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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          N. GreeneRequest for Comments: 2805                               Nortel NetworksCategory: Informational                                       M. Ramalho                                                           Cisco Systems                                                                B. Rosen                                                                 Marconi                                                              April 2000Media Gateway Control Protocol Architecture and RequirementsStatus 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.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document describes protocol requirements for the Media Gateway   Control Protocol between a Media Gateway Controller and a Media   Gateway.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000Table of Contents1.  Introduction ..............................................32.  Terminology ...............................................33.  Definitions ...............................................34.  Specific functions assumed within the MG ..................55.  Per-Call Requirements .....................................65.1.  Resource Reservation .................................65.2.  Connection Requirements ..............................75.3.  Media Transformations ................................85.4.  Signal/Event Processing and Scripting ................95.5.  QoS/CoS ..............................................105.6.  Test Support .........................................115.7.  Accounting ...........................................115.8.  Signalling Control ...................................116.  Resource Control ..........................................126.1.  Resource Status Management ...........................126.2.  Resource Assignment ..................................137.  Operational/Management Requirements .......................137.1.  Assurance of Control/Connectivity ....................137.2.  Error Control ........................................147.3.  MIB Requirements .....................................158.  General Protocol Requirements .............................158.1.  MG-MGC Association Requirements ......................168.2.  Performance Requirements .............................179.  Transport .................................................179.1.  Assumptions made for underlying network ..............179.2.  Transport Requirements ...............................1810.  Security Requirements ....................................1811.  Requirements specific to particular bearer types .........1911.1.  Media-specific Bearer types .........................2011.1.1.  Requirements for TDM PSTN (Circuit) ............2011.1.2.  Packet Bearer type .............................2211.1.3.  Bearer type requirements for ATM ...............2311.2.  Application-Specific Requirements ...................2611.2.1.  Trunking Gateway ...............................2611.2.2.  Access Gateway .................................2711.2.3.  Trunking/Access Gateway with fax ports .........2711.2.4.  Trunking/Access Gateway with text telephone ....2811.2.5.  Network Access Server ..........................2911.2.6.  Restricted Capability Gateway ..................3011.2.7.  Multimedia Gateway .............................3111.2.8.  Audio Resource Function ........................3211.2.9. Multipoint Control Units ........................4212.  References ...............................................4313.  Acknowledgements .........................................4314.  Authors' Addresses .......................................4415.  Full Copyright Statement .................................45Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 20001.  Introduction   This document describes requirements to be placed on the Media   Gateway Control Protocol. When the word protocol is used on its own   in this document it implicitly means the Media Gateway Control   Protocol.2.  Terminology   In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",   "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",   and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [1] and   indicate requirement levels for the protocol.3.  Definitions   *    Connection   Under the control of a Media Gateway Controller (MGC), the Media   Gateway (MG) realizes connections. In this document, connections are   associations of resources hosted by the MG. They typically involve   two terminations, but may involve more.   *    Line or Loop   An analogue or digital access connection from a user terminal which   carries user media content and telephony access signalling (DP, DTMF,   BRI, proprietary business set).   *    Media Gateway (MG) function   A Media Gateway (MG) function provides the media mapping and/or   transcoding functions between potentially dissimilar networks, one of   which is presumed to be a packet, frame or cell network.  For   example, an MG might terminate switched circuit network (SCN)   facilities (trunks, loops), packetize the media stream, if it is not   already packetized, and deliver packetized traffic to a packet   network.  It would perform these functions in the reverse order for   media streams flowing from the packet network to the SCN.   Media Gateways are not limited to SCN <-> packet/frame/cell   functions: A conference bridge with all packet interfaces could be an   MG, as well as an (IVR) interactive voice recognition unit, an audio   resource function, or a voice recognition system with a cell   interface.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   *    Media Gateway unit (MG-unit)   An MG-unit is a physical entity that contains an MG function and may   also contain other functions, e.g. an SG function.   *    Media Gateway Controller (MGC) function   A Media Gateway Controller (MGC) function controls a MG.   *    Media Resource   Examples of media resources are codecs, announcements, tones, and   modems, interactive voice response (IVR) units, bridges, etc.   *    Signaling Gateway (SG) function   An SG function receives/sends SCN native signalling at the edge of a   data network. For example the SG function may relay, translate or   terminate SS7 signaling in an SS7-Internet Gateway. The SG function   may also be co-resident with the MG function to process SCN   signalling associated with line or trunk terminations controlled by   the MG, such as the "D" channel of an ISDN PRI trunk.   *    Termination   A termination is a point of entry and/or exit of media flows relative   to the MG. When an MG is asked to connect two or more terminations,   it understands how the flows entering and leaving each termination   are related to each other.   Terminations are, for instance, DS0's, ATM VCs and RTP ports. Another   word for this is bearer point.   *    Trunk   An analog or digital connection from a circuit switch which carries   user media content and may carry telephony signalling (MF, R2, etc.).   Digital trunks may be transported and may appear at the Media Gateway   as channels within a framed bit stream, or as an ATM cell stream.   Trunks are typically provisioned in groups, each member of which   provides equivalent routing and service.   *    Type of Bearer   A Type of Bearer definition provides the detailed requirements for   its particular application/bearer type. A particular class of Media   Gateway, for example, would support a particular set of Bearer types.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 20004.  Specific functions assumed within the MG   This section provides an environment for the definition of the   general Media Gateway Control Protocol requirements.   MGs can be architected in many different ways depending where the   media conversions and transcoding (if required) are performed, the   level of programmability of resources, how conferences are supported,   and how associated signalling is treated. The functions assumed to be   within the MG must not be biased towards a particular architecture.   For instance, announcements in a MG could be provided by media   resources or by the bearer point resource or termination itself.   Further, this difference must not be visible to MGC: The MGC must be   able to issue the identical request to two different implementations   and achieve the identical functionality.   Depending on the application of the MG (e.g., trunking, residential),   some functions listed below will be more prominent than others, and   in some cases, functions may even disappear.   Although media adaptation is the essence of the MG, it is not   necessary for it to be involved every time. An MG may join two   terminations/resources of the same type (i.e., the MG behaves as a   switch). The required media conversion depends on the media type   supported by the resources being joined together.   In addition to media adaptation function, resources have a number of   unique properties, for instance:   *    certain types of resources have associated signalling        capabilities (e.g., PRI signalling, DTMF),   *    some resources perform maintenance functions (e.g., continuity        tests),   *    the MGC needs to know the state changes of resources (e.g., a        trunk group going out of service),   *    the MG retains some control over the allocation and control of        some resources (e.g., resource name space: RTP port numbers).   Therefore, an MG realizes point-to-point connections and conferences,   and supports several resource functions. These functions include   media conversion, resource allocation and management, and event   notifications.  Handling termination associated signalling is either   done using event notifications, or is handled by the signalling   backhaul part of a MG-unit (i.e. NOT directly handled by the MG).Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   MGs must also support some level of system related functions, such as   establishing and maintaining some kind of MG-MGC association. This is   essential for MGC redundancy, fail-over and resource sharing.   Therefore, an MG is assumed to contain these functions:   *    Reservation and release, of resources   *    Ability to provide state of resources   *    Maintenance of resources - It must be possible to make        maintenance operations independent of other termination        functions, for instance, some maintenance states should not        affect the resources associated with that resource . Examples of        maintenance functions are loopbacks and continuity tests.   *    Connection management, including connection state.   *    Media processing, using media resources: these provide services        such as transcoding, conferencing, interactive voice recognition        units, audio resource function units. Media resources may or may        not be directly part of other resources.   *    Incoming digit analysis for terminations, interpretation of        scripts for terminations   *    Event detection and signal insertion for per-channel signalling   *    Ability to configure signalling backhauls (for example, a        Sigtran backhaul)   *    Management of the association between the MGC and MG, or between        the MGC and MG resources.5.  Per-Call Requirements5.1.  Resource Reservation   The protocol must:   a.   Support reservation of bearer terminations and media resources        for use by a particular call and support their subsequent        release (which may be implicit or explicit).   b.   Allow release in a single exchange of messages, of all resources        associated with a particular set of connectivity and/or        associations between a given number terminations.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   c.   The MG is not required (or allowed) by the protocol to maintain        a sense of future time: a reservation remains in effect until        explicitly released by the MGC.5.2.  Connection Requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Support connections involving packet and circuit bearer        terminations in any combination, including "hairpin" connections        (connections between two circuit connections within the same        MG).   b.   Support connections involving TDM, Analogue, ATM, IP or FR        transport in any combination.   c.   Allow the specification of bearer plane (e.g. Frame Relay, IP,        etc.) on a call by call basis.   d.   Support unidirectional, symmetric bi-directional, and asymmetric        bi-directional flows of media.   e.   Support multiple media types (e.g. audio, text, video, T.120).   f.   Support point-to-point and point-to-multipoint connections.   g.   Support creation and modification of more complex flow        topologies e.g. conference bridge capabilities.  Be able to add        or delete media streams during a call or session, and be able to        add or subtract participants to/from a call or session.   h.   Support inclusion of media resources into call or session as        required.  Depending on the protocol and resource type, media        resources may be implicitly included, class-assigned, or        individually assigned.   i.   Provide unambiguous specification of which media flows pass        through a point and which are blocked at a given point in time,        if the protocol permits multiple flows to pass through the same        point.   j.   Allow modifications of an existing termination, for example, use        of higher compression to compensate for insufficient bandwidth        or changing transport network connections.   k.   Allow the MGC to specify that a given connection has higher        priority than other connections.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   l.   Allow a reference to a port/termination on the MG to be a        logical identifier,        with a one-to-one mapping between a logical identifier and a        physical port.   m.   Allow the MG to report events such as resource reservation and        connection completion.5.3.  Media Transformations   The Protocol must:   a.   Support mediation/adaptation of flows between different types of        transport   b.   Support invocation of additional processing such as echo        cancellation.   c.   Support mediation of flows between different content encoding        (codecs, encryption/decryption)   d.   Allow the MGC to specify whether text telephony/FAX/data modem        traffic is to be terminated at the MG, modulated/demodulated,        and converted to packets or forwarded by the MG in the media        flow as voice band traffic.   e.   Allow the MGC to specify that Dual-Tone MultiFrequency (DTMF)        digits or other line and trunk signals and general Multi-        Frequency (MF) tones are to be processed in the MG and how these        digits/signals/tones are to be handled. The MGC must be able to        specify any of the following handling of such        digits/signals/tones:   1.   The digits/signals/tones are to be encoded normally in the audio        RTP stream (e.g., no analysis of the digits/signals/tones).   2.   Analyzed and sent to the MGC.   3.   Received from the MGC and inserted in the line-side audio        stream.   4.   Analyzed and sent as part of a separate RTP stream (e.g., DTMF        digits sent via a RTP payload separate from the audio RTP        stream).   5.   Taken from a separate RTP stream and inserted in the line-side        audio stream.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   6.   Handled according to a script of instructions.  For all but the        first case, an option to mute the digits/signals/tones with        silence, comfort noise, or other means (e.g., notch filtering of        some telephony tones) must be provided.  As detection of these        events may take up to tens of milliseconds, the first few        milliseconds of such digit/signal/tone may be encoded and sent        in the audio RTP stream before the digit/signal/tone can be        verified. Therefore muting of such digits/signals/tones in the        audio RTP stream with silence or comfort noise is understood to        occur at the earliest opportunity after the digit/signal/tone is        verified.   f.   Allow the MGC to specify signalled flow characteristics on        circuit as well as on packet bearer connections, e.g. u-law/a-        law.   g.   Allow for packet/cell transport adaptation only (no media        adaptation) e.g. mid-stream (packet-to-packet)        transpacketization/transcoding, or ATM AAL5 to and from ATM AAL2        adaptation.   h.   Allow the transport of audio normalization levels as a setup        parameter, e.g., for conference bridging.   i.   Allow conversion to take place between media types e.g., text to        speech and speech to text.5.4.  Signal/Event Processing and Scripting   The Protocol must:   a.   Allow the MGC to enable/disable monitoring for specific        supervision events at specific circuit terminations   b.   Allow the MGC to enable/disable monitoring for specific events        within specified media streams   c.   Allow reporting of detected events on the MG to the MGC. The        protocol should provide the means to minimize the messaging        required to report commonly-occurring event sequences.   d.   Allow the MGC to specify other actions (besides reporting) that        the MG should take upon detection of specified events.   e.   Allow the MGC to enable and/or mask events.   f.   Provide a way for MGC to positively acknowledge event        notification.Greene, et al.               Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   g.   Allow the MGC to specify signals (e.g., supervision, ringing) to        be applied at circuit terminations.   h.   Allow the MGC to specify content of extended duration        (announcements, continuous tones) to be inserted into specified        media flows.   i.   Allow the MGC to specify alternative conditions (detection of        specific events, timeouts) under which the insertion of        extended-duration signals should cease.   j.   Allow the MGC to download, and specify a script to be invoked on        the occurrence of an event.   k.   Specify common events and signals to maximize MG/MGC        interworking.   l.   Provide an extension mechanism for implementation defined events        and signals with, for example, IANA registration procedures. It        may be useful to have an Organizational Identifier (i.e. ITU,        ETSI, ANSI, ) as part of the registration mechanism.   m.   The protocol shall allow the MGC to request the arming of a        mid-call trigger even after the call has been set up.5.5.  QoS/CoS   The Protocol must:   a.   Support the establishment of a bearer channel with a specified        QoS/CoS.   b.   Support the ability to specify QoS for the connection between        MGs, and by direction.   c.   Support a means to change QoS during a connection, as a whole        and by direction.   d.   Allow the MGC to set QOS thresholds and receive notification        when such thresholds cannot be maintained.   e.   Allow the jitter buffer parameters on RTP channels to be        specified at connection setup.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 20005.6.  Test Support   The protocol must:   a.   Support of the different types of PSTN Continuity Testing (COT)        for both the originating and terminating ends of the circuit        connection (2-wire and 4- wire).   b.   Specifically support test line operation (e.g. 103, 105, 108).5.7.  Accounting   The protocol must:   a.   Support a common identifier to mark resources related to one        connection.   b.   Support collection of specified accounting information from MGs.   c.   Provide the mechanism for the MGC to specify that the MG report        accounting information automatically at end of call, in mid-call        upon request, at specific time intervals as specified by the MGC        and at unit usage thresholds as specified by the MGC.   d.   Specifically support collection of:   *    start and stop time, by media flow,   *    volume of content carried (e.g. number of packets/cells        transmitted, number received with and without error, inter-        arrival jitter), by media flow,   *    QOS statistics, by media flow.   e.   Allow the MGC to have some control over which statistics are        reported, to enable it to manage the amount of information        transferred.5.8.  Signalling Control   Establishment and provisioning of signalling backhaul channels (via   SIGTRAN for example) is out of scope.  However, the MG must be   capable of supporting detection of events, and application of signals   associated with basic analogue line, and CAS type signalling.  The   protocol must:   a.   Support the signalling requirements of analogue lines and        Channel Associated Signaling (CAS).Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   b.   Support national variations of such signalling.   c.   Provide mechanisms to support signalling without requiring MG-        MGC timing constraints beyond that specified in this document.   d.   Must not create a situation where the MGC and the MG must be        homologated together as a mandatory requirement of using the        protocol;        i.e. it must be possible to optionally conceal signaling type        variation from the MGC.6.  Resource Control6.1.  Resource Status Management   The protocol must:   a.   Allow the MG to report changes in status of physical entities        supporting bearer terminations, media resources, and facility-        associated signalling channels, due to failures, recovery, or        administrative action. It must be able to report whether a        termination is in service or out of service.   b.   Support administrative blocking and release of TDM circuit        terminations.   Note: as the above point only relates to ISUP-controlled circuits, it   may be unnecessary to require this since the MGC controls their use.   However, it may be meaningful for MF and R2-signalled trunks, where   supervisory states are set to make the trunks unavailable at the far   end.   c.   Provide a method for the MGC to request that the MG release all        resources under the control of a particular MGC currently in        use, or reserved, for any or all connections.   d.   Provide an MG Resource Discovery mechanism which must allow an        MGC to discover what resources the MG has. Expressing resources        can be an arbitrarily difficult problem and the initial release        of the protocol may have a simplistic view of resource        discovery.        At a minimum, resource discovery must enumerate the names of        available circuit terminations and the allowed values for        parameters supported by terminations.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000        The protocol should be defined so that simple gateways could        respond with a relatively short, pre-stored response to the        discovery request mechanism. In general, if the protocol defines        a mechanism that allows the MGC to specify a setting or        parameter for a resource or connection in the MG, and MGs are        not required to support all possible values for that setting or        parameter, then the discovery mechanism should provide the MGC        with a method to determine what possible values such settings or        parameters are supported in a particular MG.   e.   Provide a mechanism to discover the current available resources        in the MG, where resources are dynamically consumed by        connections and the MGC cannot reasonably or reliably track the        consumption of such resources. It should also be possible to        discover resources currently in use, in order to reconcile        inconsistencies between the MGC and the MG.   f.   Not require an MGC to implement an SNMP manager function in        order to discover capabilities of an MG that may be specified        during context establishment.6.2.  Resource Assignment   The protocol must:   a.   Provide a way for the MG to indicate that it was unable to        perform a requested action because of resource exhaustion, or        because of temporary resource unavailability.   b.   Provide an ability for the MGC to indicate to an MG the resource        to use for a call (e.g. DS0) exactly, or indicate a set of        resources (e.g. pick a DS0 on a T1 line or a list of codec        types) via a "wild card" mechanism from which the MG can select        a specific resource for a call (e.g. the 16th timeslot, or        G.723).   c.   Allow the use of DNS names and IP addresses to identify MGs and        MGCs. This shall not preclude using other identifiers for MGs or        MGCs when other non IP transport technologies for the protocol        are used.7.  Operational/Management Requirements7.1.  Assurance of Control/Connectivity   To provide assurance of control and connectivity, the protocol must   provide the means to minimize duration of loss of control due to loss   of contact, or state mismatches.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   The protocol must:   a.   Support detection and recovery from loss of contact due to        failure/congestion of communication links or due to MG or MGC        failure.        Note that failover arrangements are one of the mechanisms which        could be used to meet this requirement.   b.   Support detection and recovery from loss of synchronized view of        resource and connection states between MGCs and MGs. (e.g.        through the use of audits).   c.   Provide a means for MGC and MG to provide each other with        booting and reboot indications, and what the MG's configuration        is.   d.   Permit more than one backup MGC and provide an orderly way for        the MG to contact one of its backups.   e.   Provide for an orderly switchback to the primary MGC after it        recovers. How MGCs coordinate resources between themselves is        outside the scope of the protocol.   f.   Provide a mechanism so that when an MGC fails, connections        already established can be maintained. The protocol does not        have to provide a capability to maintain connections in the        process of being connected, but not actually connected when the        failure occurs.   g.   The Protocol must allow the recovery or redistribution of        traffic without call loss.7.2.  Error Control   The protocol must:   a.   Allow for the MG to report reasons for abnormal failure of lower        layer connections e.g. TDM circuit failure, ATM VCC failure.   b.   Allow for the MG to report Usage Parameter Control (UPC) events.   c.   Provide means to ameliorate potential synchronization or focused        overload of supervisory/signaling events that can be detrimental        to either MG or MGC operation. Power restoration or signaling        transport re-establishment are typical sources of potentially        detrimental signaling showers from MG to MGC or vice-versa.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   d.   Allow the MG to notify the MGC that a termination was terminated        and communicate a reason when a terminations is taken out-of-        service unilaterally by the MG due to abnormal events.   e.   Allow the MGC to acknowledge that a termination has been taken        out-of-service.   f.   Allow the MG to request the MGC to release a termination and        communicate a reason.   g.   Allow the MGC to specify, as a result of such a request its        decision to take termination down, leave it as is or modify it.7.3.  MIB Requirements   The Protocol must define a common MG MIB, which must be extensible,   but must:   a.   Provide information on:   *    mapping between resources and supporting physical entities.   *    statistics on quality of service on the control and signalling        backhaul interfaces.   *    statistics required for traffic engineering within the MG.   b.   The protocol must allow the MG to provide to the MGC all        information the MGC needs to provide in its MIB.   c.   MG MIB must support implementation of H.341 by either the MG,        MGC, or both acting together.8.  General Protocol Requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Support multiple operations to be invoked in one message and        treated as a single transaction.   b.   Be both modular and extensible. Not all implementations may wish        to support all of the possible extensions for the protocol. This        will permit lightweight implementations for specialized tasks        where processing resources are constrained. This could be        accomplished by defining particular profiles for particular uses        of the protocol.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   c.   Be flexible in allocation of intelligence between MG and MGC.        For example, an MGC may want to allow the MG to assign        particular MG resources in some implementations, while in        others, the MGC may want to be the one to assign MG resources        for use.   d.   Support scalability from very small to very large MGs: The        protocol must support MGs with capacities ranging from one to        millions of terminations.   e.   Support scalability from very small to very large MGC span of        control: The protocol should support MGCs that control from one        MG to a few tens of thousands of MGs.   f.   Support the needs of a residential gateway that supports one to        a few lines, and the needs of a large PSTN gateway supporting        tens of thousands of lines. Protocol mechanisms favoring one        extreme or the other should be minimized in favor of more        general purpose mechanism applicable to a wide range of MGs.        Where special purpose mechanisms are proposed to optimize a        subset of implementations, such mechanisms should be defined as        optional, and should have minimal impact on the rest of the        protocol.   g.   Facilitate MG and MGC version upgrades independently of one        another. The protocol must include a version identifier in the        initial message exchange.   h.   Facilitate the discovery of the protocol capabilities of the one        entity to the other.   i.   Specify commands as optional (they can be ignored) or mandatory        (the command must be rejected), and within a command, to specify        parameters as optional (they can be ignored) or mandatory (the        command must be rejected).8.1.  MG-MGC Association Requirements   The Protocol must:   a.   Support the establishment of a control relationship between an        MGC and an MG.   b.   Allow multiple MGCs to send control messages to an MG. Thus, the        protocol must allow control messages from multiple signalling        addresses to a single MG.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   c.   Provide a method for the MG to tell an MGC that the MG received        a command for a resource that is under the control of a        different MGC.   d.   Support a method for the MG to control the rate of requests it        receives from the MGC (e.g. windowing techniques, exponential        back-off).   e.   Support a method for the MG to tell an MGC that it cannot handle        any more requests.8.2.  Performance Requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Minimize message exchanges between MG and MGC, for example        during boot/reboot, and during continuity tests.   b.   Support Continuity test constraints which are a maximum of 200ms        cross-MGC IAM (IAM is the name given to an SS7 connection setup        msg) propagation delay, and a maximum of 200ms from end of        dialing to IAM emission.   c.   Make efficient use of the underlying transport mechanism. For        example, protocol PDU sizes vs. transport MTU sizes needs to be        considered in designing the protocol.   d.   Not contain inherent architectural or signaling constraints that        would prohibit peak calling rates on the order of 140        calls/second on a moderately loaded network.   e.   Allow for default/provisioned settings so that commands need        only contain non-default parameters.9.  Transport9.1.  Assumptions made for underlying network        The protocol must assume that the underlying network:   a.   May be over large shared networks: proximity assumptions are not        allowed.   b.   Does not assure reliable delivery of messages.   c.   Does not guarantee ordering of messages: Sequenced delivery of        messages associated with the same source of events is not        assumed.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   d.   Does not prevent duplicate transmissions.9.2.  Transport Requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Provide the ability to abort delivery of obsolete messages at        the sending end if their transmission has not been successfully        completed. For example, aborting a command that has been        overtaken by events.   b.   Support priority messages: The protocol shall allow a command        precedence to allow priority messages to supercede non-priority        messages.   c.   Support of large fan-out at the MGC.   d.   Provide a way for one entity to correlate commands and responses        with the other entity.   e.   Provide a reason for any command failure.   f.   Provide that loss of a packet not stall messages not related to        the message(s) contained in the packet lost.   Note that there may be enough protocol reliability requirements here   to warrant a separate reliable transport layer be written apart from   the Media Gateway Control Protocol. Also need to compare Megaco   reliable transport requirements with similar Sigtran requirements.10.  Security Requirements   Security mechanisms may be specified as provided in underlying   transport mechanisms, such as IPSEC.  The protocol, or such   mechanisms, must:   a.   Allow for mutual authentication at the start of an MGC-MG        association   b.   Allow for preservation of the of control messages once the        association has been established.   c.   Allow for optional confidentiality protection of control        messages.  The mechanism should allow a choice in the algorithm        to be used.   d.   Operate across untrusted domains in a secure fashion.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   e.   Support non-repudiation for a customer-located MG talking to a        network operator's MGC.   f.   Define mechanisms to mitigate denial of service attacks   Note: the protocol document will need to include an extended   discussion of security requirements, offering more precision on each   threat and giving a complete picture of the defense including non-   protocol measures such as configuration.   g.   It would be desirable for the protocol to be able to pass        through commonly-used firewalls.11.  Requirements specific to particular bearer types   The bearer types listed in Table 1 can be packaged into different   types of MGs. Examples are listed in the following sections.  How   they are packaged is outside the scope of the general Media Gateway   control protocol. The protocol must support all types of bearer types   listed in Table 1.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000                 Table 1: Bearer Types and Applications     Bearer Type                   Applications       Transit Network     ================================================================     Trunk+ISUP                    trunking/access    IP, ATM, FR                                   Voice,Fax,NAS,                                   Multimedia     Trunk+MF                      trunking/access    IP, ATM, FR                                   Voice,Fax,NAS,                                   Multimedia     ISDN                          trunking/access    IP, ATM, FR                                   Voice,Fax,NAS,                                   Multimedia     Analogue                      Voice,Fax,         IP, ATM, FR                                   Text Telephony     Termination in a Restricted   Voice,Fax,         IP, ATM, FR     Capability Gateway            Text Telephony     Application Termination       IVR,ARF, Announcement Server,                                   Voice Recognition Server,...     Multimedia H.323              H.323 Multimedia   IP, ATM, FR                                   Gateway and MCU     Multimedia H.320              H.323 GW and MCU   ISDN, IP, ATM, FR11.1.  Media-specific Bearer Types   This section describes requirements for handling terminations   attached to specific types of networks.11.1.1.  Requirements for TDM PSTN (Circuit)   This bearer type is applicable to a Trunking GW, Access GW, ...   The protocol must allow:   a.   the MGC to specify the encoding to use on the attached circuit.   b.   In general, if something is set by a global signalling protocol        (e.g. ISUP allows mu-Law or A-Law to be signaled using ISUP)        then it must be settable by the protocol.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   c.   TDM attributes:   *    Echo cancellation,   *    PCM encoding or other voice compression (e.g. mu-law or A-law),   *    encryption,   *    rate adaptation (e.g. V.110, or V.120).   d.   for incoming calls, identification of a specific TDM circuit        (timeslot and facility).   e.   for calls outgoing to the circuit network, identification of a        specific circuit or identification of a circuit group with the        indication that the MG must select and return the identification        of an available member of that group.   f.   specification of the default encoding of content passing to and        from a given circuit, possibly on a logical or physical circuit        group basis.   g.   specification at any point during the life of a connection of        variable aspects of the content encoding, particularly including        channel information capacity.   h.   specification at any point during the life of a connection of        loss padding to be applied to incoming and outgoing media        streams at the circuit termination.   i.   specification at any point during the life of a connection of        the applicability of echo cancellation to the outgoing media        stream.   j.   Multi-rate calls to/from the SCN.   k.   H-channel (n x 64K) calls to/from the SCN.   l.   B channel aggregation protocols for creating high speed channels        for multimedia over the SCN.   m.   Modem terminations and negotiations.   The protocol may also allow:   n.   specification of sub-channel media streams,   o.   specification of multi-channel media streams.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200011.1.2.  Packet Bearer Type   The protocol must be able to specify:   a.   ingress and egress coding (i.e. the way packets coming in and        out are encoded) (including encryption).   b.   near and far-end ports and other session parameters for RTP and        RTCP.   The protocol must support reporting of:   c.   re-negotiation of codec for cause - for further study   d.   on Trunking and Access Gateways, resources capable of more than        one active connection at a time must also be capable of mixing        and packet duplication.   The protocol must allow:   e.   specification of parameters for outgoing and incoming packet        flows at separate points in the life of the connection (because        far-end port addresses are typically obtained through a separate        signalling exchange before or after the near-end port addresses        are assigned).   f.   the possibility for each Media Gateway to allocate the ports on        which it will receive packet flows (including RTCP as well as        media streams) and report its allocations to the Media Gateway        Controller for signalling to the far end.  Note that support of        different IP backbone providers on a per call basis would        require that the ports on which packets flow be selected by the        MGC. (but only if the IP address of the MG is different for each        backbone provider).   g.   the specification at any point during the life of a connection        of RTP payload type and RTP session number for each RTP-        encapsulated media flow.   h.   the ability to specify whether outgoing flows are to be uni-cast        or multi-cast. Note that on an IP network this information is        implicit in the destination address, but in other networks this        is a connection parameter.   i.   invoking of encryption/decryption on media flows and        specification of the associated algorithm and key.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   The protocol should also allow:   j.   the MGC to configure non-RTP (proprietary or other) encapsulated        packet flows.11.1.3.  Bearer type requirements for ATM   This bearer type is applicable to Trunking GW, Access GW, ....11.1.3.1.  Addressing   a.   The protocol must be able to specify the following termination        attributes:   *    VC identifier,   *    VC identifier plus AAL2 slot, and variant of these allowing the        gateway to choose (part of) the identifier,   *    remote termination network address, remote MG name.   b.   Allow specification of an ATM termination which is to be        assigned to an MG connection as a VC identifier, a VC identifier        plus AAL2 slot, a wild-carded variant of either of these. A        remote termination network address, or a remote MG name could        also be used when the MG can select the VC and change the VC        during the life of the connection by using ATM signalling.   c.   Provide an indication by the MG of the VC identifier and        possibly AAL2 slot of the termination actually assigned to a        connection.   d.   Provide a means to refer subsequently to that termination.   e.   Refer to an existing VCC as the physical interface + Virtual        Path Identifier (VPI) + Virtual Circuit Identifier (VCI).   f.   Where the VCC is locally established (SVCs signalled by the        Gateway through UNI or PNNI signalling or similar), the VCC must        be indirectly referred to in terms which are of significance to        both ends of the VCC. For example, a global name or the ATM        address of the ATM devices at each end of the VCC. However, it        is possible/probable that there may be several VCCs between a        given pair of ATM devices. Therefore the ATM address pair must        be further resolved by a VCC identifier unambiguous within the        context of the ATM address pair.   g.   refer to a VCC as the Remote GW ATM End System Address + VCCI.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   h.   allow the VCCI to be selected by the MG or imposed on the MG.   i.   support all ATM addressing variants (e.g. ATM End System Address        (AESA) and E.164).11.1.3.2.  Connection related requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Allow for the de-coupling of creation/deletion of the narrow-        band connection from the creation/deletion of the underlying        VCC.   b.   Allow for efficient disconnection of all connections associated        with a physical port or VCC. As an example, this could aggregate        disconnections across a broadband circuit which experienced a        physical error.   c.   Allow the connection established using this protocol to be        carried over a VCC, which may be a:   *    PVC or SPVC,   *    an SVC established on demand, either by the MGC itself or by a        broker acting on its behalf or,   *    an SVC originated as required by the local MG, or by the remote        end to the local MG through UNI or PNNI signalling.   d.   Allow ATM transport parameters and QoS parameters to be passed        to the MG.   e.   Allow blocking and unblocking of a physical interface, a VCC or        an AAL1/AAL2 channel.   The protocol should:   f.   Where a VCC is required to be established on a per narrow-band        call basis, allow all necessary information to be passed in one        message.11.1.3.3.  Media adaptation   The protocol must:   a.   Allow AAL parameters to be passed to the MG.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   b.   Allow AAL1/AAL2 multiple narrow-band calls to be mapped to a        single VCC. For AAL2, these calls are differentiated within each        VCC by a AAL2 channel identifier. An AAL2 connection may span        more than 1 VCC and transit AAL2 switching devices.  ITU        Q.2630.1 [2] defines an end-to-end identifier called the Served        User Generated Reference (SUGR). It carries information from the        originating user of the AAL2 signalling protocol to the        terminating user transparently and unmodified.   c.   Allow unambiguous binding of a narrow band call to an AAL2        connection identifier, or AAL1 channel, within the specified        VCC.   d.   Allow the AAL2 connection identifier, or AAL1 channel, to be        selected by the MG or imposed on the MG.   e.   Allow the use of the AAL2 channel identifier (cid) instead of        the AAL2 connection identifier.   f.   Allow the AAL2 voice profile to be imposed or negotiated before        the start of the connection.  AAL2 allows for variable length        packets and varying packet rates, with multiple codecs possible        within a given profile. Thus a given call may upgrade or        downgrade the codec within the lifetime of the call. Idle        channels may generate zero bandwidth. Thus an AAL2 VCC may vary        in bandwidth and possibly exceed its contract. Congestion        controls within a gateway may react to congestion by modifying        codec rates/types.   g.   Allow the MGC to instruct the MG on how individual narrow-band        calls behave under congestion.   h.   Allow for the MGC to specify an AAL5 bearer, with the following        choices:   *    Per ATM Forum standard AF-VTOA-0083 [4],   *    RTP with IP/UDP,   *    RTP without IP/IDP per H.323v2 Annex C [5],   *    Compressed RTP per ATM Forum AF-SAA-0124.000 [6].   i.   Allow unambiguous binding of a narrow band call to an AAL1        channel within the specified VCC. (In AAL1, multiple narrow-band        calls may be mapped to a single VCC.)Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200011.1.3.4.  Reporting requirements   The protocol should:   a.   Allow any end-of-call statistics to show loss/restoration of        underlying VCC within the calls duration, together with duration        of loss.   b.   Allow notification, as requested by MGC, of any congestion        avoidance actions taken by the MG.   The protocol must:   c.   Allow for ATM VCCs or AAL2 channels to be audited by the MGC.   d.   Allow changes in status of ATM VCCs or AAL2 channels to be        notified as requested by the MGC.   e.   Allow the MGC to query the resource and endpoint availability.        Resources may include VCCs, and DSPs. VCCs may be up or down.        End-points may be connection-free, connected or unavailable.11.1.3.5.  Functional requirements   The protocol must:   a.   Allow an MGC to reserve a bearer, and specify a route for it        through the network.11.2.  Application-Specific Requirements11.2.1.  Trunking Gateway   A Trunking Gateway is an interface between SCN networks and Voice   over IP or Voice over ATM networks.  Such gateways typically   interface to SS7 or other NNI signalling on the SCN and manage a   large number of digital circuits.   The protocol must:   a.   Provide circuit and packet-side loopback.   b.   Provide circuit-side n x 64kbs connections.   c.   Provide subrate and multirate connections for further study.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   d.   Provide the capability to support Reporting/generation of        per-trunk CAS signalling (DP, DTMF, MF, R2, J2, and national        variants).   e.   Provide the capability to support reporting of detected DTMF        events either digit-by-digit, as a sequence of detected digits        with a flexible mechanism For the MG to determine the likely end        of dial string, or in a separate RTP stream.   f.   Provide the capability to support ANI and DNIS generation and        reception.11.2.2.  Access Gateway   An Access Gateway connects UNI interfaces like ISDN (PRI and BRI) or   traditional analog voice terminal interfaces, to a Voice over IP or   Voice over ATM network, or Voice over Frame Relay network.   The Protocol must:   a.   Support detection and generation of analog line signaling        (hook-state, ring generation).   b.   Provide the capability to support reporting of detected DTMF        events either digit-by-digit, as a sequence of detected digits        with a flexible mechanism For the MG to determine the likely end        of dial string, or in a separate RTP stream.   c.   Not require scripting mechanisms, event buffering, digit map        storage when implementing restricted function (1-2 line)        gateways with very limited capabilities.   d.   Provide the capability to support CallerID generation and        reception.   Proxying of the protocol is for further study.11.2.3.  Trunking/Access Gateway with fax ports   a.   the protocol must be able to indicate detection of fax media.   b.   the protocol must be able to specify T.38 for the transport of        the fax.   c.   the protocol must be able to specify G.711 encoding for        transport of fax tones across a packet network.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200011.2.4.  Trunking/Access Gateway with text telephone access ports   An access gateway with ports capable of text telephone communication,   must provide communication between text telephones in the SCN and   text conversation channels in the packet network.   Text telephone capability of ports is assumed to be possible to   combine with other options for calls as described insection 11.2.6   (e.) on "Adaptable NASes".   The port is assumed to adjust for the differences in the supported   text telephone protocols, so that the text media stream can be   communicated T.140 coded in the packet network without further   transcoding [7].   The protocol must be capable of reporting the type of text telephone   that is connected to the SCN port. The foreseen types are the same as   the ones supported by ITU-T V.18:  DTMF, EDT, Baudot-45, Baudot-50,   Bell, V.21, Minitel and V.18. It should be possible to control which   protocols are supported. The SCN port is assumed to contain ITU-T   V.18 functionality [8].   The protocol must be able to control the following functionality   levels of text telephone support:   a.   Simple text-only support: The call is set into text mode from        the beginning of the call, in order to conduct a text-only        conversation.   b.   Alternating text-voice support: The call may begin in voice mode        or text mode and, at any moment during the call, change mode on        request by the SCN user. On the packet side, the two media        streams for voice and text must be opened, and it must be        possible to control the feeding of each stream by the protocol.   c.   Simultaneous text and voice support: The call is performed in a        mode when simultaneous text and voice streams are supported. The        call may start in voice mode and during the call change state to        a text-and-voice call.   A port may implement only level a, or any level combination of a, b   and c, always including level a.   The protocol must support:   d.   A text based alternative to the interactive voice response, or        audio resource functionality of the gateway when the port is        used in text telephone mode.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   e.   Selection of what national translation table to be used between        the Unicode based T.140 and the 5-7 bit based text telephone        protocols.   f.   Control of the V.18 probe message to be used on incoming calls.11.2.5.  Network Access Server   A NAS is an access gateway, or Media Gateway (MG), which terminates   modem signals or synchronous HDLC connections from a network (e.g.   SCN or xDSL network) and provides data access to the packet network.   Only those requirements specific to a NAS are described here.   Figure 1 provides a reference architecture for a Network Access   Server (NAS). Signaling comes into the MGC and the MGC controls the   NAS.                          +-------+        +-------+               Signaling  |       |        |       |               -----------+  MGC  +        |  AAA  |                          |       |        |       |                          +---+---+        +--+----+                              |               |                        Megaco|_______________|                                              |                                              |                          +---+---+         ~~|~~~                Bearer    |       |        (      )               -----------+  NAS  +-------(   IP   )                          |       |        (      )                          +-------+         ~~~~~~                  Figure 1: NAS reference architecture   The Protocol must support:   a.   Callback capabilities:   *    Callback   b.   Modem calls.  The protocol must be able to specify the modem        type(s) to be used for the call.   c.   Carriage of bearer information.  The protocol must be able to        specify the data rate of the TDM connection (e.g., 64 kbit/s, 56        kbit/s, 384 kbit/s), if this is available from the SCN.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   d.   Rate Adaptation: The protocol must be able to specify the type        of rate adaptation to be used for the call including indicating        the subrate, if this is available from the SCN (e.g. 56K, or        V.110 signaled in Bearer capabilities with subrate connection of        19.2kbit/s).   e.   Adaptable NASes: The protocol must be able to support multiple        options for an incoming call to allow the NAS to dynamically        select the proper type of call.  For example, an incoming ISDN        call coded for "Speech" Bearer Capability could actually be a        voice, modem, fax, text telephone, or 56 kbit/s synchronous        call.  The protocol should allow the NAS to report back to the        MGC the actual type of call once it is detected.   The 4 basic types of bearer for a NAS are:   1.   Circuit Mode, 64-kbps, 8-khz structured, Speech   2.   Circuit Mode, 64-kbps, 8-khz structured, 3.1-khz, Audio   3.   Circuit Mode, 64-kbps, 8-khz structured, Unrestricted Digital        Transmission-Rate Adapted from 56-kbps   4.   Circuit Mode, 64-kbps, 8-khz structure, Unrestricted Digital        Transmission   f.   Passage of Called and Calling Party Number information to the        NAS from the MGC. Also, passage of Charge Number/Billing Number,        Redirecting Number, and Original Call Number, if known, to the        NAS from the MGC. If there are other Q.931 fields that need to        be passed from the MGC to the MG, then it should be possible to        pass them [9].   g.   Ability for the MGC to direct the NAS to connect to a specific        tunnel, for example to an LNS, or to an AAA server.   h.   When asked by the MGC, be able to report capability information,        for example, connection types (V.34/V90/Synch ISDN..), AAA        mechanism (RADIUS/DIAMETER/..), access type (PPP/SLIP/..) after        restart or upgrade.11.2.6.  Restricted Capability Gateway   The requirements here may also be applied to small analog gateways,   and to cable/xDSL modems. See also the section on access gateways.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   The Protocol must support:   a.   The ability to provide a scaled down version of the protocol.        When features of the protocol are not supported, an appropriate        error message must be sent. Appropriate default action must be        defined.  Where this is defined may be outside the scope of the        protocol.   b.   The ability to provide device capability information to the MGC        with respect to the use of the protocol.11.2.7.  Multimedia Gateway   The protocol must have sufficient capability to support a multimedia   gateway. H.320 and H.324 are characterized by a single data stream   with multiple media streams multiplexed on it.   If the mapping is from H.320 or H.324 on the circuit side, and H.323   on the packet side, it is assumed that the MG knows how to map   respective subchannels from H.320/H.324 side to streams on packet   side. If extra information is required when connecting two   terminations, then it must be supplied so that the connections are   not ambiguous.   The Multimedia Gateway:   1)   should support Bonding Bearer channel aggregation,   2)   must support 2xB (and possibly higher rates) aggregation via        H.221,   3)   must be able to dynamically change the size of audio, video and        data channels within the h.320 multiplex,   4)   must react to changes in the H.320 multiplex on 20 msec        boundaries,   5)   must support TCS4/IIS BAS commands,   6)   must support detection and creation of DTMF tones,   7)   should support SNMP MIBS as specified in H.341 [3]   a.   If some of the above cannot be handled by the MGC to MG protocol        due to timing constraints, then it is likely that the H.245 to        H.242 processing must take place in the MG. Otherwise, support        for this functionality in the multimedia gateway are protocol        requirements.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   b.   It must be possible on a call by call basis for the protocol to        specify different applications. Thus, one call might be PSTN to        PSTN under SS7 control, while the next might be ISDN/H.320 under        SS7 control to H.323.  This is only one example; the key        requirement is that the protocol not prevent such applications.11.2.8.  Audio Resource Function   An Audio Resource Function (ARF) consists of one or more functional   modules which can be deployed on an stand alone media gateway server   IVR, Intelligent Peripheral, speech/speaker recognition unit, etc. or   a traditional media gateway.  Such a media gateway is known as an   Audio Enabled Gateway (AEG) if it performs tasks defined in one or   more of the following ARF functional modules:                   Play Audio,                   DTMF Collect,                   Record Audio,                   Speech Recognition,                   Speaker Verification/Identification,                   Auditory Feature Extraction/Recognition, or                   Audio Conferencing.   Additional ARF function modules that support human to machine   communications through the use of telephony tones (e.g., DTMF) or   auditory means (e.g.  speech) may be appended to the AEG definition   in future versions of these requirements.   Generic scripting packages for any module must support all the   requirements for that module. Any package extension for a given   module must include, by inheritance or explicit reference, the   requirements for that given module.   The protocol requirements for each of the ARF modules are provided in   the following subsections.11.2.8.1.  Play Audio Module   a.   Be able to provide the following basic operation:   -    request an ARF MG to play an announcement.   b.   Be able to specify these play characteristics:   -    Play volume   -    Play speedGreene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   -    Play iterations   -    Interval between play iterations   -    Play duration   c.   Permit the specification of voice variables such as DN, number,        date, time, etc.  The protocol must allow specification of both        the value (eg 234-3456), and well as the type (Directory        number).   d.   Using the terminology that a segment is a unit of playable        speech, or is an abstraction that is resolvable to a unit of        playable speech, permit specification of the following segment        types:   -    A provisioned recording.   -    A block of text to be converted to speech.   -    A block of text to be displayed on a device.   -    A length of silence qualified by duration.   -    An algorithmically generated tone.   -    A voice variable, specified by type and value.  Given a variable        type and value, the IVR/ARF unit would dynamically assemble the        phrases required for its playback.   -    An abstraction that represents a sequence of audio segments.        Nesting of these abstractions must also be permitted.   An example of this abstraction is a sequence of audio segments, the   first of which is a recording of the words "The number you have   dialed", followed by a Directory Number variable, followed by a   recording of the words "is no longer in service".   -    An abstraction that represents a set of audio segments and which        is resolved to a single segment by a qualifier.  Nesting of        these abstractions must be permitted.   For example take a set of audio segments recorded in different   languages all of which express the semantic concept "The number you   have dialed is no longer in service".  The set is resolved by a   language qualifier. If the qualifier is "French", the set resolves to   the French version of this announcement.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   In the case of a nested abstraction consisting of a set qualified by   language at one level and and a set qualified by gender at another   level,  it would be possible to specify that an announcement be   played in French  and spoken by a female voice.   e.   Provide two different methods of audio specification:   -    Direct specification of the audio components to be played by        specifying the sequence of segments in the command itself.   -    Indirect specification of the audio components to be played by        reference to a single identifier that resolves to a provisioned        sequence of audio segments.11.2.8.2.  DTMF Collect Module   The DTMF Collect Module must support all of the requirements in the   Play Module in addition to the following requirements:   a.   Be able to provide the following basic operation:   -    request an AEG to play an announcement, which may optionally        terminated by DTMF, and then collect DTMF   b.   Be able to specify these event collection characteristics:   -    The number of attempts to give the user to enter a valid DTMF        pattern.   c.   With respect to digit timers, allow the specification of:   -    Time allowed to enter the first digit.   -    Time allowed for user to enter each digit subsequent to the        first digit.   -    Time allowed for user to enter a digit once the maximum expected        number of digits has been entered.   d.   To be able to allow multiple prompt operations DTMF digit        collection, voice recording (if supported), and/or speech        recognition analysis (if supported) provide the following types        of prompts:   -    Initial Prompt   -    RepromptGreene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   -    Error prompt   -    Failure announcement   -    Success announcement.   e.   To allow digit pattern matching, allow the specification of:   -    maximum number of digits to collect.   -    minimum number of digits to collect.   -    a digit pattern using a regular expression.   f.   To allow digit buffer control, allow the specification of:   -    Ability to clear digit buffer prior to playing initial prompt        (default is not to clear buffer).   -    Default clearing of buffer following playing of un-interruptible        announcement segment.   -    Default clearing of buffer before playing a re-prompt in        response to previous invalid input.   g.   Provide a method to specify DTMF interruptibility on a per audio        segment basis.   h.   Allow the specification of definable key sequences for DTMF        digit collection to:   -    Discard collected digits in progress, replay the prompt, and        resume DTMF digit collection.   -    Discard collected digits in progress and resume DTMF digit        collection.   -    Terminate the current operation and return the terminating key        sequence to the MGC.   i.   Provide a way to ask the ARF MG to support the following        definable keys for digit collection and recording. These keys        would then be able to be acted upon by the ARF MG:   -    A key to terminate playing of an announcement in progress.   -    A set of one or more keys that can be accepted as the first        digit to be collected.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   -    A key that signals the end of user input.  The key may or may        not be returned to the MGC along with the input already        collected.   -    Keys to stop playing the current announcement and resume playing        at the beginning of the first segment of the announcement, last        segment of the announcement, previous segment of the        announcement, next segment of the announcement, or the current        announcement segment.11.2.8.3.  Record Audio Module   The Record Module must support all of the requirements in the Play   Module as in addition to the following requirements:   a.   Be able to provide the following basic operation:   -    request an AEG to play an announcement and then record voice.   b.   Be able to specify these event collection characteristics:   -    The number of attempts to give the user to make a recording.   c.   With respect to recording timers, allow the specification of:   -    Time to wait for the user to initially speak.   -    The amount of silence necessary following the last speech        segment for the recording to be considered complete.   -    The maximum allowable length of the recording  (not including        pre- and post- speech silence).   d.   To be able to allow multiple prompt operations for DTMF digit        collection (if supported), voice recording (if supported),        speech recognition analysis (if supported) and/or speech        verification/identification (if supported) and then to provide        the following types of prompts:   -    Initial Prompt   -    Reprompt   -    Error prompt   -    Failure announcement   -    Success announcement.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 36]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   e.   Allow the specification of definable key sequences for digit        recording or speech recognition analysis (if supported) to:   -    Discard recording in progress, replay the prompt, and resume        recording.   -    Discard recording in progress and resume recording.   -    Terminate the current operation and return the terminating key        sequence to the MGC.   f.   Provide a way to ask the ARF MG to support the following        definable keys for recording. These keys would then be able to        be acted upon by the ARF MG:   -    A key to terminate playing of an announcement in progress.   -    A key that signals the end of user input.  The key may or may        not be returned to the MGC along with the input already        collected.   -    Keys to stop playing the current announcement and resume playing        at the beginning of the first segment of the announcement, last        segment of the announcement, previous segment of the        announcement, next segment of the announcement, or the current        announcement segment.   g.   While audio prompts are usually provisioned in IVR/ARF MGs,        support changing the provisioned prompts in a voice session        rather than a data session.  In particular, with respect to        audio management:   -    A method to replace provisioned audio with audio recorded during        a call. The newly recorded audio must be accessible using the        identifier of the audio it replaces.   -    A method to revert from replaced audio to the original        provisioned audio.   -    A method to take audio recorded during a call and store it such        that it is accessible to the current call only through its own        newly created unique identifier.   -    A method to take audio recorded during a call and store it such        that it is accessible to any subsequent call through its own        newly created identifier.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 37]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200011.2.8.4.  Speech Recognition Module   The speech recognition module can be used for a number of speech   recognition applications, such as:   -    Limited Vocabulary Isolated Speech Recognition (e.g., "yes",        "no", the number "four"),   -    Limited Vocabulary Continuous Speech Feature Recognition (e.g.,        the utterance "four hundred twenty-three dollars"),and/or   -    Continuous Speech Recognition (e.g., unconstrained speech        recognition tasks).   The Speech Recognition Module must support all of the requirements in   the Play Module as in addition to the following requirements:   a.   Be able to provide the following basic operation: request an AEG        to play an announcement and then perform speech recognition        analysis.   b.   Be able to specify these event collection characteristics:   -    The number of attempts to give to perform speech recognition        task.   c.   With respect to speech recognition analysis timers, allow the        specification of:   -    Time to wait for the user to initially speak.   -    The amount of silence necessary following the last speech        segment for the speech recognition analysis segment to be        considered complete.   -    The maximum allowable length of the speech recognition analysis        (not including pre- and post- speech silence).   d.   To be able to allow multiple prompt operations for DTMF digit        collection  (if supported), voice recording (if supported),        and/or speech recognition analysis and then to provide the        following types of prompts:   -    Initial Prompt   -    Reprompt   -    Error promptGreene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 38]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   -    Failure announcement   -    Success announcement.   e.   Allow the specification of definable key sequences for digit        recording (if supported) or speech recognition analysis to:   -    Discard in process analysis, replay the prompt, and resume        analysis.   -    Discard recording in progress and resume analysis.   -    Terminate the current operation and return the terminating key        sequence to the MGC.   f.   Provide a way to ask the ARF MG to support the following        definable keys for speech recognition analysis. These keys would        then be able to be acted upon by the ARF MG:   -    A key to terminate playing of an announcement in progress.   -    A key that signals the end of user input.  The key may or may        not be returned to the MGC along with the input already        collected.   -    Keys to stop playing the current announcement and resume playing        at the beginning of the first segment of the announcement, last        segment of the announcement, previous segment of the        announcement, next segment of the announcement, or the current        announcement segment.11.2.8.5.  Speaker Verification/Identification Module   The speech verification/identification module returns parameters that   indicate either the likelihood of the speaker to be the person that   they claim to be (verification task) or the likelihood of the speaker   being one of the persons contained in a set of previously   characterized speakers (identification task).   The Speaker Verification/Identification Module must support all of   the requirements in the Play Module in addition to the following   requirements:   a.   Be able to download parameters, such as speaker templates        (verification task) or sets of potential speaker templates        (identification task), either prior to the session or in mid-        session.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 39]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   b.   Be able to download application specific software to the ARF        either prior to the session or in mid-session.   c.   Be able to return parameters indicating either the likelihood of        the speaker to be the person that they claim to be (verification        task) or the likelihood of the speaker being one of the persons        contained in a set of previously characterized speakers        (identification task).   d.   Be able to provide the following basic operation: request an AEG        to play an announcement and then perform speech        verification/identification analysis.   e.   Be able to specify these event collection characteristics: The        number of attempts to give to perform speech        verification/identification task.   f.   With respect to speech verification/identification analysis        timers, allow the specification of:   -    Time to wait for the user to initially speak.   -    The amount of silence necessary following the last speech        segment for the speech verification/identification analysis        segment to be considered complete.   -    The maximum allowable length of the speech        verification/identification analysis  (not including pre- and        post- speech silence).   g.   To be able to allow multiple prompt operations for DTMF digit        collection (if supported), voice recording, (if supported),        speech recognition analysis (if supported) and/or speech        verification/identification and provide the following types of        prompts:   -    Initial Prompt   -    Reprompt   -    Error prompt   -    Failure announcement   -    Success announcement.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 40]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   h.   Allow the specification of definable key sequences for digit        recording (if supported) or speech recognition (if supported) in        the speech verification/identification analysis to:   -    Discard speech verification/identification in analysis, replay        the prompt, and resume analysis.   -    Discard speech verification/identification analysis in progress        and resume analysis.   -    Terminate the current operation and return the terminating key        sequence to the MGC.   i.   Provide a way to ask the ARF MG to support the following        definable keys for speech verification/identification analysis.        These keys would then be able to be acted upon by the ARF MG:   -    A key to terminate playing of an announcement in progress.   -    A key that signals the end of user input.  The key may or may        not be returned to the MGC along with the input already        collected.   -    Keys to stop playing the current announcement and resume speech        verification/identification at the beginning of the first        segment of the announcement, last segment of the announcement,        previous segment of the announcement, next segment of the        announcement, or the current announcement segment.11.2.8.6.  Auditory Feature Extraction/Recognition Module   The auditory feature extraction/recognition module is engineered to   continuously monitor the auditory stream for the appearance of   particular auditory signals or speech utterances of interest and to   report these events (and optionally a signal feature representation   of these events) to network servers or MGCs.   The Auditory Feature Extraction/Recognition Module must support the   following requirements:   a.   Be able to download application specific software to the ARF        either prior to the session or in mid-session.   b.   Be able to download parameters, such as a representation of the        auditory feature to extract/recognize, for prior to the session        or in mid-session.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 41]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 2000   c.   Be able to return parameters indicating the auditory event found        or a representation of the feature found (i.e., auditory        feature).11.2.8.7.  Audio Conferencing Module   The protocol must support:   a.   a mechanism to create multi-point conferences of audio only and        multimedia conferences in the MG.   b.   audio mixing; mixing multiple audio streams into a new composite        audio stream   c.   audio switching; selection of incoming audio stream to be sent        out to all conference participants.11.2.9.  Multipoint Control Units   The protocol must support:   a.   a mechanism to create multi-point conferences of audio only and        multimedia conferences in the MG.   b.   audio mixing; mixing multiple audio streams into a new composite        audio stream   c.   audio switching; selection of incoming audio stream to be sent        out to all conference participants.   d.   video switching; selection of video stream to be sent out to all        conference participants   e.   lecture video mode; a video selection option where on video        source is sent out to all conference users   f.   multi-point of T.120 data conferencing.   g.   The ability for the MG to function as an H.323 MP, and for the        MGC to function as an H.323 MC, connected by this protocol        (MEGACOP/H.248).  It should be possible for audio, data, and        video MG/MPs to be physically separate while being under the        control of a single MGC/H.323 MC.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 42]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200012.  References   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]  ITU-T Recommendation Q.2630.1, AAL type 2 Signalling Protocol        (Capability Set 1), December 1999.   [3]  ITU-T Recommendation H.341, Line Transmission of Non-Telephone        Signals, May 1999.   [4]  ATM Forum Technical Committee, af-vtoa-0083.001, Voice and        Telephony Over ATM to the Desktop Specification, March 1999.   [5]  ITU-T Recommendation H.323v3, Packet-based Multimedia        Communications Systems (includes Annex C - H.323 on ATM),        September 1999.   [6]  ATM Forum Technical Committee, af-saa-0124.000, Gateway for        H.323 Media Transport Over ATM, May 1999.   [7]  ITU-T Recommendation T.140, Protocol for Multimedia Application        Text Conversation, February 1998.   [8]  ITU-T Recommendation V.18, Operational and Interworking        Requirements for DCEs Operating in Text Telephone Mode, February        1998.   [9]  ITU-T Recommendation Q.931, Digital Subscriber Signalling System        No. 1 (DSS 1) - ISDN User - Network Interface Layer 3        Specification for Basic Call Control, May 1998.14.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to acknowledge the many contributors who   debated the Media Gateway Control Architecture and Requirements on   the IETF Megaco and Sigtran mailing lists. Contributions to this   document have also been made through internet-drafts and discussion   with members of ETSI Tiphon, ITU-T SG16, TIA TR41.3.4, the ATM Forum,   and the Multiservice Switching Forum.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 43]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200015.  Authors' Addresses   Nancy Greene   Nortel Networks   P.O. Box 3511 Stn C   Ottawa, ON, Canada K1Y 4H7   Phone: (514) 271-7221   EMail: ngreene@nortelnetworks.com   Michael A. Ramalho   Cisco Systems   1802 Rue de la Port   Wall Township, NJ   Phone: +1.732.449.5762   EMail: mramalho@cisco.com   Brian Rosen   Marconi   1000 FORE Drive, Warrendale, PA 15086   Phone: (724) 742-6826   EMail: brosen@eng.fore.comGreene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 44]

RFC 2805            MG Control Protocol Requirements          April 200016.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Greene, et al.               Informational                     [Page 45]

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