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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
Network Working Group                                        B. ThompsonRequest for Comments: 4170                                      T. KorenBCP: 110                                                         D. WingCategory: Best Current Practice                            Cisco Systems                                                           November 2005Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP (TCRTP)Status of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the   Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).Abstract   This document describes a method to improve the bandwidth utilization   of RTP streams over network paths that carry multiple Real-time   Transport Protocol (RTP) streams in parallel between two endpoints,   as in voice trunking.  The method combines standard protocols that   provide compression, multiplexing, and tunneling over a network path   for the purpose of reducing the bandwidth used when multiple RTP   streams are carried over that path.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 1]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Is Bandwidth Costly? .......................................31.2. Overview of Protocols ......................................31.3. Document Focus .............................................41.4. Choice of Enhanced CRTP ....................................41.5. Reducing TCRTP Overhead ....................................42. Protocol Operation and Recommended Extensions ...................42.1. Models .....................................................52.2. Header Compression: ECRTP ..................................52.2.1. Synchronizing ECRTP States ..........................52.2.2. Out-of-Order Packets ................................62.3. Multiplexing: PPP Multiplexing .............................6           2.3.1. PPP Multiplex Transmitter Modifications for                  Tunneling ...........................................72.3.2. Tunneling Inefficiencies ............................82.4. Tunneling: L2TP ............................................82.4.1. Tunneling and DiffServ ..............................92.5. Encapsulation Formats ......................................93. Bandwidth Efficiency ...........................................103.1. Multiplexing Gains ........................................103.2. Packet Loss Rate ..........................................103.3. Bandwidth Calculation for Voice and Video Applications ....103.3.1. Voice Bandwidth Calculation Example ................123.3.2. Voice Bandwidth Comparison Table ...................133.3.3. Video Bandwidth Calculation Example ................133.3.4. TCRTP over ATM .....................................143.3.5. TCRTP over Non-ATM Networks ........................144. Example Implementation of TCRTP ................................154.1. Suggested PPP and L2TP Negotiation for TCRTP ..............174.2. PPP Negotiation TCRTP .....................................174.2.1. LCP Negotiation ....................................174.2.2. IPCP Negotiation ...................................184.3. L2TP Negotiation ..........................................194.3.1. Tunnel Establishment ...............................194.3.2. Session Establishment ..............................194.3.3. Tunnel Tear Down ...................................205. Security Considerations ........................................206. Acknowledgements ...............................................217. References .....................................................217.1. Normative References ......................................217.2. Informative References ....................................22Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 2]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20051.  Introduction   This document describes a way to combine existing protocols for   compression, multiplexing, and tunneling to save bandwidth for some   RTP applications.1.1.  Is Bandwidth Costly?   On certain links, such as customer access links, the cost of   bandwidth is widely acknowledged to be a significant concern.   protocols such as CRTP (Compressed RTP, [CRTP]) are well suited to   help bandwidth inefficiencies of protocols such as VoIP over these   links.   Unacknowledged by many, however, is the cost of long-distance WAN   links.  While some voice-over-packet technologies such as Voice over   ATM (VoAAL2, [I.363.2]) and Voice over MPLS provide bandwidth   efficiencies (because both technologies lack IP, UDP, and RTP   headers), neither VoATM nor VoMPLS provide direct access to voice-   over-packet services available to Voice over IP.  Thus, goals of WAN   link cost reduction are met at the expense of lost interconnection   opportunities to other networks.   TCRTP solves the VoIP bandwidth discrepancy, especially for large,   voice-trunking applications.1.2.  Overview of Protocols   Header compression is accomplished using Enhanced CRTP (ECRTP,   [ECRTP]).  ECRTP is an enhancement to classical CRTP [CRTP] that   works better over long delay links, such as the end-to-end tunneling   links described in this document.  This header compression reduces   the IP, UDP, and RTP headers.   Multiplexing is accomplished using PPP Multiplexing [PPP-MUX].   Tunneling PPP is accomplished by using L2TP [L2TPv3].   CRTP operates link-by-link; that is, to achieve compression over   multiple router hops, CRTP must be employed twice on each router --   once on ingress, again on egress.  In contrast, TCRTP described in   this document does not require any additional per-router processing   to achieve header compression.  Instead, headers are compressed end-   to-end, saving bandwidth on all intermediate links.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 3]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20051.3.  Document Focus   This document is primarily concerned with bandwidth savings for Voice   over IP (VoIP) applications over high-delay networks.  However, the   combinations of protocols described in this document can be used to   provide similar bandwidth savings for other RTP applications such as   video, and bandwidth savings are included for a sample video   application.1.4.  Choice of Enhanced CRTP   CRTP [CRTP] describes the use of RTP header compression on an   unspecified link layer transport, but typically PPP is used.  For   CRTP to compress headers, it must be implemented on each PPP link.  A   lot of context is required to successfully run CRTP, and memory and   processing requirements are high, especially if multiple hops must   implement CRTP to save bandwidth on each of the hops.  At higher line   rates, CRTP's processor consumption becomes prohibitively expensive.   To avoid the per-hop expense of CRTP, a simplistic solution is to use   CRTP with L2TP to achieve end-to-end CRTP.  However, as described in   [ECRTP], CRTP is only suitable for links with low delay and low loss.   However, once multiple router hops are involved, CRTP's expectation   of low delay and low loss can no longer be met.  Further, packets can   arrive out of order.   Therefore, this document describes the use of Enhanced CRTP [ECRTP],   which supports high delay, both packet loss, and misordering between   the compressor and decompressor.1.5.  Reducing TCRTP Overhead   If only one stream is tunneled (L2TP) and compressed (ECRTP), there   are little bandwidth savings.  Multiplexing is helpful to amortize   the overhead of the tunnel header over many RTP payloads.  The   multiplexing format proposed by this document is PPP multiplexing   [PPP-MUX].  SeeSection 2.3 for details.2.  Protocol Operation and Recommended Extensions   This section describes how to combine three protocols: Enhanced CRTP,   PPP Multiplexing, and L2TP Tunneling, to save bandwidth for RTP   applications such as Voice over IP.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 4]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20052.1.  Models   TCRTP can typically be implemented in two ways.  The most   straightforward is to implement TCRTP in the gateways terminating the   RTP streams:       [voice gateway]---[voice gateway]                       ^                       |                 TCRTP over IP   Another way TCRTP can be implemented is with an external   concentration device.  This device could be placed at strategic   places in the network and could dynamically create and destroy TCRTP   sessions without the participation of RTP-generating endpoints.       [voice GW]\                                   /[voice GW]       [voice GW]---[concentrator]---[concentrator]---[voice GW]       [voice GW]/                                   \[voice GW]                  ^                ^                ^                  |                |                |             RTP over IP     TCRTP over IP     RTP over IP   Such a design also allows classical CRTP [CRTP] to be used on links   with only a few active flows per link (where TCRTP isn't efficient;   seeSection 3):       [voice GW]\                                   /[voice GW]       [voice GW]---[concentrator]---[concentrator]---[voice GW]       [voice GW]/                                   \[voice GW]                  ^                ^                ^                  |                |                |           CRTP over IP     TCRTP over IP     RTP over IP2.2.  Header Compression: ECRTP   As described in [ECRTP], classical CRTP [CRTP] is not suitable over   long-delay WAN links commonly used when tunneling, as proposed by   this document.  Thus, ECRTP should be used instead of CRTP.2.2.1.  Synchronizing ECRTP States   When the compressor receives an RTP packet that has an unpredicted   change in the RTP header, the compressor should send a COMPRESSED_UDP   packet (described in [ECRTP]) to synchronize the ECRTP decompressor   state.  The COMPRESSED_UDP packet updates the RTP context in the   decompressor.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 5]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   To ensure delivery of updates of context variables, COMPRESSED_UDP   packets should be delivered using the robust operation described in   [ECRTP].   Because the "twice" algorithm described in [ECRTP] relies on UDP   checksums, the IP stack on the RTP transmitter should transmit UDP   checksums.  If UDP checksums are not used, the ECRTP compressor   should use the CRTP Headers checksum described in [ECRTP].2.2.2.  Out-of-Order Packets   Tunneled transport does not guarantee ordered delivery of packets.   Therefore, the ECRTP decompressor must operate correctly in the   presence of out of order packets.   The order of packets for RTP is determined by the RTP sequence   number.  To add robustness in case of packet loss or packet   reordering, ECRTP sends short deltas together with the full value   when updating context variables, and repeats the updates in N   packets, where N is an engineered constant tuned to the kind of pipe   ECRTP is used for.   By contrast, [ROHC] compresses out the sequence number and another   layer is necessary for [ROHC] to handle out-of-order delivery of   packets over a tunnel [REORDER].2.3.  Multiplexing: PPP Multiplexing   Both CRTP and ECRTP require a layer two protocol that allows   identifying different protocols.  [PPP] is suited for this.   When CRTP is used inside of a tunnel, the header compression   associated with CRTP will reduce the size of the IP, UDP, and IP   headers of the IP packet carried in the tunnel.  However, the tunnel   itself has overhead due to its IP header and the tunnel header (the   information necessary to identify the tunneled payload).  One way to   reduce the overhead of the IP header and tunnel header is to   multiplex multiple RTP payloads in a single tunneled packet.   [PPP-MUX] describes an encapsulation that combines multiple PPP   payloads into one multiplexed payload.  PPP multiplexing allows any   supported PPP payload type to be multiplexed.  This multiplexed frame   is then carried as a single PPPMUX payload in the IP tunnel.  This   allows multiple RTP payloads to be carried in a single IP tunnel   packet and allows the overhead of the uncompressed IP and tunnel   headers to be amortized over multiple RTP payloads.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 6]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   During PPP establishment of the TCRTP tunnel, only LCP and IPCP (for   header compression) are required -- IP addresses do not need to be   negotiated, nor is authentication necessary.  SeeSection 4.1 for   details.2.3.1.  PPP Multiplex Transmitter Modifications for Tunneling   Section 1.2 of [PPP-MUX] describes an example transmitter procedure   that can be used to implement a PPP Multiplex transmitter.  The   transmission procedure described in this section includes a parameter   MAX-SF-LEN that is used to limit the maximum size of a PPP Multiplex   frame.   There are two reasons for limiting the size of a PPP Multiplex frame.   First, a PPPMUX frame should never exceed the Maximum Receive Unit   (MRU) of a physical link.  Second, when a PPP session and its   associated flow control are bound to a physical link, the MAX-SF-LEN   parameter forms an upper limit on the amount of time a multiplex   packet can be held before being transmitted.  When flow control for   the PPP Multiplex transmitter is bound to a physical link, the clock   rate of the physical link can be used to pull frames from the PPP   Multiplex transmitter.   This type of flow control limits the maximum amount of time a PPP   multiplex frame can be held before being transmitted to MAX-SF-LEN /   Link Speed.   Tunnel interfaces are typically not bound to physical interfaces.   Because of this, a tunnel interface has no well-known transmission   rate associated with it.  This means that flow control in the PPPMUX   transmitter cannot rely on the clock of a physical link to pull   frames from the multiplex transmitter.  Instead, a timer must be used   to limit the amount of time a PPPMUX frame can be held before being   transmitted.  The timer along with the MAX-SF-LEN parameter should be   used to limit the amount of time a PPPMUX frame is held before being   transmitted.   The following extensions to the PPPMUX transmitter logic should be   made for use with tunnels.  The flow control logic of the PPP   transmitter should be modified to collect incoming payloads until one   of two events has occurred:          (1)  a specific number of octets, MAX-SF-LEN, has arrived at               the multiplexer, or          (2)  a timer, called T, has expired.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 7]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   When either condition is satisfied, the multiplexed PPP payload is   transmitted.   The purpose of MAX-SF-LEN is to ensure that a PPPMUX payload does not   exceed the MTU size of any of the possible physical links that the   tunnel can be associated with.  The value of MAX-SF-LEN should be   less than or equal to the minimum of MRU-2 (maximum size of length   field) and 16,383 (14 bits) for all possible physical interfaces that   the tunnel may be associated with.   The timer T provides an upper delay bound for tunnel interfaces.   Timer T is reset whenever a multiplexed payload is sent to the next   encapsulation layer.  The behavior of this timer is similar to AAL2's   Timer_CU described in [I.363.2].  Each PPPMUX transmitter should have   its own Timer T.   The optimal values for T will vary depending upon the rate at which   payloads are expected to arrive at the multiplexer and the delay   budget for the multiplexing function.  For voice applications, the   value of T would typically be 5-10 milliseconds.2.3.2.  Tunneling Inefficiencies   To get reasonable bandwidth efficiency using multiplexing within an   L2TP tunnel, multiple RTP streams should be active between the source   and destination of an L2TP tunnel.   If the source and destination of the L2TP tunnel are the same as the   source and destination of the ECRTP sessions, then the source and   destination must have multiple active RTP streams to get any benefit   from multiplexing.   Because of this limitation, TCRTP is mostly useful for applications   where many RTP sessions run between a pair of RTP endpoints.  The   number of simultaneous RTP sessions required to reduce the header   overhead to the desired level depends on the size of the L2TP header.   A smaller L2TP header will result in fewer simultaneous RTP sessions   being required to produce bandwidth efficiencies similar to CRTP.2.4.  Tunneling: L2TP   L2TP tunnels should be used to tunnel the ECRTP payloads end to end.   L2TP includes methods for tunneling messages used in PPP session   establishment, such as NCP.  This allows [IPCP-HC] to negotiate ECRTP   compression/decompression parameters.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 8]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20052.4.1.  Tunneling and DiffServ   RTP streams may be marked with Expedited Forwarding (EF) bits, as   described in [EF-PHB].  When such a packet is tunneled, the tunnel   header must also be marked for the same EF bits, as required by   [EF-PHB].  It is important to not mix EF and non-EF traffic in the   same EF-marked multiplexed tunnel.2.5.  Encapsulation Formats   The packet format for an RTP packet, compressed with RTP header   compression as defined in ECRTP, is:        +---------+---------+-------------+-----------------------+        |         |   MSTI  |             |                       |        | Context |         |     UDP     |                       |        |   ID    |   Link  |   Checksum  |       RTP Data        |        |         | Sequence|             |                       |        |  (1-2)  |   (1)   |     (0-2)   |                       |        +---------+---------+-------------+-----------------------+   The packet format of a multiplexed PPP packet as defined by [PPP-MUX]   is:        +-------+---+------+-------+-----+   +---+------+-------+-----+        | Mux   |P L|      |       |     |   |P L|      |       |     |        | PPP   |F X|Len1  |  PPP  |     |   |F X|LenN  |  PPP  |     |        | Prot. |F T|      | Prot. |Info1| ~ |F T|      | Prot. |InfoN|        | Field |          | Field1|     |   |          |FieldN |     |        | (1)   |1-2 octets| (0-2) |     |   |1-2 octets| (0-2) |     |        +-------+----------+-------+-----+   +----------+-------+-----+   The combined format used for TCRTP with a single payload is all of   the above packets concatenated.  Here is an example with one payload:        +------+-------+----------+-------+-------+-----+-------+----+        | IP   | Mux   |P L|      |       |       | MSTI|       |    |        |header| PPP   |F X|Len1  |  PPP  |Context|     | UDP   |RTP |        | (20) | Proto |F T|      | Proto |  ID   | Link| Cksum |Data|        |      | Field |          | Field1|       | Seq |       |    |        |      | (1)   |1-2 octets| (0-2) | (1-2) | (1) | (0-2) |    |        +------+-------+----------+-------+-------+-----+-------+----+               |<------------- IP payload ------------------------->|                       |<----- PPPmux payload --------------------->|   If the tunnel contains multiplexed traffic, multiple "PPPMux   payload"s are transmitted in one IP packet.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                  [Page 9]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20053.  Bandwidth Efficiency   The expected bandwidth efficiency attainable with TCRTP depends upon   a number of factors.  These factors include multiplexing gain,   expected packet loss rate across the network, and rates of change of   specific fields within the IP and RTP headers.  This section also   describes how TCRTP significantly enhances bandwidth efficiency for   voice over IP over ATM.3.1.  Multiplexing Gains   Multiplexing reduces the overhead associated with the layer 2 and   tunnel headers.  Increasing the number of CRTP payloads combined into   one multiplexed PPP payload increases multiplexing gain.  As traffic   increases within a tunnel, more payloads are combined in one   multiplexed payload.  This will increase multiplexing gain.3.2.  Packet Loss Rate   Loss of a multiplexed packet causes packet loss for all of the flows   within the multiplexed packet.   When the expected loss rate in a tunnel is relatively low (less than   perhaps 5%), the robust operation (described in [ECRTP]) should be   sufficient to ensure delivery of state changes.  This robust   operation is characterized by a parameter N, which means that the   probability of more than N adjacent packets getting lost on the   tunnel is small.   A value of N=1 will protect against the loss of a single packet   within a compressed session, at the expense of bandwidth.  A value of   N=2 will protect against the loss of two packets in a row within a   compressed session and so on.  Higher values of N have higher   bandwidth penalties.   The optimal value of N will depend on the loss rate in the tunnel.   If the loss rate is high (above perhaps 5%), more advanced techniques   must be employed.  Those techniques are beyond the scope of this   document.3.3.  Bandwidth Calculation for Voice and Video Applications   The following formula uses the factors described above to model per-   flow bandwidth usage for both voice and video applications.  These   variables are defined:Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 10]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   SOV-TCRTP, unit: octet.  Per-payload overhead of ECRTP and the          multiplexed PPP header.  This value does not include          additional overhead for updating IP ID or the RTP Time Stamp          fields (see [ECRTP] for details on IP ID).  The value assumes          the use of the COMPRESSED_RTP payload type.  It consists of 1          octet for the ECRTP context ID, 1 octet for COMPRESSED_RTP          flags, 2 octets for the UDP checksum, 1 octet for PPP protocol          ID, and 1 octet for the multiplexed PPP length field.  The          total is 6 octets.   POV-TCRTP, unit: octet.  Per-packet overhead of tunneled ECRTP.  This          is the overhead for the tunnel header and the multiplexed PPP          payload type.  This value is 20 octets for the IP header, 4          octets for the L2TPv3 header and 1 octet for the multiplexed          PPP protocol ID.  The total is 25 octets.   TRANSMIT-LENGTH, unit: milliseconds.  The average duration of a          transmission (such as a talk spurt for voice streams).   SOV-TSTAMP, unit: octet.  Additional per-payload overhead of the          COMPRESSED_UDP header that includes the absolute time stamp          field.  This value includes 1 octet for the extra flags field          in the COMPRESSED_UDP header and 4 octets for the absolute          time stamp, for a total of 5 octets.   SOV-IPID, unit: octet.  Additional per-payload overhead of the          COMPRESSED_UDP header that includes the absolute IPID field.          This value includes 2 octets for the absolute IPID.  This          value also includes 1 octet for the extra flags field in the          COMPRESSED_UDP header.  The total is 3 octets.   IPID-RATIO, unit: integer values 0 or 1.  Indicates the frequency at          which IPID will be updated by the compressor.  If IPID is          changing randomly and thus always needs to be updated, then          the value is 1.  If IPID is changing by a fixed constant          amount between payloads of a flow, then IPID-RATIO will be 0.          The value of this variable does not consider the IPID value at          the beginning of a voice or video transmission, as that is          considered by the variable TRANSMIT-LENGTH.  The          implementation of the sending IP stack and RTP application          controls this behavior.  SeeSection 1.1.   NREP, unit: integer (usually a number between 1 and 3).  This is the          number of times an update field will be repeated in ECRTP          headers to increase the delivery rate between the compressor          and decompressor.  For this example, we will assume NREP=2.   PAYLOAD-SIZE, unit: octets.  The size of the RTP payload in octets.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 11]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   MUX-SIZE, unit: count.  The number of PPP payloads multiplexed into          one multiplexed PPP payload.   SAMPLE-PERIOD, unit: milliseconds.  The average delay between          transmissions of voice or video payloads for each flow in the          multiplex.  For example, in voice applications the value of          this variable would be 10ms if all calls have a 10ms sample          period.   The formula is:     SOV-TOTAL = SOV-TCRTP + SOV-TSTAMP * (NREP * SAMPLE-PERIOD /                 TRANSMIT-LENGTH) + SOV-IPID * IPID-RATIO     BANDWIDTH = ((PAYLOAD-SIZE + SOV-TOTAL + (POV-TCRTP / MUX-SIZE)) *                 8) / SAMPLE-PERIOD)   The results are:     BANDWIDTH, unit: kilobits per second.  The average amount of               bandwidth used per voice or video flow.     SOV-TOTAL = The total amount of per-payload overhead associated                 with tunneled ECRTP.  It includes the per-payload                 overhead of ECRTP and PPP, timestamp update overhead,                 and IPID update overhead.3.3.1.  Voice Bandwidth Calculation Example   To create an example for a voice application using the above   formulas, we will assume the following usage scenario.  Compressed   voice streams using G.729 compression with a 20 millisecond   packetization period.  In this scenario, VAD is enabled and the   average talk spurt length is 1500 milliseconds.  The IPID field is   changing randomly between payloads of streams.  There is enough   traffic in the tunnel to allow 3 multiplexed payloads.  The following   values apply:        SAMPLE-PERIOD      = 20 milliseconds        TRANSMIT-LENGTH    = 1500 milliseconds        IPID-RATIO         = 1        PAYLOAD-SIZE       = 20 octets        MUX-SIZE           = 3   For this example, per call bandwidth is 16.4 kbits/sec.  Classical   CRTP over a single HDLC link using the same factors as above yields   12.4 kbits/sec.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 12]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   The effect of IPID can have a large effect on per call bandwidth.  If   the above example is recalculated using an IPID-RATIO of 0, then the   per call bandwidth is reduced to 13.8 kbits/sec.  Classical CRTP over   a single HDLC link, using these same factors, yields 11.2 kbits/call.3.3.2.  Voice Bandwidth Comparison Table   The bandwidth values are as follows when using 5 simultaneous calls,   no voice activity detection (VAD), G.729 with 20ms packetization   interval, and not considering RTCP overhead:       Normal VoIP over PPP:            124 kbps       with classical CRTP on a link:    50 kbps (savings: 59%)       with TCRTP over PPP:              62 kbps (savings: 50%)       with TCRTP over AAL5:             85 kbps (savings: 31%)3.3.3.  Video Bandwidth Calculation Example   Since TCRTP can be used to save bandwidth on any type of RTP   encapsulated flow, it can be used to save bandwidth for video   applications.  This section documents an example of TCRTP-based   bandwidth savings for MPEG-2 encoded video.   To create an example for a video application using the above   formulas, we will assume the following usage scenario.  RTP   encapsulation of MPEG System and Transport Streams is performed as   described inRFC 2250.  Frames for MPEG-2 encoded video are sent   continuously, so the TRANSMIT-LENGTH variable in the bandwidth   formula is essentially infinite.  The IPID field is changing randomly   between payloads of streams.  There is enough traffic in the tunnel   to allow 3 multiplexed payloads.  The following values apply:        SAMPLE-PERIOD      = 2.8 milliseconds        TRANSMIT-LENGTH    = infinite        IPID-RATIO         = 1        PAYLOAD-SIZE       = 1316 octets        MUX-SIZE           = 3   For this example, per flow bandwidth is 3.8 Mbits/sec.  MPEG video   with no header compression, using the same factors as above, yields   3.9 Mbits/sec.  While TCRTP does provide some bandwidth savings for   video, the ratio of transmission headers to payload is so small that   the bandwidth savings are insignificant.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20053.3.4.  TCRTP over ATM   IP transport over AAL5 causes a quantizing effect on bandwidth   utilization due to the packets always being multiples of ATM cells.   For example, the payload size for G.729 using 10 millisecond   packetization intervals is 10 octets.  This is much smaller than the   payload size of an ATM cell (48 octets).  When classical CRTP [CRTP]   is used on a link-by-link basis, the IP overhead to payload ratio is   quite good.  However, AAL5 encapsulation and its cell padding always   force the minimum payload size to be one ATM cell, which results in   poor bandwidth utilization.   Instead of wasting this padding, the multiplexing of TCRTP allows   this previously wasted space in the ATM cell to contain useful data.   This is one of the main reasons why multiplexing has such a large   effect on bandwidth utilization with Voice over IP over ATM.   This multiplexing efficiency of TCRTP is similar to AAL2 sub-cell   multiplexing described in [I.363.2].  Unlike AAL2 sub-cell   multiplexing, however, TCRTP's multiplexing efficiency isn't limited   to only ATM networks.3.3.5.  TCRTP over Non-ATM Networks   When TCRTP is used with other layer 2 encapsulations that do not have   a minimum PDU size, the benefit of multiplexing is not as great.   Depending upon the exact overhead of the layer 2 encapsulation, the   benefit of multiplexing might be slightly better or worse than link-   by-link CRTP header compression.  The per-payload overhead of CRTP   tunneling is either 4 or 6 octets.  If classical CRTP plus layer 2   overhead is greater than this amount, TCRTP multiplexing will consume   less bandwidth than classical CRTP when the outer IP header is   amortized over a large number of payloads.   The payload breakeven point can be determined by the following   formula:     POV-L2 * MUX-SIZE >= POV-L2 + POV-TUNNEL + POV-PPPMUX + SOV-PPPMUX          * MUX-SIZE   Where:     POV-L2, unit: octet.  Layer 2 packet overhead: 5 octets for HDLC          encapsulationThompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 14]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005     POV-TUNNEL, unit: octet.  Packet overhead due to tunneling: 24          octets IP header and L2TPv3 header     POV-PPPMUX, unit: octet.  Packet overhead for the multiplexed PPP          protocol ID: 1 octet     SOV-PPPMUX, unit: octet.  Per-payload overhead of PPPMUX, which is          comprised of the payload length field and the ECRTP protocol          ID.  The value of SOV-PPPMUX is typically 1, 2, or 3.   If using HDLC as the layer 2 protocol, the breakeven point (using the   above formula) is when MUX-SIZE = 7.  Thus 7 voice or video flows   need to be multiplexed to make TCRTP as bandwidth-efficient as link-   by-link CRTP compression.4.  Example Implementation of TCRTP   This section describes an example implementation of TCRTP.   Implementations of TCRTP may be done in many ways as long as the   requirements of the associated RFCs are met.   Here is the path an RTP packet takes in this implementation:Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 15]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005         +-------------------------------+             ^         |          Application          |             |         +-------------------------------+             |         |              RTP              |             |         +-------------------------------+        Application and         |              UDP              |            IP stack         +-------------------------------+             |         |              IP               |             |         +-------------------------------+             V                         |                         |  IP forwarding                         |         +-------------------------------+             ^         |             ECRTP             |             |         +-------------------------------+             |         |            PPPMUX             |             |         +-------------------------------+          Tunnel         |             PPP               |         Interface         +-------------------------------+             |         |             L2TP              |             |         +-------------------------------+             |         |              IP               |             |         +-------------------------------+             V                         |                         |  IP forwarding                         |         +-------------------------------+             ^         |            Layer 2            |             |         +-------------------------------+          Physical         |            Physical           |          Interface         +-------------------------------+             V   A protocol stack is configured to create an L2TP tunnel interface to   a destination host.  The tunnel is configured to negotiate the PPP   connection (using NCP IPCP) with ECRTP header compression and PPPMUX.   IP forwarding is configured to route RTP packets to this tunnel.  The   destination UDP port number could distinguish RTP packets from non-   RTP packets.   The transmitting application gathers the RTP data from one source,   and formats an RTP packet.  Lower level application layers add UDP   and IP headers to form a complete IP packet.   The RTP packets are routed to the tunnel interface where headers are   compressed, payloads are multiplexed, and then the packets are   tunneled to the destination host.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 16]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   The operation of the receiving node is the same as the transmitting   node in reverse.4.1.  Suggested PPP and L2TP Negotiation for TCRTP   This section describes the necessary PPP and LT2P negotiations   necessary for establishing a PPP connection and L2TP tunnel with L2TP   header compression.  The negotiation is between two peers: Peer1 and   Peer2.4.2.  PPP Negotiation TCRTP   The Point-to-Point Protocol is described in [PPP].4.2.1.  LCP Negotiation   Link Control Processing (LCP) is described in [PPP].4.2.1.1.  Link Establishment              Peer1                       Peer2              -----                       -----     Configure-Request (no options) ->                                     <- Configure-Ack                                     <- Configure-Request (no options)     Configure-Ack                  ->4.2.1.2.  Link Tear Down        Terminate-Request              ->                                        <- Terminate-AckThompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 17]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20054.2.2.  IPCP Negotiation   The protocol exchange here is described in [IPHCOMP], [PPP], and   [ECRTP].              Peer1                       Peer2              -----                       -----     Configure-Request              ->       Options:       IP-Compression-Protocol         Use protocol 0x61         and sub-parameters         as described in         [IPCP-HC] and [ECRTP]                                     <- Configure-Ack                                     <- Configure-Request                                          Options:                                          IP-Compression-Protocol                                            Use protocol 0x61                                            and sub-parameters                                            as described in                                            [IPCP-HC] and [ECRTP]     Configure-Ack                  ->Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 18]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20054.3.  L2TP Negotiation   L2TP is described in [L2TPv3].4.3.1.  Tunnel Establishment              Peer1                       Peer2              -----                       -----     SCCRQ                          ->       Mandatory AVP's:       Message Type       Protocol Version       Host Name       Framing Capabilities       Assigned Tunnel ID                                     <- SCCRP                                          Mandatory AVP's:                                          Message Type                                          Protocol Version                                          Host Name                                          Framing Capabilities                                          Assigned Tunnel ID     SCCCN                          ->     Mandatory AVP's:       Message Type                                     <- ZLB4.3.2.  Session Establishment              Peer1                       Peer2              -----                       -----     ICRQ                           ->       Mandatory AVP's:       Message Type       Assigned Session ID       Call Serial Number                                         <- ICRP                                          Mandatory AVP's:                                          Message Type                                          Assigned Session ID     ICCN                           ->       Mandatory AVP's:       Message Type       Tx (Connect Speed)       Framing Type                                     <- ZLBThompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 19]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 20054.3.3.  Tunnel Tear Down              Peer1                       Peer2              -----                       -----     StopCCN                        ->       Mandatory AVP's:       Message Type       Assigned Tunnel ID       Result Code                                     <- ZLB5.  Security Considerations   This document describes a method for combining several existing   protocols that implement compression, multiplexing, and tunneling of   RTP streams.  Attacks on the component technologies of TCRTP include   attacks on RTP/RTCP headers and payloads carried within a TCRTP   session, attacks on the compressed headers, attacks on the   multiplexing layer, or attacks on the tunneling negotiation or   transport.  The security issues associated individually with each of   those component technologies are addressed in their respective   specifications, [ECRTP], [PPP-MUX], [L2TPv3], along with the security   considerations for RTP itself [RTP].   However, there may be additional security considerations arising from   the use of these component technologies together.  For example, there   may be an increased risk of unintended misdelivery of packets from   one stream in the multiplex to another due to a protocol malfunction   or data error because the addressing information is more condensed.   This is particularly true if the tunnel is transmitted over a link-   layer protocol that allows delivery of packets containing bit errors,   in combination with a tunnel transport layer option that does not   checksum all of the payload.   The opportunity for malicious misdirection may be increased, relative   to that for a single RTP stream transported by itself, because   addressing information must be unencrypted for the header compression   and multiplexing layers to function.   The primary defense against misdelivery is to make the data unusable   to unintended recipients through cryptographic techniques.  The basic   method for encryption provided in the RTP specification [RTP] is not   suitable because it encrypts the RTP and RTCP headers along with the   payload.  However, the RTP specification also allows alternative   approaches to be defined in separate profile or payload format   specifications wherein only the payload portion of the packet would   be encrypted; therefore, header compression may be applied to the   encrypted packets.  One such profile, [SRTP], provides moreThompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 20]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   sophisticated and complete methods for encryption and message   authentication than the basic approach in [RTP].  Additional methods   may be developed in the future.  Appropriate cryptographic protection   should be incorporated into all TCRTP applications.6.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank the authors ofRFC 2508, Stephen   Casner and Van Jacobson, and the authors ofRFC 2507, Mikael   Degermark, Bjorn Nordgren, and Stephen Pink.   The authors would also like to thank Dana Blair, Alex Tweedley, Paddy   Ruddy, Francois Le Faucheur, Tim Gleeson, Matt Madison, Hussein   Salama, Mallik Tatipamula, Mike Thomas, Mark Townsley, Andrew   Valencia, Herb Wildfeuer, J. Martin Borden, John Geevarghese, and   Shoou Yiu.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [PPP-MUX] Pazhyannur, R., Ali, I., and C. Fox, "PPP Multiplexing",RFC 3153, August 2001.   [ECRTP]   Koren, T., Casner, S., Geevarghese, J., Thompson, B., and             P. Ruddy, "Enhanced Compressed RTP (CRTP) for Links with             High Delay, Packet Loss and Reordering",RFC 3545, July             2003.   [CRTP]    Casner, S. and V. Jacobson, "Compressing IP/UDP/RTP Headers             for Low-Speed Serial Links",RFC 2508, February 1999.   [IPHCOMP] Degermark, M., Nordgren, B., and S. Pink, "IP Header             Compression",RFC 2507, February 1999.   [IPCP-HC] Engan, M., Casner, S., Bormann, C., and T. Koren, "IP             Header Compression over PPP",RFC 3544, July 2003.   [RTP]     Schulzrinne, H.,  Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.             Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time             Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.   [L2TPv3]  Lau, J., Townsley, M., and I. Goyret, "Layer Two Tunneling             Protocol - Version 3 (L2TPv3)",RFC 3931, March 2005.   [I.363.2] ITU-T, "B-ISDN ATM Adaptation layer specification: Type 2             AAL", I.363.2, September 1997.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 21]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005   [EF-PHB]  Davie, B., Charny, A., Bennet, J.C., Benson, K., Le Boudec,             J., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V., and D. Stiliadis,             "An Expedited Forwarding PHB (Per-Hop Behavior)",RFC 3246,             March 2002.   [PPP]     Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD 51,RFC 1661, July 1994.7.2.  Informative References   [SRTP]    Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.             Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",RFC 3711, March 2004.   [REORDER] G. Pelletier, L. Jonsson, K. Sandlund, "RObust Header             Compression (ROHC): ROHC over Channels that can Reorder             Packets", Work in Progress, June 2004.   [ROHC]    Bormann, C., Burmeister, C., Degermark, M., Fukushima, H.,             Hannu, H., Jonsson, L-E., Hakenberg, R., Koren, T., Le, K.,             Liu, Z., Martensson, A., Miyazaki, A., Svanbro, K., Wiebke,             T., Yoshimura, T., and H. Zheng, "RObust Header Compression             (ROHC): Framework and four profiles: RTP, UDP, ESP, and             uncompressed ",RFC 3095, July 2001.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 22]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005Authors' Addresses   Bruce Thompson   170 West Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134-1706   United States of America   Phone: +1 408 527 0446   EMail: brucet@cisco.com   Tmima Koren   170 West Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134-1706   United States of America   Phone: +1 408 527 6169   EMail: tmima@cisco.com   Dan Wing   170 West Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134-1706   United States of America   EMail: dwing@cisco.comThompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 23]

RFC 4170          Tunneling Multiplexed Compressed RTP     November 2005Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Thompson, et al.         Best Current Practice                 [Page 24]

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