Am Montag, den 17.03.2008, 13:59 +0000 schrieb Alan Williamson: > Afternoon one and all. > > I am having some interesting fun with our Asterisk setup. > > We have two CISCO handsets (7960) sitting on the same network (NAT). > > Each phone can successfully originate calls. > > Each phone can be called successfully from outside > > Each phone can be directly called by other extensions OUTSIDE the network > > > HOWEVER -- when those 2 phones try to call each other; the connection is > made, but no voice is heard. > > Any advice as to where i need to look?
Hi Alan, my guess is this has to do with the Audio path. As long as audio only traverses the NAT router on the Cisco site, that device seems to handle data paths quite well (you probably enabled different SIP ports for those two devices? At least that helped me to a stable reachable phone, which would just not work with more than one SIP 5060 phone behind a single NAT). The tricky part seems to be the "turnaround". One of the ciscos tries to send audio data to the external ip address of the nat router, for the other phone, and this might be something that the router does not handle. You could try to disallow direct audio between those two cisco phones by forcing Astrisk to "stay in the audio path" (e.g. let all audio packets go to asterisk, turnaround there and go to the other phone). This is surely not optimal in bandwidth terms etc., but may solve such NAT issues. You can force Asterisk to stay in the audio path by specifying a Dial option that requires Asterisk participation: Then it will not allow direct connection automatically. Options requiring key presses (allow * transfer or something, see Asterisk docs) should do. Somehow the "reinvite" could have to do with that as well, but don't ask me there :-) BR, Anselm _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
