Martin Joseph ha scritto:
The fact that qualify fails means you have a network issue. The same reason qualify fails (ie servers can't communicate) is the reason your users are experiencing quality issues in call.

It was also my first though, but my LAN is very SIMPLE, so I was wondering if something else could cause the problem.

turn off Qualify isn't going to fix anything IMO. It's just going to hide it from you.

You're probably right, but it depends on Asterisk internals (which I don't know well). If Asterisk would stop to send RTP audio when just a qualify packet get lost it can make the situation worst.

If the asterisk servers are all on your LAN then the network issue should be easily fixable.

It should, but my LAN is very simple...
I have a 10/100 Mbit switch with no more than 15 servers on it.

Traffic on the LAN is not heavy even if the time of the day I see in the logs make me think it could be an issue related to network load trafic

Anyhow I'll try to generate some heavy traffic on the LAN to see if it could be related to that.

I also noticed that this problem began to happen when I upgraded my Asterisk to 1.2, but it can be a concidence.

Do you think it could be related to bugs in ethernet drivers, kernel or whatever at the OS level ??

  If the Asterisk servers are at remote
locations and are using public internet, you might have problems resolving this completely.

We have some Asterisk spread all over the public Internet, but firstly we should solve this problem at a LAN level

Tnx for attention

Regards


Marty


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