Network Working Group                                        J. Van Dyke
Request for Comments: 5022                      Cantata Technology, Inc.
Obsoletes: 4722                                           E. Burger, Ed.
Category: Informational                                BEA Systems, Inc.
                                                             A. Spitzer
                                                        Bluesocket Inc.
                                                         September 2007


      Media Server Control Markup Language (MSCML) and Protocol

Status of This Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

IESG Note

  This RFC is not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard.  The
  IETF disclaims any knowledge of the fitness of this RFC for any
  purpose and in particular notes that the decision to publish is not
  based on IETF review for such things as security, congestion control,
  or inappropriate interaction with deployed protocols.  The RFC Editor
  has chosen to publish this document at its discretion.  Readers of
  this document should exercise caution in evaluating its value for
  implementation and deployment.  See RFC 3932 for more information.

Abstract

  Media Server Control Markup Language (MSCML) is a markup language
  used in conjunction with SIP to provide advanced conferencing and
  interactive voice response (IVR) functions.  MSCML presents an
  application-level control model, as opposed to device-level control
  models.  One use of this protocol is for communications between a
  conference focus and mixer in the IETF SIP Conferencing Framework.















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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................4
     1.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................5
  2. MSCML Approach ..................................................5
  3. Use of SIP Request Methods ......................................6
  4. MSCML Design ....................................................8
     4.1. Transaction Model ..........................................8
     4.2. XML Usage ..................................................9
          4.2.1. MSCML Time Values ...................................9
  5. Advanced Conferencing ..........................................10
     5.1. Conference Model ..........................................10
     5.2. Configure Conference Request <configure_conference> .......11
     5.3. Configure Leg Request <configure_leg> .....................13
     5.4. Terminating a Conference ..................................14
     5.5. Conference Manipulation ...................................15
     5.6. Video Conferencing ........................................16
     5.7. Conference Events .........................................17
     5.8. Conferencing with Personalized Mixes ......................18
          5.8.1. MSCML Elements and Attributes for
                 Personalized Mixes .................................19
          5.8.2. Example Usage of Personalized Mixes ................20
  6. Interactive Voice Response (IVR) ...............................23
     6.1. Specifying Prompt Content .................................24
          6.1.1. Use of the Prompt Element ..........................24
     6.2. Multimedia Processing for IVR .............................30
     6.3. Playing Announcements <play> ..............................31
     6.4. Prompt and Collect <playcollect> ..........................32
          6.4.1. Control of Digit Buffering and Barge-In ............33
          6.4.2. Mapping DTMF Keys to Special Functions .............33
          6.4.3. Collection Timers ..................................35
          6.4.4. Logging Caller DTMF Input ..........................36
          6.4.5. Specifying DTMF Grammars ...........................36
          6.4.6. Playcollect Response ...............................37
          6.4.7. Playcollect Example ................................38
     6.5. Prompt and Record <playrecord> ............................38
          6.5.1. Prompt Phase .......................................38
          6.5.2. Record Phase .......................................39
          6.5.3. Playrecord Example .................................41
     6.6. Stop Request <stop> .......................................42
  7. Call Leg Events ................................................43
     7.1. Keypress Events ...........................................43
          7.1.1. Keypress Subscription Examples .....................45
          7.1.2. Keypress Notification Examples .....................45
     7.2. Signal Events .............................................46
          7.2.1. Signal Event Examples ..............................47
  8. Managing Content <managecontent> ...............................48
     8.1. Managecontent Example .....................................50



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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  9. Fax Processing .................................................51
     9.1. Recording a Fax <faxrecord> ...............................51
     9.2. Sending a Fax <faxplay> ...................................53
  10. MSCML Response Attributes and Elements ........................56
     10.1. Mechanism ................................................56
     10.2. Base <response> Attributes ...............................56
     10.3. Response Attributes and Elements for <configure_leg> .....57
     10.4. Response Attributes and Elements for <play> ..............57
           10.4.1. Reporting Content Retrieval Errors ...............58
     10.5. Response Attributes and Elements for <playcollect> .......59
     10.6. Response Attributes and Elements for <playrecord> ........60
     10.7. Response Attributes and Elements for <managecontent> .....61
     10.8. Response Attributes and Elements for <faxplay>
           and <faxrecord> ..........................................61
  11. Formal Syntax .................................................62
     11.1. Schema ...................................................62
  12. IANA Considerations ...........................................73
     12.1. IANA Registration of MIME Media Type application/
           mediaservercontrol+xml ...................................73
  13. Security Considerations .......................................74
  14. References ....................................................75
     14.1. Normative References .....................................75
     14.2. Informative References ...................................76
  Appendix A.  Regex Grammar Syntax .................................78
  Appendix B.  Contributors .........................................79
  Appendix C.  Acknowledgements .....................................79

























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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


1.  Introduction

  This document describes the Media Server Control Markup Language
  (MSCML) and its usage.  It describes payloads that one can send to a
  media server using standard SIP INVITE and INFO methods and the
  capabilities these payloads implement.  RFC 4240 [2] describes media
  server SIP URI formats.

  Prior to MSCML, there was not a standard way to deliver SIP-based
  enhanced conferencing.  Basic SIP constructs, such as those described
  in RFC 4240 [2], serve simple n-way conferencing well.  The SIP URI
  provides a natural mechanism for identifying a specific SIP
  conference, while INVITE and BYE methods elegantly implement
  conference join and leave semantics.  However, enhanced conferencing
  applications also require features such as sizing and resizing, in-
  conference IVR operations (e.g., recording and playing participant
  names to the full conference), and conference event reporting.  MSCML
  payloads within standard SIP methods realize these features.

  The structure and approach of MSCML satisfy the requirements set out
  in RFC 4353 [10].  In particular, MSCML serves as the interface
  between the conference server or focus and a centralized conference
  mixer.  In this case, a media server has the role of the conference
  mixer.

  There are two broad classes of MSCML functionality.  The first class
  includes primitives for advanced conferencing, such as conference
  configuration, participant leg manipulation, and conference event
  reporting.  The second class comprises primitives for interactive
  voice response (IVR).  These include collecting DTMF digits and
  playing and recording multimedia content.

  MSCML fills the need for IVR and conference control with requests and
  responses over a SIP transport.  VoiceXML [11] fills the need for IVR
  with requests and responses over a HTTP transport.  This enables
  developers to use whatever model fits their needs best.

  In general, a media server offers services to SIP UACs, such as
  Application Servers, Feature Servers, and Media Gateway Controllers.
  See the IPCC Reference Architecture [12] for definitions of these
  terms.  It is unlikely, but not prohibited, for end-user SIP UACs to
  have a direct signaling relationship with a media server.  The term
  "client" is used in this document to refer generically to an entity
  that interacts with the media server using SIP and MSCML.







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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  The media server fulfills the role of the Media Resource Function
  (MRF) in the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) [13] as described by 3GPP.
  MSCML and RFC 4240 [2], upon which MSCML builds, are specifically
  focused on the Media resource (Mr) interface which supports
  interactions between application logic and the MRF.

  This document describes a working framework and protocol with which
  there is considerable implementation experience.  Application
  developers and service providers have created several MSCML-based
  services since the availability of the initial version in 2001.  This
  experience is highly relevant to the ongoing work of the IETF,
  particularly the SIP [26], SIPPING [27], MMUSIC [28], and XCON [29]
  work groups, the IMS [30] work in 3GPP, and the CCXML work in the
  Voice Browser Work Group of the W3C.

1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [1].

2.  MSCML Approach

  It is critically important to emphasize that the goal of MSCML is to
  provide an application interface that follows the SIP, HTTP, and XML
  development paradigm to foster easier and more rapid application
  deployment.  This goal is reflected in MSCML in two ways.

  First, the programming model is that of peer to peer rather than
  master-slave.  Importantly, this allows the media server to be used
  simultaneously for multiple applications rather than be tied to a
  single point of control.  It also enables standard SIP mechanisms to
  be used for media server location and load balancing.

  Second, MSCML defines constructs and primitives that are meaningful
  at the application level to ensure that programmers are not
  distracted by unnecessary complexity.  For example, the mixing
  resource operates on constructs such as conferences and call
  participants rather than directly on individual media streams.

  The MSCML paradigm is important to the developer community, in that
  developers and operators conceptually write applications about calls,
  conferences, and call legs.  For the majority of developers and
  applications this approach significantly simplifies and speeds
  development.






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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


3.  Use of SIP Request Methods

  As mentioned above, MSCML payloads may be carried in either SIP
  INVITE or INFO requests.  The initial INVITE, which creates an
  enhanced conference, MAY include an MSCML payload.  A subsequent
  INVITE to the same Request-URI joins a participant leg to the
  conference.  This INVITE MAY include an MSCML payload.  The initial
  INVITE that establishes an IVR session MUST NOT include an MSCML
  payload.  The client sends all mid-call MSCML payloads for
  conferencing and IVR via SIP INFO requests.

  SIP INVITE requests that contain both MSCML and Session Description
  Protocol (SDP) body parts are used frequently in conferencing
  scenarios.  Therefore, the media server MUST support message bodies
  with the MIME type "multipart/mixed" in SIP INVITE requests.

  The media server transports MSCML responses in the final response to
  the SIP INVITE containing the matching MSCML request or in a SIP INFO
  message.  The only allowable final response to a SIP INFO containing
  a message body is a 200 OK, per RFC 2976 [3].  Therefore, if the
  client sends the MSCML request via SIP INFO, the media server
  responds with the MSCML response in a separate INFO request.  In
  general, these responses are asynchronous in nature and require a
  separate transaction due to timing considerations.

  There has been considerable debate on the use of the SIP INFO method
  for any purpose.  Our experience is that MSCML would not have been
  possible without it.  At the time the first MSCML specification was
  published, the first SIP Event Notification draft had just been
  submitted as an individual submission.  At that time, there was no
  mechanism to link SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY to an existing dialog.  This
  prevented its use in MSCML, since all events occurred in an INVITE-
  established dialog.  And while SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY was well suited for
  reporting conference events, its semantics seemed inappropriate for
  modifying a participant leg or conference setting where the only
  "event" was the success or failure of the request.  Lastly, since SIP
  INFO was an established RFC, most SIP stack implementations supported
  it at that time.  We had few, if any, interoperability issues as a
  result.

  More recent developments have provided additional reasons why
  SUBSCRIBE/NOTIFY is not appropriate for use in MSCML.  Use of
  SUBSCRIBE presents two problems.  The first is semantic.  The purpose
  of SUBSCRIBE is to register interest in User Agent state.  However,
  using SUBSCRIBE for MSCML results in the SUBSCRIBE modifying the User
  Agent state.  The second reason SUBSCRIBE is not appropriate is
  because MSCML is inherently call based.  The association of a SIP
  dialog with a call leg means MSCML can be incredibly straightforward.



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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  For example, if one used SUBSCRIBE or other SIP method to send
  commands about some context, one must identify that context somehow.
  Relating commands to the SIP dialog they arrive on defines the
  context for free.  Moreover, it is conceptually easy for the
  developer.  Using NOTIFY to transport MSCML responses is also not
  appropriate, as the NOTIFY would be in response to an implicit
  subscription.  The SIP and SIPPING lists have discussed the dangers
  of implicit subscription.

  In order to guarantee interoperability with this specification, as
  well as with SIP User Agents that are unaware of MSCML, SIP UACs that
  wish to use MSCML services MUST specify a service indicator that
  supports MSCML in the initial INVITE.  RFC 4240 [2] defines the
  service indicator "conf", which MUST be used for MSCML conferencing
  applications.  The service indicator "ivr" MUST be used for MSCML
  interactive voice response applications.  In this specification, only
  "conf" and "ivr" are described.

  The media server MUST support moving the call between services
  through sending the media server a BYE on the existing dialog and
  establishing a new dialog with an INVITE to the desired service.
  Media servers SHOULD support moving between services without
  requiring modification of the previously established SDP parameters.
  This is achieved by sending a re-INVITE on the existing dialog in
  which the Request-URI is modified to specify the new service desired
  by the client.  This eliminates the need for the client to send an
  INVITE to the caller or gateway to establish new SDP parameters.

  The media server, as a SIP UAS, MUST respond appropriately to an
  INVITE that contains an MSCML body.  If MSCML is not supported, the
  media server MUST generate a 415 final response and include a list of
  the supported content types in the response per RFC 3261 [4].  The
  media server MUST also advertise its support of MSCML in responses to
  OPTIONS requests, by including "application/mediaservercontrol+xml"
  as a supported content type in an Accept header.  This alleviates the
  major issues with using INFO for the transport of application data;
  namely, the User Agent's proper interpretation of what is, by design,
  an opaque message request.













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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


4.  MSCML Design

4.1.  Transaction Model

  To avoid undue complexity, MSCML establishes two rules regarding its
  usage.  The first is that only one MSCML body may be present in a SIP
  request.  The second is that each MSCML body may contain only one
  request or response.  This greatly simplifies transaction management.
  MSCML syntax does provide for the unique identification of multiple
  requests in a single body part.  However, this is not supported in
  this specification.

  Per the guidelines of RFC 3470 [14], MSCML bodies MUST be well formed
  and valid.

  MSCML is a direct request-response protocol.  There are no
  provisional responses, only final responses.  A request may, however,
  result in multiple notifications.  For example, a request for active
  talker reports will result in a notification for each speaker set.
  This maps to the three major element trees for MSCML: <request>,
  <response>, and <notification>.

  Figure 1 shows a request body.  Depending on the command, one can
  send the request in an INVITE or an INFO.  Figure 2 shows a response
  body.  The SIP INFO method transports response bodies.  Figure 3
  shows a notification body.  The SIP INFO method transports
  notifications.

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      ... request body ...
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 1: MSCML Request Format

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <response>
      ... response body ...
    </response>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 2: MSCML Response Format






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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <notification>
      ... notification body ...
    </notification>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 3: MSCML Notification Format

  MSCML requests MAY include a client-defined ID attribute for the
  purposes of matching requests and responses.  The values used for
  these IDs need only be unique within the scope of the dialog in which
  the requests are issued.

4.2.  XML Usage

  In the philosophy of XML as a text-based description language, and
  not as a programming language, MSCML makes the choice of many
  attribute values for readability by a human.  Thus, many attributes
  that would often be "boolean" instead take "yes" or "no" values.  For
  example, what does 'report="false"' or 'report="1"' mean?  However,
  'report="yes"' is clearer: I want a report.  Some programmers prefer
  the precision of a boolean.  To satisfy both styles, MSCML defines an
  XML type, "yesnoType", that takes on the values "yes" and "no" as
  well as "true", "false", "1", and "0".

  Many attributes in the MSCML schema have default values.  In order to
  limit demands on the XML parser, MSCML applies these values at the
  protocol, not XML, level.  The MSCML schema documents these defaults
  as XML annotations to the appropriate attribute.

4.2.1.  MSCML Time Values

  For clarity, time values in MSCML are based on the time designations
  described in the Cascading Style Sheets level 2 (CSS2) Specification
  [15].  Their format consists of a number immediately followed by an
  optional time unit identifier of the following form:

     ms: milliseconds (default)
     s: seconds

  If no time unit identifier is present, the value MUST be interpreted
  as being in milliseconds.  As extensions to [15] MSCML allows the
  string values "immediate" and "infinite", which have special meaning
  for certain timers.






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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


5.  Advanced Conferencing

5.1.  Conference Model

  The advanced conferencing model is a star controller model, with both
  signaling and media directed to a central location.  Figure 4 depicts
  a typical signaling relationship between end users' UACs, a
  conference application server, and a media server.

  RFC 4353 [10] describes this model.  The application server is an
  instantiation of the conference focus.  The media server is an
  instantiation of the media mixer.  Note that user-level constructs,
  such as event notifications, are in the purview of the application
  server.  This is why, for example, the media server sends active
  talker reports using MSCML notifications, while the application
  server would instead use the conference package [16] for individual
  notifications to SIP user agents.  Note that we do not recommend the
  use of the conference package for media server to application server
  notifications because none of the filtering and membership
  information is available at the media server.

     +-------+
     | UAC 1 |---\   Public URI  +-------------+
     +-------+    \ _____________| Application |
                   /    /        |   Server    |     Not shown:
     +-------+    /    /         +-------------+     RTP flows directly
     | UAC 2 |---/    /                 | Private    between UACs and
     +-------+       /                  |   URI      media server
         .          /            +--------------+
         :         /             |              |
     +-------+    /              | Media Server |
     | UAC n |---/               |              |
     +-------+                   +--------------+

                         Figure 4: Conference Model

  Each UAC sends an INVITE to a Public Conference URI.  Presumably, the
  client publishes this URI, or it is an ad hoc URI.  In any event, the
  client generates a Private URI, following the rules specified by RFC
  4240 [2].  That is, the URI is of the following form:

  sip:[email protected]

  where UniqueID is a unique conference identifier and ms.example.net
  is the host name or IP address of the media server.  There is nothing
  to prevent the UACs from contacting the media server directly.
  However, one would expect the owner of the media server to restrict
  who can use its resources.



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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  As for basic conferencing, described by RFC 4240 [2], the first
  INVITE to the media server with a UniqueID creates a conference.
  However, in advanced conferencing, the first INVITE MAY include a
  MSCML <configure_conference> payload rather than the SDP of a
  conference participant.  The <configure_conference> payload conveys
  extended session parameters (e.g., number of participants) that SDP
  does not readily express, but the media server must know to allocate
  the appropriate resources.

  When the conference is created by sending an INVITE containing a
  MSCML <configure_conference> payload, the resulting SIP dialog is
  termed the "Conference Control Leg."  This leg has several useful
  properties.  The lifetime of the conference is the same as that of
  its control leg.  This ensures that the conference remains in
  existence even if all participant legs leave or have not yet arrived.
  In addition, when the client terminates the Conference Control Leg,
  the media server automatically terminates all participant legs.  The
  Conference Control Leg is also used for play or record operations
  to/from the entire conference and for active talker notifications.
  Full conference media operations and active talker report
  subscriptions MUST be executed on the Conference Control Leg.

  Creation of a Conference Control Leg is RECOMMENDED because full
  advanced conferencing capabilities are not available without it.
  Clients MUST establish the Conference Control Leg in the initial
  INVITE that creates the conference; it cannot be created later.

  Once the client has created the conference with or without the
  Conference Control Leg, participants can be joined to the conference.
  This is achieved by the client's directing an INVITE to the Private
  Conference URI for each participant.  Using the example conference
  URI given above, this would be sip:[email protected].

5.2.  Configure Conference Request <configure_conference>

  The <configure_conference> request has two attributes that control
  the resources the media server sets aside for the conference.  These
  are described in the list below.

  Attributes of <configure_conference>:

  o  reservedtalkers - optional (see note), no default value: The
     maximum number of talker legs allocated for the conference.  Note:
     required when establishing the Conference Control Leg but optional
     in subsequent <configure_conference> requests.






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RFC 5022                         MSCML                    September 2007


  o  reserveconfmedia - optional, default value "yes": Controls
     allocation of resources to enable playing or recording to or from
     the entire conference.

  When the reservedtalkers+1st INVITE arrives at the media server, the
  media server SHOULD generate a 486 Busy Here response.  Failure to
  send a 486 response to this condition can cause the media server to
  oversubscribe its resources.

     NOTE: It would be symmetric to have a reservedlisteners parameter.
     However, the practical limitation on the media server is the
     number of talkers for a mixer to monitor.  In either case, the
     client regulates who gets into the conference by either proxying
     the INVITEs from the user agent clients or metering to whom it
     gives the conference URI.

  For example, to create a conference with up to 120 active talkers and
  the ability to play audio into the conference or record portions or
  all of the conference full mix, the client specifies both attributes,
  as shown in Figure 6.

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_conference reservedtalkers="120"
        reserveconfmedia="yes"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 6: 120 Speaker MSCML Example

  In addition to these attributes, a <configure_conference> request MAY
  contain a child <subscribe> element.  The <subscribe> element is used
  to request notifications for conference-wide active talker events.
  Detailed information regarding active talker events is contained in
  Section 5.7.

  The client MUST include a <configure_conference> request in the
  initial INVITE which establishes the conference when creating the
  Conference Control Leg. The client server MUST issue asynchronous
  commands, such as <play>, separately (i.e., in INFO messages) to
  avoid ambiguous responses.

  Media operations on the Conference Control leg are performed
  internally, no external RTP streams are involved.  Accordingly, the
  media server does not expect RTP on the Conference Control Leg.
  Therefore, the client MUST send either no SDP or hold SDP in the
  INVITE request containing a <configure_conference> payload.  The



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  media server MUST treat SDP with all media lines set to "inactive" or
  with connection addresses set to 0.0.0.0 (for backwards
  compatibility) as hold SDP.

  The media server sends a response when it has finished processing the
  <configure_conference> request.  The format of the
  <configure_conference> response is detailed in Section 10.2.

5.3.  Configure Leg Request <configure_leg>

  Conference legs have a number of properties the client can modify.
  These are set using the <configure_leg> request.  This request has
  the attributes described in the list below.

  Attributes of <configure_leg>:

  o  type - optional, default value "talker": Consider this leg's audio
     for inclusion in the output mix.  Alternative is "listener".

  o  dtmfclamp - optional, default value "yes": Remove detected DTMF
     digits from the input audio.

  o  toneclamp - optional, default value "yes": Remove tones from the
     input audio.  Tones include call progress tones and the like.

  o  mixmode - optional, default value "full": Be a candidate for the
     full mix.  Alternatives are "mute", to disallow media in the mix,
     "parked", to disconnect the leg's media streams from the
     conference for IVR operations, "preferred", to give this stream
     preferential selection in the mix (i.e., even if not loudest
     talker, include media, if present, from this leg in the mix), and
     "private", which enables personalized mixes.

  In addition to these attributes, there are four child elements
  defined for <configure_leg>.  These are <inputgain>, <outputgain>,
  <configure_team>, and <subscribe>.

  The first two, <inputgain> and <outputgain>, modify the gain applied
  to the input and output audio streams, respectively.  These may
  contain <auto>, to use automatic gain control (AGC) or <fixed>.  The
  <auto> element has the attributes "startlevel", "targetlevel", and
  "silencethreshold".  All the parameters are in dB.  The <fixed>
  element has the attribute "level", which is in dB.  The default for
  both <inputgain> and <outputgain> is <fixed>.  The media server MAY







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  silently cap <inputgain> or <outputgain> requests that exceed the
  gain limits imposed by the platform.

  Clients most commonly manipulate only the input gain for a conference
  leg and rely on the mixer to set an optimum output gain based on the
  inputs currently in the mix.  However, as described above, MSCML does
  allow for manipulation of the output gain as well.  Some of the IVR
  commands, such as <play>, enable control of the output gain for
  content playback operations.  The interaction of conference output
  gain and IVR playback gain controls is described in Section 6.1.1.
  Note that <inputgain> and <outputgain> settings apply only to
  conference legs and do not apply to IVR sessions.

  The <configure_team> element is used to create and manipulate groups
  for personalized mixes.  Details of personalized mixes are discussed
  in Section 5.8.

  The <subscribe> element is used to request notifications for call leg
  related events, such as asynchronous DTMF digit reports.  Detailed
  information regarding call leg events is discussed in Section 7.

  If the default parameters are acceptable for the leg the client
  wishes to enter into the conference, then a normal SIP INVITE, with
  no MSCML body, is sufficient.  However, if the client wishes to
  modify one or more of the parameters, the client can include a MSCML
  body in addition to the SDP body.

  The client can modify the conference leg parameters during the
  conference by issuing a SIP INFO on the dialog representing the
  conference leg.  Of course, the client cannot modify SDP in an INFO
  message.

  The media server sends a response when it has finished processing the
  <configure_leg> request.  The format of the <configure_leg> response
  is detailed in Section 10.3.

5.4.  Terminating a Conference

  To remove a leg from the conference, the client issues a SIP BYE
  request on the selected dialog representing the conference leg.

  The client can terminate all legs in a conference by issuing a SIP
  BYE request on the Conference Control Leg.  If one or more
  participants are still in the conference when the media server
  receives a SIP BYE request on the Conference Control Leg, the media
  server issues SIP BYE requests on all remaining conference legs to
  ensure cleanup of the legs.




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  The media server returns a 200 OK to the SIP BYE request as it sends
  BYE requests to the other legs.  This is because we cannot issue a
  provisional response to a non-INVITE request, yet the teardown of the
  other legs may exceed the retransmission timer limits of the original
  request.  While the conference is being cleaned up, the media server
  MUST reject any new INVITEs to the terminated conference with a 486
  Busy Here response.  This response indicates that the specified
  conference cannot accept any new members, pending deletion.

5.5.  Conference Manipulation

  Once the conference has begun, the client can manipulate the
  conference as a whole or a particular participant leg by issuing
  commands on the associated SIP dialog.  For example, by sending MSCML
  requests on the Conference Control Leg the client can request that
  the media server record the conference, play a prompt to the
  conference, or request reports on active talker events.  Similarly,
  the client may mute a participant leg, configure a personalized mix
  or request reports for call leg events, such as DTMF keypresses.

  Figure 7 shows an example of an MSCML command that plays a prompt to
  all conference participants.

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <play>
        <prompt>
          <audio url="http://prompts.example.net/en_US/welcome.au"/>
        </prompt>
      </play>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 7: Full Conference Audio Command - Play

  A client can modify a leg by issuing an INFO on the dialog associated
  with the participant leg.  For example, Figure 8 mutes a conference
  leg.

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg mixmode="mute"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 8: Sample Change Leg Command



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  In Figure 7, we saw a request to play a prompt to the entire
  conference.  The client can also request to play a prompt to an
  individual call leg.  In that case, the MSCML request is issued
  within the SIP dialog of the desired conference participant.

  Section 6 describes the interactive voice response (IVR) services
  offered by MSCML.  If an IVR command arrives on the control channel,
  it takes effect on the whole conference.  This is a mechanism for
  playing prompts to the entire conference (e.g., announcing new
  participants).  If an IVR command arrives on an individual leg, it
  only affects that leg.  This is a mechanism for interacting with
  users, such as the creation of "waiting rooms", allowing a user to
  mute themselves using key presses, allowing a moderator to out-dial,
  etc.

  A participant leg MUST be configured with mixmode="parked" prior to
  the issuance of any IVR commands with prompt content ('prompturl'
  attribute or <prompt> element).  Parking the leg isolates the
  participant's input and output media from the conference and allows
  use of those streams for playing and recording purposes.  However,
  the mixmode has no effect if just digit collection or recording is
  desired. <playcollect> and <playrecord> requests without prompt
  content MAY be sent on participant legs without setting
  mixmode="parked".

5.6.  Video Conferencing

  MSCML-controlled advanced conferences, as well as RFC 4240 [2]
  controlled basic conferences, implicitly support video conferencing
  in the form of video switching.  In video switching, the video stream
  of the loudest talker (with some hysteresis) is sent to all
  participants other than that talker.  The loudest talker receives the
  video stream from the immediately prior loudest talker.

  Media servers MUST ensure that participants receive video media
  compatible with their session.  For example, a participant who has
  established an H.263 video stream will not receive video from another
  participant employing H.264 media.  Media servers SHOULD implement
  video transcoding to minimize media incompatibilities between
  participants.

  The media server MUST switch video streams only when it receives a
  refresh video frame.  A refresh frame contains all the video
  information required to decode that frame (i.e., there is no
  dependency on data from previous video frames).






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  Refresh frames are large and generally sent infrequently to conserve
  network bandwidth.  The media server MUST implement standard
  mechanisms to request that the new loudest talker's video encoder
  transmits a refresh frame to ensure that video can be switched
  quickly.

5.7.  Conference Events

  A client can subscribe for periodic active talker event reports that
  indicate which participants are included in the conference mix.  As
  these are conference-level events, the subscription and notifications
  are sent on the Conference Control Leg.

  Media servers MAY impose limits on the minimum interval for active
  talker reports for performance reasons.  If the client request is
  below the imposed minimum, the media server SHOULD set the interval
  to the minimum value supported.  To limit unnecessary notification
  traffic, the media server SHOULD NOT send a report if the active
  talker information for the conference has not changed during the
  reporting interval.

  A request for an active talker report is in Figure 9.  The active
  talker report enumerates the current call legs in the mix.

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_conference>
        <subscribe>
          <events>
            <activetalkers report="yes" interval="60s"/>
          </events>
        </subscribe>
      </configure_conference>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 9: Active Talker Request

  Event notifications are sent in SIP INFO messages.  Figure 10 shows
  an example of a report.










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  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <notification>
      <conference uniqueid="ab34h76z" numtalkers="47">
        <activetalkers>
          <talker callid="myhost4sn123"/>
          <talker callid="myhost2sn456"/>
          <talker callid="myhost12sn78"/>
        </activetalkers>
      </conference>
    </notification>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 10: Active Talker Event Example

  The value of the "callid" attribute in the <talker> element
  corresponds to the value of the SIP Call-ID header of the associated
  dialog.  This enables the client to associate the active talker with
  a specific participant leg.

5.8.  Conferencing with Personalized Mixes

  MSCML enables clients to create personalized mixes through the
  <configure_team> element for scenarios where the standard mixmode
  settings do not provide sufficient control.  The <configure_team>
  element is a child of <configure_leg>.

  To create personalized mixes, the client has to identify the
  relationships among the participants.  This is accomplished by
  manipulating two MSCML objects.  These objects are:

  1.  The list of team members (<teammate> elements), set using
      <configure_team>

  2.  The mixmode attribute set through <configure_leg>

  The media server uses the values of these objects to determine which
  audio inputs to combine for output to the participant.  In a normal
  conference, each participant hears the conference mix minus their own
  input if they are part of the mixed output.  The team list enables
  the client to specify other participants that the leg can hear in
  addition to the normal mixed output.  Note that personalized mix
  settings apply only to audio media and do not affect video switching.

  Team relationships are implicitly symmetric.  If the client sets
  participant A as a team member of participant B, then the media
  server automatically sets participant B as a team member for A.




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  The id attribute set through <configure_leg> is used to identify the
  various participants.  A unique ID MUST be assigned to each
  participant included in a personalized mix.  The IDs used MUST be
  unique within the scope of the conference in which they appear.

  By itself, the team list only defines those participants that the leg
  can hear.  The mixmode attribute of each team member determines
  whether to include their audio input in the personalized mix.  If the
  client sets the teammate's mixmode to private, then it is part of the
  mix.  If the mixmode is set to any other value, it is not.

5.8.1.  MSCML Elements and Attributes for Personalized Mixes

  Control of personalized mixes rely on two major MSCML elements:

  1.  <configure_leg>, using the mixmode attribute setting
      mixmode="private"

  2.  <configure_team>

  The <configure_team> element allows the user to make the participants
  members of a team within a specific conference.  It is a child of the
  <configure_leg> parent element.

  The client sends the <configure_team> element in a <configure_leg>
  request in either a SIP INVITE or SIP INFO.

  o  In an INVITE, to join a participant whose properties differ from
     the properties established for the conference as a whole.

  o  In an INFO, to change the properties for an existing leg.

  The two attributes of the configure_team element are "id" and
  "action".  The id attribute MUST contain the unique ID of the leg
  being modified, as set in the original <configure_leg> request.  The
  action attribute can take on the values "add", "delete", "query", and
  "set".  The default value is "query".  This attribute allows the user
  to modify the team list.  Table 1 describes the actions that can be
  performed on the team list.












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  +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+
  | Action | Description                                              |
  +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+
  | add    | Adds a teammate to the mix.                              |
  | delete | Deletes a teammate from the mix.                         |
  | query  | Returns the teammate list to the requestor.  This is the |
  |        | default value.                                           |
  | set    | Creates a team list when followed by <teammate id="n">   |
  |        | and also removes all the teammates from the team list    |
  |        | for example, when the creator (originator) of the team   |
  |        | list on that specific conference leg wants to remove all |
  |        | of the teammates from the team.  If the set operation    |
  |        | removes all teammates from a participant, that           |
  |        | participant hears the full conference mix.               |
  +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+

                     Table 1: Configure Team Actions

5.8.2.  Example Usage of Personalized Mixes

  A common use of personalized mixing is to support coaching of one
  participant by another.  The coaching scenario includes three
  participants:
  1.  The Supervisor, who coaches the agent.
  2.  The Agent, who interacts with the customer.
  3.  The Customer, who interacts with the agent.

  Table 2 illustrates the details of the coached conference topology.

  +-------------+------------+------------+---------+-----------------+
  | Participant | ID         | Team       | Mixmode | Hears           |
  |             |            | Members    |         |                 |
  +-------------+------------+------------+---------+-----------------+
  | Supervisor  | supervisor | Agent      | Private | customer +      |
  |             |            |            |         | agent           |
  | Agent       | agent      | Supervisor | Full    | customer +      |
  |             |            |            |         | supervisor      |
  | Customer    | customer   | none       | Full    | agent           |
  +-------------+------------+------------+---------+-----------------+

                   Table 2: Coached Conference Example

  To create this topology, the client performs the following actions:

  1.  The client joins each leg to the conference, being certain to
      include a unique ID in the <configure_leg> request.  The leg ID
      needs to be unique only within the scope of the conference to
      which it belongs.



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  2.  The client configures the teammate list and mixmode of each
      participant, as required.

  Both actions (steps 1 and 2) may be combined in a single MSCML
  request.  The following sections detail these actions and their
  corresponding MSCML payloads.

5.8.2.1.  Create the Conference

  Before joining any participants, the client must create the
  conference by sending a SIP INVITE that contains an MSCML
  <configure_conference> request with a unique conference identifier.

5.8.2.2.  Joining and Configuring the Coach

  Join the coach leg to the conference and configure its desired
  properties by sending a SIP INVITE containing a <configure_leg>
  request.  The <configure_leg> element sets the leg's unique ID to
  supervisor and its mixmode to private.

  The corresponding MSCML request is as follows.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg id="supervisor" mixmode="private"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 11: Join Coach Request

  Note that the client cannot configure the teammate list for the coach
  yet, as there are no other participants in the conference.  One must
  join a participant to the conference before one can add it as a
  teammate for another leg.

5.8.2.3.  Joining and Configuring the Agent

  Join the agent leg to the conference and configure its desired
  properties by sending a SIP INVITE containing a <configure_leg>
  request.  The <configure_leg> element sets the leg's unique ID to
  "agent" and sets the supervisor as a team member of the agent.
  Because team member relationships are symmetric, this action also
  adds the agent as a team member for the coach.







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  The corresponding MSCML request is as follows.
  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
   <request>
      <configure_leg id="agent">
        <configure_team action="set">
          <teammate id="supervisor"/>
        </configure_team>
      </configure_leg>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 12: Join Agent Request

  Because the desired mixmode for this leg is full, which is the
  default value, there is no need to set it explicitly.

5.8.2.4.  Joining and Configuring the Client

  Join the client leg to the conference and configure its desired
  properties by sending a SIP INVITE containing a <configure_leg>
  request.  The <configure_leg> element simply sets the leg's unique ID
  to "customer".  The media server does not need further configuration
  because the desired mixmode, full, is the default and the customer
  has no team members.

  The corresponding MSCML request is as follows.
  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg id="customer"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 13: Join Client Request

  Strictly speaking, it is not a requirement that the client give the
  customer leg a unique ID because it will not be a team member.
  However, when using coached conferencing, we RECOMMEND that one
  assign a unique ID to each leg in the initial INVITE request.
  Assigning a unique ID eliminates the need to set it later by sending
  a SIP INFO if one later desires personalized mixing for the customer
  leg.

  The conference is now in the desired configuration, shown previously
  in Table 2.





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6.  Interactive Voice Response (IVR)

  In the IVR model, the media server acts as a media-processing proxy
  for the UAC.  This is particularly useful when the UAC is a media
  gateway or other device with limited media processing capability.

  The typical use case for MSCML is when there is an application server
  that is the MSCML client.  The client can use the SIP Service URI
  concept (RFC 3087) to initiate a service.  The client then uses RFC
  4240 [2] to initiate a MSCML session on a media server.  These
  relationships are shown in Figure 14.

                            SIP       +--------------+
                        Service URI   | Application  |
                     /----------------|    Server    |
                    /(e.g., RFC 3087) +--------------+
                   /                        |  MSCML
                  /                     SIP | Session
                 /                    +--------------+
         +-----+/       RTP           |              |
         | UAC |======================| Media Server |
         +-----+                      |              |
                                      +--------------+

                              Figure 14: IVR Model

  The IVR service supports basic Interactive Voice Response functions,
  playing announcements, collecting DTMF digits, and recording, based
  on Media Server Control Markup Language (MSCML) directives added to
  the message body of a SIP request.  The major MSCML IVR requests are
  <play>, <playcollect>, and <playrecord>.

  Multifunction media servers MUST use the URI conventions described in
  RFC 4240 [2].  The service indicator for MSCML IVR MUST be set to
  "ivr", as shown in the following example:

  sip:[email protected]

  The VoiceXML IVR service indicator is "dialog".  This service
  indicator MUST NOT be used for any other interactive voice response
  control mechanism.

  The media server MUST accept MSCML IVR payloads in INFO requests and
  MUST NOT accept MSCML IVR payloads in the initial or subsequent
  INVITEs.  The INFO method reduces certain timing issues that occur
  with INVITEs and requires less processing on both the client and
  media server.




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  The media server notifies the client that the command has completed
  through a <response> message containing final status information and
  associated data such as collected DTMF digits.

  The media server does not queue IVR requests.  If the media server
  receives a new IVR request while another is in progress, the media
  server stops the first operation and it carries out the new request.
  The media server generates a <response> message for the first request
  and returns any data collected up to that point.  If a client wishes
  to stop a request in progress but does not wish to initiate another
  operation, it issues a <stop> request.  This also causes the media
  server to generate a <response> message.

  The media server treats a SIP re-INVITE that modifies the established
  SDP parameters as an implicit <stop> request.  Examples of such SDP
  modifications include receiving hold SDP or removing an audio or
  video stream.  When this occurs, the media server immediately
  terminates the running <play>, <playcollect>, or <playrecord> request
  and sends a <response> indicating "reason=stopped".

6.1.  Specifying Prompt Content

  The MSCML IVR requests support two methods of specifying content to
  be delivered to the user.  These are the <prompt> element and the
  prompturl attribute.  Clients MUST NOT utilize both methods in a
  single IVR request.  Clients SHOULD use the more flexible <prompt>
  mechanism.  Use of the prompturl attribute is deprecated and may not
  be supported in future MSCML versions.

6.1.1.  Use of the Prompt Element

  The <prompt> element MAY be included in the body of a <play>,
  <playcollect>, or <playrecord> request to specify a prompt sequence
  to be delivered to the caller.  The prompt sequence consists of one
  or more references to physical content files, spoken variables, or
  dynamic URLs that return a sub-sequence of files or variables.  In
  addition, the <prompt> element has several attributes that control
  playback of the included content.  These are described in the list
  below.

  Attributes of <prompt>:

  o  baseurl - optional, no default value: For notational convenience,
     as well as reducing the MSCML payload size, the "baseurl"
     attribute is used to specify a base URL that is prepended to any
     other URLs in the sequence that are not fully qualified.





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  o  delay - optional, default value "0": The "delay" attribute to the
     prompt element specifies the time to pause between repetitions of
     the <prompt> sequence.  It has no effect on the first iteration of
     the sequence.  Expressed as a time value (Section 4.2.1) from 0
     onwards.

  o  duration - optional, default value "infinite": The "duration"
     attribute to the prompt element controls the maximum amount of
     time that may elapse while the media server repeats the sequence.
     This allows the client to set an upper bound on the length of
     play.  Expressed as a time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms onwards
     or the strings "immediate" and "infinite".  "Immediate" directs
     the media server to end play immediately, whereas "infinite"
     indicates that the media server imposes no limit.

  o  gain - optional, default value "0": Sets the absolute gain to be
     applied to the content contained in <prompt>.  The value of this
     attribute is specified in units of dB.  The media server MAY
     silently cap values that exceed the gain limits imposed by the
     platform.  The level reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content contained in <prompt> has been completed.

  o  gaindelta - optional, default value "0": Sets the relative gain to
     be applied to the content contained in <prompt>.  The value of
     this attribute is specified in units of dB.  The media server MAY
     silently cap values which exceed the gain limits imposed by the
     platform.  The level reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content contained in <prompt> has been completed.

  o  rate - optional, default value "0": Specifies the absolute
     playback rate of the content relative to normal as either a
     positive percentage (faster) or a negative percentage (slower).
     Any value that attempts to set the rate above the maximum allowed
     or below the minimum allowed silently sets the rate to the maximum
     or minimum.  The rate reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content contained in <prompt> has been completed.

  o  ratedelta - optional, default value "0": Specifies the playback
     rate of the content relative to it's current rate as either a
     positive percentage (faster) or negative percentage (slower).  Any
     value that attempts to set the rate above the maximum allowed or
     below the minimum allowed silently sets the rate to the maximum or
     minimum.  The rate reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content contained in <prompt> has completed.







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  o  locale - optional, no default value: Specifies the language and
     country variant used for resolving spoken variables.  The language
     is defined as a two-letter code per ISO 639.  The country variant
     is also defined as a two-letter code per ISO 3166.  These codes
     are concatenated with a single underscore (%x5F) character.

  o  offset - optional, default value "0": A time value (Section 4.2.1)
     which specifies the time from the beginning of the sequence at
     which play is to begin.  Offset only applies to the first
     repetition; subsequent repetitions begin play at offset 0.
     Allowable values are positive time values from 0 onwards.  When
     the sequence consists of multiple content files, the offset may
     select any point in the sequence.  If the offset value is greater
     than the total time of the sequence, it will "wrap" to the
     beginning and continue from there until the media server reaches
     the specified offset.

  o  repeat - optional, default value "1": The "repeat" attribute to
     the prompt element controls the number of times the media server
     plays the sequence in the <prompt> element.  Allowable values are
     integers from 0 on and the string "infinite", which indicates that
     repetition should occur indefinitely.  For example, "repeat=2"
     means that the sequence will be played twice, and "repeat=0",
     which is allowed, means that the sequence is not played.

  o  stoponerror - optional, default value "no": Controls media server
     handling and reporting of errors encountered when retrieving
     remote content.  If set to "yes", content play will end if a fetch
     error occurs, and the response will contain details regarding the
     failure.  If set to "no", the media server will silently move on
     to the next URL in the sequence if a fetch failure occurs.

  Clients MUST NOT include both 'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes
  within a single <prompt> element.

  When the client explicitly controls the output gain on a conference
  leg, as described in Section 5.3, the 'gain' and 'gaindelta'
  attributes SHOULD interact with the conference leg output gain
  settings in the following manner.

  o  Conference leg output gain set to <fixed>: The operation of the
     'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes are unchanged.  However, the
     baseline gain value before any playback changes are applied is the
     value specified for the conference leg.

  o  Conference leg output gain set to <auto>: When playback gain
     controls are used, the automatic gain control settings for the leg
     are suspended for the duration of the playback operation.  The



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     operation of the 'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes are unchanged.
     The automatic gain control settings are reinstated when playback
     has finished.

  Media servers SHOULD support rate controls for content.  However,
  media servers MAY silently ignore rate change requests if content
  limitations do not allow the request to be honored.  Clients MUST NOT
  include both 'rate' and 'ratedelta' attributes within a single
  <prompt> element.

  Figure 16 shows a sample prompt block.

  <prompt stoponerror="yes"
    baseurl="file:////var/mediaserver/prompts/"
    locale="en_US" offset="0" gain="0" rate="0"
    delay="0" duration="infinite" repeat="1">
    <audio url="num_dialed.raw" encoding="ulaw"/>
    <variable type="dig" subtype="ndn" value="3014170700"/>
    <audio url="num_invalid.wav"/>
    <audio url="please_check.wav"/>
  </prompt>

  Figure 16: Prompt Block Example

6.1.1.1.  <audio> and <variable> Elements

  Clients compose prompt sequences using the <audio> and <variable>
  elements.  An <audio> element MAY refer to content that contains
  audio, video, or both; the generic name is preserved for backwards
  compatibility.  The <audio> element has the attributes described in
  the list below.

  Attributes of <audio>:

  o  url - required, no default value: The URL of the content to be
     retrieved and played.  The target may be a local or remote (NFS)
     "file://" scheme URL or an "http://" or "https://" scheme URL.  If
     the URL is not fully qualified and a "baseurl" attribute was set,
     the value of the "baseurl" attribute will be prepended to this
     value to generate the target URL.

  o  encoding - optional, default value "ulaw": Specifies the content
     encoding for file formats that are not self-describing (e.g.,
     .WAV).  Allowable values are "ulaw", "alaw", and "msgsm".  This
     attribute only affects "file://" scheme URLs.

  o  gain - optional, default value "0": Sets the absolute gain to be
     applied to the content URL.  The value of this attribute is



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     specified in units of dB.  The media server MAY silently cap
     values that exceed the gain limits imposed by the platform.  The
     level reverts back to its original value when playback of the
     content URL has been completed.

  o  gaindelta - optional, default value "0": Sets the relative gain to
     be applied to the content URL.  The value of this attribute is
     specified in units of dB.  The media server MAY silently cap
     values that exceed the gain limits imposed by the platform.  The
     level reverts back to its original value when playback of the
     content URL has been completed.

  o  rate - optional, default value "0": Specifies the absolute
     playback rate of the content relative to normal as either a
     positive percentage (faster) or a negative percentage (slower).
     Any value that attempts to set the rate above the maximum allowed
     or below the minimum allowed silently sets the rate to the maximum
     or minimum.  The rate reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content URL has been completed.

  o  ratedelta - optional, default value "0": Specifies the playback
     rate of the content relative to it's current rate as either a
     positive percentage (faster) or a negative percentage (slower).
     Any value that attempts to set the rate above the maximum allowed
     or below the minimum allowed silently sets the rate to the maximum
     or minimum.  The rate reverts back to its original value when
     playback of the content URL has been completed.

  Clients MUST NOT include both 'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes
  within a single <audio> element.

  When the client explicitly controls the output gain on a conference
  leg, as described in Section 5.3, the 'gain' and 'gaindelta'
  attributes SHOULD interact with the conference leg output gain
  settings in the following manner.

  o  Conference leg output gain set to <fixed>: The operation of the
     'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes are unchanged.  However, the
     baseline gain value before any playback changes are applied is the
     value specified for the conference leg.

  o  Conference leg output gain set to <auto>: When playback gain
     controls are used, the automatic gain control settings for the leg
     are suspended for the duration of the playback operation.  The
     operation of the 'gain' and 'gaindelta' attributes are unchanged.
     The automatic gain control settings are reinstated when playback
     has finished.




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  Media servers SHOULD support rate controls for content.  However,
  media servers MAY silently ignore rate change requests if content
  limitations do not allow the request to be honored.  Clients MUST NOT
  include both 'rate' and 'ratedelta' attributes within a single
  <audio> element.

  Media servers MUST support local and remote (NFS) "file://" scheme
  URLs and "http://" and "https://" scheme URLs for content retrieval.

     NOTE: The provisioning of NFS mount points and their mapping to
     the "file://" schema is purely a local matter at the media server.

  MSCML also supports "http://" and "https://" scheme URLS that return
  a list of physical URLs using the "text/uri-list" MIME type.  This
  facility provides flexibility for applications to dynamically
  generate prompt sequences at execution time and enables separation of
  this function from the client and media server.

  Spoken variables are specified using the <variable> element.  This
  element has the attributes described in the list below.  MSCML's
  spoken variables are based on those described in Audio Server
  Protocol [17].

  Attributes of <variable>:

  o  type - required, no default value: Specifies the major type format
     of the spoken variable to be played.  Allowable values are "dat"
     (date), "dig" (digit), "dur" (duration), "mth" (month), "mny"
     (money), "num" (number), "sil" (silence), "str" (string), "tme"
     (time), and "wkd" (weekday).

  o  subtype - optional, no default value: Specifies the minor type
     format of the spoken variable to be played.  Allowable values
     depend on the value of the corresponding "type" attribute.
     Possible values are "mdy", "ymd", and "dmy" for dates, "t12" and
     "t24" for times, "gen", "ndn", "crd", and "ord" for digits, and
     "USD" for money.

  o  value - required, no default value: A string that will be
     interpreted based on the formatting information specified in the
     "type" and "subtype" attributes and the "locale" attribute of the
     parent <prompt> element to render the spoken variable.

  If the "locale" attribute was not specified in <prompt>, the media
  server SHOULD make a selection based on platform configuration.  If
  the precise "locale" requested cannot be honored, the media server
  SHOULD select the closest match based on the available content.




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  IVR applications normally require specialized prompt content that is
  authored by the application provider.  To deliver a quality user
  interaction, the specialized prompts and spoken variables must be
  generated by the same speaker.  Since the media server inherently
  supports multiple simultaneous applications, it is extremely
  difficult to provision all the necessary application prompts and
  matching spoken variable content locally on the media server.
  Therefore, we STRONGLY RECOMMEND that clients employ the dynamic URL
  mechanism described earlier to generate spoken variables using an
  external web server that returns "text/uri-list" content.

6.2.  Multimedia Processing for IVR

  MSCML IVR requests implicitly support multimedia content.  Multimedia
  capabilities are controlled by the audio and video media negotiated
  for the dialog and the content specified by the client for play and
  record operations.  If the content specified for delivery contains
  both audio and video tracks and the dialog has audio and video
  streams, both tracks are streamed to the caller.  Likewise, if the
  dialog has both audio and video streams and the content format
  specified supports both (e.g., .3gp files) the media server records
  both streams to the file.

  If there is a mismatch between the real time media and specified
  content, the media server MUST play or record the appropriate content
  tracks rather than failing the request.  For example, if the client
  has requested playback of content with audio and video tracks but
  only audio media has been established for the dialog, the media
  server should play the audio track.  If the dialog has both audio and
  video media but the content is audio-only, the media server MAY
  stream a pre-provisioned video track to the caller.  Media servers
  SHOULD implement video transcoding functions to minimize
  incompatibilities between real time media and content.

  The media server MUST begin recording video media only when it
  receives a refresh video frame.  A refresh frame contains all the
  video information required to decode that frame (i.e., there is no
  dependency on data from previous video frames).  Refresh frames are
  large and generally sent infrequently to conserve network bandwidth.
  The media server MUST implement standard mechanisms to request that
  the caller (video encoder) transmit a refresh frame to ensure video
  recording begins quickly.  The media server MUST begin recording the
  audio track immediately while waiting to receive the video refresh
  frame.







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6.3.  Playing Announcements <play>

  The client issues a <play> request to play an announcement without
  interruption and with no digit collection.  One use, for example, is
  to announce the name of a new participant to the entire conference.
  The <play> request has the attributes described in the list below.

  Attributes of <play>:

  o  id - optional, no default value: Specifies a client-defined ID for
     purposes of matching requests and responses.

  o  offset - optional, default value "0": Specifies the time from the
     beginning of the URL specified in the 'prompturl' attribute at
     which play will begin.  Expressed as a time value (Section 4.2.1)
     from 0 onwards.  If the offset value is greater than the total
     time of the content, it will "wrap" to the beginning and continue
     from there until the media server reaches the specified offset.
     NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  o  promptencoding - optional, no default value: Specifies the content
     encoding for file formats that are not self-describing (e.g.,
     .WAV).  Allowable values are "ulaw", "alaw", and "msgsm".  This
     attribute only affects "file://" scheme URLs.  NOTE: Use of this
     attribute is deprecated.

  o  prompturl - optional, no default value: The URL of the content to
     be retrieved and played.  The target may be a local or remote
     (NFS) "file://" scheme URL or an "http://" or "https://" scheme
     URL.  NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  The <play> request has one child element defined, <prompt>.  Use of
  <prompt> is described in Section 6.1.1.

  The client MUST NOT use both the <prompt> element and "prompturl"
  attribute in a single request.  As previously discussed, the
  "prompturl" attribute is supported for backwards compatibility with
  older MSCML applications, but its use is deprecated.  The more
  flexible <prompt> element SHOULD be used instead.

  The following play request (Figure 17) example shows the delivery of
  a complex prompt sequence consisting of content accessed via NFS and
  spoken variables.








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  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <play id="332985001">
        <prompt stoponerror="yes"
          baseurl="file:////var/mediaserver/prompts/"
          locale="en_US" offset="0" gain="0" rate="0"
          delay="0" duration="infinite" repeat="1">
          <audio url="num_dialed.raw" encoding="ulaw"/>
          <variable type="dig" subtype="ndn" value="3014170700"/>
          <audio url="num_invalid.wav"/>
          <audio url="please_check.wav"/>
        </prompt>
      </play>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 17: <Play> Request Example

  When the announcement has finished playing, the media server sends a
  <response> payload to the client in a SIP INFO message.  Details
  regarding the format of <play> responses are provided in Section
  10.4.

6.4.  Prompt and Collect <playcollect>

  The client issues a <playcollect> request to play an announcement
  (optional) and collect digits.  The <playcollect> request is executed
  in two phases, prompt and collect.  If the client specifies prompt
  content to be played, using the <prompt> element or prompturl
  attribute, the media server plays the content before starting the
  collection phase.  If no prompt content is specified, the collect
  phase begins immediately.

  The basic attributes of <playcollect> are the same as those of
  <play>, which were described in Section 6.3.  In addition to these
  basic attributes, <playcollect> defines others which control digit
  buffering and barge-in behavior, collection timers, special purpose
  DTMF key functions, and logging of user DTMF input.  Each functional
  category and its attributes are described below.











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6.4.1.  Control of Digit Buffering and Barge-In

  Whenever the media server is processing a call that specifies an
  MSCML service (i.e., "conf" and "ivr"), the media server continuously
  looks for DTMF digits and places them in a quarantine buffer.  The
  quarantine buffer is examined when a <playcollect> request is
  received.  The media server compares any previously buffered digits
  for barge-in, and to look for matches with DTMF grammars or special
  purpose keys.  This provides the type-ahead behavior for menu
  traversal and other types of IVR interactions.

  Attributes for Control of Digit Buffering and Barge-In:

  o  cleardigits - optional, default value "no": Specifies whether
     previous user input should be considered or ignored for barge-in
     purposes and DTMF matching.  When it is set to "yes", any
     previously buffered digits are removed, so prior user input is
     ignored.  If it is set to "no", previously buffered digits will be
     considered.  If "cleardigits" is set to "no" and barge-in is
     enabled, previously buffered digits will immediately terminate the
     prompt phase.  In this case, the prompt is not played, and digit
     collection begins immediately.

  o  barge - optional, default value "yes": Specifies whether user
     input will barge the prompt and force transition to the collect
     phase.  When it is set to "yes", a DTMF input will barge the
     prompt.  When it is set to "no", the prompt phase cannot be
     barged, and any user input during the prompt is placed in the
     quarantine buffer for inspection during the collect phase.  Note
     that if the "barge" attribute is set to "no", the "cleardigits"
     attribute implicitly has a value of "yes".  This ensures that the
     media server does not leave DTMF input that occurred prior to the
     current collection in the quarantine buffer after the request is
     completed.

6.4.2.  Mapping DTMF Keys to Special Functions

  The client can define mappings between DTMF digits and special
  functions.  The media server invokes the special function if the
  associated DTMF digit is detected.  MSCML has two attributes that
  define mappings that affect termination of the collect phase.  These
  attributes are described in the list below.









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  DTMF Key Mappings for <playcollect>:

  o  escapekey - optional, default value "*": Specifies a DTMF key that
     indicates that the user wishes to terminate the current operation
     without saving any input collected to that point.  Detection of
     the mapped DTMF key terminates the request immediately and
     generates a response.

  o  returnkey - optional, default value "#": Specifies a DTMF key that
     indicates that the user has completed input and wants to return
     all collected digits to the client.  When the media server detects
     the returnkey, it immediately terminates collection and returns
     the collected digits to the client in the <response> message.

  MSCML defines three additional mappings to enable video cassette
  recorder (VCR) type controls while playing a prompt sequence.  Media
  servers SHOULD support VCR controls.  However, if the media server
  does not support VCR controls, it MUST silently ignore DTMF inputs
  mapped to VCR functions and complete the <playcollect> request.  The
  VCR control attributes are described in the list below.

  Attributes for VCR Controls:

  o  skipinterval - optional, default value "6s": The "skipinterval"
     attribute indicates how far the media server should skip backwards
     or forwards when the rewind key (rwkey) or fast forward key
     (ffkey) is pressed, specified as a time value (Section 4.2.1).

  o  ffkey - optional, no default value: The "ffkey" attribute maps a
     DTMF key to a fast forward operation equal to the value of the
     "skipinterval" attribute.

  o  rwkey - optional, no default value: The "rwkey" attribute maps a
     DTMF key to a rewind action equal to the value of the
     "skipinterval" attribute.

  Clients MUST NOT map the same DTMF digit to both the "rwkey" and
  "ffkey" attributes in a single <playcollect> request.

  VCR control operations are bounded by the beginning and end of the
  prompt sequence.  A rewind action that moves the offset before the
  beginning of the sequence results in playback starting at the
  beginning of the sequence (i.e., offset=0).  A fast forward action
  that moves the offset past the end of the sequence results in the
  media server's treating the sequence as complete.






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6.4.3.  Collection Timers

  MSCML defines several timer attributes that control how long the
  media server waits for digits in the input sequence.  All timer
  settings are time values (Section 4.2.1).  The list below describes
  these attributes and their use.

  Collection Timer Attributes:

  o  firstdigittimer - optional, default value "5000ms": Specifies how
     long the media server waits for the initial DTMF input before
     terminating the collection.  Expressed as a time value (Section
     4.2.1) from 1ms onwards or the strings "immediate" and "infinite."
     The value "immediate" indicates that the timer should fire
     immediately whereas "infinite" indicates that the timer will never
     fire.

  o  interdigittimer - optional, default value "2000ms": Specifies how
     long the media server waits between DTMF inputs.  Expressed as a
     time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms onwards or the strings
     "immediate" and "infinite."  The value "immediate" indicates that
     the timer should fire immediately, whereas "infinite" indicates
     that the timer will never fire.

  o  extradigittimer - optional, default value "1000ms": Specifies how
     long the media server waits for additional user input after the
     specified number of digits has been collected.  Expressed as a
     time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms onwards or the strings
     "immediate" and "infinite."  The value "immediate" indicates that
     the timer should fire immediately, whereas "infinite" indicates
     that the timer will never fire.

  o  interdigitcriticaltimer - optional, defaults to the value of the
     interdigittimer attribute: Specifies how long the media server
     waits after a grammar has been matched for a subsequent digit that
     may cause a longer match.  Expressed as a time value (Section
     4.2.1) from 1ms onwards or the strings "immediate" and "infinite."
     The value "immediate" results in "shortest match first" behavior,
     whereas "infinite" means to wait indefinitely for additional
     input.  If not explicitly specified otherwise, this attribute is
     set to the value of the 'interdigittimer' attribute.

  The extradigittimer setting enables the "returnkey" input to be
  associated with the current collection.  For example, if maxdigits is
  set to 3 and returnkey is set to #, the user may enter either "x#",
  "xx#", or "xxx#", where x represents a DTMF digit.





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  If the media server detects the "returnkey" pattern during the
  "extradigit" interval, the media server returns the collected digits
  to the client and removes the "returnkey" from the digit buffer.

  If this were not the case, the example would return "xxx" to the
  client and leave the terminating "#" in the digit buffer.  At the
  next <playcollect> request, the media server would process the '#'.
  This might result in the termination of the following prompt, which
  is clearly not what the user intended.

  The extradigittimer has no effect unless returnkey has been set.

6.4.4.  Logging Caller DTMF Input

  Standard SIP mechanisms, such as those discussed in Security
  Considerations (Section 14), protect MSCML protocol exchanges and the
  information they contain.  These protections do not apply to data
  captured in media server log files.  In general, media server logging
  is platform specific and therefore is not covered by this
  specification.  However, one aspect of logging, the capture of
  sensitive information (such as personal identification numbers or
  credit card numbers), is relevant.  The media server has no means to
  determine whether the DTMF input it receives may be sensitive, as
  that is in the purview of the client.  Recognizing this, MSCML
  includes a per-request mechanism to suppress logging of captured DTMF
  to be enabled by clients as needed.

  The "maskdigits" attribute controls whether detected DTMF digits
  appear in the log output.  Clients use this attribute when the media
  server collects sensitive information that should not be accessible
  through the log files.

  Maskdigits Attribute:

  o  maskdigits - optional, default value "no": Controls whether user
     DTMF inputs are captured in media server log files.  The possible
     values for this attribute are "yes" and "no".

6.4.5.  Specifying DTMF Grammars

  MSCML supports four methods for specifying DTMF grammars: the
  "maxdigits" attribute, which provides a simple mechanism for
  collecting any number of digits up to the maximum, regular
  expressions, MGCP [5] digit maps, and H.248.1 [6] digit maps.  A
  media server MUST support the maxdigits and regular expression
  methods for specifying DTMF grammars and SHOULD support MGCP and
  H.248.1 methods.  A client MUST NOT mix DTMF grammar types in a
  single <playcollect> request.



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  Following is a description of the "maxdigits" attribute.

  Maxdigits Attribute:

  o  maxdigits - optional, no default value: Specifies the maximum
     number of DTMF digits to be collected.

  The <pattern> element specifies a digit pattern or patterns for the
  media server to look for.  This element may contain three different
  child elements that specify the type of DTMF grammar used in the
  expression.  The <pattern> element has no attributes.

  <regex> Use regular expressions to define DTMF patterns to match.
     The complete regular expression syntax used in MSCML is described
     in Appendix A.

  <mgcpdigitmap> Use digit maps as specified in MGCP [5].

  <megacodigitmap> Use digit maps as specified in H.248.1 [6].

  At least one <regex> element MUST be present in <pattern> when regex
  grammars are used.  Multiple <regex> elements MAY be present.  When
  <mgcpdigitmap> or <megacodigitmap> grammars are used, <pattern> MUST
  contain only one grammar element.

  The DTMF grammar elements <regex>, <mgcpdigitmap>, and
  <megacodigitmap> have the attributes described in the list below.

  Attributes of DTMF Grammar Elements:

  o  value - required, no default value: Specifies a string
     representing a DTMF grammar matching the parent element type
     (e.g., regex).  Regex values represent a single DTMF grammar.
     MGCP and MEGACO digit maps allow multiple grammars to be described
     in a single string.

  o  name - optional, no default value: Associates a client defined
     name for the grammar that is sent back in the <playcollect>
     response.  This attribute is most useful with regex type grammars
     as each grammar element can have a unique name.

6.4.6.  Playcollect Response

  When the <playcollect> has finished, the media server sends a
  <response> payload to the client in a SIP INFO message.

  Details of the <playcollect> response are described in Section 10.5.




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6.4.7.  Playcollect Example

  The following <playcollect> request (Figure 18) example depicts use
  of the "maxdigits" attribute to control digit collection.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <playcollect id="332986004" maxdigits="6" firstdigittimer="10000"
        interdigittimer="5000" extradigittimer="1000"
        interdigitcriticaltimer="1000" returnkey="#" escapekey="*"
        cleardigits="no" barge="yes" maskdigits="no">
        <prompt baseurl="http://www.example.com/prompts/">
          <audio url="generic/en_US/enter_pin.wav"/>
        </prompt>
      </playcollect>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 18: <Playcollect> Request Example Using the Maxdigits
  Attribute

6.5.  Prompt and Record <playrecord>

  The <playrecord> request directs the media server to convert and
  possibly to transcode the RTP payloads it receives and store them to
  the specified URL using the requested content codec(s) and file
  format.  This request proceeds in two phases; prompt and record.

  The <playrecord> request shares the basic attributes of <play> and
  <playcollect> as described in Section 6.3.  MSCML also defines other
  attributes that control the behavior of the prompt and recording
  phases.  These phases and the attributes that control them are
  described in the text and tables below.

6.5.1.  Prompt Phase

  The presence or absence of a "prompturl" attribute or child <prompt>
  element controls whether a prompt is played before recording begins.
  As previously noted, use of the "prompturl" attribute is deprecated,
  and clients SHOULD use <prompt> instead.

  When the client requests that the media server prompt the caller
  before recording audio, <playrecord> has two stages.  The first is
  equivalent to a <playcollect> operation.  The client may set the
  prompt phase to be interruptible by DTMF input (barge) and may
  specify an escape key that will terminate the <playrecord> request
  before the recording phase begins.



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  The list below describes the attributes of <playrecord> that specify
  the behavior of the prompt phase of the request.

  Playrecord Attributes for the Prompt Phase:

  o  barge - optional, default value "yes": Specifies whether user
     input will barge the prompt and force transition to the record
     phase.  When it is set to "yes", a DTMF input will barge the
     prompt.  When it is set to "no", the prompt phase cannot be
     barged, and any user input during the prompt is placed in the
     quarantine buffer for inspection during the collect phase.  Note
     that if the "barge" attribute is set to "no", the "cleardigits"
     attribute implicitly has a value of "yes".  This ensures that the
     media server does not leave DTMF input that occurred prior to the
     current collection in the quarantine buffer after the request
     completes.

  o  cleardigits - optional, default value "no": Specifies whether
     previous user input should be considered or ignored for barge-in
     purposes.  When it is set to "yes", any previously buffered digits
     are removed, so prior user input is ignored.  If it is set to
     "no", previously buffered digits will be considered.  If
     "cleardigits" is set to "no" and barge-in is enabled, previously
     buffered digits will terminate the prompt phase immediately.  In
     this case, the prompt is not played, and recording begins
     immediately.

  o  escapekey - optional, default value "*": Specifies a DTMF key that
     indicates the user wishes to terminate the current operation
     without saving any input recorded to that point.  Detection of the
     mapped DTMF key terminates the request immediately and generates a
     response.

  Detection of the escape key generates a response message, and the
  operation returns immediately.  If the user presses any other keys
  and if the prompt is interruptible (barge="yes"), then the play stops
  immediately, and the recording phase begins.

6.5.2.  Record Phase

  If the request proceeds to the recording phase, the media server
  discards any digits from the collect phase from the quarantine buffer
  to eliminate unintended termination of the recording.  The following
  attributes control recording behavior.

  Playrecord Attributes for the Record Phase:





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  o  recurl - required, no default value: Specifies the target URL for
     the recorded content.

  o  recencoding - optional, default value "ulaw": Specifies the
     encoding of the recorded content if it cannot be inferred from the
     recurl.  Possible values are "ulaw", "alaw", and "msgsm."

  o  mode - optional, default value "overwrite": Specifies whether the
     recording should overwrite or be appended to the target URL.
     Allowable values are "overwrite" and "append."

  o  duration - optional, default value "infinite": Specifies the
     maximum allowable duration for the recording.  Expressed as a time
     value (Section 4.2.1) from 1 onwards or the strings "immediate"
     and "infinite."  The value "immediate" indicates that recording
     will end immediately, whereas "infinite" indicates recording
     should continue indefinitely.  If the maximum duration is reached,
     the <playrecord> request will terminate and generate a response.

  o  beep - optional, default value "yes": Specifies whether a beep
     should be played to the caller immediately prior to the start of
     the recording phase.  Allowable values are "yes" and "no."

  o  initsilence - optional, default value "3000ms": Specifies how long
     to wait for initial speech input before terminating (canceling)
     the recording.  Expressed as a time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms
     onwards or the strings "immediate" and "infinite."  The value
     "immediate" indicates that the timer should fire immediately,
     whereas "infinite" directs the media server to wait indefinitely.

  o  endsilence - optional, default value "4000ms": Specifies how long
     the media server waits after speech has ended to stop the
     recording.  Expressed as a time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms
     onwards or the strings "immediate" and "infinite."  When set to
     "infinite", the recording will continue indefinitely after speech
     has ended and will only terminate due to a DTMF keypress or
     because the input has reached the maximum desired duration.

  o  recstopmask - optional, default value "0123456789ABCD#*":
     Specifies a list of individual DTMF characters that, if detected,
     will cause the recording to be terminated.  To ensure that the
     input of a specific key does not cause the recording to stop,
     remove the DTMF key from the list.

  Media servers MUST support local and remote (NFS) "file://" scheme
  URLs in the "recurl" attribute.  MSCML supports "http://" and
  "https://" scheme URLs indirectly through the <managecontent>
  (Section 8) request.



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  The media server buffers and returns any digits collected in the
  prompt phase, with the exception of those contained in the
  "recstopmask" attribute, in the response.

  The media server compares digits detected during the recording phase
  to the digits specified in the "recstopmask" to determine whether
  they indicate a recording termination request.

  The media server ignores digits not present in the recstopmask and
  passes them into the recording.  If DTMF input terminates the
  recording, the media server returns the collected digit to the client
  in the <response>.

  Once recording has begun, the media server writes the received media
  to the specified recurl URL no matter what DTMF events the media
  server detects.  It is the responsibility of the client to examine
  the DTMF input returned in the <response> message to determine
  whether the audio file should be saved or deleted and, potentially,
  re-recorded.

  If the endsilence timer expires, the media server trims the end of
  the recorded audio by an amount equal to the value of the
  "endsilence" attribute.

  When the recording is finished, the media server generates a
  <response> message and sends it to the client in a SIP INFO message.
  Details of the <playrecord> response are described in Section 10.6.

6.5.3.  Playrecord Example

  The recording example (Figure 19) plays a prompt and records it to
  the destination specified in the "recurl" attribute encoded as MS-GSM
  in wave format.


















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  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <playrecord id="5556123"
        recurl="file:////nfs.example.com/rec/name.wav"
        recencoding="msgsm"
        initsilence="5000" endsilence="3000" duration="30000"
        barge="yes"
        beep="yes"
        mode="overwrite"
        cleardigits="no"
        escapekey="*"
        recstopmask="0123456789#*">
        <prompt>
          <audio url="http://www.example.com/prompts/recordname.wav"/>
        </prompt>
      </playrecord>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 19: Recording Example

6.6.  Stop Request <stop>

  The client issues a <stop> request when the objective is to stop a
  request in progress and not to initiate another operation.  This
  request generates a <response> message from the media server.

  The only attribute is id, which is optional.

  The client-defined request id correlates the asynchronous response
  with its original request and echoes back to the client in the media
  server's response.

  The following MSCML payload (Figure 20) depicts an example <stop>
  request.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <stop id="4578903"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 20: Stop Example

  The format of a response to a <stop> request is detailed in Section
  10.2.



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  As discussed previously, the media server treats a SIP re-INVITE that
  modifies the established SDP parameters as an implicit <stop>
  request.  Examples of such SDP modifications include receiving hold
  SDP or removing an audio or video stream.  When this occurs, the
  media server immediately terminates the running <play>,
  <playcollect>, or <playrecord> request and sends a <response>
  indicating "reason=stopped".

7.  Call Leg Events

  MSCML defines event notifications that are scoped to a specific SIP
  dialog or call leg.  These events allow a client to be notified of
  individual, asynchronous DTMF keypresses, as well as of various call
  progress signals.  The subscription, event detection, and
  notifications for call leg events occur in the same SIP dialog.  This
  is different from the conference level active talker events described
  earlier.  The subscription and notifications for active talker events
  occur on the conference control leg, but the actual event detection
  occurs on one or more participant legs.

  Subscriptions for call leg events are made by sending an MSCML
  <configure_leg> request on the desired SIP dialog.  Call leg events
  may be used with the MSCML conferencing or IVR services.  When used
  with the IVR service, the <configure_leg> request SHOULD NOT include
  any conference-related attributes.  The media server MUST ignore
  these if present.  Call leg event subscriptions MUST NOT be made on
  the conference control leg, since it has no actual RTP media to
  process for event detection.  The media server MUST reject a
  <configure_leg> request sent on the conference control leg.

  The <configure_leg> request contains the child elements <subscribe>
  and <events>.  The <events> element may contain two child elements
  that control subscriptions to call leg events.  These are <keypress>
  and <signal>.  A <configure_leg> request MUST contain at most one
  <keypress> element but MAY contain multiple <signal> elements that
  request notification of different call progress events.

7.1.  Keypress Events

  Keypress events are used when the client wishes to receive
  notifications of individual DTMF events that are not tied to a
  specific <playcollect> request.  One use of this facility is to
  monitor conference legs for DTMF inputs that require application
  intervention; for example, to notify the moderator that the caller
  wishes to speak.  Keypress events are also used when the application
  desires complete control of grammars and timing constraints.





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  When used in a subscription context, the <keypress> element has two
  attributes, 'report' and 'maskdigits', which are detailed in the list
  below.

  Keypress Subscription Attributes:

  o  report - required, no default value: Possible values are
     'standard', 'long', 'both', and 'none'.  'Standard' means that
     detected digits should be reported.  'Long' means that long digits
     should be reported.  'Long' digits are defined as a single key
     press held down for more than one second, or two distinct key
     presses (a "double") of the same digit that occur within two
     seconds of each other with no other intervening digits.  'Both'
     means that both 'standard' and 'long' digit events should be
     reported.  As a 'long' digit consists of one or more "normal"
     digits, a single long duration key press will generate one
     standard event and one 'long' event.  A "double" will produce two
     standard events and one 'long' event.  'None' means that no
     keypress events should be reported; it disables keypress event
     reporting if enabled.

  o  maskdigits - optional, default value "no": Controls whether user
     DTMF inputs are captured in media server log files.  The possible
     values for this attribute are "yes" and "no".

  The media server sends an MSCML response to the subscription
  immediately upon receiving the request.  Notifications are sent to
  the client when the specified events are detected.

  When used in a notification context, the <keypress> element has
  several attributes that are used to convey details of the event that
  was detected.  It also contains a child element, <status>, that
  provides information on any MSCML request that was in progress when
  the event occurred.  The details of these notification attributes are
  described in the list below.

  Keypress Notification Attributes:

  o  digit - required, no default value: Specifies the DTMF digit
     detected.  Possible values are [0-9], [A-D], '#', or '*'.

  o  length - required, no default value: Specifies the duration class
     of the DTMF input.  Possible values are 'standard' or 'long'.

  o  method - required, no default value: Specifies the keypress
     detection method that generated the notification.  Possible values
     are 'standard', 'long', and 'double'.




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  o  interdigittime - required, no default value: Specifies the elapsed
     time, as a time value (Section 4.2.1), between the current event
     detection and the previous one.

7.1.1.  Keypress Subscription Examples

  The following examples of MSCML payloads depict a subscription for
  standard keypress events and disabling keypress reporting.

  Figure 21 shows a subscription for standard keypress events.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg>
        <subscribe>
          <events>
            <keypress report="standard"/>
          </events>
        </subscribe>
      </configure_leg>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 21: Standard Digit Events Subscription

  Figure 22 shows a client disabling keypress event notifications.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg>
        <subscribe>
          <events>
            <keypress report="none"/>
          </events>
        </subscribe>
      </configure_leg>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 22: Disabling Keypress Event Reporting

7.1.2.  Keypress Notification Examples

  The following MSCML payloads depict keypress event notifications
  caused by various types of DTMF input.




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  Figure 23 shows a notification generated by the detection of a
  standard "4" DTMF digit.  In this example, this is the first digit
  detected.  Thus, the 'interdigittime' attribute has a value of '0'.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <notification>
      <keypress digit="4" length="standard" method="standard"
        interdigittime="0">
        <status command="play" duration="10"/>
      </keypress>
    </notification>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 23: Standard Keypress Notification

  Figure 24 shows a notification generated by detection of a long pound
  (#).

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <notification>
      <keypress digit="#" length="long" method="long"
        interdigittime="200">
        <status command="idle" duration="4"/>
      </keypress>
    </notification>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 24: Long Keypress Notification

7.2.  Signal Events

  MSCML supports notification of certain call progress tones through
  the <signal> element.  When used in a subscription context, the
  <signal> element has two attributes, 'type' and 'report', and no
  child elements.  These attributes are detailed in the list below.

  Signal Subscription Attributes:

  o  report - required, no default value: Controls whether the
     specified signal is reported.  Possible values are 'yes' and 'no'.
     When set to 'yes', the media server invokes the required signal
     detection code and reports detected events.  When it is set to
     'no', the media server disables the associated signal detection
     code and does not report events.





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  o  type - required, no default value: Specifies the type of call
     progress signal to detect.  Possible values are 'busy', 'ring',
     'CED', 'CNG', and '400', which correspond to busy tone, ring tone,
     fax CED, fax CNG, and 400 Hz tone, respectively.

     NOTE: The details of media server provisioning required to support
     country-specific variants of 'busy' and 'ring' is not covered by
     this specification.

  As stated previously, a single <configure_leg> request MAY contain
  multiple <signal> elements that request notification of different
  call progress tones.  A single <configure_leg> request SHOULD NOT
  contain multiple <signal> elements that have the same 'type'
  attribute value.  If the media server receives such a request, it
  SHOULD honor the last element specifying that type that appears in
  the request.

  The media server generates an immediate response to the
  <configure_leg> subscription request and sends notifications when the
  specified signals are detected.  A single notification is sent as
  soon as the specified signal has been reliably detected.  If the
  signal persists continuously, additional notifications will not be
  sent.  If the signal is interrupted and then resumes, additional
  notifications will be sent.

  Signal notifications have a single attribute, "type", as described in
  the list below.

  Signal Notification Attribute:

  o  type - required, no default value: Specifies the type of call
     progress signal that was detected.  Possible values are 'busy',
     'ring', 'CED', 'CNG', and '400', which correspond to busy tone,
     ring tone, fax CED, fax CNG, and 400 Hz tone, respectively.

7.2.1.  Signal Event Examples

  The following MSCML payloads show a signal event subscription (Figure
  25) and notification (Figure 26).












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  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <configure_leg>
        <subscribe>
          <events>
            <signal type="busy" report="yes"/>
          </events>
        </subscribe>
      </configure_leg>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 25: Signal Event Subscription

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <notification>
      <signal type="busy"/>
    </notification>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 26: Signal Event Notification

8.  Managing Content <managecontent>

  MSCML uses the <managecontent> request to move recorded content from
  the media server to remote locations using the HTTP protocol.  This
  is a store-and-forward model, which requires the completion of local
  temporary recording before the media server can send it to the web
  server.  This facility is useful in applications such as voice
  messaging, where a message may be reviewed by the caller prior to
  being committed to persistent storage.

  The <managecontent> request contains no child elements and has the
  attributes described in the list below.

  Managecontent Attributes:

  o  src - required, no default value: Specifies the local source URL
     of the content.  The URL scheme MUST be "file://".

  o  dest - required (see note), no default value: Specifies the
     destination URL.  The URL scheme MUST be "http://".  Note: If the
     selected action is 'delete', this attribute is optional; otherwise
     it is required.





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  o  action - optional, default value "move": Specifies the operation
     for the media server to execute.  Values can be either 'move' or
     'delete'.  The 'delete' action operates on the local source file.
     After a successful move or delete, the media server deletes the
     source file from its local storage.  If the request is
     unsuccessful, the source file is not deleted, which gives the
     client complete control of the retry strategy.

  o  httpmethod - optional, default value "post": HTTP protocol method
     for the media server to use in the HTTP request.  The only values
     are 'post' or 'put'.

  o  name - required (see note), no default value: Specifies the field
     name for the content in the form when using the 'post' method.
     This is not to be confused with the "src" or "dest" attributes.
     Note: This attribute is required when the "htttpmethod" has the
     value "post" and is optional otherwise.

  o  fetchtimeout - optional, default value "10000ms": Specifies the
     maximum time allowed for the transfer to complete.  Expressed as a
     time value (Section 4.2.1) from 1ms onwards.

  o  mimetype - required (see note), no default value: Specifies the
     MIME type that the media server will use for the content transfer.
     If it is not provided, the media server MUST try to infer it from
     the content file extension based on a platform specific mapping
     table.  A non-normative, example mapping table is shown in Table
     3.  To avoid ambiguity, we RECOMMEND that clients explicitly set
     this attribute.  Note: If the MIME type of the content cannot be
     inferred from the file extension, this attribute is required.

  Table 3 shows common audio and video MIME types and possible file
  extension mappings.


















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                   +-----------+--------------------+
                   | Extension | MIME Type          |
                   +-----------+--------------------+
                   | alaw      | audio/x-alaw-basic |
                   | ulaw      | audio/basic        |
                   | msgsm     | audio/ms-gsm       |
                   | wav       | audio/x-wav        |
                   | tif       | image/tiff         |
                   | tiff      | image/tiff         |
                   | mov       | video/quicktime    |
                   | qt        | video/quicktime    |
                   | 3gp       | video/3gpp         |
                   | 3gpp      | video/3gpp         |
                   +-----------+--------------------+

          Table 3: Example File Extension to MIME Type Mappings

  <Managecontent> is purely a transport operation; the underlying
  content is not changed by it.  Therefore clients MUST ensure that the
  source and destination file name extensions and MIME types are the
  same.  Failure to do so could result in content that is unreadable.

  The ability to move or delete any local file presents a potential
  risk to the security of the media server system.  For this reason, we
  STRONGLY RECOMMEND that implementers limit local file system access
  when using <managecontent>.  For example, we encourage limiting
  access as based on file ownership and/or specific directories.

8.1.  Managecontent Example

  The following is an example (Figure 27) showing a local file on the
  media server being transferred to an HTTP URL using the "put" method.
  The client sends the following request.

  <?xml version="1.0"?>
  <MediaServerControl version="1.0">
    <request>
      <managecontent id="102"
      src="file:////var/mediaserver/rec/6A5GH49B.ulaw"
      dest="http://www.example.com/recordings/myrecording.ulaw"
      mimetype="audio/basic" action="move" httpmethod="put"
      fetchtimeout="5000"/>
    </request>
  </MediaServerControl>

  Figure 27: Managecontent Example





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  Note that the client can change the temporary file name assigned by
  the media server as part of this operation as shown.

  If the request is ambiguous, the media server MUST return a status
  code of "400" and text "Bad Request."  If the media server is unable
  to execute a syntactically correct and unambiguous request, it MUST
  return a "500" status code with the text "Server Error."  For
  example, the local file system access restrictions may prevent
  deletion of the specified file.  In this case, the "reason" attribute
  in the response conveys additional details on the server error that
  occurred.  If there is a network or remote server error, the media
  server provides detailed error information in the <error_info>
  element contained in the media server response.  Additional
  information regarding <managecontent> responses is provided in
  Section 10.7.

9.  Fax Processing

9.1.  Recording a Fax <faxrecord>

  The <faxrecord> request directs the media server to process a fax in
  answer mode.  The reason for a request separate from <playrecord> is
  that the media server needs to know to process the T.30 [18] or T.38
  [19] fax protocols.

  The <faxrecord> request has multiple attributes and one child
  element, <prompt>.  Its attributes are described in the list below.

  Attributes of <faxrecord>:

  o  lclid - optional, default value "" (the empty string): A string
     that identifies the called station.

  o  prompturl - optional, no default value: The URL of the fax content
     to be retrieved and played.  The target may be a local or remote
     (NFS) "file://" scheme URL or an "http://" or "https://" scheme
     URL.  NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  o  promptencoding - optional, no default value: Specifies the content
     encoding for files that do not have a 'tif' or 'tiff' extension.
     The only allowable value is 'tiff'.  This attribute only affects
     "file://" scheme URLs.  NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  o  recurl - optional, no default value: Specifies the target URL for
     the recorded content.

  o  rmtid - optional, no default value: Specifies the calling station
     identifier of the remote terminal.  If present, the media server



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     MUST reject transactions with the remote terminal if the remote
     terminal's identifier does not match the value of 'rmtid'.

  Clients SHOULD use the more flexible <prompt> mechanism for
  specifying fax content.  Use of the 'prompturl' attribute is
  deprecated and may not be supported in future MSCML versions.  The
  <prompt> element is described in Section 6.1.1.  A <prompt> element
  sent in a <faxrecord> request MUST NOT contain <variable> elements.

  Media servers MUST support local and remote (NFS) "file://" scheme
  URLs in the "recurl" attribute.  MSCML supports "http://" and
  "https://" scheme URLs indirectly through the <managecontent>
  (Section 8) request.

  The <faxrecord> request operates in one of three modes: receive,
  poll, and turnaround poll.  The combination of <prompt> or
  'prompturl' attribute and 'recurl' attribute define the mode.  Table
  4 describes these modes in detail.  The 'prompt' column in the table
  has the value 'yes' if the request has either a <prompt> element or a
  'prompturl' attribute.

  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+
  | prompt | recurl | Mode    | Operation                             |
  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+
  | no     | no     | Invalid | Request fails.                        |
  | no     | yes    | Receive | Record the fax to the target URL      |
  |        |        |         | specified in 'recurl'.                |
  | yes    | no     | Poll    | Send fax from source specified in the |
  |        |        |         | <prompt> element or 'prompturl'       |
  |        |        |         | attribute.  If there is a 'rmtid', it |
  |        |        |         | MUST match the remote terminal's      |
  |        |        |         | identifier, or the request will fail. |
  | yes    | yes    | TP      | Turnaround Poll (TP) mode. If the     |
  |        |        |         | remote terminal wishes to transmit,   |
  |        |        |         | the media server records the fax to   |
  |        |        |         | the target URL specified in 'recurl'. |
  |        |        |         | If the remote terminal wishes to      |
  |        |        |         | receive, the media server sends the   |
  |        |        |         | fax from the source URL contained in  |
  |        |        |         | <prompt> or 'prompturl'.  If there is |
  |        |        |         | a 'rmtid', it MUST match remote       |
  |        |        |         | terminal's identifier, or the send    |
  |        |        |         | request will fail.  A receive         |
  |        |        |         | operation will still succeed,         |
  |        |        |         | however.                              |
  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+

                       Table 4: Fax Receive Modes



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  In receive mode, the media server receives the fax and writes the fax
  data to the target URL specified by the 'recurl' attribute.

  In poll mode, the media server sends a fax, but as a polled (called)
  device.

  In turnaround poll mode, the media server will record a fax that the
  remote machine sends.  If the remote machine requests a transmission,
  then the media server will send the fax.

  When transmitting a fax, the media server will advertise that it can
  receive faxes in the DIS message.  Likewise, when receiving a fax,
  the media server will advertise that it can send faxes in the DIS
  message.

  The media server MUST flush any quarantined digits when it receives a
  <faxrecord> request.

9.2.  Sending a Fax <faxplay>

  The <faxplay> request directs the media server to process a fax in
  originate mode.  The reason for a request separate from <play> is
  that the media server needs to know to process the T.30 [18] or T.38
  [19] fax protocols.

  The <faxplay> request has multiple attributes and one child element,
  <prompt>.  Its attributes are described in the list below.

  Attributes of <faxplay>:

  o  lclid - optional, default value "" (the empty string): A string
     that identifies the called station.

  o  prompturl - optional, no default value: The URL of the content to
     be retrieved and played.  The target may be a local or remote
     (NFS) "file://" scheme URL or an "http://" or "https://" scheme
     URL.  NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  o  promptencoding - optional, no default value: Specifies the content
     encoding for files that do not have a 'tif' or 'tiff' extension.
     The only allowable value is 'tiff'.  This attribute only affects
     "file://" scheme URLs.  NOTE: Use of this attribute is deprecated.

  o  recurl - optional, no default value: Specifies the target URL for
     the recorded content.

  o  rmtid - optional, no default value: Specifies the calling station
     identifier of the remote terminal.  If present, the media server



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     MUST reject transactions with the remote terminal if the remote
     terminal's identifier does not match the value of 'rmtid'.

  Clients SHOULD use the more flexible <prompt> mechanism for
  specifying fax content.  Use of the 'prompturl' attribute is
  deprecated and may not be supported in future MSCML versions.  The
  <prompt> element is described in Section 6.1.1.  A <prompt> element
  sent in a <faxrecord> request MUST NOT contain <variable> elements.

  Media servers MUST support local and remote (NFS) "file://" scheme
  URLs in the "recurl" attribute.  MSCML supports "http://" and
  "https://" scheme URLs indirectly through the <managecontent>
  (Section 8) request.

  The <faxplay> request operates in one of three modes: send, remote
  poll, and turnaround poll.  The combination of <prompt> or
  'prompturl' attribute and 'recurl' attribute define the mode.  Table
  5 describes these modes in detail.  The 'prompt' column in the table
  has the value 'yes' if the request has either a <prompt> element or a
  'prompturl' attribute.































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  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+
  | prompt | recurl | Mode    | Operation                             |
  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+
  | no     | no     | Invalid | Request fails.                        |
  | yes    | no     | Send    | Send fax from source specified in the |
  |        |        |         | <prompt> element or 'prompturl'       |
  |        |        |         | attribute. If there is a 'rmtid', it  |
  |        |        |         | MUST match the remote terminal's      |
  |        |        |         | identifier, or the request will fail. |
  | no     | yes    | Poll    | Send fax from source specified in the |
  |        |        |         | <prompt> element or 'prompturl'       |
  |        |        |         | attribute, assuming the remote        |
  |        |        |         | terminal specifies it can receive a   |
  |        |        |         | fax in its DIS message. If the remote |
  |        |        |         | terminal does not support reverse     |
  |        |        |         | polling, the request will fail. If    |
  |        |        |         | 'rmtid' is specified, it MUST match   |
  |        |        |         | remote terminal's identifier, or the  |
  |        |        |         | request will fail.                    |
  | yes    | yes    | TP      | Turnaround Poll (TP) mode. If the     |
  |        |        |         | remote terminal wishes to transmit,   |
  |        |        |         | the media server records the fax to   |
  |        |        |         | the target URL specified in 'recurl'. |
  |        |        |         | If the remote terminal wishes to      |
  |        |        |         | receive, the media server sends the   |
  |        |        |         | fax from the source URL contained in  |
  |        |        |         | <prompt> or 'prompturl'. If there is  |
  |        |        |         | a 'rmtid', it MUST match remote       |
  |        |        |         | terminal's identifier, or the send    |
  |        |        |         | request will fail. A receive          |
  |        |        |         | operation will still succeed,         |
  |        |        |         | however.                              |
  +--------+--------+---------+---------------------------------------+

                         Table 5: Fax Send Modes

  In send mode, the media server sends the fax.

  In remote poll mode, the client places a call on behalf of the media
  server.  The media server requests a fax transmission from the remote
  fax terminal.

  In turnaround poll mode, the media server will record a fax that the
  remote machine sends.  If the remote machine requests a transmission,
  then the media server will send the fax.

  When transmitting a fax, the media server will advertise that it can
  receive faxes in the DIS message.  Likewise, when receiving a fax,



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  the media server will advertise that it can send faxes in the DIS
  message.

  The media server MUST flush any quarantined digits when it receives a
  <faxplay> request.

10.  MSCML Response Attributes and Elements

10.1.  Mechanism

  The media server acknowledges receipt of a client MSCML request sent
  in a SIP INVITE by sending a response of either 200 OK or 415 Bad
  Media Type.  The media server responds with 415 when the SIP request
  contains a content type other than "application/sdp" or "application/
  mediaservercontrol+xml".

  The media server acknowledges receipt of a client MSCML request sent
  in a SIP INFO with a 200 OK or 415 Bad Media Type.  The media server
  responds with 415 if the INFO request contains a content type other
  than "application/mediaservercontrol+xml".

  The media server transports the MSCML <response> message in a SIP
  INFO request.

  If there is an error in the request or the media server cannot
  complete the request, the media server sends the <response> message
  very shortly after receiving the request.  If the request is able to
  proceed, the <response> contains final status information as
  described below.

10.2.  Base <response> Attributes

  All MSCML responses have the basic attributes defined in the list
  below.

  Basic MSCML Response Attributes:

  o  id - optional, no default value: Echoes the client-defined ID
     contained in the request.

  o  request - required, no default value: Specifies the MSCML request
     type that generated the response.  Allowable values are
     "configure_conference", "configure_leg", "play", "playcollect",
     "playrecord", "stop", "faxplay", "faxrecord", and "managecontent".







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  o  code - required, no default value: The final status code for the
     request.  MSCML uses a subset of the status classes defined in RFC
     3261 [4].  In MSCML, 2XX responses indicate success, 4XX responses
     indicate client error, and 5XX responses indicate an error on the
     media server.  There are no 1XX, 3XX, or 6XX status codes in
     MSCML.

  o  text - required, no default value: The human readable reason
     phrase associated with the status code.

  Responses to <configure_conference> and <stop> requests contain only
  the attributes above.  MSCML responses to other requests MAY contain
  additional request-specific attributes and elements.  These are
  described in the following sections.

10.3.  Response Attributes and Elements for <configure_leg>

  Responses to <configure_leg> requests have only the base response
  attributes defined in Section 10.2.  However, when the request
  contains a <configure_team> element, the response includes a <team>
  element describing the teammate configuration for that leg.  The
  attributes of the <team> element are shown in the list below.

  Attributes of <team>:

  o  id - required, no default value: The client-defined unique
     identifier for the conference leg.

  o  numteam - required, no default value: The number of team members
     for the leg.

  Additional information on each team member is conveyed by child
  <teammate> elements contained within <team>.  Each teammate is
  represented by a single element in the list.  The <teammate> element
  has a single attribute, as described below.

  Attributes of <teammate>:

  o  id - required, no default value: The client-defined unique
     identifier for the teammate leg.

10.4.  Response Attributes and Elements for <play>

  In addition to the base response attributes defined in Section 10.2,
  responses to <play> requests have the additional attributes described
  in the list below.





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  MSCML Response Attributes for <play>:

  o  reason - optional, no default value: For requests that are not
     completed immediately, the "reason" attribute conveys additional
     information regarding why the command was completed.  Possible
     values are "stopped", indicating that an explicit or implicit
     <stop> request was received, and "EOF", indicating that the end of
     the specified sequence of URLs was reached.

  o  playduration - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the duration of the associated content
     playout.

  o  playoffset - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the time offset into the specified content
     sequence where play was terminated.  If the initial "offset" value
     in the sequence was "0", then "playduration" and "playoffset" are
     equal.  However, if the initial offset had some other value,
     "playoffset" serves as a bookmark for the client to resume play in
     a subsequent request.

10.4.1.  Reporting Content Retrieval Errors

  If the associated request set "stoponerror=yes" in <prompt> and an
  error occurred while retrieving the specified content the response
  will include an <error_info> element detailing the problem.  This
  element contains the response information received from the remote
  content server.  The <error_info> element has the attributes
  described in the list below.

  Attributes of <error_info>:

  o  code - required, no default value: The status code returned by the
     remote content server.  For example, a web server might return 404
     to indicate that the requested content was not found.

  o  text - required, no default value: The human-readable reason
     phrase returned by the remote content server.  For example, the
     reason phrase "Not Found" would be returned if the requested
     content was not found.

  o  context - required, no default value: Contains the content URL
     that was being fetched when the retrieval error occurred.  This
     enables the client to know precisely which URL in a sequence
     caused the problem.

  An <error_info> element MAY be present in the response to any request
  that contains a child <prompt> element.



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10.5.  Response Attributes and Elements for <playcollect>

  In addition to the base response attributes defined in Section 10.2,
  responses to <playcollect> requests have the additional attributes
  described in the list below.

  MSCML Response Attributes for <playcollect>:

  o  reason - optional, no default value: For requests that are not
     completed immediately, the "reason" attribute conveys additional
     information regarding why the command was completed.  Possible
     values are "stopped", indicating that an explicit or implicit
     <stop> request was received; "match", meaning that a DTMF grammar
     was matched; "timeout", indicating that no DTMF input was received
     before one of the collection timers expired; and "returnkey" or
     "escapekey", meaning the DTMF digit mapped to that key was
     detected and the return key or escape key terminated the
     operation, respectively.

  o  playduration - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the duration of the associated content
     playout.  If the caller barged the prompt, this value will reflect
     the play duration up to that event.

  o  playoffset - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the time offset into the specified content
     sequence where play was terminated.  If the initial "offset" value
     in the sequence was "0", then "playduration" and "playoffset" are
     equal.  However, if the initial offset had some other value,
     "playoffset" serves as a bookmark for the client to resume play in
     a subsequent request.  If the caller barged the prompt this value
     will reflect the time offset at which barge-in occurred.

  o  digits - required, no default value: Contains the collected DTMF
     input characters.  If no DTMF input was collected, this attribute
     is set to the empty string ("").

  o  name - required (see note), no default value: The client-defined
     name of the DTMF grammar that was matched.  Note: This attribute
     is required if the "name" attribute was set in the matching DTMF
     grammar.

  Responses to <playcollect> requests MAY include an <error_info>
  element, as described in Section 10.4.1.







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10.6.  Response Attributes and Elements for <playrecord>

  In addition to the base response attributes defined in Section 10.2,
  responses to <playrecord> requests have the additional attributes
  described in the list below.

  o  reason - optional, no default value: For requests that are not
     completed immediately, the "reason" attribute conveys additional
     information regarding why the command was completed.  Possible
     values are "stopped", indicating that an explicit or implicit
     <stop> request was received; "digit", meaning that a DTMF digit
     was detected and that the prompt phase was barged; "init_silence",
     meaning the recording terminated because of no input;
     "end_silence", meaning that the recording was terminated because
     the "endsilence" timer elapsed; "max_duration", indicating that
     the maximum time for the recording was reached; "escapekey",
     indicating that the DTMF input mapped to "escapekey" was detected,
     thus terminating the recording; and "error", indicating a general
     operation failure.

  o  playduration - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the duration of the associated content
     playout.  If the caller barged the prompt, this value will reflect
     the play duration up to that event.

  o  playoffset - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) that returns the time offset into the specified content
     sequence where play was terminated.  If the initial "offset" value
     in the sequence was "0", then "playduration" and "playoffset" are
     equal.  However, if the initial offset had some other value,
     "playoffset" serves as a bookmark for the client to resume play in
     a subsequent request.  If the caller barged the prompt this value
     will reflect the time offset at which barge-in occurred.

  o  digits - required, no default value: Contains the DTMF digit that
     terminated the recording.  If no DTMF input was detected, this
     attribute is set to the empty string ("").

  o  reclength - required, no default value: The length of the recorded
     content, in bytes.

  o  recduration - required, no default value: A time value (Section
     4.2.1) indicating the elapsed duration of the recording.

  Responses to <playrecord> requests MAY include an <error_info>
  element, as described in Section 10.4.1.





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10.7.  Response Attributes and Elements for <managecontent>

  Responses to <managecontent> requests have only the base response
  attributes defined in Section 10.2.  If a content transfer error
  occurs while executing the request the response will also contain an
  <error_info> element as described in Section 10.4.1.

10.8.  Response Attributes and Elements for <faxplay> and <faxrecord>

  In addition to the base response attributes defined in Section 10.2,
  responses to <faxplay> and <faxrecord> requests have the additional
  attributes described in the list below.

  o  reason - required, no default value: For requests that are not
     completed immediately, the "reason" attribute conveys additional
     information regarding why the command was completed.  Possible
     values are "stopped", indicating that an explicit or implicit
     <stop> request was received; "complete", indicating successful
     completion, even if there were bad lines or minor negotiation
     problems (e.g., a DCN was received); "disconnect", meaning that
     the session was disconnected; and "notfax", indicating that no DIS
     or DCS was received on the connection.

  o  pages_received - required (see note), no default value: Indicates
     the number of fax pages received.  Note: This attribute is
     required if any pages were received.

  o  pages_sent - required (see note), no default value: Indicates the
     number of fax pages sent.  Note: This attribute is required if any
     pages were sent.

  o  faxcode - required, no default value: The value of the "faxcode"
     attribute is the binary-or of the bit patterns defined in Table 6.


















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             +------+--------------------------------------+
             | Mask | description                          |
             +------+--------------------------------------+
             | 0    | Operation Failed                     |
             | 1    | Operation Succeeded                  |
             | 2    | Partial Success                      |
             | 4    | Image received and placed in recurl  |
             | 8    | Image sent from specified source URL |
             | 16   | rmtid did not match                  |
             | 32   | Error reading source URL             |
             | 64   | Error writing recurl                 |
             | 128  | Negotiation failure on send phase    |
             | 256  | Negotiation failure on receive phase |
             | 512  | Reserved                             |
             | 1024 | Irrecoverable IP packet loss         |
             | 2048 | Line errors in received image        |
             +------+--------------------------------------+

                          Table 6: Faxcode Mask

  Responses to <faxplay> and <faxrecord> requests MAY include an
  <error_info> element, as described in Section 10.4.1.

11.  Formal Syntax

  The following syntax specification uses XML Schema as described in
  XML [7].

11.1.  Schema

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
    elementFormDefault="qualified">
    <xs:element name="MediaServerControl">
      <xs:complexType>
        <xs:choice>
          <xs:element name="request">
            <xs:complexType>
              <xs:choice>
                <xs:element name="configure_conference"
                  type="configure_conferenceRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="configure_leg"
                  type="configure_legRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="play" type="playRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="playcollect"
                  type="playcollectRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="playrecord"
                  type="playrecordRequestType"/>



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                <xs:element name="managecontent"
                  type="managecontentRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="faxplay"
                  type="faxRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="faxrecord"
                  type="faxRequestType"/>
                <xs:element name="stop" type="stopRequestType"/>
              </xs:choice>
            </xs:complexType>
          </xs:element>
          <xs:element name="response" type="responseType"/>
          <xs:element name="notification">
            <xs:complexType>
              <xs:choice>
                <xs:element name="conference"
                  type="conferenceNotificationType"/>
                <xs:element name="keypress"
                  type="keypressNotificationType"/>
                <xs:element name="signal"
                  type="signalNotificationType"/>
              </xs:choice>
            </xs:complexType>
          </xs:element>
        </xs:choice>
        <xs:attribute name="version" use="required"/>
      </xs:complexType>
    </xs:element>
    <!-- Definitions for base and concrete MSCML requests -->
    <!-- and embedded types. -->
    <xs:complexType name="base_requestType" abstract="true">
      <xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="playRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="prompt" type="promptType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="prompturl" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="offset" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="promptencoding" type="xs:string"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="configure_conferenceRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">



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          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="subscribe"
              type="conference_eventsubscriptionType" minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="reservedtalkers"
            type="xs:positiveInteger"/>
          <xs:attribute name="reserveconfmedia" type="yesnoType"
            default="yes"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="configure_legRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="inputgain" type="gainType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
            <xs:element name="outputgain" type="gainType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
            <xs:element name="configure_team"
              type="configure_teamType" minOccurs="0"/>
            <xs:element name="subscribe"
              type="leg_eventsubscriptionType" minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="type">
            <xs:simpleType>
              <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
                <xs:enumeration value="talker"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="listener"/>
              </xs:restriction>
            </xs:simpleType>
          </xs:attribute>
          <xs:attribute name="mixmode">
            <xs:simpleType>
              <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
                <xs:enumeration value="full"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="mute"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="preferred"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="parked"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="private"/>
              </xs:restriction>
            </xs:simpleType>
          </xs:attribute>
          <xs:attribute name="dtmfclamp" type="yesnoType"/>
          <xs:attribute name="toneclamp" type="yesnoType"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>



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    <xs:complexType name="configure_teamType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="teammate" type="teammateType" minOccurs="0"
          maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="action" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:string">
            <xs:enumeration value="add"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="delete"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="query"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="set"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="teammateType">
      <xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="playcollectRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="prompt" type="promptType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
            <xs:element name="pattern" type="dtmfGrammarType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="prompturl" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="offset" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="barge" type="yesnoType" default="yes"/>
          <xs:attribute name="promptencoding" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="cleardigits" type="yesnoType"
            default="no"/>
          <xs:attribute name="maxdigits" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="firstdigittimer" type="xs:string"
            default="5000ms"/>
          <xs:attribute name="interdigittimer" type="xs:string"
            default="2000ms"/>
          <xs:attribute name="extradigittimer" type="xs:string"
            default="1000ms"/>
          <xs:attribute name="interdigitcriticaltimer"
            type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="skipinterval" type="xs:string"
            default="6s"/>
          <xs:attribute name="ffkey" type="DTMFkeyType"/>
          <xs:attribute name="rwkey" type="DTMFkeyType"/>



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          <xs:attribute name="returnkey" type="DTMFkeyType"
            default="#"/>
          <xs:attribute name="escapekey" type="DTMFkeyType"
            default="*"/>
          <xs:attribute name="maskdigits" type="yesnoType"
            default="no"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="playrecordRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="prompt" type="promptType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="prompturl" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="promptencoding" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="offset" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
          <xs:attribute name="barge" type="yesnoType" default="yes"/>
          <xs:attribute name="cleardigits" type="yesnoType"
            default="no"/>
          <xs:attribute name="escapekey" type="xs:string" default="*"/>
          <xs:attribute name="recurl" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
          <xs:attribute name="mode" default="overwrite">
            <xs:simpleType>
              <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
                <xs:enumeration value="append"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="overwrite"/>
              </xs:restriction>
            </xs:simpleType>
          </xs:attribute>
          <xs:attribute name="recencoding" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="initsilence" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="endsilence" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="duration" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="beep" type="yesnoType" default="yes"/>
          <xs:attribute name="recstopmask" type="xs:string"
            default="01234567890*#"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="managecontentRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:attribute name="fetchtimeout" type="xs:string"
            default="10000"/>
          <xs:attribute name="mimetype" type="xs:string"/>



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          <xs:attribute name="name" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="httpmethod">
            <xs:simpleType>
              <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
                <xs:enumeration value="put"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="post"/>
              </xs:restriction>
            </xs:simpleType>
          </xs:attribute>
          <xs:attribute name="action">
            <xs:simpleType>
              <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
                <xs:enumeration value="move"/>
                <xs:enumeration value="delete"/>
              </xs:restriction>
            </xs:simpleType>
          </xs:attribute>
          <xs:attribute name="dest" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="src" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="stopRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType"/>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="faxRequestType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_requestType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="prompt" type="promptType" minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="lclid" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="prompturl" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="recurl" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="rmtid" type="xs:string"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="dtmfGrammarType">
      <xs:choice>
        <xs:element name="regex" type="dtmfPatternType"
          maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
        <xs:element name="mgcpdigitmap" type="dtmfPatternType"/>
        <xs:element name="megacodigitmap" type="dtmfPatternType"/>
      </xs:choice>
    </xs:complexType>



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    <xs:complexType name="dtmfPatternType">
      <xs:attribute name="value" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="name" type="xs:string"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <!-- Definitions for base and concrete MSCML responses -->
    <!-- and embedded types. -->
    <xs:complexType name="base_responseType" abstract="true">
      <xs:attribute name="request" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="configure_conference"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="configure_leg"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="play"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="playcollect"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="playrecord"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="managecontent"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="faxplay"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="faxrecord"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="stop"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="code" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="text" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="responseType">
      <xs:complexContent>
        <xs:extension base="base_responseType">
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="error_info"
              type="stoponerrorResponseType" minOccurs="0"/>
            <xs:element name="team" type="configure_teamResponseType"
              minOccurs="0"/>
          </xs:sequence>
          <xs:attribute name="reason" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="reclength" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="recduration" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="digits" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="name" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="playduration" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="playoffset" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="faxcode" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="pages_sent" type="xs:string"/>
          <xs:attribute name="pages_recv" type="xs:string"/>
        </xs:extension>
      </xs:complexContent>
    </xs:complexType>



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    <xs:complexType name="stoponerrorResponseType">
      <xs:attribute name="code" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="text" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="context" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="configure_teamResponseType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="teammate" type="teammateType" minOccurs="0"
          maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="numteam" type="xs:integer" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <!-- Definitions for MSCML event subscriptions and -->
    <!-- embedded types -->
    <xs:complexType name="conference_eventsubscriptionType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="events">
          <xs:complexType>
            <xs:sequence>
              <xs:element name="activetalkers"
                type="activetalkersSubscriptionType"/>
            </xs:sequence>
          </xs:complexType>
        </xs:element>
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="activetalkersSubscriptionType">
      <xs:attribute name="report" type="yesnoType" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="interval" type="xs:string" default="60s"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="leg_eventsubscriptionType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="events">
          <xs:complexType>
            <xs:sequence>
              <xs:element name="keypress"
                type="keypressSubscriptionType" minOccurs="0"
                  maxOccurs="1"/>
              <xs:element name="signal" type="signalSubscriptionType"
                minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
            </xs:sequence>
          </xs:complexType>
        </xs:element>
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="keypressSubscriptionType">
      <xs:attribute name="report" use="required">



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        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="standard"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="long"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="both"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="none"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="maskdigits" type="yesnoType" default="no"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="signalSubscriptionType">
      <xs:attribute name="type" type="xs:NMTOKEN" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="report" type="yesnoType" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <!-- Definitions for MSCML event notifications and -->
    <!-- embedded types. -->
    <xs:complexType name="conferenceNotificationType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="activetalkers"
          type="activetalkersNotificationType" minOccurs="0"/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name="uniqueid" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="numtalkers" type="xs:string"
        use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="activetalkersNotificationType">
      <xs:sequence minOccurs="0">
        <xs:element name="talker" maxOccurs="unbounded">
          <xs:complexType>
            <xs:attribute name="callid" type="xs:string"
             use="required"/>
          </xs:complexType>
        </xs:element>
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="keypressNotificationType">
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name="status" type="statusType"/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name="digit" type="DTMFkeyType" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="length" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="standard"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="long"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>



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      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="method" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="standard"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="long"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="double"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="interdigittime" type="xs:string"
        use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="statusType">
      <xs:attribute name="command" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:string">
            <xs:enumeration value="idle"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="play"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="collect"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="record"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="duration" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="signalNotificationType">
      <xs:attribute name="type" use="required" fixed="busy"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <!-- Definitions for miscellaneous embedded, helper data types -->
    <xs:complexType name="promptType">
      <xs:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
        <xs:element name="audio" type="promptcontentType"/>
        <xs:element name="variable" type="spokenvariableType"/>
      </xs:choice>
      <xs:attribute name="locale" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="baseurl" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="stoponerror" type="yesnoType" default="no"/>
      <xs:attribute name="gain" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="gaindelta" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="rate" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="ratedelta" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="repeat" type="xs:string" default="1"/>
      <xs:attribute name="duration" type="xs:string"
        default="infinite"/>
      <xs:attribute name="offset" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="delay" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
    </xs:complexType>



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    <xs:complexType name="promptcontentType">
      <xs:attribute name="url" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
      <xs:attribute name="encoding" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="gain" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="gaindelta" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="rate" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
      <xs:attribute name="ratedelta" type="xs:string" default="0"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="spokenvariableType">
      <xs:attribute name="type" use="required">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="dat"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="dig"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="dur"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="mth"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="mny"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="num"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="sil"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="str"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="tme"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="wkd"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="subtype">
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
            <xs:enumeration value="mdy"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="dmy"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="ymd"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="ndn"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="t12"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="t24"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="USD"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="gen"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="ndn"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="crd"/>
            <xs:enumeration value="ord"/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name="value" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:simpleType name="yesnoType">
      <xs:restriction base="xs:NMTOKEN">
        <xs:enumeration value="yes"/>
        <xs:enumeration value="no"/>



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        <xs:enumeration value="1"/>
        <xs:enumeration value="0"/>
        <xs:enumeration value="true"/>
        <xs:enumeration value="false"/>
      </xs:restriction>
    </xs:simpleType>
    <xs:simpleType name="DTMFkeyType">
      <xs:restriction base="xs:string">
        <xs:pattern value="[0-9]"/>
        <xs:pattern value="[A-D]"/>
        <xs:pattern value="[a-d]"/>
        <xs:pattern value="#"/>
        <xs:pattern value="\*"/>
      </xs:restriction>
    </xs:simpleType>
    <xs:complexType name="gainType">
      <xs:choice>
        <xs:element name="auto" type="autogainType"/>
        <xs:element name="fixed" type="fixedgainType"/>
      </xs:choice>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="autogainType">
      <xs:attribute name="startlevel" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="targetlevel" type="xs:string"/>
      <xs:attribute name="silencethreshold" type="xs:string"/>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:complexType name="fixedgainType">
      <xs:attribute name="level" type="xs:string"/>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:schema>

12.  IANA Considerations

12.1.  IANA Registration of MIME Media Type application/
     mediaservercontrol+xml

     MIME media type name: application
     MIME subtype name: mediaservercontrol+xml
     Required parameters: none
     Optional parameters: charset

     charset This parameter has identical semantics to the charset
        parameter of the "application/xml" media type, as specified in
        XML Media Types [8].

  Encoding considerations: See RFC 3023 [8].
  Interoperability considerations: See RFC 2023 [8] and RFC 5022.
  Published specification: RFC 5022



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  Applications that use this media type: Multimedia, enhanced
     conferencing and interactive applications.
  Personal and email address for further
     information: [email protected] [31]
  Intended usage: COMMON

13.  Security Considerations

  Because media flows through a media server in a conference, the media
  server itself MUST protect the integrity, confidentiality, and
  security of the sessions.  It should not be possible for a conference
  participant, on her own behalf, to be able to "tap in" to another
  conference without proper authorization.

  Because conferencing is a high-value application, the media server
  SHOULD implement appropriate security measures.  This includes, but
  is not limited to, access lists for application servers.  That is,
  the media server only allows a select list of application or proxy
  servers to create conferences, to invite participants to sessions,
  etc.  Note that the mechanisms for such security, like private
  networks, shared certificates, MAC white/black lists, are beyond the
  scope of this document.

  Security concerns are one important reason MSCML limits requests with
  conference scope to a separate control leg per conference.  MSCML
  uses the simple, proven, Internet-scale security model of SIP to
  determine if a client is who they say they are (authentication) and
  if they are allowed to create and manipulate a conference.  However,
  the security model to enable a control leg to manipulate arbitrary
  conferences on the media server is extremely difficult.  Not only
  would one need to authenticate and authorize the basic conference
  primitives, but privacy considerations require policies for one
  client to access another client's conferences, even if the two
  clients are on the same host.  For example, if the media server
  allowed any control leg to control any conference, an authorized but
  unrelated client could maliciously attach itself to an existing
  session and record or tap the conversation without the participant's
  knowledge or consent.

  Participants give implicit authorization to their applications by
  virtue of the INVITE to the application.  However, there is no trust,
  explicit or implicit, between the users of one service and a distinct
  client of another service.

  All MSCML messages are sent within an INVITE-created SIP dialog.  As
  a result, it would be difficult for an entity other than the original
  requestor to interfere with an established MSCML session, as this
  would require detailed information on the dialog state.  This allows



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  multiple applications to utilize the resources of a single media
  server simultaneously without interfering with one another.

  Because of the sensitive nature of collected data, such as credit
  card numbers or other identifying information, the media server MUST
  support sips: and TLS.  Clients, who presumably know the value of the
  information they collect, as well as the privacy expectations of
  their users, are free to use clear text signaling or encrypted secure
  signaling, depending on the application's needs.  Likewise, the media
  server SHOULD support Secure Realtime Transport Protocol (SRTP) [9].
  Again, the clients are free to negotiate the appropriate level of
  media security.

  The media management facilities of MSCML, such as the <managecontent>
  (Section 8) request, assume a trust relationship between the media
  server and file server.  This scenario is similar to the one
  addressed by URLAUTH [20].  Namely, the media server is acting on
  behalf of a given user, yet the media server does not have
  credentials for that user.  One might be tempted to use the user:pass
  facility of the HTTP URI to offer per-user security, but that also
  requires that the media server be secure, as the media server would
  need to know the user credentials in a form that is easily
  compromised (clear text passwords).

  The IETF is investigating methods for providing per-user or per-
  instance authorization of third-party http writing, as is needed for
  other protocols as well, such as WEBDAV [21].  However, until that
  work is completed, media server implementations MUST be prepared to
  authenticate themselves to file and web servers using appropriate
  authentication means.  At a minimum, the media server MUST support
  HTTPS basic authentication.  Implementers should note that the media
  server will need to respond appropriately to whatever authentication
  mechanism the file server requires.

  As this is an XML markup, all the security considerations of RFC 3023
  [8] apply.

14.  References

14.1.  Normative References

  [1]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
        Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [2]   Burger, E., Van Dyke, J., and A. Spitzer, "Basic Network Media
        Services with SIP", RFC 4240, December 2005.

  [3]   Donovan, S., "The SIP INFO Method", RFC 2976, October 2000.



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  [4]   Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, "SIP:
        Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.

  [5]   "Network call signalling protocol for the delivery of time-
        critical services over cable television networks using cable
        modems", ITU-T J.162, March 2001.

  [6]   Groves, C., Pantaleo, M., Anderson, T., and T. Taylor, "Gateway
        Control Protocol Version 1", RFC 3525, June 2003.

  [7]   Thompson, H., Beech, D., Maloney, M., and N. Mendelsohn, "XML
        Schema Part 1: Structures", W3C REC REC-xmlschema-1-20010502,
        May 2001.

  [8]   Murata, M., St. Laurent, S., and D. Kohn, "XML Media Types",
        RFC 3023, January 2001.

  [9]   Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
        Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)", RFC
        3711, March 2004.

14.2.  Informative References

  [10]  Rosenberg, J., "A Framework for Conferencing with the Session
        Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4353, February 2006.

  [11]  Carter, J., Danielsen, P., Hunt, A., Ferrans, J., Lucas, B.,
        Porter, B., Rehor, K., Tryphonas, S., McGlashan, S., and D.
        Burnett, "Voice Extensible Markup Language (VoiceXML) Version
        2.0", W3C REC REC-voicexml20-20040316, March 2004.

  [12]  International Packet Communications Consortium, "IPCC Reference
        Architecture V2", June 2002.

  [13]  European Telecommunications Standards Institute, "Digital
        cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+); Universal Mobile
        Telecommunications System (UMTS); IP Multimedia Subsystem
        (IMS); Stage 2 (3GPP TS 23.228 version 7.2.0 Release 7)",
        December 2005.

  [14]  Hollenbeck, S., Rose, M., and L. Masinter, "Guidelines for the
        Use of Extensible Markup Language (XML) within IETF Protocols",
        BCP 70, RFC 3470, January 2003.

  [15]  Jacobs, I., Lie, H., Bos, B., and C. Lilley, "Cascading Style
        Sheets, level 2 (CSS2) Specification", W3C REC REC-CSS2-
        19980512, May 1998.



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  [16]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and O. Levin, "A Session
        Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Conference State",
        RFC 4575, August 2006.

  [17]  Cable Television Laboratories, Inc., "Audio Server Protocol",
        January 2005.

  [18]  "Procedures for document facsimile transmission in the general
        switched telephone network", Recommendation T.30, April 1999.

  [19]  "Procedures for real-time Group 3 facsimile communication over
        IP networks", Recommendation T.38, March 2002.

  [20]  Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - URLAUTH
        Extension", RFC 4467, May 2006.

  [21]  Dusseault, L., Ed., "HTTP Extensions for Web Distributed
        Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)", RFC 4918, June 2007.

  [22]  Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information
        Technology - Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) - Part
        1: Base Definitions, Chapter 9", IEEE Standard 1003.1, June
        2001.

  [23]  Burger, E. and M. Dolly, "A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
        Event Package for Key Press Stimulus (KPML)", RFC 4730,
        November 2006.

  [24]  Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 2821, April
        2001.

  [25]  Campbell, B., Ed., Mahy, R., Ed., and C. Jennings, Ed., "The
        Message Session Relay Protocol", Work in Progress, February
        2007.

URIs

  [26]  <http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/sip-charter.html>

  [27]  <http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/sipping-charter.html>

  [28]  <http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/mmusic.html>

  [29]  <http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/xcon-charter.html>

  [30]  <http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Specs/html-info/23228.htm>

  [31]  <mailto:[email protected]>



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Appendix A.  Regex Grammar Syntax

  The regular expression syntax used in MSCML is a telephony-oriented
  subset of POSIX Extended Regular Expressions (ERE) [22] termed Digit
  REGular EXpression (DRegex).  This syntax was first described in KPML
  [23].

  DRegex includes ordinary characters, special characters, bracket
  expressions, and interval expressions.  These entities are defined in
  the list below.

  . matches digits 0-9, *, #, and A-D (case insensitive)
  *  matches the * character
  #  matches the # character
  [character selector] matches any character in selector
  [range1-range2] matches any character in range from range1 to range2,
     inclusive
  x  matches any digit 0-9
  {m} matches m repetitions of the previous pattern
  {m,} matches m or more repetitions of the previous pattern
  {,n} matches at most n (including zero) repetitions of the previous
     pattern
  {m,n} at least m and at most n repetitions of the previous pattern
  L  the presence of 'L' in any regex expression causes the media
     server to enable "long" digit detection mode.  See Section 7.1 for
     the definition of "long" digits.

  Table 7 illustrates DRegex usage through examples.

      +--------------+--------------------------------------------+
      | Example      | Description                                |
      +--------------+--------------------------------------------+
      | 1            | Matches the digit 1                        |
      | [179]        | Matches 1, 7, or 9                         |
      | [2-9]        | Matches 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9             |
      | [02-46-9A-D] | Matches 0, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, A, B, C, D |
      | x            | Matches 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9       |
      | .            | Matches 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, A, B,|
      |              | C, D, #, *                                 |
      | *6[179#]     | Matches *61, *67, *69, or *6#              |
      | x{10}        | Ten digits (0-9)                           |
      | 011x{7,15}   | 011 followed by seven to fifteen digits    |
      | L*           | Long star                                  |
      +--------------+--------------------------------------------+

                        Table 7: DRegex Examples





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Appendix B.  Contributors

  Jeff Van Dyke and Andy Spitzer did the concept, development,
  documentation, and execution for MSCML at SnowShore Networks, Inc.,
  which is now part of Cantata Technology, Inc.  Andy Spitzer's
  original work at The Telephone Connection, Inc., influenced the IVR
  implementation.  Mary Ann Leekley implemented the personalized mix
  feature and several other enhancements.

  Cliff Schornak of Commetrex and Jeff Van Dyke developed the facsimile
  service.

  Jai Cauvet, Rolando Herrero, Srinivas Motamarri, and Ashish Patel
  contributed greatly by testing MSCML.

Appendix C.  Acknowledgements

  The following individuals provided valuable assistance in the
  direction, development, or debugging of MSCML:

  o  Brian Badger and Phil Crable from Verizon Business
  o  Stephane Bastien from BroadSoft
  o  Peter Danielsen of Lucent Technologies
  o  Kevin Flemming, formerly of SnowShore Networks, Inc.
  o  Wesley Hicks and Ravindra Kabre, formerly from Sonus Networks
  o  Jon Hinckley from SkyWave/Sestro
  o  Terence Lobo, formerly of SnowShore Networks, Inc.
  o  Kunal Nawale, formerly of SnowShore Networks, Inc.
  o  Edwina Nowicki, formerly of SnowShore Networks, Inc.
  o  Diana Rawlins and Sharadha Vijay, formerly of WorldCom
  o  Gaurav Srivastva and Subhash Verma from BayPackets
  o  Kevin Summers from Sonus Networks
  o  Tim Wong from at&t

  The authors would like to thank Cullen Jennings and Dan Wing from
  Cisco Systems for their helpful review comments.

  The authors would also like to thank Scotty Farber for applying her
  technical writing expertise to the documentation of MSCML.












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Authors' Addresses

  Jeff Van Dyke
  Cantata Technology, Inc.
  18 Keewaydin Dr.
  Salem, NH  03079
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Eric Burger (editor)
  BEA Systems, Inc.
  USA

  Email: [email protected]
  URI: http://www.standardstrack.com


  Andy Spitzer
  Bluesocket Inc.
  10 North Avenue
  Burlington, MA  01803
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]

























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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78 and at www.rfc-editor.org/copyright.html, and
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