Internet Engineering Task Force D. Cromwell INTERNET DRAFT Nortel Networks File: draft-cromwell-mgcp-advanced-audio-pkg-00.txt Date: June 2000 Proposal for an MGCP Advanced Audio Package Status of this Document This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026 Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract This document is a proposal to add a new event/signal package to the MGCP protocol to control an ARF (Audio Resource Function) which may reside on a Media Gateway or specialized Audio Server. This event package provides support for the standard IVR operations of PlayAnnouncement, PlayCollect, and PlayRecord. It supports direct references to simple audio as well as indirect references to simple and complex audio. It provides audio variables, control of audio interruptibility, digit buffer control, special key sequences, and support for reprompting during data collection. It also provides an arbitrary number of user defined qualifiers to be used in resolving complex audio structures. For example, the user could define qualif- iers for any or all of the following: language, accent, audio file format, gender, speaker, or customer. Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 1] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Table of Contents 1. Introduction ................................................ 2 1.1. Audio Segments ............................................ 3 1.1.1. Sequences And Sets ...................................... 3 1.1.2. Segment Types ........................................... 4 2. Advanced Audio Package ...................................... 5 3. Events ...................................................... 6 4. Event Parameters ............................................ 7 5. Return Parameters ........................................... 15 6. Variables ................................................... 18 7. Selectors ................................................... 21 8. Aliases ..................................................... 22 9. Examples .................................................... 22 10. Formal Syntax Description .................................. 26 11. References ................................................. 33 12. Author's Address ........................................... 34 1. Introduction The following syntax supports both simple and complex audio struc- tures. A simple audio structure might be a single announcement such as "Welcome to Bell South's Automated Directory Assistance Service." A more complex audio structure might consist of an announcement fol- lowed by voice variable followed by another announcement, for example Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 2] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 "There are thirty seven minutes remaining on your prepaid calling card," where "There are" is a prompt, the number of minutes is a voice variable, and "minutes remaining on your prepaid calling card" is another prompt. It is also possible to define complex audio structures that are qual- ified by user defined selectors such as language, audio file format, gender, accent, customer, or voice talent. For instance, if the above example were qualified by language and accent selectors, it would be possible to play "There are thirty seven minutes remaining on your prepaid calling card" in English spoken with a southern accent or in English spoken with a mid-western accent, providing that the audio to support this had been provisioned. There are two methods of specifying complex audio. The first is to directly reference the individual components. This requires a com- plete description of each component to be specified via the protocol. The second method is to provision the components on the Audio Server as a single entity and to export a reference to that entity to the call agent. In this case, only the reference (plus any dynamic data required, such as a variable data) is passed via the protocol, and no specification of individual components is necessary. The Audio Server Package provides significant functionality most of which is controlled via protocol parameters. Most parameters are optional, and where ever possible default to reasonable values. An audio application that references to provisioned, complex audio structures, and which takes advantage of parameter optionality and defaults, can specify audio events using a minimum of syntax. 1.1. Background The next two sections contain background information which may be helpful in understanding the syntax. 1.1.1. Sequence And Sets The syntax supports abstractions of set and sequence for storing and referencing audio data. A sequence is a provisioned sequence of one or more audio segments. Component segments are not necessarily all of the same type. Every sequence is assigned a unique segment id. On playback, a sequence id reference is deconstructed into its individual parts, each of which Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 3] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 is played in order. A set is a provisioned collection of audio segments with an associ- ated selector. On playback, the selector value is resolved to a par- ticular set element. Selector types are supported by the syntax, but individual selector types are not defined in the syntax except for the pre-defined language selector; they are instead defined by the user (i.e. provisioner). A user could define one or more of the following selector types: language, accent, audio file format, gender, accent, customer, or day of the week. For each selector type, the user must define a range of valid values. The user may also choose to define a default value. At runtime if a selector value is not supplied the default value is used. For example, to support an application which plays a particular piece of audio in either English, French, or Russian, a provisioner would define a set with the pre-defined selector, "Language", and would define three possible values for that selector, "eng", "fra", and "rus". The provisioner would then provision three recordings of the prompt, one in each language, and would associate the French record- ing with the "fra" selector value, etc. The provisioner also could define a default value of the selector when no selector value is sup- plied, "eng" for instance. The entire set would be assigned a unique segment id. At runtime a reference to the set with the selector set to "rus" would result in the Russian version of the prompt being played. A reference to the set with no selector would result in the English version of the prompt being played since English has been set as the default selector value. Nested definition of both sets and sequences is allowed, i.e. it legal to define a set of sets or a sequence of sequences. In addi- tion, audio structures may also be specified by intermixing sets and sequences, and it is possible to specify a set of sequences or a sequence containing one or more set elements. Direct or transitive definition of a set or segment in terms of itself is not allowed. 1.1.2. Segment Types The syntax supports the following segment types: RECORDING: A reference by unique id to a single piece of recorded audio. RECORDINGs may be provisioned or they may be made during the Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 4] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 course of a call. A RECORDING made during the course of a call can be temporary or persistent. A temporary RECORDING lasts only for the life of the call during which it was recorded. A persistent RECORDING lasts beyond the live of the call during which it was recorded. A provisioned RECORDING may be replaced (or overriden) by a per- sistent RECORDING. A reference to the id of the provisioned RECORDING will then resolve to the persistent RECORDING. The overriding persistent audio can subsequently be deleted and the original provisioned audio can be restored. A provisioned RECORDING may be overriden more than once. In this case, the id of the provisioned RECORDING refers to the latest overriding RECORDING. When the overriding RECORDING is deleted, the original provisioned RECORDING is restored, even if the segment has been overridden multiple times. TEXT: A reference to a block of text to be converted to speech or to be displayed on a device. Reference may be by unique id to a block of provisioned text or by direct specification of text in a parameter. SILENCE: A specification of a length of silence to be played in units of 100 milliseconds. TONE: The specification of a tone to be played by algorithmic generation. Most tones however will probably be recorded, not generated. Exact specification of this segment type is tbd. VARIABLE: The specification of a voice variable by the parame- ters of type, subtype, and value. Specification of variables is considered in more detail in a subsequent section of this docu- ment. SEQUENCE: A reference by unique id to a provisioned sequence of mixed RECORDING, TEXT, SILENCE, TONE, VARIABLE, SET, or SEQUENCE segments. Nested definition of SEQUENCE segments is allowed. Direct or transitive definition of a SEQUENCE segment in terms of itself is not allowed. SET: A reference by unique id to a provisioned set of seg- ments. The intended and recommended use of the SET type is that all segments in the set should be semantically equivalent, how- ever there is no real way of enforcing this restriction either in the protocol or in provisioning. Every set has an associated selector which is used at runtime to resolve the set reference to a specific element of the set. The elements of a set may one Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 5] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 of the following segment types: RECORDING, TEXT, TONE, SILENCE, SEQUENCE, or SET. Specific selector types are not specified by the protocol and must be defined by the user. Nested definition of SET segments is allowed. Direct or transitive definition of a SET segment in terms of itself is not allowed. 2. Advanced Audio Package Package Name: A This package defines events and signals for an ARF package for an Audio Server Media Gateway. 3. Events ________________________________________________________________________ | Symbol | Definition | R | S Duration | |______________|________________________|_______|_______________________| | pa(parms) | PlayAnnouncement | | TO variable | | pc(parms) | PlayCollect | | TO variable | | pr(parms) | PlayRecord | | TO variable | | es(parm) | EndSignal | | BR | | oc(parms) | OperationComplete | x | | | of(parms) | OperationFailed | x | | |______________|________________________|_______|_______________________| The events provided by the AS Package are defined as follows: PlayAnnouncement: Plays an announcement in situations where there is no need for interaction with the user. Because there is no need to monitor the incoming media stream this event is an efficient mechanism for treatments, informational announcements, etc. PlayCollect: Plays a prompt and collects DTMF digits entered by a user. If no digits are entered or an invalid digit pattern is entered, the user may be reprompted and given another chance to enter a correct pattern of digits. The following digits are supported: 0-9, *, #, A, B, C, D. By default PlayCollect does not play an initial prompt, makes only one attempt to collect digits, and therefore functions as a simple Collect operation. Various spe- cial purpose keys, key sequences, and key sets can be defined Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 6] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 for use during the PlayCollect operation. PlayRecord: Plays a prompt and records user speech. If the user does not speak, the user may be reprompted and given another chance to record. By default PlayRecord does not play an initial prompt, makes only one attempt to record, and therefore functions as a simple Record operation. OperationComplete: Detected upon the successful completion of a Play, PlayRecord, or Play Collect signal. OperationFailed: Detected upon the failure of a Play, PlayRecord, or PlayCollect signal. EndSignal: Gracefully terminates a Play, PlayCollect, or PlayRecord signal. For each of these signals, if the signal is terminated with the EndSignal signal the resulting OperationComplete event or Opera- tionFailed event will contain all the parameters it would nor- mally, including any collected digits or the recording id of the recording that was in progress when the EndSignal signal was received. 4. Signal Interactions If an Advanced Audio Package signal is active on an endpoint and another signal of the same type is applied, the two signals including parameters and parameter values will compared If the signals are identical, the signal in progress will be allowed to continue and the new signal will be discarded. Because of this behavior the Advanced Audio Package may not interoperate well with some other packages such as the Line and Trunk packages. 5. Parameters The PlayAnnouncement, PlayRecord, and PlayCollect events may each be qualified by a string of parameters, most of which are optional. Where appropriate, parameters default to reasonable values. The only event with a required parameter is PlayAnnouncement. If a Play- Announcement event is not provided with a parameter specifying some form of playable audio an error is returned to the application. Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 7] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 These parameters are shown in the following table: _______________________________________________________________________ | Parameters | |______________________________________________________________________| | Symbol | Definition | pl | pc | pr | |___________|_________________________________|________|________|______| | an | announcement | x | | | | ip | initial prompt | | x | x | | rp | reprompt | | x | x | | nd | no digits reprompt | | x | | | ns | no speech reprompt | | | x | | fa | failure announcement | | x | x | | sa | success announcement | | x | x | | ni | non-interruptible play | | x | x | | it | iterations | x | | | | iv | interval | x | | | | du | duration | x | | | | sp | speed | x | x | x | | vl | volume | x | x | x | | cb | clear digit buffer | | x | x | | mx | maximum # of digits | | x | | | mn | minimum # of digits | | x | | | dp | digit pattern | | x | | | fdt | first digit timer | | x | | | idt | inter digit timer | | x | | | edt | extra digit timer | | x | | | prt | pre-speech timer | | | x | | pst | post-speech timer | | | x | | rlt | total recording length timer | | | x | | rsk | restart key | | x | x | | rik | reinput key | | x | x | | rtk | return key | | x | x | | psk | position key | | x | x | | stk | stop key | | x | x | | sik | start input key | | x | | | eik | end input key | | x | x | | iek | include end input key | | x | | | na | number of attempts | | x | x | |___________|_________________________________|________|________|______| Parameters to the Advanced Audio Package events are defined as fol- lows: Announcement: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 8] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 An announcement to be played. Consists of one or more audio segments. Initial Prompt: The initial announcement prompting the user to either enter DTMF digits or to speak. Consists of one or more audio segments. If not specified (the default), the event immediately begins digit collection or recording. Reprompt: Played after the user has made an error such as entering an invalid digit pattern or not speaking. Consists of one or more audio segments. Defaults to the Initial Prompt. No Digits Reprompt: Played after the user has failed to enter a valid digit pattern during a PlayCollect event. Consists of one or more audio seg- ments. Defaults to the Reprompt. No Speech Reprompt: Played after the user has failed to speak during a PlayRecord event. Consists of one or more audio segments. Defaults to the Reprompt. Failure Announcement: Played when all data entry attempts have failed. Consists of one or more audio segments. No default. Success Announcement: Played when data collection has succeeded. Consists of one or more audio segments. No default. Non-Interruptible Play: If set to true, initial prompt is not interruptible by either voice or digits. Defaults to false. Valid values are the text strings "true" and "false." Iterations: The maximum number of times an announcement is to be played. A value of minus one (-1) indicates the announcement is to be Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 9] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 repeated forever. Defaults to one (1). Interval: The interval of silence to be inserted between iterative plays. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. Defaults to 100. Duration: The maximum amount of time to play and possibly replay an announcement. Takes precedence over iteration and interval. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. No default. Speed: The relative playback speed of announcement specifiable as a positive or negative percentage of the original playback speed. Volume: The relative playback volume of announcement specifiable as a positive or negative decibel variation from the original play- back volume. Clear Digit Buffer: If set to true, clears the digit buffer before playing the ini- tial prompt. Defaults to false. Valid values are the text strings "true" and "false." Maximum # Of Digits: The maximum number of digits to collect. Defaults to one. This parameter should not be specified if the Digit Pattern parameter is present. Minimum # Of Digits: The minimum number of digits to collect. Defaults to one. This parameter should not be specified if the Digit Pattern parameter is present. Digit Pattern: A legal digit map as described in section 7.1.14 of the Megaco protocol [6] using the DTMF mappings associated with the Megaco DTMF Detection Package described in the Megaco protocol document [6]. This parameter should not be specified if one or both of Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 10] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 the Minimum # Of Digits parameter and the Maximum Number Of Digits parameter is present. First Digit Timer: The amount of time allowed for the user to enter the first digit. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. Defaults to 500. Inter Digit Timer: The amount of time allowed for the user to enter each subsequent digit. Specified units of 100 milliseconds seconds. Defaults to 300. Extra Digit Timer: The amount of time to wait for a user to enter a final digit once the maximum expected amount of digits have been entered. Typically this timer is used to wait for a terminating key in applications where a specific key has been defined to terminate input. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. If not speci- fied, this timer is not activated. Pre-speech Timer: The amount of time to wait for the user to initially speak. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. Defaults to 300. Post-speech Timer: The amount of silence necessary after the end of the last speech segment for the recording to be considered complete. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. Defaults to 200. Recording Length Timer: The maximum allowable length of the recording, not including pre or post speech silence. Specified in units of 100 milliseconds. This parameter is mandatory. Restart Key: Defines a key sequence consisting of a command key optionally followed by zero or more keys. This key sequence has the fol- lowing action: discard any digits collected or recording in progress, replay the prompt, and resume digit collection or recording. No default. An application that defines more than one command key sequence, will typically use the same command Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 11] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 key for all command key sequences. If more than one command key sequence is defined, then all key sequences must consist of a command key plus at least one other key. Reinput Key: Defines a key sequence consisting of a command key optionally followed by zero or more keys. This key sequence has the fol- lowing action: discard any digits collected or recordings in progress and resume digit collection or recording. No default. An application that defines more than one command key sequence, will typically use the same command key for all command key sequences. If more than one command key sequence is defined, then all key sequences must consist of a command key plus at least one other key. Return Key: Defines a key sequence consisting of a command key optionally followed by zero or more keys. This key sequence has the fol- lowing action: terminate the current event and any queued event and return the terminating key sequence to the call processing agent. No default. An application that defines more than one command key sequence, will typically use the same command key for all command key sequences. If more than one command key sequence is defined, then all key sequences must consist of a command key plus at least one other key. Position Key: Defines a key with the following action. Stop playing the current announcement and resume playing at the beginning of the first, last, previous, next, or the current segment of the announcement. No default. The actions for the position key are fst, lst, prv, nxt, and cur. Stop Key: Defines a key with the following action. Terminate playback of the announcement. No default. Start Input Keys: Defines a set of keys that are acceptable as the first digit collected. This set of keys can be specified to interrupt a playing announcement or to not interrupt a playing announcement. The default key set is 0-9. The default behavior is to interrupt a playing announcement when a Start Input Key is pressed. This Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 12] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 behavior can be overidden for the initial prompt only by using the ni (Non-Interruptible Play) parameter. Specification is a list of keys with no separators, e.g. 123456789#. End Input Key: Specifies a key that signals the end of digit collection or voice recording. The default end input key is the # key. To specify that no End Input Key be used the parameter is set to the string "null". The default behavior not to return the End Input Key in the digits returned to the call agent. This behavior can be overidden by the Include End Input Key (eik) parameter. Include End Input Key: By default the End Input Key is not included in the collected digits returned to the call agent. If this parameter is set to "true" then the End Input Key will be returned with the col- lected digits returned to the call agent. Default is "false". Number Of Attempts: The number of attempts the user needed to enter a valid digit pattern or to make a recording. Defaults to 1. Also used as a return parameter to indicate the number of attempts the user made. Record Persistent Audio: If set to true, the recording that is made is persistent instead of temporary. Defaults to false. Valid values are the text strings "true" and "false." Delete Persistent Audio Indicates that the specified persistent audio segment is to be deleted. This parameter is carried by the PlayRecord event, although nothing is either played or recorded in this case. Override Audio: Indicates that the specified provisioned audio segment is to be overridden with a persistent audio segment to be recorded in the PlayRecord operation that carries this parameter. Restore Audio: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 13] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Indicates that the provisioned audio segment originally associ- ated with the specified segment id is to be restored and that the overriding persistent audio is to be deleted. This parame- ter is carried by the PlayRecord event, although nothing is either played or recorded in this case. 6. Return Parameters Each event has an associated set of possible return parameters which are listed in the following tables. ________________________________________________________________________ | Return Parameters | |_______________________________________________________________________| | Symbol | Definition | pl | pc | pr | |___________|________________________________|________|_________|_______| | vi | voice interrupt | | | x | | ik | interrupting key sequence | | x | | | ap | amount played | | x | x | | na | number of attempts | | x | x | | dc | digits collected | | x | | | ri | recording id | | | x | | rc | return code | x | x | x | |___________|________________________________|________|_________|_______| Voice Interrupted: Set to "true" if the initial prompt of a PlayRecord operation was interrupted by voice. Defaults to "false". Interrupting Key Sequence: The key or key sequence that interrupted the initial prompt of a PlayCollect specified using the digit map characters "0" through "9" and "A" through "F" as defined in the DTMF Detection Package in the Megaco protocol document [6]. Amount Played: The length played of an initial prompt if the prompt was inter- rupted, in 100 ms units. Number Of Attempts: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 14] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 The number of attempts the user needed to enter a valid digit pattern or to make a recording. Defaults to 1. Also used as an input parameter to specify the number of attempts the user will be allowed to enter a valid digit pattern or make a recording. Digits Collected: The DTMF digits that were collected during a PlayCollect opera- tion specified using the digit map characters "0" through "9" and "A" through "F" as defined in the DTMF Detection Package in the Megaco protocol document [6]. Recording ID: A 32 bit binary integer assigned to audio recorded during the Play Record operation. Return Code: A return code giving the final status of the operation. Two ranges are defined: _________________________________ | Range | Meaning | |________|_______________________| |100-199 | successful completion | |300-399 | error | |________|_______________________| The following return codes are define: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 15] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 ________________________________________________________________________ |Return Code | Meaning | |____________|__________________________________________________________| | 100 | Success | | 300 | Unspecified failure | | 301 | Bad audio ID | | 302 | Bad selector type | | 303 | Bad selector value | | 304 | Variable type not supported | | 305 | Variable subtype not supported | | 306 | Invalid variable name | | 307 | Variable value out of range | | 308 | Inconsistent variable specification | | 309 | Alias not found | | 310 | Extra sequence data | | 311 | Missing sequence data | | 312 | Mismatch between play specification and provisioned data | | 313 | Language not set | | 314 | Remove override error | | 315 | Override error | | 316 | Delete audio error | | 317 | Unable to record temporary audio | | 318 | Unable to delete temporary audio | | 319 | Unable to record persistent audio | | 320 | Unable to delete persistent audio | | 321 | Unable to override non-existent segment id | | 321 | Unable to remove override from non-existent segment id | | 322 | Provisioning error | | 323 | Unspecified hardware failure | | 324 | Syntax error | | 325 | No digits | | 326 | No speech | | 327 | Spoke too long | | 328 | Digit pattern not matched | | 329 | Max attempts exceeded | |____________|__________________________________________________________| Here are some examples of how the return parameters are used: The PlayAnnouncement event completed successfully: O: A/oc(rc=100) The PlayAnnouncement event failed because an alias was not found: O: A/of(rc=309) Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 16] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 The PlayCollect event completed successfully on the user's second attempt when the user entered the digits 04375182: O: A/oc(rc=100 na=2 dc=04375182) The PlayRecord event was successful on the user's first attempt; the id of the recording made by the user is 983: O: A/oc(rc=100 na=1 ri=983) 7. Segment Descriptors Segment descriptors are used with the an, ip, rp, nd, ns, fa, and sa parameters to define the segments that make up an announcement. ________________________________________________________________________ | Segment Descriptors | |_______________________________________________________________________| | Symbol | Definition | |____________________________________|__________________________________| | 32 bit binary number | segment identifier | | ts | text to speech | | dt | display text | | si | silence | | to | tone | | vb | variable | |____________________________________|__________________________________| Segment Identifier: A 32 bit binary integer identifying a provisioned entity such as a recording, set, sequence, etc. Text To Speech: Specifies a text string to be converted to speech. Display Text: Specifies a text string to be displayed on a device. Silence: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 17] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Specifies a length of silence to be played in units of 100 mil- liseconds. Tone: Specifies a tone to be played by algorithmic generation. Exact specification of this parameter is tbd. Most tones will likely be recorded, not generated. Variable: Specifies a voice variable by type, subtype, and value. Vari- ables are more completely defined in a subsequent section of the document. 8. Variables The syntax supports two kinds of variables. Embedded embedded vari- ables are variables that have been provisioned as part of a segment. Standalone variables are completely specified in the protocol mes- sage. Typically embedded variables are provisioned along with recorded speech, e.g. "A representative will be with you in approximately 5 minutes. If you would prefer to leave a voice message, press 1 now." where the variable is the number of minutes. This kind of variable is often referred to as an embedded variable. Variables are specified by the following parameters: type, subtype, and value. Variable types include Date, Money, Number, Time, etc. Subtype is a refinement of type. For example the variable type Money might have an associated range of subtypes such as Dollar, Rupee, Dinar, etc. Not all variables require a subtype, and for these vari- ables the subtype parameter should be set to null. For embedded variables, the type and subtype must be provisioned. The value may be provisioned. If it is not provisioned it must be specified as part of the variable reference. In a list of segments, an embedded variable value specification applies only to the segment that directly precedes it. If a segment has multiple embedded vari- ables, the values must be given in the order in which the variables are encountered when the segment is played. Some examples follow below: A standalone variable: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 18] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 S: pa(an=vb(mny,usd,1153)) An embedded variable: S: pa(an=37<1153>) Not all variables, such as the date variable shown in the next exam- ple, require a subtype. In that case, the subtype is encoded with the value "null": S: pa(an=vb(dat,null,101598)) In some cases it may be desirable to play an announcement that con- tains an embedded variable without playing the variable itself. To do this a single "null" is provided for the value: S: pa(an=37) Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 19] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 ________________________________________________________________________ | Variables Qualifiers | |_______________________________________________________________________| | Symbol | Definition | Type | Subtype | Subtype Of | |_________|__________________________|________|___________|_____________| | dat | date | x | | | | dig | digits | x | | | | gen | generic | | x | dig | | ndn | North American DN | | x | dig | | dur | duration | x | | | | mth | month | x | | | | mny | money | x | | | | num | number | x | | | | crd | cardinal | | x | nm | | ord | ordinal | | x | nm | | sil | silence | x | | | | str | string | x | | | | txt | text | x | | | | dsp | display text | | x | txt | | spk | text to speech | | x | txt | | tme | time | x | | | | t12 | twelve hour format | | x | tme | | t24 | twenty four hour format | | x | tme | | ton | tone | x | | | | wkd | weekday | x | | | |_________|__________________________|________|___________|_____________| Date: Speaks a date specified as YYYYMMDD (per ISO 8601, International Date and Time Notation [7]). For example "19981015" is spoken as "October fifteenth nineteen ninety eight." Digits: Speaks a string of digits one at a time. If the subtype is North American DN, the format of which is NPA-NXX-XXXX, the digits are spoken with appropriate pauses between the NPA and NXX and between the NXX and XXXX. If the subtype is generic, the digits are spoken no pauses. Duration: Duration is specified in seconds and is spoken in one or more units of time as appropriate, e.g. "3661" is spoken as "One Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 20] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 hour, one minute, and one second." Money: Money is specified in the smallest units of a given currency and is spoken in one or more units of currency as appropriate, e.g. "110" in U.S. Dollars would be spoken "one dollar and ten cents." The three letter codes defined in ISO 4217, Currency And Funds Code List [5] are used to specify the currency sub- type. A small excerpt from ISO 4217 follows: __________________________________________________________ |Alpha-code | Numeric-code | Currency | Entity | |___________|______________|__________|___________________| |GQE | 226 | Ekwele | Equatorial Guinea | |GRD | 300 | Drachma | Greece | |GTQ | 320 | Quetzal | Guatemala | |___________|______________|__________|___________________| Money can be specified in negative or positive units of currency. In the above example "-110" would be spoken as "minus one dollar and ten cents." Month: Speaks the specified month, e.g. "10" is spoken as "October." Specification is in MM format with "01" denoting January, "02" denoting February, etc. Number: Speaks a number in cardinal form or in ordinal form. For exam- ple, "100" is spoken as "one hundred" in cardinal form and "one hundredth" in ordinal form. Cardinal numbers can be specified as negative or positive. Silence: Plays a specified period of silence. Specification is in 100 millisecond units. String: Speaks each character of a string, e.g. "a34bc" is spoken "A, three, four, b, c." Valid characters are a-z, A-Z, 0-9, #, and *. Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 21] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Text: Produces the specified text as speech or displays it on a dev- ice. Time: Speaks a time in either twelve hour format or twenty four hour format depending on the specified subtype. For example "1700" is spoken as "Five pm" in twelve hour format or as "Seventeen hun- dred hours" in twenty four hour format. Specification is in HHMM format per ISO 8601, International Data and Time Notation [7]. Tone: Plays an algorithmically generated tone, specification of which is tbd. Probably most applications will use prerecorded tones. Weekday: Speaks the day of the week, e.g. "Monday." Weekdays are speci- fied as single digits, with "1" denoting Sunday, "2" denoting Monday, etc. 9. Selectors Selector types, except for the pre-defined "Language" (language) selector, are definable by the user and may be applied to an indivi- dual segment within an operation or to all the segments in an opera- tion. For each selector type, the user must also define a range of values that the selector can assume. For example, if the user defines a selector of type "phase-of-the- moon", he might also define the legal values for that selector to be "new", "half", "full", "harvest", and "blue". For the selector to actually work at runtime, audio associated with each of the selector values must be provisioned. Although not required, it is suggested that the three letter codes defined in ISO standard 639-2, Code For The Representation Of Names Of Languages [4] be used as values for user defined language selec- tors. A small excerpt from ISO 639-2 follows: Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 22] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 _________________ |Code | Language | |_____|__________| |cze | Czech | |cym | Welsh | |dan | Danish | |_____|__________| Selectors can apply to entire operations or to a segment within an operation. If an operation contains multiple segments, each segment may have its own set of selectors. If selectors for an individual segment and selectors for the entire operation are present, the selector for the individual segment takes precedence for that seg- ment. The selectors for the operation apply to all segments within that operation that do not have individual segment selectors. If a selector set is not specified, provisioned defaults are used. Selectors are applied to variables only after the variable has been resolved. For instance if a date variable resolved to "October 15th, 1998" the voice with which the variable is spoken could resolve to either male or female if a gender selector had been defined. 10. Aliases Aliasing of audio segments is supported. The alias to segment id mapping is provisioned and at runtime the alias is resolved to its associated segment id. The syntax for an alias is inclusion of the alias between two forward slashes, e.g.: S: pa(an=/not-in-service/) 11. Examples This section presents a number of examples of how the syntax is used. Note that arguments to an event are separated by a one or more whi- tespace characters, which can be either an ASCII space character or an ASCII tabulation character. Play an announcement that consists of a single segment: S: pa(an=39) Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 23] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Play an announcement that consists of multiple segments: S: pa(an=39,40,47) Play an announcement that consists of a recording followed by silence followed by text to speech followed by a standalone voice variable: S: pa(an=39 si(30) ts(hello) vb(my,usd,3999)) Play an announcement with an embedded variable. If the first three segments of the previous announcement were provisioned as segment 40, the following would be exactly equivalent to the play in the preced- ing example: S: pa(an=40<3999>) Play an announcement with two embedded variables: S: pa(an=113<3999,10151998>) Play a prompt and collect a single digit. If need be, play a reprompt, a no digits prompt, and a success or failure announcement. Give the user three attempts to enter a digit: S: pc(ip=21 rp=109 nd=102 fa=81 sa=72 na=3) Play a prompt and collect a single digit. If the user does not enter a digit replay the initial prompt. Give the user three attempts to enter a digit: S: pc(ip=21 na=3) Play a prompt and record voice. If the user does not speak play a no speech prompt. Give the user two attempts to record: S: pr(ip=22 ns=42 na=2) Play an announcement at ninety percent of its original speed and five decibels softer than its original volume. Play the announcement three times with two seconds of silence between plays. Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 24] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 S: pa(an=27 sp=90 vl=-5 it=3 iv=20) Give the user two attempts to enter a three digit pattern. Clear the digit buffer before playing the prompt. The user can signal end of input using the # key, which is not returned to the call agent with the collected digits. S: pc(ip=43 cb=true mn=3 mx=3 na=2) Give the user three attempts to enter a three digit pattern. If the user enters one digits or two digits on the first or second attempts a reprompt is played. If the user enters no digits on the first or second attempts a no digits reprompt is played. If all three attempts fail, a failure announcement is played. If one of the attempts is successful, a success announcement is played and the col- lected digits are returned to the call agent. The user can signal end of input using the # key. If the # key terminates a successful input attempt, the collected digits, but not the # key, are returned to the call agent. S: pc(ip=87 rp=5 nd=409 fa=9 sa=18 mx=3 na=3) Give the user a single attempt to enter a a 1 to 4 digit pattern, allow 8 seconds for the user to enter the first digit, and allow 6 seconds for the user to enter each subsequent digit. If the subse- quent digit timer expires after the user has less than four digits, the digits collected are returned to the call agent. The user can signal end of input using the # key which is not returned to the call agent with the collected digits. S: pc(ip=4 fdt=80 idt=60 mx=4) Give the user three chances to enter an 11 digit number that begins with 0 or 1. If the user makes a mistake while entering digits, he can press the * key to discard any digits already collected, replay the prompt, and resume collection. S: pc(ip=33 mn=11 mx=11 sik=01 rsk=* na=3) Give the user three chances to enter an 11 digit number that begins with 0 or 1. If the user makes a mistake while entering digits, he can press the key sequence *11 to discard any digits already col- lected, replay the prompt, and resume collection. If the user enters Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 25] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 the key sequence *12 the play collect is terminated along with any queued events, and the terminating key sequence is returned to the call agent for processing. S: pc(ip=33 mn=11 mx=11 sik=01 rsk=*11 rtk=*12 na=3) Give the user two chances to make a recording. After playing the prompt, wait 5 seconds for the user to speak, otherwise replay the initial prompt and try again. If the user does speak, wait for seven seconds after speech stops to make sure the user is finished. If the recording is successful, return a reference to the recording to the call agent. S: pr(ip=6 prt=50 pst=70 na=2) Play an announcement in the default language: S: pa(an=5) Play the same announcement the English. In the first example, the selector applies to the an segment; in the second it applies to the pa operation. For these particular examples, the net effect is the same. S: pa(an=5[Language=eng]) or S: pa(an=5)[Language=eng] Play an announcement in Danish using a female voice with a Cajun accent. S: pa(an=6)[Language=dan,gender=female,accent=cajun] Play the first part of an announcement in English, the second part in the default language, and the third part in French. S: pa(an=5[Language=eng],6,7[Language=fra]) Play an announcement with an embedded variable in English: S: pa(an=5<101599>)[Language=eng] Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 26] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 12. Formal Syntax Description AudPkgEvent = PlayAnnouncement / PlayCollect / PlayRecord / OperationComplete / OperationFailed / EndSignal PlayAnnouncement = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] PlayAnnToken LPAREN PlayAnnParmList RPAREN [ OpSelectorList ] PlayCollect = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] PlayColToken LPAREN [ PlayColParmList ] RPAREN [ OpSelectorList ] PlayRecord = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] PlayRecToken LPAREN [ PlayRecParmList ] RPAREN [ OpSelectorList ] OperationComplete = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] OpCompleteToken LPAREN OpCompleteParmList RPAREN OperationFailed = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] OpFailedToken LPAREN ReturnCodeParm RPAREN EndSignal = [ AdvAudioPkgToken SLASH ] EndSignalToken LPAREN SignalParm RPAREN OpSelectorList = LSQUARE OpSelector *( COMMA OpSelector ) RSQUARE OpSelector = NAME EQUALS NAME PlayAnnParmList = PlayAnnParm *( WSP PlayAnnParm ) PlayColParmList = PlayColParm *( WSP PlayColParm ) PlayRecParmList = PlayRecParm *( WSP PlayRecParm ) OpCompleteParmList = OpCompleteParm *( WSP OpCompleteParm ) PlayAnnParm = ( AnnouncementParm / IterationsParm / IntervalParm / DurationParm / SpeedParm / VolumeParm ) PlayColParm = ( InitPromptParm / RepromptParm / NoDigitsParm / FailAnnParm / SuccessAnnParm / NoInterruptParm / SpeedParm / VolumeParm / ClearBufferParm / MaxDigitsParm / MinDigitsParm / DigitPatternParm / FirstDigitParm / InterDigitParm / ExtraDigitParm / RestartKeyParm / ReinputKeyParm / ReturnKeyParm / PosKeyParm / StopKeyParm / StartInputKeyParm / EndInputKeyParm / IncludeEndInputKey / NumAttemptsParm ) Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 27] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 PlayRecParm = ( InitPromptParm / RepromptParm / NoSpeechParm / FailAnnParm / SuccessAnnParm / NoInterruptParm / SpeedParm / VolumeParm / ClearBufferParm / PreSpeechParm / PostSpeechParm / RecordLenParm / RestartKeyParm / ReinputKeyParm / ReturnKeyParm / PosKeyParm / StopKeyParm / EndInputKeyParm / RecPersistParm / OverrideAudioParm / RestoreAudioParm / DeletePersistParm / NumAttemptsParm ) OpCompleteParm = ( VoiceInterruptParm / IntKeySeqParm / NumAttemptsParm / AmtPlayedParm / DigitsColParm / RecordingIdParm / ReturnCodeParm ) AnnouncementParm = AnParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist InitPromptParm = IpParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist RepromptParm = RpParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist NoDigitsParm = NdParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist NoSpeechParm = NsParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist FailAnnParm = FaParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist SuccessAnnParm = SaParmToken EQUALS Segmentlist DurationParm = DuParmToken EQUALS NUMBER IterationsParm = ItParmToken EQUALS ( NUMBER / "-1" ) IntervalParm = IvParmToken EQUALS NUMBER SpeedParm = SpParmToken EQUALS SIGNEDINT VolumeParm = VlParmToken EQUALS SIGNEDINT NoInterruptParm = NiParmToken EQUALS BOOLSTR ClearBufferParm = CbParmToken EQUALS BOOLSTR MaxDigitsParm = MxParmToken EQUALS NUMBER MinDigitsParm = MnParmToken EQUALS NUMBER DigitPatternParm = DpParmToken EQUALS DIGITPATTERN FirstDigitParm = FdtParmToken EQUALS NUMBER Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 28] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 InterDigitParm = IdtParmToken EQUALS NUMBER ExtraDigitParm = EdtParmToken EQUALS NUMBER PreSpeechParm = PrtParmToken EQUALS NUMBER PostSpeechParm = PstParmToken EQUALS NUMBER RecordLenParm = RltParmToken EQUALS NUMBER RestartKeyParm = RskParmToken EQUALS CommandKeySequence ReinputKeyParm = RikParmToken EQUALS CommandKeySequence ReturnKeyParm = RtkParmToken EQUALS CommandKeySequence PosKeyParm = PskParmToken EQUALS KeyPadKey COMMA PosKeyAction PosKeyAction = FirstSegmentToken / LastSegmentToken / PreviousSegmentToken / NextSegmentToken / CurrentSegmentToken StopKeyParm = StkParmToken EQUALS KeyPadKey StartInputKeyParm = SikParmToken EQUALS KeySet EndInputKeyParm = EikParmToken EQUALS KeyPadKey IncludeEndinputKey = IekParmToken EQUALS BOOLSTR RecPersistParm = RpaParmToken EQUALS BOOLSTR OverrideAudioParm = OaParmToken EQUALS SEGID RestoreAudioParm = RaParmToken EQUALS SEGID DeletePersistParm = DpaParmToken EQUALS SEGID NumAttemptsParm = NaParmToken EQUALS NUMBER VoiceInterruptParm = ViParmToken EQUALS BOOLSTR IntKeySeqParm = IkParmToken EQUALS CommandKeySequence AmtPlayedParm = ApParmToken EQUALS NUMBER DigitsColParm = DcParmToken EQUALS KeySequence RecordingIdParm = RiParmToken EQUALS NUMBER Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 29] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 ReturnCodeParm = RcParmToken EQUALS 3*3(DIGIT) KeyPadKey = "1" / "2" / "3" / "4" / "5" / "6" / "7" / "8" / "9" / "*" / "#" CommandKeySequence = 1*3(KeyPadKey) KeySequence = 1*64(KeyPadKey) KeySet = 1*11(KeyPadKey) SignalParm = SgParmToken EQUALS ( PlayAnnToken / PlayColToken / PlayRecToken ) RPAREN Segmentlist = SegmentDescriptor *( COMMA SegmentDescriptor ) SegmentDescriptor = ( ( SegmentId [ EmbedVarList ] [ SegSelectorList ] ) / ( TextToSpeechSeg [ SegSelectorList ] ) / ( DisplayTextSeg [ SegSelectorList ] ) / ( VariableSeg [ SegSelectorList ] ) / SilenceSeg ) SegmentId = ( Segid / Alias ) TextToSpeechSeg = TextToSpeechSegToken LPAREN NAME RPAREN DisplayTextSeg = DisplayTextSegToken LPAREN NAME RPAREN SilenceSeg = SilenceSegToken LPAREN NAME RPAREN VariableSeg = VariableSegToken LPAREN FullSpecVar RPAREN Segid = NUMBER Alias = SLASH NAME SLASH EmbedVarList = LANGLE NAME *( COMMA NAME ) RANGLE SegSelectorList = LSQUARE SegSelector *( COMMA SegSelector ) RSQUARE SegSelector = NAME EQUALS NAME FullSpecVar = ( DateVariable / DigitsVariable / DurationVariable / MonthVariable / MoneyVariable / NumberVariable / SilenceVariable / StringVariable / TextVariable / TimeVariable / WeekdayVariable ) DateVariable = DateVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA Date Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 30] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 Date = 8*8(DIGIT) DigitsVariable = DigitsVarToken COMMA (NorthAmericanDnToken / GenericDigitsToken) COMMA NUMBER DurationVariable = DurationVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA NUMBER MoneyVariable = MoneyVarToken COMMA 3*3(ALPHA) COMMA OPTSIGNEDINT MonthVariable = MonthVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA Month Month = "01" / "02" / "03" / "04" / "05" / "06" / "07" / "08" / "09" / "10" / "11" / "12" NumberVariable = (NumberVarToken COMMA CardinalNumberToken COMMA OPTSIGNEDINT) / (NumberVarToken COMMA OrdinalNumberToken COMMA NUMBER) SilenceVariable = SilenceVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA NUMBER StringVariable = StringVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA *(KeyPadKey) OrdinalNumberToken) COMMA NUMBER SilenceVariable = SilenceVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA NUMBER StringVariable = StringVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA *(KeyPadKey) TextVariable = TextVarToken COMMA (DisplayTextToken / TextToSpeechToken) COMMA NAME TimeVariable = TimeVarToken COMMA (TwelveHourFormatToken / TwentyFourHourFormatToken) COMMA 4*4(DIGIT) WeekdayVariable = WeekdayVarToken COMMA NullStrToken COMMA NAME AdvAudioPkgToken = "A" PlayAnnToken = "pa" PlayColToken = "pc" PlayRecToken = "pr" OpCompleteToken = "oc" OpFailedToken = "of" EndSignalToken = "es" TextToSpeechSegToken = "ts" DisplayTextSegToken = "dt" SilenceSegToken = "si" VariableSegToken = "vb" AnParmToken = "an" IpParmToken = "ip" Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 31] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 RpParmToken = "rp" NdParmToken = "nd" NsParmToken = "ns" FaParmToken = "fa" SaParmToken = "sa" NiParmToken = "ni" ItParmToken = "it" IvParmToken = "iv" DuParmToken = "du" SpParmToken = "sp" VlParmToken = "vl" CbParmToken = "cb" MxParmToken = "mx" MnParmToken = "mn" DpParmToken = "dp" FdtParmToken = "fdt" IdtParmToken = "idt" EdtParmToken = "edt" PrtParmToken = "prt" PstParmToken = "pst" RltParmToken = "rlt" RskParmToken = "rsk" RikParmToken = "rik" RtkParmToken = "rtk" PskParmToken = "psk" StkParmToken = "stk" SikParmToken = "sik" EikParmToken = "eik" IekParmToken = "iek" RpaParmToken = "rpa" DpaParmToken = "dpa" OaParmToken = "oa" RaParmToken = "ra" NaParmToken = "na" RidParmToken = "rid" ViParmToken = "vi" IkParmToken = "ik" ApParmToken = "ap" DcParmToken = "dc" RiParmToken = "ri" RcParmToken = "rc" SgParmToken = "sg" DateVarToken = "dat" DigitsVarToken = "dig" DuratioNVarToken = "dur" MoneyVarToken = "mny" MonthVarToken = "mth" NumberVarToken = "num" Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 32] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 SilenceVarToken = "sil" StringVarToken = "str" TextVarToken = "txt" TimeVarToken = "tme" WeekdayVarToken = "wkd" GenericDigitsToken = "gen" NorthAmericanDnSToken = "ndn" CardinalNumberToken = "crd" OrdinalNumberToken = "ord" DisplayTextToken = "dsp" TextToSpeechToken = "spk" TwelveHourFormatToken = "t12" TwentyFourHourFormatToken = "t24" NullStrToken = "null" FirstSegmentToken = "fst" LastSegmentToken = "lst" PreviousSegmentToken = "prv" NextSegmentToken = "nxt" CurrentSegmentToken = "cur" BOOLSTR = "true" / "false" NAMECHAR = ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" NAME = 1*64(NAMECHAR) NUMBER = DIGIT *31(DIGIT) SIGNEDINT = ("+" / "-") DIGIT *31(DIGIT) OPTSIGNEDINT = ["+" / "-"] DIGIT *31(DIGIT) EQUALS = "=" COMMA = "," LSQUARE = "[" RSQUARE = "]" LANGLE = "<" RANGLE = ">" LPAREN = "(" RPAREN = ")" SLASH = "/" WSP = SP / HTAB Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 33] INTERNET DRAFT MGCP Advanced Audio Package June 2000 13. References [1] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [2] Arango, M. , Dugan, A., Elliott, I., Huitema, C., and Pickett, S., "Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP)", Version 0.1, November 9, 1998, INTERNET DRAFT. [3] Cromwell, D., Durling, M., "Requirements For Control Of A Media Services Function", Version 0.0, November, 1998, INTERNET DRAFT. [4] ISO 639-2, "Code For The Representation Of Names Of Languages", 1998. [5] ISO 4217, "Currency And Funds Code List", 1981. [6] Cuervo, F., Hill, B., Greene, N., Huitema, C., Rayhan, A., Rosen, B., Segers, J., "Megaco Protocol", February 21, 2000, INTERNET DRAFT. [7] ISO 8601, "International Date and Time Notation", 1998. 14. Author's Address David Cromwell Nortel Networks Box 13478 35 Davis Drive Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 cromwell@nortelnetworks.com Phone: 919-991-8870 Cromwell expires December 2000 [Page 34]