Network Working Group                                            M. Handley
Request for Comments: 2736                                            ACIRI
BCP: 36                                                          C. Perkins
Category: Best Current Practice                                         UCL
                                                             December 1999


     Guidelines for Writers of RTP Payload Format Specifications

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the
  Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document provides general guidelines aimed at assisting the
  authors of RTP Payload Format specifications in deciding on good
  formats.  These guidelines attempt to capture some of the experience
  gained with RTP as it evolved during its development.

1.  Introduction

  This document provides general guidelines aimed at assisting the
  authors of RTP [9] Payload Format specifications in deciding on good
  formats.  These guidelines attempt to capture some of the experience
  gained with RTP as it evolved during its development.

  The principles outlined in this document are applicable to almost all
  data types, but are framed in examples of audio and video codecs for
  clarity.

2.  Background

  RTP was designed around the concept of Application Level Framing
  (ALF), first described by Clark and Tennenhouse [2]. The key argument
  underlying ALF is that there are many different ways an application
  might be able to cope with misordered or lost packets.  These range
  from ignoring the loss, to re-sending the missing data (either from a
  buffer or by regenerating it), and to sending new data which
  supersedes the missing data.  The application only has this choice if
  the transport protocol is dealing with data in "Application Data
  Units" (ADUs). An ADU contains data that can be processed out-of-



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  order with respect to other ADUs.  Thus the ADU is the minimum unit
  of error recovery.

  The key property of a transport protocol for ADUs is that each ADU
  contains sufficient information to be processed by the receiver
  immediately.  An example is a video stream, wherein the compressed
  video data in an ADU must be capable of being decompressed regardless
  of whether previous ADUs have been received.  Additionally the ADU
  must contain "header" information detailing its position in the video
  image and the frame from which it came.

  Although an ADU need not be a packet, there are many applications for
  which a packet is a natural ADU.  Such ALF applications have the
  great advantage that all packets that are received can be processed
  by the application immediately.

  RTP was designed around an ALF philosophy.  In the context of a
  stream of RTP data, an RTP packet header provides sufficient
  information to be able to identify and decode the packet irrespective
  of whether it was received in order, or whether preceding packets
  have been lost. However, these arguments only hold good if the RTP
  payload formats are also designed using an ALF philosophy.

  Note that this also implies smart, network aware, end-points. An
  application using RTP should be aware of the limitations of the
  underlying network, and should adapt its transmission to match those
  limitations.  Our experience is that a smart end-point implementation
  can achieve significantly better performance on real IP-based
  networks than a naive implementation.

3.  Channel Characteristics

  We identify the following channel characteristics that influence the
  best-effort transport of RTP over UDP/IP in the Internet:

  o  Packets may be lost

  o  Packets may be duplicated

  o  Packets may be reordered in transit

  o  Packets will be fragmented if they exceed the MTU of the
     underlying network

  The loss characteristics of a link may vary widely over short time
  intervals.





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  Although fragmentation is not a disastrous phenomenon if it is a rare
  occurrence, relying on IP fragmentation is a bad design strategy as
  it significantly increases the effective loss rate of a network and
  decreases goodput.  This is because if one fragment is lost, the
  remaining fragments (which have used up bottleneck bandwidth) will
  then need to be discarded by the receiver.  It also puts additional
  load on the routers performing fragmentation and on the end-systems
  re-assembling the fragments.

  In addition, it is noted that the transit time between two hosts on
  the Internet will not be constant.  This is due to two effects -
  jitter caused by being queued behind cross-traffic, and routing
  changes.  The former is possible to characterise and compensate for
  by using a playout buffer, but the latter is impossible to predict
  and difficult to accommodate gracefully.

4.  Guidelines

  We identify the following requirements of RTP payload format
  specifications:

  +  A payload format should be devised so that the stream being
     transported is still useful even in the presence of a moderate
     amount of packet loss.

  +  Ideally all the contents of every packet should be possible to be
     decoded and played out irrespective of whether preceding packets
     have been lost or arrive late.

  The first of these requirements is based on the nature of the
  Internet.  Although it may be possible to engineer parts of the
  Internet to produce low loss rates through careful provisioning or
  the use of non-best-effort services, as a rule payload formats should
  not be designed for these special purpose environments.  Payload
  formats should be designed to be used in the public Internet with
  best effort service, and thus should expect to see moderate loss
  rates.  For example, a 5% loss rate is not uncommon.  We note that
  TCP steady state models [3][4][6] indicate that a 5% loss rate with a
  1KByte packet size and 200ms round-trip time will result in TCP
  achieving a throughput of around 180Kbit/s.  Higher loss rates,
  smaller packet sizes, or a larger RTT are required to constrain TCP
  to lower data rates.  For the most part, it is such TCP traffic that
  is producing the background loss that many RTP flows must co-exist
  with.  Without explicit congestion notification (ECN) [8], loss must
  be considered an intrinsic property of best-effort parts of the
  Internet.





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  When payload formats do not assume packet loss will occur, they
  should state this explicitly up front, and they will be considered
  special purpose payload formats, unsuitable for use on the public
  Internet without special support from the network infrastructure.

  The second of these requirements is more explicit about how RTP
  should cope with loss.  If an RTP payload format is properly
  designed, every packet that is actually received should be useful.
  Typically this implies the following guidelines are adhered to:

  +  Packet boundaries should coincide with codec frame boundaries.
     Thus a packet should normally consist of one or more complete
     codec frames.

  +  A codec's minimum unit of data should never be packetised so that
     it crosses a packet boundary unless it is larger than the MTU.

  +  If a codec's frame size is larger than the MTU, the payload format
     must not rely on IP fragmentation.  Instead it must define its own
     fragmentation mechanism.  Such mechanisms may involve codec-
     specific information that allows decoding of fragments.
     Alternatively they might allow codec-independent packet-level
     forward error correction [5] to be applied that cannot be used
     with IP-level fragmentation.

  In the abstract, a codec frame (i.e., the ADU or the minimum size
  unit that has semantic meaning when handed to the codec) can be of
  arbitrary size.  For PCM audio, it is one byte.  For GSM audio, a
  frame corresponds to 20ms of audio.  For H.261 video, it is a Group
  of Blocks (GOB), or one twelfth of a CIF video frame.

  For PCM, it does not matter how audio is packetised, as the ADU size
  is one byte.  For GSM audio, arbitrary packetisation would split a
  20ms frame over two packets, which would mean that if one packet were
  lost, partial frames in packets before and after the loss are
  meaningless.  This means that not only were the bits in the missing
  packet lost, but also that additional bits in neighboring packets
  that used bottleneck bandwidth were effectively also lost because the
  receiver must throw them away.  Instead, we would packetise GSM by
  including several complete GSM frames in a packet; typically four GSM
  frames are included in current implementations.  Thus every packet
  received can be decoded because even in the presence of loss, no
  incomplete frames are received.

  The H.261 specification allows GOBs to be up to 3KBytes long,
  although most of the time they are smaller than this.  It might be
  thought that we should insert a group of blocks into a packet when it
  fits, and arbitrarily split the GOB over two or more packets when a



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  GOB is large.  In the first version of the H.261 payload format, this
  is what was done.  However, this still means that there are
  circumstances where H.261 packets arrive at the receiver and must be
  discarded because other packets were lost - a loss multiplier effect
  that we wish to avoid.  In fact there are smaller units than GOBs in
  the H.261 bit-stream called macroblocks, but they are not
  identifiable without parsing from the start of the GOB.  However, if
  we provide a little additional information at the start of each
  packet, we can reinstate information that would normally be found by
  parsing from the start of the GOB, and we can packetise H.261 by
  splitting the data stream on macroblock boundaries.  This is a less
  obvious packetisation for H.261 than the GOB packetisation, but it
  does mean that a slightly smarter depacketiser at the receiver can
  reconstruct a valid H.261 bitstream from a stream of RTP packets that
  has experienced loss, and not have to discard any of the data that
  arrived.

  An additional guideline concerns codecs that require the decoder
  state machine to keep step with the encoder state machine.  Many
  audio codecs such as LPC or GSM are of this form.  Typically they are
  loss tolerant, in that after a loss, the predictor coefficients
  decay, so that after a certain amount of time, the predictor error
  induced by the loss will disappear.  Most codecs designed for
  telephony services are of this form because they were designed to
  cope with bit errors without the decoder predictor state permanently
  remaining incorrect.  Just packetising these formats so that packets
  consist of integer multiples of codec frames may not be optimal, as
  although the packet received immediately after a packet loss can be
  decoded, the start of the audio stream produced will be incorrect
  (and hence distort the signal) because the decoder predictor is now
  out of step with the encoder.  In principle, all of the decoder's
  internal state could be added using a header attached to the start of
  every packet, but for lower bit-rate encodings, this state is so
  substantial that the bit rate is no longer low.  However, a
  compromise can usually be found, where a greatly reduced form of
  decoder state is sent in every packet, which does not recreate the
  encoders predictor precisely, but does reduce the magnitude and
  duration of the distortion produced when the previous packet is lost.
  Such compressed state is, by definition, very dependent on the codec
  in question.  Thus we recommend:

  +  Payload formats for encodings where the decoder contains internal
     data-driven state that attempts to track encoder state should
     normally consider including a small additional header that conveys
     the most critical elements of this state to reduce distortion
     after packet loss.





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  A similar issue arises with codec parameters, and whether or not they
  should be included in the payload format. An example is with a codec
  that has a choice of huffman tables for compression.  The codec may
  use either huffman table 1 or table 2 for encoding and the receiver
  needs to know this information for correct decoding. There are a
  number of ways in which this kind of information can be conveyed:

  o  Out of band signalling, prior to media transmission.

  o  Out of band signalling, but the parameter can be changed mid-
     session.  This requires synchronization of the change in the media
     stream.

  o  The change is signaled through a change in the RTP payload type
     field. This requires mapping the parameter space into particular
     payload type values and signalling this mapping out-of-band prior
     to media transmission.

  o  Including the parameter in the payload format. This allows for
     adapting the parameter in a robust manner, but makes the payload
     format less efficient.

  Which mechanism to use depends on the utility of changing the
  parameter in mid-session to support application layer adaptation.
  However, using out-of-band signalling to change a parameter in mid-
  session is generally to be discouraged due to the problem of
  synchronizing the parameter change with the media stream.

4.1.  RTP Header Extensions

  Many RTP payload formats require some additional header information
  to be carried in addition to that included in the fixed RTP packet
  header.  The recommended way of conveying this information is in the
  payload section of the packet. The RTP header extension should not be
  used to convey payload specific information ([9], section 5.3) since
  this is inefficient in its use of bandwidth; requires the definition
  of a new RTP profile or profile extension; and makes it difficult to
  employ FEC schemes such as, for example, [7].  Use of an RTP header
  extension is only appropriate for cases where the extension in
  question applies across a wide range of payload types.

4.2.  Header Compression

  Designers of payload formats should also be aware of the needs of RTP
  header compression [1]. In particular, the compression algorithm
  functions best when the RTP timestamp increments by a constant value
  between consecutive packets. Payload formats which rely on sending
  packets out of order, such that the timestamp increment is not



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  constant, are likely to compress less well than those which send
  packets in order. This has most often been an issue when designing
  payload formats for FEC information, although some video codecs also
  rely on out-of-order transmission of packets at the expense of
  reduced compression. Although in some cases such out-of-order
  transmission may be the best solution, payload format designers are
  encourage to look for alternative solutions where possible.

5.  Summary

  Designing packet formats for RTP is not a trivial task.  Typically a
  detailed knowledge of the codec involved is required to be able to
  design a format that is resilient to loss, does not introduce loss
  magnification effects due to inappropriate packetisation, and does
  not introduce unnecessary distortion after a packet loss.  We believe
  that considerable effort should be put into designing packet formats
  that are well tailored to the codec in question.  Typically this
  requires a very small amount of processing at the sender and
  receiver, but the result can be greatly improved quality when
  operating in typical Internet environments.

  Designers of new codecs for use with RTP should consider making the
  output of the codec "naturally packetizable". This implies that the
  codec should be designed to produce a packet stream, rather than a
  bit-stream; and that that packet stream contains the minimal amount
  of redundancy necessary to ensure that each packet is independently
  decodable with minimal loss of decoder predictor tracking. It is
  recognised that sacrificing some small amount of bandwidth to ensure
  greater robustness to packet loss is often a worthwhile tradeoff.

  It is hoped that, in the long run, new codecs should be produced
  which can be directly packetised, without the trouble of designing a
  codec-specific payload format.

  It is possible to design generic packetisation formats that do not
  pay attention to the issues described in this document, but such
  formats are only suitable for special purpose networks where packet
  loss can be avoided by careful engineering at the network layer, and
  are not suited to current best-effort networks.

6.  Security Considerations

  The guidelines in this document result in RTP payload formats that
  are robust in the presence of real world network conditions.
  Designing payload formats for special purpose networks that assume
  negligable loss rates will normally result in slightly better
  compression, but produce formats that are more fragile, thus
  rendering them easier targets for denial-of-service attacks.



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  Designers of payload formats should pay close attention to possible
  security issues that might arise from poor implementations of their
  formats, and should be careful to specify the correct behaviour when
  anomalous conditions arise.  Examples include how to process illegal
  field values, and conditions when there are mismatches between length
  fields and actual data.  Whilst the correct action will normally be
  to discard the packet, possible such conditions should be brought to
  the attention of the implementor to ensure that they are trapped
  properly.

  The RTP specification covers encryption of the payload.  This issue
  should not normally be dealt with by payload formats themselves.
  However, certain payload formats spread information about a
  particular application data unit over a number of packets, or rely on
  packets which relate to a number of application data units. Care must
  be taken when changing the encryption of such streams, since such
  payload formats may constrain the places in a stream where it is
  possible to change the encryption key without exposing sensitive
  data.

  Designers of payload formats which include FEC should be aware that
  the automatic addition of FEC in response to packet loss may increase
  network congestion, leading to a worsening of the problem which the
  use of FEC was intended to solve. Since this may, at its worst,
  constitute a denial of service attack, designers of such payload
  formats should take care that appropriate safeguards are in place to
  prevent abuse.

Authors' Addresses

  Mark Handley
  AT&T Center for Internet Research at ICSI,
  International Computer Science Institute,
  1947 Center Street, Suite 600,
  Berkeley, CA 94704, USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Colin Perkins
  Dept of Computer Science,
  University College London,
  Gower Street,
  London WC1E 6BT, UK.

  EMail: [email protected]





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RFC 2736     Guidelines for Writers of RTP Payload Formats December 1999


Acknowledgments

  This document is based on experience gained over several years by
  many people, including Van Jacobson, Steve McCanne, Steve Casner,
  Henning Schulzrinne, Thierry Turletti, Jonathan Rosenberg and
  Christian Huitema amongst others.

References

  [1]  Casner, S. and V. Jacobson, "Compressing IP/UDP/RTP Headers for
       Low-Speed Serial Links", RFC 2508, February 1999.

  [2]  D. Clark and  D. Tennenhouse, "Architectural Considerations for
       a New Generation of Network Protocols" Proc ACM Sigcomm 90.

  [3]  J. Mahdavi and S. Floyd. "TCP-friendly unicast rate-based flow
       control". Note sent to end2end-interest mailing list, Jan 1997.

  [4]  M. Mathis, J. Semske, J. Mahdavi, and T. Ott. "The macro-scopic
       behavior of the TCP congestion avoidance algorithm". Computer
       Communication Review, 27(3), July 1997.

  [5]  J. Nonnenmacher, E. Biersack, Don Towsley, "Parity-Based Loss
       Recovery for Reliable Multicast Transmission", Proc ACM Sigcomm

  [6]  J. Padhye, V. Firoiu, D. Towsley, J.  Kurose, "Modeling TCP
       Throughput: A Simple Model and its Empirical Validation", Proc.
       ACM Sigcomm 1998.

  [7]  Perkins, C., Kouvelas, I., Hodson, O., Hardman, V., Handley, M.,
       Bolot, J.C., Vega-Garcia, A. and S. Fosse-Parisis, "RTP Payload
       for Redundant Audio Data", RFC 2198, September 1997.

  [8]  Ramakrishnan, K. and  S. Floyd, "A Proposal to add Explicit
       Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP", RFC 2481, January 1999.

  [9]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobson,
       "Real-Time Transport Protocol", RFC 1889, January 1996.













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Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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