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PROPOSED STANDARD
Network Working Group                                     H. SchulzrinneRequest for Comments: 4734                                   Columbia U.Obsoletes:2833                                                T. TaylorUpdates:4733                                                     NortelCategory: Standards Track                                  December 2006Definition of Events for Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony SignalsStatus 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 IETF Trust (2006).Abstract   This memo updatesRFC 4733 to add event codes for modem, fax, and   text telephony signals when carried in the telephony event RTP   payload.  It supersedes the assignment of event codes for this   purpose inRFC 2833, and therefore obsoletes that part ofRFC 2833.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Terminology ................................................31.2. Overview ...................................................3   2. Definitions of Events for Control of Data, Fax, and Text      Telephony Sessions ..............................................52.1. V.8 bis Events .............................................52.1.1. Handling of Congestion ..............................92.2. V.21 Events ...............................................102.2.1. Handling of Congestion .............................112.3. V.8 Events ................................................122.3.1. Handling of Congestion .............................152.4. V.25 Events ...............................................152.4.1. Handling of Congestion .............................172.5. V.32/V.32bis Events .......................................182.5.1. Handling of Congestion .............................192.6. T.30 Events ...............................................192.6.1. Handling of Congestion .............................232.7. Events for Text Telephony .................................232.7.1. Signal Format Indicators for Text Telephony ........232.7.2. Use of Events with V.18 Modems .....................272.8. A Generic Indicator .......................................283. Strategies for Handling Fax and Modem Signals ..................294. Example of V.8 Negotiation .....................................30      4.1. Simultaneous Transmission of Events and           Retransmitted Events UsingRFC 2198 Redundancy ............35      4.2. Simultaneous Transmission of Events and Voice-Band           Data UsingRFC 2198 Redundancy ............................375. Security Considerations ........................................396. IANA Considerations ............................................407. Acknowledgements ...............................................428. References .....................................................438.1. Normative References ......................................438.2. Informative References ....................................44Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20061.  Introduction1.1.  Terminology   In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",   "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",   and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [1].   In addition to those defined for specific events, this document uses   the following abbreviations:   Fax    facsimile   HDLC   High-level Data Link Control   PSTN   Public Switched (circuit) Telephone Network1.2.  Overview   This document extends the set of telephony events defined within the   framework ofRFC 4733 [5] to include the control events and tones   that can appear on a subscriber line serving a fax machine, a modem,   or a text telephony device.  The events are organized into several   groups, corresponding to the ITU-T Recommendation in which they are   defined.  Their purpose is to support negotiation, start-up and   takedown of fax, modem, or text telephony sessions and transitions   between operating modes.  The actual fax, modem, and text payload is   typically carried by other payload types (e.g., V.150.1 [32] modem   relay, voice-band data as formalized in ITU-T Rec. V.152 [33],   Clearmode [17] for digital data, T.38 [21] for fax, orRFC 4103 [18]   for character-mode text).   NOTE: implementers SHOULD NOT rely on the descriptions of the various   modem protocols described below without consulting the original   references (generally ITU-T Recommendations).  The descriptions are   provided in this document to give a context for the use of the events   defined here.  They frequently omit important details needed for   implementation.   The typical application of these events is to allow the Internet to   serve as a bridge between terminals operating on the PSTN.  This   application is characterized as follows:   o  each gateway will act both as sender and as receiver;   o  time constraints apply to the exchange of signals, making the      early identification and reporting of events desirable so that      receiver playout can proceed in a timely fashion;Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   o  the receiver must play out events in their proper order;   o  transfer of the events must be reliable.  Applications will vary      in their ability to recover from missing events.   In some cases, an implementation may simply ignore certain events,   such as fax tones, that do not make sense in a particular   environment.Section 2.4.1 of RFC 4733 [5] specifies how an   implementation can use the Session Description Protocol (SDP) "fmtp"   parameter within an SDP description [4] to indicate which events it   is prepared to handle.   Regardless of which events they support, implementations MUST be   prepared to send and receive data signals using payload types other   than telephone-event, simultaneously with the use of the latter.   This is discussed further inSection 3.   In many cases, continuity of playout is critical.  In principle, this   is achieved through buffering at the receiving end.  It is generally   desirable to minimize such buffering to reduce round-trip response   times.  Maintenance of a constant packetization interval at the   sending end while reporting events is helpful for this purpose.   A further word on time constraints is in order.  Time constraints   governing the duration of tones do not pose a problem when using the   telephone-event payload type: the payload specifies the duration and   the receiving gateway can play out the tones accordingly.  Problems   occur when time constraints are specified for the duration of silence   between tones.  A silent period of "at least x ms" is not a problem   -- event notifications can be received late, but they can still be   played out at their specified durations.   The problem occurs if silence must last for a specific duration or at   most some specific period.  The most general constraint of the latter   type has to do with the operation of echo suppressors (ITU-T   Rec. G.164 [6]) and echo cancellers (ITU-T Rec. G.165 [7]).  These   devices may re-activate after as little as 100 ms of no signal on the   line.  As a result, in any situation where echo suppressors or   cancellers must be disabled for signalling to work, tone events must   be reported quickly enough to ensure that these devices do not become   re-enabled.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20062.  Definitions of Events for Control of Data, Fax, and Text Telephony    Sessions2.1.  V.8 bis Events   Recommendation V.8 bis [10] is a general procedure for two endpoints   to establish each other's capabilities and to transition between   different operating modes, both at call startup and after the call   has been established.  It supports many of the same terminals as V.8   [9] (Section 2.3 below), but allows more detailed parameter   negotiation.  It lacks support for some of the older V-series modems   defined in V.8, but adds capabilities for simultaneous or alternating   voice and data, H.324 [20] multilink, and T.120 [23] conferencing.   Following V.8 bis capability negotiations, if the terminals have   negotiated a modem-based operating mode, they initiate the actual   modem session using either V.8, a truncated version of V.8   (preferred), or V.25 start-up.  V.25 is described inSection 2.4.   V.8 bis distinguishes between "signals" and "messages".  The V.8 bis   signals -- ESi/ESr, MRe/MRd, and CRe/CRd -- consist of tones, as   described in the next few paragraphs.  The V.8 bis messages -- MS,   CL, CLR, ACK(1), ACK(2), NAK(1), NAK(2), NACK(3), and NACK(4) --   consist of sequences of bits transported over V.21 [12] modulation.   Signals are intended to be comprehensible at the receiver even in the   presence of voice content.  They consist of two tone segments.  The   first segment consists of a dual-frequency tone held for 400 ms, and   has the function of preparing the receiver and any in-line echo   suppressor or canceller for what follows.  The specific frequencies   depend only on whether the signal is from the initiator or the   responder in a transaction.  When using the telephone-event payload,   the V8bISeg and V8bRSeg events in Table 1 represent the first segment   of any V.8 bis signal in the initiating and responding case,   respectively.      The complete V.8 bis strategy for dealing with echo suppressors or      cancellers is described in Rec. V.8 bisAppendix III.  The only      silent period constraints imposed are of the "at least" type,      posing no difficulties for the use of the telephone-event payload.   The second segment follows immediately after the first, and is a   single tone held for 100 ms.  The frequency used indicates the   specific signal of the six signals defined.  When using the   telephone-event payload, the second segment of a V.8 bis signal is   represented by the applicable event: CRdSeg, CReSeg, MRdSeg, MReSeg,Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   ESiSeg, or ESrSeg, as defined in Table 1.  ESiSeg and ESrSeg use the   same frequencies as V.21 low and high channel '1' bits, respectively   (see Table 2), and are therefore assigned the same event codes.   V.8 bis messages use V.21 [12] frequency-shift signalling to transfer   message content.  V.21 is described in the next section.  V.8 bis   uses V.21 in half-duplex mode at 300 bits/s, with the lower channel   assigned to the initiator and the upper channel to the responder.   Each V.8 bis message is preceded by a 100-ms preamble of continuous   V.21 marking frequency except if it was immediately preceded by an   ESi or ESr signal (the second segment of which is that same V.21   marking frequency).  The sender SHALL NOT report this preamble tone   using the ESiSeg or ESrSeg events; these are to be used only for the   V.8 bis signals to which they pertain.      Spelling this out, continuous V.21 marking tone immediately      following V8bISeg and V8bRSeg is reported as ESiSeg or ESrSeg,      respectively.  Continuous V.21 marking tone occurring in any other      context, and particularly after CRdSeg, CReSeg, MRdSeg, or MReSeg,      is reported by other means such as a different payload type or      using the V.21 '1' bit events defined inSection 2.2.   No events are defined for V.8 bis messages, but a brief description   follows.   o  the V.8 bis CL message describes the sending terminal's      capabilities;   o  the CLR message also describes capabilities, but indicates that      the sender wants to receive a CL in return;   o  the MS establishes a particular operating mode;   o  the ACK and NAK messages are used to terminate the message      transactions.   The V.8 bis messages are organized as a sequence of octets.  The   first two to five octets are HDLC flags (0x7E).  Then comes a message   type identifier (four bits), a V.8 bis version identifier (four   bits), zero to two more octets of identifying information, followed   by zero or more information field parameters in the form of bit maps.   An individual bit map is one to five octets in length.  Up to 64   octets of non-standard information may also be present.  The   information fields are followed by a checksum and one to three HDLC   flags.  Because of limits on the size of any one information field,   V.8 bis defines segmentation procedures.  Excess data is sent in an   additional message, but only after prompting from the receiving end.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   Applications supporting V.8 bis signalling using the telephone-event   payload MAY transfer V.8 bis messages in the form of sequences of   bits, using the V.21 bit events defined in the next section.  If they   do so, the transmitted information MUST include the complete contents   of the message: the initial HDLC flags, the information field, the   checksum, and the terminating HDLC flags.   Transmission MUST also include the extra '0' bits added according to   the procedures of Rec. V.8 bis, clause 7.2.8, to prevent false   recognition of HDLC flags at the receiver.  Implementers should note   that these extra '0' bits mean that in general V.8 bis messages as   transmitted on the wire will not come out to an even multiple of   octets.  Sending implementations MAY choose to vary the packetization   interval to include exactly one octet of information plus any extra   '0' bits inserted into that octet; the resulting variation will be   insignificant compared with the amount of buffering required to guard   against network delays in delivery of packets to the receiver (see   below).      One reason for reporting the V.21 bits exactly as presented on the      wire is to match the corresponding content if it is also carried      by other means, such as voice-band data.   The power levels of the V.8 bis and V.21 signals are subject to   national regulation.  Thus, it seems suitable to model V.8 bis events   as tones for which the volumes SHOULD be specified by the sender.  If   the receiver is rendering the V.8 bis tones as audio content for   onward transmission, the receiver MAY use the volumes contained in   the event reports, or MAY modify the volumes to match downstream   national requirements.   Table 1 summarizes the event codes defined for V.8 bis signalling in   this document.  The individual events are described following the   table.  Each event begins when the beginning of the tone segment is   detected and ends when the tone is no longer detected.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006    +---------+-------------+-----------+------------+------+---------+    | Event   | Freq.  (Hz) | Dur. (ms) | Event Code | Type | Volume? |    +---------+-------------+-----------+------------+------+---------+    | ESiSeg  |      980    |    100    |     38     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | ESrSeg  |     1650    |    100    |     40     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | CRdSeg  |     1900    |    100    |     23     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | CReSeg  |      400    |    100    |     24     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | MRdSeg  |     1150    |    100    |     25     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | MReSeg  |      650    |    100    |     26     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | V8bISeg | 1375 + 2002 |    400    |     28     | tone |   yes   |    |         |             |           |            |      |         |    | V8bRSeg | 1529 + 2225 |    400    |     29     | tone |   yes   |    +---------+-------------+-----------+------------+------+---------+                    Table 1: Events for V.8 bis Signals   ESiSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis initiating Escape Signal (ESi).      The complete ESi signal is represented by events V8bISeg followed      by ESiSeg.  ESi will be followed by an MS, CL, or CLR message from      the same terminal.  A 1.5-s silent interval may come between the      ESi signal and the transmission of the MS, CL, or CLR message to      accommodate network echo suppressors.   ESrSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis responding Escape Signal (ESr).      The complete ESr signal is represented by events V8bRSeg followed      by ESrSeg.  ESr is always sent by the calling terminal in response      to an MRe or CRe from an automatic answering station.  It will be      followed by an MS, CL, or CLR message.  The ESr signal turns off      any announcement being generated by the automatic answering      station.   CRdSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis Capabilities Request signal (CRd).      The first segment of the CRd signal is represented either by      V8bISeg or V8bRSeg, depending on context.  The other end will      return a capabilities list (CL or CLR message).Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   CReSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis Capabilities Request signal (CRe)      initiated by an automatic answering terminal.  The complete CRe      signal is represented by events V8bISeg followed by CReSeg.  The      calling terminal will respond with a CRd signal or a CL or CLR      message.   MRdSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis Mode Request signal (MRd).  The      first segment of the MRd signal is represented either by V8bISeg      or V8bRSeg, depending on context.  The other end will return a CRd      signal or an MS message.   MReSeg:      The second segment of a V.8 bis Mode Request signal (MRe)      initiated by an automatic answering terminal.  The complete MRe      signal is represented by events V8bISeg followed by MReSeg.  The      calling terminal will respond with an MRd or CRd signal or an MS      message.   V8bISeg:      The first segment of an initiating V.8 bis signal, which may be      one of ESi, CRd, CRe, MRd, or MRe.   V8bRSeg:      The first segment of a responding V.8 bis signal, which may be one      of ESr, CRd, or MRd.2.1.1.  Handling of Congestion   V.8 bis implementations are unlikely to tolerate gaps or extensions   in playout times due to congestion-caused packet delay.  At a   minimum, the current transaction is liable to be reset when these   defects in playout occur.  As a result, careful management of the   playout buffer is required at the receiver to increase robustness in   the face of possible lost or delayed packets.  The playout algorithm   should also be such as not to cause event playout to exceed the   nominal duration of the event.   V.8 bis does not appear to offer opportunities for dynamic adaptation   to congestion through manipulation of the packetization interval.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20062.2.  V.21 Events   V.21 [12] is a modem protocol offering data transmission at a maximum   rate of 300 bits/s.  Two channels are defined, supporting full duplex   data transmission if required.  The low channel uses frequencies 980   Hz for '1' (mark) and 1180 Hz for '0' (space); the high channel uses   frequencies 1650 Hz for '1' and 1850 Hz for '0'.  The modem can   operate synchronously or asynchronously.   V.21 is used by other protocols (e.g., V.8 bis, V.18, T.30) for   transmission of control data, and is also used in its own right   between text terminals.  The V.21 events are summarized in Table 2.   Sending implementations SHOULD report a completed event for every bit   transmitted (i.e., rather than at transitions between '0' and '1').   Bit events are assumed to begin and end with the clock interval for   the event, neglecting the rise and fall times between bit   transitions.  Thus, it is important for a gateway to determine the   actual bit rate in use before beginning to report V.21 events.      Sometimes determination of the bit rate is not immediately      possible, as in the case of the 100-ms training signal at V.21      mark frequency used before V.8 bis messages.  Transmission of a      single longer-duration V.21 event is reasonable under these      circumstances and should not cause any difficulties at the      receiving end.   Implementations SHOULD pack multiple events into one packet, using   the procedures ofSection 2.5.1.5 of RFC 4733 [5].  Eight to ten bits   is a reasonable packetization interval.   Reliable transmission of V.21 events is important, to prevent data   corruption.  Reporting an event per bit rather than per transition   increases reporting redundancy and thus reporting reliability, since   each event completion is transmitted three times as described inSection 2.5.1.4 of RFC 4733 [5].  To reduce the number of packets   required for reporting, implementations SHOULD carry the   retransmitted events usingRFC 2198 [2] redundancy encoding.  This is   illustrated in the example inSection 4.1.   The time to transmit one V.21 bit at the nominal rate of 300 bits/s   is 3.33 ms, or 26.67 timestamp units at the default 8000-Hz sampling   rate for the telephone-event payload type.  Because this duration is   not an integral number of timestamp units, accurate reporting of the   beginning of the event and the event duration is impossible.  Sending   gateways SHOULD round V.21 event starting times to the nearest whole   timestamp unit.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   When sending multiple consecutive V.21 events in a succession of   packets, the sending gateway MUST ensure that individual event   durations reported do not cause the last event of one packet to   overlap with the first event of the next, taking into account the   respective initial event timestamps.  To accomplish this, the sending   gateway MUST derive the individual event durations as the succession   of differences between the event starting times (so that, at 8000 Hz,   every third event has reported duration 26 units, the remainder 27   units).   Where a receiving gateway recognizes that a packet reports a   consecutive series of V.21 bit events, it SHOULD play them out at a   uniform rate despite the possible one-timestamp-unit discrepancies in   their reported spacing and duration.   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | Event              | Frequency (Hz) | Event Code | Type | Volume? |   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | V.21 channel 1,    |           1180 |         37 | tone |     yes |   | '0' bit            |                |            |      |         |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | V.21 channel 1,    |            980 |         38 | tone |     yes |   | '1' bit            |                |            |      |         |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | V.21 channel 2,    |           1850 |         39 | tone |     yes |   | '0' bit            |                |            |      |         |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | V.21 channel 2,    |           1650 |         40 | tone |     yes |   | '1' bit            |                |            |      |         |   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+                     Table 2: Events for V.21 Signals   Implementations that choose to transmit V.21 content using a   different payload type may wish to use one of the indicator events   defined in Table 7 to alert the receiver to the nature of the   content.  It is not expected that an implementation will send both   one of these indicator events and the V.21 bit events defined above   for the same content.2.2.1.  Handling of Congestion   The duration of V.21 bits cannot be extended from its nominal value   (which depends on the transmission rate).  The playout algorithm at   the receiver should take this constraint into account when   compensating for the delay or loss of packets due to congestion.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   Other congestion-related considerations depend on the specific   application for which the V.21 bit events are being used.2.3.  V.8 Events   V.8 [9] is an older general negotiation and control protocol,   supporting startup for the following terminals: H.324 [20]   multimedia, V.18 [11] text, T.101 [22] videotext, T.30 [8] send or   receive fax, and a long list of V-series modems including V.34 [28],   V.90 [29], V.91 [30], and V.92 [31].  In contrast to V.8 bis [10], in   V.8 only the calling terminal can determine the operating mode.   V.8 does not use the same terminology as V.8 bis.  Rather, it defines   four signals that consist of bits transferred by V.21 [12] at 300   bits/s: the call indicator signal (CI), the call menu signal (CM),   the CM terminator (CJ), and the joint menu signal (JM).  In addition,   it uses tones defined in V.25 [13] and T.30 [8] (described below),   and one tone (ANSam) defined in V.8 itself.  The calling terminal   sends using the V.21 low channel; the answering terminal uses the   high channel.   The basic protocol sequence is subject to a number of variations to   accommodate different terminal types.  A pure V.8 sequence is as   follows:   1.  After an initial period of silence, the calling terminal       transmits the V.8 CI signal.  It repeats CI at least three times,       continuing with occasional pauses until it detects ANSam tone.       The CI indicates whether the calling terminal wants to function       as H.324, V.18, T.30 send, T.30 receive, or a V-series modem.   2.  The answering terminal transmits ANSam after detecting CI.  ANSam       will disable any G.164 [6] echo suppressors on the circuit after       400 ms and any G.165 [7] echo cancellers after one second of       ANSam playout.   3.  On detecting ANSam, the calling terminal pauses at least half a       second, then begins transmitting CM to indicate detailed       capabilities within the chosen mode.   4.  After detecting at least two identical sequences of CM, the       answering terminal begins to transmit JM, indicating its own       capabilities (or offering an alternative terminal type if it       cannot support the one requested).Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   5.  After detecting at least two identical sequences of JM, the       calling terminal completes the current octet of CM, then       transmits CJ to acknowledge the JM signal.  It pauses exactly 75       ms, then starts operating in the selected mode.   6.  The answering terminal transmits JM until it has detected CJ.  At       that point, it stops transmitting JM immediately, pauses exactly       75 ms, then starts operating in the selected mode.   The CI, CM, and JM signals all consist of a fixed sequence of ten '1'   bits followed by a signal-dependent pattern of ten synchronization   bits, followed by one or more octets of variable information.  Each   octet is preceded by a '0' start bit and followed by a '1' stop bit.   The combination of the synchronization pattern and V.21 channel   uniquely identifies the message type.  The CJ signal consists of   three successive octets of all zeros with stop and start bits but   without the preceding '1's and synchronizing pattern of the other   signals.   Applications MAY report each instance of a CM, JM, and CJ signal,   respectively, as a series of V.21 bit events (Section 2.2), or may   use another payload type to carry this information.  Applications   supporting V.8 signalling using the telephone-event payload MAY   report the synchronization part of the CI signal (ten '1's followed   by '00000 00001') both as a series of V.21 bit events and, when it   has been recognized, as a single CI event.      Note that the CI event covers only the synchronization part of the      CI signal.  The remaining call function octet and its start and      stop bits need to be transmitted also, either as a series of V.21      bit events or in some other payload format.  Presumably, the      calling end gateway will use the same format for the CM and CJ      signals.   The overlapping nature of V.8 signalling means that there is no risk   of silence exceeding 100 ms once ANSam has disabled any echo control   circuitry.  However, the 75-ms pause before entering operation in the   selected data mode will require both the calling and the answering   gateways to recognize the completion of CJ, so they can change from   playout of telephone-event to playout of the data-bearing payload   after the 75-ms period.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006      +--------+----------------------+------------+------+---------+      | Event  |       Frequency (Hz) | Event Code | Type | Volume? |      +--------+----------------------+------------+------+---------+      | ANSam  |            2100 x 15 |         34 | tone |     yes |      |        |                      |            |      |         |      | /ANSam | 2100 x 15 phase rev. |         35 | tone |     yes |      |        |                      |            |      |         |      | CI     |          (V.21 bits) |         53 | tone |     yes |      +--------+----------------------+------------+------+---------+                      Table 3: Events for V.8 Signals   ANSam:      The modified answer tone ANSam consists of a sinewave signal at      2100 Hz, amplitude-modulated by a sine wave at 15 Hz.  The      beginning of the event is at the beginning of the tone.  The end      of the event is at the sooner of the ending of the tone or the      occurrence of a phase reversal (marking the beginning of a /ANSam      event).  Phase reversals are used to disable echo cancellation; if      they are being applied, they occur at 450-ms intervals.      An ANSam event packet SHOULD NOT be sent until it is possible to      discriminate between an ANSam event and an ANS event (see V.25      events, below).      The modulated envelope for the ANSam tone ranges in amplitude      between 0.8 and 1.2 times its average amplitude.  The average      transmitted power is governed by national regulations.  Thus, it      makes sense to indicate the volume of the signal.   /ANSam:      /ANSam reports the same physical signal as ANSam, but is reported      following the first phase reversal in that signal.  It begins with      the phase reversal and ends at the end of the tone.  The receiver      of /ANSam MUST reverse the phase of the tone at the beginning of      playout of /ANSam and every 450 ms thereafter until the end of the      tone is reached.   CI:      CI reports the occurrence of the V.21 bit pattern '11111 11111      00000 00001' indicating the beginning of a V.8 CI signal.  The      event begins at the beginning of the first bit and ends at the end      of the last one.  This event MUST NOT be reported except in a      context where a V.8 CI signal might be expected (i.e., at the      calling end during call setup).  Note that if the calling modemSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006      sends the CI signal at all, it will typically repeat the signal      several times.      It is expected that the CI event will be most useful when the      modem content is being transmitted primarily using another payload      type.  The event acts as a commentary on that content, allowing      the receiver to recognize that V.8 signalling is in progress.2.3.1.  Handling of Congestion   The tolerances built into V.8 suggest that it may be mostly robust in   the face of packet losses or delays.  Playout of ANSam and /ANSam can   be extended for multiple packetization periods without harm, provided   that phase reversals occur on schedule at 450-ms intervals during   playout of the latter.   To increase robustness of transmission of the V.21-based signals,   sending applications using the V.21 events SHOULD include an integral   number of octets, including start and stop bits, in each packet.  The   presence of start and stop bits provides some hope that receiving   implementations can withstand unavoidable gaps in playout between   octets.  When a message is being repeated (as is possible for CI, CM,   and JM), an even stronger robustness measure would be for the   receiver to retain a copy of the message when it is first received,   and when a packet is delayed or lost to continue playing out the   current message instance and commence a new repetition as if packets   had continued to arrive on schedule.2.4.  V.25 Events   V.25 [13] is a start-up protocol predating V.8 [9] and V.8 bis [10].   It specifies the exchange of two tone signals: CT and ANS.   CT (calling tone) consists of a series of interrupted bursts of   1300-Hz tone, on for a duration of not less than 0.5 s and not more   than 0.7 s and off for a duration of not less than 1.5 s and not more   than 2.0 s. [13].  Modems not starting with the V.8 CI signal often   use this tone.   ANS (Answer tone) is a 2100-Hz tone used to disable echo suppression   for data transmission [13], [8].  For fax machines, Recommendation   T.30 [8] refers to this tone as called terminal identification (CED)   answer tone.  ANS differs from V.8 ANSam in that, unlike the latter,   it has constant amplitude.   V.25 specifically includes procedures for disabling echo suppressors   as defined by ITU-T Rec. G.164 [6].  However, G.164 echo suppressors   have now for the most part been replaced by G.165 [7] echoSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   cancellers, which require phase reversals in the disabling tone (see   ANSam above).  As a result, Recommendation V.25 was modified in July   2001 to say that phase reversal in the ANS tone is required if echo   cancellers are to be disabled.   One possible V.25 sequence is as follows:   1.  The calling terminal starts generating CT as soon as the call is       connected.   2.  The called terminal waits in silence for 1.8 to 2.5 s after       answer, then begins to transmit ANS continuously.  If echo       cancellers are on the line, the phase of the ANS signal is       reversed every 450 ms.  ANS will not reach the calling terminal       until the echo control equipment has been disabled.  Since this       takes about a second, it can only happen in the gap between one       burst of CT and the next.   3.  Following detection of ANS, the calling terminal may stop       generating CT immediately or wait until the end of the current       burst to stop.  In any event, it must wait at least 400 ms (at       least 1 s if phase reversal of ANS is being used to disable echo       cancellers) after stopping CT before it can generate the calling       station response tone.  This tone is modem-specific, not       specified in V.25.   4.  The called terminal plays out ANS for 2.6 to 4.0 seconds or until       it has detected calling station response for 100 ms.  It waits       55-95 ms (nominal 75 ms) in silence.  (Note that the upper limit       of 95 ms is rather close to the point at which echo control may       reestablish itself.)  If the reason for ANS termination was       timeout rather than detection of calling station response, the       called terminal begins to play out ANS again to maintain       disabling of echo control until the calling station responds.   The events defined for V.25 signalling are shown in Table 4.   +-------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | Event             | Frequency (Hz) | Event Code | Type | Volume? |   +-------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | Answer tone (ANS) | 2100           |         32 | tone |     yes |   |                   |                |            |      |         |   | /ANS              | 2100 ph. rev.  |         33 | tone |     yes |   |                   |                |            |      |         |   | CT                | 1300           |         49 | tone |     yes |   +-------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+                     Table 4: Events for V.25 SignalsSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   ANS:      The beginning of the event is at the beginning of the 2100-Hz      tone.  The end of the event is at the sooner of the ending of the      tone or the occurrence of a phase reversal (marking the beginning      of a /ANS event).      An initial ANS event packet SHOULD NOT be sent until it is      possible to discriminate between an ANS event and an ANSam event      (see V.8 events, above).   /ANS:      /ANS reports the same physical signal as ANS, but is reported      following the first phase reversal in that signal.  It begins with      the phase reversal and ends at the end of the tone.  The receiver      of /ANS MUST reverse the phase of the tone at the beginning of      playout of /ANS and every 450 ms thereafter until the end of the      tone is reached.   CT:      The beginning of the CT event is at the beginning of an individual      burst of the 1300-Hz tone.  The end of the event is at the end of      that tone burst.  The gateway at the calling end SHOULD use a      packetization interval smaller than the nominal duration of a CT      burst, to ensure that CT playout at the called end precedes the      sending of ANS from that end.2.4.1.  Handling of Congestion   The V.25 sequence appears to be robust in the face of lost or delayed   packets, provided that the receiver continues to play out any tone it   is in the process of playing until more packets are received.  The   receiver must play out the phase transitions for /ANS on schedule, at   450-ms intervals, even if updates of the /ANS event have been   delayed.  It also appears to be possible for the sender to   temporarily increase the packetization interval to reduce packet   volumes when congestion is encountered.  The one risk is that   extended playout proceeds past the actual end of the tone (as   determined retroactively), and the receiver is forced to continue   imposing an additional playout buffering lag in order to meet the   constraint on maximum duration of the nominal 75-ms silent period   following tone playout.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20062.5.  V.32/V.32bis Events   ITU-T Recommendation V.32 [14] is a modem using phase-shift keying   with quadrature amplitude modification.  It operates on a carrier at   1800 Hz, modulated at 2400 symbols/s.  The basic data rates for V.32   are 4800 and 9600 bits/s.  V.32bis [15] extends the data rates up to   14,400 bits/s.  Most or all existing deployments are V.32bis,   typically in support of point-of-sale terminals and the like.   One reason V.32bis is still used is because of its relatively rapid   start-up sequence, particularly on leased lines.  Operating over the   public telephone network, the start-up begins as follows:   a.  the answering end begins with the V.25 answering procedure (1.8       to 2.5 s of silence followed by continuous ANS tone to a maximum       of 3.3 s, with possible phase reversals to disable echo       cancelling equipment);   b.  the calling end waits in silence until it has detected ANS for       1 s;   c.  the calling end begins to transmit a V.32/V.32bis pattern       designated AA, i.e., a series of '0000' bit sequences transmitted       at 4800 bits/s;   d.  upon detecting the AA pattern for at least 100 ms, the called       modem is silent for 75 +/- 20 ms, then responds with an AC       pattern, which is a series of '0011' bit sequences transmitted at       4800 bits/s.   The difference in leased line operation is that the calling modem   starts the session by sending AA.  After that, the called modem   responds with AC, and the rest of the sequence is unchanged.   In support of V.32/V.32bis operation, Table 5 defines two events,   V32AA and V32AC.    +----------------+------------------+------------+------+---------+    | Event          | Bit Pattern      | Event Code | Type | Volume? |    +----------------+------------------+------------+------+---------+    | V32AA          | b'0000' repeated |         63 | tone |     yes |    |                |                  |            |      |         |    | V32AC          | b'0011' repeated |         27 | tone |     yes |    +----------------+------------------+------------+------+---------+                 Table 5: Events for V.32/V.32bis SignalsSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   V32AA:      Indicates that the AA calling pattern of a V.32/V.32bis terminal      has been detected.   V32AC:      Indicates that the AC answering pattern of a V.32/V.32bis terminal      has been detected.   Each of these two events begins at the beginning of its pattern, and   ends nominally when the pattern stops being received.  Following the   sending of either of these events the session may continue using   V.150.1 modem relay [32] or Clearmode [17] as negotiated or   configured in advance.  To help make the transition as quickly as   possible, the V32AA or V32AC event SHOULD be reported as soon as the   corresponding pattern is detected.  It seems likely that the   implementation will be transmitting the event reports simultaneously   with the same data in an alternate form, typically usingRFC 2198 [2]   redundancy.2.5.1.  Handling of Congestion   The primary issue raised by congestion is the loss or undue delay of   the initial report.  Once the receiver is aware that an AA or AC   pattern has been detected, further reports are of no interest.  The   actual duration of the AC pattern may be as short as 27 ms.  On this   basis, the appropriate sender behavior may be to send at least three   packets reporting the event using normal event updates and end of   event retransmission behavior and a fairly short packetization   interval (20-30 ms).2.6.  T.30 Events   ITU-T Recommendation T.30 [8] defines the procedures used by Group   III fax terminals.  The pre-message procedures for which the events   of this section are defined are used to identify terminal   capabilities at each end and negotiate operating mode.  Post-message   procedures are also included, to handle cases such as multiple   document transmission.  Fax terminals support a wide variety of   protocol stacks, so T.30 has a number of options for control   protocols and sequences.   T.30 defines two tone signals used at the beginning of a call.  The   CNG signal is sent by the calling terminal.  It is a pure 1100-Hz   tone played in bursts: 0.5 s on, 3 s off.  It continues until timeoutSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   or until the calling terminal detects a response.  Its primary   purpose is to let human operators at the called end know that a fax   terminal has been activated at the calling end.   The called terminal waits in silence for at least 200 ms.  It then   may return CED tone (which is physically identical to V.25 ANS), or   else V.8 ANSam if it has V.8 capability.  If called and calling   terminals both support V.8, the called terminal will detect CI or   more likely CM in response to its ANSam and will continue with V.8   negotiation.  Otherwise, the called terminal stops transmitting CED   after 2.6 to 4 seconds, waits 75 +/- 20 ms in silence, then enters   the T.30 negotiation phase.   In the T.30 negotiation phase the terminals exchange binary messages   using V.21 signals, high channel frequencies only, at 300 bits/s.   Each message is preceded by a one-second (nominal) preamble   consisting entirely of HDLC flag octets (0x7E).  This flag has the   function of preparing echo control equipment for the message that   follows.   The pre-transfer messages exchanged using the V.21 coding are:   Digital Identification Signal (DIS):      Characterizes the standard ITU-T capabilities of the called      terminal.  This is always the first message sent.   Digital Transmit Command (DTC):      A possible response to the DIS signal by the calling terminal.  It      requests the called terminal to be the transmitter of the fax      content.   Digital Command Signal (DCS):      A command message sent by the transmitting terminal to indicate      the options to be used in the transmission and request that the      other end prepare to receive fax content.  This is sent by the      calling end if it will transmit, or by the called end in response      to a DTC from the calling end.  It is followed by a training      signal, also sent by the transmitting terminal.   Confirmation To Receive (CFR):      A digital response confirming that the entire pre-message      procedure including training has been completed and the message      transmissions may commence.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   Each message may consist of multiple frames bounded by HDLC flags.   The messages are organized as a series of octets, but like V.8 bis,   T.30 calls for the insertion of extra '0' bits to prevent spurious   recognition of HDLC flags.   T.30 also provides for the transmission of control messages after   document transmission has completed (e.g., to support transmission of   multiple documents).  The transition to and from the modem used for   document transmission (V.17 [24], V.27ter [26], V.29 [27], V.34 [28])   is preceded by 75 ms (nominal) of silence).   Applications supporting T.30 signalling using the telephone-event   payload MAY report the preamble preceding each message both as a   series of V.21 bit events and, when it has been recognized, as a   single V.21 preamble event.  The T.30 control message following the   preamble MAY be reported in the form of a sequence of V.21 bit events   or using some other payload type.  If transmitted as bit events, the   transmitted information MUST include the complete contents of the   message: the initial HDLC flags, the information field, the checksum,   the terminating HDLC flags, and the extra '0' bits added to prevent   false recognition of HDLC flags at the receiver.  Implementers should   note that these extra '0' bits mean that in general T.30 messages as   transmitted on the wire will not come out to an even multiple of   octets.   The training signal sent by the transmitting terminal after DCS   consists of a steady string of V.21 high channel zeros (1850-Hz tone)   for 1.5 s.  Since the bit rate (nominally 300 bits/s) should have   been clearly established when processing the preceding signalling, it   is natural that if the telephony-event payload type is being used,   this training signal will also be sent as a series of V.21 bit events   at that bit rate.  However, if the sending gateway is capable of   recognizing the transition from the end of the DCS to the start of   training, it MAY report the training signal as a single extended V.21   (high channel) '0' event.   The events defined for T.30 signalling are shown in Table 6.  The CED   and /CED events represent exactly the same tone signals as V.25 ANS   and /ANS, and are given the same codepoints; they are reproduced here   only for convenience.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | Event              | Frequency (Hz) | Event Code | Type | Volume? |   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+   | CED (Called tone)  | 2100           |         32 | tone |     yes |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | /CED               | 2100 ph. rev.  |         33 | tone |     yes |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | CNG (Calling tone) | 1100           |         36 | tone |     yes |   |                    |                |            |      |         |   | V.21 preamble flag | (V.21 bits)    |         54 | tone |     yes |   +--------------------+----------------+------------+------+---------+                     Table 6: Events for T.30 Signals   CED:      The beginning of the event is at the beginning of the 2100-Hz      tone.  The end of the event is at the sooner of the ending of the      tone or the occurrence of a phase reversal (marking the beginning      of a /CED event).      An initial CED event packet SHOULD NOT be sent until it is      possible to discriminate between a CED event and an ANSam event      (see V.8 events, above).   /CED:      /CED reports the same physical signal as CED, but is reported      following the first phase reversal in that signal.  It begins with      the phase reversal and ends at the end of the tone.  The receiver      of /CED MUST reverse the phase of the tone at the beginning of      playout of /CED and every 450 ms thereafter until the end of the      tone is reached.   CNG:      The beginning of the CNG event is at the beginning of an      individual burst of the 1100-Hz tone.  The end of the event is at      the end of that tone burst.   V.21 preamble flag:      This event begins with the first V.21 bits transmitted after a      period of silence.  It ends when a pattern of V.21 bits other than      an HDLC flag is observed.  This means that the V.21 preamble event      absorbs the initial HDLC flags of the following message.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006      It is expected that the V.21 preamble flag event will be most      useful when the modem content is being transmitted primarily using      another payload type.  The event acts as a commentary on that      content, allowing the receiver to prepare itself to transition to      fax mode.2.6.1.  Handling of Congestion   T.30 appears to be an intermediate case in terms of its vulnerability   to congestion.  Tone playout in the face of packet delay or loss is   subject to the same considerations as for V.25 (seeSection 2.4.1).   Similarly, the receiver may extend playout of the preamble event   while waiting for further reports.  However, gaps or extended playout   of the V.21 sequences are not feasible.  This means, as with V.8 bis,   that the receiver must manage its playout buffer appropriately to   increase robustness in the face of congestion.2.7.  Events for Text Telephony2.7.1.  Signal Format Indicators for Text Telephony   Legacy text telephony uses a wide variety of terminals, with   different standards favored in different parts of the world.  Going   forward, the vision is that new terminals will work directly into the   packet network and be based onRFC 4103 [18] packetization of   character data.  In anticipation of this migration, it is RECOMMENDED   that text carried in the PSTN by legacy modem protocols be converted   toRFC 4103 packets at the sending gateway.   During a transitional period, however, gateways of a lesser   capability may be able to recognize the nature of incoming content,   but may only be able to encode it as voice-band data on the packet   side.  In such circumstances, it will help to optimize processing of   the signal at the receiving end if that end receives an indication of   the nature of the voice-encoded data signals.  The events defined in   this section provide such indications, and MAY be used in conjunction   with ITU-T Recommendation V.152 [33], as one example, to carry the   content as voice-band data.   Implementers should take note of an additional class of text   terminals not considered in the events below.  These terminals use   dual tone multi-frequency (DTMF) tones to encode and exchange   signals.  This application is described inRFC 4733 [5], Section 3.1,   in conjunction with the registration of DTMF events.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   The events shown in Table 7 correspond to signals coming from the   following modem types:   o  Baudot [34], a five bit character encoding nominally operating at      45.45 or 50 bits/s with frequencies 1800 Hz = '0', 1400 Hz = '1';   o  EDT, which is V.21 [12] operating at 110 bits/s in half-duplex      mode (lower channel only); characters are 7-bit IA5 plus initial      start bit, trailing parity bit, and two stop bits;   o  Bell 103 mode (documented in Recommendation V.18 Annex D), which      is structurally similar to V.21, but uses different frequencies:      lower channel, 1070 Hz = '0', 1270 Hz = '1'; upper channel, 2025      Hz = '0', 2225 Hz = '1'; characters are US ASCII framed by one      start bit, one trailing parity bit, and one stop bit;   o  V.23 [25] based videotex, in Minitel and Prestel versions.  V.23      offers a forward channel operating at 1200 bits/s if possible      (2100 Hz = '0', 1300 Hz = '1') or otherwise at 600 bits/s (1700 Hz      = '0', 1300 Hz = '1'), and a 75 bits/s backward channel, which is      transmitting 390 Hz (continuous '1's) except when '0' is to be      transmitted (450 Hz);   o  a non-V.18 text terminal using V.21 [12] at 300 bits/s.      Characters are 7-bit national (e.g., US ASCII) with a start bit,      parity, and one stop bit.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   +----------+-----------+----------------+---------+-------+---------+   | Event    | Bit Rate  | Frequency (Hz) |   Event |  Type | Volume? |   |          | bits/s    |                |    Code |       |         |   +----------+-----------+----------------+---------+-------+---------+   | ANS2225  | N/A       | 2225           |      52 |  tone |     yes |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | V21L110  | 110       | 980/1180       |      55 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | V21L300  | 300       | 980/1180       |      30 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | V21H300  | 300       | 1650/1850      |      31 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | B103L300 | 300       | 1070/1270      |      56 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | V23Main  | 600/1200  | 1700-2100/1300 |      57 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | V23Back  | 75        | 450/390        |      58 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | Baud4545 | 45.45     | 1800/1400      |      59 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | Baud50   | 50        | 1800/1400      |      60 | other |      no |   |          |           |                |         |       |         |   | XCIMark  | 1200      | 2100/1300      |      62 |  tone |     yes |   +----------+-----------+----------------+---------+-------+---------+                  Table 7: Indicators for Text Telephony   ANS2225:      indicates that a 2225-Hz answer tone has been detected.  This is a      pure tone with no amplitude modulation and no semantics attached      to phase reversals, if there are any.  The sender SHOULD report      the beginning of the event when the tone is detected.  The sender      MAY send updates as the tone continues, and MUST report the end of      the event when the tone ceases.  The tone concerned is generated      by a Bell 103-type modem in answer mode.  This event MUST NOT be      reported outside of the startup context (i.e., on the answering      side at the beginning of a call).   V21L110:      indicates that the sender has detected V.21 modulation operating      in the lower channel at 110 bits/s.  Note that it may take some      time to distinguish between 300 bits/s and 110 bits/s operation.      It is expected that implementations will not transmit both this      event and individual V.21 bit events for the same content.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   V21L300:      indicates that the sender has detected V.21 modulation operating      in the lower channel at 300 bits/s.  Note that it may take some      time to distinguish between 300 bits/s and 110 bits/s operation.      It is expected that implementations will not transmit both this      event and individual V.21 bit events for the same content.   V21H300:      indicates that the sender has detected V.21 modulation operating      in the upper channel at 300 bits/s.  It is expected that      implementations will not transmit both this event and individual      V.21 bit events for the same content.   B103L300:      indicates that the sending device has detected Bell 103 class      modulation operating in the low channel at 300 bits/s.   V23Main:      indicates that the sending device has detected V.23 modulation      operating in the high-speed channel.  As described below, this      indicator may alternate with the XCIMark indication.   V23Back:      indicates that the sending device has detected V.23 modulation      operating in the 75 bit/s back-channel.   Baud4545:      indicates that the sending device has detected Baudot modulation      operating at 45.45 bits/s.   Baud50:      indicates that the sending device has detected Baudot modulation      operating at 50 bits/s.   XCIMark:      Indicates that the sending device has detected the specific bit      pattern (0) 1111 1111(1)(0)1111 1111(1) sent at 1200 bits/s using      V.23 upper-channel modulation, following a period of V.23 main      channel "mark" (1300 Hz).Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   It is assumed in all cases that the event reports described here are   being transmitted in addition to another media encoding, typically   G.711 [19] voice-band data, reporting the same information.  A   natural method to do this is to combine the voice-band data with   event reports in anRFC 2198 [2] redundancy payload.   The handling of ANS2225 has been indicated above.  Since it is a   specific tone, it can be handled like any other tone event.   For all of the other indicators, the sender SHOULD generate an   initial event report as soon as the nature of the audio content has   been recognized.  For reliability, the initial event report SHOULD be   retransmitted twice at short intervals. (20 ms is a suggested value,   although the packetization period of the associated media may be   sufficient.)  The sender MAY continue to send additional reports of   the same indicator event, although these have little value once the   receiver has adjusted itself to the type of content it is receiving.   If the nature of the content changes (e.g., because it is coming from   a V.18 terminal in the probing stage), the sender MUST send an event   report for the new content type as soon as it is recognized.  If the   sender has been sending updates for the previous indicator, it SHOULD   report the end of that previous indicator event along with the   beginning of the new one.2.7.1.1.  Handling of Congestion   In the face of packet loss or delay, it is appropriate for the   receiver to continue to play out the ANS2225 event until further   packets are received.  For the other events, the issue is loss of the   initial event report rather than maintenance of playout continuity.   The advice on retransmission of these other events already given   above is sufficient to deal with packet loss or delay due to   congestion.2.7.2.  Use of Events with V.18 Modems   ITU-T Recommendation V.18 [11] defines a terminal for text   conversation, possibly in combination with voice.  V.18 is intended   to interoperate with a variety of legacy text terminals, so its   start-up sequence can consist of a series of stimuli designed to   determine what is at the other end.  Two V.18 terminals talking to   each other will use V.8 to negotiate startup and continue at the   physical level with V.21 at 300 bits/s carrying 7-bit characters   bounded by start and stop bits.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   The V.18 terminal is also designed to interoperate with the text   modems listed in the previous sub-section.  The startup sequences for   all these different terminal types are naturally quite different.   The V.18 initial startup sequence specifically addresses itself to   V.8-capable terminals and V.21 terminals and, by the combination of   signals, to V.23 videotex terminals.  During the initial startup   sequence, the V.18 terminal listens for frequency responses   characterizing the other terminal types.  If it does not make contact   in the preliminary step, it probes for each type specifically.  By   the nature of the application, V.18 has been designed to provide an   extremely robust startup capability.   The handling of the V.18 XCI signal is a specific case of the   procedures described in the previous section.  XCI is a signal   transmitted in high-band V.23 modulation to stimulate V.23 terminals   to respond and to allow detection of V.18 capabilities in a DCE.  The   3-second XCI signal uses the V.23 upper channel having periods of   "mark" (i.e., 1300 Hz) alternating with the XCIMark pattern.  The   full definition is found in V.18,Section 3.13.  The sender SHOULD   indicate V23Main during the transmission of the "mark" portion of   XCI, and change the indication to XCIMark when that pattern is   detected.2.8.  A Generic Indicator   Numerous proprietary modem protocols exist, as well as standardized   protocols not identified above.  Table 8 defines a single indicator   event that may be used to identify modem content when a more specific   event is unavailable.  Typically, this would be sent in combination   with another payload type, for example, voice-band data as specified   by ITU-T Recommendation V.152 [33].   As with the indicators in the previous section, the sender SHOULD   generate an initial event report as soon as the nature of the audio   content has been recognized.  For reliability, the initial event   report SHOULD be retransmitted twice at short intervals. (20 ms is a   suggested value, although the packetization period of the associated   media may be sufficient.)  The sender MAY continue to send additional   reports of the VBDGen event, although these have little value once   the receiver has adjusted itself to the type of content it is   receiving.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   +--------+---------------+------------+-----------+-------+---------+   | Event  | Bit Rate      | Frequency  |     Event |  Type | Volume? |   |        | bits/s        | (Hz)       |      Code |       |         |   +--------+---------------+------------+-----------+-------+---------+   | VBDGen | Variable      | Variable   |        61 | other |      no |   +--------+---------------+------------+-----------+-------+---------+                  Table 8: Generic Modem Signal Indicator   VBDGen:      indicates that the sender has detected tone patterns indicating      the operation of some form of modem.  This indicator SHOULD NOT be      sent if a more specific event is available.3.  Strategies for Handling Fax and Modem Signals   As described inSection 1.2, the typical data application involves a   pair of gateways interposed between two terminals, where the   terminals are in the PSTN.  The gateways are likely to be serving a   mixture of voice and data traffic, and need to adopt payload types   appropriate to the media flows as they occur.  If voice compression   is in use for voice calls, this means that the gateways need the   flexibility to switch to other payload types when data streams are   recognized.   Within the established IETF framework, this implies that the gateways   must negotiate the potential payloads (voice, telephone-event, tones,   voice-band data, T.38 fax [21], and possiblyRFC 4103 [18] text and   Clearmode [17] octet streams) as separate payload types.  From a   timing point of view, this is most easily done at the beginning of a   call, but results in an over-allocation of resources at the gateways   and in the intervening network.   One alternative is to use named events to buy time while out-of-band   signals are exchanged to update to the new payload type applicable to   the session.  Thanks to the events defined in this document, this is   a viable approach for sessions beginning with V.8, V.8 bis, T.30, or   V.25 control sequences.   Named data-related events also allow gateways to optimize their   operation when data signals are received in a relatively general   form.  One example is the use of V.8-related events to deduce that   the voice-band data being sent in a G.711 payload comes from a   higher-speed modem and therefore requires disabling of echo   cancellers.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   All of the control procedures described in the sub-sections ofSection 2 eventually give way to data content.  As mentioned above,   this content will be carried by other payload types.  Receiving   gateways MUST be prepared to switch to the other payload type within   the time constraints associated with the respective applications.   (For several of the procedures documented above, the sender provides   75 ms of silence between the initial control signalling and the   sending of data content.)  In some cases (V.8 bis [10], T.30 [8]),   further control signalling may happen after the call has been   established.   A possible strategy is to send both the telephone-event and the data   payload in anRFC 2198 [2] redundancy arrangement.  The receiving   gateway then propagates the data payload whenever no event is in   progress.  For this to work, the data payload and events (when   present) MUST cover exactly the same content over the same time   period; otherwise, spurious events will be detected downstream.  An   example of this mode of operation is shown below.   Note that there are a number of cases where no control sequence will   precede the data content.  This is true, for example, for a number of   legacy text terminal types.  In such instances, the events defined inSection 2.7 in particular MAY be sent to help the remote gateway   optimize its handling of the alternative payload.4.  Example of V.8 Negotiation   This section presents an example of the use of the event codes   defined inSection 2.  The basic scenario is the startup sequence for   duplex V.34 modem operation.  It is assumed that once the initial V.8   sequence is complete, the gateways will enter into voice-band data   operation using G.711 encoding to transmit the modem signals.  The   basic packet sequence is indicated in Table 9.  Sample packets are   then shown in detail for two variants on event transmission strategy:   o  simultaneous transmission of events and retransmitted events usingRFC 2198 [2] redundancy;   o  simultaneous transmission of events, retransmitted events, and      voice-band data covering the same content usingRFC 2198      redundancy.   For simplicity and semi-realism, the times shown for the example   scenario assume a fixed lag at each gateway of 20 ms between the   packet side of the gateway and the local user equipment and vice   versa (i.e., minimum of 40 ms between packet received and packet sent   specifically in response to the received packet).  A propagation   delay of 5 ms is assumed between gateways.  It is assumed that theSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   event packetization interval is 30 ms, a reasonable compromise   between packet volume and buffering delay, particularly for V.21   events.   At the basic V.8 protocol level, the table assumes that the answering   modem waits 0.2 s (200 ms) from the beginning of the call to start   transmitting ANSam.  The calling modem waits 1 s (1000 ms) from the   time it begins to receive ANSam until it begins to send the V.8 CM   signal.  Both modems wait 75 ms from the time they finish sending and   receiving CJ, respectively, until they begin sending V.34 modem   signals.   +------------+------------------------------------------------------+   |  Time (ms) | Event                                                |   +------------+------------------------------------------------------+   |      220.0 | The called gateway detects the start of ANSam from   |   |            | its end.                                             |   |            |                                                      |   |      250.0 | The called gateway sends out the first ANSam event   |   |            | packet.  M bit is set, timestamp is ts0 + 1760       |   |            | (where ts0 is the timestamp value at the start of    |   |            | the call).  The initial ANSam event continues until  |   |            | a phase shift is detected at 670.0 ms (see below).   |   |            | Up to this time, the called gateway sends out        |   |            | further ANSam event updates, with the same initial   |   |            | timestamp, M bit off, and cumulative duration        |   |            | increasing by 240 units each time.                   |   |            |                                                      |   |      255.0 | The calling gateway receives the first ANSam event   |   |            | report and begins playout of ANSam tone at its end.  |   |            |                                                      |   |      275.0 | The calling terminal receives the beginning of ANSam |   |            | tone and starts its timer.  It will begin sending    |   |            | the CM signal 1 s later (at 1275.0 ms into the       |   |            | call).                                               |   |            |                                                      |   |      670.0 | The called gateway detects a phase shift in the      |   |            | incoming signal, marking a change from ANSam to      |   |            | /ANSam.  This happens to coincide with the end of a  |   |            | packetization interval.  For the sake of the         |   |            | example, assume that the called gateway does not     |   |            | detect this in time for the event report it sends    |   |            | out.                                                 |   |            |                                                      |Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   |      700.0 | The called gateway issues its next-scheduled event   |   |            | report packet, indicating an initial report for      |   |            | /ANSam (M bit set, timestamp ts0 + 5360, duration    |   |            | 240 timestamp units).  The packet also carries the   |   |            | first retransmission of the final ANSam report,      |   |            | total duration 3600 units, this time with the E bit  |   |            | set.                                                 |   |            |                                                      |   |     1295.0 | The calling gateway begins to receive the CM signal  |   |            | from the calling modem.                              |   |            |                                                      |   |     1325.0 | The calling gateway sends a packet containing the    |   |            | first 9 bits of the CM signal.                       |   |            |                                                      |   |     1445.0 | The calling gateway sends out a packet containing    |   |            | the last 4 bits of the first CM signal, plus the     |   |            | first 5 bits of the next repetition of that signal.  |   |            | CM bits will continue to be transmitted from the     |   |            | calling gateway until 2015.0 ms (see below), for a   |   |            | total of 24 packets.  (The final packet also carries |   |            | the beginning of the CJ signal.)                     |   |            |                                                      |   |     1596.7 | The called gateway completes playout of the final    |   |            | bit of the second occurrence of the CM signal.       |   |            |                                                      |   |     1636.7 | The called gateway detects end of /ANSam (and        |   |            | beginning of JM) from the called modem.  The next    |   |            | packet is not yet due to go out.                     |   |            |                                                      |   |     1660.0 | The called gateway sends out a packet combining the  |   |            | final /ANSam event report (E bit set and total       |   |            | duration 533 timestamp units) with the first 7 bits  |   |            | of the JM signal.  The M bit for the packet is set   |   |            | and the packet timestamp is ts0 + 12560 (the start   |   |            | of the now-discontinued /ANSam event).               |   |            |                                                      |   |     1690.0 | The called gateway sends out a packet containing the |   |            | next nine bits of JM signal.  The M bit is set and   |   |            | the timestamp is ts0 + 13280 (beginning of the first |   |            | bit in the packet).  JM will continue to be          |   |            | transmitted until 2170.0 ms (see below), for a total |   |            | of 18 packets (plus two for final retransmissions).  |   |            |                                                      |   |     1938.3 | The calling gateway completes playout of the final   |   |            | packet of the second occurrence of the JM signal.    |   |            |                                                      |   |     1995.0 | The calling gateway begins to receive the initial    |   |            | bits of the CJ signal.                               |Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   |            |                                                      |   |     2015.0 | The calling gateway sends a packet containing the    |   |            | final 3 bits of the first decad of a CM signal and   |   |            | first 6 bits of a CJ signal.                         |   |            |                                                      |   |     2095.0 | The calling gateway receives the last bit of the CJ  |   |            | signal.  A period of silence lasting 75-ms begins at |   |            | the called end.  It is not yet time to send out an   |   |            | event report.                                        |   |            |                                                      |   |     2105.0 | The calling gateway sends out a packet containing    |   |            | the final 6 bits of the CJ signal.                   |   |            |                                                      |   |     2130.0 | The called gateway finishes playing out the last CJ  |   |            | signal bit sent to it.                               |   |            |                                                      |   |     2135.0 | The calling gateway sends a packet containing no new |   |            | events, but retransmissions of the last 15 bits of   |   |            | the CJ signal (in two generations).                  |   |            |                                                      |   |     2165.0 | The calling gateway sends out a packet containing no |   |            | new events, but retransmissions of the final 6 bits  |   |            | of the CJ signal.                                    |   |            |                                                      |   |     2170.0 | The called gateway sends out the last packet         |   |            | containing bits of the JM signal (except for         |   |            | retransmissions).  Note that according to the V.8    |   |            | specification these bits do not in general complete  |   |            | a JM signal or even an "octet" of that signal        |   |            | (although they happen to do so in this example).  A  |   |            | 75 ms period of silence begins at the called end.    |   |            |                                                      |   |     2170.0 | The calling gateway begins to receive V.34           |   |            | signalling from the called modem.                    |   |            |                                                      |   |     2175.0 | The calling gateway finishes playing out the last JM |   |            | signal bit sent to it.                               |   |            |                                                      |   |     2195.0 | The calling gateway sends out a first packet of V.34 |   |            | signalling as voice-band data (PCMU).  Timestamp is  |   |            | ts0 + 17360 and M bit is set to indicate the         |   |            | beginning of content after silence.  The packet      |   |            | contains 200 8-bit samples.  Packetization interval  |   |            | is shown here as continuing to be 30 ms.  It could   |   |            | be less, but MUST NOT be more because that would     |   |            | make the silent period too long.                     |   |            |                                                      |Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   |     2200.0 | The called gateway sends a packet containing no new  |   |            | events, but retransmissions of the last 18 bits of   |   |            | the JM signal (in two generations).                  |   |            |                                                      |   |     2225.0 | The calling gateway sends out the second packet of   |   |            | V.34 signalling as voice-band data (PCMU).           |   |            | Timestamp is ts0 + 17560 and M bit is not set.  The  |   |            | packet contains 240 8-bit samples.                   |   |            |                                                      |   |     2230.0 | The called gateway sends out a packet containing no  |   |            | new events, but retransmissions of the final 9 bits  |   |            | of the JM signal.                                    |   |            |                                                      |   |     2245.0 | The called gateway begins to receive V.34 signalling |   |            | from the called modem.                               |   |            |                                                      |   |     2255.0 | The calling gateway sends out a third packet of V.34 |   |            | signalling as voice-band data (PCMU).  Timestamp is  |   |            | ts0 + 17800 and M bit is not set.  The packet        |   |            | contains 240 8-bit samples.                          |   |            |                                                      |   |     2260.0 | The called gateway sends out a first packet of V.34  |   |            | signalling as voice-band data (PCMU).  Timestamp is  |   |            | ts0 + 17960 and M bit is set to indicate the         |   |            | beginning of content after silence.  The packet      |   |            | contains 120 samples.  Packetization interval is     |   |            | shown here as continuing to be 30 ms.  It could be   |   |            | less, but MUST NOT be more because that would make   |   |            | the silent period too long.                          |   |            |                                                      |   |      . . . | . . .                                                |   +------------+------------------------------------------------------+                 Table 9: Events for Example V.8 ScenarioSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20064.1.  Simultaneous Transmission of Events and Retransmitted Events UsingRFC 2198 Redundancy   Negotiation of the transmission mode being described in this section   would use SDP similar to the following:      m=audio 12343 RTP/AVP 99      a=rtpmap:99 pcmu/8000      m=audio 12345 RTP/AVP 100 101      a=rtpmap:100 red/8000/1      a=fmtp:100 101/101/101      a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000      a=fmtp:101 0-15,32-41,43,46,48-49,52-68   This indicates two media streams, the first for G.711 (i.e., voice or   voice-band data), the second for triply-redundant telephone events.   AsRFC 2198 notes, it is also possible for the sender to send   telephone-event payloads without redundancy in the second stream,   although the redundant form is the primary transmission mode.  (It   would be reasonable to send the interim ANSam reports without   redundancy.)  The set of telephone events supported includes the DTMF   events (not relevant in this example), and all of the data events   defined in this document.  In fact, only event codes 34-35 and 37-40   are used in the example.   For the purpose of illustrating the use ofRFC 2198 redundancy as   well as showing the basic composition of the event reports, the   second packet reporting JM signal bits (sent by the called gateway at   1690.0 ms) seems to be a good choice.  This packet will also carry   the second retransmission of the final /ANSam event report and the   first retransmission of the initial 7 bits of the JM signal.  The   detailed content of the packet is shown in Figure 1.  To see the   contents of the successive generations more clearly, they are   presented as if they were aligned on successive 32-bit boundaries.   In fact, they are all offset by one octet, following on consecutively   from theRFC 2198 header.   The M bit is set in the RTP header for the packet, as required for   the coding of multiple events in the primary block of data.  In fact,RFC 2198 implies that this is the correct behavior, but does not say   so explicitly.  The E bit is set for every event.  It is possible   that it would not be set for the final event in the primary block.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006       0                   1                    2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3  4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |V=2|P|X| CC=0  |1|  PT=100     |   sequence number = seq0 + 48 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |              timestamp = ts0 + 13280                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |           synchronization source (SSRC) identifier            |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1| block PT=101|  timestamp offset = 720   | block length =  4 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1| block PT=101|  timestamp offset = 267   | block length = 28 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0| block PT=101|     (begin block for /ANSam ...)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      /ANSam block (second retransmission)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 35  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 533        |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+              First 7 bits of JM (="1111111" in V.21 high channel)                    (first retransmission)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      /    (5 similar events, durations 27,26,27,27,26 respectively)  /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+              Next 9 bits of JM (="111000000" in V.21 high channel)                    (new content)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      /     (7 similar events, codes 40,40,39,39,39,39,39 and         /      /      durations 26,27,27,26,27,27,26 respectively)             /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 39  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+             Figure 1: Packet Contents, Redundant Events OnlySchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   Since all of the events in the above packet are consecutive and   adjacent, it would have been permissible according to the telephone-   event payload specification to carry them as a simple event payload   without theRFC 2198 header.  The advantage of the latter is that the   receiving gateway can skip over the retransmitted events when   processing the packet, unless it needs them.4.2.  Simultaneous Transmission of Events and Voice-Band Data UsingRFC2198 Redundancy   Negotiation of the transmission mode being described in this section   would use SDP similar to the following:      m=audio 12343 RTP/AVP 99 100 101      a=rtpmap:99 red/8000/1      a=fmtp:99 100/101/101/101      a=rtpmap:100 pcmu/8000      a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000      a=fmtp:101 0-15,32-41,43,46,48-49,52-68   This indicates one media stream, with G.711 (i.e., voice or voice-   band data) as the primary content, along with three blocks of   telephone events.RFC 2198 requires that the more voluminous   representation (i.e., the G.711) be the primary one.  The most recent   block of events covers the same time period as the voice-band data.   The other two streams provide the first and second retransmissions of   the events as in the previous example.  Because G.711 is the primary   content, the M bit for the packets will in general not be set, except   after periods of silence.   Figure 2 shows the detailed packet content for the same sample point   as in the previous figure, but including the G.711 content.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006       0                   1                    2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3  4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |V=2|P|X| CC=0  |0|  PT=99      |   sequence number = seq0 + 48 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |              timestamp = ts0 + 13280                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |           synchronization source (SSRC) identifier            |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1| block PT=101|  timestamp offset = 720   | block length =  4 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1| block PT=101|  timestamp offset = 267   | block length = 28 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1| block PT=101|  timestamp offset = 0     | block length = 36 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0| block PT=100|     (begin block for /ANSam ...)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      /ANSam block (second retransmission)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 35  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 533        |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+              First 7 bits of JM (="1111111" in V.21 high channel)                    (first retransmission)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      /    (5 similar events, durations 27,26,27,27,26 respectively)  /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+              Next 9 bits of JM (="111000000" in V.21 high channel)                    (new content)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 40  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      /     (7 similar events, codes 40,40,39,39,39,39,39 and         /      /      durations 26,27,27,26,27,27,26 respectively)             /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     event = 39  |1|R| volume    |       duration = 27         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006             30 ms of G.711-encoded voice-band data (240 samples)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |   Sample 1    |   Sample 2    |   Sample 3    |   Sample 4    |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      /                            . . .                              /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |   Sample 237  |   Sample 238  |   Sample 239  |   Sample 240  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    Figure 2: Packet Contents with Voice-Band Data Combined with Events5.  Security Considerations   The V.21 bit events defined in this document may be used to transmit   user-sensitive data.  This could include initial log-on sequences and   application-level protocol exchanges as well as user content.  As a   result, such a usage of V.21 bit events entails, in the terminology   of [16], threats to both communications and system security.  The   attacks of concern are:   o  confidentiality violations and password sniffing;   o  hijacking of data sessions through message insertion;   o  modification of the transmitted content through man-in-the-middle      attacks;   o  denial of service by means of message insertion, deletion, and      modification aimed at interference with the application protocol.   To prevent these attacks, the transmission of V.21 bit events MUST be   given confidentiality protection.  Message authentication and the   protection of message integrity MUST also be provided.  These address   the threats posed by message insertion and modification.  With these   measures in place, RTP sequence numbers and the redundancy provided   by theRFC 4733 procedures for transmission of events add protection   against and some resiliency in the face of message deletion.   The other events defined in this document (and V.21 bit events within   control sequences) are used only for the setup and control of   sessions between data terminals or fax devices.  While disclosure of   these events would not expose user-sensitive data, it can potentially   expose capabilities of the user equipment that could be exploited by   attacks in the PSTN domain.  Thus, confidentiality protection SHOULD   be provided.  The primary threat is denial of service, through   injection of inappropriate signals at vulnerable points in the   control sequence or through alteration or blocking of enough eventSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   packets to disrupt that sequence.  To meet the injection threat,   message authentication and integrity protection MUST be provided.   The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP) [3] meets the   requirements for protection of confidentiality, message integrity,   and message authentication described above.  It SHOULD therefore be   used to protect media streams containing the events described in this   document.      Note that the appropriate method of key distribution for SRTP may      vary with the specific application.      In some deployments, it may be preferable to use other means to      provide protection equivalent to that provided by SRTP.6.  IANA Considerations   This document adds the events in Table 10 to the registry established   byRFC 4733 [5].   +-------+--------------------------------------------+--------------+   | Event | Event Name                                 |    Reference |   |  Code |                                            |              |   +-------+--------------------------------------------+--------------+   |   23  | CRdSeg: second segment of V.8 bis CRd      |RFC 4734 |   |       | signal                                     |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   24  | CReSeg: second segment of V.8 bis CRe      |RFC 4734 |   |       | signal                                     |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   25  | MRdSeg: second segment of V.8 bis MRd      |RFC 4734 |   |       | signal                                     |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   26  | MReSeg: second segment of V.8 bis MRe      |RFC 4734 |   |       | signal                                     |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   27  | V32AC: A pattern of bits modulated at 4800 |RFC 4734 |   |       | bits/s, emitted by a V.32/V.32bis          |              |   |       | answering terminal upon detection of the   |              |   |       | AA pattern.                                |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   28  | V8bISeg: first segment of initiating V.8   |RFC 4734 |   |       | bis signal                                 |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   29  | V8bRSeg: first segment of responding V.8   |RFC 4734 |   |       | bis signal                                 |              |   |       |                                            |              |Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   |   30  | V21L300: 300 bits/s low channel V.21       |RFC 4734 |   |       | indication                                 |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   31  | V21H300: 300 bits/s high channel V.21      |RFC 4734 |   |       | indication                                 |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   32  | ANS (V.25 Answer tone).  Also known as CED |RFC 4734 |   |       | (T.30 Called tone).                        |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   33  | /ANS (V.25 Answer tone after phase shift). |RFC 4734 |   |       | Also known as /CED (T.30 Called tone after |              |   |       | phase shift)                               |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   34  | ANSam (V.8 amplitude modified Answer tone) |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   35  | /ANSam (V.8 amplitude modified Answer tone |RFC 4734 |   |       | after phase shift)                         |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   36  | CNG (T.30 Calling tone)                    |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   37  | V.21 channel 1 (low channel), '0' bit      |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   38  | V.21 channel 1, '1' bit.  Also used for    |RFC 4734 |   |       | ESiSeg (second segment of V.8 bis ESi      |              |   |       | signal).                                   |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   39  | V.21 channel 2, '0' bit                    |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   40  | V.21 channel 2, '1' bit.  Also used for    |RFC 4734 |   |       | ESrSeg (second segment of V.8 bis ESr      |              |   |       | signal).                                   |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   49  | CT (V.25 Calling Tone)                     |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   52  | ANS2225: 2225-Hz indication for text       |RFC 4734 |   |       | telephony                                  |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   53  | CI (V.8 Call Indicator signal preamble)    |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   54  | V.21 preamble flag (T.30)                  |RFC 4734 |   |       |                                            |              |   |   55  | V21L110: 110 bits/s V.21 indication for    |RFC 4734 |   |       | text telephony                             |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   56  | B103L300: Bell 103 low channel indication  |RFC 4734 |   |       | for text telephony                         |              |   |       |                                            |              |Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   |   57  | V23Main: V.23 main channel indication for  |RFC 4734 |   |       | text telephony                             |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   58  | V23Back: V.23 back channel indication for  |RFC 4734 |   |       | text telephony                             |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   59  | Baud4545: 45.45 bits/s Baudot indication   |RFC 4734 |   |       | for text telephony                         |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   60  | Baud50: 50 bits/s Baudot indication for    |RFC 4734 |   |       | text telephony                             |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   61  | VBDGen: Tone patterns indicative of use of |RFC 4734 |   |       | an unidentified modem type                 |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   62  | XCIMark: A pattern of bits modulated in    |RFC 4734 |   |       | the V.23 main channel, emitted by a V.18   |              |   |       | calling terminal.                          |              |   |       |                                            |              |   |   63  | V32AA: A pattern of bits modulated at 4800 |RFC 4734 |   |       | bits/s, emitted by a V.32/V.23bis calling  |              |   |       | terminal.                                  |              |   +-------+--------------------------------------------+--------------+   Table 10: Data-Related Additions toRFC 4733 Telephony Event Registry7.  Acknowledgements   Scott Petrack was the original author ofRFC 2833.  Henning   Schulzrinne later loaned his expertise to complete the document, but   Scott must be credited with the energy behind the idea of a compact   encoding of tones over IP.   Gunnar Hellstrom and Keith Chu provided particularly useful comments   helping to shape the present document.  Amiram Allouche and Ido Benda   drew the authors' attention to the value of including events for   V.32/V.32bis in the document, and Yaakov Stein confirmed details of   operation of this modem.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 20068.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]   Perkins, C., Kouvelas, I., Hodson, O., Hardman, V., Handley,         M., Bolot, J., Vega-Garcia, A., and S. Fosse-Parisis, "RTP         Payload for Redundant Audio Data",RFC 2198, September 1997.   [3]   Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.         Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",RFC 3711, March 2004.   [4]   Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session         Description Protocol",RFC 4566, July 2006.   [5]   Schulzrinne, H. and T. Taylor, "RTP Payload for DTMF Digits,         Telephony Tones, and Telephony Signals",RFC 4733, December         2006.   [6]   International Telecommunication Union, "Echo suppressors",         ITU-T Recommendation G.164, November 1988.   [7]   International Telecommunication Union, "Echo cancellers", ITU-T         Recommendation G.165, March 1993.   [8]   International Telecommunication Union, "Procedures for document         facsimile transmission in the general switched telephone         network", ITU-T Recommendation T.30, July 2003.   [9]   International Telecommunication Union, "Procedures for starting         sessions of data transmission over the public switched         telephone network", ITU-T Recommendation V.8, November 2000.   [10]  International Telecommunication Union, "Procedures for the         identification and selection of common modes of operation         between data circuit-terminating equipments (DCEs) and between         data terminal equipments (DTEs) over the public switched         telephone network and on leased point-to-point telephone-type         circuits", ITU-T Recommendation V.8 bis, November 2000.   [11]  International Telecommunication Union, "Operational and         interworking requirements for {DCEs operating in the text         telephone mode", ITU-T Recommendation V.18, November 2000.         See also Recommendation V.18 Amendment 1, Nov. 2002.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   [12]  International Telecommunication Union, "300 bits per second         duplex modem standardized for use in the general switched         telephone network", ITU-T Recommendation V.21, November 1988.   [13]  International Telecommunication Union, "Automatic answering         equipment and general procedures for automatic calling         equipment on the general switched telephone network including         procedures for disabling of echo control devices for both         manually and automatically established calls", ITU-T         Recommendation V.25, October 1996.         See also Corrigendum 1 to Recommendation V.25, Jul. 2001.   [14]  International Telecommunication Union, "A family of 2-wire,         duplex modems operating at data signalling rates of up to 9600         bit/s for use on the general switched telephone network and on         leased telephone-type circuits", ITU-T Recommendation V.32,         March 1993.   [15]  International Telecommunication Union, "A duplex modem         operating at data signalling rates of up to 14 400 bit/s for         use on the general switched telephone network and on leased         point-to-point 2-wire telephone-type circuits", ITU-T         Recommendation V.32bis, February 1991.8.2.  Informative References   [16]  Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC Text on         Security Considerations",BCP 72,RFC 3552, July 2003.   [17]  Kreuter, R., "RTP Payload Format for a 64 kbit/s Transparent         Call",RFC 4040, April 2005.   [18]  Hellstrom, G. and P. Jones, "RTP Payload for Text         Conversation",RFC 4103, June 2005.   [19]  International Telecommunication Union, "Pulse code modulation         (PCM) of voice frequencies", ITU-T Recommendation G.711,         November 1988.   [20]  International Telecommunication Union, "Terminal for low bit-         rate multimedia communication", ITU-T Recommendation H.324,         March 2002.   [21]  International Telecommunication Union, "Procedures for real-         time Group 3 facsimile communication over IP networks", ITU-T         Recommendation T.38, July 2003.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   [22]  International Telecommunication Union, "International         interworking for videotex services", ITU-T         Recommendation T.101, November 1994.   [23]  International Telecommunication Union, "Data protocols for         multimedia conferencing", ITU-T Recommendation T.120,         July 1996.   [24]  International Telecommunication Union, "A 2-wire modem for         facsimile applications with rates up to 14 400 bit/s", ITU-T         Recommendation V.17, February 1991.   [25]  International Telecommunication Union, "600/1200-baud modem         standardized for use in the general switched telephone         network", ITU-T Recommendation V.23, November 1988.   [26]  International Telecommunication Union, "4800/2400 bits per         second modem standardized for use in the general switched         telephone network", ITU-T Recommendation V.27ter,         November 1988.   [27]  International Telecommunication Union, "9600 bits per second         modem standardized for use on point-to-point 4-wire leased         telephone-type circuits", ITU-T Recommendation V.29,         November 1988.   [28]  International Telecommunication Union, "A modem operating at         data signalling rates of up to 33 600 bit/s for use on the         general switched telephone network and on leased point-to-point         2-wire telephone-type circuits", ITU-T Recommendation V.34,         February 1998.   [29]  International Telecommunication Union, "A digital modem and         analogue modem pair for use on the Public Switched Telephone         Network (PSTN) at data signalling rates of up to 56 000 bit/s         downstream and up to 33 600 bit/s upstream", ITU-T         Recommendation V.90, September 1998.   [30]  International Telecommunication Union, "A digital modem         operating at data signalling rates of up to 64 000 bit/s for         use on a 4-wire circuit switched connection and on leased         point-to-point 4-wire digital circuits", ITU-T         Recommendation V.91, May 1999.   [31]  International Telecommunication Union, "Enhancements to         Recommendation V.90", ITU-T Recommendation V.92, November 2000.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006   [32]  International Telecommunication Union, "Modem-over-IP networks:         Procedures for the end-to-end connection of V-series DCEs",         ITU-T Recommendation V.150.1, January 2003.   [33]  International Telecommunication Union, "Procedures for         supporting voice-band data over IP networks", ITU-T         Recommendation V.152, January 2005.   [34]  Telecommunications Industry Association, "A Frequency Shift         Keyed Modem for Use on the Public Switched Telephone Network",         ANSI TIA- 825-A-2003, April 2003.Authors' Addresses   Henning Schulzrinne   Columbia U.   Dept. of Computer Science   Columbia University   1214 Amsterdam Avenue   New York, NY  10027   US   EMail: schulzrinne@cs.columbia.edu   Tom Taylor   Nortel   1852 Lorraine Ave   Ottawa, Ontario  K1H 6Z8   Canada   EMail: taylor@nortel.comSchulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 4734         Modem, Fax, and Text Telephony Events     December 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST,   AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES,   EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT   THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY   IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR   PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Schulzrinne & Taylor        Standards Track                    [Page 47]

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