G.711 is a
narrowband audio codec originally designed for use in
telephony
Telephony ( ) is the field of technology involving the development, application, and deployment of telecommunications services for the purpose of electronic transmission of voice, fax, or data, between distant parties. The history of telephony is ...
that provides toll-quality audio at 64 kbit/s. It is an
ITU-T
The International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) is one of the three Sectors (branches) of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). It is responsible for coordinating Standardization, standards fo ...
standard (Recommendation) for audio
encoding
In communications and Data processing, information processing, code is a system of rules to convert information—such as a letter (alphabet), letter, word, sound, image, or gesture—into another form, sometimes data compression, shortened or ...
, titled Pulse code modulation (PCM) of voice frequencies released for use in 1972.
G.711 passes audio signals in the
frequency band
Spectral bands are regions of a given spectrum, having a specific range of wavelengths or frequencies. Most often, it refers to electromagnetic bands, regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
More generally, spectral bands may also be means in ...
of 300–3400 Hz and
samples them at the rate of 8000 Hz, with the tolerance on that rate of 50
parts per million
In science and engineering, the parts-per notation is a set of pseudo-units to describe the small values of miscellaneous dimensionless quantity, dimensionless quantities, e.g. mole fraction or mass fraction (chemistry), mass fraction.
Since t ...
(ppm).
It uses one of two different logarithmic
companding
In telecommunications and signal processing, companding (occasionally called compansion) is a method of mitigating the detrimental effects of a channel with limited dynamic range. The name is a portmanteau of the words compressing and expandi ...
algorithms:
μ-law, which is used primarily in North America and Japan, and
A-law, which is in use in most other countries outside North America. Each companded sample is quantized as 8 bits, resulting in a 64 kbit/s
bit rate
In telecommunications and computing, bit rate (bitrate or as a variable ''R'') is the number of bits that are conveyed or processed per unit of time.
The bit rate is expressed in the unit bit per second (symbol: bit/s), often in conjunction ...
.
G.711 is a required standard in many technologies, such as in the
H.320 and
H.323 standards.
It can also be used for
fax communication over IP networks (as defined in
T.38 specification).
Two enhancements to G.711 have been published: G.711.0 utilizes
lossless data compression
Lossless compression is a class of data compression that allows the original data to be perfectly reconstructed from the compressed data with no loss of information. Lossless compression is possible because most real-world data exhibits Redundanc ...
to reduce the bandwidth usage and G.711.1 increases audio quality by increasing bandwidth.
Features
* 8 kHz sampling frequency
* 64 kbit/s bitrate (8 kHz sampling frequency × 8 bits per sample)
* Typical algorithmic delay is 0.125 ms, with no look-ahead delay
* G.711 is a waveform
speech coder
* G.711 Appendix I defines a
packet loss concealment (PLC) algorithm to help hide transmission losses in a packetized network
* G.711 Appendix II defines a
discontinuous transmission (DTX) algorithm which uses
voice activity detection (VAD) and
comfort noise generation (CNG) to reduce bandwidth usage during silence periods
*
PSQM testing under ideal conditions yields
mean opinion scores of 4.45 for G.711 μ-law, 4.45 for G.711 A-law
* PSQM testing under network stress yields
mean opinion scores of 4.13 for G.711 μ-law, 4.11 for G.711 A-law
Types
G.711 defines two main
companding
In telecommunications and signal processing, companding (occasionally called compansion) is a method of mitigating the detrimental effects of a channel with limited dynamic range. The name is a portmanteau of the words compressing and expandi ...
algorithms, the
μ-law algorithm
The μ-law algorithm (sometimes written Mu (letter), mu-law, often abbreviated as u-law) is a companding algorithm, primarily used in 8-bit PCM Digital data, digital telecommunications systems in North America and Japan. It is one of the two c ...
and
A-law algorithm. Both are
logarithmic, but A-law was specifically designed to be simpler for a computer to process. The standard also defines a sequence of repeating code values which defines the power level of 0
dB.
The μ-law and A-law algorithms encode 14-bit and 13-bit signed linear PCM samples (respectively) to logarithmic 8-bit samples. Thus, the G.711
encoder will create a 64 kbit/s bitstream for a signal sampled at 8 kHz.
G.711 μ-law tends to give more resolution to higher range signals while G.711 A-law provides more quantization levels at lower signal levels.
The terms ''PCMU'', ''G711u'' and ''G711MU'' are also used for G.711 μ-law, and ''PCMA'' and ''G711A'' for G.711 A-law.
A-law
A-law encoding thus takes a 13-bit signed linear audio sample as input and converts it to an 8 bit value as follows:
Where is the sign bit,
is its inverse (i.e. positive values are encoded with MSB = = 1), and bits marked are discarded. Note that the first column of the table uses different representation of negative values than the third column. So for example, input decimal value −21 is represented in binary after bit inversion as 1000000010100, which maps to 00001010 (according to the first row of the table). When decoding, this maps back to 1000000010101, which is interpreted as output value −21 in decimal. Input value +52 (0000000110100 in binary) maps to 10011010 (according to the second row), which maps back to 0000000110101 (+53 in decimal).
This can be seen as a floating-point
In computing, floating-point arithmetic (FP) is arithmetic on subsets of real numbers formed by a ''significand'' (a Sign (mathematics), signed sequence of a fixed number of digits in some Radix, base) multiplied by an integer power of that ba ...
number with 4 bits of mantissa (equivalent to a 5-bit precision), 3 bits of exponent and 1 sign bit , formatted as eeemmmm
with the decoded linear value given by formula
:
which is a 13-bit signed integer in the range ±1 to ±(2 − 2). Note that no compressed code decodes to zero due to the addition of 0.5 (half of a quantization step).
In addition, the standard specifies that all resulting even bits ( LSB is even) are inverted before the octet is transmitted. This is to provide plenty of 0/1 transitions to facilitate the clock recovery process in the PCM receivers. Thus, a silent A-law encoded PCM channel has the 8 bit samples coded 0xD5 instead of 0x80 in the octets.
When data is sent over E0 ( G.703), MSB (sign) is sent first and LSB is sent last.
ITU-T STL defines the algorithm for decoding as follows (it puts the decoded values in the 13 most significant bits of the 16-bit output data type).
void alaw_expand(lseg, logbuf, linbuf)
long lseg;
short *linbuf;
short *logbuf;
See also "ITU-T Software Tool Library 2009 User's manual" that can be found at.
μ-law
The μ-law (sometimes referred to as ulaw, G.711Mu, or G.711μ) encoding takes a 14-bit signed linear audio sample in two's complement
Two's complement is the most common method of representing signed (positive, negative, and zero) integers on computers, and more generally, fixed point binary values. Two's complement uses the binary digit with the ''greatest'' value as the ''s ...
representation as input, inverts all bits after the sign bit if the value is negative, adds 33 (binary 100001) and converts it to an 8 bit value as follows:
Where is the sign bit, and bits marked are discarded.
In addition, the standard specifies that the encoded bits are inverted before the octet is transmitted. Thus, a silent μ-law encoded PCM channel has the 8 bit samples transmitted 0xFF instead of 0x00 in the octets.
Adding 33 is necessary so that all values fall into a compression group and it is subtracted back when decoding.
Breaking the encoded value formatted as seeemmmm
into 4 bits of mantissa , 3 bits of exponent and 1 sign bit , the decoded linear value is given by formula
:
which is a 14-bit signed integer in the range ±0 to ±8031.
Note that 0 is transmitted as 0xFF, and −1 is transmitted as 0x7F, but when received the result is 0 in both cases.
G.711.0
G.711.0, also known as G.711 LLC, utilizes lossless data compression
Lossless compression is a class of data compression that allows the original data to be perfectly reconstructed from the compressed data with no loss of information. Lossless compression is possible because most real-world data exhibits Redundanc ...
to reduce the bandwidth usage by as much as 50 percent. The ''Lossless compression of G.711 pulse code modulation'' standard was approved by ITU-T in September 2009.
G.711.1
G.711.1 ''"Wideband embedded extension for G.711 pulse code modulation"'' is a higher-fidelity extension to G.711, ratified in 2008 and further extended in 2012.
G.711.1 allows a series of enhancement layers on top of a raw G.711 core stream (Layer 0): Layer 1 codes 16-bit audio in the same 4kHz narrowband, and Layer 2 allows 8kHz wideband
In communications, a system is wideband when the message bandwidth significantly exceeds the coherence bandwidth of the channel. Some communication links have such a high data rate that they are forced to use a wide bandwidth; other links ma ...
using MDCT; each uses a fixed 16 kbps in addition to the 64 kbps core. They may be used together or singly, and each encodes the differences from the previous layer. Ratified in 2012, Layer 3 extends Layer 2 to 16kHz "superwideband," allowing another 16 kbps for the highest frequencies, while retaining layer independence. Peak bitrate becomes 96 kbps in original G.711.1, or 112 kbps with superwideband. No internal method of identifying or separating the layers is defined, leaving it to the implementation to packetize or signal them.
A decoder that doesn't understand any set of fidelity layers may ignore or drop non-core packets without affecting it, enabling graceful degradation across any G.711 (or original G.711.1) telephony system with no changes.
Also ratified in 2012 was G.711.0 lossless extended to the new fidelity layers. Like G.711.0, full G.711 backward compatibility is sacrificed for efficiency, though a G.711.0 aware node may still ignore or drop layer packets it doesn't understand.
Licensing
The patents for G.711, released in 1972, have expired, so it may be used without the need for a license.
See also
* List of codecs
* Comparison of audio coding formats
* RTP audio video profile
*Au file format
The Au file format is a simple audio file format introduced by Sun Microsystems. The format was common on NeXT systems and on early Web pages. Originally it was headerless, being 8-bit μ-law algorithm, μ-law-encoded data at an 8000 Hz sample rat ...
References
External links
ITU-T Recommendation G.711
ITU-T G.191 software tools for speech and audio coding, including G.711 C code
Code Project C# implementation of G.711 with source code
RFC 3551 - RTP Profile for Audio and Video Conferences with Minimal Control
- G.711 - PCMA and PCMU definition.
RFC 4856 - Registration of Media Type audio/PCMA and audio/PCMU
* - RTP Payload Format for ITU-T Recommendation G.711.1 (PCMA-WB and PCMU-WB)
{{Compression formats
Audio codecs
Speech codecs
ITU-T recommendations
ITU-T G Series Recommendations
Telecommunications-related introductions in 1972