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SDP Session Description Protocol (SDP) an application-layer protocol intended to describe multimedia sessions a text-based protocol when describing a session the caller and callee indicate their respective "receive" capabilities, media formats and receive address/port capability exchange can be performed during session set-up or during the session itself (while the session is in progress) 9.1 SDP message contents 9.2 SDP message format 9.3 Selected SDP lines 9.1 SDP message contents An SDP message contains three levels of information Session-level description includes the session identifier and other session level parameters, such as the IP address, subject, contact info about the session and/or creator Timing description start and stop times, repeat times, one or more media-level descriptions Media type and format transport protocol and port number, other medialevel parameters The three levels of information must appear in the order described above The SDP message is a collection of SDP lines 9.1.1 Session description 9.1.2 Time description 9.1.3 Media description 9.1.1 Session description Table 9.1 lists all the session-level description lines and indicates their mandate and the letter used as the line name 9.1.2 Time description Table 9.2 lists all the time-level description lines and indicates their mandate and the letter used as the line name 9.1.3 Media description Table 9.3 lists all the media-level description lines and indicates their mandate and the letter used as the line name 9.2 SDP message format The SDP syntax is very strict and all lines follow the same format Every SDP line has the format <character>=<value> value=parameter1 parameter2 . . . parameterN Each SDP line ends with a carriage return line feed (CRLF) and each line has a defined number of parameters 9.3 Selected SDP lines 9.3.1 Protocol version line 9.3.2 Connection information line 9.3.3 Media line 9.3.4 Attribute line 9.3.5 The rtpmap attribute 9.3.1 Protocol version line The SDP protocol version is 0 and, therefore, the v-line in an SDP message must always be set to 0 v=0 9.3.2 Connection information line The c-line must be either present at the session level or media level It must be present at the media level if it is not present at the session level If it is present at both levels, then media-level connection information overrides session-level information c=<network type> <address type> <network address> The c-line has three parameters network type the only currently defined network type is the Internet the value appears as "IN" address type there are two address types, IP4 or IP6 network address this parameter identifies the IP address or domain name where media are received 9.3.3 Media line The m-line carries information about the media, including transport information The syntax is as follows m=<media> <port> <transport> <format-list> The m-line has four parameters Media the type of media (e.g., audio, video, game) Port contains the port number where these media can be received Transport the transport protocol to use, either the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) or Real-time Transport Protocol Audio and Video Profile (RTP/AVP) Format-list contains more information about the media, usually payload types defined in RTP/AVPs If the transport is RTP/AVP, then the port number for the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) = RTP port + 1 RTCP is assumed to be sent whenever RTP is carrying the media The RTP port number must always be an even number and, therefore, the RTCP port is an odd number 9.3.4 Attribute line The a-line defines the attributes of the media Attributes can be session-level attributes, media-level attributes or both Attribute interpretation depends on the media tool being invoked Syntax a=<attribute field> [" : "<attribute value>] attribute field contains the name of the attribute. attribute value optional, if present is separated from the attribute field by a colon Table 9.4 shows a list of the most commonly used attributes 9.3.5 The rtpmap attribute For RTP-transported media, SDP can be used to bind a media-encoding codec to the media's RTP payload type this is done using a payload-type number Payload types static payload types the payload-type number is sufficient for the binding the payload-type number is carried in the formatlist parameter of the media line dynamic payload types the payload-type number is not sufficient and additional encoding information is needed this is achieved using the rtpmap attribute Syntax of the rtpmap attribute a=rtpmap: <payload type> <encoding name>/<clock rate>[/<encoding parameters>] payload type carries the payload-type number as indicated in the m-line encoding name the codec name clock rate bits per second encoding parameters media-specific parameters, including the number of channels, but not codec-specific parameters