0601 Inserted missing lines in IP4Address

production.

A.2 IG0601 Modified TransactionResponseAck to allow

acknowledgement of multiple ranges of

transactionIds.

A.2 IG0601 Corrected numerical value of CHOOSE as a

context identifier.

A.2 IGDUB Added missing extension marker in

TopologyRequest.

A.2 IG1100 AuditReply and AuditResult modified to bring

binary functionality into line with text

functionality.

A.2 IG0601 Removed OPTIONAL tag from terminationID in

NotifyReply.

A.2 IG0601 Added extraInfo substructure to EventParameter

and SigParameter.

A.2 IG0601 Modified MediaDescriptor to make it optional

to specify a stream.

A.2 IG0601 Added OPTIONAL tags to reserveValue and

reserveGroup.

A.2 IGDUB Added to comments for pkgdName to indicate

applicability to event names, signal names,

and statisticIds as well as property.

A.2 IG0601 RequestID made optional in EventsDescriptor

and SecondEventsDescriptor and comment added

saying it must be present if events are

present.

A.2 IG1100 Added OPTIONAL tags on RequestActions and

SecondRequestedActions keepActive BOOLEANs.

A.2 IG1100 Added comment to indicate requestID value to

use in an AuditCapReply.

A.2 GEN0202 Added comment to DigitMapValue indicating time

units for timers.

A.2 IG0601 Added comment indicating coding of Value for

GEN0202 ServiceChangeReason. Cleaned up in Geneva to

use ASN.1 and BER in their proper places.

A.2 IG0601 Inserted missing extension marker in

ServiceChangeParm production.

A.2 IG0601 Aligned definition of mtpAddress in

ServiceChangeAddress with that in MId.

A.2 IG0601 Added timestamp to ServiceChangeResParm.

A.2 IGDUB Changed type of profileName in

ServiceChangeProfile to IA5String.

A.2 IG0601 Made returned value optional in

statisticsParameter, to support

auditCapability result.

A.2 GEN0202 Added reference to ISO 8601:1988 for

TimeNotation.

A.2 IG1100 Value production modified to support the

sublist parameter type.

A.3 IG1100 Corrected ABNF for digitStringlisT, replacing

"/" with "".

A.3 IG1100 Added parentheses to digitMapRange production.

A.3 IG1100 Replaced more abbreviated syntax for pathName

with fuller definition and constraints copied

from B.2.

B.2 IGDUB Added note warning that the syntax alone does

not provide a complete description of the

constraints, but must be supplemented by a

reading of the text and comments.

B.2 IG0601 Added note warning that the interpretation of

symbols is context-dependent.

B.2 IG1100 Added comment to indicate case insensitivity

of protocol (excepting SDP) and ABNF.

B.2 IG0601 Expanded upon and capitalized this comment.

B.2 IG0601 Lengthy note added on the coding of the VALUE

construct.

B.2 IGDUB Deleted sentence in note suggesting that

packages could add new types for properties,

parameters, or statistics.

B.2 IG0601 Added note indicating that parsers should

allow for white space preceding the first line

of SDP in Local or Remote.

B.2 IGDUB Added comments identifying the O- and W- tags.

B.2 IG1100 Moved wildcard tag up from individual commands

to commandRequestList.

B.2 GEN0202 Added additional error case to actionReply.

B.2 IG0601 Modified syntax of auditOther to allow return

of terminationID only.

B.2 IGDUB Corrected upper limit for V4hex.

B.2 IG1100 Corrected and expanded comments describing

mtpAddress form of MId.

B.2 IG0601 Modified comment to mediaParm to make

streamParms and StreamDescriptor mutually

exclusive.

B.2 GEN0202 Modified comment further to indicate at most

one instance of terminationStateDescriptor.

B.2 GEN0202 Expanded comment for streamParm to indicate

the restriction on repetition is per item.

B.2 IG0601 Modified "at most once" comments to localParm,

terminationStateParm, and modemType, to allow

multiple instances of propertyParm in the

first two cases and extensionParameter in the

last one.

B.2 IG0601 Added note before description of Local and

Remote, pointing out that the octet value x00

is not allowed in octetString.

B.2 IG0601 Syntax for eventsDescriptor, embedFirst, and

eventBufferDescriptor modified to make

contents beyond token optional.

B.2 IGDUB Replaced "event" by "item" in comment to

pkgdName because pkgdName applies to

properties, signals, and statistics as well.

B.2 IG0601 Corrected placement of EQUAL in eventDM

production.

B.2 IG1100 Added comment and syntax to indicate requestID

value to use in an AuditCapReply.

B.2 IG1100 Corrected Modem Descriptor to allow package

items as properties.

B.2 IG0601 Comment to modemType changed to allow multiple

instances of extensionParameter.

B.2 GEN0202 Comment added to indicate units for Timer.

B.2 IG1100 Added parentheses to digitMapRange production.

B.2 IG1100 Added comment to serviceChangeParm,

restricting each parameter to one appearance.

B.2 IG0601 Added comments making serviceChangeMgcId and

serviceChangeAddress mutually exclusive in

ServiceChangeParm and servChgReplyParm.

B.2 IGDUB Added comment to serviceChangeParm indicating

that ServiceChangeMethod and

ServiceChangeReason are required.

B.2 IG0601 Added Timestamp to servChgReplyParm.

B.2 IG0601 Added comment indicating coding of Value for

ServiceChangeReason.

B.2 IG0601 Modified ServiceChangeAddress to use MId

definition for full address.

B.2 IG1100 Made returned value optional in

statisticsParameter, to support

auditCapability result.

B.2 IG1100 Changed topologyDescriptor to allow multiple

triples.

B.2 IG0601 Added comment forbidding use of a double quote

within a quotedString value.

B.2 IG1100 Reserved prefixes for new tokens added to

signalParameter and eventParameter, to avoid

collision with package names.

B.2 IG1100 EmbedToken and EmergencyToken changed to

remove clash with EventBufferToken.

B.3 IG1100 New section describing hexadecimal octet

encoding.

B.4 IG1100 New section describing hex octet sequence.

C IG1100 Added permission to use Annex C properties in

LocalControl as well as in Local and Remote.

C IG0601 Added text making support of all properties of

Annex C optional.

C IGDUB Added directions to reconcile tabulated

formats with allowed types for properties.

C.1 IG1100 Corrected Q.765 reference to Q.765.5 for

ACodec.

C.1 IG1100 Deprecated Echocanc codepoint in favour of

package-defined property.

C.4 ITUPOST Updated references from Q.2961 to Q.2961.1.

C.4 IGDUB Added details on format of VPVC.

C.9 IG1100 Renamed USI to layer1prot.

C.9 IG1100 Deprecated ECHOCI codepoint in favour of

package-defined property.

C.9 IG1100 Added new USI property.

C.11 IG1100 Added m= line tag.

D.1 IG0601 Added explanation of ALF.

D.1.5 IGDUB Expanded text indicating that when trying to

reestablish contact with the previously

controlling MGC the MG uses the Disconnected

method.

E.1.2 GEN0202 Added missing EventsDescriptor parameters

lines.

E.1.2 GEN0202 For the Signal Completion event:

- corrected the description of how it is

enabled

- heavily edited the description of the Signal

Identity observed event parameter and added a

type.

E.1.2 IGDUB The timeout completion reason for the Signal

Completion event was broadened to include

other circumstances where the signal completed

on its own.

E.1.2 IG1100 Added signal list ID observed event parameter

to the Signal Completion event.

E.2.1 IG0601 Added missing read only, read-write

specifications.

E.2.1 IG0601 Split ProvisionalResponseTimer properties into

one for MG, one for MGC.

E.3 GEN0202 Added "Designed to be extended only" to

tonegen package description.

E.4 GEN0202 Added "Designed to be extended only" to

tonedet package description.

E.4.2 GEN0202 Added type for tone ID observed parameter for

Long Tone Detected event.

E.6.2 IG1100 Corrected binary identifier for digit map

completion event to avoid clash with base

package.

E.6.2 IG1100 Removed procedural text.

E.6.5 IG1100 Added procedural text indicating where to find

the applicable digit map and indicating the

error to return if the parameter is missing.

E.6.5 IG0601 Further modified procedural text.

E.7.3 IG1100 Corrected text identifier for payphone

recognition tone to avoid clash with base

package.

E.10.5 IGDUB Provided informative references for tones and

procedures for continuity check.

E.13 GEN0202 Added note that TDM package could also apply

to other transports.

E.13.1 IG1100 Changed default for echo cancellation from

"on" to provisioned.

E.13.1 IG0601 Corrected type for gain property.

Appendix TTPOST Included a number of corrections which were

I not picked up in H.248.1 Amendment 1 but which

do appear in H.248.1 v2.

Intellectual Property Rights

The ITU draws attention to the possibility that the practice or

implementation of this RFCmay involve the use of a claimed

Intellectual Property Right. The ITU takes no position concerning

the evidence, validity or applicability of claimed Intellectual

Property Rights, whether asserted by ITU members or others outside of

the Recommendation development process.

As of the date of approval of this RFC, the ITU had received notice

of intellectual property, protected by patents, which may be required

to implement this RFC. However, implementors are cautioned that this

may not represent the latest information and are therefore strongly

urged to consult the TSB patent database.

The IETF has also received notice of intellectual property claims

relating to Megaco/H.248.1. Please consult the IETF IPR

announcements at http://www.ietf.org/ipr.Html.

Acknowledgments

Megaco/H.248.1 is the result of hard work by many people in both the

IETF and in ITU-T Study Group 16. This section records those who

played a prominent role in ITU-T meetings, on the Megaco list, or

both.

Megaco/H.248 owes a large initial debt to the MGCP protocol (RFC

2705), and thus to its authors, Mauricio Arango, Andrew Dugan, Ike

Elliott, Christian Huitema, and Scott Pickett. Flemming Andreasen

does not appear on this list of authors, but was a major contributor

to the development of both MGCP and Megaco/H.248.1. RFC3435 has an

extensive acknowledgement of many other people who worked on media

gateway control before Megaco got started.

The authors of the first Megaco RFCs (2805, then 3015) were Fernando

Cuervo, Nancy Greene, Abdallah Rayhan, Christian Huitema, Brian

Rosen, and John Segers. Christian Groves conceived and was editor of

Annex C. The people most active on the Megaco list in the period

leading up to the completion of RFC2885 were Brian Rosen, Tom

Taylor, Nancy Greene, Christian Huitema, Matt Holdrege, Chip Sharp,

John Segers, Michael Thomas, Henry Sinnreich, and Paul Sijben. The

people who sacrificed sleep and meals to complete the massive amount

of work required in the decisive Study Group 16 meeting of February,

2000, were Michael Brown, Ranga Dendi, Larry Forni, Glen Freundlich,

Christian Groves, Alf Heidemark, Steve Magnell, Selvam Rengasami,

Rich Rubin, Klaus Sambor, John Segers, Chip Sharp, Tom Taylor, and

Stephen Terrill.

The most active people on the Megaco list in the period since the

February 2000 have been Tom Taylor, Brian Rosen, Christian Groves,

Madhu Babu Brahmanapally, Troy Cauble, Terry Anderson, Chuong Nguyen,

and Kevin Boyle, but many other people have been regular

contributors. Brian Rosen did tremendous service in putting together

the Megaco interoperability tests. On the Study Group 16 side, the

editorial team for the final revised document in February, 2002

included Christian Groves, Marcello Pantaleo, Terry Anderson, Peter

Leis, Kevin Boyle, and Tom Taylor.

Tom Taylor as Megaco Chair managed the day to day operation of the

Megaco list, with Brian Rosen taking an equal share of the burden for

most of the last three years. Glen Freundlich as the Study Group 16

Rapporteur ran the ITU-T meetings and ensured that all of the work at

hand was completed. Without Glen's determination the Megaco/H.248

standard would have taken at least half a year longer to produce.

Christian Groves filled in ably as Rapporteur when Glen could no

longer take part.

Authors' Addresses

Terry L. Anderson

24 Hill St

Bernardsville, NJ 07924

USA

EMail: tlatla@verizon.net

Christian Groves

Ericsson AsiaPacificLab Australia

37/360 Elizabeth St

Melbourne, Victoria 3000

Australia

EMail: Christian.Groves@ericsson.com.au

Marcello Pantaleo

Ericsson Eurolab Deuschland

Ericsson Allee 1

52134 Herzogenrath, Germany

EMail: Marcello.Pantaleo@eed.ericsson.se

Tom Taylor

Nortel Networks

1852 Lorraine Ave,

Ottawa, Ontario

Canada K1H 6Z8

Phone: +1 613 736 0961

EMail: taylor@nortelnetworks.com

Full 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 RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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