summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt')
-rw-r--r--doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt4896
1 files changed, 4896 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt b/doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..316f961
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/rfc/rfc8829.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,4896 @@
+
+
+
+
+Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) J. Uberti
+Request for Comments: 8829 Google
+Category: Standards Track C. Jennings
+ISSN: 2070-1721 Cisco
+ E. Rescorla, Ed.
+ Mozilla
+ January 2021
+
+
+ JavaScript Session Establishment Protocol (JSEP)
+
+Abstract
+
+ This document describes the mechanisms for allowing a JavaScript
+ application to control the signaling plane of a multimedia session
+ via the interface specified in the W3C RTCPeerConnection API and
+ discusses how this relates to existing signaling protocols.
+
+Status of This Memo
+
+ This is an Internet Standards Track document.
+
+ This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
+ (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
+ received public review and has been approved for publication by the
+ Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
+ Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
+
+ Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
+ and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
+ https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8829.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
+ document authors. All rights reserved.
+
+ This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
+ Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
+ (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
+ publication of this document. Please review these documents
+ carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
+ to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
+ include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
+ the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
+ described in the Simplified BSD License.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+ 1. Introduction
+ 1.1. General Design of JSEP
+ 1.2. Other Approaches Considered
+ 1.3. Contradiction regarding bundle-only "m=" sections
+ 2. Terminology
+ 3. Semantics and Syntax
+ 3.1. Signaling Model
+ 3.2. Session Descriptions and State Machine
+ 3.3. Session Description Format
+ 3.4. Session Description Control
+ 3.4.1. RtpTransceivers
+ 3.4.2. RtpSenders
+ 3.4.3. RtpReceivers
+ 3.5. ICE
+ 3.5.1. ICE Gathering Overview
+ 3.5.2. ICE Candidate Trickling
+ 3.5.2.1. ICE Candidate Format
+ 3.5.3. ICE Candidate Policy
+ 3.5.4. ICE Candidate Pool
+ 3.5.5. ICE Versions
+ 3.6. Video Size Negotiation
+ 3.6.1. Creating an imageattr Attribute
+ 3.6.2. Interpreting imageattr Attributes
+ 3.7. Simulcast
+ 3.8. Interactions with Forking
+ 3.8.1. Sequential Forking
+ 3.8.2. Parallel Forking
+ 4. Interface
+ 4.1. PeerConnection
+ 4.1.1. Constructor
+ 4.1.2. addTrack
+ 4.1.3. removeTrack
+ 4.1.4. addTransceiver
+ 4.1.5. onaddtrack Event
+ 4.1.6. createDataChannel
+ 4.1.7. ondatachannel Event
+ 4.1.8. createOffer
+ 4.1.9. createAnswer
+ 4.1.10. SessionDescriptionType
+ 4.1.10.1. Use of Provisional Answers
+ 4.1.10.2. Rollback
+ 4.1.11. setLocalDescription
+ 4.1.12. setRemoteDescription
+ 4.1.13. currentLocalDescription
+ 4.1.14. pendingLocalDescription
+ 4.1.15. currentRemoteDescription
+ 4.1.16. pendingRemoteDescription
+ 4.1.17. canTrickleIceCandidates
+ 4.1.18. setConfiguration
+ 4.1.19. addIceCandidate
+ 4.1.20. onicecandidate Event
+ 4.2. RtpTransceiver
+ 4.2.1. stop
+ 4.2.2. stopped
+ 4.2.3. setDirection
+ 4.2.4. direction
+ 4.2.5. currentDirection
+ 4.2.6. setCodecPreferences
+ 5. SDP Interaction Procedures
+ 5.1. Requirements Overview
+ 5.1.1. Usage Requirements
+ 5.1.2. Profile Names and Interoperability
+ 5.2. Constructing an Offer
+ 5.2.1. Initial Offers
+ 5.2.2. Subsequent Offers
+ 5.2.3. Options Handling
+ 5.2.3.1. IceRestart
+ 5.2.3.2. VoiceActivityDetection
+ 5.3. Generating an Answer
+ 5.3.1. Initial Answers
+ 5.3.2. Subsequent Answers
+ 5.3.3. Options Handling
+ 5.3.3.1. VoiceActivityDetection
+ 5.4. Modifying an Offer or Answer
+ 5.5. Processing a Local Description
+ 5.6. Processing a Remote Description
+ 5.7. Processing a Rollback
+ 5.8. Parsing a Session Description
+ 5.8.1. Session-Level Parsing
+ 5.8.2. Media Section Parsing
+ 5.8.3. Semantics Verification
+ 5.9. Applying a Local Description
+ 5.10. Applying a Remote Description
+ 5.11. Applying an Answer
+ 6. Processing RTP/RTCP
+ 7. Examples
+ 7.1. Simple Example
+ 7.2. Detailed Example
+ 7.3. Early Transport Warmup Example
+ 8. Security Considerations
+ 9. IANA Considerations
+ 10. References
+ 10.1. Normative References
+ 10.2. Informative References
+ Appendix A. SDP ABNF Syntax
+ Acknowledgements
+ Authors' Addresses
+
+1. Introduction
+
+ This document describes how the W3C Web Real-Time Communication
+ (WebRTC) RTCPeerConnection interface [W3C.webrtc] is used to control
+ the setup, management, and teardown of a multimedia session.
+
+1.1. General Design of JSEP
+
+ WebRTC call setup has been designed to focus on controlling the media
+ plane, leaving signaling-plane behavior up to the application as much
+ as possible. The rationale is that different applications may prefer
+ to use different protocols, such as the existing SIP call signaling
+ protocol, or something custom to the particular application, perhaps
+ for a novel use case. In this approach, the key information that
+ needs to be exchanged is the multimedia session description, which
+ specifies the transport and media configuration information necessary
+ to establish the media plane.
+
+ With these considerations in mind, this document describes the
+ JavaScript Session Establishment Protocol (JSEP), which allows for
+ full control of the signaling state machine from JavaScript. As
+ described above, JSEP assumes a model in which a JavaScript
+ application executes inside a runtime containing WebRTC APIs (the
+ "JSEP implementation"). The JSEP implementation is almost entirely
+ divorced from the core signaling flow, which is instead handled by
+ the JavaScript making use of two interfaces: (1) passing in local and
+ remote session descriptions and (2) interacting with the Interactive
+ Connectivity Establishment (ICE) state machine [RFC8445]. The
+ combination of the JSEP implementation and the JavaScript application
+ is referred to throughout this document as a "JSEP endpoint".
+
+ In this document, the use of JSEP is described as if it always occurs
+ between two JSEP endpoints. Note, though, that in many cases it will
+ actually be between a JSEP endpoint and some kind of server, such as
+ a gateway or Multipoint Control Unit (MCU). This distinction is
+ invisible to the JSEP endpoint; it just follows the instructions it
+ is given via the API.
+
+ JSEP's handling of session descriptions is simple and
+ straightforward. Whenever an offer/answer exchange is needed, the
+ initiating side creates an offer by calling a createOffer API. The
+ application then uses that offer to set up its local configuration
+ via the setLocalDescription API. The offer is finally sent off to
+ the remote side over its preferred signaling mechanism (e.g.,
+ WebSockets); upon receipt of that offer, the remote party installs it
+ using the setRemoteDescription API.
+
+ To complete the offer/answer exchange, the remote party uses the
+ createAnswer API to generate an appropriate answer, applies it using
+ the setLocalDescription API, and sends the answer back to the
+ initiator over the signaling channel. When the initiator gets that
+ answer, it installs it using the setRemoteDescription API, and
+ initial setup is complete. This process can be repeated for
+ additional offer/answer exchanges.
+
+ Regarding ICE [RFC8445], JSEP decouples the ICE state machine from
+ the overall signaling state machine. The ICE state machine must
+ remain in the JSEP implementation because only the implementation has
+ the necessary knowledge of candidates and other transport
+ information. Performing this separation provides additional
+ flexibility in protocols that decouple session descriptions from
+ transport. For instance, in traditional SIP, each offer or answer is
+ self-contained, including both the session descriptions and the
+ transport information. However, [RFC8840] allows SIP to be used with
+ Trickle ICE [RFC8838], in which the session description can be sent
+ immediately and the transport information can be sent when available.
+ Sending transport information separately can allow for faster ICE and
+ DTLS startup, since ICE checks can start as soon as any transport
+ information is available rather than waiting for all of it. JSEP's
+ decoupling of the ICE and signaling state machines allows it to
+ accommodate either model.
+
+ Although it abstracts signaling, the JSEP approach requires that the
+ application be aware of the signaling process. While the application
+ does not need to understand the contents of session descriptions to
+ set up a call, the application must call the right APIs at the right
+ times, convert the session descriptions and ICE information into the
+ defined messages of its chosen signaling protocol, and perform the
+ reverse conversion on the messages it receives from the other side.
+
+ One way to make life easier for the application is to provide a
+ JavaScript library that hides this complexity from the developer;
+ said library would implement a given signaling protocol along with
+ its state machine and serialization code, presenting a higher-level
+ call-oriented interface to the application developer. For example,
+ libraries exist to provide implementations of the SIP [RFC3261] and
+ Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) [RFC6120] signaling
+ protocols atop the JSEP API. Thus, JSEP provides greater control for
+ the experienced developer without forcing any additional complexity
+ on the novice developer.
+
+1.2. Other Approaches Considered
+
+ One approach that was considered instead of JSEP was to include a
+ lightweight signaling protocol. Instead of providing session
+ descriptions to the API, the API would produce and consume messages
+ from this protocol. While providing a more high-level API, this put
+ more control of signaling within the JSEP implementation, forcing it
+ to have to understand and handle concepts like signaling glare (see
+ [RFC3264], Section 4).
+
+ A second approach that was considered but not chosen was to decouple
+ the management of the media control objects from session
+ descriptions, instead offering APIs that would control each component
+ directly. This was rejected based on the argument that requiring
+ exposure of this level of complexity to the application programmer
+ would not be beneficial; it would (1) result in an API where even a
+ simple example would require a significant amount of code to
+ orchestrate all the needed interactions and (2) create a large API
+ surface that would need to be agreed upon and documented. In
+ addition, these API points could be called in any order, resulting in
+ a more complex set of interactions with the media subsystem than the
+ JSEP approach, which specifies how session descriptions are to be
+ evaluated and applied.
+
+ One variation on JSEP that was considered was to keep the basic
+ session-description-oriented API but to move the mechanism for
+ generating offers and answers out of the JSEP implementation.
+ Instead of providing createOffer/createAnswer methods within the
+ implementation, this approach would instead expose a getCapabilities
+ API, which would provide the application with the information it
+ needed in order to generate its own session descriptions. This
+ increases the amount of work that the application needs to do; it
+ needs to know how to generate session descriptions from capabilities,
+ and especially how to generate the correct answer from an arbitrary
+ offer and the supported capabilities. While this could certainly be
+ addressed by using a library like the one mentioned above, it
+ basically forces the use of said library even for a simple example.
+ Providing createOffer/createAnswer avoids this problem.
+
+1.3. Contradiction regarding bundle-only "m=" sections
+
+ Since the approval of the WebRTC specification documents, the IETF
+ has become aware of an inconsistency between the document specifying
+ JSEP and the document specifying BUNDLE (this RFC and [RFC8843],
+ respectively). Rather than delaying publication further to come to a
+ resolution, the documents are being published as they were originally
+ approved. The IETF intends to restart work on these technologies,
+ and revised versions of these documents will be published as soon as
+ a resolution becomes available.
+
+ The specific issue involves the handling of "m=" sections that are
+ designated as bundle-only, as discussed in Section 4.1.1 of this RFC.
+ Currently, there is divergence between JSEP and BUNDLE, as well as
+ between these specifications and existing browser implementations:
+
+ * JSEP prescribes that said "m=" sections should use port zero and
+ add an "a=bundle-only" attribute in initial offers, but not in
+ answers or subsequent offers.
+
+ * BUNDLE prescribes that these "m=" sections should be marked as
+ described in the previous point, but in all offers and answers.
+
+ * Most current browsers do not mark any "m=" sections with port zero
+ and instead use the same port for all bundled "m=" sections; some
+ others follow the JSEP behavior.
+
+2. Terminology
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
+ "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
+ BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
+ capitals, as shown here.
+
+3. Semantics and Syntax
+
+3.1. Signaling Model
+
+ JSEP does not specify a particular signaling model or state machine,
+ other than the generic need to exchange session descriptions in the
+ fashion described by [RFC3264] (offer/answer) in order for both sides
+ of the session to know how to conduct the session. JSEP provides
+ mechanisms to create offers and answers, as well as to apply them to
+ a session. However, the JSEP implementation is totally decoupled
+ from the actual mechanism by which these offers and answers are
+ communicated to the remote side, including addressing,
+ retransmission, forking, and glare handling. These issues are left
+ entirely up to the application; the application has complete control
+ over which offers and answers get handed to the implementation, and
+ when.
+
+ +-----------+ +-----------+
+ | Web App |<--- App-Specific Signaling -->| Web App |
+ +-----------+ +-----------+
+ ^ ^
+ | SDP | SDP
+ V V
+ +-----------+ +-----------+
+ | JSEP |<----------- Media ------------>| JSEP |
+ | Impl. | | Impl. |
+ +-----------+ +-----------+
+
+ Figure 1: JSEP Signaling Model
+
+3.2. Session Descriptions and State Machine
+
+ In order to establish the media plane, the JSEP implementation needs
+ specific parameters to indicate what to transmit to the remote side,
+ as well as how to handle the media that is received. These
+ parameters are determined by the exchange of session descriptions in
+ offers and answers, and there are certain details to this process
+ that must be handled in the JSEP APIs.
+
+ Whether a session description applies to the local side or the remote
+ side affects the meaning of that description. For example, the list
+ of codecs sent to a remote party indicates what the local side is
+ willing to receive, which, when intersected with the set of codecs
+ the remote side supports, specifies what the remote side should send.
+ However, not all parameters follow this rule; some parameters are
+ declarative, and the remote side must either accept them or reject
+ them altogether. An example of such a parameter is the TLS
+ fingerprints [RFC8122] as used in the context of DTLS [RFC6347];
+ these fingerprints are calculated based on the local certificate(s)
+ offered and are not subject to negotiation.
+
+ In addition, various RFCs put different conditions on the format of
+ offers versus answers. For example, an offer may propose an
+ arbitrary number of "m=" sections (i.e., media descriptions as
+ described in [RFC4566], Section 5.14), but an answer must contain the
+ exact same number as the offer.
+
+ Lastly, while the exact media parameters are known only after an
+ offer and an answer have been exchanged, the offerer may receive ICE
+ checks, and possibly media (e.g., in the case of a re-offer after a
+ connection has been established) before it receives an answer. To
+ properly process incoming media in this case, the offerer's media
+ handler must be aware of the details of the offer before the answer
+ arrives.
+
+ Therefore, in order to handle session descriptions properly, the JSEP
+ implementation needs:
+
+ 1. To know if a session description pertains to the local or remote
+ side.
+
+ 2. To know if a session description is an offer or an answer.
+
+ 3. To allow the offer to be specified independently of the answer.
+
+ JSEP addresses this by adding both setLocalDescription and
+ setRemoteDescription methods and having session description objects
+ contain a type field indicating the type of session description being
+ supplied. This satisfies the requirements listed above for both the
+ offerer, who first calls setLocalDescription(sdp [offer]) and then
+ later setRemoteDescription(sdp [answer]), and the answerer, who first
+ calls setRemoteDescription(sdp [offer]) and then later
+ setLocalDescription(sdp [answer]).
+
+ During the offer/answer exchange, the outstanding offer is considered
+ to be "pending" at the offerer and the answerer, as it may be either
+ accepted or rejected. If this is a re-offer, each side will also
+ have "current" local and remote descriptions, which reflect the
+ result of the last offer/answer exchange. Sections 4.1.14, 4.1.16,
+ 4.1.13, and 4.1.15 provide more detail on pending and current
+ descriptions.
+
+ JSEP also allows for an answer to be treated as provisional by the
+ application. Provisional answers provide a way for an answerer to
+ communicate initial session parameters back to the offerer, in order
+ to allow the session to begin, while allowing a final answer to be
+ specified later. This concept of a final answer is important to the
+ offer/answer model; when such an answer is received, any extra
+ resources allocated by the caller can be released, now that the exact
+ session configuration is known. These "resources" can include things
+ like extra ICE components, Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN)
+ candidates, or video decoders. Provisional answers, on the other
+ hand, do no such deallocation; as a result, multiple dissimilar
+ provisional answers, with their own codec choices, transport
+ parameters, etc., can be received and applied during call setup.
+ Note that the final answer itself may be different than any received
+ provisional answers.
+
+ In [RFC3264], the constraint at the signaling level is that only one
+ offer can be outstanding for a given session, but at the JSEP level,
+ a new offer can be generated at any point. For example, when using
+ SIP for signaling, if one offer is sent and is then canceled using a
+ SIP CANCEL, another offer can be generated even though no answer was
+ received for the first offer. To support this, the JSEP media layer
+ can provide an offer via the createOffer method whenever the
+ JavaScript application needs one for the signaling. The answerer can
+ send back zero or more provisional answers and then finally end the
+ offer/answer exchange by sending a final answer. The state machine
+ for this is as follows:
+
+ setRemote(OFFER) setLocal(PRANSWER)
+ /-----\ /-----\
+ | | | |
+ v | v |
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+ |
+ | |----/ | |----/
+ | have- | setLocal(PRANSWER) | have- |
+ | remote-offer |------------------- >| local-pranswer|
+ | | | |
+ | | | |
+ +---------------+ +---------------+
+ ^ | |
+ | | setLocal(ANSWER) |
+ setRemote(OFFER) | |
+ | V setLocal(ANSWER) |
+ +---------------+ |
+ | | |
+ | |<---------------------------+
+ | stable |
+ | |<---------------------------+
+ | | |
+ +---------------+ setRemote(ANSWER) |
+ ^ | |
+ | | setLocal(OFFER) |
+ setRemote(ANSWER) | |
+ | V |
+ +---------------+ +---------------+
+ | | | |
+ | have- | setRemote(PRANSWER) |have- |
+ | local-offer |------------------- >|remote-pranswer|
+ | | | |
+ | |----\ | |----\
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+ |
+ ^ | ^ |
+ | | | |
+ \-----/ \-----/
+ setLocal(OFFER) setRemote(PRANSWER)
+
+ Figure 2: JSEP State Machine
+
+ Aside from these state transitions, there is no other difference
+ between the handling of provisional ("pranswer") and final ("answer")
+ answers.
+
+3.3. Session Description Format
+
+ JSEP's session descriptions use Session Description Protocol (SDP)
+ syntax for their internal representation. While this format is not
+ optimal for manipulation from JavaScript, it is widely accepted and
+ is frequently updated with new features; any alternate encoding of
+ session descriptions would have to keep pace with the changes to SDP,
+ at least until the time that this new encoding eclipsed SDP in
+ popularity.
+
+ However, to provide for future flexibility, the SDP syntax is
+ encapsulated within a SessionDescription object, which can be
+ constructed from SDP and be serialized out to SDP. If future
+ specifications agree on a JSON format for session descriptions, we
+ could easily enable this object to generate and consume that JSON.
+
+ As detailed below, most applications should be able to treat the
+ SessionDescriptions produced and consumed by these various API calls
+ as opaque blobs; that is, the application will not need to read or
+ change them.
+
+3.4. Session Description Control
+
+ In order to give the application control over various common session
+ parameters, JSEP provides control surfaces that tell the JSEP
+ implementation how to generate session descriptions. This avoids the
+ need for JavaScript to modify session descriptions in most cases.
+
+ Changes to these objects result in changes to the session
+ descriptions generated by subsequent createOffer/createAnswer calls.
+
+3.4.1. RtpTransceivers
+
+ RtpTransceivers allow the application to control the RTP media
+ associated with one "m=" section. Each RtpTransceiver has an
+ RtpSender and an RtpReceiver, which an application can use to control
+ the sending and receiving of RTP media. The application may also
+ modify the RtpTransceiver directly, for instance, by stopping it.
+
+ RtpTransceivers generally have a 1:1 mapping with "m=" sections,
+ although there may be more RtpTransceivers than "m=" sections when
+ RtpTransceivers are created but not yet associated with an "m="
+ section, or if RtpTransceivers have been stopped and disassociated
+ from "m=" sections. An RtpTransceiver is said to be associated with
+ an "m=" section if its media identification (mid) property is non-
+ null; otherwise, it is said to be disassociated. The associated "m="
+ section is determined using a mapping between transceivers and "m="
+ section indices, formed when creating an offer or applying a remote
+ offer.
+
+ An RtpTransceiver is never associated with more than one "m="
+ section, and once a session description is applied, an "m=" section
+ is always associated with exactly one RtpTransceiver. However, in
+ certain cases where an "m=" section has been rejected, as discussed
+ in Section 5.2.2 below, that "m=" section will be "recycled" and
+ associated with a new RtpTransceiver with a new MID value.
+
+ RtpTransceivers can be created explicitly by the application or
+ implicitly by calling setRemoteDescription with an offer that adds
+ new "m=" sections.
+
+3.4.2. RtpSenders
+
+ RtpSenders allow the application to control how RTP media is sent.
+ An RtpSender is conceptually responsible for the outgoing RTP
+ stream(s) described by an "m=" section. This includes encoding the
+ attached MediaStreamTrack, sending RTP media packets, and generating/
+ processing the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) for the outgoing RTP
+ streams(s).
+
+3.4.3. RtpReceivers
+
+ RtpReceivers allow the application to inspect how RTP media is
+ received. An RtpReceiver is conceptually responsible for the
+ incoming RTP stream(s) described by an "m=" section. This includes
+ processing received RTP media packets, decoding the incoming
+ stream(s) to produce a remote MediaStreamTrack, and generating/
+ processing RTCP for the incoming RTP stream(s).
+
+3.5. ICE
+
+3.5.1. ICE Gathering Overview
+
+ JSEP gathers ICE candidates as needed by the application. Collection
+ of ICE candidates is referred to as a gathering phase, and this is
+ triggered either by the addition of a new or recycled "m=" section to
+ the local session description or by new ICE credentials in the
+ description, indicating an ICE restart. Use of new ICE credentials
+ can be triggered explicitly by the application or implicitly by the
+ JSEP implementation in response to changes in the ICE configuration.
+
+ When the ICE configuration changes in a way that requires a new
+ gathering phase, a 'needs-ice-restart' bit is set. When this bit is
+ set, calls to the createOffer API will generate new ICE credentials.
+ This bit is cleared by a call to the setLocalDescription API with new
+ ICE credentials from either an offer or an answer, i.e., from either
+ a locally or remotely initiated ICE restart.
+
+ When a new gathering phase starts, the ICE agent will notify the
+ application that gathering is occurring through a state change event.
+ Then, when each new ICE candidate becomes available, the ICE agent
+ will supply it to the application via an onicecandidate event; these
+ candidates will also automatically be added to the current and/or
+ pending local session description. Finally, when all candidates have
+ been gathered, a final onicecandidate event will be dispatched to
+ signal that the gathering process is complete.
+
+ Note that gathering phases only gather the candidates needed by
+ new/recycled/restarting "m=" sections; other "m=" sections continue
+ to use their existing candidates. Also, if an "m=" section is
+ bundled (either by a successful bundle negotiation or by being marked
+ as bundle-only), then candidates will be gathered and exchanged for
+ that "m=" section if and only if its MID item is a BUNDLE-tag, as
+ described in [RFC8843].
+
+3.5.2. ICE Candidate Trickling
+
+ Candidate trickling is a technique through which a caller may
+ incrementally provide candidates to the callee after the initial
+ offer has been dispatched; the semantics of "Trickle ICE" are defined
+ in [RFC8838]. This process allows the callee to begin acting upon
+ the call and setting up the ICE (and perhaps DTLS) connections
+ immediately, without having to wait for the caller to gather all
+ possible candidates. This results in faster media setup in cases
+ where gathering is not performed prior to initiating the call.
+
+ JSEP supports optional candidate trickling by providing APIs, as
+ described above, that provide control and feedback on the ICE
+ candidate gathering process. Applications that support candidate
+ trickling can send the initial offer immediately and send individual
+ candidates when they get notified of a new candidate; applications
+ that do not support this feature can simply wait for the indication
+ that gathering is complete, and then create and send their offer,
+ with all the candidates, at that time.
+
+ Upon receipt of trickled candidates, the receiving application will
+ supply them to its ICE agent. This triggers the ICE agent to start
+ using the new remote candidates for connectivity checks.
+
+3.5.2.1. ICE Candidate Format
+
+ In JSEP, ICE candidates are abstracted by an IceCandidate object, and
+ as with session descriptions, SDP syntax is used for the internal
+ representation.
+
+ The candidate details are specified in an IceCandidate field, using
+ the same SDP syntax as the "candidate-attribute" field defined in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.1. Note that this field does not contain an
+ "a=" prefix, as indicated in the following example:
+
+ candidate:1 1 UDP 1694498815 192.0.2.33 10000 typ host
+
+ The IceCandidate object contains a field to indicate which ICE
+ username fragment (ufrag) it is associated with, as defined in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.4. This value is used to determine which
+ session description (and thereby which gathering phase) this
+ IceCandidate belongs to, which helps resolve ambiguities during ICE
+ restarts. If this field is absent in a received IceCandidate
+ (perhaps when communicating with a non-JSEP endpoint), the most
+ recently received session description is assumed.
+
+ The IceCandidate object also contains fields to indicate which "m="
+ section it is associated with, which can be identified in one of two
+ ways: either by an "m=" section index or by a MID. The "m=" section
+ index is a zero-based index, with index N referring to the N+1th "m="
+ section in the session description referenced by this IceCandidate.
+ The MID is a "media stream identification" value, as defined in
+ [RFC5888], Section 4, which provides a more robust way to identify
+ the "m=" section in the session description, using the MID of the
+ associated RtpTransceiver object (which may have been locally
+ generated by the answerer when interacting with a non-JSEP endpoint
+ that does not support the MID attribute, as discussed in Section 5.10
+ below). If the MID field is present in a received IceCandidate, it
+ MUST be used for identification; otherwise, the "m=" section index is
+ used instead.
+
+ Implementations MUST be prepared to receive objects with some fields
+ missing, as mentioned above.
+
+3.5.3. ICE Candidate Policy
+
+ Typically, when gathering ICE candidates, the JSEP implementation
+ will gather all possible forms of initial candidates -- host, server-
+ reflexive, and relay. However, in certain cases, applications may
+ want to have more specific control over the gathering process, due to
+ privacy or related concerns. For example, one may want to only use
+ relay candidates, to leak as little location information as possible
+ (keeping in mind that this choice comes with corresponding
+ operational costs). To accomplish this, JSEP allows the application
+ to restrict which ICE candidates are used in a session. Note that
+ this filtering is applied on top of any restrictions the
+ implementation chooses to enforce regarding which IP addresses are
+ permitted for the application, as discussed in [RFC8828].
+
+ There may also be cases where the application wants to change which
+ types of candidates are used while the session is active. A prime
+ example is where a callee may initially want to use only relay
+ candidates, to avoid leaking location information to an arbitrary
+ caller, but then change to use all candidates (for lower operational
+ cost) once the user has indicated that they want to take the call.
+ For this scenario, the JSEP implementation MUST allow the candidate
+ policy to be changed in mid-session, subject to the aforementioned
+ interactions with local policy.
+
+ To administer the ICE candidate policy, the JSEP implementation will
+ determine the current setting at the start of each gathering phase.
+ Then, during the gathering phase, the implementation MUST NOT expose
+ candidates disallowed by the current policy to the application, use
+ them as the source of connectivity checks, or indirectly expose them
+ via other fields, such as the raddr/rport attributes for other ICE
+ candidates. Later, if a different policy is specified by the
+ application, the application can apply it by kicking off a new
+ gathering phase via an ICE restart.
+
+3.5.4. ICE Candidate Pool
+
+ JSEP applications typically inform the JSEP implementation to begin
+ ICE gathering via the information supplied to setLocalDescription, as
+ the local description indicates the number of ICE components that
+ will be needed and for which candidates must be gathered. However,
+ to accelerate cases where the application knows the number of ICE
+ components to use ahead of time, it may ask the implementation to
+ gather a pool of potential ICE candidates to help ensure rapid media
+ setup.
+
+ When setLocalDescription is eventually called and the JSEP
+ implementation prepares to gather the needed ICE candidates, it
+ SHOULD start by checking if any candidates are available in the pool.
+ If there are candidates in the pool, they SHOULD be handed to the
+ application immediately via the ICE candidate event. If the pool
+ becomes depleted, either because a larger-than-expected number of ICE
+ components are used or because the pool has not had enough time to
+ gather candidates, the remaining candidates are gathered as usual.
+ This only occurs for the first offer/answer exchange, after which the
+ candidate pool is emptied and no longer used.
+
+ One example of where this concept is useful is an application that
+ expects an incoming call at some point in the future, and wants to
+ minimize the time it takes to establish connectivity, to avoid
+ clipping of initial media. By pre-gathering candidates into the
+ pool, it can exchange and start sending connectivity checks from
+ these candidates almost immediately upon receipt of a call. Note,
+ though, that by holding on to these pre-gathered candidates, which
+ will be kept alive as long as they may be needed, the application
+ will consume resources on the STUN/TURN servers it is using. ("STUN"
+ stands for "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT".)
+
+3.5.5. ICE Versions
+
+ While this specification formally relies on [RFC8445], at the time of
+ its publication, the majority of WebRTC implementations support the
+ version of ICE described in [RFC5245]. The "ice2" attribute defined
+ in [RFC8445] can be used to detect the version in use by a remote
+ endpoint and to provide a smooth transition from the older
+ specification to the newer one. Implementations MUST be able to
+ accept remote descriptions that do not have the "ice2" attribute.
+
+3.6. Video Size Negotiation
+
+ Video size negotiation is the process through which a receiver can
+ use the "a=imageattr" SDP attribute [RFC6236] to indicate what video
+ frame sizes it is capable of receiving. A receiver may have hard
+ limits on what its video decoder can process, or it may have some
+ maximum set by policy. By specifying these limits in an
+ "a=imageattr" attribute, JSEP endpoints can attempt to ensure that
+ the remote sender transmits video at an acceptable resolution.
+ However, when communicating with a non-JSEP endpoint that does not
+ understand this attribute, any signaled limits may be exceeded, and
+ the JSEP implementation MUST handle this gracefully, e.g., by
+ discarding the video.
+
+ Note that certain codecs support transmission of samples with aspect
+ ratios other than 1.0 (i.e., non-square pixels). JSEP
+ implementations will not transmit non-square pixels but SHOULD
+ receive and render such video with the correct aspect ratio.
+ However, sample aspect ratio has no impact on the size negotiation
+ described below; all dimensions are measured in pixels, whether
+ square or not.
+
+3.6.1. Creating an imageattr Attribute
+
+ The receiver will first combine any known local limits (e.g.,
+ hardware decoder capabilities or local policy) to determine the
+ absolute minimum and maximum sizes it can receive. If there are no
+ known local limits, the "a=imageattr" attribute SHOULD be omitted.
+ If these local limits preclude receiving any video, i.e., the
+ degenerate case of no permitted resolutions, the "a=imageattr"
+ attribute MUST be omitted, and the "m=" section MUST be marked as
+ sendonly/inactive, as appropriate.
+
+ Otherwise, an "a=imageattr" attribute is created with a "recv"
+ direction, and the resulting resolution space formed from the
+ aforementioned intersection is used to specify its minimum and
+ maximum "x=" and "y=" values.
+
+ The rules here express a single set of preferences, and therefore,
+ the "a=imageattr" "q=" value is not important. It SHOULD be set to
+ "1.0".
+
+ The "a=imageattr" field is payload type specific. When all video
+ codecs supported have the same capabilities, use of a single
+ attribute, with the wildcard payload type (*), is RECOMMENDED.
+ However, when the supported video codecs have different limitations,
+ specific "a=imageattr" attributes MUST be inserted for each payload
+ type.
+
+ As an example, consider a system with a multiformat video decoder,
+ which is capable of decoding any resolution from 48x48 to 720p. In
+ this case, the implementation would generate this attribute:
+
+ a=imageattr:* recv [x=[48:1280],y=[48:720],q=1.0]
+
+ This declaration indicates that the receiver is capable of decoding
+ any image resolution from 48x48 up to 1280x720 pixels.
+
+3.6.2. Interpreting imageattr Attributes
+
+ [RFC6236] defines "a=imageattr" to be an advisory field. This means
+ that it does not absolutely constrain the video formats that the
+ sender can use but gives an indication of the preferred values.
+
+ This specification prescribes behavior that is more specific. When a
+ MediaStreamTrack, which is producing video of a certain resolution
+ (the "track resolution"), is attached to an RtpSender, which is
+ encoding the track video at the same or lower resolution(s) (the
+ "encoder resolutions"), and a remote description is applied that
+ references the sender and contains valid "a=imageattr recv"
+ attributes, it MUST follow the rules below to ensure that the sender
+ does not transmit a resolution that would exceed the size criteria
+ specified in the attributes. These rules MUST be followed as long as
+ the attributes remain present in the remote description, including
+ cases in which the track changes its resolution or is replaced with a
+ different track.
+
+ Depending on how the RtpSender is configured, it may be producing a
+ single encoding at a certain resolution or, if simulcast
+ (Section 3.7) has been negotiated, multiple encodings, each at their
+ own specific resolution. In addition, depending on the
+ configuration, each encoding may have the flexibility to reduce
+ resolution when needed or may be locked to a specific output
+ resolution.
+
+ For each encoding being produced by the RtpSender, the set of
+ "a=imageattr recv" attributes in the corresponding "m=" section of
+ the remote description is processed to determine what should be
+ transmitted. Only attributes that reference the media format
+ selected for the encoding are considered; each such attribute is
+ evaluated individually, starting with the attribute with the highest
+ "q=" value. If multiple attributes have the same "q=" value, they
+ are evaluated in the order they appear in their containing "m="
+ section. Note that while JSEP endpoints will include at most one
+ "a=imageattr recv" attribute per media format, JSEP endpoints may
+ receive session descriptions from non-JSEP endpoints with "m="
+ sections that contain multiple such attributes.
+
+ For each "a=imageattr recv" attribute, the following rules are
+ applied. If this processing is successful, the encoding is
+ transmitted accordingly, and no further attributes are considered for
+ that encoding. Otherwise, the next attribute is evaluated, in the
+ aforementioned order. If none of the supplied attributes can be
+ processed successfully, the encoding MUST NOT be transmitted, and an
+ error SHOULD be raised to the application.
+
+ * The limits from the attribute are compared to the encoder
+ resolution. Only the specific limits mentioned below are
+ considered; any other values, such as picture aspect ratio, MUST
+ be ignored. When considering a MediaStreamTrack that is producing
+ rotated video, the unrotated resolution MUST be used for the
+ checks. This is required regardless of whether the receiver
+ supports performing receive-side rotation (e.g., through
+ Coordination of Video Orientation (CVO) [TS26.114]), as it
+ significantly simplifies the matching logic.
+
+ * If the attribute includes a "sar=" (sample aspect ratio) value set
+ to something other than "1.0", indicating that the receiver wants
+ to receive non-square pixels, this cannot be satisfied and the
+ attribute MUST NOT be used.
+
+ * If the encoder resolution exceeds the maximum size permitted by
+ the attribute and the encoder is allowed to adjust its resolution,
+ the encoder SHOULD apply downscaling in order to satisfy the
+ limits. Downscaling MUST NOT change the picture aspect ratio of
+ the encoding, ignoring any trivial differences due to rounding.
+ For example, if the encoder resolution is 1280x720 and the
+ attribute specified a maximum of 640x480, the expected output
+ resolution would be 640x360. If downscaling cannot be applied,
+ the attribute MUST NOT be used.
+
+ * If the encoder resolution is less than the minimum size permitted
+ by the attribute, the attribute MUST NOT be used; the encoder MUST
+ NOT apply upscaling. JSEP implementations SHOULD avoid this
+ situation by allowing receipt of arbitrarily small resolutions,
+ perhaps via fallback to a software decoder.
+
+ * If the encoder resolution is within the maximum and minimum sizes,
+ no action is needed.
+
+3.7. Simulcast
+
+ JSEP supports simulcast transmission of a MediaStreamTrack, where
+ multiple encodings of the source media can be transmitted within the
+ context of a single "m=" section. The current JSEP API is designed
+ to allow applications to send simulcasted media but only to receive a
+ single encoding. This allows for multi-user scenarios where each
+ sending client sends multiple encodings to a server, which then, for
+ each receiving client, chooses the appropriate encoding to forward.
+
+ Applications request support for simulcast by configuring multiple
+ encodings on an RtpSender. Upon generation of an offer or answer,
+ these encodings are indicated via SDP markings on the corresponding
+ "m=" section, as described below. Receivers that understand
+ simulcast and are willing to receive it will also include SDP
+ markings to indicate their support, and JSEP endpoints will use these
+ markings to determine whether simulcast is permitted for a given
+ RtpSender. If simulcast support is not negotiated, the RtpSender
+ will only use the first configured encoding.
+
+ Note that the exact simulcast parameters are up to the sending
+ application. While the aforementioned SDP markings are provided to
+ ensure that the remote side can receive and demux multiple simulcast
+ encodings, the specific resolutions and bitrates to be used for each
+ encoding are purely a send-side decision in JSEP.
+
+ JSEP currently does not provide a mechanism to configure receipt of
+ simulcast. This means that if simulcast is offered by the remote
+ endpoint, the answer generated by a JSEP endpoint will not indicate
+ support for receipt of simulcast, and as such the remote endpoint
+ will only send a single encoding per "m=" section.
+
+ In addition, JSEP does not provide a mechanism to handle an incoming
+ offer requesting simulcast from the JSEP endpoint. This means that
+ setting up simulcast in the case where the JSEP endpoint receives the
+ initial offer requires out-of-band signaling or SDP inspection.
+ However, in the case where the JSEP endpoint sets up simulcast in its
+ initial offer, any established simulcast streams will continue to
+ work upon receipt of an incoming re-offer. Future versions of this
+ specification may add additional APIs to handle the incoming initial
+ offer scenario.
+
+ When using JSEP to transmit multiple encodings from an RtpSender, the
+ techniques from [RFC8853] and [RFC8851] are used. Specifically, when
+ multiple encodings have been configured for an RtpSender, the "m="
+ section for the RtpSender will include an "a=simulcast" attribute, as
+ defined in [RFC8853], Section 5.1, with a "send" simulcast stream
+ description that lists each desired encoding, and no "recv" simulcast
+ stream description. The "m=" section will also include an "a=rid"
+ attribute for each encoding, as specified in [RFC8851], Section 4;
+ the use of Restriction Identifiers (RIDs, also called rid-ids or
+ RtpStreamIds) allows the individual encodings to be disambiguated
+ even though they are all part of the same "m=" section.
+
+3.8. Interactions with Forking
+
+ Some call signaling systems allow various types of forking where an
+ SDP Offer may be provided to more than one device. For example, SIP
+ [RFC3261] defines both a "parallel search" and "sequential search".
+ Although these are primarily signaling-level issues that are outside
+ the scope of JSEP, they do have some impact on the configuration of
+ the media plane that is relevant. When forking happens at the
+ signaling layer, the JavaScript application responsible for the
+ signaling needs to make the decisions about what media should be sent
+ or received at any point in time, as well as which remote endpoint it
+ should communicate with; JSEP is used to make sure the media engine
+ can make the RTP and media perform as required by the application.
+ The basic operations that the applications can have the media engine
+ do are as follows:
+
+ * Start exchanging media with a given remote peer, but keep all the
+ resources reserved in the offer.
+
+ * Start exchanging media with a given remote peer, and free any
+ resources in the offer that are not being used.
+
+3.8.1. Sequential Forking
+
+ Sequential forking involves a call being dispatched to multiple
+ remote callees, where each callee can accept the call, but only one
+ active session ever exists at a time; no mixing of received media is
+ performed.
+
+ JSEP handles sequential forking well, allowing the application to
+ easily control the policy for selecting the desired remote endpoint.
+ When an answer arrives from one of the callees, the application can
+ choose to apply it as either (1) a provisional answer, leaving open
+ the possibility of using a different answer in the future or (2) a
+ final answer, ending the setup flow.
+
+ In a "first-one-wins" situation, the first answer will be applied as
+ a final answer, and the application will reject any subsequent
+ answers. In SIP parlance, this would be ACK + BYE.
+
+ In a "last-one-wins" situation, all answers would be applied as
+ provisional answers, and any previous call leg will be terminated.
+ At some point, the application will end the setup process, perhaps
+ with a timer; at this point, the application could reapply the
+ pending remote description as a final answer.
+
+3.8.2. Parallel Forking
+
+ Parallel forking involves a call being dispatched to multiple remote
+ callees, where each callee can accept the call and multiple
+ simultaneous active signaling sessions can be established as a
+ result. If multiple callees send media at the same time, the
+ possibilities for handling this are described in [RFC3960],
+ Section 3.1. Most SIP devices today only support exchanging media
+ with a single device at a time and do not try to mix multiple early
+ media audio sources, as that could result in a confusing situation.
+ For example, consider having a European ringback tone mixed together
+ with the North American ringback tone -- the resulting sound would
+ not be like either tone and would confuse the user. If the signaling
+ application wishes to only exchange media with one of the remote
+ endpoints at a time, then from a media engine point of view, this is
+ exactly like the sequential forking case.
+
+ In the parallel forking case where the JavaScript application wishes
+ to simultaneously exchange media with multiple peers, the flow is
+ slightly more complex, but the JavaScript application can follow the
+ strategy that [RFC3960] describes, using UPDATE. The UPDATE approach
+ allows the signaling to set up a separate media flow for each peer
+ that it wishes to exchange media with. In JSEP, this offer used in
+ the UPDATE would be formed by simply creating a new PeerConnection
+ (see Section 4.1) and making sure that the same local media streams
+ have been added into this new PeerConnection. Then the new
+ PeerConnection object would produce an SDP offer that could be used
+ by the signaling to perform the UPDATE strategy discussed in
+ [RFC3960].
+
+ As a result of sharing the media streams, the application will end up
+ with N parallel PeerConnection sessions, each with a local and remote
+ description and their own local and remote addresses. The media flow
+ from these sessions can be managed using setDirection (see
+ Section 4.2.3), or the application can choose to play out the media
+ from all sessions mixed together. Of course, if the application
+ wants to only keep a single session, it can simply terminate the
+ sessions that it no longer needs.
+
+4. Interface
+
+ This section details the basic operations that must be present to
+ implement JSEP functionality. The actual API exposed in the W3C API
+ may have somewhat different syntax but should map easily to these
+ concepts.
+
+4.1. PeerConnection
+
+4.1.1. Constructor
+
+ The PeerConnection constructor allows the application to specify
+ global parameters for the media session, such as the STUN/TURN
+ servers and credentials to use when gathering candidates, as well as
+ the initial ICE candidate policy and pool size, and also the bundle
+ policy to use.
+
+ If an ICE candidate policy is specified, it functions as described in
+ Section 3.5.3, causing the JSEP implementation to only surface the
+ permitted candidates (including any implementation-internal
+ filtering) to the application and only use those candidates for
+ connectivity checks. The set of available policies is as follows:
+
+ all: All candidates permitted by implementation policy will be
+ gathered and used.
+
+ relay: All candidates except relay candidates will be filtered out.
+ This obfuscates the location information that might be ascertained
+ by the remote peer from the received candidates. Depending on how
+ the application deploys and chooses relay servers, this could
+ obfuscate location to a metro or possibly even global level.
+
+ The default ICE candidate policy MUST be set to "all", as this is
+ generally the desired policy and also typically reduces the use of
+ application TURN server resources significantly.
+
+ If a size is specified for the ICE candidate pool, this indicates the
+ number of ICE components to pre-gather candidates for. Because
+ pre-gathering results in utilizing STUN/TURN server resources for
+ potentially long periods of time, this MUST only occur upon
+ application request, and therefore the default candidate pool size
+ MUST be zero.
+
+ The application can specify its preferred policy regarding use of
+ bundle, the multiplexing mechanism defined in [RFC8843]. Regardless
+ of policy, the application will always try to negotiate bundle onto a
+ single transport and will offer a single bundle group across all "m="
+ sections; use of this single transport is contingent upon the
+ answerer accepting bundle. However, by specifying a policy from the
+ list below, the application can control exactly how aggressively it
+ will try to bundle media streams together, which affects how it will
+ interoperate with a non-bundle-aware endpoint. When negotiating with
+ a non-bundle-aware endpoint, only the streams not marked as bundle-
+ only streams will be established.
+
+ The set of available policies is as follows:
+
+ balanced: The first "m=" section of each type (audio, video, or
+ application) will contain transport parameters, which will allow
+ an answerer to unbundle that section. The second and any
+ subsequent "m=" sections of each type will be marked bundle-only.
+ The result is that if there are N distinct media types, then
+ candidates will be gathered for N media streams. This policy
+ balances desire to multiplex with the need to ensure that basic
+ audio and video can still be negotiated in legacy cases. When
+ acting as answerer, if there is no bundle group in the offer, the
+ implementation will reject all but the first "m=" section of each
+ type.
+
+ max-compat: All "m=" sections will contain transport parameters;
+ none will be marked as bundle-only. This policy will allow all
+ streams to be received by non-bundle-aware endpoints but will
+ require separate candidates to be gathered for each media stream.
+
+ max-bundle: Only the first "m=" section will contain transport
+ parameters; all streams other than the first will be marked as
+ bundle-only. This policy aims to minimize candidate gathering and
+ maximize multiplexing, at the cost of less compatibility with
+ legacy endpoints. When acting as answerer, the implementation
+ will reject any "m=" sections other than the first "m=" section,
+ unless they are in the same bundle group as that "m=" section.
+
+ As it provides the best trade-off between performance and
+ compatibility with legacy endpoints, the default bundle policy MUST
+ be set to "balanced".
+
+ The application can specify its preferred policy regarding use of
+ RTP/RTCP multiplexing [RFC5761] using one of the following policies:
+
+ negotiate: The JSEP implementation will gather both RTP and RTCP
+ candidates but also will offer "a=rtcp-mux", thus allowing for
+ compatibility with either multiplexing or non-multiplexing
+ endpoints.
+
+ require: The JSEP implementation will only gather RTP candidates and
+ will insert an "a=rtcp-mux-only" indication into any new "m="
+ sections in offers it generates. This halves the number of
+ candidates that the offerer needs to gather. Applying a
+ description with an "m=" section that does not contain an "a=rtcp-
+ mux" attribute will cause an error to be returned.
+
+ The default multiplexing policy MUST be set to "require".
+ Implementations MAY choose to reject attempts by the application to
+ set the multiplexing policy to "negotiate".
+
+4.1.2. addTrack
+
+ The addTrack method adds a MediaStreamTrack to the PeerConnection,
+ using the MediaStream argument to associate the track with other
+ tracks in the same MediaStream, so that they can be added to the same
+ "LS" (Lip Synchronization) group when creating an offer or answer.
+ Adding tracks to the same "LS" group indicates that the playback of
+ these tracks should be synchronized for proper lip sync, as described
+ in [RFC5888], Section 7. addTrack attempts to minimize the number of
+ transceivers as follows: if the PeerConnection is in the
+ "have-remote-offer" state, the track will be attached to the first
+ compatible transceiver that was created by the most recent call to
+ setRemoteDescription and does not have a local track. Otherwise, a
+ new transceiver will be created, as described in Section 4.1.4.
+
+4.1.3. removeTrack
+
+ The removeTrack method removes a MediaStreamTrack from the
+ PeerConnection, using the RtpSender argument to indicate which sender
+ should have its track removed. The sender's track is cleared, and
+ the sender stops sending. Future calls to createOffer will mark the
+ "m=" section associated with the sender as recvonly (if
+ transceiver.direction is sendrecv) or as inactive (if
+ transceiver.direction is sendonly).
+
+4.1.4. addTransceiver
+
+ The addTransceiver method adds a new RtpTransceiver to the
+ PeerConnection. If a MediaStreamTrack argument is provided, then the
+ transceiver will be configured with that media type and the track
+ will be attached to the transceiver. Otherwise, the application MUST
+ explicitly specify the type; this mode is useful for creating
+ recvonly transceivers as well as for creating transceivers to which a
+ track can be attached at some later point.
+
+ At the time of creation, the application can also specify a
+ transceiver direction attribute, a set of MediaStreams that the
+ transceiver is associated with (allowing "LS" group assignments), and
+ a set of encodings for the media (used for simulcast as described in
+ Section 3.7).
+
+4.1.5. onaddtrack Event
+
+ The onaddtrack event is dispatched to the application when a new
+ remote track has been signaled as a result of a setRemoteDescription
+ call. The new track is supplied as a MediaStreamTrack object in the
+ event, along with the MediaStream(s) the track is part of.
+
+4.1.6. createDataChannel
+
+ The createDataChannel method creates a new data channel and attaches
+ it to the PeerConnection. If no data channel currently exists for
+ this PeerConnection, then a new offer/answer exchange is required.
+ All data channels on a given PeerConnection share the same SCTP/DTLS
+ association ("SCTP" stands for "Stream Control Transmission
+ Protocol") and therefore the same "m=" section, so subsequent
+ creation of data channels does not have any impact on the JSEP state.
+
+ The createDataChannel method also includes a number of arguments that
+ are used by the PeerConnection (e.g., maxPacketLifetime) but are not
+ reflected in the SDP and do not affect the JSEP state.
+
+4.1.7. ondatachannel Event
+
+ The ondatachannel event is dispatched to the application when a new
+ data channel has been negotiated by the remote side, which can occur
+ at any time after the underlying SCTP/DTLS association has been
+ established. The new data channel object is supplied in the event.
+
+4.1.8. createOffer
+
+ The createOffer method generates a blob of SDP that contains an offer
+ per [RFC3264] with the supported configurations for the session,
+ including descriptions of the media added to this PeerConnection, the
+ codec, RTP, and RTCP options supported by this implementation, and
+ any candidates that have been gathered by the ICE agent. An options
+ parameter may be supplied to provide additional control over the
+ generated offer. This options parameter allows an application to
+ trigger an ICE restart, for the purpose of reestablishing
+ connectivity.
+
+ In the initial offer, the generated SDP will contain all desired
+ functionality for the session (functionality that is supported but
+ not desired by default may be omitted); for each SDP line, the
+ generation of the SDP will follow the process defined for generating
+ an initial offer from the specification that defines the given SDP
+ line. The exact handling of initial offer generation is detailed in
+ Section 5.2.1 below.
+
+ In the event createOffer is called after the session is established,
+ createOffer will generate an offer to modify the current session
+ based on any changes that have been made to the session, e.g., adding
+ or stopping RtpTransceivers, or requesting an ICE restart. For each
+ existing stream, the generation of each SDP line MUST follow the
+ process defined for generating an updated offer from the RFC that
+ specifies the given SDP line. For each new stream, the generation of
+ the SDP MUST follow the process of generating an initial offer, as
+ mentioned above. If no changes have been made, or for SDP lines that
+ are unaffected by the requested changes, the offer will only contain
+ the parameters negotiated by the last offer/answer exchange. The
+ exact handling of subsequent offer generation is detailed in
+ Section 5.2.2 below.
+
+ Session descriptions generated by createOffer MUST be immediately
+ usable by setLocalDescription; if a system has limited resources
+ (e.g., a finite number of decoders), createOffer SHOULD return an
+ offer that reflects the current state of the system, so that
+ setLocalDescription will succeed when it attempts to acquire those
+ resources.
+
+ Calling this method may do things such as generating new ICE
+ credentials, but it does not change the PeerConnection state, trigger
+ candidate gathering, or cause media to start or stop flowing.
+ Specifically, the offer is not applied, and does not become the
+ pending local description, until setLocalDescription is called.
+
+4.1.9. createAnswer
+
+ The createAnswer method generates a blob of SDP that contains an SDP
+ answer per [RFC3264] with the supported configuration for the session
+ that is compatible with the parameters supplied in the most recent
+ call to setRemoteDescription; setRemoteDescription MUST have been
+ called prior to calling createAnswer. Like createOffer, the returned
+ blob contains descriptions of the media added to this PeerConnection,
+ the codec/RTP/RTCP options negotiated for this session, and any
+ candidates that have been gathered by the ICE agent. An options
+ parameter may be supplied to provide additional control over the
+ generated answer.
+
+ As an answer, the generated SDP will contain a specific configuration
+ that specifies how the media plane should be established; for each
+ SDP line, the generation of the SDP MUST follow the process defined
+ for generating an answer from the specification that defines the
+ given SDP line. The exact handling of answer generation is detailed
+ in Section 5.3 below.
+
+ Session descriptions generated by createAnswer MUST be immediately
+ usable by setLocalDescription; like createOffer, the returned
+ description SHOULD reflect the current state of the system.
+
+ Calling this method may do things such as generating new ICE
+ credentials, but it does not change the PeerConnection state, trigger
+ candidate gathering, or cause a media state change. Specifically,
+ the answer is not applied, and does not become the current local
+ description, until setLocalDescription is called.
+
+4.1.10. SessionDescriptionType
+
+ Session description objects (RTCSessionDescription) may be of type
+ "offer", "pranswer", "answer", or "rollback". These types provide
+ information as to how the description parameter should be parsed and
+ how the media state should be changed.
+
+ "offer" indicates that a description MUST be parsed as an offer; said
+ description may include many possible media configurations. A
+ description used as an "offer" may be applied any time the
+ PeerConnection is in a "stable" state or applied as an update to a
+ previously supplied but unanswered "offer".
+
+ "pranswer" indicates that a description MUST be parsed as an answer,
+ but not a final answer, and so MUST NOT result in the freeing of
+ allocated resources. It may result in the start of media
+ transmission, if the answer does not specify an inactive media
+ direction. A description used as a "pranswer" may be applied as a
+ response to an "offer" or as an update to a previously sent
+ "pranswer".
+
+ "answer" indicates that a description MUST be parsed as an answer,
+ the offer/answer exchange MUST be considered complete, and any
+ resources (decoders, candidates) that are no longer needed SHOULD be
+ released. A description used as an "answer" may be applied as a
+ response to an "offer" or as an update to a previously sent
+ "pranswer".
+
+ The only difference between a provisional and final answer is that
+ the final answer results in the freeing of any unused resources that
+ were allocated as a result of the offer. As such, the application
+ can use some discretion on whether an answer should be applied as
+ provisional or final and can change the type of the session
+ description as needed. For example, in a serial forking scenario, an
+ application may receive multiple "final" answers, one from each
+ remote endpoint. The application could choose to accept the initial
+ answers as provisional answers and only apply an answer as final when
+ it receives one that meets its criteria (e.g., a live user instead of
+ voicemail).
+
+ "rollback" is a special session description type indicating that the
+ state machine MUST be rolled back to the previous "stable" state, as
+ described in Section 4.1.10.2. The contents MUST be empty.
+
+4.1.10.1. Use of Provisional Answers
+
+ Most applications will not need to create answers using the
+ "pranswer" type. While it is good practice to send an immediate
+ response to an offer, in order to warm up the session transport and
+ prevent media clipping, the preferred handling for a JSEP application
+ is to create and send a "sendonly" final answer with a null
+ MediaStreamTrack immediately after receiving the offer, which will
+ prevent media from being sent by the caller and allow media to be
+ sent immediately upon answer by the callee. Later, when the callee
+ actually accepts the call, the application can plug in the real
+ MediaStreamTrack and create a new "sendrecv" offer to update the
+ previous offer/answer pair and start bidirectional media flow. While
+ this could also be done with a "sendonly" pranswer followed by a
+ "sendrecv" answer, the initial pranswer leaves the offer/answer
+ exchange open, which means that the caller cannot send an updated
+ offer during this time.
+
+ As an example, consider a typical JSEP application that wants to set
+ up audio and video as quickly as possible. When the callee receives
+ an offer with audio and video MediaStreamTracks, it will send an
+ immediate answer accepting these tracks as sendonly (meaning that the
+ caller will not send the callee any media yet, and because the callee
+ has not yet added its own MediaStreamTracks, the callee will not send
+ any media either). It will then ask the user to accept the call and
+ acquire the needed local tracks. Upon acceptance by the user, the
+ application will plug in the tracks it has acquired, which, because
+ ICE handshaking and DTLS handshaking have likely completed by this
+ point, can start transmitting immediately. The application will also
+ send a new offer to the remote side indicating call acceptance and
+ moving the audio and video to be two-way media. A detailed example
+ flow along these lines is shown in Section 7.3.
+
+ Of course, some applications may not be able to perform this double
+ offer/answer exchange, particularly ones that are attempting to
+ gateway to legacy signaling protocols. In these cases, pranswer can
+ still provide the application with a mechanism to warm up the
+ transport.
+
+4.1.10.2. Rollback
+
+ In certain situations, it may be desirable to "undo" a change made to
+ setLocalDescription or setRemoteDescription. Consider a case where a
+ call is ongoing and one side wants to change some of the session
+ parameters; that side generates an updated offer and then calls
+ setLocalDescription. However, the remote side, either before or
+ after setRemoteDescription, decides it does not want to accept the
+ new parameters and sends a reject message back to the offerer. Now,
+ the offerer, and possibly the answerer as well, needs to return to a
+ "stable" state and the previous local/remote description. To support
+ this, we introduce the concept of "rollback", which discards any
+ proposed changes to the session, returning the state machine to the
+ "stable" state. A rollback is performed by supplying a session
+ description of type "rollback" with empty contents to either
+ setLocalDescription or setRemoteDescription.
+
+4.1.11. setLocalDescription
+
+ The setLocalDescription method instructs the PeerConnection to apply
+ the supplied session description as its local configuration. The
+ type field indicates whether the description should be processed as
+ an offer, provisional answer, final answer, or rollback; offers and
+ answers are checked differently, using the various rules that exist
+ for each SDP line.
+
+ This API changes the local media state; among other things, it sets
+ up local resources for receiving and decoding media. In order to
+ successfully handle scenarios where the application wants to offer to
+ change from one media format to a different, incompatible format, the
+ PeerConnection MUST be able to simultaneously support use of both the
+ current and pending local descriptions (e.g., support the codecs that
+ exist in either description). This dual processing begins when the
+ PeerConnection enters the "have-local-offer" state, and it continues
+ until setRemoteDescription is called with either (1) a final answer,
+ at which point the PeerConnection can fully adopt the pending local
+ description or (2) a rollback, which results in a revert to the
+ current local description.
+
+ This API indirectly controls the candidate gathering process. When a
+ local description is supplied and the number of transports currently
+ in use does not match the number of transports needed by the local
+ description, the PeerConnection will create transports as needed and
+ begin gathering candidates for each transport, using ones from the
+ candidate pool if available.
+
+ If (1) setRemoteDescription was previously called with an offer, (2)
+ setLocalDescription is called with an answer (provisional or final),
+ (3) the media directions are compatible, and (4) media is available
+ to send, this will result in the starting of media transmission.
+
+4.1.12. setRemoteDescription
+
+ The setRemoteDescription method instructs the PeerConnection to apply
+ the supplied session description as the desired remote configuration.
+ As in setLocalDescription, the type field of the description
+ indicates how it should be processed.
+
+ This API changes the local media state; among other things, it sets
+ up local resources for sending and encoding media.
+
+ If (1) setLocalDescription was previously called with an offer, (2)
+ setRemoteDescription is called with an answer (provisional or final),
+ (3) the media directions are compatible, and (4) media is available
+ to send, this will result in the starting of media transmission.
+
+4.1.13. currentLocalDescription
+
+ The currentLocalDescription method returns the current negotiated
+ local description -- i.e., the local description from the last
+ successful offer/answer exchange -- in addition to any local
+ candidates that have been generated by the ICE agent since the local
+ description was set.
+
+ A null object will be returned if an offer/answer exchange has not
+ yet been completed.
+
+4.1.14. pendingLocalDescription
+
+ The pendingLocalDescription method returns a copy of the local
+ description currently in negotiation -- i.e., a local offer set
+ without any corresponding remote answer -- in addition to any local
+ candidates that have been generated by the ICE agent since the local
+ description was set.
+
+ A null object will be returned if the state of the PeerConnection is
+ "stable" or "have-remote-offer".
+
+4.1.15. currentRemoteDescription
+
+ The currentRemoteDescription method returns a copy of the current
+ negotiated remote description -- i.e., the remote description from
+ the last successful offer/answer exchange -- in addition to any
+ remote candidates that have been supplied via processIceMessage since
+ the remote description was set.
+
+ A null object will be returned if an offer/answer exchange has not
+ yet been completed.
+
+4.1.16. pendingRemoteDescription
+
+ The pendingRemoteDescription method returns a copy of the remote
+ description currently in negotiation -- i.e., a remote offer set
+ without any corresponding local answer -- in addition to any remote
+ candidates that have been supplied via processIceMessage since the
+ remote description was set.
+
+ A null object will be returned if the state of the PeerConnection is
+ "stable" or "have-local-offer".
+
+4.1.17. canTrickleIceCandidates
+
+ The canTrickleIceCandidates property indicates whether the remote
+ side supports receiving trickled candidates. There are three
+ potential values:
+
+ null: No SDP has been received from the other side, so it is not
+ known if it can handle trickle. This is the initial value before
+ setRemoteDescription is called.
+
+ true: SDP has been received from the other side indicating that it
+ can support trickle.
+
+ false: SDP has been received from the other side indicating that it
+ cannot support trickle.
+
+ As described in Section 3.5.2, JSEP implementations always provide
+ candidates to the application individually, consistent with what is
+ needed for Trickle ICE. However, applications can use the
+ canTrickleIceCandidates property to determine whether their peer can
+ actually do Trickle ICE, i.e., whether it is safe to send an initial
+ offer or answer followed later by candidates as they are gathered.
+ As "true" is the only value that definitively indicates remote
+ Trickle ICE support, an application that compares
+ canTrickleIceCandidates against "true" will by default attempt Half
+ Trickle on initial offers and Full Trickle on subsequent interactions
+ with a Trickle ICE-compatible agent.
+
+4.1.18. setConfiguration
+
+ The setConfiguration method allows the global configuration of the
+ PeerConnection, which was initially set by constructor parameters, to
+ be changed during the session. The effects of calling this method
+ depend on when it is invoked, and they will differ, depending on
+ which specific parameters are changed:
+
+ * Any changes to the STUN/TURN servers to use affect the next
+ gathering phase. If an ICE gathering phase has already started or
+ completed, the 'needs-ice-restart' bit mentioned in Section 3.5.1
+ will be set. This will cause the next call to createOffer to
+ generate new ICE credentials, for the purpose of forcing an ICE
+ restart and kicking off a new gathering phase, in which the new
+ servers will be used. If the ICE candidate pool has a nonzero
+ size and a local description has not yet been applied, any
+ existing candidates will be discarded, and new candidates will be
+ gathered from the new servers.
+
+ * Any change to the ICE candidate policy affects the next gathering
+ phase. If an ICE gathering phase has already started or
+ completed, the 'needs-ice-restart' bit will be set. Either way,
+ changes to the policy have no effect on the candidate pool,
+ because pooled candidates are not made available to the
+ application until a gathering phase occurs, and so any necessary
+ filtering can still be done on any pooled candidates.
+
+ * The ICE candidate pool size MUST NOT be changed after applying a
+ local description. If a local description has not yet been
+ applied, any changes to the ICE candidate pool size take effect
+ immediately; if increased, additional candidates are pre-gathered;
+ if decreased, the now-superfluous candidates are discarded.
+
+ * The bundle and RTCP-multiplexing policies MUST NOT be changed
+ after the construction of the PeerConnection.
+
+ Calling this method may result in a change to the state of the ICE
+ agent.
+
+4.1.19. addIceCandidate
+
+ The addIceCandidate method provides an update to the ICE agent via an
+ IceCandidate object (Section 3.5.2.1). If the IceCandidate's
+ candidate field is non-null, the IceCandidate is treated as a new
+ remote ICE candidate, which will be added to the current and/or
+ pending remote description according to the rules defined for Trickle
+ ICE. Otherwise, the IceCandidate is treated as an end-of-candidates
+ indication, as defined in [RFC8838], Section 14.
+
+ In either case, the "m=" section index, MID, and ufrag fields from
+ the supplied IceCandidate are used to determine which "m=" section
+ and ICE candidate generation the IceCandidate belongs to, as
+ described in Section 3.5.2.1 above. In the case of an end-of-
+ candidates indication, null values for the "m=" section index and MID
+ fields are interpreted to mean that the indication applies to all
+ "m=" sections in the specified ICE candidate generation. However, if
+ both fields are null for a new remote candidate, this MUST be treated
+ as an invalid condition, as specified below.
+
+ If any IceCandidate fields contain invalid values or an error occurs
+ during the processing of the IceCandidate object, the supplied
+ IceCandidate MUST be ignored and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ Otherwise, the new remote candidate or end-of-candidates indication
+ is supplied to the ICE agent. In the case of a new remote candidate,
+ connectivity checks will be sent to the new candidate, assuming
+ setLocalDescription has already been called to initialize the ICE
+ gathering process.
+
+4.1.20. onicecandidate Event
+
+ The onicecandidate event is dispatched to the application in two
+ situations: (1) when the ICE agent has discovered a new allowed local
+ ICE candidate during ICE gathering, as outlined in Section 3.5.1 and
+ subject to the restrictions discussed in Section 3.5.3, or (2) when
+ an ICE gathering phase completes. The event contains a single
+ IceCandidate object, as defined in Section 3.5.2.1.
+
+ In the first case, the newly discovered candidate is reflected in the
+ IceCandidate object, and all of its fields MUST be non-null. This
+ candidate will also be added to the current and/or pending local
+ description according to the rules defined for Trickle ICE.
+
+ In the second case, the event's IceCandidate object MUST have its
+ candidate field set to null to indicate that the current gathering
+ phase is complete, i.e., there will be no further onicecandidate
+ events in this phase. However, the IceCandidate's ufrag field MUST
+ be specified to indicate which ICE candidate generation is ending.
+ The IceCandidate's "m=" section index and MID fields MAY be specified
+ to indicate that the event applies to a specific "m=" section, or set
+ to null to indicate it applies to all "m=" sections in the current
+ ICE candidate generation. This event can be used by the application
+ to generate an end-of-candidates indication, as defined in [RFC8838],
+ Section 13.
+
+4.2. RtpTransceiver
+
+4.2.1. stop
+
+ The stop method stops an RtpTransceiver. This will cause future
+ calls to createOffer to generate a zero port for the associated "m="
+ section. See below for more details.
+
+4.2.2. stopped
+
+ The stopped property indicates whether the transceiver has been
+ stopped, either by a call to stop or by applying an answer that
+ rejects the associated "m=" section. In either of these cases, it is
+ set to "true" and otherwise will be set to "false".
+
+ A stopped RtpTransceiver does not send any outgoing RTP or RTCP or
+ process any incoming RTP or RTCP. It cannot be restarted.
+
+4.2.3. setDirection
+
+ The setDirection method sets the direction of a transceiver, which
+ affects the direction property of the associated "m=" section on
+ future calls to createOffer and createAnswer. The permitted values
+ for direction are "recvonly", "sendrecv", "sendonly", and "inactive",
+ mirroring the identically named direction attributes defined in
+ [RFC4566], Section 6.
+
+ When creating offers, the transceiver direction is directly reflected
+ in the output, even for re-offers. When creating answers, the
+ transceiver direction is intersected with the offered direction, as
+ explained in Section 5.3 below.
+
+ Note that while setDirection sets the direction property of the
+ transceiver immediately (Section 4.2.4), this property does not
+ immediately affect whether the transceiver's RtpSender will send or
+ its RtpReceiver will receive. The direction in effect is represented
+ by the currentDirection property, which is only updated when an
+ answer is applied.
+
+4.2.4. direction
+
+ The direction property indicates the last value passed into
+ setDirection. If setDirection has never been called, it is set to
+ the direction the transceiver was initialized with.
+
+4.2.5. currentDirection
+
+ The currentDirection property indicates the last negotiated direction
+ for the transceiver's associated "m=" section. More specifically, it
+ indicates the direction attribute [RFC3264] of the associated "m="
+ section in the last applied answer (including provisional answers),
+ with "send" and "recv" directions reversed if it was a remote answer.
+ For example, if the direction attribute for the associated "m="
+ section in a remote answer is "recvonly", currentDirection is set to
+ "sendonly".
+
+ If an answer that references this transceiver has not yet been
+ applied or if the transceiver is stopped, currentDirection is set to
+ "null".
+
+4.2.6. setCodecPreferences
+
+ The setCodecPreferences method sets the codec preferences of a
+ transceiver, which in turn affect the presence and order of codecs of
+ the associated "m=" section on future calls to createOffer and
+ createAnswer. Note that setCodecPreferences does not directly affect
+ which codec the implementation decides to send. It only affects
+ which codecs the implementation indicates that it prefers to receive,
+ via the offer or answer. Even when a codec is excluded by
+ setCodecPreferences, it still may be used to send until the next
+ offer/answer exchange discards it.
+
+ The codec preferences of an RtpTransceiver can cause codecs to be
+ excluded by subsequent calls to createOffer and createAnswer, in
+ which case the corresponding media formats in the associated "m="
+ section will be excluded. The codec preferences cannot add media
+ formats that would otherwise not be present.
+
+ The codec preferences of an RtpTransceiver can also determine the
+ order of codecs in subsequent calls to createOffer and createAnswer,
+ in which case the order of the media formats in the associated "m="
+ section will follow the specified preferences.
+
+5. SDP Interaction Procedures
+
+ This section describes the specific procedures to be followed when
+ creating and parsing SDP objects.
+
+5.1. Requirements Overview
+
+ JSEP implementations MUST comply with the specifications listed below
+ that govern the creation and processing of offers and answers.
+
+5.1.1. Usage Requirements
+
+ All session descriptions handled by JSEP implementations, both local
+ and remote, MUST indicate support for the following specifications.
+ If any of these are absent, this omission MUST be treated as an
+ error.
+
+ * ICE, as specified in [RFC8445], MUST be used. Note that the
+ remote endpoint may use a lite implementation; implementations
+ MUST properly handle remote endpoints that use ICE-lite. The
+ remote endpoint may also use an older version of ICE;
+ implementations MUST properly handle remote endpoints that use ICE
+ as specified in [RFC5245].
+
+ * DTLS [RFC6347] or DTLS-SRTP [RFC5763] MUST be used, as appropriate
+ for the media type, as specified in [RFC8827].
+
+ The SDP security descriptions mechanism for SRTP keying [RFC4568]
+ MUST NOT be used, as discussed in [RFC8827].
+
+5.1.2. Profile Names and Interoperability
+
+ For media "m=" sections, JSEP implementations MUST support the
+ "UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF" profile specified in [RFC5764] as well as the
+ "TCP/DTLS/RTP/SAVPF" profile specified in [RFC7850] and MUST indicate
+ one of these profiles for each media "m=" line they produce in an
+ offer. For data "m=" sections, implementations MUST support the
+ "UDP/DTLS/SCTP" profile as well as the "TCP/DTLS/SCTP" profile and
+ MUST indicate one of these profiles for each data "m=" line they
+ produce in an offer. The exact profile to use is determined by the
+ protocol associated with the current default or selected ICE
+ candidate, as described in [RFC8839], Section 4.2.1.2.
+
+ Unfortunately, in an attempt at compatibility, some endpoints
+ generate other profile strings even when they mean to support one of
+ these profiles. For instance, an endpoint might generate "RTP/AVP"
+ but supply "a=fingerprint" and "a=rtcp-fb" attributes, indicating its
+ willingness to support "UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF" or "TCP/DTLS/RTP/SAVPF".
+ In order to simplify compatibility with such endpoints, JSEP
+ implementations MUST follow the following rules when processing the
+ media "m=" sections in a received offer:
+
+ * Any profile in the offer matching one of the following MUST be
+ accepted:
+
+ - "RTP/AVP" (defined in [RFC4566], Section 8.2.2)
+
+ - "RTP/AVPF" (defined in [RFC4585], Section 9)
+
+ - "RTP/SAVP" (defined in [RFC3711], Section 12)
+
+ - "RTP/SAVPF" (defined in [RFC5124], Section 6)
+
+ - "TCP/DTLS/RTP/SAVP" (defined in [RFC7850], Section 3.4)
+
+ - "TCP/DTLS/RTP/SAVPF" (defined in [RFC7850], Section 3.5)
+
+ - "UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVP" (defined in [RFC5764], Section 9)
+
+ - "UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF" (defined in [RFC5764], Section 9)
+
+ * The profile in any "m=" line in any generated answer MUST exactly
+ match the profile provided in the offer.
+
+ * Because DTLS-SRTP is REQUIRED, the choice of SAVP or AVP has no
+ effect; support for DTLS-SRTP is determined by the presence of one
+ or more "a=fingerprint" attributes. Note that lack of an
+ "a=fingerprint" attribute will lead to negotiation failure.
+
+ * The use of AVPF or AVP simply controls the timing rules used for
+ RTCP feedback. If AVPF is provided or an "a=rtcp-fb" attribute is
+ present, assume AVPF timing, i.e., a default value of "trr-int=0".
+ Otherwise, assume that AVPF is being used in an AVP-compatible
+ mode and use a value of "trr-int=4000".
+
+ * For data "m=" sections, implementations MUST support receiving the
+ "UDP/DTLS/SCTP", "TCP/DTLS/SCTP", or "DTLS/SCTP" (for backwards
+ compatibility) profiles.
+
+ Note that re-offers by JSEP implementations MUST use the correct
+ profile strings even if the initial offer/answer exchange used an
+ (incorrect) older profile string. This simplifies JSEP behavior,
+ with minimal downside, as any remote endpoint that fails to handle
+ such a re-offer will also fail to handle a JSEP endpoint's initial
+ offer.
+
+5.2. Constructing an Offer
+
+ When createOffer is called, a new SDP description MUST be created
+ that includes the functionality specified in [RFC8834]. The exact
+ details of this process are explained below.
+
+5.2.1. Initial Offers
+
+ When createOffer is called for the first time, the result is known as
+ the initial offer.
+
+ The first step in generating an initial offer is to generate session-
+ level attributes, as specified in [RFC4566], Section 5.
+ Specifically:
+
+ * The first SDP line MUST be "v=0" as defined in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.1.
+
+ * The second SDP line MUST be an "o=" line as defined in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.2. The value of the <username> field SHOULD be "-".
+ The <sess-id> MUST be representable by a 64-bit signed integer,
+ and the value MUST be less than 2^(63)-1. It is RECOMMENDED that
+ the <sess-id> be constructed by generating a 64-bit quantity with
+ the highest bit set to zero and the remaining 63 bits being
+ cryptographically random. The value of the <nettype> <addrtype>
+ <unicast-address> tuple SHOULD be set to a non-meaningful address,
+ such as IN IP4 0.0.0.0, to prevent leaking a local IP address in
+ this field; this problem is discussed in [RFC8828]. As mentioned
+ in [RFC4566], the entire "o=" line needs to be unique, but
+ selecting a random number for <sess-id> is sufficient to
+ accomplish this.
+
+ * The third SDP line MUST be a "s=" line as defined in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.3; to match the "o=" line, a single dash SHOULD be used
+ as the session name, e.g., "s=-". Note that this differs from the
+ advice in [RFC4566], which proposes a single space, but as both
+ "o=" and "s=" are meaningless in JSEP, having the same meaningless
+ value seems clearer.
+
+ * Session Information ("i="), URI ("u="), Email Address ("e="),
+ Phone Number ("p="), Repeat Times ("r="), and Time Zones ("z=")
+ lines are not useful in this context and SHOULD NOT be included.
+
+ * Encryption Keys ("k=") lines do not provide sufficient security
+ and MUST NOT be included.
+
+ * A "t=" line MUST be added, as specified in [RFC4566], Section 5.9;
+ both <start-time> and <stop-time> SHOULD be set to zero, e.g.,
+ "t=0 0".
+
+ * An "a=ice-options" line with the "trickle" and "ice2" options MUST
+ be added, as specified in [RFC8840], Section 4.1.1 and [RFC8445],
+ Section 10.
+
+ * If WebRTC identity is being used, an "a=identity" line MUST be
+ added, as described in [RFC8827], Section 5.
+
+ The next step is to generate "m=" sections, as specified in
+ [RFC4566], Section 5.14. An "m=" section is generated for each
+ RtpTransceiver that has been added to the PeerConnection, excluding
+ any stopped RtpTransceivers; this is done in the order the
+ RtpTransceivers were added to the PeerConnection. If there are no
+ such RtpTransceivers, no "m=" sections are generated; more can be
+ added later, as discussed in [RFC3264], Section 5.
+
+ For each "m=" section generated for an RtpTransceiver, establish a
+ mapping between the transceiver and the index of the generated "m="
+ section.
+
+ Each "m=" section, provided it is not marked as bundle-only, MUST
+ contain a unique set of ICE credentials and a unique set of ICE
+ candidates. Bundle-only "m=" sections MUST NOT contain any ICE
+ credentials and MUST NOT gather any candidates.
+
+ For DTLS, all "m=" sections MUST use any and all certificates that
+ have been specified for the PeerConnection; as a result, they MUST
+ all have the same fingerprint value or values [RFC8122], or these
+ values MUST be session-level attributes.
+
+ Each "m=" section MUST be generated as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.14. For the "m=" line itself, the following rules MUST be
+ followed:
+
+ * If the "m=" section is marked as bundle-only, then the <port>
+ value MUST be set to zero. Otherwise, the <port> value is set to
+ the port of the default ICE candidate for this "m=" section, but
+ given that no candidates are available yet, the default port value
+ of 9 (Discard) MUST be used, as indicated in [RFC8840],
+ Section 4.1.1.
+
+ * To properly indicate use of DTLS, the <proto> field MUST be set to
+ "UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF", as specified in [RFC5764], Section 8.
+
+ * If codec preferences have been set for the associated transceiver,
+ media formats MUST be generated in the corresponding order and
+ MUST exclude any codecs not present in the codec preferences.
+
+ * Unless excluded by the above restrictions, the media formats MUST
+ include the mandatory audio/video codecs as specified in
+ [RFC7874], Section 3 and [RFC7742], Section 5.
+
+ The "m=" line MUST be followed immediately by a "c=" line, as
+ specified in [RFC4566], Section 5.7. Again, as no candidates are
+ available yet, the "c=" line MUST contain the default value "IN IP4
+ 0.0.0.0", as defined in [RFC8840], Section 4.1.1.
+
+ [RFC8859] groups SDP attributes into different categories. To avoid
+ unnecessary duplication when bundling, attributes of category
+ IDENTICAL or TRANSPORT MUST NOT be repeated in bundled "m=" sections,
+ repeating the guidance from [RFC8843], Section 7.1.3. This includes
+ "m=" sections for which bundling has been negotiated and is still
+ desired, as well as "m=" sections marked as bundle-only.
+
+ The following attributes, which are of a category other than
+ IDENTICAL or TRANSPORT, MUST be included in each "m=" section:
+
+ * An "a=mid" line, as specified in [RFC5888], Section 4. All MID
+ values MUST be generated in a fashion that does not leak user
+ information, e.g., randomly or using a per-PeerConnection counter,
+ and SHOULD be 3 bytes or less, to allow them to efficiently fit
+ into the RTP header extension defined in [RFC8843], Section 15.2.
+ Note that this does not set the RtpTransceiver mid property, as
+ that only occurs when the description is applied. The generated
+ MID value can be considered a "proposed" MID at this point.
+
+ * A direction attribute that is the same as that of the associated
+ transceiver.
+
+ * For each media format on the "m=" line, "a=rtpmap" and "a=fmtp"
+ lines, as specified in [RFC4566], Section 6 and [RFC3264],
+ Section 5.1.
+
+ * For each primary codec where RTP retransmission should be used, a
+ corresponding "a=rtpmap" line indicating "rtx" with the clock rate
+ of the primary codec and an "a=fmtp" line that references the
+ payload type of the primary codec, as specified in [RFC4588],
+ Section 8.1.
+
+ * For each supported Forward Error Correction (FEC) mechanism,
+ "a=rtpmap" and "a=fmtp" lines, as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 6. The FEC mechanisms that MUST be supported are
+ specified in [RFC8854], Section 7, and specific usage for each
+ media type is outlined in Sections 4 and 5.
+
+ * If this "m=" section is for media with configurable durations of
+ media per packet, e.g., audio, an "a=maxptime" line, indicating
+ the maximum amount of media, specified in milliseconds, that can
+ be encapsulated in each packet, as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 6. This value is set to the smallest of the maximum
+ duration values across all the codecs included in the "m="
+ section.
+
+ * If this "m=" section is for video media and there are known
+ limitations on the size of images that can be decoded, an
+ "a=imageattr" line, as specified in Section 3.6.
+
+ * For each supported RTP header extension, an "a=extmap" line, as
+ specified in [RFC5285], Section 5. The list of header extensions
+ that SHOULD/MUST be supported is specified in [RFC8834],
+ Section 5.2. Any header extensions that require encryption MUST
+ be specified as indicated in [RFC6904], Section 4.
+
+ * For each supported RTCP feedback mechanism, an "a=rtcp-fb" line,
+ as specified in [RFC4585], Section 4.2. The list of RTCP feedback
+ mechanisms that SHOULD/MUST be supported is specified in
+ [RFC8834], Section 5.1.
+
+ * If the RtpTransceiver has a sendrecv or sendonly direction:
+
+ - For each MediaStream that was associated with the transceiver
+ when it was created via addTrack or addTransceiver, an "a=msid"
+ line, as specified in [RFC8830], Section 2, but omitting the
+ "appdata" field.
+
+ * If the RtpTransceiver has a sendrecv or sendonly direction, and
+ the application has specified a rid-id for an encoding, or has
+ specified more than one encoding in the RtpSenders's parameters,
+ an "a=rid" line for each encoding specified. The "a=rid" line is
+ specified in [RFC8851], and its direction MUST be "send". If the
+ application has chosen a rid-id, it MUST be used; otherwise, a
+ rid-id MUST be generated by the implementation. rid-ids MUST be
+ generated in a fashion that does not leak user information, e.g.,
+ randomly or using a per-PeerConnection counter (see guidance at
+ the end of [RFC8852], Section 3.3), and SHOULD be 3 bytes or less,
+ to allow them to efficiently fit into the RTP header extensions
+ defined in [RFC8852], Section 3.3. If no encodings have been
+ specified, or only one encoding is specified but without a rid-id,
+ then no "a=rid" lines are generated.
+
+ * If the RtpTransceiver has a sendrecv or sendonly direction and
+ more than one "a=rid" line has been generated, an "a=simulcast"
+ line, with direction "send", as defined in [RFC8853], Section 5.1.
+ The associated set of rid-ids MUST include all of the rid-ids used
+ in the "a=rid" lines for this "m=" section.
+
+ * If (1) the bundle policy for this PeerConnection is set to "max-
+ bundle" and this is not the first "m=" section or (2) the bundle
+ policy is set to "balanced" and this is not the first "m=" section
+ for this media type, an "a=bundle-only" line.
+
+ The following attributes, which are of category IDENTICAL or
+ TRANSPORT, MUST appear only in "m=" sections that either have a
+ unique address or are associated with the BUNDLE-tag. (In initial
+ offers, this means those "m=" sections that do not contain an
+ "a=bundle-only" attribute.)
+
+ * "a=ice-ufrag" and "a=ice-pwd" lines, as specified in [RFC8839],
+ Section 5.4.
+
+ * For each desired digest algorithm, one or more "a=fingerprint"
+ lines for each of the endpoint's certificates, as specified in
+ [RFC8122], Section 5.
+
+ * An "a=setup" line, as specified in [RFC4145], Section 4 and
+ clarified for use in DTLS-SRTP scenarios in [RFC5763], Section 5.
+ The role value in the offer MUST be "actpass".
+
+ * An "a=tls-id" line, as specified in [RFC8842], Section 5.2.
+
+ * An "a=rtcp" line, as specified in [RFC3605], Section 2.1,
+ containing the default value "9 IN IP4 0.0.0.0", because no
+ candidates have yet been gathered.
+
+ * An "a=rtcp-mux" line, as specified in [RFC5761], Section 5.1.3.
+
+ * If the RTP/RTCP multiplexing policy is "require", an "a=rtcp-mux-
+ only" line, as specified in [RFC8858], Section 4.
+
+ * An "a=rtcp-rsize" line, as specified in [RFC5506], Section 5.
+
+ Lastly, if a data channel has been created, an "m=" section MUST be
+ generated for data. The <media> field MUST be set to "application",
+ and the <proto> field MUST be set to "UDP/DTLS/SCTP" [RFC8841]. The
+ <fmt> value MUST be set to "webrtc-datachannel" as specified in
+ [RFC8841], Section 4.2.2.
+
+ Within the data "m=" section, an "a=mid" line MUST be generated and
+ included as described above, along with an "a=sctp-port" line
+ referencing the SCTP port number, as defined in [RFC8841],
+ Section 5.1; and, if appropriate, an "a=max-message-size" line, as
+ defined in [RFC8841], Section 6.1.
+
+ As discussed above, the following attributes of category IDENTICAL or
+ TRANSPORT are included only if the data "m=" section either has a
+ unique address or is associated with the BUNDLE-tag (e.g., if it is
+ the only "m=" section):
+
+ * "a=ice-ufrag"
+
+ * "a=ice-pwd"
+
+ * "a=fingerprint"
+
+ * "a=setup"
+
+ * "a=tls-id"
+
+ Once all "m=" sections have been generated, a session-level "a=group"
+ attribute MUST be added as specified in [RFC5888]. This attribute
+ MUST have semantics "BUNDLE" and MUST include the mid identifiers of
+ each "m=" section. The effect of this is that the JSEP
+ implementation offers all "m=" sections as one bundle group.
+ However, whether the "m=" sections are bundle-only or not depends on
+ the bundle policy.
+
+ The next step is to generate session-level lip sync groups as defined
+ in [RFC5888], Section 7. For each MediaStream referenced by more
+ than one RtpTransceiver (by passing those MediaStreams as arguments
+ to the addTrack and addTransceiver methods), a group of type "LS"
+ MUST be added that contains the MID values for each RtpTransceiver.
+
+ Attributes that SDP permits to be at either the session level or the
+ media level SHOULD generally be at the media level even if they are
+ identical. This assists development and debugging by making it
+ easier to understand individual media sections, especially if one of
+ a set of initially identical attributes is subsequently changed.
+ However, implementations MAY choose to aggregate attributes at the
+ session level, and JSEP implementations MUST be prepared to receive
+ attributes in either location.
+
+ Attributes other than the ones specified above MAY be included,
+ except for the following attributes, which are specifically
+ incompatible with the requirements of [RFC8834] and MUST NOT be
+ included:
+
+ * "a=crypto"
+
+ * "a=key-mgmt"
+
+ * "a=ice-lite"
+
+ Note that when bundle is used, any additional attributes that are
+ added MUST follow the advice in [RFC8859] on how those attributes
+ interact with bundle.
+
+ Note that these requirements are in some cases stricter than those of
+ SDP. Implementations MUST be prepared to accept compliant SDP even
+ if it would not conform to the requirements for generating SDP in
+ this specification.
+
+5.2.2. Subsequent Offers
+
+ When createOffer is called a second (or later) time or is called
+ after a local description has already been installed, the processing
+ is somewhat different than for an initial offer.
+
+ If the previous offer was not applied using setLocalDescription,
+ meaning the PeerConnection is still in the "stable" state, the steps
+ for generating an initial offer MUST be followed, subject to the
+ following restriction:
+
+ * The fields of the "o=" line MUST stay the same except for the
+ <session-version> field, which MUST increment by one on each call
+ to createOffer if the offer might differ from the output of the
+ previous call to createOffer; implementations MAY opt to increment
+ <session-version> on every call. The value of the generated
+ <session-version> is independent of the <session-version> of the
+ current local description; in particular, in the case where the
+ current version is N, an offer is created and applied with version
+ N+1, and then that offer is rolled back so that the current
+ version is again N, the next generated offer will still have
+ version N+2.
+
+ Note that if the application creates an offer by reading
+ currentLocalDescription instead of calling createOffer, the returned
+ SDP may be different than when setLocalDescription was originally
+ called, due to the addition of gathered ICE candidates, but the
+ <session-version> will not have changed. There are no known
+ scenarios in which this causes problems, but if this is a concern,
+ the solution is simply to use createOffer to ensure a unique
+ <session-version>.
+
+ If the previous offer was applied using setLocalDescription, but a
+ corresponding answer from the remote side has not yet been applied,
+ meaning the PeerConnection is still in the "have-local-offer" state,
+ an offer is generated by following the steps in the "stable" state
+ above, along with these exceptions:
+
+ * The "s=" and "t=" lines MUST stay the same.
+
+ * If any RtpTransceiver has been added and there exists an "m="
+ section with a zero port in the current local description or the
+ current remote description, that "m=" section MUST be recycled by
+ generating an "m=" section for the added RtpTransceiver as if the
+ "m=" section were being added to the session description
+ (including a new MID value) and placing it at the same index as
+ the "m=" section with a zero port.
+
+ * If an RtpTransceiver is stopped and is not associated with an "m="
+ section, an "m=" section MUST NOT be generated for it. This
+ prevents adding back RtpTransceivers whose "m=" sections were
+ recycled and used for a new RtpTransceiver in a previous offer/
+ answer exchange, as described above.
+
+ * If an RtpTransceiver has been stopped and is associated with an
+ "m=" section, and the "m=" section is not being recycled as
+ described above, an "m=" section MUST be generated for it with the
+ port set to zero and all "a=msid" lines removed.
+
+ * For RtpTransceivers that are not stopped, the "a=msid" line or
+ lines MUST stay the same if they are present in the current
+ description, regardless of changes to the transceiver's direction
+ or track. If no "a=msid" line is present in the current
+ description, "a=msid" line(s) MUST be generated according to the
+ same rules as for an initial offer.
+
+ * Each "m=" and "c=" line MUST be filled in with the port, relevant
+ RTP profile, and address of the default candidate for the "m="
+ section, as described in [RFC8839], Section 4.2.1.2 and clarified
+ in Section 5.1.2. If no RTP candidates have yet been gathered,
+ default values MUST still be used, as described above.
+
+ * Each "a=mid" line MUST stay the same.
+
+ * Each "a=ice-ufrag" and "a=ice-pwd" line MUST stay the same, unless
+ the ICE configuration has changed (e.g., changes to either the
+ supported STUN/TURN servers or the ICE candidate policy) or the
+ IceRestart option (Section 5.2.3.1) was specified. If the "m="
+ section is bundled into another "m=" section, it still MUST NOT
+ contain any ICE credentials.
+
+ * If the "m=" section is not bundled into another "m=" section, its
+ "a=rtcp" attribute line MUST be filled in with the port and
+ address of the default RTCP candidate, as indicated in [RFC5761],
+ Section 5.1.3. If no RTCP candidates have yet been gathered,
+ default values MUST be used, as described in Section 5.2.1 above.
+
+ * If the "m=" section is not bundled into another "m=" section, for
+ each candidate that has been gathered during the most recent
+ gathering phase (see Section 3.5.1), an "a=candidate" line MUST be
+ added, as defined in [RFC8839], Section 5.1. If candidate
+ gathering for the section has completed, an "a=end-of-candidates"
+ attribute MUST be added, as described in [RFC8840], Section 8.2.
+ If the "m=" section is bundled into another "m=" section, both
+ "a=candidate" and "a=end-of-candidates" MUST be omitted.
+
+ * For RtpTransceivers that are still present, the "a=rid" lines MUST
+ stay the same.
+
+ * For RtpTransceivers that are still present, any "a=simulcast" line
+ MUST stay the same.
+
+ If the previous offer was applied using setLocalDescription, and a
+ corresponding answer from the remote side has been applied using
+ setRemoteDescription, meaning the PeerConnection is in the "have-
+ remote-pranswer" state or the "stable" state, an offer is generated
+ based on the negotiated session descriptions by following the steps
+ mentioned for the "have-local-offer" state above.
+
+ In addition, for each existing, non-recycled, non-rejected "m="
+ section in the new offer, the following adjustments are made based on
+ the contents of the corresponding "m=" section in the current local
+ or remote description, as appropriate:
+
+ * The "m=" line and corresponding "a=rtpmap" and "a=fmtp" lines MUST
+ only include media formats that have not been excluded by the
+ codec preferences of the associated transceiver and also MUST
+ include all currently available formats. Media formats that were
+ previously offered but are no longer available (e.g., a shared
+ hardware codec) MAY be excluded.
+
+ * Unless codec preferences have been set for the associated
+ transceiver, the media formats on the "m=" line MUST be generated
+ in the same order as in the most recent answer. Any media formats
+ that were not present in the most recent answer MUST be added
+ after all existing formats.
+
+ * The RTP header extensions MUST only include those that are present
+ in the most recent answer.
+
+ * The RTCP feedback mechanisms MUST only include those that are
+ present in the most recent answer, except for the case of format-
+ specific mechanisms that are referencing a newly added media
+ format.
+
+ * The "a=rtcp" line MUST NOT be added if the most recent answer
+ included an "a=rtcp-mux" line.
+
+ * The "a=rtcp-mux" line MUST be the same as that in the most recent
+ answer.
+
+ * The "a=rtcp-mux-only" line MUST NOT be added.
+
+ * The "a=rtcp-rsize" line MUST NOT be added unless present in the
+ most recent answer.
+
+ * An "a=bundle-only" line, as defined in [RFC8843], Section 6, MUST
+ NOT be added. Instead, JSEP implementations MUST simply omit
+ parameters in the IDENTICAL and TRANSPORT categories for bundled
+ "m=" sections, as described in [RFC8843], Section 7.1.3.
+
+ * Note that if media "m=" sections are bundled into a data "m="
+ section, then certain TRANSPORT and IDENTICAL attributes may
+ appear in the data "m=" section even if they would otherwise only
+ be appropriate for a media "m=" section (e.g., "a=rtcp-mux").
+ This cannot happen in initial offers because in the initial offer
+ JSEP implementations always list media "m=" sections (if any)
+ before the data "m=" section (if any), and at least one of those
+ media "m=" sections will not have the "a=bundle-only" attribute.
+ Therefore, in initial offers, any "a=bundle-only" "m=" sections
+ will be bundled into a preceding non-bundle-only media "m="
+ section.
+
+ The "a=group:BUNDLE" attribute MUST include the MID identifiers
+ specified in the bundle group in the most recent answer, minus any
+ "m=" sections that have been marked as rejected, plus any newly added
+ or re-enabled "m=" sections. In other words, the bundle attribute
+ MUST contain all "m=" sections that were previously bundled, as long
+ as they are still alive, as well as any new "m=" sections.
+
+ "a=group:LS" attributes are generated in the same way as for initial
+ offers, with the additional stipulation that any lip sync groups that
+ were present in the most recent answer MUST continue to exist and
+ MUST contain any previously existing MID identifiers, as long as the
+ identified "m=" sections still exist and are not rejected, and the
+ group still contains at least two MID identifiers. This ensures that
+ any synchronized "recvonly" "m=" sections continue to be synchronized
+ in the new offer.
+
+5.2.3. Options Handling
+
+ The createOffer method takes as a parameter an RTCOfferOptions
+ object. Special processing is performed when generating an SDP
+ description if the following options are present.
+
+5.2.3.1. IceRestart
+
+ If the IceRestart option is specified, with a value of "true", the
+ offer MUST indicate an ICE restart by generating new ICE ufrag and
+ pwd attributes, as specified in [RFC8839], Section 4.4.3.1.1. If
+ this option is specified on an initial offer, it has no effect (since
+ a new ICE ufrag and pwd are already generated). Similarly, if the
+ ICE configuration has changed, this option has no effect, since new
+ ufrag and pwd attributes will be generated automatically. This
+ option is primarily useful for reestablishing connectivity in cases
+ where failures are detected by the application.
+
+5.2.3.2. VoiceActivityDetection
+
+ Silence suppression, also known as discontinuous transmission
+ ("DTX"), can reduce the bandwidth used for audio by switching to a
+ special encoding when voice activity is not detected, at the cost of
+ some fidelity.
+
+ If the "VoiceActivityDetection" option is specified, with a value of
+ "true", the offer MUST indicate support for silence suppression in
+ the audio it receives by including comfort noise ("CN") codecs for
+ each offered audio codec, as specified in [RFC3389], Section 5.1,
+ except for codecs that have their own internal silence suppression
+ support. For codecs that have their own internal silence suppression
+ support, the appropriate fmtp parameters for that codec MUST be
+ specified to indicate that silence suppression for received audio is
+ desired. For example, when using the Opus codec [RFC6716], the
+ "usedtx=1" parameter, specified in [RFC7587], would be used in the
+ offer.
+
+ If the "VoiceActivityDetection" option is specified, with a value of
+ "false", the JSEP implementation MUST NOT emit "CN" codecs. For
+ codecs that have their own internal silence suppression support, the
+ appropriate fmtp parameters for that codec MUST be specified to
+ indicate that silence suppression for received audio is not desired.
+ For example, when using the Opus codec, the "usedtx=0" parameter
+ would be specified in the offer. In addition, the implementation
+ MUST NOT use silence suppression for media it generates, regardless
+ of whether the "CN" codecs or related fmtp parameters appear in the
+ peer's description. The impact of these rules is that silence
+ suppression in JSEP depends on mutual agreement of both sides, which
+ ensures consistent handling regardless of which codec is used.
+
+ The "VoiceActivityDetection" option does not have any impact on the
+ setting of the "vad" value in the signaling of the client-to-mixer
+ audio level header extension described in [RFC6464], Section 4.
+
+5.3. Generating an Answer
+
+ When createAnswer is called, a new SDP description MUST be created
+ that is compatible with the supplied remote description as well as
+ the requirements specified in [RFC8834]. The exact details of this
+ process are explained below.
+
+5.3.1. Initial Answers
+
+ When createAnswer is called for the first time after a remote
+ description has been provided, the result is known as the initial
+ answer. If no remote description has been installed, an answer
+ cannot be generated, and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ Note that the remote description SDP may not have been created by a
+ JSEP endpoint and may not conform to all the requirements listed in
+ Section 5.2. For many cases, this is not a problem. However, if any
+ mandatory SDP attributes are missing or functionality listed as
+ mandatory-to-use above is not present, this MUST be treated as an
+ error and MUST cause the affected "m=" sections to be marked as
+ rejected.
+
+ The first step in generating an initial answer is to generate
+ session-level attributes. The process here is identical to that
+ indicated in Section 5.2.1 above, except that the "a=ice-options"
+ line, with the "trickle" option as specified in [RFC8840],
+ Section 4.1.3 and the "ice2" option as specified in [RFC8445],
+ Section 10, is only included if such an option was present in the
+ offer.
+
+ The next step is to generate session-level lip sync groups, as
+ defined in [RFC5888], Section 7. For each group of type "LS" present
+ in the offer, select the local RtpTransceivers that are referenced by
+ the MID values in the specified group, and determine which of them
+ either reference a common local MediaStream (specified in the calls
+ to addTrack/addTransceiver used to create them) or have no
+ MediaStream to reference because they were not created by addTrack/
+ addTransceiver. If at least two such RtpTransceivers exist, a group
+ of type "LS" with the MID values of these RtpTransceivers MUST be
+ added. Otherwise, the offered "LS" group MUST be ignored and no
+ corresponding group generated in the answer.
+
+ As a simple example, consider the following offer of a single audio
+ and single video track contained in the same MediaStream. SDP lines
+ not relevant to this example have been removed for clarity. As
+ explained in Section 5.2, a group of type "LS" has been added that
+ references each track's RtpTransceiver.
+
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+ m=audio 10000 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=msid:ms1
+ m=video 10001 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=msid:ms1
+
+ If the answerer uses a single MediaStream when it adds its tracks,
+ both of its transceivers will reference this stream, and so the
+ subsequent answer will contain a "LS" group identical to that in the
+ offer, as shown below:
+
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+ m=audio 20000 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=msid:ms2
+ m=video 20001 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=msid:ms2
+
+ However, if the answerer groups its tracks into separate
+ MediaStreams, its transceivers will reference different streams, and
+ so the subsequent answer will not contain a "LS" group.
+
+ m=audio 20000 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=msid:ms2a
+ m=video 20001 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=msid:ms2b
+
+ Finally, if the answerer does not add any tracks, its transceivers
+ will not reference any MediaStreams, causing the preferences of the
+ offerer to be maintained, and so the subsequent answer will contain
+ an identical "LS" group.
+
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+ m=audio 20000 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=recvonly
+ m=video 20001 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=recvonly
+
+ The example in Section 7.2 shows a more involved case of "LS" group
+ generation.
+
+ The next step is to generate an "m=" section for each "m=" section
+ that is present in the remote offer, as specified in [RFC3264],
+ Section 6. For the purposes of this discussion, any session-level
+ attributes in the offer that are also valid as media-level attributes
+ are considered to be present in each "m=" section. Each offered "m="
+ section will have an associated RtpTransceiver, as described in
+ Section 5.10. If there are more RtpTransceivers than there are "m="
+ sections, the unmatched RtpTransceivers will need to be associated in
+ a subsequent offer.
+
+ For each offered "m=" section, if any of the following conditions are
+ true, the corresponding "m=" section in the answer MUST be marked as
+ rejected by setting the <port> in the "m=" line to zero, as indicated
+ in [RFC3264], Section 6, and further processing for this "m=" section
+ can be skipped:
+
+ * The associated RtpTransceiver has been stopped.
+
+ * There is no offered media format that is both supported and, if
+ applicable, allowed by codec preferences.
+
+ * The bundle policy is "max-bundle", and this is not the first "m="
+ section or in the same bundle group as the first "m=" section.
+
+ * The bundle policy is "balanced", and this is not the first "m="
+ section for this media type or in the same bundle group as the
+ first "m=" section for this media type.
+
+ * This "m=" section is in a bundle group, and the group's offerer
+ tagged "m=" section is being rejected due to one of the above
+ reasons. This requires all "m=" sections in the bundle group to
+ be rejected, as specified in [RFC8843], Section 7.3.3.
+
+ Otherwise, each "m=" section in the answer MUST then be generated as
+ specified in [RFC3264], Section 6.1. For the "m=" line itself, the
+ following rules MUST be followed:
+
+ * The <port> value would normally be set to the port of the default
+ ICE candidate for this "m=" section, but given that no candidates
+ are available yet, the default <port> value of 9 (Discard) MUST be
+ used, as indicated in [RFC8840], Section 4.1.1.
+
+ * The <proto> field MUST be set to exactly match the <proto> field
+ for the corresponding "m=" line in the offer.
+
+ * If codec preferences have been set for the associated transceiver,
+ media formats MUST be generated in the corresponding order,
+ regardless of what was offered, and MUST exclude any codecs not
+ present in the codec preferences.
+
+ * Otherwise, the media formats on the "m=" line MUST be generated in
+ the same order as those offered in the current remote description,
+ excluding any currently unsupported formats. Any currently
+ available media formats that are not present in the current remote
+ description MUST be added after all existing formats.
+
+ * In either case, the media formats in the answer MUST include at
+ least one format that is present in the offer but MAY include
+ formats that are locally supported but not present in the offer,
+ as mentioned in [RFC3264], Section 6.1. If no common format
+ exists, the "m=" section is rejected as described above.
+
+ The "m=" line MUST be followed immediately by a "c=" line, as
+ specified in [RFC4566], Section 5.7. Again, as no candidates are
+ available yet, the "c=" line MUST contain the default value "IN IP4
+ 0.0.0.0", as defined in [RFC8840], Section 4.1.3.
+
+ If the offer supports bundle, all "m=" sections to be bundled MUST
+ use the same ICE credentials and candidates; all "m=" sections not
+ being bundled MUST use unique ICE credentials and candidates. Each
+ "m=" section MUST contain the following attributes (which are of
+ attribute types other than IDENTICAL or TRANSPORT):
+
+ * If and only if present in the offer, an "a=mid" line, as specified
+ in [RFC5888], Section 9.1. The MID value MUST match that
+ specified in the offer.
+
+ * A direction attribute, determined by applying the rules regarding
+ the offered direction specified in [RFC3264], Section 6.1, and
+ then intersecting with the direction of the associated
+ RtpTransceiver. For example, in the case where an "m=" section is
+ offered as "sendonly" and the local transceiver is set to
+ "sendrecv", the result in the answer is a "recvonly" direction.
+
+ * For each media format on the "m=" line, "a=rtpmap" and "a=fmtp"
+ lines, as specified in [RFC4566], Section 6 and [RFC3264],
+ Section 6.1.
+
+ * If "rtx" is present in the offer, for each primary codec where RTP
+ retransmission should be used, a corresponding "a=rtpmap" line
+ indicating "rtx" with the clock rate of the primary codec and an
+ "a=fmtp" line that references the payload type of the primary
+ codec, as specified in [RFC4588], Section 8.1.
+
+ * For each supported FEC mechanism, "a=rtpmap" and "a=fmtp" lines,
+ as specified in [RFC4566], Section 6. The FEC mechanisms that
+ MUST be supported are specified in [RFC8854], Section 7, and
+ specific usage for each media type is outlined in Sections 4 and
+ 5.
+
+ * If this "m=" section is for media with configurable durations of
+ media per packet, e.g., audio, an "a=maxptime" line, as described
+ in Section 5.2.
+
+ * If this "m=" section is for video media and there are known
+ limitations on the size of images that can be decoded, an
+ "a=imageattr" line, as specified in Section 3.6.
+
+ * For each supported RTP header extension that is present in the
+ offer, an "a=extmap" line, as specified in [RFC5285], Section 5.
+ The list of header extensions that SHOULD/MUST be supported is
+ specified in [RFC8834], Section 5.2. Any header extensions that
+ require encryption MUST be specified as indicated in [RFC6904],
+ Section 4.
+
+ * For each supported RTCP feedback mechanism that is present in the
+ offer, an "a=rtcp-fb" line, as specified in [RFC4585],
+ Section 4.2. The list of RTCP feedback mechanisms that SHOULD/
+ MUST be supported is specified in [RFC8834], Section 5.1.
+
+ * If the RtpTransceiver has a sendrecv or sendonly direction:
+
+ - For each MediaStream that was associated with the transceiver
+ when it was created via addTrack or addTransceiver, an "a=msid"
+ line, as specified in [RFC8830], Section 2, but omitting the
+ "appdata" field.
+
+ Each "m=" section that is not bundled into another "m=" section MUST
+ contain the following attributes (which are of category IDENTICAL or
+ TRANSPORT):
+
+ * "a=ice-ufrag" and "a=ice-pwd" lines, as specified in [RFC8839],
+ Section 5.4.
+
+ * For each desired digest algorithm, one or more "a=fingerprint"
+ lines for each of the endpoint's certificates, as specified in
+ [RFC8122], Section 5.
+
+ * An "a=setup" line, as specified in [RFC4145], Section 4 and
+ clarified for use in DTLS-SRTP scenarios in [RFC5763], Section 5.
+ The role value in the answer MUST be "active" or "passive". When
+ the offer contains the "actpass" value, as will always be the case
+ with JSEP endpoints, the answerer SHOULD use the "active" role.
+ Offers from non-JSEP endpoints MAY send other values for
+ "a=setup", in which case the answer MUST use a value consistent
+ with the value in the offer.
+
+ * An "a=tls-id" line, as specified in [RFC8842], Section 5.3.
+
+ * If present in the offer, an "a=rtcp-mux" line, as specified in
+ [RFC5761], Section 5.1.3. Otherwise, an "a=rtcp" line, as
+ specified in [RFC3605], Section 2.1, containing the default value
+ "9 IN IP4 0.0.0.0" (because no candidates have yet been gathered).
+
+ * If present in the offer, an "a=rtcp-rsize" line, as specified in
+ [RFC5506], Section 5.
+
+ If a data channel "m=" section has been offered, an "m=" section MUST
+ also be generated for data. The <media> field MUST be set to
+ "application", and the <proto> and <fmt> fields MUST be set to
+ exactly match the fields in the offer.
+
+ Within the data "m=" section, an "a=mid" line MUST be generated and
+ included as described above, along with an "a=sctp-port" line
+ referencing the SCTP port number, as defined in [RFC8841],
+ Section 5.1; and, if appropriate, an "a=max-message-size" line, as
+ defined in [RFC8841], Section 6.1.
+
+ As discussed above, the following attributes of category IDENTICAL or
+ TRANSPORT are included only if the data "m=" section is not bundled
+ into another "m=" section:
+
+ * "a=ice-ufrag"
+
+ * "a=ice-pwd"
+
+ * "a=fingerprint"
+
+ * "a=setup"
+
+ * "a=tls-id"
+
+ Note that if media "m=" sections are bundled into a data "m="
+ section, then certain TRANSPORT and IDENTICAL attributes may also
+ appear in the data "m=" section even if they would otherwise only be
+ appropriate for a media "m=" section (e.g., "a=rtcp-mux").
+
+ If "a=group" attributes with semantics of "BUNDLE" are offered,
+ corresponding session-level "a=group" attributes MUST be added as
+ specified in [RFC5888]. These attributes MUST have semantics
+ "BUNDLE" and MUST include all mid identifiers from the offered bundle
+ groups that have not been rejected. Note that regardless of the
+ presence of "a=bundle-only" in the offer, all "m=" sections in the
+ answer MUST NOT have an "a=bundle-only" line.
+
+ Attributes that are common between all "m=" sections MAY be moved to
+ the session level if explicitly defined to be valid at the session
+ level.
+
+ The attributes prohibited in the creation of offers are also
+ prohibited in the creation of answers.
+
+5.3.2. Subsequent Answers
+
+ When createAnswer is called a second (or later) time or is called
+ after a local description has already been installed, the processing
+ is somewhat different than for an initial answer.
+
+ If the previous answer was not applied using setLocalDescription,
+ meaning the PeerConnection is still in the "have-remote-offer" state,
+ the steps for generating an initial answer MUST be followed, subject
+ to the following restriction:
+
+ * The fields of the "o=" line MUST stay the same except for the
+ <session-version> field, which MUST increment if the session
+ description changes in any way from the previously generated
+ answer.
+
+ If any session description was previously supplied to
+ setLocalDescription, an answer is generated by following the steps in
+ the "have-remote-offer" state above, along with these exceptions:
+
+ * The "s=" and "t=" lines MUST stay the same.
+
+ * Each "m=" and "c=" line MUST be filled in with the port and
+ address of the default candidate for the "m=" section, as
+ described in [RFC8839], Section 4.2.1.2. Note that in certain
+ cases, the "m=" line protocol may not match that of the default
+ candidate, because the "m=" line protocol value MUST match what
+ was supplied in the offer, as described above.
+
+ * Each "a=ice-ufrag" and "a=ice-pwd" line MUST stay the same, unless
+ the "m=" section is restarting, in which case new ICE credentials
+ MUST be created as specified in [RFC8839], Section 4.4.1.1.1. If
+ the "m=" section is bundled into another "m=" section, it still
+ MUST NOT contain any ICE credentials.
+
+ * Each "a=tls-id" line MUST stay the same, unless the offerer's
+ "a=tls-id" line changed, in which case a new tls-id value MUST be
+ created, as described in [RFC8842], Section 5.2.
+
+ * Each "a=setup" line MUST use an "active" or "passive" role value
+ consistent with the existing DTLS association, if the association
+ is being continued by the offerer.
+
+ * RTCP multiplexing MUST be used, and an "a=rtcp-mux" line inserted
+ if and only if the "m=" section previously used RTCP multiplexing.
+
+ * If the "m=" section is not bundled into another "m=" section and
+ RTCP multiplexing is not active, an "a=rtcp" attribute line MUST
+ be filled in with the port and address of the default RTCP
+ candidate. If no RTCP candidates have yet been gathered, default
+ values MUST be used, as described in Section 5.3.1 above.
+
+ * If the "m=" section is not bundled into another "m=" section, for
+ each candidate that has been gathered during the most recent
+ gathering phase (see Section 3.5.1), an "a=candidate" line MUST be
+ added, as defined in [RFC8839], Section 5.1. If candidate
+ gathering for the section has completed, an "a=end-of-candidates"
+ attribute MUST be added, as described in [RFC8840], Section 8.2.
+ If the "m=" section is bundled into another "m=" section, both
+ "a=candidate" and "a=end-of-candidates" MUST be omitted.
+
+ * For RtpTransceivers that are not stopped, the "a=msid" line(s)
+ MUST stay the same, regardless of changes to the transceiver's
+ direction or track. If no "a=msid" line is present in the current
+ description, "a=msid" line(s) MUST be generated according to the
+ same rules as for an initial answer.
+
+5.3.3. Options Handling
+
+ The createAnswer method takes as a parameter an RTCAnswerOptions
+ object. The set of parameters for RTCAnswerOptions is different than
+ those supported in RTCOfferOptions; the IceRestart option is
+ unnecessary, as ICE credentials will automatically be changed for all
+ "m=" sections where the offerer chose to perform ICE restart.
+
+ The following options are supported in RTCAnswerOptions.
+
+5.3.3.1. VoiceActivityDetection
+
+ Silence suppression in the answer is handled as described in
+ Section 5.2.3.2, with one exception: if support for silence
+ suppression was not indicated in the offer, the
+ VoiceActivityDetection parameter has no effect, and the answer MUST
+ be generated as if VoiceActivityDetection was set to "false". This
+ is done on a per-codec basis (e.g., if the offerer somehow offered
+ support for CN but set "usedtx=0" for Opus, setting
+ VoiceActivityDetection to "true" would result in an answer with CN
+ codecs and "usedtx=0"). The impact of this rule is that an answerer
+ will not try to use silence suppression with any endpoint that does
+ not offer it, making silence suppression support bilateral even with
+ non-JSEP endpoints.
+
+5.4. Modifying an Offer or Answer
+
+ The SDP returned from createOffer or createAnswer MUST NOT be changed
+ before passing it to setLocalDescription. If precise control over
+ the SDP is needed, the aforementioned createOffer/createAnswer
+ options or RtpTransceiver APIs MUST be used.
+
+ After calling setLocalDescription with an offer or answer, the
+ application MAY modify the SDP to reduce its capabilities before
+ sending it to the far side, as long as it follows the rules above
+ that define a valid JSEP offer or answer. Likewise, an application
+ that has received an offer or answer from a peer MAY modify the
+ received SDP, subject to the same constraints, before calling
+ setRemoteDescription.
+
+ As always, the application is solely responsible for what it sends to
+ the other party, and all incoming SDP will be processed by the JSEP
+ implementation to the extent of its capabilities. It is an error to
+ assume that all SDP is well formed; however, one should be able to
+ assume that any implementation of this specification will be able to
+ process, as a remote offer or answer, unmodified SDP coming from any
+ other implementation of this specification.
+
+5.5. Processing a Local Description
+
+ When a SessionDescription is supplied to setLocalDescription, the
+ following steps MUST be performed:
+
+ * If the description is of type "rollback", follow the processing
+ defined in Section 5.7 and skip the processing described in the
+ rest of this section.
+
+ * Otherwise, the type of the SessionDescription is checked against
+ the current state of the PeerConnection:
+
+ - If the type is "offer", the PeerConnection state MUST be either
+ "stable" or "have-local-offer".
+
+ - If the type is "pranswer" or "answer", the PeerConnection state
+ MUST be either "have-remote-offer" or "have-local-pranswer".
+
+ * If the type is not correct for the current state, processing MUST
+ stop and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ * The SessionDescription is then checked to ensure that its contents
+ are identical to those generated in the last call to createOffer/
+ createAnswer, and thus have not been altered, as discussed in
+ Section 5.4; otherwise, processing MUST stop and an error MUST be
+ returned.
+
+ * Next, the SessionDescription is parsed into a data structure, as
+ described in Section 5.8 below.
+
+ * Finally, the parsed SessionDescription is applied as described in
+ Section 5.9 below.
+
+5.6. Processing a Remote Description
+
+ When a SessionDescription is supplied to setRemoteDescription, the
+ following steps MUST be performed:
+
+ * If the description is of type "rollback", follow the processing
+ defined in Section 5.7 and skip the processing described in the
+ rest of this section.
+
+ * Otherwise, the type of the SessionDescription is checked against
+ the current state of the PeerConnection:
+
+ - If the type is "offer", the PeerConnection state MUST be either
+ "stable" or "have-remote-offer".
+
+ - If the type is "pranswer" or "answer", the PeerConnection state
+ MUST be either "have-local-offer" or "have-remote-pranswer".
+
+ * If the type is not correct for the current state, processing MUST
+ stop and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ * Next, the SessionDescription is parsed into a data structure, as
+ described in Section 5.8 below. If parsing fails for any reason,
+ processing MUST stop and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ * Finally, the parsed SessionDescription is applied as described in
+ Section 5.10 below.
+
+5.7. Processing a Rollback
+
+ A rollback may be performed if the PeerConnection is in any state
+ except for "stable". This means that both offers and provisional
+ answers can be rolled back. Rollback can only be used to cancel
+ proposed changes; there is no support for rolling back from a
+ "stable" state to a previous "stable" state. If a rollback is
+ attempted in the "stable" state, processing MUST stop and an error
+ MUST be returned. Note that this implies that once the answerer has
+ performed setLocalDescription with its answer, this cannot be rolled
+ back.
+
+ The effect of rollback MUST be the same regardless of whether
+ setLocalDescription or setRemoteDescription is called.
+
+ In order to process rollback, a JSEP implementation abandons the
+ current offer/answer transaction, sets the signaling state to
+ "stable", and sets the pending local and/or remote description (see
+ Sections 4.1.14 and 4.1.16) to "null". Any resources or candidates
+ that were allocated by the abandoned local description are discarded;
+ any media that is received is processed according to the previous
+ local and remote descriptions.
+
+ A rollback disassociates any RtpTransceivers that were associated
+ with "m=" sections by the application of the rolled-back session
+ description (see Sections 5.10 and 5.9). This means that some
+ RtpTransceivers that were previously associated will no longer be
+ associated with any "m=" section; in such cases, the value of the
+ RtpTransceiver's mid property MUST be set to "null", and the mapping
+ between the transceiver and its "m=" section index MUST be discarded.
+ RtpTransceivers that were created by applying a remote offer that was
+ subsequently rolled back MUST be stopped and removed from the
+ PeerConnection. However, an RtpTransceiver MUST NOT be removed if a
+ track was attached to the RtpTransceiver via the addTrack method.
+ This is so that an application may call addTrack, then call
+ setRemoteDescription with an offer, then roll back that offer, then
+ call createOffer and have an "m=" section for the added track appear
+ in the generated offer.
+
+5.8. Parsing a Session Description
+
+ The SDP contained in the session description object consists of a
+ sequence of text lines, each containing a key-value expression, as
+ described in [RFC4566], Section 5. The SDP is read, line by line,
+ and converted to a data structure that contains the deserialized
+ information. However, SDP allows many types of lines, not all of
+ which are relevant to JSEP applications. For each line, the
+ implementation will first ensure that it is syntactically correct
+ according to its defining ABNF, check that it conforms to the
+ semantics used in [RFC4566] and [RFC3264], and then either parse and
+ store or discard the provided value, as described below.
+
+ If any line is not well formed or cannot be parsed as described, the
+ parser MUST stop with an error and reject the session description,
+ even if the value is to be discarded. This ensures that
+ implementations do not accidentally misinterpret ambiguous SDP.
+
+5.8.1. Session-Level Parsing
+
+ First, the session-level lines are checked and parsed. These lines
+ MUST occur in a specific order, and with a specific syntax, as
+ defined in [RFC4566], Section 5. Note that while the specific line
+ types (e.g., "v=", "c=") MUST occur in the defined order, lines of
+ the same type (typically "a=") can occur in any order.
+
+ The following non-attribute lines are not meaningful in the JSEP
+ context and MAY be discarded once they have been checked.
+
+ * The "c=" line MUST be checked for syntax, but its value is only
+ used for ICE mismatch detection, as defined in [RFC8445],
+ Section 5.4. Note that JSEP implementations should never
+ encounter this condition because ICE is required for WebRTC.
+
+ * The "i=", "u=", "e=", "p=", "t=", "r=", "z=", and "k=" lines MUST
+ be checked for syntax, but their values are not otherwise used.
+
+ The remaining non-attribute lines are processed as follows:
+
+ * The "v=" line MUST have a version of 0, as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.1.
+
+ * The "o=" line MUST be parsed as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.2.
+
+ * The "b=" line, if present, MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC4566], Section 5.8, and the bwtype and bandwidth values
+ stored.
+
+ Finally, the attribute lines are processed. Specific processing MUST
+ be applied for the following session-level attribute ("a=") lines:
+
+ * Any "a=group" lines are parsed as specified in [RFC5888],
+ Section 5, and the group's semantics and mids are stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-lite" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.3, and a value indicating the presence of
+ ice-lite is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-ufrag" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.4, and the ufrag value is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-pwd" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.4, and the password value is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-options" line is parsed as specified
+ in [RFC8839], Section 5.6, and the set of specified options is
+ stored.
+
+ * Any "a=fingerprint" lines are parsed as specified in [RFC8122],
+ Section 5, and the set of fingerprint and algorithm values is
+ stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=setup" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC4145], Section 4, and the setup value is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=tls-id" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8842], Section 5, and the attribute value is stored.
+
+ * Any "a=identity" lines are parsed and the identity values stored
+ for subsequent verification, as specified in [RFC8827], Section 5.
+
+ * Any "a=extmap" lines are parsed as specified in [RFC5285],
+ Section 5, and their values are stored.
+
+ Other attributes that are not relevant to JSEP may also be present,
+ and implementations SHOULD process any that they recognize. As
+ required by [RFC4566], Section 5.13, unknown attribute lines MUST be
+ ignored.
+
+ Once all the session-level lines have been parsed, processing
+ continues with the lines in "m=" sections.
+
+5.8.2. Media Section Parsing
+
+ Like the session-level lines, the media section lines MUST occur in
+ the specific order and with the specific syntax defined in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.
+
+ The "m=" line itself MUST be parsed as described in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.14, and the <media>, <port>, <proto>, and <fmt> values
+ stored.
+
+ Following the "m=" line, specific processing MUST be applied for the
+ following non-attribute lines:
+
+ * As with the "c=" line at the session level, the "c=" line MUST be
+ parsed according to [RFC4566], Section 5.7, but its value is not
+ used.
+
+ * The "b=" line, if present, MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC4566], Section 5.8, and the bwtype and bandwidth values
+ stored.
+
+ Specific processing MUST also be applied for the following attribute
+ lines:
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-ufrag" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.4, and the ufrag value is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-pwd" line is parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.4, and the password value is stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ice-options" line is parsed as specified
+ in [RFC8839], Section 5.6, and the set of specified options is
+ stored.
+
+ * Any "a=candidate" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8839], Section 5.1, and their values stored.
+
+ * Any "a=remote-candidates" attributes MUST be parsed as specified
+ in [RFC8839], Section 5.2, but their values are ignored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=end-of-candidates" attribute MUST be
+ parsed as specified in [RFC8840], Section 8.1, and its presence or
+ absence flagged and stored.
+
+ * Any "a=fingerprint" lines are parsed as specified in [RFC8122],
+ Section 5, and the set of fingerprint and algorithm values is
+ stored.
+
+ If the "m=" <proto> value indicates use of RTP, as described in
+ Section 5.1.2 above, the following attribute lines MUST be processed:
+
+ * The "m=" <fmt> value MUST be parsed as specified in [RFC4566],
+ Section 5.14, and the individual values stored.
+
+ * Any "a=rtpmap" or "a=fmtp" lines MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC4566], Section 6, and their values stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=ptime" line MUST be parsed as described in
+ [RFC4566], Section 6, and its value stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=maxptime" line MUST be parsed as described
+ in [RFC4566], Section 6, and its value stored.
+
+ * If present, a single direction attribute line (e.g., "a=sendrecv")
+ MUST be parsed as described in [RFC4566], Section 6, and its value
+ stored.
+
+ * Any "a=ssrc" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in [RFC5576],
+ Section 4.1, and their values stored.
+
+ * Any "a=extmap" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC5285], Section 5, and their values stored.
+
+ * Any "a=rtcp-fb" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC4585], Section 4.2, and their values stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=rtcp-mux" attribute MUST be parsed as
+ specified in [RFC5761], Section 5.1.3, and its presence or absence
+ flagged and stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=rtcp-mux-only" attribute MUST be parsed as
+ specified in [RFC8858], Section 3, and its presence or absence
+ flagged and stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=rtcp-rsize" attribute MUST be parsed as
+ specified in [RFC5506], Section 5, and its presence or absence
+ flagged and stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=rtcp" attribute MUST be parsed as
+ specified in [RFC3605], Section 2.1, but its value is ignored, as
+ this information is superfluous when using ICE.
+
+ * If present, "a=msid" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC8830], Section 3.2, and their values stored, ignoring any
+ "appdata" field. If no "a=msid" attributes are present, a random
+ msid-id value is generated for a "default" MediaStream for the
+ session, if not already present, and this value is stored.
+
+ * Any "a=imageattr" attributes MUST be parsed as specified in
+ [RFC6236], Section 3, and their values stored.
+
+ * Any "a=rid" lines MUST be parsed as specified in [RFC8851],
+ Section 10, and their values stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=simulcast" line MUST be parsed as
+ specified in [RFC8853], and its values stored.
+
+ Otherwise, if the "m=" <proto> value indicates use of SCTP, the
+ following attribute lines MUST be processed:
+
+ * The "m=" <fmt> value MUST be parsed as specified in [RFC8841],
+ Section 4.3, and the application protocol value stored.
+
+ * An "a=sctp-port" attribute MUST be present, and it MUST be parsed
+ as specified in [RFC8841], Section 5.2, and the value stored.
+
+ * If present, a single "a=max-message-size" attribute MUST be parsed
+ as specified in [RFC8841], Section 6, and the value stored.
+ Otherwise, use the specified default.
+
+ Other attributes that are not relevant to JSEP may also be present,
+ and implementations SHOULD process any that they recognize. As
+ required by [RFC4566], Section 5.13, unknown attribute lines MUST be
+ ignored.
+
+5.8.3. Semantics Verification
+
+ Assuming that parsing completes successfully, the parsed description
+ is then evaluated to ensure internal consistency as well as proper
+ support for mandatory features. Specifically, the following checks
+ are performed:
+
+ * For each "m=" section, valid values for each of the mandatory-to-
+ use features enumerated in Section 5.1.1 MUST be present. These
+ values MAY be either present at the media level or inherited from
+ the session level.
+
+ - ICE ufrag and password values, which MUST comply with the size
+ limits specified in [RFC8839], Section 5.4.
+
+ - A tls-id value, which MUST be set according to [RFC8842],
+ Section 5. If this is a re-offer or a response to a re-offer
+ and the tls-id value is different from that presently in use,
+ the DTLS connection is not being continued and the remote
+ description MUST be part of an ICE restart, together with new
+ ufrag and password values.
+
+ - A DTLS setup value, which MUST be set according to the rules
+ specified in [RFC5763], Section 5 and MUST be consistent with
+ the selected role of the current DTLS connection, if one exists
+ and is being continued.
+
+ - DTLS fingerprint values, where at least one fingerprint MUST be
+ present.
+
+ * All rid-ids referenced in an "a=simulcast" line MUST exist as
+ "a=rid" lines.
+
+ * Each "m=" section is also checked to ensure that prohibited
+ features are not used.
+
+ * If the RTP/RTCP multiplexing policy is "require", each "m="
+ section MUST contain an "a=rtcp-mux" attribute. If an "m="
+ section contains an "a=rtcp-mux-only" attribute, that section MUST
+ also contain an "a=rtcp-mux" attribute.
+
+ * If an "m=" section was present in the previous answer, the state
+ of RTP/RTCP multiplexing MUST match what was previously
+ negotiated.
+
+ If this session description is of type "pranswer" or "answer", the
+ following additional checks are applied:
+
+ * The session description MUST follow the rules defined in
+ [RFC3264], Section 6, including the requirement that the number of
+ "m=" sections MUST exactly match the number of "m=" sections in
+ the associated offer.
+
+ * For each "m=" section, the media type and protocol values MUST
+ exactly match the media type and protocol values in the
+ corresponding "m=" section in the associated offer.
+
+ If any of the preceding checks failed, processing MUST stop and an
+ error MUST be returned.
+
+5.9. Applying a Local Description
+
+ The following steps are performed at the media engine level to apply
+ a local description. If an error is returned, the session MUST be
+ restored to the state it was in before performing these steps.
+
+ First, "m=" sections are processed. For each "m=" section, the
+ following steps MUST be performed; if any parameters are out of
+ bounds or cannot be applied, processing MUST stop and an error MUST
+ be returned.
+
+ * If this "m=" section is new, begin gathering candidates for it, as
+ defined in [RFC8445], Section 5.1.1, unless it is definitively
+ being bundled (either (1) this is an offer and the "m=" section is
+ marked bundle-only or (2) it is an answer and the "m=" section is
+ bundled into another "m=" section).
+
+ * Or, if the ICE ufrag and password values have changed, trigger the
+ ICE agent to start an ICE restart as described in [RFC8445],
+ Section 9, and begin gathering new candidates for the "m="
+ section. If this description is an answer, also start checks on
+ that media section.
+
+ * If the "m=" section <proto> value indicates use of RTP:
+
+ - If there is no RtpTransceiver associated with this "m="
+ section, find one and associate it with this "m=" section
+ according to the following steps. Note that this situation
+ will only occur when applying an offer.
+
+ o Find the RtpTransceiver that corresponds to this "m="
+ section, using the mapping between transceivers and "m="
+ section indices established when creating the offer.
+
+ o Set the value of this RtpTransceiver's mid property to the
+ MID of the "m=" section.
+
+ - If RTCP mux is indicated, prepare to demux RTP and RTCP from
+ the RTP ICE component, as specified in [RFC5761],
+ Section 5.1.3.
+
+ - For each specified RTP header extension, establish a mapping
+ between the extension ID and URI, as described in [RFC5285],
+ Section 6.
+
+ - If the MID header extension is supported, prepare to demux RTP
+ streams intended for this "m=" section based on the MID header
+ extension, as described in [RFC8843], Section 15.
+
+ - For each specified media format, establish a mapping between
+ the payload type and the actual media format, as described in
+ [RFC3264], Section 6.1. In addition, prepare to demux RTP
+ streams intended for this "m=" section based on the media
+ formats supported by this "m=" section, as described in
+ [RFC8843], Section 9.2.
+
+ - For each specified "rtx" media format, establish a mapping
+ between the RTX payload type and its associated primary payload
+ type, as described in Sections 8.6 and 8.7 of [RFC4588].
+
+ - If the direction attribute is of type "sendrecv" or "recvonly",
+ enable receipt and decoding of media.
+
+ Finally, if this description is of type "pranswer" or "answer",
+ follow the processing defined in Section 5.11 below.
+
+5.10. Applying a Remote Description
+
+ The following steps are performed to apply a remote description. If
+ an error is returned, the session MUST be restored to the state it
+ was in before performing these steps.
+
+ If the answer contains any "a=ice-options" attributes where "trickle"
+ is listed as an attribute, update the PeerConnection
+ canTrickleIceCandidates property to be "true". Otherwise, set this
+ property to "false".
+
+ The following steps MUST be performed for attributes at the session
+ level; if any parameters are out of bounds or cannot be applied,
+ processing MUST stop and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ * For any specified "CT" bandwidth value, set this value as the
+ limit for the maximum total bitrate for all "m=" sections, as
+ specified in [RFC4566], Section 5.8. Within this overall limit,
+ the implementation can dynamically decide how to best allocate the
+ available bandwidth between "m=" sections, respecting any specific
+ limits that have been specified for individual "m=" sections.
+
+ * For any specified "RR" or "RS" bandwidth values, handle as
+ specified in [RFC3556], Section 2.
+
+ * Any "AS" bandwidth value ([RFC4566], Section 5.8) MUST be ignored,
+ as the meaning of this construct at the session level is not well
+ defined.
+
+ For each "m=" section, the following steps MUST be performed; if any
+ parameters are out of bounds or cannot be applied, processing MUST
+ stop and an error MUST be returned.
+
+ * If the ICE ufrag or password changed from the previous remote
+ description:
+
+ - If the description is of type "offer", the implementation MUST
+ note that an ICE restart is needed, as described in [RFC8839],
+ Section 4.4.1.1.1.
+
+ - If the description is of type "answer" or "pranswer", then
+ check to see if the current local description is an ICE
+ restart, and if not, generate an error. If the PeerConnection
+ state is "have-remote-pranswer" and the ICE ufrag or password
+ changed from the previous provisional answer, then signal the
+ ICE agent to discard any previous ICE checklist state for the
+ "m=" section. Finally, signal the ICE agent to begin checks.
+
+ * If the current local description indicates an ICE restart but
+ neither the ICE ufrag nor the password has changed from the
+ previous remote description (as prescribed by [RFC8445],
+ Section 9), generate an error.
+
+ * Configure the ICE components associated with this media section to
+ use the supplied ICE remote ufrag and password for their
+ connectivity checks.
+
+ * Pair any supplied ICE candidates with any gathered local
+ candidates, as described in [RFC8445], Section 6.1.2, and start
+ connectivity checks with the appropriate credentials.
+
+ * If an "a=end-of-candidates" attribute is present, process the end-
+ of-candidates indication as described in [RFC8838], Section 14.
+
+ * If the "m=" section <proto> value indicates use of RTP:
+
+ - If the "m=" section is being recycled (see Section 5.2.2),
+ disassociate the currently associated RtpTransceiver by setting
+ its mid property to "null", and discard the mapping between the
+ transceiver and its "m=" section index.
+
+ - If the "m=" section is not associated with any RtpTransceiver
+ (possibly because it was disassociated in the previous step),
+ either find an RtpTransceiver or create one according to the
+ following steps:
+
+ o If the "m=" section is sendrecv or recvonly, and there are
+ RtpTransceivers of the same type that were added to the
+ PeerConnection by addTrack and are not associated with any
+ "m=" section and are not stopped, find the first (according
+ to the canonical order described in Section 5.2.1) such
+ RtpTransceiver.
+
+ o If no RtpTransceiver was found in the previous step, create
+ one with a recvonly direction.
+
+ o Associate the found or created RtpTransceiver with the "m="
+ section by setting the value of the RtpTransceiver's mid
+ property to the MID of the "m=" section, and establish a
+ mapping between the transceiver and the index of the "m="
+ section. If the "m=" section does not include a MID (i.e.,
+ the remote endpoint does not support the MID extension),
+ generate a value for the RtpTransceiver mid property,
+ following the guidance for "a=mid" mentioned in
+ Section 5.2.1.
+
+ - For each specified media format that is also supported by the
+ local implementation, establish a mapping between the specified
+ payload type and the media format, as described in [RFC3264],
+ Section 6.1. Specifically, this means that the implementation
+ records the payload type to be used in outgoing RTP packets
+ when sending each specified media format, as well as the
+ relative preference for each format that is indicated in their
+ ordering. If any indicated media format is not supported by
+ the local implementation, it MUST be ignored.
+
+ - For each specified "rtx" media format, establish a mapping
+ between the RTX payload type and its associated primary payload
+ type, as described in [RFC4588], Section 4. If any referenced
+ primary payload types are not present, this MUST result in an
+ error. Note that RTX payload types may refer to primary
+ payload types that are not supported by the local media
+ implementation, in which case the RTX payload type MUST also be
+ ignored.
+
+ - For each specified fmtp parameter that is supported by the
+ local implementation, enable them on the associated media
+ formats.
+
+ - For each specified Synchronization Source (SSRC) that is
+ signaled in the "m=" section, prepare to demux RTP streams
+ intended for this "m=" section using that SSRC, as described in
+ [RFC8843], Section 9.2.
+
+ - For each specified RTP header extension that is also supported
+ by the local implementation, establish a mapping between the
+ extension ID and URI, as described in [RFC5285], Section 5.
+ Specifically, this means that the implementation records the
+ extension ID to be used in outgoing RTP packets when sending
+ each specified header extension. If any indicated RTP header
+ extension is not supported by the local implementation, it MUST
+ be ignored.
+
+ - For each specified RTCP feedback mechanism that is supported by
+ the local implementation, enable them on the associated media
+ formats.
+
+ - For any specified "TIAS" ("Transport Independent Application
+ Specific Maximum") bandwidth value, set this value as a
+ constraint on the maximum RTP bitrate to be used when sending
+ media, as specified in [RFC3890]. If a "TIAS" value is not
+ present but an "AS" value is specified, generate a "TIAS" value
+ using this formula:
+
+ TIAS = AS * 1000 * 0.95 - (50 * 40 * 8)
+
+ The 1000 changes the unit from kbps to bps (as required by
+ TIAS), and the 0.95 is to allocate 5% to RTCP. An estimate of
+ header overhead is then subtracted out, in which the 50 is
+ based on 50 packets per second, the 40 is based on typical
+ header size (in bytes), and the 8 converts bytes to bits. Note
+ that "TIAS" is preferred over "AS" because it provides more
+ accurate control of bandwidth.
+
+ - For any "RR" or "RS" bandwidth values, handle as specified in
+ [RFC3556], Section 2.
+
+ - Any specified "CT" bandwidth value MUST be ignored, as the
+ meaning of this construct at the media level is not well
+ defined.
+
+ - If the "m=" section is of type "audio":
+
+ o For each specified "CN" media format, configure silence
+ suppression for all supported media formats with the same
+ clock rate, as described in [RFC3389], Section 5, except for
+ formats that have their own internal silence suppression
+ mechanisms. Silence suppression for such formats (e.g.,
+ Opus) is controlled via fmtp parameters, as discussed in
+ Section 5.2.3.2.
+
+ o For each specified "telephone-event" media format, enable
+ dual-tone multifrequency (DTMF) transmission for all
+ supported media formats with the same clock rate, as
+ described in [RFC4733], Section 2.5.1.2. If there are any
+ supported media formats that do not have a corresponding
+ telephone-event format, disable DTMF transmission for those
+ formats.
+
+ o For any specified "ptime" value, configure the available
+ media formats to use the specified packet size when sending.
+ If the specified size is not supported for a media format,
+ use the next closest value instead.
+
+ Finally, if this description is of type "pranswer" or "answer",
+ follow the processing defined in Section 5.11 below.
+
+5.11. Applying an Answer
+
+ In addition to the steps mentioned above for processing a local or
+ remote description, the following steps are performed when processing
+ a description of type "pranswer" or "answer".
+
+ For each "m=" section, the following steps MUST be performed:
+
+ * If the "m=" section has been rejected (i.e., the <port> value is
+ set to zero in the answer), stop any reception or transmission of
+ media for this section, and, unless a non-rejected "m=" section is
+ bundled with this "m=" section, discard any associated ICE
+ components, as described in [RFC8839], Section 4.4.3.1.
+
+ * If the remote DTLS fingerprint has been changed or the value of
+ the "a=tls-id" attribute has changed, tear down the DTLS
+ connection. This includes the case when the PeerConnection state
+ is "have-remote-pranswer". If a DTLS connection needs to be torn
+ down but the answer does not indicate an ICE restart or, in the
+ case of "have-remote-pranswer", new ICE credentials, an error MUST
+ be generated. If an ICE restart is performed without a change in
+ the tls-id value or fingerprint, then the same DTLS connection is
+ continued over the new ICE channel. Note that although JSEP
+ requires that answerers change the tls-id value if and only if the
+ offerer does, non-JSEP answerers are permitted to change the tls-
+ id value as long as the offer contained an ICE restart. Thus,
+ JSEP implementations that process DTLS data prior to receiving an
+ answer MUST be prepared to receive either a ClientHello or data
+ from the previous DTLS connection.
+
+ * If no valid DTLS connection exists, prepare to start a DTLS
+ connection, using the specified roles and fingerprints, on any
+ underlying ICE components, once they are active.
+
+ * If the "m=" section <proto> value indicates use of RTP:
+
+ - If the "m=" section references RTCP feedback mechanisms that
+ were not present in the corresponding "m=" section in the
+ offer, this indicates a negotiation problem and MUST result in
+ an error. However, new media formats and new RTP header
+ extension values are permitted in the answer, as described in
+ [RFC3264], Section 7 and [RFC5285], Section 6.
+
+ - If the "m=" section has RTCP mux enabled, discard the RTCP ICE
+ component, if one exists, and begin or continue muxing RTCP
+ over the RTP ICE component, as specified in [RFC5761],
+ Section 5.1.3. Otherwise, prepare to transmit RTCP over the
+ RTCP ICE component; if no RTCP ICE component exists because
+ RTCP mux was previously enabled, this MUST result in an error.
+
+ - If the "m=" section has Reduced-Size RTCP enabled, configure
+ the RTCP transmission for this "m=" section to use Reduced-Size
+ RTCP, as specified in [RFC5506].
+
+ - If the direction attribute in the answer indicates that the
+ JSEP implementation should be sending media ("sendonly" for
+ local answers, "recvonly" for remote answers, or "sendrecv" for
+ either type of answer), choose the media format to send as the
+ most preferred media format from the remote description that is
+ also locally supported, as discussed in Sections 6.1 and 7 of
+ [RFC3264], and start transmitting RTP media using that format
+ once the underlying transport layers have been established. If
+ an SSRC has not already been chosen for this outgoing RTP
+ stream, choose a unique random one. If media is already being
+ transmitted, the same SSRC SHOULD be used unless the clock rate
+ of the new codec is different, in which case a new SSRC MUST be
+ chosen, as specified in [RFC7160], Section 4.1.
+
+ - The payload type mapping from the remote description is used to
+ determine payload types for the outgoing RTP streams, including
+ the payload type for the send media format chosen above. Any
+ RTP header extensions that were negotiated should be included
+ in the outgoing RTP streams, using the extension mapping from
+ the remote description. If the MID header extension has been
+ negotiated, include it in the outgoing RTP streams, as
+ indicated in [RFC8843], Section 15. If the RtpStreamId or
+ RepairedRtpStreamId header extensions have been negotiated and
+ rid-ids have been established, include these header extensions
+ in the outgoing RTP streams, as indicated in [RFC8851],
+ Section 4.
+
+ - If the "m=" section is of type "audio", and silence suppression
+ was (1) configured for the send media format as a result of
+ processing the remote description and (2) also enabled for that
+ format in the local description, use silence suppression for
+ outgoing media, in accordance with the guidance in
+ Section 5.2.3.2. If these conditions are not met, silence
+ suppression MUST NOT be used for outgoing media.
+
+ - If simulcast has been negotiated, send the appropriate number
+ of Source RTP Streams as specified in [RFC8853], Section 5.3.3.
+
+ - If the send media format chosen above has a corresponding "rtx"
+ media format or a FEC mechanism has been negotiated, establish
+ a redundancy RTP stream with a unique random SSRC for each
+ Source RTP Stream, and start or continue transmitting RTX/FEC
+ packets as needed.
+
+ - If the send media format chosen above has a corresponding "red"
+ media format of the same clock rate, allow redundant encoding
+ using the specified format for resiliency purposes, as
+ discussed in [RFC8854], Section 3.2. Note that unlike RTX or
+ FEC media formats, the "red" format is transmitted on the
+ Source RTP Stream, not the redundancy RTP stream.
+
+ - Enable the RTCP feedback mechanisms referenced in the media
+ section for all Source RTP Streams using the specified media
+ formats. Specifically, begin or continue sending the requested
+ feedback types and reacting to received feedback, as specified
+ in [RFC4585], Section 4.2. When sending RTCP feedback, follow
+ the rules and recommendations from [RFC8108], Section 5.4.1 to
+ select which SSRC to use.
+
+ - If the direction attribute in the answer indicates that the
+ JSEP implementation should not be sending media ("recvonly" for
+ local answers, "sendonly" for remote answers, or "inactive" for
+ either type of answer), stop transmitting all RTP media, but
+ continue sending RTCP, as described in [RFC3264], Section 5.1.
+
+ * If the "m=" section <proto> value indicates use of SCTP:
+
+ - If an SCTP association exists and the remote SCTP port has
+ changed, discard the existing SCTP association. This includes
+ the case when the PeerConnection state is "have-remote-
+ pranswer".
+
+ - If no valid SCTP association exists, prepare to initiate an
+ SCTP association over the associated ICE component and DTLS
+ connection, using the local SCTP port value from the local
+ description and the remote SCTP port value from the remote
+ description, as described in [RFC8841], Section 10.2.
+
+ If the answer contains valid bundle groups, discard any ICE
+ components for the "m=" sections that will be bundled onto the
+ primary ICE components in each bundle, and begin muxing these "m="
+ sections accordingly, as described in [RFC8843], Section 7.4.
+
+ If the description is of type "answer" and there are still remaining
+ candidates in the ICE candidate pool, discard them.
+
+6. Processing RTP/RTCP
+
+ When bundling, associating incoming RTP/RTCP with the proper "m="
+ section is defined in [RFC8843], Section 9.2. When not bundling, the
+ proper "m=" section is clear from the ICE component over which the
+ RTP/RTCP is received.
+
+ Once the proper "m=" section or sections are known, RTP/RTCP is
+ delivered to the RtpTransceiver(s) associated with the "m="
+ section(s) and further processing of the RTP/RTCP is done at the
+ RtpTransceiver level. This includes using the RID mechanism
+ [RFC8851] and its associated RtpStreamId and RepairedRtpStreamId
+ identifiers to distinguish between multiple encoded streams and
+ determine which Source RTP stream should be repaired by a given
+ redundancy RTP stream.
+
+7. Examples
+
+ Note that this example section shows several SDP fragments. To
+ accommodate RFC line-length restrictions, some of the SDP lines have
+ been split into multiple lines, where leading whitespace indicates
+ that a line is a continuation of the previous line. In addition,
+ some blank lines have been added to improve readability but are not
+ valid in SDP.
+
+ More examples of SDP for WebRTC call flows, including examples with
+ IPv6 addresses, can be found in [SDP4WebRTC].
+
+7.1. Simple Example
+
+ This section shows a very simple example that sets up a minimal
+ audio/video call between two JSEP endpoints without using Trickle
+ ICE. The example in the following section provides a more detailed
+ example of what could happen in a JSEP session.
+
+ The code flow below shows Alice's endpoint initiating the session to
+ Bob's endpoint. The messages from the JavaScript application in
+ Alice's browser to the JavaScript in Bob's browser, abbreviated as
+ "AliceJS" and "BobJS", respectively, are assumed to flow over some
+ signaling protocol via a web server. The JavaScript on both Alice's
+ side and Bob's side waits for all candidates before sending the offer
+ or answer, so the offers and answers are complete; Trickle ICE is not
+ used. The user agents (JSEP implementations) in Alice's and Bob's
+ browsers, abbreviated as "AliceUA" and "BobUA", respectively, are
+ both using the default bundle policy of "balanced" and the default
+ RTCP mux policy of "require".
+
+ // set up local media state
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: create new PeerConnection
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addTrack with two tracks: audio and video
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createOffer to get offer
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setLocalDescription with offer
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: multiple onicecandidate events with candidates
+
+ // wait for ICE gathering to complete
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onicecandidate event with null candidate
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: get |offer-A1| from pendingLocalDescription
+
+ // |offer-A1| is sent over signaling protocol to Bob
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-A1|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-A1|
+
+ // |offer-A1| arrives at Bob
+ BobJS->BobUA: create a PeerConnection
+ BobJS->BobUA: setRemoteDescription with |offer-A1|
+ BobUA->BobJS: ontrack events for audio and video tracks
+
+ // Bob accepts call
+ BobJS->BobUA: addTrack with local tracks
+ BobJS->BobUA: createAnswer
+ BobJS->BobUA: setLocalDescription with answer
+ BobUA->BobJS: multiple onicecandidate events with candidates
+
+ // wait for ICE gathering to complete
+ BobUA->BobJS: onicecandidate event with null candidate
+ BobJS->BobUA: get |answer-A1| from currentLocalDescription
+
+ // |answer-A1| is sent over signaling protocol
+ // to Alice
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-A1|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-A1|
+
+ // |answer-A1| arrives at Alice
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setRemoteDescription with |answer-A1|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ontrack events for audio and video tracks
+
+ // media flows
+ BobUA->AliceUA: media sent from Bob to Alice
+ AliceUA->BobUA: media sent from Alice to Bob
+
+ The SDP for |offer-A1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 4962303333179871722 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 10100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 203.0.113.100
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:47017fee-b6c1-4162-929c-a25110252400
+ a=ice-ufrag:ETEn
+ a=ice-pwd:OtSK0WpNtpUjkY4+86js7ZQl
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 19:E2:1C:3B:4B:9F:81:E6:B8:5C:F4:A5:A8:D8:73:04:
+ BB:05:2F:70:9F:04:A9:0E:05:E9:26:33:E8:70:88:A2
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:91bbf309c0990a6bec11e38ba2933cee
+ a=rtcp:10101 IN IP4 203.0.113.100
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.100 10100 typ host
+ a=candidate:1 2 udp 2113929470 203.0.113.100 10101 typ host
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=video 10102 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 203.0.113.100
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:47017fee-b6c1-4162-929c-a25110252400
+ a=ice-ufrag:BGKk
+ a=ice-pwd:mqyWsAjvtKwTGnvhPztQ9mIf
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 19:E2:1C:3B:4B:9F:81:E6:B8:5C:F4:A5:A8:D8:73:04:
+ BB:05:2F:70:9F:04:A9:0E:05:E9:26:33:E8:70:88:A2
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:91bbf309c0990a6bec11e38ba2933cee
+ a=rtcp:10103 IN IP4 203.0.113.100
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.100 10102 typ host
+ a=candidate:1 2 udp 2113929470 203.0.113.100 10103 typ host
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ The SDP for |answer-A1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 6729291447651054566 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 10200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 203.0.113.200
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:61317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+ a=ice-ufrag:6sFv
+ a=ice-pwd:cOTZKZNVlO9RSGsEGM63JXT2
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 6B:8B:F0:65:5F:78:E2:51:3B:AC:6F:F3:3F:46:1B:35:
+ DC:B8:5F:64:1A:24:C2:43:F0:A1:58:D0:A1:2C:19:08
+ a=setup:active
+ a=tls-id:eec3392ab83e11ceb6a0990c903fbb19
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.200 10200 typ host
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=video 10200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 203.0.113.200
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:61317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+
+7.2. Detailed Example
+
+ This section shows a more involved example of a session between two
+ JSEP endpoints. Trickle ICE is used in full trickle mode, with a
+ bundle policy of "max-bundle", an RTCP mux policy of "require", and a
+ single TURN server. Initially, both Alice and Bob establish an audio
+ channel and a data channel. Later, Bob adds two video flows -- one
+ for his video feed and one for screen sharing, both supporting FEC --
+ with the video feed configured for simulcast. Alice accepts these
+ video flows but does not add video flows of her own, so they are
+ handled as recvonly. Alice also specifies a maximum video decoder
+ resolution.
+
+ // set up local media state
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: create new PeerConnection
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addTrack with an audio track
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createDataChannel to get data channel
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createOffer to get |offer-B1|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setLocalDescription with |offer-B1|
+
+ // |offer-B1| is sent over signaling protocol to Bob
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-B1|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-B1|
+
+ // |offer-B1| arrives at Bob
+ BobJS->BobUA: create a PeerConnection
+ BobJS->BobUA: setRemoteDescription with |offer-B1|
+ BobUA->BobJS: ontrack event with audio track from Alice
+
+ // candidates are sent to Bob
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onicecandidate (host) |offer-B1-candidate-1|
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-1|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onicecandidate (srflx) |offer-B1-candidate-2|
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-2|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onicecandidate (relay) |offer-B1-candidate-3|
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-3|
+
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-1|
+ BobJS->BobUA: addIceCandidate with |offer-B1-candidate-1|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-2|
+ BobJS->BobUA: addIceCandidate with |offer-B1-candidate-2|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-B1-candidate-3|
+ BobJS->BobUA: addIceCandidate with |offer-B1-candidate-3|
+
+ // Bob accepts call
+ BobJS->BobUA: addTrack with local audio
+ BobJS->BobUA: createDataChannel to get data channel
+ BobJS->BobUA: createAnswer to get |answer-B1|
+ BobJS->BobUA: setLocalDescription with |answer-B1|
+
+ // |answer-B1| is sent to Alice
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B1|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-B1|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setRemoteDescription with |answer-B1|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ontrack event with audio track from Bob
+
+ // candidates are sent to Alice
+ BobUA->BobJS: onicecandidate (host) |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ BobUA->BobJS: onicecandidate (srflx) |answer-B1-candidate-2|
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-2|
+ BobUA->BobJS: onicecandidate (relay) |answer-B1-candidate-3|
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-3|
+
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addIceCandidate with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-2|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addIceCandidate with |answer-B1-candidate-2|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-3|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addIceCandidate with |answer-B1-candidate-3|
+
+ // data channel opens
+ BobUA->BobJS: ondatachannel event
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ondatachannel event
+ BobUA->BobJS: onopen
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onopen
+
+ // media is flowing between endpoints
+ BobUA->AliceUA: audio+data sent from Bob to Alice
+ AliceUA->BobUA: audio+data sent from Alice to Bob
+
+ // some time later, Bob adds two video streams
+ // note: no candidates exchanged, because of bundle
+ BobJS->BobUA: addTrack with first video stream
+ BobJS->BobUA: addTrack with second video stream
+ BobJS->BobUA: createOffer to get |offer-B2|
+ BobJS->BobUA: setLocalDescription with |offer-B2|
+
+ // |offer-B2| is sent to Alice
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-B2|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |offer-B2|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setRemoteDescription with |offer-B2|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ontrack event with first video track
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ontrack event with second video track
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createAnswer to get |answer-B2|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setLocalDescription with |answer-B2|
+
+ // |answer-B2| is sent over signaling protocol
+ // to Bob
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B2|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |answer-B2|
+ BobJS->BobUA: setRemoteDescription with |answer-B2|
+
+ // media is flowing between endpoints
+ BobUA->AliceUA: audio+video+data sent from Bob to Alice
+ AliceUA->BobUA: audio+video+data sent from Alice to Bob
+
+ The SDP for |offer-B1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 4962303333179871723 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 d1
+
+ m=audio 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:57017fee-b6c1-4162-929c-a25110252400
+ a=ice-ufrag:ATEn
+ a=ice-pwd:AtSK0WpNtpUjkY4+86js7ZQl
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 29:E2:1C:3B:4B:9F:81:E6:B8:5C:F4:A5:A8:D8:73:04:
+ BB:05:2F:70:9F:04:A9:0E:05:E9:26:33:E8:70:88:A2
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:17f0f4ba8a5f1213faca591b58ba52a7
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+
+ m=application 0 UDP/DTLS/SCTP webrtc-datachannel
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:d1
+ a=sctp-port:5000
+ a=max-message-size:65536
+ a=bundle-only
+
+ |offer-B1-candidate-1| looks like:
+
+ ufrag ATEn
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.100 10100 typ host
+
+ |offer-B1-candidate-2| looks like:
+
+ ufrag ATEn
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 1845494015 198.51.100.100 11100 typ srflx
+ raddr 203.0.113.100 rport 10100
+
+ |offer-B1-candidate-3| looks like:
+
+ ufrag ATEn
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.100 12100 typ relay
+ raddr 198.51.100.100 rport 11100
+
+ The SDP for |answer-B1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 7729291447651054566 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 d1
+
+ m=audio 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:71317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+ a=ice-ufrag:7sFv
+ a=ice-pwd:dOTZKZNVlO9RSGsEGM63JXT2
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 7B:8B:F0:65:5F:78:E2:51:3B:AC:6F:F3:3F:46:1B:35:
+ DC:B8:5F:64:1A:24:C2:43:F0:A1:58:D0:A1:2C:19:08
+ a=setup:active
+ a=tls-id:7a25ab85b195acaf3121f5a8ab4f0f71
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+
+ m=application 9 UDP/DTLS/SCTP webrtc-datachannel
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:d1
+ a=sctp-port:5000
+ a=max-message-size:65536
+
+ |answer-B1-candidate-1| looks like:
+
+ ufrag 7sFv
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.200 10200 typ host
+
+ |answer-B1-candidate-2| looks like:
+
+ ufrag 7sFv
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 1845494015 198.51.100.200 11200 typ srflx
+ raddr 203.0.113.200 rport 10200
+
+ |answer-B1-candidate-3| looks like:
+
+ ufrag 7sFv
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.200 12200 typ relay
+ raddr 198.51.100.200 rport 11200
+
+ The SDP for |offer-B2| is shown below. In addition to the new "m="
+ sections for video, both of which are offering FEC and one of which
+ is offering simulcast, note the increment of the version number in
+ the "o=" line; changes to the "c=" line, indicating the local
+ candidate that was selected; and the inclusion of gathered candidates
+ as a=candidate lines.
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 7729291447651054566 2 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 d1 v1 v2
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 12200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:71317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+ a=ice-ufrag:7sFv
+ a=ice-pwd:dOTZKZNVlO9RSGsEGM63JXT2
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 7B:8B:F0:65:5F:78:E2:51:3B:AC:6F:F3:3F:46:1B:35:
+ DC:B8:5F:64:1A:24:C2:43:F0:A1:58:D0:A1:2C:19:08
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:7a25ab85b195acaf3121f5a8ab4f0f71
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.200 10200 typ host
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 1845494015 198.51.100.200 11200 typ srflx
+ raddr 203.0.113.200 rport 10200
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.200 12200 typ relay
+ raddr 198.51.100.200 rport 11200
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=application 12200 UDP/DTLS/SCTP webrtc-datachannel
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:d1
+ a=sctp-port:5000
+ a=max-message-size:65536
+
+ m=video 12200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103 104
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=rtpmap:104 flexfec/90000
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:71317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+ a=rid:1 send
+ a=rid:2 send
+ a=rid:3 send
+ a=simulcast:send 1;2;3
+
+ m=video 12200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103 104
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:v2
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=rtpmap:104 flexfec/90000
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:81317484-2ed4-49d7-9eb7-1414322a7aae
+
+ The SDP for |answer-B2| is shown below. In addition to the
+ acceptance of the video "m=" sections, the use of a=recvonly to
+ indicate one-way video, and the use of a=imageattr to limit the
+ received resolution, note the use of setup:passive to maintain the
+ existing DTLS roles.
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 4962303333179871723 2 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 d1 v1 v2
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 12100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:57017fee-b6c1-4162-929c-a25110252400
+ a=ice-ufrag:ATEn
+ a=ice-pwd:AtSK0WpNtpUjkY4+86js7ZQl
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ 29:E2:1C:3B:4B:9F:81:E6:B8:5C:F4:A5:A8:D8:73:04:
+ BB:05:2F:70:9F:04:A9:0E:05:E9:26:33:E8:70:88:A2
+ a=setup:passive
+ a=tls-id:17f0f4ba8a5f1213faca591b58ba52a7
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 2113929471 203.0.113.100 10100 typ host
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 1845494015 198.51.100.100 11100 typ srflx
+ raddr 203.0.113.100 rport 10100
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.100 12100 typ relay
+ raddr 198.51.100.100 rport 11100
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=application 12100 UDP/DTLS/SCTP webrtc-datachannel
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:d1
+ a=sctp-port:5000
+ a=max-message-size:65536
+
+ m=video 12100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=recvonly
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=imageattr:100 recv [x=[48:1920],y=[48:1080],q=1.0]
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+
+ m=video 12100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:v2
+ a=recvonly
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=imageattr:100 recv [x=[48:1920],y=[48:1080],q=1.0]
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+
+7.3. Early Transport Warmup Example
+
+ This example demonstrates the early-warmup technique described in
+ Section 4.1.10.1. Here, Alice's endpoint sends an offer to Bob's
+ endpoint to start an audio/video call. Bob immediately responds with
+ an answer that accepts the audio/video "m=" sections but marks them
+ as sendonly (from his perspective), meaning that Alice will not yet
+ send media. This allows the JSEP implementation to start negotiating
+ ICE and DTLS immediately. Bob's endpoint then prompts him to answer
+ the call, and when he does, his endpoint sends a second offer, which
+ enables the audio and video "m=" sections, and thereby bidirectional
+ media transmission. The advantage of such a flow is that as soon as
+ the first answer is received, the implementation can proceed with ICE
+ and DTLS negotiation and establish the session transport. If the
+ transport setup completes before the second offer is sent, then media
+ can be transmitted by the callee immediately upon answering the call,
+ minimizing perceived post-dial delay. The second offer/answer
+ exchange can also change the preferred codecs or other session
+ parameters.
+
+ This example also makes use of the "relay" ICE candidate policy
+ described in Section 3.5.3 to minimize the ICE gathering and checking
+ needed.
+
+ // set up local media state
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: create new PeerConnection with "relay" ICE policy
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addTrack with two tracks: audio and video
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createOffer to get |offer-C1|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setLocalDescription with |offer-C1|
+
+ // |offer-C1| is sent over signaling protocol to Bob
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-C1|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-C1|
+
+ // |offer-C1| arrives at Bob
+ BobJS->BobUA: create new PeerConnection with "relay" ICE policy
+ BobJS->BobUA: setRemoteDescription with |offer-C1|
+ BobUA->BobJS: ontrack events for audio and video
+
+ // a relay candidate is sent to Bob
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: onicecandidate (relay) |offer-C1-candidate-1|
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-C1-candidate-1|
+
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |offer-C1-candidate-1|
+ BobJS->BobUA: addIceCandidate with |offer-C1-candidate-1|
+
+ // Bob prepares an early answer to warm up the
+ // transport
+ BobJS->BobUA: addTransceiver with null audio and video tracks
+ BobJS->BobUA: transceiver.setDirection(sendonly) for both
+ BobJS->BobUA: createAnswer
+ BobJS->BobUA: setLocalDescription with answer
+
+ // |answer-C1| is sent over signaling protocol
+ // to Alice
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-C1|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-C1|
+
+ // |answer-C1| (sendonly) arrives at Alice
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setRemoteDescription with |answer-C1|
+ AliceUA->AliceJS: ontrack events for audio and video
+
+ // a relay candidate is sent to Alice
+ BobUA->BobJS: onicecandidate (relay) |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: addIceCandidate with |answer-B1-candidate-1|
+
+ // ICE and DTLS establish while call is ringing
+
+ // Bob accepts call, starts media, and sends
+ // new offer
+ BobJS->BobUA: transceiver.setTrack with audio and video tracks
+ BobUA->AliceUA: media sent from Bob to Alice
+ BobJS->BobUA: transceiver.setDirection(sendrecv) for both
+ transceivers
+ BobJS->BobUA: createOffer
+ BobJS->BobUA: setLocalDescription with offer
+
+ // |offer-C2| is sent over signaling protocol
+ // to Alice
+ BobJS->WebServer: signaling with |offer-C2|
+ WebServer->AliceJS: signaling with |offer-C2|
+
+ // |offer-C2| (sendrecv) arrives at Alice
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setRemoteDescription with |offer-C2|
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: createAnswer
+ AliceJS->AliceUA: setLocalDescription with |answer-C2|
+ AliceUA->BobUA: media sent from Alice to Bob
+
+ // |answer-C2| is sent over signaling protocol
+ // to Bob
+ AliceJS->WebServer: signaling with |answer-C2|
+ WebServer->BobJS: signaling with |answer-C2|
+ BobJS->BobUA: setRemoteDescription with |answer-C2|
+
+ The SDP for |offer-C1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 1070771854436052752 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:bbce3ba6-abfc-ac63-d00a-e15b286f8fce
+ a=ice-ufrag:4ZcD
+ a=ice-pwd:ZaaG6OG7tCn4J/lehAGz+HHD
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ C4:68:F8:77:6A:44:F1:98:6D:7C:9F:47:EB:E3:34:A4:
+ 0A:AA:2D:49:08:28:70:2E:1F:AE:18:7D:4E:3E:66:BF
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:9e5b948ade9c3d41de6617b68f769e55
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+
+ m=video 0 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:bbce3ba6-abfc-ac63-d00a-e15b286f8fce
+ a=bundle-only
+
+ |offer-C1-candidate-1| looks like:
+
+ ufrag 4ZcD
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.100 12100 typ relay
+ raddr 0.0.0.0 rport 0
+
+ The SDP for |answer-C1| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 6386516489780559513 1 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendonly
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:751f239e-4ae0-c549-aa3d-890de772998b
+ a=ice-ufrag:TpaA
+ a=ice-pwd:t2Ouhc67y8JcCaYZxUUTgKw/
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ A2:F3:A5:6D:4C:8C:1E:B2:62:10:4A:F6:70:61:C4:FC:
+ 3C:E0:01:D6:F3:24:80:74:DA:7C:3E:50:18:7B:CE:4D
+ a=setup:active
+ a=tls-id:55e967f86b7166ed14d3c9eda849b5e9
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+
+ m=video 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendonly
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:751f239e-4ae0-c549-aa3d-890de772998b
+
+ |answer-C1-candidate-1| looks like:
+
+ ufrag TpaA
+ index 0
+ mid a1
+ attr candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.200 12200 typ relay
+ raddr 0.0.0.0 rport 0
+
+ The SDP for |offer-C2| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 6386516489780559513 2 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 12200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:751f239e-4ae0-c549-aa3d-890de772998b
+ a=ice-ufrag:TpaA
+ a=ice-pwd:t2Ouhc67y8JcCaYZxUUTgKw/
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ A2:F3:A5:6D:4C:8C:1E:B2:62:10:4A:F6:70:61:C4:FC:
+ 3C:E0:01:D6:F3:24:80:74:DA:7C:3E:50:18:7B:CE:4D
+ a=setup:actpass
+ a=tls-id:55e967f86b7166ed14d3c9eda849b5e9
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.200 12200 typ relay
+ raddr 0.0.0.0 rport 0
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=video 12200 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.200
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:751f239e-4ae0-c549-aa3d-890de772998b
+
+ The SDP for |answer-C2| looks like:
+
+ v=0
+ o=- 1070771854436052752 2 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
+ s=-
+ t=0 0
+ a=ice-options:trickle ice2
+ a=group:BUNDLE a1 v1
+ a=group:LS a1 v1
+
+ m=audio 12100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 96 0 8 97 98
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:a1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:96 opus/48000/2
+ a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
+ a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000
+ a=rtpmap:97 telephone-event/8000
+ a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/48000
+ a=fmtp:97 0-15
+ a=fmtp:98 0-15
+ a=maxptime:120
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:2 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:ssrc-audio-level
+ a=msid:bbce3ba6-abfc-ac63-d00a-e15b286f8fce
+ a=ice-ufrag:4ZcD
+ a=ice-pwd:ZaaG6OG7tCn4J/lehAGz+HHD
+ a=fingerprint:sha-256
+ C4:68:F8:77:6A:44:F1:98:6D:7C:9F:47:EB:E3:34:A4:
+ 0A:AA:2D:49:08:28:70:2E:1F:AE:18:7D:4E:3E:66:BF
+ a=setup:passive
+ a=tls-id:9e5b948ade9c3d41de6617b68f769e55
+ a=rtcp-mux
+ a=rtcp-mux-only
+ a=rtcp-rsize
+ a=candidate:1 1 udp 255 192.0.2.100 12100 typ relay
+ raddr 0.0.0.0 rport 0
+ a=end-of-candidates
+
+ m=video 12100 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 100 101 102 103
+ c=IN IP4 192.0.2.100
+ a=mid:v1
+ a=sendrecv
+ a=rtpmap:100 VP8/90000
+ a=rtpmap:101 H264/90000
+ a=fmtp:101 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=42e01f
+ a=rtpmap:102 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:102 apt=100
+ a=rtpmap:103 rtx/90000
+ a=fmtp:103 apt=101
+ a=extmap:1 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:mid
+ a=extmap:3 urn:ietf:params:rtp-hdrext:sdes:rtp-stream-id
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 ccm fir
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack
+ a=rtcp-fb:100 nack pli
+ a=msid:bbce3ba6-abfc-ac63-d00a-e15b286f8fce
+
+8. Security Considerations
+
+ The IETF has published separate documents [RFC8827] [RFC8826]
+ describing the security architecture for WebRTC as a whole. The
+ remainder of this section describes security considerations for this
+ document.
+
+ While formally the JSEP interface is an API, it is better to think of
+ it as an Internet protocol, with the application JavaScript being
+ untrustworthy from the perspective of the JSEP implementation. Thus,
+ the threat model of [RFC3552] applies. In particular, JavaScript can
+ call the API in any order and with any inputs, including malicious
+ ones. This is particularly relevant when we consider the SDP that is
+ passed to setLocalDescription. While correct API usage requires that
+ the application pass in SDP that was derived from createOffer or
+ createAnswer, there is no guarantee that applications do so. The
+ JSEP implementation MUST be prepared for the JavaScript to pass in
+ bogus data instead.
+
+ Conversely, the application programmer needs to be aware that the
+ JavaScript does not have complete control of endpoint behavior. One
+ case that bears particular mention is that editing ICE candidates out
+ of the SDP or suppressing trickled candidates does not have the
+ expected behavior: implementations will still perform checks from
+ those candidates even if they are not sent to the other side. Thus,
+ for instance, it is not possible to prevent the remote peer from
+ learning your public IP address by removing server-reflexive
+ candidates. Applications that wish to conceal their public IP
+ address MUST instead configure the ICE agent to use only relay
+ candidates.
+
+9. IANA Considerations
+
+ This document has no IANA actions.
+
+10. References
+
+10.1. Normative References
+
+ [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
+ Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
+
+ [RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
+ A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
+ Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3261, June 2002,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3261>.
+
+ [RFC3264] Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model
+ with Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3264,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3264, June 2002,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3264>.
+
+ [RFC3552] Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC
+ Text on Security Considerations", BCP 72, RFC 3552,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3552, July 2003,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3552>.
+
+ [RFC3605] Huitema, C., "Real Time Control Protocol (RTCP) attribute
+ in Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 3605,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3605, October 2003,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3605>.
+
+ [RFC3711] Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
+ Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",
+ RFC 3711, DOI 10.17487/RFC3711, March 2004,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3711>.
+
+ [RFC3890] Westerlund, M., "A Transport Independent Bandwidth
+ Modifier for the Session Description Protocol (SDP)",
+ RFC 3890, DOI 10.17487/RFC3890, September 2004,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3890>.
+
+ [RFC4145] Yon, D. and G. Camarillo, "TCP-Based Media Transport in
+ the Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 4145,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC4145, September 2005,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4145>.
+
+ [RFC4566] Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
+ Description Protocol", RFC 4566, DOI 10.17487/RFC4566,
+ July 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4566>.
+
+ [RFC4585] Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,
+ "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control
+ Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.
+
+ [RFC5124] Ott, J. and E. Carrara, "Extended Secure RTP Profile for
+ Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback
+ (RTP/SAVPF)", RFC 5124, DOI 10.17487/RFC5124, February
+ 2008, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5124>.
+
+ [RFC5285] Singer, D. and H. Desineni, "A General Mechanism for RTP
+ Header Extensions", RFC 5285, DOI 10.17487/RFC5285, July
+ 2008, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5285>.
+
+ [RFC5761] Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Multiplexing RTP Data and
+ Control Packets on a Single Port", RFC 5761,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC5761, April 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5761>.
+
+ [RFC5888] Camarillo, G. and H. Schulzrinne, "The Session Description
+ Protocol (SDP) Grouping Framework", RFC 5888,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC5888, June 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5888>.
+
+ [RFC6236] Johansson, I. and K. Jung, "Negotiation of Generic Image
+ Attributes in the Session Description Protocol (SDP)",
+ RFC 6236, DOI 10.17487/RFC6236, May 2011,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6236>.
+
+ [RFC6347] Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer
+ Security Version 1.2", RFC 6347, DOI 10.17487/RFC6347,
+ January 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6347>.
+
+ [RFC6716] Valin, JM., Vos, K., and T. Terriberry, "Definition of the
+ Opus Audio Codec", RFC 6716, DOI 10.17487/RFC6716,
+ September 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6716>.
+
+ [RFC6904] Lennox, J., "Encryption of Header Extensions in the Secure
+ Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)", RFC 6904,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC6904, April 2013,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6904>.
+
+ [RFC7160] Petit-Huguenin, M. and G. Zorn, Ed., "Support for Multiple
+ Clock Rates in an RTP Session", RFC 7160,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC7160, April 2014,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7160>.
+
+ [RFC7587] Spittka, J., Vos, K., and JM. Valin, "RTP Payload Format
+ for the Opus Speech and Audio Codec", RFC 7587,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC7587, June 2015,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7587>.
+
+ [RFC7742] Roach, A.B., "WebRTC Video Processing and Codec
+ Requirements", RFC 7742, DOI 10.17487/RFC7742, March 2016,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7742>.
+
+ [RFC7850] Nandakumar, S., "Registering Values of the SDP 'proto'
+ Field for Transporting RTP Media over TCP under Various
+ RTP Profiles", RFC 7850, DOI 10.17487/RFC7850, April 2016,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7850>.
+
+ [RFC7874] Valin, JM. and C. Bran, "WebRTC Audio Codec and Processing
+ Requirements", RFC 7874, DOI 10.17487/RFC7874, May 2016,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7874>.
+
+ [RFC8108] Lennox, J., Westerlund, M., Wu, Q., and C. Perkins,
+ "Sending Multiple RTP Streams in a Single RTP Session",
+ RFC 8108, DOI 10.17487/RFC8108, March 2017,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8108>.
+
+ [RFC8122] Lennox, J. and C. Holmberg, "Connection-Oriented Media
+ Transport over the Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
+ in the Session Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 8122,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8122, March 2017,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8122>.
+
+ [RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
+ 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
+ May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
+
+ [RFC8445] Keranen, A., Holmberg, C., and J. Rosenberg, "Interactive
+ Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network
+ Address Translator (NAT) Traversal", RFC 8445,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8445, July 2018,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8445>.
+
+ [RFC8826] Rescorla, E., "Security Considerations for WebRTC",
+ RFC 8826, DOI 10.17487/RFC8826, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8826>.
+
+ [RFC8827] Rescorla, E., "WebRTC Security Architecture", RFC 8827,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8827, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8827>.
+
+ [RFC8830] Alvestrand, H., "WebRTC MediaStream Identification in the
+ Session Description Protocol", RFC 8830,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8830, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8830>.
+
+ [RFC8834] Perkins, C., Westerlund, M., and J. Ott, "Media Transport
+ and Use of RTP in WebRTC", RFC 8834, DOI 10.17487/RFC8834,
+ January 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8834>.
+
+ [RFC8838] Ivov, E., Uberti, J., and P. Saint-Andre, "Trickle ICE:
+ Incremental Provisioning of Candidates for the Interactive
+ Connectivity Establishment (ICE) Protocol", RFC 8838,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8838, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8838>.
+
+ [RFC8839] Petit-Huguenin, M., Nandakumar, S., Holmberg, C., Keränen,
+ A., and R. Shpount, "Session Description Protocol (SDP)
+ Offer/Answer Procedures for Interactive Connectivity
+ Establishment (ICE)", RFC 8839, DOI 10.17487/RFC8839,
+ January 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8839>.
+
+ [RFC8840] Ivov, E., Stach, T., Marocco, E., and C. Holmberg, "A
+ Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Usage for Incremental
+ Provisioning of Candidates for the Interactive
+ Connectivity Establishment (Trickle ICE)", RFC 8840,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8840, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8840>.
+
+ [RFC8841] Holmberg, C., Shpount, R., Loreto, S., and G. Camarillo,
+ "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Offer/Answer
+ Procedures for Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)
+ over Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Transport",
+ RFC 8841, DOI 10.17487/RFC8841, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8841>.
+
+ [RFC8842] Holmberg, C. and R. Shpount, "Session Description Protocol
+ (SDP) Offer/Answer Considerations for Datagram Transport
+ Layer Security (DTLS) and Transport Layer Security (TLS)",
+ RFC 8842, DOI 10.17487/RFC8842, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8842>.
+
+ [RFC8843] Holmberg, C., Alvestrand, H., and C. Jennings,
+ "Negotiating Media Multiplexing Using the Session
+ Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 8843,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8843, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8843>.
+
+ [RFC8851] Roach, A.B., Ed., "RTP Payload Format Restrictions",
+ RFC 8851, DOI 10.17487/RFC8851, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8851>.
+
+ [RFC8852] Roach, A.B., Nandakumar, S., and P. Thatcher, "RTP Stream
+ Identifier Source Description (SDES)", RFC 8852,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8852, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8852>.
+
+ [RFC8853] Burman, B., Westerlund, M., Nandakumar, S., and M. Zanaty,
+ "Using Simulcast in Session Description Protocol (SDP) and
+ RTP Sessions", RFC 8853, DOI 10.17487/RFC8853, January
+ 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8853>.
+
+ [RFC8854] Uberti, J., "WebRTC Forward Error Correction
+ Requirements", RFC 8854, DOI 10.17487/RFC8854, January
+ 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8854>.
+
+ [RFC8858] Holmberg, C., "Indicating Exclusive Support of RTP and RTP
+ Control Protocol (RTCP) Multiplexing Using the Session
+ Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 8858,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8858, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8858>.
+
+ [RFC8859] Nandakumar, S., "A Framework for Session Description
+ Protocol (SDP) Attributes When Multiplexing", RFC 8859,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8859, January 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8859>.
+
+10.2. Informative References
+
+ [RFC3389] Zopf, R., "Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) Payload for
+ Comfort Noise (CN)", RFC 3389, DOI 10.17487/RFC3389,
+ September 2002, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3389>.
+
+ [RFC3556] Casner, S., "Session Description Protocol (SDP) Bandwidth
+ Modifiers for RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Bandwidth",
+ RFC 3556, DOI 10.17487/RFC3556, July 2003,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3556>.
+
+ [RFC3960] Camarillo, G. and H. Schulzrinne, "Early Media and Ringing
+ Tone Generation in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",
+ RFC 3960, DOI 10.17487/RFC3960, December 2004,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3960>.
+
+ [RFC4568] Andreasen, F., Baugher, M., and D. Wing, "Session
+ Description Protocol (SDP) Security Descriptions for Media
+ Streams", RFC 4568, DOI 10.17487/RFC4568, July 2006,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4568>.
+
+ [RFC4588] Rey, J., Leon, D., Miyazaki, A., Varsa, V., and R.
+ Hakenberg, "RTP Retransmission Payload Format", RFC 4588,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC4588, July 2006,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4588>.
+
+ [RFC4733] Schulzrinne, H. and T. Taylor, "RTP Payload for DTMF
+ Digits, Telephony Tones, and Telephony Signals", RFC 4733,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC4733, December 2006,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4733>.
+
+ [RFC5245] Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment
+ (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT)
+ Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols", RFC 5245,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC5245, April 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5245>.
+
+ [RFC5506] Johansson, I. and M. Westerlund, "Support for Reduced-Size
+ Real-Time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP): Opportunities
+ and Consequences", RFC 5506, DOI 10.17487/RFC5506, April
+ 2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5506>.
+
+ [RFC5576] Lennox, J., Ott, J., and T. Schierl, "Source-Specific
+ Media Attributes in the Session Description Protocol
+ (SDP)", RFC 5576, DOI 10.17487/RFC5576, June 2009,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5576>.
+
+ [RFC5763] Fischl, J., Tschofenig, H., and E. Rescorla, "Framework
+ for Establishing a Secure Real-time Transport Protocol
+ (SRTP) Security Context Using Datagram Transport Layer
+ Security (DTLS)", RFC 5763, DOI 10.17487/RFC5763, May
+ 2010, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5763>.
+
+ [RFC5764] McGrew, D. and E. Rescorla, "Datagram Transport Layer
+ Security (DTLS) Extension to Establish Keys for the Secure
+ Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)", RFC 5764,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC5764, May 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5764>.
+
+ [RFC6120] Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence
+ Protocol (XMPP): Core", RFC 6120, DOI 10.17487/RFC6120,
+ March 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6120>.
+
+ [RFC6464] Lennox, J., Ed., Ivov, E., and E. Marocco, "A Real-time
+ Transport Protocol (RTP) Header Extension for Client-to-
+ Mixer Audio Level Indication", RFC 6464,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC6464, December 2011,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6464>.
+
+ [RFC8828] Uberti, J. and G. Shieh, "WebRTC IP Address Handling
+ Requirements", RFC 8828, DOI 10.17487/RFC8828, January
+ 2021, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8828>.
+
+ [SDP4WebRTC]
+ Nandakumar, S. and C. Jennings, "Annotated Example SDP for
+ WebRTC", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-
+ rtcweb-sdp-14, 17 December 2020,
+ <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-rtcweb-sdp-14>.
+
+ [TS26.114] 3GPP, "3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical
+ Specification Group Services and System Aspects; IP
+ Multimedia Subsystem (IMS); Multimedia Telephony; Media
+ handling and interaction (Release 16)", 3GPP TS 26.114
+ V16.3.0, September 2019,
+ <https://www.3gpp.org/DynaReport/26114.htm>.
+
+ [W3C.webrtc]
+ Jennings, C., Ed., Boström, H., Ed., and J. Bruaroey, Ed.,
+ "WebRTC 1.0: Real-time Communication Between Browsers",
+ World Wide Web Consortium PR PR-webrtc-20201215, December
+ 2020, <https://www.w3.org/TR/2020/PR-webrtc-20201215/>.
+
+Appendix A. SDP ABNF Syntax
+
+ For the syntax validation performed in Section 5.8, the following
+ list of ABNF definitions is used:
+
+ +=========================+==========================+
+ | Attribute | Reference |
+ +=========================+==========================+
+ | ptime | Section 6 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | maxptime | Section 6 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | rtpmap | Section 6 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | recvonly | Section 9 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | sendrecv | Section 9 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | sendonly | Section 9 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | inactive | Section 9 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | fmtp | Section 9 of [RFC4566] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | rtcp | Section 2.1 of [RFC3605] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | setup | Section 4 of [RFC4145] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | fingerprint | Section 5 of [RFC8122] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | rtcp-fb | Section 4.2 of [RFC4585] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | extmap | Section 7 of [RFC5285] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | mid | Section 4 of [RFC5888] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | group | Section 5 of [RFC5888] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | imageattr | Section 3.1 of [RFC6236] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | extmap (encrypt option) | Section 4 of [RFC6904] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | candidate | Section 5.1 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | remote-candidates | Section 5.2 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | ice-lite | Section 5.3 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | ice-ufrag | Section 5.4 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | ice-pwd | Section 5.4 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | ice-options | Section 5.6 of [RFC8839] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | msid | Section 3 of [RFC8830] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | rid | Section 10 of [RFC8851] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | simulcast | Section 5.1 of [RFC8853] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+ | tls-id | Section 4 of [RFC8842] |
+ +-------------------------+--------------------------+
+
+ Table 1: SDP ABNF References
+
+Acknowledgements
+
+ Harald Alvestrand, Taylor Brandstetter, Suhas Nandakumar, and Peter
+ Thatcher provided significant text for this document. Bernard Aboba,
+ Adam Bergkvist, Jan-Ivar Bruaroey, Dan Burnett, Ben Campbell, Alissa
+ Cooper, Richard Ejzak, Stefan Håkansson, Ted Hardie, Christer
+ Holmberg, Andrew Hutton, Randell Jesup, Matthew Kaufman, Anant
+ Narayanan, Adam Roach, Robert Sparks, Neil Stratford, Martin Thomson,
+ Sean Turner, and Magnus Westerlund all provided valuable feedback on
+ this document.
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Justin Uberti
+ Google
+ 747 6th Street South
+ Kirkland, WA 98033
+ United States of America
+
+ Email: justin@uberti.name
+
+
+ Cullen Jennings
+ Cisco
+ 400 3rd Avenue SW
+ Calgary AB T2P 4H2
+ Canada
+
+ Email: fluffy@iii.ca
+
+
+ Eric Rescorla (editor)
+ Mozilla
+
+ Email: ekr@rtfm.com