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 Linux geek and random computer tamer check out my Linux Cookbook! http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/linuxckbk/ best book for sysadmins and power users ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _______________________________________________ Astlinux-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.kriscompanies.com/mailman/listinfo/astlinux-users Donations to support AstLinux are graciously accepted via PayPal to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
