Jingle (protocol)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jingle is an extension to the Jabber/XMPP protocol, to allow for peer-to-peer (p2p) signalling for multimedia interactions such as voice or video. It was designed by Google and the XMPP Standards Foundation. The multimedia content itself can be delivered using the Real-time Transport Protocol, with Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) for NAT traversal.
As of January 26 2007, the Jingle standards are marked as being experimental, meaning that it has not yet been approved by the XMPP Standards Foundation.
The libjingle library, used by Google Talk to implement Jingle, has been released to the public under a Berkeley-style license. However, the version of the protocol that libjingle (and by extension Google Talk) implements differs from that published by the XMPP Software Foundation. Currently, most software which advertises support for Jingle is limited to Google Talk compatibility. See the Jabber wiki's page on Jingle for more details.
[edit] Clients supporting Jingle
- Coccinella
- Google Talk
- Kopete (since 0.12)
- Jabbin (2.0 beta2)
- Psi (experimental support in 0.11 beta)
- Tapioca
- Telepathy Gabble
[edit] External links
- XEP-0166: Jingle
- XEP-0167: Jingle Audio Content Description Format
- XEP-0177: Jingle Raw UDP Transport
- XEP-0179: Jingle IAX Transport Method
- XEP-0180: Jingle Video Content Description Format
- XEP-0176: Jingle ICE Transport
- XEP-0181: Jingle DTMF