On Wed, Oct 11, 2006 at 12:07:50PM -0400, Bob Chiodini wrote:
We had a power failure that took down the internet connection and local
DNS server. My local Cisco phones could not register (IP addresses are
hard-coded) and, because of the DNS failure I could not register with my
SIP provider.
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 10:20 -0400, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
As a general rule, if you aren't already, you should have your Linux
box running a local DNS server, to which everything in your net should
be pointed, and that server *should have an authoritative zone for your
local RFC 1918 network
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 10:20 -0400, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
On Wed, Oct 11, 2006 at 12:07:50PM -0400, Bob Chiodini wrote:
We had a power failure that took down the internet connection and local
DNS server. My local Cisco phones could not register (IP addresses are
hard-coded) and, because of
On Thu, Oct 12, 2006 at 04:53:51PM +0200, Dave Cotton wrote:
It's more likely directly linked with how asterisk deals with
registrations to external SIP/IAX servers it appears to sit there for
ever trying to do the registration, then when an internal phone tries to
re-register it can't, in the
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 12:00 -0400, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2006 at 04:53:51PM +0200, Dave Cotton wrote:
It's more likely directly linked with how asterisk deals with
registrations to external SIP/IAX servers it appears to sit there for
ever trying to do the registration, then
Dave Cotton wrote:
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 12:00 -0400, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2006 at 04:53:51PM +0200, Dave Cotton wrote:
It's more likely directly linked with how asterisk deals with
registrations to external SIP/IAX servers it appears to sit there for
ever trying to do the
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 11:56 -0500, Eric ManxPower Wieling wrote:
This has been talked about quite a bit on this mailing list. Search the
archives.
Why? I don't have a problem I've solved it in my case. But my solution
will be of no use whatsoever for most others. I don't need to register
Dave Cotton wrote:
On Thu, 2006-10-12 at 11:56 -0500, Eric ManxPower Wieling wrote:
This has been talked about quite a bit on this mailing list. Search the
archives.
Why? I don't have a problem I've solved it in my case. But my solution
will be of no use whatsoever for most others. I don't
I lost my internet connection today for a short time.
During that time 1.2.12.1 stopped talking to my phones.
Asterisk was still working as I got 2 voicemails. I have TDM analog
cards for incoming calls.
Anyway my cisco phones had X's (lost registration) and my uniden phones
said Registration
Jerry Geis wrote:
I lost my internet connection today for a short time.
During that time 1.2.12.1 stopped talking to my phones.
Asterisk was still working as I got 2 voicemails. I have TDM analog
cards for incoming calls.
Anyway my cisco phones had X's (lost registration) and my uniden
On Wed, 2006-10-11 at 11:19 -0400, Jerry Geis wrote:
I lost my internet connection today for a short time.
During that time 1.2.12.1 stopped talking to my phones.
Asterisk was still working as I got 2 voicemails. I have TDM analog
cards for incoming calls.
Anyway my cisco phones had X's
On Wed, 2006-10-11 at 11:19 -0400, Jerry Geis wrote:
I lost my internet connection today for a short time.
During that time 1.2.12.1 stopped talking to my phones.
Asterisk was still working as I got 2 voicemails. I have TDM analog
cards for incoming calls.
Anyway my cisco phones had X's
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