One document matched: draft-ietf-mediactrl-ivr-control-package-00.txt
Network Working Group S. McGlashan
Internet-Draft Hewlett-Packard
Intended status: Standards Track T. Melanchuk
Expires: December 12, 2008 Rain Willow Communications
C. Boulton
Avaya
June 10, 2008
An Interactive Voice Response (IVR) Control Package for the Media
Control Channel Framework
draft-ietf-mediactrl-ivr-control-package-00
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Abstract
This document defines a Media Control Channel Framework Package for
Interactive Voice Response (IVR) dialog interaction on media
connections and conferences. The package defines dialog management
elements for preparing, starting and terminating dialog interactions,
as well as associated responses and notifications. While other
dialog types can be used, this package defines a specific IVR dialog
type supporting prompt playback, runtime controls, DTMF collect and
media recording. The package also defines elements for auditing
package capabilities and dialogs.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Conventions and Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3. Control Package Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.1. Control Package Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.2. Framework Message Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Common XML Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.4. CONTROL Message Body . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.5. REPORT Message Body . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.6. Audit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4. Element Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1. <mscivr> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2. Dialog Management Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.2.1. <dialogprepare> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.2.2. <dialogstart> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.2.2.1. <subscribe> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.2.2.1.1. <dtmfsub> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.2.2.2. <stream> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.2.3. <dialogterminate> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
4.2.4. <response> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4.2.5. <event> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
4.2.5.1. <dialogexit> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
4.2.5.2. <dtmfnotify> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
4.2.6. <params> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
4.2.6.1. <param> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
4.3. IVR Dialog Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
4.3.1. <dialog> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
4.3.1.1. <prompt> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
4.3.1.1.1. <media> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
4.3.1.1.2. <variable> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
4.3.1.1.3. <dtmf> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
4.3.1.2. <control> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
4.3.1.3. <collect> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
4.3.1.3.1. <grammar> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
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4.3.1.4. <record> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
4.3.2. Exit Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
4.3.2.1. <promptinfo> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
4.3.2.2. <controlinfo> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
4.3.2.2.1. <controlmatch> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
4.3.2.3. <collectinfo> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
4.3.2.4. <recordinfo> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
4.4. Audit Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
4.4.1. <audit> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
4.4.2. <auditresponse> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
4.4.2.1. <codecs> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
4.4.2.1.1. <codec> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
4.4.2.2. <capabilities> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
4.4.2.2.1. <dialogtypes> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
4.4.2.2.2. <grammartypes> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
4.4.2.2.3. <recordtypes> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
4.4.2.2.4. <mediatypes> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
4.4.2.3. <dialogs> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
4.4.2.3.1. <dialogaudit> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
4.5. Response Status Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
4.6. Type Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
5. Formal Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
6. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
6.1. AS-MS Dialog Interaction Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
6.1.1. Starting an IVR dialog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
6.1.2. IVR dialog fails to start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
6.1.3. Preparing and starting an IVR dialog . . . . . . . . 82
6.1.4. Terminating a dialog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
6.2. IVR Dialog Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
6.2.1. Playing announcements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
6.2.2. Prompt and collect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
6.2.3. Prompt and record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
6.2.4. Runtime controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
6.2.5. Subscriptions and notifications . . . . . . . . . . . 88
6.3. Other Dialog types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
8.1. Control Package Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
8.2. URN Sub-Namespace Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
8.3. Mime Type Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
9. Change Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
10. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
11. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
12.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . 105
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1. Introduction
The Media Control Channel Framework
([I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]) provides a generic
approach for establishment and reporting capabilities of remotely
initiated commands. The Control Framework utilizes many functions
provided by the Session Initiation Protocol [RFC3261] (SIP) for the
rendezvous and establishment of a reliable channel for control
interactions. The Control Framework also introduces the concept of a
Control Package. A Control Package is an explicit usage of the
Control Framework for a particular interaction set. This document
defines a Control Package for Interactive Voice Response (IVR)
dialogs on media connections and conferences. The term 'IVR' is used
in its inclusive sense, allowing media other than voice for dialog
interaction.
The package defines dialog management elements for preparing,
starting and terminating dialog interactions, as well as associated
responses and notifications. While other dialog types can be used,
this package defines a specific IVR dialog type supporting prompt
playback, runtime controls, DTMF collect and media recording. The
package also defines elements for auditing package capabilities and
dialogs.
This package has been designed to satisfy the IETF MediaCtrl
requirements ([RFC5167]) by building upon two major approaches to IVR
dialog design. These approaches address a wide range of IVR use
cases and are used in many applications which are extensively
deployed today.
First, the package is designed to provide the major IVR functionality
of SIP Media Server languages such as netann ([RFC4240]), MSCML
([RFC5022]) and MSML ([MSML]) which themselves build upon more
traditional non-SIP languages ([H.248.9], [RFC2897]). A key
differentiator is that this package provides IVR functionality using
the Media Control Channel Framework.
Second, its design is aligned with key concepts of web model as
defined in W3C Voice Browser languages. The key dialog management
mechanism is closely aligned with CCXML ([CCXML10]). The dialog
functionality defined in this package can be largely seen as a subset
of VoiceXML ([VXML20], [VXML21]): where possible, basic prompting,
DTMF collection and media recording features are incorporated, but
not any advanced VoiceXML constructs (such as <form>, its
interpretation algorithm, or a dynamic data model). As W3C develops
VoiceXML 3.0, we expect to see further alignment, especially in
providing a set of basic independent primitive elements (such as
prompt, collect, record and runtime controls) which can be re-used in
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different dialog languages.
By reusing and building upon design patterns from these approaches to
IVR languages, this package is intended to provide a foundation which
is familiar to current IVR developers and sufficient for most IVR
applications, as well as a path to other languages which address more
advanced applications.
This package defines an IVR dialog type. The scope of this dialog
type is the following IVR functionality:
o playing one or more media resources as a prompt to the user
o runtime controls (including VCR controls like speed and volume)
o collecting DTMF input from the user according to a grammar
o recording user media input
Out of scope for this dialog type are more advanced functions
including ASR (Automatic Speech Recognition), TTS (Text-to-Speech),
VoiceXML, fax and media transformation. Such functionality may be
addressed by other dialog types used with this package, extension to
this package or other packages.
The functionality of this package is defined by messages, containing
XML [XML] elements, transported using the Media Control Channel
Framework. The XML elements can be divided into three types: dialog
management elements; a dialog element which defines the specific IVR
operations carried within dialog management elements; and finally,
elements for auditing package capabilities as well as dialogs managed
by the package.
Dialog management elements are designed to manage the general
lifecycle of a dialog. Elements are provided for preparing a dialog,
starting the dialog on a conference or connection, and terminating
execution of a dialog. Each of these elements is contained in a
Media Control Channel Framework CONTROL message sent to the media
server. When the appropriate action has been executed, the media
server sends a REPORT message (or a 200 response to the CONTROL if it
can execute in time) with a response element indicating whether the
operation was successful or not (e.g. if the dialog cannot be
started, then the error is reported in this response). Once a dialog
has been successfully started, the media server may send further
event notifications in a framework CONTROL message. This package
defines two event notifications: a DTMF event indicating the DTMF
activity; and a dialogexit event indicating that the dialog has
exited. If the dialog has executed successful, the dialogexit event
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includes information collected during the dialog. If an error occurs
during execution (e.g. a media resource failed to play, no recording
resource available, etc), then error information is reported in the
dialogexit event. Once a dialogexit event is sent, the dialog
lifecycle is terminated.
Specific dialog types are referenced or contained within dialog
management elements for preparing and starting dialogs. While other
dialog types defined elsewhere can be used, this package defines a
IVR dialog type which contains child elements for playing prompts to
the user, specifying runtime controls, collecting DTMF input from the
user and recording media input from the user. The child elements can
co-occur in this dialog type so as to provide 'play announcement',
'prompt and collect' as well as 'prompt and record' functionality.
The document is organized as follows. Section 3 descibes how this
control package fulfills the requirements for a Media Control Channel
Framework control package. Section 4 describes the syntax and
semantics of defined elements, including dialog management
(Section 4.2), the IVR dialog element (Section 4.3) and audit
elements (Section 4.4). Section 5 describes an XML schema for these
elements and provides extensibility by allowing attributes and
elements from other namespaces. Section 6 provides examples of
package usage.
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2. Conventions and Terminology
In this document, BCP 14 [RFC2119] defines the key words "MUST",
"MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
"RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL". In
addition, BCP 15 indicates requirement levels for compliant
implementations.
The following additional terms are defined for use in this document:
Dialog: A dialog performs media interaction with a user. A dialog
is specified as inline XML, or via a URI reference to an external
XML document type. Traditional IVR dialogs typically feature
capabilities such as playing audio prompts, collecting DTMF input
and recording audio input from the user. More inclusive
definitions may include support for other media types, runtime
controls, synthesized speech, recording and playback of video,
recognition of spoken input, and mixed initiative conversations.
Application server: A SIP [RFC3261] application server (AS) hosts
and executes services such as interactive media and conferencing
in an operator's network. An AS influences and impacts the SIP
session, in particular by terminating SIP sessions on a media
server, which is under its control.
Media Server: A media server (MS) processes media streams on behalf
of an AS by offering functionality such as interactive media,
conferencing, and transcoding to the end user. Interactive media
functionality is realized by way of dialogs which are initiated by
the application server.
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3. Control Package Definition
This section fulfills the mandatory requirement for information that
MUST be specified during the definition of a Control Framework
Package, as detailed in Section 8 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework].
3.1. Control Package Name
The Control Framework requires a Control Package to specify and
register a unique name and version.
The name and version of this Control Package is "msc-ivr/1.0" (Media
Server Control - Interactive Voice Response - version 1.0). Its IANA
registration is specified in Section 8.1.
3.2. Framework Message Usage
The Control Framework requires a Control Package to explicitly detail
the control messages that can be used as well as provide an
indication of directionality between entities. This will include
which role type is allowed to initiate a request type.
This package specifies CONTROL and reponse messages in terms of XML
elements defined in Section 4. These elements describe requests,
response and notifications and all are contained within a root
<mscivr> element (Section 4.1).
In this package, the MS operates as a Control Framework Server in
receiving requests from, and sending responses to, the AS (operating
as Control Framework Client). Dialog management requests and
responses are defined in Section 4.2. Audit requests and responses
are defined in Section 4.4. dialog management and audit responses are
carried in a framework 200 response or REPORT message bodies. This
package's response codes are defined in Section 4.5.
Note that package responses are different from framework response
codes. Framework error response codes (see Section 8 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]) are used when the request
or event notification is invalid; for example, a request is invalid
XML (400), or not understood (500).
The MS also operates as a Control Framework Client in sending event
notification to the AS (Control Framework Server). Event
notifications (Section 4.2.5) are carried in CONTROL message bodies.
The AS MUST respond with a Control Framework 200 response.
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3.3. Common XML Support
The Control Framework requires a Control Package definition to
specify if the attributes for media dialog or conference references
are required.
This package requires that the XML Schema in Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework] MUST be supported for
media dialogs and conferences.
The package uses "connectionid" and "conferenceid" attributes for
various element definitions (Section 4). The XML schema (Section 5)
imports the definitions of these attributes from the framework
schema.
3.4. CONTROL Message Body
The Control Framework requires a Control Package to define the
control body that can be contained within a CONTROL command request
and to indicate the location of detailed syntax definitions and
semantics for the appropriate body types.
When operating as Control Framework Server, the MS receives CONTROL
messages body containing an <mscivr> element with either a dialog
management or audit request child element.
The following dialog management request elements are carried in
CONTROL message bodies to MS: <dialogprepare> (Section 4.2.1),
<dialogstart> (Section 4.2.2) and <dialogterminate>
(Section 4.2.3)elements.
The <audit> request element (Section 4.4.1) is also carried in
CONTROL message bodies.
When operating as Control Framework Client, the MS sends CONTROL
messages with a body containing a notification <event> element
(Section 4.2.5).
3.5. REPORT Message Body
The Control Framework requires a control package definition to define
the REPORT body that can be contained within a REPORT command
request, or that no report package body is required. This section
should indicate the location of detailed syntax definitions and
semantics for the appropriate body types.
When operating as Control Framework Server, the MS sends REPORT
bodies containing a <mscivr> element with a response child element.
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The response element for dialog management requests is a <response>
element (Section 4.2.4). The response element for an audit request
is a <auditresponse> element (Section 4.4.2).
3.6. Audit
The Control Framework encourages Control Packages to specify whether
auditing is available, how it is triggered as well as the query/
response formats.
This Control Packages supports auditing of package capabilities and
dialogs on the MS. An audit request is carried in a CONTROL messages
and an audit response in a REPORT message (or a 200 reponse to the
CONTROL if it can execute the audit in time).
The syntax and semantics of audit request and response elements is
defined in Section 4.4.
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4. Element Definitions
This section defines the XML elements for this package. The elements
are defined in the XML namespace specified in Section 8.2.
The root element is <mscivr> (Section 4.1). All other XML elements
(requests, responses and notification elements) are contained within
it. Child elements describe dialog management (Section 4.2) and
audit (Section 4.4) functionality. The IVR dialog element (contained
within dialog management elements) is defined in Section 4.3.
Response status codes are defined in Section 4.5 and type definitions
in Section 4.6.
Implementation of this control package MUST adhere to the syntax and
semantics of XML elements defined in this section and the schema
(Section 5). The XML schema supports extensibility by allowing
attributes and elements from other namespaces. Implementations MAY
support attributes and elements from other namespaces. If an
implementation encounters attributes or elements from another
namespace which it does not understand, it MUST ignore them and
continue processing.
Extensible attributes and elements are not described in this section.
In all other cases where there is a difference in constraints between
the XML schema and the textual description of elements in this
section, the textual definition takes priority.
Usage examples are provided in Section 6.
4.1. <mscivr>
The <mscivr> element has the following attributes (in addition to
standard XML namspace attributes such as xmlns):
version: a string specifying the mscivr package version. The value
is fixed as '1.0' for this version of the package. The attribute
is mandatory.
The <mscivr> element has the following defined child elements, only
one of which can occur:
1. dialog management elements defined in Section 4.2:
<dialogprepare> prepare a dialog. See Section 4.2.1
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<dialogstart> start a dialog. See Section 4.2.2
<dialogterminate> terminate a dialog. See Section 4.2.3
<response> response to a dialog request. See Section 4.2.4
<event> dialog or subscription notification. See Section 4.2.5
2. audit elements defined in Section 4.4:
<audit> audit package capabilities and managed dialogs. See
Section 4.4.1
<auditresponse> response to an audit request. See Section 4.4.2
For example, a request to the MS to start an IVR dialog playing a
prompt:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart>
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/welcome.wav"/>
</prompt>
</dialog>
</mscivr>
and a response from the MS that the dialog started sucessfully:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="200" dialogid="d1"/>
</mscivr>
and finally a notification from the MS indicating that the dialog
exited upon completion of playing the prompt:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d1">
<dialogexit status="1">
<promptinfo termmode="completed"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
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4.2. Dialog Management Elements
This section defines the dialog management XML elements for this
control package. These elements are divided into requests, responses
and notifications.
Request elements are sent to the MS to request a specific dialog
operation to be executed. The following request elements are
defined:
<dialogprepare>: prepare a dialog for later execution
<dialogstart>: start a dialog on a connection or conference
<dialogterminate>: terminate an IVR dialog
The MS MUST support the IVR dialog type defined in Section 4.3. The
MS MAY support other dialog types.
Responses from the MS describe the status of the requested operation.
Responses are specified in a <response> element (Section 4.2.4). The
MS MUST respond to a request message with a response message. If the
MS is not able to carry out the requested dialog operation, it is an
error and the MS MUST indicate the error in the status code of the
response.
Notifications are sent from the MS to provide updates on the status
of a dialog or operations defined within the dialog. Notifications
are specified in an <event> element (Section 4.2.5). The MS MUST
always send a dialog exit notification (Section 4.2.5.1) when the
dialog exits, including when runtime errors occur. The MS MUST send
DTMF subscription notifications (Section 4.2.5.2) when they occur
during the dialog.
The MS MUST adhere to the following life cycle for dialog. Each
dialog has the following state machine:
IDLE: the dialog is uninitialized.
PREPARING: the dialog is being prepared. If an error occurs the
dialog transitions to the TERMINATED state and the MS MUST send a
response indicating the error type.
PREPARED: the dialog has been successfully prepared and has a valid
dialog identifier. The MS MUST send a response indicating the
prepare operation was successful. If the duration the dialog
remains in the PREPARED state exceeds the maximum preparation
duration, the dialog transitions to the TERMINATED state and the
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MS MUST send a dialogexit notification with an error status code
(Section 4.5). A maximum preparation duration of 30s is
RECOMMENDED.
STARTING: the dialog is being started. If an error occurs the
dialog transitions to the TERMINATED state and the MS MUST send a
response indicating the error type.
STARTED: the dialog has been successfully started and is now active.
The MS MUST send a response indicating the start operation was
successful. If any dialog events occurs which were subscribed to,
the MS MUST send a notifications when the dialog event occurs.
When the dialog exits, the MS MUST send a dialogexit notification
event and the dialog transitions to the TERMINATED state.
TERMINATED: the dialog is terminated and its dialogid is no longer
valid. Dialog notifications MUST NOT be sent for this dialog.
It is an error to prepare or start a dialog with the same dialogid as
that of a dialog on the MS which is in the state PREPARING, PREPARED,
STARTING or STARTED: the MS MUST send a response with a status code
401. Once a dialog is in a TERMINATED state, its dialogid can be
reused.
[Editors note: IVR-200. Would this description benefit from a state
machine diagram?]
4.2.1. <dialogprepare>
The <dialogprepare> request is sent to the MS to request preparation
of a dialog. Dialog preparation consists of (a) retrieving external
dialog document and resources (if required), and (b) validating the
dialog document syntactically and semantically.
A prepared dialog is executed when the MS receives a <dialogstart>
request referencing the prepared dialog identifier (see
Section 4.2.2).
The <dialogprepare> element has the following attributes:
src: specifies the location of an external dialog document to
prepare. A valid value is a URI (see Section 4.6.9). It is an
error if the document cannot be retrieved or processed (e.g. URI
protocol not supported). The attribute is optional. There is no
default value.
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type: specifies the type of the external dialog document indicated
in the 'src' attribute. The MS MAY use the value to assist the
remote source in selecting the appropriate resource type (e.g.
with HTTP 'accept' header) and to determine how the document is to
be processed. A valid value is a MIME type (see Section 4.6.10).
The attribute is optional. The default value is the mime type
"application/msc-ivr+xml" (Section 8.3) associated with the IVR
dialog type (Section 4.3).
fetchtimeout: the maximum interval to wait when fetching an external
dialog document. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
30s.
dialogid: string indicating a unique name for the dialog. It is an
error if a dialog with the same name already exists on the MS. If
this attribute is not specified, the MS MUST create a unique name
for the dialog. The value is used in subsequent references to the
dialog (e.g. as dialogid in a <response>). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
The <dialogprepare> element has one optional child element:
<dialog> an IVR dialog (Section 4.3.1) to prepare. The element is
optional.
The dialog to prepare can either be specified inline as a child
element or externally using the src attribute (but not both). It is
an error if both an inline <dialog> element and a src attribute are
specified. The type and fetchtimeout attributes are only relevant
when a dialog is specified as an external document.
For example, a <dialogprepare> request to prepare an inline IVR
dialog with a single prompt:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogprepare>
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/welcome.wav"/>
</prompt>
</dialog>
</dialogprepare>
</mscivr>
In this example, a request to prepare a dialog type located
externally with a specified dialogid;
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogprepare dialogid="d2" type="application/voicexml+xml"
src="http://www.example.com/mydialog.vxml"
fetchtimeout="15s"/>
</mscivr>
Since MS support for dialog types other than the IVR dialog type is
optional, if the MS does not support the dialog type, it MUST send a
response with the status code 409 (dialog type not supported).
4.2.2. <dialogstart>
The <dialogstart> element is sent to the MS to start a dialog. If
the dialog has not been prepared, the dialog is prepared (retrieving
an external document and resources if necessary, and the dialog
document validated syntactically and semantically). Media processors
(e.g. DTMF and prompt queue) are activated and associated with the
specified connection or conference.
The <dialogstart> element has the following attributes:
src: specifies the location of an external dialog document to start.
A valid value is a URI (see Section 4.6.9). It is an error if the
document cannot be retrieved or processed (e.g. URI protocol not
supported). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
type: specifies the type of the external dialog document indicated
in the 'src' attribute. The MS MAY use the value to assist the
remote source in selecting the appropriate resource type (e.g.
with HTTP 'accept' header) and to determine how the document is to
be processed. A valid value is a MIME type (see Section 4.6.10).
The attribute is optional. The default value is the mime type
"application/msc-ivr+xml" (Section 8.3) associated with the IVR
dialog type (Section 4.3).
fetchtimeout: the maximum interval to wait when fetching an external
dialog document. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
30s.
dialogid: string indicating a unique name for the dialog. It is an
error if a dialog with the same name already exists on the MS. If
neither the dialogid attribute nor the prepareddialogid attribute
is specified, the MS MUST create a unique name for the dialog.
The value is used in subsequent references to the dialog (e.g. as
dialogid in a <response>). The attribute is optional. There is
no default value.
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prepareddialogid: string identifying a dialog previously prepared
using a dialogprepare request. The attribute is optional. There
is no default value.
connectionid: string identifying the SIP dialog connection on which
this dialog is to be started (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
conferenceid: string identifying the conference on which this dialog
is to be started (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
Exactly one of the connectionid or conferenceid attributes MUST be
specified. It is an error to specify both connectionid and
conferenceid attributes or neither.
It is an error if the connection or conference referenced by a
specific connectionid or conferenceid attribute is not available on
the MS at the time the <dialogstart> request is executed.
The <dialogstart> element has the following sequence of child
elements:
<dialog>: specifies the IVR dialog (Section 4.3.1) to execute. The
element is optional.
<subscribe>: specifies subscriptions to dialog events
(Section 4.2.2.1). The element is optional.
<params>: specifies input parameters (Section 4.2.6) for a dialog
types defined outside this specification. The element is
optional.
<stream>: determines the media stream(s) associated with the
connection or conference on which the dialog is executed
(Section 4.2.2.2). The <stream> element is optional. Multiple
<stream> elements may be specified.
The dialog to start on a connection or conference can be specified
either inline, or externally, or reference a previously prepared
dialog. Exactly one of the src attribute, the prepareddialogid or a
<dialog> child element MUST be specified. If the prepareddialogid is
specified, it is an error to specify the src attribute, the dialogid
attribute or a dialog type child element. If the src attribute is
specified, it is an error to specify the prepareddialogid attribute,
or a dialog type child element. If a <dialog> child element is
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specified, it is an error to specify the src attribute or the
prepareddialogid attribute. The type and fetchtimeout attributes are
only relevant when a dialog is specified as an external document.
The <stream> element provides explicit control over which media
streams on the connection or conference are used during dialog
execution. For example, if a connection supports both audio and
video streams, a <stream> element could be used to indicate that only
the audio stream is used in receive mode. In cases where there are
multiple media streams of the same type for a dialog, it is
RECOMMENDED that the configuration is explicitly specified using
<stream> elements. If no <stream> elements are specified, then the
default media configuration is that defined for the connection or
conference.
It is an error if a <stream> element is in conflict with (a) another
<stream> element, (b) with specified connection or conference media
capabilities, (c) with a SDP label value as part of the connectionid
(see Section 17.1 of [I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]) or
(d) if the media stream configuration is not supported by the MS. If
the MS does not support a requested <stream> configuration, it MUST
response with a <response> with a 413 status code.
This specification allows multiple, simultaneous dialogs to be
started on the same connection or conference. It is RECOMMENDED the
MS support the following cases:
1. different media streams used in different dialogs; e.g. audio
only on one dialog and video only on another dialog
2. the same media stream received by different dialogs
3. use of implicit mixing (where appropriate) when the same type of
media stream is sent from different dialogs
If the MS does not support starting another dialog on the same
connection or conference it MUST report an error when starting that
dialog.
[Editors Note: IVR-201. If the conference mixer package supports
video layout regions, then we need a mechanism to specify that the
dialog is to be started on a specific region of the conference.]
For example, a request to start an ivr dialog on a connection
subscribing to DTMF notificatons:
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="connection1">
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/getpin.wav"/>
</prompt>
<collect maxdigits="2"/>
</dialog>
<subscribe>
<dmtfnotify matchmode="all"/>
</subscribe>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
In this example, the dialog is started on a conference where only
audio media stream is received:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart conferenceid="conference1">
<dialog>
<record maxtime="384000s"/>
</dialog>
<stream media="audio" direction="recvonly"/>
</mscivr>
4.2.2.1. <subscribe>
The <subscribe> element allows the AS to subscribe to, and be
notified of, specific events which occur during execution of the
dialog. Notifications of dialog events are delivered using the
<event> element (see Section 4.2.5).
The <subscribe> element has no attributes.
The <subscribe> element has the following sequence of child elements
(0 or more occurences):
<dtmfsub>: Subscription to DTMF input during the dialog
(Section 4.2.2.1.1). The element is optional.
The MS MUST support a <dtmfsub> subscription. It MAY support other
dialog subscriptions. If the MS does not support a requested
subscription, it MUST send a <response> with a 412 status code.
4.2.2.1.1. <dtmfsub>
The <dtmfsub> element has the following attributes:
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matchmode: controls which DTMF input are subscribed to. Valid
values are: "all" - notify all DTMF keypresses received during the
dialog; "collect" - notify only DTMF input matched by the collect
operation (Section 4.3.1.3); and "control" - notify only DTMF
input matched by the runtime control operation (Section 4.3.1.2).
The attribute is optional. The default value is "all".
The <dtmfsub> element has no child elements.
DTMF notifications are delivered in the <dtmfnotify> element
(Section 4.2.5.2).
For example, the AS wishes to subscribe to DTMF keypress matching a
runtime control:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart dialogid="d3" connectionid="connection1">
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/getpin.wav"/>
</prompt>
<control ffkey="2" rewkey="3"/>
</dialog>
<subscribe>
<dmtfnotify matchmode="control"/>
</subscribe>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
Each time a '2' or '3' DTMF input is received, the MS sends a
notification event:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d3">
<dtmfnotify matchmode="collect" dtmf="2"
timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:14Z"/>
/event>
</mscivr>
4.2.2.2. <stream>
the <stream> element has the following attributes:
media: a string indicating the type of media associated with the
stream. It is strongly RECOMMENDED that the following values are
used for common types of media: "audio" for audio media, and
"video" for video media. The attribute is mandatory.
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label: a string indicating the SDP label associated with a media
stream ([RFC4574]). The attribute is optional.
direction: a string indicating the direction of the media flow
between a dialog and its end point conference or connection.
Defined values are: "sendrecv" (media can be sent and received),
"sendonly" (media can only be sent), "recvonly" (media can only be
received) and "inactive" (stream is not to be used). The default
value is "sendrecv". The attribute is optional.
the <stream> element has no child elements.
For example, assume a user agent connection with multiple audio and
video streams associated with the user and a separate web camera. In
this case, the dialog could be started to record only the audio and
video streams associated with the user:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="connection1">
<dialog>
<record maxtime="384000s"/>
</dialog>
<stream media="audio" label="camaudio" direction="inactive"/>
<stream media="video" label="camvideo" direction="inactive"/>
<stream media="audio" label="useraudio" direction="recvonly"/>
<stream media="video" label="uservideo" direction="recvonly"/>
</mscivr>
4.2.3. <dialogterminate>
A dialog that has been successfully prepared or started can be
terminated by sending a <dialogterminate> request element to the MS.
The <dialogterminate> element has the following attributes:
dialogid: string identifying the dialog to terminate. It is an
error if the dialog identifier is not valid. The attribute is
mandatory.
immediate: indicates whether the dialog is to be terminated
immediately or not. A valid value is a boolean (see
Section 4.6.1). A value of true indicates that the dialog is
terminated immediately and a dialogexit notification without
report information MUST be sent. A value of false indicates that
the dialog terminates after the current iteration and the MS MUST
send a dialogexit notification with report information. The
attribute is optional. The default value is false.
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When an MS receives a <dialogterminate> request, the dialog MUST be
in a PREPARED, STARTING or STARTED states; otherwise, the MS MUST
send a response with the status code 402. If it is in a PREPARED
state, then it transitions immediately to the TERMINATED state. If
it is in STARTING state, then any further starting (or preparation)
of the dialog is canceled, the dialog transitions to the TERMINATED
state and the MS MUST send a response with the status code 414 for
the dialogstart request. If the dialog is in a STARTED state, then
the dialog is terminated according to the value of the immediate
attribute.
The MS MUST reply to <dialogterminate> request with a <response>
element (Section 4.2.4), reporting whether the dialog was stopped
successful or not.
For example, immediately terminating a dialog with dialogid "d4":
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogterminate dialogid="d4" immediate="true"/>
</mscivr>
If the dialog is terminated successfully, then the response to the
dialogterminate request would be:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="200" dialogid="d4"/>
<dialogterminate dialogid="d4" immediate="true"/>
</mscivr>
4.2.4. <response>
Responses to dialog management requests are specified with a
<response> element.
The <response> element has following attributes:
status: numeric code indicating the response status. Valid values
are defined in Section 4.5. The attribute is mandatory.
reason: string specifying a reason for the response status. The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
dialogid: string identifying the dialog. If the request specifies a
dialogid, then that value is used. Otherwise, with
<dialogprepare> and <dialogstart> requests, the dialogid generated
by the MS is used. If there is no available dialogid (e.g. a
<dialogterminate> request with no dialogid attribute specified),
then the value is the empty string. The attribute is mandatory.
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connectionid: string identifying the SIP dialog connection
associated with the dialog (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
conferenceid: string identifying the conference associated with the
dialog (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
For example, a response when a dialog was prepared successfully:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="200" dialogid="d5"/>
</mscivr>
The response if dialog preparation failed due to an unsupported
dialog type:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="409" dialogid="d5"
reason="Unsupported dialog type: application/voicexml+xml"/>
</mscivr>
In this example a <dialogterminate> request does not specify a
dialogid:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogterminate/>
</mscivr>
The response status indicates a 409 error (attribute required) and
dialogid attribute has an empty string value:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="408" dialogid=""
reason="Attribute required: dialogid"/>
</mscivr>
4.2.5. <event>
When a dialog generates a notification event, the MS sends the event
using an <event> element.
The <event> element has the following attributes:
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dialogid: string identifying the dialog which generated the event.
The attribute is mandatory.
The <event> element has the following child elements, only one of
which can occur:
<dialogexit>: indicates that the dialog has exited
(Section 4.2.5.1).
<dtmfnotify>: indicates that a DTMF key press occured
(Section 4.2.5.2).
4.2.5.1. <dialogexit>
The <dialogexit> event indicates that a prepared or active dialog has
exited because it is complete, has been terminated, or because an
error occurred during execution (for example, a media resource cannot
be played). This event MUST be sent by the MS when the dialog exits.
The <dialogexit> element has the following attributes:
status: a status code indicating success or failure of the dialog.
A valid value is a non-negative integer (see Section 4.6.4). A
value of 0 indicates that the dialog has been terminated by a
<dialogterminate> request. A value of 1 indicates success. A
value of 2 indicates that the dialog terminated because the
connection or conference associated with the dialog has
terminated. A value of 3 indicates the dialog terminated due to
exceeding its maximum duration. A value of 4 indicates the dialog
terminated due to an execution error. Any other value indicates
an error defined by the MS. The attribute is mandatory.
reason: a textual description providing a reason for the status
code; e.g. details about an error. A valid value is a string (see
Section 4.6.6). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
The <dialogexit> element has the following sequence of child
elements:
<promptinfo>: report information (Section 4.3.2.1) about the prompt
execution in an IVR <dialog>. The element is optional.
<controlinfo>: reports information (Section 4.3.2.2) about the
control execution in an IVR <dialog>. The element is optional.
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<collectinfo>: reports information (Section 4.3.2.3) about the
collect execution in an IVR <dialog>. The element is optional.
<recordinfo>: reports information (Section 4.3.2.4) about the record
execution in an IVR <dialog>. The element is optional.
<params>: reports exit parameters (Section 4.2.6) for a dialog type
defined outside this specification. The element is optional.
For example, an active <dialog> exits normally the MS sends a
dialogexit <event> reporting information:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d6"/>
<dialogexit status="1">
<collectinfo dtmf="1234" termmode="match"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
4.2.5.2. <dtmfnotify>
The <dtmfnotify> element provide a notification of DTMF input
received during the active dialog as requested by a <dtmfsub>
subscription (Section 4.2.2.1).
The <dtmfnotify> element has the following attributes:
matchmode: indicates the matching mode specified in the subscription
request. Valid values are: "all" - all DTMF keypresses notified;
"collect" - only DTMF input matched by the collect operation
notified; and "control" - only DTMF input matched by the control
operation notified. The attribute is optional. The default value
is "all".
dtmf: DTMF keypress received. A valid value is a DTMF string (see
Section 4.6.3) with no space between characters. The attribute is
mandatory.
timestamp: indicates the time (on the MS) at which the key press
occured. A valid value is a dateTime expression (Section 4.6.12).
The attribute is mandatory.
For example, a notification of a DTMF matched during the collect
operation:
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d3">
<dtmfnotify matchmode="collect" dtmf="3"
timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:14Z"/>
/event>
</mscivr>
4.2.6. <params>
The <params> element is a container for <param> elements
(Section 4.2.6.1).
The <params> element has no attributes, but the following child
elements are defined (0 or more):
<param>: specifies a parameter name and value (Section 4.2.6.1).
For example, usage with a dialog type defined outside this
specification to send additional parameters into the dialog:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart type="application/x-dialog"
src="nfs://nas01/dialog4" connectionid="c1">
<params>
<param name="mode">playannouncement</param>
<param name="prompt1">nfs://nas01/media1.3gp"</param>
<param name="prompt2">nfs://nas01/media2.3gp"</param>
</params>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
4.2.6.1. <param>
The <param> element describes a parameter name and value.
The <param> element has the following attributes:
name: a string indicating the name of the parameter. The attribute
is mandatory.
type: specifies a mimetype of the parameter value. A valid value is
a MIME type (see Section 4.6.10). The attribute is optional.
There is no default value.
valuetype: a string indicating the type of the parameter value. The
attribute is optional. The default value is a string type.
If the MS supports parameters, it MUST support the string valuetype
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and MAY support other parameter valuetypes (e.g. base64Binary for
inline binary data, such as a media recording).
The <param> element content model is the value of the parameter.
For example, usage with a dialog type defined outside this
specification to receive parameters from the dialog when it exits:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d6"/>
<dialogexit status="1">
<params>
<param name="mode">recording</param>
<param name="recording1" mimetype="audio/x-wav"
valuetype="base64Binary">
R0lGODlhZABqALMAAFrMYr/BvlKOVJKOg2xZUKmenMfDw8tgWJpV
</param>
</params>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
4.3. IVR Dialog Elements
This section describes the IVR dialog type. The MS MUST support this
dialog type.
The <dialog> element is an execution container for operations of
playing prompts (Section 4.3.1.1), runtime controls
(Section 4.3.1.2), collecting DTMF (Section 4.3.1.3),and recording
user input (Section 4.3.1.4. Results of the dialog execution
(Section 4.3.2) are reported in a dialogexit notification event.
Using these elements, three common dialog models are supported:
playannouncements: only a <prompt> element is specified in the
container. The prompt media resources are played in sequence.
promptandcollect: a <collect> element is specified and, optionally,
a <prompt> element. If a <prompt> element is specified and
bargein is enabled, playing of the prompt is terminated when
bargein occurs, and DTMF collection is initiated; otherwise, the
prompt is played to completion before DTMF collection is
initiated. If no prompt element is specified, DTMF collection is
initiated immediately.
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promptandrecord: a <record> element is specified and, optionally, a
<prompt> element. If a <prompt> element is specified and bargein
is enabled, playing of the prompt is terminated when bargein
occurs, and recording is initiated; otherwise, the prompt is
played to completion before recording is initiated. If no prompt
element is specified, recording is initiated immediately.
In addition, this dialog type supports runtime ('VCR') controls
enabling a user to control prompt playback using DTMF.
Each of the core elements - <prompt>, <control>, <collect> and
<record> - are specified so that their execution and reporting is
largely self-contained. This facilitates their re-use in other
dialog container elements. Note that DTMF and bargein behavior
affects multiple elements and is addressed in the relevant element
definitions.
Execution results are reported in the <dialogexit> notification event
with child elements defined in Section 4.3.2. If the dialog
terminated normally (i.e. not due to an error or to a
<dialogterminate> request), then the MS MUST report the results for
the operations specified in the dialog:
<prompt>: <promptinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.1) with at least the
termmode attribute specified.
<control>: <controlinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.2) if any runtime
controls are matched.
<collect>: <collectinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.3) with the dtmf and
termmode attributes specified.
<record>: <recordinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.4) with at least the
recording, type and termmode attributes specified.
The media format requirements for IVR dialogs are undefined. This
package is agnostic to the media types and codecs for media resources
and recording which need to be supported by an implementation. For
example, a MS implementation may choose to support only audio and in
particular the 'audio/basic' codec for media playback and recording.
However, when executing a dialog, if an MS encounters a media type or
codec which it cannot process, the MS MUST stop further processing
and report the error using the dialogexit notification.
4.3.1. <dialog>
An IVR dialog to play prompts to the user, allow runtime controls,
collect DTMF or record input. The dialog is specified using a
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<dialog> element.
A <dialog> element has the following attributes:
repeatCount: number of times the dialog is to be executed. A valid
value is a non-negative integer (see Section 4.6.4). A value of 0
indicates that the dialog is repeated until halted by other means.
The attribute is optional. The default value is 1.
repeatDur: maximum duration for dialog execution. A valid value is
a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7). If no value is specified,
then there is no limit on the duration of the dialog. The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
The repeatDur attribute takes priority over the repeatCount attribute
in determining maximum duration of the dialog. See 'repeatCount' and
'repeatDur' in SMIL ([W3C.REC-SMIL2-20051213]) for further
information.
The <dialog> element has the following sequence of child elements:
<prompt>: defines media resources to play in sequence (see
Section 4.3.1.1). The element is optional.
<control>: defines how DTMF is used for runtime controls (see
Section 4.3.1.2). The element is optional.
<collect>: defines how DTMF is collected (see Section 4.3.1.3). The
element is optional.
<record>: defines how recording takes place (see Section 4.3.1.4).
The element is optional.
It is an error if no child element is specified. The behavior is not
defined if both <collect> and <record> are specified.
The IVR dialog has the following execution model after initialization
(initialization errors are reported in the response):
1. If an error occurs during execution, then the dialog terminates
and the error is reported in the <dialogexit> event by setting
the status attribute (see Section 4.3.2). Details about the
error are specified in the reason attribute.
2. A counter is initialized to 0.
3. A duration timer is started for the value of the repeatDur
attribute. If the timer expires before the dialog is complete,
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then dialog is terminated and the dialogexit status attribute is
set to 3 (see Section 4.2.5.1). The dialogexit MAY report
information gathered in the last execution cycle (if any).
4. A dialog execution cycle is initiated. Each cycle executes the
operations associated with the child elements of the dialog. If
subscriptions are specified for the dialog, then a notification
event is sent when the specified event occurs. If a child
element reports an execution error, dialog execution is
terminated (other child element operations are stopped) and the
dialogexit status event sent, reporting any information gathered.
5. If the dialog execution cycle completes successfully, then the
counter is incremented by one. If the value of the repeatCount
attribute is greater than zero and the counter is equal to the
value of the repeatCount attribute, then dialog execution is
terminated and the dialogexit (with a status of 1) reports
operation information collected in the dialog execution cycle.
Otherwise, another dialog execution cycle is initiated.
4.3.1.1. <prompt>
The <prompt> element specifies a sequence of media resources to play.
A <prompt> element has the following attributes:
xml:base: A string declaring the base URI from which relative URIs
in child elements are resolved prior to fetching. A valid value
is a URI (see Section 4.6.9). The attribute is optional. There
is no default value.
bargein: Indicates whether user input stops prompt playback unless
the input is assocated with a specified runtime <control>
operation (input matching control operations never interrupts
prompt playback). A valid value is a boolean (see Section 4.6.1).
A value of true indicates that bargein is permitted and prompt
playback is stopped. A value of false indicates that bargein is
not permitted: user input does not terminate prompt playback. The
attribute is optional. The default value is true.
The <prompt> element has the following child elements (any order,
multiple occurrences of each element permitted):
<media>: media resource (see Section 4.3.1.1.1) to play. The
element is optional.
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<variable>: specifies a variable media announcement (see
Section 4.3.1.1.2) to play. The element is optional.
<dtmf>: generates one or more DTMF tones (see Section 4.3.1.1.3) to
play. The element is optional.
It is an error if no child element is specified.
Prompt playing has the following execution model upon initialization:
1. Prompt playback is initiated playing each <media>, <variable> and
<dtmf> in document order.
2. If an error (including fetching errors) occurs during execution,
then playback terminates and the error is reported to the dialog
container. The <promptinfo> termmode attribute is set to stopped
(see Section 4.3.2.1) and any additional information is set.
3. If the dialog container signals a bargein event and the value of
the bargein attribute is true, then prompt playback is terminated
and the <promptinfo> termmode attribute is set to bargein (see
Section 4.3.2.1) and any additional information is set.
4. If prompt playback is stopped by the dialog container, then
<promptinfo> termmode attribute is set to stopped (see
Section 4.3.2.1).
5. If prompt playback completes successfully, <promptinfo> termmode
attribute set to completed (see Section 4.3.2.1) and any
additional information is set. This completion status is of this
element reported to the dialog.
4.3.1.1.1. <media>
The <media> element specifies a media resource to play.
A <media> element has the following attributes:
src: specifies the location of the media resource. A valid value is
a URI (see Section 4.6.9). The attribute is mandatory.
type: specifies the type of the media resource indicated in the
'src' attribute. The MS MAY use the value to assist the remote
source in selecting the appropriate resource type (e.g. with HTTP
'accept' header) and to determine how the document is to be
processed. The value may include additional parameters for
guiding playback; for example, [RFC4281] defines a 'codec'
parameter for 'bucket' media types like video/3gpp. A valid value
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is a MIME type (see Section 4.6.10). The attribute is optional.
There is no default value.
fetchtimeout: the maximum interval to wait when fetching a media
resource. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
30s.
soundLevel: playback soundLevel (volume) for the media resource. A
valid value is a percentage (see Section 4.6.4). The value
indicates increase or decrease relative to the original recorded
volume of the media. A value of 100% (the default) plays the
media at its recorded volume, a value of 200% will play the media
twice recorded volume, 50% at half its recorded volume, a value of
0% will play the media silently, and so on. See 'soundLevel' in
SMIL ([W3C.REC-SMIL2-20051213]) for further information. The
attribute is optional. The default value is 100%.
clipBegin: offset from start of media resource to begin playing. A
valid value is a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7). The offset
is measured in normal media playback time from the beginning of
the media resource. If the clipBegin offset is after the end of
media, no media is played. See 'clipBegin' in SMIL
([W3C.REC-SMIL2-20051213]) for further information. The attribute
is optional. The default value is 0s.
The <media> element has no children.
It is an error if the media resource cannot be fetched (e.g. fetch
timeout occurs) or played (e.g. unsupported format).
4.3.1.1.2. <variable>
The <variable> element specifies variable announcements using
predefined media resources. Each variable has at least a type (e.g.
date) and a value (e.g. 2008-02-25). The value is rendered according
to the variable type (e.g. 25th February 2008) as well as other
defined attributes. The precise mechanism for generating variable
announcements (including the location of associated media resources)
is implementation specific.
A <variable> element has the following attributes:
value: specifies the string to be rendered. A valid value is a
string (see Section 4.6.6). The attribute is mandatory.
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type: specifies the type to use for rendering. A valid value is a
string (see Section 4.6.6). The attribute is mandatory.
format: specifies format information to use in conjunction with the
type for the rendering. A valid value is a string (see
Section 4.6.6). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
gender: specifies the gender to use when rendering the variable.
Valid values are "male" or "female". The attribute is optional.
There is no default value.
xml:lang: specifies the language to use when rendering the variable.
A valid value is a language identifier (see Section 4.6.11). The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
The <variable> element has no children.
This package is agnostic to which <variable> values, types and
formats are supported by an implementation. However it is
RECOMMENDED that an implementation support the following type/format
combinations:
type=date Supported formats: "mdy" (month day year), "ymd" (year
month day), "dym" (day month year), "dm" (day month)
type=time Supported formats: "t12" (12 hour format with am/pm),
"t24" (24 hour format)
type=digits Supported formats: "gen" (XXX), "ndn" (XXX), "crn"
(cardinal), "ord" (ordinal)
[Editors Note: IVR-202. What do 'gen' and 'ndn' format mean for
digits? Terms defined in MSCML. ]
This specification is agnostic to the type and codec of media
resources into which variable are rendered as well as the rendering
mechanism itself. For example, an MS implementation supporting audio
rendering may map the <variable> into one or more audio media
resources.
It is an error if a <variable> element cannot be rendered
successfully on the MS implementation.
Depending on the specific implementation of the <variable> rendering
on the MS, execution of this element may be seen as conversion of a
<variable> into a list of <media> elements. For example,
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<variable value="2008-02-25" type="date" format="dmy"
xml:lang="en" gender="male"/>
could be transformed into audio saying "twenty-fifth of February two
thousand and eight" using a list of <media> resources:
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/25th.wav"/>
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/of.wav"/>
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/february.wav"/>
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/2000.wav"/>
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/and.wav"/>
<media src="nfs://voicebase/en/male/8.wav"/>
4.3.1.1.3. <dtmf>
The <dtmf> element specifies a sequence of DTMF tones for output.
DTMF tones could be generated using <media> resources where the
output is transported as RTP audio packets. However, <media>
resources are not sufficient for cases where DTMF tones are to be
transported as DTMF RTP ([RFC4733]) or in event packages.
A <dtmf> element has the following attributes:
digits: specifies the DTMF sequence to output. A valid value is a
DTMF string (see Section 4.6.3). The attribute is mandatory.
level: used to define the power level for which the DTMF tones will
be generated. Values are expressed in dBm0. A valid value is an
integer in the range of 0 to -96 (dBm0). Larger negative values
express lower power levels. Note that values lower than -55 dBm0
will be rejected by most receivers (TR-TSY-000181, ITU-T Q.24A).
The attribute is optional. The default value is -6 (dBm0).
duration: specifies the duration for which each DTMF tone is
generated. A valid value is a time designation (see
Section 4.6.7). Implementations may round the value if they only
support discrete durations. The attribute is optional. The
default value is 100ms.
interval: specifies the duration of a silence interval following
each generated DTMF tone. A valid value is a time designation
(see Section 4.6.7). Implementations may round the value if they
only support discrete durations. The attribute is optional. The
default value is 100ms.
The <dtmf> element has no children.
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It is an error if a <dtmf> element cannot be processed successfully.
4.3.1.2. <control>
The <control> element defines how DTMF input is mapped to runtime
controls, including prompt playback controls.
DTMF input matching these controls MUST NOT cause prompt playback to
interrupted (i.e. no prompt bargein), but causes the appropriate
operation to be applied; for examples, speeding up prompt playback.
DTMF input matching these controls has priority over <collect> input
for the duration of prompt playback. If incoming DTMF matches a
specified runtime control, then the DTMF is not available to the
<collect> operation, including its digit buffer. Once prompt
playback is complete, runtime controls are no longer active.
The <control> element has the following attributes:
gotostartkey: maps a DTMF key to skip directly to the start of the
prompt. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see Section 4.6.2).
The attribute is optional. There is no default value.
gotoendkey: maps a DTMF key to skip directly to the end of the
prompt. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see Section 4.6.2).
The attribute is optional. There is no default value.
skipinterval: indicates how far a MS should skip backwards or
forwards through prompt playback when the rewind (rwkey) of fast
forward key (ffkey) is pressed. A valid value is a Time
Designation (see Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The
default value is 6s.
ffkey: maps a DTMF key to a fast forward operation equal to the
value of 'skipinterval'. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see
Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
rwkey: maps a DTMF key to a rewind operation equal to the value of
'skipinterval'. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see
Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
pauseinterval: indicates how long a MS should pause prompt playback
when the pausekey is pressed. A valid value is a Time Designation
(see Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default
value is 10s.
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pausekey: maps a DTMF key to a pause operation equal to the value of
'pauseinterval'. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see
Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
resumekey: maps a DTMF key to a resume operation. A valid value is
a DTMF Character (see Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional.
There is no default value.
volumeinterval: indicates the increase or decrease in playback
volume (relative to the current volume) when the volupkey or
voldnkey is pressed. A valid value is a percentage (see
Section 4.6.8). The attribute is optional. The default value is
10%.
volupkey: maps a DTMF key to a volume increase operation equal to
the value of 'volumeinterval'. A valid value is a DTMF Character
(see Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no
default value.
voldnkey: maps a DTMF key to a volume decrease operation equal to
the value of 'volumeinterval'. A valid value is a DTMF Character
(see Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no
default value.
speedinterval: indicates the increase or decrease in playback speed
(relative to the current speed) when the speedupkey or speeddnkey
is pressed. A valid value is a percentage (see Section 4.6.8).
The attribute is optional. The default value is 10%.
speedupkey: maps a DTMF key to a speed increase operation equal to
the value of the speedinterval attribute. A valid value is a DTMF
Character (see Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There
is no default value.
speeddnkey: maps a DTMF key to a speed decrease operation equal to
the value of the speedinterval attribute. A valid value is a DTMF
Character (see Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There
is no default value.
external: allows one or more DTMF keys to be declared as external
controls (for example: video camera controls); the MS can send
notifications when a matching key is activated using <dtmfnotify>
(Section 4.2.5.2). A valid value is a DTMF String (see
Section 4.6.3). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
It is an error if any control key is specified with the same value
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except that the pausekey and resumekey may have the same value.
Runtime control has the following execution model upon
initialization:
1. If an error occurs during execution, then runtime control
terminates and the error is reported to the dialog container.
Controls executed successfully before the error MAY be reported
in <controlinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.2).
2. Runtime controls are active only during prompt playback. If DTMF
input matches any specified keys (for example the ffkey), then
the appropriate operation is applied immediately. If a seek
operation (ffkey, rwkey) attempts to go beyond the beginning or
end of the prompt queue, then it is automatically truncated to
the prompt beginning or end respectively. If the pause operation
attempts to pause output when it is already paused, then the
operation is ignored. If the resume operation attempts to resume
when the prompts are not paused, then the operation is ignored.
If a volume operations attempts to go beyond the minimum or
maximum volume supported by the platform, then the operation is
ignored.
3. If DTMF control subscription has been specified for the dialog,
then each DTMF match of a control operation is reported in a
<dtmfnotify> notification evemt (Section 4.2.5.2).
4. When the dialog exits, all control matches are reported in a
<controlinfo> element (Section 4.3.2.2).
4.3.1.3. <collect>
The <collect> element defines how DTMF input is collected.
The <collect> element has the following attributes:
cleardigitbuffer: indicates whether the digit buffer is to be
cleared. A valid value is a boolean (see Section 4.6.1). A value
of true indicates that the digit buffer is to be cleared. A value
of false indicates that the digit buffer is not to be cleared.
The attribute is optional. The default value is true.
timeout: indicates the maximum time to wait for user input to begin.
A valid value is a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7). The
attribute is optional. The default value is 5s.
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interdigittimeout: indicates inter-digit timeout value to use when
recognizing DTMF input. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
2s.
termtimeout: indicates the terminating timeout value to use when
recognizing DTMF input. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
0s.
escapekey: specifies a DTMF key that indicates the DTMF collection
is to be re-initiated. A valid value is a DTMF Character (see
Section 4.6.2). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
termchar: specifies a DTMF character for terminating DTMF input
collection using the internal grammar. A valid value is a DTMF
character (see Section 4.6.2). To disable termination by a
conventional DTMF character, set the parameter to an
unconventional character like 'A'. The attribute is optional.
The default value is '#'.
maxdigits: The maximum number of digits to collect using an internal
digits (0-9 only) grammar. A valid value is a positive integer
(see Section 4.6.5). The attribute is optional. The default
value is 5.
The <collect> element has the following child elements:
<grammar>: indicates a custom grammar format (see
Section 4.3.1.3.1). The element is optional.
The custom grammar takes priority over the internal grammar. If a
<grammar> element is specified, the MS MUST use it for DTMF
collection.
DTMF collection has the following execution model upon
initialization:
1. The DTMF collection buffer MUST NOT receive DTMF input matching
<control> operations (see Section 4.3.1.2).
2. If an error occurs during execution, then collection terminates
and the error is reported to the dialog container. DTMF
collected before the error MAY be reported in <collectinfo> (see
Section 4.3.2.3).
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3. The digit buffer is cleared if the value of the cleardigitbuffer
attribute is true.
4. A timer with the duration of the value of the timeout attribute
is activated. If the timer expires before DTMF input collection
begins, then collection execution terminates, the <collectinfo>
(see Section 4.3.2.3) has the termmode attribute set to noinput
and the execution status reported to the dialog container.
5. If DTMF collect input matches the value of the escapekey
attribute, then the timer is canceled and DTMF collection is re-
initialized.
6. Other DTMF collect input is matched to the grammar. Valid DTMF
patterns are either a simple digit string where the maximum
length is determined by the maxdigits attribute and may be
terminated by the character in the termchar attribute; or a
custom DTMF grammar specified with the <grammar> element. The
attributes interdigittimeout and termtimeout control interdigit
timeout and the terminating timeout respectively.
7. If the collect input completely matches the grammar, the timer is
canceled, collection execution terminates and the execution
status is reported to the dialog container with <collectinfo>
(see Section 4.3.2.3) where the termmode attribute set to match.
8. If the collect input does not match the grammar, the timer is
canceled, collection execution terminates and execution status is
reported to the dialog container with a <collectinfo> (see
Section 4.3.2.3) where the termmode attribute set to nomatch.
4.3.1.3.1. <grammar>
The <grammar> element allows a custom grammar, inline or external, to
be specified. Custom grammars permit the full range of DTMF
characters including '*' and '#' to be specified for DTMF pattern
matching.
The <grammar> element has the following attributes:
src: specifies the location of an external grammar document. A
valid value is a URI (see Section 4.6.9). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
type: identifies the preferred type of the grammar document
identified by the src attribute. The MS MAY use the value to
assist the remote source in selecting the appropriate resource
type (e.g. with HTTP 'accept' header) and to determine how the
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document is processed. A valid value is a MIME type (see
Section 4.6.10). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value.
fetchtimeout: the maximum interval to wait when fetching a grammar
resource. A valid value is a Time Designation (see
Section 4.6.7). The attribute is optional. The default value is
30s.
The <grammar> element allows inline grammars to be specified. XML
grammar formats MUST use a namespace other than the one used in this
specification. Non-XML grammar formats MAY use a CDATA section.
The MS MUST support the [SRGS] XML grammar format ("application/
srgs+xml") and MS MAY support KPML ([RFC4730]) or other grammar
formats.
It is an error if a grammar format is specified which is not
supported by the MS.
For example, the following fragment shows DTMF collection with an
inline SRGS grammar:
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<collect cleardigitbuffer="false" timeout="20s"
interdigittimeout="1s">
<grammar>
<grammar xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/06/grammar"
version="1.0" mode="dtmf">
<rule id="digit">
<one-of>
<item>0</item>
<item>1</item>
<item>2</item>
<item>3</item>
<item>4</item>
<item>5</item>
<item>6</item>
<item>7</item>
<item>8</item>
<item>9</item>
</one-of>
</rule>
<rule id="pin" scope="public">
<one-of>
<item>
<item repeat="4">
<ruleref uri="#digit"/>
</item>#</item>
<item>* 9</item>
</one-of>
</rule>
</grammar>
</grammar>
</collect>
The same grammar could also be referenced externally (and take
advantage of HTTP caching):
<collect cleardigitbuffer="false" timeout="20s">
<grammar type=""application/srgs+xml"
src="http://example.org/pin.grxml"/>
</collect>
4.3.1.4. <record>
The <record> element defines how media input is recorded.
The <record> element has the following attributes:
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timeout: indicates the time to wait for user input to begin. A
valid value is a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7). The
attribute is optional. The default value is 5s.
type: specifies the type of the recording format. The type value
may include additional parameters for guiding recording; for
example, [RFC4281] defines a 'codec' parameter for 'bucket' media
types like video/3gpp. A valid value is a MIME type (see
Section 4.6.10). The attribute is optional. There is no default
value (recording format is MS-specific).
dest: specifies the location where recorded data is to be stored.
The MS uploads the recorded data to this location during or after
the recording operation. A valid value is a URI (see
Section 4.6.9). The attribute is optional. If not specified, the
MS MUST use a local recording location (reported in <recordinfo>
Section 4.3.2.4); this recording is available until the connection
or conference associated with the dialog terminates.
vadinitial: Control whether voice activity detection can be used to
initiate the recording operation. A valid value is a boolean (see
Section 4.6.1). A value of true indicates recording may be
initiated using voice activity detection. A value of false
indicates that recording must not be initiated using voice
activity detection. The attribute is optional. The default value
is true.
vadfinal: Control whether voice activity detection can be used to
terminate the recording operation. A valid value is a boolean
(see Section 4.6.1). A value of true indicates recording may be
terminated using voice activity detection. A value of false
indicates that recording must not be terminated using voice
activity detection. The attribute is optional. The default value
is true.
dtmfterm: Indicates whether the recording operation is terminated by
DTMF input. A valid value is a boolean (see Section 4.6.1). A
value of true indicates that recording is terminated by DTMF
input. A value of false indicates that recording is not
terminated by DTMF input. The attribute is optional. The default
value is true.
maxtime: indicates The maximum duration of the recording. A valid
value is a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7). The attribute is
optional. The default value is 15s.
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beep: indicates whether a 'beep' should be played immediately prior
to initiation of the recording operation. A valid value is a
boolean (see Section 4.6.1). The attribute is optional. The
default value is false.
finalsilence: indicates the interval of silence that indicates end
of speech. This interval is not part of the recording itself.
This parameter is ignored if the vadfinal attribute has the value
false. A valid value is a Time Designation (see Section 4.6.7).
The attribute is optional. The default value is 5s.
It is an error if a dest attribute is specified where the MS does not
understand the URI protocol, cannot locate the URI, or cannot send
recorded data successfully to the location.
The <record> element has no child elements.
Recording has the following execution model upon initialization:
1. If an error occurs during execution, then record execution
terminates and the error is reported to the dialog container.
Data recorded before the error MAY be reported in <recordinfo>
(see Section 4.3.2.4).
2. If DTMF input (not matching a <control> operation) is received
during prompt playback and the prompt bargein attribute is set to
true, then record execution is activated. Otherwise, it is
activated after the completion of prompt playback.
3. If a beep attribute with the value of true is specified, then a
beep tone is played.
4. A timer with the duration of the value of the timeout attribute
is activated. If the timer expires before the recording
operation begins, then recording execution terminates and the
status is reported to dialog container with <recordinfo> (see
Section 4.3.2.4) where the termmode attribute is set to noinput.
5. Initiation of the recording operation depends on the value of the
vadinitial attribute. If vadinitial has the value false, then
the recording operation is initiated immediately. Otherwise, the
recording operations is initiated when voice activity is
detected.
6. When the recording operation is initiated, a timer is started for
the value of the maxtime attribute (maximum duration of the
recording). If the timer expires before the recording operation
is complete, then recording execution terminates and the
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dialogexit result contains a <recordinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.4)
with the termmode attribute set to maxtime.
7. During the record operation user media input is recording in the
format specified by the value of the type attribute. If the dest
attribute is specified, then recorded input is sent to that
location. Otherwise, MS uses an internal location.
8. If the dtmfterm attribute has the value true and DTMF input is
detected during the record operation, then the recording
terminates and and status is reported to the dialog container
with a <recordinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.4) where the termmode
attribute is set to dtmf.
9. If vadfinal attribute has the value true, then the recording
operation is terminated when a period of silence, with the
duration specified by the value of the finalsilence attribute, is
detected. This period of silence is not part of the final
recording. The status is reported to the dialog container with a
<recordinfo> (see Section 4.3.2.4) where the termmode attribute
is set to finalsilence.
4.3.2. Exit Information
When the dialog exits, information about the specified operations is
reported in a <dialogexit> notification event (Section 4.2.5.1).
4.3.2.1. <promptinfo>
The <promptinfo> element reports the information about prompt
execution. It has the following attributes:
duration: indicates the duration of prompt playback in milliseconds.
A valid value is a non-negative integer (see Section 4.6.4). The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
termmode: indicates how playback was terminated. Valid values are:
'stopped', 'completed' or 'bargein'. The attribute is mandatory.
The <promptinfo> element has no child elements.
4.3.2.2. <controlinfo>
The <controlinfo> element reports information about control
execution.
The <controlinfo> element has no attributes and has 0 or more
<controlmatch> child elements each describing an individual runtime
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control match.
4.3.2.2.1. <controlmatch>
The <controlmatch> element has the following attributes:
dtmf: DTMF input triggering the runtime control. A valid value is a
DTMF string (see Section 4.6.3) with no space between characters.
The attribute is mandatory.
timestamp: indicates the time (on the MS) at which the control was
triggered. A valid value is an dateTime expression
(Section 4.6.12). The attribute is mandatory.
The <controlmatch> element has no child elements.
4.3.2.3. <collectinfo>
The <collectinfo> element reports the information about collect
execution.
The <collectinfo> element has the following attributes:
dtmf: DTMF input collected from the user. A valid value is a DTMF
string (see Section 4.6.3) with no space between characters. The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
termmode: indicates how collection was terminated. Valid values
are: 'stopped', 'match', 'noinput' or 'nomatch'. The attribute is
mandatory.
The <collectinfo> element has no child elements.
4.3.2.4. <recordinfo>
The <recordinfo> element reports the information about record
execution.
The <recordinfo> element has the following attributes:
recording: references the location to which media is recorded. A
valid value is a URI (see Section 4.6.9). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
type: indicates the format of the recording. A valid value is a
MIME type (see Section 4.6.10). The attribute is optional. There
is no default value.
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duration: indicates the duration of the recording in milliseconds.
A valid value is a non-negative integer (see Section 4.6.4). The
attribute is optional. There is no default value.
size: indicates the size of the recording in bytes. A valid value
is a non-negative integer (see Section 4.6.4). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
termmode: indicates how recording was terminated. Valid values are:
'stopped', 'noinput', 'dtmf', 'maxtime', and 'finalsilence'. The
attribute is mandatory.
The <recordinfo> element has no child elements.
4.4. Audit Elements
The audit elements defined in this section allow the MS to be audited
for package capabilities as well as dialogs managed by the package.
Auditing is particularly important for two use cases. First, it
enables discovery of package capabilities supported on an MS before
an AS starts a dialog on connection or conference. The AS may then
use this informaton to create request elements using supported
capabilities and, in the case of codecs, to negotiate an appropriate
SDP for a user agent's connection. Second, auditing enables
discovery of the existence and status of dialogs currently managed by
the package on the MS. This allows one AS to take over management of
the dialogs when the AS which initiated the dialogs fails or is no
longer available.
4.4.1. <audit>
The <audit> request element is sent to the MS to request information
about the capabilities of, and dialogs currently managed with, this
control package. Capabilities include supported dialog types,
grammar formats, record and media types as well as codecs. Dialog
information includes the status of managed dialogs as well as codecs.
The <audit> element has the following attributes:
capabilities: indicates whether package capabilities are to be
audited. A valid value is a boolean (see Section 4.6.1). A value
of true indicates that capability information is to be reported.
A value of false indicates that capability information is not to
be reported. The attribute is optional. The default value is
true.
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dialogs: indicates whether dialogs currently managed by the package
are to be audited. A valid value is a boolean (see
Section 4.6.1). A value of true indicates that dialog information
is to be reported. A value of false indicates that dialog
information is not to be reported. The attribute is optional.
The default value is true.
dialogid: string identifying a specific dialog to audit. It is an
error if the dialogid attribute is specified and the dialog
identifier is not valid. The attribute is optional. There is no
default value.
If the dialogs attribute has the value true and dialogid attribute is
specified, then only audit information about the specified dialog is
reported. If the dialogs attribute has the value false, then no
dialog audit information is reported even if a dialogid attribute is
specified.
The <audit> element has no child elements.
When the MS receives a <audit> request, it MUST reply with a
<auditresponse> element (Section 4.4.2). If the request is
successful, <auditresponse> contain (depending on atrribute values) a
<capabilities> element (Section 4.4.2.2) reporting package
capabilities and a <dialogs> element (Section 4.4.2.3) reporting
managed dialog information.
For example, a request to audit capabilities and dialogs managed by
the package:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<audit/>
</mscivr>
In this example, only capabilities are to be audited:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<audit dialogs="false"/>
</mscivr>
With this example, only a specific dialog is to be audited:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<audit capabilities="false" dialogid="d4"/>
</mscivr>
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4.4.2. <auditresponse>
The <auditresponse> element describes a response to a <audit>
request.
The <auditresponse> element has the following attributes:
status: numeric code indicating the audit response status. The
attribute is mandatory. Valid values are defined in Section 4.5.
reason: string specifying a reason for the status. The attribute is
optional.
The <auditresponse> element has the following sequence of child
elements:
<capabilities> element (Section 4.4.2.2) describing capabilities of
the package. The element is optional.
<dialogs> element (Section 4.4.2.3) describing information about
managed dialogs. The element is optional.
For example, a successful response to a <audit> request requesting
capabilities and dialogs information:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<auditresponse status="200">
<capabilities>
<dialogtypes>
<mimetype>application/msc-ivr+xml</mimetype>
</dialogtypes>
<grammartypes>
<mimetype>application/srgs+xml</mimetype>
</grammartypes>
<recordtypes>
<mimetype>application/x-wav</mimetype>
<mimetype>video/3gpp</mimetype>
</recordtypes>
<mediatypes>
<mimetype>application/x-wav</mimetype>
<mimetype>video/3gpp</mimetype>
</mediatypes>
<codecs>
<codec>
<subtype>H.263</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>H.264</subtype>
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</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMU</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMA</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>telephone-event</subtype>
</codec>
</codecs>
</capabilities>
<dialogs>
<dialogaudit dialogid="4532" state="preparing"/>
<dialogaudit dialogid="4599" state="prepared"/>
<dialogaudit dialogid="1234" state="started" conferenceid="conf1">
<codecs>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMA</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>telephone-event</subtype>
</codec>
</codecs>
</dialogaudit>
</dialogs>
</auditresponse>
</mscivr>
4.4.2.1. <codecs>
The <codecs> provides audit information about codecs.
The <codecs> element has no attributes.
The <codecs> element has the following sequence of child elements (0
or more occurences):
<codec>: audit information for a codec (Section 4.4.2.1.1). The
element is optional.
For example, a fragment describing two codecs:
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<codecs>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMA</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>telephone-event</subtype>
</codec>
</codecs>
4.4.2.1.1. <codec>
The <codec> element describes a codec on the MS. The element is
defined in the XCON conference information data model
([I-D.ietf-xcon-common-data-model]).
Note that additional information about the codec can be provided
through schema extensibility (see Section 5).
[Editors Note: IVR-203. Do we need to define additional information?
specific (rate, speed, etc) or generic using <params>?]
For example, a fragment with a <codec> element describing the H.263
codec:
<codec>
<subtype>H.263</subtype>
</codec>
4.4.2.2. <capabilities>
The <capabilities> element provides audit information about package
capabilities.
The <capabilities> element has no attributes.
The <capabilities> element has the following sequence of child
elements:
<dialogtypes>: element (Section 4.4.2.2.1) describing supported
dialog types. The element is mandatory.
<grammartypes>: element (Section 4.4.2.2.2) describing supported
<grammar> (Section 4.3.1.3.1) format types. The element is
mandatory.
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<recordtypes>: element (Section 4.4.2.2.3) describing supported
<record> (Section 4.3.1.4) format types. The element is
mandatory.
<mediatypes>: element (Section 4.4.2.2.4) describing supported
<media> (Section 4.3.1.1.1) format types. The element is
mandatory.
<codecs>: element (Section 4.4.2.1) describing codecs available to
the package. The element is mandatory.
For example, a fragment describing capabilities:
<capabilities>
<dialogtypes>
<mimetype>application/msc-ivr+xml</mimetype>
<mimetype>application/voicexml+xml</mimetype>
</dialogtypes>
<grammartypes>
<mimetype>application/srgs+xml</mimetype>
</grammartypes>
<recordtypes>
<mimetype>application/x-wav</mimetype>
<mimetype>video/3gpp</mimetype>
</recordtypes>
<mediatypes>
<mimetype>application/x-wav</mimetype>
<mimetype>video/3gpp</mimetype>
</mediatypes>
<codecs>
<codec>
<subtype>H.263</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>H.264</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMU</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMA</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>telephone-event</subtype>
</codec>
</codecs>
</capabilities>
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4.4.2.2.1. <dialogtypes>
The <dialogtypes> element provides information about dialog types
supported by the package. The MS MUST include the mandatory dialog
type for this package, "application/msc-ivr+xml" (Section 8.3)
associated with the IVR dialog type (Section 4.3).
The <dialogtypes> element has no attributes.
The <dialogtypes> element has the following sequence of child
elements (1 or more occurences):
<mimetype>: element whose content model describes a mime type
(Section 4.6.10). The element is optional.
4.4.2.2.2. <grammartypes>
The <grammartypes> element provides information about <grammar>
format types supported by the package. The MS MUST include the
mandatory SRGS format type, "application/srgs+xml"
(Section 4.3.1.3.1).
The <grammartypes> element has no attributes.
The <grammartypes> element has the following sequence of child
elements (1 or more occurences):
<mimetype>: element whose content model describes a mime type
(Section 4.6.10). The element is optional.
4.4.2.2.3. <recordtypes>
The <recordtypes> element provides information about <record> format
types supported by the package (Section 4.3.1.4).
The <recordtypes> element has no attributes.
The <recordtypes> element has the following sequence of child
elements (0 or more occurences):
<mimetype>: element whose content model describes a mime type
(Section 4.6.10). The element is optional.
4.4.2.2.4. <mediatypes>
The <mediatypes> element provides information about <media> format
types supported by the package (Section 4.3.1.1.1).
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The <mediatypes> element has no attributes.
The <mediatypes> element has the following sequence of child elements
(0 or more occurences):
<mimetype>: element whose content model describes a mime type
(Section 4.6.10). The element is optional.
4.4.2.3. <dialogs>
The <dialogs> element provides audit information about dialogs.
The <dialogs> element has no attributes.
The <dialogs> element has the following sequence of child elements (0
or more occurences):
<dialogaudit>: audit information for a dialog (Section 4.4.2.3.1).
The element is optional.
4.4.2.3.1. <dialogaudit>
The <dialogaudit> element has the following attributes:
dialogid: string identifying the dialog. The attribute is
mandatory.
state: string indicating the state of the dialog. Valid values are:
preparing, prepared, starting, started. The attribute is
mandatory.
connectionid: string identifying the SIP dialog connection
associated with the dialog (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
conferenceid: string identifying the conference associated with the
dialog (see Section 17.1 of
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]). The attribute is
optional. There is no default value.
The <dialogaudit> element has the following child element:
<codecs> element describing codecs used in the dialog. See
Section 4.4.2.1. The element is optional.
For example, a fragment describing a started dialog which is using
PCMU and telephony-event codecs:
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<dialogaudit dialogid="1234" state="started">
<codecs>
<codec>
<subtype>PCMU</subtype>
</codec>
<codec>
<subtype>telephone-event</subtype>
</codec>
</codecs>
</dialogaudit>
4.5. Response Status Codes
The following status codes for dialog management (Section 4.2.4) and
audit (Section 4.4.2) responses are defined:
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+-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
| code | description |
+-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
| 200 | OK |
| | |
| 401 | dialogid already exists |
| | |
| 402 | dialogid does not exist |
| | |
| 403 | connectionid does not exist |
| | |
| 404 | conferenceid does not exist |
| | |
| 405 | Unknown or unsupported element |
| | |
| 406 | Element required |
| | |
| 407 | Unknown or unsupported attribute |
| | |
| 408 | Attribute required |
| | |
| 409 | dialog type not supported |
| | |
| 410 | Retrieving resource failed |
| | |
| 411 | Invalid attribute value |
| | |
| 412 | subscription not supported |
| | |
| 413 | invalid stream configuration |
| | |
| 414 | dialog execution cancelled |
| | |
| 499 | other error |
+-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
Table 1: status codes
The MS MAY define other status codes.
4.6. Type Definitions
This section defines types referenced in attribute definitions.
4.6.1. Boolean
The value space of boolean is the set {true, false}.
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4.6.2. DTMFChar
A DTMF character. The value space is the set {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, 9, #, *, A, B, C, D}.
4.6.3. DTMFString
A String composed of one or more DTMFChars.
4.6.4. Non-Negative Integer
The value space of non-negative integer is the infinite set
{0,1,2,...}.
4.6.5. Positive Integer
The value space of positive integer is the infinite set {1,2,...}.
4.6.6. String
A string in the character encoding associated with the XML element.
4.6.7. Time Designation
A time designation consists of a non-negative real number followed by
a time unit identifier.
The time unit identifiers are: "ms" (milliseconds) and "s" (seconds).
Examples include: "3s", "850ms", "0.7s", ".5s" and "+1.5s".
4.6.8. Percentage
A percentage consists of a Positive Integer followed by "%".
Examples include: "100%", "500%" and "10%".
4.6.9. URI
Uniform Resource Indicator as defined in [RFC3986].
4.6.10. mimetype
A string formated as a IANA mimetype.
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4.6.11. Language Identifier
A language identifier labels information content as being of a
particular human language variant. Following the XML specification
for language identification [XML], a legal language identifier is
identified by a RFC4646 ([RFC4646]) and RFC4647 ([RFC4647]) code
where the language code is required and a country code or other
subtag identifier is optional.
4.6.12. DateTime
A string formated according to the XML schema definition of a
dateTime type ([XMLSchema:Part2]).
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5. Formal Syntax
This section defines the XML schema for IVR Control Package.
The schema defines datatypes, attributes, dialog management and IVR
dialog elements in the urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr namespace. In
most elements the order of child elements is significant. The schema
is extensible: elements allow attributes and child elements from
other namespaces. Elements from outside this package's namespace can
occur after elements defined in this package.
The schema is dependent upon the schema (framework.xsd) defined in
Section 17.1 of the Control Framework
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]. It is also dependent
upon the W3C (xml.xsd) schema for definitions of XML attributes (e.g.
xml:base).
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xsd:schema targetNamespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr"
elementFormDefault="qualified" blockDefault="#all"
xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr"
xmlns:fw="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:control:framework-attributes"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
IETF MediaCtrl IVR 1.0 (20080610)
This is the schema of the IETF MediaCtrl IVR control
package.
The schema namespace is urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<!--
#############################################################
SCHEMA IMPORTS
#############################################################
-->
<xsd:import namespace="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace"
schemaLocation="xml.xsd">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
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This import brings in the XML attributes for
xml:base, xml:lang, etc
See http://www.w3.org/2001/xml.xsd for latest version
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
</xsd:import>
<xsd:import
namespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:control:framework-attributes"
schemaLocation="framework.xsd">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
This import brings in the framework attributes for
conferenceid and connectionid.
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
</xsd:import>
<!--
#####################################################
Extensible core type
#####################################################
-->
<xsd:complexType name="Tcore">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
This type is extended by other component types to
allow elements and attributes from other namespaces
to be added.
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:anyAttribute namespace="##other" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:complexType>
<!--
#####################################################
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TOP LEVEL ELEMENT: mscivr
#####################################################
-->
<xsd:complexType name="mscivrType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:choice>
<xsd:element ref="dialogprepare" />
<xsd:element ref="dialogstart" />
<xsd:element ref="dialogterminate" />
<xsd:element ref="response" />
<xsd:element ref="event" />
<xsd:element ref="audit" />
<xsd:element ref="auditresponse" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="version" type="version.datatype"
use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="mscivr" type="mscivrType" />
<!--
#####################################################
DIALOG MANAGEMENT TYPES
#####################################################
-->
<!-- dialogprepare -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogprepareType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="dialog" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
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</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="src" type="xsd:anyURI" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype"
default="application/msc-ivr+xml" />
<xsd:attribute name="fetchtimeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="30s" />
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogprepare" type="dialogprepareType" />
<!-- dialogstart -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogstartType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="dialog" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="subscribe" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="params" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="stream" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="src" type="xsd:anyURI" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="fetchtimeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="30s" />
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="prepareddialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" />
<xsd:attributeGroup ref="fw:framework-attributes" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogstart" type="dialogstartType" />
<!-- dialogterminate -->
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<xsd:complexType name="dialogterminateType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="immediate"
type="boolean.datatype" default="false" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogterminate" type="dialogterminateType" />
<!-- response -->
<xsd:complexType name="responseType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="status" type="status.datatype"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="reason" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" use="required" />
<xsd:attributeGroup ref="fw:framework-attributes" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="response" type="responseType" />
<!-- event -->
<xsd:complexType name="eventType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:choice>
<xsd:element ref="dialogexit" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="dtmfnotify" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:choice>
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
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</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="event" type="eventType" />
<!-- dialogexit-->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogexitType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="promptinfo" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="controlinfo" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="collectinfo" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="recordinfo" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="params" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="status"
type="xsd:positiveInteger" use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="reason" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogexit" type="dialogexitType" />
<!-- dtmfnotify-->
<xsd:complexType name="dtmfnotifyType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="matchmode"
type="matchmode.datatype" default="all" />
<xsd:attribute name="dtmf" type="dtmfstring.datatype"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="timestamp" type="xsd:dateTime"
use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
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<xsd:element name="dtmfnotify" type="dtmfnotifyType" />
<!-- promptinfo -->
<xsd:complexType name="promptinfoType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="duration"
type="xsd:nonNegativeInteger" />
<xsd:attribute name="termmode"
type="prompt_termmode.datatype" use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="promptinfo" type="promptinfoType" />
<!-- controlinfo -->
<xsd:complexType name="controlinfoType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="controlmatch" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="controlinfo" type="controlinfoType" />
<!-- controlmatch -->
<xsd:complexType name="controlmatchType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="dtmf"
type="dtmfstring.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="timestamp" type="xsd:dateTime" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
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</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="controlmatch" type="controlmatchType" />
<!-- collectinfo -->
<xsd:complexType name="collectinfoType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="dtmf"
type="dtmfstring.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="termmode"
type="collect_termmode.datatype" use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="collectinfo" type="collectinfoType" />
<!-- recordinfo -->
<xsd:complexType name="recordinfoType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="recording" type="xsd:anyURI" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="duration"
type="xsd:nonNegativeInteger" />
<xsd:attribute name="size"
type="xsd:nonNegativeInteger" />
<xsd:attribute name="termmode"
type="record_termmode.datatype" use="required" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="recordinfo" type="recordinfoType" />
<!-- subscribe -->
<xsd:complexType name="subscribeType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
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<xsd:element ref="dtmfsub" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="subscribe" type="subscribeType" />
<!-- dtmfsub -->
<xsd:complexType name="dtmfsubType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="matchmode"
type="matchmode.datatype" default="all" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dtmfsub" type="dtmfsubType" />
<!-- params -->
<xsd:complexType name="paramsType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="param" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="params" type="paramsType" />
<!-- param -->
<!-- doesn't extend tCore since its content model is mixed -->
<xsd:complexType name="paramType" mixed="true">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
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maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="valuetype" type="valuetype.datatype"
default="string" />
<xsd:anyAttribute namespace="##other" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="param" type="paramType" />
<!-- stream -->
<xsd:complexType name="streamType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="media" type="media.datatype"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="label" type="label.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="direction"
type="direction.datatype" default="sendrecv" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="stream" type="streamType" />
<!-- dialog -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="prompt" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="control" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="collect" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="record" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="repeatCount"
type="xsd:nonNegativeInteger" default="1" />
<xsd:attribute name="repeatDur"
type="timedesignation.datatype" />
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</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialog" type="dialogType" />
<!-- prompt -->
<xsd:complexType name="promptType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:choice minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="unbounded">
<xsd:element ref="media" />
<xsd:element ref="variable" />
<xsd:element ref="dtmf" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other"
processContents="lax" />
</xsd:choice>
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:base" />
<xsd:attribute name="bargein" type="boolean.datatype"
default="true" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="prompt" type="promptType" />
<!-- media -->
<xsd:complexType name="mediaType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="src" type="xsd:anyURI"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="fetchtimeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="30s" />
<xsd:attribute name="soundLevel"
type="percentage.datatype" default="100%" />
<xsd:attribute name="clipBegin"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="0s" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="media" type="mediaType" />
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<!-- variable -->
<xsd:complexType name="variableType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="value" type="xsd:string"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string"
use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="format" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="gender" type="gender.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute ref="xml:lang" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="variable" type="variableType" />
<!-- dtmf -->
<xsd:complexType name="dtmfType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="digits"
type="dtmfstring.datatype" use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="level" type="xsd:integer"
default="-6" />
<xsd:attribute name="duration"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="100ms" />
<xsd:attribute name="interval"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="100ms" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dtmf" type="dtmfType" />
<!-- control -->
<xsd:complexType name="controlType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="skipinterval"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="6s" />
<xsd:attribute name="ffkey" type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="rwkey" type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="pauseinterval"
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type="timedesignation.datatype" default="10s" />
<xsd:attribute name="pausekey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="resumekey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="volumeinterval"
type="percentage.datatype" default="10%" />
<xsd:attribute name="volupkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="voldnkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="speedinterval"
type="percentage.datatype" default="10%" />
<xsd:attribute name="speedupkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="speeddnkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="gotostartkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="gotoendkey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="external"
type="dtmfstring.datatype" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="control" type="controlType" />
<!-- collect -->
<xsd:complexType name="collectType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="grammar" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="cleardigitbuffer"
type="boolean.datatype" default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="timeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="5s" />
<xsd:attribute name="interdigittimeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="2s" />
<xsd:attribute name="termtimeout"
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type="timedesignation.datatype" default="0s" />
<xsd:attribute name="escapekey"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="termchar"
type="dtmfchar.datatype" default="#" />
<xsd:attribute name="maxdigits"
type="xsd:positiveInteger" default="5" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="collect" type="collectType" />
<!-- grammar -->
<!-- doesn't extend tCore since its content model is mixed -->
<xsd:complexType name="grammarType" mixed="true">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="src" type="xsd:anyURI" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="fetchtimeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="30s" />
<xsd:anyAttribute namespace="##other" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="grammar" type="grammarType" />
<!-- record -->
<xsd:complexType name="recordType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="timeout"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="5s" />
<xsd:attribute name="type" type="mime.datatype" />
<xsd:attribute name="dest" type="xsd:anyURI" />
<xsd:attribute name="beep" type="boolean.datatype"
default="false" />
<xsd:attribute name="vadinitial"
type="boolean.datatype" default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="vadfinal"
type="boolean.datatype" default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="dtmfterm"
type="boolean.datatype" default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="maxtime"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="15s" />
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<xsd:attribute name="finalsilence"
type="timedesignation.datatype" default="5s" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="record" type="recordType" />
<!--
#####################################################
AUDIT TYPES
#####################################################
-->
<!-- audit -->
<xsd:complexType name="auditType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:attribute name="capabilities"
type="boolean.datatype" default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="dialogs" type="boolean.datatype"
default="true" />
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="audit" type="auditType" />
<!-- auditresponse -->
<xsd:complexType name="auditresponseType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="capabilities" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="dialogs" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="status" type="status.datatype"
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use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="reason" type="xsd:string" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="auditresponse" type="auditresponseType" />
<!-- codec -->
<xsd:complexType name="codecType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="subtype" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" />
<xsd:attribute name="policy" type="policy.datatype" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="codec" type="codecType" />
<!-- subtype -->
<xsd:simpleType name="subtypeType">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:element name="subtype" type="subtypeType" />
<!-- codecs -->
<xsd:complexType name="codecsType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="codec" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
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</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="codecs" type="codecsType" />
<!-- capabilities -->
<xsd:complexType name="capabilitiesType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="dialogtypes" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="grammartypes" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="recordtypes" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="mediatypes" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:element ref="codecs" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="capabilities" type="capabilitiesType" />
<!-- mimetype -->
<xsd:element name="mimetype" type="mime.datatype" />
<!-- dialogtypes -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogtypesType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="mimetype" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
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</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogtypes" type="dialogtypesType" />
<!-- grammartypes -->
<xsd:complexType name="grammartypesType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="mimetype" minOccurs="1"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="grammartypes" type="grammartypesType" />
<!-- recordtypes -->
<xsd:complexType name="recordtypesType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="mimetype" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="recordtypes" type="recordtypesType" />
<!-- mediatypes -->
<xsd:complexType name="mediatypesType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
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<xsd:element ref="mimetype" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="mediatypes" type="mediatypesType" />
<!-- dialogs -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogsType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="dialogaudit" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogs" type="dialogsType" />
<!-- dialogaudit -->
<xsd:complexType name="dialogauditType">
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:extension base="Tcore">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="codecs" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="1" />
<xsd:any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded" processContents="lax" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="dialogid"
type="dialogid.datatype" use="required" />
<xsd:attribute name="state" type="state.datatype"
use="required" />
<xsd:attributeGroup ref="fw:framework-attributes" />
</xsd:extension>
</xsd:complexContent>
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</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="dialogaudit" type="dialogauditType" />
<!--
####################################################
DATATYPES
####################################################
-->
<xsd:simpleType name="version.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="1.0" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="mime.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="dialogid.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="boolean.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="true" />
<xsd:enumeration value="false" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="valuetype.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="gender.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="female" />
<xsd:enumeration value="male" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="policy.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="allowed" />
<xsd:enumeration value="disallowed" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="state.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
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<xsd:enumeration value="preparing" />
<xsd:enumeration value="prepared" />
<xsd:enumeration value="starting" />
<xsd:enumeration value="started" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="status.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:positiveInteger">
<xsd:pattern value="[0-9][0-9][0-9]" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="media.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="label.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string" />
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="direction.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="sendrecv" />
<xsd:enumeration value="sendonly" />
<xsd:enumeration value="recvonly" />
<xsd:enumeration value="inactive" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="timedesignation.datatype">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
Time designation following Time in CSS2
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string">
<xsd:pattern value="(\+)?([0-9]*\.)?[0-9]+(ms|s)" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="dtmfchar.datatype">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
DTMF character [0-9#*A-D]
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string">
<xsd:pattern value="[0-9#*A-D]" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="dtmfstring.datatype">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
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DTMF sequence [0-9#*A-D]
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string">
<xsd:pattern value="([0-9#*A-D])+" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="percentage.datatype">
<xsd:annotation>
<xsd:documentation>
whole integer followed by '%'
</xsd:documentation>
</xsd:annotation>
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:string">
<xsd:pattern value="([0-9])+%" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="prompt_termmode.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="completed" />
<xsd:enumeration value="maxduration" />
<xsd:enumeration value="bargein" />
<xsd:enumeration value="stopped" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="collect_termmode.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="match" />
<xsd:enumeration value="noinput" />
<xsd:enumeration value="nomatch" />
<xsd:enumeration value="stopped" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="record_termmode.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
<xsd:enumeration value="noinput" />
<xsd:enumeration value="dtmf" />
<xsd:enumeration value="maxtime" />
<xsd:enumeration value="finalsilence" />
<xsd:enumeration value="stopped" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
<xsd:simpleType name="matchmode.datatype">
<xsd:restriction base="xsd:NMTOKEN">
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<xsd:enumeration value="all" />
<xsd:enumeration value="collect" />
<xsd:enumeration value="control" />
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:simpleType>
</xsd:schema>
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6. Examples
This section provides examples of the IVR Control package.
6.1. AS-MS Dialog Interaction Examples
The following example assume a control channel has been established
and synced as described in the Media Control Channel Framework
([I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]).
The XML messages are in angled brackets (with the root <mscivr>
omitted); the REPORT status is in round brackets. Other aspects of
the protocol are omitted for readability.
6.1.1. Starting an IVR dialog
An IVR dialog is started successfully, and dialogexit notification
<event> is sent from the MS to the AS when the dialog exits normally.
Application Server (AS) Media Server (MS)
| |
| (1) CONTROL: <dialogstart> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (2) 202 |
| <--------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| (3) REPORT: <response status="200"/> |
| (terminate) |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (4) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (5) CONTROL: <event ... /> |
| |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (6) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
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6.1.2. IVR dialog fails to start
An IVR dialog fails to start due to an unknown dialog type. The
<sreponse> is reported in a framework 200 message.
Application Server (AS) Media Server (MS)
| |
| (1) CONTROL: <dialogstart> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (2) 200: <response status="409"/> |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
6.1.3. Preparing and starting an IVR dialog
An IVR dialog is prepared and started successfully, and then the
dialog exits normally.
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Application Server (AS) Media Server (MS)
| |
| (1) CONTROL: <dialogprepare> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (2) 202 |
| <--------------------------------------- |
| |
| (3) REPORT: <response status="200"/> |
| (terminate) |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (4) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (5) CONTROL: <dialogstart> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (6) 202 |
| <--------------------------------------- |
| |
| (7) REPORT: <response status="200"/> |
| (terminate) |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (8) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (9) CONTROL: <event .../> |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (10) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
6.1.4. Terminating a dialog
An IVR dialog is started successfully, and then terminated by the AS.
The dialogexit event is sent by to the AS when the dialog exits.
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Application Server (AS) Media Server (MS)
| |
| (1) CONTROL: <dialogstart> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (2) 202 |
| <--------------------------------------- |
| |
| (3) REPORT: <response status="200"/> |
| (terminate) |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (4) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (5) CONTROL: <dialogterminate> |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
| (6) 200: <response status="200"/> |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (7) CONTROL: <event .../> |
| <---------------------------------------- |
| |
| (8) 200 |
| ----------------------------------------> |
| |
Note that in (6) the <response> payload to the <dialogterminate/>
request is carried on a framework 200 response since it could
complete the requested operation before the transaction timeout.
6.2. IVR Dialog Examples
The following examples show how <dialog> is used with
<dialogprepare>, <dialogstart> and <event> elements to play prompts,
set runtime controls, collect DTMF input and record user input.
The examples do not specify all messages between the AS and MS.
6.2.1. Playing announcements
This example prepares an announcement composed of two prompts.
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogprepare>
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/media/Number_09.wav"/>
<media src="http://www.example.com/media/Number_11.wav"/>
</prompt>
</dialog>
</dialogprepare>
</mscivr>
If the dialog is prepared successfully, a <response> with status 200
is returned:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="200" dialogid="vxi78"/>
</mscivr>
The prepared dialog is then started on a conference playing the
prompts twice:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart prepareddialogid="vxi78" conferenceid="conference11"/>
</mscivr>
In the case of a successful dialog, the output is provided in
<event>; for example
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi78">
<dialogexit status="1">
<promptinfo termmode="completed"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
6.2.2. Prompt and collect
This example plays no prompts and just waits for DTMF input from the
user:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog>
<collect/>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
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</mscivr>
If the dialog is successful, then dialogexit <event> contains the
dtmf collected in its result parameter:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi80">
<dialogexit status="1">
<collectinfo dtmf="12345" termmode="match"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
/mscivr>
In this example, a prompt is played and then we wait for 3 hours for
a two digit sequence:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/prompt1.wav"/>
</prompt>
<collect timeout="1080s" maxdigits="2"/>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
If no user input is collected within 3 hours, then following would be
returned:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi81">
<dialogexit status="1" >
<collectinfo termmode="noinput"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
And finally in this example, one of the input parameters is invalid:
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog repeatCount="two">
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/prompt1.wav"/>
</prompt>
<collect cleardigitbuffer="true" bargein="true"
timeout="4s" interdigittimeout="2s"
termtimeout="0s maxdigits="2"/>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
The error is reported in the response:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<response status="411" dialogid="vxi82"
reason="repeatCount value invalid: two"/>
</mscivr>
6.2.3. Prompt and record
In this example, the user is prompted, then their input is recorded
for a maximum of 30 seconds.
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog>
<prompt>
<media src="http://www.example.com/media/sayname.wav"/>
</prompt>
<record dtmfterm="false" maxtime="30s" beep="true"/>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
If successful and the recording is terminated by DTMF, the following
is returned in a dialogexit <event>:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi83">
<dialogexit status="1">
<recordinfo recording="http://www.example.com/recording1.wav"
termmode="dtmf"/>
</dialogexit>
</event>
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</mscivr>
6.2.4. Runtime controls
In this example, a prompt is played with collect and runtime controls
are activated.
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog>
<prompt bargein="true">
<media src="http://www.example.com/prompt1.wav"/>
</prompt>
<control ffkey=5" rwkey="6" speedupkey="3"
speeddownkey="4"/>
<collect maxdigits="2"/>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
Once the dialog is active, the user can press keys 3, 4, 5 and 6 to
execute runtime controls on the prompt queue. The keys do not cause
bargein to occur. If the user presses any other key, then the prompt
is interrupted and DTMF collect begins. Note that runtime controls
are not active during the collect operation.
When the dialog is completed successfully, then both control and
collect information is reported.
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi81">
<dialogexit status="1">
<promptinfo termmode="bargein"/>
<collectinfo termmode="match" dtmf="14"/>
<controlinfo>
<controlmatch dtmf="4" timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:14Z"/>
<controlmatch dtmf="3" timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:15Z"/>
<controlmatch dtmf="5" timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:16Z"/>
<controlinfo>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
6.2.5. Subscriptions and notifications
In this example, a looped dialog is started with subscription for
notifications each time the user input matches the collect grammar:
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart repeatCount="0" connectionid="7HDY839~HJKSkyHS~HUwkuh7ns">
<dialog>
<collect maxdigits="2"/>
<subscribe>
<dtmfsub matchmode="collect"/>
</subscribe>
</dialog>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
Each time the user input the DTMF matching the grammar, the following
notification event would be sent:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="vxi81">
<dtmfnotify matchmode="collect" dtmf="12"
timestamp="2008-05-12T12:13:14Z"/>
</event>
</mscivr>
If no user input was provided, or the input did not match the
grammar, the dialgo would continue to loop until terminated (or an
error occured).
6.3. Other Dialog types
The following example requests that a VoiceXML dialog is started:
<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<dialogstart dialogid="d2" type="application/voicexml+xml"
src="http://www.example.com/mydialog.vxml"
fetchtimeout="15s">
<params>
<param name="prompt1">nfs://nas01/media1.3gp"</param>
<param name="prompt2">nfs://nas01/media2.3gp"</param>
</params>
</dialogstart>
</mscivr>
If the MS does not support this dialog type, rhen the response would
have the status code 409. However, if it does support the VoiceXML
dialog type, it would respond with a 200 status, activate the
VoiceXML dialog and may make the <params> available in the VoiceXML
script through the "connection.ccxml.values" object.
When the VoiceXML dialog exits, exit parameters may be specified on
the dialogexit event:
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<mscivr version="1.0" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr">
<event dialogid="d2">
<dialogexit status="1">
<params>
<param name="username">peter</param>
<param name="pin">1234</param>
</params>
</dialogexit>
</event>
</mscivr>
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7. Security Considerations
As this control package uses XML markup, implementation MUST address
the security considerations of [RFC3023].
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8. IANA Considerations
This specification instructs IANA to register a new Media Control
Channel Framework Package, a new XML namespace and a new mime type.
8.1. Control Package Registration
Control Package name: msc-ivr/1.0
8.2. URN Sub-Namespace Registration
XML namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr
8.3. Mime Type Registration
MIME type: application/msc-ivr+xml
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9. Change Summary
Note to RFC Editor: Please remove this whole section.
The following are the major changes between the -00 of this work
group item draft and the individual submission -05 version.
o [IVR01] When the MS sends a notification event in a CONTROL, the
AS sends mandatory 200 response (no extended transaction).
o [IVR23] Added a top-level container element, <mscivr>, with
version attribute.
o Removed term 'basic' in title, description, elements and IANA
registration. Control package name is now 'msc-ivr/1.0'.
Namespace is now 'urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:msc-ivr'. Mime type is
now 'application/msc-ivr+xml'. Renamed 'basicivr' element to
'dialog' and moved version attribute to mscivr element.
o [IVR15] Updated and simplified XML schema. Ordering of child
elements is significant.
o [IVR06] Removed 'volume' and 'offset' from prompt element. Added
'soundLevel' and 'clipBegin' to media element.
o [IVR17]/[IVR06] Removed 'iterations' and 'duration' from prompt.
Added 'repeatCount' and 'repeatDur' to dialog element.
o Moved VCR commands from <collect> into separate <control> element.
Defined controlinfo element to report rumtime control match
information.
o [IVR05] Added <subscribe> to <dialogstart> where AS can subscribe
to DTMF keypresses (all, control match only, collect match only).
Extended <event> to support associated notification.
o Moved definition of <stream> into a separate section.
o [IVR21] Added audit capability: auditing of package capabilities
and managed dialogs
o [IVR21] Explicitly stated that an error must be reported if the
connection or conference referenced in a <dialogstart> is not
available at the time the request is processed on the MS.
o Clarified that the <variable> rendering mechanism is MS
implementation specific.
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o [IVR09]/[IVR10] Clarified <variable> attribute definitions and
added 'gender' attrribute.
o [IVR16] Clarified that info must be reported in dialogexit, if the
correpsonding element is specified in a <dialog>. For example, if
<prompt> is specified, then <promptinfo> must be specified if the
dialog terminates normally.
o [IVR18] Added 'inactive' value for direction attribute of
<stream>.
o [IVR19] Clarified case of <dialogstart> on connection/conference
with multiple streams of the same type: recommended to be set
explcitly with <stream>s.
o [IVR02] Clarified that multiple dialogs may started simultaneously
on the same connection or conference.
o [IVR20] Added maximum duration (10 minutes) for a dialog to remain
in the PREPARED state.
o Added <params> in <dialogstart> and <dialogexit> for input/output
in other dialog types
o [IVR22] Added fetchtimeout parameter to dialogprepare,
dialogstart, media and grammar elements.
o [IVR04] Added dialogexit status to indicate the connection or
conference has been terminated. Added others status errors.
o [IVR08] Clarified that the <control> operation does not interrupt
playing prompts and that matched DTMF is not available to
<collect> or <record> operations during prompt playback.
o [IVR11] Added runtime controls for speed, goto start/end and
external controls.
o Clarified that recordings can be uploaded to dest during or after
the recording operation.
o <record>/<collect>: clarified timer handling - timeout refers to
waiting time for collect/record to begin.
o Clarified behavior of immediate attribute on <dialogterminate>.
o clarified dialogid lifecycle: dialogids can be re-cycled.
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o Clarified error handling.
o Editorial tidy up of sections.
o dialogid attribute on <response> is now mandatory.
o Clarified that the duration specified in finalsilence attribute of
<record> is not part of the final recording.
o Clarified that the SRGS XML grammar format is mandatory
The following are the major changes between the -06 of the draft and
the -05 version.
o Event notifications are sent in CONTROL messages with the MS
acting as Control Framework Client. Compared with the previous
approach, this means that a <dialogstart> transaction is now
complete when the MS sends a <response>. A new transaction is
initiated by the MS each time the MS sends a notification <event>
to the AS.
o Changed conf-id to conferenceid and connection-id to connectionid.
o Clarification of the state model for dialogs
o <dialogprepare>: modified definition of src attribute to allow
reference to external dialog documents; added (MIME) type
attribute; removed <data> child element.
o <dialogstart>: modified definition of src attribute to allow
reference to external dialog documents; added (MIME) type
attribute; removed <data> child element;
o <dialogterminate>: modified so that a dialogexit event is always
sent for active dialogs (i.e. the dialogexit event is a
terminating notification)
o <event> notification simplified and make more extensible. Manual
notifications (via <subscribe> element) are removed from the basic
package. A <dialogexit> event is defined as <event> child and it
can be extended with additional child elements
o <data> element is removed.
o <subscribe> element removed.
o Replaced dialog templates with a general <dialog> element. It has
child elements for playing media resource (<prompt>), collecting
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DTMF (<collect>) and recording (<record>). The functionality is
largely unchanged.
o <dialogprepare> and <dialogstart> are extended with <dialog> child
element.
o <event> is extended with a <dialogexit> element which contains
status and reported information (replacement for output parameters
in template dialogs)
o Prompts: now structured as a <prompt> element with <media>,
<variable> and <dtmf> children. The <prompt> element has xml:base
attribute, bargein, iterations, duration, volume and offset
attributes. The speed attribute is removed. A <media> element
has src and type attributes. The maxage and maxstale attributes
are removed.
o DTMF input: parameters now specified as attributes of a <collect>
element. Custom grammar specified with a <grammar> element as
child of <collect> element. Added 'escapekey' to allow the dialog
to be retried. Added 'pauseinterval', 'pausekey' and 'resumekey'
to allow the prompts to paused/resumed. Added 'volumeinterval',
'volupkey' and voldnkey' to add prompt volume to be increased/
decreased. Moved 'bargein' attribute to prompt.
o Recording: parameters now specified as attributes of <record>
element. Added 'dest' and 'beep' attributes.
The following are the major changes between the -05 of the draft and
the -04 version.
o Mainly an alignment/evaluation exercise with requirements produced
by MEDIACTRL IVR design team.
o playannouncement parameters from Table 7 of '04' version are now
reflected in text - schema to be updated.
o Added VCR commands based on MSCML.
The following are the major changes between the -04 of the draft and
the -03 version.
o None.
The following are the major changes between the -03 of the draft and
the -02 version.
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o added "basicivr:" protocol to template dialog types which must be
supported as values of the "src" attribute in <dialogprepare> and
<dialogstart>. Note alternative: "/basicivr/playannouncement"
offered in [RFC4240].
o added "basicivr:" URI schema to IANA considerations
o Added mimetype, vadinitial and vadfinal parameters to
'promptandrecord' dialog type
o updated references
The following are the major changes between the -02 of the draft and
the -01 version.
o added version 1.0 to package name
o separate section for element definitions
o dialogterminate treated as request rather than notification
o simplified responses: single element <response>
o removed response elements: <dialogprepared>, <dialogstarted>,
<errordialognotprepared>, <errordialognotstarted>
o simplified event notifications to single <event> element carried
in a REPORT
o <dialogexit> element replaced with <event name="dialogexit">
o removed <dialoguser> element
o added <stream> element as child of <dialogstart>
o removed 'type' attribute from <dialogprepare> and <dialogstart>
o added dialogid attribute to <dialogprepare> and <dialogstart>
o removed template "Sample Implementation" section
o renamed <namelist> to <data>
o re-organized so that template details after general package
framework and element description.
The following are the primary changes between the -01 of the draft
and the -00 version.
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o Removed requirement for VoiceXML dialog support
o Added requirement for template dialog support
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10. Contributors
Asher Shiratzky from Radvision provided valuable support and
contributions to the early versions of this document.
The authors would like to thank the IVR design team consisting of
Roni Even, Lorenzo Miniero, Adnan Saleem and Diego Besprosvan who
provided valuable feedback, input and text to this document.
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11. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Adnan Saleem of Radisys, Gene
Shtirmer of Intel, Dave Burke of Google, Dan York of Voxeo and Steve
Buko of dialogic for expert reviews of this work.
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12. References
12.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
12.2. Informative References
[CCXML10] Auburn, R J., "Voice Browser Call Control: CCXML Version
1.0", W3C Working Draft (work in progress), January 2007.
[H.248.1] "Gateway control protocol: Version 3", ITU-T
Recommendation H.248.1.
[H.248.9] "Gateway control protocol: Advanced media server
packages", ITU-T Recommendation H.248.9.
[I-D.ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework]
Boulton, C., Melanchuk, T., and S. McGlashan, "Media
Control Channel Framework",
draft-ietf-mediactrl-sip-control-framework-02 (work in
progress), April 2008.
[I-D.ietf-xcon-common-data-model]
Novo, O., Camarillo, G., Morgan, D., and R. Even,
"Conference Information Data Model for Centralized
Conferencing (XCON)", draft-ietf-xcon-common-data-model-10
(work in progress), March 2008.
[MSML] Saleem, A., Xin, Y., and G. Sharratt, "Media Session
Markup Language (MSML)", draft-saleem-msml-06 (work in
progress), February 2008.
[RFC2897] Cromwell, D., "Proposal for an MGCP Advanced Audio
Package", RFC 2897, August 2000.
[RFC3023] Murata, M., St. Laurent, S., and D. Kohn, "XML Media
Types", RFC 3023, January 2001.
[RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
June 2002.
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
RFC 3986, January 2005.
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[RFC4240] Burger, E., Van Dyke, J., and A. Spitzer, "Basic Network
Media Services with SIP", RFC 4240, December 2005.
[RFC4281] Gellens, R., Singer, D., and P. Frojdh, "The Codecs
Parameter for "Bucket" Media Types", RFC 4281,
November 2005.
[RFC4574] Levin, O. and G. Camarillo, "The Session Description
Protocol (SDP) Label Attribute", RFC 4574, August 2006.
[RFC4646] Phillips, A. and M. Davis, "Tags for Identifying
Languages", BCP 47, RFC 4646, September 2006.
[RFC4647] Phillips, A. and M. Davis, "Matching of Language Tags",
BCP 47, RFC 4647, September 2006.
[RFC4730] Burger, E. and M. Dolly, "A Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP) Event Package for Key Press Stimulus (KPML)",
RFC 4730, November 2006.
[RFC4733] Schulzrinne, H. and T. Taylor, "RTP Payload for DTMF
Digits, Telephony Tones, and Telephony Signals", RFC 4733,
December 2006.
[RFC5022] Van Dyke, J., Burger, E., and A. Spitzer, "Media Server
Control Markup Language (MSCML) and Protocol", RFC 5022,
September 2007.
[RFC5167] Dolly, M. and R. Even, "Media Server Control Protocol
Requirements", RFC 5167, March 2008.
[SRGS] Hunt, A. and S. McGlashan, "Speech Recognition Grammar
Specification Version 1.0", W3C Recommendation,
March 2004.
[VXML20] McGlashan, S., Burnett, D., Carter, J., Danielsen, P.,
Ferrans, J., Hunt, A., Lucas, B., Porter, B., Rehor, K.,
and S. Tryphonas, "Voice Extensible Markup Language
(VoiceXML) Version 2.0", W3C Recommendation, March 2004.
[VXML21] Oshry, M., Auburn, RJ., Baggia, P., Bodell, M., Burke, D.,
Burnett, D., Candell, E., Carter, J., McGlashan, S., Lee,
A., Porter, B., and K. Rehor, "Voice Extensible Markup
Language (VoiceXML) Version 2.1", W3C Recommendation,
June 2007.
[W3C.REC-SMIL2-20051213]
Michel, T., Mullender, S., Jansen, J., Koivisto, A.,
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Zucker, D., Grassel, G., Bulterman, D., and N. Layaida,
"Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL 2.1)",
World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-SMIL2-
20051213, December 2005,
<http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/REC-SMIL2-20051213>.
[XML] Bray, T., Paoli, J., Sperberg-McQueen, C M., Maler, E.,
and F. Yergeau, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0
(Third Edition)", W3C Recommendation, February 2004.
[XMLSchema:Part2]
Biron, P. and A. Malhotra, "XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes
Second Edition", W3C Recommendation, October 2004.
McGlashan, et al. Expires December 12, 2008 [Page 103]
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Authors' Addresses
Scott McGlashan
Hewlett-Packard
Gustav III:s boulevard 36
SE-16985 Stockholm, Sweden
Email: scott.mcglashan@hp.com
Tim Melanchuk
Rain Willow Communications
Email: tim.melanchuk@gmail.com
Chris Boulton
Avaya
Building 3
Wern Fawr Lane
St Mellons
Cardiff, South Wales CF3 5EA
Email: cboulton@avaya.com
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Internet-Draft IVR Control Package June 2008
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McGlashan, et al. Expires December 12, 2008 [Page 105]
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