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INFORMATIONAL
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Network Working Group                                       F. AndreasenRequest for Comments: 5347                                 Cisco SystemsCategory: Informational                                       D. Hancock                                                               CableLabs                                                            October 2008Media Gateway Control Protocol Fax PackageStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document defines a Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP) package   to support fax calls.  The package allows for fax calls to be   supported in two different ways.  The first one utilizes ITU-T   Recommendation T.38 for fax relay under the control of the Call   Agent.  The second one lets the gateway decide upon a method for fax   transmission as well as handle the details of the fax call without   Call Agent involvement.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................21.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................32. Fax Package Definition ..........................................32.1. LocalConnectionOptions .....................................32.1.1. T.38 Procedure (Strict or Loose) ....................62.1.2. Gateway Procedure ...................................82.1.3. Off Procedure .......................................82.1.4. Mode Operation ......................................82.1.5. Detecting a Fax Call ...............................10           2.1.6. Considerations for Determining Which                  Procedures to Request ..............................112.2. Events and Signals ........................................132.2.1. Gateway Controlled Fax (gwfax) .....................132.2.2. No Special Fax Handling (nopfax) ...................142.2.3. T.38 Fax Relay (t38) ...............................142.3. Connection Parameters .....................................152.4. Negotiation of T.38 Parameters ............................162.5. Implementation Considerations .............................182.5.1. Media IP Address and Port for T.38 .................182.5.2. Case Sensitivity ...................................182.5.3. Boolean Indicator After T.38 Parameters ............193. Call Flow Examples .............................................193.1. Call Agent Controlled T.38 Strict .........................203.2. Multiple and Different Options ............................293.3. Interaction with SIP Endpoints ............................374. Security Considerations ........................................445. IANA Considerations ............................................446. Normative References ...........................................447. Informative References .........................................451.  Introduction   This document defines a Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP)   [RFC3435] package that enables MGCP controlled gateways to support   fax calls.  The package enables fax calls to be supported in two   different ways.  The first one utilizes ITU-T Recommendation T.38   using either UDP Transport Layer (UDPTL) or TCP (see [T38]) for fax   relay under the control of the Call Agent.  The second one lets the   gateway decide upon a method for fax transmission as well as handle   the details of the fax call without Call Agent involvement.   The fax package definition is provided inSection 2, and inSection 3   we provide three call flow examples showing how to use it.  Security   considerations are found inSection 4, followed by the IANA   considerations and references.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20081.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inBCP 14,RFC-2119   [RFC2119].2.  Fax Package Definition   A package is defined for fax.  The package defines new   LocalConnectionOptions, events, and connection parameters as detailed   below:   Package Name:        FXR   Package Version:     02.1.  LocalConnectionOptions   A new Fax LocalConnectionOptions (LCO) parameter is defined for fax   handling.  The Call Agent supplies this fax LCO to indicate the   desired fax handling procedure to the Media Gateway.  The fax LCO   contains a list of desired fax handling procedures ordered by   preference, with the most desired procedure listed first.  When the   parameter is explicitly included in a command, the gateway MUST be   able to use at least one of the listed procedures for the command to   succeed.  Currently, the list can indicate one or more of the   following procedures (see Sections2.1.1 to2.1.4 for further details   on these):   * T.38 Strict:     Use T.38 [T38] with either UDPTL or TCP for fax relay and have the     Call Agent control it.  Assuming the procedure can be used (seeSection 2.1.1), a switch to T.38 procedures will be initiated upon     fax detection, and a "t38(start)" event will be generated (seeSection 2.2).  This mode requires an indication of T.38 support     from the remote side in order to be used, as described further inSection 2.1.1.   * T.38 Loose:     Identical to T.38 Strict procedure, except that an indication of     T.38 support from the remote side is not required for the procedure     to be used.   * Off:     Do not invoke any special procedure for fax, except for echo     cancellation adjustment and possibly switching to another codec.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   * Gateway:     Let the gateway control and decide how to handle fax calls without     Call Agent involvement.  This includes the case where the gateway     does not do anything special for fax; hence, by definition this     procedure can always be supported.  If the gateway invokes a     special procedure upon detection of fax, it will generate a     "gwfax(start)" event to inform the Call Agent of this (seeSection2.2).  The Call Agent SHOULD then refrain from issuing potentially     conflicting commands to the gateway until the gateway ends its     special fax handling procedure.     A gateway that ends up not being able to invoke any special     procedure for fax will generate a "nopfax(start)" event (seeSection 2.2) upon detection of fax.   The set of possible values (i.e., procedures) for the fax LCO is   extensible.  The prefix "x-", which indicates an optional extension,   and the prefix "x+", which indicates a mandatory extension, are   reserved for vendor-specific use.   In CreateConnection commands, the fax LCO value defaults to   "gateway".  In ModifyConnection commands, the fax LCO value defaults   to its current value on the connection.  Thus, if   LocalConnectionOptions are omitted or if the fax LCO is not included   in a ModifyConnection command, the previous fax LCO value for the   connection is retained without affecting the outcome of the command;   consequently, the gateway may now not apply any special procedure to   fax.  If the Call Agent wants to ensure that a command succeeds only   when a fax procedure is applied, the command needs to include the fax   LCO explicitly.      As an example of this, assume that the CreateConnection command      successfully specified the use of "T.38 Strict", and a      ModifyConnection command is now received without the fax LCO but      with a RemoteConnectionDescriptor indicating no support for T.38.      In this case, the ModifyConnection command will succeed, but T.38      procedures will no longer be invoked upon fax detection (a      "nopfax" event will be generated).  Had the Call Agent instead      included the fax LCO set to "T.38 Strict", the command would have      failed.   If multiple fax parameter values are provided, the gateway MUST   choose one of the procedures specified according to the order in   which they are supplied, except as follows:Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   1. If "gateway" would have been selected and it would have resulted      in no special procedure being applied, and   2. if there are procedures other than "off" that are specified after      "gateway" (e.g., "t38"),   then the gateway MUST use the most preferred of those subsequent   procedures that can be supported.  If none of those subsequent   procedures can be supported, the gateway reverts to not invoking any   special procedure for fax.  Please refer toSection 2.1.4 for further   details on determining which procedures can be supported.   The fax LCO parameter is encoded as the keyword "fx" (prefixed with   the package name per [RFC3435]), followed by a colon and then a   semicolon separated list of values, where T.38 Strict is encoded as   "t38", T.38 Loose is encoded as "t38-loose", gateway is encoded as   "gw", and off is encoded as "off".   The following example illustrates the use of PCMU or G.729 for audio   encoding, and T.38 Strict fax relay (preferred) or gateway control   for fax:      L: a:PCMU;G729, fxr/fx:t38;gw   It should be noted that MGCP allows the CreateConnection command to   omit both LocalConnectionOptions and RemoteConnectionDescriptor,   thereby letting the gateway decide upon the media parameters to use.   When the T.38 fax package is supported, the gateway could thus choose   to do either audio or T.38 fax relay in such cases.  Most likely, the   Call Agent requires one or the other to be used, and hence it SHOULD   NOT omit both LocalConnectionOptions and RemoteConnectionDescriptor   in CreateConnection commands.   When auditing capabilities, the fax LCO may be returned with a   semicolon-separated list of supported fax handling parameters.  The   values "t38", "t38-loose", "off", and "gw" MAY be omitted from such a   list as they are always implied.  Gateways that implement additional   parameters SHOULD return these additional parameters when   capabilities are audited, as illustrated by the following example:      A: a:image/t38, fxr/fx:mypar, ...   In the following subsections, we provide additional detail on the   above-defined fax procedures.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20082.1.1.  T.38 Procedure (Strict or Loose)   When a gateway is instructed to use one of the T.38 procedures   (strict or loose), also known as Call Agent controlled T.38 mode, the   "m=" line in the Session Description Protocol (SDP) returned will not   indicate use of UDPTL-based or TCP-based T.38 (unless the gateway was   also instructed to use "image/t38" for the media stream).  Any other   entity seeing this SDP will not know whether or not T.38 is supported   and hence whether it is safe to attempt a switch to T.38 upon fax   detection.  To remedy this dilemma, capability information for T.38   (if supported) using the SDP Simple Capability Declaration extensions   [RFC3407] MUST be included.  Other capability information is included   as well, regardless of whether the Call Agent authorized use of those   in the connection handling command.  A subsequent attempt to actually   use these may of course not succeed, e.g., because the Call Agent LCO   does not allow them to be used.  The following example illustrates   theRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability descriptor--note the inclusion of   both current (audio) and latent (T.38) capabilities, as specified inRFC 3407 [RFC3407]:      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 18      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 18      a=cdsc: 2 image udptl t38   For a list of T.38 related parameters to be included in the SDP,   please refer to T.38 Annex D [T38].   Upon fax detection, a gateway that has successfully been instructed   to use one of the T.38 procedures will:   1. Initiate the T.38 fax relay procedure and mute the media channel      in both the send and receive direction (unless the media channel      is already using T.38).   2. Generate a "t38(start)" event.   3. Await further instructions from the Call Agent in order to      initiate the actual media change (unless the media channel is      already using T.38).   The Call Agent instructs the gateway to perform the media change by   sending it a ModifyConnection command with "image/t38" listed as the   encoding method in the LocalConnectionOptions (receipt of a   ModifyConnection command without LocalConnectionOptions but with a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor containing an "m=" line with the MIME type   "image/t38" would achieve the same).  Per the normal MGCP codec   negotiation procedures (see[RFC3435] Section 2.6), if aAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   RemoteConnectionDescriptor was included as well, it needs to include   an "m=" line with "image/t38" as an acceptable media format in order   for the command to succeed.  The gateway may choose between the UDPTL   and TCP transport protocols at its own discretion subject to the   normal MGCP codec negotiation procedures (in practice, TCP-based   implementations are currently rare).   If a RemoteConnectionDescriptor was not included with the   ModifyConnection command sent to a gateway that initiated the T.38   procedure, it is possible (in fact likely), that the last received   RemoteConnectionDescriptor did not include an "m=" line listing   "image/t38" as an acceptable media format.  In that case, the   endpoint cannot send T.38 media to the other side.  The endpoint MUST   instead wait for an updated RemoteConnectionDescriptor that contains   "image/t38" as an acceptable media format and a supported transport   protocol (UDPTL or TCP).  The T.38 fax procedure continues when an   acceptable RemoteConnectionDescriptor is received.  An acceptable   RemoteConnectionDescriptor contains an "m=" line with the "image/t38"   MIME type (using the normal SDP syntax) and a supported transport   protocol (UDPTL or TCP).  If the fax call fails (e.g., due to a fax   timeout) while waiting for either the Call Agent to instruct the   gateway to switch to "image/t38" or for an acceptable   RemoteConnectionDescriptor, a "t38(stop)" or a "t38(failure)" event   MUST be generated.  When the T.38 procedure ends, a "t38(stop)" or   "t38(failure)" event MUST be generated.   Finally, the Call Agent may need to abort a T.38 procedure that is in   progress.  This can for example be done when the remote side is   unable to switch to T.38, and a fallback to fax passthrough using an   audio codec is attempted.  The Call Agent instructs the endpoint to   abort an in-progress T.38 procedure by use of the "off" fax LCO as   illustrated below:      L: fxr/fx:off   We now define "time t38init" as the point in time where the T.38   procedure was initiated, and "time t38abort" as the point in time   where the Call Agent aborts an in-progress T.38 procedure.  If the   Call Agent at time t38abort instructs or enables the endpoint to   revert to one or more codecs that were in use just prior to time   t38init, the endpoint SHOULD use media stream parameters that mimic   the most recent LocalConnectionDescriptor issued before time t38init.   For example, IP-address and UDP port, payload formats used and their   payload type mapping, should all be the same as before time t38init.   This will enable the fallback to be as rapid as possible.  A   LocalConnectionDescriptor is returned as usual, i.e., only if one orAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   more parameters changed since the last LocalConnectionDescriptor   issued (e.g., if a T.38 LCD was issued or a transport address in the   audio LCD was changed).2.1.2.  Gateway Procedure   A gateway using the gateway procedure, also known as Gateway   controlled mode, may initiate special fax handling upon detecting a   fax call.  The details of this special fax handling are outside the   scope of this document.  However, in order to use any special fax   handling, support for it MUST be negotiated with the other side by   passing and recognizing relevant parameters via the   LocalConnectionDescriptor and RemoteConnectionDescriptor (this   includes the use of RTP-based T.38).  If the other side has not   indicated support for the special fax handling desired, the gateway   MUST NOT attempt to initiate it.  When special fax handling is   initiated, a "gwfax(start)" event MUST be generated, thereby enabling   the Call Agent to differ between the Call Agent and gateway   controlled mode while still being informed about the actual change to   fax.  When the special gateway handling of fax ends, a "gwfax(stop)"   or "gwfax(failure)" event MUST be generated.2.1.3.  Off Procedure   A gateway using the "off" procedure will not invoke any special fax   procedures, e.g., T.38, when detecting a fax.  However, the gateway   may still adjust local echo cancellation and/or switch to an   alternative codec as needed.  Also, a "nopfax(start)" event MUST be   generated; a corresponding "stop" event, however, will not.   Generating a "stop" event would imply that the gateway had to infer   when the fax call ends, which involves processing the media stream.   However, when using the "off" mode, such processing is not expected   to occur.2.1.4.  Mode Operation   For each of the above modes, the RemoteConnectionDescriptor provides   information on what procedure(s) the other side supports.  The   following rules are used to determine which procedure to use:   1. Whatever the Call Agent specified in the Fax      LocalConnectionOptions for the current command MUST be adhered to.      If the gateway cannot satisfy any of the options, the command      fails (error code 532 -- unsupported value(s) in      LocalConnectionOptions is RECOMMENDED).Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   2. If both Fax LocalConnectionOptions and a      RemoteConnectionDescriptor are provided, the procedure selected      MUST be supported by both sides -- this is currently only an issue      for "T.38 Strict".  A procedure can be satisfied by the remote      side if:      * the relevant MIME media type, e.g., "image/t38", is included in        the "m=" line in the RemoteConnectionDescriptor, or      * the relevant MIME media type is included as a capability (see        [RFC3407]) in the RemoteConnectionDescriptor.      If the gateway cannot select any of the procedures in the Fax      LocalConnectionOptions, the command fails (error code 532 is      RECOMMENDED).  Note that "T.38 Loose", "gateway", and "off" -- by      definition -- can always be supported by an implementation that      supports this package, irrespective of what the      RemoteConnectionDescriptor indicates.   3. If the Call Agent did not include any Fax LocalConnectionOptions      or a RemoteConnectionDescriptor with the command, the gateway MUST      continue using whichever procedure it is currently using.   4. If the Call Agent did not include any Fax LocalConnectionOptions,      but a RemoteConnectionDescriptor was included, the gateway MUST      follow rule 2 in selecting a procedure.  In so doing, the default      Fax LocalConnectionOptions, i.e., "gateway" in CreateConnection,      or the current value in ModifyConnection, MUST be used.  In the      case of ModifyConnection, the outcome of the command does not      depend on the gateway being able to select one of these "default"      procedures (as described inSection 2.1).  Note that this is not      an issue for the CreateConnection command, since the default value      can always be supported by definition.   5. A previously received RemoteConnectionDescriptor does not affect      what procedure can be selected.  Only a RemoteConnectionDescriptor      supplied with the current command affects the procedure selection.      However, in order to send media of a given type (e.g.,      "image/t38"), the most recently received      RemoteConnectionDescriptor MUST include a corresponding media      line.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   The following examples illustrate the use of the above rules:   Per rule 1, a gateway that only supports standard T.38 fax relay will   fail a command that only contains the fax option "mypar", whereas it   will succeed a command that contains "t38-loose", "gw", "off", or no   fax LCO.  A command that only contained "t38", i.e., use of T.38 in   "strict" mode, may or may not succeed (depending on the   RemoteConnectionDescriptor).   A gateway supporting T.38 that receives a CreateConnection command   with the fax handling LCO set to "t38" and a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor with neither a T.38 capability nor a T.38   media stream will fail per rule 2.  Had the fax handling LCO included   either "t38-loose", "gw" or "off", the command would have succeeded,   and any of the procedures included could have been selected.   Assume a gateway supporting T.38 has successfully executed a   CreateConnection command with fax handling set to "t38" (i.e.,   strict).  If the gateway now receives a ModifyConnection command   without a fax handling LCO but with a RemoteConnectionDescriptor that   has neither a T.38 capability nor a media stream with "image/t38",   the command will succeed (since rule 1 has no effect in that case).   However, per rule 2 and 4, there will not be any T.38 procedure in   place.  Had the Call Agent instead included a fax handling LCO set to   "t38" again, the command would have failed per rule 2.   Finally, it should be noted that a switch to T.38 can be initiated by   either one or both of the originating and terminating gateways and   hence implementations MUST be prepared to handle this.  This includes   the case where both sides initiate the switch, which for example can   occur when the originating fax generates Calling Tone (CNG) and the   terminating fax detects V.21 fax preamble (see [T30]) before the   switch to T.38 has been performed on the terminating side.2.1.5.  Detecting a Fax Call   A fax call can be detected by several different means (e.g., V.21 fax   preamble, T.30 CNG tone, or V.8 signals) depending on the fax   transmission method being used.  Implementations of this package MUST   at a minimum detect a fax call based on V.21 fax preamble.   Triggering based on T.30 CNG tone MAY be done; this is generally   considered acceptable for G3 and lower fax speeds.  However, when   used with T.38 version 2 or earlier, it will impact V.34 high-speed   fax.  The reason is that T.38 version 2 (and earlier) does not   support the V.8 ANSam and CM signals used with V.34 fax, and hence   the V.34 faxes will downspeed to G3 (14.400 bps) or lower when using   T.38 version 2 (or earlier).  Also, a few rare cases of modemsAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   generating T.30 CNG tones for non-fax calls have been reported; such   modems would generate a false trigger for fax.  As a consequence of   the above, it is RECOMMENDED that implementations of this package   that support T.30 CNG-based fax detection provide a configuration   option to disable it for T.38 version 2 (or earlier).2.1.6.  Considerations for Determining Which Procedures to Request   It is important to understand the implications of using any one of   the above defined procedures.  Furthermore, multiple alternative   procedures can be requested, however not all combinations make sense.   In this section, we elaborate on both of these issues.   Use of the T.38 Strict mode is ideal in an environment where it is   known that other endpoints generateRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability   descriptions with T.38 fax relay information.  If a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor without T.38 fax relay capabilities is   received in such an environment, it is known that the other side does   not support T.38, and hence an unsuccessful attempt to switch to T.38   (which in turn may lead to a failed fax call) can be avoided.  If it   is not known whether other endpoints support theRFC 3407 [RFC3407]   capability descriptors, the trade-off is less clear.  The advantage   is that a switch to T.38 will only be attempted if it is known that   the other side supports it, but endpoints that do not indicate   support for T.38 may still support it; however, T.38 will not be used   with these, which in turn may lead to unnecessary fax failures with   low-bandwidth codecs or lossy networks.   Use of the T.38 loose mode involves the same considerations as for   T.38 Strict, however the pros and cons are reversed.  If a peer   endpoint does not support T.38, the T.38 loose mode will still   attempt to switch to T.38 (and fail), which in turn may lead to a   failed fax call.  On the other hand, if the peer endpoint does not   support theRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability descriptors, but the peer   endpoint does in fact support T.38, T.38 would still be used with   this mode.   In summary, there is no single good answer to the use of either T.38   Strict or T.38 loose mode; it depends on the capabilities of the   endpoints involved as well as the trade-off between potentially   letting fax calls fail due to lack of capability indications (where   T.38 is otherwise supported) versus potentially letting fax calls   fail due to an unsuccessful switch to T.38 (because T.38 in fact was   not supported).  It should be noted that Call Agents may have means   beyondRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability descriptors to determine if a   peer endpoint supports T.38 or not.  For example, when SIP is used as   the signaling protocol with other peers (e.g., Call Agents or other   SIP devices), the SIP OPTIONS method can be used to learn whetherAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   T.38 is supported.  Also, if the Call Agent allows use of   high-bandwidth codecs with redundancy when support for T.38 is not   indicated, fax calls may still succeed without the use of T.38, even   in networks with non-negligible packet loss.   When the gateway controlled mode is selected, there will only be   special fax handling if the two peer endpoints support the same fax   handling method; note that the details of the actual method is   entirely up to the vendor.  Also note that if the two peer endpoints   do not support the same method for fax handling or if the method is   not indicated in the SDP exchanged, there will be no special fax   handling in place.  Furthermore, the Call Agent will not be aware   that this is the case until the fax transmission starts and a   "nopfax(start)" event is generated.   The off mode is straightforward; there will be no special procedure   in place for fax handling, except for the usual handling of echo   cancellation and possibly a change to a higher bandwidth codec.   Having looked at the individual procedures in more detail, we now   elaborate on some of the combinations of procedures that may be   requested:   * T.38 strict:     If the T.38 strict procedure is placed after the T.38 loose or the     off procedure (both of which can always be supported), it will not     be selected.  Apart from this, it makes little sense to request     both T.38 strict and T.38 loose.   * T.38 loose:     The T.38 loose procedure can always be supported, so any procedure     specified after T.38 loose will not be selected.   * Gateway:     The gateway controlled procedure can always be supported.  If the     gateway controlled procedure would have resulted in no special fax     procedure and further options (except off) are provided, those     procedures will be attempted.  If neither of those procedures can     be supported, there will be no special fax procedure in place.   * Off:     The off procedure can always be supported.  Any procedure specified     after this one will not be selected.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20082.2.  Events and Signals   The following events are defined in support of the above:    ------------------------------------------------------------------   | Symbol  |   Definition               |  R  |   S     Duration    |   |---------|----------------------------|-----|---------------------|   |  gwfax  | Gateway controlled fax     |  x  |                     |   |  nopfax | No special fax handling    |  x  |                     |   |  t38    | T.38 fax relay             |  x  |                     |    ------------------------------------------------------------------   The definitions of the individual events are provided in the   following subsections.2.2.1.  Gateway Controlled Fax (gwfax)   The "gateway controlled fax" event occurs when the gateway handled   fax procedure either starts, stops, or fails.  The event is encoded   as "gwfax", and the following event parameters, which apply to   ObservedEvents only, are defined:   * start:     Gateway controlled fax procedure was initiated.  The Call Agent     SHOULD refrain from issuing media handling instructions to the     gateway until either a "gwfax(stop)" or "gwfax(failure)" event is     generated.   * stop:     Gateway controlled fax procedure ended and the gateway did not     detect any errors.  Note that this does not necessarily imply a     successfully transmitted fax.  It merely indicates that the gateway     controlled fax procedure has ended and the procedure itself did not     encounter any errors.  Media parameters for the connection are as     before the gateway handled fax procedure started.   * failure:     The gateway controlled fax procedure ended abnormally.  Some kind     of problem was encountered in the gateway controlled fax procedure,     and the procedure ended.  Media parameters are as before the     gateway handled fax procedure started.   One of the above parameters will be present when the event is   reported.  The "gwfax" event MAY be parameterized with additional   parameters in ObservedEvents, however it is RECOMMENDED that one of   the above parameters is the first parameter supplied.  Unknown   parameters MUST be ignored.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   The following example illustrates the encoding of the "gwfax" event:      O: fxr/gwfax(start)      O: fxr/gwfax(stop, foobar)2.2.2.  No Special Fax Handling (nopfax)   The "no special fax handling" event occurs when there is no special   fax handling procedure in place and a fax call is detected.  This can   happen either because no special fax handling procedure was requested   (including "off") or negotiation resulted in no special fax handling   procedure being supported.  The event is encoded as "nopfax", and the   following event parameter, which applies to ObservedEvents only, is   defined:   * start:     No special fax handling procedure is in place, however a fax call     is now detected.  The Call Agent may have to issue further commands     in order to ensure a successful fax call (e.g., switch to another     codec).   The above parameter will be present when the event is reported.  The   "nopfax" event MAY be parameterized with additional parameters on   ObservedEvents, however it is RECOMMENDED that the above parameter is   the first parameter supplied.  Unknown parameters MUST be ignored.   Note that this event currently cannot be parameterized with "stop" or   "failure" as it only detects the beginning of a fax call.   The following example illustrates the encoding of the "nopfax" event:      O: fxr/nopfax(start)2.2.3.  T.38 Fax Relay (t38)   The "T.38 fax relay" event occurs when one of the T.38 fax relay   procedures (strict or loose) either starts, stops, or fails.  The   event is encoded as "t38", and the following event parameters, which   apply to ObservedEvents only, are defined:   * start:     A fax call was detected on the endpoint and the Call Agent     controlled T.38 fax relay procedure was initiated.  The Call Agent     SHOULD modify each side of the connection to start using the     "image/t38" media format, unless they already do.  Note that, as     long as use of the Call Agent controlled T.38 relay procedure is in     effect, the event will be generated upon fax call detection,     irrespective of the current encoding method on any connections on     the endpoint (incl. "image/t38").  The "t38(start)" event MUST beAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008     generated at most once by the endpoint per fax call, regardless of     whether or not it is requested again in a subsequent requested     events list.   * stop:     Call Agent controlled T.38 fax relay procedure ended and the     gateway did not detect any errors.  Note that this does not     necessarily imply a successfully transmitted fax.  It merely     indicates that the Call Agent controlled T.38 fax relay procedure     has ended and the procedure itself did not encounter any errors.     The Call Agent may want to modify the media parameters for each     side of the connection.  Note that, in contrast to the gateway     controlled fax procedure case, media parameters such as codecs do     not automatically revert to their values before the start of the     fax call; however, echo cancellation and silence suppression do per     the procedures in[RFC3435] Section 2.3.5.  The "t38(stop)" event     MUST NOT be generated unless a corresponding "t38(start)" event for     the fax call in question was generated earlier.   * failure:     Call Agent controlled T.38 fax relay procedure ended abnormally.     Some kind of problem in the Call Agent controlled T.38 fax relay     procedure was encountered, and the procedure ended.  The Call Agent     may want to modify the media parameters for each side of the     connection.  Note that, in contrast to the gateway controlled fax     procedure case, media parameters such as codecs do not     automatically revert to their state before the start of the fax     call; however, echo cancellation and silence suppression do per the     procedures in[RFC3435] Section 2.3.5. The "t38(failure)" event     MUST NOT be generated unless a corresponding "t38(start)" event for     the fax call in question was generated earlier.   One of the above parameters will be present when the event is   reported.  The "t38" event MAY be parameterized with additional   parameters, however it is RECOMMENDED that one of the above   parameters is the first parameter supplied.  Unknown parameters MUST   be ignored.   The following example illustrates the encoding of the "t38" event:      O: fxr/t38(start)      O: fxr/t38(stop, foobar)2.3.  Connection Parameters   The connection parameters for the connection, that measures packets   and octets sent and received, MUST include packets and octets for fax   handling as well.  Interarrival jitter and average transmission delayAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   calculation however MAY NOT be performed while fax is in progress,   e.g., if T.38 is used.  In such cases, the interarrival jitter and   average transmission delay calculations are simply suspended until   calculations can resume, e.g., by changing back to an RTP-based media   stream.   In addition to these connection parameters, the fax package defines   the following connection parameters, which gateways MAY support:   Number of fax pages sent (PGS):      The cumulative number of fax pages sent by the endpoint for the      life of the connection.  The parameter is encoded as "PGS", and      the value supplied is a string of up to nine decimal digits.   Number of fax pages received (PGR):      The cumulative number of fax pages received by the endpoint for      the life of the connection.  The parameter is encoded as "PGR",      and the value supplied is a string of up to nine decimal digits.   The following example illustrates the use of these parameters:      P: FXR/PGS=3, FXR/PGR=0, PS=1245, OS=62345, ...2.4.  Negotiation of T.38 Parameters   T.38 Annex D [T38] defines a number of T.38 parameters that can be   negotiated in the SDP.  Currently, T.38 does not specify procedures   for how each of these parameters is negotiated or in particular   whether each side has to use the same value.  Therefore, we   considered adding such definitions and procedures here.  However, it   is expected that T.38 will rectify the above, which could lead to   conflicting definitions and procedures.  To avoid that, we instead   assume the existence of an offer/answer [RFC3264] section for T.38,   where T.38 Annex D parameters are classified as either declarative or   negotiated, and we then provide guidelines for how to map such   definitions and procedures to the MGCP fax package defined here.   MGCP does not specify use of the offer/answer model but instead   operates with the concept of connection handling commands (e.g.,   CreateConnection and ModifyConnection) that may include a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor (SDP) and in turn may generate a   LocalConnectionDescriptor (SDP) in their response.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   When an MGCP endpoint receives a CreateConnection command without a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor, it should follow the corresponding T.38   procedures for generating an initial offer and return the resulting   SDP in its LocalConnectionDescriptor.   When an MGCP endpoint receives a CreateConnection command with a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor, it should follow the corresponding T.38   procedures for receiving an initial offer and generating an answer to   it.  The resulting SDP is returned in the LocalConnectionDescriptor.   When an MGCP endpoint receives a ModifyConnection command with a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor, it cannot determine whether this   corresponds to an answer to an initial offer or to a new offer.  This   is not an issue for declarative parameters since they can be   specified independently in either direction.  Negotiated parameters,   however, require some consideration:   When an offerer receives an answer to a previous offer, the   negotiation has completed and the parameters negotiated can no longer   be changed with this offer/answer exchange.  The negotiated   parameters may be subject to certain validation checks.  Conversely,   when an answerer receives an offer, the negotiation is open and the   answerer may change some of the offered negotiated parameters.  Since   the MGCP endpoint does not know which situation it is in, it cannot   perform the "offerer" validation checks.  Likewise, in order to   ensure that any required negotiation actually takes place, it needs   to process an incoming SDP as an offer.  If the SDP in fact does   correspond to an offer, then this is obviously correct behavior.   However, if the SDP corresponds to an answer, and one or more   negotiated parameters did change, then this will result in a new SDP.   The Call Agent may or may not contain sufficient intelligence to   determine whether or not this new SDP needs to result in another   offer/answer exchange.      For example, if the initial offer (in response to a      CreateConnection without SDP) contained fax version 2, and the      answer (in response to a CreateConnection with SDP) contained fax      version 0, then the corresponding ModifyConnection command (with      SDP) will result in an updated SDP with fax version also set to      zero.  If this was the only change in the updated SDP, a new      offer/answer exchange would not be needed.  Note that this example      does not imply that it is generally considered a good idea for      Call Agents to parse SDP in order to determine whether or not new      offer/answer exchanges are needed.   Finally, a ModifyConnection without SDP that generates an SDP needs   to be considered.  The SDP generated may either correspond to an   initial offer/answer exchange or a subsequent offer/answer exchange.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   The endpoint should generate SDP as if it was part of a subsequent   offer/answer exchange.  If the Call Agent does not desire such   semantics, it can simply create a new connection instead.2.5.  Implementation Considerations2.5.1.  Media IP Address and Port for T.38   When an endpoint is instructed to change to or from T.38 for a media   stream, it SHOULD continue using the same IP address and port the   media stream is currently using, since this will minimize any Quality   of Service, Network Address Translator (NAT), and Firewall   interactions from the change.  However, if an endpoint has a good   reason, it MAY choose not to follow this recommendation.   When an endpoint uses the same port for RTP audio and T.38 with   either UDPTL or TCP, packets of one type (e.g., T.38) may be received   while expecting packets of another type (RTP audio).  Since there is   explicit signaling to indicate which type is expected at any given   point in time, this does not introduce any new problems.  In other   words, the receiver does not operate as a demultiplexer with a need   to determine if a given packet received is an RTP audio packet or a   T.38 UDPTL/TCP packet.  The receiver simply processes incoming   packets as usual.  If T.38 packets are expected, then incoming   packets are validated against T.38, and if RTP audio packets are   expected, then incoming packets are validated against RTP.2.5.2.  Case Sensitivity   IANA has registered the uppercase string "UDPTL" as the transport   protocol identifier to be used for UDP-based T.38.  However, the   examples provided in Recommendation T.38, as well as most (if not   all) current implementations, use the lowercase string "udptl"   instead.  Implementations conforming to this package SHOULD generate   the lowercase string "udptl" and accept the lowercase, uppercase, and   mixed upper/lowercase strings as being equivalent.   The attribute "T38MaxBitRate" was once incorrectly registered with   IANA as "T38maxBitRate" (lower-case "m").  In accordance with T.38   examples and common implementation practice, the form "T38MaxBitRate"   SHOULD be generated by implementations conforming to this package.   In general, it is RECOMMENDED that implementations of this package   accept lowercase, uppercase, and mixed upper/lowercase encodings of   all the T.38 attributes.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20082.5.3.  Boolean Indicator After T.38 Parameters   Some implementations incorrectly use a colon (':') followed by a   number (zero or one) after the attributes T38FaxFillBitRemoval,   T38FaxTranscodingMMR, and T38FaxTranscodingJBIG.  Implementations   that receive such erroneous encodings MAY interpret the value ":0" as   lack of support for the option and all other values as support for   the option.3.  Call Flow Examples   In this section, we provide three example call flows.  The first one   illustrates a T.38 fax call under Call Agent control on both the   originating and terminating side.  The second one illustrates the use   of multiple and different options on the two sides.  The third one   illustrates the interaction with a SIP endpoint.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20083.1.  Call Agent Controlled T.38 Strict   In this example, both sides are under strict T.38 Call Agent control.   We assume the originating and terminating Call Agents communicate via   the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) [RFC3261].  Furthermore, the   originating fax machine does not generate CNG tone, which is typical   of early (i.e., pre-1993) fax machines.    ------------------------------------------------------------------   | #|     GW-o      |     CA-o      |      CA-t     |      GW-t     |   |==|===============|===============|===============|===============|   | 1|             <-|CRCX           |               |               |   | 2|     200(sdp-o)|->             |               |               |   | 3|               |  INVITE(sdp-o)|->             |               |   | 4|               |               |    CRCX(sdp-o)|->             |   | 5|               |               |             <-|200 (sdp-t)    |   | 6|               |             <-|200(sdp-t)     |               |   | 7|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t)    |               |               |   | 8|            200|->             |               |               |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   | 9|               |               |               |  <- ANS/      |   |  |               |               |               |      T.30 CED |   |10|               |               |               |  <- V.21 fax  |   |  |               |               |               |     preamble  |   |11|               |               |             <-|NTFY(t38 start)|   |12|               |               |            200|->             |   |13|               |               |      MDCX(t38)|->             |   |14|               |               |             <-|200(sdp-t2)    |   |15|               |             <-|INVITE(sdp-t2) |               |   |16|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t2)   |               |               |   |17|    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |               |   |18|               |    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |   |19|               |               |   MDCX(sdp-o2)|->             |   |20|               |               |             <-|200            |   |21|  V.21 fax ->  |               |               |               |   |  |  preamble     |               |               |               |   |22|NTFY(t38 start)|->             |               |               |   |23|             <-|200            |               |               |   |24|             <-|RQNT(T38 event)|               |               |   |25|            200|->             |               |               |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   |26|               |               |               |   (fax ends)  |   |27|               |               |             <-|NTFY(t38 stop) |   |28|               |               |            200|->             |   |29|NTFY(t38 stop) |->             |               |               |   |30|             <-|200            |               |               |    ------------------------------------------------------------------Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 1:   The Call Agent issues a CreateConnection command to the gateway,   instructing it to use PCMU media encoding and to use the strict Call   Agent controlled T.38 procedure.  Consequently, the Call Agent asks   the gateway to notify it of the "t38" event:      CRCX 1000 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      L: a:PCMU, fxr/fx:t38      M: recvonly      R: fxr/t38      X: 1   Step 2:   The gateway acknowledges the command and includes SDP with codec   information andRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability information:      200 1000 OK      I:1      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 3:   The originating Call Agent sends a SIP INVITE message with the SDP to   the terminating Call Agent.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 4:   The terminating Call Agent issues a CreateConnection command to the   terminating gateway, instructing it to use PCMU media encoding and to   use the strict Call Agent controlled T.38 procedure.  Consequently,   the Call Agent asks the gateway to notify it of the "t38" event:      CRCX 2000 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      L: a:PCMU, fxr/fx:t38      M: sendrecv      R: fxr/t38      X: 20      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 5:   The terminating gateway supports T.38, and the   RemoteConnectionDescriptor included indicates that the other side   supports T.38 as well, so the strict T.38 Call Agent controlled   procedure requested can be used.  The terminating gateway sends back   a success response with its SDP, which also includes capability   information:      200 2000 OK      I:2      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 6:   The terminating Call Agent sends back a SIP 200 OK response to the   originating Call Agent, which in turn sends a SIP ACK (not shown).   Step 7:   The originating Call Agent in turn sends a ModifyConnection command   to the originating gateway:      MDCX 1001 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      M: sendrecv      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   The ModifyConnection command does not repeat the   LocalConnectionOptions sent previously.  As far as fax handling is   concerned, the gateway therefore attempts to continue using the   current fax handling procedure, i.e., strict Call Agent controlled   T.38.  Since the capability information indicates the other side   supports T.38, the gateway will in fact be able to use the strict   Call Agent controlled T.38 procedure.  Had there not been any support   for T.38 in the RemoteConnectionDescriptor, then this command would   still have succeeded, however there would be no special fax handling   procedure (since strict mode could not be supported).   Step 8:   The gateway acknowledges the command.  At this point, a call is   established using PCMU encoding, and if a fax call is detected, the   Call Agent controlled T.38 procedure will be initiated.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Steps 9-11:   A fax call now occurs.  The T.30 CED tone (a.k.a. V.25 ANS) is sent   -- in this case, it is simply passed through the current PCMU   encoding.  Since both fax and modem calls can start with this   sequence, it is not possible to determine that this is a fax call   until step 10, where the V.21 fax preamble is detected.   The gateway was instructed to apply the Call Agent controlled T.38   procedure for fax calls, so it begins to mute audio, generates the   "t38(start)" event, and notifies the Call Agent:      NTFY 2500 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: fxr/t38(start)      X: 20   Step 12:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 2500 OK   Step 13:   The Call Agent then instructs the terminating gateway to use the   "image/t38" MIME type instead:      MDCX 2002 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      I: 2      L: a:image/t38      R: fxr/t38      X: 21Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 14:   The gateway changes to T.38 and sends back a success response with   updated SDP:      200 2002 OK      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Note that since the gateway's current RemoteConnectionDescriptor (as   opposed to the LocalConnectionDescriptor returned here) does not list   "image/t38" as a valid encoding method, the terminating gateway is   still muting the media and is now waiting for an updated   RemoteConnectionDescriptor with "image/t38".   Step 15:   The terminating Call Agent sends a re-INVITE to the originating Call   Agent with the updated SDP.   Step 16:   The originating Call Agent then sends a ModifyConnection command to   the originating gateway:      MDCX 1003 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 17:   The originating gateway changes to T.38 and sends back a success   response with updated SDP:      200 1003 OK      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 18:   The originating Call Agent sends a SIP 200 OK response with the   updated SDP to the terminating Call Agent, which in turn sends a SIP   ACK (not shown).   Step 19:   The terminating Call Agent sends a ModifyConnection with the updated   SDP to the terminating gateway:      MDCX 2003 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      I: 2      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 20:   The terminating gateway sends back a success response:      200 2003 OK   Since the terminating gateway now has a RemoteConnectionDescriptor   with "image/t38" as valid media, it can start exchanging T.38 with   the originating gateway.   Steps 21, 22:   The originating endpoint detects V.21 fax preamble.  Even though the   endpoint is already using "image/t38" for media, it generates a   "t38(start)" event and notifies the Call Agent.      NTFY 3500 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: fxr/t38(start)      X: 1   Steps 23, 24:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command, then issues a new   request for notification of the "t38" event.      200 3500 OK      .      RQNT 1004 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      R: fxr/t38      X: 2   Step 25:   The gateway acknowledges the command.      200 1004 OK   Steps 26, 27:   When the fax ends, a "t38(stop)" event is generated by the   terminating endpoint, which is notified to the Call Agent:      NTFY 2501 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: t38(stop)      X: 21Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 28:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 2501 OK   Step 29:   The originating endpoint also generates a "t38(stop)" event, which is   notified to the Call Agent:      NTFY 3502 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: t38(stop)      X: 2   Step 30:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 3502 OK   The fax call is now over.  The Call Agent may now decide to change   back to a voice codec, delete the connection, or do something   different.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20083.2.  Multiple and Different Options   In this example, the originating gateway is instructed to use the   gateway procedure, whereas the terminating gateway is given a choice   between the gateway procedure and the strict t38 procedure.   Furthermore, the originating fax machine is generating CNG tone.    ------------------------------------------------------------------   | #|     GW-o      |     CA-o      |      CA-t     |      GW-t     |   |==|===============|===============|===============|===============|   | 1|             <-|CRCX           |               |               |   | 2|     200(sdp-o)|->             |               |               |   | 3|               |  INVITE(sdp-o)|->             |               |   | 4|               |               |    CRCX(sdp-o)|->             |   | 5|               |               |             <-|200 (sdp-t)    |   | 6|               |             <-|200(sdp-t)     |               |   | 7|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t)    |               |               |   | 8|            200|->             |               |               |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   | 9|         CNG ->|               |               |               |   |10|               |               |               |<- ANS/T.30 CED|   |11|               |               |               |<- V.21 fax    |   |  |               |               |               |   preamble    |   |12|               |               |             <-|NTFY(t38 start)|   |13|               |               |            200|->             |   |14|               |               |      MDCX(t38)|->             |   |15|               |               |             <-|200(sdp-t2)    |   |16|               |             <-|INVITE(sdp-t2) |               |   |17|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t2)   |               |               |   |18|    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |               |   |19|               |    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |   |20|               |               |   MDCX(sdp-o2)|->             |   |21|               |               |             <-|200            |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   |22|               |               |               |   (fax ends)  |   |23|               |               |             <-|NTFY(t38 stop) |   |24|               |               |            200|->             |    ------------------------------------------------------------------Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 1:   The Call Agent issues a CreateConnection command to the gateway,   instructing it to use PCMU media encoding and to use the gateway   procedure.  Consequently, the Call Agent asks the gateway to notify   it of the "gwfax" event:      CRCX 1000 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      L: a:PCMU, fxr/fx:gw      M: recvonly      R: fxr/gwfax      X: 1   Step 2:   The gateway acknowledges the command and includes SDP with codec   information and capability information:      200 1000 OK      I:1      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38      a=X-FaxScheme: 123   We assume the gateway supports some other fax scheme, and it   indicates this by including an attribute "X-FaxScheme: 123".   Step 3:   The originating Call Agent sends a SIP INVITE message with the SDP to   the terminating Call Agent.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 4:   The terminating Call Agent issues a CreateConnection command to the   terminating gateway, instructing it to use PCMU media encoding and to   use either the gateway procedure or the strict Call Agent controlled   T.38 procedure.  Consequently, the Call Agent asks the gateway to   notify it of both the "gwfax" and "t38" events:      CRCX 2000 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      L: a:PCMU, fxr/fx:gw;t38      M: sendrecv      R: fxr/t38, fxr/gwfax      X: 20      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38      a=X-FaxScheme: 123   Step 5:   The terminating gateway does not support any special gateway fax   handling; however, it does support T.38, and the   RemoteConnectionDescriptor included indicates that the other side   supports T.38 as well, so the strict T.38 Call Agent controlled   procedure requested can be honored.  The terminating gateway sends   back a success response with its SDP, which also includes capability   information:      200 2000 OK      I:2      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 6:   The terminating Call Agent sends back a SIP 200 OK response to the   originating Call Agent, which in turn sends a SIP ACK (not shown).   Step 7:   The originating Call Agent in turns sends a ModifyConnection command   to the originating gateway:      MDCX 1001 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      M: sendrecv      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   The ModifyConnection command does not repeat the   LocalConnectionOptions sent previously.  As far as fax handling is   concerned, the gateway therefore attempts to continue using the   current fax handling, i.e., the gateway procedure.  The SDP   information returned however does not indicate support for the "X-   FaxScheme: 123", and hence the originating gateway will not invoke   any special fax handling procedure for this call.   Step 8:   The gateway acknowledges the command.  At this point, a call is   established using PCMU encoding, and if a fax call is detected, no   special fax handling procedure will occur.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Steps 9-12:   A CNG tone is generated by the originating fax, thereby indicating a   fax call.  If the gateway was using either of the T.38 modes, or if   it had negotiated support for a special gateway handling procedure   with the other side, a "t38(start)" or "gwfax(start)" event would now   have been generated and the switch to T.38 (or special gateway   handling) could start.  However, since the negotiation with the   terminating gateway resulted in the originating gateway not doing   anything special for fax, no such event is generated.  Instead, the   "nopfax(start)" event is now generated, but since the Call Agent has   not requested this event, it is not detected and hence not reported   to the Call Agent.  Consequently, the CNG tone is simply passed   through the current PCMU encoding without the (originating) Call   Agent being aware of the fax call.   Subsequently, the T.30 CED tone (a.k.a. V.25 ANS) occurs -- in this   case, it is also simply passed through the current PCMU encoding.   Since both fax and modem calls can start with this sequence, it is   not possible to determine that this is a fax call until step 11,   where the V.21 fax preamble is detected.   The terminating gateway is using the Call Agent controlled T.38   procedure for fax calls, so it begins to mute audio, generates the   "t38(start)" event, and notifies the Call Agent:      NTFY 2500 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: fxr/t38(start)      X: 20   Step 13:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 2500 OK   Step 14:   The Call Agent then instructs the terminating gateway to use the   "image/t38" MIME type instead:      MDCX 2002 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      I: 2      L: a:image/t38      R: fxr/t38      X: 21Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 15:   The gateway changes to T.38 and sends back a success response with   updated SDP:      200 2002 OK      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Note that since the terminating gateway's last received   RemoteConnectionDescriptor (as opposed to the   LocalConnectionDescriptor returned here) did not list "image/t38" as   a valid encoding method, the terminating gateway is still muting the   media and is now waiting for an updated RemoteConnectionDescriptor   with "image/t38".   Step 16:   The terminating Call Agent sends a re-INVITE to the originating Call   Agent with the updated SDP.   Step 17:   The originating Call Agent then sends a ModifyConnection command to   the originating gateway:      MDCX 1003 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 18:   The originating gateway changes to T.38 and sends back a success   response with updated SDP:      200 1003 OK      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 19:   The originating Call Agent sends a SIP 200 OK response with the   updated SDP to the terminating Call Agent, which in turn sends a SIP   ACK (not shown).   Step 20:   The terminating Call Agent sends a ModifyConnection with the updated   SDP to the terminating gateway:      MDCX 2003 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 2      I: 2      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 21:   The terminating gateway sends back a success response:      200 2003 OK   Since the terminating gateway now has a RemoteConnectionDescriptor   with "image/t38" as valid media, it can start exchanging T.38 with   the originating gateway.   Steps 22, 23:   When the fax ends, a "t38(stop)" event is generated, which is   notified to the Call Agent:      NTFY 2501 ds/ds1-1/2@gw-t.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: t38(stop)      X: 21   Step 24:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 2501 OK   The fax call is now over.  The Call Agent may now decide to change   back to a voice codec, delete the connection, or do something   different.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 36]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20083.3.  Interaction with SIP Endpoints   In this example, we show interaction with a SIP endpoint that does   not support theRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability descriptors.  To   accommodate such endpoints, the T.38 loose mode is being used (at the   risk of initiating T.38 to an endpoint that does not support it).   Once again, the originating fax does not generate CNG tone.    ------------------------------------------------------------------   | #|     GW-o      |     CA-o      |    SIP-UA-t   |      fax      |   |==|===============|===============|===============|===============|   | 1|             <-|CRCX           |               |               |   | 2|     200(sdp-o)|->             |               |               |   | 3|               |  INVITE(sdp-o)|->             |               |   | 4|               |             <-|200(sdp-t)     |               |   | 5|               |            ACK|->             |               |   | 6|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t)    |               |               |   | 7|            200|->             |               |               |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   | 8|               |               |               |  <- ANS/      |   |  |               |               |               |      T.30 CED |   | 9|               |               |               |  <- V.21 fax  |   |  |               |               |               |     preamble  |   |10|               |             <-|INVITE(sdp-t2) |               |   |11|             <-|MDCX(sdp-t2)   |               |               |   |12|    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |               |   |13|               |    200(sdp-o2)|->             |               |   |14|               |             <-|ACK            |               |   |15|  V.21 fax ->  |               |               |               |   |  |  preamble     |               |               |               |   |16|NTFY(t38 start)|->             |               |               |   |17|             <-|200            |               |               |   |18|             <-|RQNT(T38 event)|               |               |   |19|            200|->             |               |               |   |--|---------------|---------------|---------------|---------------|   |20|               |               |               |   (fax ends)  |   |21|               |             <-|BYE            |               |   |22|               |            200|->             |               |   |23|NTFY(t38 stop) |->             |               |               |   |24|             <-|200            |               |               |    ------------------------------------------------------------------Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 37]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 1:   The Call Agent issues a CreateConnection command to the gateway,   instructing it to use PCMU media encoding and to use the loose Call   Agent controlled T.38 procedure.  Consequently, the Call Agent asks   the gateway to notify it of the "t38" event:      CRCX 1000 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      L: a:PCMU, fxr/fx:t38-loose      M: recvonly      R: fxr/t38      X: 1   Step 2:   The gateway acknowledges the command and includes SDP with codec   information andRFC 3407 [RFC3407] capability information:      200 1000 OK      I:1      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 38]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 3:   The originating SIP User Agent (UA) sends a SIP INVITE message with   the SDP to the terminating Call Agent (not all SIP details shown   here):      INVITE sip:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0      ...      Content-Type: application/sdp      Content-Length: 167      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=audio 3456 RTP/AVP 0      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 4:   The terminating SIP User Agent sends back a SIP 200 OK response (not   all SIP details shown) to the originating Call Agent:      SIP/2.0 200 OK      ...      Content-Type: application/sdp      Content-Length: 100      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0   Note that the terminating SIP User Agent does not use theRFC 3407   [RFC3407] capability descriptor to indicate support for (or lack of   support for) T.38.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 39]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 5:   The originating Call Agent receives the SIP 200 response and sends a   SIP ACK message to the terminating SIP UA.   Note that the Call Agent does not know whether the peer entity   supports T.38.  In order to figure this out, the Call Agent could   send a SIP OPTIONS request to the terminating SIP UA, requesting it   to return its capabilities (not shown).  Note that this can of course   be done towards any SIP peer, e.g., if the other side was a Call   Agent speaking SIP it could be done there too.   Step 6:   The originating Call Agent in turns sends a ModifyConnection command   to the originating gateway:      MDCX 1001 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      M: sendrecv      v=0      o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=audio 1296 RTP/AVP 0   The ModifyConnection command does not repeat the   LocalConnectionOptions sent previously.  As far as fax handling is   concerned, the gateway therefore attempts to continue using the   current fax handling procedure, i.e., loose Call Agent controlled   T.38.  The T.38 loose procedure can always be supported, and hence a   switch to T.38 will be attempted if the originating gateway detects a   fax call.   Step 7:   The gateway acknowledges the command.  At this point, a call is   established using PCMU encoding, and if a fax call is detected, the   Call Agent controlled T.38 procedure will be initiated.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 40]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Steps 8, 9:   A fax call now occurs.  The T.30 CED tone (a.k.a. V.25 ANS) is   sent--in this case, it is simply passed through the current PCMU   encoding.  Since both fax and modem calls can start with this   sequence, it is not possible to determine that this is a fax call   until step 9, where the V.21 fax preamble is detected.   Step 10:   The terminating SIP UA does in fact support T.38 and, upon detecting   the fax call, attempts to change to T.38.  Consequently, it sends a   re-INVITE to the originating Call Agent with an updated SDP   indicating a switch to T.38.      INVITE sip:ca@ca-o.example.net SIP/2.0      ...      Content-Type: application/sdp      Content-Length: 100      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38   Step 11:   The originating Call Agent then sends a ModifyConnection command to   the originating gateway:      MDCX 1003 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      C: 1      I: 1      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.2      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.2      t=0 0      m=image 1296 udptl t38Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 41]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 12:   The originating gateway changes to T.38 and sends back a success   response with updated SDP:      200 1003 OK      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 13:   The originating Call Agent sends a SIP 200 OK response with the   updated SDP to the terminating SIP User Agent:      SIP/2.0 200 OK      ...      Content-Type: application/sdp      Content-Length: 167      v=0      o=- 25678 753850 IN IP4 192.0.2.1      s=-      c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1      t=0 0      m=image 3456 udptl t38      a=sqn: 0      a=cdsc: 1 audio RTP/AVP 0 18      a=cdsc: 3 image udptl t38   Step 14:   The terminating SIP User Agent receives the SIP 200 and sends a SIP   ACK.   Since the terminating SIP User Agent now has a   RemoteConnectionDescriptor with "image/t38" as valid media, it can   start exchanging T.38 with the originating gateway (and vice versa).Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 42]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Steps 15, 16:   The originating endpoint detects V.21 fax preamble.  Even though the   endpoint is already using "image/t38" for media, it generates a   "t38(start)" event and notifies the Call Agent.      NTFY 3500 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      O: fxr/t38(start)      X: 1   Steps 17, 18:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command and issues a new   (piggybacked) request for notification of the T38 event.      200 3500 OK      .      RQNT 1004 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0      R: fxr/t38      X: 2   Step 19:   The gateway acknowledges the command.      200 1004 OK   Steps 20-22:   When the fax ends, the terminating SIP UA decides to tear down the   call and hence sends a SIP BYE message, which the Call Agent responds   to with a SIP 200.   Step 23:   The originating endpoint also generates a "t38(stop)" event, which is   notified to the Call Agent:      NTFY 3502 ds/ds1-1/1@gw-o.example.net MGCP 1.0 O: t38(stop) X: 2Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 43]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008   Step 24:   The Call Agent acknowledges the Notify command:      200 3502 OK   The fax call is now over.  The Call Agent may now decide to change   back to a voice codec, delete the connection, or do something   different.4.  Security Considerations   The MGCP fax package itself is not known to introduce any new   security concerns.  However, implementers should note that T.38 media   is currently transported over UDP (UDPTL) or TCP in the clear and   without any integrity protection.  If for example security services   are in place to protect RTP media streams, these will thus not be in   effect for the T.38 media stream.  If such lack of security is a   concern, the fax LocalConnectionOptions allowing T.38 in this package   SHOULD NOT be used, i.e., the "off" (or a new secure extension) fax   LocalConnectionOption should be used.5.  IANA Considerations   IANA has registered the following MGCP package:      Package Title         Name     Version      -------------         ----     -------      Fax                   FXR        06.  Normative References   [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate             Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3435] Andreasen, F. and B. Foster, "Media Gateway Control             Protocol (MGCP) Version 1.0",RFC 3435, January 2003.   [T38]     ITU-T Recommendation T.38, "Procedures for real-time Group             3 facsimile communication over IP networks", March 2002.   [RFC3407] Andreasen, F., "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Simple             Capability Declaration",RFC 3407, October 2002.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 44]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 20087.  Informative References   [T30]     ITU-T Recommendation T.30, "Procedures for document             facsimile transmission in the general switched telephone             network", July 2003.   [RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,             A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler,             "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.   [RFC3264] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model             with Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3264, June             2002.Acknowledgements   Several people have contributed to the development of the MGCP fax   package.  In particular, the author would like to thank Bill Foster,   Paul Jones, Gary Kelly, Rajesh Kumar, Dave Horwitz, Hiroshi Tamura,   Rob Thompson, and the CableLabs PacketCable NCS focus team for their   contributions.Authors' Addresses   Flemming Andreasen   Cisco Systems   499 Thornall Street, 8th Floor   Edison, NJ 08837   EMail: fandreas@cisco.com   David Hancock   CableLabs   858 Coal Creek Circle   Louisville, CO 80027   EMail: d.hancock@cablelabs.comAndreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 45]

RFC 5347                    MGCP Fax Package                October 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   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.Andreasen & Hancock          Informational                     [Page 46]

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