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IETF RFC 7006



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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                  M. Garcia-Martin
Request for Comments: 7006                                      Ericsson
Category: Standards Track                              S. Veikkolainen
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Nokia
                                                               R. Gilman
                                                          September 2013


             Miscellaneous Capabilities Negotiation in the
                   Session Description Protocol (SDP)

 Abstract

   The Session Description Protocol (SDP) has been extended with a
   capability negotiation mechanism framework that allows the endpoints
   to negotiate transport protocols and attributes.  This framework has
   been extended with a media capabilities negotiation mechanism that
   allows endpoints to negotiate additional media-related capabilities.
   This negotiation is embedded into the widely used SDP offer/answer
   procedures.

   This memo extends the SDP capability negotiation framework to allow
   endpoints to negotiate three additional SDP capabilities.  In
   particular, this memo provides a mechanism to negotiate bandwidth
   ("b=" line), connection data ("c=" line), and session or media titles
   ("i=" line for each session or media).

 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/RFC 7006.











Garcia-Martin, et al.        Standards Track                 PAGE 1 top


RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2013 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. Table of Contents 1. Introduction ....................................................3 2. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................3 3. Protocol Description ............................................4 3.1. Extensions to SDP ..........................................4 3.1.1. Bandwidth Capability ................................6 3.1.2. Connection Data Capability ..........................8 3.1.3. Title Capability ...................................12 3.2. Session Level versus Media Level ..........................16 3.3. Offer/Answer Model Extensions .............................17 3.3.1. Generating the Initial Offer .......................17 3.3.2. Generating the Answer ..............................17 3.3.3. Offerer Processing of the Answer ...................18 3.3.4. Modifying the Session ..............................18 4. Field Replacement Rules ........................................18 5. Security Considerations ........................................18 6. IANA Considerations ............................................19 6.1. New SDP Attributes ........................................19 6.2. New Option Tags ...........................................20 6.3. New SDP Capability Negotiation Configuration Parameters ...20 7. Acknowledgments ................................................20 8. References .....................................................20 8.1. Normative References ......................................20 8.2. Informative References ....................................21 Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 2 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 1. Introduction The Session Description Protocol (SDP) [RFC 4566] is intended for describing multimedia sessions for the purposes of session announcement, session invitation, and other forms of multimedia session initiation. SDP has been extended with an SDP Capability Negotiation Mechanism Framework [RFC 5939] that allows the endpoints to negotiate capabilities, such as support for the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) [RFC 3550] and the Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP) [RFC 3711]. The SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871] provides negotiation capabilities to media lines as well. The capability negotiation is embedded into the widely used SDP offer/answer procedure [RFC 3264]. This memo provides the means to negotiate further capabilities than those specified in the SDP Capability Negotiation Mechanism Framework [RFC 5939] and the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871]. In particular, this memo provides a mechanism to negotiate bandwidth ("b="), connection data ("c="), and session or media titles ("i="). Since the three added capabilities are independent, it is not expected that implementations will necessarily support all of them at the same time. Instead, it is expected that applications will choose their needed capability for their specific purpose. For this reason, the normative part pertaining to each capability is in a self- contained section: Section 3.1.1 describes the bandwidth capability extension, Section 3.1.2 describes the connection data capability extension, and Section 3.1.3 describes the title capability extension. Separate SDP Capability Negotiation option tags are defined for each capability, allowing endpoints to indicate and/or require support for these extensions according to procedures defined in SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939]. 2. Conventions Used in This Document 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 BCP 14, RFC 2119 [RFC 2119] and indicate requirement levels for compliant implementations. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 3 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 3. Protocol Description 3.1. Extensions to SDP The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] and the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871] specify attributes for negotiating SDP capabilities. These documents specify new attributes (e.g., "acap", "tcap", "rmcap", and "omcap") for achieving their purpose. In this document, we define three new additional capability attributes for SDP lines of the general form: type=value for types "b", "c", and "i". The corresponding capability attributes are respectively defined as: o "bcap": bandwidth capability o "ccap": connection data capability o "icap": title capability From the sub-rules of the attribute ("a=") line in SDP [RFC 4566], SDP attributes are of the form: attribute = (att-field ":" att-value) / att-field att-field = token att-value = byte-string Capability attributes use only the "att-field:att-value" form. The new capabilities may be referenced in potential configurations ("a=pcfg") or in latent configurations ("a=lcfg") as productions conforming to the <extension-config-list>, as respectively defined in RFC 5939 [RFC 5939] and RFC 6871 [RFC 6871]. extension-config-list = ["+"] ext-cap-name "=" ext-cap-list ext-cap-name = 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT) ; ALPHA and DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 ext-cap-list = 1*VCHAR ; VCHAR defined in RFC 5234 The optional "+" is used to indicate that the extension is mandatory and MUST be supported in order to use that particular configuration. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 4 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 The new capabilities may also be referenced in actual configurations ("a=acfg") as productions conforming to the <sel-extension-config> defined in RFC 5939 [RFC 5939]. sel-extension-config = ext-cap-name "=" 1*VCHAR The specific parameters are defined in the individual description of each capability below. The "bcap", "ccap", and "icap" capability attributes can be provided at the SDP session and/or media level. According to the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939], each extension capability must specify the implication of making it part of a configuration at the media level. According to SDP [RFC 4566], "b=", "c=", and "i=" lines may appear at either session or media level. In line with this, the "bcap", "ccap", and "icap" capability attributes, when declared at session level, are to be interpreted as if that attribute was provided with that value at the session level. The "bcap", "ccap", and "icap" capability attributes declared at media level are to be interpreted as if that capability attribute was declared at the media level. For example, extending the example in [RFC 6871] with "icap" and "bcap" capability attributes, we get the following SDP: v=0 o=- 25678 753849 IN IP4 192.0.2.1 s= c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1 t=0 0 a=bcap:1 CT:200 a=icap:1 Video conference m=audio 54320 RTP/AVP 0 a=rmcap:1 L16/8000/1 a=rmcap:2 L16/16000/2 a=pcfg:1 m=1|2 pt=1:99,2:98 m=video 66544 RTP/AVP 100 a=rmcap:3 H263-1998/90000 a=rtpmap:100 H264/90000 a=pcfg:10 m=3 pt=3:101 b=1 i=1 Figure 1: Example SDP offer with bcap and icap efined at session level Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 5 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 The above SDP defines one PCMU audio stream and one H.264 video stream. It also defines two RTP-based media capabilities ("rmcap" numbered 1 and 2), using 16-bit linear (L16) audio at 8 kbps and 16 kbps, respectively, as well as an RTP-based media capability for H.263 video ("rmcap" numbered 3). The RTP-based media capabilities all appear at the media level. The example also contains a single bandwidth capability ("bcap") and a single title capability ("icap"), both defined at session level. According to the definition above, when the capabilities defined in the "bcap" and "icap" attributes are referenced from the potential configuration, in the resulting SDP they are to be interpreted as session-level attributes (but the RTP-based media capabilities are to be interpreted as media-level attributes). 3.1.1. Bandwidth Capability According to RFC 4566 [RFC 4566], the bandwidth field denotes the proposed bandwidth to be used by the session or media. In this memo, we specify the bandwidth capability attribute, which can also appear at the SDP session and/or media level. The bandwidth field is specified in RFC 4566 [RFC 4566] with the following syntax: b=<bwtype>:<bandwidth> where <bwtype> is an alphanumeric modifier giving the meaning of the <bandwidth> figure. In this document, we define a new capability attribute: the bandwidth capability attribute "bcap". This attribute lists bandwidth as capabilities, according to the following definition: "a=bcap:" bw-cap-num 1*WSP bwtype ":" bandwidth CRLF where <bw-cap-num> is a unique integer within all the bandwidth capabilities in the entire SDP, which is used to number the bandwidth capability and can take a value between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). The other elements are as defined for the "b=" field in SDP [RFC 4566]. This format satisfies the general attribute production rules in SDP [RFC 4566], according to the following Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC 5234] syntax: att-field =/ "bcap" att-value =/ bw-cap-num 1*WSP bwtype ":" bandwidth bw-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 Figure 2: Syntax of the "bcap" attribute Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 6 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 Negotiation of bandwidth per media stream can be useful when negotiating media encoding capabilities with different bandwidths. 3.1.1.1. Configuration Parameters The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] provides for the existence of the "pcfg" and "acfg" attributes. The concept is extended by the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871] with an "lcfg" attribute that conveys latent configurations. Extensions to the "pcfg" and "lcfg" attributes are defined through <extension-config-list>, and extensions to the "acfg" attribute are defined through the <sel-extension-config>, as defined in the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939]. In this document, we extend the <extension-config-list> field to be able to convey lists of bandwidth capabilities in latent or potential configurations, according to the following Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC 5234] syntax: extension-config-list =/ bandwidth-config-list bandwidth-config-list = ["+"] "b=" bw-cap-list *(BAR bw-cap-list) ; BAR defined in RFC 5939 bw-cap-list = bw-cap-num *("," bw-cap-num) bw-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 Figure 3: Syntax of the bandwidth parameter in "lcfg" and "pcfg" attributes Each bandwidth capability configuration is a comma-separated list of bandwidth capability attribute numbers where <bw-cap-num> refers to the <bw-cap-num> bandwidth capability numbers defined explicitly earlier in this document, and hence MUST be between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). Alternative bandwidth configurations are separated by a vertical bar ("|"). The above syntax is very flexible, allowing referencing to multiple "b=" lines per configuration, even for the same <bwtype>. While the need for such definitions is not seen, we have not restricted this, as it is not restricted in SDP [RFC 4566] either. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 7 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 The bandwidth parameter to the actual configuration attribute ("a=acfg") is formulated as a <sel-extension-config> with ext-cap-name = "b" hence sel-extension-config =/ sel-bandwidth-config sel-bandwidth-config = "b=" bw-cap-list ; bw-cap-list as above. Figure 4: Syntax of the bandwidth parameter in "acfg" attributes 3.1.1.2. Option Tag The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] allows for capability negotiation extensions to be defined. Associated with each such extension is an option tag that identifies the extension in question. Hereby, we define a new option tag "bcap-v0" that identifies support for the bandwidth capability. The endpoints using the "bcap" capability attribute SHOULD add the option tag to other existing option tags present in the "csup" and "creq" attributes in SDP, according to the procedures defined in the SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939]. 3.1.2. Connection Data Capability According to SDP [RFC 4566], the connection data field in SDP contains the connection data, and it has the following syntax: c=<nettype> <addrtype> <connection-address> where <nettype> indicates the network type, <addrtype> indicates the address type, and the <connection-address> is the connection address, which is dependent on the address type. At the moment, network types already defined include "IN", which indicates Internet network type, and "ATM" (see RFC 3108 [RFC 3108]), used for describing Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) bearer connections. The Circuit-Switched (CS) descriptions in the SDP document [SDP-CS] adds a "PSTN" network type for expressing a Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) circuit switch. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 8 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 SDP [RFC 4566] permits specification of connection data at the SDP session and/or media level. In order to permit negotiation of connection data at the media level, we define the connection data capability attribute ("a=ccap") in the form: "a=ccap:" conn-cap-num 1*WSP nettype SP addrtype SP connection-address CRLF where <conn-cap-num> is a unique integer within all the connection capabilities in the entire SDP, which is used to identify the connection data capability and can take a value between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). The other elements are as defined in [RFC 4566]. This format corresponds to the [RFC 4566] attribute production rules, according to the following Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC 5234] syntax: att-field =/ "ccap" att-value =/ conn-cap-num 1*WSP nettype SP addrtype SP connection-address conn-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; 1 to 2^31-1, inclusive ; DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 Figure 5: Syntax of the "ccap" attribute The "ccap" capability attribute allows for expressing alternative connections address ("c=") lines in SDP as part of the SDP Capability Negotiation process. One of the primary use cases for this is offering alternative connection addresses where the <nettype> is "IN" or "PSTN", i.e., selecting between an IP-based bearer or a circuit-switched bearer. By supporting the "IN" <nettype>, the "ccap" attribute enables the signaling of multiple IPv4 and IPv6 addresses; however, the Standards Track mechanism for negotiation of alternative IP addresses in SDP is Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) [RFC 5245]. The "ccap" attribute does not change that; hence, the combined set of actual and potential configurations (as defined in [RFC 5939]) for any given media description MUST NOT use the "ccap" attribute to negotiate more than one address with an IN network type (i.e., it is not permissible to select between "IPv4" and "IPv6" address families or different IP addresses within the same IP address family. Figure 6 is an example of an SDP offer that includes a "ccap" capability attribute. An audio stream can be set up with an RTP flow or by establishing a circuit-switched audio stream: Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 9 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 v=0 o=2987933123 2987933123 IN IP4 198.51.100.7 s=- t=0 0 a=creq:med-v0,ccap-v0 m=audio 38902 RTP/AVP 0 8 c=IN IP4 198.51.100.7 a=ccap:1 PSTN E164 +15555556666 a=tcap:2 PSTN a=omcap:1 - a=acap:1 setup:actpass a=acap:2 connection:new a=acap:3 cs-correlation:callerid:+15555556666 a=pcfg:1 c=1 t=2 m=1 a=1,2,3 Figure 6: Example SDP offer with a "ccap" attribute The example in Figure 6 represents an SDP offer indicating an audio flow using RTP, such as the one represented in Figure 7, or an audio flow using a circuit-switched connection, such as the one represented in Figure 8. v=0 o=2987933123 2987933123 IN IP4 198.51.100.7 s=- t=0 0 m=audio 38902 RTP/AVP 0 8 c=IN IP4 198.51.100.7 Figure 7: Equivalent SDP offer with the RTP flow v=0 o=2987933123 2987933123 IN IP4 198.51.100.7 s=- t=0 0 m=audio 9 PSTN - c=PSTN E164 +15555556666 a=setup:actpass a=connection:new a=cs-correlation:callerid:+15555556666 Figure 8: Equivalent SDP offer with the circuit-switched flow This document does not define any mechanism for negotiating or describing different port numbers; hence, the port number from the "m=" line MUST be used by default. Exceptions to this default can be provided by extension mechanisms or network type specific rules. This document defines an exception when the network type is "PSTN", Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 10 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 in which case the port number is replaced with 9 (the "discard" port), as described in "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Extension for Setting Audio and Video Media Streams over Circuit-Switched Bearers in the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)" [SDP-CS]. An endpoint offering alternative IP and PSTN bearers MUST include the IP media description in the actual configuration (IP address in the "c=" line and port number in the "m=" line) and the PSTN media description in the potential configuration. Exceptions for other network types, such as for the "ATM" network type defined in [RFC 3108], require additional specifications. 3.1.2.1. Configuration Parameters The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] provides for the existence of the "pcfg" and "acfg" attributes, which can convey one or more configurations to be negotiated. The concept is extended by the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871] with an "lcfg" attribute that conveys latent configurations. In this document, we define a <connection-config> parameter to be used to specify a connection data capability in a potential or latent configuration attribute. The parameter follows the form of an <extension-config-list> with ext-cap-name = "c" ext-cap-list = conn-cap-list where, according to the following Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC 5234] syntax: extension-config-list =/ conn-config-list conn-config-list = ["+"] "c=" conn-cap-list conn-cap-list = conn-cap-num *(BAR conn-cap-num) conn-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; 1 to 2^32-1 inclusive Figure 9: Syntax of the connection data parameter in "lcfg" and "pcfg" attributes Each capability configuration alternative contains a single connection data capability attribute number and refers to the conn-cap-num capability number defined explicitly earlier in this document; hence, the values MUST be between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). The connection data capability allows the expression of only a single capability in each alternative, rather than a list of capabilities, since no more than a single connection data field is Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 11 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 permitted per media block. Nevertheless, it is still allowed to express alternative potential connection configurations separated by a vertical bar ("|"). An endpoint includes a plus sign ("+") in the configuration attribute to mandate support for this extension. An endpoint that receives this parameter prefixed with a plus sign and does not support this extension MUST treat that potential configuration as not valid. The connection data parameter to the actual configuration attribute ("a=acfg") is formulated as a <sel-extension-config> with ext-cap-name = "c" hence sel-extension-config =/ sel-connection-config sel-connection-config = "c=" conn-cap-num ; as defined above. Figure 10: Syntax of the connection data parameter in "acfg" attributes 3.1.2.2. Option Tag The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] solution allows for capability negotiation extensions to be defined. Associated with each such extension is an option tag that identifies the extension in question. Hereby, we define a new option tag of "ccap-v0" that identifies support for the connection data capability. This option tag SHOULD be added to other existing option tags present in the "csup" and "creq" attributes in SDP, according to the procedures defined in the SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939]. 3.1.3. Title Capability SDP [RFC 4566] provides for the existence of an information field expressed in the format of the "i=" line, which can appear at the SDP session and/or media level. An "i=" line that is present at the session level is known as the "session name", and its purpose is to convey human-readable textual information about the session. The "i=" line in SDP can also appear at the media level, in which case it is used to provide human-readable information about the media stream to which it is related; for example, it may indicate the purpose of the media stream. The "i=" line is not to be confused with the label attribute ("a=label:", [RFC 4574]), which provides a machine-readable tag. It is foreseen that applications declaring capabilities related to different configurations of a media stream Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 12 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 may need to provide different identifying information for each of those configurations. That is, a party might offer alternative media configurations for a stream, each of which represents a different presentation of the same or similar information. For example, an audio stream might offer English or Spanish configurations, or a video stream might offer a choice of video source such as speaker camera, group camera, or document viewer. The title capability is needed to inform the answering user in order to select the proper choice, and the label is used to inform the offering machine which choice the answerer has selected. Hence, there is value in defining a mechanism to provide titles of media streams as capabilities. As defined in SDP [RFC 4566], the session information field ("i=", referred to as "title" in this document) is subject to the "a=charset" attribute in order to support different character sets and hence internationalization. The title capability attribute itself ("a=icap") is, however, not subject to the "a=charset" attribute as this would preclude the inclusion of alternative session/title information each using different character sets. Instead, the session/title value embedded in an "a=icap" attribute (title capability) will be subject to the "a=charset" value used within a configuration that includes that title capability. This provides for consistent SDP operation while allowing for capabilities and configurations with different session/title information values with different character set encodings (with each such configuration including an "a=charset" value with the relevant character set for the session/title information in question). According to SDP [RFC 4566], the session information ("i=") line has the following syntax: "i=" text where "text" represents a human-readable text indicating the purpose of the session or media stream. In this document, we define a new capability attribute: the title capability "icap". This attribute lists session or media titles as capabilities, according to the following definition: "a=icap:" title-cap-num 1*WSP text where <title-cap-num> is a unique integer within all the connection capabilities in the entire SDP, which is used to identify the particular title capability and can take a value between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). <text> is a human-readable text that indicates the purpose of the session or media stream it is supposed to characterize. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 13 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 As an example, one might use: a=icap:1 Document Camera to define a title capability number 1 to identify a particular source of a media stream. Or, in another example, one might offer two title capabilities with different character encodings (using the charset attribute defined in "SDP: Session Description Protocol" [RFC 4566] and the generic attribute capability attribute ("a=acap:") defined in "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Capability Negotiation" [RFC 5939]). a=icap:1 [Text encoded in ISO-8859-1] a=acap:1 charset:ISO-8859-1 a=icap:2 [Text encoded in UTF-8] a=acap:2 charset:UTF-8 NOTE: Due to limitations of the ASCII encoding of RFCs, the actual text with non-printable characters cannot be represented in the text. See the PDF format of this RFC for a figure with non-printable characters. The title capability attribute satisfies the general attribute production rules in SDP [RFC 4566], according to the following Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) [RFC 5234] syntax: att-field =/ "icap" att-value =/ title-cap-num 1*WSP text ; text defined in RFC 4566 title-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 Figure 11: Syntax of the "icap" attribute 3.1.3.1. Configuration Parameters The SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939] provides for the existence of the "pcfg" and "acfg" attributes. The concept is extended by the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871] with an "lcfg" attribute that conveys latent configurations. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 14 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 In this document, we define a <title-config-list> parameter to be used to convey title capabilities in a potential or latent configuration. This parameter is defined as an <extension-config-list> with the following associations: ext-cap-name = "i" ext-cap-list = title-cap-list This leads to the following definition for the title capability parameter: extension-config-list =/ title-config-list title-config-list = ["+"] "i=" title-cap-list title-cap-list = title-cap-num *(BAR title-cap-num) ; BAR defined in RFC 5939 title-cap-num = 1*10(DIGIT) ; DIGIT defined in RFC 5234 Figure 12: Syntax of the title capability parameter in "lcfg" and "pcfg" attributes Each potential capability configuration contains a single title capability attribute number where "title-cap-num" is the title capability number defined explicitly earlier in this document, and hence must be between 1 and 2^31-1 (both included). The title capability allows the expression of only a single capability in each alternative, since no more than a single-title field is permitted per block. Nevertheless, it is still allowed to express alternative potential title configurations separated by a vertical bar ("|"). An endpoint includes a plus sign ("+") in the configuration attribute to mandate support for this extension. An endpoint that receives this parameter prefixed with a plus sign and does not support this extension MUST treat that potential configuration as not valid. The title parameter to the actual configuration attribute ("a=acfg") is formulated as a <sel-extension-config> with ext-cap-name = "i" hence sel-extension-config =/ sel-title-config sel-title-config = "i=" title-cap-num ; as defined above. Figure 13: Syntax of the title parameter in "acfg" attributes Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 15 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 3.1.3.2. Option Tag At present, it is difficult to envision a scenario in which the "icap" attribute must be supported or the offer must be rejected. In most cases, if the icap attribute or its contents were to be ignored, an offered configuration could still be chosen based on other criteria such as configuration numbering. However, one might imagine an SDP offer that contained English and Spanish potential configurations for an audio stream. The session might be unintelligible if the choice is based on configuration numbering, rather than informed user selection. Based on such considerations, it may well prove useful to announce the ability to use the icap attribute and its contents to select media configurations, or to inform the user about the selected configuration(s). Therefore, we define a new option tag of "icap-v0" that identifies support for the title capability. This option tag SHOULD be added to other existing option tags present in the "csup" and/or "creq" attributes in SDP, according to the procedures defined in the SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939]. The discussion above suggests that "icap-v0" will typically appear in a "csup" attribute, but rarely in a "creq" attribute. 3.2. Session Level versus Media Level The "bcap", "ccap", and "icap" attributes can appear at the SDP session and/or media level. Endpoints MUST interpret capabilities declared at session level as part of the session level in the resulting SDP for that particular configuration. Endpoints MUST interpret capabilities declared at media description as part of the media level in the resulting SDP for that particular configuration. The presence of the "bcap" capability for the same <bwtype> at both the session and media level is subject to the same constraints and restrictions specified in RFC 4566 [RFC 4566] for the bandwidth attribute "b=". To avoid confusion, the <type-attr-num> for each "a=bcap", "a=ccap", and "a=icap" line MUST be unique across all capability attributes of the same type within the entire session description. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 16 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 3.3. Offer/Answer Model Extensions In this section, we define extensions to the offer/answer model defined in SDP Offer/Answer Model [RFC 3264] and extended in the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939] to allow for bandwidth, connection, and title capabilities to be used with the SDP Capability Negotiation Framework. 3.3.1. Generating the Initial Offer When an endpoint generates an initial offer and wants to use the functionality described in the current document, it first defines appropriate values for the bandwidth, connection data, and/or title capability attributes according to the rules defined in [RFC 4566] for "b=", "c=", and "i=" lines. The endpoint then MUST include the respective capability attributes and associated values in the SDP offer. The preferred configurations for each media stream are identified following the media line in a "pcfg" attribute. Bandwidth and title capabilities may also be referenced in latent configurations in an "lcfg" attribute, as defined in the SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871]. Implementations are advised to pay attention to the port number that is used in the "m=" line. By default, a potential configuration that includes a connection data capability will use the port number from the "m=" line, unless the network type is "PSTN", in which case the default port number used will be 9. The offer SHOULD include the level of capability negotiation extensions needed to support this functionality in a "creq" attribute. 3.3.2. Generating the Answer When the answering party receives the offer, and if it supports the required capability negotiation extensions, it SHOULD select the most preferred configuration it can support for each media stream and build the answer accordingly, as defined in Section 3.6.2 of the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939]. If the connection data capability is used in a selected potential configuration chosen by the answerer, that offer configuration MUST by default use the port number from the actual offer configuration (i.e., the "m=" line), unless the network type is "PSTN", in which case the default port MUST be assumed to be 9. Extensions may be defined to negotiate the port number explicitly instead. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 17 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 3.3.3. Offerer Processing of the Answer When the offerer receives the answer, it MUST process the media lines according to normal SDP processing rules to identify the media stream(s) accepted by the answer, if any, as defined in Section 3.6.3 of the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939]. The "acfg" attribute, if present, MUST be used to verify the proposed configuration used to form the answer and to infer the lack of acceptability of higher-preference configurations that were not chosen. 3.3.4. Modifying the Session If, at a later time, one of the parties wishes to modify the operating parameters of a session, e.g., by adding a new media stream or by changing the properties used on an existing stream, it may do so via the mechanisms defined for SDP offer/answer [RFC 3264] and in accordance with the procedures defined in Section 3.6.4 of the SDP Capability Negotiation [RFC 5939]. 4. Field Replacement Rules To simplify the construction of SDP records, given the need to include fields within the media description in question for endpoints that do not support capabilities negotiation, we define some simple field-replacement rules for those fields invoked by potential or latent configurations. In particular, any "i=" or "c=" lines invoked by a configuration MUST replace the corresponding line, if present within the media description in question. Any "b=" line invoked by a configuration MUST replace any "b=" of the same bandwidth type at the media level, but not at the session level. 5. Security Considerations This document provides an extension on top of the SDP [RFC 4566], SDP Offer/Answer Model [RFC 3264], SDP Capability Negotiation Framework [RFC 5939], and SDP Media Capabilities Negotiation [RFC 6871]. As such, the security considerations of those documents apply. The bandwidth capability attribute may be used for reserving resources at endpoints and intermediaries that inspect SDP. Modification of the bandwidth value by an attacker can lead to the network being underutilized (too high bandwidth value) or congested (too low bandwidth value). Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 18 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 Similarly, by modifying the alternative connection address(es), an attacker would be able to direct media streams to a desired endpoint, thus launching a version of the well-known voice hammer attack (see Section 18.5.1 of [RFC 5245]). The title capability provides for alternative "i=" line information, which is intended for human consumption. However, manipulating the textual information could be misused to provide false information, leading to a bad user experience or the person using the service making a wrong choice regarding the available media streams. In case it is essential to protect the capability attribute values, one of the security mechanisms proposed in [RFC 5939] SHOULD be used. The "i=" line, and thus the value carried in the title capability attribute, is intended for human-readable description only. It should not be parsed programmatically. 6. IANA Considerations 6.1. New SDP Attributes IANA has registered new attributes in the "att-field (both session and media level)" subregistry of the "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Parameters" registry, according to the following registration form: Attribute name: bcap Long form name: Bandwidth Capability Type of attribute: Both media and session level Subject to charset: No Purpose: Negotiate session or media-level bandwidths Appropriate values: See RFC 7066, Section 3.1.1 Contact name: Miguel A. Garcia Miguel.A.Garcia@ericsson.com Attribute name: ccap Long form name: Connection Data Capability Type of attribute: Both media and session level Subject to charset: No Purpose: Negotiate media-level connection data Appropriate values: See RFC 7066, Section 3.1.2 Contact name: Miguel A. Garcia Miguel.A.Garcia@ericsson.com Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 19 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 Attribute name: icap Long form name: Title Capability Type of attribute: Both media and session level Subject to charset: Yes Purpose: Negotiate human-readable information describing the session or media Appropriate values: See RFC 7066, Section 3.1.3 Contact name: Miguel A. Garcia Miguel.A.Garcia@ericsson.com 6.2. New Option Tags IANA has added the new option tags "bcap-v0", "ccap-v0", and "icap- v0", defined herein, to the "SDP Capability Negotiation Option Tag" subregistry of the "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Parameters" registry. 6.3. New SDP Capability Negotiation Configuration Parameters IANA has added the new parameter identifiers "b" for "Bandwidth", "c" for "Connection Data", and "i" for "Title" to the "SDP Capability Negotiation Configuration Parameters" subregistry of the "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Parameters" registry. These parameters are permitted in "lcfg", "acfg", and "pcfg" attributes. 7. Acknowledgments Thanks to Christer Holmberg, Alf Heidermark, and Ingemar Johansson for arguing for the existence of this document and reviewing it in the early stages. Thanks to Flemming Andreasen, Andrew Allen, and Jonathan Lennox for a detailed review and many suggestions for improvement. 8. References 8.1. Normative References [RFC 2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC 3264] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model with Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264, June 2002. [RFC 4566] Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 20 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 [RFC 5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008. [RFC 5939] Andreasen, F., "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Capability Negotiation", RFC 5939, September 2010. [RFC 6871] Gilman, R., Even, R., and F. Andreasen, "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Media Capabilities Negotiation", RFC 6871, February 2013. 8.2. Informative References [RFC 3108] Kumar, R. and M. Mostafa, "Conventions for the use of the Session Description Protocol (SDP) for ATM Bearer Connections", RFC 3108, May 2001. [RFC 3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V. Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003. [RFC 3711] Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K. Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)", RFC 3711, March 2004. [RFC 4574] Levin, O. and G. Camarillo, "The Session Description Protocol (SDP) Label Attribute", RFC 4574, August 2006. [RFC 5245] Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols", RFC 5245, April 2010. [SDP-CS] Garcia, M. and S. Veikkolainen, "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Extension for Setting Audio and Video Media Streams over Circuit-Switched Bearers in the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)", Work in Progress, June 2013. Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 21 top

RFC 7006 SDP Misc. Capabilities Negotiation September 2013 Authors' Addresses Miguel A. Garcia-Martin Ericsson Calle Via de los Poblados 13 Madrid 28033 Spain Phone: +34 91 339 1000 EMail: miguel.a.garcia@ericsson.com Simo Veikkolainen Nokia P.O. Box 226 NOKIA GROUP, FI 00045 Finland Phone: +358 50 486 4463 EMail: simo.veikkolainen@nokia.com Robert R. Gilman 3243 W. 11th Ave. Dr. Broomfield, Colorado 80020 U.S.A. Phone: +1 303 898 9780 EMail: bob_gilman@comcast.net Garcia-Martin, et al. Standards Track PAGE 22 top

RFC TOTAL SIZE: 47133 bytes PUBLICATION DATE: Wednesday, September 25th, 2013 LEGAL RIGHTS: The IETF Trust (see BCP 78)


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