Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         J. Lennox
Request for Comments: 8108                                         Vidyo
Updates: 3550, 4585                                        M. Westerlund
Category: Standards Track                                       Ericsson
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Q. Wu
                                                                 Huawei
                                                             C. Perkins
                                                  University of Glasgow
                                                             March 2017


         Sending Multiple RTP Streams in a Single RTP Session

Abstract

  This memo expands and clarifies the behavior of Real-time Transport
  Protocol (RTP) endpoints that use multiple synchronization sources
  (SSRCs).  This occurs, for example, when an endpoint sends multiple
  RTP streams in a single RTP session.  This memo updates RFC 3550 with
  regard to handling multiple SSRCs per endpoint in RTP sessions, with
  a particular focus on RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) behavior.  It also
  updates RFC 4585 to change and clarify the calculation of the timeout
  of SSRCs and the inclusion of feedback messages.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8108.














Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.





































Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................4
  2. Terminology .....................................................4
  3. Use Cases for Multi-Stream Endpoints ............................4
     3.1. Endpoints with Multiple Capture Devices ....................4
     3.2. Multiple Media Types in a Single RTP Session ...............5
     3.3. Multiple Stream Mixers .....................................5
     3.4. Multiple SSRCs for a Single Media Source ...................5
  4. Use of RTP by Endpoints That Send Multiple Media Streams ........6
  5. Use of RTCP by Endpoints That Send Multiple Media Streams .......6
     5.1. RTCP Reporting Requirement .................................7
     5.2. Initial Reporting Interval .................................7
     5.3. Aggregation of Reports into Compound RTCP Packets ..........8
          5.3.1. Maintaining AVG_RTCP_SIZE ...........................9
          5.3.2. Scheduling RTCP when Aggregating Multiple SSRCs ....10
     5.4. Use of RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF Feedback .....................13
          5.4.1. Choice of SSRC for Feedback Packets ................13
          5.4.2. Scheduling an RTCP Feedback Packet .................14
  6. Adding and Removing SSRCs ......................................15
     6.1. Adding RTP Streams ........................................16
     6.2. Removing RTP Streams ......................................16
  7. RTCP Considerations for Streams with Disparate Rates ...........17
     7.1. Timing Out SSRCs ..........................................19
          7.1.1. Problems with the RTP/AVPF T_rr_interval
                 Parameter ..........................................19
          7.1.2. Avoiding Premature Timeout .........................20
          7.1.3. Interoperability between RTP/AVP and RTP/AVPF ......21
          7.1.4. Updated SSRC Timeout Rules .........................22
     7.2. Tuning RTCP Transmissions .................................22
          7.2.1. RTP/AVP and RTP/SAVP ...............................22
          7.2.2. RTP/AVPF and RTP/SAVPF .............................24
  8. Security Considerations ........................................25
  9. References .....................................................26
     9.1. Normative References ......................................26
     9.2. Informative References ....................................26
  Acknowledgments ...................................................29
  Authors' Addresses ................................................29













Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


1.  Introduction

  At the time the Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) [RFC3550] was
  originally designed, and for quite some time after, endpoints in RTP
  sessions typically only transmitted a single media source and, thus,
  used a single RTP stream and synchronization source (SSRC) per RTP
  session, where separate RTP sessions were typically used for each
  distinct media type.  Recently, however, a number of scenarios have
  emerged in which endpoints wish to send multiple RTP streams,
  distinguished by distinct RTP synchronization source (SSRC)
  identifiers, in a single RTP session.  These are outlined in
  Section 3.  Although the initial design of RTP did consider such
  scenarios, the specification was not consistently written with such
  use cases in mind; thus, the specification is somewhat unclear in
  places.

  This memo updates [RFC3550] to clarify behavior in use cases where
  endpoints use multiple SSRCs.  It also updates [RFC4585] to resolve
  problems with regard to timeout of inactive SSRCs and to clarify
  behavior around inclusion of feedback messages.

2.  Terminology

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC
  2119 [RFC2119] and indicate requirement levels for compliant
  implementations.

3.  Use Cases for Multi-Stream Endpoints

  This section discusses several use cases that have motivated the
  development of endpoints that sends RTP data using multiple SSRCs in
  a single RTP session.

3.1.  Endpoints with Multiple Capture Devices

  The most straightforward motivation for an endpoint to send multiple
  simultaneous RTP streams in a single RTP session is when an endpoint
  has multiple capture devices and, hence, can generate multiple media
  sources, of the same media type and characteristics.  For example,
  telepresence systems of the type described by the CLUE Telepresence
  Framework [CLUE-FRAME] often have multiple cameras or microphones
  covering various areas of a room and, hence, send several RTP streams
  of each type within a single RTP session.






Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


3.2.  Multiple Media Types in a Single RTP Session

  Recent work has updated RTP [MULTI-RTP] and Session Description
  Protocol (SDP) [SDP-BUNDLE] to remove the historical assumption in
  RTP that media sources of different media types would always be sent
  on different RTP sessions.  In this work, a single endpoint's audio
  and video RTP streams (for example) are instead sent in a single RTP
  session to reduce the number of transport-layer flows used.

3.3.  Multiple Stream Mixers

  There are several RTP topologies that can involve a central device
  that itself generates multiple RTP streams in a session.  An example
  is a mixer providing centralized compositing for a multi-capture
  scenario like that described in Section 3.1.  In this case, the
  centralized node is behaving much like a multi-capturer endpoint,
  generating several similar and related sources.

  A more complex example is the selective forwarding middlebox,
  described in Section 3.7 of [RFC7667].  This is a middlebox that
  receives RTP streams from several endpoints and then selectively
  forwards modified versions of some RTP streams toward the other
  endpoints to which it is connected.  For each connected endpoint, a
  separate media source appears in the session for every other source
  connected to the middlebox, "projected" from the original streams,
  but at any given time many of them can appear to be inactive (and
  thus are receivers, not senders, in RTP).  This sort of device is
  closer to being an RTP mixer than an RTP translator: it terminates
  RTCP reporting about the mixed streams; it can rewrite SSRCs,
  timestamps, and sequence numbers, as well as the contents of the RTP
  payloads; and it can turn sources on and off at will without
  appearing to generate packet loss.  Each projected stream will
  typically preserve its original RTCP source description (SDES)
  information.

3.4.  Multiple SSRCs for a Single Media Source

  There are also several cases where multiple SSRCs can be used to send
  data from a single media source within a single RTP session.  These
  include, but are not limited to, transport robustness tools, such as
  the RTP retransmission payload format [RFC4588], that require one
  SSRC to be used for the media data and another SSRC for the repair
  data.  Similarly, some layered media encoding schemes, for example,
  H.264 Scalable Video Coding (SVC) [RFC6190], can be used in a
  configuration where each layer is sent using a different SSRC within
  a single RTP session.





Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


4.  Use of RTP by Endpoints That Send Multiple Media Streams

  RTP is inherently a group communication protocol.  Each endpoint in
  an RTP session will use one or more SSRCs, as will some types of RTP-
  level middlebox.  Accordingly, unless restrictions on the number of
  SSRCs have been signaled, RTP endpoints can expect to receive RTP
  data packets sent using a number of different SSRCs, within a single
  RTP session.  This can occur irrespective of whether the RTP session
  is running over a point-to-point connection or a multicast group,
  since middleboxes can be used to connect multiple transport
  connections together into a single RTP session (the RTP session is
  defined by the shared SSRC space, not by the transport connections).
  Furthermore, if RTP mixers are used, some SSRCs might only be visible
  in the contributing source (CSRC) list of an RTP packet and in RTCP,
  and might not appear directly as the SSRC of an RTP data packet.

  Every RTP endpoint will have an allocated share of the available
  session bandwidth, as determined by signaling and congestion control.
  The endpoint needs to keep its total media sending rate within this
  share.  However, endpoints that send multiple RTP streams do not
  necessarily need to subdivide their share of the available bandwidth
  independently or uniformly to each RTP stream and its SSRCs.  In
  particular, an endpoint can vary the bandwidth allocation to
  different streams depending on their needs, and it can dynamically
  change the bandwidth allocated to different SSRCs (for example, by
  using a variable-rate codec), provided the total sending rate does
  not exceed its allocated share.  This includes enabling or disabling
  RTP streams, or their redundancy streams, as more or less bandwidth
  becomes available.

5.  Use of RTCP by Endpoints That Send Multiple Media Streams

  RTCP is defined in Section 6 of [RFC3550].  The description of the
  protocol is phrased in terms of the behavior of "participants" in an
  RTP session, under the assumption that each endpoint is a participant
  with a single SSRC.  However, for correct operation in cases where
  endpoints have multiple SSRC values, implementations MUST treat each
  SSRC as a separate participant in the RTP session, so that an
  endpoint that has multiple SSRCs counts as multiple participants.












Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


5.1.  RTCP Reporting Requirement

  An RTP endpoint that has multiple SSRCs MUST treat each SSRC as a
  separate participant in the RTP session.  Each SSRC will maintain its
  own RTCP-related state information and, hence, will have its own RTCP
  reporting interval that determines when it sends RTCP reports.  If
  the mechanism in [MULTI-STREAM-OPT] is not used, then each SSRC will
  send RTCP reports for all other SSRCs, including those co-located at
  the same endpoint.

  If the endpoint has some SSRCs that are sending data and some that
  are only receivers, then they will receive different shares of the
  RTCP bandwidth and calculate different base RTCP reporting intervals.
  Otherwise, all SSRCs at an endpoint will calculate the same base RTCP
  reporting interval.  The actual reporting intervals for each SSRC are
  randomized in the usual way, but reports can be aggregated as
  described in Section 5.3.

5.2.  Initial Reporting Interval

  When a participant joins a unicast session, the following text from
  Section 6.2 of [RFC3550] is relevant: "For unicast sessions... the
  delay before sending the initial compound RTCP packet MAY be zero."
  The basic assumption is that this also ought to apply in the case of
  multiple SSRCs.  Caution has to be exercised, however, when an
  endpoint (or middlebox) with a large number of SSRCs joins a unicast
  session, since immediate transmission of many RTCP reports can create
  a significant burst of traffic, leading to transient congestion and
  packet loss due to queue overflows.

  To ensure that the initial burst of traffic generated by an RTP
  endpoint is no larger than would be generated by a TCP connection, an
  RTP endpoint MUST NOT send more than four compound RTCP packets with
  zero initial delay when it joins an RTP session, independent of the
  number of SSRCs used by the endpoint.  Each of those initial compound
  RTCP packets MAY include aggregated reports from multiple SSRCs,
  provided the total compound RTCP packet size does not exceed the MTU,
  and the avg_rtcp_size is maintained as in Section 5.3.1.  Aggregating
  reports from several SSRCs in the initial compound RTCP packets
  allows a substantial number of SSRCs to report immediately.
  Endpoints SHOULD prioritize reports on SSRCs that are likely to be
  most immediately useful, e.g., for SSRCs that are initially senders.

  An endpoint that needs to report on more SSRCs than will fit into the
  four compound RTCP reports that can be sent immediately MUST send the
  other reports later, following the usual RTCP timing rules including
  timer reconsideration.  Those reports MAY be aggregated as described
  in Section 5.3.



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


     Note: The above is chosen to match the TCP maximum initial window
     of four packets [RFC3390], not the larger TCP initial windows for
     which there is an ongoing experiment [RFC6928].  The reason for
     this is a desire to be conservative, since an RTP endpoint will
     also in many cases start sending RTP data packets at the same time
     as these initial RTCP packets are sent.

5.3.  Aggregation of Reports into Compound RTCP Packets

  As outlined in Section 5.1, an endpoint with multiple SSRCs has to
  treat each SSRC as a separate participant when it comes to sending
  RTCP reports.  This will lead to each SSRC sending a compound RTCP
  packet in each reporting interval.  Since these packets are coming
  from the same endpoint, it might reasonably be expected that they can
  be aggregated to reduce overheads.  Indeed, Section 6.1 of [RFC3550]
  allows RTP translators and mixers to aggregate packets in similar
  circumstances:

     It is RECOMMENDED that translators and mixers combine individual
     RTCP packets from the multiple sources they are forwarding into
     one compound packet whenever feasible in order to amortize the
     packet overhead (see Section 7).  An example RTCP compound packet
     as might be produced by a mixer is shown in Fig. 1.  If the
     overall length of a compound packet would exceed the MTU of the
     network path, it SHOULD be segmented into multiple shorter
     compound packets to be transmitted in separate packets of the
     underlying protocol.  This does not impair the RTCP bandwidth
     estimation because each compound packet represents at least one
     distinct participant.  Note that each of the compound packets MUST
     begin with an SR or RR packet.

  This allows RTP translators and mixers to generate compound RTCP
  packets that contain multiple Sender Report (SR) or Receiver Report
  (RR) packets from different SSRCs, as well as any of the other packet
  types.  There are no restrictions on the order in which the RTCP
  packets can occur within the compound packet, except the regular rule
  that the compound RTCP packet starts with an SR or RR packet.  Due to
  this rule, correctly implemented RTP endpoints will be able to handle
  compound RTCP packets that contain RTCP packets relating to multiple
  SSRCs.

  Accordingly, endpoints that use multiple SSRCs can aggregate the RTCP
  packets sent by their different SSRCs into compound RTCP packets,
  provided 1) the resulting compound RTCP packets begin with an SR or
  RR packet, 2) they maintain the average RTCP packet size as described
  in Section 5.3.1, and 3) they schedule packet transmission and manage
  aggregation as described in Section 5.3.2.




Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


5.3.1.  Maintaining AVG_RTCP_SIZE

  The RTCP scheduling algorithm in [RFC3550] works on a per-SSRC basis.
  Each SSRC sends a single compound RTCP packet in each RTCP reporting
  interval.  When an endpoint uses multiple SSRCs, it is desirable to
  aggregate the compound RTCP packets sent by its SSRCs, reducing the
  overhead by forming a larger compound RTCP packet.  This aggregation
  can be done as described in Section 5.3.2, provided the average RTCP
  packet size calculation is updated as follows.

  Participants in an RTP session update their estimate of the average
  RTCP packet size (avg_rtcp_size) each time they send or receive an
  RTCP packet (see Section 6.3.3 of [RFC3550]).  When a compound RTCP
  packet that contains RTCP packets from several SSRCs is sent or
  received, the avg_rtcp_size estimate for each SSRC that is reported
  upon is updated using div_packet_size rather than the actual packet
  size:

     avg_rtcp_size = (1/16) * div_packet_size + (15/16) * avg_rtcp_size

  where div_packet_size is packet_size divided by the number of SSRCs
  reporting in that compound packet.  The number of SSRCs reporting in
  a compound packet is determined by counting the number of different
  SSRCs that are the source of SR or RR RTCP packets within the
  compound RTCP packet.  Non-compound RTCP packets (i.e., RTCP packets
  that do not contain an SR or RR packet [RFC5506]) are considered to
  report on a single SSRC.

  A participant that doesn't follow the above rule, and instead uses
  the full RTCP compound packet size to calculate avg_rtcp_size, will
  derive an RTCP reporting interval that is overly large by a factor
  that is proportional to the number of SSRCs aggregated into compound
  RTCP packets and the size of set of SSRCs being aggregated relative
  to the total number of participants.  This increased RTCP reporting
  interval can cause premature timeouts if it is more than five times
  the interval chosen by the SSRCs that understand compound RTCP that
  aggregate reports from many SSRCs.  A 1500-octet MTU can fit five
  typical-size reports into a compound RTCP packet, so this is a real
  concern if endpoints aggregate RTCP reports from multiple SSRCs.

  The issue raised in the previous paragraph is mitigated by the
  modification in timeout behavior specified in Section 7.1.2 of this
  memo.  This mitigation is in place in those cases where the RTCP
  bandwidth is sufficiently high that an endpoint, using avg_rtcp_size
  calculated without taking into account the number of reporting SSRCs,
  can transmit more frequently than approximately every 5 seconds.
  Note, however, that the non-updated endpoint's RTCP reporting is
  still negatively impacted even if the premature timeouts of its SSRCs



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  are avoided.  If compatibility with non-updated endpoints is a
  concern, the number of reports from different SSRCs aggregated into a
  single compound RTCP packet SHOULD either be limited to two reports
  or aggregation ought not be used at all.  This will limit the
  non-updated endpoint's RTCP reporting interval to be no larger than
  twice the RTCP reporting interval that would be chosen by an endpoint
  following this specification.

5.3.2.  Scheduling RTCP when Aggregating Multiple SSRCs

  This section revises and extends the behavior defined in Section 6.3
  of [RFC3550], and in Section 3.5.3 of [RFC4585] if the RTP/AVPF
  profile or the RTP/SAVPF profile is used, regarding actions to take
  when scheduling and sending RTCP packets where multiple reporting
  SSRCs are aggregating their RTCP packets into the same compound RTCP
  packet.  These changes to the RTCP scheduling rules are needed to
  maintain important RTCP timing properties, including the inter-packet
  distribution, and the behavior during flash joins and other changes
  in session membership.

  The variables tn, tp, tc, T, and Td used in the following are defined
  in Section 6.3 of [RFC3550].  The variables T_rr_interval and
  T_rr_last are defined in [RFC4585].

  Each endpoint MUST schedule RTCP transmission independently for each
  of its SSRCs using the regular calculation of tn for the RTP profile
  being used.  Each time the timer tn expires for an SSRC, the endpoint
  MUST perform RTCP timer reconsideration and, if applicable,
  suppression based on T_rr_interval.  If the result indicates that a
  compound RTCP packet is to be sent by that SSRC, and the transmission
  is not an early RTCP packet [RFC4585], then the endpoint SHOULD try
  to aggregate RTCP packets of additional SSRCs that are scheduled in
  the future into the compound RTCP packet before it is sent.  The
  reason to limit or not aggregate due to backwards compatibility
  reasons is discussed in Section 5.3.1.

  Aggregation proceeds as follows.  The endpoint selects the SSRC that
  has the smallest tn value after the current time, tc, and prepares
  the RTCP packets that SSRC would send if its timer tn expired at tc.
  If those RTCP packets will fit into the compound RTCP packet that is
  being generated, taking into account the path MTU and the previously
  added RTCP packets, then they are added to the compound RTCP packet;
  otherwise, they are discarded.  This process is repeated for each
  SSRC, in order of increasing tn, until the compound RTCP packet is
  full or all SSRCs have been aggregated.  At that point, the compound
  RTCP packet is sent.





Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  When the compound RTCP packet is sent, the endpoint MUST update tp,
  tn, and T_rr_last (if applicable) for each SSRC that was included.
  These variables are updated as follows:

  a.  For the first SSRC that reported in the compound RTCP packet, set
      the effective transmission time, tt, of that SSRC to tc.

  b.  For each additional SSRC that reported in the compound RTCP
      packet, calculate the transmission time that SSRC would have had
      if it had not been aggregated into the compound RTCP packet.
      This is derived by taking tn for that SSRC, then performing
      reconsideration and updating tn until tp + T <= tn.  Once this is
      done, set the effective transmission time, tt, for that SSRC to
      the calculated value of tn.  If the RTP/AVPF profile or the RTP/
      SAVPF profile is being used, then suppression based on
      T_rr_interval MUST NOT be used in this calculation.

  c.  Calculate average effective transmission time, tt_avg, for the
      compound RTCP packet based on the tt values for all SSRCs sent in
      the compound RTCP packet.  Set tp for each of the SSRCs sent in
      the compound RTCP packet to tt_avg.  If the RTP/AVPF profile or
      the RTP/SAVPF profile is being used, set T_tt_last for each SSRC
      sent in the compound RTCP packet to tt_avg.

  d.  For each of the SSRCs sent in the compound RTCP packet, calculate
      new tn values based on the updated parameters and the usual RTCP
      timing rules and reschedule the timers.

  When using the RTP/AVPF profile or the RTP/SAVPF profile, the above
  mechanism only attempts to aggregate RTCP packets when the compound
  RTCP packet to be sent is not an early RTCP packet, and hence the
  algorithm in Section 3.5.3 of [RFC4585] will control RTCP scheduling.
  If T_rr_interval == 0, or if T_rr_interval != 0 and option 1, 2a, or
  2b of the algorithm are chosen, then the above mechanism updates the
  necessary variables.  However, if the transmission is suppressed per
  option 2c of the algorithm, then tp is updated to tc as aggregation
  has not taken place.

  Reverse reconsideration MUST be performed following Section 6.3.4 of
  [RFC3550].  In some cases, this can lead to the value of tp after
  reverse reconsideration being larger than tc.  This is not a problem,
  and has the desired effect of proportionally pulling the tp value
  towards tc (as well as tn) as the reporting interval shrinks in
  direct proportion the reduced group size.

  The above algorithm has been shown in simulations [Sim88] [Sim92] to
  maintain the inter-RTCP packet transmission time distribution for
  each SSRC and to consume the same amount of bandwidth as



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  non-aggregated RTCP packets.  With this algorithm, the actual
  transmission interval for an SSRC triggering an RTCP compound packet
  transmission is following the regular transmission rules.  The value
  tp is set to somewhere in the interval [0, 1.5/1.21828*Td] ahead of
  tc.  The actual value is the average of one instance of tc and the
  randomized transmission times of the additional SSRCs; thus, the
  lower range of the interval is more probable.  This compensates for
  the bias that is otherwise introduced by picking the shortest tn
  value out of the N SSRCs included in aggregate.

  The algorithm also handles the cases where the number of SSRCs that
  can be included in an aggregated packet varies.  An SSRC that
  previously was aggregated and fails to fit in a packet still has its
  own transmission scheduled according to normal rules.  Thus, it will
  trigger a transmission in due time, or the SSRC will be included in
  another aggregate.  The algorithm's behavior under SSRC group size
  changes is as follows:

  RTP sessions where the number of SSRCs is growing:  When the group
     size is growing, Td grows in proportion to the number of new SSRCs
     in the group.  When reconsideration is performed due to expiry of
     the tn timer, that SSRC will reconsider the transmission and with
     a certain probability reschedule the tn timer.  This part of the
     reconsideration algorithm is only impacted by the above algorithm
     having tp values that were in the future instead of set to the
     time of the actual last transmission at the time of updating tp.

  RTP sessions where the number of SSRCs is shrinking:  When the group
     shrinks, reverse reconsideration moves the tp and tn values
     towards tc proportionally to the number of SSRCs that leave the
     session compared to the total number of participants when they
     left.  The setting of the tp value forward in time related to the
     tc could be believed to have negative effect.  However, the reason
     for this setting is to compensate for bias caused by picking the
     shortest tn out of the N aggregated.  This bias remains over a
     reduction in the number of SSRCs.  The reverse reconsideration
     compensates the reduction independently of whether or not
     aggregation is being used.  The negative effect that can occur on
     removing an SSRC is that the most favorable tn belonged to the
     removed SSRC.  The impact of this is limited to delaying the
     transmission, in the worst case, one reporting interval.

  In conclusion, the investigations performed have found no significant
  negative impact on the scheduling algorithm.







Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


5.4.  Use of RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF Feedback

  This section discusses the transmission of RTP/AVPF feedback packets
  when the transmitting endpoint has multiple SSRCs.  The guidelines in
  this section also apply to endpoints using the RTP/SAVPF profile.

5.4.1.  Choice of SSRC for Feedback Packets

  When an RTP/AVPF endpoint has multiple SSRCs, it can choose what SSRC
  to use as the source for the RTCP feedback packets it sends.  Several
  factors can affect that choice:

  o  RTCP feedback packets relating to a particular media type SHOULD
     be sent by an SSRC that receives that media type.  For example,
     when audio and video are multiplexed onto a single RTP session,
     endpoints will use their audio SSRC to send feedback on the audio
     received from other participants.

  o  RTCP feedback packets and RTCP codec control messages that are
     notifications or indications regarding RTP data processed by an
     endpoint MUST be sent from the SSRC used for that RTP data.  This
     includes notifications that relate to a previously received
     request or command [RFC4585][RFC5104].

  o  If separate SSRCs are used to send and receive media, then the
     corresponding SSRC SHOULD be used for feedback, since they have
     differing RTCP bandwidth fractions.  This can also affect the
     consideration of whether or not the SSRC can be used in immediate
     mode.

  o  Some RTCP feedback packet types require consistency in the SSRC
     used.  For example, if a Temporary Maximum Media Stream Bit Rate
     Request (TMMBR) limitation [RFC5104] is set by an SSRC, the same
     SSRC needs to be used to remove the limitation.

  o  If several SSRCs are suitable for sending feedback, it might be
     desirable to use an SSRC that allows the sending of feedback as an
     early RTCP packet.

  When an RTCP feedback packet is sent as part of a compound RTCP
  packet that aggregates reports from multiple SSRCs, there is no
  requirement that the compound packet contain an SR or RR packet
  generated by the sender of the RTCP feedback packet.  For reduced-
  size RTCP packets, aggregation of RTCP feedback packets from multiple
  sources is not limited further than Section 4.2.2 of [RFC5506].






Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


5.4.2.  Scheduling an RTCP Feedback Packet

  When an SSRC has a need to transmit a feedback packet in early mode,
  it MUST schedule that packet following the algorithm in Section 3.5
  of [RFC4585] modified as follows:

  o  To determine whether an RTP session is considered to be a point-
     to-point session or a multiparty session, an endpoint MUST count
     the number of distinct RTCP SDES CNAME values used by the SSRCs
     listed in the SSRC field of RTP data packets it receives and in
     the "SSRC of sender" field of RTCP SR, RR, RTPFB, or PSFB packets
     it receives.  An RTP session is considered to be a multiparty
     session if more than one CNAME is used by those SSRCs, unless
     signaling indicates that the session is to be handled as point to
     point or RTCP reporting groups [MULTI-STREAM-OPT] are used.  If
     RTCP reporting groups are used, an RTP session is considered to be
     a point-to-point session if the endpoint receives only a single
     reporting group and is considered to be a multiparty session if
     multiple reporting groups are received or a combination of
     reporting groups and SSRCs that are not part of a reporting group
     are received.  Endpoints MUST NOT determine whether an RTP session
     is multiparty or point to point based on the type of connection
     (unicast or multicast) used, or on the number of SSRCs received.

  o  When checking if there is already a scheduled compound RTCP packet
     containing feedback messages (Step 2 in Section 3.5.2 of
     [RFC4585]), that check MUST be done considering all local SSRCs.

  o  If an SSRC is not allowed to send an early RTCP packet, then the
     feedback message MAY be queued for transmission as part of any
     early or regular scheduled transmission that can occur within the
     maximum useful lifetime of the feedback message (T_max_fb_delay).
     This modifies the behavior in item 4a in Section 3.5.2 of
     [RFC4585].

  The first bullet point above specifies a rule to determine if an RTP
  session is to be considered a point-to-point session or a multiparty
  session.  This rule is straightforward to implement, but is known to
  incorrectly classify some sessions as multiparty sessions.  The known
  problems are as follows:

  Endpoint with multiple synchronization contexts:  An endpoint that is
     part of a point-to-point session can have multiple synchronization
     contexts, for example, due to forwarding an external media source
     into an interactive real-time conversation.  In this case, the
     classification will consider the peer as two endpoints, while the
     actual RTP/RTCP transmission will be under the control of one
     endpoint.



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  Selective Forwarding Middlebox:  The Selective Forwarding Middlebox
     (SFM) as defined in Section 3.7 of [RFC7667] has control over the
     transmission and configurations between itself and each peer
     endpoint individually.  It also fully controls the RTCP packets
     being forwarded between the individual legs.  Thus, this type of
     middlebox can be compared to the RTP mixer, which uses its own
     SSRCs to mix or select the media it forwards, that will be
     classified as a point-to-point RTP session by the above rule.

  In the above cases, it is very reasonable to use RTCP reporting
  groups [MULTI-STREAM-OPT].  If that extension is used, an endpoint
  can indicate that the multitude of CNAMEs are in fact under a single
  endpoint or middlebox control by using only a single reporting group.

  The above rules will also classify some sessions where the endpoint
  is connected to an RTP mixer as being point to point.  For example,
  the mixer could act as gateway to an RTP session based on Any Source
  Multicast for the discussed endpoint.  However, this will, in most
  cases, be okay, as the RTP mixer provides separation between the two
  parts of the session.  The responsibility falls on the mixer to act
  accordingly in each domain.

  Finally, we note that signaling mechanisms could be defined to
  override the rules when they would result in the wrong
  classification.

6.  Adding and Removing SSRCs

  The set of SSRCs present in a single RTP session can vary over time
  due to changes in the number of endpoints in the session or due to
  changes in the number or type of RTP streams being sent.

  Every endpoint in an RTP session will have at least one SSRC that it
  uses for RTCP reporting, and for sending media if desired.  It can
  also have additional SSRCs, for sending extra media sources or for
  additional RTCP reporting.  If the set of media sources being sent
  changes, then the set of SSRCs being sent will change.  Changes in
  the media format or clock rate might also require changes in the set
  of SSRCs used.  An endpoint can also have more SSRCs than it has
  active RTP streams, and send RTCP relating to SSRCs that are not
  currently sending RTP data packets so that its peers are aware of the
  SSRCs, and have the associated context (e.g., clock synchronization
  and an SDES CNAME) in place to be able to play out media as soon as
  they becomes active.

  In the following, we describe some considerations around adding and
  removing RTP streams and their associated SSRCs.




Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


6.1.  Adding RTP Streams

  When an endpoint joins an RTP session, it can have zero, one, or more
  RTP streams it will send, or that it is prepared to send.  If it has
  no RTP stream it plans to send, it still needs an SSRC that will be
  used to send RTCP feedback.  If it will send one or more RTP streams,
  it will need the corresponding number of SSRC values.  The SSRCs used
  by an endpoint are made known to other endpoints in the RTP session
  by sending RTP and RTCP packets.  SSRCs can also be signaled using
  non-RTP means (e.g., [RFC5576]).  Unless restricted by signaling, an
  endpoint can, at any time, send an additional RTP stream, identified
  by a new SSRC (this might be associated with a signaling event, but
  that is outside the scope of this memo).  This makes the new SSRC
  visible to the other endpoints in the session, since they share the
  single SSRC space inherent in the definition of an RTP session.

  An endpoint that has never sent an RTP stream will have an SSRC that
  it uses for RTCP reporting.  If that endpoint wants to start sending
  an RTP stream, it is RECOMMENDED that it use its existing SSRC for
  that stream, since otherwise the participant count in the RTP session
  will be unnecessarily increased, leading to a longer RTCP reporting
  interval and larger RTCP reports due to cross reporting.  If the
  endpoint wants to start sending more than one RTP stream, it will
  need to generate a new SSRC for the second and any subsequent RTP
  streams.

  An endpoint that has previously stopped sending an RTP stream, and
  that wants to start sending a new RTP stream, cannot generally reuse
  the existing SSRC, and often needs to generate a new SSRC, because an
  SSRC cannot change media type (e.g., audio to video) or RTP timestamp
  clock rate [RFC7160] and because the SSRC might be associated with a
  particular semantic by the application (note: an RTP stream can pause
  and restart using the same SSRC, provided RTCP is sent for that SSRC
  during the pause; these rules only apply to new RTP streams reusing
  an existing SSRC).

6.2.  Removing RTP Streams

  An SSRC is removed from an RTP session in one of two ways.  When an
  endpoint stops sending RTP and RTCP packets using an SSRC, then that
  SSRC will eventually time out as described in Section 6.3.5 of
  [RFC3550].  Alternatively, an SSRC can be explicitly removed from use
  by sending an RTCP BYE packet as described in Section 6.3.7 of
  [RFC3550].  It is RECOMMENDED that SSRCs be removed from use by
  sending an RTCP BYE packet.  Note that [RFC3550] requires that the
  RTCP BYE SHOULD be the last RTP/RTCP packet sent in the RTP session





Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  for an SSRC.  If an endpoint needs to restart an RTP stream after
  sending an RTCP BYE for its SSRC, it needs to generate a new SSRC
  value for that stream.

  The finality of sending RTCP BYE means that endpoints need to
  consider if the ceasing of transmission of an RTP stream is temporary
  or permanent.  Temporary suspension of media transmission using a
  particular RTP stream (SSRC) needs to maintain that SSRC as an active
  participant, by continuing RTCP transmission for it.  That way the
  media sending can be resumed immediately, knowing that the context is
  in place.  When permanently halting transmission, a participant needs
  to send an RTCP BYE to allow the other participants to use the RTCP
  bandwidth resources and clean up their state databases.

  An endpoint that ceases transmission of all its RTP streams but
  remains in the RTP session MUST maintain at least one SSRC that is to
  be used for RTCP reporting and feedback (i.e., it cannot send a BYE
  for all SSRCs, but needs to retain at least one active SSRC).  As
  some Feedback packets can be bound to media type, there might be a
  need to maintain one SSRC per media type within an RTP session.  An
  alternative can be to create a new SSRC to use for RTCP reporting and
  feedback.  However, to avoid the perception that an endpoint drops
  completely out of an RTP session, such a new SSRC ought to be
  established first -- before terminating all the existing SSRCs.

7.  RTCP Considerations for Streams with Disparate Rates

  An RTP session has a single set of parameters that configure the
  session bandwidth.  These are the RTCP sender and receiver fractions
  (e.g., the SDP "b=RR:" and "b=RS:" lines [RFC3556]) and the
  parameters of the RTP/AVPF profile [RFC4585] (e.g., trr-int) if that
  profile (or its secure extension, RTP/SAVPF [RFC5124]) is used.  As a
  consequence, the base RTCP reporting interval, before randomization,
  will be the same for every sending SSRC in an RTP session.
  Similarly, every receiving SSRC in an RTP session will have the same
  base reporting interval, although this can differ from the reporting
  interval chosen by sending SSRCs.  This uniform RTCP reporting
  interval for all SSRCs can result in RTCP reports being sent more
  often, or too seldom, than is considered desirable for an RTP stream.

  For example, consider a scenario in which an audio flow sending at
  tens of kilobits per second is multiplexed into an RTP session with a
  multi-megabit high-quality video flow.  If the session bandwidth is
  configured based on the video sending rate, and the default RTCP
  bandwidth fraction of 5% of the session bandwidth is used, it is
  likely that the RTCP bandwidth will exceed the audio sending rate.
  If the reduced minimum RTCP interval described in Section 6.2 of
  [RFC3550] is then used in the session, as appropriate for video where



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  rapid feedback on damaged I-frames is wanted, the uniform reporting
  interval for all senders could mean that audio sources are expected
  to send RTCP packets more often than they send audio data packets.
  This bandwidth mismatch can be reduced by careful tuning of the RTCP
  parameters, especially trr_int when the RTP/AVPF profile is used, but
  cannot be avoided entirely as it is inherent in the design of the
  RTCP timing rules, and affects all RTP sessions that contain flows
  with greatly mismatched bandwidth.

  Different media rates or desired RTCP behaviors can also occur with
  SSRCs carrying the same media type.  A common case in multiparty
  conferencing is when a small number of video streams are shown in
  high resolution, while the others are shown as low-resolution
  thumbnails, with the choice of which is shown in high resolution
  being voice-activity controlled.  Here the differences are both in
  actual media rate and in choices for what feedback messages might be
  needed.  Other examples of differences that can exist are due to the
  intended usage of a media source.  A media source carrying the video
  of the speaker in a conference is different from a document camera.
  Basic parameters that can differ in this case are frame-rate,
  acceptable end-to-end delay, and the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)
  fidelity of the image.  These differences affect not only the needed
  bitrates, but also possible transmission behaviors, usable repair
  mechanisms, what feedback messages the control and repair requires,
  the transmission requirements on those feedback messages, and
  monitoring of the RTP stream delivery.  Other similar scenarios can
  also exist.

  Sending multiple media types in a single RTP session causes that
  session to contain more SSRCs than if each media type was sent in a
  separate RTP session.  For example, if two participants each send an
  audio and a video RTP stream in a single RTP session, that session
  will comprise four SSRCs; but if separate RTP sessions had been used
  for audio and video, each of those two RTP sessions would comprise
  only two SSRCs.  Hence, sending multiple RTP streams in an RTP
  session increases the amount of cross reporting between the SSRCs, as
  each SSRC reports on all other SSRCs in the session.  This increases
  the size of the RTCP reports, causing them to be sent less often than
  would be the case if separate RTP sessions where used for a given
  RTCP bandwidth.

  Finally, when an RTP session contains multiple media types, it is
  important to note that the RTCP reception quality reports, feedback
  messages, and extended report blocks used might not be applicable to
  all media types.  Endpoints will need to consider the media type of
  each SSRC, and only send or process reports and feedback that apply
  to that particular SSRC and its media type.  Signaling solutions




Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  might have shortcomings when it comes to indicating that a particular
  set of RTCP reports or feedback messages only apply to a particular
  media type within an RTP session.

  From an RTCP perspective, therefore, it can be seen that there are
  advantages to using separate RTP sessions for each media source,
  rather than sending multiple media sources in a single RTP session.
  However, these are frequently offset by the need to reduce port use,
  to ease NAT/firewall traversal, achieved by combining media sources
  into a single RTP session.  The following sections consider some of
  the issues with using RTCP in sessions with multiple media sources in
  more detail.

7.1.  Timing Out SSRCs

  Various issues have been identified with timing out SSRC values when
  sending multiple RTP streams in an RTP session.

7.1.1.  Problems with the RTP/AVPF T_rr_interval Parameter

  The RTP/AVPF profile includes a method to prevent regular RTCP
  reports from being sent too often.  This mechanism is described in
  Section 3.5.3 of [RFC4585]; it is controlled by the T_rr_interval
  parameter.  It works as follows.  When a regular RTCP report is sent,
  a new random value, T_rr_current_interval, is generated, drawn evenly
  in the range 0.5 to 1.5 times T_rr_interval.  If a regular RTCP
  packet is to be sent earlier than T_rr_current_interval seconds after
  the previous regular RTCP packet, and there are no feedback messages
  to be sent, then that regular RTCP packet is suppressed and the next
  regular RTCP packet is scheduled.  The T_rr_current_interval is
  recalculated each time a regular RTCP packet is sent.  The benefit of
  suppression is that it avoids wasting bandwidth when there is nothing
  requiring frequent RTCP transmissions, but still allows utilization
  of the configured bandwidth when feedback is needed.

  Unfortunately, this suppression mechanism skews the distribution of
  the RTCP sending intervals compared to the regular RTCP reporting
  intervals.  The standard RTCP timing rules, including reconsideration
  and the compensation factor, result in the intervals between sending
  RTCP packets having a distribution that is skewed towards the upper
  end of the range [0.5/1.21828, 1.5/1.21828]*Td, where Td is the
  deterministic calculated RTCP reporting interval.  With Td = 5 s,
  this distribution covers the range [2.052 s, 6.156 s].  In
  comparison, the RTP/AVPF suppression rules act in an interval that is
  0.5 to 1.5 times T_rr_interval; for T_rr_interval = 5s, this is
  [2.5 s, 7.5 s].





Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  The effect of this is that the time between consecutive RTCP packets
  when using T_rr_interval suppression can become large.  The maximum
  time interval between sending one regular RTCP packet and the next,
  when T_rr_interval is being used, occurs when T_rr_current_interval
  takes its maximum value and a regular RTCP packet is suppressed at
  the end of the suppression period, then the next regular RTCP packet
  is scheduled after its largest possible reporting interval.  Taking
  the worst case of the two intervals gives a maximum time between two
  RTCP reports of 1.5*T_rr_interval + 1.5/1.21828*Td.

  This behavior can be surprising when Td and T_rr_interval have the
  same value.  That is, when T_rr_interval is configured to match the
  regular RTCP reporting interval.  In this case, one might expect that
  regular RTCP packets are sent according to their usual schedule, but
  feedback packets can be sent early.  However, the above-mentioned
  issue results in the RTCP packets actually being sent in the range
  [0.5*Td, 2.731*Td] with a highly non-uniform distribution, rather
  than the range [0.41*Td, 1.23*Td].  This is perhaps unexpected, but
  is not a problem in itself.  However, when coupled with packet loss,
  it raises the issue of premature timeout.

7.1.2.  Avoiding Premature Timeout

  In RTP/AVP [RFC3550] the timeout behavior is simple; it is 5 times
  Td, where Td is calculated with a Tmin value of 5 seconds.  In other
  words, if the configured RTCP bandwidth allows for an average RTCP
  reporting interval shorter than 5 seconds, the timeout is 25 seconds
  of no activity from the SSRC (RTP or RTCP); otherwise, the timeout is
  5 average reporting intervals.

  RTP/AVPF [RFC4585] introduces different timeout behaviors depending
  on the value of T_rr_interval.  When T_rr_interval is 0, it uses the
  same timeout calculation as RTP/AVP.  However, when T_rr_interval is
  non-zero, it replaces Tmin in the timeout calculation, most likely to
  speed up detection of timed out SSRCs.  However, using a non-zero
  T_rr_interval has two consequences for RTP behavior.

  First, due to suppression, the number of RTP and RTCP packets sent by
  an SSRC that is not an active RTP sender can become very low, because
  of the issue discussed in Section 7.1.1.  As the RTCP packet interval
  can be as long as 2.73*Td, during a 5*Td time period, an endpoint
  might in fact transmit only a single RTCP packet.  The long intervals
  result in fewer RTCP packets, to a point where a single RTCP packet
  loss can sometimes result in timing out an SSRC.

  Second, the RTP/AVPF changes to the timeout rules reduce robustness
  to misconfiguration.  It is common to use RTP/AVPF configured such
  that RTCP packets can be sent frequently to allow rapid feedback;



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  however, this makes timeouts very sensitive to T_rr_interval.  For
  example, if two SSRCs are configured, one with T_rr_interval = 0.1 s
  and the other with T_rr_interval = 0.6 s, then this small difference
  will result in the SSRC with the shorter T_rr_interval timing out the
  other if it stops sending RTP packets, since the other RTCP reporting
  interval is more than five times its own.  When RTP/AVP is used, or
  RTP/AVPF with T_rr_interval = 0, this is a non-issue, as the timeout
  period will be 25 s, and differences between configured RTCP
  bandwidth can only cause premature timeouts when the reporting
  intervals are greater than 5 s and differ by a factor of five.  To
  limit the scope for such problematic misconfiguration, we define an
  update to the RTP/AVPF timeout rules in Section 7.1.4.

7.1.3.  Interoperability between RTP/AVP and RTP/AVPF

  If endpoints implementing the RTP/AVP and RTP/AVPF profiles (or their
  secure variants) are combined within a single RTP session, and the
  RTP/AVPF endpoints use a non-zero T_rr_interval that is significantly
  below 5 seconds, there is a risk that the RTP/AVPF endpoints will
  prematurely time out the SSRCs of the RTP/AVP endpoints, due to their
  different RTCP timeout rules.  Conversely, if the RTP/AVPF endpoints
  use a T_rr_interval that is significantly larger than 5 seconds,
  there is a risk that the RTP/AVP endpoints will time out the SSRCs of
  the RTP/AVPF endpoints.

  Mixing endpoints using two different RTP profiles within a single RTP
  session is NOT RECOMMENDED.  However, if mixed RTP profiles are used,
  and the RTP/AVPF endpoints are not updated to follow Section 7.1.4 of
  this memo, then the RTP/AVPF session SHOULD be configured to use
  T_rr_interval = 4 seconds to avoid premature timeouts.

  The choice of T_rr_interval = 4 seconds for interoperability might
  appear strange.  Intuitively, this value ought to be 5 seconds, to
  make both the RTP/AVP and RTP/AVPF use the same timeout period.
  However, the behavior outlined in Section 7.1.1 shows that actual
  RTP/AVPF reporting intervals can be longer than expected.  Setting
  T_rr_interval = 4 seconds gives actual RTCP intervals near to those
  expected by RTP/AVP, ensuring interoperability.













Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


7.1.4.  Updated SSRC Timeout Rules

  To ensure interoperability and avoid premature timeouts, all SSRCs in
  an RTP session MUST use the same timeout behavior.  However, previous
  specifications are inconsistent in this regard.  To avoid
  interoperability issues, this memo updates the timeout rules as
  follows:

  o  For the RTP/AVP, RTP/SAVP, RTP/AVPF, and RTP/SAVPF profiles, the
     timeout interval SHALL be calculated using a multiplier of five
     times the deterministic RTCP reporting interval.  That is, the
     timeout interval SHALL be 5*Td.

  o  For the RTP/AVP, RTP/SAVP, RTP/AVPF, and RTP/SAVPF profiles,
     calculation of Td, for the purpose of calculating the participant
     timeout only, SHALL be done using a Tmin value of 5 seconds and
     not the reduced minimal interval, even if the reduced minimum
     interval is used to calculate RTCP packet transmission intervals.

  This changes the behavior for the RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF profiles when
  T_rr_interval != 0.  Specifically, the first paragraph of
  Section 3.5.4 of [RFC4585] is updated to use Tmin instead of
  T_rr_interval in the timeout calculation for RTP/AVPF entities.

7.2.  Tuning RTCP Transmissions

  This subsection discusses what tuning can be done to reduce the
  downsides of the shared RTCP packet intervals.  First, what
  possibilities exist for the RTP/AVP [RFC3551] profile are listed
  followed by what additional tools are provided by RTP/AVPF [RFC4585].

7.2.1.  RTP/AVP and RTP/SAVP

  When using the RTP/AVP or RTP/SAVP profiles, the options for tuning
  the RTCP reporting intervals are limited to the RTCP sender and
  receiver bandwidth, and whether the minimum RTCP interval is scaled
  according to the bandwidth.  As the scheduling algorithm includes
  both randomization and reconsideration, one cannot simply calculate
  the expected average transmission interval using the formula for Td
  given in Section 6.3.1 of [RFC3550].  However, by considering the
  inputs to that expression, and the randomization and reconsideration
  rules, we can begin to understand the behavior of the RTCP
  transmission interval.








Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  Let's start with some basic observations:

  a.  Unless the scaled minimum RTCP interval is used, Td prior to
      randomization and reconsideration can never be less than Tmin.
      The default value of Tmin is 5 seconds.

  b.  If the scaled minimum RTCP interval is used, Td can become as low
      as 360 divided by RTP Session bandwidth in kilobits per second.
      In SDP, the RTP session bandwidth is signaled using a "b=AS"
      line.  An RTP Session bandwidth of 72 kbps results in Tmin being
      5 seconds.  An RTP session bandwidth of 360 kbps of course gives
      a Tmin of 1 second, and to achieve a Tmin equal to once every
      frame for a 25 frame-per-second video stream requires an RTP
      session bandwidth of 9 Mbps.  Use of the RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF
      profile allows more frequent RTCP reports for the same bandwidth,
      as discussed below.

  c.  The value of Td scales with the number of SSRCs and the average
      size of the RTCP reports to keep the overall RTCP bandwidth
      constant.

  d.  The actual transmission interval for a Td value is in the range
      [0.5*Td/1.21828, 1.5*Td/1.21828], and the distribution is skewed,
      due to reconsideration, with the majority of the probability mass
      being above Td.  This means, for example, that for Td = 5 s, the
      actual transmission interval will be distributed in the range
      [2.052 s, 6.156 s], and tending towards the upper half of the
      interval.  Note that Tmin parameter limits the value of Td before
      randomization and reconsideration are applied, so the actual
      transmission interval will cover a range extending below Tmin.

  Given the above, we can calculate the number of SSRCs, n, that an RTP
  session with 5% of the session bandwidth assigned to RTCP can support
  while maintaining Td equal to Tmin.  This will tell us how many RTP
  streams we can report on, keeping the RTCP overhead within acceptable
  bounds.  We make two assumptions that simplify the calculation: that
  all SSRCs are senders, and that they all send compound RTCP packets
  comprising an SR packet with n-1 report blocks, followed by an SDES
  packet containing a 16 octet CNAME value [RFC7022] (such RTCP packets
  will vary in size between 54 and 798 octets depending on n, up to the
  maximum of 31 report blocks that can be included in an SR packet).
  If we put this packet size, and a 5% RTCP bandwidth fraction into the
  RTCP interval calculation in Section 6.3.1 of [RFC3550], and
  calculate the value of n needed to give Td = Tmin for the scaled
  minimum interval, we find n=9 SSRCs can be supported (irrespective of
  the interval, due to the way the reporting interval scales with the
  session bandwidth).  We see that to support more SSRCs without
  changing the scaled minimum interval, we need to increase the RTCP



Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  bandwidth fraction from 5%; changing the session bandwidth to a
  higher value would reduce the Tmin.  However, if using the default 5%
  allocation of RTCP bandwidth, an increase will result in more SSRCs
  being supported given a fixed Td target.

  Based on the above, when using the RTP/AVP profile or the RTP/SAVP
  profile, the key limitation for rapid RTCP reporting in small unicast
  sessions is going to be the Tmin value.  The RTP session bandwidth
  configured in RTCP has to be sufficiently high to reach the reporting
  goals the application has following the rules for the scaled minimal
  RTCP interval.

7.2.2.  RTP/AVPF and RTP/SAVPF

  When using RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF, we have a powerful additional tool
  for tuning RTCP transmissions: the T_rr_interval parameter.  Use of
  this parameter allows short RTCP reporting intervals; alternatively
  it gives the ability to sent frequent RTCP feedback without sending
  frequent regular RTCP reports.

  The use of the RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF profile with T_rr_interval set
  to a value greater than zero but smaller than Tmin allows more
  frequent RTCP feedback than the RTP/AVP or RTP/SAVP profiles, for a
  given RTCP bandwidth.  This happens because Tmin is set to zero after
  the transmission of the initial RTCP report, causing the reporting
  interval for later packet to be determined by the usual RTCP
  bandwidth-based calculation, with Tmin=0, and the T_rr_interval.
  This has the effect that we are no longer restricted by the minimal
  interval (whether the default 5-second minimum or the reduced minimum
  interval).  Rather, the RTCP bandwidth and the T_rr_interval are the
  governing factors, allowing faster feedback.  Applications that care
  about rapid regular RTCP feedback ought to consider using the RTP/
  AVPF or RTP/SAVPF profile, even if they don't use the feedback
  features of that profile.

  The use of the RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF profile allows RTCP feedback
  packets to be sent frequently, without also requiring regular RTCP
  reports to be sent frequently, since T_rr_interval limits the rate at
  which regular RTCP packets can be sent, while still permitting RTCP
  feedback packets to be sent.  Applications that can use feedback
  packets for some RTP streams, e.g., video streams, but don't want
  frequent regular reporting for other RTP streams, can configure the
  T_rr_interval to a value so that the regular reporting for both audio
  and video is at a level that is considered acceptable for the audio.
  They could then use feedback packets, which will include RTCP SR/RR
  packets unless reduced size RTCP feedback packets [RFC5506] are used,





Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  for the video reporting.  This allows the available RTCP bandwidth to
  be devoted on the feedback that provides the most utility for the
  application.

  Using T_rr_interval still requires one to determine suitable values
  for the RTCP bandwidth value.  Indeed, it might make this choice even
  more important, as this is more likely to affect the RTCP behavior
  and performance than when using the RTP/AVP or RTP/SAVP profile, as
  there are fewer limitations affecting the RTCP transmission.

  When T_rr_interval is non-zero, there are configurations that need to
  be avoided.  If the RTCP bandwidth chosen is such that the Td value
  is smaller than, but close to, T_rr_interval, then the actual regular
  RTCP packet transmission interval can become very large, as discussed
  in Section 7.1.1.  Therefore, for configuration where one intends to
  have Td smaller than T_rr_interval, then Td is RECOMMENDED to be
  targeted at values less than 1/4th of T_rr_interval, which results in
  the range becoming [0.5*T_rr_interval, 1.81*T_rr_interval].

  With the RTP/AVPF or RTP/SAVPF profiles, using T_rr_interval = 0 has
  utility and results in a behavior where the RTCP transmission is only
  limited by the bandwidth, i.e., no Tmin limitations at all.  This
  allows more frequent regular RTCP reporting than can be achieved
  using the RTP/AVP profile.  Many configurations of RTCP will not
  consume all the bandwidth that they have been configured to use, but
  this configuration will consume what it has been given.  Note that
  the same behavior will be achieved as long as T_rr_interval is
  smaller than 1/3 of Td as that prevents T_rr_interval from affecting
  the transmission.

  There exists no method for using different regular RTCP reporting
  intervals depending on the media type or individual RTP stream, other
  than using a separate RTP session for each type or stream.

8.  Security Considerations

  When using the secure RTP protocol (RTP/SAVP) [RFC3711], or the
  secure variant of the feedback profile (RTP/SAVPF) [RFC5124], the
  cryptographic context of a compound secure RTCP packet is the SSRC of
  the sender of the first RTCP (sub-)packet.  This could matter in some
  cases, especially for keying mechanisms such as MIKEY [RFC3830] that
  allow use of per-SSRC keying.

  Otherwise, the standard security considerations of RTP apply; sending
  multiple RTP streams from a single endpoint in a single RTP session
  does not appear to have different security consequences than sending
  the same number of RTP streams spread across different RTP sessions.




Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


9.  References

9.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
             Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
             Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,
             July 2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.

  [RFC3711]  Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
             Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",
             RFC 3711, DOI 10.17487/RFC3711, March 2004,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3711>.

  [RFC4585]  Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,
             "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control
             Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.

  [RFC5124]  Ott, J. and E. Carrara, "Extended Secure RTP Profile for
             Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback
             (RTP/SAVPF)", RFC 5124, DOI 10.17487/RFC5124, February
             2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5124>.

  [RFC5506]  Johansson, I. and M. Westerlund, "Support for Reduced-Size
             Real-Time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP): Opportunities
             and Consequences", RFC 5506, DOI 10.17487/RFC5506, April
             2009, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5506>.

9.2.  Informative References

  [CLUE-FRAME]
             Duckworth, M., Ed., Pepperell, A., and S. Wenger,
             "Framework for Telepresence Multi-Streams", Work in
             Progress, draft-ietf-clue-framework-25, January 2016.

  [MULTI-RTP]
             Westerlund, M., Perkins, C., and J. Lennox, "Sending
             Multiple Types of Media in a Single RTP Session", Work in
             Progress, draft-ietf-avtcore-multi-media-rtp-session-13,
             December 2015.




Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  [MULTI-STREAM-OPT]
             Lennox, J., Westerlund, M., Wu, Q., and C. Perkins,
             "Sending Multiple Media Streams in a Single RTP Session:
             Grouping RTCP Reception Statistics and Other Feedback",
             Work in Progress, draft-ietf-avtcore-rtp-multi-
             stream-optimisation-12, March 2016.

  [RFC3390]  Allman, M., Floyd, S., and C. Partridge, "Increasing TCP's
             Initial Window", RFC 3390, DOI 10.17487/RFC3390, October
             2002, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3390>.

  [RFC3551]  Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio and
             Video Conferences with Minimal Control", STD 65, RFC 3551,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC3551, July 2003,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3551>.

  [RFC3556]  Casner, S., "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Bandwidth
             Modifiers for RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Bandwidth",
             RFC 3556, DOI 10.17487/RFC3556, July 2003,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3556>.

  [RFC3830]  Arkko, J., Carrara, E., Lindholm, F., Naslund, M., and K.
             Norrman, "MIKEY: Multimedia Internet KEYing", RFC 3830,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC3830, August 2004,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3830>.

  [RFC4588]  Rey, J., Leon, D., Miyazaki, A., Varsa, V., and R.
             Hakenberg, "RTP Retransmission Payload Format", RFC 4588,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC4588, July 2006,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4588>.

  [RFC5104]  Wenger, S., Chandra, U., Westerlund, M., and B. Burman,
             "Codec Control Messages in the RTP Audio-Visual Profile
             with Feedback (AVPF)", RFC 5104, DOI 10.17487/RFC5104,
             February 2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5104>.

  [RFC5576]  Lennox, J., Ott, J., and T. Schierl, "Source-Specific
             Media Attributes in the Session Description Protocol
             (SDP)", RFC 5576, DOI 10.17487/RFC5576, June 2009,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5576>.

  [RFC6190]  Wenger, S., Wang, Y., Schierl, T., and A. Eleftheriadis,
             "RTP Payload Format for Scalable Video Coding", RFC 6190,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6190, May 2011,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6190>.






Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


  [RFC6928]  Chu, J., Dukkipati, N., Cheng, Y., and M. Mathis,
             "Increasing TCP's Initial Window", RFC 6928,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6928, April 2013,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6928>.

  [RFC7022]  Begen, A., Perkins, C., Wing, D., and E. Rescorla,
             "Guidelines for Choosing RTP Control Protocol (RTCP)
             Canonical Names (CNAMEs)", RFC 7022, DOI 10.17487/RFC7022,
             September 2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7022>.

  [RFC7160]  Petit-Huguenin, M. and G. Zorn, Ed., "Support for Multiple
             Clock Rates in an RTP Session", RFC 7160,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7160, April 2014,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7160>.

  [RFC7667]  Westerlund, M. and S. Wenger, "RTP Topologies", RFC 7667,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7667, November 2015,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7667>.

  [SDP-BUNDLE]
             Holmberg, C., Alvestrand, H., and C. Jennings,
             "Negotiating Media Multiplexing Using the Session
             Description Protocol (SDP)", Work in Progress,
             draft-ietf-mmusic-sdp-bundle-negotiation-36, October 2016.

  [Sim88]    Westerlund, M., "SIMULATION RESULTS FOR MULTI-STREAM",
             IETF 88 Proceedings, November 2013,
             <https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/88/slides/
             slides-88-avtcore-0.pdf>.

  [Sim92]    Westerlund, M., Lennox, J., Perkins, C., and Q. Wu,
             "Changes in RTP Multi-stream", IETF 92 Proceedings, March
             2015, <https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/92/slides/
             slides-92-avtcore-0.pdf>.

















Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 8108        Multiple Media Streams in an RTP Session      March 2017


Acknowledgments

  The authors like to thank Harald Alvestrand and everyone else who has
  been involved in the development of this document.

Authors' Addresses

  Jonathan Lennox
  Vidyo, Inc.
  433 Hackensack Avenue
  Seventh Floor
  Hackensack, NJ  07601
  United States of America

  Email: [email protected]


  Magnus Westerlund
  Ericsson
  Farogatan 2
  SE-164 80 Kista
  Sweden

  Phone: +46 10 714 82 87
  Email: [email protected]


  Qin Wu
  Huawei
  101 Software Avenue, Yuhua District
  Nanjing, Jiangsu 210012
  China

  Email: [email protected]


  Colin Perkins
  University of Glasgow
  School of Computing Science
  Glasgow  G12 8QQ
  United Kingdom

  Email: [email protected]








Lennox, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 29]