2008/12/1 Maxim Sobolev [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Joan,
Were there any other calls going through the machine at the very same
time? For some reason the RTPproxy was unable to locate any spare port,
do you run any other software that use lot of UDP ports on that machine?
This is a testing
2008/11/24 Klaus Darilion [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi Joan!
I suggest to create an openser config with the wizard on sipwise.com.
Then analyze this config and you will learn how to apply nat traversal
and use rtpproxy.
Ok, as Klaus have suggested, I've generated the configuration (also
with the
Joan,
The E10 means that the proxy was not able to open ports for
sending/receiving RTP traffic on. Can you please run the rtpproxy in
foreground (-f command line switch) and post log output here. This would
help a lot to diagnose the issue.
Joan wrote:
2008/11/24 Klaus Darilion [EMAIL
2008/11/25 Maxim Sobolev [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Joan,
The E10 means that the proxy was not able to open ports for
sending/receiving RTP traffic on. Can you please run the rtpproxy in
foreground (-f command line switch) and post log output here. This would
help a lot to diagnose the issue.
I
2008/11/21 Maxim Sobolev [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Joan,
The problem seems to be in unbalanced force_rtp_proxy() - which means
that you don't invoke force_rtp_proxy() on INVITE, but call it on
response. This is not allowed, since you would have one way audio in
such case.
In your script you call
Joan wrote:
Hello, I've been trying to setup a testing scenario to offer voip services.
At this point I've a phone behind a nat, and I am trying to
communicate to the openser, that in turns forwards the calls to an
asterisk server.
Before nating the phone and starting with the rtpproxy