> [snip] > > Below is an example of a working type=user and type=peer without > > the register statement prior to livevoip going bankrupt. > > > > ;[livevoip] ; for incoming calls from LiveVoIP.com > > ;type=user ; used for Incoming calls > > ;secret=mysecret-in > > ;deny=0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0 > > ;permit=217.160.244.186/255.255.255.0 > > ;context=livevoip-in > > ;disallow=all > > ;allow=gsm > > ;trunk=no > > > > ;[livevoipout] ; for outbound calls via LiveVoip.com > > ;type=peer ; used for outgoing calls > > ;host=217.160.244.186 > > ;username=myuserid > > ;secret=mysecret > > ;disallow=all > > ;allow=gsm > > ;trunk=no > > Do you have an example how the dialing string will look like? > I think when dialing I will need to put password in dialing context, > isn't it? > exten => exten => 888,1,Dial(IAX2/livevoip:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/${EXTEN,1})
Using the above example, your dialing string would be like: exten => 888,1,Dial(IAX2/livevoipout/${EXTEN,1}) and if you wanted to change codecs (or several other parameters), you simply do it in the [livevoipout] section, not in all the appearences of the exten => dialstring. Doing it this way, the password only appears within the context, not all the exten dialstrings. > If I use example above there is not need to have this context in iax.conf on > dialing-out server, isn't it? > ;[livevoipout] ; for outbound calls via LiveVoip.com > > ;type=peer ; used for outgoing calls > > ;host=217.160.244.186 > > ;username=myuserid > > ;secret=mysecret > > ;disallow=all > > ;allow=gsm > > ;trunk=no > > > I'm trying to avoid storing password in cdr record. > > On Wiki there are some samples described but they are very confusing, > especially whey are are reusing the same parameters. > I know there three ways of connecting asterisk boxs via iax. _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users