[asterisk-bugs] [JIRA] (ASTERISK-28285) Fixed wrong RTT calculation
sungtae kim (JIRA)
noreply at issues.asterisk.org
Thu Feb 14 15:01:47 CST 2019
[ https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-28285?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=246228#comment-246228 ]
sungtae kim commented on ASTERISK-28285:
----------------------------------------
I was wrong. No need to fix this.
> Fixed wrong RTT calculation
> ---------------------------
>
> Key: ASTERISK-28285
> URL: https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-28285
> Project: Asterisk
> Issue Type: Bug
> Security Level: None
> Components: Resources/res_rtp_asterisk
> Affects Versions: 16.1.1
> Reporter: sungtae kim
> Severity: Minor
>
> Currently, when the Asterisk calculate the RTT for the RTCPSent/RTCPReceived, it does like the below.
> {noformat}
> rtt = lsr_a - lsr - dlsr;
> {noformat}
> the lsr_a and lsr is compact timestamp type, but dlsr is 1 / 65536 sec, which is not matched. So this mismatching type makes huge amount of RTT time.
> {noformat}
> last SR timestamp (LSR): 32 bits
> The middle 32 bits out of 64 in the NTP timestamp (as explained in
> Section 4) received as part of the most recent RTCP sender report
> (SR) packet from source SSRC_n. If no SR has been received yet,
> the field is set to zero.
> delay since last SR (DLSR): 32 bits
> The delay, expressed in units of 1/65536 seconds, between
> receiving the last SR packet from source SSRC_n and sending this
> reception report block. If no SR packet has been received yet
> from SSRC_n, the DLSR field is set to zero.
> 4. Byte Order, Alignment, and Time Format
> All integer fields are carried in network byte order, that is, most
> significant byte (octet) first. This byte order is commonly known as
> big-endian. The transmission order is described in detail in [3].
> Unless otherwise noted, numeric constants are in decimal (base 10).
> All header data is aligned to its natural length, i.e., 16-bit fields
> are aligned on even offsets, 32-bit fields are aligned at offsets
> divisible by four, etc. Octets designated as padding have the value
> zero.
> Wallclock time (absolute date and time) is represented using the
> timestamp format of the Network Time Protocol (NTP), which is in
> seconds relative to 0h UTC on 1 January 1900 [4]. The full
> resolution NTP timestamp is a 64-bit unsigned fixed-point number with
> the integer part in the first 32 bits and the fractional part in the
> last 32 bits. In some fields where a more compact representation is
> appropriate, only the middle 32 bits are used; that is, the low 16
> bits of the integer part and the high 16 bits of the fractional part.
> The high 16 bits of the integer part must be determined
> independently.
> An implementation is not required to run the Network Time Protocol in
> order to use RTP. Other time sources, or none at all, may be used
> (see the description of the NTP timestamp field in Section 6.4.1).
> However, running NTP may be useful for synchronizing streams
> transmitted from separate hosts.
> The NTP timestamp will wrap around to zero some time in the year
> 2036, but for RTP purposes, only differences between pairs of NTP
> timestamps are used. So long as the pairs of timestamps can be
> assumed to be within 68 years of each other, using modular arithmetic
> for subtractions and comparisons makes the wraparound irrelevant.
> {noformat}
> But the dlsr has different unit. It's 1/65536 sec. So this ma
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