Hello,
I get image not found on that link, have you removed it?
Cheers,
Daniel
On 01.06.20 13:57, George Diamantopoulos wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I've recently been experimenting with dmq, and I've noticed something
> that seemed a little odd. shmem use would often be abnormally high on
>
Hello,
have you compiled and installed http_client module?
It has to be added to "include_modules", see:
*
https://kamailio.org/docs/tutorials/devel/kamailio-install-guide-git/#tuning-makefiles
Cheers,
Daniel
On 01.06.20 22:39, ke...@alcall.net wrote:
> Hello @everybody
>
> i can't load
Hello @everybody
i can't load http_client module, can someone advice ?
ERROR: No module matching found, failed to load module
version: kamailio 5.3.3 ( installed from GIT )
libcurl4-openssl-dev is installed too in Debian 9
thank for your attention
George,
I understand. Have you considered begrudgingly adding a lightweight B2BUA such
as SEMS in the middle?
I understand it greatly increases the operational complexity and moving parts
of your setup, to say nothing of infrastructural costs. I am all for using
Kamailio alone to solve
Hello Alex,
Thank you for your reply. Well, I'm interfacing with several PSTN
operators, and some of their networks' SIP endpoints (or other obscure IMS
entity there) are very picky in that if they don't like the capabilities
you serve for telephone-event (which is if they don't match theirs),
Hello all,
I've recently been experimenting with dmq, and I've noticed something that
seemed a little odd. shmem use would often be abnormally high on otherwise
idle kamailio nodes (literally, only dispatcher module OPTIONS were
exchanged at the time besides KDMQ messages).
After disabling the
George,
It may be orthogonal to the answer that you seek, but I’m going to ask anyway:
what is the overall motive underlying your SDP manipulation?
It seems to me that one should reason backward from that root cause. The kind
of SDP manipulation you are doing is seldom necessary in ordinarily
Hello all,
I'm facing one of those cases where I need to edit the body of a SIP
message, which is then to be fed to rtpengine for processing. Although I've
taken every precaution I've read about on this list and elsewhere, I can't
prevent the edited line from appearing twice in the outgoing