I don't believe that addresses the OP's original post since he was talking about limiting "incoming" calls from specific IP addresses. You might want to validate how secure your definitions are considering the type=friend approach.

Lists @ EMS wrote:
Hi, I've only just now seen this post. This is how we have setup.

In sip.conf

[xxx.xxx.xx1]
host = xxx.xxx.xx1
type = friend
insecure = very
context = your-context
canreinvite=no

[xxx.xxx.xx2]
host = xxx.xxx.xx2
type = friend
insecure = very
context = your-context
canreinvite=no

[xxx.xxx.xx3]
host = xxx.xxx.xx3
type = friend
insecure = very
context = your-context
canreinvite=no

[xxx.xxx.xx4]
host = xxx.xxx.xx4
type = friend
insecure = very
context = your-context
canreinvite=no



Hope this helps.


Paulo


I wish I could offer some direct help on whether or not your method with a
comma separated list would work, but I can't. However, you could always
create a few entries using different formats and then run some tests against
them....


Still no answers huh?

I've asked a couple of time how to do this, and by the lack of answers, I'm guessing there is no way. The workaround unfortunately is to create an entry for each IP address in the range (I hope you don't have to open up a whole C class)
-----Original Message-----

How do I enter a trunk with multiple IPs.

xyz voip provider has 4 IPs and I want to allow incoming from any of
them: 1.1.1.1, 1.1.1.2, 1.1.1.3 and 1.1.1.4

Do I put 4 separate host= lines, do I put a single host=line that is comma separated or do I have to set up 4 separate incoming trunks?

TIA,
Warren

_______________________________________________
--Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
  http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users

Reply via email to