On Nov 19, 2007 8:22 PM, Ovidiu Sas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I don't have it setup like that -- but if OpenSER doesn't have to talk > > to something behind NAT, then yes -- either that, or from what I've > > heard, you need to have a local proxy that everything goes through so > > it can route it inside your internal network. I don't believe it can > > do it if your company is behind NAT and all the phones are exposed as > > only a single IP address. > > Multiple phones behind the same NAT can be handled properly using the > openser/rtpproxy tandem. > Also, openser can easily handle Phone-to-Phone traffic, providing > features like call forwarding, CLID, speed dial, smart routing (lcr, > enum ...) and it can integrate with a cluster of asterisk boxes for > features like: voicemail, conferencing, transcoding (using the setup > that Leif described).
Does that actually keep the RTP stream behind their NAT, or does OpenSER actually handle the RTP stream through the rtpproxy module? Basically you're saying OpenSER handles the RTP stream instead of Asterisk, correct? -- Leif Madsen. http://www.leifmadsen.com http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/asterisk --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]