RFC7266

From RFC-Wiki

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Clark Request for Comments: 7266 Telchemy Category: Standards Track Q. Wu ISSN: 2070-1721 Huawei

                                                           R. Schott
                                                    Deutsche Telekom
                                                             G. Zorn
                                                         Network Zen
                                                           June 2014
        RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Extended Report (XR)
      Blocks for Mean Opinion Score (MOS) Metric Reporting

Abstract

This document defines an RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Extended Report (XR) Block including two new segment types and associated Session Description Protocol (SDP) parameters that allow the reporting of mean opinion score (MOS) Metrics for use in a range of RTP applications.

Status of This Memo

This is an Internet Standards Track document.

This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7266.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.

This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.

Introduction

MOS Metrics Report Block

This document defines a new block type to augment those defined in RFC3611, for use in a range of RTP applications.

The new block type provides information on media quality using one of several standard metrics (e.g., mean opinion score (MOS)).

The metrics belong to the class of application-level metrics defined in RFC6792.

RTCP and RTCP XR Reports

The use of RTCP for reporting is defined in RFC3550. RFC 3611 defined an extensible structure for reporting using an RTCP Extended Report (XR). This document defines a new Extended Report block for use with RFC3550 and RFC3611.

Performance Metrics Framework

The Performance Metrics Framework RFC6390 provides guidance on the definition and specification of performance metrics. The RTP Monitoring Architectures document RFC6792 provides guidelines for reporting block format using RTCP XR. The XR block type described in this document is in accordance with the guidelines in RFC6390 and RFC6792.

Applicability

The MOS Metrics Report Block can be used in any application of RTP for which QoE (Quality-of-Experience) measurement algorithms are defined.

The factors that affect real-time audio/video application quality can be split into two categories. The first category consists of transport-specific factors such as packet loss, delay, and jitter (which also translates into losses in the playback buffer). The factors in the second category consists of content- and codec-related factors such as codec type and loss recovery technique, coding bit rate, packetization scheme, and content characteristics

Transport-specific factors may be insufficient to infer real-time media quality as codec related parameters and the interaction between transport problems and application-layer protocols can have a substantial effect on observed media quality. Media quality may be measured using algorithms that directly compare input and output

media streams, or it may be estimated using algorithms that model the interaction between media quality, protocol, and encoded content. Media quality is commonly expressed in terms of MOS; however, it is also represented by a range of indexes and other scores.

The measurement of media quality has a number of applications:

o Detecting problems with media delivery or encoding that is

  impacting user-perceived quality.

o Tuning the content encoder algorithm to satisfy real-time data

  quality requirements.

o Determining which system techniques to use in a given situation

  and when to switch from one technique to another as system
  parameters change (for example, as discussed in [G.1082]).

o Prequalifying a network to assess its ability to deliver an

  acceptable end-user-perceived quality level.

Terminology

Standards Language

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 RFC2119.

Notable terminology used is the following.

  Numeric formats X:Y
     where X the number of bits prior to the decimal place and Y the
     number of bits after the decimal place.
     Hence, 8:8 represents an unsigned number in the range 0.0 to
     255.996 with a granularity of 0.0039. 0:16 represents a proper
     binary fraction with range 0.0 to 1 - 1/65536 = 0.9999847,
     though note that use of flag values at the top of the numeric
     range slightly reduces this upper limit.  For example, if the
     16-bit values 0XFFFE and 0XFFFF are used as flags for "over-
     range" and "unavailable" conditions, a 0:16 quantity has range
     0.0 to 1 - 3/65536 = 0.9999542.
  Calculation Algorithm
     Calculation Algorithm is used in this document to mean the MOS
     or QoE estimation algorithm.

MOS Metrics Block

A multimedia application MOS Metric is commonly expressed as a MOS. The MOS is usually on a scale from 1 to 5, in which 5 represents excellent and 1 represents unacceptable; however, it can use other ranges (for example, 0 to 10 ). The term "MOS" originates from subjective testing and is used to refer to the mean of a number of individual opinion scores. Therefore, there is a well-understood relationship between MOS and user experience; hence, the industry commonly uses MOS as the scale for objective test results. Subjective tests can be used for measuring live network traffic; however, the use of objective or algorithmic measurement techniques allows much larger scale measurements to be made. Within the scope of this document, mean opinion scores are obtained using objective or estimation algorithms. ITU-T or ITU-R recommendations (e.g., [BS.1387-1], [G.107], [G.107.1], [P.862], [P.862.1], [P.862.2], [P.863], [P.564], [G.1082], [P.1201.1], [P.1201.2], [P.1202.1], [P.1202.2]) define methodologies for assessment of the performance of audio and video streams. Other international and national standards organizations such as EBU, ETSI, IEC, and IEEE also define QoE algorithms and methodologies, and the intent of this document is not to restrict its use to ITU recommendations but to suggest that ITU recommendations be used where they are defined.

This block reports the media quality in the form of a MOS range (e.g., 1-5, 0-10, or 0-100, as specified by the calculation algorithm); however, it does not report the MOS that includes parameters outside the scope of the RTP stream, for example, signaling performance, mean time to repair (MTTR), or other factors that may affect the overall user experience.

The MOS Metric reported in this block gives a numerical indication of the perceived quality of the received media stream, which is typically measured at the receiving end of the RTP stream. Instances of this Metrics Block refer by synchronization source (SSRC) to the separate auxiliary Measurement Information block RFC6776 which describes measurement periods in use (see RFC 6776, Section 4.2).

This Metrics Block relies on the measurement period in the Measurement Information block indicating the span of the report. Senders MUST send this block in the same compound RTCP packet as the Measurement Information block. Receivers MUST verify that the measurement period is received in the same compound RTCP packet as this Metrics Block. If not, this Metrics Block MUST be discarded.

Report Block Structure

The MOS Metrics Block has the following format:

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     BT=29     | I |  Reserved |       Block Length            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        SSRC of source                         |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Segment  1                           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Segment 2                            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Segment n                            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Definition of Fields in MOS Metrics Block

Block type (BT): 8 bits

  The MOS Metrics Block is identified by the constant 29.

Interval Metric flag (I): 2 bits

  This field is used to indicate whether the MOS Metrics are
  Sampled, Interval, or Cumulative RFC6792:
     I=10: Interval Duration - the reported value applies to the
           most recent measurement interval duration between
           successive metrics reports.
     I=11: Cumulative Duration - the reported value applies to the
           accumulation period characteristic of cumulative
           measurements.
     I=01: Sampled Value - the reported value is a sampled
           instantaneous value.
     I=00: Reserved
  In this document, MOS Metrics MAY be reported for intervals or for
  the duration of the media stream (cumulative).  The value I=01,
  indicating a sampled value, MUST NOT be sent and MUST be discarded
  when received.

Reserved: 6 bits

  This field is reserved for future definition.  In the absence of
  such a definition, the bits in this field MUST be set to zero and
  ignored by the receiver (see RFC 6709, Section 4.2).

Block Length: 16 bits

  The length of this report block in 32-bit words, minus one.  For
  the MOS Metrics Block, the block length is variable length.

SSRC of source: 32 bits

  As defined in Section 4.1 of RFC3611.

Segment i: 32 bits

  There are two segment types defined in this document: single-
  channel audio/video per SSRC segment and multi-channel audio per
  SSRC segment.  Multi-channel audio per SSRC segment is used to
  deal with the case where multi-channel audio streams are carried
  in one RTP stream while a single-channel audio/video per SSRC
  segment is used to deal with the case where each media stream is
  identified by SSRC and sent in separate RTP streams.  The leftmost
  bit of the segment determines its type.  If the leftmost bit of
  the segment is zero, then it is a single-channel segment.  If the
  leftmost bit is one, then it is a multi-channel audio segment.
  Note that two segment types cannot be present in the same metric
  block.

Single-Channel Audio/Video per SSRC Segment

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |S| CAID | PT | MOS Value | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Segment Type (S): 1 bit

  This field is used to identify the segment type used in this
  report block.  A zero identifies this as a single-channel
  audio/video per SSRC segment.  Single channel means there is only
  one media stream carried in one RTP stream.  The single-channel
  audio/video per SSRC segment can be used to report the MOS value
  associated with the media stream identified by SSRC.  If there are
  multiple media streams and they want to use the single-channel
  audio/video per SSRC segment to report the MOS value, they should
  be carried in the separate RTP streams with each identified by
  different SSRC.  In this case, multiple MOS Metrics Blocks are
  required to report the MOS value corresponding to each media
  stream using single-channel audio/video per SSRC segment in the
  same RTCP XR packet.

Calculation Algorithm ID (CAID) : 8 bits

  The 8-bit CAID is the session specific reference to the
  calculation algorithm and associated qualifiers indicated in SDP
  (see Section 4.1) and used to compute the MOS score for this
  segment.

Payload Type (PT): 7 bits

  MOS Metrics reporting depends on the payload format in use.  This
  field identifies the RTP payload type in use during the reporting
  interval.  The binding between RTP payload types and RTP payload
  formats is configured via a signaling protocol, for example, an
  SDP offer/answer exchange.  If the RTP payload type used is
  changed during an RTP session, separate reports SHOULD be sent for
  each RTP payload type, with corresponding measurement information
  blocks indicating the time period to which they relate.
  Note that the use of this Report Block with MPEG Transport streams
  carried over RTP is undefined as each MPEG Transport stream may
  use distinct audio or video codecs and the indication of the
  encoding of these is within the MPEG Transport stream and does not
  use RTP payloads.

MOS Value: 16 bits

  The estimated mean opinion score (MOS) for multimedia application
  performance is estimated using an algorithm that includes the
  impact of delay, loss, jitter and other impairments that affect
  media quality.  This is an unsigned fixed-point 7:9 value
  representing the MOS, allowing the MOS score up to 127 in the
  integer part.  MOS ranges are defined as part of the specification
  of the MOS estimation algorithm (Calculation Algorithm in this
  document), and are normally ranges like 1-5, 0-10, or 0-100.  Two
  values are reserved: a value of 0xFFFE indicates that the
  measurement is out of range and a value of 0xFFFF indicates that
  the measurement is unavailable.  Values outside of the range
  defined by the Calculation Algorithm, other than the two reserved
  values, MUST NOT be sent and MUST be ignored by the receiving
  system.

Multi-Channel Audio per SSRC Segment

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |S| CAID | PT |CHID | MOS Value | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Segment Type (S): 1 bit

  This field is used to identify the segment type used in this
  report block.  A one identifies this as a multi-channel audio
  segment.

Calculation Algorithm ID (CAID) : 8 bits

  The 8-bit CAID is the session specific reference to the
  calculation algorithm and associated qualifiers indicated in SDP
  (see Section 4.1) and used to compute the MOS score for this
  segment.

Payload Type (PT): 7 bits

  As defined in Section 3.2.1 of this document

Channel Identifier (CHID): 3 bits

  If multiple channels of audio are carried in one RTP stream, each
  channel of audio will be viewed as an independent channel (e.g.,
  left channel audio, right channel audio).  This field is used to
  identify each channel carried in the same media stream.  The
  default channel mapping follows static ordering rule described in
  Section 4.1 of RFC3551.  However, there are some payload formats
  that use different channel mappings, e.g., AC-3 audio over RTP
  RFC4184 only follow AC-3 channel order scheme defined in [ATSC].
  Enhanced AC-3 audio over RTP RFC4598 uses a dynamic channel
  transform mechanism.  In order for the appropriate channel mapping
  to be determined, MOS metrics reports need to be tied to an RTP
  payload format.  The reports should include the payload type of
  the reported media according to RFC6792, so that it can be used
  to determine the appropriate channel mapping.

MOS Value: 13 bits

  The estimated MOS for multimedia application performance is
  defined as including the effects of delay, loss, discard, jitter
  and other effects that would affect media quality.  This is an
  unsigned fixed-point 7:6 value representing the MOS, allowing the
  MOS score up to 127 in the integer part.  MOS ranges are defined
  as part of the specification of the MOS estimation algorithm
  (Calculation Algorithm in this document), and are normally ranges
  like 1-5, 0-10, or 0-100.  Two values are reserved: a value of
  0x1FFE indicates out of range and a value of 0x1FFF indicates that
  the measurement is unavailable.  Values outside of the range
  defined by the Calculation Algorithm, other than the two reserved
  values, MUST NOT be sent and MUST be ignored by the receiving
  system.

SDP Signaling

RFC3611 defines the use of SDP RFC4566 for signaling the use of XR blocks. However, XR blocks MAY be used without prior signaling (see Section 5 of RFC 3611).

SDP "rtcp-xr-attrib" Attribute Extension

This section augments the SDP RFC4566 attribute "rtcp-xr" defined in RFC3611 by providing an additional value of "xr-format" to signal the use of the report block defined in this document. Within the "xr-format", the syntax element "calgextmap" is an attribute as defined in RFC4566 and used to signal the mapping of the local identifier (CAID) in the segment extension defined in Section 3.2 to the calculation algorithm. Specific extension attributes are defined by the specification that defines a specific extension name: there might be several. The ABNF RFC5234 syntax is as follows.

xr-format =/ xr-mos-block xr-mos-block = "mos-metric" ["=" calgextmap *("," calgextmap)] calgextmap = mapentry "=" extensionname [SP extentionattributes] direction = "sendonly" / "recvonly" / "sendrecv" / "inactive" mapentry = "calg:" 1*3DIGIT [ "/" direction ]

                      ; Values in the range 1-255 are valid
                      ; if needed, 0 can be used to indicate that
                      ; an algorithm is rejected

extensionname = "P564";ITU-T P.564 Compliant Algorithm [P.564]

             / "G107";ITU-T G.107 [G.107]
             / "G107_1";ITU-T G.107.1 [G.107.1]
             / "TS101_329";ETSI TS 101 329-5 Annex E [ ETSI]
             /"JJ201_1 ";TTC JJ201.1 [TTC]
             /"P1201_1";ITU-T P.1201.2 [P.1201.1]
             /"P1201_2";ITU-T P.1201.2 [P.1201.2]
             /"P1202_1";ITU-T P.1202.1 [P.1202.1]
             /"P1202_2";ITU-T P.1202.2 [P.1202.2]
             /"P.862.2";ITU-T P.862.2 [P.862.2]
             /"P.863"; ITU-T P.863 [P.863]
             / non-ws-string

extensionattributes = mosref

                   /attributes-ext

mosref = "mosref=" ("l"; lower resolution

                    /"m"; middle resolution
                    / "h";higher resolution
                   / non-ws-string)

attributes-ext = non-ws-string SP = <Defined in RFC 5234> non-ws-string = 1*(%x21-FF)

Each local identifier (CAID) of calculation algorithm used in the segment defined in Section 3.2 is mapped to a string using an attribute of the form:

a=calg:<value> [ "/"<direction> ] <name> [<extensionattributes>]

where <name> is a calculation algorithm name, as above, <value> is the local identifier (CAID) of the calculation algorithm associated with the segment defined in this document and is an integer in the valid range, inclusive.

Example: a=rtcp-xr:mos-metric=calg:1=G107,calg:2=P1202_1

A usable mapping MUST use IDs in the valid range, and each ID in this range MUST be unique and used only once for each stream or each channel in the stream.

The mapping MUST be provided per media stream (in the media-level section(s) of SDP, i.e., after an "m=" line).

The syntax element "mosref" is referred to the media resolution relative reference and has three values 'l','m','h'. (e.g., narrowband (3.4 kHz) speech and Standard Definition (SD) or lower resolution video have 'l' resolution, super-wideband (>14 kHz) speech or higher and High Definition (HD) or higher resolution video have 'h' resolution, wideband speech (7 kHz) and video with resolution between SD and HD has 'm' resolution). The MOS reported in the MOS metrics block might vary with the MOS reference; for example, MOS values for narrowband, wideband, super-wideband codecs occupy the same range but SHOULD be reported in different value. For video application, MOS scores for SD resolution, HD resolution video also occupy the same ranges and SHOULD be reported in different value.

Offer/Answer Usage

When SDP is used in offer/answer context, the SDP Offer/Answer usage defined in RFC3611 applies. In the offer/answer context, the signaling described above might be used in three ways:

o asymmetric behavior (segment extensions sent in only one

  direction),

o the offer of mutually exclusive alternatives, or

o the offer of more segments than can be sent in a single session.

A direction attribute MAY be included in a "calgextmap"; without it, the direction implicitly inherits, of course, from the RTCP stream direction.

Segment extensions, with their directions, MAY be signaled for an "inactive" stream. An extension direction MUST be compatible with the stream direction. If a segment extension in the SDP offer is marked as "sendonly" and the answerer desires to receive it, the extension MUST be marked as "recvonly" in the SDP answer. An answerer that has no desire to receive the extension or does not understand the extension SHOULD NOT include it in the SDP answer.

If a segment extension is marked as "recvonly" in the SDP offer and the answerer desires to send it, the extension MUST be marked as "sendonly" in the SDP answer. An answerer that has no desire to, or is unable to, send the extension SHOULD NOT include it in the SDP answer.

If a segment extension is offered as "sendrecv", explicitly or implicitly, and asymmetric behavior is desired, the SDP MAY be modified to modify or add direction qualifiers for that segment extension.

A "mosref" attribute and "MOS Type" attribute MAY be included in a calgextmap; if not present, the "mosref" and "MOS Type" MUST be as defined in the QoE estimation algorithm referenced by the name attribute (e.g., P.1201.1 [P.1201.1] indicates lower resolution used while P.1201.2 [P.1201.2] indicates higher resolution used) or payload type carried in the segment extension (e.g., EVRC-WB RFC5188 indicates using Wideband Codec). However, not all payload types or MOS algorithm names indicate resolution to be used and MOS type to be used. If an answerer receives an offer with a "mosref" attribute value it doesn't support (e.g.,the answerer only supports "l" and receives "h" from offerer), the answer SHOULD reject the mosref attribute value offered by the offerer.

If the answerer wishes to reject a "mosref" attribute offered by the offerer, it sets identifiers associated with segment extensions in the answer to the value in the range 4096-4351. The rejected answer MUST contain a "mosref" attribute whose value is the value of the SDP offer.

Local identifiers in the valid range (inclusive) in an offer or answer must not be used more than once per media section. A session update MAY change the direction qualifiers of segment extensions under use. A session update MAY add or remove segment extension(s). Identifier values in the valid range MUST NOT be altered (remapped).

If a party wishes to offer mutually exclusive alternatives, then multiple segment extensions with the same identifier in the (unusable) range 4096-4351 MAY be offered; the answerer SHOULD select at most one of the offered extensions with the same identifier, and remap it to a free identifier in the valid range for that extension to be usable. Note that the two segment types defined in Section 3 are also exclusive alternatives.

If more segment extensions are offered in the valid range, the answerer SHOULD choose those that are desired and place the offered identifier value "as is" in the SDP answer.

Similarly, if more segment extensions are offered than can be fit in the valid range, identifiers in the range 4096-4351 MAY be offered; the answerer SHOULD choose those that are desired and remap them to a free identifier in the valid range.

Note that the range 4096-4351 for these negotiation identifiers is deliberately restricted to allow expansion of the range of valid identifiers in the future. Segment extensions with an identifier outside the valid range cannot, of course, be used.

Example:

Note - port numbers, RTP profiles, payload IDs and rtpmaps, etc., have all been omitted for brevity.

The offer:

a=rtcp-xr:mos-metric=calg:4906=P1201_l,calg:4906=P1202_l, calg: 4907=G107

The answerer is interested in transmission P.1202.1 on a lower resolution application, but it doesn't support P.1201.1 on a lower resolution application at all. It is interested in transmission G.107. Therefore, it adjusts the declarations:

a=rtcp-xr:mos-metric=calg:1=P1202_l,calg:2=G107

IANA Considerations

New block types for RTCP XR are subject to IANA registration. For general guidelines on IANA considerations for RTCP XR, refer to RFC3611.

New RTCP XR Block Type Value

This document assigns the block type value 29 in the IANA "RTP Control Protocol Extended Reports (RTCP XR) Block Type Registry" to the "MOS Metrics Block".

New RTCP XR SDP Parameter

This document also registers a new parameter "mos-metric" in the "RTP Control Protocol Extended Reports (RTCP XR) Session Description Protocol (SDP) Parameters Registry".

The SDP "calgextmap" Attribute

This section contains the information required by RFC4566 for an SDP attribute.

o contact name, email address: RAI Area Directors

  <[email protected]>

o attribute name (as it will appear in SDP): calgextmap

o long-form attribute name in English: calculation algorithm map

  definition

o type of attribute (session level, media level, or both): both

o whether the attribute value is subject to the charset attribute:

  not subject to the charset attribute

o a one-paragraph explanation of the purpose of the attribute: This

  attribute defines the mapping from the local identifier (CAID) in
  the segment extension defined in Section 3.2 into the calculation
  algorithm name as documented in specifications and appropriately
  registered.

o a specification of appropriate attribute values for this

  attribute: see RFC 7266.

New Registry of Calculation Algorithms

This document creates a new registry called "RTCP XR MOS Metric block - multimedia application Calculation Algorithm" as a subregistry of the "RTP Control Protocol Extended Reports (RTCP XR) Block Type Registry". This registry applies to the multimedia session where each type of medium is sent in a separate RTP stream and also applies to the session where multi-channel audios are carried in one RTP stream. Policies for this new registry are as follows:

o The information required to support this assignment is an

  unambiguous definition of the new metric, covering the base
  measurements and how they are processed to generate the reported
  metric.

o The review process for the registry is "Specification Required" as

  described in Section 4.1 of RFC5226.

o Entries in the registry are identified by entry name and mapped to

  the local identifier (CAID) in the segment extension defined in
  Section 3.2.

o Registration Template

  The following information must be provided with each registration:
  *  Name: A string uniquely and unambiguously identifying the
     calculation algorithm for use in protocols.
  *  Name Description: A valid Description of the calculation
     algorithm Name.
  *  Reference: The reference that defines the calculation algorithm
     corresponding to the Name and Name Description.
  *  Type: The media type to which the calculation algorithm is
     applied

o Initial assignments are as follows:

Name Name Description Reference Type

===== ================================ ==========

P564 ITU-T P.564 Compliant Algorithm [P.564] voice G107 ITU-T G.107 [G.107] voice TS101_329 ETSI TS 101 329-5 Annex E [ETSI] voice JJ201_1 TTC JJ201.1 [TTC] voice G107_1 ITU-T G.107.1 [G.107.1] voice P862 ITU-T P.862 [P.862] voice P862_2 ITU-T P.862.2 [P.862.2] voice P863 ITU-T P.863 [P.863] voice P1201_1 ITU-T P.1201.1 [P.1201.1] multimedia P1201_2 ITU-T P.1201.2 [P.1201.2] multimedia P1202_1 ITU-T P.1202.1 [P.1202.1] video P1202_2 ITU-T P.1202.2 [P.1202.2] video

Security Considerations

The new RTCP XR blocks proposed in this document introduce no new security considerations beyond those described in RFC3611.

Contributors

This document merges ideas from two documents addressing the MOS Metric Reporting issue. The authors of these documents are listed below (in alphabetical order):

  Alan Clark <[email protected]>
  Geoff Hunt <[email protected]>
  Martin Kastner <[email protected]>
  Kai Lee <[email protected]>
  Roland Schott <[email protected]>
  Qin Wu <[email protected]>
  Glen Zorn <[email protected]>

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the comments and contributions made by Bruce Adams, Philip Arden, Amit Arora, Bob Biskner, Kevin Connor, Claus Dahm, Randy Ethier, Roni Even, Jim Frauenthal, Albert Higashi, Tom Hock, Shane Holthaus, Paul Jones, Rajesh Kumar, Keith Lantz, Mohamed Mostafa, Amy Pendleton, Colin Perkins, Mike Ramalho, Ravi Raviraj, Albrecht Schwarz, Tom Taylor, Bill Ver Steeg, David R. Oran, Ted Lemon, Benoit Claise, Pete Resnick, Ali Begen, and Hideaki Yamada.

References

Normative References

[ATSC] Advanced Television Systems Committee, Inc., "Digital

            Audio Compression Standard (AC-3, E-AC-3) Revision B",
            ATSC Document A/52B, June 2005.

RFC2119 Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

RFC3550 Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.

            Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
            Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.

RFC3551 Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio

            and Video Conferences with Minimal Control", STD 65, RFC
            3551, July 2003.

RFC3611 Friedman, T., Ed., Caceres, R., Ed., and A. Clark, Ed.,

            "RTP Control Protocol Extended Reports (RTCP XR)", RFC
            3611, November 2003.

RFC4566 Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session

            Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006.

RFC5226 Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an

            IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226,
            May 2008.

RFC5234 Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for

            Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January
            2008.

RFC6776 Clark, A. and Q. Wu, "Measurement Identity and

            Information Reporting Using a Source Description (SDES)
            Item and an RTCP Extended Report (XR) Block", RFC 6776,
            October 2012.

Informative References

[BS.1387-1] ITU-R, "Method for objective measurements of perceived

            audio quality", ITU-R Recommendation BS.1387-1,
            1998-2001.

[ETSI] ETSI, "TIPHON Release 3; Technology Compliance

            Specification; Part 5: Quality of Service (QoS)
            measurement methodologies", ETSI TS 101 329-5 V1.1.1,
            November 2000.

[G.107] ITU-T, "The E Model, a computational model for use in

            transmission planning", ITU-T Recommendation G.107,
            February 2014.

[G.107.1] ITU-T, "Wideband E-model", ITU-T Recommendation G.107.1,

            December 2011.

[G.1082] ITU-T, "Measurement-based methods for improving the

            robustness of IPTV performance", ITU-T Recommendation
            G.1082, April 2009.

[P.1201.1] ITU-T, "Parametric non-intrusive assessment of

            audiovisual media streaming quality - Lower resolution
            application area", ITU-T Recommendation P.1201.1,
            October 2012.

[P.1201.2] ITU-T, "Parametric non-intrusive assessment of

            audiovisual media streaming quality - Higher resolution
            application area", ITU-T Recommendation P.1201.2,
            October 2012.

[P.1202.1] ITU-T, "Parametric non-intrusive bitstream assessment of

            video media streaming quality - Lower resolution
            application area", ITU-T Recommendation P.1202.1,
            October 2012.

[P.1202.2] ITU-T, "Parametric non-intrusive bitstream assessment of

            video media streaming quality - Higher resolution
            application area", ITU-T Recommendation P.1202.2, May
            2013.

[P.564] ITU-T, "Conformance testing for narrowband Voice over IP

            transmission quality assessment models", ITU-T
            Recommendation P.564, November 2007.

[P.862] ITU-T, "Perceptual evaluation of speech quality (PESQ):

            An objective method for end-to-end speech quality
            assessment of narrow-band telephone networks and speech
            codecs", ITU-T Recommendation P.862, February 2001.

[P.862.1] ITU-T, "Mapping function for transforming P.862 raw

            result scores to MOS-LQO", ITU-T Recommendation P.862.1,
            November 2003.

[P.862.2] ITU-T, "Wideband extension to Recommendation P.862 for

            the assessment of wideband telephone networks and speech
            codecs", ITU-T Recommendation P.862.2, November 2007.

[P.863] ITU-T, "Perceptual objective listening quality

            assessment", ITU-T Recommendation P.863, January 2011.

RFC4184 Link, B., Hager, T., and J. Flaks, "RTP Payload Format

            for AC-3 Audio", RFC 4184, October 2005.

RFC4598 Link, B., "Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) Payload

            Format for Enhanced AC-3 (E-AC-3) Audio", RFC 4598, July
            2006.

RFC5188 Desineni, H. and Q. Xie, "RTP Payload Format for the

            Enhanced Variable Rate Wideband Codec (EVRC-WB) and the
            Media Subtype Updates for EVRC-B Codec", RFC 5188,
            February 2008.

RFC6390 Clark, A. and B. Claise, "Guidelines for Considering New

            Performance Metric Development", BCP 170, RFC 6390,
            October 2011.

RFC6792 Wu, Q., Ed., Hunt, G., and P. Arden, "Guidelines for Use

            of the RTP Monitoring Framework", RFC 6792, November
            2012.

[TTC] Telecommunication Technology Committee, "A Method for

            Speech Quality Assessment for IP Telephony", TTC
            JJ-201.01 (Japan), November 2013,
            <http://www.ttc.or.jp/jp/document_list/pdf/j/STD/
            JJ-201.01v7.pdf>.

Appendix A. Metrics Represented Using the Template from RFC 6390

a. MOS Value Metric

  *  Metric Name: MOS in RTP
  *  Metric Description: The estimated mean opinion score for
     multimedia application performance of the RTP stream is defined
     as including the effects of delay, loss, discard, jitter, and
     others on audio or video quality.
  *  Method of Measurement or Calculation: See Section 3.2.1, MOS
     value definition.
  *  Units of Measurement: See Section 3.2.1, MOS value definition.
  *  Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain: See
     Section 3, second paragraph.
  *  Measurement Timing: See Section 3, third paragraph for
     measurement timing and Section 3.1 for Interval Metric flag.
  *  Use and applications: See Section 1.4.
  *  Reporting model: See RFC 3611.

b. Segment Type Metric

  *  Metric Name: Segment Type in RTP
  *  Metric Description: It is used to identify the segment type of
     RTP stream used in this report block.  For more details, see
     Section 3.2.1, Segment type definition.
  *  Method of Measurement or Calculation: See Section 3.2.1,
     Segment Type definition.
  *  Units of Measurement: See Section 3.2.1, Segment Type
     definition.
  *  Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain: See
     Section 3, second paragraph.
  *  Measurement Timing: See Section 3, third paragraph for
     measurement timing and Section 3.1 for Interval Metric flag.
  *  Use and applications: See Section 1.4.
  *  Reporting model: See RFC 3611.

c. Calculation Algorithm Identifier Metric

  *  Metric Name: RTP Stream Calculation Algorithm Identifier
  *  Metric Description: It is the local identifier of RTP Stream
     calculation Algorithm associated with this segment in the range
     1-255 (inclusive).
  *  Method of Measurement or Calculation: See Section 3.2.1,
     Calculation Algorithm ID definition.
  *  Units of Measurement: See Section 3.2.1, Calg Algorithm ID
     definition.
  *  Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain: See
     Section 3, second paragraph.
  *  Measurement Timing: See Section 3, third paragraph for
     measurement timing and Section 3.1 for Interval Metric flag.
  *  Use and applications: See Section 1.4.
  *  Reporting model: See RFC 3611.

d. Payload Type Metric

  *  Metric Name: RTP Payload Type
  *  Metric Description: It is used to identify the format of the
     RTP payload.  For more details, see Section 3.2.1, payload type
     definition.
  *  Method of Measurement or Calculation: See Section 3.2.1,
     Payload type definition.
  *  Units of Measurement: See Section 3.2.1, Payload type
     definition.
  *  Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain: See
     Section 3, second paragraph.
  *  Measurement Timing: See Section 3, third paragraph for
     measurement timing and Section 3.1 for Interval Metric flag.
  *  Use and applications: See Section 1.4.
  *  Reporting model: See RFC 3611.

e. Channel Identifier Metric

  *  Metric Name: Audio Channel Identifier in RTP
  *  Metric Description: It is used to identify each audio channel
     carried in the same RTP stream.  For more details, see Section
     3.2.2, channel identifier definition.
  *  Method of Measurement or Calculation: See Section 3.2.2,
     Channel Identifier definition.
  *  Units of Measurement: See Section 3.2.2, Channel Identifier
     definition.
  *  Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain: See
     Section 3, second paragraph.
  *  Measurement Timing: See Section 3, third paragraph for
     measurement timing and Section 3.1 for Interval Metric flag.
  *  Use and applications: See Section 1.4.
  *  Reporting model: See RFC 3611.

Authors' Addresses

Alan Clark Telchemy Incorporated 2905 Premiere Parkway, Suite 280 Duluth, GA 30097 USA

EMail: [email protected]

Qin Wu Huawei 101 Software Avenue, Yuhua District Nanjing, Jiangsu 210012 China

EMail: [email protected]

Roland Schott Deutsche Telekom Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse 3-7 Darmstadt 64295 Germany

EMail: [email protected]

Glen Zorn Network Zen 77/440 Soi Phoomjit, Rama IV Road Phra Khanong, Khlong Toie Bangkok 10110 Thailand

Phone: +66 (0) 87 502 4274 EMail: [email protected]