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Network Working Group                                            M. LubyRequest for Comments: 5053                              Digital FountainCategory: Standards Track                                 A. Shokrollahi                                                                    EPFL                                                               M. Watson                                                        Digital Fountain                                                          T. Stockhammer                                                          Nomor Research                                                            October 2007Raptor Forward Error Correction Scheme for Object DeliveryStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document describes a Fully-Specified Forward Error Correction   (FEC) scheme, corresponding to FEC Encoding ID 1, for the Raptor   forward error correction code and its application to reliable   delivery of data objects.   Raptor is a fountain code, i.e., as many encoding symbols as needed   can be generated by the encoder on-the-fly from the source symbols of   a source block of data.  The decoder is able to recover the source   block from any set of encoding symbols only slightly more in number   than the number of source symbols.   The Raptor code described here is a systematic code, meaning that all   the source symbols are among the encoding symbols that can be   generated.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Requirements Notation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33.  Formats and Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33.1.  FEC Payload IDs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33.2.  FEC Object Transmission Information (OTI)  . . . . . . . .43.2.1.  Mandatory  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.2.2.  Common . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.2.3.  Scheme-Specific  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.  Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.1.  Content Delivery Protocol Requirements . . . . . . . . . .54.2.  Example Parameter Derivation Algorithm . . . . . . . . . .65.  Raptor FEC Code Specification  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85.1.  Definitions, Symbols, and Abbreviations  . . . . . . . . .85.1.1.  Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85.1.2.  Symbols  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.1.3.  Abbreviations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.2.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.3.  Object Delivery  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.3.1.  Source Block Construction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.3.2.  Encoding Packet Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . .145.4.  Systematic Raptor Encoder  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .155.4.1.  Encoding Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15       5.4.2.  First Encoding Step: Intermediate Symbol Generation  . 165.4.3.  Second Encoding Step: LT Encoding  . . . . . . . . . .205.4.4.  Generators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .215.5.  Example FEC Decoder  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .235.5.1.  General  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .235.5.2.  Decoding a Source Block  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .235.6.  Random Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.6.1.  The Table V0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.6.2.  The Table V1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .295.7.  Systematic Indices J(K)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .306.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .437.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .438.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .449.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .449.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .449.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44Luby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20071.  Introduction   This document specifies an FEC Scheme for the Raptor forward error   correction code for object delivery applications.  The concept of an   FEC Scheme is defined in [RFC5052] and this document follows the   format prescribed there and uses the terminology of that document.   Raptor Codes were introduced in [Raptor].  For an overview, see, for   example, [CCNC].   The Raptor FEC Scheme is a Fully-Specified FEC Scheme corresponding   to FEC Encoding ID 1.   Raptor is a fountain code, i.e., as many encoding symbols as needed   can be generated by the encoder on-the-fly from the source symbols of   a block.  The decoder is able to recover the source block from any   set of encoding symbols only slightly more in number than the number   of source symbols.   The code described in this document is a systematic code, that is,   the original source symbols can be sent unmodified from sender to   receiver, as well as a number of repair symbols.  For more background   on the use of Forward Error Correction codes in reliable multicast,   see [RFC3453].   The code described here is identical to that described in [MBMS].2.  Requirements Notation   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].3.  Formats and Codes3.1.  FEC Payload IDs   The FEC Payload ID MUST be a 4 octet field defined as follows:        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |     Source Block Number       |      Encoding Symbol ID       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Figure 1: FEC Payload ID formatLuby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      Source Block Number (SBN), (16 bits): An integer identifier for      the source block that the encoding symbols within the packet      relate to.      Encoding Symbol ID (ESI), (16 bits): An integer identifier for the      encoding symbols within the packet.   The interpretation of the Source Block Number and Encoding Symbol   Identifier is defined inSection 5.3.2.  FEC Object Transmission Information (OTI)3.2.1.  Mandatory   The value of the FEC Encoding ID MUST be 1 (one), as assigned by IANA   (seeSection 7).3.2.2.  Common   The Common FEC Object Transmission Information elements used by this   FEC Scheme are:      - Transfer Length (F)      - Encoding Symbol Length (T)   The Transfer Length is a non-negative integer less than 2^^45.  The   Encoding Symbol Length is a non-negative integer less than 2^^16.   The encoded Common FEC Object Transmission Information format is   shown in Figure 2.       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                      Transfer Length                          |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |           Reserved            |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |    Encoding Symbol Length     |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+          Figure 2: Encoded Common FEC OTI for Raptor FEC Scheme      NOTE 1: The limit of 2^^45 on the transfer length is a consequence      of the limitation on the symbol size to 2^^16-1, the limitation on      the number of symbols in a source block to 2^^13, and theLuby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      limitation on the number of source blocks to 2^^16.  However, the      Transfer Length is encoded as a 48-bit field for simplicity.3.2.3.  Scheme-Specific   The following parameters are carried in the Scheme-Specific FEC   Object Transmission Information element for this FEC Scheme:      - The number of source blocks (Z)      - The number of sub-blocks (N)      - A symbol alignment parameter (Al)   These parameters are all non-negative integers.  The encoded Scheme-   specific Object Transmission Information is a 4-octet field   consisting of the parameters Z (2 octets), N (1 octet), and Al (1   octet) as shown in Figure 3.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |             Z                 |      N        |       Al      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 3: Encoded Scheme-Specific FEC Object Transmission Information   The encoded FEC Object Transmission Information is a 14-octet field   consisting of the concatenation of the encoded Common FEC Object   Transmission Information and the encoded Scheme-Specific FEC Object   Transmission Information.   These three parameters define the source block partitioning as   described inSection 5.3.1.2.4.  Procedures4.1.  Content Delivery Protocol Requirements   This section describes the information exchange between the Raptor   FEC Scheme and any Content Delivery Protocol (CDP) that makes use of   the Raptor FEC Scheme for object delivery.   The Raptor encoder and decoder for object delivery require the   following information from the CDP:      - The transfer length of the object, F, in bytesLuby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      - A symbol alignment parameter, Al      - The symbol size, T, in bytes, which MUST be a multiple of Al      - The number of source blocks, Z      - The number of sub-blocks in each source block, N   The Raptor encoder for object delivery additionally requires:      - the object to be encoded, F bytes   The Raptor encoder supplies the CDP with the following information   for each packet to be sent:      - Source Block Number (SBN)      - Encoding Symbol ID (ESI)      - Encoding symbol(s)   The CDP MUST communicate this information to the receiver.4.2.  Example Parameter Derivation Algorithm   This section provides recommendations for the derivation of the three   transport parameters, T, Z, and N.  This recommendation is based on   the following input parameters:   - F  the transfer length of the object, in bytes   - W  a target on the sub-block size, in bytes   - P  the maximum packet payload size, in bytes, which is assumed to        be a multiple of Al   - Al the symbol alignment parameter, in bytes   - Kmax  the maximum number of source symbols per source block.             Note:Section 5.1.2 defines Kmax to be 8192.   - Kmin  a minimum target on the number of symbols per source block   - Gmax  a maximum target number of symbols per packetLuby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   Based on the above inputs, the transport parameters T, Z, and N are   calculated as follows:   Let      G = min{ceil(P*Kmin/F), P/Al, Gmax}      T = floor(P/(Al*G))*Al      Kt = ceil(F/T)      Z = ceil(Kt/Kmax)      N = min{ceil(ceil(Kt/Z)*T/W), T/Al}   The value G represents the maximum number of symbols to be   transported in a single packet.  The value Kt is the total number of   symbols required to represent the source data of the object.  The   values of G and N derived above should be considered as lower bounds.   It may be advantageous to increase these values, for example, to the   nearest power of two.  In particular, the above algorithm does not   guarantee that the symbol size, T, divides the maximum packet size,   P, and so it may not be possible to use the packets of size exactly   P.  If, instead, G is chosen to be a value that divides P/Al, then   the symbol size, T, will be a divisor of P and packets of size P can   be used.   The algorithm above and that defined inSection 5.3.1.2 ensure that   the sub-symbol sizes are a multiple of the symbol alignment   parameter, Al.  This is useful because the XOR operations used for   encoding and decoding are generally performed several bytes at a   time, for example, at least 4 bytes at a time on a 32-bit processor.   Thus, the encoding and decoding can be performed faster if the sub-   symbol sizes are a multiple of this number of bytes.   Recommended settings for the input parameters, Al, Kmin, and Gmax are   as follows: Al = 4, Kmin = 1024, Gmax = 10.   The parameter W can be used to generate encoded data that can be   decoded efficiently with limited working memory at the decoder.  Note   that the actual maximum decoder memory requirement for a given value   of W depends on the implementation, but it is possible to implement   decoding using working memory only slightly larger than W.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20075.  Raptor FEC Code Specification5.1.  Definitions, Symbols, and Abbreviations5.1.1.  Definitions   For the purposes of this specification, the following terms and   definitions apply.      Source block: a block of K source symbols that are considered      together for Raptor encoding purposes.      Source symbol: the smallest unit of data used during the encoding      process.  All source symbols within a source block have the same      size.      Encoding symbol: a symbol that is included in a data packet.  The      encoding symbols consist of the source symbols and the repair      symbols.  Repair symbols generated from a source block have the      same size as the source symbols of that source block.      Systematic code: a code in which all the source symbols may be      included as part of the encoding symbols sent for a source block.      Repair symbol: the encoding symbols sent for a source block that      are not the source symbols.  The repair symbols are generated      based on the source symbols.      Intermediate symbols: symbols generated from the source symbols      using an inverse encoding process .  The repair symbols are then      generated directly from the intermediate symbols.  The encoding      symbols do not include the intermediate symbols, i.e.,      intermediate symbols are not included in data packets.      Symbol: a unit of data.  The size, in bytes, of a symbol is known      as the symbol size.      Encoding symbol group: a group of encoding symbols that are sent      together, i.e., within the same packet whose relationship to the      source symbols can be derived from a single Encoding Symbol ID.      Encoding Symbol ID: information that defines the relationship      between the symbols of an encoding symbol group and the source      symbols.      Encoding packet: data packets that contain encoding symbolsLuby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      Sub-block: a source block is sometimes broken into sub-blocks,      each of which is sufficiently small to be decoded in working      memory.  For a source block consisting of K source symbols, each      sub-block consists of K sub-symbols, each symbol of the source      block being composed of one sub-symbol from each sub-block.      Sub-symbol: part of a symbol.  Each source symbol is composed of      as many sub-symbols as there are sub-blocks in the source block.      Source packet: data packets that contain source symbols.      Repair packet: data packets that contain repair symbols.5.1.2.  Symbols   i, j, x, h, a, b, d, v, m  represent positive integers.   ceil(x)  denotes the smallest positive integer that is greater than            or equal to x.   choose(i,j)  denotes the number of ways j objects can be chosen from                among i objects without repetition.   floor(x)  denotes the largest positive integer that is less than or             equal to x.   i % j  denotes i modulo j.   X ^ Y  denotes, for equal-length bit strings X and Y, the bitwise          exclusive-or of X and Y.   Al   denotes a symbol alignment parameter.  Symbol and sub-symbol        sizes are restricted to be multiples of Al.   A    denotes a matrix over GF(2).   Transpose[A]  denotes the transposed matrix of matrix A.   A^^-1  denotes the inverse matrix of matrix A.   K    denotes the number of symbols in a single source block.   Kmax denotes the maximum number of source symbols that can be in a        single source block.  Set to 8192.   L    denotes the number of pre-coding symbols for a single source        block.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   S    denotes the number of LDPC symbols for a single source block.   H    denotes the number of Half symbols for a single source block.   C    denotes an array of intermediate symbols, C[0], C[1], C[2],...,        C[L-1].   C'   denotes an array of source symbols, C'[0], C'[1], C'[2],...,        C'[K-1].   X    a non-negative integer value   V0, V1  two arrays of 4-byte integers, V0[0], V0[1],..., V0[255] and           V1[0], V1[1],..., V1[255]   Rand[X, i, m]  a pseudo-random number generator   Deg[v]  a degree generator   LTEnc[K, C ,(d, a, b)]  a LT encoding symbol generator   Trip[K, X]  a triple generator function   G    the number of symbols within an encoding symbol group   GF(n)  the Galois field with n elements.   N    the number of sub-blocks within a source block   T    the symbol size in bytes.  If the source block is partitioned        into sub-blocks, then T = T'*N.   T'   the sub-symbol size, in bytes.  If the source block is not        partitioned into sub-blocks, then T' is not relevant.   F    the transfer length of an object, in bytes   I    the sub-block size in bytes   P    for object delivery, the payload size of each packet, in bytes,        that is used in the recommended derivation of the object        delivery transport parameters.   Q    Q = 65521, i.e., Q is the largest prime smaller than 2^^16   Z    the number of source blocks, for object delivery   J(K) the systematic index associated with KLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   I_S  denotes the SxS identity matrix.   0_SxH  denotes the SxH zero matrix.   a ^^ b  a raised to the power b5.1.3.  Abbreviations   For the purposes of the present document, the following abbreviations   apply:   ESI       Encoding Symbol ID   LDPC      Low Density Parity Check   LT        Luby Transform   SBN       Source Block Number   SBL       Source Block Length (in units of symbols)5.2.  Overview   The principal component of the systematic Raptor code is the basic   encoder described inSection 5.4.  First, it is described how to   derive values for a set of intermediate symbols from the original   source symbols such that knowledge of the intermediate symbols is   sufficient to reconstruct the source symbols.  Secondly, the encoder   produces repair symbols, which are each the exclusive OR of a number   of the intermediate symbols.  The encoding symbols are the   combination of the source and repair symbols.  The repair symbols are   produced in such a way that the intermediate symbols, and therefore   also the source symbols, can be recovered from any sufficiently large   set of encoding symbols.   This document specifies the systematic Raptor code encoder.  A number   of possible decoding algorithms are possible.  An efficient decoding   algorithm is provided inSection 5.5.   The construction of the intermediate and repair symbols is based in   part on a pseudo-random number generator described inSection 5.4.4.1.  This generator is based on a fixed set of 512   random numbers that MUST be available to both sender and receiver.   These are provided inSection 5.6.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   Finally, the construction of the intermediate symbols from the source   symbols is governed by a 'systematic index', values of which are   provided inSection 5.7 for source block sizes from 4 source symbols   to Kmax = 8192 source symbols.5.3.  Object Delivery5.3.1.  Source Block Construction5.3.1.1.  General   In order to apply the Raptor encoder to a source object, the object   may be broken into Z >= 1 blocks, known as source blocks.  The Raptor   encoder is applied independently to each source block.  Each source   block is identified by a unique integer Source Block Number (SBN),   where the first source block has SBN zero, the second has SBN one,   etc.  Each source block is divided into a number, K, of source   symbols of size T bytes each.  Each source symbol is identified by a   unique integer Encoding Symbol Identifier (ESI), where the first   source symbol of a source block has ESI zero, the second has ESI one,   etc.   Each source block with K source symbols is divided into N >= 1 sub-   blocks, which are small enough to be decoded in the working memory.   Each sub-block is divided into K sub-symbols of size T'.   Note that the value of K is not necessarily the same for each source   block of an object and the value of T' may not necessarily be the   same for each sub-block of a source block.  However, the symbol size   T is the same for all source blocks of an object and the number of   symbols, K, is the same for every sub-block of a source block.  Exact   partitioning of the object into source blocks and sub-blocks is   described inSection 5.3.1.2 below.5.3.1.2.  Source Block and Sub-Block Partitioning   The construction of source blocks and sub-blocks is determined based   on five input parameters, F, Al, T, Z, and N, and a function   Partition[].  The five input parameters are defined as follows:   - F  the transfer length of the object, in bytes   - Al a symbol alignment parameter, in bytes   - T  the symbol size, in bytes, which MUST be a multiple of Al   - Z  the number of source blocksLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   - N  the number of sub-blocks in each source block   These parameters MUST be set so that ceil(ceil(F/T)/Z) <= Kmax.   Recommendations for derivation of these parameters are provided inSection 4.2.   The function Partition[] takes a pair of integers (I, J) as input and   derives four integers (IL, IS, JL, JS) as output.  Specifically, the   value of Partition[I, J] is a sequence of four integers (IL, IS, JL,   JS), where IL = ceil(I/J), IS = floor(I/J), JL = I - IS * J, and JS =   J - JL.  Partition[] derives parameters for partitioning a block of   size I into J approximately equal-sized blocks.  Specifically, JL   blocks of length IL and JS blocks of length IS.   The source object MUST be partitioned into source blocks and sub-   blocks as follows:   Let      Kt = ceil(F/T)      (KL, KS, ZL, ZS) = Partition[Kt, Z]      (TL, TS, NL, NS) = Partition[T/Al, N]   Then, the object MUST be partitioned into Z = ZL + ZS contiguous   source blocks, the first ZL source blocks each having length KL*T   bytes, and the remaining ZS source blocks each having KS*T bytes.   If Kt*T > F, then for encoding purposes, the last symbol MUST be   padded at the end with Kt*T - F zero bytes.   Next, each source block MUST be divided into N = NL + NS contiguous   sub-blocks, the first NL sub-blocks each consisting of K contiguous   sub-symbols of size of TL*Al and the remaining NS sub-blocks each   consisting of K contiguous sub-symbols of size of TS*Al.  The symbol   alignment parameter Al ensures that sub-symbols are always a multiple   of Al bytes.   Finally, the m-th symbol of a source block consists of the   concatenation of the m-th sub-symbol from each of the N sub-blocks.   Note that this implies that when N > 1, then a symbol is NOT a   contiguous portion of the object.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20075.3.2.  Encoding Packet Construction   Each encoding packet contains the following information:      - Source Block Number (SBN)      - Encoding Symbol ID (ESI)      - encoding symbol(s)   Each source block is encoded independently of the others.  Source   blocks are numbered consecutively from zero.   Encoding Symbol ID values from 0 to K-1 identify the source symbols   of a source block in sequential order, where K is the number of   symbols in the source block.  Encoding Symbol IDs from K onwards   identify repair symbols.   Each encoding packet either consists entirely of source symbols   (source packet) or entirely of repair symbols (repair packet).  A   packet may contain any number of symbols from the same source block.   In the case that the last source symbol in a source packet includes   padding bytes added for FEC encoding purposes, then these bytes need   not be included in the packet.  Otherwise, only whole symbols MUST be   included.   The Encoding Symbol ID, X, carried in each source packet is the   Encoding Symbol ID of the first source symbol carried in that packet.   The subsequent source symbols in the packet have Encoding Symbol IDs,   X+1 to X+G-1, in sequential order, where G is the number of symbols   in the packet.   Similarly, the Encoding Symbol ID, X, placed into a repair packet is   the Encoding Symbol ID of the first repair symbol in the repair   packet and the subsequent repair symbols in the packet have Encoding   Symbol IDs X+1 to X+G-1 in sequential order, where G is the number of   symbols in the packet.   Note that it is not necessary for the receiver to know the total   number of repair packets.   Associated with each symbol is a triple of integers (d, a, b).   The G repair symbol triples (d[0], a[0], b[0]),..., (d[G-1], a[G-1],   b[G-1]) for the repair symbols placed into a repair packet with ESI X   are computed using the Triple generator defined inSection 5.4.4.4 as   follows:Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      For each i = 0, ..., G-1, (d[i], a[i], b[i]) = Trip[K,X+i]   The G repair symbols to be placed in repair packet with ESI X are   calculated based on the repair symbol triples, as described inSection 5.4, using the intermediate symbols C and the LT encoder   LTEnc[K, C, (d[i], a[i], b[i])].5.4.  Systematic Raptor Encoder5.4.1.  Encoding Overview   The systematic Raptor encoder is used to generate repair symbols from   a source block that consists of K source symbols.   Symbols are the fundamental data units of the encoding and decoding   process.  For each source block (sub-block), all symbols (sub-   symbols) are the same size.  The atomic operation performed on   symbols (sub-symbols) for both encoding and decoding is the   exclusive-or operation.   Let C'[0],..., C'[K-1] denote the K source symbols.   Let C[0],..., C[L-1] denote L intermediate symbols.   The first step of encoding is to generate a number, L > K, of   intermediate symbols from the K source symbols.  In this step, K   source symbol triples (d[0], a[0], b[0]), ..., (d[K-1], a[K-1],   b[K-1]) are generated using the Trip[] generator as described inSection 5.4.2.2.  The K source symbol triples are associated with the   K source symbols and are then used to determine the L intermediate   symbols C[0],..., C[L-1] from the source symbols using an inverse   encoding process.  This process can be realized by a Raptor decoding   process.   Certain "pre-coding relationships" MUST hold within the L   intermediate symbols.Section 5.4.2.3 describes these relationships   and how the intermediate symbols are generated from the source   symbols.   Once the intermediate symbols have been generated, repair symbols are   produced and one or more repair symbols are placed as a group into a   single data packet.  Each repair symbol group is associated with an   Encoding Symbol ID (ESI) and a number, G, of repair symbols.  The ESI   is used to generate a triple of three integers, (d, a, b) for each   repair symbol, again using the Trip[] generator as described inSection 5.4.4.4.  Then, each (d,a,b)-triple is used to generate theLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   corresponding repair symbol from the intermediate symbols using the   LTEnc[K, C[0],..., C[L-1], (d,a,b)] generator described inSection 5.4.4.3.5.4.2.  First Encoding Step: Intermediate Symbol Generation5.4.2.1.  General   The first encoding step is a pre-coding step to generate the L   intermediate symbols C[0], ..., C[L-1] from the source symbols C'[0],   ..., C'[K-1].  The intermediate symbols are uniquely defined by two   sets of constraints:      1.  The intermediate symbols are related to the source symbols by      a set of source symbol triples.  The generation of the source      symbol triples is defined inSection 5.4.2.2 using the Trip[]      generator described inSection 5.4.4.4.      2.  A set of pre-coding relationships hold within the intermediate      symbols themselves.  These are defined inSection 5.4.2.3.   The generation of the L intermediate symbols is then defined inSection 5.4.2.45.4.2.2.  Source Symbol Triples   Each of the K source symbols is associated with a triple (d[i], a[i],   b[i]) for 0 <= i < K.  The source symbol triples are determined using   the Triple generator defined inSection 5.4.4.4 as:      For each i, 0 <= i < K         (d[i], a[i], b[i]) = Trip[K, i]5.4.2.3.  Pre-Coding Relationships   The pre-coding relationships amongst the L intermediate symbols are   defined by expressing the last L-K intermediate symbols in terms of   the first K intermediate symbols.   The last L-K intermediate symbols C[K],...,C[L-1] consist of S LDPC   symbols and H Half symbols The values of S and H are determined from   K as described below.  Then L = K+S+H.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   Let      X be the smallest positive integer such that X*(X-1) >= 2*K.      S be the smallest prime integer such that S >= ceil(0.01*K) + X      H be the smallest integer such that choose(H,ceil(H/2)) >= K + S      H' = ceil(H/2)      L = K+S+H      C[0],...,C[K-1] denote the first K intermediate symbols      C[K],...,C[K+S-1] denote the S LDPC symbols, initialised to zero      C[K+S],...,C[L-1] denote the H Half symbols, initialised to zero   The S LDPC symbols are defined to be the values of C[K],...,C[K+S-1]   at the end of the following process:      For i = 0,...,K-1 do         a = 1 + (floor(i/S) % (S-1))         b = i % S         C[K + b] = C[K + b] ^ C[i]         b = (b + a) % S         C[K + b] = C[K + b] ^ C[i]         b = (b + a) % S         C[K + b] = C[K + b] ^ C[i]   The H Half symbols are defined as follows:   Let      g[i] = i ^ (floor(i/2)) for all positive integers i         Note: g[i] is the Gray sequence, in which each element differs         from the previous one in a single bit position      m[k] denote the subsequence of g[.] whose elements have exactly k      non-zero bits in their binary representation.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      m[j,k] denote the jth element of the sequence m[k], where j=0, 1,      2, ...   Then, the Half symbols are defined as the values of C[K+S],...,C[L-1]   after the following process:      For h = 0,...,H-1 do         For j = 0,...,K+S-1 do            If bit h of m[j,H'] is equal to 1 then C[h+K+S] = C[h+K+S] ^            C[j].5.4.2.4.  Intermediate Symbols5.4.2.4.1.  Definition   Given the K source symbols C'[0], C'[1],..., C'[K-1] the L   intermediate symbols C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1] are the uniquely defined   symbol values that satisfy the following conditions:      1.  The K source symbols C'[0], C'[1],..., C'[K-1] satisfy the K      constraints         C'[i] = LTEnc[K, (C[0],..., C[L-1]), (d[i], a[i], b[i])], for         all i, 0 <= i < K.      2.  The L intermediate symbols C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1] satisfy the      pre-coding relationships defined inSection 5.4.2.3.5.4.2.4.2.  Example Method for Calculation of Intermediate Symbols   This subsection describes a possible method for calculation of the L   intermediate symbols C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1] satisfying the   constraints inSection 5.4.2.4.1.   The 'generator matrix' for a code that generates N output symbols   from K input symbols is an NxK matrix over GF(2), where each row   corresponds to one of the output symbols and each column to one of   the input symbols and where the ith output symbol is equal to the sum   of those input symbols whose column contains a non-zero entry in row   i.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   Then, the L intermediate symbols can be calculated as follows:   Let      C denote the column vector of the L intermediate symbols, C[0],      C[1],..., C[L-1].      D denote the column vector consisting of S+H zero symbols followed      by the K source symbols C'[0], C'[1], ..., C'[K-1]   Then the above constraints define an LxL matrix over GF(2), A, such   that:      A*C = D   The matrix A can be constructed as follows:   Let:      G_LDPC be the S x K generator matrix of the LDPC symbols.  So,         G_LDPC * Transpose[(C[0],...., C[K-1])] = Transpose[(C[K], ...,         C[K+S-1])]      G_Half be the H x (K+S) generator matrix of the Half symbols, So,         G_Half * Transpose[(C[0], ..., C[S+K-1])] = Transpose[(C[K+S],         ..., C[K+S+H-1])]      I_S be the S x S identity matrix      I_H be the H x H identity matrix      0_SxH be the S x H zero matrix      G_LT be the KxL generator matrix of the encoding symbols generated      by the LT Encoder.  So,         G_LT * Transpose[(C[0], ..., C[L-1])] =         Transpose[(C'[0],C'[1],...,C'[K-1])]         i.e., G_LT(i,j) = 1 if and only if C[j] is included in the         symbols that are XORed to produce LTEnc[K, (C[0], ..., C[L-1]),         (d[i], a[i], b[i])].   Then:      The first S rows of A are equal to G_LDPC | I_S | 0_SxH.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      The next H rows of A are equal to G_Half | I_H.      The remaining K rows of A are equal to G_LT.   The matrix A is depicted in Figure 4 below:                 K               S       H     +-----------------------+-------+-------+     |                       |       |       |   S |        G_LDPC         |  I_S  | 0_SxH |     |                       |       |       |     +-----------------------+-------+-------+     |                               |       |   H |        G_Half                 |  I_H  |     |                               |       |     +-------------------------------+-------+     |                                       |     |                                       |   K |                 G_LT                  |     |                                       |     |                                       |     +---------------------------------------+                          Figure 4: The matrix A   The intermediate symbols can then be calculated as:      C = (A^^-1)*D   The source symbol triples are generated such that for any K matrix, A   has full rank and is therefore invertible.  This calculation can be   realized by applying a Raptor decoding process to the K source   symbols C'[0], C'[1],..., C'[K-1] to produce the L intermediate   symbols C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1].   To efficiently generate the intermediate symbols from the source   symbols, it is recommended that an efficient decoder implementation   such as that described inSection 5.5 be used.  The source symbol   triples are designed to facilitate efficient decoding of the source   symbols using that algorithm.5.4.3.  Second Encoding Step: LT Encoding   In the second encoding step, the repair symbol with ESI X is   generated by applying the generator LTEnc[K, (C[0], C[1],...,   C[L-1]), (d, a, b)] defined inSection 5.4.4.3 to the L intermediate   symbols C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1] using the triple (d, a, b)=Trip[K,X]   generated according toSection 5.3.2Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20075.4.4.  Generators5.4.4.1.  Random Generator   The random number generator Rand[X, i, m] is defined as follows,   where X is a non-negative integer, i is a non-negative integer, and m   is a positive integer and the value produced is an integer between 0   and m-1.  Let V0 and V1 be arrays of 256 entries each, where each   entry is a 4-byte unsigned integer.  These arrays are provided inSection 5.6.   Then,      Rand[X, i, m] = (V0[(X + i) % 256] ^ V1[(floor(X/256)+ i) % 256])      % m5.4.4.2.  Degree Generator   The degree generator Deg[v] is defined as follows, where v is an   integer that is at least 0 and less than 2^^20 = 1048576.      In Table 1, find the index j such that f[j-1] <= v < f[j]      Then, Deg[v] = d[j]                       +---------+---------+------+                       | Index j | f[j]    | d[j] |                       +---------+---------+------+                       | 0       | 0       | --   |                       | 1       | 10241   | 1    |                       | 2       | 491582  | 2    |                       | 3       | 712794  | 3    |                       | 4       | 831695  | 4    |                       | 5       | 948446  | 10   |                       | 6       | 1032189 | 11   |                       | 7       | 1048576 | 40   |                       +---------+---------+------+       Table 1: Defines the degree distribution for encoding symbols5.4.4.3.  LT Encoding Symbol Generator   The encoding symbol generator LTEnc[K, (C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1]), (d,   a, b)] takes the following inputs:Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      K is the number of source symbols (or sub-symbols) for the source      block (sub-block).  Let L be derived from K as described inSection 5.4.2.3, and let L' be the smallest prime integer greater      than or equal to L.      (C[0], C[1],..., C[L-1]) is the array of L intermediate symbols      (sub-symbols) generated as described inSection 5.4.2.4.      (d, a, b) is a source triple determined using the Triple generator      defined inSection 5.4.4.4, whereby         d is an integer denoting an encoding symbol degree         a is an integer between 1 and L'-1 inclusive         b is an integer between 0 and L'-1 inclusive   The encoding symbol generator produces a single encoding symbol as   output, according to the following algorithm:      While (b >= L) do b = (b + a) % L'      Let result = C[b].      For j = 1,...,min(d-1,L-1) do         b = (b + a) % L'         While (b >= L) do b = (b + a) % L'         result = result ^ C[b]      Return result5.4.4.4.  Triple Generator   The triple generator Trip[K,X] takes the following inputs:      K - The number of source symbols      X - An encoding symbol ID   Let      L be determined from K as described inSection 5.4.2.3      L' be the smallest prime that is greater than or equal to LLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      Q = 65521, the largest prime smaller than 2^^16.      J(K) be the systematic index associated with K, as defined inSection 5.7.   The output of the triple generator is a triple, (d, a, b) determined   as follows:      A = (53591 + J(K)*997) % Q      B = 10267*(J(K)+1) % Q      Y = (B + X*A) % Q      v = Rand[Y, 0, 2^^20]      d = Deg[v]      a = 1 + Rand[Y, 1, L'-1]      b = Rand[Y, 2, L']5.5.  Example FEC Decoder5.5.1.  General   This section describes an efficient decoding algorithm for the Raptor   codes described in this specification.  Note that each received   encoding symbol can be considered as the value of an equation amongst   the intermediate symbols.  From these simultaneous equations, and the   known pre-coding relationships amongst the intermediate symbols, any   algorithm for solving simultaneous equations can successfully decode   the intermediate symbols and hence the source symbols.  However, the   algorithm chosen has a major effect on the computational efficiency   of the decoding.5.5.2.  Decoding a Source Block5.5.2.1.  General   It is assumed that the decoder knows the structure of the source   block it is to decode, including the symbol size, T, and the number K   of symbols in the source block.   From the algorithms described inSection 5.4, the Raptor decoder can   calculate the total number L = K+S+H of pre-coding symbols and   determine how they were generated from the source block to be   decoded.  In this description, it is assumed that the receivedLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   encoding symbols for the source block to be decoded are passed to the   decoder.  Note that, as described inSection 5.3.2, the last source   symbol of a source packet may have included padding bytes added for   FEC encoding purposes.  These padding bytes may not be actually   included in the packet sent and so must be reinserted at the received   before passing the symbol to the decoder.   For each such encoding symbol, it is assumed that the number and set   of intermediate symbols whose exclusive-or is equal to the encoding   symbol is also passed to the decoder.  In the case of source symbols,   the source symbol triples described inSection 5.4.2.2 indicate the   number and set of intermediate symbols that sum to give each source   symbol.   Let N >= K be the number of received encoding symbols for a source   block and let M = S+H+N.  The following M by L bit matrix A can be   derived from the information passed to the decoder for the source   block to be decoded.  Let C be the column vector of the L   intermediate symbols, and let D be the column vector of M symbols   with values known to the receiver, where the first S+H of the M   symbols are zero-valued symbols that correspond to LDPC and Half   symbols (these are check symbols for the LDPC and Half symbols, and   not the LDPC and Half symbols themselves), and the remaining N of the   M symbols are the received encoding symbols for the source block.   Then, A is the bit matrix that satisfies A*C = D, where here *   denotes matrix multiplication over GF[2].  In particular, A[i,j] = 1   if the intermediate symbol corresponding to index j is exclusive-ORed   into the LDPC, Half, or encoding symbol corresponding to index i in   the encoding, or if index i corresponds to a LDPC or Half symbol and   index j corresponds to the same LDPC or Half symbol.  For all other i   and j, A[i,j] = 0.   Decoding a source block is equivalent to decoding C from known A and   D.  It is clear that C can be decoded if and only if the rank of A   over GF[2] is L.  Once C has been decoded, missing source symbols can   be obtained by using the source symbol triples to determine the   number and set of intermediate symbols that MUST be exclusive-ORed to   obtain each missing source symbol.   The first step in decoding C is to form a decoding schedule.  In this   step A is converted, using Gaussian elimination (using row operations   and row and column reorderings) and after discarding M - L rows, into   the L by L identity matrix.  The decoding schedule consists of the   sequence of row operations and row and column reorderings during the   Gaussian elimination process, and only depends on A and not on D.    The decoding of C from D can take place concurrently with the   forming of the decoding schedule, or the decoding can take place   afterwards based on the decoding schedule.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   The correspondence between the decoding schedule and the decoding of   C is as follows.  Let c[0] = 0, c[1] = 1,...,c[L-1] = L-1 and d[0] =   0, d[1] = 1,...,d[M-1] = M-1 initially.   -  Each time row i of A is exclusive-ORed into row i' in the decoding      schedule, then in the decoding process, symbol D[d[i]] is      exclusive-ORed into symbol D[d[i']].   -  Each time row i is exchanged with row i' in the decoding schedule,      then in the decoding process, the value of d[i] is exchanged with      the value of d[i'].   -  Each time column j is exchanged with column j' in the decoding      schedule, then in the decoding process, the value of c[j] is      exchanged with the value of c[j'].   From this correspondence, it is clear that the total number of   exclusive-ORs of symbols in the decoding of the source block is the   number of row operations (not exchanges) in the Gaussian elimination.   Since A is the L by L identity matrix after the Gaussian elimination   and after discarding the last M - L rows, it is clear at the end of   successful decoding that the L symbols D[d[0]], D[d[1]],...,   D[d[L-1]] are the values of the L symbols C[c[0]], C[c[1]],...,   C[c[L-1]].   The order in which Gaussian elimination is performed to form the   decoding schedule has no bearing on whether or not the decoding is   successful.  However, the speed of the decoding depends heavily on   the order in which Gaussian elimination is performed.  (Furthermore,   maintaining a sparse representation of A is crucial, although this is   not described here).  The remainder of this section describes an   order in which Gaussian elimination could be performed that is   relatively efficient.5.5.2.2.  First Phase   The first phase of the Gaussian elimination, the matrix A, is   conceptually partitioned into submatrices.  The submatrix sizes are   parameterized by non-negative integers i and u, which are initialized   to 0.  The submatrices of A are:      (1) The submatrix I defined by the intersection of the first i          rows and first i columns.  This is the identity matrix at the          end of each step in the phase.      (2) The submatrix defined by the intersection of the first i rows          and all but the first i columns and last u columns.  All          entries of this submatrix are zero.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007      (3) The submatrix defined by the intersection of the first i          columns and all but the first i rows.  All entries of this          submatrix are zero.      (4) The submatrix U defined by the intersection of all the rows          and the last u columns.      (5) The submatrix V formed by the intersection of all but the          first i columns and the last u columns and all but the first i          rows.   Figure 5 illustrates the submatrices of A.  At the beginning of the   first phase, V = A.  In each step, a row of A is chosen.   +-----------+-----------------+---------+   |           |                 |         |   |     I     |    All Zeros    |         |   |           |                 |         |   +-----------+-----------------+    U    |   |           |                 |         |   |           |                 |         |   | All Zeros |       V         |         |   |           |                 |         |   |           |                 |         |   +-----------+-----------------+---------+               Figure 5: Submatrices of A in the first phase   The following graph defined by the structure of V is used in   determining which row of A is chosen.  The columns that intersect V   are the nodes in the graph, and the rows that have exactly 2 ones in   V are the edges of the graph that connect the two columns (nodes) in   the positions of the two ones.  A component in this graph is a   maximal set of nodes (columns) and edges (rows) such that there is a   path between each pair of nodes/edges in the graph.  The size of a   component is the number of nodes (columns) in the component.   There are at most L steps in the first phase.  The phase ends   successfully when i + u = L, i.e., when V and the all-zeroes   submatrix above V have disappeared and A consists of I, the all   zeroes submatrix below I, and U.  The phase ends unsuccessfully in   decoding failure if, at some step before V disappears, there is no   non-zero row in V to choose in that step.  Whenever there are non-   zero rows in V, then the next step starts by choosing a row of A as   follows:Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   o  Let r be the minimum integer such that at least one row of A has      exactly r ones in V.      *  If r != 2, then choose a row with exactly r ones in V with         minimum original degree among all such rows.      *  If r = 2, then choose any row with exactly 2 ones in V that is         part of a maximum size component in the graph defined by V.   After the row is chosen in this step the first row of A that   intersects V is exchanged with the chosen row so that the chosen row   is the first row that intersects V.  The columns of A among those   that intersect V are reordered so that one of the r ones in the   chosen row appears in the first column of V and so that the remaining   r-1 ones appear in the last columns of V.  Then, the chosen row is   exclusive-ORed into all the other rows of A below the chosen row that   have a one in the first column of V.  Finally, i is incremented by 1   and u is incremented by r-1, which completes the step.5.5.2.3.  Second Phase   The submatrix U is further partitioned into the first i rows,   U_upper, and the remaining M - i rows, U_lower.  Gaussian elimination   is performed in the second phase on U_lower to either determine that   its rank is less than u (decoding failure) or to convert it into a   matrix where the first u rows is the identity matrix (success of the   second phase).  Call this u by u identity matrix I_u.  The M - L rows   of A that intersect U_lower - I_u are discarded.  After this phase, A   has L rows and L columns.5.5.2.4.  Third Phase   After the second phase, the only portion of A that needs to be zeroed   out to finish converting A into the L by L identity matrix is   U_upper.  The number of rows i of the submatrix U_upper is generally   much larger than the number of columns u of U_upper.  To zero out   U_upper efficiently, the following precomputation matrix U' is   computed based on I_u in the third phase and then U' is used in the   fourth phase to zero out U_upper.  The u rows of Iu are partitioned   into ceil(u/8) groups of 8 rows each.  Then, for each group of 8   rows, all non-zero combinations of the 8 rows are computed, resulting   in 2^^8 - 1 = 255 rows (this can be done with 2^^8-8-1 = 247   exclusive-ors of rows per group, since the combinations of Hamming   weight one that appear in I_u do not need to be recomputed).  Thus,   the resulting precomputation matrix U' has ceil(u/8)*255 rows and u   columns.  Note that U' is not formally a part of matrix A, but will   be used in the fourth phase to zero out U_upper.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20075.5.2.5.  Fourth Phase   For each of the first i rows of A, for each group of 8 columns in the   U_upper submatrix of this row, if the set of 8 column entries in   U_upper are not all zero, then the row of the precomputation matrix   U' that matches the pattern in the 8 columns is exclusive-ORed into   the row, thus zeroing out those 8 columns in the row at the cost of   exclusive-ORing one row of U' into the row.   After this phase, A is the L by L identity matrix and a complete   decoding schedule has been successfully formed.  Then, as explained   inSection 5.5.2.1, the corresponding decoding consisting of   exclusive-ORing known encoding symbols can be executed to recover the   intermediate symbols based on the decoding schedule.  The triples   associated with all source symbols are computed according toSection 5.4.2.2.  The triples for received source symbols are used in   the decoding.  The triples for missing source symbols are used to   determine which intermediate symbols need to be exclusive-ORed to   recover the missing source symbols.5.6.  Random Numbers   The two tables V0 and V1 described inSection 5.4.4.1 are given   below.  Each entry is a 32-bit integer in decimal representation.5.6.1.  The Table V0   251291136, 3952231631, 3370958628, 4070167936, 123631495, 3351110283,   3218676425, 2011642291, 774603218, 2402805061, 1004366930,   1843948209, 428891132, 3746331984, 1591258008, 3067016507,   1433388735, 504005498, 2032657933, 3419319784, 2805686246,   3102436986, 3808671154, 2501582075, 3978944421, 246043949,   4016898363, 649743608, 1974987508, 2651273766, 2357956801, 689605112,   715807172, 2722736134, 191939188, 3535520147, 3277019569, 1470435941,   3763101702, 3232409631, 122701163, 3920852693, 782246947, 372121310,   2995604341, 2045698575, 2332962102, 4005368743, 218596347,   3415381967, 4207612806, 861117671, 3676575285, 2581671944,   3312220480, 681232419, 307306866, 4112503940, 1158111502, 709227802,   2724140433, 4201101115, 4215970289, 4048876515, 3031661061,   1909085522, 510985033, 1361682810, 129243379, 3142379587, 2569842483,   3033268270, 1658118006, 932109358, 1982290045, 2983082771,   3007670818, 3448104768, 683749698, 778296777, 1399125101, 1939403708,   1692176003, 3868299200, 1422476658, 593093658, 1878973865,   2526292949, 1591602827, 3986158854, 3964389521, 2695031039,   1942050155, 424618399, 1347204291, 2669179716, 2434425874,   2540801947, 1384069776, 4123580443, 1523670218, 2708475297,   1046771089, 2229796016, 1255426612, 4213663089, 1521339547,   3041843489, 420130494, 10677091, 515623176, 3457502702, 2115821274,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   2720124766, 3242576090, 854310108, 425973987, 325832382, 1796851292,   2462744411, 1976681690, 1408671665, 1228817808, 3917210003,   263976645, 2593736473, 2471651269, 4291353919, 650792940, 1191583883,   3046561335, 2466530435, 2545983082, 969168436, 2019348792,   2268075521, 1169345068, 3250240009, 3963499681, 2560755113,   911182396, 760842409, 3569308693, 2687243553, 381854665, 2613828404,   2761078866, 1456668111, 883760091, 3294951678, 1604598575,   1985308198, 1014570543, 2724959607, 3062518035, 3115293053,   138853680, 4160398285, 3322241130, 2068983570, 2247491078,   3669524410, 1575146607, 828029864, 3732001371, 3422026452,   3370954177, 4006626915, 543812220, 1243116171, 3928372514,   2791443445, 4081325272, 2280435605, 885616073, 616452097, 3188863436,   2780382310, 2340014831, 1208439576, 258356309, 3837963200,   2075009450, 3214181212, 3303882142, 880813252, 1355575717, 207231484,   2420803184, 358923368, 1617557768, 3272161958, 1771154147,   2842106362, 1751209208, 1421030790, 658316681, 194065839, 3241510581,   38625260, 301875395, 4176141739, 297312930, 2137802113, 1502984205,   3669376622, 3728477036, 234652930, 2213589897, 2734638932,   1129721478, 3187422815, 2859178611, 3284308411, 3819792700,   3557526733, 451874476, 1740576081, 3592838701, 1709429513,   3702918379, 3533351328, 1641660745, 179350258, 2380520112,   3936163904, 3685256204, 3156252216, 1854258901, 2861641019,   3176611298, 834787554, 331353807, 517858103, 3010168884, 4012642001,   2217188075, 3756943137, 3077882590, 2054995199, 3081443129,   3895398812, 1141097543, 2376261053, 2626898255, 2554703076,   401233789, 1460049922, 678083952, 1064990737, 940909784, 1673396780,   528881783, 1712547446, 3629685652, 13583075115.6.2.  The Table V1   807385413, 2043073223, 3336749796, 1302105833, 2278607931, 541015020,   1684564270, 372709334, 3508252125, 1768346005, 1270451292,   2603029534, 2049387273, 3891424859, 2152948345, 4114760273,   915180310, 3754787998, 700503826, 2131559305, 1308908630, 224437350,   4065424007, 3638665944, 1679385496, 3431345226, 1779595665,   3068494238, 1424062773, 1033448464, 4050396853, 3302235057,   420600373, 2868446243, 311689386, 259047959, 4057180909, 1575367248,   4151214153, 110249784, 3006865921, 4293710613, 3501256572, 998007483,   499288295, 1205710710, 2997199489, 640417429, 3044194711, 486690751,   2686640734, 2394526209, 2521660077, 49993987, 3843885867, 4201106668,   415906198, 19296841, 2402488407, 2137119134, 1744097284, 579965637,   2037662632, 852173610, 2681403713, 1047144830, 2982173936, 910285038,   4187576520, 2589870048, 989448887, 3292758024, 506322719, 176010738,   1865471968, 2619324712, 564829442, 1996870325, 339697593, 4071072948,   3618966336, 2111320126, 1093955153, 957978696, 892010560, 1854601078,   1873407527, 2498544695, 2694156259, 1927339682, 1650555729,   183933047, 3061444337, 2067387204, 228962564, 3904109414, 1595995433,   1780701372, 2463145963, 307281463, 3237929991, 3852995239,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   2398693510, 3754138664, 522074127, 146352474, 4104915256, 3029415884,   3545667983, 332038910, 976628269, 3123492423, 3041418372, 2258059298,   2139377204, 3243642973, 3226247917, 3674004636, 2698992189,   3453843574, 1963216666, 3509855005, 2358481858, 747331248,   1957348676, 1097574450, 2435697214, 3870972145, 1888833893,   2914085525, 4161315584, 1273113343, 3269644828, 3681293816,   412536684, 1156034077, 3823026442, 1066971017, 3598330293,   1979273937, 2079029895, 1195045909, 1071986421, 2712821515,   3377754595, 2184151095, 750918864, 2585729879, 4249895712,   1832579367, 1192240192, 946734366, 31230688, 3174399083, 3549375728,   1642430184, 1904857554, 861877404, 3277825584, 4267074718,   3122860549, 666423581, 644189126, 226475395, 307789415, 1196105631,   3191691839, 782852669, 1608507813, 1847685900, 4069766876,   3931548641, 2526471011, 766865139, 2115084288, 4259411376,   3323683436, 568512177, 3736601419, 1800276898, 4012458395, 1823982,   27980198, 2023839966, 869505096, 431161506, 1024804023, 1853869307,   3393537983, 1500703614, 3019471560, 1351086955, 3096933631,   3034634988, 2544598006, 1230942551, 3362230798, 159984793, 491590373,   3993872886, 3681855622, 903593547, 3535062472, 1799803217, 772984149,   895863112, 1899036275, 4187322100, 101856048, 234650315, 3183125617,   3190039692, 525584357, 1286834489, 455810374, 1869181575, 922673938,   3877430102, 3422391938, 1414347295, 1971054608, 3061798054,   830555096, 2822905141, 167033190, 1079139428, 4210126723, 3593797804,   429192890, 372093950, 1779187770, 3312189287, 204349348, 452421568,   2800540462, 3733109044, 1235082423, 1765319556, 3174729780,   3762994475, 3171962488, 442160826, 198349622, 45942637, 1324086311,   2901868599, 678860040, 3812229107, 19936821, 1119590141, 3640121682,   3545931032, 2102949142, 2828208598, 3603378023, 41350488965.7.  Systematic Indices J(K)   For each value of K, the systematic index J(K) is designed to have   the property that the set of source symbol triples (d[0], a[0],   b[0]), ..., (d[L-1], a[L-1], b[L-1]) are such that the L intermediate   symbols are uniquely defined, i.e., the matrix A inSection 5.4.2.4.2   has full rank and is therefore invertible.   The following is the list of the systematic indices for values of K   between 4 and 8192 inclusive.   18, 14, 61, 46, 14, 22, 20, 40, 48, 1, 29, 40, 43, 46, 18, 8, 20, 2,   61, 26, 13, 29, 36, 19, 58, 5, 58, 0, 54, 56, 24, 14, 5, 67, 39, 31,   25, 29, 24, 19, 14, 56, 49, 49, 63, 30, 4, 39, 2, 1, 20, 19, 61, 4,   54, 70, 25, 52, 9, 26, 55, 69, 27, 68, 75, 19, 64, 57, 45, 3, 37, 31,   100, 41, 25, 41, 53, 23, 9, 31, 26, 30, 30, 46, 90, 50, 13, 90, 77,   61, 31, 54, 54, 3, 21, 66, 21, 11, 23, 11, 29, 21, 7, 1, 27, 4, 34,   17, 85, 69, 17, 75, 93, 57, 0, 53, 71, 88, 119, 88, 90, 22, 0, 58,   41, 22, 96, 26, 79, 118, 19, 3, 81, 72, 50, 0, 32, 79, 28, 25, 12,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   25, 29, 3, 37, 30, 30, 41, 84, 32, 31, 61, 32, 61, 7, 56, 54, 39, 33,   66, 29, 3, 14, 75, 75, 78, 84, 75, 84, 25, 54, 25, 25, 107, 78, 27,   73, 0, 49, 96, 53, 50, 21, 10, 73, 58, 65, 27, 3, 27, 18, 54, 45, 69,   29, 3, 65, 31, 71, 76, 56, 54, 76, 54, 13, 5, 18, 142, 17, 3, 37,   114, 41, 25, 56, 0, 23, 3, 41, 22, 22, 31, 18, 48, 31, 58, 37, 75,   88, 3, 56, 1, 95, 19, 73, 52, 52, 4, 75, 26, 1, 25, 10, 1, 70, 31,   31, 12, 10, 54, 46, 11, 74, 84, 74, 8, 58, 23, 74, 8, 36, 11, 16, 94,   76, 14, 57, 65, 8, 22, 10, 36, 36, 96, 62, 103, 6, 75, 103, 58, 10,   15, 41, 75, 125, 58, 15, 10, 34, 29, 34, 4, 16, 29, 18, 18, 28, 71,   28, 43, 77, 18, 41, 41, 41, 62, 29, 96, 15, 106, 43, 15, 3, 43, 61,   3, 18, 103, 77, 29, 103, 19, 58, 84, 58, 1, 146, 32, 3, 70, 52, 54,   29, 70, 69, 124, 62, 1, 26, 38, 26, 3, 16, 26, 5, 51, 120, 41, 16, 1,   43, 34, 34, 29, 37, 56, 29, 96, 86, 54, 25, 84, 50, 34, 34, 93, 84,   96, 29, 29, 50, 50, 6, 1, 105, 78, 15, 37, 19, 50, 71, 36, 6, 54, 8,   28, 54, 75, 75, 16, 75, 131, 5, 25, 16, 69, 17, 69, 6, 96, 53, 96,   41, 119, 6, 6, 88, 50, 88, 52, 37, 0, 124, 73, 73, 7, 14, 36, 69, 79,   6, 114, 40, 79, 17, 77, 24, 44, 37, 69, 27, 37, 29, 33, 37, 50, 31,   69, 29, 101, 7, 61, 45, 17, 73, 37, 34, 18, 94, 22, 22, 63, 3, 25,   25, 17, 3, 90, 34, 34, 41, 34, 41, 54, 41, 54, 41, 41, 41, 163, 143,   96, 18, 32, 39, 86, 104, 11, 17, 17, 11, 86, 104, 78, 70, 52, 78, 17,   73, 91, 62, 7, 128, 50, 124, 18, 101, 46, 10, 75, 104, 73, 58, 132,   34, 13, 4, 95, 88, 33, 76, 74, 54, 62, 113, 114, 103, 32, 103, 69,   54, 53, 3, 11, 72, 31, 53, 102, 37, 53, 11, 81, 41, 10, 164, 10, 41,   31, 36, 113, 82, 3, 125, 62, 16, 4, 41, 41, 4, 128, 49, 138, 128, 74,   103, 0, 6, 101, 41, 142, 171, 39, 105, 121, 81, 62, 41, 81, 37, 3,   81, 69, 62, 3, 69, 70, 21, 29, 4, 91, 87, 37, 79, 36, 21, 71, 37, 41,   75, 128, 128, 15, 25, 3, 108, 73, 91, 62, 114, 62, 62, 36, 36, 15,   58, 114, 61, 114, 58, 105, 114, 41, 61, 176, 145, 46, 37, 30, 220,   77, 138, 15, 1, 128, 53, 50, 50, 58, 8, 91, 114, 105, 63, 91, 37, 37,   13, 169, 51, 102, 6, 102, 23, 105, 23, 58, 6, 29, 29, 19, 82, 29, 13,   36, 27, 29, 61, 12, 18, 127, 127, 12, 44, 102, 18, 4, 15, 206, 53,   127, 53, 17, 69, 69, 69, 29, 29, 109, 25, 102, 25, 53, 62, 99, 62,   62, 29, 62, 62, 45, 91, 125, 29, 29, 29, 4, 117, 72, 4, 30, 71, 71,   95, 79, 179, 71, 30, 53, 32, 32, 49, 25, 91, 25, 26, 26, 103, 123,   26, 41, 162, 78, 52, 103, 25, 6, 142, 94, 45, 45, 94, 127, 94, 94,   94, 47, 209, 138, 39, 39, 19, 154, 73, 67, 91, 27, 91, 84, 4, 84, 91,   12, 14, 165, 142, 54, 69, 192, 157, 185, 8, 95, 25, 62, 103, 103, 95,   71, 97, 62, 128, 0, 29, 51, 16, 94, 16, 16, 51, 0, 29, 85, 10, 105,   16, 29, 29, 13, 29, 4, 4, 132, 23, 95, 25, 54, 41, 29, 50, 70, 58,   142, 72, 70, 15, 72, 54, 29, 22, 145, 29, 127, 29, 85, 58, 101, 34,   165, 91, 46, 46, 25, 185, 25, 77, 128, 46, 128, 46, 188, 114, 46, 25,   45, 45, 114, 145, 114, 15, 102, 142, 8, 73, 31, 139, 157, 13, 79, 13,   114, 150, 8, 90, 91, 123, 69, 82, 132, 8, 18, 10, 102, 103, 114, 103,   8, 103, 13, 115, 55, 62, 3, 8, 154, 114, 99, 19, 8, 31, 73, 19, 99,   10, 6, 121, 32, 13, 32, 119, 32, 29, 145, 30, 13, 13, 114, 145, 32,   1, 123, 39, 29, 31, 69, 31, 140, 72, 72, 25, 25, 123, 25, 123, 8, 4,   85, 8, 25, 39, 25, 39, 85, 138, 25, 138, 25, 33, 102, 70, 25, 25, 31,   25, 25, 192, 69, 69, 114, 145, 120, 120, 8, 33, 98, 15, 212, 155, 8,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   101, 8, 8, 98, 68, 155, 102, 132, 120, 30, 25, 123, 123, 101, 25,   123, 32, 24, 94, 145, 32, 24, 94, 118, 145, 101, 53, 53, 25, 128,   173, 142, 81, 81, 69, 33, 33, 125, 4, 1, 17, 27, 4, 17, 102, 27, 13,   25, 128, 71, 13, 39, 53, 13, 53, 47, 39, 23, 128, 53, 39, 47, 39,   135, 158, 136, 36, 36, 27, 157, 47, 76, 213, 47, 156, 25, 25, 53, 25,   53, 25, 86, 27, 159, 25, 62, 79, 39, 79, 25, 145, 49, 25, 143, 13,   114, 150, 130, 94, 102, 39, 4, 39, 61, 77, 228, 22, 25, 47, 119, 205,   122, 119, 205, 119, 22, 119, 258, 143, 22, 81, 179, 22, 22, 143, 25,   65, 53, 168, 36, 79, 175, 37, 79, 70, 79, 103, 70, 25, 175, 4, 96,   96, 49, 128, 138, 96, 22, 62, 47, 95, 105, 95, 62, 95, 62, 142, 103,   69, 103, 30, 103, 34, 173, 127, 70, 127, 132, 18, 85, 22, 71, 18,   206, 206, 18, 128, 145, 70, 193, 188, 8, 125, 114, 70, 128, 114, 145,   102, 25, 12, 108, 102, 94, 10, 102, 1, 102, 124, 22, 22, 118, 132,   22, 116, 75, 41, 63, 41, 189, 208, 55, 85, 69, 8, 71, 53, 71, 69,   102, 165, 41, 99, 69, 33, 33, 29, 156, 102, 13, 251, 102, 25, 13,   109, 102, 164, 102, 164, 102, 25, 29, 228, 29, 259, 179, 222, 95, 94,   30, 30, 30, 142, 55, 142, 72, 55, 102, 128, 17, 69, 164, 165, 3, 164,   36, 165, 27, 27, 45, 21, 21, 237, 113, 83, 231, 106, 13, 154, 13,   154, 128, 154, 148, 258, 25, 154, 128, 3, 27, 10, 145, 145, 21, 146,   25, 1, 185, 121, 0, 1, 95, 55, 95, 95, 30, 0, 27, 95, 0, 95, 8, 222,   27, 121, 30, 95, 121, 0, 98, 94, 131, 55, 95, 95, 30, 98, 30, 0, 91,   145, 66, 179, 66, 58, 175, 29, 0, 31, 173, 146, 160, 39, 53, 28, 123,   199, 123, 175, 146, 156, 54, 54, 149, 25, 70, 178, 128, 25, 70, 70,   94, 224, 54, 4, 54, 54, 25, 228, 160, 206, 165, 143, 206, 108, 220,   234, 160, 13, 169, 103, 103, 103, 91, 213, 222, 91, 103, 91, 103, 31,   30, 123, 13, 62, 103, 50, 106, 42, 13, 145, 114, 220, 65, 8, 8, 175,   11, 104, 94, 118, 132, 27, 118, 193, 27, 128, 127, 127, 183, 33, 30,   29, 103, 128, 61, 234, 165, 41, 29, 193, 33, 207, 41, 165, 165, 55,   81, 157, 157, 8, 81, 11, 27, 8, 8, 98, 96, 142, 145, 41, 179, 112,   62, 180, 206, 206, 165, 39, 241, 45, 151, 26, 197, 102, 192, 125,   128, 67, 128, 69, 128, 197, 33, 125, 102, 13, 103, 25, 30, 12, 30,   12, 30, 25, 77, 12, 25, 180, 27, 10, 69, 235, 228, 343, 118, 69, 41,   8, 69, 175, 25, 69, 25, 125, 41, 25, 41, 8, 155, 146, 155, 146, 155,   206, 168, 128, 157, 27, 273, 211, 211, 168, 11, 173, 154, 77, 173,   77, 102, 102, 102, 8, 85, 95, 102, 157, 28, 122, 234, 122, 157, 235,   222, 241, 10, 91, 179, 25, 13, 25, 41, 25, 206, 41, 6, 41, 158, 206,   206, 33, 296, 296, 33, 228, 69, 8, 114, 148, 33, 29, 66, 27, 27, 30,   233, 54, 173, 108, 106, 108, 108, 53, 103, 33, 33, 33, 176, 27, 27,   205, 164, 105, 237, 41, 27, 72, 165, 29, 29, 259, 132, 132, 132, 364,   71, 71, 27, 94, 160, 127, 51, 234, 55, 27, 95, 94, 165, 55, 55, 41,   0, 41, 128, 4, 123, 173, 6, 164, 157, 121, 121, 154, 86, 164, 164,   25, 93, 164, 25, 164, 210, 284, 62, 93, 30, 25, 25, 30, 30, 260, 130,   25, 125, 57, 53, 166, 166, 166, 185, 166, 158, 94, 113, 215, 159, 62,   99, 21, 172, 99, 184, 62, 259, 4, 21, 21, 77, 62, 173, 41, 146, 6,   41, 128, 121, 41, 11, 121, 103, 159, 164, 175, 206, 91, 103, 164, 72,   25, 129, 72, 206, 129, 33, 103, 102, 102, 29, 13, 11, 251, 234, 135,   31, 8, 123, 65, 91, 121, 129, 65, 243, 10, 91, 8, 65, 70, 228, 220,   243, 91, 10, 10, 30, 178, 91, 178, 33, 21, 25, 235, 165, 11, 161,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   158, 27, 27, 30, 128, 75, 36, 30, 36, 36, 173, 25, 33, 178, 112, 162,   112, 112, 112, 162, 33, 33, 178, 123, 123, 39, 106, 91, 106, 106,   158, 106, 106, 284, 39, 230, 21, 228, 11, 21, 228, 159, 241, 62, 10,   62, 10, 68, 234, 39, 39, 138, 62, 22, 27, 183, 22, 215, 10, 175, 175,   353, 228, 42, 193, 175, 175, 27, 98, 27, 193, 150, 27, 173, 17, 233,   233, 25, 102, 123, 152, 242, 108, 4, 94, 176, 13, 41, 219, 17, 151,   22, 103, 103, 53, 128, 233, 284, 25, 265, 128, 39, 39, 138, 42, 39,   21, 86, 95, 127, 29, 91, 46, 103, 103, 215, 25, 123, 123, 230, 25,   193, 180, 30, 60, 30, 242, 136, 180, 193, 30, 206, 180, 60, 165, 206,   193, 165, 123, 164, 103, 68, 25, 70, 91, 25, 82, 53, 82, 186, 53, 82,   53, 25, 30, 282, 91, 13, 234, 160, 160, 126, 149, 36, 36, 160, 149,   178, 160, 39, 294, 149, 149, 160, 39, 95, 221, 186, 106, 178, 316,   267, 53, 53, 164, 159, 164, 165, 94, 228, 53, 52, 178, 183, 53, 294,   128, 55, 140, 294, 25, 95, 366, 15, 304, 13, 183, 77, 230, 6, 136,   235, 121, 311, 273, 36, 158, 235, 230, 98, 201, 165, 165, 165, 91,   175, 248, 39, 185, 128, 39, 39, 128, 313, 91, 36, 219, 130, 25, 130,   234, 234, 130, 234, 121, 205, 304, 94, 77, 64, 259, 60, 60, 60, 77,   242, 60, 145, 95, 270, 18, 91, 199, 159, 91, 235, 58, 249, 26, 123,   114, 29, 15, 191, 15, 30, 55, 55, 347, 4, 29, 15, 4, 341, 93, 7, 30,   23, 7, 121, 266, 178, 261, 70, 169, 25, 25, 158, 169, 25, 169, 270,   270, 13, 128, 327, 103, 55, 128, 103, 136, 159, 103, 327, 41, 32,   111, 111, 114, 173, 215, 173, 25, 173, 180, 114, 173, 173, 98, 93,   25, 160, 157, 159, 160, 159, 159, 160, 320, 35, 193, 221, 33, 36,   136, 248, 91, 215, 125, 215, 156, 68, 125, 125, 1, 287, 123, 94, 30,   184, 13, 30, 94, 123, 206, 12, 206, 289, 128, 122, 184, 128, 289,   178, 29, 26, 206, 178, 65, 206, 128, 192, 102, 197, 36, 94, 94, 155,   10, 36, 121, 280, 121, 368, 192, 121, 121, 179, 121, 36, 54, 192,   121, 192, 197, 118, 123, 224, 118, 10, 192, 10, 91, 269, 91, 49, 206,   184, 185, 62, 8, 49, 289, 30, 5, 55, 30, 42, 39, 220, 298, 42, 347,   42, 234, 42, 70, 42, 55, 321, 129, 172, 173, 172, 13, 98, 129, 325,   235, 284, 362, 129, 233, 345, 175, 261, 175, 60, 261, 58, 289, 99,   99, 99, 206, 99, 36, 175, 29, 25, 432, 125, 264, 168, 173, 69, 158,   273, 179, 164, 69, 158, 69, 8, 95, 192, 30, 164, 101, 44, 53, 273,   335, 273, 53, 45, 128, 45, 234, 123, 105, 103, 103, 224, 36, 90, 211,   282, 264, 91, 228, 91, 166, 264, 228, 398, 50, 101, 91, 264, 73, 36,   25, 73, 50, 50, 242, 36, 36, 58, 165, 204, 353, 165, 125, 320, 128,   298, 298, 180, 128, 60, 102, 30, 30, 53, 179, 234, 325, 234, 175, 21,   250, 215, 103, 21, 21, 250, 91, 211, 91, 313, 301, 323, 215, 228,   160, 29, 29, 81, 53, 180, 146, 248, 66, 159, 39, 98, 323, 98, 36, 95,   218, 234, 39, 82, 82, 230, 62, 13, 62, 230, 13, 30, 98, 0, 8, 98, 8,   98, 91, 267, 121, 197, 30, 78, 27, 78, 102, 27, 298, 160, 103, 264,   264, 264, 175, 17, 273, 273, 165, 31, 160, 17, 99, 17, 99, 234, 31,   17, 99, 36, 26, 128, 29, 214, 353, 264, 102, 36, 102, 264, 264, 273,   273, 4, 16, 138, 138, 264, 128, 313, 25, 420, 60, 10, 280, 264, 60,   60, 103, 178, 125, 178, 29, 327, 29, 36, 30, 36, 4, 52, 183, 183,   173, 52, 31, 173, 31, 158, 31, 158, 31, 9, 31, 31, 353, 31, 353, 173,   415, 9, 17, 222, 31, 103, 31, 165, 27, 31, 31, 165, 27, 27, 206, 31,   31, 4, 4, 30, 4, 4, 264, 185, 159, 310, 273, 310, 173, 40, 4, 173, 4,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   173, 4, 250, 250, 62, 188, 119, 250, 233, 62, 121, 105, 105, 54, 103,   111, 291, 236, 236, 103, 297, 36, 26, 316, 69, 183, 158, 206, 129,   160, 129, 184, 55, 179, 279, 11, 179, 347, 160, 184, 129, 179, 351,   179, 353, 179, 129, 129, 351, 11, 111, 93, 93, 235, 103, 173, 53, 93,   50, 111, 86, 123, 94, 36, 183, 60, 55, 55, 178, 219, 253, 321, 178,   235, 235, 183, 183, 204, 321, 219, 160, 193, 335, 121, 70, 69, 295,   159, 297, 231, 121, 231, 136, 353, 136, 121, 279, 215, 366, 215, 353,   159, 353, 353, 103, 31, 31, 298, 298, 30, 30, 165, 273, 25, 219, 35,   165, 259, 54, 36, 54, 54, 165, 71, 250, 327, 13, 289, 165, 196, 165,   165, 94, 233, 165, 94, 60, 165, 96, 220, 166, 271, 158, 397, 122, 53,   53, 137, 280, 272, 62, 30, 30, 30, 105, 102, 67, 140, 8, 67, 21, 270,   298, 69, 173, 298, 91, 179, 327, 86, 179, 88, 179, 179, 55, 123, 220,   233, 94, 94, 175, 13, 53, 13, 154, 191, 74, 83, 83, 325, 207, 83, 74,   83, 325, 74, 316, 388, 55, 55, 364, 55, 183, 434, 273, 273, 273, 164,   213, 11, 213, 327, 321, 21, 352, 185, 103, 13, 13, 55, 30, 323, 123,   178, 435, 178, 30, 175, 175, 30, 481, 527, 175, 125, 232, 306, 232,   206, 306, 364, 206, 270, 206, 232, 10, 30, 130, 160, 130, 347, 240,   30, 136, 130, 347, 136, 279, 298, 206, 30, 103, 273, 241, 70, 206,   306, 434, 206, 94, 94, 156, 161, 321, 321, 64, 161, 13, 183, 183, 83,   161, 13, 169, 13, 159, 36, 173, 159, 36, 36, 230, 235, 235, 159, 159,   335, 312, 42, 342, 264, 39, 39, 39, 34, 298, 36, 36, 252, 164, 29,   493, 29, 387, 387, 435, 493, 132, 273, 105, 132, 74, 73, 206, 234,   273, 206, 95, 15, 280, 280, 280, 280, 397, 273, 273, 242, 397, 280,   397, 397, 397, 273, 397, 280, 230, 137, 353, 67, 81, 137, 137, 353,   259, 312, 114, 164, 164, 25, 77, 21, 77, 165, 30, 30, 231, 234, 121,   234, 312, 121, 364, 136, 123, 123, 136, 123, 136, 150, 264, 285, 30,   166, 93, 30, 39, 224, 136, 39, 355, 355, 397, 67, 67, 25, 67, 25,   298, 11, 67, 264, 374, 99, 150, 321, 67, 70, 67, 295, 150, 29, 321,   150, 70, 29, 142, 355, 311, 173, 13, 253, 103, 114, 114, 70, 192, 22,   128, 128, 183, 184, 70, 77, 215, 102, 292, 30, 123, 279, 292, 142,   33, 215, 102, 468, 123, 468, 473, 30, 292, 215, 30, 213, 443, 473,   215, 234, 279, 279, 279, 279, 265, 443, 206, 66, 313, 34, 30, 206,   30, 51, 15, 206, 41, 434, 41, 398, 67, 30, 301, 67, 36, 3, 285, 437,   136, 136, 22, 136, 145, 365, 323, 323, 145, 136, 22, 453, 99, 323,   353, 9, 258, 323, 231, 128, 231, 382, 150, 420, 39, 94, 29, 29, 353,   22, 22, 347, 353, 39, 29, 22, 183, 8, 284, 355, 388, 284, 60, 64, 99,   60, 64, 150, 95, 150, 364, 150, 95, 150, 6, 236, 383, 544, 81, 206,   388, 206, 58, 159, 99, 231, 228, 363, 363, 121, 99, 121, 121, 99,   422, 544, 273, 173, 121, 427, 102, 121, 235, 284, 179, 25, 197, 25,   179, 511, 70, 368, 70, 25, 388, 123, 368, 159, 213, 410, 159, 236,   127, 159, 21, 373, 184, 424, 327, 250, 176, 176, 175, 284, 316, 176,   284, 327, 111, 250, 284, 175, 175, 264, 111, 176, 219, 111, 427, 427,   176, 284, 427, 353, 428, 55, 184, 493, 158, 136, 99, 287, 264, 334,   264, 213, 213, 292, 481, 93, 264, 292, 295, 295, 6, 367, 279, 173,   308, 285, 158, 308, 335, 299, 137, 137, 572, 41, 137, 137, 41, 94,   335, 220, 36, 224, 420, 36, 265, 265, 91, 91, 71, 123, 264, 91, 91,   123, 107, 30, 22, 292, 35, 241, 356, 298, 14, 298, 441, 35, 121, 71,   63, 130, 63, 488, 363, 71, 63, 307, 194, 71, 71, 220, 121, 125, 71,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   220, 71, 71, 71, 71, 235, 265, 353, 128, 155, 128, 420, 400, 130,   173, 183, 183, 184, 130, 173, 183, 13, 183, 130, 130, 183, 183, 353,   353, 183, 242, 183, 183, 306, 324, 324, 321, 306, 321, 6, 6, 128,   306, 242, 242, 306, 183, 183, 6, 183, 321, 486, 183, 164, 30, 78,   138, 158, 138, 34, 206, 362, 55, 70, 67, 21, 375, 136, 298, 81, 298,   298, 298, 230, 121, 30, 230, 311, 240, 311, 311, 158, 204, 136, 136,   184, 136, 264, 311, 311, 312, 312, 72, 311, 175, 264, 91, 175, 264,   121, 461, 312, 312, 238, 475, 350, 512, 350, 312, 313, 350, 312, 366,   294, 30, 253, 253, 253, 388, 158, 388, 22, 388, 22, 388, 103, 321,   321, 253, 7, 437, 103, 114, 242, 114, 114, 242, 114, 114, 242, 242,   242, 306, 242, 114, 7, 353, 335, 27, 241, 299, 312, 364, 506, 409,   94, 462, 230, 462, 243, 230, 175, 175, 462, 461, 230, 428, 426, 175,   175, 165, 175, 175, 372, 183, 572, 102, 85, 102, 538, 206, 376, 85,   85, 284, 85, 85, 284, 398, 83, 160, 265, 308, 398, 310, 583, 289,   279, 273, 285, 490, 490, 211, 292, 292, 158, 398, 30, 220, 169, 368,   368, 368, 169, 159, 368, 93, 368, 368, 93, 169, 368, 368, 443, 368,   298, 443, 368, 298, 538, 345, 345, 311, 178, 54, 311, 215, 178, 175,   222, 264, 475, 264, 264, 475, 478, 289, 63, 236, 63, 299, 231, 296,   397, 299, 158, 36, 164, 164, 21, 492, 21, 164, 21, 164, 403, 26, 26,   588, 179, 234, 169, 465, 295, 67, 41, 353, 295, 538, 161, 185, 306,   323, 68, 420, 323, 82, 241, 241, 36, 53, 493, 301, 292, 241, 250, 63,   63, 103, 442, 353, 185, 353, 321, 353, 185, 353, 353, 185, 409, 353,   589, 34, 271, 271, 34, 86, 34, 34, 353, 353, 39, 414, 4, 95, 95, 4,   225, 95, 4, 121, 30, 552, 136, 159, 159, 514, 159, 159, 54, 514, 206,   136, 206, 159, 74, 235, 235, 312, 54, 312, 42, 156, 422, 629, 54,   465, 265, 165, 250, 35, 165, 175, 659, 175, 175, 8, 8, 8, 8, 206,   206, 206, 50, 435, 206, 432, 230, 230, 234, 230, 94, 299, 299, 285,   184, 41, 93, 299, 299, 285, 41, 285, 158, 285, 206, 299, 41, 36, 396,   364, 364, 120, 396, 514, 91, 382, 538, 807, 717, 22, 93, 412, 54,   215, 54, 298, 308, 148, 298, 148, 298, 308, 102, 656, 6, 148, 745,   128, 298, 64, 407, 273, 41, 172, 64, 234, 250, 398, 181, 445, 95,   236, 441, 477, 504, 102, 196, 137, 364, 60, 453, 137, 364, 367, 334,   364, 299, 196, 397, 630, 589, 589, 196, 646, 337, 235, 128, 128, 343,   289, 235, 324, 427, 324, 58, 215, 215, 461, 425, 461, 387, 440, 285,   440, 440, 285, 387, 632, 325, 325, 440, 461, 425, 425, 387, 627, 191,   285, 440, 308, 55, 219, 280, 308, 265, 538, 183, 121, 30, 236, 206,   30, 455, 236, 30, 30, 705, 83, 228, 280, 468, 132, 8, 132, 132, 128,   409, 173, 353, 132, 409, 35, 128, 450, 137, 398, 67, 432, 423, 235,   235, 388, 306, 93, 93, 452, 300, 190, 13, 452, 388, 30, 452, 13, 30,   13, 30, 306, 362, 234, 721, 635, 809, 784, 67, 498, 498, 67, 353,   635, 67, 183, 159, 445, 285, 183, 53, 183, 445, 265, 432, 57, 420,   432, 420, 477, 327, 55, 60, 105, 183, 218, 104, 104, 475, 239, 582,   151, 239, 104, 732, 41, 26, 784, 86, 300, 215, 36, 64, 86, 86, 675,   294, 64, 86, 528, 550, 493, 565, 298, 230, 312, 295, 538, 298, 295,   230, 54, 374, 516, 441, 54, 54, 323, 401, 401, 382, 159, 837, 159,   54, 401, 592, 159, 401, 417, 610, 264, 150, 323, 452, 185, 323, 323,   185, 403, 185, 423, 165, 425, 219, 407, 270, 231, 99, 93, 231, 631,   756, 71, 364, 434, 213, 86, 102, 434, 102, 86, 23, 71, 335, 164, 323,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   409, 381, 4, 124, 41, 424, 206, 41, 124, 41, 41, 703, 635, 124, 493,   41, 41, 487, 492, 124, 175, 124, 261, 600, 488, 261, 488, 261, 206,   677, 261, 308, 723, 908, 704, 691, 723, 488, 488, 441, 136, 476, 312,   136, 550, 572, 728, 550, 22, 312, 312, 22, 55, 413, 183, 280, 593,   191, 36, 36, 427, 36, 695, 592, 19, 544, 13, 468, 13, 544, 72, 437,   321, 266, 461, 266, 441, 230, 409, 93, 521, 521, 345, 235, 22, 142,   150, 102, 569, 235, 264, 91, 521, 264, 7, 102, 7, 498, 521, 235, 537,   235, 6, 241, 420, 420, 631, 41, 527, 103, 67, 337, 62, 264, 527, 131,   67, 174, 263, 264, 36, 36, 263, 581, 253, 465, 160, 286, 91, 160, 55,   4, 4, 631, 631, 608, 365, 465, 294, 427, 427, 335, 669, 669, 129, 93,   93, 93, 93, 74, 66, 758, 504, 347, 130, 505, 504, 143, 505, 550, 222,   13, 352, 529, 291, 538, 50, 68, 269, 130, 295, 130, 511, 295, 295,   130, 486, 132, 61, 206, 185, 368, 669, 22, 175, 492, 207, 373, 452,   432, 327, 89, 550, 496, 611, 527, 89, 527, 496, 550, 516, 516, 91,   136, 538, 264, 264, 124, 264, 264, 264, 264, 264, 535, 264, 150, 285,   398, 285, 582, 398, 475, 81, 694, 694, 64, 81, 694, 234, 607, 723,   513, 234, 64, 581, 64, 124, 64, 607, 234, 723, 717, 367, 64, 513,   607, 488, 183, 488, 450, 183, 550, 286, 183, 363, 286, 414, 67, 449,   449, 366, 215, 235, 95, 295, 295, 41, 335, 21, 445, 225, 21, 295,   372, 749, 461, 53, 481, 397, 427, 427, 427, 714, 481, 714, 427, 717,   165, 245, 486, 415, 245, 415, 486, 274, 415, 441, 456, 300, 548, 300,   422, 422, 757, 11, 74, 430, 430, 136, 409, 430, 749, 191, 819, 592,   136, 364, 465, 231, 231, 918, 160, 589, 160, 160, 465, 465, 231, 157,   538, 538, 259, 538, 326, 22, 22, 22, 179, 22, 22, 550, 179, 287, 287,   417, 327, 498, 498, 287, 488, 327, 538, 488, 583, 488, 287, 335, 287,   335, 287, 41, 287, 335, 287, 327, 441, 335, 287, 488, 538, 327, 498,   8, 8, 374, 8, 64, 427, 8, 374, 417, 760, 409, 373, 160, 423, 206,   160, 106, 499, 160, 271, 235, 160, 590, 353, 695, 478, 619, 590, 353,   13, 63, 189, 420, 605, 427, 643, 121, 280, 415, 121, 415, 595, 417,   121, 398, 55, 330, 463, 463, 123, 353, 330, 582, 309, 582, 582, 405,   330, 550, 405, 582, 353, 309, 308, 60, 353, 7, 60, 71, 353, 189, 183,   183, 183, 582, 755, 189, 437, 287, 189, 183, 668, 481, 384, 384, 481,   481, 481, 477, 582, 582, 499, 650, 481, 121, 461, 231, 36, 235, 36,   413, 235, 209, 36, 689, 114, 353, 353, 235, 592, 36, 353, 413, 209,   70, 308, 70, 699, 308, 70, 213, 292, 86, 689, 465, 55, 508, 128, 452,   29, 41, 681, 573, 352, 21, 21, 648, 648, 69, 509, 409, 21, 264, 21,   509, 514, 514, 409, 21, 264, 443, 443, 427, 160, 433, 663, 433, 231,   646, 185, 482, 646, 433, 13, 398, 172, 234, 42, 491, 172, 234, 234,   832, 775, 172, 196, 335, 822, 461, 298, 461, 364, 1120, 537, 169,   169, 364, 694, 219, 612, 231, 740, 42, 235, 321, 279, 960, 279, 353,   492, 159, 572, 321, 159, 287, 353, 287, 287, 206, 206, 321, 287, 159,   321, 492, 159, 55, 572, 600, 270, 492, 784, 173, 91, 91, 443, 443,   582, 261, 497, 572, 91, 555, 352, 206, 261, 555, 285, 91, 555, 497,   83, 91, 619, 353, 488, 112, 4, 592, 295, 295, 488, 235, 231, 769,   568, 581, 671, 451, 451, 483, 299, 1011, 432, 422, 207, 106, 701,   508, 555, 508, 555, 125, 870, 555, 589, 508, 125, 749, 482, 125, 125,   130, 544, 643, 643, 544, 488, 22, 643, 130, 335, 544, 22, 130, 544,   544, 488, 426, 426, 4, 180, 4, 695, 35, 54, 433, 500, 592, 433, 262,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   94, 401, 401, 106, 216, 216, 106, 521, 102, 462, 518, 271, 475, 365,   193, 648, 206, 424, 206, 193, 206, 206, 424, 299, 590, 590, 364, 621,   67, 538, 488, 567, 51, 51, 513, 194, 81, 488, 486, 289, 567, 563,   749, 563, 338, 338, 502, 563, 822, 338, 563, 338, 502, 201, 230, 201,   533, 445, 175, 201, 175, 13, 85, 960, 103, 85, 175, 30, 445, 445,   175, 573, 196, 877, 287, 356, 678, 235, 489, 312, 572, 264, 717, 138,   295, 6, 295, 523, 55, 165, 165, 295, 138, 663, 6, 295, 6, 353, 138,   6, 138, 169, 129, 784, 12, 129, 194, 605, 784, 445, 234, 627, 563,   689, 627, 647, 570, 627, 570, 647, 206, 234, 215, 234, 816, 627, 816,   234, 627, 215, 234, 627, 264, 427, 427, 30, 424, 161, 161, 916, 740,   180, 616, 481, 514, 383, 265, 481, 164, 650, 121, 582, 689, 420, 669,   589, 420, 788, 549, 165, 734, 280, 224, 146, 681, 788, 184, 398, 784,   4, 398, 417, 417, 398, 636, 784, 417, 81, 398, 417, 81, 185, 827,   420, 241, 420, 41, 185, 185, 718, 241, 101, 185, 185, 241, 241, 241,   241, 241, 185, 324, 420, 420, 1011, 420, 827, 241, 184, 563, 241,   183, 285, 529, 285, 808, 822, 891, 822, 488, 285, 486, 619, 55, 869,   39, 567, 39, 289, 203, 158, 289, 710, 818, 158, 818, 355, 29, 409,   203, 308, 648, 792, 308, 308, 91, 308, 6, 592, 792, 106, 106, 308,   41, 178, 91, 751, 91, 259, 734, 166, 36, 327, 166, 230, 205, 205,   172, 128, 230, 432, 623, 838, 623, 432, 278, 432, 42, 916, 432, 694,   623, 352, 452, 93, 314, 93, 93, 641, 88, 970, 914, 230, 61, 159, 270,   159, 493, 159, 755, 159, 409, 30, 30, 836, 128, 241, 99, 102, 984,   538, 102, 102, 273, 639, 838, 102, 102, 136, 637, 508, 627, 285, 465,   327, 327, 21, 749, 327, 749, 21, 845, 21, 21, 409, 749, 1367, 806,   616, 714, 253, 616, 714, 714, 112, 375, 21, 112, 375, 375, 51, 51,   51, 51, 393, 206, 870, 713, 193, 802, 21, 1061, 42, 382, 42, 543,   876, 42, 876, 382, 696, 543, 635, 490, 353, 353, 417, 64, 1257, 271,   64, 377, 127, 127, 537, 417, 905, 353, 538, 465, 605, 876, 427, 324,   514, 852, 427, 53, 427, 557, 173, 173, 7, 1274, 563, 31, 31, 31, 745,   392, 289, 230, 230, 230, 91, 218, 327, 420, 420, 128, 901, 552, 420,   230, 608, 552, 476, 347, 476, 231, 159, 137, 716, 648, 716, 627, 740,   718, 679, 679, 6, 718, 740, 6, 189, 679, 125, 159, 757, 1191, 409,   175, 250, 409, 67, 324, 681, 605, 550, 398, 550, 931, 478, 174, 21,   316, 91, 316, 654, 409, 425, 425, 699, 61, 699, 321, 698, 321, 698,   61, 425, 699, 321, 409, 699, 299, 335, 321, 335, 61, 698, 699, 654,   698, 299, 425, 231, 14, 121, 515, 121, 14, 165, 81, 409, 189, 81,   373, 465, 463, 1055, 507, 81, 81, 189, 1246, 321, 409, 886, 104, 842,   689, 300, 740, 380, 656, 656, 832, 656, 380, 300, 300, 206, 187, 175,   142, 465, 206, 271, 468, 215, 560, 83, 215, 83, 215, 215, 83, 175,   215, 83, 83, 111, 206, 756, 559, 756, 1367, 206, 559, 1015, 559, 559,   946, 1015, 548, 559, 756, 1043, 756, 698, 159, 414, 308, 458, 997,   663, 663, 347, 39, 755, 838, 323, 755, 323, 159, 159, 717, 159, 21,   41, 128, 516, 159, 717, 71, 870, 755, 159, 740, 717, 374, 516, 740,   51, 148, 335, 148, 335, 791, 120, 364, 335, 335, 51, 120, 251, 538,   251, 971, 1395, 538, 78, 178, 538, 538, 918, 129, 918, 129, 538, 538,   656, 129, 538, 538, 129, 538, 1051, 538, 128, 838, 931, 998, 823,   1095, 334, 870, 334, 367, 550, 1061, 498, 745, 832, 498, 745, 716,   498, 498, 128, 997, 832, 716, 832, 130, 642, 616, 497, 432, 432, 432,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   432, 642, 159, 432, 46, 230, 788, 160, 230, 478, 46, 693, 103, 920,   230, 589, 643, 160, 616, 432, 165, 165, 583, 592, 838, 784, 583, 710,   6, 583, 583, 6, 35, 230, 838, 592, 710, 6, 589, 230, 838, 30, 592,   583, 6, 583, 6, 6, 583, 30, 30, 6, 375, 375, 99, 36, 1158, 425, 662,   417, 681, 364, 375, 1025, 538, 822, 669, 893, 538, 538, 450, 409,   632, 527, 632, 563, 632, 527, 550, 71, 698, 550, 39, 550, 514, 537,   514, 537, 111, 41, 173, 592, 173, 648, 173, 173, 173, 1011, 514, 173,   173, 514, 166, 648, 355, 161, 166, 648, 497, 327, 327, 550, 650, 21,   425, 605, 555, 103, 425, 605, 842, 836, 1011, 636, 138, 756, 836,   756, 756, 353, 1011, 636, 636, 1158, 741, 741, 842, 756, 741, 1011,   677, 1011, 770, 366, 306, 488, 920, 920, 665, 775, 502, 500, 775,   775, 648, 364, 833, 207, 13, 93, 500, 364, 500, 665, 500, 93, 295,   183, 1293, 313, 272, 313, 279, 303, 93, 516, 93, 1013, 381, 6, 93,   93, 303, 259, 643, 168, 673, 230, 1261, 230, 230, 673, 1060, 1079,   1079, 550, 741, 741, 590, 527, 741, 741, 442, 741, 442, 848, 741,   590, 925, 219, 527, 925, 335, 442, 590, 239, 590, 590, 590, 239, 527,   239, 1033, 230, 734, 241, 741, 230, 549, 548, 1015, 1015, 32, 36,   433, 465, 724, 465, 73, 73, 73, 465, 808, 73, 592, 1430, 250, 154,   154, 250, 538, 353, 353, 353, 353, 353, 175, 194, 206, 538, 632,   1163, 960, 175, 175, 538, 452, 632, 1163, 175, 538, 960, 194, 175,   194, 632, 960, 632, 94, 632, 461, 960, 1163, 1163, 461, 632, 960,   755, 707, 105, 382, 625, 382, 382, 784, 707, 871, 559, 387, 387, 871,   784, 559, 784, 88, 36, 570, 314, 1028, 975, 335, 335, 398, 573, 573,   573, 21, 215, 562, 738, 612, 424, 21, 103, 788, 870, 912, 23, 186,   757, 73, 818, 23, 73, 563, 952, 262, 563, 137, 262, 1022, 952, 137,   1273, 442, 952, 604, 137, 308, 384, 913, 235, 325, 695, 398, 95, 668,   776, 713, 309, 691, 22, 10, 364, 682, 682, 578, 481, 1252, 1072,   1252, 825, 578, 825, 1072, 1149, 592, 273, 387, 273, 427, 155, 1204,   50, 452, 50, 1142, 50, 367, 452, 1142, 611, 367, 50, 50, 367, 50,   1675, 99, 367, 50, 1501, 1099, 830, 681, 689, 917, 1089, 453, 425,   235, 918, 538, 550, 335, 161, 387, 859, 324, 21, 838, 859, 1123, 21,   723, 21, 335, 335, 206, 21, 364, 1426, 21, 838, 838, 335, 364, 21,   21, 859, 920, 838, 838, 397, 81, 639, 397, 397, 588, 933, 933, 784,   222, 830, 36, 36, 222, 1251, 266, 36, 146, 266, 366, 581, 605, 366,   22, 966, 681, 681, 433, 730, 1013, 550, 21, 21, 938, 488, 516, 21,   21, 656, 420, 323, 323, 323, 327, 323, 918, 581, 581, 830, 361, 830,   364, 259, 364, 496, 496, 364, 691, 705, 691, 475, 427, 1145, 600,   179, 427, 527, 749, 869, 689, 335, 347, 220, 298, 689, 1426, 183,   554, 55, 832, 550, 550, 165, 770, 957, 67, 1386, 219, 683, 683, 355,   683, 355, 355, 738, 355, 842, 931, 266, 325, 349, 256, 1113, 256,   423, 960, 554, 554, 325, 554, 508, 22, 142, 22, 508, 916, 767, 55,   1529, 767, 55, 1286, 93, 972, 550, 931, 1286, 1286, 972, 93, 1286,   1392, 890, 93, 1286, 93, 1286, 972, 374, 931, 890, 808, 779, 975,   975, 175, 173, 4, 681, 383, 1367, 173, 383, 1367, 383, 173, 175, 69,   238, 146, 238, 36, 148, 888, 238, 173, 238, 148, 238, 888, 185, 925,   925, 797, 925, 815, 925, 469, 784, 289, 784, 925, 797, 925, 925,   1093, 925, 925, 925, 1163, 797, 797, 815, 925, 1093, 784, 636, 663,   925, 187, 922, 316, 1380, 709, 916, 916, 187, 355, 948, 916, 187,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   916, 916, 948, 948, 916, 355, 316, 316, 334, 300, 1461, 36, 583,   1179, 699, 235, 858, 583, 699, 858, 699, 1189, 1256, 1189, 699, 797,   699, 699, 699, 699, 427, 488, 427, 488, 175, 815, 656, 656, 150, 322,   465, 322, 870, 465, 1099, 582, 665, 767, 749, 635, 749, 600, 1448,   36, 502, 235, 502, 355, 502, 355, 355, 355, 172, 355, 355, 95, 866,   425, 393, 1165, 42, 42, 42, 393, 939, 909, 909, 836, 552, 424, 1333,   852, 897, 1426, 1333, 1446, 1426, 997, 1011, 852, 1198, 55, 32, 239,   588, 681, 681, 239, 1401, 32, 588, 239, 462, 286, 1260, 984, 1160,   960, 960, 486, 828, 462, 960, 1199, 581, 850, 663, 581, 751, 581,   581, 1571, 252, 252, 1283, 264, 430, 264, 430, 430, 842, 252, 745,   21, 307, 681, 1592, 488, 857, 857, 1161, 857, 857, 857, 138, 374,   374, 1196, 374, 1903, 1782, 1626, 414, 112, 1477, 1040, 356, 775,   414, 414, 112, 356, 775, 435, 338, 1066, 689, 689, 1501, 689, 1249,   205, 689, 765, 220, 308, 917, 308, 308, 220, 327, 387, 838, 917, 917,   917, 220, 662, 308, 220, 387, 387, 220, 220, 308, 308, 308, 387,   1009, 1745, 822, 279, 554, 1129, 543, 383, 870, 1425, 241, 870, 241,   383, 716, 592, 21, 21, 592, 425, 550, 550, 550, 427, 230, 57, 483,   784, 860, 57, 308, 57, 486, 870, 447, 486, 433, 433, 870, 433, 997,   486, 443, 433, 433, 997, 486, 1292, 47, 708, 81, 895, 394, 81, 935,   81, 81, 81, 374, 986, 916, 1103, 1095, 465, 495, 916, 667, 1745, 518,   220, 1338, 220, 734, 1294, 741, 166, 828, 741, 741, 1165, 1371, 1371,   471, 1371, 647, 1142, 1878, 1878, 1371, 1371, 822, 66, 327, 158, 427,   427, 465, 465, 676, 676, 30, 30, 676, 676, 893, 1592, 93, 455, 308,   582, 695, 582, 629, 582, 85, 1179, 85, 85, 1592, 1179, 280, 1027,   681, 398, 1027, 398, 295, 784, 740, 509, 425, 968, 509, 46, 833, 842,   401, 184, 401, 464, 6, 1501, 1501, 550, 538, 883, 538, 883, 883, 883,   1129, 550, 550, 333, 689, 948, 21, 21, 241, 2557, 2094, 273, 308, 58,   863, 893, 1086, 409, 136, 1086, 592, 592, 830, 830, 883, 830, 277,   68, 689, 902, 277, 453, 507, 129, 689, 630, 664, 550, 128, 1626,   1626, 128, 902, 312, 589, 755, 755, 589, 755, 407, 1782, 589, 784,   1516, 1118, 407, 407, 1447, 589, 235, 755, 1191, 235, 235, 407, 128,   589, 1118, 21, 383, 1331, 691, 481, 383, 1129, 1129, 1261, 1104,   1378, 1129, 784, 1129, 1261, 1129, 947, 1129, 784, 784, 1129, 1129,   35, 1104, 35, 866, 1129, 1129, 64, 481, 730, 1260, 481, 970, 481,   481, 481, 481, 863, 481, 681, 699, 863, 486, 681, 481, 481, 55, 55,   235, 1364, 944, 632, 822, 401, 822, 952, 822, 822, 99, 550, 2240,   550, 70, 891, 860, 860, 550, 550, 916, 1176, 1530, 425, 1530, 916,   628, 1583, 916, 628, 916, 916, 628, 628, 425, 916, 1062, 1265, 916,   916, 916, 280, 461, 916, 916, 1583, 628, 1062, 916, 916, 677, 1297,   924, 1260, 83, 1260, 482, 433, 234, 462, 323, 1656, 997, 323, 323,   931, 838, 931, 1933, 1391, 367, 323, 931, 1391, 1391, 103, 1116,   1116, 1116, 769, 1195, 1218, 312, 791, 312, 741, 791, 997, 312, 334,   334, 312, 287, 287, 633, 1397, 1426, 605, 1431, 327, 592, 705, 1194,   592, 1097, 1118, 1503, 1267, 1267, 1267, 618, 1229, 734, 1089, 785,   1089, 1129, 1148, 1148, 1089, 915, 1148, 1129, 1148, 1011, 1011,   1229, 871, 1560, 1560, 1560, 563, 1537, 1009, 1560, 632, 985, 592,   1308, 592, 882, 145, 145, 397, 837, 383, 592, 592, 832, 36, 2714,   2107, 1588, 1347, 36, 36, 1443, 1453, 334, 2230, 1588, 1169, 650,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   1169, 2107, 425, 425, 891, 891, 425, 2532, 679, 274, 274, 274, 325,   274, 1297, 194, 1297, 627, 314, 917, 314, 314, 1501, 414, 1490, 1036,   592, 1036, 1025, 901, 1218, 1025, 901, 280, 592, 592, 901, 1461, 159,   159, 159, 2076, 1066, 1176, 1176, 516, 327, 516, 1179, 1176, 899,   1176, 1176, 323, 1187, 1229, 663, 1229, 504, 1229, 916, 1229, 916,   1661, 41, 36, 278, 1027, 648, 648, 648, 1626, 648, 646, 1179, 1580,   1061, 1514, 1008, 1741, 2076, 1514, 1008, 952, 1089, 427, 952, 427,   1083, 425, 427, 1089, 1083, 425, 427, 425, 230, 920, 1678, 920, 1678,   189, 189, 953, 189, 133, 189, 1075, 189, 189, 133, 1264, 725, 189,   1629, 189, 808, 230, 230, 2179, 770, 230, 770, 230, 21, 21, 784,   1118, 230, 230, 230, 770, 1118, 986, 808, 916, 30, 327, 918, 679,   414, 916, 1165, 1355, 916, 755, 733, 433, 1490, 433, 433, 433, 605,   433, 433, 433, 1446, 679, 206, 433, 21, 2452, 206, 206, 433, 1894,   206, 822, 206, 2073, 206, 206, 21, 822, 21, 206, 206, 21, 383, 1513,   375, 1347, 432, 1589, 172, 954, 242, 1256, 1256, 1248, 1256, 1256,   1248, 1248, 1256, 842, 13, 592, 13, 842, 1291, 592, 21, 175, 13, 592,   13, 13, 1426, 13, 1541, 445, 808, 808, 863, 647, 219, 1592, 1029,   1225, 917, 1963, 1129, 555, 1313, 550, 660, 550, 220, 660, 552, 663,   220, 533, 220, 383, 550, 1278, 1495, 636, 842, 1036, 425, 842, 425,   1537, 1278, 842, 554, 1508, 636, 554, 301, 842, 792, 1392, 1021, 284,   1172, 997, 1021, 103, 1316, 308, 1210, 848, 848, 1089, 1089, 848,   848, 67, 1029, 827, 1029, 2078, 827, 1312, 1029, 827, 590, 872, 1312,   427, 67, 67, 67, 67, 872, 827, 872, 2126, 1436, 26, 2126, 67, 1072,   2126, 1610, 872, 1620, 883, 883, 1397, 1189, 555, 555, 563, 1189,   555, 640, 555, 640, 1089, 1089, 610, 610, 1585, 610, 1355, 610, 1015,   616, 925, 1015, 482, 230, 707, 231, 888, 1355, 589, 1379, 151, 931,   1486, 1486, 393, 235, 960, 590, 235, 960, 422, 142, 285, 285, 327,   327, 442, 2009, 822, 445, 822, 567, 888, 2611, 1537, 323, 55, 1537,   323, 888, 2611, 323, 1537, 323, 58, 445, 593, 2045, 593, 58, 47, 770,   842, 47, 47, 842, 842, 648, 2557, 173, 689, 2291, 1446, 2085, 2557,   2557, 2291, 1780, 1535, 2291, 2391, 808, 691, 1295, 1165, 983, 948,   2000, 948, 983, 983, 2225, 2000, 983, 983, 705, 948, 2000, 1795,   1592, 478, 592, 1795, 1795, 663, 478, 1790, 478, 592, 1592, 173, 901,   312, 4, 1606, 173, 838, 754, 754, 128, 550, 1166, 551, 1480, 550,   550, 1875, 1957, 1166, 902, 1875, 550, 550, 551, 2632, 551, 1875,   1875, 551, 2891, 2159, 2632, 3231, 551, 815, 150, 1654, 1059, 1059,   734, 770, 555, 1592, 555, 2059, 770, 770, 1803, 627, 627, 627, 2059,   931, 1272, 427, 1606, 1272, 1606, 1187, 1204, 397, 822, 21, 1645,   263, 263, 822, 263, 1645, 280, 263, 605, 1645, 2014, 21, 21, 1029,   263, 1916, 2291, 397, 397, 496, 270, 270, 1319, 264, 1638, 264, 986,   1278, 1397, 1278, 1191, 409, 1191, 740, 1191, 754, 754, 387, 63, 948,   666, 666, 1198, 548, 63, 1248, 285, 1248, 169, 1248, 1248, 285, 918,   224, 285, 1426, 1671, 514, 514, 717, 514, 51, 1521, 1745, 51, 605,   1191, 51, 128, 1191, 51, 51, 1521, 267, 513, 952, 966, 1671, 897, 51,   71, 592, 986, 986, 1121, 592, 280, 2000, 2000, 1165, 1165, 1165,   1818, 222, 1818, 1165, 1252, 506, 327, 443, 432, 1291, 1291, 2755,   1413, 520, 1318, 227, 1047, 828, 520, 347, 1364, 136, 136, 452, 457,   457, 132, 457, 488, 1087, 1013, 2225, 32, 1571, 2009, 483, 67, 483,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   740, 740, 1013, 2854, 866, 32, 2861, 866, 887, 32, 2444, 740, 32, 32,   866, 2225, 866, 32, 1571, 2627, 32, 850, 1675, 569, 1158, 32, 1158,   1797, 2641, 1565, 1158, 569, 1797, 1158, 1797, 55, 1703, 42, 55,   2562, 675, 1703, 42, 55, 749, 488, 488, 347, 1206, 1286, 1286, 488,   488, 1206, 1286, 1206, 1286, 550, 550, 1790, 860, 550, 2452, 550,   550, 2765, 1089, 1633, 797, 2244, 1313, 194, 2129, 194, 194, 194,   818, 32, 194, 450, 1313, 2387, 194, 1227, 2387, 308, 2232, 526, 476,   278, 830, 830, 194, 830, 194, 278, 194, 714, 476, 830, 714, 830, 278,   830, 2532, 1218, 1759, 1446, 960, 1747, 187, 1446, 1759, 960, 105,   1446, 1446, 1271, 1446, 960, 960, 1218, 1446, 1446, 105, 1446, 960,   488, 1446, 427, 534, 842, 1969, 2460, 1969, 842, 842, 1969, 427, 941,   2160, 427, 230, 938, 2075, 1675, 1675, 895, 1675, 34, 129, 1811, 239,   749, 1957, 2271, 749, 1908, 129, 239, 239, 129, 129, 2271, 2426,   1355, 1756, 194, 1583, 194, 194, 1583, 194, 1355, 194, 1628, 2221,   1269, 2425, 1756, 1355, 1355, 1583, 1033, 427, 582, 30, 582, 582,   935, 1444, 1962, 915, 733, 915, 938, 1962, 767, 353, 1630, 1962,   1962, 563, 733, 563, 733, 353, 822, 1630, 740, 2076, 2076, 2076, 589,   589, 2636, 866, 589, 947, 1528, 125, 273, 1058, 1058, 1161, 1635,   1355, 1161, 1161, 1355, 1355, 650, 1206, 1206, 784, 784, 784, 784,   784, 412, 461, 412, 2240, 412, 679, 891, 461, 679, 679, 189, 189,   1933, 1651, 2515, 189, 1386, 538, 1386, 1386, 1187, 1386, 2423, 2601,   2285, 175, 175, 2331, 194, 3079, 384, 538, 2365, 2294, 538, 2166,   1841, 3326, 1256, 3923, 976, 85, 550, 550, 1295, 863, 863, 550, 1249,   550, 1759, 146, 1069, 920, 2633, 885, 885, 1514, 1489, 166, 1514,   2041, 885, 2456, 885, 2041, 1081, 1948, 362, 550, 94, 324, 2308, 94,   2386, 94, 550, 874, 1329, 1759, 2280, 1487, 493, 493, 2099, 2599,   1431, 1086, 1514, 1086, 2099, 1858, 368, 1330, 2599, 1858, 2846,   2846, 2907, 2846, 713, 713, 1854, 1123, 713, 713, 3010, 1123, 3010,   538, 713, 1123, 447, 822, 555, 2011, 493, 508, 2292, 555, 1736, 2135,   2704, 555, 2814, 555, 2000, 555, 555, 822, 914, 327, 679, 327, 648,   537, 2263, 931, 1496, 537, 1296, 1745, 1592, 1658, 1795, 650, 1592,   1745, 1745, 1658, 1592, 1745, 1592, 1745, 1658, 1338, 2124, 1592,   1745, 1745, 1745, 837, 1726, 2897, 1118, 1118, 230, 1118, 1118, 1118,   1388, 1748, 514, 128, 1165, 931, 514, 2974, 2041, 2387, 2041, 979,   185, 36, 1269, 550, 173, 812, 36, 1165, 2676, 2562, 1473, 2885, 1982,   1578, 1578, 383, 383, 2360, 383, 1578, 2360, 1584, 1982, 1578, 1578,   1578, 2019, 1036, 355, 724, 2023, 205, 303, 355, 1036, 1966, 355,   1036, 401, 401, 401, 830, 401, 849, 578, 401, 849, 849, 578, 1776,   1123, 552, 2632, 808, 1446, 1120, 373, 1529, 1483, 1057, 893, 1284,   1430, 1529, 1529, 2632, 1352, 2063, 1606, 1352, 1606, 2291, 3079,   2291, 1529, 506, 838, 1606, 1606, 1352, 1529, 1529, 1483, 1529, 1606,   1529, 259, 902, 259, 902, 612, 612, 284, 398, 2991, 1534, 1118, 1118,   1118, 1118, 1118, 734, 284, 2224, 398, 734, 284, 734, 398, 3031, 398,   734, 1707, 2643, 1344, 1477, 475, 1818, 194, 1894, 691, 1528, 1184,   1207, 1501, 6, 2069, 871, 2069, 3548, 1443, 2069, 2685, 3265, 1350,   3265, 2069, 2069, 128, 1313, 128, 663, 414, 1313, 414, 2000, 128,   2000, 663, 1313, 699, 1797, 550, 327, 550, 1526, 699, 327, 1797,   1526, 550, 550, 327, 550, 1426, 1426, 1426, 2285, 1123, 890, 728,Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007   1707, 728, 728, 327, 253, 1187, 1281, 1364, 1571, 2170, 755, 3232,   925, 1496, 2170, 2170, 1125, 443, 902, 902, 925, 755, 2078, 2457,   902, 2059, 2170, 1643, 1129, 902, 902, 1643, 1129, 606, 36, 103, 338,   338, 1089, 338, 338, 338, 1089, 338, 36, 340, 1206, 1176, 2041, 833,   1854, 1916, 1916, 1501, 2132, 1736, 3065, 367, 1934, 833, 833, 833,   2041, 3017, 2147, 818, 1397, 828, 2147, 398, 828, 818, 1158, 818,   689, 327, 36, 1745, 2132, 582, 1475, 189, 582, 2132, 1191, 582, 2132,   1176, 1176, 516, 2610, 2230, 2230, 64, 1501, 537, 1501, 173, 2230,   2988, 1501, 2694, 2694, 537, 537, 173, 173, 1501, 537, 64, 173, 173,   64, 2230, 537, 2230, 537, 2230, 2230, 2069, 3142, 1645, 689, 1165,   1165, 1963, 514, 488, 1963, 1145, 235, 1145, 1078, 1145, 231, 2405,   552, 21, 57, 57, 57, 1297, 1455, 1988, 2310, 1885, 2854, 2014, 734,   1705, 734, 2854, 734, 677, 1988, 1660, 734, 677, 734, 677, 677, 734,   2854, 1355, 677, 1397, 2947, 2386, 1698, 128, 1698, 3028, 2386, 2437,   2947, 2386, 2643, 2386, 2804, 1188, 335, 746, 1187, 1187, 861, 2519,   1917, 2842, 1917, 675, 1308, 234, 1917, 314, 314, 2339, 2339, 2592,   2576, 902, 916, 2339, 916, 2339, 916, 2339, 916, 1089, 1089, 2644,   1221, 1221, 2446, 308, 308, 2225, 2225, 3192, 2225, 555, 1592, 1592,   555, 893, 555, 550, 770, 3622, 2291, 2291, 3419, 465, 250, 2842,   2291, 2291, 2291, 935, 160, 1271, 308, 325, 935, 1799, 1799, 1891,   2227, 1799, 1598, 112, 1415, 1840, 2014, 1822, 2014, 677, 1822, 1415,   1415, 1822, 2014, 2386, 2159, 1822, 1415, 1822, 179, 1976, 1033, 179,   1840, 2014, 1415, 1970, 1970, 1501, 563, 563, 563, 462, 563, 1970,   1158, 563, 563, 1541, 1238, 383, 235, 1158, 383, 1278, 383, 1898,   2938, 21, 2938, 1313, 2201, 2059, 423, 2059, 1313, 872, 1313, 2044,   89, 173, 3327, 1660, 2044, 1623, 173, 1114, 1114, 1592, 1868, 1651,   1811, 383, 3469, 1811, 1651, 869, 383, 383, 1651, 1651, 3223, 2166,   3469, 767, 383, 1811, 767, 2323, 3355, 1457, 3341, 2640, 2976, 2323,   3341, 2323, 2640, 103, 103, 1161, 1080, 2429, 370, 2018, 2854, 2429,   2166, 2429, 2094, 2207, 871, 1963, 1963, 2023, 2023, 2336, 663, 2893,   1580, 691, 663, 705, 2046, 2599, 409, 2295, 1118, 2494, 1118, 1950,   549, 2494, 2453, 2046, 2494, 2453, 2046, 2453, 2046, 409, 1118, 4952,   2291, 2225, 1894, 1423, 2498, 567, 4129, 1475, 1501, 795, 463, 2084,   828, 828, 232, 828, 232, 232, 1818, 1818, 666, 463, 232, 220, 220,   2162, 2162, 833, 4336, 913, 35, 913, 21, 2927, 886, 3037, 383, 886,   876, 1747, 383, 916, 916, 916, 2927, 916, 1747, 837, 1894, 717, 423,   481, 1894, 1059, 2262, 3206, 4700, 1059, 3304, 2262, 871, 1831, 871,   3304, 1059, 1158, 1934, 1158, 756, 1511, 41, 978, 1934, 2603, 720,   41, 756, 41, 325, 2611, 1158, 173, 1123, 1934, 1934, 1511, 2045,   2045, 2045, 1423, 3206, 3691, 2512, 3206, 2512, 2000, 1811, 2504,   2504, 2611, 2437, 2437, 2437, 1455, 893, 150, 2665, 1966, 605, 398,   2331, 1177, 516, 1962, 4241, 94, 1252, 760, 1292, 1962, 1373, 2000,   1990, 3684, 42, 1868, 3779, 1811, 1811, 2041, 3010, 5436, 1780, 2041,   1868, 1811, 1780, 1811, 1868, 1811, 2041, 1868, 1811, 5627, 4274,   1811, 1868, 4602, 1811, 1811, 1474, 2665, 235, 1474, 2665Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20076.  Security Considerations   Data delivery can be subject to denial-of-service attacks by   attackers that send corrupted packets that are accepted as legitimate   by receivers.  This is particularly a concern for multicast delivery   because a corrupted packet may be injected into the session close to   the root of the multicast tree, in which case, the corrupted packet   will arrive at many receivers.  This is particularly a concern when   the code described in this document is used because the use of even   one corrupted packet containing encoding data may result in the   decoding of an object that is completely corrupted and unusable.  It   is thus RECOMMENDED that source authentication and integrity checking   are applied to decoded objects before delivering objects to an   application.  For example, a SHA-1 hash [SHA1] of an object may be   appended before transmission, and the SHA-1 hash is computed and   checked after the object is decoded but before it is delivered to an   application.  Source authentication SHOULD be provided, for example,   by including a digital signature verifiable by the receiver computed   on top of the hash value.  It is also RECOMMENDED that a packet   authentication protocol, such as TESLA [RFC4082], be used to detect   and discard corrupted packets upon arrival.  This method may also be   used to provide source authentication.  Furthermore, it is   RECOMMENDED that Reverse Path Forwarding checks be enabled in all   network routers and switches along the path from the sender to   receivers to limit the possibility of a bad agent successfully   injecting a corrupted packet into the multicast tree data path.   Another security concern is that some FEC information may be obtained   by receivers out-of-band in a session description, and if the session   description is forged or corrupted, then the receivers will not use   the correct protocol for decoding content from received packets.  To   avoid these problems, it is RECOMMENDED that measures be taken to   prevent receivers from accepting incorrect session descriptions,   e.g., by using source authentication to ensure that receivers only   accept legitimate session descriptions from authorized senders.7.  IANA Considerations   Values of FEC Encoding IDs and FEC Instance IDs are subject to IANA   registration.  For general guidelines on IANA considerations as they   apply to this document, see [RFC5052].  This document assigns the   Fully-Specified FEC Encoding ID 1 under the ietf:rmt:fec:encoding   name-space to "Raptor Code".Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 20078.  Acknowledgements   Numerous editorial improvements and clarifications were made to this   specification during the review process within 3GPP.  Thanks are due   to the members of 3GPP Technical Specification Group SA, Working   Group 4, for these.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC4082]  Perrig, A., Song, D., Canetti, R., Tygar, J., and B.              Briscoe, "Timed Efficient Stream Loss-Tolerant              Authentication (TESLA): Multicast Source Authentication              Transform Introduction",RFC 4082, June 2005.   [RFC5052]  Watson, M., Luby, M., and L. Vicisano, "Forward Error              Correction (FEC) Building Block",RFC 5052, August 2007.9.2.  Informative References   [CCNC]     Luby, M., Watson, M., Gasiba, T., Stockhammer, T., and W.              Xu, "Raptor Codes for Reliable Download Delivery in              Wireless Broadcast Systems", CCNC 2006, Las Vegas, NV ,              Jan 2006.   [MBMS]     3GPP, "Multimedia Broadcast/Multicast Service (MBMS);              Protocols and codecs", 3GPP TS 26.346 6.1.0, June 2005.   [RFC3453]  Luby, M., Vicisano, L., Gemmell, J., Rizzo, L., Handley,              M., and J. Crowcroft, "The Use of Forward Error Correction              (FEC) in Reliable Multicast",RFC 3453, December 2002.   [Raptor]   Shokrollahi, A., "Raptor Codes", IEEE Transactions on              Information Theory no. 6, June 2006.   [SHA1]     "Secure Hash Standard", Federal Information Processing              Standards Publication (FIPS PUB) 180-1, April 2005.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007Authors' Addresses   Michael Luby   Digital Fountain   39141 Civic Center Drive   Suite 300   Fremont, CA  94538   U.S.A.   EMail: luby@digitalfountain.com   Amin Shokrollahi   EPFL   Laboratory of Algorithmic Mathematics   IC-IIF-ALGO   PSE-A   Lausanne  1015   Switzerland   EMail: amin.shokrollahi@epfl.ch   Mark Watson   Digital Fountain   39141 Civic Center Drive   Suite 300   Fremont, CA  94538   U.S.A.   EMail: mark@digitalfountain.com   Thomas Stockhammer   Nomor Research   Brecherspitzstrasse 8   Munich  81541   Germany   EMail: stockhammer@nomor.deLuby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 5053                   Raptor FEC Scheme                October 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   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, THE IETF TRUST 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.Luby, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 46]

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