One document matched: draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-12.txt

Differences from draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-11.txt


Audio/Video Transport WG                                      S. Wenger 
Internet Draft                                               Y.-K. Wang 
Intended status: Standards track                                  Nokia 
Expires: December 2008                                       T. Schierl 
                                                         Fraunhofer HHI 
                                                       A. Eleftheriadis 
                                                                  Vidyo 
                                                          June 30, 2008 
                                    
 
 
                                      
                     RTP Payload Format for SVC Video 
                      draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-12.txt 


    

Status of this Memo 

   By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any 
   applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware 
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   This Internet-Draft will expire on December 30, 2008. 

Copyright Notice 

   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008). 

 
 
 
 
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Abstract 

   This memo describes an RTP payload format for Scalable Video Coding 
   (SVC) as defined in_Annex G of ITU-T Recommendation H.264, which is 
   technically identical to Amendment 3 of ISO/IEC International 
   Standard 14496-10.  The RTP payload format allows for packetization 
   of one or more H.264 Network Abstraction Layer (NAL) units in each 
   RTP packet payload, supporting both single-session as well as multi-
   session streams.  For single-session streams the packetization modes 
   of RFC 3984 are used, whereas for multi-session streams four 
   different packetization modes are defined in this memo.  The payload 
   format is backwards compatible to RFC 3984, and has wide 
   applicability in conversational applications such as 
   videoconferencing, Internet video streaming, and high bit-rate 
   entertainment-quality video, among others.  

    

Table of Contents 

    
   Status of this Memo ............................................ 1 
   Copyright Notice ............................................... 1 
   Abstract ....................................................... 2 
   Table of Contents .............................................. 2 
   1. Introduction ................................................ 4 
   2. Conventions ................................................. 6 
   3. Scope ....................................................... 7 
   4. Definitions and Abbreviations ............................... 7 
      4.1 Definitions ............................................. 7 
         4.1.1 Definitions from the SVC Specification ............. 7 
         4.1.2 Definitions Specific to This Memo .................. 9 
      4.2 Abbreviations .......................................... 12 
   5. The SVC Codec .............................................. 12 
      5.1 Overview ............................................... 12 
      5.2 Parameter Sets ......................................... 15 
      5.3 Network Abstraction Layer Units ........................ 16 
   6. RTP Payload Format ......................................... 20 
      6.1 Design Principles ...................................... 20 
      6.2 RTP Header Usage ....................................... 20 
      6.3 Common Structure of the RTP Payload Format ............. 20 
      6.4 NAL Unit Header Usage .................................. 20 
      6.5 Packetization Modes .................................... 22 
         6.5.1 Packetization Modes for Single-Source  
               Transmission ...................................... 22 
         6.5.2 Packetization Modes for Multi-Source   
               Transmission ...................................... 22 
 
 
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      6.6 Aggregation Packets .................................... 25 
      6.7 Fragmentation Units (FUs) .............................. 25 
      6.8 Payload Content Scalability Information (PACSI)  
          NAL Unit ............................................... 25 
      6.9 Non-Interleaved Multi-Time Aggregation Packets  
          (NI-MTAPs) ............................................. 32 
      6.10 Decoding Order Number (DON) ........................... 34 
         6.10.1 Cross-Session DON (CS-DON) for Multi-Source 
         Transmission ............................................ 35 
   7. Packetization Rules ........................................ 36 
      7.1 Packetization Rules for Multi-Source Transmission ...... 37 
         7.1.1 NI-T / NI-TC Packetization Rules .................. 38 
         7.1.2 NI-C / NI-TC Packetization Rules .................. 38 
         7.1.3 I-C Packetization Rules ........................... 40 
         7.1.4 Packetization Rules for Non-VCL NAL Units ......... 40 
         7.1.5 Packetization Rules for Prefix NAL Units .......... 40 
   8. De-Packetization Process ................................... 41 
      8.1 De-Packetization Process for Multi-Source Transmission . 41 
         8.1.1 Decoding Order Recovery for the NI-T and  
               NI-TC Modes ....................................... 42 
            8.1.1.1 Informative Algorithm for NI-T Decoding Order      
                    Recovery within an Access Unit ............... 45 
         8.1.2 Decoding Order Recovery for the NI-C, NI-TC and I-C  
               Modes ............................................. 48 
   9. Payload Format Parameters .................................. 50 
      9.1 Media Type Registration ................................ 50 
      9.2 SDP Parameters ......................................... 60 
         9.2.1 Mapping of Payload Type Parameters to SDP ......... 61 
         9.2.2 Usage with the SDP Offer/Answer Model.............. 61 
         9.2.3 Usage with Multi-Source Transmission .............. 66 
         9.2.4 Usage in Declarative Session Descriptions ......... 66 
      9.3 Examples ............................................... 67 
         9.3.1 Example for Offering A Single SVC Session ......... 67 
         9.3.2 Example for Offering Session Multiplexing ......... 68 
      9.4 Parameter Set Considerations ........................... 69 
   10. Security Considerations ................................... 69 
   11. Congestion Control ........................................ 69 
   12. IANA Consideration ........................................ 70 
   13. Informative Appendix: Application Examples................. 71 
      13.1 Introduction .......................................... 71 
      13.2 Layered Multicast ..................................... 71 
      13.3 Streaming of an SVC Scalable Stream ................... 72 
      13.4 Multicast to MANE, SVC Scalable Stream to Endpoint .... 73 
      13.5 Scenarios Currently Not Considered .................... 74 
      13.6 SSRC Multiplexing ..................................... 76 
   14. References ................................................ 76 
      14.1 Normative References................................... 76 
 
 
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      14.2 Informative References................................. 77 
   15. Authors' Addresses......................................... 78 
   Intellectual Property Statement ............................... 79 
   Disclaimer of Validity......................................... 79 
   Copyright Statement............................................ 80 
   Acknowledgement................................................ 80 
   16. Open Issues................................................ 80 
   17. Changes Log................................................ 81 
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-08 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-09 ... 81 
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-09 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-10 ... 82 
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-10 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-11 ... 83 
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-11 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-12 ... 83 
    
    

1. Introduction 

   This memo specifies an RTP [RFC3550] payload format for the Scalable 
   Video Coding (SVC) extension of the H.264/AVC video coding standard. 
   SVC is specified in Amendment 3 to ISO/IEC 14496 Part 10 [MPEG4-10], 
   and Annex G of ITU-T Rec. H.264/AVC [H.264].  

   SVC covers the entire application range of H.264/AVC, from low 
   bitrate Internet streaming applications, to HDTV broadcasting, and 
   even Digital Cinema that requires nearly lossless coding and 
   hundreds of Mbps. The payload format specified in this memo is a 
   backwards compatible enhancement to the H264/AVC payload format 
   (H264, [RFC3984]), in which the specific features introduced by SVC 
   are taken into account. It is assumed that the reader is familiar 
   with the terminology and concepts defined in RFC 3984. 

   SVC provides a coded representation of a video signal as a set of 
   hierarchical components, composed of a base layer and one or more 
   enhancement layers, as explained in Section 5 All data produced by 
   an SVC encoder are structured in H.264 Network Abstraction Layer 
   (NAL) units. This payload specification can only be used to carry 
   the raw H.264 NAL unit stream over RTP, and not the byte stream 
   format specified in Annex B of [H.264]. 

   Depending on the packetization mode used, one or more than one NAL 
   unit may be present in a single RTP packet. The base layer is, by 
   design, compatible to H264, but may be formatted either according to 
   RFC 3984 ("AVC base layer") or according to this memo ("SVC base 
   layer").  Furthermore, the base layer may have multiple temporal 
   components (i.e., supporting different frame rates).  As a result, 
   we distinguish the lowest temporal component ("T0") of the base 
   layer (either AVC or SVC) as the starting point of the SVC bitstream 
 
 
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   hierarchy.  The difference of an SVC base layer as compared to an 
   AVC base layer is that additional NAL unit types may be present in 
   the RTP stream in the SVC base layer case, which, however, are 
   ignored by a receiver conforming to RFC 3984.  

   This specification allows to encapsulate in a given RTP stream NAL 
   units belonging to either: 

   o  the T0 AVC base layer or the T0 SVC base layer only; 

   o  one or more enhancement layers; or 

   o  the T0 SVC base layer, and one or more enhancement layers. 

   Furthermore, this specification allows the packetization of SVC data 
   for either single-source or multi-source transmission.  In the case 
   of single-source transmission (SST) all SVC data are carried in a 
   single RTP session with the same SSRC.  In the case of Multi-Source 
   Transmission (MST), two or more RTP sessions are used to carry the 
   SVC data, using distinct SSRC's, in accordance with the 
   packetization modes defined in this memo and in RFC 3984.  Each RTP 
   session is associated with one RTP stream, which MAY carry one or 
   more layers, structured according to one of the three cases 
   indicated above. 

   When MST is not used, the following applies. 

   o  When an H.264/AVC compatible subset of the SVC base layer is 
      transmitted, the subset SHOULD be carried in one RTP stream that 
      MUST be encapsulated according to RFC 3984.  This way, an RFC 
      3984 receiver will be able to receive the H.264/AVC compatible 
      bitstream subset. 

   o  When a set of layers including one or more SVC enhancement layers 
      is transmitted, the set SHOULD be carried in one RTP stream that 
      SHOULD be encapsulated according to this memo. 

   When MST is used, this memo defines four different packetization 
   modes. The modes differ depending on if the SVC data are allowed to 
   be interleaved, i.e., to be transmitted in an order different than 
   the intended decoding order, and they also differ in the mechanisms 
   provided in order to recover the correct decoding order of the NAL 
   units across the multiple RTP sessions. These four MST modes re-use 
   the packetization modes introduced in RFC 3984 for the packetization 
   of NAL units in each of their individual RTP sessions. 


 
 
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   MST SHOULD be used in a multicast session when different receivers 
   may request different layers of the scalable bitstream.  An 
   operation point for an SVC bit stream, as defined in this memo, 
   corresponds to a set of layers that together conform to one of the 
   profiles defined in Annex A or G of [H.264] and, when decoded, offer 
   a representation of the original video at a certain fidelity.  The 
   number of streams used in MST SHOULD be at least equal to the number 
   of operation points that may be requested by the receivers.   
   Depending on the application, this may result in each layer being 
   carried in its own RTP session, or in having multipe layers 
   encapsulated within one RTP session. 

         Informative note: Layered multicast is a term commonly used to 
         describe the application where multicast is used to transmit 
         layered or scalable data that has been encapsulated into more 
         than one RTP session.  This application allows different 
         receivers in the multicast session to receive different 
         operation points of the scalable bitstream.  Layered 
         multicast, among other application examples, is discussed in 
         more detail in Section 13.2 

   This RTP payload specification is designed to be unaware of the  NAL 
   unit payload defined in [H.264]. Similar to RFC 3984, this memo 
   introduces two new NAL unit types, using unit type numbers from the 
   space explicitly left unspecified in [H.264] and not used in RFC 
   3984.  When the single NAL unit packetization mode is used, where 
   one NAL unit always corresponds to one RTP packet, the NAL unit 
   header defined in [H.264] co-serves as the payload header of this 
   RTP payload format.  In this case, the payload of the NAL unit 
   follows immediately. In all other modes data from multiple NAL units 
   may be present in an RTP packet, either through nesting (a NAL unit 
   is contained in another one) or serialization (NAL units appear in 
   sequence in an RTP packet).  

   This memo also also defines signaling support for SVC, including a 
   new media subtype name (H264-SVC). 

2. Conventions 

   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 
   [RFC2119]. 

   This specification uses the notion of setting and clearing a bit 
   when bit fields are handled.  Setting a bit is the same as assigning 

 
 
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   that bit the value of 1 (On).  Clearing a bit is the same as 
   assigning that bit the value of 0 (Off). 

3. Scope 

   o  The scalability features that SVC adds to the H.264 specification 
      enable several system-level functionalities related to the 
      ability of a system to adapt the signal to different system 
      conditions with no or minimal processing. The adaptation relates 
      both to the capabilities of potentially heterogenous receivers 
      (screen resolution, processing speed, etc.), as well as differing 
      or time-varying network conditions. The adaptation can be 
      performed at the source, the destination, or in intermediate 
      media-aware network elements. This payload specification exposes 
      these system-level functionalities so that system designers can 
      take direct advantage of these features. The likely applications 
      of this specification are in the IP-based multimedia 
      communication fields, including conversational multimedia, video 
      telephony or video conferencing, Internet streaming, and IPTV. 

4. Definitions and Abbreviations 

4.1 Definitions 

4.1.1 Definitions from the SVC Specification 

   This document uses the terms and definitions of [H.264].  The  
   following terms are relevant to this memo, and their definitions are 
   copied here from [H.264] for convenience. 

      access unit: A set of NAL units always containing exactly one 
      primary coded picture.  In addition to the primary coded picture, 
      an access unit may also contain one or more redundant coded 
      pictures, one auxiliary coded picture, or other NAL units not 
      containing slices or slice data partitions of a coded picture.  
      The decoding of an access unit always results in a decoded 
      picture. 

      base layer: A bitstream subset that contains all the NAL units 
      with the nal_unit_type syntax element equal to 1 or 5 of the 
      bitstream and does not contain any NAL unit with the 
      nal_unit_type syntax element equal to 14, 15, or 20 and conforms 
      to one or more of the profiles specified in Annex A of [H.264]. 

      base quality layer representation: The layer representation of 
      the target dependency representation of an access unit that is 
      associated with the quality_id syntax element equal to 0. 
 
 
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      coded video sequence: A sequence of access units that consists, 
      in decoding order, of an IDR access unit followed by zero or more 
      non-IDR access units including all subsequent access units up to 
      but not including any subsequent IDR access unit. 

      dependency representation: A subset of VCL NAL units within an 
      access unit that are associated with the same value of the 
      dependency_id syntax element, which is provided as part of the 
      NAL unit header or by an associated prefix NAL unit.  A 
      dependency representation consist of one or more layer 
      representations. 

      IDR access unit: An access unit in which the primary coded 
      picture is an IDR picture. 

      IDR picture: A coded picture in which all slices of the target 
      dependency representation within the access unit are I or EI 
      slices that causes the decoding process to mark all reference 
      pictures as "unused for reference" immediately after decoding the 
      IDR picture.  After the decoding of an IDR picture all following 
      coded pictures in decoding order can be decoded without inter 
      prediction from any picture decoded prior to the IDR picture.  
      The first picture of each coded video sequence is an IDR picture. 

      layer representation: A subset of VCL NAL units within an access 
      unit that are associated with the same values of the 
      dependency_id and quality_id syntax elements, which are provided 
      as part of the VCL NAL unit header or by an associated prefix NAL 
      unit.  One or more layer representations represent a dependency 
      representation.  

      prefix NAL unit: A NAL unit with nal_unit_type equal to 14 that 
      immediately precedes in decoding order a NAL unit with 
      nal_unit_type equal to 1, 5, or 12.  The NAL unit that 
      immediately succeeds in decoding order the prefix NAL unit is 
      referred to as the associated NAL unit.  The prefix NAL unit 
      contains data associated with the associated NAL unit, which are 
      considered to be part of the associated NAL unit. 

      reference base picture: A reference picture that is obtained by 
      decoding a base quality layer representation with the nal_ref_idc 
      syntax element not equal to 0 and the store_ref_base_pic_flag 
      syntax element equal to 1 of an access unit and all layer 
      representations of the access unit that are referred to by inter-
      layer prediction of the base quality layer representation.  A 
      reference base picture is not an output of the decoding process, 
      but the samples of a reference base picture may be used for inter 
 
 
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      prediction in the decoding process of subsequent pictures in 
      decoding order.  Reference base picture is a collective term for 
      a reference base field or a reference base frame. 

      scalable bitstream: A bitstream with the property that one or 
      more bitstream subsets that are not identical to the scalable 
      bitstream form another bitstream that conforms to the SVC 
      specification[SVC]. 

      target dependency representation: The dependency representation 
      of an access unit that is associated with the largest value of 
      the dependency_id syntax element for all dependency 
      representations of the access unit. 

      target layer representation: The layer representation of the 
      target dependency representation of an access unit that is 
      associated with the largest value of the quality_id syntax 
      element for all layer representations of the target dependency 
      representation of the access unit. 

4.1.2 Definitions Specific to This Memo 

      anchor layer representation: An anchor layer representation is 
      such a layer representation that, if decoding of the operation 
      point corresponding to the layer starts from the access unit 
      containing this layer representation, all the following layer 
      representations of the layer, in output order, can be correctly 
      decoded.  An anchor layer representation is a random access point 
      to the layer the anchor layer representation belongs to.  
      However, some layer representations, succeeding an anchor layer 
      representation in decoding order but preceding the anchor layer 
      representation in output order, may refer to earlier layer 
      representations for inter prediction, and hence may not be 
      correctly decoded if random access is performed at the anchor 
      layer representation. 

      AVC base layer: The subset of the SVC base layer in which all 
      prefix NAL units (type 14) are removed. Note that this is 
      equivalent to the term "base layer" as defined in Annex G of 
      [H.264]. 

      base RTP session: When multi-source transmission is used, the RTP 
      session that carries the RTP stream containing the T0 AVC base 
      layer or the T0 SVC base layer, and zero or more enhancement 
      layers.  This RTP session does not depend on any other RTP 
      session as indicated by mechanisms defined in [I-D.ietf-mmusic-

 
 
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      decoding-dependency].  The base RTP session may carry NAL units 
      of NAL unit type equal to 14 and 15. 

      effective NAL unit timestamp: The value that the RTP timestamp 
      would have if the particular NAL unit was transported in its own 
      RTP packet. (The NAL unit time is different than that actual RTP 
      timestamp of the packet containing the particular NAL unit in the 
      case of MTAPs.) 

      enhancement RTP session: When multi-source transmission is used, 
      an RTP session that is not the base RTP session.  An enhancement 
      RTP session typically contains an RTP stream that depends on at 
      least one other RTP session as indicated by mechanisms defined in 
      [I-D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-dependency].  A lower RTP session to an 
      enhancement RTP session is an RTP session which the enhancement 
      RTP session depends on. The lowest RTP session for a receiver is 
      the RTP session that does not depend on any other RTP session 
      received by the receiver.  The highest RTP session for a receiver 
      is the RTP session which no other RTP session received by the 
      receiver depends on. 

      cross-session decoding order number (CS-DON): A derived variable 
      indicating NAL unit decoding order number over all NAL units 
      within all the session-multiplexed RTP sessions that carry the 
      same SVC bitstream. 

      enhancement layer: A layer in which at least one of the values of 
      dependency_id or quality_id is higher than 0, or a layer in which 
      none of the NAL units is associated with the value of temporal_id 
      equal to 0.  An operation point constructed using the maximum 
      temporal_id, dependency_id, and quality_id values associated with 
      an enhancement layer may or may not conform to one or more of the 
      profiles specified in Annex A of [H.264]. 

      H.264/AVC compatible: A biststream subset that conforms to one or 
      more of the profiles specified in Annex A of [H.264]. 

      intra layer representation:  A layer representation that contains 
      only slices that use intra prediction, and hence do not refer to 
      any earlier layer representation in decoding order in the same 
      layer.  Note that in [SVC] intra prediction includes intra-layer 
      intra prediction as well as inter-layer intra prediction. 

      layer: A bistream subset in which all NAL units of type 1, 5, 12, 
      14, or 20 have the same values of dependency_id and quality_id, 
      either directly through their NAL unit header (for NAL units of 
      type 14 or 20) or through association to a prefix (type 14) NAL 
 
 
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      unit (for NAL unit types 1, 5, or 12).  A layer may contain NAL 
      units associated with more than one values of temporal_id. 

      multi-source transmission: This specifies that the SVC bitstream 
      is distributed across multiple RTP sessions, with each stream 
      having a distinct SSRC, and consequently its own timestamp and 
      sequence number spaces.  Those multiple streams can be associated 
      using the RTCP CNAME, or explicit signalling of the SSRC used. 
      [Ed. (AE): Is the single transport connection mode supported? It 
      does not appear to, as seen by the definitions of base and 
      enhancement RTP sessions, and the rest of the text. I modified 
      the definition so that it is not allowed.] Dependency between RTP 
      sessions MUST be signaled according to [I-D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-
      dependency] and this memo.  

      operation point: An operation point is identified by a set of 
      values of temporal_id, dependency_id, and quality_id. A bistream 
      corresponding to an operation point can be constructed by 
      removing all NAL units associated with a higher value of 
      dependency_id, and all NAL units associated with the same value 
      of dependency_id but higher values of quality_id or temporal_id. 
      Additional NAL units may be removed (with lower dependency_id or 
      same dependency_id but lower quality_id) if they are not required 
      for decoding the bitstream at the particular operation point. An 
      operation point bitstream conforms to at least one of the 
      profiles defined in Annex A or Annex G of [H.264], and offers a 
      representation of the original video signal at a certain 
      fidelity. [Ed.Note(YkW): Need to check whether a bitstream subset 
      with those additional NAL units removed is a conforming 
      bitstream.] 

      operation point representation: The set of all NAL units of an 
      operation point within the same access unit. 

      RTP packet stream: A sequence of RTP packets with increasing 
      sequence numbers (except for wrap-around), identical PT and 
      identical SSRC (Synchronization Source), carried in one RTP 
      session.  Within the scope of this memo, one RTP packet stream is 
      utilized to transport one or more layers. 

      SVC base layer: The layer that includes all NAL units associated 
      with dependency_id and quality_id values both equal to 0, 
      including prefix NAL units (NAL unit type 14). 

      SVC enhancement layer: A layer in which at least one of the 
      values of dependency_id or quality_id is higher than 0.  An 
      operation point constructed using the maximum dependency_id and 
 
 
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      quality_id values and any temporal_id value associated with an 
      SVC enhancement layer does not conform to any of the profiles 
      specified in Annex A of [H.264]. 

      SVC NAL unit: A NAL unit of NAL unit type 14, 15, or 20 as 
      specified in Annex G of [H.264]. 

      SVC NAL unit header: A four-byte header resulting from the 
      addition of a three-byte SVC-specific header extension added in 
      NAL unit types 14, 15 and 20. 

      SVC RTP session: Either the base RTP session or an enhancement 
      RTP session.   

      T0 AVC base layer: A subset of the AVC base layer constructed by 
      removing all VCL NAL units associated with temporal_id values 
      higher than 0. 

      T0 SVC base layer: A subset of the SVC base layer constructed by 
      removing all VCL NAL units associated with temporal_id values 
      higher than 0 as well as their associated prefix NAL units. 

4.2 Abbreviations 

   In addition to the abbreviations defined in [RFC3984], the following 
   abbrevations are used in this memo. 

      CGS:        Coarse-Grain Scalability 
      CS-DON:     Cross-Session Decoding Order Number 
      ETS:        Effective Timestamp (of a NAL unit) 
      MGS:        Medium-Grain Scalability 
      MST:       Multi-Source Transmission 
      PACSI:      Payload Content Scalability Information 
      SST:       Single-Source Transmission 
      SNR:       Signal-to-Noise Ratio 
      SVC:        Scalable Video Coding 

    

5. The SVC Codec 

5.1 Overview 

   SVC [H.264]defines a coded video representation in which a given 
   bitstream offers representations of the source material at different 
   levels of fidelity (hence the term "scalable").  Scalable video 
   coding bitstreams, or scalable bitstreams, are constructed in a 
 
 
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   pyramidal fashion: the coding process creates bitstream components 
   that improve the fidelity of hierarchically lower components. 

   The fidelity dimensions offered by SVC are spatial (picture size), 
   quality (or Signal-to-Noise Ratio - SNR), as well as temporal 
   (pictures per second).  Bitstream components associated with a given 
   level of spatial, quality, and temporal fidelity are identified 
   using corresponding parameters in the bitstream: dependency_id, 
   quality_id, and temporal_id (see also Section 5.3).  The fidelity 
   identifiers have integer values, where higher values designate 
   components that are higher in the hierarchy.  It is noted that SVC 
   offers significant flexibility in terms of how an encoder may choose 
   to structure the dependencies between the various components.  
   Decoding of a particular component requires the availability of all 
   the components it depends upon, either directly, or indirectly.  An 
   operation point of an SVC bitstream consists of the bistream 
   components required to be able to decode a particular dependency_id, 
   quality_id, and temporal_id combination. 

   SVC maintains the bitstream organization introduced in H.264/AVC.  
   Specifically, all bitstream components are encapsulated in Network 
   Abstraction Layer (NAL) units which are organized as Access Units 
   (AU).  An AU is associated with a single sampling instance in time.  
   A subset of the NAL unit types correspond to the Video Coding Layer 
   (VCL), and contain the coded picture data associated with the source 
   content.  Non-VLC NAL units carry ancillary data that may be 
   necessary for decoding (e.g., parameter sets as explained below), or 
   that facilitate certain system operations but are not needed by the 
   decoding process itself. Coded picture data at the various fidelity 
   dimensions are organized in slices.  Within one AU, a coded picture 
   of an operation point consists of all the coded slices required for 
   decoding up to the particular combination of dependency_id and 
   quality_id values  at the time instance corresponding to the AU.  
   The NAL encapsulates each slice generated by the VCL into one or 
   more NAL units. RFC 3984 provides a more in-depth discussion of the 
   NAL unit concept.  SVC specifies the decoding order of NAL units. 

   It is noted that the concept of temporal scalability is already 
   present in H.264/AVC, as profiles defined in Annex A of [H.264] 
   already support it.  Specifically, in [H.264] sub-sequences have 
   been introduced in order to allow optional use of temporal layers.  
   SVC extends this approach by exposing the temporal scalability 
   information using the temporal_id parameter, alongside (and unified 
   with) the dependency_id and quality_id values that are used for 
   spatial and quality scalability.  For coded picture data defined in 
   Annex G of [H.264] this is accomplished by using a new type of NAL 
   unit where the fidelity parameters are part of its header.  For 
 
 
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   coded picture data that follow H.264/AVC, and to ensure 
   compatibility with existing H.264/AVC receivers, a new type of 
   "prefix" NAL unit has been defined to carry this header information.  
   This prefix NAL unit type is among those ignored by H.264/AVC 
   receivers as explained in [RFC3984].  

   Within an AU, the VCL NAL units associated with a given 
   dependency_id and quality_id are referred to as a "layer 
   representation".  The layer representation corresponding to the 
   lowest values of dependency_id and quality_id (i.e., zero) is 
   referred to as the base layer representation and is compliant by 
   design to H.264/AVC.  The set of VCL and associated non-VCL NAL 
   units across all AUs in a bitstream associated with a particular 
   combination of values of dependency_id and quality_id, and 
   regardless of the value of temporal_id, is conceptually a scalable 
   layer.  Due to the backwards compatibility with H.264/AVC, it is 
   important to differentiate, however, whether or not SVC-specific NAL 
   units are present in a given bitstream or not.  This is particularly 
   important for the lowest fidelity values in terms of dependency_id 
   and quality_id (zero for both), as the corresponding VCL data are 
   compliant to H.264/AVC, and may or may not be accompanied by 
   associated prefix NAL units.  This memo therefore uses the term "AVC 
   base layer" to designate the layer that contains only H.264/AVC VCL 
   NAL units, and "SVC base layer" to designate the same layer but with 
   the addition of the associated SVC prefix NAL units.  Note that the 
   SVC specification  uses the term "base layer" for what in this memo 
   will be referred to as "AVC base layer".  Similarly, it is also 
   important to be able to differentiate, within a layer, the temporal 
   fidelity components it contains.  This memo uses the term "T0" to 
   indicate, within a particular layer, the subset that contains the 
   NAL units associated with temporal_id equal to 0. 

   The term "layer" is used in various contexts in this memo.  For 
   example, in the terms "Video Coding Layer" and "Network Abstraction 
   Layer" it refers to conceptual organization levels.  When referring 
   to bitstream syntax elements such as block layer or macroblock 
   layer, it refers to hierarchical bitstream structure levels.  When 
   used in the context of bitstream scalability, e.g., "AVC base 
   layer", it refers to a level of representation fidelity of the 
   source signal with a specific set of NAL units included.  The 
   correct interpretation is supported by providing the appropriate 
   context. 

   SNR scalability in SVC is offered in two different ways.  In what is 
   called Coarse-Grained Scalability (CGS), scalability is provided by 
   including or excluding a complete layer when decoding a particular 
   bitstream.  In contrast, in Medium-Grained Scalability (MGS), 
 
 
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   scalability is provided by selectively omitting the decoding of 
   specific NAL units belonging to MGS layers.  The selection of the 
   NAL units to omit can be based on fixed length fields present in the 
   NAL unit header. 

5.2 Parameter Sets  

   The parameter set concept is defined in [H.264].  Please refer to 
   Section 1.2 of RFC 3984 for more details. 

   SVC introduces a new type of sequence parameter set, referred to as 
   a subset sequence parameter set [H.264].  Subset sequence parameter 
   sets have NAL unit type equal to 15, which is different from the NAL 
   unit type value (7) of sequence parameter sets.  VCL NAL units of 
   NAL unit type 1 to 5 must only (indirectly) refer to sequence 
   parameter sets, while VCL NAL units of NAL unit type 20 must only 
   (indirectly) refer to subset sequence parameter sets.  The 
   references are indirect because VCL NAL units refer to picture 
   parameter sets (in their slice header), which in turn refer to 
   sequence parameter sets. Subset sequence parameter sets use a 
   separate identifier value space than sequence parameter sets.  An 
   overview of the NAL unit and packet types used in this memo can be 
   found in Table 1  in Section 5.3. 

   In SVC, coded picture data from different layers may use the same or 
   different sequence and picture parameter sets.  At any time instant 
   during the decoding process there may be one active sequence 
   parameter set (for the layer representation with the highest value 
   of (dependency_id * 16 + quality_id)) and one or more active layer 
   SVC sequence parameter set(s) (for layer representations with lower 
   values of (dependency_id * 16 + quality_id)).  The active sequence 
   parameter set or an active layer SVC sequence parameter set remains 
   unchanged throughout a coded video sequence in the scalable layer in 
   which the active sequence parameter set or active layer SVC sequence 
   parameter set is referred to.  This means that the referred sequence 
   parameter set or subset sequence parameter set can only change at 
   IDR access units for any layer.  At any time instant during the 
   decoding process there may be one active picture parameter set (for 
   the layer representation with the highest value of (dependency_id * 
   16 + quality_id)) and one or more active layer picture parameter 
   set(s) (for layer representations with lower values of 
   (dependency_id * 16 + quality_id)).  The active picture parameter 
   set or an active layer picture parameter set remains unchanged 
   throughout a layer representation in which the active picture 
   parameter set or active layer picture parameter set is referred to, 
   but may change from one AU to the next. 

 
 
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5.3 Network Abstraction Layer Units  

   The NAL unit organization is central to [ H.264], RFC 3984, as well 
   as this memo. In addition to the NAL unit types defined originally 
   for H.264/AVC, [H.264]introduces two new NAL unit types for SVC 
   (among others): SVC VCL NAL units ("slice in scalable extension", 
   type 20), and prefix NAL units (type 14). SVC VCL NAL units 
   encapsulate VCL data as defined in Annex G of [H.264].  The prefix 
   NAL unithas no payload of its own, and instead includes descriptive 
   information of the associated H.264/AVC VCL NAL unit (type 1 or 5) 
   that immediately follows the prefix NAL unit.  

   In addition to the NAL unit types introduced for packetization 
   purposes in RFC 2984, this memo also introduces two new NAL unit 
   types to facilitate packetization (PACSI and NI-MTAP, specified in 
   detail later on). The following table gives an overview of NAL unit 
   and packet types used in this memo and also provides references to 
   the appropriate document and section where their use is defined. 

   Table 1.  Summary of NAL unit and packet types used in this memo 

    

   Type  Description                Definition in: [RC3984] / this memo 

   -------------------------------------------------------------------- 

   0     unspecified                                  -     / - 

   1-23  NAL unit per [H.264]/Single NAL unit packet  5.2   / 6.3 

   14    Prefix NAL unit per [SVC]                    -     / 5.1 

   15    Subset sequence parameter set per [SVC]      -     / 5.2 

   20    Slice in scalable extensions per [SVC]       -     / 5.3 

   24    Single-time aggregation packet (STAP-A)      5.7.1 / 6.6 

   25    Single-time aggregation packet (STAP-B)      5.7.1 / 6.6 

   26    Multi-time aggregation packet (MTAP16)       5.7.2 / 6.6 

   27    Multi-time aggregation packet (MTAP24)       5.7.2 / 6.66.7 

   28    Fragmentation unit (FU-A)                    5.8   / 6.7 

 
 
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   29    Fragmentation unit with DON (FU-B)           5.8   / 6.7 

   30    Payload Content Scalability Info. (PACSI)    -     / 6.8 

   31    unspecified                                  -     / - 

    

   SVC extends the one-byte H.264/AVC NAL unit header by three 
   additional octets for NAL units of type 14 and 20.  The header 
   indicates the type of the NAL unit, the (potential) presence of bit 
   errors or syntax violations in the NAL unit payload, information 
   regarding the relative importance of the NAL unit for the decoding 
   process, the layer identification information, and other fields as 
   discussed below. 

   The syntax and semantics of the NAL unit header are specified in 
   [H.264], but the essential properties of the NAL unit header are 
   summarized below for convenience. 

   The first byte of the NAL unit header has the following format (the 
   bit fields are the same as defined for the one-byte H.264/AVC NAL 
   unit header, while the semantics of some fields have changed 
   slightly, in a backward compatible way): 

         +---------------+ 
         |0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7| 
         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
         |F|NRI|  Type   | 
         +---------------+ 
    
   The semantics of the components of the NAL unit type octet, as 
   specified in the H.264 specification, are described briefly below. 

   F: 1 bit 
      forbidden_zero_bit.  H.264/AVC declares a value of 1 as a syntax 
      violation. 

   NRI: 2 bits 
      nal_ref_idc.  A value of '00' (in binary form) indicates that the 
      content of the NAL unit is not used to reconstruct reference 
      pictures for future prediction.  Such NAL units can be discarded 
      without risking the integrity of the reference pictures in the 
      same layer.  A value greater than '00' indicates that the 
      decoding of the NAL unit is required to maintain the integrity of 
      reference pictures in the same layer, or that the NAL unit 
      contains parameter sets. 
 
 
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   Type: 5 bits 
      nal_unit_type.  This component specifies the NAL unit type as 
      defined in Table 7-1 of [H.264], and later within this memo.  For 
      a reference of all currently defined NAL unit types and their 
      semantics, please refer to Section 7.4.1 in [H.264]. 

      In H.264/AVC, NAL unit types 14, 15 and 20 are reserved for 
      future extensions.  SVC uses these three NAL unit types as 
      follows: NAL unit type 14 is used for prefix NAL unit, NAL unit 
      type 15 is used for subset sequence parameter set, and NAL unit 
      type 20 is used for coded slice data in scalable extension (see 
      Section 7.4.1 in [H.264]).  NAL unit types 14 and 20 indicate the 
      presence of three additional octets in the NAL unit header, as 
      shown below. 

            +---------------+---------------+---------------+ 
            |0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7| 
            +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
            |R|I|   PRID    |N| DID |  QID  | TID |U|D|O| RR| 
            +---------------+---------------+---------------+ 
    
   R: 1 bit 
      reserved_one_bit.  Reserved bit for future extension.  R MUST be 
      equal to 1.  Receivers SHOULD ignore the value of R. 

   I: 1 bit 
      idr_flag.  This component specifies whether the layer 
      representation is an instantaneous decoding refresh (IDR) layer 
      representation (when equal to 1) or not (when equal to 0). 

   PRID: 6 bits 
      priority_id.  This flag specifies a priority identifier for the 
      NAL unit.  A lower value of PRID indicates a higher priority. 

   N: 1 bit 
      no_inter_layer_pred_flag.  This flag specifies, when present in a 
      coded slice NAL unit, whether inter-layer prediction may be used 
      for decoding the coded slice (when equal to 1) or not (when equal 
      to 0). 

   DID: 3 bits 
      dependency_id.  This component indicates the inter-layer coding 
      dependency level of a layer representation.  At any access unit, 
      a layer representation with a given dependency_id may be used for 
      inter-layer prediction for coding of a layer representation with 
      a higher dependency_id, while a layer representation with a given 

 
 
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      dependency_id shall not be used for inter-layer prediction for 
      coding of a layer representation with a lower dependency_id. 

   QID: 4 bits 
      quality_id.  This component indicates the quality level of an MGS 
      layer representation.  At any access unit and for identical 
      dependency_id values, a layer representation with quality_id 
      equal to ql uses a layer representation with quality_id equal to 
      ql-1 for inter-layer prediction. 

   TID: 3 bits 
      temporal_id.  This component indicates the temporal level of a 
      layer representation.  The temporal_id is associated with the 
      frame rate, with lower values of _temporal_id corresponding to 
      lower frame rates.  A layer representation at a given temporal_id 
      typically depends on layer representations with lower temporal_id 
      values, but it never depends on layer representations with higher 
      temporal_id values. 

   U: 1 bit 
      use_ref_base_pic_flag.  A value of 1 indicates that only 
      reference base pictures are used during the inter prediction 
      process.  A value of 0 indicates that the reference base pictures 
      are not used during the inter prediction process. 

   D: 1 bit 
      discardable_flag.  A value of 1 indicates that the current NAL 
      unit is not used for decoding NAL units with values of 
      dependency_id higher than the one of the current NAL unit, in the 
      current and all subsequent access units.  Such NAL units can be 
      discarded without risking the integrity of layers with higher 
      dependency_id values.  discardable_flag equal to 0 indicates that 
      the decoding of the NAL unit is required to maintain the 
      integrity of layers with higher dependency_id. 

   O: 1 bit 
      output_flag: Affects the decoded picture output process as 
      defined in Annex C of [H.264]. 

   RR: 2 bits 
      reserved_three_2bits.  Reserved bits for future extension.  RR 
      MUST be equal to '11' (in binary form).  Receivers SHOULD ignore 
      the value of RR. 

   This specification extends the semantics of F, NRI, I, PRID, DID, 
   QID, TID, U, and D per [H.264] as described in Section 6.4. 

 
 
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6. RTP Payload Format 

6.1Design Principles 

   The following design principles have been observed: 

   o  Backward compatibility with [RFC3984] wherever possible. 

   o  The SVC base layer or any H.264/AVC compatible subset of the SVC 
      base layer, when transmitted in its own RTP stream, MUST be  
      encapsulated using [RFC3984].  This ensures that such an RTP 
      stream can be understood by RFC 3984 receivers. 

   o  Media-Aware Network Elements (MANEs) as defined in [RFC3984] are 
      signaling-aware and rely on signaling information.  MANEs have 
      state. 

   o  MANEs can aggregate multiple RTP streams, possibly from multiple 
      RTP sessions. 

   o  MANEs can perform media-aware stream thinning (selective 
      elimination of packets or portions thereof).  By using the 
      payload header information identifying Layers within an RTP 
      session, MANEs are able to remove packets from the incoming RTP 
      packet stream.  This implies rewriting the RTP headers of the 
      outgoing packet stream and rewriting of RTCP Receiver Reports. 

6.2 RTP Header Usage 

   Please see Section 5.1 of [RFC3984]. 

6.3 Common Structure of the RTP Payload Format 

   Please see Section 5.2 of [RFC3984]. 

6.4 NAL Unit Header Usage 

   The structure and semantics of the NAL unit header were introduced 
   in Section 5.3.  This section specifies the semantics of F, NRI, I, 
   PRID, DID, QID, TID, U, and D according to this specification. 

   The semantics of F specified in Section 5.3 of [RFC3984] also apply 
   in this memo. 

   For NRI, for a bitstream conforming to one of the profiles defined 
   in Annex A of [H.264] and transported using [RFC3984], the semantics 
   specified in Section 5.3 of [RFC3984] apply, i.e., NRI also 
 
 
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   indicates the relative importance of NAL units.  For a bitstream 
   conforming to one of the profiles defined in Annex G of [H.264] and 
   transported using this memo, in addition to the semantics specified 
   in Annex G of [H.264], NRI also indicates the relative importance of 
   NAL units within a layer.   

   For I, in addition to the semantics specified in Annex G of [H.264], 
   according to this memo, MANEs MAY use this information to protect 
   NAL units with I equal to 1 better than NAL units with I equal to 0.  
   MANEs MAY also utilize information of NAL units with I equal to 1 to 
   decide when to forward more packets for an RTP packet stream. For 
   example, when it is sensed that spatial layer switching has happened 
   such that the operation point has changed to a higher value of DID, 
   MANEs MAY start to forward NAL units with the higher value of DID 
   only after forwarding a NAL unit with I equal to 1 with the higher 
   value of DID. 

   Note that, in the context of this section, "protecting a NAL unit" 
   means any RTP or network transport mechanism that could improve the 
   probability of success delivery of the packet conveying the NAL 
   unit, including applying a QoS-enabled network, Forward Error 
   Correction (FEC), retransmissions, and advanced scheduling behavior, 
   whenever possible. 

   For PRID, the semantics specified in Annex G of [H.264] applies.  
   Note, that MANEs implementing unequal error protection MAY use this 
   information to protect NAL units with smaller PRID values better 
   than those with larger PRID values, for example by including only 
   the more important NAL units in an FEC protection mechanism.  The 
   importance for the decoding process decreases as the PRID value 
   increases. 

   For DID, QID, TID, in addition to the semantics specified in Annex G 
   of [H.264], according to this memo, values of DID, QID, or TID 
   indicate the relative importance in their respective dimension.  A 
   lower value of DID, QID, or TID indicates a higher importance if the 
   other two components are identical.  MANEs MAY use this information 
   to protect more important NAL units better than less important NAL 
   units. 

   For U, in addition to the semantics specified in Annex G of [H.264], 
   according to this memo, MANEs MAY use this information to protect 
   NAL units with U equal to 1 better than NAL units with U equal to 0. 

   For D, in addition to the semantics specified in Annex G of [H.264], 
   according to this memo, MANEs MAY use this information to determine 
   whether a given NAL unit is required for successfully decoding a 
 
 
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   certain Operation Point of the SVC bitstream, hence to decide 
   whether to forward the NAL unit. 

6.5 Packetization Modes 

6.5.1Packetization Modes for Single-Source Transmission 

   Section 5.4 of RFC 3984 applies when using single-source 
   transmission.  The packetization modes specified in Section 5.4 of 
   RFC 3984 are also referred to as session-specific packetization 
   modes. 

    

6.5.2 Packetization Modes for Multi-Source  Transmission 

   When multi-source transmission (MST) is used this memo specifies 
   four cases of MST  packetization modes: 

   o  Non-interleaved timestamp based mode (NI-T); 

   o  Non-interleaved cross-session decoding order number (CS-DON) 
      based mode (NI-C); 

   o  Non-interleaved combined timestamp and CS-DON mode (NI-TC); and 

   o  Interleaved CS-DON (I-C) mode. 

   These four modes differ in two ways. First, they differ in terms of 
   if they require that the NAL units are transmited in NAL unit 
   decoding order (non-interleaved) or if they allow them to be 
   transmitted in an arbitrary order (interleaved). Second, they differ 
   in the mechanisms they provide in order to recover the correct 
   decoding order of the NAL units across all RTP sessions involved.  

   The NI-T, NI-C, and NI-TC modes do not allow interleaving, and are 
   thus targeted for systems that require relatively low end-to-end 
   latency, e.g. conversational systems. The I-C mode allows 
   interleaving and is thus targeted for systems that do not require 
   very low end-to-end latency. 

   The NI-T and NI-TC modes use timestamps to recover the decoding 
   order of NAL units, whereas NI-TC, NI-C, and I-C all use the CS-DON 
   mechanism (explained later on) to do so. Note that the NI-TC mode 
   uses both timestamps and the CS-DON method; receivers in this case 
   may use either method for performing decoding order recovery. 

 
 
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   The MST packetization mode in use MAY be signaled by the value of 
   the OPTIONAL pmode media type parameter or by external means.  When 
   the value of pmode is equal to "NI-T", the NI-T mode MUST be used.  
   When the value of pmode is equal to "NI-C", the NI-C mode MUST be 
   used.  When the value of pmode is equal to "NI-TC" or pmode is not 
   present, the NI-TC mode MUST be used.  When the value of pmode is 
   equal to "I-C", the I-C mode MUST be used.  [Ed.Note(YkW): There MAY 
   be at most one global pmode present in the SDP common for all the 
   multiplexed RTP sessions.  It is also possible to have pmode 
   session-specific in the SDP, but then all the multiplexed sessions 
   MUST have the same value of this parameter.  When pmode is not 
   present, the NI-TC mode is implied.] 

   The used MST packetization mode governs which session-specific 
   packetization modes are allowed in the associated RTP sessions, 
   which in turn govern which NAL unit types are allowed as RTP 
   payloads. 

   Table 2 summarizes the allowed session-specific packetization modes 
   for the NI-T, NI-C and NI-TC packetization modes.  Table 3 
   summarizes the allowed session-specific packetization modes for the 
   I-C packetization mode. 

   Table 2  Summary of allowed session-specific packetization modes for 
     the NI-T, NI-C and NI-TC packetization modes (yes = allowed, no = 
                               disallowed) 

      Session-Specific Mode    Base Session    Enhancement Session 
      ---------------------------------------------------------- 
      Single NAL Unit Mode         yes             no 
      Non-Interleaved Mode         yes            yes 
      Interleaved Mode              no             no 
    
   Table 3  Summary of allowed session-specific packetization modes for 
       the I-C packetization mode (yes = allowed, no = disallowed) 

      Session-Specific Mode    Base Session    Enhancement Session 
      ---------------------------------------------------------- 
      Single NAL Unit Mode          no             no 
      Non-Interleaved Mode          no             no 
      Interleaved Mode             yes            yes 
    
   Table 4 summarizes the allowed NAL unit types for each allowed 
   session-specific packetization mode of the NI-T packetization mode.  
   Table 5 summarizes the allowed NAL unit types for each allowed 
   session-specific packetization mode of the NI-C and NI-TC 
   packetization modes.  Table 6 summarizes the allowed NAL unit types 
 
 
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   for the only allowed session-specific packetization mode (i.e. the 
   interleaved mode) of the I-C packetization mode. 

                                      

   Table 4  Summary of allowed NAL unit types for each session-specific 
   packetization mode of the NI-T packetization mode (yes = allowed, no 
                        = disallowed, ig = ignore) 

      Type   Packet    Single NAL    Non-Interleaved   
                       Unit Mode           Mode        
      ------------------------------------------------ 
      0      undefined     ig               ig         
      1-23   NAL unit     yes              yes         
      24     STAP-A        no              yes         
      25     STAP-B        no               no         
      26     MTAP16        no               no         
      27     MTAP24        no               no         
      28     FU-A          no              yes         
      29     FU-B          no               no         
      30     PACSI         no               yes         
      31     NI-MTAP       no              yes         
    
   Table 5  Summary of allowed NAL unit types for each session-specific 
    packetization mode of the NI-C and NI-TC packetization modes (yes = 
                  allowed, no = disallowed, ig = ignore) 

      Type   Packet    Single NAL    Non-Interleaved   
                       Unit Mode           Mode        
      ------------------------------------------------ 
      0      undefined     ig               ig         
      1-23   NAL unit     yes              yes         
      24     STAP-A        no              yes         
      25     STAP-B        no               no         
      26     MTAP16        no               no         
      27     MTAP24        no               no         
      28     FU-A          no              yes         
      29     FU-B          no               no         
      30     PACSI        yes              yes         
      31     NI-MTAP       no              yes         
    
                                      

                                      

                                      

 
 
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    Table 6  Summary of allowed NAL unit types for the session-specific 
    packetization mode of the I-C packetization mode (yes = allowed, no 
                        = disallowed, ig = ignore) 

      Type   Packet    Interleaved  
                         Mode       
      ------------------------------ 
      0      undefined     ig        
      1-23   NAL unit      no        
      24     STAP-A        no        
      25     STAP-B       yes        
      26     MTAP16       yes        
      27     MTAP24       yes        
      28     FU-A         yes        
      29     FU-B         yes        
      30     PACSI         yes        
      31     undefined     no        
    
   The NAL unit type values indicated as undefined in Tables 3.3, 3.4 
   and 3.5 are reserved for future extensions.  NAL units of those 
   types SHOULD NOT be sent by a sender and MUST be ignored by a 
   receiver.  Note that NAL unit type 30 and 31 are indicated as 
   undefined in RFC 3984, therefore RFC 3984 receivers MUST ignore NAL 
   units of this type, if present. 

6.6 Aggregation Packets 

   Please see Section 5.7 of [RFC3984]. 

6.7 Fragmentation Units (FUs) 

   Please see section 5.8 of [RFC3984]. 

6.8 Payload Content Scalability Information (PACSI) NAL Unit 

   One of the two new NAL unit types specified in this memo is the 
   Payload Content Scalability Information (PACSI) NAL unit.  The 
   OPTIONAL PACSI NAL unit, if present, MUST be the first NAL unit in 
   an aggregation packet or the NAL unit in a single NAL unit packet, 
   and it MUST NOT be present in other types of packets.  The PACSI NAL 
   unit, when included in an aggregation packet, indicates scalability 
   information and other characteristics that are common for all the 
   remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation packet. 
   Furthermore, a PACSI NAL unit MAY contain zero or more SEI NAL 
   units.  The PACSI NAL unit makes it easier for MANEs to decide 
 
 
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   whether to forward/process/discard the aggregation packet containing 
   the PACSI NAL unit.  Additional reasons to use PACSI NAL units are 
   indicated later on, in the  specification of the semantics of the 
   fields.  Senders MAY create PACSI NAL units and receivers MAY ignore 
   them, or use them as hints to enable efficient aggregation packet 
   processing or decoding order recovery in multi-source transmission.  
   Note that the NAL unit type for the PACSI NAL unit (type 30) is 
   among the types that are left unspecified in [H.264] and [RFC3984]. 

   When the first aggregation unit of an aggregation packet contains a 
   PACSI NAL unit, there MUST be at least one additional aggregation 
   unit present in the same packet.  The RTP header and payload header 
   fields of the aggregation packet are set according to the remaining 
   NAL units in the aggregation packet. 

   When a PACSI NAL unit is included in a multi-time aggregation packet 
   (MTAP), the decoding order number (DON) for the PACSI NAL unit MUST 
   be set to indicate that the PACSI NAL unit has an identical DON to 
   the first NAL unit in decoding order among the remaining NAL units 
   in the aggregation packet. 

   When a PACSI NAL unit is included in a single NAL unit packet, the 
   RTP header and payload header fields of the packet are set according 
   to the next non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order. 

   The structure of a PACSI NAL unit is as follows.  The first four 
   octets are exactly the same as the four-byte SVC NAL unit header 
   discussed in Section 5.35.3.  They are followed by one octet 
   containing several flags, then five optional octets, and finally 
   zero or more SEI NAL units. Each SEI NAL unit is preceded by a 16-
   bit unsigned size field (in network byte order) that indicates the 
   size of the following NAL unit in bytes (excluding these two octets, 
   but including the NAL unit type octet of the SEI NAL unit).  Figure 
   1 illustrates the PACSI NAL unit structure and an example of a PACSI 
   NAL unit containing two SEI NAL units. 

   The bits A, P, C, S, and E are specified only if the bit X is equal 
   to 1.  The fields TL0PICIDX and IDRPICID are present only if the bit 
   Y is equal to 1. The field DONC is present only if the bit T is 
   equal to 1.  The field T MUST be equal to 0 if the aggregation 
   packet containing the PACSI NAL unit is not an STAP-A packet. 






 
 
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       0                   1                   2                   3    
       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1  
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |F|NRI|  Type   |R|I|   PRID    |N| DID |  QID  | TID |U|D|O| RR| 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |X|Y|T|A|P|C|S|E| TL0PICIDX (o.)|        IDRPICID (o.)          | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |          DONC (o.)            |        NAL unit size 1        | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |                                                               | 
      |                 SEI NAL unit 1                                | 
      |                                                               | 
      |                         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |                         |        NAL unit size 2        |     | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     | 
      |                                                               | 
      |            SEI NAL unit 2                                     | 
      |                                           +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
      |                                           | 
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
    
             Figure 1  PACSI NAL unit structure.  Fields suffixed by 
                               "(o.)" are OPTIONAL. 

   The values of the fields in PACSI NAL unit MUST be set as follows.  
   The term "target NAL unit" is used in the semantics of some fields.  
   When the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation packet, a 
   "target NAL unit" refers to one or more NAL units that are contained 
   in the aggregation packet, but not included in the PACSI NAL unit 
   itself, that are in the same access unit as the first NAL unit 
   following the PACSI NAL unit in the aggregation packet.  When the 
   PACSI NAL unit is included in a single NAL unit packet, a "target 
   NAL unit" refers to the next non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission 
   order. 

   o  The F bit MUST be set to 1 if the F bit in at least one of the 
      remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation packet is 
      equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or if the next non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order 
      has the F bit equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in 
      a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the F bit MUST be set 
      to 0. 





 
 
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   o  The NRI field MUST be set to the highest value of NRI field among 
      all the remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation 
      packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or the value of the NRI field of the next non-PACSI NAL 
      unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is included 
      in a single NAL unit packet). 

   o  The Type field MUST be set to 30. 

   o  The R bit MUST be set to 1.  Receivers SHOULD ignore the value of 
      R. 

   o  The I bit MUST be set to 1 if the I bit of at least one of the 
      remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation packet is 
      equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or if the I bit of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order is equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the I bit MUST 
      be set to 0. 

   o  The PRID field MUST be set to the lowest value of the PRID values 
      of all the remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation 
      packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or the PRID value of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in a 
      single NAL unit packet). 

   o  The N bit MUST be set to 1 if the N bit of all the remaining NAL 
      units in the payload of the aggregation packet is equal to 1 
      (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation packet) or 
      if the N bit of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order 
      is equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in a single 
      NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the N bit MUST be set to 0. 

   o  The DID field MUST be set to the lowest value of the DID values 
      of all the remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation 
      packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or the DID value of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in a 
      single NAL unit packet). 

   o  The QID field MUST be set to the lowest value of the QID values 
      of all the remaining NAL units with the lowest value of DID in 
      the payload of the aggregation packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in an aggregation packet) or the QID value of the next 
      non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit 
      is included in a single NAL unit packet). 
 
 
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   o  The TID field MUST be set to the lowest value of the TID values 
      of all the remaining NAL units with the lowest value of DID in 
      the payload of the aggregation packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in an aggregation packet) or the TID value of the next 
      non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit 
      is included in a single NAL unit packet). 

   o  The U bit MUST be set to 1 if the U bit of at least one of the 
      remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation packet is 
      equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or if the U bit of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order is equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the U bit MUST 
      be set to 0. 

   o  The D bit MUST be set to 1 if the D value of all the remaining 
      NAL unit in the payload is equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in an aggregation packet) or if the D bit of the next 
      non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order is equal to 1 (when the 
      PACSI NAL unit is included in a single NAL unit packet).  
      Otherwise, the D bit MUST be set to 0. 

   o  The O bit MUST be set to 1 if the O bit of at least one of the 
      remaining NAL units in the payload of the aggregation packet is 
      equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or if the O bit of the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order is equal to 1 (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the O bit MUST 
      be set to 0. 

   o  The RR field MUST be set to '11' (in binary form).  Receivers 
      SHOULD ignore the value of RR. 

   o  If the X bit is equal to 1, the bits A, P, and C are specified as 
      below. Otherwise, the bits A, P, and C are unspecified, and 
      receivers MUST ignore these bits.  The X bit SHOULD be identical 
      for all the PACSI NAL units in all the RTP sessions carrying the 
      same SVC bitstream. 

   o  If the Y bit is equal to 1, the OPTIONAL fields TL0PICIDX and 
      IDRPICID MUST be present and specified as below, and the bits S 
      and E are also specified as below. Otherwise, the fields 
      TL0PICIDX and IDRPICID MUST NOT be present, whereas the S and E 
      bits are unspecified and receivers MUST ignore these bits.  The Y 
      bit SHOULD be identical for all the PACSI NAL units in all the 
      RTP sessions carrying the same SVC bitstream. 

 
 
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   o  If the T bit is equal to 1, the OPTIONAL field DONC MUST be 
      present and specified as below. Otherwise, the field DONC MUST 
      NOT be present. 

   o  The A bit MUST be set to 1 if all the target NAL units belong to 
      anchor layer representations.  Otherwise, the A bit MUST be set 
      to 0.  The A bit SHOULD be identical for all the PACSI NAL units 
      for which the target NAL units belong to the same access unit. 

      Informative note: The A bit indicates whether CGS or spatial 
      layer switching at a non-IDR layer representation (a layer 
      representation with nal_unit_type not equal to 5 and idr_flag not 
      equal to 1) can be performed.  When a picture coding structure 
      such as IBBP is in use, a non-IDR intra layer representation can 
      be used for random access.  Compared to using only IDR layer 
      representations, higher coding efficiency can be achieved.  The 
      H.264/AVC or SVC solution to indicate the random accessibility of 
      a non-IDR intra layer representation is using a recovery point 
      SEI message.  The A bit offers direct access to this information, 
      without having to parse the recovery point SEI message, which may 
      be buried deeply in an SEI NAL unit.  Furthermore, the SEI 
      message may not be present in the bitstream. 

   o  The P bit MUST be set to 1 if all the remaining NAL units in the 
      payload of the aggregation packet have redundant_pic_cnt greater 
      than 0 (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation 
      packet) or the next non-PACSI NAL unit in transmission order has 
      redundant_pic_cnt greater than 0 (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the P bit MUST 
      be set to 0. 

      Informative note: The P bit indicates whether a packet can be 
      discarded because it contains only redundant slice NAL units.  
      Without this bit, the corresponding information can be obtained 
      from the syntax element redundant_pic_cnt, which is containedin 
      the variable-length coded slice header. 

   o  The C bit MUST be set to 1 if all the target NAL units belong to 
      intra layer representations.  Otherwise, the C bit MUST be set to 
      0.  The C bit SHOULD be identical for all the PACSI NAL units for 
      which the target NAL units belong to the same access unit. 

      Informative note: The C bit indicates whether a packet contains 
      intra slices, which may be the only packets to be forwarded,, 
      e.g. when the network conditions are particularly adverse. 


 
 
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   o  The S bit MUST be set to 1, if the first VCL NAL unit, in 
      decoding order, of the layer representation containing the first 
      NAL unit following the PACSI NAL unit in the aggregation packet 
      is present in the payload (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in 
      an aggregation packet) or if the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order is the first VCL NAL unit, in decoding order, 
      of a layer representation (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in 
      a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the S bit MUST be set to 
      0. 

   o  The E bit MUST be set to 1, if the last VCL NAL unit, in decoding 
      order, of the layer representation containing the first NAL unit 
      following the PACSI NAL unit in the aggregation packet is present 
      in the payload (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in an 
      aggregation packet) or if the next non-PACSI NAL unit in 
      transmission order is the last VCL NAL unit, in decoding order, 
      of a layer representation (when the PACSI NAL unit is included in 
      a single NAL unit packet).  Otherwise, the E field MUST be set to 
      0. 

      Informative note: The S or E bit indicates whether the first or 
      last slice, in transmission order, of a layer representation is 
      in a packet, to enable a MANE to detect slice loss and take 
      proper action such as requesting a retransmission as soon as 
      possible, as well as to allow efficient playout buffer handling 
      similarly to the M bit present in the RTP header.  The M bit in 
      the RTP header still indicates the end of an access unit, not the 
      end of a layer representation. 

   o  When present, the TL0PICIDX field MUST be set to equal to 
      tl0_dep_rep_idx as specified in Annex G of [H.264] for the layer 
      representation containing the first NAL unit following the PACSI 
      NAL unit in the aggregation packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in an aggregation packet) or containing the next non-
      PACSI NAL unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet). 

   o  When present, the IDRPICID field MUST be set to equal to 
      effective_idr_pic_id as specified in Annex G of [H.264] for the 
      layer representation containing the first NAL unit following the 
      PACSI NAL unit in the aggregation packet (when the PACSI NAL unit 
      is included in an aggregation packet) or containing the next non-
      PACSI NAL unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet). 

      Informative note: The TL0PICIDX and IDRPICID fields enable the 
      detection of the loss of layer representations in the most 
 
 
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      important temporal layer (0) by receivers as well as MANEs.  SVC 
      provides a solution that uses SEI messages, which are harder to 
      parse and may not be present in the bitstream at all. 

   o  When present, the field DONC indicates the Cross-Session Decoding 
      Order Number (CS-DON) for the first NAL unit of the remaining NAL 
      units in the aggregation packet (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in an aggregation packet) or the CS-DON of the next non-
      PACSI NAL unit in transmission order (when the PACSI NAL unit is 
      included in a single NAL unit packet). The CS-DON is further 
      discussed in Section 6.10. 

   The PACSI NAL unit SHALL include a subset (zero to all) of the SEI 
   NAL units associated with the access unit to which the target NAL 
   units belong, and SHALL NOT contain SEI NAL units associated with 
   any other access unit. [Ed. (AE): Is the intention here to say: if 
   the AU has SEI messages, then they must all be included in the 
   PACSI. Or to say that the PACSI MAY include one or more of the SEI 
   NAL units..., i.e., to make it an option? The Informative note below 
   seems to indicate the latter (it uses the word "may").] 

      Informative note: Senders may repeat such SEI NAL units in the 
      PACSI NAL unit, so that they are repeated in more than one packet 
      and thus increase robustness against packet loss. Receivers may 
      use the repeated SEI messages in place of missing SEI messages.  
      In H.264/AVC and SVC, within each access unit, SEI NAL units must 
      appear before any VCL NAL unit in decoding order.  Therefore, 
      without using PACSI NAL units, SEI messages are typically only 
      conveyed in the first of the packets comprising an access unit. 

   When the PACSI NAL unit is included in an aggregation packet, an SEI 
   message SHOULD NOT be included in the PACSI NAL unit and included in 
   one of the remaining NAL units contained in the same aggregation 
   packet. 

6.9 Non-Interleaved Multi-Time Aggregation Packets (NI-MTAPs) 

   The second new NAL unit type introduced in this memois the Non-
   Interleaved Multi-Time Aggregation packet (NI-MTAP).  An NI-MTAP 
   consists of zero or more non-interleaved multi-time aggregation 
   units, as shown in Figure 2. 

   Informative note: The rule above differs from the constraint on 
   aggregation packets present in [RFC3984], where at least one NAL 
   unit must be contained in the aggregation packet.  


 
 
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   The NI-MTAP consists of 16 bits of unsigned size information of the 
   following NAL unit (in network byte order), and 16 bits (in network 
   byte order) of timestamp offset (TS offset) for this NAL unit. 

   The structure of the multi-time aggregation units for the NI-MTAP is 
   presented in Figure 2.  The starting or ending position of an 
   aggregation unit within a packet MAY not be on a 32-bit word 
   boundary.  The NAL units in the NI-MTAP are ordered in NAL unit 
   decoding order. 

   The term NAL unit Effective Timestamp (ETS) is defined as the value 
   that the RTP timestamp would have if the particular NAL unit was 
   transported in its own RTP packet. This value is different from the 
   actual RTP timestamp present in the packet carrying the particular 
   NAL units in MTAP packets.  

   Let ETS be the effective timestamp of a NAL unit and TS the actual 
   RTP timestamp of the packet carrying the NAL unit. The timestamp 
   offset field MUST be set to a value equal to the value of the 
   following formula: If ETS >= TS, then TS offset = ETS - TS.  If ETS 
   < TS, then TS offset = ETS + (2^32 - TS). 

    0                   1                   2                   3 
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   :        NAL unit size          |        TS offset              | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                                                               | 
   |                         NAL unit                              | 
   |                                                               | 
   |                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                               : 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 

            Figure 2  Non-interleaved Multi-time aggregation unit for 
                                     NI-MTAP 

   For the "earliest" multi-time aggregation unit in an MTAP the 
   timestamp offset MUST be zero.  Hence, the RTP timestamp of the MTAP 
   itself is identical to the earliest NAL unit effective timestamp. 

   Informative note: The "earliest" multi-time aggregation unit is the 
   one that would have the smallest extended RTP timestamp among all 
   the aggregation units of an MTAP if the aggregation units were 
   encapsulated in single NAL unit packets.  An extended timestamp is a 
   timestamp that has more than 32 bits and is capable of counting the 
   wraparound of the timestamp field, thus enabling one to determine 
 
 
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   the smallest value if the timestamp wraps.  Such an "earliest" 
   aggregation unit may not be the first one in the order in which the 
   aggregation units are encapsulated in an NI-MTAP.  The "earliest" 
   NAL unit need not be the same as the first NAL unit in the NAL unit 
   decoding order either.  

   Figure 3 presents an example of an RTP packet that contains an NI-
   MTAP multi-time aggregation packet that contains two non-interleaved 
   multi-time aggregation units, labeled as 1 and 2 in the figure. 

    0                   1                   2                   3 
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                          RTP Header                           | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |NI-MTAPNAL HDR |            NALU 1 Size        | NALU 1 TS Off.| 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   | NALU 1 TS Off.|  NALU 1 HDR   |    NALU 1 DATA                | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               + 
   :                                                               : 
   ++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++ 
   |            NALU 2 SIZE        |       NALU 2 TS Offset        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |  NALU 2 HDR   |    NALU 2 DATA                                | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                               | 
   :                                                               : 
   |                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   |                               :...OPTIONAL RTP padding        | 
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 

           Figure 3  An RTP packet including a NI-MTAP non-interleaved 
           multi-time aggregation packet and two non-interleaved multi-
                              time aggregation units 

6.10 Decoding Order Number (DON) 

   The DON concept is introduced in RFC 3984 and is used to recover the 
   decoding order when interleaving is used within a single session. 
   Section 5.5 of [RFC3984] applies when using SST. 

   When using MST, it is necessary to recover the decoding order across 
   the various RTP sessions regardless if interleaving is used or not. 
   In addition to the timestamp mechanism desribed later on, the CS-DON 
   mechanism is an extension of the DON facility that can be used for 
   this purpose, and is defined in the following section.  


 
 
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6.10.1 Cross-Session DON (CS-DON) for Multi-Source Transmission 

   The Cross-Session Decoding Order Number (CS-DON) is a number that 
   indicates the decoding order of NAL units across all sessions 
   involved in MST. It is similar to the DON concept in [H.264], but 
   contrary to RFC 3984 where the DON was used only for interleaved 
   packetization, in this memo it is used not only in the interleaved 
   mode (I-C) but also in two of the non-interleaved modes as well (NI-
   C and NI-TC).  

   When the NI-C or NI-TC MST packetization modes are in use, the 
   packetization of each session MUST be as specified in Section 7.1. 
   In PACSI NAL units the CS-DON value is explicitly coded in the field 
   DONC. For non-PACSI NAL units the CS-DON value is derived as 
   follows. Let SN indicate the RTP sequence number of a packet, and 
   recall that the NAL unit effective timestamp (ETS) was defined in 
   Section 6.9 as the value that the RTP timestamp would have if that 
   NAL unit would be transported in its own RTP packet. 

   o  For each non-PACSI NAL unit carried in a session using the single 
      NAL unit session-specific packetization mode, the CS-DON value of 
      the NAL unit is equal to (DONC_prev_PACSI + SN_diff - 1) % 65536, 
      wherein '%' is the modulo operation, DONC_prev_PACSI is the DONC 
      value of the previous PACSI NAL unit with the same ETS as the 
      current NAL unit, and SN_diff is calculated as follows: 

                 if SN1 > SN2, SN_diff = SN1 - SN2 
                 else SN_diff = SN2 + 65536 - SN1 

     where SN1 and SN2 are the SNs of the current NAL unit and the 
     previous PACSI NAL unit with the same ETS, respectively. 

   o  For non-PACSI NAL units carried in a session using a non-
      interleaved session-specific packetization mode (NI-TC, NI-C), 
      the CS-DON value of each non-PACSI NAL unit is derived as 
      follows. 

       . For a non-PACSI NAL unit in a single NAL unit packet, the 
          following applies. 

            . If the previous PACSI NAL unit is contained in a single 
               NAL unit packet, the CS-DON value of the NAL unit is 
               calculated as above when the single NAL unit session-
               specific packetization mode is in use; 



 
 
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            . otherwise (the previous PACSI NAL unit is contained in 
               an STAP-A packet), the CS-DON value of the NAL unit is 
               equal to: (the CS-DON value of the previous non-PACSI 
               NAL unit in decoding order + 1) % 65536, where '%' is 
               the modulo operation. 

       . For a non-PACSI NAL unit in an STAP-A packet, the following 
          applies. 

            . If the non-PACSI NAL unit is the first non-PACSI NAL 
               unit in the STAP-A packet, the CS-DON value of the NAL 
               unit is equal to DONC of the PACSI NAL unit in the STAP-
               A packet; 

            . otherwise (the non-PACSI NAL unit is not the first non-
               PACSI NAL unit in the STAP-A packet), the CS-DON value 
               of the NAL unit is equal to: (the CS-DON value of the 
               previous non-PACSI NAL unit in decoding order + 1) % 
               65536, wherein '%' is the modulo operation. 

       . For a non-PACSI NAL unit in a number of FU-A packets, the CS-
          DON value of the NAL unit is calculated as above when the 
          single NAL unit session-specific packetization mode is in 
          use, with SN1 being the SN value of the first FU-A packet. 

   When the I-C MST packetization mode is in use, the DON values 
   derived according to RFC 3984 of all the NAL units in each of the 
   multiplexed RTP sessions MUST indicate CS-DON values. 

7. Packetization Rules 

   Section 6 of [RFC3984] applies in this memo, with the following 
   additions. 

   All receivers MUST support the single NAL unit packetization mode to 
   provide backward compatibility to endpoints supporting only the 
   single NAL unit mode of RFC 3984. However, the use of single NAL 
   unit packetization mode (packetization-mode equal to 0) SHOULD be 
   avoided whenever possible, because encapsulating NAL units of small 
   sizes in their own packets (e.g. small NAL units containing 
   parameter sets, prefix NAL units, or SEI messages) is less efficient 
   due to the packet header overhead. 

   All receivers MUST support the non-interleaved mode of [RFC3984]. 

      Informative note: The non-interleaved mode does allow an 
      application to encapsulate a single NAL unit in a single RTP 
 
 
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      packet.  Historically, the single NAL unit mode has been included 
      into [RFC3984] only for compatibility with ITU-T Rec. H.241 Annex 
      A [H.241].  There is no point in carrying this historic ballast 
      towards a new application space such as the one provided with 
      SVC.  The implementation complexity increase for supporting the 
      additional mechanisms of the non-interleaved mode (namely STAP-A 
      and FU-A) is minor, whereas the benefits are significant. As a 
      result, STAP-A and FU-A implementation is required. 

   A NAL unit of small size SHOULD be encapsulated in an aggregation 
   packet together with one or more other NAL units. For example, non-
   VCL NAL units such as access unit delimiter, parameter set, or SEI 
   NAL unit are typically small. 

   A prefix NAL unit and the NAL unit with which it is associated, and 
   which follows the prefix NAL unit in decoding order, SHOULD be 
   included in the same aggregation packet whenever an aggregation 
   packet is used for the associated NAL unit. 

      Informative note: Although the prefix NAL unit is ignored by an 
      H.264/AVC decoder, it is necessary in the SVC decoding process. 
      Given the small size of the prefix NAL unit, it is best if it is 
      transported in the same RTP packet as its associated NAL unit. 

   When the first aggregation unit of an aggregation packet contains a 
   PACSI NAL unit, there MUST be at least one additional aggregation 
   unit present in the same packet. 

7.1 Packetization Rules for Multi-Source Transmission 

   When MST is used, decoding order recovery for NAL units carried in 
   the associated RTP sessions is needed.  The following packetization 
   rules ensure that decoding order of NAL units carried in the 
   sessions can be correctly recovered for each of the MST  
   packetization modes using the de-packetization process specified in 
   Section 8.1. 

   The NI-T and NI-TC modes rely on timestamps to recover the decoding 
   order. In order to be able to do so, it is necessary for the SVC 
   stream to contain data for all sampling instances of a given layer 
   in all enhancement layers that depend on the given layer. The NI-TC, 
   NI-C, and I-C modes do not have this limitation, and use the CS-DON 
   value as a means to explicitly indicate decoding order, either 
   direcly coded in PACSI NAL units, or inferred from them using the 
   packetization rules. It is noted that the NI-TC mode offers both 
   techniques and it is up to the receiver to select which one to use. 

 
 
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7.1.1 NI-T / NI-TC Packetization Rules 

  When the NI-T or NI-TC packetization mode is in use, the following 
  applies. 

   o  If one or more NAL units of an access unit of sampling time 
      instance t is present in RTP session A, then one or more NAL 
      units of the same access unit of the same sampling time instance 
      t MUST be present in any enhancement RTP session which depends on 
      RTP session A.  

      Informative note: There are multiple ways to insert additional 
      NAL units in order to satisfy this rule: 

         - One option for adding additional NAL units is to place NI-
         MTAP packets (defined in Section 6.9), and not include any 
         aggregation packet in the payload.  Although empty, these 
         packets are used by the process described in Section 8.1.1 for 
         the access unit re-ordering process. 

         - Additional NAL units may also be added by repeating prefix 
         NAL units (NAL unit type 14).  Before passing NAL units to the 
         decoder re-ordering of the access unit as described in Section 
         8.1.1 is needed.  This may only be possible for access units 
         which contain base layer NAL units.  [Ed. (TS): It may be 
         useful to indicate in the SDP parameters that additional NAL 
         unit re-ordering as specified in 7.1.4 is not required.][Ed. 
         (AE): I don't understand this comment.] 

         - Additional NAL units may also be added by placing single NAL 
         unit packets containing exactly one PACSI NAL unit in the 
         enhancement RTP sessions. 

         - Additional NAL units may also be added by the encoder 
         itself.  This option, however, may not be available with pre-
         encoded content. 

   o  When not using NI-TC mode and a PACSI NAL unit is present, the T 
      bit MUST be equal to 0, i.e. the DONC field MUST NOT be present. 

7.1.2 NI-C / NI-TC Packetization Rules 

   When the NI-C or NI-TC packetization mode is in use, the following 
   applies. 



 
 
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   o  For each single NAL unit packet containing a non-PACSI NAL unit, 
      the previous packet, if present, MUST have the same RTP timestamp 
      as the single NAL unit packet, and the following applies. 

       . If the ETS of the non-PACSI NAL unit is not equal to the ETS 
          of the previous non-PACSI NAL unit in decoding order, the 
          previous packet MUST contain a PACSI NAL unit containing the 
          DONC field; 

       . Otherwise (the ETS of the non-PACSI NAL unit is equal to the 
          ETS of the previous non-PACSI NAL unit in decoding order), 
          the previous packet MAY contain a PACSI NAL unit containing 
          the DONC field. 

   o  For each STAP-A packet, the first NAL unit in the STAP-A packet, 
      if present,  MUST be a PACSI NAL unit containing the DONC field. 
      [Ed. (AE): Is it possible to have an empty STAP-A? Or was the "if 
      present" superfluous?] 

   o  For each FU-A packet, if present, the previous packet MUST have 
      the same RTP timestamp as the FU-A packet, and the following 
      applies. [Ed. (AE): See the previous comment for STAP-A, 
      regarding the "if present" part.] 

       . If the FU-A packet is the start of the fragmented NAL unit, 
          the following applies; 

            . If the ETS of the fragmented NAL unit is not equal to 
               the ETS of the previous non-PACSI NAL unit in decoding 
               order, the previous packet MUST contain a PACSI NAL unit 
               containing the DONC field; 

            . Otherwise (the ETS of the fragmented NAL unit is equal 
               to the ETS of the previous non-PACSI NAL unit in 
               decoding order), the previous packet MAY contain a PACSI 
               NAL unit containing the DONC field. 

       . Otherwise if the FU-A packet is the end of the fragmented NAL 
          unit, the following applies. 

            . If the next non-PACSI NAL unit in decoding order has ETS 
               equal to the ETS of the fragmented NAL unit, and is 
               carried in a number of FU-A packets or a single NAL unit 
               packet, the next packet MUST be a single NAL unit packet 
               containing a PACSI NAL unit containing the DONC field. 
               [Ed. (AE): Does this mean I am inserting a single RTP 
               packet with just PACSI in it? Just to make sure.] 
 
 
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       . Otherwise (the FU-A packet is neither the start nor the end of 
          the fragmented NAL unit), the previous packet MUST be a FU-A 
          packet. 

   o  For each single NAL unit packet containing a PACSI NAL unit, if 
      present, the PACSI NAL unit MUST contain the DONC field. 

7.1.3 I-C Packetization Rules 

   When the I-C session-multiplexing packetization mode is in use, the 
   following applies. 

   o  When a PACSI NAL unit is present, the T bit MUST be equal to 0, 
      i.e., the DONC field MUST NOT be present.[Ed. (AE): Why? 
      Revisit.] 

7.1.4 Packetization Rules for Non-VCL NAL Units 

   NAL units which do not directly encode video slices are known in 
   H.264 as non-VCL NAL units.  Non-VCL units that are only used by, or 
   only relevant to, enhancement RTP sessions SHOULD be sent in the 
   lowest session to which they are relevant. 

   Some senders, however, such as those sending pre-encoded data, might 
   not be able to easily determine which non-VCL units are relevant to 
   which session.  Thus, essential non-VCL NAL units (parameter sets 
   sent in-band, i.e., NAL unit types 7, 8, 13, and 15) MAY, instead, 
   be sent in session that the one they are used by depends on (e.g.,  
   the base RTP session), and non-essential non-VCL NAL units MAY be 
   sent in any RTP session. 

   If a non-VCL unit is relevant to more than one RTP session, neither 
   of which depends on the other(s), the NAL unit MAY be sent in 
   another session which all these sessions depend on. Alternatively, 
   it MAY be repeated in all such sessions.  In general, identical non-
   VCL units MAY be sent in more than one session for redundancy.  [Ed. 
   (JL): Can this cause issues with HRD timing?] 

7.1.5 Packetization Rules for Prefix NAL Units 

   When the base layer is sent on an RTP session using the Non-
   Interleaved or the Interleaved mode, prefix NAL units SHOULD be 
   aggregated (using STAP-A or STAP-B units) with the NAL unit they 
   prefix, unless this would violate session MTU constraints or if  
   fragmentation units are used. 


 
 
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   If the base layer is sent in a base RTP session using RFC 3984, 
   prefix NAL units MAY be sent in the lowest enhancement RTP session 
   rather than in the base RTP session. 

8. De-Packetization Process 

   For single-source transmission where a single RTP session is used, 
   the de-packetization process specified in Section 7 of [RFC3984] 
   applies. [Ed. (??): with some fixes to section 7 of RFC 3984 and 
   some changes/additions to section 7.3 (Additional De-Packetization 
   Guidelines) of RFC 3984 - TBD] 

   For multi-source transmission, where more than one RTP sessions are 
   used to receive data from the same SVC bitstream, the de-
   packetization process is specified in Section 8.1. 

8.1 De-Packetization Process for Multi-Source Transmission 

   As for a single RTP session, the general concept behind the de-
   packetization process is to reorder NAL units from transmission 
   order to the NAL unit decoding order. 

   The sessions to be received SHALL be identified by mechanisms 
   specified in [I-D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-dependency]. Enhancement RTP 
   sessions typically contain an RTP stream that depends on at least 
   one other RTP session, as indicated by mechanisms defined in [I-
   D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-dependency]. A lower RTP session to an 
   enhancement RTP session is an RTP session which the enhancement RTP 
   session depends on. The lowest RTP session for a receiver is the 
   base RTP session, which does not depend on any other RTP session 
   received by the receiver.  The highest RTP session for a receiver is 
   the RTP session which no other RTP session received by the receiver 
   depends on. 

   For each of the RTP sessions, the RTP reception process as specified 
   in RFC 3550 is applied.  Then the received packets are passed in 
   increasing order of sequence number into the payload de-
   packetization to NAL units as defined in this memo. 

   The decoding order of the NAL units carried in all the associated 
   RTP sessions is then recovered by applying one of the following 
   subsections, depending on which of the MST packetization modes is in 
   use. 




 
 
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8.1.1 Decoding Order Recovery for the NI-T and NI-TC Modes 

   The following process SHALL be applied when the NI-T packetization 
   mode is in use.  The following process MAY be applied when the NI-TC 
   packetization mode is in use. 

   The process is based on RTP session dependency signaling, RTP 
   sequence numbers, and timestamps. 

   The decoding order of NAL units within an RTP packet stream in RTP 
   session S is given by the ordering of sequence numbers SN of the RTP 
   packets the NAL units are contained in.  In an aggregation packet 
   contained in an RTP packet the decoding order is given by the order 
   of appearance of the NAL units within the packet. The RTP session 
   identifier S gives the increasing order of dependency of the 
   received RTP sessions as indicated by mechanisms specified in 
   Section 9.2.3, where S equal to 0 identifies the base RTP session. 
   [Ed. (AE): Does the mmusic draft excplicitly order the session ID's 
   by dependency? I coulnd't find it in the text.] 

   Timing information according to the media timestamp TS(SN) derived 
   from the RTP packet timestamp of the RTP packet with sequence number 
   SN is associated with all NAL units contained in the same RTP packet 
   received in RTP session S.  For NI-MTAP packets the effective 
   timstamp ETS is derived for each contained NAL unit by using the "TS 
   offset" value in the NI-MTAP packet as defined in 6.9, and is used 
   instead of the actual TS. NAL units contained in fragmentation 
   packets are handled as defragmented, entire NAL units with their own 
   timestamp. All NAL units associated with the same value of media 
   timestamp TS are part of the same access unit AU(TS). 

   Each NI-MTAP packet which does not contain any aggregation units or 
   each PACSI NAL unit in a single NAL unit packet SHOULD be kept as, 
   effectively, access unit indicators in the re-ordering process.  NI-
   MTAP or PACSI NAL units SHOULD be removed before passing access unit 
   data to the decoder. 

         Informative Note: These special (essentially, empty) NI-MTAP 
         and PACSI NAL units are used to associate NAL units present in 
         other RTP sessions with RTP sessions not containing any data 
         for an access unit of a particular time instance. They act as 
         access unit indicators in sessions that would otherwise 
         contain no data for the particular access unit. The presence 
         of these NAL units is ensured by the packetization rules in 
         Section 7.1.1. 


 
 
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   The decoding order of NAL units from multiple RTP streams in 
   multiple RTP sessions SHALL be recovered into a single sequence of 
   NAL units, grouped into access units, by performing the following 
   steps: 

       o The process SHOULD be started with the NAL units received in 
          the highest RTP enhancement session with the earliest 
          timestamp TS available in the session's (de-jittering) 
          buffer. 

       o  Collect all NAL units associated with the same value of 
          timestamp TS, starting from the highest RTP enhancement 
          session, from all the (de-jittering) buffers of the received 
          RTP sessions. The collected NAL units will be those 
          associated with the access unit AU(TS).  

       o  Place the collected NAL units in increasing order of session 
          identifier S. 

       o  Place the ordered collected NAL units in decoding order 
          within the particular access unit by satisfying the NAL unit 
          ordering rules for SVC access units, as specified in the 
          informative algorithm provided in Section 8.1.1.1. 

       o  Remove NI-MTAP and any PACSI NAL units from the access unit 
          AU(TS). 

       o  The access units MAY be transferred to the decoder.  If 
          access units AU(TS) are transferred to the decoder, they 
          SHALL be passed in the order of appearance (given by the 
          order of RTP sequence numbers) of timestamp values TS in the 
          highest RTP session associated with access unit AU(TS). 

            Informative Note: Due to packet loss it is possible that 
            not all sessions may have NAL units present for the 
            timestamp value TS present in the highest RTP session. In 
            such a case an algorithm may:  
            a) proceed to the next complete access unit with NAL units 
            present in all the received RTP sessions; or  
            b) consider the highest RTP session to be the largest 
            session identifier for which the access unit is complete,  
            and apply the process above. The algorithm may return to 
            the original highest RTP session when a complete and error-
            free access unit that contains NAL units in all the 
            sessions is received.  

   Informative example: 
 
 
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   The example shown in Figure 4 refers to three RTP sessions A, B and 
   C containing an SVC bitstream transmitted as 3 sources.  In the 
   example, the dependency signaling as described in Section 9.2.3, 
   indicates that session A is the base RTP session, B is the first 
   enhancement RTP session and depends on A, and C is the second RTP 
   enhancement session and depends on A and B. A hierarchical picture 
   coding prediction structure is used, in which Session A has the 
   lowest frame rate and Session B and C have the same but higher frame 
   rate. The figure indicates decoding order numbers for NAL units in 
   the various packets across the sessions, as well as the associated 
   media timestamps (TS[]).  The example demonstrates decoding order 
   recovery when differenta amounts of jitter is present in each of the 
   sessions (i.e., i.e., at buffering startup not all packets with the 
   same timestamp are available in all the de-jittering buffers. 

   The process first proceeds to the NAL units associated with the 
   first timestamp TS[1] present in session C and removes/ignores all 
   preceding NAL units to NAL units with TS[1] in each of the de-
   jittering buffers of RTP sessions A, B, and C.  Then, starting from 
   session C, the first timestamp available in decoding order (TS [1]) 
   is selected and NAL units starting from RTP session A, and sessions 
   B and C are placed in order of the RTP session dependency (in the 
   example for TS[1]: first session B and then session C) into the 
   access unit AU(TS[1]) associated with timestamp TS[1].  Then the 
   next timestamp TS[3] in order of appearance in the highest RTP 
   session C is processed and the process described above is repeated.  
   Note that there may be access units with no NAL units present, e.g., 
   in the lowest RTP session A (see, e.g., TS[1]).  With TS[8], the 
   first access unit with NAL units present in all the RTP sessions 
   appears in the buffers. 

    
   C: ------------(1,2)-(3,4)--(5)---(6)---(7,8)(9,10)-(11)--(12)---- 
        |     |     |     |     |     |      |    |     |      |      
   B: -(1,2)-(3,4)-(5)---(6)--(7,8)-(9,10)-(11)-(12)--(13,14)(15,15)- 
        |     |                 |     |                 |      |      
   A: -------(1)---------------(2)---(3)---------------(4)----(5)---- 
   -------------------------------------------------------------------> 
   TS: [4]   [2]   [1]   [3]   [8]   [6]   [5]   [7]   [12]   [10]     
    
    
   Key: 
   A, B, C                - RTP sessions 
   Integer values in '()' - NAL unit decoding order within RTP session 
   '( )'                  - groups the NAL units of an access unit  
 
 
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                            in a RTP session 
   '|'                    - indicates corresponding NAL units of the  
                            same access unit AU(TS[..]) in the RTP  
                            sessions 
   Integer values in '[]' - media Timestamp (TS), sampling time as  
                            derived from RTP timestamps associated to  
                            the access unit AU(TS[..]). 
    
           Figure 4  Example of decoding order recovery in multi-source 
              transmission with different session jitter at startup. 

8.1.1.1 Informative Algorithm for NI-T Decoding Order Recovery within 
   an Access Unit 

   Within an access unit, the [H.264] specification (Sections 7.4.1.2.3 
   and G.7.4.1.2.3) constrains the valid decoding order of NAL units.  
   These constraints make it possible to reconstruct a valid decoding 
   order for the NAL units of an access unit based only on the order of 
   NAL units in each session, the NAL unit headers, and Supplemental 
   Enhancement Information message headers. 

   This section specifies an informative algorithm to reconstruct a 
   valid decoding order for NAL units within an access unit.  Other NAL 
   unit orderings may also be valid; however, any compliant NAL unit 
   ordering will describe the same video stream and ancillary data as 
   the one produced by this algorithm. 

   An actual implementation, of course, needs only to behave "as if" 
   this reordering is done.  In particular, NAL units which are 
   discarded by an implementation's decoding process do not need to be 
   reordered. 

   In this algorithm, NAL units within an access unit are first ordered 
   by NAL unit type, in the order specified in the list below, except 
   from NAL unit type 14 which is handled specially as described.  NAL 
   units of the same type are then ordered as specified for the type, 
   if necessary. 

   For the purposes of this algorithm, "session order" is the order of 
   NAL units implied by their transmission order within an RTP session.  
   For the Non-Interleaved and Single NAL unit modes, this is the RTP 
   sequence number order coupled with the order of NAL units within an 
   aggregation unit. 

     o  9           Access unit delimiter 

 
 
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         Only one access unit delimiter will be present within an 
         access unit. 

     o  7           Sequence parameter set 

         Any order of sequence parameter sets within an access unit is 
         valid. 

     o  13          Sequence parameter set extension 

         Any order of sequence parameter set extensions within an 
         access unit is valid. 

     o  15          Subset sequence parameter set 

         Any order of subset sequence parameter sets within an access 
         unit is valid. 

     o  8           Picture parameter set 

         Any order of picture parameter sets within an access unit is 
         valid. 

     o  6           Supplemental enhancement information (SEI) 

         If an SEI message with a first payload of 0 (Buffering Period) 
         is present, it must be the first SEI. 

         If SEI messages with a Scalable Nesting (30) payload and a 
         nested payload of 0 (Buffering Period) are present, these then 
         follow.  Such an SEI message with the 
         all_layer_representations_in_au_flag equal to 1 is placed 
         first, followed by any others, sorted in DQId order by the 
         highest DQId mentioned. 

         All other SEI messages follow in any order. 

     o  1           Coded slice of a non-IDR picture 

     o  5           Coded slice of an IDR picture 

     o  14          Prefix NAL unit in scalable extension 

         NAL units of type 1 or 5 will be sent within only a single 
         session for any given access unit. They are placed in session 
         order.  (Note: Any given access unit will contain only NAL 
         units of type 1 or type 5, not both.)  
 
 
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         If NAL units of type 14 are present, every NAL unit of type 1 
         or 5 is prefixed by a NAL unit of type 14.  (Note: Within an 
         access unit, every NAL unit of type 14 is identical, so 
         correlation of type 14 NAL units with the other NAL units is 
         not necessary.) [Ed. (AE): Shouldn't this go before #5??]` 

     o  12          Filler data 

     o  14          Prefix NAL unit in scalable extension 

         Any order of filler data units within an access unit is valid. 
         [Ed. (AE): Shouldn't this move up, below #12?] 

         If NAL units of type 14 are present, every filler data NAL 
         unit is prefixed by a NAL unit of type 14. 

     o  2           Coded slice data partition A 

     o  3           Coded slice data partition B 

     o  4           Coded slice data partition C 

         These NAL units will be sent within only a single session for 
         any given access unit, and are placed in session order.  
         (Note: No current SVC profile uses slice data partitioning.) 

    

     o  19          Coded slice of an auxiliary coded picture without 
        partitioning 

        These NAL units will be sent within only a single session for 
        any given access unit, and are placed in session order. 

     o  16-18       Reserved 

     o  21-23       Reserved 

         These are placed immediately following the non-reserved-type 
         VCL NAL unit they follow in session order. 

     o  20          Coded slice in scalable extension 

         These are placed in DQId order, based on the dependency_id and 
         quality_id values in the slice's NAL unit header extension.  
         Within each DQId, they are placed in session order.  (Note: 

 
 
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         SVC slices with a given DQId value will be sent on a single 
         session for any given access unit.) 

     o  10          End of sequence 

         Only one end of sequence will be present within an access 
         unit. 

     o  11          End of stream 

         Only one end of stream will be present within an access unit. 

   [Ed. (AE): This list needs reformatting as a table.] 

8.1.2 Decoding Order Recovery for the NI-C, NI-TC and I-C Modes  

   The following process SHALL be used when either the NI-C or I-C MST 
   packetization mode is in use.  The following process MAY be applied 
   when the NI-TC MST packetization mode is in use. 

   The RTP packets output from the RTP-level reception processing for 
   each session are placed into a remultiplexing buffer.  
   [Ed.Note(YkW): Add handling of some cases of packet losses when the 
   NI-C or NI-TC mode is in use, that discards some received NAL units 
   for which the CS-DON value cannot be derived.] 

   It is RECOMMENDED to set the size of the remultiplexing buffer (in 
   bytes) equal to or greater than the value of the sprop-remux-buf-req 
   media type parameter of the highest RTP session the receiver 
   receives. 

   The CS-DON value is calculated and stored for each NAL unit. 

   The receiver operation is described below with the help of the 
   following functions and constants: 

   o  Function AbsDON is specified in Section 8.1 of RFC 3984. 

   o  Function don_diff is specified in Section 5.5 of RFC 3984. 

   o  Constant N is the value of the OPTIONAL sprop-mst-interleave-
      depth media type parameter of the highest RTP session incremented 
      by 1. 

   Initial buffering lasts until one of the following conditions is 
   fulfilled: 

 
 
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   o  There are N or more VCL NAL units in the remultiplexing buffer. 

   o  If sprop-mst-max-don-diff of the highest RTP session is present, 
      don_diff(m,n) is greater than the value of sprop-mst-max-don-diff 
      of the highest RTP session, where n corresponds to the NAL unit 
      having the greatest value of AbsDON among the received NAL units 
      and m corresponds to the NAL unit having the smallest value of 
      AbsDON among the received NAL units. 

   o  Initial buffering has lasted for the duration equal to or greater 
      than the value of the OPTIONAL sprop-remux-init-buf-time media 
      type parameter of the highest RTP session. 

   The NAL units to be removed from the remultiplexing buffer are 
   determined as follows: 

   o  If the remultiplexing buffer contains at least N VCL NAL units, 
      NAL units are removed from the remultiplexing buffer and passed 
      to the decoder in the order specified below until the buffer 
      contains N-1 VCL NAL units. 

   o  If sprop-mst-max-don-diff of the highest RTP session is present, 
      all NAL units m for which don_diff(m,n) is greater than sprop-
      max-don-diff of the highest RTP session are removed from the 
      remultiplexing buffer and passed to the decoder in the order 
      specified below.  Herein, n corresponds to the NAL unit having 
      the greatest value of AbsDON among the NAL units in the 
      remultiplexing buffer. 

   The order in which NAL units are passed to the decoder is specified 
   as follows: 

   o  Let PDON be a variable that is initialized to 0 at the beginning 
      of the RTP sessions. 

   o  For each NAL unit associated with a value of CS-DON, a CS-DON 
      distance is calculated as follows.  If the value of CS-DON of the 
      NAL unit is larger than the value of PDON, the CS-DON distance is 
      equal to CS-DON - PDON.  Otherwise, the CS-DON distance is equal 
      to 65535 - PDON + CS-DON + 1. 

   o  NAL units are delivered to the decoder in increasing order of CS-
      DON distance.  If several NAL units share the same value of CS-
      DON distance, they can be passed to the decoder in any order. 



 
 
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   o  When a desired number of NAL units have been passed to the 
      decoder, the value of PDON is set to the value of CS-DON for the 
      last NAL unit passed to the decoder. 

9. Payload Format Parameters 

   This section specifies the parameters that MAY be used to select 
   optional features of the payload format and certain features of the 
   bitstream.  The parameters are specified here as part of the media 
   type registration for the SVC codec.  A mapping of the parameters 
   into the Session Description Protocol (SDP) [RFC4566] is also 
   provided for applications that use SDP.  Equivalent parameters could 
   be defined elsewhere for use with control protocols that do not use 
   SDP. 

   Some parameters provide a receiver with the properties of the stream 
   that will be sent.  The names of all these parameters start with 
   "sprop" for stream properties.  Some of these "sprop" parameters are 
   limited by other payload or codec configuration parameters.  For 
   example, the sprop-parameter-sets parameter is constrained by the 
   profile-level-id parameter.  The media sender selects all "sprop" 
   parameters rather than the receiver.  This uncommon characteristic 
   of the "sprop" parameters may not be compatible with some signaling 
   protocol concepts, in which case the use of these parameters SHOULD 
   be avoided. 

9.1 Media Type Registration 

   The media subtype for the SVC codec is allocated from the IETF tree. 

   The receiver MUST ignore any unspecified parameter. 

      Informative note: Requiring that the receiver ignores unspecified 
      parameters allows for backward compatibility of future 
      extensions.  For example, if a future specification that is 
      backward compatible to this specification specifies some new 
      parameters, then a receiver according to this specification is 
      capable of receiving data per the new payload but ignoring those 
      parameters newly specified in the new payload specification.  
      This provision is also present in RFC 3984.  

   Media Type name:     video 

   Media subtype name:  H264-SVC 

   [Ed. (??): Text on "H264" must go into different section, see 
   Colin's comments sent on 10 June 2008]The media subtype "H264" MUST 
 
 
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   be used for RTP streams using RFC 3984, i.e. not using any of the 
   new features introduced by this specification compared to RFC 3984.  
   [Edt. Note: The new features are to be listed herein.]  For RTP 
   streams using any of the new features introduced by this 
   specification compared to RFC 3984, the media subtype "H264-SVC" 
   SHOULD be used, and the media subtype "H264" MAY be used.  Use of 
   the media subtype "H264" for RTP streams using the new features 
   allows for RFC 3984 receivers to negotiate and receive H.264/AVC or 
   SVC streams packetized according to this specification, but to 
   ignore media parameters and NAL unit types it does not recognize. 

   Required parameters: none 

   OPTIONAL parameters: 

      profile-level-id: 
         A base16 [RFC3548] (hexadecimal) representation of the 
         following three bytes in the sequence parameter set NAL unit 
         specified in [H.264]: 1) profile_idc, 2) a byte herein 
         referred to as profile-iop, composed of the values of 
         constraint_set0_flag, constraint_set1_flag, 
         constraint_set2_flag, constraint_set3_flag, and 
         reserved_zero_4bits in bit-significance order, starting from 
         the most significant bit, and 3) level_idc.  Note that 
         reserved_zero_4bits is required to be equal to 0 in [H.264], 
         but other values for it may be specified in the future by ITU-
         T or ISO/IEC. 

         If the profile-level-id parameter is used to indicate 
         properties of a NAL unit stream, it indicates the profile and 
         level that a decoder has to support in order to comply with 
         [H.264] when it decodes the NAL unit stream.  The profile-iop 
         byte indicates whether the NAL unit stream also obeys all the 
         constraints as specified in subsection G.7.4.2.1.1 of [H.264].  
         Herein the NAL unit stream refers to the one consisting of all 
         NAL units conveyed in the current RTP session, and all NAL 
         units conveyed in other RTP sessions, if present, the current 
         RTP session depends on.  The current RTP session MAY depend on 
         other RTP sessions when a scalable bitstream is transported 
         with more than one RTP session and the current session is not 
         an independent RTP session. 

         If the profile-level-id parameter is used for capability 
         exchange or session setup, it indicates the profile that the 
         codec supports and the highest level supported for the 
         signaled profile.  The profile-iop byte indicates whether the 
         codec has additional limitations whereby only the common 
 
 
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         subset of the algorithmic features and limitations signaled 
         with the profile-iop byte is supported by the codec.  For 
         example, if a codec supports only the common subset of the 
         coding tools of the Baseline profile and the Main profile at 
         level 2.1 and below, the profile-level-id becomes 42E015, in 
         which 42 stands for the Baseline profile, E0 indicates that 
         only the common subset for all profiles is supported, and 15 
         indicates level 2.1. 

            Informative note: Capability exchange and session setup 
            procedures should provide means to list the capabilities 
            for each supported codec profile separately.  For example, 
            the one-of-N codec selection procedure of the SDP 
            Offer/Answer model can be used (section 10.2 of [RFC4566]). 

         If no profile-level-id is present, the Baseline Profile 
         without additional constraints at Level 1 MUST be implied. 

      max-mbps, max-fs, max-cpb, max-dpb, and max-br: 
         The common property of these parameters is as specified in RFC 
         3984. 

      max-mbps: This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      max-fs: This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      max-cpb: The value of max-cpb is an integer indicating the 
         maximum coded picture buffer size in units of 1000 bits for 
         the VCL HRD parameters (see A.3.1 item i or G.10.2.2 item g of 
         [H.264]) and in units of 1200 bits for the NAL HRD parameters 
         (see A.3.1 item j or G.10.2.2 item h of [H.264]).  The max-cpb 
         parameter signals that the receiver has more memory than the 
         minimum amount of coded picture buffer memory required by the 
         signaled level conveyed in the value of the profile-level-id 
         parameter.  When max-cpb is signaled, the receiver MUST be 
         able to decode NAL unit streams that conform to the signaled 
         level, with the exception that the MaxCPB value in Table A-1 
         of [H.264] for the signaled level is replaced with the value 
         of max-cpb.  The value of max-cpb MUST be greater than or 
         equal to the value of MaxCPB for the level given in Table A-1 
         of [H.264].  Senders MAY use this knowledge to construct coded 
         video streams with greater variation of bit rate than can be 
         achieved with the MaxCPB value in Table A-1 of [H.264]. 

            Informative note: The coded picture buffer is used in the 
            Hypothetical Reference Decoder (HRD, Annex C) of [H.264].  
            The use of the HRD is recommended in SVC encoders to verify 
 
 
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            that the produced bitstream conforms to the standard and to 
            control the output bitrate.  Thus, the coded picture buffer 
            is conceptually independent of any other potential buffers 
            in the receiver, including remultiplexing and de-jitter 
            buffers.  The coded picture buffer need not be implemented 
            in decoders as specified in Annex C of [H.264]; standard-
            compliant decoders can have any buffering arrangements 
            provided that they can decode standard-compliant 
            bitstreams.  Thus, in practice, the input buffer for video 
            decoder can be integrated with the remultiplexing and de-
            jitter buffers of the receiver. 

      max-dpb: This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      max-br: The value of max-br is an integer indicating the maximum 
         video bit rate in units of 1000 bits per second for the VCL 
         HRD parameters (see A.3.1 item i or G.10.2.2 item g of 
         [H.264]) and in units of 1200 bits per second for the NAL HRD 
         parameters (see A.3.1 item j or G.10.2.2 item h of [H.264]). 

         The max-br parameter signals that the video decoder of the 
         receiver is capable of decoding video at a higher bit rate 
         than is required by the signaled level conveyed in the value 
         of the profile-level-id parameter. 

         When max-br is signaled, the video codec of the receiver MUST 
         be able to decode NAL unit streams that conform to the 
         signaled level, conveyed in the profile-level-id parameter, 
         with the following exceptions in the limits specified by the 
         level: 

         o The value of max-br replaces the MaxBR value of the 
            signaled level (in Table A-1 of [H.264]). 

         o When the max-cpb parameter is not present, the result of 
            the following formula replaces the value of MaxCPB in Table 
            A-1 of [H.264]: (MaxCPB of the signaled level) * max-br / 
            (MaxBR of the signaled level). 

         For example, if a receiver signals capability for Level 1.2 
         with max-br equal to 1550, this indicates a maximum video 
         bitrate of 1550 kbits/sec for VCL HRD parameters, a maximum 
         video bitrate of 1860 kbits/sec for NAL HRD parameters, and a 
         CPB size of 4036458 bits (1550000 / 384000 * 1000 * 1000). 

         The value of max-br MUST be greater than or equal to the value 
         MaxBR for the signaled level given in Table A-1 of [H.264]. 
 
 
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         Senders MAY use this knowledge to send higher bitrate video as 
         allowed in the level definition of SVC, to achieve improved 
         video quality. 

            Informative note: This parameter was added primarily to 
            complement a similar codepoint in the ITU-T Recommendation 
            H.245, so as to facilitate signaling gateway designs.  No 
            assumption can be made from the value of this parameter 
            that the network is capable of handling such bit rates at 
            any given time.  In particular, no conclusion can be drawn 
            that the signaled bit rate is possible under congestion 
            control constraints. 

      redundant-pic-cap: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      sprop-parameter-sets: 
         This parameter MAY be used to convey any sequence parameter 
         set, subset sequence parameter set and picture parameter set 
         NAL units (herein referred to as the initial parameter set NAL 
         units) that MUST be placed in the NAL unit stream to precede 
         any other NAL units in decoding order by the receiver.  The 
         parameter MUST NOT be used to indicate codec capability in any 
         capability exchange procedure.  The value of the parameter is 
         the base64 [RFC3548] representation of the initial parameter 
         set NAL units as specified in sections 7.3.2.1, 7.3.2.2 and 
         G.7.3.2.1 of [H.264].  The parameter sets are conveyed in 
         decoding order, and no framing of the parameter set NAL units 
         takes place.  A comma is used to separate any pair of 
         parameter sets in the list.  Note that the number of bytes in 
         a parameter set NAL unit is typically less than 10, but a 
         picture parameter set NAL unit can contain several hundreds of 
         bytes. 

            Informative note: When several payload types are offered in 
            the SDP Offer/Answer model, each with its own sprop-
            parameter-sets parameter, then the receiver cannot assume 
            that those parameter sets do not use conflicting storage 
            locations (i.e., identical values of parameter set 
            identifiers).  Therefore, a receiver should double-buffer 
            all sprop-parameter-sets and make them available to the 
            decoder instance that decodes a certain payload type. 

      parameter-add:  
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 


 
 
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      packetization-mode:  
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      sprop-interleaving-depth:  
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      sprop-deint-buf-req: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      deint-buf-cap: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      sprop-init-buf-time: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      sprop-max-don-diff: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      max-rcmd-nalu-size: 
         This parameter is as specified in RFC 3984. 

      pmode: 
         This parameter signals the properties of a NAL unit stream 
         carried in more than one RTP session using session 
         multiplexing or the capabilities of a receiver implementation.  
         When the value of pmode is equal to "NI-T", the NI-T mode MUST 
         be used.  When the value of pmode is equal to "NI-C", the NI-C 
         mode MUST be used.  When the value of pmode is equal to "NI-
         TC" or pmode is not present, the NI-TC mode MUST be used.  
         When the value of pmode is equal to "I-C", the I-C mode MUST 
         be used.  The value of pmode MUST have one of the following 
         tokens: "NI-T", "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C".  This parameter 
         MUST NOT be present, when "packetization-mode" is present. 

      sprop-mst-interleave-depth: 
         This parameter MUST NOT be present when the value of pmode is 
         equal to "NI-T".  This parameter MUST be present when the 
         value of pmode is equal to "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C" or pmode 
         is not present. 

         This parameter signals the properties of a NAL unit stream 
         carried in the current RTP session and the RTP sessions the 
         current RTP session depends on.  It is guaranteed that 
         receivers can reconstruct NAL unit decoding order as specified 
         in Subsection 8.1.2 of this memo when the remultiplexing 
         buffer size is at least the value of sprop-mst-interleave-
         depth + 1 in terms of VCL NAL units. [Ed. (AE): But you don't 
 
 
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         say what's the property explicitly. Only what it guarantees. 
         Is it interleaving depth?] 

         The value of sprop-mst-interleave-depth MUST be an integer in 
         the range of 0 to 32767, inclusive. 

      sprop-remux-buf-req: 
         This parameter MUST NOT be present when the value of pmode is 
         equal to "NI-T".  It MUST be present when pmode is not present 
         or the value of pmode is equal to "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C". 

         sprop-remux-buf-req signals the required size of the 
         remultiplexing buffer for the NAL unit stream carried in the 
         current RTP session and the RTP sessions the current RTP 
         session depends on.  It is guaranteed that receivers can 
         recover the decoding order of the received NAL units from the 
         current RTP session and the RTP sessions the current RTP 
         session depends on as specified in section 8.1.2, when the 
         remultiplexing buffer size is at least the value of sprop-
         remux-buf-req in terms of bytes. 

         The value of sprop-remux-buf-req MUST be an integer in the 
         range of 0 to 4294967295, inclusive. 

      remux-buf-cap: 
         This parameter signals the capabilities of a receiver 
         implementation and indicates the amount of remultiplexing 
         buffer space in units of bytes that the receiver has available 
         for recovering the NAL unit decoding order as specified in 
         section 8.1.2.  A receiver is able to handle any NAL unit 
         stream for which the value of the sprop-remux-buf-req 
         parameter is smaller than or equal to this parameter. 

         If the parameter is not present, then a value of 0 MUST be 
         used for remux-buf-cap.  The value of remux-buf-cap MUST be an 
         integer in the range of 0 to 4294967295, inclusive. 

      sprop-remux-init-buf-time: 
         This parameter MAY be used to signal the properties of a NAL 
         unit stream carried in the current RTP session and the RTP 
         sessions the current RTP session depends on.  The parameter 
         MUST NOT be present if pmode is not present or the value of 
         pmode is equal to "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C". 

         The parameter signals the initial buffering time that a 
         receiver MUST wait before starting to recover the NAL unit 
         decoding order as specified in Subsection 8.1.2 of this memo. 
 
 
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         The parameter is coded as a non-negative base10 integer 
         representation in clock ticks of a 90-kHz clock.  If the 
         parameter is not present, then no initial buffering time value 
         is defined.  Otherwise the value of sprop-remux-init-buf-time 
         MUST be an integer in the range of 0 to 4294967295, inclusive. 

      sprop-mst-max-don-diff: 
         This parameter MAY be used to signal the properties of a NAL 
         unit stream carried in the current RTP session and the RTP 
         sessions the current RTP session depends on.  It MUST NOT be 
         used to signal transmitter or receiver or codec capabilities.  
         The parameter MUST NOT be present if the value of pmode is 
         equal to "NI-T".  sprop-mst-max-don-diff is an integer in the 
         range of 0 to 32767, inclusive.  If sprop-mst-max-don-diff is 
         not present, the value of the parameter is unspecified.  
         sprop-mst-max-don-diff is calculated same as sprop-max-don-
         diff as specified in RFC 3984, with decoding order number 
         being replaced by cross-session decoding order number. 

      sprop-prebuf-size: 
         This parameter MAY be present when the current RTP session 
         depends on any other RTP session.  This parameter MUST NOT be 
         present when pmode is not present or the value of pmode is 
         equal to "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C".  sprop-prebuf-size MAY 
         signal the required size of the receiver buffer for the NAL 
         unit stream per RTP session.  This parameter may be useful to 
         compensate the impact of inter-RTP session jitter, when the 
         receiver buffer size is at least the value of sprop-prebuf-
         size in terms of bytes.  Herein the NAL unit stream refers to 
         the one consisting of all NAL units conveyed in the current 
         RTP session. 

         The value of sprop-prebuf-size MUST be an integer in the range 
         of 0 to 4294967295, inclusive. 

            Informative note: sprop-prebuf-size indicates the required 
            size of the prebuffering receiver buffer only.  When 
            network jitter can occur, an appropriately sized jitter 
            buffer has to be provisioned for as well.  When a scalable 
            bitstream is conveyed in more than one RTP session, and the 
            sessions initiates at different time, the session 
            initiation variation has also to be compensated by an 
            appropriately sized buffer.  

            [Ed. (AE): None of the sprop-prebuf-* parameters are 
            mentioned anywhere else in the spec. Why are they needed?] 

 
 
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      sprop-prebuf-time: 
         This parameter MAY be used to signal the properties of a NAL 
         unit stream within a session multiplexing.  Herein the NAL 
         unit stream refers to the one consisting of all NAL units 
         conveyed in the current RTP session.  This parameter MUST NOT 
         be present when pmode is not present or the value of pmode is 
         equal to "NI-C", "NI-TC", or "I-C". 

         The parameter signals the initial buffering time used for a 
         receiver before starting to recover the NAL unit decoding 
         order for more than one RTP session. The parameter is the 
         maximum value of (transmission time of a NAL unit - decoding 
         time of the NAL unit), assuming reliable and instantaneous 
         transmission, the same timeline for transmission and decoding, 
         and that decoding starts when the first packet arrives. 

         The parameter is coded as a non-negative base10 integer 
         representation in clock ticks of a 90-kHz clock.  If the 
         parameter is not present, then no initial buffering time value 
         is defined.  Otherwise the value of sprop-prebuf-time MUST be 
         an integer in the range of 0 to 4294967295, inclusive. 

         In addition to the signaled sprop-prebuf-time, receivers 
         SHOULD take into account the transmission delay jitter 
         buffering, including buffering for the delay jitter caused by 
         mixers, translators, gateways, proxies, traffic-shapers, and 
         other network elements.  Yet another aspect receivers SHOULD 
         take into account is the session initiation variation when a 
         scalable bitstream is conveyed in more than one session, 
         including buffering the variation. 

         [Ed. (YkW): Need to discuss how inter-RTP session jitter 
         should be handled in general, and how it works by using sprop-
         prebuf-size and sprop-prebuf-time.] 

      sprop-scalability-info: 
         This parameter MAY be used to convey the NAL unit containing 
         the scalability information SEI message as specified in Annex 
         G of [H.264].  This parameter MAY be used to signal the 
         contained Layers of an SVC bitstream.  The parameter MUST NOT 
         be used to indicate codec capability in any capability 
         exchange procedure.  The value of the parameter is the base64 
         representation of the NAL unit containing the scalability 
         information SEI message.  If present, the NAL unit MUST 
         contain only a scalability information SEI message. 


 
 
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         This parameter MAY be used in an offering or declarative SDP 
         message to indicate what Layers can be provided.  A receiver 
         MAY indicate its choice of one Layer using the optional media 
         type parameter scalable-layer-id. 

      sprop-layer-range: 
         This parameter MAY be used to signal two sets of the layer 
         identification values of the lowest and highest operation 
         points conveyed in the RTP session.  Each set is a base16 
         representation of a three-character value, with the first 
         character representing DID, the second character representing 
         QID, and the third character representing TID.  The two sets 
         are comma separated.  Let DIDl and DIDh be the lowest DID 
         value and the highest DID value, respectively, among all the 
         NAL units conveyed in the RTP session. Let QIDl and TIDl be 
         the lowest  QID value and the lowest TID value, respectively, 
         among all the NAL units that are conveyed in the RTP session 
         and that have DID equal to DIDl. Let QIDh and TIDh be the 
         highest QID value and the highest  TID value, respectively, 
         among all the NAL units that are conveyed in the RTP session 
         and that have DID equal to DIDh.  The first set indicates the 
         DID, QID and TID values of the lowest operation point, for 
         which the DID, QID and TID values are equal to DIDl, QIDl, and 
         TIDl, respectively.  The second set indicates the DID, QID and 
         TID values of the highest operation point, for which the DID, 
         QID and TID values are equal to DIDh, QIDh, and TIDh, 
         respectively. 

      scalable-layer-id: 
         This parameter MAY be used to signal a receiver's choice of 
         the offers or declared operation points or layers using sprop-
         scalability-info.  The value of scalable-layer-id is a base16 
         representation of the layer_id[ i ] syntax element in the 
         scalability information SEI message as specified in [H.264]. 

         [Ed. (TS): That is, a SDP capable receiver/middle-box must 
         decode the sprop-scalabiltiy-info syntax, which is not 
         specified in this memo, to select a scalable-layer-id. This is 
         currently not addressed in the offer answer section!] 

      sprop-spatial-resolution: 
         [Ed. (??): I know that framerate and bitrate SDP parameters 
         are already available, but failed to find a spatial resolution 
         SDP parameter. It would be good if this is already defined. 
         Otherwise, it would be better to be defined somewhere else 
         because it is a generic parameter.] 

 
 
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         This parameter MAY be used to indicate the property of a 
         stream or the capability of a receiver or sender 
         implementation.  The value is a base16 of the width and height 
         of the spatial resolution, in pixels, separated by a comma.  

         [Edt. Note (TS): Shouldn't this be a generic SDP parameter?] 

      Encoding considerations: 
         This type is only defined for transfer via RTP (RFC 3550). 

      Security considerations: 
         See Section 10 of RFC XXXX. 

      Public specification: 
         Please refer to Section 14 of RFC XXXX. 

      Additional information: 
         None 

      File extensions:     none 

      Macintosh file type code: none 

      Object identifier or OID: none 

      Person & email address to contact for further information: 

      Intended usage:      COMMON 

      Author: 

      Change controller: 
         IETF Audio/Video Transport working group delegated from the 
         IESG. 

9.2 SDP Parameters 

   [Ed. (??): For agreeing on a Layer or OP in unicast, an SDP can 
   contain multiple m lines with bitrate, framerate and spatial 
   resolution parameters available, in addition to sprop-scalability-
   info. The receive can select one of the m lines, or, for operation 
   points that are not included in the m lines, one of the "scalable 
   layers" specified by sprop-scalabiltiy-info using scalable-layer-id. 

   For layered multicast, then the grouping signaling in I-D.ietf-
   mmusic-decoding-dependency is needed. 

 
 
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   The above would conveniently support also the normal ROI use cases 
   (with a few ROIs each indicated as a "scalable layer") but not the 
   interactive ROI use cases.  The quality layer using priority_id use 
   cases are not supported either. That would need one more optional 
   media type parameter, to identify a quality layer.  The lightweight 
   transcoding use cases should be supported well by using (multiple) 
   normal AVC SDP offering messages.] 

9.2.1 Mapping of Payload Type Parameters to SDP 

   The media type video/H264-SVC string is mapped to fields in the 
   Session Description Protocol (SDP) as follows: 

   o  The media name in the "m=" line of SDP MUST be video. 

   o  The encoding name in the "a=rtpmap" line of SDP MUST be H264-SVC 
      (the media subtype). 

   o  The clock rate in the "a=rtpmap" line MUST be 90000. 

   o  The OPTIONAL parameters "profile-level-id", "max-mbps", "max-fs", 
      "max-cpb", "max-dpb", "max-br", "redundant-pic-cap", "sprop-
      parameter-sets", "parameter-add", "packetization-mode", "sprop-
      interleaving-depth", "deint-buf-cap", "sprop-deint-buf-req", 
      "sprop-init-buf-time", "sprop-max-don-diff", "max-rcmd-nalu-
      size", "pmode", "sprop-mst-interleave-depth", "sprop-remux-buf-
      req", "remux-buf-cap", "sprop-remux-init-buf-time", "sprop-mst-
      max-don-diff", "sprop-prebuf-size", "sprop-prebuf-time", "sprop-
      layer-range", "sprop-scalability-info", "scalable-layer-id", and 
      "sprop-spatial-resolution", when present, MUST be included in the 
      "a=fmtp" line of SDP.  These parameters are expressed as a media 
      type string, in the form of a semicolon separated list of 
      parameter=value pairs. 

9.2.2 Usage with the SDP Offer/Answer Model 

   When H.264 or SVC is offered over RTP using SDP in an Offer/Answer 
   model [RFC3264] for negotiation for unicast usage, the following 
   limitations and rules apply: 

   o  The parameters identifying a media format configuration for H.264 
      or SVC are "profile-level-id", "packetization-mode", and, if 
      required by "packetization-mode", "sprop-deint-buf-req".  These 
      three parameters MUST be used symmetrically; i.e., the answerer 
      MUST either maintain all configuration parameters or remove the 
      media format (payload type) completely, if one or more of the 
      parameter values are not supported. 
 
 
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         Informative note: The requirement for symmetric use applies 
         only for the above three parameters and not for the other 
         stream properties and capability parameters. 

      To simplify handling and matching of these configurations, the 
      same RTP payload type number used in the offer SHOULD also be 
      used in the answer, as specified in [RFC3264].  An answer MUST 
      NOT contain a payload type number used in the offer unless the 
      configuration ("profile-level-id", "packetization-mode", and, if 
      present, "sprop-deint-buf-req") is the same as in the offer. 

         Informative note: An offerer, when receiving the answer, has 
         to compare payload types not declared in the offer based on 
         media type (i.e., video/H264-SVC) and the above three 
         parameters with any payload types it has already declared, in 
         order to determine whether the configuration in question is 
         new or equivalent to a configuration already offered. 

      An answerer MAY select from the layers offered in the "sprop-
      scalability-information" parameter by including "scalable-layer-
      id" or "sprop-layer-range" in the answer.[Edt. Note: do we need 
      to additionally define behavior with snd/rcvonly parameter?] 

   o  The parameters "sprop-parameter-sets", "sprop-deint-buf-req", 
      "sprop-interleaving-depth", "sprop-max-don-diff", "sprop-init-
      buf-time", "sprop-prebuf-size", "sprop-prebuf-time", "sprop-
      scalability-information", "sprop-layer-range" describe the 
      properties of the NAL unit stream that the offerer or answerer is 
      sending for this media format configuration.  This differs from 
      the normal usage of the Offer/Answer parameters: normally such 
      parameters declare the properties of the stream that the offerer 
      or the answerer is able to receive.  When dealing with H.264 or 
      SVC, the offerer assumes that the answerer will be able to 
      receive media encoded using the configuration being offered. 

         Informative note: The above parameters apply for any stream 
         sent by the declaring entity with the same configuration; 
         i.e., they are dependent on their source.  Rather then being 
         bound to the payload type, the values may have to be applied 
         to another payload type when being sent, as they apply for the 
         configuration. 






 
 
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   o  The capability parameters ("max-mbps", "max-fs", "max-cpb",  
      "max-dpb", "max-br", ,"redundant-pic-cap", "max-rcmd-nalu-size") 
      MAY be used to declare further capabilities.  Their 
      interpretation depends on the direction attribute.  When the 
      direction attribute is sendonly, then the parameters describe the 
      limits of the RTP packets and the NAL unit stream that the sender 
      is capable of producing.  When the direction attribute is 
      sendrecv or recvonly, then the parameters describe the 
      limitations of what the receiver accepts. 

   o  As specified above, an offerer has to include the size of the 
      deinterleaving buffer in the offer for an interleaved H.264 or 
      SVC stream.  To enable the offerer and answerer to inform each 
      other about their capabilities for deinterleaving buffering, both 
      parties are RECOMMENDED to include "deint-buf-cap".  This 
      information MAY be used when the value for "sprop-deint-buf-req" 
      is selected in a second round of offer and answer.  For 
      interleaved streams, it is also RECOMMENDED to consider offering 
      multiple payload types with different buffering requirements when 
      the capabilities of the receiver are unknown. 

   o  The "sprop-parameter-sets" parameter is used as described above.  
      In addition, an answerer MUST maintain all parameter sets 
      received in the offer in its answer.  Depending on the value of 
      the "parameter-add" parameter, different rules apply: If 
      "parameter-add" is false (0), the answer MUST NOT add any 
      additional parameter sets.  If "parameter-add" is true (1), the 
      answerer, in its answer, MAY add additional parameter sets to the 
      "sprop-parameter-sets" parameter.  The answerer MUST also, 
      independent of the value of "parameter-add", accept to receive a 
      video stream using the sprop-parameter-sets it declared in the 
      answer. 

         Informative note: care must be taken when parameter sets are 
         added not to cause overwriting of already transmitted 
         parameter sets by using conflicting parameter set identifiers. 

   For streams being delivered over multicast, the following rules 
   apply in addition: 

   o  The stream properties parameters ("sprop-parameter-sets", "sprop- 
      deint-buf-req", "sprop-interleaving-depth", "sprop-max-don-diff", 
      "sprop-init-buf-time", "sprop-prebuf-size", "sprop-prebuf-time", 
      "sprop-scalability-information", and "sprop-layer-range") MUST 
      NOT be changed by the answerer.  Thus, a payload type can either 
      be accepted unaltered or removed. 

 
 
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   o  The receiver capability parameters "max-mbps", "max-fs", "max-
      cpb", "max-dpb", "max-br", and "max-rcmd-nalu-size" MUST be 
      supported by the answerer for all streams declared as sendrecv or 
      recvonly; otherwise, one of the following actions MUST be 
      performed: the media format is removed, or the session rejected. 

   o  The receiver capability parameter redundant-pic-cap SHOULD be 
      supported by the answerer for all streams declared as sendrecv or 
      recvonly as follows:  The answerer SHOULD NOT include redundant 
      coded pictures in the transmitted stream if the offerer indicated 
      redundant-pic-cap equal to 0.  Otherwise (when redundant_pic_cap 
      is equal to 1), it is beyond the scope of this memo to recommend 
      how the answerer should use redundant coded pictures. 

   Below are the complete lists of how the different parameters shall 
   be interpreted in the different combinations of offer or answer and 
   direction attribute. 

   o  In offers and answers for which "a=sendrecv" or no direction 
      attribute is used, or in offers and answers for which 
      "a=recvonly" is used, the following interpretation of the 
      parameters MUST be used. 

      Declaring actual configuration or properties for receiving: 

         - profile-level-id 
         - packetization-mode 

      Declaring actual properties of the stream to be sent (applicable 
      only when "a=sendrecv" or no direction attribute is used): 

         - sprop-deint-buf-req 
         - sprop-interleaving-depth 
         - sprop-parameter-sets 
         - sprop-max-don-diff 
         - sprop-init-buf-time 
         - sprop-prebuf-size 
         - sprop-prebuf-time 
         - sprop-scalability-information 
         - sprop-layer-range 
         - scalable-layer-id 

      Declaring receiver implementation capabilities: 

         - max-mbps 
         - max-fs 
         - max-cpb 
 
 
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         - max-dpb 
         - max-br 
         - redundant-pic-cap 
         - deint-buf-cap 
         - max-rcmd-nalu-size 

      Declaring how Offer/Answer negotiation shall be performed: 

         - parameter-add 

   o  In an offer or answer for which the direction attribute 
      "a=sendonly" is included for the media stream, the following 
      interpretation of the parameters MUST be used: 

      Declaring actual configuration and properties of stream proposed 
      to be sent: 

         - profile-level-id 
         - packetization-mode 
         - sprop-deint-buf-req 
         - sprop-max-don-diff 
         - sprop-init-buf-time 
         - sprop-parameter-sets 
         - sprop-interleaving-depth 
         - sprop-prebuf-size 
         - sprop-prebuf-time 
         - sprop-scalability-information 
         - sprop-layer-range 
         - sprop-spatial-resoltuion 

      Declaring how Offer/Answer negotiation shall be performed: 

         - parameter-add 

   Furthermore, the following considerations are necessary: 

   o  Parameters used for declaring receiver capabilities are in 
      general downgradable; i.e., they express the upper limit for a 
      sender's possible behavior.  Thus a sender MAY select to set its 
      encoder using only lower/lesser or equal values of these 
      parameters. "sprop-parameter-sets" MUST NOT be used in a sender's 
      declaration of its capabilities, as the limits of the values that 
      are carried inside the parameter sets are implicit with the 
      profile and level used. 



 
 
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   o  Parameters declaring a configuration point are not downgradable, 
      with the exception of the level part of the "profile-level-id" 
      parameter.  This expresses values a receiver expects to be used 
      and must be used verbatim on the sender side. 

   o  When a sender's capabilities are declared, and non-downgradable 
      parameters are used in this declaration, then these parameters 
      express a configuration that is acceptable.  In order to achieve 
      high interoperability levels, it is often advisable to offer 
      multiple alternative configurations; e.g., for the packetization 
      mode.  It is impossible to offer multiple configurations in a 
      single payload type.  Thus, when multiple configuration offers 
      are made, each offer requires its own RTP payload type associated 
      with the offer. 

   o  A receiver SHOULD understand all MIME parameters, even if it only 
      supports a subset of the payload format's functionality.  This 
      ensures that a receiver is capable of understanding when an offer 
      to receive media can be downgraded to what is supported by 
      receiver of the offer. 

   o  An answerer MAY extend the offer with additional media format 
      configurations.  However, to enable their usage, in most cases a 
      second offer is required from the offerer to provide the stream 
      properties parameters that the media sender will use.  This also 
      has the effect that the offerer has to be able to receive this 
      media format configuration, not only to send it. 

   o  If an offerer wishes to have non-symmetric capabilities between 
      sending and receiving, the offerer has to offer different RTP 
      sessions; i.e., different media lines declared as "recvonly" and 
      "sendonly", respectively.  This may have further implications on 
      the system. 

9.2.3 Usage with Multi-Source Transmission 

   If MST is used, the rules on signaling media decoding dependency in 
   SDP as defined in [I-D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-dependency] apply. 

9.2.4 Usage in Declarative Session Descriptions 

   When H.264 or SVC over RTP is offered with SDP in a declarative 
   style, as in RTSP [RFC2326] or SAP [RFC2974], the following 
   considerations are necessary. 



 
 
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   o  All parameters capable of indicating the properties of both a NAL 
      unit stream and a receiver are used to indicate the properties of 
      a NAL unit stream.  For example, in this case, the parameter 
      "profile-level-id" declares the values used by the stream, 
      instead of the capabilities of the sender.  This results in that 
      the following interpretation of the parameters MUST be used: 

      Declaring actual configuration or properties: 

         - profile-level-id 
         - sprop-parameter-sets 
         - packetization-mode 
         - sprop-interleaving-depth 
         - sprop-deint-buf-req 
         - sprop-max-don-diff 
         - sprop-init-buf-time 
         - sprop-prebuf-size 
         - sprop-prebuf-time 
         - sprop-layer-range 
         - sprop-spatial-resolution 
         - sprop-scalability-info 

      Not usable: 

         - max-mbps 
         - max-fs 
         - max-cpb 
         - max-dpb 
         - max-br 
         - redundant-pic-cap 
         - max-rcmd-nalu-size 
         - parameter-add 
         - deint-buf-cap 
         - scalable_layer_id 

   o  A receiver of the SDP is required to support all parameters and 
      values of the parameters provided; otherwise, the receiver MUST 
      reject (RTSP) or not participate in (SAP) the session.  It falls 
      on the creator of the session to use values that are expected to 
      be supported by the receiving application. 

9.3 Examples 

9.3.1 Example for Offering A Single SVC Session 

      Offerer -> Answerer SDP message: 

 
 
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      v=0 
      o=jdoe 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 192.0.2.12 
      s=SVC SDP example  
      i=SVC Scalable Video Coding session 
      t=2873397496 2873404696 
      m=video 20000 RTP/AVP 96 97 98 
      a=rtpmap:96 H264/90000 
      a=fmtp:96 profile-level-id=4d400a; packetization-mode=1; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,aP4Eag==; 
      a=rtpmap:97 H264-SVC/90000 
      a=fmtp:97 profile-level-id=53000c; packetization-mode=1; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=rtpmap:98 H264-SVC/90000 
      a=fmtp:98 profile-level-id=53000c; packetization-mode=2; 
      init-buf-time=156320; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 

9.3.2 Example for Offering Session Multiplexing 

      Offerer -> Answerer SDP message: 

      v=0 
      o=jdoe 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 192.0.2.12 
      s=SVC Scalable Video Coding session 
      i=SDP is an Offer for a session offered by a transcoding entity 
      t=2873397496 2873404696 
      a=group:DDP 1 2 3 
      m=video 20000 RTP/AVP 96 97 98 
      a=rtpmap:96 H264/90000 
      a=fmtp:96 profile-level-id=4d400a; packetization-mode=0; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,aP4Eag==; 
      a=rtpmap:97 H264/90000 
      a=fmtp:97 profile-level-id=53000c; packetization-mode=1; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=rtpmap:98 H264/90000 
      a=fmtp:98 profile-level-id=53000c; packetization-mode=2; 
      init-buf-time=156320; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=mid:1 
      m=video 20002 RTP/AVP 99 100 
      a=rtpmap:99 H264-SVC/90000 
      a=fmtp:99 profile-level-id=53000c; pmode=NI-T; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
 
 
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      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=rtpmap:100 H264-SVC/90000 
      a=fmtp:100 profile-level-id=53000c; pmode=I-C; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=mid:2 
      a=depend:99 lay 1:96,97; 100 lay 1:98 
      m=video 20004 RTP/AVP 101 
      a=rtpmap:101 H264-SVC/90000 
      a=fmtp:101 profile-level-id=53000c; pmode=NI-TC; 
      sprop-parameter-sets=Z01ACprLFicg,Z1MADEsA1NZYWCWQ,aP4Eag==,aEvgR
      qA=,aGvgRiA=; 
      a=mid:3 
      a=depend:101 lay 1:96,97 2:99 

9.4 Parameter Set Considerations 

   Please see Section 8.4 of [RFC3984]. 

10. Security Considerations 

   Section 9 of [RFC3984] applies.  Additionally, the following 
   applies. 

   Decoders MUST exercise caution with respect to the handling of 
   reserved NAL unit types and reserved SEI messages, particularly if 
   they contain active elements, and MUST restrict their domain of 
   applicability to the presentation containing the stream.  The safest 
   way is to simply discard these NAL units and SEI messages. 

   When integrity protection is applied, care MUST be taken that the 
   stream being transported may be scalable; hence a receiver may be 
   able to access only part of the entire stream. 

      Informative note: Other security aspects, including 
      confidentiality, authentication, and denial-of-service threat, 
      for SVC are similar as H.264/AVC, as discussed in Section 9 of 
      [RFC3984]. 

11. Congestion Control 

   Within any given RTP session carrying payload according to this 
   specification, the provisions of section 12 of [RFC3984] apply.  
   Reducing the session bandwidth is possible by one or more of the 
   following means, listed in an order that, in most cases, will assure 
   the least negative impact to the user experience: 

 
 
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   a) within the highest Layer identified by the DIDfield, utilize the 
     TID and/or QID fields in the NAL unit header to drop NAL units 
     with lower importance for the decoding process or human 
     perception. 

   b) drop all NAL units belonging to the highest enhancement Layer as 
     identified by the highest DID value. 

   c) dropping NAL units according to their importance for the decoding 
     process, as indicated by the fields in the NAL unit header of the 
     NAL units or in the prefix NAL units. 

   d) dropping NAL units or entire packets not according to the 
     aforementioned rules (media-unaware stream thinning).  This 
     results in the reception of a non-compliant bitstream and, most 
     likely, in very annoying artifacts 

      Informative note: The discussion above is centered on NAL units 
      and not on packets, primarily because that is the level where 
      senders can meaningfully manipulate the scalable bitstream.  The 
      mapping of NAL units to RTP packets is fairly flexible when using 
      aggregation packets.  Depending on the nature of the congestion 
      control algorithm, the "dimension" of congestion measurement 
      (packet count or bitrate) and reaction to it (reducing packet 
      count or bitrate or both) can be adjusted accordingly. 

   All aforementioned means are available to the RTP sender, regardless 
   whether that sender is located in the sending endpoint or in a mixer 
   based MANE. 

   When a translator-based MANE is employed, then the MANE MAY 
   manipulate the session only on the MANE's outgoing path, so that the 
   sensed end-to-end congestion falls within the permissible envelope.  
   As all translators, in this case the MANE needs to rewrite RTCP RRs 
   to reflect the manipulations it has performed on the session. 

      Informative note: Applications MAY also implement, in addition or 
      separately, other congestion control mechanisms, e.g. as 
      described in [RFC3450] and [Yan]. 

12. IANA Consideration 

   [Edt. Note: A new media type should be registered from IANA.] 




 
 
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13. Informative Appendix: Application Examples 

   [Ed. (AE): I think this whole section does not add any real value, 
   is outdated, and should be eliminated. In particular, the 
   application scenario of the only currently shipping SVC product is 
   not even listed here.] 

13.1 Introduction 

   Scalable video coding is a concept that has been around since at 
   least MPEG-2 [MPEG2], which goes back as early as 1993.  
   Nevertheless, it has never gained wide acceptance; perhaps partly 
   because applications didn't materialize in the form envisioned 
   during standardization. 

   ISO/IEC MPEG and ITU-T VCEG, respectively, performed a requirement 
   analysis for the SVC project.  Dozens of scenarios have been 
   studied.  While some of the scenarios appear not to follow the most 
   basic design principles of the Internet, e.g. as discussed in 
   section 13.5 -- and are therefore not appropriate for IETF 
   standardization -- others are clearly in the scope of IETF work.  Of 
   these, this draft chooses the following subset for immediate 
   consideration.  The MPEG and VCEG requirement documents are 
   available in [JVT-N026] and [JVT-N027], respectively. 

   With these remarks, we now introduce three main application 
   scenarios that we consider relevant, and that are implementable with 
   this specification. 

13.2 Layered Multicast 

   This well-understood form of the use of layered coding [McCanne] 
   implies that all layers are individually conveyed in their own RTP 
   packet streams, each carried in its own RTP session using the IP 
   (multicast) address and port number as the single demultiplexing 
   point.  Receivers "tune" into the layers by subscribing to the IP 
   multicast, normally by using IGMP [IGMP].  Depending on the 
   application scenario, it is also possible to convey a number of 
   layers in one RTP session, when finer operation points within the 
   subset of layers are not needed. 

   Layered multicast has the great advantage of simplicity and easy 
   implementation.  However, it has also the great disadvantage of 
   utilizing many different transport addresses.  While we consider 
   this not to be a major problem for a professionally maintained 
   content server, receiving client endpoints need to open many ports 
   to IP multicast addresses in their firewalls.  This is a practical 
 
 
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   problem from a firewall and network address translation (NAT) 
   viewpoint.  Furthermore, even today IP multicast is not as widely 
   deployed as many wish. 

   We consider layered multicast an important application scenario for 
   the following reasons.  First, it is well understood and the 
   implementation constraints are well known.  Second, there may well 
   be large scale IP networks outside the immediate Internet context 
   that may wish to employ layered multicast in the future.  One 
   possible example could be a combination of content creation and 
   core-network distribution for the various mobile TV services, e.g. 
   those being developed by 3GPP (MBMS) [MBMS] and DVB (DVB-H) [DVB-H]. 

13.3 Streaming of an SVC Scalable Stream 

   In this scenario, a streaming server has a repository of stored SVC 
   coded layers for a given content.  At the time of streaming, and 
   according to the capabilities, connectivity, and congestion 
   situation of the client(s), the streaming server generates and 
   serves a scalable stream.  Both unicast and multicast serving is 
   possible.  At the same time, the streaming server may use the same 
   repository of stored layers to compose different streams (with a 
   different set of layers) intended for other audiences. 

   As every endpoint receives only a single SVC RTP session, the number 
   of firewall pinholes can be optimized to one. 

   The main difference between this scenario and straightforward 
   simulcasting lies in the architecture and the requirements of the 
   streaming server, and is therefore out of the scope of IETF 
   standardization.  However, compelling arguments can be made why such 
   a streaming server design makes sense.  One possible argument is 
   related to storage space and channel bandwidth.  Another is 
   bandwidth adaptability without transcoding -- a considerable 
   advantage in a congestion controlled network.  When the streaming 
   server learns about congestion, it can reduce sending bitrate by 
   choosing fewer layers, when composing the layered stream; see 
   section 11.  SVC is designed to gracefully support both bandwidth 
   rampdown and bandwidth rampup with a considerable dynamic range.  
   This payload format is designed to allow for bandwidth flexibility 
   in the mentioned sense.  While, in theory, a transcoding step could 
   achieve a similar dynamic range, the computational demands are 
   impractically high and video quality is typically lowered -- 
   therefore, few (if any) streaming servers implement full 
   transcoding. 


 
 
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13.4 Multicast to MANE, SVC Scalable Stream to Endpoint 

   This scenario is a bit more complex, and designed to optimize the 
   network traffic in a core network, while still requiring only a 
   single pinhole in the endpoint's firewall.  One of its key 
   applications is the mobile TV market. 

   Consider a large private IP network, e.g. the core network of 3GPP.  
   Streaming servers within this core network can be assumed to be 
   professionally maintained.  We assume that these servers can have 
   many ports open to the network and that layered multicast is a real 
   option.  Therefore, we assume that the streaming server multicasts 
   SVC scalable layers, instead of simulcasting different 
   representations of the same content at different bit rates. 

   Also consider many endpoints of different classes.  Some of these 
   endpoints may not have the processing power or the display size to 
   meaningfully decode all layers; others may have these capabilities.  
   Users of some endpoints may not wish to pay for high quality and are 
   happy with a base service, which may be cheaper or even free.  Other 
   users are willing to pay for high quality.  Finally, some connected 
   users may have a bandwidth problem in that they can't receive the 
   bandwidth they would want to receive -- be it through congestion, 
   connectivity, change of service quality, or for whatever other 
   reasons.  However, all these users have in common that they don't 
   want to be exposed too much, and therefore the number of firewall 
   pinholes need to be small. 

   This situation can be handled best by introducing middleboxes close 
   to the edge of the core network, which receive the layered multicast 
   streams and compose the single SVC scalable bit stream according to 
   the needs of the endpoint connected.  These middleboxes are called 
   MANEs throughout this specification.  In practice, we envision the 
   MANE to be part of (or at least physically and topologically close 
   to) the base station of a mobile network, where all the signaling 
   and media traffic necessarily are multiplexed on the same physical 
   link.  This is why we do not worry too much about decomposition 
   aspects of the MANE as such. 

   MANEs necessarily need to be fairly complex devices.  They certainly 
   need to understand the signaling, so, for example, to associate the 
   PT octet in the RTP header with the SVC payload type.   

   A MANE may aggregate multiple RTP streams, possibly from multiple 
   RTP sessions, thus to reduce the number of firewall pinholes 
   required at the endpoints. This type of MANEs is conceptually easy 
   to implement and can offer powerful features, primarily because it 
 
 
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   necessarily can "see" the payload (including the RTP payload 
   headers), utilize the wealth of layering information available 
   therein, and manipulate it. 

   While such an MANE operation in its most trivial form (combining 
   multiple RTP packet streams into a single one) can be implemented 
   comparatively simply -- reordering the incoming packets according to 
   the DON and sending them in the appropriate order -- more complex 
   forms can also be envisioned.  For example, a MANE can be optimizing 
   the outgoing RTP stream to the MTU size of the outgoing path by 
   utilizing the aggregation and fragmentation mechanisms of this memo. 

   A MANE can also perform stream thinning, so to adhere to congestion 
   control principles as discussed in section 11.  While the 
   implementation of the forward (media) channel of such a MANE appears 
   to be comparatively simple, the need to rewrite RTCP RRs makes even 
   such a MANE a complex device. 

   While the implementation complexity of either case of a MANE, as 
   discussed above, is fairly high, the computational demands are 
   comparatively low.  In particular, SVC and/or this specification 
   contain means to easily generate the correct inter-layer decoding 
   order of NAL units.  No serious bit-oriented processing is required 
   and no significant state information (beyond that of the signaling 
   and perhaps the SVC sequence parameter sets) need to be kept.  

13.5 Scenarios Currently Not Considered 

   Remarks have been made that the current draft does not take into 
   consideration at least one application scenario which some JVT folks 
   considered important.  In particular, their idea was to make the RTP 
   payload format (or the media stream itself) self-contained enough 
   that a stateless, non-signaling-aware device can "thin" an RTP 
   session to meet the bandwidth demands of the endpoint.  They called 
   this device a "Router" or "Gateway", and sometimes a MANE.  
   Obviously, it's not a Router or Gateway in the IETF sense.  To 
   distinguish it from a MANE as defined in RFC 3984 and in this 
   specification, let's call it an MDfH (Magic Device from Heaven). 

   To simplify discussions, let's assume point-to-point traffic only.  
   The endpoint has a signaling relationship with the streaming server, 
   but it is known that the MDfH is somewhere in the media path (e.g. 
   because the physical network topology ensures this).  It has been 
   requested, at least implicitly through MPEG's and JVT's requirements 
   document, that the MDfH should be capable to intercept the SVC 
   scalable bit stream, modify it by dropping packets or parts thereof, 
   and forwarding the resulting packet stream to the receiving 
 
 
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   endpoint.  It has been requested that this payload specification 
   contains protocol elements facilitating such an operation, and the 
   argument has been made that the NRI field of RFC 3984 serves exactly 
   the same purpose. 

   The authors of this I-D do not consider the scenario above to be 
   aligned with the most basic design philosophies the IETF follows, 
   and therefore have not addressed the comments made (except through 
   this section).  In particular, we see the following problems with 
   the MDfH approach): 

   o As the very minimum, the MDfH would need to know which RTP streams 
     are carrying SVC.  We don't see how this could be accomplished but 
     by using a static payload type.  None of the IETF defined RTP 
     profiles envision static payload types for SVC, and even the de-
     facto profiles developed by some application standard 
     organizations (3GPP for example) do not use this outdated concept.  
     Therefore, the MDfH necessarily needs to be at least "listening" 
     to the signaling. 

   o If the RTP packet payload were encrypted, it would be impossible 
     to interpret the payload header and/or the first bytes of the 
     media stream.  We understand that there are crypto schemes under 
     discussion that encrypt only the last n bytes of an RTP payload, 
     but we are more than unsure that this is fully in line with the 
     IETF's security vision. 

   Even if the above two problems would have been overcome through 
   standardization outside of the IETF, we still foresee serious design 
   flaws: 

   o An MDfH can't simply dump RTP packets it doesn't want to forward.  
     It either needs to act as a full RTP Translator (implying that it 
     rewrites RTCP RRs and such), or it needs to patch the RTP sequence 
     numbers to fulfill the RTP specification.  Not doing either would, 
     for the receiver, look like the gaps in the sequence numbers 
     occurred due to unintentional erasures, which has interesting 
     effects on congestion control (if implemented), will break pretty 
     much every meta-payload ever developed, and so on.  (Many more 
     points could be made here). 

   In summary, based on our current knowledge we are not willing to 
   specify protocol mechanisms that support an operation point that has 
   so little in common with classic RTP use. 



 
 
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13.6 SSRC Multiplexing 

   The authors have played with the idea of introducing SSRC 
   multiplexing, i.e. allowing sending multiple RTP packet streams 
   containing layers in the same RTP session, differentiated by SSRC 
   values.  Our intention was to minimize the number of firewall 
   pinholes in an endpoint to one, by using MANEs to aggregate multiple 
   outgoing sessions stemming from a server into a single session (with 
   SSRC multiplexed packet streams).  We were hoping that would be 
   feasible even with encrypted packets in an SRTP context. 

   While an implementation along these lines indeed appears to be 
   feasible for the forward media path, the RTCP RR rewrite cannot be 
   implemented in the way necessary for this scheme to work.  This 
   relates to the need to authenticate the RTCP RRs as per SRTP 
   [RFC3711].  While the RTCP RR itself does not need to be rewritten 
   by the scheme we envisioned, its transport addresses needs to be 
   manipulated.  This, in turn, is incompatible with the mandatory 
   authentication of RTCP RRs.  As a result, there would be a 
   requirement that a MANE needs to be in the RTCP security context of 
   the sessions, which was not envisioned in our use case. 

   As the envisioned use case cannot be implemented, we refrained to 
   add the considerable document complexity to support SSRC 
   multiplexing herein. 

14. References 

14.1 Normative References 

   [H.264]   ITU-T Recommendation H.264, "Advanced video coding for                                                  rd                  generic audiovisual services", 3  Edition, November 2007. 

   [I-D.ietf-mmusic-decoding-dependency]  Schierl, T., and Wenger, S., 
             "Signaling media decoding dependency in Session 
             Description Protocol (SDP)", draft-ietf-mmusic-decoding-
             dependency-02 (work in progress), May 2008. 

   [MPEG4-10]  ISO/IEC International Standard 14496-10:2005. 

   [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate 
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. 

   [RFC3264] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model 
             With Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264, June 
             2002. 

 
 
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   [RFC3548] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data 
             Encodings", RFC 3548, July 2003.  

   [RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and Jacobson, 
             V., "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time 
             Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003. 

   [RFC3984] Wenger, S., Hannuksela, M., Stockhammer, T., 
             Westerlund,M., and Singer, D., "RTP Payload Format for 
             H.264 Video", RFC 3984, February 2005. 

   [RFC4566] Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and Perkins, C., "SDP: Session 
             Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006. 

14.2 Informative References 

   [DVB-H]   DVB - Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); DVB-H 
             Implementation Guidelines, ETSI TR 102 377, 2005. 

   [H.241]   ITU-T Rec. H.241, "Extended video procedures and control 
             signals for H.300-series terminals", May 2006. 

   [IGMP]    Cain, B., Deering S., Kovenlas, I., Fenner, B., and 
             Thyagarajan, A., "Internet Group Management Protocol, 
             Version 3", RFC 3376, October 2002. 

   [JVT-N026]  Ohm J.-R., Koenen, R., and Chiariglione, L. (ed.), "SVC 
             requirements specified by MPEG (ISO/IEC JTC1 SC29 WG11)", 
             JVT-N026, available from http://ftp3.itu.ch/av-arch/jvt-
             site/2005_01_HongKongGeneva/JVT-N026.doc, Hong Kong, 
             China, January 2005. 

   [JVT-N027]  Sullivan, G., and Wiegand, T. (ed.), "SVC requirements 
             specified by VCEG (ITU-T SG16 Q.6)", JVT-N027, available 
             from http://ftp3.itu.ch/av-arch/jvt-
             site/2005_01_HongKongGeneva/JVT-N027.doc, Hong Kong, 
             China, January 2005. 

   [McCanne] McCanne, S., Jacobson, V., and Vetterli, M., "Receiver-
             driven layered multicast", in Proc. of ACM SIGCOMM'96, 
             pages 117--130, Stanford, CA, August 1996. 

   [MBMS]    3GPP - Technical Specification Group Services and System 
             Aspects; Multimedia Broadcast/Multicast Service (MBMS); 
             Protocols and codecs (Release 6), December 2005. 

   [MPEG2]   ISO/IEC International Standard 13818-2:1993. 
 
 
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   [RFC2326] Schulzrinne, H., Rao, A., and R. Lanphier, "Real Time 
             Streaming Protocol (RTSP)", RFC 2326, April 1998. 

   [RFC2974] Handley, M., Perkins, C., and E. Whelan, "Session 
             Announcement Protocol", RFC 2974, October 2000. 

   [RFC3450] Luby, M., Gemmell, J., Vicisano, L., Rizzo, L., and 
             Crowcroft, J., "Asynchronous layered coding (ALC) protocol 
             instantiation", RFC 3450, December 2002. 

   [RFC3711] Baugher, M., McGrew, D, Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and 
             Norrman, K., "The secure real-time transport protocol 
             (SRTP)", RFC 3711, March 2004. 

   [Yan]     Yan, J., Katrinis, K., May, M., and Plattner, R., "Media-
             And TCP-friendly congestion control for scalable video 
             streams", in IEEE Trans. Multimedia, pages 196--206, April 
             2006. 

15. Authors' Addresses 

   Stephan Wenger 
   Nokia 
   955 Page Mill Road 
   Palo Alto, CA 94304 
   USA 
       
   Phone: +1-650-862-7368 
   EMail: stewe@stewe.org 
    
   Ye-Kui Wang 
   Nokia Research Center 
   P.O. Box 100 
   33721 Tampere 
   Finland 
       
   Phone: +358-50-466-7004 
   EMail: ye-kui.wang@nokia.com 
    
   Thomas Schierl 
   Fraunhofer HHI 
   Einsteinufer 37 
   D-10587 Berlin 

 
 
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   Germany 
       
   Phone: +49-30-31002-227 
   Email: schierl@hhi.fhg.de 
    
   Alex Eleftheriadis 
   Vidyo, Inc. 
   433 Hackensack Ave. 
   Hackensack, NJ 07601 
   USA 
       
   Phone: +1-201-467-5135 
   Email: alex@vidyo.com 
    

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Disclaimer of Validity 

   This document and the information contained herein are provided on 
   an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE 
   REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE 
   IETF TRUST AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL 
 
 
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   WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY 
   WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE 
   ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS 
   FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 

Copyright Statement 

   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008). 

   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions 
   contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors 
   retain all their rights. 

Acknowledgement 

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the 
   Internet Society.  Further, the author Thomas Schierl of Fraunhofer 
   HHI is sponsored by the European Commission under the contract 
   number FP7-ICT-214063, project SEA.  The authors want to thank 
   Jonathan Lennox for his valuable comments on and input to the draft. 

16. Open Issues 

   1) There is a list of remaining issues for decoding order recovery in 
     session multiplexing, as documented in editing notes. 

   2) A lot of work needed for section9.2 (SDP parameters). 

   3) Bugs in RFC 3984 (see the BIS draft) need to be fixed also in the 
     memo. 

   4) Clarify the usage of the new parameters like sprop-scalability-
     info, relation to SEI and usage in offer/answer.  In the Design 
     Team's conference call on 6 May 2008, it was decided that Ye-Kui 
     would study and report. 

   5) Non-VCL NAL units, e.g. SEI messages and parameter sets, may be 
     needed by an enhancement layer but not the base layer. However, 
     according to SVC, within an access unit, these non-VCL NAL units 
     must precede VCL NAL units in decoding order. In session 
     multiplexing, should non-VCL NAL units be transported in the same 
     session as the layer that requires the non-VCL NAL unit, or should 
     they be always transported in the base session? It may be 
     impossible to find out without parsing details which session 
     respectively SPS/subset SPS a picture parameter set belongs to. It 
     may make sense for simplicity to allow a MANE to include all of 
     the non-VCL NAL units within all the sessions.  In the Design 
 
 
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     Team's conference call on 6 May 2008, it was decided that 
     Jonathan/Alex would provide text change for review, including 
     handling of prefix NAL units. 

   6) sprop-spatial-resolution: do we need this for offering/answering 
     spatial scalable layers? In this draft or a more generic draft? In 
     the Design Team's conference call on 6 May 2008, it was decided 
     that Ye-Kui will study and report. 

17. Changes Log 

   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-08 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-09 

   5-9 May 2008: YkW 
    
   - Added Alex as an editor. Welcome! 
   -  Added text for session-multiplexing packetization modes 
   -  Updated section6.5 (Packetization Modes) and added section6.5.1 
   -  Updated section6.6 (DON) and added section6.6.1 
   -  Updated PACSI introductory text and semantics (section6.9) 
   -  Updated packetization rules for session multiplexing (section7.1) 
   -  Updated the de-packetization process for session multiplexing 
     (section8.1) 
   -  Updated semantics of existing media type parameters and added new 
     media type parameters ("pmode", "sprop-mst-interleave-depth", 
     "sprop-remux-buf-req", "remux-buf-cap", "sprop-remux-init-buf-
     time", "sprop-mst-max-don-diff") in section9.1. 
   -  Removed obsolete comments. 
   -  Updated some definitions. 
   -  Updated one design principle regarding cases that must use RFC 
     3984 encapsulation.   
   -  Removed "(Informative)" from the title of section8 (De-
     Packetization Process) - same to be proposed to RFC 3984 bis. 
   -  Updated the open issues 
   -  Removed earlier changes log that can be found from earlier 
     versions of the draft 
    
   13 May 2008: AE 
    
   -  Corrected definition of "highest RTP session" in "enhancement RTP 
     session" definition. 


 
 
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   -  Moved the triggering of the use of the S and E bits from the X 
     flag to the Y flag, so that they are triggered together with 
     TL0PICIDX.  
   -  Other minor editorial corrections for language.  
    
   13 May 2008: YkW 
    
   -  Removed some obsolete comments. 
    
   14 May 2008: AE 
    
   -  Moved definition of lower/higher/lowest/highest RTP session from 
     definitions (part of "enhancement RTP session") to 8.1.1, right 
     before they are first needed. The text assumes that base is 
     lowest, and highest is the single RTP session which no other 
     session depends on.  
   -  Modified definition of "operation point" to distinguish between 
     the OP and the associated bitstream, as there may be multiple ways 
     to construct it (i.e., removing or not removing unneeded NAL units 
     below the operation point).  
   -  Renamed modes as follows: NITS->NI-T, NICD->NI-C, NICB->NI-TC, 
     and AINT->I-C. This way the interleaving and DON process are 
     evident from the acronym.  
   -  Rephrased "target NAL unit" definition (in Section 6.9) to be a 
     bit more clear. 
    
   15 May 2008: YkW 
    
   -  Added a comment regarding the definition of operation point. 
   -  Updated open issues (removed the one on PACSI). 
   -  Changed the Word template used to generation of this I-D. 
    
    
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-09 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-10 

   30 May 2008: TS 
    
   - Improved text in 7.1 for NI-T 
    
   02 June 2008: TS 
    
 
 
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   - Improved text on NI-T and NI-TC in section 8.1.1 
   - Added new packet type NI-MTAP in section 6.10  
   - Added informative text on placeholder NAL units to section 7.1.1 
   - Added text on placeholder NAL units to 8.1.1 
   - Changed text regarding the order of RTP packets are delivered from 
     the RFC3550 process to the re-ordering process in section 8.   
    
   02 June 2008: JL 
    
   - Added non-VCL and prefix NAL packetization rules sent by Jonathan 
     Lennox in sections 7.1.4 and 7.1.5. 
   - Added informative reordering algorithm. 
    
    
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-10 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-11 

   17 June 2008: TS 
    
   - Addressed the following comments sent by Colin on 10 June 2008 to 
     the mailing list: 
   - Inserted table on NAL unit and packet types into section 3.3 
   - Corrected text on NAL unit header ext. in 3.3 
   - Corrected text in 3.4 
   - Corrected text in 5.1.1 on base layer VCL Nal unit types 
   - Added reference to MANEs in section 6.1 
   - Used symbolic names for packetization modes 
   - Corrected SDP examples 
   - Removed H264 from media type section, TBD: text on "H264" needs to 
     be moved 
   - TBD: new name for session mux. 
   - Improved text on NI-T mode 
      
   From draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-11 to draft-ietf-avt-rtp-svc-12 

   30 June 2008: AE 
    
   The entire text has been edited. The following offers highlights of 
   the important changes. 
    
   - Moved Section 3 (The SVC Codec) after "Scope" (Sec. 4) and 
     "Definitions" (Sec. 5).  

 
 
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   - Changed section numbering style definitions in Word so that 
     section references are properly formed (without a trailing ".").  
    
   - Renumbered tables to run sequentially in the draft. 
    
   - Removed [SVC] from the normative references. All references to 
     [SVC] were converted to references to [H.264]. 
    
   - Major rewrite of Introduction (and Abstract) to introduce concepts 
     and facilitate understanding. The text from Scope has been moved 
     there, and the Scope re-written to be inline with the intended 
     content. 
    
   - Definition of "session-multiplexing", is problematic. It states 
     that in all cases there is a single RTP session, which is 
     incorrect. The two cases are: 1) transmission on sepearate 
     transport addresses, 2) transmission on a single transport 
     address. In the former case there are clearly multiple RTP 
     sessions. It is also not clear to me if the single transport 
     address mode is supported in this memo or it should be explicitly 
     disallowed. I put a comment to that effect in the text. 
    
   - Session multiplexing: The text uses the term RTP base session and 
     RTP enhancement session throughout, as well as RTP stream. 
     Jonathan suggested multi-session stream, but that would create a 
     lot of problems with the terminology in this draft (which says, 
     e.g., that each RTP session carries an RTP stream). So I initially 
     opted for the term "multi-session transmission". This is in-line 
     with the RFC3550 definition of an "RTP session". We can easily 
     search/replace to convert to "mutli-stream" transmission" if 
     necessary (but it is not advisable, as the whole text needs to be 
     reviewed for consistency). But due to the fact the draft's 
     definition of "session multiplexing" explicitly says that it can 
     be over the same transport or different transport addresses (thus 
     using a single or multiple  RTP sessions), I converged to "multi-
     source transmission" to indicate that the SVC stream is 
     transmitted as streams coming from multiple sources. I think that 
     nails it. 
    

 
 
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   - Defined acronyms SST (Single-Source Transmission) and MST (Multi-
     Source Transmission), and added in "Abbreviations".  
    
   - Added definition for "NALU time" as "NAL unit effective 
     timestamp". This is also inline with the concepts in 8.1.1. 
    
   - Added ETS in the abbreviations for Effective Timestamp of a NAL 
     unit. 
    
   - It is noted that FU-A and FU-B are also carrying one NAL unit per 
     RTP packet (since FU itself is defined as a NAL unit), so the 
     statement that only in the single NAL unit mode you have one NAL 
     unit per packet is, technically, incorrect. Since the intended use 
     is present in the name of the mode (single NAL unit mode) I 
     removed any dubious reference to this property. 
    
   - Table 3.3 (now Table 4), changed PACSI from 'no' to 'yes' (in the  
     non-interleaved column only). 
    
   - Table 3.5 (now Table 6), changed PACSI from 'no' to 'yes'. But in 
     7.1.3 (I-C packetization rules) PACSIs are not allowed to have 
     DONC. Why? 
    
   - Moved Section 6.5 DON to the end of Section 6, as 6.10. Part of 
     the reason is that the section requires that PACSI is already 
     introduced. 
    
   - "de-session-multiplexing buffer" was changed to "remultiplexing 
     buffer",  properly reflecting what's going on. 
    
   - Changed all sprop-desemul-* to sprop-remux-*.  
    
   - Changed all sprop-semul-* to sprop-mst-*.  
    
   - Changed sprop-session-multiplexing-depth to sprop-mst-interleave-
     depth. 
    
   - Added all acronyms encountered in the text in the "Abbreviations" 
     section. 
    
    
 
 
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