Doesn't make any difference 'how' one might ping a remote site, ping will never qualify the Quality of the channel between two points. It will only suggest its up/down and possibly the delay at that specific point in time. Has nothing to do with whether packets were dropped or delayed some milliseconds before or after the ping, and the ping pkt would never be subjected to any positive QoS parameters implemented in the point-to-point network infrastructure. A large number of ISP's block icmp pkts anyway (for other reasons), so its not a reasonable way to determine anything.
-------------------- > how do you ping a TDM connection ? -------------------- > On Mon, 2004-07-12 at 11:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > On 11 Jul 2004 at 19:16, Rich Adamson wrote: > > > > > > QoS is most certainly an issue when making the decision to move off > > > > the PSTN. Is the performance of your VoIP system going to be > > > > comparable to the performance of your PSTN system? Sounds like a > > > > reasonable question to me. > > > > > > Not trying to get in the middle of whatever argument you're trying to > > > make, the poster's original question (although probably not worded all > > > that clear) can be answered by... no, asterisk cannot make a decision > > > to route calls via a second path due to quality issues on some first > > > choice path. > > > > Well...you could run an agi to check ping time for 1 sec and then if > > the differences are too much or the overall amount is too high, then > > use the POTS line... _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
