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INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                     M. WesterlundRequest for Comments: 7667                                      EricssonObsoletes:5117                                                S. WengerCategory: Informational                                            VidyoISSN: 2070-1721                                            November 2015RTP TopologiesAbstract   This document discusses point-to-point and multi-endpoint topologies   used in environments based on the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP).   In particular, centralized topologies commonly employed in the video   conferencing industry are mapped to the RTP terminology.   This document is updated with additional topologies and replacesRFC5117.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7667.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.1.  Glossary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.2.  Definitions Related to RTP Grouping Taxonomy  . . . . . .53.  Topologies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.1.  Point to Point  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.2.  Point to Point via Middlebox  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.2.1.  Translators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.2.2.  Back-to-Back RTP sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.3.  Point to Multipoint Using Multicast . . . . . . . . . . .123.3.1.  Any-Source Multicast (ASM)  . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.3.2.  Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) . . . . . . . . . . .143.3.3.  SSM with Local Unicast Resources  . . . . . . . . . .153.4.  Point to Multipoint Using Mesh  . . . . . . . . . . . . .173.5.  Point to Multipoint Using theRFC 3550 Translator . . . .203.5.1.  Relay - Transport Translator  . . . . . . . . . . . .203.5.2.  Media Translator  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.6.  Point to Multipoint Using theRFC 3550 Mixer Model  . . .223.6.1.  Media-Mixing Mixer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.6.2.  Media-Switching Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .273.7.  Selective Forwarding Middlebox  . . . . . . . . . . . . .293.8.  Point to Multipoint Using Video-Switching MCUs  . . . . .333.9.  Point to Multipoint Using RTCP-Terminating MCU  . . . . .343.10. Split Component Terminal  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .353.11. Non-symmetric Mixer/Translators . . . . . . . . . . . . .383.12. Combining Topologies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .384.  Topology Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .394.1.  All-to-All Media Transmission . . . . . . . . . . . . . .394.2.  Transport or Media Interoperability . . . . . . . . . . .404.3.  Per-Domain Bitrate Adaptation . . . . . . . . . . . . . .404.4.  Aggregation of Media  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414.5.  View of All Session Participants  . . . . . . . . . . . .414.6.  Loop Detection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .424.7.  Consistency between Header Extensions and RTCP  . . . . .425.  Comparison of Topologies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .426.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .437.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .457.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .457.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 20151.  Introduction   Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) [RFC3550] topologies describe   methods for interconnecting RTP entities and their processing   behavior for RTP and the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP).  This document   tries to address past and existing confusion, especially with respect   to terms not defined in RTP but in common use in the communication   industry, such as the Multipoint Control Unit or MCU.   When the Audio-Visual Profile with Feedback (AVPF) [RFC4585] was   developed, the main emphasis lay in the efficient support of   point-to-point and small multipoint scenarios without centralized   multipoint control.  In practice, however, most multipoint   conferences operate utilizing centralized units referred to as MCUs.   MCUs may implement mixer or translator functionality (in RTP   [RFC3550] terminology) and signaling support.  They may also contain   additional application-layer functionality.  This document focuses on   the media transport aspects of the MCU that can be realized using   RTP, as discussed below.  Further considered are the properties of   mixers and translators, and how some types of deployed MCUs deviate   from these properties.   This document also codifies new multipoint architectures that have   recently been introduced and that were not anticipated inRFC 5117;   thus, this document replaces [RFC5117].  These architectures use   scalable video coding and simulcasting, and their associated   centralized units are referred to as Selective Forwarding Middleboxes   (SFMs).  This codification provides a common information basis for   future discussion and specification work.   The new topologies are Point to Point via Middlebox (Section 3.2),   Source-Specific Multicast (Section 3.3.2), SSM with Local Unicast   Resources (Section 3.3.3), Point to Multipoint Using Mesh   (Section 3.4), Selective Forwarding Middlebox (Section 3.7), and   Split Component Terminal (Section 3.10).  The Point to Multipoint   Using theRFC 3550 Mixer Model (Section 3.6) has been significantly   expanded to cover two different versions, namely Media-Mixing Mixer   (Section 3.6.1) and Media-Switching Mixer (Section 3.6.2).   The document's attempt to clarify and explain sections of the RTP   spec [RFC3550] is informal.  It is not intended to update or change   what is normatively specified withinRFC 3550.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 20152.  Definitions2.1.  Glossary   ASM:  Any-Source Multicast   AVPF:  The extended RTP profile for RTCP-based feedback   CSRC:  Contributing Source   Link:  The data transport to the next IP hop   Middlebox:  A device that is on the Path that media travel between      two endpoints   MCU:  Multipoint Control Unit   Path:  The concatenation of multiple links, resulting in an      end-to-end data transfer.   PtM:  Point to Multipoint   PtP:  Point to Point   SFM:  Selective Forwarding Middlebox   SSM:  Source-Specific Multicast   SSRC:  Synchronization Source2.2.  Definitions Related to RTP Grouping Taxonomy   The following definitions have been taken from [RFC7656].   Communication Session:  A Communication Session is an association      among two or more Participants communicating with each other via      one or more Multimedia Sessions.   Endpoint:  A single addressable entity sending or receiving RTP      packets.  It may be decomposed into several functional blocks, but      as long as it behaves as a single RTP stack mentity, it is      classified as a single "endpoint".   Media Source:  A Media Source is the logical source of a time      progressing digital media stream synchronized to a reference      clock.  This stream is called a Source Stream.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   Multimedia Session:   A Multimedia Session is an association among a      group of participants engaged in communication via one or more RTP      sessions.3.  Topologies   This subsection defines several topologies that are relevant for   codec control but also RTP usage in other contexts.  The section   starts with point-to-point cases, with or without middleboxes.  Then   it follows a number of different methods for establishing point-to-   multipoint communication.  These are structured around the most   fundamental enabler, i.e., multicast, a mesh of connections,   translators, mixers, and finally MCUs and SFMs.  The section ends by   discussing decomposited terminals, asymmetric middlebox behaviors,   and combining topologies.   The topologies may be referenced in other documents by a shortcut   name, indicated by the prefix "Topo-".   For each of the RTP-defined topologies, we discuss how RTP, RTCP, and   the carried media are handled.  With respect to RTCP, we also discuss   the handling of RTCP feedback messages as defined in [RFC4585] and   [RFC5104].3.1.  Point to Point   Shortcut name: Topo-Point-to-Point   The Point-to-Point (PtP) topology (Figure 1) consists of two   endpoints, communicating using unicast.  Both RTP and RTCP traffic   are conveyed endpoint to endpoint, using unicast traffic only (even   if, in exotic cases, this unicast traffic happens to be conveyed over   an IP multicast address).                            +---+         +---+                            | A |<------->| B |                            +---+         +---+                         Figure 1: Point to Point   The main property of this topology is that A sends to B, and only B,   while B sends to A, and only A.  This avoids all complexities of   handling multiple endpoints and combining the requirements stemming   from them.  Note that an endpoint can still use multiple RTP   Synchronization Sources (SSRCs) in an RTP session.  The number of RTP   sessions in use between A and B can also be of any number, subject   only to system-level limitations like the number range of ports.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   RTCP feedback messages for the indicated SSRCs are communicated   directly between the endpoints.  Therefore, this topology poses   minimal (if any) issues for any feedback messages.  For RTP sessions   that use multiple SSRCs per endpoint, it can be relevant to implement   support for cross-reporting suppression as defined in "Sending   Multiple Media Streams in a Single RTP Session" [MULTI-STREAM-OPT].3.2.  Point to Point via Middlebox   This section discusses cases where two endpoints communicate but have   one or more middleboxes involved in the RTP session.3.2.1.  Translators   Shortcut name: Topo-PtP-Translator   Two main categories of translators can be distinguished: Transport   Translators and Media Translators.  Both translator types share   common attributes that separate them from mixers.  For each RTP   stream that the translator receives, it generates an individual RTP   stream in the other domain.  A translator keeps the SSRC for an RTP   stream across the translation, whereas a mixer can select a single   RTP stream from multiple received RTP streams (in cases like audio/   video switching) or send out an RTP stream composed of multiple mixed   media received in multiple RTP streams (in cases like audio mixing or   video tiling), but always under its own SSRC, possibly using the CSRC   field to indicate the source(s) of the content.  Mixers are more   common in point-to-multipoint cases than in PtP.  The reason is that   in PtP use cases, the primary focus of a middlebox is enabling   interoperability, between otherwise non-interoperable endpoints, such   as transcoding to a codec the receiver supports, which can be done by   a Media Translator.   As specified inSection 7.1 of [RFC3550], the SSRC space is common   for all participants in the RTP session, independent of on which side   of the translator the session resides.  Therefore, it is the   responsibility of the endpoints (as the RTP session participants) to   run SSRC collision detection, and the SSRC is thus a field the   translator cannot change.  Any Source Description (SDES) information   associated with an SSRC or CSRC also needs to be forwarded between   the domains for any SSRC/CSRC used in the different domains.   A translator commonly does not use an SSRC of its own and is not   visible as an active participant in the RTP session.  One reason to   have its own SSRC is when a translator acts as a quality monitor that   sends RTCP reports and therefore is required to have an SSRC.   Another example is the case when a translator is prepared to use RTCP   feedback messages.  This may, for example, occur in a translatorWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   configured to detect packet loss of important video packets, and it   wants to trigger repair by the media sending endpoint, by sending   feedback messages.  While such feedback could use the SSRC of the   target for the translator (the receiving endpoint), this in turn   would require translation of the target RTCP reports to make them   consistent.  It may be simpler to expose an additional SSRC in the   session.  The only concern is that endpoints failing to support the   full RTP specification may have issues with multiple SSRCs reporting   on the RTP streams sent by that endpoint, as this use case may be   viewed as exotic by implementers.   In general, a translator implementation should consider which RTCP   feedback messages or codec-control messages it needs to understand in   relation to the functionality of the translator itself.  This is   completely in line with the requirement to also translate RTCP   messages between the domains.3.2.1.1.  Transport Relay/Anchoring   Shortcut name: Topo-PtP-Relay   There exist a number of different types of middleboxes that might be   inserted between two endpoints on the transport level, e.g., to   perform changes on the IP/UDP headers, and are, therefore, basic   Transport Translators.  These middleboxes come in many variations   including NAT [RFC3022] traversal by pinning the media path to a   public address domain relay and network topologies where the RTP   stream is required to pass a particular point for audit by employing   relaying, or preserving privacy by hiding each peer's transport   addresses to the other party.  Other protocols or functionalities   that provide this behavior are Traversal Using Relays around NAT   (TURN) [RFC5766] servers, Session Border Gateways, and Media   Processing Nodes with media anchoring functionalities.                     +---+        +---+         +---+                     | A |<------>| T |<------->| B |                     +---+        +---+         +---+                 Figure 2: Point to Point with Translator   A common element in these functions is that they are normally   transparent at the RTP level, i.e., they perform no changes on any   RTP or RTCP packet fields and only affect the lower layers.  They may   affect, however, the path since the RTP and RTCP packets are routed   between the endpoints in the RTP session, and thereby they indirectly   affect the RTP session.  For this reason, one could believe that   Transport Translator-type middleboxes do not need to be included in   this document.  This topology, however, can raise additionalWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   requirements in the RTP implementation and its interactions with the   signaling solution.  Both in signaling and in certain RTCP fields,   network addresses other than those of the relay can occur since B has   a different network address than the relay (T).  Implementations that   cannot support this will also not work correctly when endpoints are   subject to NAT.   The Transport Relay implementations also have to take into account   security considerations.  In particular, source address filtering of   incoming packets is usually important in relays, to prevent attackers   from injecting traffic into a session, which one peer may, in the   absence of adequate security in the relay, think it comes from the   other peer.3.2.1.2.  Transport Translator   Shortcut name: Topo-Trn-Translator   Transport Translators (Topo-Trn-Translator) do not modify the RTP   stream itself but are concerned with transport parameters.  Transport   parameters, in the sense of this section, comprise the transport   addresses (to bridge different domains such as unicast to multicast)   and the media packetization to allow other transport protocols to be   interconnected to a session (in gateways).   Translators that bridge between different protocol worlds need to be   concerned about the mapping of the SSRC/CSRC (Contributing Source)   concept to the non-RTP protocol.  When designing a translator to a   non-RTP-based media transport, an important consideration is how to   handle different sources and their identities.  This problem space is   not discussed henceforth.   Of the Transport Translators, this memo is primarily interested in   those that use RTP on both sides, and this is assumed henceforth.   The most basic Transport Translators that operate below the RTP level   were already discussed inSection 3.2.1.1.3.2.1.3.  Media Translator   Shortcut name: Topo-Media-Translator   Media Translators (Topo-Media-Translator) modify the media inside the   RTP stream.  This process is commonly known as transcoding.  The   modification of the media can be as small as removing parts of the   stream, and it can go all the way to a full decoding and re-encoding   (down to the sample level or equivalent) utilizing a different mediaWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   codec.  Media Translators are commonly used to connect endpoints   without a common interoperability point in the media encoding.   Stand-alone Media Translators are rare.  Most commonly, a combination   of Transport and Media Translator is used to translate both the media   and the transport aspects of the RTP stream carrying the media   between two transport domains.   When media translation occurs, the translator's task regarding   handling of RTCP traffic becomes substantially more complex.  In this   case, the translator needs to rewrite endpoint B's RTCP receiver   report before forwarding them to endpoint A.  The rewriting is needed   as the RTP stream received by B is not the same RTP stream as the   other participants receive.  For example, the number of packets   transmitted to B may be lower than what A sends, due to the different   media format and data rate.  Therefore, if the receiver reports were   forwarded without changes, the extended highest sequence number would   indicate that B was substantially behind in reception, while it most   likely would not be.  Therefore, the translator must translate that   number to a corresponding sequence number for the stream the   translator received.  Similar requirements exist for most other   fields in the RTCP receiver reports.   A Media Translator may in some cases act on behalf of the "real"   source (the endpoint originally sending the media to the translator)   and respond to RTCP feedback messages.  This may occur, for example,   when a receiving endpoint requests a bandwidth reduction, and the   Media Translator has not detected any congestion or other reasons for   bandwidth reduction between the sending endpoint and itself.  In that   case, it is sensible that the Media Translator reacts to codec   control messages itself, for example, by transcoding to a lower media   rate.   A variant of translator behavior worth pointing out is the one   depicted in Figure 3 of an endpoint A sending an RTP stream   containing media (only) to B.  On the path, there is a device T that   manipulates the RTP streams on A's behalf.  One common example is   that T adds a second RTP stream containing Forward Error Correction   (FEC) information in order to protect A's (non FEC-protected) RTP   stream.  In this case, T needs to semantically bind the new FEC RTP   stream to A's media-carrying RTP stream, for example, by using the   same CNAME as A.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015                 +------+        +------+         +------+                 |      |        |      |         |      |                 |  A   |------->|  T   |-------->|  B   |                 |      |        |      |---FEC-->|      |                 +------+        +------+         +------+                   Figure 3: Media Translator Adding FEC   There may also be cases where information is added into the original   RTP stream, while leaving most or all of the original RTP packets   intact (with the exception of certain RTP header fields, such as the   sequence number).  One example is the injection of metadata into the   RTP stream, carried in their own RTP packets.   Similarly, a Media Translator can sometimes remove information from   the RTP stream, while otherwise leaving the remaining RTP packets   unchanged (again with the exception of certain RTP header fields).   Either type of functionality where T manipulates the RTP stream, or   adds an accompanying RTP stream, on behalf of A is also covered under   the Media Translator definition.3.2.2.  Back-to-Back RTP sessions   Shortcut name: Topo-Back-To-Back   There exist middleboxes that interconnect two endpoints (A and B)   through themselves (MB), but not by being part of a common RTP   session.  Instead, they establish two different RTP sessions: one   between A and the middlebox and another between the middlebox and B.   This topology is called Topo-Back-To-Back.                   |<--Session A-->|  |<--Session B-->|                 +------+        +------+         +------+                 |  A   |------->|  MB  |-------->|  B   |                 +------+        +------+         +------+           Figure 4: Back-to-Back RTP Sessions through Middlebox   The middlebox acts as an application-level gateway and bridges the   two RTP sessions.  This bridging can be as basic as forwarding the   RTP payloads between the sessions or more complex including media   transcoding.  The difference of this topology relative to the single   RTP session context is the handling of the SSRCs and the other   session-related identifiers, such as CNAMEs.  With two different RTP   sessions, these can be freely changed and it becomes the middlebox's   responsibility to maintain the correct relations.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   The signaling or other above RTP-level functionalities referencing   RTP streams may be what is most impacted by using two RTP sessions   and changing identifiers.  The structure with two RTP sessions also   puts a congestion control requirement on the middlebox, because it   becomes fully responsible for the media stream it sources into each   of the sessions.   Adherence to congestion control can be solved locally on each of the   two segments or by bridging statistics from the receiving endpoint   through the middlebox to the sending endpoint.  From an   implementation point, however, the latter requires dealing with a   number of inconsistencies.  First, packet loss must be detected for   an RTP stream sent from A to the middlebox, and that loss must be   reported through a skipped sequence number in the RTP stream from the   middlebox to B.  This coupling and the resulting inconsistencies are   conceptually easier to handle when considering the two RTP streams as   belonging to a single RTP session.3.3.  Point to Multipoint Using Multicast   Multicast is an IP-layer functionality that is available in some   networks.  Two main flavors can be distinguished: Any-Source   Multicast (ASM) [RFC1112] where any multicast group participant can   send to the group address and expect the packet to reach all group   participants and Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) [RFC3569], where   only a particular IP host sends to the multicast group.  Each of   these models are discussed below in their respective sections.3.3.1.  Any-Source Multicast (ASM)   Shortcut name: Topo-ASM (was Topo-Multicast)                                   +-----+                        +---+     /       \    +---+                        | A |----/         \---| B |                        +---+   /   Multi-  \  +---+                               +    cast     +                        +---+   \  Network  /  +---+                        | C |----\         /---| D |                        +---+     \       /    +---+                                   +-----+               Figure 5: Point to Multipoint Using MulticastWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   Point to Multipoint (PtM) is defined here as using a multicast   topology as a transmission model, in which traffic from any multicast   group participant reaches all the other multicast group participants,   except for cases such as:   o  packet loss, or   o  when a multicast group participant does not wish to receive the      traffic for a specific multicast group and, therefore, has not      subscribed to the IP multicast group in question.  This scenario      can occur, for example, where a Multimedia Session is distributed      using two or more multicast groups, and a multicast group      participant is subscribed only to a subset of these sessions.   In the above context, "traffic" encompasses both RTP and RTCP   traffic.  The number of multicast group participants can vary between   one and many, as RTP and RTCP scale to very large multicast groups   (the theoretical limit of the number of participants in a single RTP   session is in the range of billions).  The above can be realized   using ASM.   For feedback usage, it is useful to define a "small multicast group"   as a group where the number of multicast group participants is so low   (and other factors such as the connectivity is so good) that it   allows the participants to use early or immediate feedback, as   defined in AVPF [RFC4585].  Even when the environment would allow for   the use of a small multicast group, some applications may still want   to use the more limited options for RTCP feedback available to large   multicast groups, for example, when there is a likelihood that the   threshold of the small multicast group (in terms of multicast group   participants) may be exceeded during the lifetime of a session.   RTCP feedback messages in multicast reach, like media data, every   subscriber (subject to packet losses and multicast group   subscription).  Therefore, the feedback suppression mechanism   discussed in [RFC4585] is typically required.  Each individual   endpoint that is a multicast group participant needs to process every   feedback message it receives, not only to determine if it is affected   or if the feedback message applies only to some other endpoint but   also to derive timing restrictions for the sending of its own   feedback messages, if any.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 20153.3.2.  Source-Specific Multicast (SSM)   Shortcut name: Topo-SSM   In Any-Source Multicast, any of the multicast group participants can   send to all the other multicast group participants, by sending a   packet to the multicast group.  In contrast, Source-Specific   Multicast [RFC3569][RFC4607] refers to scenarios where only a single   source (Distribution Source) can send to the multicast group,   creating a topology that looks like the one below:          +--------+       +-----+          |Media   |       |     |       Source-Specific          |Sender 1|<----->| D S |          Multicast          +--------+       | I O |  +--+----------------> R(1)                           | S U |  |  |                    |          +--------+       | T R |  |  +-----------> R(2)   |          |Media   |<----->| R C |->+  |           :   |    |          |Sender 2|       | I E |  |  +------> R(n-1) |    |          +--------+       | B   |  |  |          |    |    |              :            | U   |  +--+--> R(n)  |    |    |              :            | T +-|          |     |    |    |              :            | I | |<---------+     |    |    |          +--------+       | O |F|<---------------+    |    |          |Media   |       | N |T|<--------------------+    |          |Sender M|<----->|   | |<-------------------------+          +--------+       +-----+       RTCP Unicast          FT = Feedback Target          Transport from the Feedback Target to the Distribution          Source is via unicast or multicast RTCP if they are not          co-located.       Figure 6: Point to Multipoint Using Source-Specific Multicast   In the SSM topology (Figure 6), a number of RTP sending endpoints   (RTP sources henceforth) (1 to M) are allowed to send media to the   SSM group.  These sources send media to a dedicated Distribution   Source, which forwards the RTP streams to the multicast group on   behalf of the original RTP sources.  The RTP streams reach the   receiving endpoints (receivers henceforth) (R(1) to R(n)).  The   receivers' RTCP messages cannot be sent to the multicast group, as   the SSM multicast group by definition has only a single IP sender.   To support RTCP, an RTP extension for SSM [RFC5760] was defined.  It   uses unicast transmission to send RTCP from each of the receivers to   one or more Feedback Targets (FT).  The Feedback Targets relay the   RTCP unmodified, or provide a summary of the participants' RTCP   reports towards the whole group by forwarding the RTCP traffic to theWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   Distribution Source.  Figure 6 only shows a single Feedback Target   integrated in the Distribution Source, but for scalability the FT can   be distributed and each instance can have responsibility for   subgroups of the receivers.  For summary reports, however, there   typically must be a single Feedback Target aggregating all the   summaries to a common message to the whole receiver group.   The RTP extension for SSM specifies how feedback (both reception   information and specific feedback events) are handled.  The more   general problems associated with the use of multicast, where everyone   receives what the Distribution Source sends, need to be accounted   for.   The aforementioned situation results in common behavior for RTP   multicast:   1.  Multicast applications often use a group of RTP sessions, not       one.  Each endpoint needs to be a member of most or all of these       RTP sessions in order to perform well.   2.  Within each RTP session, the number of media sinks is likely to       be much larger than the number of RTP sources.   3.  Multicast applications need signaling functions to identify the       relationships between RTP sessions.   4.  Multicast applications need signaling functions to identify the       relationships between SSRCs in different RTP sessions.   All multicast configurations share a signaling requirement: all of   the endpoints need to have the same RTP and payload type   configuration.  Otherwise, endpoint A could, for example, be using   payload type 97 to identify the video codec H.264, while endpoint B   would identify it as MPEG-2, with unpredictable but almost certainly   not visually pleasing results.   Security solutions for this type of group communication are also   challenging.  First, the key management and the security protocol   must support group communication.  Source authentication becomes more   difficult and requires specialized solutions.  For more discussion on   this, please review "Options for Securing RTP Sessions" [RFC7201].3.3.3.  SSM with Local Unicast Resources   Shortcut name: Topo-SSM-RAMS   "Unicast-Based Rapid Acquisition of Multicast RTP Sessions" [RFC6285]   results in additional extensions to SSM topology.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015    -----------                                       --------------   |           |------------------------------------>|              |   |           |.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.->|              |   |           |                                     |              |   | Multicast |          ----------------           |              |   |  Source   |         | Retransmission |          |              |   |           |-------->|  Server (RS)   |          |              |   |           |.-.-.-.->|                |          |              |   |           |         |  ------------  |          |              |    -----------          | |  Feedback  | |<.=.=.=.=.|              |                         | | Target (FT)| |<~~~~~~~~~| RTP Receiver |   PRIMARY MULTICAST     |  ------------  |          |   (RTP_Rx)   |   RTP SESSION with      |                |          |              |   UNICAST FEEDBACK      |                |          |              |                         |                |          |              |   - - - - - - - - - - - |- - - - - - - - |- - - - - |- - - - - - - |- -                         |                |          |              |   UNICAST BURST         |  ------------  |          |              |   (or RETRANSMISSION)   | |   Burst/   | |<~~~~~~~~>|              |   RTP SESSION           | |  Retrans.  | |.........>|              |                         | |Source (BRS)| |<.=.=.=.=>|              |                         |  ------------  |          |              |                         |                |          |              |                          ----------------            --------------      -------> Multicast RTP Stream      .-.-.-.> Multicast RTCP Stream      .=.=.=.> Unicast RTCP Reports      ~~~~~~~> Unicast RTCP Feedback Messages      .......> Unicast RTP Stream             Figure 7: SSM with Local Unicast Resources (RAMS)   The rapid acquisition extension allows an endpoint joining an SSM   multicast session to request media starting with the last sync point   (from where media can be decoded without requiring context   established by the decoding of prior packets) to be sent at high   speed until such time where, after the decoding of these burst-   delivered media packets, the correct media timing is established,   i.e., media packets are received within adequate buffer intervals for   this application.  This is accomplished by first establishing a   unicast PtP RTP session between the Burst/Retransmission Source (BRS)   (Figure 7) and the RTP Receiver.  The unicast session is used to   transmit cached packets from the multicast group at higher then   normal speed in order to synchronize the receiver to the ongoing   multicast RTP stream.  Once the RTP receiver and its decoder have   caught up with the multicast session's current delivery, the receiver   switches over to receiving directly from the multicast group.  InWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   many deployed applications, the (still existing) PtP RTP session is   used as a repair channel, i.e., for RTP Retransmission traffic of   those packets that were not received from the multicast group.3.4.  Point to Multipoint Using Mesh   Shortcut name: Topo-Mesh                             +---+      +---+                             | A |<---->| B |                             +---+      +---+                               ^         ^                                \       /                                 \     /                                  v   v                                  +---+                                  | C |                                  +---+                 Figure 8: Point to Multipoint Using Mesh   Based on the RTP session definition, it is clearly possible to have a   joint RTP session involving three or more endpoints over multiple   unicast transport flows, like the joint three-endpoint session   depicted above.  In this case, A needs to send its RTP streams and   RTCP packets to both B and C over their respective transport flows.   As long as all endpoints do the same, everyone will have a joint view   of the RTP session.   This topology does not create any additional requirements beyond the   need to have multiple transport flows associated with a single RTP   session.  Note that an endpoint may use a single local port to   receive all these transport flows (in which case the sending port, IP   address, or SSRC can be used to demultiplex), or it might have   separate local reception ports for each of the endpoints.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015         +-A--------------------+         |+---+                 |         ||CAM|                 |                 +-B-----------+         |+---+     +-UDP1------|                 |-UDP1------+ |         |  |       | +-RTP1----|                 |-RTP1----+ | |         |  V       | | +-Video-|                 |-Video-+ | | |         |+----+    | | |       |<----------------|BV1    | | | |         ||ENC |----+-+-+--->AV1|---------------->|       | | | |         |+----+    | | +-------|                 |-------+ | | |         |  |       | +---------|                 |---------+ | |         |  |       +-----------|                 |-----------+ |         |  |                   |                 +-------------+         |  |                   |         |  |                   |                 +-C-----------+         |  |       +-UDP2------|                 |-UDP2------+ |         |  |       | +-RTP1----|                 |-RTP1----+ | |         |  |       | | +-Video-|                 |-Video-+ | | |         |  +-------+-+-+--->AV1|---------------->|       | | | |         |          | | |       |<----------------|CV1    | | | |         |          | | +-------|                 |-------+ | | |         |          | +---------|                 |---------+ | |         |          +-----------|                 |-----------+ |         +----------------------+                 +-------------+          Figure 9: A Multi-Unicast Mesh with a Joint RTP Session   Figure 9 depicts endpoint A's view of using a common RTP session when   establishing the mesh as shown in Figure 8.  There is only one RTP   session (RTP1) but two transport flows (UDP1 and UDP2).  The Media   Source (CAM) is encoded and transmitted over the SSRC (AV1) across   both transport layers.  However, as this is a joint RTP session, the   two streams must be the same.  Thus, a congestion control adaptation   needed for the paths A to B and A to C needs to use the most   restricting path's properties.   An alternative structure for establishing the above topology is to   use independent RTP sessions between each pair of peers, i.e., three   different RTP sessions.  In some scenarios, the same RTP stream may   be sent from the transmitting endpoint; however, it also supports   local adaptation taking place in one or more of the RTP streams,   rendering them non-identical.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015          +-A----------------------+              +-B-----------+          |+---+                   |              |             |          ||MIC|       +-UDP1------|              |-UDP1------+ |          |+---+       | +-RTP1----|              |-RTP1----+ | |          | |  +----+  | | +-Audio-|              |-Audio-+ | | |          | +->|ENC1|--+-+-+--->AA1|------------->|       | | | |          | |  +----+  | | |       |<-------------|BA1    | | | |          | |          | | +-------|              |-------+ | | |          | |          | +---------|              |---------+ | |          | |          +-----------|              |-----------+ |          | |          ------------|              |-------------|          | |                      |              |-------------+          | |                      |          | |                      |              +-C-----------+          | |                      |              |             |          | |          +-UDP2------|              |-UDP2------+ |          | |          | +-RTP2----|              |-RTP2----+ | |          | |  +----+  | | +-Audio-|              |-Audio-+ | | |          | +->|ENC2|--+-+-+--->AA2|------------->|       | | | |          |    +----+  | | |       |<-------------|CA1    | | | |          |            | | +-------|              |-------+ | | |          |            | +---------|              |---------+ | |          |            +-----------|              |-----------+ |          +------------------------+              +-------------+      Figure 10: A Multi-Unicast Mesh with an Independent RTP Session   Let's review the topology when independent RTP sessions are used from   A's perspective in Figure 10 by considering both how the media is   handled and how the RTP sessions are set up in Figure 10.  A's   microphone is captured and the audio is fed into two different   encoder instances, each with a different independent RTP session,   i.e., RTP1 and RTP2, respectively.  The SSRCs (AA1 and AA2) in each   RTP session are completely independent, and the media bitrate   produced by the encoders can also be tuned differently to address any   congestion control requirements differing for the paths A to B   compared to A to C.   From a topologies viewpoint, an important difference exists in the   behavior around RTCP.  First, when a single RTP session spans all   three endpoints A, B, and C, and their connecting RTP streams, a   common RTCP bandwidth is calculated and used for this single joint   session.  In contrast, when there are multiple independent RTP   sessions, each RTP session has its local RTCP bandwidth allocation.   Further, when multiple sessions are used, endpoints not directly   involved in a session do not have any awareness of the conditions in   those sessions.  For example, in the case of the three-endpointWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   configuration in Figure 8, endpoint A has no awareness of the   conditions occurring in the session between endpoints B and C   (whereas if a single RTP session were used, it would have such   awareness).   Loop detection is also affected.  With independent RTP sessions, the   SSRC/CSRC cannot be used to determine when an endpoint receives its   own media stream, or a mixed media stream including its own media   stream (a condition known as a loop).  The identification of loops   and, in most cases, their avoidance, has to be achieved by other   means, for example, through signaling or the use of an RTP external   namespace binding SSRC/CSRC among any communicating RTP sessions in   the mesh.3.5.  Point to Multipoint Using theRFC 3550 Translator   This section discusses some additional usages related to point to   multipoint of translators compared to the point-to-point cases inSection 3.2.1.3.5.1.  Relay - Transport Translator   Shortcut name: Topo-PtM-Trn-Translator   This section discusses Transport Translator-only usages to enable   multipoint sessions.                        +-----+             +---+     /       \     +------------+      +---+             | A |<---/         \    |            |<---->| B |             +---+   /           \   |            |      +---+                    +  Multicast  +->| Translator |             +---+   \  Network  /   |            |      +---+             | C |<---\         /    |            |<---->| D |             +---+     \       /     +------------+      +---+                        +-----+              Figure 11: Point to Multipoint Using Multicast   Figure 11 depicts an example of a Transport Translator performing at   least IP address translation.  It allows the (non-multicast-capable)   endpoints B and D to take part in an Any-Source Multicast session   involving endpoints A and C, by having the translator forward their   unicast traffic to the multicast addresses in use, and vice versa.   It must also forward B's traffic to D, and vice versa, to provide   both B and D with a complete view of the session.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015                   +---+      +------------+      +---+                   | A |<---->|            |<---->| B |                   +---+      |            |      +---+                              | Translator |                   +---+      |            |      +---+                   | C |<---->|            |<---->| D |                   +---+      +------------+      +---+         Figure 12: RTP Translator (Relay) with Only Unicast Paths   Another translator scenario is depicted in Figure 12.  The translator   in this case connects multiple endpoints through unicast.  This can   be implemented using a very simple Transport Translator which, in   this document, is called a relay.  The relay forwards all traffic it   receives, both RTP and RTCP, to all other endpoints.  In doing so, a   multicast network is emulated without relying on a multicast-capable   network infrastructure.   For RTCP feedback, this results in a similar set of considerations to   those described in the ASM RTP topology.  It also puts some   additional signaling requirements onto the session establishment; for   example, a common configuration of RTP payload types is required.   Transport Translators and relays should always consider implementing   source address filtering, to prevent attackers from using the   listening ports on the translator to inject traffic.  The translator   can, however, go one step further, especially if explicit SSRC   signaling is used, to prevent endpoints from sending SSRCs other than   its own (that are, for example, used by other participants in the   session).  This can improve the security properties of the session,   despite the use of group keys that on a cryptographic level allows   anyone to impersonate another in the same RTP session.   A translator that doesn't change the RTP/RTCP packet content can be   operated without requiring it to have access to the security contexts   used to protect the RTP/RTCP traffic between the participants.3.5.2.  Media Translator   In the context of multipoint communications, a Media Translator is   not providing new mechanisms to establish a multipoint session.  It   is more of an enabler, or facilitator, that ensures a given endpoint   or a defined subset of endpoints can participate in the session.   If endpoint B in Figure 11 were behind a limited network path, the   translator may perform media transcoding to allow the traffic   received from the other endpoints to reach B without overloading the   path.  This transcoding can help the other endpoints in the multicastWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   part of the session, by not requiring the quality transmitted by A to   be lowered to the bitrates that B is actually capable of receiving   (and vice versa).3.6.  Point to Multipoint Using theRFC 3550 Mixer Model   Shortcut name: Topo-Mixer   A mixer is a middlebox that aggregates multiple RTP streams that are   part of a session by generating one or more new RTP streams and, in   most cases, by manipulating the media data.  One common application   for a mixer is to allow a participant to receive a session with a   reduced amount of resources.                        +-----+             +---+     /       \     +-----------+      +---+             | A |<---/         \    |           |<---->| B |             +---+   /   Multi-  \   |           |      +---+                    +    cast     +->|   Mixer   |             +---+   \  Network  /   |           |      +---+             | C |<---\         /    |           |<---->| D |             +---+     \       /     +-----------+      +---+                        +-----+       Figure 13: Point to Multipoint Using theRFC 3550 Mixer Model   A mixer can be viewed as a device terminating the RTP streams   received from other endpoints in the same RTP session.  Using the   media data carried in the received RTP streams, a mixer generates   derived RTP streams that are sent to the receiving endpoints.   The content that the mixer provides is the mixed aggregate of what   the mixer receives over the PtP or PtM paths, which are part of the   same Communication Session.   The mixer creates the Media Source and the source RTP stream just   like an endpoint, as it mixes the content (often in the uncompressed   domain) and then encodes and packetizes it for transmission to a   receiving endpoint.  The CSRC Count (CC) and CSRC fields in the RTP   header can be used to indicate the contributors to the newly   generated RTP stream.  The SSRCs of the to-be-mixed streams on the   mixer input appear as the CSRCs at the mixer output.  That output   stream uses a unique SSRC that identifies the mixer's stream.  The   CSRC should be forwarded between the different endpoints to allow for   loop detection and identification of sources that are part of the   Communication Session.  Note thatSection 7.1 of RFC 3550 requiresWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   the SSRC space to be shared between domains for these reasons.  This   also implies that any SDES information normally needs to be forwarded   across the mixer.   The mixer is responsible for generating RTCP packets in accordance   with its role.  It is an RTP receiver and should therefore send RTCP   receiver reports for the RTP streams it receives and terminates.  In   its role as an RTP sender, it should also generate RTCP sender   reports for those RTP streams it sends.  As specified inSection 7.3   of RFC 3550, a mixer must not forward RTCP unaltered between the two   domains.   The mixer depicted in Figure 13 is involved in three domains that   need to be separated: the Any-Source Multicast network (including   endpoints A and C), endpoint B, and endpoint D.  Assuming all four   endpoints in the conference are interested in receiving content from   all other endpoints, the mixer produces different mixed RTP streams   for B and D, as the one to B may contain content received from D, and   vice versa.  However, the mixer may only need one SSRC per media type   in each domain where it is the receiving entity and transmitter of   mixed content.   In the multicast domain, a mixer still needs to provide a mixed view   of the other domains.  This makes the mixer simpler to implement and   avoids any issues with advanced RTCP handling or loop detection,   which would be problematic if the mixer were providing non-symmetric   behavior.  Please seeSection 3.11 for more discussion on this topic.   The mixing operation, however, in each domain could potentially be   different.   A mixer is responsible for receiving RTCP feedback messages and   handling them appropriately.  The definition of "appropriate" depends   on the message itself and the context.  In some cases, the reception   of a codec-control message by the mixer may result in the generation   and transmission of RTCP feedback messages by the mixer to the   endpoints in the other domain(s).  In other cases, a message is   handled by the mixer locally and therefore not forwarded to any other   domain.   When replacing the multicast network in Figure 13 (to the left of the   mixer) with individual unicast paths as depicted in Figure 14, the   mixer model is very similar to the one discussed inSection 3.9   below.  Please see the discussion inSection 3.9 about the   differences between these two models.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015                   +---+      +------------+      +---+                   | A |<---->|            |<---->| B |                   +---+      |            |      +---+                              |   Mixer    |                   +---+      |            |      +---+                   | C |<---->|            |<---->| D |                   +---+      +------------+      +---+               Figure 14: RTP Mixer with Only Unicast Paths   We now discuss in more detail the different mixing operations that a   mixer can perform and how they can affect RTP and RTCP behavior.3.6.1.  Media-Mixing Mixer   The Media-Mixing Mixer is likely the one that most think of when they   hear the term "mixer".  Its basic mode of operation is that it   receives RTP streams from several endpoints and selects the stream(s)   to be included in a media-domain mix.  The selection can be through   static configuration or by dynamic, content-dependent means such as   voice activation.  The mixer then creates a single outgoing RTP   stream from this mix.   The most commonly deployed Media-Mixing Mixer is probably the audio   mixer, used in voice conferencing, where the output consists of a   mixture of all the input audio signals; this needs minimal signaling   to be successfully set up.  From a signal processing viewpoint, audio   mixing is relatively straightforward and commonly possible for a   reasonable number of endpoints.  Assume, for example, that one wants   to mix N streams from N different endpoints.  The mixer needs to   decode those N streams, typically into the sample domain, and then   produce N or N+1 mixes.  Different mixes are needed so that each   endpoint gets a mix of all other sources except its own, as this   would result in an echo.  When N is lower than the number of all   endpoints, one may produce a mix of all N streams for the group that   are currently not included in the mix; thus, N+1 mixes.  These audio   streams are then encoded again, RTP packetized, and sent out.  In   many cases, audio level normalization, noise suppression, and similar   signal processing steps are also required or desirable before the   actual mixing process commences.   In video, the term "mixing" has a different interpretation than   audio.  It is commonly used to refer to the process of spatially   combining contributed video streams, which is also known as "tiling".   The reconstructed, appropriately scaled down videos can be spatially   arranged in a set of tiles, with each tile containing the video from   an endpoint (typically showing a human participant).  Tiles can be of   different sizes so that, for example, a particularly importantWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   participant, or the loudest speaker, is being shown in a larger tile   than other participants.  A self-view picture can be included in the   tiling, which can be either locally produced or feedback from a   mixer-received and reconstructed video image.  Such remote loopback   allows for confidence monitoring, i.e., it enables the participant to   see himself/herself in the same quality as other participants see   him/her.  The tiling normally operates on reconstructed video in the   sample domain.  The tiled image is encoded, packetized, and sent by   the mixer to the receiving endpoints.  It is possible that a   middlebox with media mixing duties contains only a single mixer of   the aforementioned type, in which case all participants necessarily   see the same tiled video, even if it is being sent over different RTP   streams.  More common, however, are mixing arrangements where an   individual mixer is available for each outgoing port of the   middlebox, allowing individual compositions for each receiving   endpoint (a feature commonly referred to as personalized layout).   One problem with media mixing is that it consumes both large amounts   of media processing resources (for the decoding and mixing process in   the uncompressed domain) and encoding resources (for the encoding of   the mixed signal).  Another problem is the quality degradation   created by decoding and re-encoding the media, which is the result of   the lossy nature of the most commonly used media codecs.  A third   problem is the latency introduced by the media mixing, which can be   substantial and annoyingly noticeable in case of video, or in case of   audio if that mixed audio is lip-synchronized with high-latency   video.  The advantage of media mixing is that it is straightforward   for the endpoints to handle the single media stream (which includes   the mixed aggregate of many sources), as they don't need to handle   multiple decodings, local mixing, and composition.  In fact, mixers   were introduced in pre-RTP times so that legacy, single stream   receiving endpoints (that, in some protocol environments, actually   didn't need to be aware of the multipoint nature of the conference)   could successfully participate in what a user would recognize as a   multiparty video conference.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015           +-A---------+          +-MIXER----------------------+           | +-RTP1----|          |-RTP1------+        +-----+ |           | | +-Audio-|          |-Audio---+ | +---+  |     | |           | | |    AA1|--------->|---------+-+-|DEC|->|     | |           | | |       |<---------|MA1 <----+ | +---+  |     | |           | | |       |          |(BA1+CA1)|\| +---+  |     | |           | | +-------|          |---------+ +-|ENC|<-| B+C | |           | +---------|          |-----------+ +---+  |     | |           +-----------+          |                    |     | |                                  |                    |  M  | |           +-B---------+          |                    |  E  | |           | +-RTP2----|          |-RTP2------+        |  D  | |           | | +-Audio-|          |-Audio---+ | +---+  |  I  | |           | | |    BA1|--------->|---------+-+-|DEC|->|  A  | |           | | |       |<---------|MA2 <----+ | +---+  |     | |           | | +-------|          |(AA1+CA1)|\| +---+  |     | |           | +---------|          |---------+ +-|ENC|<-| A+C | |           +-----------+          |-----------+ +---+  |     | |                                  |                    |  M  | |           +-C---------+          |                    |  I  | |           | +-RTP3----|          |-RTP3------+        |  X  | |           | | +-Audio-|          |-Audio---+ | +---+  |  E  | |           | | |    CA1|--------->|---------+-+-|DEC|->|  R  | |           | | |       |<---------|MA3 <----+ | +---+  |     | |           | | +-------|          |(AA1+BA1)|\| +---+  |     | |           | +---------|          |---------+ +-|ENC|<-| A+B | |           +-----------+          |-----------+ +---+  +-----+ |                                  +----------------------------+            Figure 15: Session and SSRC Details for Media Mixer   From an RTP perspective, media mixing can be a very simple process,   as can be seen in Figure 15.  The mixer presents one SSRC towards the   receiving endpoint, e.g., MA1 to Peer A, where the associated stream   is the media mix of the other endpoints.  As each peer, in this   example, receives a different version of a mix from the mixer, there   is no actual relation between the different RTP sessions in terms of   actual media or transport-level information.  There are, however,   common relationships between RTP1-RTP3, namely SSRC space and   identity information.  When A receives the MA1 stream, which is a   combination of BA1 and CA1 streams, the mixer may include CSRC   information in the MA1 stream to identify the Contributing Sources   BA1 and CA1, allowing the receiver to identify the Contributing   Sources even if this were not possible through the media itself or   through other signaling means.   The CSRC has, in turn, utility in RTP extensions, like the RTP header   extension for Mixer-to-Client Audio Level Indication [RFC6465].  IfWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 26]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   the SSRCs from the endpoint to mixer paths are used as CSRCs in   another RTP session, then RTP1, RTP2, and RTP3 become one joint   session as they have a common SSRC space.  At this stage, the mixer   also needs to consider which RTCP information it needs to expose in   the different paths.  In the above scenario, a mixer would normally   expose nothing more than the SDES information and RTCP BYE for a CSRC   leaving the session.  The main goal would be to enable the correct   binding against the application logic and other information sources.   This also enables loop detection in the RTP session.3.6.2.  Media-Switching Mixer   Media-Switching Mixers are used in limited functionality scenarios   where no, or only very limited, concurrent presentation of multiple   sources is required by the application and also in more complex   multi-stream usages with receiver mixing or tiling, including   combined with simulcast and/or scalability between source and mixer.   An RTP mixer based on media switching avoids the media decoding and   encoding operations in the mixer, as it conceptually forwards the   encoded media stream as it was being sent to the mixer.  It does not   avoid, however, the decryption and re-encryption cycle as it rewrites   RTP headers.  Forwarding media (in contrast to reconstructing-mixing-   encoding media) reduces the amount of computational resources needed   in the mixer and increases the media quality (both in terms of   fidelity and reduced latency).   A Media-Switching Mixer maintains a pool of SSRCs representing   conceptual or functional RTP streams that the mixer can produce.   These RTP streams are created by selecting media from one of the RTP   streams received by the mixer and forwarded to the peer using the   mixer's own SSRCs.  The mixer can switch between available sources if   that is required by the concept for the source, like the currently   active speaker.  Note that the mixer, in most cases, still needs to   perform a certain amount of media processing, as many media formats   do not allow to "tune into" the stream at arbitrary points in their   bitstream.   To achieve a coherent RTP stream from the mixer's SSRC, the mixer   needs to rewrite the incoming RTP packet's header.  First, the SSRC   field must be set to the value of the mixer's SSRC.  Second, the   sequence number must be the next in the sequence of outgoing packets   it sent.  Third, the RTP timestamp value needs to be adjusted using   an offset that changes each time one switches the Media Source.   Finally, depending on the negotiation of the RTP payload type, the   value representing this particular RTP payload configuration may have   to be changed if the different endpoint-to-mixer paths have not   arrived on the same numbering for a given configuration.  This alsoWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 27]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   requires that the different endpoints support a common set of codecs,   otherwise media transcoding for codec compatibility would still be   required.   We now consider the operation of a Media-Switching Mixer that   supports a video conference with six participating endpoints (A-F)   where the two most recent speakers in the conference are shown to   each receiving endpoint.  Thus, the mixer has two SSRCs sending video   to each peer, and each peer is capable of locally handling two video   streams simultaneously.         +-A---------+             +-MIXER----------------------+         | +-RTP1----|             |-RTP1------+        +-----+ |         | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |        |     | |         | | |    AV1|------------>|---------+-+------->|  S  | |         | | |       |<------------|MV1 <----+-+-BV1----|  W  | |         | | |       |<------------|MV2 <----+-+-EV1----|  I  | |         | | +-------|             |---------+ |        |  T  | |         | +---------|             |-----------+        |  C  | |         +-----------+             |                    |  H  | |                                   |                    |     | |         +-B---------+             |                    |  M  | |         | +-RTP2----|             |-RTP2------+        |  A  | |         | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |        |  T  | |         | | |    BV1|------------>|---------+-+------->|  R  | |         | | |       |<------------|MV3 <----+-+-AV1----|  I  | |         | | |       |<------------|MV4 <----+-+-EV1----|  X  | |         | | +-------|             |---------+ |        |     | |         | +---------|             |-----------+        |     | |         +-----------+             |                    |     | |                                   :                    :     : :                                   :                    :     : :         +-F---------+             |                    |     | |         | +-RTP6----|             |-RTP6------+        |     | |         | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |        |     | |         | | |    FV1|------------>|---------+-+------->|     | |         | | |       |<------------|MV11 <---+-+-AV1----|     | |         | | |       |<------------|MV12 <---+-+-EV1----|     | |         | | +-------|             |---------+ |        |     | |         | +---------|             |-----------+        +-----+ |         +-----------+             +----------------------------+                   Figure 16: Media-Switching RTP MixerWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 28]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   The Media-Switching Mixer can, similarly to the Media-Mixing Mixer,   reduce the bitrate required for media transmission towards the   different peers by selecting and forwarding only a subset of RTP   streams it receives from the sending endpoints.  In case the mixer   receives simulcast transmissions or a scalable encoding of the Media   Source, the mixer has more degrees of freedom to select streams or   subsets of streams to forward to a receiving endpoint, both based on   transport or endpoint restrictions as well as application logic.   To ensure that a media receiver in an endpoint can correctly decode   the media in the RTP stream after a switch, a codec that uses   temporal prediction needs to start its decoding from independent   refresh points, or points in the bitstream offering similar   functionality (like "dirty refresh points").  For some codecs, for   example, frame-based speech and audio codecs, this is easily achieved   by starting the decoding at RTP packet boundaries, as each packet   boundary provides a refresh point (assuming proper packetization on   the encoder side).  For other codecs, particularly in video, refresh   points are less common in the bitstream or may not be present at all   without an explicit request to the respective encoder.  The Full   Intra Request [RFC5104] RTCP codec control message has been defined   for this purpose.   In this type of mixer, one could consider fully terminating the RTP   sessions between the different endpoint and mixer paths.  The same   arguments and considerations as discussed inSection 3.9 need to be   taken into consideration and apply here.3.7.  Selective Forwarding Middlebox   Another method for handling media in the RTP mixer is to "project",   or make available, all potential RTP sources (SSRCs) into a per-   endpoint, independent RTP session.  The middlebox can select which of   the potential sources that are currently actively transmitting media   will be sent to each of the endpoints.  This is similar to the Media-   Switching Mixer but has some important differences in RTP details.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 29]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015          +-A---------+             +-Middlebox-----------------+          | +-RTP1----|             |-RTP1------+       +-----+ |          | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |       |     | |          | | |    AV1|------------>|---------+-+------>|     | |          | | |       |<------------|BV1 <----+-+-------|  S  | |          | | |       |<------------|CV1 <----+-+-------|  W  | |          | | |       |<------------|DV1 <----+-+-------|  I  | |          | | |       |<------------|EV1 <----+-+-------|  T  | |          | | |       |<------------|FV1 <----+-+-------|  C  | |          | | +-------|             |---------+ |       |  H  | |          | +---------|             |-----------+       |     | |          +-----------+             |                   |  M  | |                                    |                   |  A  | |          +-B---------+             |                   |  T  | |          | +-RTP2----|             |-RTP2------+       |  R  | |          | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |       |  I  | |          | | |    BV1|------------>|---------+-+------>|  X  | |          | | |       |<------------|AV1 <----+-+-------|     | |          | | |       |<------------|CV1 <----+-+-------|     | |          | | |       | :    :    : |: :  : : : : :  : :|     | |          | | |       |<------------|FV1 <----+-+-------|     | |          | | +-------|             |---------+ |       |     | |          | +---------|             |-----------+       |     | |          +-----------+             |                   |     | |                                    :                   :     : :                                    :                   :     : :          +-F---------+             |                   |     | |          | +-RTP6----|             |-RTP6------+       |     | |          | | +-Video-|             |-Video---+ |       |     | |          | | |    FV1|------------>|---------+-+------>|     | |          | | |       |<------------|AV1 <----+-+-------|     | |          | | |       | :    :    : |: :  : : : : :  : :|     | |          | | |       |<------------|EV1 <----+-+-------|     | |          | | +-------|             |---------+ |       |     | |          | +---------|             |-----------+       +-----+ |          +-----------+             +---------------------------+                 Figure 17: Selective Forwarding Middlebox   In the six endpoint conference depicted above (in Figure 17), one can   see that endpoint A is aware of five incoming SSRCs, BV1-FV1.  If   this middlebox intends to have a similar behavior as inSection 3.6.2   where the mixer provides the endpoints with the two latest speaking   endpoints, then only two out of these five SSRCs need concurrently   transmit media to A.  As the middlebox selects the source in the   different RTP sessions that transmit media to the endpoints, each RTP   stream requires the rewriting of certain RTP header fields when being   projected from one session into another.  In particular, the sequenceWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 30]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   number needs to be consecutively incremented based on the packet   actually being transmitted in each RTP session.  Therefore, the RTP   sequence number offset will change each time a source is turned on in   an RTP session.  The timestamp (possibly offset) stays the same.   The RTP sessions can be considered independent, resulting in that the   SSRC numbers used can also be handled independently.  This simplifies   the SSRC collision detection and avoidance but requires tools such as   remapping tables between the RTP sessions.  Using independent RTP   sessions is not required, as it is possible for the switching   behavior to also perform with a common SSRC space.  However, in this   case, collision detection and handling becomes a different problem.   It is up to the implementation to use a single common SSRC space or   separate ones.   Using separate SSRC spaces has some implications.  For example, the   RTP stream that is being sent by endpoint B to the middlebox (BV1)   may use an SSRC value of 12345678.  When that RTP stream is sent to   endpoint F by the middlebox, it can use any SSRC value, e.g.,   87654321.  As a result, each endpoint may have a different view of   the application usage of a particular SSRC.  Any RTP-level identity   information, such as SDES items, also needs to update the SSRC   referenced, if the included SDES items are intended to be global.   Thus, the application must not use SSRC as references to RTP streams   when communicating with other peers directly.  This also affects loop   detection, which will fail to work as there is no common namespace   and identities across the different legs in the Communication Session   on the RTP level.  Instead, this responsibility falls onto higher   layers.   The middlebox is also responsible for receiving any RTCP codec   control requests coming from an endpoint and deciding if it can act   on the request locally or needs to translate the request into the RTP   session/transport leg that contains the Media Source.  Both endpoints   and the middlebox need to implement conference-related codec control   functionalities to provide a good experience.  Commonly used are Full   Intra Request to request from the Media Source that switching points   be provided between the sources and Temporary Maximum Media Bitrate   Request (TMMBR) to enable the middlebox to aggregate congestion   control responses towards the Media Source so to enable it to adjust   its bitrate (obviously, only in case the limitation is not in the   source to middlebox link).   The Selective Forwarding Middlebox has been introduced in recently   developed videoconferencing systems in conjunction with, and to   capitalize on, scalable video coding as well as simulcasting.  An   example of scalable video coding is Annex G of H.264, but other   codecs, including H.264 AVC and VP8, also exhibit scalability, albeitWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 31]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   only in the temporal dimension.  In both scalable coding and   simulcast cases, the video signal is represented by a set of two or   more bitstreams, providing a corresponding number of distinct   fidelity points.  The middlebox selects which parts of a scalable   bitstream (or which bitstream, in the case of simulcasting) to   forward to each of the receiving endpoints.  The decision may be   driven by a number of factors, such as available bitrate, desired   layout, etc.  Contrary to transcoding MCUs, SFMs have extremely low   delay and provide features that are typically associated with high-   end systems (personalized layout, error localization) without any   signal processing at the middlebox.  They are also capable of scaling   to a large number of concurrent users, and--due to their very low   delay--can also be cascaded.   This version of the middlebox also puts different requirements on the   endpoint when it comes to decoder instances and handling of the RTP   streams providing media.  As each projected SSRC can, at any time,   provide media, the endpoint either needs to be able to handle as many   decoder instances as the middlebox received, or have efficient   switching of decoder contexts in a more limited set of actual decoder   instances to cope with the switches.  The application also gets more   responsibility to update how the media provided is to be presented to   the user.   Note that this topology could potentially be seen as a Media   Translator that includes an on/off logic as part of its media   translation.  The topology has the property that all SSRCs present in   the session are visible to an endpoint.  It also has mixer aspects,   as the streams it provides are not basically translated versions, but   instead they have conceptual property assigned to them and can be   both turned on/off as well as fully or partially delivered.  Thus,   this topology appears to be some hybrid between the translator and   mixer model.   The differences between a Selective Forwarding Middlebox and a   Switching-Media Mixer (Section 3.6.2) are minor, and they share most   properties.  The above requirement on having a large number of   decoding instances or requiring efficient switching of decoder   contexts, are one point of difference.  The other is how the   identification is performed, where the mixer uses CSRC to provide   information on what is included in a particular RTP stream that   represents a particular concept.  Selective forwarding gets the   source information through the SSRC and instead uses other mechanisms   to indicate the streams intended usage, if needed.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 32]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 20153.8.  Point to Multipoint Using Video-Switching MCUs   Shortcut name: Topo-Video-switch-MCU                   +---+      +------------+      +---+                   | A |------| Multipoint |------| B |                   +---+      |  Control   |      +---+                              |   Unit     |                   +---+      |   (MCU)    |      +---+                   | C |------|            |------| D |                   +---+      +------------+      +---+        Figure 18: Point to Multipoint Using a Video-Switching MCU   This PtM topology was popular in early implementations of multipoint   videoconferencing systems due to its simplicity, and the   corresponding middlebox design has been known as a "video-switching   MCU".  The more complex RTCP-terminating MCUs, discussed in the next   section, became the norm, however, when technology allowed   implementations at acceptable costs.   A video-switching MCU forwards to a participant a single media   stream, selected from the available streams.  The criteria for   selection are often based on voice activity in the audio-visual   conference, but other conference management mechanisms (like   presentation mode or explicit floor control) are known to exist as   well.   The video-switching MCU may also perform media translation to modify   the content in bitrate, encoding, or resolution.  However, it still   may indicate the original sender of the content through the SSRC.  In   this case, the values of the CC and CSRC fields are retained.   If not terminating RTP, the RTCP sender reports are forwarded for the   currently selected sender.  All RTCP receiver reports are freely   forwarded between the endpoints.  In addition, the MCU may also   originate RTCP control traffic in order to control the session and/or   report on status from its viewpoint.   The video-switching MCU has most of the attributes of a translator.   However, its stream selection is a mixing behavior.  This behavior   has some RTP and RTCP issues associated with it.  The suppression of   all but one RTP stream results in most participants seeing only a   subset of the sent RTP streams at any given time, often a single RTP   stream per conference.  Therefore, RTCP receiver reports only report   on these RTP streams.  Consequently, the endpoints emitting RTP   streams that are not currently forwarded receive a view of the   session that indicates their RTP streams disappear somewhere enWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 33]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   route.  This makes the use of RTCP for congestion control, or any   type of quality reporting, very problematic.   To avoid the aforementioned issues, the MCU needs to implement two   features.  First, it needs to act as a mixer (seeSection 3.6) and   forward the selected RTP stream under its own SSRC and with the   appropriate CSRC values.  Second, the MCU needs to modify the RTCP   RRs it forwards between the domains.  As a result, it is recommended   that one implement a centralized video-switching conference using a   mixer according toRFC 3550, instead of the shortcut implementation   described here.3.9.  Point to Multipoint Using RTCP-Terminating MCU   Shortcut name: Topo-RTCP-terminating-MCU                   +---+      +------------+      +---+                   | A |<---->| Multipoint |<---->| B |                   +---+      |  Control   |      +---+                              |   Unit     |                   +---+      |   (MCU)    |      +---+                   | C |<---->|            |<---->| D |                   +---+      +------------+      +---+        Figure 19: Point to Multipoint Using Content Modifying MCUs   In this PtM scenario, each endpoint runs an RTP point-to-point   session between itself and the MCU.  This is a very commonly deployed   topology in multipoint video conferencing.  The content that the MCU   provides to each participant is either:   a.  a selection of the content received from the other endpoints or   b.  the mixed aggregate of what the MCU receives from the other PtP       paths, which are part of the same Communication Session.   In case (a), the MCU may modify the content in terms of bitrate,   encoding format, or resolution.  No explicit RTP mechanism is used to   establish the relationship between the original RTP stream of the   media being sent and the RTP stream the MCU sends.  In other words,   the outgoing RTP streams typically use a different SSRC, and may well   use a different payload type (PT), even if this different PT happens   to be mapped to the same media type.  This is a result of the   individually negotiated RTP session for each endpoint.   In case (b), the MCU is the Media Source and generates the Source RTP   Stream as it mixes the received content and then encodes and   packetizes it for transmission to an endpoint.  According to RTPWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 34]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   [RFC3550], the SSRC of the contributors are to be signaled using the   CSRC/CC mechanism.  In practice, today, most deployed MCUs do not   implement this feature.  Instead, the identification of the endpoints   whose content is included in the mixer's output is not indicated   through any explicit RTP mechanism.  That is, most deployed MCUs set   the CC field in the RTP header to zero, thereby indicating no   available CSRC information, even if they could identify the original   sending endpoints as suggested in RTP.   The main feature that sets this topology apart from whatRFC 3550   describes is the breaking of the common RTP session across the   centralized device, such as the MCU.  This results in the loss of   explicit RTP-level indication of all participants.  If one were using   the mechanisms available in RTP and RTCP to signal this explicitly,   the topology would follow the approach of an RTP mixer.  The lack of   explicit indication has at least the following potential problems:   1.  Loop detection cannot be performed on the RTP level.  When       carelessly connecting two misconfigured MCUs, a loop could be       generated.   2.  There is no information about active media senders available in       the RTP packet.  As this information is missing, receivers cannot       use it.  It also deprives the client of information related to       currently active senders in a machine-usable way, thus preventing       clients from indicating currently active speakers in user       interfaces, etc.   Note that many/most deployed MCUs (and video conferencing endpoints)   rely on signaling-layer mechanisms for the identification of the   Contributing Sources, for example, a SIP conferencing package   [RFC4575].  This alleviates, to some extent, the aforementioned   issues resulting from ignoring RTP's CSRC mechanism.3.10.  Split Component Terminal   Shortcut name: Topo-Split-Terminal   In some applications, for example, in some telepresence systems,   terminals may not be integrated into a single functional unit but   composed of more than one subunits.  For example, a telepresence room   terminal employing multiple cameras and monitors may consist of   multiple video conferencing subunits, each capable of handling a   single camera and monitor.  Another example would be a video   conferencing terminal in which audio is handled by one subunit, and   video by another.  Each of these subunits uses its own physical   network interface (for example: Ethernet jack) and network address.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 35]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   The various (media processing) subunits need (logically and   physically) to be interconnected by control functionality, but their   media plane functionality may be split.  These types of terminals are   referred to as split component terminals.  Historically, the earliest   split component terminals were perhaps the independent audio and   video conference software tools used over the MBONE in the late   1990s.   An example for such a split component terminal is depicted in   Figure 20.  Within split component terminal A, at least audio and   video subunits are addressed by their own network addresses.  In some   of these systems, the control stack subunit may also have its own   network address.   From an RTP viewpoint, each of the subunits terminates RTP and acts   as an endpoint in the sense that each subunit includes its own,   independent RTP stack.  However, as the subunits are semantically   part of the same terminal, it is appropriate that this semantic   relationship is expressed in RTCP protocol elements, namely in the   CNAME.               +---------------------+               | Endpoint A          |               | Local Area Network  |               |      +------------+ |               |   +->| Audio      |<+-RTP---\               |   |  +------------+ |        \    +------+               |   |  +------------+ |         +-->|      |               |   +->| Video      |<+-RTP-------->|  B   |               |   |  +------------+ |         +-->|      |               |   |  +------------+ |        /    +------+               |   +->| Control    |<+-SIP---/               |      +------------+ |               +---------------------+                    Figure 20: Split Component Terminal   It is further sensible that the subunits share a common clock from   which RTP and RTCP clocks are derived, to facilitate synchronization   and avoid clock drift.   To indicate that audio and video Source Streams generated by   different subunits share a common clock, and can be synchronized, the   RTP streams generated from those Source Streams need to include the   same CNAME in their RTCP SDES packets.  The use of a common CNAME for   RTP flows carried in different transport-layer flows is entirely   normal for RTP and RTCP senders, and fully compliant RTP endpoints,   middleboxes, and other tools should have no problem with this.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 36]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   However, outside of the split component terminal scenario (and   perhaps a multihomed endpoint scenario, which is not further   discussed herein), the use of a common CNAME in RTP streams sent from   separate endpoints (as opposed to a common CNAME for RTP streams sent   on different transport-layer flows between two endpoints) is rare.   It has been reported that at least some third-party tools like some   network monitors do not handle gracefully endpoints that use a common   CNAME across multiple transport-layer flows: they report an error   condition in which two separate endpoints are using the same CNAME.   Depending on the sophistication of the support staff, such erroneous   reports can lead to support issues.   The aforementioned support issue can sometimes be avoided if each of   the subunits of a split component terminal is configured to use a   different CNAME, with the synchronization between the RTP streams   being indicated by some non-RTP signaling channel rather than using a   common CNAME sent in RTCP.  This complicates the signaling,   especially in cases where there are multiple SSRCs in use with   complex synchronization requirements, as is the same in many current   telepresence systems.  Unless one uses RTCP terminating topologies   such as Topo-RTCP-terminating-MCU, sessions involving more than one   video subunit with a common CNAME are close to unavoidable.   The different RTP streams comprising a split terminal system can form   a single RTP session or they can form multiple RTP sessions,   depending on the visibility of their SSRC values in RTCP reports.  If   the receiver of the RTP streams sent by the split terminal sends   reports relating to all of the RTP flows (i.e., to each SSRC) in each   RTCP report, then a single RTP session is formed.  Alternatively, if   the receiver of the RTP streams sent by the split terminal does not   send cross-reports in RTCP, then the audio and video form separate   RTP sessions.   For example, in Figure 20, B will send RTCP reports to each of the   subunits of A.  If the RTCP packets that B sends to the audio subunit   of A include reports on the reception quality of the video as well as   the audio, and similarly if the RTCP packets that B sends to the   video subunit of A include reports on the reception quality of the   audio as well as video, then a single RTP session is formed.   However, if the RTCP packets B sends to the audio subunit of A only   report on the received audio, and the RTCP packets B sends to the   video subunit of A only report on the received video, then there are   two separate RTP sessions.   Forming a single RTP session across the RTP streams sent by the   different subunits of a split terminal gives each subunit visibility   into reception quality of RTP streams sent by the other subunits.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 37]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   This information can help diagnose reception quality problems, but at   the cost of increased RTCP bandwidth use.   RTP streams sent by the subunits of a split terminal need to use the   same CNAME in their RTCP packets if they are to be synchronized,   irrespective of whether a single RTP session is formed or not.3.11.  Non-symmetric Mixer/Translators   Shortcut name: Topo-Asymmetric   It is theoretically possible to construct an MCU that is a mixer in   one direction and a translator in another.  The main reason to   consider this would be to allow topologies similar to Figure 13,   where the mixer does not need to mix in the direction from B or D   towards the multicast domains with A and C.  Instead, the RTP streams   from B and D are forwarded without changes.  Avoiding this mixing   would save media processing resources that perform the mixing in   cases where it isn't needed.  However, there would still be a need to   mix B's media towards D.  Only in the direction B -> multicast domain   or D -> multicast domain would it be possible to work as a   translator.  In all other directions, it would function as a mixer.   The mixer/translator would still need to process and change the RTCP   before forwarding it in the directions of B or D to the multicast   domain.  One issue is that A and C do not know about the mixed-media   stream the mixer sends to either B or D.  Therefore, any reports   related to these streams must be removed.  Also, receiver reports   related to A's and C's RTP streams would be missing.  To avoid A and   C thinking that B and D aren't receiving A and C at all, the mixer   needs to insert locally generated reports reflecting the situation   for the streams from A and C into B's and D's sender reports.  In the   opposite direction, the receiver reports from A and C about B's and   D's streams also need to be aggregated into the mixer's receiver   reports sent to B and D.  Since B and D only have the mixer as source   for the stream, all RTCP from A and C must be suppressed by the   mixer.   This topology is so problematic, and it is so easy to get the RTCP   processing wrong, that it is not recommended for implementation.3.12.  Combining Topologies   Topologies can be combined and linked to each other using mixers or   translators.  However, care must be taken in handling the SSRC/CSRC   space.  A mixer does not forward RTCP from sources in other domains,   but instead generates its own RTCP packets for each domain it mixes   into, including the necessary SDES information for both the CSRCs andWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 38]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   the SSRCs.  Thus, in a mixed domain, the only SSRCs seen will be the   ones present in the domain, while there can be CSRCs from all the   domains connected together with a combination of mixers and   translators.  The combined SSRC and CSRC space is common over any   translator or mixer.  It is important to facilitate loop detection,   something that is likely to be even more important in combined   topologies due to the mixed behavior between the domains.  Any   hybrid, like the Topo-Video-switch-MCU or Topo-Asymmetric, requires   considerable thought on how RTCP is dealt with.4.  Topology Properties   The topologies discussed inSection 3 have different properties.   This section describes these properties.  Note that, even if a   certain property is supported within a particular topology concept,   the necessary functionality may be optional to implement.4.1.  All-to-All Media Transmission   To recapitulate, multicast, and in particular ASM, provides the   functionality that everyone may send to, or receive from, everyone   else within the session.  SSM can provide a similar functionality by   having anyone intending to participate as a sender to send its media   to the SSM Distribution Source.  The SSM Distribution Source forwards   the media to all receivers subscribed to the multicast group.  Mesh,   MCUs, mixers, Selective Forwarding Middleboxes (SFMs), and   translators may all provide that functionality at least on some basic   level.  However, there are some differences in which type of   reachability they provide.   The topologies that come closest to emulating Any-Source IP   Multicast, with all-to-all transmission capabilities, are the   Transport Translator function called "relay" inSection 3.5, as well   as the Mesh with joint RTP sessions (Section 3.4).  Media   Translators, Mesh with independent RTP Sessions, mixers, SFUs, and   the MCU variants do not provide a fully meshed forwarding on the   transport level; instead, they only allow limited forwarding of   content from the other session participants.   The "all-to-all media transmission" requires that any media   transmitting endpoint considers the path to the least-capable   receiving endpoint.  Otherwise, the media transmissions may overload   that path.  Therefore, a sending endpoint needs to monitor the path   from itself to any of the receiving endpoints, to detect the   currently least-capable receiver and adapt its sending rate   accordingly.  As multiple endpoints may send simultaneously, the   available resources may vary.  RTCP's receiver reports help perform   this monitoring, at least on a medium time scale.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 39]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   The resource consumption for performing all-to-all transmission   varies depending on the topology.  Both ASM and SSM have the benefit   that only one copy of each packet traverses a particular link.  Using   a relay causes the transmission of one copy of a packet per   endpoint-to-relay path and packet transmitted.  However, in most   cases, the links carrying the multiple copies will be the ones close   to the relay (which can be assumed to be part of the network   infrastructure with good connectivity to the backbone) rather than   the endpoints (which may be behind slower access links).  The Mesh   topologies causes N-1 streams of transmitted packets to traverse the   first-hop link from the endpoint, in a mesh with N endpoints.  How   long the different paths are common is highly situation dependent.   The transmission of RTCP by design adapts to any changes in the   number of participants due to the transmission algorithm, defined in   the RTP specification [RFC3550], and the extensions in AVPF [RFC4585]   (when applicable).  That way, the resources utilized for RTCP stay   within the bounds configured for the session.4.2.  Transport or Media Interoperability   All translators, mixers, RTCP-terminating MCUs, and Mesh with   individual RTP sessions allow changing the media encoding or the   transport to other properties of the other domain, thereby providing   extended interoperability in cases where the endpoints lack a common   set of media codecs and/or transport protocols.  Selective Forwarding   Middleboxes can adopt the transport and (at least) selectively   forward the encoded streams that match a receiving endpoint's   capability.  It requires an additional translator to change the media   encoding if the encoded streams do not match the receiving endpoint's   capabilities.4.3.  Per-Domain Bitrate Adaptation   Endpoints are often connected to each other with a heterogeneous set   of paths.  This makes congestion control in a Point-to-Multipoint set   problematic.  In the ASM, SSM, Mesh with common RTP session, and   Transport Relay scenarios, each individual sending endpoint has to   adapt to the receiving endpoint behind the least-capable path,   yielding suboptimal quality for the endpoints behind the more capable   paths.  This is no longer an issue when Media Translators, mixers,   SFMs, or MCUs are involved, as each endpoint only needs to adapt to   the slowest path within its own domain.  The translator, mixer, SFM,   or MCU topologies all require their respective outgoing RTP streams   to adjust the bitrate, packet rate, etc., to adapt to the least-   capable path in each of the other domains.  That way one can avoid   lowering the quality to the least-capable endpoint in all the domains   at the cost (complexity, delay, equipment) of the mixer, SFM, orWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 40]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   translator, and potentially the media sender (multicast/layered   encoding and sending the different representations).4.4.  Aggregation of Media   In the all-to-all media property mentioned above and provided by ASM,   SSM, Mesh with common RTP session, and relay, all simultaneous media   transmissions share the available bitrate.  For endpoints with   limited reception capabilities, this may result in a situation where   even a minimal, acceptable media quality cannot be accomplished,   because multiple RTP streams need to share the same resources.  One   solution to this problem is to use a mixer, or MCU, to aggregate the   multiple RTP streams into a single one, where the single RTP stream   takes up less resources in terms of bitrate.  This aggregation can be   performed according to different methods.  Mixing or selection are   two common methods.  Selection is almost always possible and easy to   implement.  Mixing requires resources in the mixer and may be   relatively easy and not impair the quality too badly (audio) or quite   difficult (video tiling, which is not only computationally complex   but also reduces the pixel count per stream, with corresponding loss   in perceptual quality).4.5.  View of All Session Participants   The RTP protocol includes functionality to identify the session   participants through the use of the SSRC and CSRC fields.  In   addition, it is capable of carrying some further identity information   about these participants using the RTCP SDES.  In topologies that   provide a full all-to-all functionality, i.e., ASM, Mesh with common   RTP session, and relay, a compliant RTP implementation offers the   functionality directly as specified in RTP.  In topologies that do   not offer all-to-all communication, it is necessary that RTCP is   handled correctly in domain bridging functions.  RTP includes   explicit specification text for translators and mixers, and for SFMs   the required functionality can be derived from that text.  However,   the MCU described inSection 3.8 cannot offer the full functionality   for session participant identification through RTP means.  The   topologies that create independent RTP sessions per endpoint or pair   of endpoints, like a Back-to-Back RTP session, MESH with independent   RTP sessions, and the RTCP terminating MCU (Section 3.9), with an   exception of SFM, do not support RTP-based identification of session   participants.  In all those cases, other non-RTP-based mechanisms   need to be implemented if such knowledge is required or desirable.   When it comes to SFM, the SSRC namespace is not necessarily joint.   Instead, identification will require knowledge of SSRC/CSRC mappings   that the SFM performed; seeSection 3.7.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 41]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 20154.6.  Loop Detection   In complex topologies with multiple interconnected domains, it is   possible to unintentionally form media loops.  RTP and RTCP support   detecting such loops, as long as the SSRC and CSRC identities are   maintained and correctly set in forwarded packets.  Loop detection   will work in ASM, SSM, Mesh with joint RTP session, and relay.  It is   likely that loop detection works for the video-switching MCU,Section 3.8, at least as long as it forwards the RTCP between the   endpoints.  However, the Back-to-Back RTP sessions, Mesh with   independent RTP sessions, and SFMs will definitely break the loop   detection mechanism.4.7.  Consistency between Header Extensions and RTCP   Some RTP header extensions have relevance not only end to end but   also hop to hop, meaning at least some of the middleboxes in the path   are aware of their potential presence through signaling, intercept   and interpret such header extensions, and potentially also rewrite or   generate them.  Modern header extensions generally follow "A General   Mechanism for RTP Header Extensions" [RFC5285], which allows for all   of the above.  Examples for such header extensions include the Media   ID (MID) in [SDP-BUNDLE].  At the time of writing, there was also a   proposal for how to include some SDES into an RTP header extension   [RTCP-SDES].   When such header extensions are in use, any middlebox that   understands it must ensure consistency between the extensions it sees   and/or generates and the RTCP it receives and generates.  For   example, the MID of the bundle is sent in an RTP header extension and   also in an RTCP SDES message.  This apparent redundancy was   introduced as unaware middleboxes may choose to discard RTP header   extensions.  Obviously, inconsistency between the MID sent in the RTP   header extension and in the RTCP SDES message could lead to   undesirable results, and, therefore, consistency is needed.   Middleboxes unaware of the nature of a header extension, as specified   in [RFC5285], are free to forward or discard header extensions.5.  Comparison of Topologies   The table below attempts to summarize the properties of the different   topologies.  The legend to the topology abbreviations are:   Topo-Point-to-Point (PtP), Topo-ASM (ASM), Topo-SSM (SSM), Topo-Trn-   Translator (TT), Topo-Media-Translator (including Transport   Translator) (MT), Topo-Mesh with joint session (MJS), Topo-Mesh with   individual sessions (MIS), Topo-Mixer (Mix), Topo-Asymmetric (ASY),   Topo-Video-switch-MCU (VSM), Topo-RTCP-terminating-MCU (RTM), and   Selective Forwarding Middlebox (SFM).  In the table below, YWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 42]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   indicates Yes or full support, N indicates No support, (Y) indicates   partial support, and N/A indicates not applicable.   Property             PtP  ASM SSM  TT MT MJS MIS Mix ASY VSM RTM SFM   ---------------------------------------------------------------------   All-to-All Media      N    Y  (Y)  Y  Y   Y  (Y) (Y) (Y) (Y) (Y) (Y)   Interoperability      N/A  N   N   Y  Y   Y   Y   Y   Y   N   Y   Y   Per-Domain Adaptation N/A  N   N   N  Y   N   Y   Y   Y   N   Y   Y   Aggregation of Media  N    N   N   N  N   N   N   Y  (Y)  Y   Y   N   Full Session View     Y    Y   Y   Y  Y   Y   N   Y   Y  (Y)  N   Y   Loop Detection        Y    Y   Y   Y  Y   Y   N   Y   Y  (Y)  N   N   Please note that the Media Translator also includes the Transport   Translator functionality.6.  Security Considerations   The use of mixers, SFMs, and translators has impact on security and   the security functions used.  The primary issue is that mixers, SFMs,   and translators modify packets, thus preventing the use of integrity   and source authentication, unless they are trusted devices that take   part in the security context, e.g., the device can send Secure Real-   time Transport Protocol (SRTP) and Secure Real-time Transport Control   Protocol (SRTCP) [RFC3711] packets to endpoints in the Communication   Session.  If encryption is employed, the Media Translator, SFM, and   mixer need to be able to decrypt the media to perform its function.   A Transport Translator may be used without access to the encrypted   payload in cases where it translates parts that are not included in   the encryption and integrity protection, for example, IP address and   UDP port numbers in a media stream using SRTP [RFC3711].  However, in   general, the translator, SFM, or mixer needs to be part of the   signaling context and get the necessary security associations (e.g.,   SRTP crypto contexts) established with its RTP session participants.   Including the mixer, SFM, and translator in the security context   allows the entity, if subverted or misbehaving, to perform a number   of very serious attacks as it has full access.  It can perform all   the attacks possible (seeRFC 3550 and any applicable profiles) as if   the media session were not protected at all, while giving the   impression to the human session participants that they are protected.   Transport Translators have no interactions with cryptography that   work above the transport layer, such as SRTP, since that sort of   translator leaves the RTP header and payload unaltered.  Media   Translators, on the other hand, have strong interactions with   cryptography, since they alter the RTP payload.  A Media Translator   in a session that uses cryptographic protection needs to perform   cryptographic processing to both inbound and outbound packets.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 43]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   A Media Translator may need to use different cryptographic keys for   the inbound and outbound processing.  For SRTP, different keys are   required, because anRFC 3550 Media Translator leaves the SSRC   unchanged during its packet processing, and SRTP key sharing is only   allowed when distinct SSRCs can be used to protect distinct packet   streams.   When the Media Translator uses different keys to process inbound and   outbound packets, each session participant needs to be provided with   the appropriate key, depending on whether they are listening to the   translator or the original source.  (Note that there is an   architectural difference between RTP media translation, in which   participants can rely on the RTP payload type field of a packet to   determine appropriate processing, and cryptographically protected   media translation, in which participants must use information that is   not carried in the packet.)   When using security mechanisms with translators, SFMs, and mixers, it   is possible that the translator, SFM, or mixer could create different   security associations for the different domains they are working in.   Doing so has some implications:   First, it might weaken security if the mixer/translator accepts a   weaker algorithm or key in one domain rather than in another.   Therefore, care should be taken that appropriately strong security   parameters are negotiated in all domains.  In many cases,   "appropriate" translates to "similar" strength.  If a key-management   system does allow the negotiation of security parameters resulting in   a different strength of the security, then this system should notify   the participants in the other domains about this.   Second, the number of crypto contexts (keys and security-related   state) needed (for example, in SRTP [RFC3711]) may vary between   mixers, SFMs, and translators.  A mixer normally needs to represent   only a single SSRC per domain and therefore needs to create only one   security association (SRTP crypto context) per domain.  In contrast,   a translator needs one security association per participant it   translates towards, in the opposite domain.  Considering Figure 11,   the translator needs two security associations towards the multicast   domain: one for B and one for D.  It may be forced to maintain a set   of totally independent security associations between itself and B and   D, respectively, so as to avoid two-time pad occurrences.  These   contexts must also be capable of handling all the sources present in   the other domains.  Hence, using completely independent security   associations (for certain keying mechanisms) may force a translator   to handle N*DM keys and related state, where N is the total number of   SSRCs used over all domains and DM is the total number of domains.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 44]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   The ASM, SSM, Relay, and Mesh (with common RTP session) topologies   each have multiple endpoints that require shared knowledge about the   different crypto contexts for the endpoints.  These multiparty   topologies have special requirements on the key management as well as   the security functions.  Specifically, source authentication in these   environments has special requirements.   There exist a number of different mechanisms to provide keys to the   different participants.  One example is the choice between group keys   and unique keys per SSRC.  The appropriate keying model is impacted   by the topologies one intends to use.  The final security properties   are dependent on both the topologies in use and the keying   mechanisms' properties and need to be considered by the application.   Exactly which mechanisms are used is outside of the scope of this   document.  Please review RTP Security Options [RFC7201] to get a   better understanding of most of the available options.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.              Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time              Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,              July 2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.   [RFC4585]  Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,              "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control              Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)",RFC 4585,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.   [RFC7656]  Lennox, J., Gross, K., Nandakumar, S., Salgueiro, G., and              B. Burman, Ed., "A Taxonomy of Grouping Semantics and              Mechanisms for Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP)              Sources",RFC 7656, November 2015,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7656>.7.2.  Informative References   [MULTI-STREAM-OPT]              Lennox, J., Westerlund, M., Wu, W., and C. Perkins,              "Sending Multiple Media Streams in a Single RTP Session:              Grouping RTCP Reception Statistics and Other Feedback",              Work in Progress,draft-ietf-avtcore-rtp-multi-stream-optimisation-08, October 2015.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 45]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   [RFC1112]  Deering, S., "Host extensions for IP multicasting", STD 5,RFC 1112, DOI 10.17487/RFC1112, August 1989,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1112>.   [RFC3022]  Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network              Address Translator (Traditional NAT)",RFC 3022,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3022, January 2001,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3022>.   [RFC3569]  Bhattacharyya, S., Ed., "An Overview of Source-Specific              Multicast (SSM)",RFC 3569, DOI 10.17487/RFC3569, July              2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3569>.   [RFC3711]  Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.              Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",RFC 3711, DOI 10.17487/RFC3711, March 2004,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3711>.   [RFC4575]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and O. Levin, Ed., "A              Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for              Conference State",RFC 4575, DOI 10.17487/RFC4575, August              2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4575>.   [RFC4607]  Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source-Specific Multicast for              IP",RFC 4607, DOI 10.17487/RFC4607, August 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4607>.   [RFC5104]  Wenger, S., Chandra, U., Westerlund, M., and B. Burman,              "Codec Control Messages in the RTP Audio-Visual Profile              with Feedback (AVPF)",RFC 5104, DOI 10.17487/RFC5104,              February 2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5104>.   [RFC5117]  Westerlund, M. and S. Wenger, "RTP Topologies",RFC 5117,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5117, January 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5117>.   [RFC5285]  Singer, D. and H. Desineni, "A General Mechanism for RTP              Header Extensions",RFC 5285, DOI 10.17487/RFC5285, July              2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5285>.   [RFC5760]  Ott, J., Chesterfield, J., and E. Schooler, "RTP Control              Protocol (RTCP) Extensions for Single-Source Multicast              Sessions with Unicast Feedback",RFC 5760,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5760, February 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5760>.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 46]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015   [RFC5766]  Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and J. Rosenberg, "Traversal Using              Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session              Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5766,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5766, April 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5766>.   [RFC6285]  Ver Steeg, B., Begen, A., Van Caenegem, T., and Z. Vax,              "Unicast-Based Rapid Acquisition of Multicast RTP              Sessions",RFC 6285, DOI 10.17487/RFC6285, June 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6285>.   [RFC6465]  Ivov, E., Ed., Marocco, E., Ed., and J. Lennox, "A Real-              time Transport Protocol (RTP) Header Extension for Mixer-              to-Client Audio Level Indication",RFC 6465,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6465, December 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6465>.   [RFC7201]  Westerlund, M. and C. Perkins, "Options for Securing RTP              Sessions",RFC 7201, DOI 10.17487/RFC7201, April 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7201>.   [RTCP-SDES]              Westerlund, M., Burman, B., Even, R., and M. Zanaty, "RTP              Header Extension for RTCP Source Description Items", Work              in Progress,draft-ietf-avtext-sdes-hdr-ext-02, July 2015.   [SDP-BUNDLE]              Holmberg, C., Alvestrand, H., and C. Jennings,              "Negotiating Media Multiplexing Using the Session              Description Protocol (SDP)", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-mmusic-sdp-bundle-negotiation-23, July 2015.Westerlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 47]

RFC 7667                     RTP Topologies                November 2015Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Mark Baugher, Bo Burman, Ben   Campbell, Umesh Chandra, Alex Eleftheriadis, Roni Even, Ladan Gharai,   Geoff Hunt, Suresh Krishnan, Keith Lantz, Jonathan Lennox, Scarlet   Liuyan, Suhas Nandakumar, Colin Perkins, and Dan Wing for their help   in reviewing and improving this document.Authors' Addresses   Magnus Westerlund   Ericsson   Farogatan 2   SE-164 80 Kista   Sweden   Phone: +46 10 714 82 87   Email: magnus.westerlund@ericsson.com   Stephan Wenger   Vidyo   433 Hackensack Ave   Hackensack, NJ  07601   United States   Email: stewe@stewe.orgWesterlund & Wenger           Informational                    [Page 48]

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