Paul
wrote
"Perhaps we can require the calling device to
not transmit any data until it receives at least one IFP packet from the
called side and determines the ASN.1 version used to encode the message."
Unfortunately this won't work - although typically
the called endpoint will provide the first IFP (Probably a CED) this doesn't
work when you poll for a fax - in that case the calling endpoint will probably
want to send the first IFP.
The only way I can see out of this is to add a new
data application (say, t38faxV2) to DataApplicationCapability etc in the H.245
ASN.1. t38fax would use the 1998 ASN.1 and t38faxV2 would
use the 2002 ASN.1 - and future carefully checked modifications ;-). Now
there's no problem, a 2002 aware endpoint can offer both versions and a 1998
aware endpoint can only accept the ASN.1 it
understands.
Pete Price
Vegastream Limited
Folks,
Today, I was exchanging e-mail with somebody over the
fax version number issue and the different syntax that is used (1998 vs
2002).
If we open H.245 and exchange a full set of
capabilities, and H.323 endpoint could determine the version supported by
the other side and open a channel supporting that particular version.
However, I don't think any text is explicitly clear on that.
Another scenario-- and one I have more trouble
with-- is Fast Connect. If a calling endpoint populates the fastStart
element with "version 2" proposals, for example, the called side (say, a
version 0 device) might accept the proposal and return the response.
However, it is not allowed to modify the version field. The reason is
that Fast Connect proposals are not ordered in a way such that replies must
be ordered the same way. Rather, the calling device determines which
proposals are accepted based on characteristics of the proposals returned
(e.g., codec type, samples per packet, or other information). In some
cases, a calling endpoint will actually not try to "match" the proposal
returned, but just accept it as a proposal and run with it.
The problem is that if a calling device proposes
version 2 and the called device returns version 2 (but is actually a v0
device), then the wrong syntax will be transmitted on the wire. Thus,
the text needs to state somewhere one of these options (or something
similar):
- The calling device must offer a proposal for each
version it wants to potentially use and the called device must accept the
first proposal it can accept (in order of the proposals) and the called
device must not accept any proposal for a version it does not
support
- The calling device must wait for capability exchange
to complete to determine the actual supported version of the other
device
Alternatively, we could make an allowance for the
endpoint to change the version number in the Fast Connect proposal, but I
don't think that's a good idea, as it would quite possibly break
interoperability with some devices.
What would a version 0 device do today if it received
a Fast Connect proposal advertising version 2? Would it accept
it? I suspect so and I'm afraid that we might have some interop
problems regardless of the direction we go.
Perhaps we can require the calling device to not
transmit any data until it receives at least one IFP packet from the called
side and determines the ASN.1 version used to encode the message. As
much as we can push onto the shoulders of a v2 device, the better, as I
don't think we have any real deployments in the field (yet)... might be
wrong, but I think it would be a far less significant impact on that
side.
I'm open to suggestions. Perhaps this issue is
even addressed and I've simply overlooked it.
Thanks,
Paul