Gah, so it depends on whatever the people calling my network are using? Is 
there any downside to allowing all codecs, like performance issues? Assume a 
magical world with no licensing hassles for proprietary codecs. :)

On Tuesday 05 December 2006 18:38, Michael Graves wrote:
> Carla,
>
> The system will offer to negotiate a connection with the allowed
> codecs. If it cannot then the call will simply be refused. You can
> allow GSM and ILBC as these are royalty free and commonly used. If you
> find that ILBC calls are poor quality you can always rem out that line
> later on.
>
> Noe also that you can specify the codecs in the general section and
> also on a per peer basis.
>
> Michael
>
> On Tue, 5 Dec 2006 18:02:24 -0800, Carla Schroder wrote:
> >hey all,
> >
> >How do you decide which codecs to allow in sip.conf? A typical
> > configuration looks like this:
> >
> >disallow=all
> >allow=alaw
> >allow=ulaw
> >
> >What happens when a call comes in that uses a different codec? Any
> > pointers to a good reference are welcome.
> >
> >--


-- 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Carla Schroder
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check out my Linux Cookbook! 
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