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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:5691
Network Working Group                                    J. van der MeerRequest for Comments: 3640                           Philips ElectronicsCategory: Standards Track                                      D. Mackie                                                          Apple Computer                                                          V. Swaminathan                                                   Sun Microsystems Inc.                                                               D. Singer                                                          Apple Computer                                                              P. Gentric                                                     Philips Electronics                                                           November 2003RTP Payload Format for Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary StreamsStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   The Motion Picture Experts Group (MPEG) Committee (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29   WG11) is a working group in ISO that produced the MPEG-4 standard.   MPEG defines tools to compress content such as audio-visual   information into elementary streams.  This specification defines a   simple, but generic RTP payload format for transport of any non-   multiplexed MPEG-4 elementary stream.Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Carriage of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams Over RTP . . . . . . . .42.1.  Signaling by MIME Format Parameters  . . . . . . . . . .42.2.  MPEG Access Units  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.3.  Concatenation of Access Units  . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.4.  Fragmentation of Access Units  . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.5.  Interleaving . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.6.  Time Stamp Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.7.  State Indication of MPEG-4 System Streams  . . . . . . .82.8.  Random Access Indication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20032.9.  Carriage of Auxiliary Information  . . . . . . . . . . .8       2.10. MIME Format Parameters and Configuring Conditional Field  82.11. Global Structure of Payload Format . . . . . . . . . . .92.12. Modes to Transport MPEG-4 Streams  . . . . . . . . . . .92.13. Alignment withRFC 3016  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.  Payload Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.1.  Usage of RTP Header Fields and RTCP  . . . . . . . . . .103.2.  RTP Payload Structure  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.2.1.  The AU Header Section  . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.2.1.1.  The AU-header  . . . . . . . . . . . .123.2.2.  The Auxiliary Section . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.2.3.  The Access Unit Data Section . . . . . . . . . .153.2.3.1.  Fragmentation. . . . . . . . . . . . .163.2.3.2.  Interleaving . . . . . . . . . . . . .163.2.3.3.  Constraints for Interleaving . . . . .17                     3.2.3.4.  Crucial and Non-Crucial AUs with                               MPEG-4 System Data . . . . . . . . . .203.3.  Usage of this Specification. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.3.1.  General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.3.2.  The Generic Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.3.  Constant Bit Rate CELP . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.4.  Variable Bit Rate CELP . . . . . . . . . . . . .233.3.5.  Low Bit Rate AAC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.3.6.  High Bit Rate AAC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .253.3.7.  Additional Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .264.  IANA Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .274.1.  MIME Type Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .274.2.  Registration of Mode Definitions with IANA . . . . . . .334.3.  Concatenation of Parameters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .334.4.  Usage of SDP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .344.4.1.  The a=fmtp Keyword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .345.  Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .346.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35   APPENDIX: Usage of this Payload Format. . .  . . . . . . . . . . .36Appendix A.  Interleave Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36A.  Examples of Delay Analysis with Interleave. . .  . . . . . . .36A.1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36A.2.  De-interleaving and Error Concealment  . . . . . . . . .36A.3.  Simple Group Interleave  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36A.3.1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36A.3.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size  . . .37A.3.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement . . . . . .37A.4.  More Subtle Group Interleave . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38A.4.1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38A.4.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size. . . .38A.4.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement . . . . . .39A.5.  Continuous Interleave  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39A.5.1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003A.5.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size  . . .40A.5.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement . . . . . .40   References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41   Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41   Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41   Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42   Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .431.  Introduction   The MPEG Committee is Working Group 11 (WG11) in ISO/IEC JTC1 SC29   that specified the MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and, more recently, the MPEG-4   standards [1].  The MPEG-4 standard specifies compression of audio-   visual data into, for example an audio or video elementary stream.   In the MPEG-4 standard, these streams take the form of audio-visual   objects that may be arranged into an audio-visual scene by means of a   scene description.  Each MPEG-4 elementary stream consists of a   sequence of Access Units; examples of an Access Unit (AU) are an   audio frame and a video picture.   This specification defines a general and configurable payload   structure to transport MPEG-4 elementary streams, in particular   MPEG-4 audio (including speech) streams, MPEG-4 video streams and   also MPEG-4 systems streams, such as BIFS (BInary Format for Scenes),   OCI (Object Content Information), OD (Object Descriptor) and IPMP   (Intellectual Property Management and Protection) streams.  The RTP   payload defined in this document is simple to implement and   reasonably efficient.  It allows for optional interleaving of Access   Units (such as audio frames) to increase error resiliency in packet   loss.   Some types of MPEG-4 elementary streams include "crucial" information   whose loss cannot be tolerated.  However, RTP does not provide   reliable transmission, so receipt of that crucial information is not   assured.Section 3.2.3.4 specifies how stream state is conveyed so   that the receiver can detect the loss of crucial information and   cease decoding until the next random access point has been received.   Applications transmitting streams that include crucial information,   such as OD commands, BIFS commands, or programmatic content such as   MPEG-J (Java) and ECMAScript, should include random access points, at   a suitable periodicity depending upon the probability of loss, in   order to reduce stream corruption to an acceptable level.  An example   is the carousel mechanism as defined by MPEG in ISO/IEC 14496-1 [1].   Such applications may also employ additional protocols or services to   reduce the probability of loss.  At the RTP layer, these measures   include payload formats and profiles for retransmission or forward   error correction (such as inRFC 2733 [10]), that must be employedvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   with due consideration to congestion control.  Another solution that   may be appropriate for some applications is to carry RTP over TCP   (such as inRFC 2326 [8], section 10.12).  At the network layer,   resource allocation or preferential service may be available to   reduce the probability of loss.  For a general description of methods   to repair streaming media, seeRFC 2354 [9].   Though the RTP payload format defined in this document is capable of   transporting any MPEG-4 stream, other, more specific, formats may   exist, such asRFC 3016 [12] for transport of MPEG-4 video (ISO/IEC   14496 [1] part 2).   Configuration of the payload is provided to accommodate the   transportation of any MPEG-4 stream at any possible bit rate.   However, for a specific MPEG-4 elementary stream typically only very   few configurations are needed.  So as to allow for the design of   simplified, but dedicated receivers, this specification requires that   specific modes be defined for transport of MPEG-4 streams.  This   document defines modes for MPEG-4 CELP and AAC streams, as well as a   generic mode that can be used to transport any MPEG-4 stream.  In the   future, new RFCs are expected to specify additional modes for the   transportation of MPEG-4 streams.   The RTP payload format defined in this document specifies carriage of   system-related information that is often equivalent to the   information that may be contained in the MPEG-4 Sync Layer (SL) as   defined in MPEG-4 Systems [1].  This document does not prescribe how   to transcode or map information from the SL to fields defined in the   RTP payload format.  Such processing, if any, is left to the   discretion of the application.  However, to anticipate the need for   the transportation of any additional system-related information in   the future, an auxiliary field can be configured that may carry any   such data.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED",  "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inBCP 14,RFC 2119 [4].2.  Carriage of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams over RTP2.1.  Signaling by MIME Format Parameters   With this payload format, a single MPEG-4 elementary stream can be   transported.  Information on the type of MPEG-4 stream carried in the   payload is conveyed by MIME format parameters, as in an SDP [5]   message or by other means (seesection 4).  These MIME format   parameters specify the configuration of the payload.  To allow for   simplified and dedicated receivers, a MIME format parameter isvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   available to signal a specific mode of using this payload.  A mode   definition MAY include the type of MPEG-4 elementary stream, as well   as the applied configuration, so as to avoid the need for receivers   to parse all MIME format parameters.  The applied mode MUST be   signaled.2.2.  MPEG Access Units   For carriage of compressed audio-visual data, MPEG defines Access   Units.  An MPEG Access Unit (AU) is the smallest data entity to which   timing information is attributed.  In the case of audio, an Access   Unit may represent an audio frame and in the case of video, a   picture.  MPEG Access Units are octet-aligned by definition.  If, for   example, an audio frame is not octet-aligned, up to 7 zero-padding   bits MUST be inserted at the end of the frame to achieve the octet-   aligned Access Units, as required by the MPEG-4 specification.   MPEG-4 decoders MUST be able to decode AUs in which such padding is   applied.   Consistent with the MPEG-4 specification, this document requires that   each MPEG-4 part 2 video Access Unit include all the coded data of a   picture, any video stream headers that may precede the coded picture   data, and any video stream stuffing that may follow it, up to but not   including the startcode indicating the start of a new video stream or   the next Access Unit.2.3.  Concatenation of Access Units   Frequently it is possible to carry multiple Access Units in one RTP   packet.  This is particularly useful for audio; for example, when AAC   is used for encoding a stereo signal at 64 kbits/sec, AAC frames   contain on average, approximately 200 octets.  On a LAN with a 1500   octet MTU, this would allow an average of 7 complete AAC frames to be   carried per RTP packet.   Access Units may have a fixed size in octets, but a variable size is   also possible.  To facilitate parsing in the case of multiple   concatenated AUs in one RTP packet, the size of each AU is made known   to the receiver.  When concatenating in the case of a constant AU   size, this size is communicated "out of band" through a MIME format   parameter.  When concatenating in case of variable size AUs, the RTP   payload carries "in band" an AU size field for each contained AU.   In combination with the RTP payload length, the size information   allows the RTP payload to be split by the receiver back into the   individual AUs.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   To simplify the implementation of RTP receivers, it is required that   when multiple AUs are carried in an RTP packet, each AU MUST be   complete, i.e., the number of AUs in an RTP packet MUST be integral.   In addition, an AU MUST NOT be repeated in other RTP packets; hence   repetition of an AU is only possible when using a duplicate RTP   packet.2.4.  Fragmentation of Access Units   MPEG allows for very large Access Units.  Since most IP networks have   significantly smaller MTU sizes, this payload format allows for the   fragmentation of an Access Unit over multiple RTP packets.  Hence,   when an IP packet is lost after IP-level fragmentation, only an AU   fragment may get lost instead of the entire AU.  To simplify the   implementation of RTP receivers, an RTP packet SHALL either carry one   or more complete Access Units or a single fragment of one AU, i.e.,   packets MUST NOT contain fragments of multiple Access Units.2.5.  Interleaving   When an RTP packet carries a contiguous sequence of Access Units, the   loss of such a packet can result in a "decoding gap" for the user.   One method of alleviating this problem is to allow for the Access   Units to be interleaved in the RTP packets.  For a modest cost in   latency and implementation complexity, significant error resiliency   to packet loss can be achieved.   To support optional interleaving of Access Units, this payload format   allows for index information to be sent for each Access Unit.  After   informing receivers about buffer resources to allocate for de-   interleaving, the RTP sender is free to choose the interleaving   pattern without propagating this information a priori to the   receiver(s).  Indeed, the sender could dynamically adjust the   interleaving pattern based on the Access Unit size, error rates, etc.   The RTP receiver does not need to know the interleaving pattern used;   it only needs to extract the index information of the Access Unit and   insert the Access Unit into the appropriate sequence in the decoding   or rendering queue.  An example of interleaving is given below.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   For example, if we assume that an RTP packet contains 3 AUs, and that   the AUs are numbered 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth, and if an   interleaving group length of 9 is chosen, then RTP packet(i) contains   the following AU(n):      RTP packet(0):  AU(0),  AU(3),  AU(6)      RTP packet(1):  AU(1),  AU(4),  AU(7)      RTP packet(2):  AU(2),  AU(5),  AU(8)      RTP packet(3):  AU(9),  AU(12), AU(15)      RTP packet(4):  AU(10), AU(13), AU(16)  Etc.2.6.  Time Stamp Information   The RTP time stamp MUST carry the sampling instant of the first AU   (fragment) in the RTP packet.  When multiple AUs are carried within   an RTP packet, the time stamps of subsequent AUs can be calculated if   the frame period of each AU is known.  For audio and video, this is   possible if the frame rate is constant.  However, in some cases it is   not possible to make such a calculation (for example, for variable   frame rate video, or for MPEG-4 BIFS streams carrying composition   information).  To support such cases, this payload format can be   configured to carry a time stamp in the RTP payload for each   contained Access Unit.  A time stamp MAY be conveyed in the RTP   payload only for non-first AUs in the RTP packet, and SHALL NOT be   conveyed for the first AU (fragment), as the time stamp for the first   AU in the RTP packet is carried by the RTP time stamp.   MPEG-4 defines two types of time stamps: the composition time stamp   (CTS) and the decoding time stamp (DTS).  The CTS represents the   sampling instant of an AU, and hence the CTS is equivalent to the RTP   time stamp.  The DTS may be used in MPEG-4 video streams that use   bi-directional coding, i.e., when pictures are predicted in both   forward and backward direction by using either a reference picture in   the past, or a reference picture in the future.  The DTS cannot be   carried in the RTP header.  In some cases, the DTS can be derived   from the RTP time stamp using frame rate information; this requires   deep parsing in the video stream, which may be considered   objectionable.  If the video frame rate is variable, the required   information may not even be present in the video stream.  For both   reasons, the capability has been defined to optionally carry the DTS   in the RTP payload for each contained Access Unit.   To keep the coding of time stamps efficient, each time stamp   contained in the RTP payload is coded as a difference.  For the CTS,   the offset from the RTP time stamps is provided, and for the DTS, the   offset from the CTS.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20032.7.  State Indication of MPEG-4 System Streams   ISO/IEC 14496-1 defines states for MPEG-4 system streams.  So as to   convey state information when transporting MPEG-4 system streams,   this payload format allows for the optional carriage in the RTP   payload of the stream state for each contained Access Unit.  Stream   states are used to signal "crucial" AUs that carry information whose   loss cannot be tolerated and are also useful when repeating AUs   according to the carousel mechanism defined in ISO/IEC 14496-1.2.8.  Random Access Indication   Random access to the content of MPEG-4 elementary streams may be   possible at some but not all Access Units.  To signal Access Units   where random access is possible, a random access point flag can   optionally be carried in the RTP payload for each contained Access   Unit.  Carriage of random access points is particularly useful for   MPEG-4 system streams in combination with the stream state.2.9.  Carriage of Auxiliary Information   This payload format defines a specific field to carry auxiliary data.   The auxiliary data field is preceded by a field that specifies the   length of the auxiliary data, so as to facilitate the skipping of   data without parsing it.  The coding of the auxiliary data is not   defined in this document; instead, the format, meaning and signaling   of auxiliary information is expected to be specified in one or more   future RFCs.  Auxiliary information MUST NOT be transmitted until its   format, meaning and signaling have been specified and its use has   been signaled.  Receivers that have knowledge of the auxiliary data   MAY decode the auxiliary data, but receivers without knowledge of   such data MUST skip the auxiliary data field.2.10.  MIME Format Parameters and Configuring Conditional Fields   To support the features described in the previous sections, several   fields are defined for carriage in the RTP payload.  However, their   use strongly depends on the type of MPEG-4 elementary stream that is   carried.  Sometimes a specific field is needed with a certain length,   while in other cases such a field is not needed.  To be efficient in   either case, the fields to support these features are configurable by   means of MIME format parameters.  In general, a MIME format parameter   defines the presence and length of the associated field.  A length of   zero indicates absence of the field.  As a consequence, parsing of   the payload requires knowledge of MIME format parameters.  The MIME   format parameters are conveyed to the receiver via SDP [5] messages,   as specified insection 4.4.1, or through other means.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20032.11.  Global Structure of Payload Format   The RTP payload following the RTP header, contains three octet-   aligned data sections, of which the first two MAY be empty, see   Figure 1.         +---------+-----------+-----------+---------------+         | RTP     | AU Header | Auxiliary | Access Unit   |         | Header  | Section   | Section   | Data Section  |         +---------+-----------+-----------+---------------+                   <----------RTP Packet Payload----------->            Figure 1: Data sections within an RTP packet   The first data section is the AU (Access Unit) Header Section, that   contains one or more AU-headers; however, each AU-header MAY be   empty, in which case the entire AU Header Section is empty.  The   second section is the Auxiliary Section, containing auxiliary data;   this section MAY also be configured empty.  The third section is the   Access Unit Data Section, containing either a single fragment of one   Access Unit or one or more complete Access Units.  The Access Unit   Data Section MUST NOT be empty.2.12.  Modes to Transport MPEG-4 Streams   While it is possible to build fully configurable receivers capable of   receiving any MPEG-4 stream, this specification also allows for the   design of simplified, but dedicated receivers, that are for example,   capable of receiving only one type of MPEG-4 stream.  This is   achieved by requiring that specific modes be defined in order to use   this specification.  Each mode may define constraints for transport   of one or more types of MPEG-4 streams, for instance on the payload   configuration.   The applied mode MUST be signaled.  Signaling the mode is   particularly important for receivers that are only capable of   decoding one or more specific modes.  Such receivers need to   determine whether the applied mode is supported, so as to avoid   problems with processing of payloads that are beyond the capabilities   of the receiver.   In this document several modes are defined for the transportation of   MPEG-4 CELP and AAC streams, as well as a generic mode that can be   used for any MPEG-4 stream.  In the future, new RFCs may specify   other modes of using this specification.  However, each mode MUST be   in full compliance with this specification (seesection 3.3.7).van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20032.13.  Alignment withRFC 3016   This payload can be configured as nearly identical to the payload   format defined inRFC 3016 [12] for the MPEG-4 video configurations   recommended inRFC 3016.  Hence, receivers that comply withRFC 3016   can decode such RTP payload, provided that additional packets   containing video decoder configuration (VO, VOL, VOSH) are inserted   in the stream, as required byRFC 3016 [12].  Conversely, receivers   that comply with the specification in this document SHOULD be able to   decode payloads, names and parameters defined for MPEG-4 video inRFC3016 [12].  In this respect, it is strongly RECOMMENDED that the   implementation provide the ability to ignore "in band" video decoder   configuration packets that may be found in streams conforming to theRFC 3016 video payload.   Note the "out of band" availability of the video decoder   configuration is optional inRFC 3016 [12].  To achieve maximum   interoperability with the RTP payload format defined in this   document, applications that useRFC 3016 to transport MPEG-4 video   (part 2) are recommended to make the video decoder configuration   available as a MIME parameter.3.  Payload Format3.1.  Usage of RTP Header Fields and RTCP   Payload Type (PT): The assignment of an RTP payload type for this      packet format is outside the scope of this document; it is      specified by the RTP profile under which this payload format is      used, or signaled dynamically out-of-band (e.g., using SDP).   Marker (M) bit: The M bit is set to 1 to indicate that the RTP packet      payload contains either the final fragment of a fragmented Access      Unit or one or more complete Access Units.   Extension (X) bit: Defined by the RTP profile used.   Sequence Number: The RTP sequence number SHOULD be generated by the      sender in the usual manner with a constant random offset.   Timestamp: Indicates the sampling instant of the first AU contained      in the RTP payload.  This sampling instant is equivalent to the      CTS in the MPEG-4 time domain.  When using SDP, the clock rate of      the RTP time stamp MUST be expressed using the "rtpmap" attribute.      If an MPEG-4 audio stream is transported, the rate SHOULD be set      to the same value as the sampling rate of the audio stream.  If an      MPEG-4 video stream is transported, it is RECOMMENDED that the      rate be set to 90 kHz.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   In all cases, the sender SHALL make sure that RTP time stamps are   identical only if the RTP time stamp refers to fragments of the same   Access Unit.   According toRFC 3550 [2] (section 5.1), it is RECOMMENDED that RTP   time stamps start at a random value for security reasons.  This is   not an issue for synchronization of multiple RTP streams.  However,   when streams from multiple sources are to be synchronized (for   example one stream from local storage, another from an RTP streaming   server), synchronization may become impossible if the receiver only   knows the original time stamp relationships.  In such cases the time   stamp relationship required for obtaining synchronization may be   provided by out of band means.  The format of such information, as   well as methods to convey such information, are beyond the scope of   this specification.   SSRC: set as described inRFC 3550 [2].   CC and CSRC fields are used as described inRFC 3550 [2].   RTCP SHOULD be used as defined inRFC 3550 [2].  Note that time   stamps in RTCP Sender Reports may be used to synchronize multiple   MPEG-4 elementary streams and also to synchronize MPEG-4 streams with   non-MPEG-4 streams, in case the delivery of these streams uses RTP.3.2.  RTP Payload Structure3.2.1.  The AU Header Section   When present, the AU Header Section consists of the AU-headers-length   field, followed by a number of AU-headers, see Figure 2.      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- .. -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |AU-headers-length|AU-header|AU-header|      |AU-header|padding|      |                 |   (1)   |   (2)   |      |   (n)   | bits  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- .. -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   Figure 2: The AU Header Section   The AU-headers are configured using MIME format parameters and MAY be   empty.  If the AU-header is configured empty, the AU-headers-length   field SHALL NOT be present and consequently the AU Header Section is   empty.  If the AU-header is not configured empty, then the AU-   headers-length is a two octet field that specifies the length in bits   of the immediately following AU-headers, excluding the padding bits.   Each AU-header is associated with a single Access Unit (fragment)   contained in the Access Unit Data Section in the same RTP packet.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   For each contained Access Unit (fragment), there is exactly one AU-   header.  Within the AU Header Section, the AU-headers are bit-wise   concatenated in the order in which the Access Units are contained in   the Access Unit Data Section.  Hence, the n-th AU-header refers to   the n-th AU (fragment).  If the concatenated AU-headers consume a   non-integer number of octets, up to 7 zero-padding bits MUST be   inserted at the end in order to achieve octet-alignment of the AU   Header Section.3.2.1.1.  The AU-header   Each AU-header may contain the fields given in Figure 3.  The length   in bits of the fields, with the exception of the CTS-flag, the   DTS-flag and the RAP-flag fields, is defined by MIME format   parameters; seesection 4.1.  If a MIME format parameter has the   default value of zero, then the associated field is not present.  The   number of bits for fields that are present and that represent the   value of a parameter MUST be chosen large enough to correctly encode   the largest value of that parameter during the session.   If present, the fields MUST occur in the mutual order given in Figure   3.  In the general case, a receiver can only discover the size of an   AU-header by parsing it since the presence of the CTS-delta and DTS-   delta fields is signaled by the value of the CTS-flag and DTS-flag,   respectively.      +---------------------------------------+      |     AU-size                           |      +---------------------------------------+      |     AU-Index / AU-Index-delta         |      +---------------------------------------+      |     CTS-flag                          |      +---------------------------------------+      |     CTS-delta                         |      +---------------------------------------+      |     DTS-flag                          |      +---------------------------------------+      |     DTS-delta                         |      +---------------------------------------+      |     RAP-flag                          |      +---------------------------------------+      |     Stream-state                      |      +---------------------------------------+   Figure 3: The fields in the AU-header.  If used, the AU-Index field             only occurs in the first AU-header within an AU Header             Section; in any other AU-header, the AU-Index-delta field             occurs instead.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   AU-size: Indicates the size in octets of the associated Access Unit      in the Access Unit Data Section in the same RTP packet.  When the      AU-size is associated with an AU fragment, the AU size indicates      the size of the entire AU and not the size of the fragment.  In      this case, the size of the fragment is known from the size of the      AU data section.  This can be exploited to determine whether a      packet contains an entire AU or a fragment, which is particularly      useful after losing a packet carrying the last fragment of an AU.   AU-Index: Indicates the serial number of the associated Access Unit      (fragment).  For each (in decoding order) consecutive AU or AU      fragment, the serial number is incremented by 1.  When present,      the AU-Index field occurs in the first AU-header in the AU Header      Section, but MUST NOT occur in any subsequent (non-first) AU-      header in that Section.  To encode the serial number in any such      non-first AU-header, the AU-Index-delta field is used.   AU-Index-delta: The AU-Index-delta field is an unsigned integer that      specifies the serial number of the associated AU as the difference      with respect to the serial number of the previous Access Unit.      Hence, for the n-th (n>1) AU, the serial number is found from:      AU-Index(n) = AU-Index(n-1) + AU-Index-delta(n) + 1      If the AU-Index field is present in the first AU-header in the AU      Header Section, then the AU-Index-delta field MUST be present in      any subsequent (non-first) AU-header.  When the AU-Index-delta is      coded with the value 0, it indicates that the Access Units are      consecutive in decoding order.  An AU-Index-delta value larger      than 0 signals that interleaving is applied.   CTS-flag: Indicates whether the CTS-delta field is present.  A value      of 1 indicates that the field is present, a value of 0 indicates      that it is not present.      The CTS-flag field MUST be present in each AU-header if the length      of the CTS-delta field is signaled to be larger than zero.  In      that case, the CTS-flag field MUST have the value 0 in the first      AU-header and MAY have the value 1 in all non-first AU-headers.      The CTS-flag field SHOULD be 0 for any non-first fragment of an      Access Unit.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   CTS-delta: Encodes the CTS by specifying the value of CTS as a 2's      complement offset (delta) from the time stamp in the RTP header of      this RTP packet.  The CTS MUST use the same clock rate as the time      stamp in the RTP header.   DTS-flag: Indicates whether the DTS-delta field is present.  A value      of 1 indicates that DTS-delta is present, a value of 0 indicates      that it is not present.      The DTS-flag field MUST be present in each AU-header if the length      of the DTS-delta field is signaled to be larger than zero.  The      DTS-flag field MUST have the same value for all fragments of an      Access Unit.   DTS-delta: Specifies the value of the DTS as a 2's complement offset      (delta) from the CTS.  The DTS MUST use the same clock rate as the      time stamp in the RTP header.  The DTS-delta field MUST have the      same value for all fragments of an Access Unit.   RAP-flag: When set to 1, indicates that the associated Access Unit      provides a random access point to the content of the stream.  If      an Access Unit is fragmented, the RAP flag, if present, MUST be      set to 0 for each non-first fragment of the AU.   Stream-state:  Specifies the state of the stream for an AU of an      MPEG-4 system stream; each state is identified by a value of a      modulo counter.  In ISO/IEC 14496-1, MPEG-4 system streams use the      AU_SequenceNumber to signal stream states.  When the stream state      changes, the value of the stream-state MUST be incremented by one.      Note: no relation is required between stream-states of different      streams.3.2.2.  The Auxiliary Section   The Auxiliary Section consists of the auxiliary-data-size field   followed by the auxiliary-data field.  Receivers MAY (but are not   required to) parse the auxiliary-data field; to facilitate skipping   of the auxiliary-data field by receivers, the auxiliary-data-size   field indicates the length in bits of the auxiliary-data.  If the   concatenation of the auxiliary-data-size and the auxiliary-data   fields consume a non-integer number of octets, up to 7 zero padding   bits MUST be inserted immediately after the auxiliary data in order   to achieve octet-alignment.  See Figure 4.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- .. -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      | auxiliary-data-size   | auxiliary-data       |padding bits |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- .. -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+           Figure 4: The fields in the Auxiliary Section   The length in bits of the auxiliary-data-size field is configurable   by a MIME format parameter; seesection 4.1.  The default length of   zero indicates that the entire Auxiliary Section is absent.   auxiliary-data-size: specifies the length in bits of the immediately      following auxiliary-data field;   auxiliary-data: the auxiliary-data field contains data of a format      not defined by this specification.3.2.3.  The Access Unit Data Section   The Access Unit Data Section contains an integer number of complete   Access Units or a single fragment of one AU.  The Access Unit Data   Section is never empty.  If data of more than one Access Unit is   present, then the AUs are concatenated into a contiguous string of   octets.  See Figure 5.  The AUs inside the Access Unit Data Section   MUST be in decoding order, though not necessarily contiguous in the   case of interleaving.   The size and number of Access Units SHOULD be adjusted such that the   resulting RTP packet is not larger than the path MTU.  To handle   larger packets, this payload format relies on lower layers for   fragmentation, which may result in reduced performance.      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |AU(1)                                                          |      +                                                               |      |                                                               |      |               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |               |AU(2)                                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                               |      |                                                               |      |                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               | AU(n)                         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |AU(n) continued|      |-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+        Figure 5: Access Unit Data Section; each AU is octet-aligned.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   When multiple Access Units are carried, the size of each AU MUST be   made available to the receiver.  If the AU size is variable, then the   size of each AU MUST be indicated in the AU-size field of the   corresponding AU-header.  However, if the AU size is constant for a   stream, this mechanism SHOULD NOT be used; instead, the fixed size   SHOULD be signaled by the MIME format parameter "constantSize"; seesection 4.1.   The absence of both AU-size in the AU-header and the constantSize   MIME format parameter indicates the carriage of a single AU   (fragment), i.e., that a single Access Unit (fragment) is transported   in each RTP packet for that stream.3.2.3.1.  Fragmentation   A packet SHALL carry either one or more complete Access Units, or a   single fragment of an Access Unit.  Fragments of the same Access Unit   have the same time stamp but different RTP sequence numbers.  The   marker bit in the RTP header is 1 on the last fragment of an Access   Unit, and 0 on all other fragments.3.2.3.2.  Interleaving   Unless prohibited by the signaled mode, a sender MAY interleave   Access Units.  Receivers that are capable of receiving modes that   support interleaving MUST be able to decode interleaved Access Units.   When a sender interleaves Access Units, it needs to provide   sufficient information to enable a receiver to unambiguously   reconstruct the original order, even in the case of out-of-order   packets, packet loss or duplication.  The information that senders   need to provide depends on whether or not the Access Units have a   constant time duration.  Access Units have a constant time duration,   if:   TS(i+1) - TS(i) = constant       for any i, where:          i indicates the index of the AU in the original order, and          TS(i) denotes the time stamp of AU(i)   The MIME parameter "constantDuration" SHOULD be used to signal that   Access Units have a constant time duration; seesection 4.1.   If the "constantDuration" parameter is present, the receiver can   reconstruct the original Access Unit timing based solely on the RTP   timestamp and AU-Index-delta.  Accordingly, when transmitting Access   Units of constant duration, the AU-Index, if present, MUST be set tovan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   the value 0.  Receivers of constant duration Access Units MUST use   the RTP timestamp to determine the index of the first AU in the RTP   packet.  The AU-Index-delta header and the signaled   "constantDuration" are used to reconstruct AU timing.   If the "constantDuration" parameter is not present, then senders MAY   signal AUs of constant duration by coding the AU-Index with zero in   each RTP packet.  In the absence of the constantDuration parameter   receivers MUST conclude that the AUs have constant duration if the   AU-index is zero in two consecutive RTP packets.   When transmitting Access Units of variable duration, then the   "constantDuration" parameter MUST NOT be present, and the transmitter   MUST use the AU-Index to encode the index information required for   re-ordering, and the receiver MUST use that value to determine the   index of each AU in the RTP packet.  The number of bits of the AU-   Index field MUST be chosen so that valid index information is   provided at the applied interleaving scheme, without causing problems   due to roll-over of the AU-Index field.  In addition, the CTS-delta   MUST be coded in the AU header for each non-first AU in the RTP   packet, so that receivers can place the AUs correctly in time.   When interleaving is applied, a de-interleave buffer is needed in   receivers to put the Access Units in their correct logical   consecutive decoding order.  This requires the computation of the   time stamp for each Access Unit.  In case of a constant time duration   per Access Unit, the time stamp of the i-th access unit in an RTP   packet with RTP time stamp T is calculated as follows:   Timestamp[0] = T   Timestamp[i, i > 0] = T +(Sum(for k=1 to i of (AU-Index-delta[k]                         + 1))) * access-unit-duration   When AU-Index-delta is always 0, this reduces to T + i * (access-   unit-duration).  This is the non-interleaved case, where the frames   are consecutive in decoding order.  Note that the AU-Index field   (present for the first Access Unit) is indeed not needed in this   calculation.3.2.3.3.  Constraints for Interleaving   The size of the packets should be suitably chosen to be appropriate   to both the path MTU and the capacity of the receiver's de-interleave   buffer.  The maximum packet size for a session SHOULD be chosen to   not exceed the path MTU.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   To allow receivers to allocate sufficient resources for de-   interleaving, senders MUST provide the information to receivers as   specified in this section.   AUs enter the decoder in decoding order.  The de-interleave buffer is   used to re-order a stream of interleaved AUs back into decoding   order.  When interleaving is applied, the decoding of "early" AUs has   to be postponed until all AUs that precede it in decoding order are   present.  Therefore, these "early" AUs are stored in the de-   interleave buffer.  As an example in Figure 6, the interleaving   pattern fromsection 2.5 is considered.                             +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Interleaved AUs           | 0| 3| 6| 1| 4| 7| 2| 5| 8| 9|12|..                             +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Storage of "early" AUs         3  3  3  3  3  3                                     6  6  6  6  6  6                                           4  4  4                                              7  7  7                                                            12 12   Figure 6: Storage of "early" AUs in the de-interleave buffer per             interleaved AU.   AU(3) is to be delivered to the decoder after AU(0), AU(1) and AU(2);   of these AUs, AU(2) arrives from the network last and hence AU(3)   needs to be stored until AU(2) is present in the pattern.  Similarly,   AU(6) is to be stored until AU(5) is present, while AU(4) and AU(7)   are to be stored until AU(2) and AU(5) are present, respectively.   Note that the fullness of the de-interleave buffer varies in time.   In Figure 6, the de-interleave buffer contains at most 4, but often   less AUs.   So as to give a rough indication of the resources needed in the   receiver for de-interleaving, the maximum displacement in time of an   AU is defined.  For any AU(j) in the pattern, each AU(i) with i<j   that is not yet present can be determined.  The maximum displacement   in time of an AU is the maximum difference between the time stamp of   an AU in the pattern and the time stamp of the earliest AU that is   not yet present.  In other words, when considering a sequence of   interleaved AUs, then:   Maximum displacement = max{TS(i) - TS(j)}       for any i and any j>i, where:          i and j indicate the index of the AU in the interleaving                pattern, and          TS denotes the time stamp of the AU.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   As an example in Figure 7, the interleaving pattern fromsection 2.5   is considered.  For each AU in the pattern, the index is given of the   earliest of any earlier AUs not yet present.  Hence for each AU(n) in   the interleaving pattern the smallest index k (with k<n) of not yet   delivered AUs is indicated.  A "-" indicates that all previous AUs   are present.  If the AU period is constant, the maximum displacement   equals 5 AU periods, as found for AU(6) and AU(7).                                 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Interleaved AUs               | 0| 3| 6| 1| 4| 7| 2| 5| 8| 9|12|..                                 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Earliest not yet present AU     -  1  1  -  2  2  -  -  -  - 10   Figure 7: For each AU in the interleaving pattern, the earliest of             any earlier AUs not yet present   When interleaving, senders MUST signal the maximum displacement in   time during the session via the MIME format parameter   "maxDisplacement"; seesection 4.1.   An estimate of the size of the de-interleave buffer is found by   multiplying the maximum displacement by the maximum bit rate:   size(de-interleave buffer) = {(maxDisplacement) * Rate(max)} / (RTP                                clock frequency),       where:          Rate(max) is the maximum bit-rate of the transported stream.   Note that receivers can derive Rate(max) from the MIME format   parameters streamType, profile-level-id, and config.   However, this calculation estimates the size of the de-interleave   buffer and the required size may differ from the calculated value.   If this calculation under-estimates the size of the   de-interleave buffer, then senders, when interleaving, MUST signal a   size of the de-interleave buffer via the MIME format parameter   "de-interleaveBufferSize"; seesection 4.1.  If the calculation   over-estimates the size of the de-interleave buffer, then senders,   when interleaving, MAY signal a size of the de-interleave buffer via   the MIME format parameter "de-interleaveBufferSize".van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   The signaled size of the de-interleave buffer MUST be large enough to   contain all "early" AUs at any point in time during the session.   That is:   minimum de-interleave buffer size = max [sum {if TS(i) > TS(j) then                                       AU-size(i) else 0}]       for any j and any i<j, where:          i and j indicate the index of an AU in the interleaving                pattern,          TS(i) denotes the time stamp of AU(i), and          AU-size(i) denotes the size of AU(i) in number of octets.   If the "de-interleaveBufferSize" parameter is present, then the   applied buffer for de-interleaving in a receiver MUST have a size   that is at least equal to the signaled size of the de-interleave   buffer, else a size that is at least equal to the calculated size of   the de-interleave buffer.   No matter what interleaving scheme is used, the scheme must be   analyzed to calculate the applicable maxDisplacement value, as well   as the required size of the de-interleave buffer.  Senders SHOULD   signal values that are not larger than the strictly required values;   if larger values are signaled, the receiver will buffer excessively.   Note that for low bit-rate material, the applied interleaving may   make packets shorter than the MTU size.3.2.3.4.  Crucial and Non-Crucial AUs with MPEG-4 System Data   Some Access Units with MPEG-4 system data, called "crucial" AUs,   carry information whose loss cannot be tolerated, either in the   presentation or in the decoder.  At each crucial AU in an MPEG-4   system stream, the stream state changes.  The stream-state MAY remain   constant at non-crucial AUs.  In ISO/IEC 14496-1, MPEG-4 system   streams use the AU_SequenceNumber to signal stream states.   Example: Given three AUs, AU1 = "Insertion of node X", AU2 = "Set   position of node X", AU3 = "Set position of node X".  AU1 is crucial,   since if it is lost, AU2 cannot be executed.  However, AU2 is not   crucial, since AU3 can be executed even if AU2 is lost.   When a crucial AU is (possibly) lost, the stream is corrupted.  For   example, when an AU is lost and the stream state has changed at the   next received AU, then it is possible that the lost AU was crucial.   Once corrupted, the stream remains corrupted until the next random   access point.  Note that loss of non-crucial AUs does not corrupt the   stream.  When a decoder starts receiving a stream, the decoder MUSTvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   consider the stream corrupted until an AU is received that provides a   random access point.   An AU that provides a random access point, as signaled by the RAP-   flag, may or may not be crucial.  Non-crucial RAP AUs provide a   "repeated" random access point for use by decoders that recently   joined the stream or that need to re-start decoding after a stream   corruption.  Non-crucial RAP AUs MUST include all updates since the   last crucial RAP AU.   Upon receiving AUs, decoders are to react as follows:   a) if the RAP-flag is set to 1 and the stream-state changes, then the      AU is a crucial RAP AU, and the AU MUST be decoded.   b) if the RAP-flag is set to 1 and the stream state does not change,      then the AU is a non-crucial RAP AU, and the receiver SHOULD      decode it if the stream is corrupted.  Otherwise, the decoder MUST      ignore the AU.   c) if the RAP-flag is set to 0, then the AU MUST be decoded, unless      the stream is corrupted, in which case the AU MUST be ignored.3.3.  Usage of this Specification3.3.1.  General   Usage of this specification requires definition of a mode.  A mode   defines how to use this specification, as deemed appropriate.   Senders MUST signal the applied mode via the MIME format parameter   "mode", as specified insection 4.1.  This specification defines a   generic mode that can be used for any MPEG-4 stream, as well as   specific modes for the transportation of MPEG-4 CELP and MPEG-4 AAC   streams, defined in ISO/IEC 14496-3 [1].   When use of this payload format is signaled using SDP [5], an   "rtpmap" attribute is part of that signaling.  The same requirements   apply for the rtpmap attribute in any mode compliant to this   specification.  The general form of an rtpmap attribute is:   a=rtpmap:<payload type> <encoding name>/<clock rate>[/<encoding             parameters>]   For audio streams, <encoding parameters> specifies the number of   audio channels: 2 for stereo material (seeRFC 2327 [5]) and 1 for   mono.  Provided no additional parameters are needed, this parameter   may be omitted for mono material, hence its default value is 1.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20033.3.2.  The Generic Mode   The generic mode can be used for any MPEG-4 stream.  In this mode, no   mode-specific constraints are applied; hence, in the generic mode,   the full flexibility of this specification can be exploited.  The   generic mode is signaled by mode=generic.   An example is given below for the transportation of a BIFS-Anim   stream.  In this example carriage of multiple BIFS-Anim Access Units   is allowed in one RTP packet.  The AU-header contains the AU-size   field, the CTS-flag and, if the CTS flag is set to 1, the CTS-delta   field.  The number of bits of the AU-size and the CTS-delta fields   are 10 and 16, respectively.  The AU-header also contains the RAP-   flag and the Stream-state of 4 bits.  This results in an AU-header   with a total size of two or four octets per BIFS-Anim AU.  The RTP   time stamp uses a 1 kHz clock.  Note that the media type name is   video, because the BIFS-Anim stream is part of an audio-visual   presentation.  For conventions on media type names, seesection 4.1.   In detail:   m=video 49230 RTP/AVP 96   a=rtpmap:96 mpeg4-generic/1000   a=fmtp:96 streamtype=3; profile-level-id=1807; mode=generic;   objectType=2; config=0842237F24001FB400094002C0; sizeLength=10;   CTSDeltaLength=16; randomAccessIndication=1;   streamStateIndication=4   Note: The a=fmtp line has been wrapped to fit the page, it comprises   a single line in the SDP file.   The hexadecimal value of the "config" parameter is the   BIFSConfiguration() as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-1.  The   BIFSConfiguration() specifies that the BIFS stream is a BIFS-Anim   stream.  For the description of MIME parameters, seesection 4.1.3.3.3.  Constant Bit-rate CELP   This mode is signaled by mode=CELP-cbr.  In this mode, one or more   complete CELP frames of fixed size can be transported in one RTP   packet; interleaving MUST NOT be used with this mode.  The RTP   payload consists of one or more concatenated CELP frames, each of   equal size.  CELP frames MUST NOT be fragmented when using this mode.   Both the AU Header Section and the Auxiliary Section MUST be empty.   The MIME format parameter constantSize MUST be provided to specify   the length of each CELP frame.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   For example:   m=audio 49230 RTP/AVP 96   a=rtpmap:96 mpeg4-generic/16000/1   a=fmtp:96 streamtype=5; profile-level-id=14; mode=CELP-cbr; config=   440E00; constantSize=27; constantDuration=240   Note: The a=fmtp line has been wrapped to fit the page, it comprises   a single line in the SDP file.   The hexadecimal value of the "config" parameter is the   AudioSpecificConfig()as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-3.   AudioSpecificConfig() specifies a mono CELP stream with a sampling   rate of 16 kHz at a fixed bitrate of 14.4 kb/s and 6 sub-frames per   CELP frame.  For the description of MIME parameters, seesection 4.1.3.3.4.  Variable Bit-rate CELP   This mode is signaled by mode=CELP-vbr.  With this mode, one or more   complete CELP frames of variable size can be transported in one RTP   packet with OPTIONAL interleaving.  In this mode, the largest   possible value for AU-size is greater than the maximum CELP frame   size. Because CELP frames are very small, there is no support for   fragmentation of CELP frames.  Hence, CELP frames MUST NOT be   fragmented when using this mode.   In this mode, the RTP payload consists of the AU Header Section,   followed by one or more concatenated CELP frames.  The Auxiliary   Section MUST be empty.  For each CELP frame contained in the payload,   there MUST be a one octet AU-header in the AU Header Section to   provide:   a) the size of each CELP frame in the payload and   b) index information for computing the sequence (and hence timing) of      each CELP frame.   Transport of CELP frames requires that the AU-size field be coded   with 6 bits.  Therefore, in this mode 6 bits are allocated to the   AU-size field, and 2 bits to the AU-Index(-delta) field.  Each AU-   Index field MUST be coded with the value 0.  In the AU Header   Section, the concatenated AU-headers are preceded by the 16-bit AU-   headers-length field, as specified insection 3.2.1.   In addition to the required MIME format parameters, the following   parameters MUST be present: sizeLength, indexLength, and   indexDeltaLength.  CELP frames always have a fixed duration per   Access Unit; when interleaving in this mode, this specific durationvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   MUST be signaled by the MIME format parameter constantDuration.  In   addition, the parameter maxDisplacement MUST be present when   interleaving.   For example:   m=audio 49230 RTP/AVP 96   a=rtpmap:96 mpeg4-generic/16000/1   a=fmtp:96 streamtype=5; profile-level-id=14; mode=CELP-vbr; config=   440F20; sizeLength=6; indexLength=2; indexDeltaLength=2;   constantDuration=160; maxDisplacement=5   Note: The a=fmtp line has been wrapped to fit the page; it comprises   a single line in the SDP file.   The hexadecimal value of the "config" parameter is the   AudioSpecificConfig() as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-3.   AudioSpecificConfig() specifies a mono CELP stream with a sampling   rate of 16 kHz, at a bitrate that varies between 13.9 and 16.2 kb/s   and with 4 sub-frames per CELP frame.  For the description of MIME   parameters, seesection 4.1.3.3.5.  Low Bit-rate AAC   This mode is signaled by mode=AAC-lbr.  This mode supports the   transportation of one or more complete AAC frames of variable size.   In this mode, the AAC frames are allowed to be interleaved and hence   receivers MUST support de-interleaving.  The maximum size of an AAC   frame in this mode is 63 octets.  AAC frames MUST NOT be fragmented   when using this mode.  Hence, when using this mode, encoders MUST   ensure that the size of each AAC frame is at most 63 octets.   The payload configuration in this mode is the same as in the variable   bit-rate CELP mode as defined in 3.3.4.  The RTP payload consists of   the AU Header Section, followed by concatenated AAC frames.  The   Auxiliary Section MUST be empty.  For each AAC frame contained in the   payload, the one octet AU-header MUST provide:   a) the size of each AAC frame in the payload and   b) index information for computing the sequence (and hence timing) of      each AAC frame.   In the AU-header Section, the concatenated AU-headers MUST be   preceded by the 16-bit AU-headers-length field, as specified insection 3.2.1.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   In addition to the required MIME format parameters, the following   parameters MUST be present: sizeLength, indexLength, and   indexDeltaLength.  AAC frames always have a fixed duration per Access   Unit; when interleaving in this mode, this specific duration MUST be   signaled by the MIME format parameter constantDuration.  In addition,   the parameter maxDisplacement MUST be present when interleaving.   For example:   m=audio 49230 RTP/AVP 96   a=rtpmap:96 mpeg4-generic/22050/1   a=fmtp:96 streamtype=5; profile-level-id=14; mode=AAC-lbr; config=   1388; sizeLength=6; indexLength=2; indexDeltaLength=2;   constantDuration=1024; maxDisplacement=5   Note: The a=fmtp line has been wrapped to fit the page; it comprises   a single line in the SDP file.   The hexadecimal value of the "config" parameter is the   AudioSpecificConfig(), as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-3.   AudioSpecificConfig() specifies a mono AAC stream with a sampling   rate of 22.05 kHz.  For the description of MIME parameters, seesection 4.1.3.3.6.  High Bit-rate AAC   This mode is signaled by mode=AAC-hbr.  This mode supports the   transportation of variable size AAC frames.  In one RTP packet,   either one or more complete AAC frames are carried, or a single   fragment of an AAC frame is carried.  In this mode, the AAC frames   are allowed to be interleaved and hence receivers MUST support de-   interleaving.  The maximum size of an AAC frame in this mode is 8191   octets.   In this mode, the RTP payload consists of the AU Header Section,   followed by either one AAC frame, several concatenated AAC frames or   one fragmented AAC frame.  The Auxiliary Section MUST be empty.  For   each AAC frame contained in the payload, there MUST be an AU-header   in the AU Header Section to provide:   a) the size of each AAC frame in the payload and   b) index information for computing the sequence (and hence timing) of      each AAC frame.   To code the maximum size of an AAC frame requires 13 bits.   Therefore, in this configuration 13 bits are allocated to the AU-   size, and 3 bits to the AU-Index(-delta) field.  Thus, each AU-headervan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   has a size of 2 octets.  Each AU-Index field MUST be coded with the   value 0.  In the AU Header Section, the concatenated AU-headers MUST   be preceded by the 16-bit AU-headers-length field, as specified insection 3.2.1.   In addition to the required MIME format parameters, the following   parameters MUST be present: sizeLength, indexLength, and   indexDeltaLength.  AAC frames always have a fixed duration per Access   Unit; when interleaving in this mode, this specific duration MUST be   signaled by the MIME format parameter constantDuration.  In addition,   the parameter maxDisplacement MUST be present when interleaving.   For example:   m=audio 49230 RTP/AVP 96   a=rtpmap:96 mpeg4-generic/48000/6   a=fmtp:96 streamtype=5; profile-level-id=16; mode=AAC-hbr;   config=11B0; sizeLength=13; indexLength=3;   indexDeltaLength=3; constantDuration=1024   Note: The a=fmtp line has been wrapped to fit the page; it comprises   a single line in the SDP file.   The hexadecimal value of the "config" parameter is the   AudioSpecificConfig(), as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-3.   AudioSpecificConfig() specifies a 5.1 channel AAC stream with a   sampling rate of 48 kHz.  For the description of MIME parameters, seesection 4.1.3.3.7.  Additional Modes   This specification only defines the modes specified in sections3.3.2   through 3.3.6.  Additional modes are expected to be defined in future   RFCs.  Each additional mode MUST be in full compliance with this   specification.   Any new mode MUST be defined such that an implementation including   all the features of this specification can decode the payload format   corresponding to this new mode.  For this reason, a mode MUST NOT   specify new default values for MIME parameters.  In particular, MIME   parameters that configure the RTP payload MUST be present (unless   they have the default value), even if its presence is redundant in   case the mode assigns a fixed value to a parameter.  A mode may   additionally define that some MIME parameters are required instead of   optional, that some MIME parameters have fixed values (or ranges),   and that there are rules restricting its usage.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20034.  IANA Considerations   This section describes the MIME types and names associated with this   payload format.Section 4.1 registers the MIME types, as perRFC2048 [3].   This format may require additional information about the mapping to   be made available to the receiver.  This is done using parameters   described in the next section.4.1.  MIME Type Registration   MIME media type name: "video" or "audio" or "application"   "video" MUST be used for MPEG-4 Visual streams (ISO/IEC 14496-2) or   MPEG-4 Systems streams (ISO/IEC 14496-1) that convey information   needed for an audio/visual presentation.   "audio" MUST be used for MPEG-4 Audio streams (ISO/IEC 14496-3) or   MPEG-4 Systems streams that convey information needed for an audio   only presentation.   "application" MUST be used for MPEG-4 Systems streams (ISO/IEC   14496-1) that serve purposes other than audio/visual presentation,   e.g., in some cases when MPEG-J (Java) streams are transmitted.   Depending on the required payload configuration, MIME format   parameters may need to be available to the receiver.  This is done   using the parameters described in the next section.  There are   required and optional parameters.   Optional parameters are of two types: general parameters and   configuration parameters.  The configuration parameters are used to   configure the fields in the AU Header section and in the auxiliary   section.  The absence of any configuration parameter is equivalent to   the associated field set to its default value, which is always zero.   The absence of all configuration parameters results in a default   "basic" configuration with an empty AU-header section and an empty   auxiliary section in each RTP packet.   MIME subtype name: mpeg4-generic   Required parameters:   MIME format parameters are not case dependent; for clarity however,   both upper and lower case are used in the names of the parameters   described in this specification.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      streamType:      The integer value that indicates the type of MPEG-4 stream that is      carried; its coding corresponds to the values of the streamType,      as defined in Table 9 (streamType Values) in ISO/IEC 14496-1.      profile-level-id:      A decimal representation of the MPEG-4 Profile Level indication.      This parameter MUST be used in the capability exchange or session      set-up procedure to indicate the MPEG-4 Profile and Level      combination of which the relevant MPEG-4 media codec is capable.      For MPEG-4 Audio streams, this parameter is the decimal value from         Table 5 (audioProfileLevelIndication Values) in ISO/IEC 14496-         1, indicating which MPEG-4 Audio tool subsets are required to         decode the audio stream.      For MPEG-4 Visual streams, this parameter is the decimal value         from Table G-1 (FLC table for profile and level indication) of         ISO/IEC 14496-2 [1], indicating which MPEG-4 Visual tool         subsets are required to decode the visual stream.      For BIFS streams, this parameter is the decimal value obtained         from (SPLI + 256*GPLI), where:         SPLI is the decimal value from Table 4 in ISO/IEC 14496-1 with                  the applied sceneProfileLevelIndication;         GPLI is the decimal value from Table 7 in ISO/IEC 14496-1 with            the applied graphicsProfileLevelIndication.      For MPEG-J streams, this parameter is the decimal value from table         13 (MPEGJProfileLevelIndication) in ISO/IEC 14496-1, indicating         the profile and level of the MPEG-J stream.      For OD streams, this parameter is the decimal value from table 3         (ODProfileLevelIndication) in ISO/IEC 14496-1, indicating the         profile and level of the OD stream.      For IPMP streams, this parameter has either the decimal value 0,         indicating an unspecified profile and level, or a value larger         than zero, indicating an MPEG-4 IPMP profile and level as         defined in a future MPEG-4 specification.      For Clock Reference streams and Object Content Info streams, this         parameter has the decimal value zero, indicating that profile         and level information is conveyed through the OD framework.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      config:      A hexadecimal representation of an octet string that expresses the      media payload configuration.  Configuration data is mapped onto      the hexadecimal octet string in an MSB-first basis.  The first bit      of the configuration data SHALL be located at the MSB of the first      octet.  In the last octet, if necessary to achieve octet-      alignment, up to 7 zero-valued padding bits shall follow the      configuration data.      For MPEG-4 Audio streams, config is the audio object type specific         decoder configuration data AudioSpecificConfig(), as defined in         ISO/IEC 14496-3.  For Structured Audio, the         AudioSpecificConfig() may be conveyed by other means, not         defined by this specification.  If the AudioSpecificConfig() is         conveyed by other means for Structured Audio, then the config         MUST be a quoted empty hexadecimal octet string, as follows:         config="".         Note that a future mode of using this RTP payload format for         Structured Audio may define such other means.      For MPEG-4 Visual streams, config is the MPEG-4 Visual         configuration information as defined in subclause 6.2.1, Start         codes of ISO/IEC 14496-2.  The configuration information         indicated by this parameter SHALL be the same as the         configuration information in the corresponding MPEG-4 Visual         stream, except for first-half-vbv-occupancy and latter-half-         vbv-occupancy, if it exists, which may vary in the repeated         configuration information inside an MPEG-4 Visual stream (See         6.2.1 Start codes of ISO/IEC 14496-2).      For BIFS streams, this is the BIFSConfig() information as defined         in ISO/IEC 14496-1.  Version 1 of BIFSConfig is defined insection 9.3.5.2, and version 2 is defined insection 9.3.5.3.         The MIME format parameter objectType signals the version of         BIFSConfig.      For IPMP streams, this is either a quoted empty hexadecimal octet         string, indicating the absence of any decoder configuration         information (config=""), or the IPMPConfiguration() as will be         defined in a future MPEG-4 IPMP specification.      For Object Content Info (OCI) streams, this is the         OCIDecoderConfiguration() information of the OCI stream, as         defined insection 8.4.2.4 in ISO/IEC 14496-1.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      For OD streams, Clock Reference streams and MPEG-J streams, this         is a quoted empty hexadecimal octet string (config=""), as no         information on the decoder configuration is required.      mode:      The mode in which this specification is used.  The following modes      can be signaled:      mode=generic,      mode=CELP-cbr,      mode=CELP-vbr,      mode=AAC-lbr and      mode=AAC-hbr.      Other modes are expected to be defined in future RFCs.  See alsosection 3.3.7 and 4.2 ofRFC 3640.   Optional general parameters:      objectType:      The decimal value from Table 8 in ISO/IEC 14496-1, indicating the      value of the objectTypeIndication of the transported stream.  For      BIFS streams, this parameter MUST be present to signal the version      of BIFSConfiguration().  Note that objectTypeIndication may signal      a non-MPEG-4 stream and that the RTP payload format defined in      this document may not be suitable for carrying a stream that is      not defined by MPEG-4.  The objectType parameter SHOULD NOT be set      to a value that signals a stream that cannot be carried by this      payload format.      constantSize:      The constant size in octets of each Access Unit for this stream.      The constantSize and the sizeLength parameters MUST NOT be      simultaneously present.      constantDuration:      The constant duration of each Access Unit for this stream,      measured with the same units as the RTP time stamp.      maxDisplacement:      The decimal representation of the maximum displacement in time of      an interleaved AU, as defined insection 3.2.3.3, expressed in      units of the RTP time stamp clock.      This parameter MUST be present when interleaving is applied.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      de-interleaveBufferSize:      The decimal representation in number of octets of the size of the      de-interleave buffer, described insection 3.2.3.3.  When      interleaving, this parameter MUST be present if the calculation of      the de-interleave buffer size given in 3.2.3.3 and based on      maxDisplacement and rate(max) under-estimates the size of the      de-interleave buffer.  If this calculation does not under-estimate      the size of the de-interleave buffer, then the      de-interleaveBufferSize parameter SHOULD NOT be present.   Optional configuration parameters:      sizeLength:      The number of bits on which the AU-size field is encoded in the      AU-header.  The sizeLength and the constantSize parameters MUST      NOT be simultaneously present.      indexLength:      The number of bits on which the AU-Index is encoded in the first      AU-header.  The default value of zero indicates the absence of the      AU-Index field in each first AU-header.      indexDeltaLength:      The number of bits on which the AU-Index-delta field is encoded in      any non-first AU-header.  The default value of zero indicates the      absence of the AU-Index-delta field in each non-first AU-header.      CTSDeltaLength:      The number of bits on which the CTS-delta field is encoded in the      AU-header.      DTSDeltaLength:      The number of bits on which the DTS-delta field is encoded in the      AU-header.      randomAccessIndication:      A decimal value of zero or one, indicating whether the RAP-flag is      present in the AU-header.  The decimal value of one indicates      presence of the RAP-flag, the default value zero indicates its      absence.      streamStateIndication:      The number of bits on which the Stream-state field is encoded in      the AU-header.  This parameter MAY be present when transporting      MPEG-4 system streams, and SHALL NOT be present for MPEG-4 audio      and MPEG-4 video streams.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003      auxiliaryDataSizeLength:      The number of bits that is used to encode the auxiliary-data-size      field.   Applications MAY use more parameters, in addition to those defined   above.  Each additional parameter MUST be registered with IANA to   ensure that there is not a clash of names.  Each additional parameter   MUST be accompanied by a specification in the form of an RFC, MPEG   standard, or other permanent and readily available reference (the   "Specification Required" policy defined inRFC 2434 [6]).  Receivers   MUST tolerate the presence of such additional parameters, but these   parameters SHALL NOT impact the decoding of receivers that comply   with this specification.   Encoding considerations:   This MIME subtype is defined for RTP transport only.  System   bitstreams MUST be generated according to MPEG-4 Systems   specifications (ISO/IEC 14496-1).  Video bitstreams MUST be generated   according to MPEG-4 Visual specifications (ISO/IEC 14496-2).  Audio   bitstreams MUST be generated according to MPEG-4 Audio specifications   (ISO/IEC 14496-3).  The RTP packets MUST be packetized according to   the RTP payload format defined inRFC 3640.   Security considerations:   As defined insection 5 of RFC 3640.   Interoperability considerations:   MPEG-4 provides a large and rich set of tools for the coding of   visual objects.  For effective implementation of the standard,   subsets of the MPEG-4 tool sets have been provided for use in   specific applications.  These subsets, called 'Profiles', limit the   size of the tool set a decoder is required to implement.  In order to   restrict computational complexity, one or more 'Levels' are set for   each Profile.  A Profile@Level combination allows:       .  a codec builder to implement only the subset of the standard          he needs, while maintaining interworking with other MPEG-4          devices that implement the same combination, and       .  checking whether MPEG-4 devices comply with the standard          ('conformance testing').   A stream SHALL be compliant with the MPEG-4 Profile@Level specified   by the parameter "profile-level-id".  Interoperability between a   sender and a receiver is achieved by specifying the parameter   "profile-level-id" in MIME content.  In the capability   exchange/announcement procedure, this parameter may mutually be set   to the same value.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   Published specification:   The specifications for MPEG-4 streams are presented in ISO/IEC   14496-1, 14496-2, and 14496-3.  The RTP payload format is described   inRFC 3640.   Applications which use this media type:   Multimedia streaming and conferencing tools.   Additional information: none   Magic number(s): none   File extension(s):   None.  A file format with the extension .mp4 has been defined for   MPEG-4 content but is not directly correlated with this MIME type for   which the sole purpose is RTP transport.   Macintosh File Type Code(s): none   Person & email address to contact for further information:   Authors ofRFC 3640, IETF Audio/Video Transport working group.   Intended usage: COMMON   Author/Change controller:   Authors ofRFC 3640, IETF Audio/Video Transport working group.4.2.  Registration of Mode Definitions with IANA   This specification can be used in a number of modes.  The mode of   operation is signaled using the "mode" MIME parameter, with the   initial set of values specified insection 4.1.  New modes may be   defined at any time, as described insection 3.3.7.  These modes MUST   be registered with IANA, to ensure that there is not a clash of   names.   A new mode registration MUST be accompanied by a specification in the   form of an RFC, MPEG standard, or other permanent and readily   available reference (the "Specification Required" policy defined inRFC 2434 [6]).4.3.  Concatenation of Parameters   Multiple parameters SHOULD be expressed as a MIME media type string,   in the form of a semicolon-separated list of parameter=value pairs   (for parameter usage examples see sections3.3.2 up to 3.3.6).van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 20034.4.  Usage of SDP4.4.1.  The a=fmtp Keyword   It is assumed that one typical way to transport the above-described   parameters associated with this payload format is via an SDP message   [5] for example transported to the client in reply to an RTSP   DESCRIBE [8] or via SAP [11].  In that case, the (a=fmtp) keyword   MUST be used as described inRFC 2327 [5], section 6, the syntax then   being:   a=fmtp:<format> <parameter name>=<value>[; <parameter name>=<value>]5.  Security Considerations   RTP packets using the payload format defined in this specification   are subject to the security considerations discussed in the RTP   specification [2].  This implies that confidentiality of the media   streams is achieved by encryption.  Because the data compression used   with this payload format is applied end-to-end, encryption may be   performed on the compressed data so there is no conflict between the   two operations.  The packet processing complexity of this payload   type (i.e., excluding media data processing) does not exhibit any   significant non-uniformity in the receiver side to cause a denial-   of-service threat.   However, it is possible to inject non-compliant MPEG streams (Audio,   Video, and Systems) so that the receiver/decoder's buffers are   overloaded, which might compromise the functionality of the receiver   or even crash it.  This is especially true for end-to-end systems   like MPEG, where the buffer models are precisely defined.   MPEG-4 Systems support stream types including commands that are   executed on the terminal, like OD commands, BIFS commands, etc. and   programmatic content like MPEG-J (Java(TM) Byte Code) and MPEG-4   scripts.  It is possible to use one or more of the above in a manner   non-compliant to MPEG to crash the receiver or make it temporarily   unavailable.  Senders that transport MPEG-4 content SHOULD ensure   that such content is MPEG compliant, as defined in the compliance   part of IEC/ISO 14496 [1].  Receivers that support MPEG-4 content   should prevent malfunctioning of the receiver in case of non MPEG   compliant content.   Authentication mechanisms can be used to validate the sender and the   data to prevent security problems due to non-compliant malignant   MPEG-4 streams.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   In ISO/IEC 14496-1, a security model is defined for MPEG-4 Systems   streams carrying MPEG-J access units that comprise Java(TM) classes   and objects.  MPEG-J defines a set of Java APIs and a secure   execution model.  MPEG-J content can call this set of APIs and   Java(TM) methods from a set of Java packages supported in the   receiver within the defined security model.  According to this   security model, downloaded byte code is forbidden to load libraries,   define native methods, start programs, read or write files, or read   system properties. Receivers can implement intelligent filters to   validate the buffer requirements or parametric (OD, BIFS, etc.) or   programmatic (MPEG-J, MPEG-4 scripts) commands in the streams.   However, this can increase the complexity significantly.   Implementors of MPEG-4 streaming over RTP who also implement MPEG-4   scripts (subset of ECMAScript) MUST ensure that the action of such   scripts is limited solely to the domain of the single presentation in   which they reside (thus disallowing session to session communication,   access to local resources and storage, etc).  Though loading static   network-located resources (such as media) into the presentation   should be permitted, network access by scripts MUST be restricted to   such a (media) download.6.  Acknowledgements   This document evolved intoRFC 3640 after several revisions.  Thanks   to contributions from people in the ISMA forum, the IETF AVT Working   Group and the 4-on-IP ad-hoc group within MPEG.  The authors wish to   thank all people involved, particularly Andrea Basso, Stephen Casner,   M. Reha Civanlar, Carsten Herpel, John Lazaro, Zvi Lifshitz, Young-   kwon Lim, Alex MacAulay, Bill May, Colin Perkins, Dorairaj V and   Stephan Wenger for their valuable comments and support.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003APPENDIX: Usage of this Payload FormatAppendix A.  Interleave AnalysisA.  Examples of Delay Analysis with InterleaveA.1.  Introduction   Interleaving issues are discussed in this appendix.  Some general   notes are provided on de-interleaving and error concealment, while a   number of interleaving patterns are examined, in particular for   determining the size of the de-interleave buffer and the maximum   displacement of access units in time.  In these examples, the maximum   displacement is cited in terms of an access unit count, for ease of   reading.  In actual streams, it is signaled in units of the RTP time   stamp clock.A.2.  De-interleaving and Error Concealment   This appendix does not describe any details on de-interleaving and   error concealment, as the control of the AU decoding and error   concealment process has little to do with interleaving.  If the next   AU to be decoded is present and there is sufficient storage available   for the decoded AU, then decode it immediately.  If not, wait.  When   the decoding deadline is reached (i.e., the time when decoding must   begin in order to be completed by the time the AU is to be   presented), or if the decoder is some hardware that presents a   constant delay between initiation of decoding of an AU and   presentation of that AU, then decoding must begin at that deadline   time.   If the next AU to be decoded is not present when the decoding   deadline is reached, then that AU is lost so the receiver must take   whatever error concealment measures are deemed appropriate.  The   play-out delay may need to be adjusted at that point (especially if   other AUs have also missed their deadline recently).  Or, if it was a   momentary delay, and maintaining the latency is important, then the   receiver should minimize the glitch and continue processing with the   next AU.A.3.  Simple Group InterleaveA.3.1.  Introduction   An example of regular interleave is when packets are formed into   groups.  If the 'stride' of the interleave (the distance between   interleaved AUs) is N, packet 0 could contain AU(0), AU(N), AU(2N),   and so on; packet 1 could contain AU(1), AU(1+N), AU(1+2N), and sovan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   on.  If there are M access units in a packet, then there are M*N   access units in the group.   An example with N=M=3 follows; note that this is the same example as   given insection 2.5 and that a fixed time duration per Access Unit   is assumed:   Packet   Time stamp   Carried AUs      AU-Index, AU-Index-delta   P(0)     T[0]         0, 3, 6          0, 2, 2   P(1)     T[1]         1, 4, 7          0, 2, 2   P(2)     T[2]         2, 5, 8          0, 2, 2   P(3)     T[9]         9,12,15          0, 2, 2   In this example, the AU-Index is present in the first AU-header and   coded with the value 0, as required for fixed duration AUs.  The   position of the first AU of each packet within the group is defined   by the RTP time stamp, while the AU-Index-delta field indicates the   position of subsequent AUs relative to the first AU in the packet.   All AU-Index-delta fields are coded with the value N-1, equal to 2 in   this example.  Hence the RTP time stamp and the AU-Index-delta are   used to reconstruct the original order.  See alsosection 3.2.3.2.A.3.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size   For the regular pattern as in this example, Figure 6 insection3.2.3.3 shows that the de-interleave buffer stores at most 4 AUs.  A   de-interleaveBufferSize value that is at least equal to the total   number of octets of any 4 "early" AUs that are stored at the same   time may be signaled.A.3.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement   For the regular pattern as in this example, Figure 7 insection 3.3   shows that the maximum displacement in time equals 5 AU periods.   Hence, the minimum maxDisplacement value that must be signaled is 5   AU periods.  In case each AU has the same size, this maxDisplacement   value over-estimates the de-interleave buffer size with one AU.   However, note that in case of variable AU sizes, the total size of   any 4 "early" AUs that must be stored at the same time may exceed   maxDisplacement times the maximum bitrate, in which case the de-   interleaveBufferSize must be signaled.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003A.4.  More Subtle Group InterleaveA.4.1.  Introduction   Another example of forming packets with group interleave is given   below.  In this example, the packets are formed such that the loss of   two subsequent RTP packets does not cause the loss of two subsequent   AUs.  Note that in this example, the RTP time stamps of packet 3 and   packet 4 are earlier than the RTP time stamps of packets 1 and 2,   respectively; a fixed time duration per Access Unit is assumed.   Packet   Time stamp   Carried AUs      AU-Index, AU-Index-delta   0        T[0]         0,  5            0, 4   1        T[2]         2,  7            0, 4   2        T[4]         4,  9            0, 4   3        T[1]         1,  6            0, 4   4        T[3]         3,  8            0, 4   5        T[10]       10, 15            0, 4   and so on ..   In this example, the AU-Index is present in the first AU-header and   coded with the value 0, as required for AUs with a fixed duration.   To reconstruct the original order, the RTP time stamp and the AU-   Index-delta (coded with the value 4) are used.  See alsosection3.2.3.2.A.4.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size   From Figure 8, it can be to determined that at most 5 "early" AUs are   to be stored.  If the AUs are of constant size, then this value   equals 5 times the AU size.  The minimum size of the de-interleave   buffer equals the maximum total number of octets of the "early" AUs   that are to be stored at the same time.  This gives the minimum value   of the de-interleaveBufferSize that may be signaled.                              +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   Interleaved AUs            | 0| 5| 2| 7| 4| 9| 1| 6| 3| 8|                              +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+                                -  -  5  -  5  -  2  7  4  9                                            7     4  9  5   "Early" AUs                                    5     6                                                  7     7                                                  9     9   Figure 8: Storage of "early" AUs in the de-interleave buffer per             interleaved AU.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003A.4.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement   From Figure 9, it can be seen that the maximum displacement in time   equals 8 AU periods.  Hence the minimum maxDisplacement value to be   signaled is 8 AU periods.                                    +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   Interleaved AUs                  | 0| 5| 2| 7| 4| 9| 1| 6| 3| 8|                                    +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   Earliest not yet present AU        -  1  1  1  1  1  -  3  -  -   Figure 9: For each AU in the interleaving pattern, the earliest of             any earlier AUs not yet present   In case each AU has the same size, the found maxDisplacement value   over-estimates the de-interleave buffer size with three AUs.   However, in case of variable AU sizes, the total size of any 5   "early" AUs stored at the same time may exceed maxDisplacement times   the maximum bitrate, in which case de-interleaveBufferSize must be   signaled.A.5.  Continuous InterleaveA.5.1.  Introduction   In continuous interleave, once the scheme is 'primed', the number of   AUs in a packet exceeds the 'stride' (the distance between them).   This shortens the buffering needed, smoothes the data-flow, and gives   slightly larger packets -- and thus lower overhead -- for the same   interleave.  For example, here is a continuous interleave also over a   stride of 3 AUs, but with 4 AUs per packet, for a run of 20 AUs.   This shows both how the scheme 'starts up' and how it finishes.  Once   again, the example assumes fixed time duration per Access Unit.   Packet   Time-stamp   Carried AUs         AU-Index, AU-Index-delta   0        T[0]                      0      0   1        T[1]                  1   4      0  2   2        T[2]              2   5   8      0  2  2   3        T[3]          3   6   9  12      0  2  2  2   4        T[7]          7  10  13  16      0  2  2  2   5        T[11]        11  14  17  20      0  2  2  2   6        T[15]        15  18              0  2   7        T[19]        19                  0   In this example, the AU-Index is present in the first AU-header and   coded with the value 0, as required for AUs with a fixed duration.   To reconstruct the original order, the RTP time stamp and thevan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003   AU-Index-delta (coded with the value 2) are used.  See also 3.2.3.2.   Note that this example has RTP time-stamps in increasing order.A.5.2.  Determining the De-interleave Buffer Size   For this example the de-interleave buffer size can be derived from   Figure 10.  The maximum number of "early" AUs is 3.  If the AUs are   of constant size, then the de-interleave buffer size equals 3 times   the AU size.  Compared to the example in A.2, for constant size AUs   the de-interleave buffer size is reduced from 4 to 3 times the AU   size, while maintaining the same 'stride'.                        +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Interleaved AUs      | 0| 1| 4| 2| 5| 8| 3| 6| 9|12| 7|10|13|16|                        +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-                          -  -  -  4  -  -  4  8  -  -  8 12  -  -                                            5           9   "Early" AUs                              8          12   Figure 10: Storage of "early" AUs in the de-interleave buffer per              interleaved AU.A.5.3.  Determining the Maximum Displacement   For this example, the maximum displacement has a value of 5 AU   periods.  See Figure 11.  Compared to the example in A.2, the maximum   displacement does not decrease, though in fact less de-interleave   buffering is required.                        +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Interleaved AUs      | 0| 1| 4| 2| 5| 8| 3| 6| 9|12| 7|10|13|16|                        +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-   Earliest not yet        present AU        -  -  2  -  3  3  -  -  7  7  -  - 11 11   Figure 11: For each AU in the interleaving pattern, the earliest of              any earlier AUs not yet presentvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003ReferencesNormative References   [1]  ISO/IEC International Standard 14496 (MPEG-4); "Information        technology - Coding of audio-visual objects", January 2000   [2]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobson,        "RTP:  A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications",RFC3550, July 2003.   [3]  Freed, N., Klensin, J. and J. Postel, "Multipurpose Internet        Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Four: Registration Procedures",BCP13,RFC 2048, November 1996.   [4]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [5]  Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description        Protocol",RFC 2327, April 1998.   [6]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA        Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 2434, October 1998.Informative References   [7]  Hoffman, D., Fernando, G., Goyal, V. and M. Civanlar, "RTP        Payload Format for MPEG1/MPEG2 Video",RFC 2250, January 1998.   [8]  Schulzrinne, H., Rao, A. and R. Lanphier, "Real-Time Session        Protocol (RTSP)",RFC 2326, April 1998.   [9]  Perkins, C. and O. Hodson, "Options for Repair of Streaming        Media",RFC 2354, June 1998.   [10] Schulzrinne, H. and J. Rosenberg, "An RTP Payload Format for        Generic Forward Error Correction",RFC 2733, December 1999.   [11] Handley, M., Perkins, C. and E. Whelan, "Session Announcement        Protocol",RFC 2974, October 2000.   [12] Kikuchi, Y., Nomura, T., Fukunaga, S., Matsui, Y. and H. Kimata,        "RTP Payload Format for MPEG-4 Audio/Visual Streams",RFC 3016,        November 2000.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003Authors' Addresses   Jan van der Meer   Philips Electronics   Prof Holstlaan 4   Building WAH-1   5600 JZ Eindhoven   Netherlands   EMail: jan.vandermeer@philips.com   David Mackie   Apple Computer, Inc.   One Infinite Loop, MS:302-3KS   Cupertino  CA 95014   EMail: dmackie@apple.com   Viswanathan Swaminathan   Sun Microsystems Inc.   2600 Casey Avenue   Mountain View, CA 94043   EMail: viswanathan.swaminathan@sun.com   David Singer   Apple Computer, Inc.   One Infinite Loop, MS:302-3MT   Cupertino  CA 95014   EMail: singer@apple.com   Philippe Gentric   Philips Electronics   51 rue Carnot   92156 Suresnes   France   EMail: philippe.gentric@philips.comvan der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 3640         Transport of MPEG-4 Elementary Streams    November 2003Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.van der Meer, et al.        Standards Track                    [Page 43]

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