On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:11 AM, Eugen Dedu
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Irving Ruan wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 1:25 PM, Eugen Dedu
> > <[email protected]>wrote:
> >
> >> Irving Ruan wrote:
> >>> Hello ekiga devs,
> >>>
> >>> I am currently attempting to try and test video/audio throughput,
> delay,
> >>> etc. with Ekiga softphone via a two person conference. Are there any
> >>> programs out there that will allow me to analyze network traffic that's
> >>> specific to Ekiga's utilization of resources? Or, is there a way to
> >> better
> >>> "hook" the network packets while running Ekiga, say, from the command
> >> line
> >>> via some tool?
> >> Well, I do not think there is such a program, but you have two
> >> possibilities:
> >>
> >> - use wireshark and filter messages from and to your computer
> >>
> >> - or use ekiga -d 4 2>blahblah, and afterwards you look into this
> >> blahblah file, which contain SIP packets (not audio/video packets) and
> >> other information.  If you use the program at
> >> http://git.gnome.org/browse/ekiga/plain/src/ekiga-debug-analyser, you
> >> can remove the "other information" to see only SIP packets.
> >>
> >
> > Eugen,
> >
> > Thanks for the help. Is there an advantage to using Wireshark over the
> > command-line output option?
>
> with -d 4 you have only SIP headers, with wireshark you have everything.
>


I got some SIP and UDP packet information; I am currently attempting to do
live testing on Ekiga (user-to-user videoconferencing) and trying to obtain
the timestamps on RTP packets so I can observe the delay/jitter of one
packet from source to dest. Is there a way to obtain this information from
an ekiga debug log or some kind of udp packet analyzer?
_______________________________________________
Ekiga-devel-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/ekiga-devel-list

Reply via email to