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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         JM. Valin
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Request for Comments: 8251                           Mozilla Corporation
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Updates: 6716                                                     K. Vos
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Category: Standards Track                                        vocTone
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ISSN: 2070-1721                                             October 2017
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                    Updates to the Opus Audio Codec
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Abstract
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   This document addresses minor issues that were found in the
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   specification of the Opus audio codec in RFC 6716.  It updates the
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   normative decoder implementation included in Appendix A of RFC 6716.
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   The changes fix real and potential security-related issues, as well
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   as minor quality-related issues.
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Status of This Memo
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   This is an Internet Standards Track document.
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   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
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   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
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   received public review and has been approved for publication by the
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   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
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   Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
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   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
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   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
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   https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8251.
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Copyright Notice
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   Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
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   document authors.  All rights reserved.
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   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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   (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
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   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
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   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
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   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
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   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
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   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
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   described in the Simplified BSD License.
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Valin & Vos                  Standards Track                    [Page 1]
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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Table of Contents
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   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
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   2.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
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   3.  Stereo State Reset in SILK  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
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   4.  Parsing of the Opus Packet Padding  . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
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   5.  Resampler Buffer  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
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   6.  Integer Wrap-Around in Inverse Gain Computation . . . . . . .   6
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   7.  Integer Wrap-Around in LSF Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
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   8.  Cap on Band Energy  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
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   9.  Hybrid Folding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
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   10. Downmix to Mono . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
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   11. New Test Vectors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
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   12. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
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   13. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
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   14. Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
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   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
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   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
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1.  Introduction
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   This document addresses minor issues that were discovered in the
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   reference implementation of the Opus codec.  Unlike most IETF
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   specifications, RFC 6716 [RFC6716] defines Opus in terms of a
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   normative reference decoder implementation rather than from the
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   associated text description.  Appendix A of that RFC includes the
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   reference decoder implementation, which is why only issues affecting
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   the decoder are listed here.  An up-to-date implementation of the
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   Opus encoder can be found at <https://opus-codec.org/>.
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   Some of the changes in this document update normative behavior in a
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   way that requires new test vectors.  Only the C implementation is
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   affected, not the English text of the specification.  This
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   specification remains fully compatible with RFC 6716 [RFC6716].
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   Note: Due to RFC formatting conventions, lines exceeding the column
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   width in the patch are split using a backslash character.  The
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   backslashes at the end of a line and the white space at the beginning
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   of the following line are not part of the patch.  Referenced line
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   numbers are approximations.  A properly formatted patch including all
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   changes is available at 
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   materials-98-codec-opus-update-00.patch> and has a SHA-1 hash of
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   029e3aa88fc342c91e67a21e7bfbc9458661cd5f.
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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2.  Terminology
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   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
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   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
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   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
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   BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
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   capitals, as shown here.
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3.  Stereo State Reset in SILK
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   The reference implementation does not reinitialize the stereo state
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   during a mode switch.  The old stereo memory can produce a brief
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   impulse (i.e., single sample) in the decoded audio.  This can be
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   fixed by changing silk/dec_API.c around line 72:
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        for( n = 0; n < DECODER_NUM_CHANNELS; n++ ) {
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            ret  = silk_init_decoder( &channel_state[ n ] );
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        }
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   +    silk_memset(&((silk_decoder *)decState)->sStereo, 0,
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   +                sizeof(((silk_decoder *)decState)->sStereo));
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   +    /* Not strictly needed, but it's cleaner that way */
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   +    ((silk_decoder *)decState)->prev_decode_only_middle = 0;
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        return ret;
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    }
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   This change affects the normative output of the decoder, but the
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   amount of change is within the tolerance and is too small to make the
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   test vector check fail.
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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4.  Parsing of the Opus Packet Padding
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   It was discovered that some invalid packets of a very large size
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   could trigger an out-of-bounds read in the Opus packet parsing code
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   responsible for padding.  This is due to an integer overflow if the
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   signaled padding exceeds 2^31-1 bytes (the actual packet may be
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   smaller).  The code can be fixed by decrementing the (signed) len
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   value, instead of incrementing a separate padding counter.  This is
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   done by applying the following changes around line 596 of
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   src/opus_decoder.c:
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          /* Padding flag is bit 6 */
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          if (ch&0x40)
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          {
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   -         int padding=0;
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             int p;
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             do {
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                if (len<=0)
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                   return OPUS_INVALID_PACKET;
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                p = *data++;
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                len--;
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   -            padding += p==255 ? 254: p;
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   +            len -= p==255 ? 254: p;
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             } while (p==255);
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   -         len -= padding;
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          }
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   This packet-parsing issue is limited to reading memory up to about 60
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   KB beyond the compressed buffer.  This can only be triggered by a
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   compressed packet more than about 16 MB long, so it's not a problem
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   for RTP.  In theory, it could crash a file decoder (e.g., Opus in
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   Ogg) if the memory just after the incoming packet is out of range,
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   but our attempts to trigger such a crash in a production application
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   built using an affected version of the Opus decoder failed.
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5.  Resampler Buffer
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   The SILK resampler had the following issues:
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   1.  The calls to memcpy() were using sizeof(opus_int32), but the type
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       of the local buffer was opus_int16.
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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   2.  Because the size was wrong, this potentially allowed the source
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       and destination regions of the memcpy() to overlap on the copy
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       from "buf" to "buf".  We believe that nSamplesIn (number of input
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       samples) is at least fs_in_khZ (sampling rate in kHz), which is
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       at least 8.  Since RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 is only 8, that should
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       not be a problem once the type size is fixed.
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   3.  The size of the buffer used RESAMPLER_MAX_BATCH_SIZE_IN, but the
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       data stored in it was actually twice the input batch size
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       (nSamplesIn<<1).
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   The code can be fixed by applying the following changes around line
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   78 of silk/resampler_private_IIR_FIR.c:
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    )
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    {
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        silk_resampler_state_struct *S = \
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   (silk_resampler_state_struct *)SS;
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        opus_int32 nSamplesIn;
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        opus_int32 max_index_Q16, index_increment_Q16;
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   -    opus_int16 buf[ RESAMPLER_MAX_BATCH_SIZE_IN + \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 ];
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   +    opus_int16 buf[ 2*RESAMPLER_MAX_BATCH_SIZE_IN + \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 ];
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        /* Copy buffered samples to start of buffer */
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   -    silk_memcpy( buf, S->sFIR, RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 \
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   * sizeof( opus_int32 ) );
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   +    silk_memcpy( buf, S->sFIR, RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 \
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   * sizeof( opus_int16 ) );
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        /* Iterate over blocks of frameSizeIn input samples */
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        index_increment_Q16 = S->invRatio_Q16;
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        while( 1 ) {
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            nSamplesIn = silk_min( inLen, S->batchSize );
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            /* Upsample 2x */
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            silk_resampler_private_up2_HQ( S->sIIR, &buf[ \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 ], in, nSamplesIn );
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            max_index_Q16 = silk_LSHIFT32( nSamplesIn, 16 + 1 \
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   );         /* + 1 because 2x upsampling */
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            out = silk_resampler_private_IIR_FIR_INTERPOL( out, \
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   buf, max_index_Q16, index_increment_Q16 );
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            in += nSamplesIn;
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            inLen -= nSamplesIn;
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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            if( inLen > 0 ) {
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                /* More iterations to do; copy last part of \
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   filtered signal to beginning of buffer */
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   -            silk_memcpy( buf, &buf[ nSamplesIn << 1 ], \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 * sizeof( opus_int32 ) );
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   +            silk_memmove( buf, &buf[ nSamplesIn << 1 ], \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 * sizeof( opus_int16 ) );
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            } else {
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                break;
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            }
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        }
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        /* Copy last part of filtered signal to the state for \
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   the next call */
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   -    silk_memcpy( S->sFIR, &buf[ nSamplesIn << 1 ], \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 * sizeof( opus_int32 ) );
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   +    silk_memcpy( S->sFIR, &buf[ nSamplesIn << 1 ], \
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   RESAMPLER_ORDER_FIR_12 * sizeof( opus_int16 ) );
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    }
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6.  Integer Wrap-Around in Inverse Gain Computation
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   It was discovered through decoder fuzzing that some bitstreams could
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   produce integer values exceeding 32 bits in
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   LPC_inverse_pred_gain_QA(), causing a wrap-around.  The C standard
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   considers this behavior as undefined.  The following patch around
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   line 87 of silk/LPC_inv_pred_gain.c detects values that do not fit in
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   a 32-bit integer and considers the corresponding filters unstable:
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           /* Update AR coefficient */
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           for( n = 0; n < k; n++ ) {
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  -            tmp_QA = Aold_QA[ n ] - MUL32_FRAC_Q( \
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  Aold_QA[ k - n - 1 ], rc_Q31, 31 );
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  -            Anew_QA[ n ] = MUL32_FRAC_Q( tmp_QA, rc_mult2 , mult2Q );
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  +            opus_int64 tmp64;
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  +            tmp_QA = silk_SUB_SAT32( Aold_QA[ n ], MUL32_FRAC_Q( \
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  Aold_QA[ k - n - 1 ], rc_Q31, 31 ) );
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  +            tmp64 = silk_RSHIFT_ROUND64( silk_SMULL( tmp_QA, \
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  rc_mult2 ), mult2Q);
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  +            if( tmp64 > silk_int32_MAX || tmp64 < silk_int32_MIN ) {
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  +               return 0;
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  +            }
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  +            Anew_QA[ n ] = ( opus_int32 )tmp64;
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           }
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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7.  Integer Wrap-Around in LSF Decoding
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   It was discovered -- also from decoder fuzzing -- that an integer
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   wrap-around could occur when decoding bitstreams with extremely large
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   values for the high Line Spectral Frequency (LSF) parameters.  The
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   end result of the wrap-around is an illegal read access on the stack,
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   which the authors do not believe is exploitable but should
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   nonetheless be fixed.  The following patch around line 137 of silk/
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   NLSF_stabilize.c prevents the problem:
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              /* Keep delta_min distance between the NLSFs */
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            for( i = 1; i < L; i++ )
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   -            NLSF_Q15[i] = silk_max_int( NLSF_Q15[i], \
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   NLSF_Q15[i-1] + NDeltaMin_Q15[i] );
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   +            NLSF_Q15[i] = silk_max_int( NLSF_Q15[i], \
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   silk_ADD_SAT16( NLSF_Q15[i-1], NDeltaMin_Q15[i] ) );
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            /* Last NLSF should be no higher than 1 - NDeltaMin[L] */
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8.  Cap on Band Energy
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   On extreme bitstreams, it is possible for log-domain band energy
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   levels to exceed the maximum single-precision floating point value
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   once converted to a linear scale.  This would later cause the decoded
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   values to be NaN (not a number), possibly causing problems in the
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   software using the PCM values.  This can be avoided with the
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   following patch around line 552 of celt/quant_bands.c:
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          {
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             opus_val16 lg = ADD16(oldEBands[i+c*m->nbEBands],
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                             SHL16((opus_val16)eMeans[i],6));
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   +         lg = MIN32(QCONST32(32.f, 16), lg);
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             eBands[i+c*m->nbEBands] = PSHR32(celt_exp2(lg),4);
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          }
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          for (;i<m->nbEBands;i++)
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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9.  Hybrid Folding
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   When encoding in hybrid mode at low bitrate, we sometimes only have
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   enough bits to code a single Constrained-Energy Lapped Transform
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   (CELT) band (8 - 9.6 kHz).  When that happens, the second band (CELT
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   band 18, from 9.6 - 12 kHz) cannot use folding because it is wider
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   than the amount already coded and falls back to white noise.  Because
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   it can also happen on transients (e.g., stops), it can cause audible
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   pre-echo.
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   To address the issue, we change the folding behavior so that it is
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   never forced to fall back to Linear Congruential Generator (LCG) due
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   to the first band not containing enough coefficients to fold onto the
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   second band.  This is achieved by simply repeating part of the first
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   band in the folding of the second band.  This changes the code in
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   celt/bands.c around line 1237:
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            b = 0;
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         }
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  -      if (resynth && M*eBands[i]-N >= M*eBands[start] && \
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  (update_lowband || lowband_offset==0))
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  +      if (resynth && (M*eBands[i]-N >= M*eBands[start] || \
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  i==start+1) && (update_lowband || lowband_offset==0))
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               lowband_offset = i;
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  +      if (i == start+1)
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  +      {
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  +         int n1, n2;
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  +         int offset;
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  +         n1 = M*(eBands[start+1]-eBands[start]);
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  +         n2 = M*(eBands[start+2]-eBands[start+1]);
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  +         offset = M*eBands[start];
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  +         /* Duplicate enough of the first band folding data to \
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  be able to fold the second band.
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  +            Copies no data for CELT-only mode. */
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  +         OPUS_COPY(&norm[offset+n1], &norm[offset+2*n1 - n2], n2-n1);
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  +         if (C==2)
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  +            OPUS_COPY(&norm2[offset+n1], &norm2[offset+2*n1 - n2], \
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  n2-n1);
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  +      }
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  +
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         tf_change = tf_res[i];
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         if (i>=m->effEBands)
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         {
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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   as well as around line 1260:
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             fold_start = lowband_offset;
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             while(M*eBands[--fold_start] > effective_lowband);
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             fold_end = lowband_offset-1;
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   -         while(M*eBands[++fold_end] < effective_lowband+N);
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   +         while(++fold_end < i && M*eBands[fold_end] < \
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   effective_lowband+N);
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             x_cm = y_cm = 0;
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             fold_i = fold_start; do {
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               x_cm |= collapse_masks[fold_i*C+0];
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   The fix does not impact compatibility, because the improvement does
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   not depend on the encoder doing anything special.  There is also no
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   reasonable way for an encoder to use the original behavior to improve
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   quality over the proposed change.
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10.  Downmix to Mono
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   The last issue is not strictly a bug, but it is an issue that has
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   been reported when downmixing an Opus decoded stream to mono, whether
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   this is done inside the decoder or as a post-processing step on the
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   stereo decoder output.  Opus intensity stereo allows optionally
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   coding the two channels 180 degrees out of phase on a per-band basis.
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   This provides better stereo quality than forcing the two channels to
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   be in phase, but when the output is downmixed to mono, the energy in
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   the affected bands is canceled, sometimes resulting in audible
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   artifacts.
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   As a work-around for this issue, the decoder MAY choose not to apply
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   the 180-degree phase shift.  This can be useful when downmixing to
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   mono inside or outside of the decoder (e.g., requested explicitly
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   from an API).
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11.  New Test Vectors
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   Changes in Sections 9 and 10 have sufficient impact on the test
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   vectors to make them fail.  For this reason, this document also
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   updates the Opus test vectors.  The new test vectors now include two
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   decoded outputs for the same bitstream.  The outputs with suffix 'm'
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   do not apply the CELT 180-degree phase shift as allowed in
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   Section 10, while the outputs without the suffix do.  An
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   implementation is compliant as long as it passes either set of
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   vectors.
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Valin & Vos                  Standards Track                    [Page 9]
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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   Any Opus implementation that passes either the original test vectors
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   from RFC 6716 [RFC6716] or one of the new sets of test vectors is
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   compliant with the Opus specification.  However, newer
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   implementations SHOULD be based on the new test vectors rather than
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   the old ones.
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   The new test vectors are located at
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   newvectors-00.tar.gz>.  The SHA-1 hashes of the test vectors are:
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   e49b2862ceec7324790ed8019eb9744596d5be01  testvector01.bit
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   b809795ae1bcd606049d76de4ad24236257135e0  testvector02.bit
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   e0c4ecaeab44d35a2f5b6575cd996848e5ee2acc  testvector03.bit
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   a0f870cbe14ebb71fa9066ef3ee96e59c9a75187  testvector04.bit
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   9b3d92b48b965dfe9edf7b8a85edd4309f8cf7c8  testvector05.bit
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   28e66769ab17e17f72875283c14b19690cbc4e57  testvector06.bit
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   bacf467be3215fc7ec288f29e2477de1192947a6  testvector07.bit
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   ddbe08b688bbf934071f3893cd0030ce48dba12f  testvector08.bit
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   3932d9d61944dab1201645b8eeaad595d5705ecb  testvector09.bit
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   521eb2a1e0cc9c31b8b740673307c2d3b10c1900  testvector10.bit
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   6bc8f3146fcb96450c901b16c3d464ccdf4d5d96  testvector11.bit
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   338c3f1b4b97226bc60bc41038becbc6de06b28f  testvector12.bit
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   f5ef93884da6a814d311027918e9afc6f2e5c2c8  testvector01.dec
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   48ac1ff1995250a756e1e17bd32acefa8cd2b820  testvector02.dec
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   d15567e919db2d0e818727092c0af8dd9df23c95  testvector03.dec
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   1249dd28f5bd1e39a66fd6d99449dca7a8316342  testvector04.dec
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   b85675d81deef84a112c466cdff3b7aaa1d2fc76  testvector05.dec
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   55f0b191e90bfa6f98b50d01a64b44255cb4813e  testvector06.dec
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   61e8b357ab090b1801eeb578a28a6ae935e25b7b  testvector07.dec
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   a58539ee5321453b2ddf4c0f2500e856b3966862  testvector08.dec
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   bb96aad2cde188555862b7bbb3af6133851ef8f4  testvector09.dec
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   1b6cdf0413ac9965b16184b1bea129b5c0b2a37a  testvector10.dec
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   b1fff72b74666e3027801b29dbc48b31f80dee0d  testvector11.dec
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   98e09bbafed329e341c3b4052e9c4ba5fc83f9b1  testvector12.dec
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   1e7d984ea3fbb16ba998aea761f4893fbdb30157  testvector01m.dec
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   48ac1ff1995250a756e1e17bd32acefa8cd2b820  testvector02m.dec
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   d15567e919db2d0e818727092c0af8dd9df23c95  testvector03m.dec
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   1249dd28f5bd1e39a66fd6d99449dca7a8316342  testvector04m.dec
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   d70b0bad431e7d463bc3da49bd2d49f1c6d0a530  testvector05m.dec
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   6ac1648c3174c95fada565161a6c78bdbe59c77d  testvector06m.dec
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   fc5e2f709693738324fb4c8bdc0dad6dda04e713  testvector07m.dec
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   aad2ba397bf1b6a18e8e09b50e4b19627d479f00  testvector08m.dec
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   6feb7a7b9d7cdc1383baf8d5739e2a514bd0ba08  testvector09m.dec
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   1b6cdf0413ac9965b16184b1bea129b5c0b2a37a  testvector10m.dec
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   fd3d3a7b0dfbdab98d37ed9aa04b659b9fefbd18  testvector11m.dec
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   98e09bbafed329e341c3b4052e9c4ba5fc83f9b1  testvector12m.dec
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   Note that the decoder input bitstream files (.bit) are unchanged.
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Valin & Vos                  Standards Track                   [Page 10]
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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12.  Security Considerations
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   This document fixes two security issues reported on Opus that affect
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   the reference implementation in RFC 6716 [RFC6716]: CVE-2013-0899
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   <https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2013-0899> and CVE-2017-0381
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   <https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2017-0381>.  CVE-2013-0899
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   theoretically could have caused an information leak.  The leaked
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   information would have gone through the decoder process before being
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   accessible to the attacker.  The update in Section 4 fixes this.
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   CVE-2017-0381 could have resulted in a 16-bit out-of-bounds read from
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   a fixed location.  The update in Section 7 fixes this.  Beyond the
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   two fixed Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs), this document
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   adds no new security considerations beyond those in RFC 6716
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   [RFC6716].
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13.  IANA Considerations
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   This document does not require any IANA actions.
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14.  Normative References
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   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
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              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
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              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
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              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
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   [RFC6716]  Valin, JM., Vos, K., and T. Terriberry, "Definition of the
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              Opus Audio Codec", RFC 6716, DOI 10.17487/RFC6716,
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              September 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6716>.
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   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
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              2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
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              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
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Acknowledgements
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   We would like to thank Juri Aedla for reporting the issue with the
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   parsing of the Opus padding.  Thanks to Felicia Lim for reporting the
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   LSF integer overflow issue.  Also, thanks to Tina le Grand, Jonathan
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   Lennox, and Mark Harris for their feedback on this document.
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Valin & Vos                  Standards Track                   [Page 11]
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RFC 8251                       Opus Update                  October 2017
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Authors' Addresses
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   Jean-Marc Valin
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   Mozilla Corporation
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   331 E. Evelyn Avenue
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   Mountain View, CA  94041
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   United States of America
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   Phone: +1 650 903-0800
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   Email: jmvalin@jmvalin.ca
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   Koen Vos
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   vocTone
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   Email: koenvos74@gmail.com
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Valin & Vos                  Standards Track                   [Page 12]
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