Internet Engineering Task Force G. Hellstrom
Internet-Draft Omnitor
Intended status: Best Current Practice November 1, 2019
Expires: May 4, 2020

Real-time text media handling in multi-party conferences
draft-hellstrom-mmusic-multi-party-rtt-00

Abstract

This memo specifies methods for Real-Time Text (RTT) media handling in multi-party calls. The main solution is to carry Real-Time text by the RTP protocol in a time-sampled mode according to RFC 4103. The main solution for centralized multi-party handling of real-time text is achieved through a media control unit coordinating multiple RTP text streams into one RTP session.

Identification for the streams are provided through the RTCP messages. This mechanism enables the receiving application to present the received real-time text medium in different ways according to user preferences. Some presentation related features are also described explaining suitable variations of transmission and presentation of text.

Call control features are described for the SIP environment. A number of alternative methods for providing the multi-party negotiation, transmission and presentation are discussed and a recommendation for the main one is provided. Two alternative methods using a single RTP stream and source identification inline in the text stream are also described, one of them being provided as a lower functionality fallback method for endpoints with no multi-party awareness for RTT.

Brief information is also provided for multi-party RTT in the WebRTC environment.

EDITOR NOTE: A number of alternatives are specified for discussion. A decision is needed which alternatives are preferred and then how the preferred alternatives shall be emphasized.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 4, 2020.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Real-time text (RTT) is a medium in real-time conversational sessions. Text entered by participants in a session is transmitted in a time-sampled fashion, so that no specific user action is needed to cause transmission. This gives a direct flow of text in the rate it is created, that is suitable in a real-time conversational setting. The real-time text medium can be combined with other media in multimedia sessions.

Media from a number of multimedia session participants can be combined in a multi-party session. This memo specifies how the real-time text streams are handled in multi-party sessions.

The description is mainly focused on the transport level, but also describes a few session and presentation level aspects.

Transport of real-time text is specified in RFC 4103 RTP Payload for text conversation. It makes use of RFC 3550 Real Time Protocol, for transport. Robustness against network transmission problems is normally achieved through redundancy transmission based on the principle from RFC 2198, with one primary and two redundant transmission of each text element Primary and redundant transmissions are combined in packets and described by a redundancy header. This transport is usually used in the SIP Session Initiation Protocol RFC 3261 environment.

A very brief overview of functions for real-time text handling in multi-party sessions is described in RFC 4597 Conferencing Scenarios, sections 4.8 and 4.10. This specification builds on that description and indicates which protocol mechanisms should be used to implement multi-party handling of real-time text.

EDITOR NOTE: A number of alternatives are specified for discussion. A decision is needed which alternatives are preferred and then how the preferred alternatives shall be emphasized.

1.1. Requirements 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.

2. Centralized conference model

In the centralized conference model for SIP, introduced in RFC 4353 A Framework for Conferencing with the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), one function co-ordinates the communication with participants in the multi-party session. This function also controls media mixer functions for the media appearing in the session. The central function is common for control of all media, while the media mixers may work differently for each medium.

The central function is called the Focus UA and may be co-located in an advanced terminal including multi-party control functions, or it may be located in a separate location. Many variants exist for setting up sessions including the multipoint control centre. It is not within scope of this description to describe these, but rather the media specific handling in the mixer required to handle multi-party calls with RTT.

The main principle for handling real-time text media in a centralized conference is that one RTP session for real-time text is established including the multipoint media control centre and the participating endpoints which are going to have real-time text exchange with the others.

The different possible mechanisms for mixing and transporting RTT differs in the way they multiplex the text streams and how they identify the sources of the streams. RFC 7667 describes a number of possible use cases for RTP. This specification refers to different sections of RFC 7667 for further reading of the situations caused by the different possible design choices.

3. Requirements on multi-party RTT

The following requirements are placed on multi-party RTT:

4. Coordination of text RTP streams

Coordinating and sending text RTP streams in the multi-party session can be done in a number of ways. The most suitable methods are specified here with pros and cons.

A receiving UA SHOULD separate text from the different sources and identify and display them accordingly.

4.1. RTP Translator sending one RTT stream per participant

Within the RTP session, text from each participant is transmitted from the RTP media translator in a separate RTP stream, thus using the same destination address/port combination, but separate RTP SSRC parameters and sequence number series as described in Section 7.1 and 7.2 of RTP RFC 3550 about the Translator function. The sources of the text in each RTP packet are identified by the SSRC parameters in the RTP packets, containing the SSRC of the initial sources of text.

A receiving UA is supposed to separate text items from the different sources and identify and display them in a suitable way.

This method is described in RFC 7667, section 3.5.1 Relay-transport translator or 3.5.2 Media translator.

The identification of the source is made through the RTCP SDES CNAME and NAME packets as described in RTP[RFC3550].

Pros:

This method has moderate overhead. When loss of packets occur, it is possible to recover text from redundancy at loss of up to the number of redundancy levels carried in the RFC 4103 stream. (normally primary and two redundant levels.

More loss than what can be recovered, can be detected and the marker for text loss can be inserted in the correct stream.

It may be possible in some scenarios to keep the text encrypted through the Translator.

Cons:

There may be RTP implementations not supporting the Translator model.

It is even most likely that this configuration is not supported by current media declarations in sdp. RFC 3264 specifies in many places that one media description is supposed to describe just one RTP stream.

4.2. RTP Mixer indicating participants in CSRC

An RTP media mixer combines text from all participants except from the receiving endpoint into one RTP stream , thus all using the same destination address/port combination, the same RTP SSRC and , one sequence number series as described in Section 7.1 and 7.3 of RTP RFC 3550 about the Mixer function. The sources of the text in each RTP packet are identified by the CSRC parameters in the RTP packets, containing the SSRC of the initial sources of text. The order of the CSRC parameters are the same as the order of the redundant and primary data fields in the packet. If all redundancy blocks in a packet are from the same source, then it is allowed to use only one CSRC in the RTP packet. This method is described in RFC 7667, section 3.6.3 Media switching mixer.

The identification of the source is made through the RTCP SDES CNAME and NAME packets as described in RTP[RFC3550].

A receiving UA is supposed to separate text items from the different sources and identify and display them accordingly.

It is likely that the conference server need to have authority to decrypt the payload in the RTP packets in order to be able to recover text from redundant data or insert the missing text marker in the stream, and repack the text in new packets. Further study is needed

Pros:

This method has moderate overhead.

When loss of packets occur, it is possible to recover text from redundancy at loss of up to the number of redundancy levels carried in the RFC 4103 stream. (normally primary and two redundant levels.

This method can be implemented with most RTP implementations.

Cons:

When more consecutive packet loss than the number of generations of redundant data appears, it is not possible to deduct the source of the totally lost data. Therefore it is not possible to know in which stream to insert the missing text marker. It MAY be acceptable to either indicate a general loss indication, or insert a loss marker in all streams. Calculations of most likely source can however be made from received RTP and RTCP contents so that the loss marker can be inserted in the most likely struck stream.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the packet payload.

4.3. RTP Mixer indicating participants by a control code in the stream

Text from all participants except the receiving one is transmitted from the media mixer in the same RTP session and stream, thus all using the same destination address/port combination, the same RTP SSRC and , one sequence number series as described in Section 7.1 and 7.3 of RTP RFC 3550 about the Mixer function. The sources of the text in each RTP packet are identified by a new defined T.140 control code "c" followed by a unique identification of the source in UTF-8 string format.

The receiver can use the string for presenting the source of text. This method is on the RTP level described in RFC 7667, section 3.6.2 Media mixing mixer.

The inline coding of the source of text is applied in the data stream itself, and an RTP mixer function is used for coordinating the sources of text into one RTP stream.

Information uniquely identifying each user in the multi-party session is placed as the parameter value “n” in the T.140 application protocol function with the function code “c”. The identifier shall thus be formatted like this: SOS c n ST, where SOS and ST are coded as specified in ITU-T T.140. The "c" is the letter "c". The n parameter value is a string uniquely identifying the source. This parameter shall be kept short so that it can be repeated in the transmission without concerns for network load.

A receiving UA is supposed to separate text items from the different sources and identify and display them accordingly.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the packet payload in order to check the source and repack the text.

Pros:

If loss of packets occur, it is possible to recover text from redundancy at loss of up to the number of redundancy levels carried in the RFC 4103 stream. (normally primary and two redundant levels.

This method can be implemented with most RTP implementations.

Transmitted text can also be used with other transports than RTP

Cons:

If more consecutive packet loss than the number of generations of redundant data appears, it is not possible to deduct the source of the totally lost data. Therefore it is not possible to know in which stream to insert the missing text marker. Calculations of most likely source can however be made from recent history, so that it is quite likely that the marker is inserted in the correct stream. Such loss should however be rare, and a general warning that there might have been text loss in the session might be acceptable.

The mixer needs to be able to generate suitable and unique source identifications which are suitable as labels for the sources.

Requires an extension on the ITU-T T.140 standard, best made by the ITU.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the packet payload.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the packet payload.

4.4. Mesh of RTP endpoints

Text from all participants are transmitted directly to all others in one RTP session, without a central bridge. The sources of the text in each RTP packet are identified by the source network address and the SSRC.

This method is described in RFC 7667, section 3.4 Point to multi-point using mesh.

Pros:

When loss of packets occur, it is possible to recover text from redundancy at loss of up to the number of redundancy levels carried in the RFC 4103 stream. (normally primary and two redundant levels.

This method can be implemented with most RTP implementations.

Transmitted text can also be used with other transports than RTP

Cons:

This model is not described in IMS, NENA and EENA specifications, and does therefore not meet the requirements.

4.5. Multiple RTP sessions, one for each participant

Text from all participants are transmitted directly to all others in one RTP session each, without a central bridge. Each session is established with a separate media description in SDP. The sources of the text in each RTP packet are identified by the source network address and the SSRC.

This method is out of scope for further discussion here, because the foreseen applications use centralized model conferencing.

Pros:

When loss of packets occur, it is possible to recover text from redundancy at loss of up to the number of redundancy levels carried in the RFC 4103 stream. (normally primary and two redundant levels.

Complete loss of text can be indicated in the received stream.

This method can be implemented with most RTP implementations.

End-to-end encryption is achievable.

Cons:

This method is not described in IMS, NENA and EENA specifications and does therefore not meet the requirements.

A lot of network resources are spent on setting up separate sessions for each participant.

4.6. Mixing for conference-unaware user agents

Multi-party real-time text contents can be transmitted to conference-unaware user agents if source labeling and formatting of the text is performed by a mixer. This method has the limitations that the layout of the presentation and the format of source identification is purely controlled by the mixer, and that only one source at a time is allowed to present in real-time. Other sources need to be stored temporarily waiting for an appropriate moment to switch the source of transmitted text. The mixer controls the switching of sources and inserts a source identifier in text format at the beginning of text after switch of source. The logic of trhe mixer to detect when a switch is appropriate should detect a number of places in text where a switch can be allowed, including new line, end of sentence, end of phrase, a period of inactivity, and a word separator after a long time of active transmission.

This method MAY be used when no support for multi-party awareness is detected in the receiving endpoint.The base for his method is described in RFC 7667, section 3.6.2 Media mixing mixer.

See Appendix A for an informative example of a procedure for presenting RTT to a conference-unaware UA.

Pros:

Can be transmitted to conference-unaware endpoints.

Can be used with other transports than RTP

Cons:

Does not allow full real-time presentation of more than one source at a time. Text from other sources will be delayed, even if automatic detection of suitable moments for switching source for presentation is made by the mixer.

The only realistic presentation format is a style with the text from the different sources presented with a text label indicating source, and the text collected in a chat style presentation but with more frequent turn-taking.

Endpoints often have their own system for adding labels to the RTT presentation. In that case there will be two levels of labels in the presentation, one for the mixer and one for the sources.

If loss of more packets than can be recovered by the redundancy appears, it is not possible to detect which source was struck by the loss. It is also possible that a source switch occurred during the loss, and therefore a false indication of the source of text can be provided to the user after such loss.

Because of all these cons, this method MUST NOT be used as the main method, but only as the last resort for backwards interoperability with conference-unaware endpoints.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the packet payload.

5. RTT bridging in WebRTC

Within WebRTC, real-time text is specified to be carried in WebRTC data channels as specified in draft-ietf-mmusic-t140-usage-data-channel. A few ways to handle multi-party RTT are mentioned briefly. They are explained and further detailed below.

5.1. RTT bridging in WebRTC with one data channel per source

A straightforward way to handle multi-party RTT is for the bridge to open one T.140 data channel per source towards the receiving participants.

The stream-id forms a unique stream identification.

The identification of the source is made through the Label property of the channel, and session information belonging to the source. The UA can compose a readable label for the presentation from this information.

Pros:

This is a straightforward solution.

Cons:

With a high number of participants, the overhead of establishing the high number of data channels required may be high.

5.2. RTT bridging in WebRTC with one common data channel

A way to handle multi-party RTT in WebRTC is for the bridge combine text from all sources into one data channel and insert the sources in the stream by a T.140 control code for source.

This method is described in a corresponding section for RTP transmission above.

The identification of the source is made through insertion in the beginning of each text transmission from a source of a control code extension "c" followed by a string representing the source, framed by the control code start and end flags SOS and ST (See ITU-T T.140).

A receiving UA is supposed to separate text items from the different sources and identify and display them in a suitable way.

The UA does not always display the source identification in the received text at the place where it is received, but has the information as a guide for planning the presentation of received text. A label corresponding to the source identification is presented when needed depending on the selected presentation style.

Pros:

This solution has relatively low overhead on session and network level

Cons:

This solution has higher overhead on the media contents level than the WebRTC solution above.

Standardisation of the new control code "c" in ITU-T T.140 is required.

The conference server need to be allowed to decrypt/encrypt the data channel contents.

6. Preferred multi-party RTT transport method

EDITOR NOTE: The recommendations here need to be validated, and the proposed further studies performed.

For RTP transport of RTT, two methods for multi-party mixing and transport for conference-aware parties stand out as fulfilling the goals best: "RTP Mixer indicating participants in CSRC" and "RTP Mixer indicating participants by a control code in the stream". The CSRC based method has a slightly better opportunity to use a robust and well defined procedure in the server. The inline stream based method has the slightly better opportunity for ease of interworking with other environments for RTT where the in-line identification also could be used. The inline method can also be applied in the case when an ad-hoc method for conferencing is used, and the source of text only detectable inline. The possibility to use such methods for conferencing and the interoperability opportunities are important, and therefore the method to implement for multi-party RTT with or without conference-aware parties when no other method is explicitly agreed between implementing parties for SIP with RTP is "RTP Mixer indicating participants by a control code in the stream".

Further studies should be made to find out if assessment of the source for lost text can be better done, and if operation without letting the conference server decrypt data can be specified.

For WebRTC, one method is to prefer because of the same interoperability reasons, and because of the lower network resource usage. So, for WebRTC, the method to implement for multi-party RTT with conference-aware parties when no other method is explicitly agreed between implementing parties is: "RTT bridging in WebRTC with one common data channel".

Further studies are needed to check if it can be possible to let the conference server act without decrypting the text.

As a last resort, when the UA is not conference-aware, the method for mixing for multi-party-unaware user agents may be used for both RTP and WebRTC data channel solutions considering that this method provides a reduced impression of the real time characteristics and may delay presentation of text.

7. Session control of multi-party RTT sessions

General session control aspects for multi-party sessions are described in RFC 4575 A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Conference State, and RFC 4579 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents. The nomenclature of these specifications are used here.

The procedures for a conference-aware model for RTT-transmission shall only be applied if a capability exchange for conference-aware real-time text transmission has been completed and a supported method for multi-party real-time text transmission can be identified.

A method for detection of conference-awareness for centralized SIP conferencing in general is specified in RFC 4579. The focus sends the "isfocus" feature tag in a SIP Contact header. This causes the conference-aware UA to subscribe to conference notifications from the focus. The focus then sends notifications to the UA about entering and disappearing conference participants and their media capabilities. The information is carried XML-formatted in a 'conference-info' block in the notification according to RFC 4575. The mechanism is described in detail in RFC 4575.

Before a conference media server starts sending multi-party RTT to a UA, a verification of its ability to handle multi-party RTT must be made. A decision on which mechanism to use for identifying text from the different participants must also be taken, implicitly or explicitly. These verifications and decisions can be done in a number of ways. The most apparent ways are specified here and their pros and cons described. One of the methods is selected to be the one to be used by implementations according to this specification.

7.1. Implicit RTT multi-party capability indication

Capability for RTT multi-party handling can be decided to be implicitly indicated by session control items.

The focus may implicitly indicate muti-party RTT capability by including the media child with value "text" in the RFC 4575 conference-info provided in conference notifications.

A UA may implicitly indicate multi-party RTT capability by including the text media in the SDP in the session control transactions with the conference focus after the subscription to the conference has taken place.

The implicit RTT capability indication means for the focus that it can handle multi-party RTT according to the preferred method indicated in the RTT multi-party methods section above.

The implicit RTT capability indication means for the UA that it can handle multi-party RTT according to the preferred method indicated in the RTT multi-party methods section above.

If the focus detects that a UA implicitly declared RTT multi-party capability, it SHALL provide RTT according to the preferred method.

If the focus detects that the UA does not indicate any RTT multi-party capability, then it shall provide RTT multi-party text in the way specified for conference-unaware UA above.

If the UA detects that the focus has implicitly declared RTT multi-party capability, it shall be prepared to present RTT in a multi-party fashion according to the preferred method.

Pros:

Acceptance of implicit multi-party capability implies that no standardisation of explicit RTT multi-party capability exchange is required.

Cons:

There may be a desire to indicate conference-awareness in general, but not for RTT. Then the method called "Mixing for conference-unaware user agents" should be used as a lower functionality fallback. There is no way to provide that indication by the UA according to the specification of the implicit method above. The solution must be that no conference awareness is indicated by the UA when it has no RTT multi-party capability.

If other methods for multi-party RTT are to be used in the same implementation environment as the preferred ones,then capability exchange needs to be defined for them.

7.2. RTT multi-party capability declared by SIP media-tags

Specifications for RTT multi-party capability declarations can be agreed for use as SIP media feature tags, to be exchanged during SIP call control operation according to the mechanisms in RFC 3840 and RFC 3841. Capability for the RTT Multi-party capability is then indicated by the media feature tag "rtt-mixer", with one or more of its possible values in a comma-separated list.

The possible values in the list are:

rtp-translator indicates capability for using the RTP-translator based coordination of multi-party text.

rtp-mixer indicates capability for using the RTP-mixer based presentation of multi-party text.

t140-mixer indicates capability for using the T.140 control code source indicators in a mixer.

text-mixer indicates capability for using the fallback method with text formatting for conference-unaware endpoints.

rtp-mesh indicates capability for using the mesh based transmission of multi-party text.

multi-session indicates capability for using separate point-to-point RTP sessions between all participants.

An offer-answer exchange should take place and the common method selected by the answering party shall be used in the session with that UA.

When no common method is declared, then only the fallback method can be used.

If more than one text media line is included in SDP, all must be capable of using the declared RTT multi-party method.

Pros:

Provides a clear decision method.

Can be extended with new mixing methods.

Can guide call routing to a suitable capable focus.

Cons:

Requires standardization and IANA registration.

Cannot be used in the WebRTC environment.

7.3. SDP media attribute for RTT multi-party capability indication

An attribute can be specified on media level, to be used in text media SDP declarations for negotiating RTT multi-party capabilities. The attribute can have the name "rtt-mixer", with one or more of its possible values in a comma-separated list.

The possible values in the list are:

rtp-translator indicates capability for using the RTP-translator based coordination of multi-party text.

rtp-mixer indicates capability for using the RTP-mixer based presentation of multi-party text.

t140-mixer indicates capability for using the T.140 control code source indicators in a mixer.

text-mixer indicates capability for using the fallback method with text formatting for conference-unaware endpoints.

rtp-mesh indicates capability for using the mesh based transmission of multi-party text.

multi-session indicates capability for using separate point-to-point RTP sessions between all participants.

An offer-answer exchange should take place and the common method selected by the answering party shall be used in the session with that UA.

When no common method is declared, then only the fallback method can be used.

Pros:

Provides a clear decision method.

Can be extended with new mixing methods.

Can be used on specific text media.

Can be used also for SDP-controlled WebRTC sessions with multiple streams in the same data channel.

Cons:

Requires standardization and IANA registration.

Is not well defined for multi-party methods involving more than one media section for text.

Cannot guide SIP routing.

7.4. Preferred capability declaration method.

The preferred capability declaration method is the one with SDP attributes because it is partially usable also for WebRTC.

8. Identification of the source of text

EDITOR NOTE: The text in the following sections need to be adapted after recommendations for the main methods for coordination of RTT has been selected. Details should be provided mainly for the recommended method.

As soon as a new member is added to the RTP session, its characteristics shall be transmitted in RTCP SDES CNAME and NAME reports according to section 6.5 in RFC 3550. The information about the participant MUST also be included in the conference data including the text media member in a notification according to RFC 4575.

The RTCP SDES report, SHOULD contain identification of the source represented by the SSRC/CSRC identifier. This identification MUST contain the CNAME field and MAY contain the NAME field and other defined fields of the SDES report.

A focus UA SHOULD primarily convey SDES information received from the sources of the session members. When such information is not available, the focus UA SHOULD compose SSRC/CSRC, CNAME and NAME information from available information from the SIP session with the participant.

9. Presentation of multi-party text

All session participants MUST observe the SSRC/CSRC field of incoming text RTP packets, and make note of what source they came from in order to be able to present text in a way that makes it easy to read text from each participant in a session, and get information about the source of the text.

9.1. Associating identities with text streams

A source identity SHOULD be composed from available information sources and displayed together with the text as indicated in ITU-T T.140 Appendix[T.140].

The source identity should primarily be the NAME field from incoming SDES packets. If this information is not available, and the session is a two-party session, then the T.140 source identity SHOULD be composed from the SIP session participant information. For multi-party sessions the source identity may be composed by local information if sufficient information is not available in the session.

Applications may abbreviate the presented source identity to a suitable form for the available display.

9.2. Presentation details for multi-party aware UAs.

The multi-party aware UA should after any action for recovery of data from lost packets, separate the incoming streams and present them according to the style that the receiving application supports and the user has selected. The decisions taken for presentation of the multi-party interchange shall be purely on the receiving side. The sending application must not insert any item in the stream to influence presentation that is not requested by the sending participant.

9.2.1. Bubble style presentation

One often used style is to present real-time text in chunks in readable bubbles identified by labels containing names of sources. Bubbles are placed in one column in the presentation area and are closed and moved upwards in the presentation area after certain items or events, when there is also newer text from another source that would go into a new bubble. The text items that allows bubble closing are any character closing a phrase or sentence followed by a space or a timeout of a suitable time (about 10 seconds).

Real-time active text sent from the local user should be presented in a separate area. When there is a reason to close a bubble from the local user, the bubble should be placed above all real-time active bubbles, so that the time order that real-time text entries were completed is visible.

Scrolling is usually provided for viewing of recent or older text. When scrolling is done to an earlier point in the text, the presentation shall not move the scroll position by new received text. It must be the decision of the local user to return to automatic viewing of latest text actions. It may be useful with an indication that there is new text to read after scrolling to an earlier position has been activated.

The presentation area may become too small to present all text in all real-time active bubbles. Various techniques can be applied to provide a good overview and good reading opportunity even in such situations. The active real-time bubble may have a limited number of lines and if their contents need more lines, then a scrolling opportunity within the real-time active bubble is provided. Another method can be to only show the label and the last line of the active real-time bubble contents, and make it possible to expand or compress the bubble presentation between full view and one line view.

Erasures require special consideration. Erasure within a real-time active bubble is straightforward. But if erasure from one participant affects the last character before a bubble, the whole previous bubble becomes the actual bubble for real-time action by that participant and is placed below all other bubbles in the presentation area. If the border between bubbles was caused by the CRLF characters, only one erasure action is required to erase this bubble border. When a bubble is closed, it is moved up, above all real-time active bubbles.

9.2.2. Other presentation styles

Other presentation styles than the bubble style may be arranged and appreciated by the users. In a video conference one way may be to have a real-time text area under the video view of each participant. Another view may be to provide one column in a presentation area for each participant and place the text entries in a relative vertical position corresponding to when text entry in them was completed. The labels can then be placed in the column header. The considerations for ending and moving and erasure of entered text discussed above for the bubble style are valid also for these styles.

10. Presentation details for multi-party unaware UAs.

Multi-party unaware UA:s are prepared only for presentation of two sources of text, the local user and a remote user. In order to enable some multi-party communication with such UA, the mixer need to plan the presentation and insert labels and line breaks before lables. Many limitations appear for this presentation mode, and it must be seen as a fallback and a last resort.

See Appendix A for an informative example of a procedure for presenting RTT to a conference-unaware UA.

11. Transmission of text from each user

UAs participating in sessions with real-time text, SHOULD send SDES packets in RTCP giving values to appropriate identification fields.

The CNAME field SHALL be included in SDES packets.

The NAME field should be given a value that is suitable as an identifier of text from the user of the UA.

12. Robustness and indication of possible loss

This section discusses the means for robustness against loss of text that is already specified and their performance in the multi-party situation. means for reducing the risk for loss is discussed, as well as ways to detect in which stream loss has occurred.

TBD

13. Performance

This section discusses performance and performance limitations for the different transport solutions, and indicates which means for performance increase versus load limitations can be suitable to apply compared to the point-to-point case.

TBD

14. Security Considerations

The security considerations valid for RFC 4103 and RFC 3550 are valid also for the multi-party sessions with text.

15. IANA Considerations

EDITOR NOTE: TBD after decision of proposed preferences in the draft.

This document Introduces the TBD /SIP media tag/SDP media level attribute/ rtt-mixer, with a comma-separated parameter list containing the following possible values:

rtp-translator indicates capability for using the RTP-translator based coordination of multi-party text.

rtp-mixer indicates capability for using the RTP-mixer based presentation of multi-party text.

t140-mixer indicates capability for using the T.140 control code source indicators in a mixer.

text-mixer indicates capability for using the fallback method with text formatting for conference-unaware endpoints.

rtp-mesh indicates capability for using the mesh based transmission of multi-party text.

multi-session indicates capability for using separate point-to-point RTP sessions between all participants.

16. Congestion considerations

The congestion considerations described in RFC 4103 are valid also for multi-party use of the real-time text RTP transport. A risk for congestion may appear if a number of conference participants are active transmitting text simultaneously, because this multi-party transmission method does not allow multiple sources of text to contribute to the same packet.

In situations of risk for congestion, the Focus UA MAY combine packets from the same source to increase the transmission interval per source up to one second. Local conference policy in the Focus UA may be used to decide which streams shall be selected for such transmission frequency reduction.

17. Acknowledgements

Arnoud van Wijk for contributions to an earlier, expired draft of this memo.

18. References

18.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, DOI 10.17487/RFC3261, June 2002.
[RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550, July 2003.
[RFC4103] Hellstrom, G. and P. Jones, "RTP Payload for Text Conversation", RFC 4103, DOI 10.17487/RFC4103, June 2005.
[RFC4575] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H. and O. Levin, "A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Conference State", RFC 4575, DOI 10.17487/RFC4575, August 2006.
[RFC4579] Johnston, A. and O. Levin, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents", BCP 119, RFC 4579, DOI 10.17487/RFC4579, August 2006.
[T.140] "Protocol for multimedia application text conversation", 1998.

18.2. Informative References

[RFC4353] Rosenberg, J., "A Framework for Conferencing with the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4353, DOI 10.17487/RFC4353, February 2006.
[RFC4597] Even, R. and N. Ismail, "Conferencing Scenarios", RFC 4597, DOI 10.17487/RFC4597, August 2006.
[RFC7667] Westerlund, M. and S. Wenger, "RTP Topologies", RFC 7667, DOI 10.17487/RFC7667, November 2015.

Appendix A. Mixing for a conference-unaware UA

This informational appendix describes media mixer procedures for a multi-party conference server to format real-time text from a number of participants into one single text stream to a participant with a terminal that has no features for multi-party text display. The procedures are intended for implementations using ITU-T T.140 [T.140] for the real-time text coding and presentation.

A.1. Short description

The media mixer procedures described here are intended to make real-time text from a number of call participants be coordinated into one text stream to a terminal originally intended for two-party calls. A conference server is supposed to apply the procedures.

The procedures may also be applied on a terminal for display of multiple streams of real-time text in one area.

The intention is that text from each participant shall be displayed in suitable sections so that it is easy to read, and text from one active participant at a time is sent and displayed in real-time. The receiving terminal is assumed to have one display area for received text. The display is arranged by this procedure in a text chat style, with a name label in front of each text section where switch of source of the text has taken place.

When more than one participant transmits text at the same time, the text from only one of them is transmitted directly to the receiving terminals. Text from the other participants is stored in buffers in the conference server for transmission at a later time, when a suitable situation for switch of current transmitter can take place.

A.2. Functionality goals and drawbacks

The procedures are intended to make best efforts to present a multi-party text conversation on a terminal that has no awareness of multi-party calls. There are some obvious drawbacks, and a terminal designed with multi-party awareness will be able to present multi-party call contents in a more flexible way. Only two parties at a time will be allowed to display added text in real-time, while the other parties' produced text will need to be stored in the multi-party server for a moment awaiting a suitable occasion to be displayed. There are also some cases of erasure that will not be performed on the target text but only indicated in another way. Even with these drawbacks, the procedure provides an opportunity to display text from more than two parties in a smooth and readable way.

This specification does not introduce any new protocol element, and does not rely on anything else than basic two-party terminal functionality with presentation level according to ITU-T T.140 [T.140]. It is a description of a best current practice for mixing and presentation of the real-time text component in multi-party calls with terminals without multi-party awareness.

The procedures are applicable to scenarios, when the conference focus and a User Agent have not gone through any successfully completed negotiation about conference awareness for the real-time text medium neither on the transport level, nor on the presentation level.

A.3. Definitions

A.4. Presentation level procedures

The conference server applies these mixing procedures to text transmitted to all call participants who have not gone through a completed negotiation for conference awareness in real-time text presentation.

All the participants and the conference server use real-time text conversation presentation coding according to ITU-T T.140 [T.140]. A consequence is that real-time text transmissions are UTF-8 coded, with control codes selected from ISO 6429 [ISO 6429].

The description is from the conference server point of view.

A.4.1. Structure

The real-time text mixer structure described here is supposed to be placed in the media path so that it is implemented with one mixer per recipient. A mixer contains buffers for temporary storage of text intended for the recipient. Each mixer has one buffer for each contributing participant. A set of status variables is maintained per buffer and is used in the mixer actions. The mixer logic decides for each moment which participant?s buffer content is to be sent on to the recipient. By default, the recipient does not contribute text to its own mixer. Text transmitted by a participant is usually displayed locally and will only cause confusion if it appears also in received text.

If there is a reason, own text can be configured to be transmitted also to the participants. That can enable a simplification of the mixer design to have only one common set of buffers instead of a set per recipient. That simplification will however hamper the flow of the conversation severely and is therefore NOT RECOMMENDED.

A.4.2. Action on reception

This description of the mixer is valid per recipient.

Text from each contributing participant is checked for a set of characteristics on reception.

A.5. Display examples

The following pictures are examples of the view on a participant's display.

              
           
  _________________________________________________
 |       Conference       |          Alice          |                
 |________________________|_________________________|
 |                        |I will arrive by TGV.    |                  
 |[Bob]:My flight is to   |Convenient to the main   | 
 |Orly.                   |station.                 |
 |[Eve]:Hi all, can we    |                         | 
 |plan for the seminar.   |                         | 
 |                        |                         |                       
 |[Bob]:Eve, will you do  |                         |                       
 |your presentation on    |                         |                       
 |Friday?                 |                         |
 |[Eve]:Yes, Friday at 10.|                         |
 |[Bob]: Fine, wo         |We need to meet befo     | 
 |________________________|_________________________|

Figure 2 : Alice who has a conference-unaware client is receiving the multi-party real-time text in a single-stream. This figure shows how a coordinated column view MAY be presented on Alice's device.

              _________________________________________________
             |                                              |^|
             |[Alice] Hi, Alice here.                       | |
             |                                              | |
             |[Bob] Bob as well.                            | |
             |                                              | |
             |[Eve] Hi, this is Eve, calling from Paris.    | |
             |      I thought you should be here.           | |
             |                                              | |
             |[Alice] I am coming on Thursday, my           | |
             |      performance is not until Friday morning.| |
             |                                              | |
             |[Bob] And I on Wednesday evening.             | |
             |                                              | |
             |[Eve] we can have dinner and then take a walk | |
             |                                              | |
             | [Eve-typing] But I need to be back to        | |
             |    the hotel by 11 because I need            |-|
             |                                              |-|
             |______________________________________________|v|
             | of course, I underst                           |
             |________________________________________________|
 

Figure 3 shows a conference view with real-time text preview. Bob?s text is buffering until a Current switch reason.

A.6. Summary of configurable parameters

A number of configurable parameters are described in this specification. This table provides a summary of the parameters on presentation level. A service provider implementing a multi-party service may want to set specific values on these parameters to adapt the characteristics of the service. It is possible to control them per recipient, if desired.

Parameter: Current Recipients

Purpose: Control if participant shall get their own text.

Possible values: Exclude or Include Current Participant

Default value: Exclude

Comment: Own transmissions are usually displayed sufficiently locally

Parameter: Erasure replacement

Purpose: Character to show erasure, when erasure cannot be done

Possible values: Character

Default value: X

Comment: May need to have other value for other than Latin script.

Parameter: Message delimiter

Purpose: Detection of suitable place in text for switching Current Participant

Possible values: List of Unicode editing codes

Default value: Line Separator, Paragraph Separator, CR, CRLF, LF

Comment: Other than Latin based scripts may have other conventions

Parameter: Pending period

Purpose: Inactivity timer for detection of time to Switch Current Participant

Possible values: Time in seconds

Default value: 7

Comment: Longer times may cause inefficient transmission. Shorter time may cause unwanted switching cutting lines of thought inconveniently

Parameter: Sentence delimiter

Purpose: Characters forming end of sentence

Possible values: List of delimiters.

Default value: . or ? or ! followed by a space

Comment: Used for deciding on a position in the text to switch Current Participant according to configured logic.

Parameter: Label length

Purpose: Length of label put in front of or above entry.

Possible values: Number of characters

Default value: 12

Comment: Includes any surrounding characters

Parameter: Label delimiters

Purpose: Set of characters at the edges of the label

Possible values: Two strings. One in the beginning, one after.

Default value: [] followed by a space

Comment: It may be valid to include a Line Separator instead of the space

Parameter: Maximum waiting time

Purpose: The maximum time any participant?s text shall be allowed to wait for transmission

Possible values: Seconds

Default value: 20

Comment After this time a Switch will be forced within the Time Extension

Parameter: Word delimiter

Purpose: Delimiter for words

Possible values: List of characters

Default value: Space

Comment: Used for detection of suitable switch position if Maximum Waiting time has passed.

Parameter: Time extension

Purpose: Time for maximum further waiting for a Switch Reason

Possible values: Time in seconds

Default value: 7

Comment: After this time a Switch is forced.

A.7. References for this Appendix

A.8. Acknowledgement

This appendix was developed with funding in part from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, U.S. Department of Education,RERC on Telecommunications Access,?grant # H133E090001?. However, the contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.

Author's Address

Gunnar Hellstrom Omnitor Esplanaden 30 Vendelso, SE-136 70 SE Phone: +46 708 204 288 EMail: gunnar.hellstrom@omnitor.se URI: www.omnitor.se