[Petter Reinholdtsen] <p...@hungry.com> writes: > Nope. It do not seem to be available in Bullseye. I'll try with a > Bookworm machine and see if there is greater success there.
I tested on Bookworm, and while it is different, I did not manage to call the SIP endpoint of Zoom. With the mediastreamer2-plugin-openh264 package installed, the H.264 option show up as enabled, and disabling and enabling it do not ask for anything to be downloaded. This is great. The problem is that I try to connect it to my local Asterisk server, which appear to not work. I get a proxy account with the correct settings, but linphone do not seem to reach the server. Ignoring this, I try to enter the sip address of the Zoom room I want to connect to, but entering it in the upper text field just pop up a 'add contact' prompt that do not work (the 'sip address' field seem to be write protected), and just pressing [enter] after cut-n-pasting the SIP address just clear the field. Cut-n-pasting the SIP address in the text field just below it also did nothing. In short, while H.264 might be working with Linphone in Bookworm, I have no idea how to test it with my current setup. Perhaps it only work when accepting the terms of the external service? > Are you able to connect to Zoom yourself? Would be interesting to know the answer to this question. > Note, the majority of my issue with the current behaviour is the > pretend to download and enable H.264 stuff, which appear to not really > happen. Perhaps the download code should be disabled or changed to > suggest installing mediastreamer2-plugin-openh264? How is this > feature behaving in newer versions? It behave a lot better. I guess this issue can be seen as solved with linphone version 5.1.65-4. Still have not found a way to make Linphone useful, but at least the download popup seem to be gone. I am happy to debug some more, and am available on #debian-voip if someone want direct contact. -- Happy hacking Petter Reinholdtsen