RFC741

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NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444







                     SPECIFICATIONS FOR THE
                                
                  NETWORK VOICE PROTOCOL (NVP)
                                
                              and
     Appendix 1:  The Definition of Tables-Set-#1 (for LPC)
          Appendix 2:  Implementation Recommendations












NSC NOTE 68

(Revision of NSC Notes 26, 40, and 43)



Danny Cohen, ISI

January 29, 1976� NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444 Specifications for the Network Voice Protocol (NVP)


                            CONTENTS

PREFACE iii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS iv

INTRODUCTION 2

THE CONTROL PROTOCOL 2

  Summary of the CONTROL Messages                                  3
  Definition of the CONTROL Messages                               4
  Definition of the <WHAT> and <HOW>
     Negotiation Tables                                            8
  On RENEGOTIATION                                                10
  The Header of Data Messages                                     10

THE LPC DATA PROTOCOL 13

EXAMPLES FOR THE CONTROL PROTOCOL 15

APPENDIX 1: THE DEFINITION OF TABLES-SET-#1 18

  General Comments                                                20
  Comments on the PITCH Table                                     20
  Comments on the GAIN Table                                      21
  Comments on the INDEX7 Table                                    21
  Comments on the INDEX6 Table                                    21
  Comments on the INDEX5 Table                                    21
  The PITCH Table                                                 22
  The GAIN Table                                                  24
  The INDEX7 Table                                                25
  The INDEX6 Table                                                26
  The INDEX5 Table                                                27

APPENDIX 2: IMPLEMENTATION RECOMMENDATIONS 28

REFERENCES 30









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                            PREFACE

The major objective of ARPA's Network Secure Communications (NSC) project is to develop and demonstrate the feasibility of secure, high-quality, low-bandwidth, real-time, full-duplex (two-way) digital voice communications over packet-switched computer communications networks. This kind of communication is a very high priority military goal for all levels of command and control activities. ARPA's NSC projrct will supply digitized speech which can be secured by existing encryption devices. The major goal of this research is to demonstrate a digital high-quality, low-bandwidth, secure voice handling capability as part of the general military requirement for worldwide secure voice communication. The development at ISI of the Network Voice Protocol described herein is an important part of the total effort.



















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                        ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The Network Voice Protocol (NVP), implemented first in December 1973, and has been in use since then for local and transnet real-time voice communication over the ARPANET at the following sites:

  o    Information  Sciences  Institute,  for LPC and CVSD,  with  a
       PDP-11/45 and an SPS-41.
  o    Lincoln  Laboratory,  for LPC and CVSD,  with a TX2  and  the
       Lincoln FDP, and with a PDP-11/45 and the LDVT.
  o    Culler-Harrison,  Inc.,  for LPC,  with  the  Culler-Harrison
       MP32A and AP-90.
  o    Stanford Research Institute, for LPC, with a PDP-11/40 and an
       SPS-41.

The NVP's success in bridging the differences between the above systems is due mainly to the cooperation of many people in the ARPA-NSC community, including Jim Forgie (Lincoln Laboratory), Mike McCammon (Culler-Harrison), Steve Casner (ISI) and Paul Raveling (ISI), who participated heavily in the definition of the control protocol; and John Markel (Speech Communications Research Laboratory), John Makhoul (Bolt Beranek & Newman, Inc.) and Randy Cole (ISI), who participated in the definition of the data protocol. Many other people have contributed to the NVP-based effort, in both software and hardware support.













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                        1.  INTRODUCTION

Currently, computer communication networks are designed for data transfer. Since there is a growing need for communication of real-time interactive voice over computer networks, new communication discipline must be developed. The current HOST-to-HOST protocol of the ARPANET, which was designed (and optimized) for data transfer, was found unsuitable for real-time network voice communication. Therefore this Network Voice Protocol (NVP) was designed and implemented.

Important design objectives of the NVP are:

  - Recovery  of loss of any message  without  catastrophic effects.
    Therefore  all answers have to be unambiguous, in the sense that
    it must be clear to which inquiry a reply refers.
  - Design  such that no system  can tie up the resources of another
    system unnecessarily.
  - Avoidance of end-to-end retransmission.
  - Separation of control signals from data traffic.
  - Separation of vocoding-dependent parts from vocoding-independent
    parts.
  - Adaptation to the dynamic network performance.
  - Optimal  performance,  i.e.  guaranteed  required bandwidth, and
    minimized maximum delay.
  - Independence from lower level protocols.

The protocol consists of two parts:

  (1) The control protocol,
  (2) The data protocol.

Control messages are sent as controlled (TYPE 0/0) messages, and data messages may be sent as either controlled (TYPE 0/0) or uncontrolled (TYPE 0/3) messages (see BBN Report 1822 for definition of MESSAGE-TYPE).

Throughout this document a "word" means a "16-bit quantity".




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                    2.  THE CONTROL PROTOCOL

Throughout this document the 12-bit MESSAGE-ID (see BBN Report 1822) is referred to as LINK (its 8 MSBs) and SUB-LINK (its 4 LSBs).

The control protocol starts with an initial connection phase on link 377 and continues on other links assigned at run time.

Four links are used for each voice communication:

  Link L    will be used for control, from CALLER to ANSWERER.
  Link K    will be used for control, from ANSWERER to CALLER.
  Link L+1  will be used for data,    from CALLER to ANSWERER.
  Link K+1  will be used for data,    from ANSWERER to CALLER.

Both L and K should be between 340 and 375 (octal). L and K need not differ.

The first message (CALLER to ANSWERER) on link 377 indicates which user wants to talk to whom and specifies K. As a response (on K), the ANSWERER either refuses the call or accepts it and assigns L.

The CALLER then calls again (this time on link L). The ANSWERER initiates a negotiation session to verify the compatibility of the two parties.

The negotiation consists of suggestions put forth by one of the parties, which are either accepted or rejected by the other party. The suggesting party in the negotiation is called the NEGOTIATION MASTER. The other party is called the NEGOTIATION SLAVE. Usually the ANSWERER is the negotiation master, unless agreed otherwise by the method described later.

If the negotiation fails, either party may terminate the call by sending a "GOODBYE". If the negotiation is successfully ended, the ANSWERER rings bells to draw human attention and sends "RINGING" to the CALLER. When the call is answered (by a human), a "READY" is sent to the CALLER and the data starts flowing (on L+1 and K+1). However, a "READY" can be sent without a preceeding "RINGING".

This bell ringing occurs only after the initial call (not after renegotiation).

The assignment of L and K cannot be changed after the initial connection phase.

Only one control message can be sent in a network-message. Extra bits needed to fill the network-message are ignored.



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The length of control messages should never exceed a single-packet (i.e., 1,007 data bits).

Control messages not recognized by their receiver should be ignored and should not cause any error condition resuting in termination of the connection. These messages may result from differences in implementation level between systems.

SUMMARY OF THE CONTROL MESSAGES

  #1   "1,<WHO>,<WHOM>,K"
  #2   "2," or only "2"
  #3   "3,<WHAT>,<N>,<HOW(1),...HOW(N)>"
  #4   "4,<WHAT>,<HOW>"
  #5   "5,<WHAT>,<HOW>" or only "5,<WHAT>"
  #6   "6,L" or only "6"
  #7   "7"
  #8   "8"
  #9   "9"
  #10  "10,<ID>"
  #11  "11,<ID>"
  #12  "12,<IM>"
  #13  "13,<YM>,<OK>"









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DEFINITION OF THE CONTROL MESSAGES

  #1  CALLING (on 377 and L)
     This  call is issued first on link 377 and later on link L. Its
     format  is "1,<WHO>,<WHOM>,K", where <WHO> and <WHOM> are words
     which identify  respectively  the calling  party and the  party
     that is being  called, and K is as defined above. The format of
     the <WHO> and <WHOM> is:
        (HHIIIIIIXXXXXXXX)
     where  HH are 2 bits identifying  the HOST,  followed by 6 bits
     identifying  the  IMP,  followed  by  8  bits  identifying  the
     extension   (needed   because   there  may  be  more  than  one
     communication unit on the same HOST).
     The system  which sends this message  is defined as the CALLER,
     and the other system is defined as the ANSWERER.
  #2  GOODBYE (TERMINATION, on L or K)
     This message has the purpose of terminating calls at any stage.
     ICP can be terminated  (on  K)  either  negatively  by  sending
     either   a  single  word  "2"  ("GOODBYE")  or  the  two  words
     "2,",  or positively  by sending  the two words "6,L", as
     described later.
     After the initial  connection phase, calls can be terminated by
     either  the  CALLER  (on  L)  or  the  ANSWERER  (on  K).  This
     termination  has two words:  "2,",  where   is  the
     reason for the termination, as specified here:
        0.  Other than the following.
        1.  I am busy.
        2.  I am not authorized to talk with you.
        3.  Request of my user.
        4.  We believe you are down.
        5.  Systems incompatibility (NEGOTIATION failure).
        6.  We have problems.
        7.  I am in a conference now.


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        8.  You made a protocol error.
  #3  NEGOTIATION INQUIRY (on L or K)
     Sent by the NEGOTIATION  MASTER for compatibility verification.
     The format is:
     "3,<WHAT>,<LIST-LENGTH>,<HOW-LIST>", meaning
     "CAN-YOU-DO,<WHAT>,<LIST-LENGTH>,<HOW-LIST>".
     The <HOW-LIST>  is a list of pointers  into agreed-upon tables,
     as shown below.
  #4  POSITIVE NEGOTIATION RESPONSE (on L or K)
     Sent by the NEGOTIATION  SLAVE in  response  to  a  NEGOTIATION
     INQUIRY. The format is:
     "4,<WHAT>,<HOW>", meaning: "I-CAN-DO,<WHAT>,<HOW>".
  #5  NEGATIVE NEGOTIATION RESPONSE (on L or K)
     Sent by the NEGOTIATION  SLAVE in  response  to  a  NEGOTIATION
     INQUIRY. The format is either:
     "5,<WHAT>,0", meaning "I-CAN'T-DO-<WHAT>-IN-ANY-OF-THESE-WAYS",
     or:  "5,<WHAT>,N",  meaning  inability  to accept  any  of  the
     options  offered  in the INQUIRY, but using "N" as a suggestion
     to  the  ANSWERER   about  another  possibility.  Examples  are
     presented later in this report.
  #6  READY (on L or K)
     Sent by either  party to indicate readiness to accept data. Its
     format  is "6,L"  in the reply  to the initial  call,  and  "6"
     thereafter.
  #7  NOT READY (on L or K)
     Sent by either party to indicate unreadiness to accept data. It
     is always a single word: "7".
  #8  INQUIRY (on L or K)
     Sent by either  party to inquire about the status of the other.
     It is always  a single  word: "8". It is answered by #6, #7, or
     #9.


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  #9  RINGING (on K)
     Sent  by  the  ANSWERER   after  the  negotiations   have  been
     successfully  terminated  and human  permission  is  needed  to
     proceed  further. The ringing will continue for 10 seconds, and
     then stop,  UNLESS  a #8 is received.  This message is always a
     single word: "9".
  #10  ECHO REQUEST (on L or K)
     Sent by whichever  party is interested in measuring the network
     delays.  Its only purpose  is to  be  echoed  immediately.  The
     format  is "10,<ID>",  where <ID> is any word used to  identify
     the ECHO.
  #11  ECHO (on L or K)
     Sent in response  to ECHO REQUEST.  The  format  is  "11,<ID>",
     where <ID> is the word specified  by #10. The implementation of
     this feature  is not compulsory,  and no connection  should  be
     terminated due to lack of response to ECHO-REQUEST.
  #12  RENEGOTIATION REQUEST (on L or K)
     Can be sent by either party at ANY stage after LINKS are agreed
     upon.  This message consists of the two words "12,<IM>". If the
     word <IM> (for I  MASTER)  is  non-zero,  the  sender  of  this
     message  requests  to be the NEGOTIATION MASTER. If it is zero,
     the receiver of this message is requested to be the NEGOTIATION
     MASTER. Renegotiation is described later.
  #13  RENEGOTIATION APPROVAL (on L or K)
     This message  may be  sent  by  either  party  in  response  to
     RENEGOTIATION   REQUEST.   It  consists   of  the  three  words
     "13,<YM>,<OK>".  If  <OK>  is  non-zero,  this  is  a  positive
     acknowledgment  (approval).  If it is zero,  this is a negative
     acknowledgment  (i.e., refusal). <YM> is set to be equal to the
     <IM> of #12, for identification purposes.
  Messages #7, #8, and #9 are always a single word. Messages #1, #3,
  #4, and #5 are several words long. Messages #2 and #6 are either a
  single word or two words long. #10, #11 and #12 are always 2 words
  long.  Message  #13 is always 3 words long. Message #1 is always 4
  words long.
  Message  #1 is sent only by the CALLER, #3 only by the NEGOTIATION
  MASTER, and #4 and #5 only by the NEGOTIATION SLAVE. Message #9 is



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  sent only by the ANSWERER.  All the other  control messages may be
  sent by either party.
  The last <HOW> which was both suggested  by the NEGOTIATION MASTER
  (in #3)  and accepted  by the NEGOTIATION  SLAVE  (in #4) for each
  <WHAT> is assumed to be in use.
























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DEFINITION OF THE <WHAT> AND <HOW> NEGOTIATION TABLES:

  <WHAT>                          <HOW>
  1. VOCODING                   * 1. LPC
                                + 2. CVSD
                                  3. RELP
                                  4. DELCO
  2. SAMPLE PERIOD
     (in microseconds)            N. N (*150) (+62)
  3. VERSION
                                * 1. V1 (see definition below)
                                + 2. V2 (see definition below)
  4. MAX MSG LENGTH (in bits)
     NVP header included          N. N (*976 and +976)
     (32 bits) but not HOST/IMP
     leader and not HOST/IMP padding
  5. If LPC:
     Degree                       N. For N coefficients (*10)
     If CVSD:
     Time Constant
     (in milliseconds)            N. N (+50)
  6. Samples per Parcel           N. N (*128) (+224)
  7. If LPC:
     Acoustic Coding            * 1. SIMPLE (see below)
                                  2. OPTIMIZED
  8. If LPC:
     Info Coding                * 1. SIMPLE (see below)
                                  2. OPTIMIZED





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  9. If LPC:
     Pre-emphasis                 N. N (*58, for
     1 - mu x [Z**-1]               mu = 58/64 = 0.90625)
     N = 64 x mu
  10. If LPC:
     Table-set                    N. N (*1)
                                     See definition of Set #1
                                     in Appendix 1
  (* indicates recommended options for LPC)
  (+ indicates recommended options for CVSD)
  No parameter  (<WHAT>) should be inquired about by the NEGOTIATION
  MASTER  if some option (<HOW>) for it has been previously accepted
  by the NEGOTIATION  SLAVE implicitly in the "VERSION". The purpose
  of this restriction  is  to  avoid  a  possible  conflict  between
  individual parameters and the VERSION-option.
     Version 1 (V1) is defined as:
        1-1    LPC
        2-150  150 microseconds sampling
        3-1    V1
        5-10   10 coefficients
        6-128  128 samples per parcel
        7-1    SIMPLE acoustic coding
        8-1    SIMPLE information coding
        9-58   mu = 58/64 = 0.90625
        10-1   Tables set #1
     Version 2 (V2) is defined as:
        1-2    CVSD
        2-62   62 microseconds sampling (16 KHz sampling)
        3-2    V2
        5-50   50 msec time constant
        6-192  192 samples per parcel
     Note that this defines  every negotiated  parameter, except MAX
     MSG LENGTH.
     SIMPLE and OPTIMIZED codings will be described below in Section
     3.
     All the negotiation  is managed  by the NEGOTIATION MASTER, who
     decides  how much negotiation is needed, and what to do in case


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     some discrepancy (incompatibility) is discovered: either to try
     alternative options or to abort the connection. Upon completion
     of successful  negotiation, the NEGOTIATION MASTER sends either
     #9 (RINGING)  only  if it is the ANSWERER  and if  this  is  an
     initial  connection,  else it sends  #6  (READY-FOR-DATA),  and
     probably  inquires  with #8 about the readiness  of  the  other
     party.  The inquiries  (#8) before the successful completion of
     the negotiation are ignored. However, these inquiries after the
     first RINGING  (#9)  and before the first READY (#6) are needed
     to keep the ANSWERER ringing.
     Note that the negotiation process can be shortened by using the
     VERSION option, as shown in the examples that follow.

ON RENEGOTIATION

  At any stage after links  are  agreed  upon,  either  party  might
  request  a RENEGOTIATION.  If the request is approved by the other
  party, either party might become the NEGOTIATION MASTER, depending
  on the type of renegotiation  request.  When renegotiation starts,
  no previously  negotiated  agreements  (except LINK numbers) hold,
  and all items have to be  renegotiated  from  scratch.  Note  that
  renegotiation  may entirely  replace  the  negotiation  phase  and
  allows the CALLER to be the NEGOTIATION MASTER.
  Upon issuance  (or reception)  of RENEGOTIATION  REQUEST, all data
  messages   are  ignored  until  the  positive  indication  of  the
  successful completion of the renegotiation (#6).
  After the completion  of renegotiation,  the frame-count  (see the
  section on MESSAGE-HEADER) may be reset to zero.

THE HEADER OF DATA MESSAGES

  Data messages  are the messages  which contain vocoded speech. The
  first 32 bits of each data message  is the  MESSAGE-HEADER,  which
  carries sequence and timing information as described below.
  For each vocoding  scheme a "FRAME" is defined as the transmission
  interval  (as agreed  upon at the negotiation  stage in <WHAT#6>).
  Since this interval  is defined  by the  number  of  samples,  its
  duration  can be found by multiplying the sampling period <WHAT#2>
  by the interval  length  (in samples) <WHAT#6>. For example, in V1
  the sampling  period  is 150  microseconds  and  the  transmission
  interval is 128 samples, which yields:
     128*150 microseconds = 19.2 milliseconds.
  The data describing  a FRAME is called a PARCEL. Each parcel has a


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  serial  number.  The first parcel  created after the completion of
  the negotiation  (or every RENEGOTIATION)  has the  serial  number
  zero. Each message contains an integral number of parcels.
  The serial number of the first parcel in the message is put in the
  first   16  bits  of  the  message  and  is  referred  to  as  the
  MESSAGE-TIME-STAMP. Note that this time stamp is synchronized with
  the data stream.  Note also that these  16 bits are  actually  the
  third  word  of  the  message,  following  the  2  words  used  as
  IMP-to-HOST leader (see BBN Report 1822).
  The next bit in the header is the WE-SKIPPED-PARCELS bit, which is
  described  later.  The next 7 bits tell how many parcels there are
  in  the  message;   this  number  is  called  the  COUNT,  or  the
  PARCEL-COUNT.
  Note that if message  number  N has the time stamp  T(N)  and  the
  count  C(N),  then  T(N+1)  must  be  greater  than  or  equal  to
  T(N)+C(N). Usually T(N+1) = T(N)+C(N), unless the XMTR decided not
  to send some parcels  due to silence.  If this  happens  then  the
  WE-SKIPPED-PARCELS  bit is set to ONE,  else it is  set  to  ZERO.
  Hence, if T(N+1) is found by the RCVR to be greater than T(N)+C(N)
  and the WE-SKIPPED-PARCELS is zero, some message must be lost.
  Note that by definition  the time stamps on messages monotonically
  increase, except for wrap-around.
  The message  header  structure  is illustrated  by  the  following
  diagram:
   WORD 1           WORD 2           WORD 3          WORD 4

!................!................!................!................!... !P000TTTTHHIIIIII!LLLLLLLLZZZZZZZZ!TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!WCCCCCCCSSSSSSSS!DDD !................!................!................!^...............!... !<--HOST/IMP-OR-IMP/HOST-LEADER-->!<--TIME-STAMP-->!^<COUNT><-SAVE->!<-D

                                                ^
                                       WE-SKIPPED-PARCELS
     P = PRIORITY (one bit = 1)
     T = MESSAGE TYPE (4 bits = 0011)
     L = link ("L" OR "K", 8 bits, greater than 337 octal)
     D = data bits (from here to the end of the message)
     ZZZZZZZZ = 8 ZERO bits
     HHIIIIII = HOST (8 bits, destination or source)
     CCCCCCC = parcel COUNT (7 bits)
     SSSSSSSS = 8 bits saved for future applications
     TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT = TIME STAMP (16 bits)



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     The first parcel  sent by either party after the NEGOTIATION or
     RENEGOTIATION should have the serial number set to zero.
     During  silence  periods,  the XMTR might  send a  "6"  or  "7"
     message  periodically.  If it does not do so,  the  RCVR  might
     interrogate  the livelihood of the XMTR by sending periodically
     "8" ("ARE-YOU-THERE?") or #10 (ECHO-REQUEST) messages.























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                   3.  THE LPC DATA PROTOCOL

The DATA sent at each transmission interval is called a PARCEL.

Network messages always contain an integral number of PARCELs.

There are two independent issues in the coding. One is, obviously, the acoustic coding, i.e., which parameters have to be transmitted. SIMPLE acoustic coding is sending all the parameters at every transmission interval. OPTIMIZED acoustic coding sends only as little as acoustically needed. DELCO is an example of OPTIMIZED acoustic coding.

In this document only the format of the SIMPLE acoustic coding is defined.

All the transmitted parameters are sent as pointers into agreed-upon tables. These tables are defined as two lists of values. The transmitter table {X(J)} is used in the following way: The value V is coded as the code J if X(J-1) < V =< X(J). The receiver table {R(J) is used to retrieve the value R(J) if the code J was received. X(-1) is implicitly defined as minus-infinity, and X(Jmax) is explicitly defined as plus-infinity.

For each parameter, {X(J)} and {R(J)} may be defined independently.

The second coding issue is the information coding technique. The SIMPLE (information-wise) way of sending the information is to use binary coding for the codes representing the parameters. The OPTIMIZED way is to compute distributions for each parameter and to define the appropriate coding. It is very probable that the PITCH and GAIN will be decoded absolutely in the first PARCEL of each message, and incrementally thereafter.

At present, only the SIMPLE (information-wise) coding is used.

The details of the LPC data protocol and its Tables-Set-#1 can be found in Appendix 1.








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Following is the definition for the format of the SIMPLE-SIMPLE coding, according to Tables-Set-#1:

For each parcel:

  PITCH              6 bits  (PITCH=0 for UNVOICED)
  GAIN               5 bits
  I(1)               7 bits
  I(2)               7 bits
  I(3)               6 bits
  I(4)               6 bits
  I(5)               5 bits
  I(6)               5 bits
  I(7)               5 bits
  I(8)               5 bits
  I(9)               5 bits
  I(10)              5 bits

where each of the I(j) is an index for inverse sine coding. If K(j)=arcsin(Theta(j)) and N bits are assigned for its transmission, then I(j)=(Theta(j)/Pi)*2**N.

Hence at each transmission interval (128 samples times 150 microseconds) 67 bits are sent, which results in a data rate of 3490 bps. Since this bandwidth is well within the capabilities of the network, SIMPLE-SIMPLE coding is used, which requires the least computation by the hosts. Note that this data rate is a peak rate, without the use of silence.







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             4.  EXAMPLES FOR THE CONTROL PROTOCOL

Here is an example for a connection:

  (377)  C: 1,<WHO>,<WHOM>,340    Please talk to me on 340/341.
  (340)  A: 2,1                   I refuse, since I'm busy.

Another example:

  (377)  C: 1,<WHO>,<WHOM>,360    Please talk to me on 360/361.
  (360)  A: 6,350                 OK.  You talk to me on 350/351.
  (350)  C: 1,<WHO>,<WHOM>        I want to talk to you.
  (360)  A: 3,1,1,2               Can you do CVSD?  (ANSWERER tries
                                  to be the NEGOTIATION MASTER)
  (350)  C: 12,1                  I want to be it.
  (360)  A: 13,1                  That's OK with me.
  (350)  C: 3,1,1,2               Can you do CVSD?
  (360)  A: 5,1,1                 No, but I can do LPC.
  (350)  C: 3,1,1,3               Can you do RELP?
  (360)  A: 5,1,1                 No, but I can do LPC.
  (350)  C: 3,1,1,1               How about LPC?
  (360)  A: 4,1,1                 LPC is fine with me.
  (350)  C: 3,2,1,150             Can you use 150 microseconds
                                  sampling?
  (360)  A: 4,2,150               I can use 150 microseconds.
  (350)  C: 3,4,3,976,1040,2016   Can you use 976, 1040, or 2016
                                  bits/msg?
  (360)  A: 4,4,976               I can use 976.
  (350)  C: 3,5,1,10              Can you send 10 coefficients?
  (360)  A: 4,5,10                I can send 10.



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  (350)  C: 3,6,1,64              Can you use a 64 sample
                                  transmission?
  (360)  A: 4,6,64                I can use 64.
  (350)  C: 3,7,2,1,2             SIMPLE or OPTIMIZED acoustic
                                  coding?
  (360)  A: 4,7,2                 OPTIMIZED!
  (350)  C: 3,8,1,1               Can you do SIMPLE info coding?
  (360)  A: 4,8,1                 I can do SIMPLE.
  (350)  C: 3,9,1,58              mu = 0.90625?
  (360)  A: 4,9,58                Fine with me.
  (350)  C: 3,10,1                Table set #1?
  (360)  A: 4,10,1                Of course!
  (350)  C: 6                     I am ready.  (Note:  No "RINGING"
                                  sent)
  (350)  C: 8                     And you?
  (360)  A: 6                     I am ready, too.
     .......                      Data is exchanged now,
     .......                      on 351 and 361.
  (350)  C: 10,1234               Echo it, please.
  (360)  A: 11,1234               Here it comes!
     .......
  (360)  A: 10,3333               Now ANSWERER wants to measure
  (350)  C: 11,3333               ...the delays, too.
     .......
  (???)    X: 2,3                 Termination by either user.




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Another example:

  (377)  C: 1,<WHO>,<WHOM>,360    Please talk to me on 360/361.
  (360)  A: 6,340                 Fine.  You send on 340/341.
  (340)  C: 1,<WHO>,<WHOM>        I want to talk to you.
  (360)  A: 3,3,1,1               Can you use V1?
  (340)  C: 4,3,1                 Yes, V1 is OK.
  (360)  A: 3,4,1,1984            Can you use up to 1984 bits/msg?
  (340)  C: 5,4,976               No, but I can use 976.
  (360)  A: 3,4,1,976             Can you use up to 976 bits/msg?
  (340)  C: 4,4,976               I can use 976.
  (360)  A: 9                     Ringing (note how short this
                                  negotiation is!!).
     .......
  (340)  C: 8                     Still there?
  (360)  A: 9                     Still ringing.
     .......
  (340)  C: 8                     Still there?
  (360)  A: 9                     Still ringing.
     .......
  (340)  C: 8                     How about it?
  (360)  A: 9                     Still ringing.
  (340)  C: 2                     Forget it!  (No reason given.)






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                           APPENDIX 1


                       THE DEFINITION OF:
                         TABLES-SET-#1
  
  
  
  
  
                               by
                         John D. Markel
            Speech Communication Research Laboratory
                   Santa Barbara, California

















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                         TABLES-SET-#1

This set includes tables for:



  PITCH -  64 values, PITCH table
  GAIN  -  32 values, GAIN table
  I( 1) - 128 values, INDEX7 table
  I( 2) - 128 values, INDEX7 table
  I( 3) -  64 values, INDEX6 table
  I( 4) -  64 values, INDEX6 table
  I( 5) -  32 values, INDEX5 table
  I( 6) -  32 values, INDEX5 table
  I( 7) -  32 values, INDEX5 table
  I( 8) -  32 values, INDEX5 table
  I( 9) -  32 values, INDEX5 table
  I(10) -  32 values, INDEX5 table

These tables are defined specifically for a sampling period of 150 microseconds.















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GENERAL COMMENTS

  The following  tables  are arranged in three columns, {X(j)}, {j},
  and {R(j)}.  Note that the entries in the {X(j)} column are half a
  step off the other columns.  This is to  indicate  that  INTERVALS
  from X-domain (pitch, gain, and the Ks) are mapped into CODES {j},
  which are transmitted  over the network,  to be translated  by the
  receiver   into  the  {R(j)}.   These  intervals  are  defined  as
  OPEN-CLOSE  intervals.  For  example,  the  PITCH  value  (at  the
  transmitter)  of 4131 belongs to the interval "(4024,4131]", hence
  it is coded  as j=6 which  is mapped  by the receiver to the value
  21.  Similarly, the value of 2400 for INDEX7 is found to belong to
  the interval  "(2009,2811]", coded into the CODE 3 and mapped back
  into 2411.
  Note  that  if N bits  are used  by a certain CODE, then there are
  2**N+1  entries  in the X-table,  but only  2**N  entries  in  the
  R-table.
  The  transformation   values   used  for  PITCH,   GAIN,  and  the
  K-parameters  (in the X- and R-tables)  are as defined in NSC Note
  42.
  Values  above  and below  the range of the X-table are mapped into
  the maximum and minimum table indices, respectively.
  Note that R(J) of INDEX5 is identical to R(2J) of INDEX6, and that
  R(J)  of INDEX6  is identical to R(2J) of INDEX7. Therefore, it is
  possible to store only the R-table of INDEX7, without the R-tables
  of INDEX5 and INDEX6.
  In the SPS-41 implementation there is no need to store any R-table
  for the K-parameters.  The transmitted  index can be used directly
  (with the appropriate  scaling)  as an index into the SPS built-in
  TRIG tables.

COMMENTS ON THE PITCH TABLE

  The level J=0 defines the UNVOICED condition. The receiver maps it
  into the number of samples per frame (here 128).
  This PITCH table differs  significantly  from previous  tables and
  supersedes  the table published  in NSC Note 36.  Details  of  the
  calculation  of the table  can be found  in NSC Note 42. Immediate
  questions should be referred to John Markel.




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COMMENTS ON THE GAIN TABLE

  The level J=0 defines absolute silence.
  This table  is designed  for a maximum  of 12-bit  A/D input,  and
  allows for a dynamic range of 43.5 dB.
  NSC Notes  36, 45, 56 and 58 supply background for the GAIN table.
  Gain is the energy of the pre-emphasized, windowed signal.
  This table  is the NEW GAIN table. NSC Notes 56 and 58 explain the
  reasoning behind the NEW GAIN.

COMMENTS ON THE INDEX7 TABLE

  Positive values are coded into the range [0-63, decimal]. Negative
  values  are coded into the 7-bits two's complement of the codes of
  their absolute value [65-127, decimal].
  Note that all values -403 < V < 403 are coded as (and mapped into)
  0. Note also that the code -64 (100 octal) is never used.
  In  SPS-41  implementation,  the  R-table  is  not  needed,  since
  TRIG(2J) is the needed value R(J).

COMMENTS ON THE INDEX6 TABLE

  Positive values are coded into the range [0-31, decimal]. Negative
  values  are coded into the 6-bits two's complement of the codes of
  their absolute values [33-63, decimal].
  Note that all values -805 < V < 805 are coded as (and mapped into)
  0. Note also that the code -32 (40 octal) is never used.
  In  SPS-41  implementation,  the  R-table  is  not  needed,  since
  TRIG(4J) is the needed value R(J).

COMMENTS ON THE INDEX5 TABLE

  Positive  numbers  are  coded  into  the  range  [0-15,  decimal].
  Negative  numbers  are coded into the 5-bits  two's complement  of
  their absolute values, i.e., [17-31, decimal].
  Note  that  all values  -1609  < V < 1609 are coded as (and mapped
  into) 0. Note also that the code -16 (20 octal) is never used.
  In  SPS-41  implementation,  the  R-table  is  not  needed,  since
  TRIG(8J) is the needed value R(J).



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THE PITCH TABLE (as of 10-29-74)

  X(J)    J  R(J)           X(J)    J  R(J)          X(J)    J  R(J)
     0                      6002                     10770
          0  128*                  21   33                   42   61
     0                      6168                     11080
          1   18                   22   34                   43   63
  3630                      6338                     11399
          2   19                   23   35                   44   65
  3724                      6515                     11728
          3   19                   24   36                   45   67
  3821                      6696                     12067
          4   20                   25   37                   46   69
  3921                      6883                     12417
          5   20                   26   38                   47   71
  4024                      7075                     12776
          6   21                   27   39                   48   73
  4131                      7274                     13147
          7   22                   28   40                   49   75
  4240                      7478                      13529
          8   22                   29   41                   50   77
  4353                      7689                     13922
          9   23                   30   43                   51   80
  4469                      7905                     14327
         10   24                   31   44                   52   82
  4588                      8129                     14745
         11   24                   32   45                   53   85
  4711                      8359                     15175
         12   25                   33   47                   54   87
  4838                      8596                     15618
         13   26                   34   48                   55   90
  4969                      8840                     16075
         14   27                   35   50                   56   93
  5104                      9092                     16545
         15   27                   36   51                   57   95
  5242                      9351                     17029
         16   28                   37   53                   58   98
  5385                      9618                     17529
         17   29                   38   54                   59  101
  5533                      9894                     18043
         18   30                   39   56                   60  104
  5684                     10177                     18572
         19   31                   40   57                   61  107
  5841                     10469                     19118
         20   32                   41   59                   62  111
  6002                     10770                     19681
                                                             63  114
                                                     infinity


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  Note:  This table has only 58 different intervals defined, since 5
  values are repeated in the R(j) table.
  * This value is the "Transmission Interval" (measured in  samples)
  as defined in item #6 of the NEGOTIATION.
























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THE GAIN TABLE (as of 9-17-75)

  X(J)  J  R(J)          X(J)    J   R(J)
    0                     225
        0     0                 16    245
   20                    266
        1    20                 17    289
   22                    315
        2    24                 18    342
   26                    372
        3    28                 19    404
   30                    439
        4    33                 20    478
   36                    519
        5    39                 21    565
   42                    614
        6    46                 22    667
   50                    725
        7    54                 23    789
   59                    857
        8    64                 24    932
   70                   1013
        9    76                 25   1101
   83                   1197
        10   90                 26   1301
   98                   1415
        11  106                 27   1538
  116                   1672
        12  126                 28   1818
  137                   1976
        13  148                 29   2148
  161                   2335
        14  175                 30   2539
  191                   2760
        15  207                 31   3000
  255                   infinity








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NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444 Specifications for the Network Voice Protocol (NVP)


INDEX7 TABLE (as of 9-23-74)

  X(J)    J    R(J)       X(J)    J    R(J)       X(J)    J    R(J)
      0                  15800                   27897
          0       0              21   16151              42   28106
    402                  16500                   28311
          1     804              22   16846              43   28511
   1206                  17190                   28707
          2    1608              23   17531              44   28899
   2009                  17869                   29086
          3    2411              24   18205              45   29269
   2811                  18538                   29448
          4    3212              25   18868              46   29622
   3612                  19195                   29792
          5    4011              26   19520              47   29957
   4410                  19841                   30118
          6    4808              27   20160              48   30274
   5205                  20475                   30425
          7    5602              28   20788              49   30572
   5998                  21097                   30715
          8    6393              29   21403              50   30853
   6787                  21706                   30986
          9    7180              30   22006              51   31114
   7571                  22302                   31238
         10    7962              31   22595              52   31357
   8351                  22884                   31471
         11    8740              32   23170              53   31581
   9127                  23453                   31686
         12    9512              33   23732              54   31786
   9896                  24008                   31881
         13   10279              34   24279              55   31972
  10660                  24548                   32058
         14   11039              35   24812              56   32138
  11417                  25073                   32214
         15   11793              36   25330              57   32286
  12167                  25583                   32352
         16   12540              37   25833              58   32413
  12910                  26078                   32470
         17   13279              38   26320              59   32522
  13646                  26557                   32568
         18   14010              39   26791              60   32610
  14373                  27020                   32647
         19   14733              40   27246              61   32679
  15091                  27467                   32706
         20   15447              41   27684              62   32729
  15800                  27897                   32746
                                                         63   32758
                                                 infinity


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NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444 Specifications for the Network Voice Protocol (NVP)


INDEX6 TABLE (as of 9-23-74)

  X(J)    J    R(J)              X(J)    J    R(J)
     0                          22595
          0       0                     16   23170
   804                          23732
          1    1608                     17   24279
   2411                         24812
          2    3212                     18   25330
   4011                         25833
          3    4808                     19   26320
   5602                         26791
          4    6393                     20   27246
   7180                         27684
          5    7962                     21   28106
   8740                         28511
          6    9512                     22   28899
  10279                        29269
          7   11039                     23   29622
  11793                        29957
          8   12540                     24   30274
  13279                        30572
          9   14010                     25   30853
  14733                        31114
         10   15447                     26   31357
  16151                        31581
         11   16846                     27   31786
  17531                        31972
         12   18205                     28   32138
  18868                        32286
         13   19520                     29   32413
  20160                        32522
         14   20788                     30   32610
  21403                        32679
         15   22006                     31   32729
  22595                        infinity








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NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444 Specifications for the Network Voice Protocol (NVP)


INDEX5 TABLE (as of 9-23-74)

    X(J)   J    R(J)           X(J)     J    R(J)
      0                       22006
           0       0                    8   23170
   1608                       24279
           1    3212                    9   25330
   4808                       26320
           2    6393                   10   27246
   7962                       28106
           3    9512                   11   28899
  11039                       29622
           4   12540                   12   30274
  14010                       30853
           5   15447                   13   31357
  16846                       31786
           6   18205                   14   32138
  19520                       32413
           7   20788                   15   32610
  22006                       infinity
















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NWG/RFC 741 DC 22 Nov 77 42444 Specifications for the Network Voice Protocol (NVP)


                           APPENDIX 2
                 IMPLEMENTATION RECOMMENDATIONS

(1) It is recommended that the priority-bit be turned ON in the HOST/IMP header.

(2) It is recommended that in all abbreviations, "R" be used for Receiver and "X" for Transmitter.

(3) The following identifiers and values are recommended for implementations:

  SLNCTH  30          SILENCE-THRESHOLD.
     Used for LONG-SILENCE  definition.  See below.  Measured in the
     same units as GAIN, in its X-table.
  TBS      1.000 sec  TIME-BEGIN-SILENCE.
     LONG-SILENCE is declared if GAIN<SLNCTH for more than TBS.
  TAS      0.500 sec  TIME-AFTER-SILENCE.
     A  delay   introduced   by  the  receiver   after  the  end  of
     LONG-SILENCE, before restarting the playback.
  TES      0.150 sec  TIME-END-SILENCE.
     The amount  of time  the transmitter  backs  up at the end of a
     LONG-SILENCE  in order to ensure  a smooth  transition  back to
     speech.
  TRI      2.000 sec  TIME-RESPONSE-INITIAL.
     Time for waiting  for response for an initial call (#1 and #3).
     The initial call is repeated every TRI until an answer arrives,
     or until TRIGU expires.
  TRIGU   20.000 sec  TIME-RESPONSE-INITIAL-GIVEUP.
     If no response  to an initial  call is  received  within  TRIGU
     after the FIRST initial call, the system gives up, assuming the
     other system is down.
  TRQ      1.000 sec  TIME-RESPONSE-INQUIRY.
     If no response  to an inquiry  (#8) is received within TRQ, the
     inquiry is repeated.


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  TRQGU   10.000 sec  TIME-RESPONSE-INQUIRY-GIVEUP.
     If no response to an inquiry is received  within TRQGU from the
     FIRST inquiry,  the system  gives up, assuming the other system
     is down.
  TBDA     3.000 sec  TIME-BETWEEN-DATA-ARRIVAL.
     If no data arrives  within  TBDA, an INQUIRY (#8) is sent. This
     repeats every TBDA.
  TNR      2.000 sec  TIME-NOT-READY.
     If the other  system  is in the NOT-READY  (#7)  state for more
     than  TNR, an INQUIRY (#8) is sent. This repeats every TNR.
  TNRGU   10.000 sec  TIME-NOT-READY-GIVEUP.
     If the other  system  is in the NOT-READY  (#7)  state for more
     than  TNRGU,  then the system  gives  up,  assuming  the  other
     system is down.
  TBIN     3.000 sec  TIME-BUFFER-IN.
     The input  buffer  size is equivalent  to the time period  TBIN
     (and   its size is  the  DATA-RATE  multiplied  by  the  period
     TBIN).  If the INPUT  QUEUE  ever gets to be longer  than TBIN,
     data is discarded.
  TBOUT    3.000 sec  TIME-BUFFER-OUT.
     The output  buffer  size is equivalent to the time period TBOUT
     (and  its size  is  the  DATA-RATE  multiplied  by  the  period
     TBOUT).  If  the  OUTPUT  QUEUE  ever gets to  be  longer  than
     TBOUT, data is discarded.









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                           REFERENCES

Bolt Beranek & Newman, Inc., Report No. 1822, Interface Message Processor: Specifications for the Interconnection of a Host and an IMP.

NSC Note 42 (in progress).

NSC Note 36, Proposal for NSC-LPC Coding/Decoding Tables, by J. D. Markel, Speech Communications Research Laboratory, Inc., July 20, 1974.

NSC Note 45, Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Gain, by E. Randolph Cole, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 11, 1974.

NSC Note 56, Nothing to Lose, but Lots to Gain, by John Makhoul and Lynn Cosell, Bolt Beranek & Newman, Inc., March 10, 1975.

NSC Note 58, Gain Again, by Randy Cole, USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 12, 1975.

















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