# note to me ```bash docker compose build --network host ``` ``` docker compose up -d --force-recreate ``` # TODO - [ ] let user choose whether use mirror (use which mirror) when building Dockerfile --- Based on the logs and the **GB/T 28181-2022** standard you provided, here is the explanation: Yes, this is **SIP**, but the content *inside* the SIP message is **SDP (Session Description Protocol)**. While XML is used for *control* (like PTZ), **SDP** is used for **Media Negotiation** (setting up the video stream). ### The Architecture from your logs 1. **SIP (The Envelope):** Starts the conversation ("I want to watch video"). 2. **SDP (The Letter inside):** Describes technical details ("Send video to IP X, Port Y, using Format Z"). 3. **RTP (The result):** After this SIP/SDP handshake finishes, the actual binary video stream (PS/H.264) starts flowing over a separate TCP/UDP connection. ### Breakdown of your Log This log shows a **Real-time Live View** handshake. #### 1. The Request (SRS Server -> Camera) The Server asks the Camera to send video. ```ini INVITE sip:34020000001320000001@3402000000 SIP/2.0 Content-Type: application/sdp s=Play # "Play" = Real-time Live View (Standard 9.2.2.1) c=IN IP4 192.168.2.184 # The Media Server IP m=video 9000 TCP/RTP/AVP 96 # "Send video to my Port 9000 via TCP" a=recvonly # "I will only receive, not send" y=0911024252 # **GB/T 28181 Special**: The SSRC (Stream ID) ``` #### 2. The Response (Camera -> SRS Server) The Camera agrees and tells the server its own details. ```ini SIP/2.0 200 OK Content-Type: application/sdp c=IN IP4 192.168.2.64 # The Camera IP m=video 15060 TCP/RTP/AVP 96 # "I am sending from Port 15060" a=sendonly # "I will only send" a=setup:active # "I will initiate the TCP connection to you" y=0911024252 # Matches the SSRC provided f=v/2/2560x1440/25/2/8192a/... # **GB/T 28181 Special**: Media Info ``` ### Key Differences from Standard SDP GB/T 28181 modifies standard SDP with two specific fields mandatory for this protocol: 1. **`y=` (SSRC)**: * **Standard SDP:** Does not have a `y` line. * **GB/T 28181:** Uses `y` to define the **SSRC** (Synchronization Source). This 10-digit number is crucial because it marks every binary video packet sent later. If the binary stream headers don't match this `y` value, the stream is rejected. 2. **`f=` (Media Info)**: * **Standard SDP:** Does not have an `f` line. * **GB/T 28181:** Uses `f` to describe video parameters. In your log: `v/2/2560x1440/25...` means: * `v`: Video * `2`: Coding format (likely H.264 or H.265 mapped) * `2560x1440`: Resolution * `25`: Frame rate ### Summary of Cooperation 1. **XML (SIP MESSAGE):** Used for "remote control" (PTZ, Query, Keepalive). 2. **SDP (SIP INVITE):** Used to *negotiate* the pipeline. 3. **Binary (RTP/PS):** The actual heavy video data that flows through the pipe created by the SDP.