That seems correct and sounds like it should work. What is the request
URI of the INVITE that comes back into Kamailio on the B leg? Does its
domain match the AOR domain? Do you have your registrar/usrloc set to
use domains on lookup()?
-- Alex
--
Alex Balashov | Principal | Evariste Systems
Yes, that is what has me a little boggled. If I don't, calls do not go through
so I am obviously confused, but that is how I was finally able to get full
duplex calls working.
In Asterisk, I have a Kamailio endpoint listening for traffic from Kamailio.
How would Asterisk know the Contact
On Sun, May 13, 2018 at 01:14:08PM +, Wilkins, Steve wrote:
> In my configuration I have to use Asterisk as my PBX, and I use
> Kamailio in front of Asterisk accepting and inspecting calls. I have
> many AORs, for which a phone can register to. I have noticed that,
> depending on the call,
Hello Pan,
Thank you for responding!,
In my configuration I have to use Asterisk as my PBX, and I use Kamailio in
front of Asterisk accepting and inspecting calls.
I have many AORs, for which a phone can register to. I have noticed that,
depending on the call, when a call arrives it gets
Hello Steve.
What are you trying to achieve?
The call could go from client A to Kamailio to client B. No need to involve
Asterisk. If you need PBX functionality, the INVITE needs to be routed to
Asterisk, which will most likely answer the call and then set up a new call to
client B. As
Hello All,
I am trying to resolve, in my mind, the flow of a WebRTC<=>WebRTC call using
Kamailio and Asterisk.
Each WebRTC client is registered in Kamailio and when I call WebTRC Client1
from WebRTC Client2 what I see is ->
The Invite is sent from Kamailio to Asterisk and then Asterisk is