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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Forward copy of Register information to FreeSWITCH
(Alexandr Usov)
2. Re: Forward copy of Register information to FreeSWITCH
(Alexandr Usov)
3. Re: Forward copy of Register information to FreeSWITCH
(Daniel-Constantin Mierla)
4. Re: Forward copy of Register information to FreeSWITCH
(Frank Carmickle)
5. Re: Forward copy of Register information to FreeSWITCH
(Daniel-Constantin Mierla)
6. R: ERROR reply code Failure route (pars3c)
7. Re: message 484 (Slava Bendersky)
8. Re: message 484 (Slava Bendersky)
9. Re: Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ? (Rizwan Khan)
10. Re: Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ? (Alex Balashov)
11. Re: How to turn on debugging in kamailio? (mark li)
12. Re: Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ? (Rizwan Khan)
13. Re: Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ? (Alex Balashov)
14. Re: message 484 (Pedro Ni?o)
15. Re: message 484 (Slava Bendersky)
16. Re: Kamailio ICSCF strange forking (DURECU, OLIVIER (OLIVIER))
17. Re: Crash on REGISTER (Igor Potjevlesch)
18. (no subject) (info@vintageelectronics.ca)
19. rls, rls_get_by_service_uri(): match not found (Mihai Marin)
20. Re: message 484 (Slava Bendersky)
21. Kamailio on Android (jay binks)
22. Social Configuration module for Kamailio released (Alex Balashov)
23. Re: Social Configuration module for Kamailio released
(Kelvin Chua)
24. Re: Intermittent Audio/video call (Wingsravi R)
25. Re: Dimension a kamailio server (Rizwan Khan)
26. Re: Dimension a kamailio server (Alex Balashov)
27. Re: Dimension a kamailio server (Alex Balashov)
28. Re: Dimension a kamailio server (Rainer Piper)
29. SIP - WebRTC gateway (Zappasodi Daniele)
30. Re: Dimension a kamailio server (Rainer Piper)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:07:13 +0300
From: Alexandr Usov <blessendor@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Forward copy of Register information to
FreeSWITCH
Message-ID:
<CAEaKXwDcmT5urkuKxLS50fbznmTKnc=1fknAX_iCMBxHq=igZA@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
2014-03-28 18:16 GMT+02:00 Frank Carmickle <frank@carmickle.com>:
>
> Freeswitch does not require registration. What are you trying to use
> freeswitch for? Voicemail, B2BUA (transcoding), ivr? See the acl
> configuration or don't use the directory at all.
>
>
I want use Kamailio only for registrations and use rtpproxy for registered
peers.
So all PBX features I want to use on FS (and/or Asterisk).
So acl style can't serve Voicemail and presence features for not registered
(on FS) users?
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Message: 2
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:20:43 +0300
From: Alexandr Usov <blessendor@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Forward copy of Register information to
FreeSWITCH
Message-ID:
<CAEaKXwAzA2tWcnM7PNwgrozA5yEPkgZakS=88yDkcLRRCP0WGg@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Thanks Richard, I will trying to use your solution on practice.
Need roll-back of default FS configs, because it seems that my /dev/hands
not working good)
2014-03-28 20:48 GMT+02:00 Richard Brady <rnbrady@gmail.com>:
> Hi Alexandr
>
> On 28 March 2014 15:36, Alexandr Usov <blessendor@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I am already have some practice to integrate Kamailio with Asterisk, when
>> all users creates and registers in Kamailio, and calls go to/from Asterisk
>> with static "host=kamailio_ip" settings for each user on Asterisk side.
>>
>> I can't (don't know - how to) use in same way integration with
>> FreeSWITCH.
>>
>
> You could just set <param name="outbound-proxy" value="kamailio_ip"/> in
> the SIP profile which would send ALL calls via Kamailio.
>
>
>> Can't create in FS directory structure a user with "host=kamailio_ip", FS
>> require registration.
>>
>
> For each user add:
>
> <param name="dial-string"
> value="sofia/internal/${dialed_user}@kamailio_ip"/>
>
> This replaces the default "dial-string". See more details here:
> http://wiki.freeswitch.org/wiki/XML_User_Directory_Guide#Dial_String
>
>
>> Maybe I can register user on Kamailio and send additional registration
>> request to FS with src ip changed to kamailio (lan ip)?
>>
>
> This can also work. Both Kamailio and FS support RFC 3327 and the Path
> header which can we used to tell FS to send calls for the user via
> Kamailio.
>
> Note these are 3 separate solutions, you should probably only do one.
>
> Regards,
> Richard
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
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------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 13:22:48 +0200
From: Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Forward copy of Register information to
FreeSWITCH
Message-ID: <53395008.9040609@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed"
On 31/03/14 13:07, Alexandr Usov wrote:
>
>
> 2014-03-28 18:16 GMT+02:00 Frank Carmickle <frank@carmickle.com
> <mailto:frank@carmickle.com>>:
>
>
> Freeswitch does not require registration. What are you trying to
> use freeswitch for? Voicemail, B2BUA (transcoding), ivr? See the
> acl configuration or don't use the directory at all.
>
>
> I want use Kamailio only for registrations and use rtpproxy for
> registered peers.
> So all PBX features I want to use on FS (and/or Asterisk).
>
> So acl style can't serve Voicemail and presence features for not
> registered (on FS) users?
For presence you don't need registration. For example, for MWI just
forward the subscribe request to freeswitch, being sure it matches the
voicebox/voicemail id.
The default config for kamailio has logic for forwarding mwi
subscriptions to voicemail server.
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.com
http://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
Kamailio World Conference - April 2-4, 2014, Berlin, Germany
http://www.kamailioworld.com
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Message: 4
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 08:10:32 -0400
From: Frank Carmickle <frank@carmickle.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Forward copy of Register information to
FreeSWITCH
Message-ID: <FE379A31-87F6-4D84-9072-1B6D4DBF1ED7@carmickle.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
On Mar 31, 2014, at 7:22 AM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On 31/03/14 13:07, Alexandr Usov wrote:
>>
>>
>> 2014-03-28 18:16 GMT+02:00 Frank Carmickle <frank@carmickle.com>:
>>
>> Freeswitch does not require registration. What are you trying to use freeswitch for? Voicemail, B2BUA (transcoding), ivr? See the acl configuration or don't use the directory at all.
>>
>>
>> I want use Kamailio only for registrations and use rtpproxy for registered peers.
>> So all PBX features I want to use on FS (and/or Asterisk).
>>
>> So acl style can't serve Voicemail and presence features for not registered (on FS) users?
> For presence you don't need registration. For example, for MWI just forward the subscribe request to freeswitch, being sure it matches the voicebox/voicemail id.
>
> The default config for kamailio has logic for forwarding mwi subscriptions to voicemail server.
You would need to create the voicemail boxes in the voicemail database for each user. You should do this when creating the user.
--FC
------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:14:41 +0200
From: Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Forward copy of Register information to
FreeSWITCH
Message-ID: <53395C31.5070404@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Hello,
On 31/03/14 14:10, Frank Carmickle wrote:
> On Mar 31, 2014, at 7:22 AM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On 31/03/14 13:07, Alexandr Usov wrote:
>>>
>>> 2014-03-28 18:16 GMT+02:00 Frank Carmickle <frank@carmickle.com>:
>>>
>>> Freeswitch does not require registration. What are you trying to use freeswitch for? Voicemail, B2BUA (transcoding), ivr? See the acl configuration or don't use the directory at all.
>>>
>>>
>>> I want use Kamailio only for registrations and use rtpproxy for registered peers.
>>> So all PBX features I want to use on FS (and/or Asterisk).
>>>
>>> So acl style can't serve Voicemail and presence features for not registered (on FS) users?
>> For presence you don't need registration. For example, for MWI just forward the subscribe request to freeswitch, being sure it matches the voicebox/voicemail id.
>>
>> The default config for kamailio has logic for forwarding mwi subscriptions to voicemail server.
> You would need to create the voicemail boxes in the voicemail database for each user. You should do this when creating the user.
they can be generated on the fly as well -- a starting point here:
-
http://kb.asipto.com/freeswitch:kamailio-3.3.x-freeswitch-1.2.x-sbc#user_directory
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.com
http://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
Kamailio World Conference - April 2-4, 2014, Berlin, Germany
http://www.kamailioworld.com
------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:36:52 +0200
From: "pars3c" <pars3c@gmail.com>
To: <miconda@gmail.com>, "'Kamailio \(SER\) - Users Mailing List'"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: [SR-Users] R: ERROR reply code Failure route
Message-ID: <035401cf4cdd$e5be6fa0$b13b4ee0$@com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
I checked the trace ip, and we don?t receive 500, but only 487
Thanks
Da: sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org [mailto:sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org] Per conto di Daniel-Constantin Mierla
Inviato: luned? 31 marzo 2014 10:27
A: Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List
Oggetto: Re: [SR-Users] ERROR reply code Failure route
Hello,
can you look at sip traffic to see if a 500 response is received and then another one with code 487 comes?
Cheers,
Daniel
On 31/03/14 10:19, pars3c wrote:
Hello,
i receive many error on the failure route like this ? t_should_relay_response(): ERROR: t_should_relay_response: status rewrite by UAS: stored: 500, received: 487? . Do you know why ?
My version of Kamailio is the 4.1.2 and the code is this:
failure_route[MANAGE_FAILURE] {
if (t_is_canceled()) {
exit;
}
revert_uri();
if (!cr_next_domain("$avp(s:carrier)", "$avp(s:domain)", "$rU", "$avp(s:host)", "$T_reply_code", "$avp(s:domain)")) {
exit;
}
if (!cr_route("$avp(s:carrier)", "$avp(s:domain)", "$rU", "$rU", "call_id")) {
exit;
}
$avp(s:host)= $rd;
t_on_failure("MANAGE_FAILURE");
t_on_branch("MANAGE_BRANCH");
append_branch();
if (!t_relay()) {
exit;
}
}
Thanks to all
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.com
http://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
Kamailio World Conference - April 2-4, 2014, Berlin, Germany
http://www.kamailioworld.com
_____
Nessun virus nel messaggio.
Controllato da AVG - www.avg.com
Versione: 2014.0.4354 / Database dei virus: 3722/7259 - Data di rilascio: 27/03/2014
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Message: 7
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 08:43:37 -0400 (EDT)
From: Slava Bendersky <volga629@networklab.ca>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Message-ID:
<1278111208.2211832.1396269817976.JavaMail.zimbra@skillsearch.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello Olle,
Overlap is disabled on asterisk. I more wonder about this message.
Mar 31 08:40:20 dsm01 /usr/sbin/kamailio[6101]: WARNING: sanity [sanity.c:833]: check_parse_uris(): sanity_check(): check_parse_uris(): failed to parse From uri
Because from direct connected network, call failing to voicemail.
Slva.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Olle E. Johansson" <oej@edvina.net>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 3:33:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Hi!
I guess this is a poorly configured Asterisk server that has "Allowoverlap" enabled.
A 484 is used for overlap dialing. The server says "I need more digits to complete this call".
/O
On 31 Mar 2014, at 02:30, Pedro Ni?o < nino.pedro@gmail.com > wrote:
I think this is the correct behavior, as asterisk server is complaining about the address/request not containing all the necesary data to process the message
Can you please elaborate with a bit more of detail? Also can use tools like sngrep, tcpdump (or wireshark) to have a better view of the complete call flow.
Maybe that way we can help.
El mar 29, 2014 1:59 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
<blockquote>
Hello Everyone,
How to correct message 484
Is need use txt module to fill string with correct information ?
<--- SIP read from UDP: 192.168.100.145:5060 --->
SIP/2.0 484 Address Incomplete
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 192.168.100.145:5062;branch=z9hG4bK5ec564e6
From: "asterisk" < sip:1300@networklab.loc >;tag=as0a530a8d
To: < sip:192.168.100.145 >;tag=b27e1a1d33761e85846fc98f5f3a7e58.93df ---> This line ins question.
Call-ID: 631e893f75da720865e8468132884367@networklab.loc
CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
Contact: < sip:1300@192.168.100.145:5062 >;expires=3600
Server: kamailio (4.1.2 (x86_64/linux))
Content-Length: 0
Slava.
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
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sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
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http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
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Message: 8
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 08:46:18 -0400 (EDT)
From: Slava Bendersky <volga629@networklab.ca>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Message-ID:
<2123610737.2212356.1396269978573.JavaMail.zimbra@skillsearch.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello Olle,
This only one place. I don't see xlog only function error.
if(!sanity_check("1511", "7"))
{
xlog("Malformed SIP message from $si:$sp\n");
exit;
}
Slava.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Olle E. Johansson" <oej@edvina.net>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 3:33:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Hi!
I guess this is a poorly configured Asterisk server that has "Allowoverlap" enabled.
A 484 is used for overlap dialing. The server says "I need more digits to complete this call".
/O
On 31 Mar 2014, at 02:30, Pedro Ni?o < nino.pedro@gmail.com > wrote:
I think this is the correct behavior, as asterisk server is complaining about the address/request not containing all the necesary data to process the message
Can you please elaborate with a bit more of detail? Also can use tools like sngrep, tcpdump (or wireshark) to have a better view of the complete call flow.
Maybe that way we can help.
El mar 29, 2014 1:59 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
<blockquote>
Hello Everyone,
How to correct message 484
Is need use txt module to fill string with correct information ?
<--- SIP read from UDP: 192.168.100.145:5060 --->
SIP/2.0 484 Address Incomplete
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 192.168.100.145:5062;branch=z9hG4bK5ec564e6
From: "asterisk" < sip:1300@networklab.loc >;tag=as0a530a8d
To: < sip:192.168.100.145 >;tag=b27e1a1d33761e85846fc98f5f3a7e58.93df ---> This line ins question.
Call-ID: 631e893f75da720865e8468132884367@networklab.loc
CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
Contact: < sip:1300@192.168.100.145:5062 >;expires=3600
Server: kamailio (4.1.2 (x86_64/linux))
Content-Length: 0
Slava.
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
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Message: 9
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:13:00 +0500
From: Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ?
Message-ID:
<CALByW_Ha8QOWmB2VZFDbnLbBQCWs255n5GumgmYjVV=hXe0FdQ@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Any updates guys ?
Rizwan Khan
On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 2:13 PM, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can they be installed on an HP UX platform. Considering they are written
> in C, it shouldnt be a porblem, but has anyone tried that?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
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Message: 10
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 09:16:07 -0400
From: Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
To: sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ?
Message-ID: <53396A97.2010600@evaristesys.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
I don't know that there are any HP-UX users here. Try it and let us
know! :-)
On 03/31/2014 09:13 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
> Any updates guys ?
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 2:13 PM, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com
> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Can they be installed on an HP UX platform. Considering they are
> written in C, it shouldnt be a porblem, but has anyone tried that?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
--
Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0670
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
------------------------------
Message: 11
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 06:18:17 -0700 (PDT)
From: mark li <limark67@yahoo.com>
To: "Kamailio \(SER\) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] How to turn on debugging in kamailio?
Message-ID:
<1396271897.85205.YahooMailNeo@web161305.mail.bf1.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Does anyone have any other suggestions / ideas on what I might be doing wrong / missing?? I can't any log entries to show up in my syslog file.? I'm trying to add custom messages to debug a specific scenario...
I prefer to log it to a file instead of to the console because there's a lot of debug data on the console and it's hard to scroll through.
thanks.
________________________________
From: mark li <limark67@yahoo.com>
To: Olle E. Johansson <oej@edvina.net>
Cc: Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2014 8:47:51 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] How to turn on debugging in kamailio?
Here's a copy of my cfg file:? http://pastebin.com/GtDwWKWr
I tried to run with the switches you mentioned... but i still don't get anything logged to syslog.
?
sorry... and thanks for your patience.
________________________________
From: Olle E. Johansson <oej@edvina.net>
To: mark li <limark67@yahoo.com>
Cc: Olle E Johansson <oej@edvina.net>; Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2014 2:55:22 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] How to turn on debugging in kamailio?
On 27 Mar 2014, at 21:31, mark li <limark67@yahoo.com> wrote:
Olle
>I've added some debug statements using the XLOG function like so:
>
>xlog("L_INFO", "my custom message");
>
>but none of my debug statements appear in syslog.? I don't get any errors either when I restart kamailio.
>any suggestion?
>I am loading the module in kamailio.cfg... I see a line that says "loadmodule xlog.so"
>and i've also added a modparam for the log like so:
>
>modparam("xlog", "buf_size", 8192)
>
Start kamailio in the foreground with "-D 1 -E" and you'll see the log messages on your console if Kamailio runs. If you haven't got a listen address in the config, you might want to add a "-l <param>" to force kamailio to listen to the right IP address (replace <param> with a listen address, run "kamailio -h" for docs).
/O
_______________________________________________
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Message: 12
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:25:49 +0500
From: Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ?
Message-ID:
<CALByW_GeYh5ofqXv4bbzTn2UAU7_kM=25jeGWBicbFg0=JaHaw@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
OK, i will :)
Rizwan Khan
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 6:16 PM, Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>wrote:
> I don't know that there are any HP-UX users here. Try it and let us know!
> :-)
>
>
> On 03/31/2014 09:13 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>
> Any updates guys ?
>>
>> Rizwan Khan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 2:13 PM, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com
>> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>> Can they be installed on an HP UX platform. Considering they are
>> written in C, it shouldnt be a porblem, but has anyone tried that?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Rizwan Khan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>
>>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov - Principal
> Evariste Systems LLC
> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
> Suite 106
> Decatur, GA 30030
> United States
> Tel: +1-678-954-0670
> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
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Message: 13
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 09:27:41 -0400
From: Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
To: sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Kamailio and Asterisks work on HP-UX ?
Message-ID: <53396D4D.90307@evaristesys.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
While you're at it, port Kamailio to AIX, too. :-) Could be fun.
On 03/31/2014 09:25 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
> OK, i will :)
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 6:16 PM, Alex Balashov
> <abalashov@evaristesys.com <mailto:abalashov@evaristesys.com>> wrote:
>
> I don't know that there are any HP-UX users here. Try it and let us
> know! :-)
>
>
> On 03/31/2014 09:13 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>
> Any updates guys ?
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 2:13 PM, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com
> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>
> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>>> wrote:
>
> Can they be installed on an HP UX platform. Considering
> they are
> written in C, it shouldnt be a porblem, but has anyone
> tried that?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
> mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/__cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-__users <http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users>
>
>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov - Principal
> Evariste Systems LLC
> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
> Suite 106
> Decatur, GA 30030
> United States
> Tel: +1-678-954-0670 <tel:%2B1-678-954-0670>
> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
> _________________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/__cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-__users
> <http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
--
Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0670
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
------------------------------
Message: 14
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 09:21:11 -0430
From: Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Message-ID:
<CAEad=i9wtkd=8HKeWJom1=xNjVqu5ZsTdm5H_T6BE7CT3OmOJA@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
So, the problem is that calls made from a direct connected user, falls to
voicemail? Even if the other user is online?
All the users are on the same asterisk server? Or using a trunk outside?
As a test, tried to register to the asterisk server directly and test the
call?
That's why I was asking to elaborate, and show a bit more about the call
flow behavior... A small text diagram and desired behavior would be useful
El mar 31, 2014 8:13 AM, "Slava Bendersky" <volga629@networklab.ca>
escribi?:
> Hello Olle,
> Overlap is disabled on asterisk. I more wonder about this message.
>
> Mar 31 08:40:20 dsm01 /usr/sbin/kamailio[6101]: WARNING: sanity
> [sanity.c:833]: check_parse_uris(): sanity_check(): check_parse_uris():
> failed to parse From uri
>
> Because from direct connected network, call failing to voicemail.
>
> Slva.
> ------------------------------
> *From: *"Olle E. Johansson" <oej@edvina.net>
> *To: *"Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> >
> *Sent: *Monday, March 31, 2014 3:33:11 AM
> *Subject: *Re: [SR-Users] message 484
>
> Hi!
> I guess this is a poorly configured Asterisk server that has
> "Allowoverlap" enabled.
> A 484 is used for overlap dialing. The server says "I need more digits to
> complete this call".
>
> /O
>
> On 31 Mar 2014, at 02:30, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I think this is the correct behavior, as asterisk server is complaining
> about the address/request not containing all the necesary data to process
> the message
>
> Can you please elaborate with a bit more of detail? Also can use tools
> like sngrep, tcpdump (or wireshark) to have a better view of the complete
> call flow.
>
> Maybe that way we can help.
> El mar 29, 2014 1:59 AM, "Slava Bendersky" <volga629@networklab.ca>
> escribi?:
>
>> Hello Everyone,
>> How to correct message 484
>> Is need use txt module to fill string with correct information ?
>>
>> <--- SIP read from UDP:192.168.100.145:5060 --->
>> SIP/2.0 484 Address Incomplete
>> Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 192.168.100.145:5062;branch=z9hG4bK5ec564e6
>> From: "asterisk" <sip:1300@networklab.loc>;tag=as0a530a8d
>> To: <sip:192.168.100.145>;tag=b27e1a1d33761e85846fc98f5f3a7e58.93df
>> ---> This line ins question.
>> Call-ID: 631e893f75da720865e8468132884367@networklab.loc
>> CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
>> Contact: <sip:1300@192.168.100.145:5062>;expires=3600
>> Server: kamailio (4.1.2 (x86_64/linux))
>> Content-Length: 0
>>
>>
>> Slava.
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>
>> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
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------------------------------
Message: 15
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 10:09:54 -0400 (EDT)
From: Slava Bendersky <volga629@networklab.ca>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Message-ID:
<1712391001.2228884.1396274994378.JavaMail.zimbra@skillsearch.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello Pedro,
Asterisk is used only for voicemail. All extension are terminates and registrar on kamailio gateway. Kamailio used ldap and registration working ok. I can come back to lab soon after meeting and I post some debug.
Slava.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Pedro Ni?o" <nino.pedro@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 9:51:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
So, the problem is that calls made from a direct connected user, falls to voicemail? Even if the other user is online?
All the users are on the same asterisk server? Or using a trunk outside?
As a test, tried to register to the asterisk server directly and test the call?
That's why I was asking to elaborate, and show a bit more about the call flow behavior... A small text diagram and desired behavior would be useful
El mar 31, 2014 8:13 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
Hello Olle,
Overlap is disabled on asterisk. I more wonder about this message.
Mar 31 08:40:20 dsm01 /usr/sbin/kamailio[6101]: WARNING: sanity [sanity.c:833]: check_parse_uris(): sanity_check(): check_parse_uris(): failed to parse From uri
Because from direct connected network, call failing to voicemail.
Slva.
From: "Olle E. Johansson" < oej@edvina.net >
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" < sr-users@lists.sip-router.org >
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 3:33:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Hi!
I guess this is a poorly configured Asterisk server that has "Allowoverlap" enabled.
A 484 is used for overlap dialing. The server says "I need more digits to complete this call".
/O
On 31 Mar 2014, at 02:30, Pedro Ni?o < nino.pedro@gmail.com > wrote:
<blockquote>
I think this is the correct behavior, as asterisk server is complaining about the address/request not containing all the necesary data to process the message
Can you please elaborate with a bit more of detail? Also can use tools like sngrep, tcpdump (or wireshark) to have a better view of the complete call flow.
Maybe that way we can help.
El mar 29, 2014 1:59 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
<blockquote>
Hello Everyone,
How to correct message 484
Is need use txt module to fill string with correct information ?
<--- SIP read from UDP: 192.168.100.145:5060 --->
SIP/2.0 484 Address Incomplete
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 192.168.100.145:5062;branch=z9hG4bK5ec564e6
From: "asterisk" < sip:1300@networklab.loc >;tag=as0a530a8d
To: < sip:192.168.100.145 >;tag=b27e1a1d33761e85846fc98f5f3a7e58.93df ---> This line ins question.
Call-ID: 631e893f75da720865e8468132884367@networklab.loc
CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
Contact: < sip:1300@192.168.100.145:5062 >;expires=3600
Server: kamailio (4.1.2 (x86_64/linux))
Content-Length: 0
Slava.
_______________________________________________
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sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
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sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
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Message: 16
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:34:44 +0000
From: "DURECU, OLIVIER (OLIVIER)" <olivier.durecu@alcatel-lucent.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Kamailio ICSCF strange forking
Message-ID:
<10F8D61BDA174943A50091439385E1DD01D32058@FR712WXCHMBA12.zeu.alcatel-lucent.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Answering to myself: the I-CSCF routing logic contains a "append_branch()" on reception of the HSS LIR answer which is the cause of this use less fork
Removed it and everything is fine
Olivier
De : sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org [mailto:sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org] De la part de DURECU, OLIVIER (OLIVIER)
Envoy? : vendredi 21 mars 2014 17:39
? : sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
Objet : [SR-Users] Kamailio ICSCF strange forking
Hi all,
I have deployed an IMS based on Kamailio 4.1.2 and I don't manage establishing a call.
Users registration is OK but when I initiate the call from A@ims.net<mailto:A@ims.net> to B@ims.net<mailto:B@ims.net>, I notice a strange I-CSCF behavior
The INVITE message goes OK from P-CSCF to S-CSCF then to I-CSCF. Till this point everything is fine...
Then the I-CSCF performs its LIR diameter request and gets an Ok response from the HSS with a S-CSCF URI
The I-CSCF forwards the INVITE at the received S-CSCF.
BUT at the same time the I-CSCF generates a DNS request to resolve ims.net SIP SRV (it gets itself as answer...) and forwards a second INVITE (exact copy from the one sent to the S-CSCF) to itself
So I have 2 copies of the same INVITE dialog travelling in the network and messing everything.
Any idea of the cause of this behavior .
Thanks for your support...
Olivier
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Message: 17
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:34:08 +0200
From: "Igor Potjevlesch" <igor.potjevlesch@gmail.com>
To: <miconda@gmail.com>, "'Kamailio \(SER\) - Users Mailing List'"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Crash on REGISTER
Message-ID: <00a401cf4cff$0b5d0250$221706f0$@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello,
Is the patch has been ported within 4.1.x?
We were studying the opportunity to move on 4.1 branches.
Regards,
Igor.
De : Igor Potjevlesch [mailto:igor.potjevlesch@gmail.com]
Envoy? : dimanche 30 mars 2014 16:52
? : miconda@gmail.com; 'Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List'
Objet : RE: [SR-Users] Crash on REGISTER
Hello Daniel,
Looks that GDB works after all. Here is the result of a BT:
#0 0x00000030f2230f30 in escape_string_for_mysql () from /usr/lib64/mysql/libmysqlclient.so.16
#1 0x00000030f22269c1 in mysql_real_escape_string () from /usr/lib64/mysql/libmysqlclient.so.16
#2 0x00007f3eac7000e5 in db_mysql_val2str (_c=0x7f3eaca8a6d0, _v=0x7f3ea9489e40, _s=0x2170beb "sip.fr','**********','s','172.16.*.***')", _len=0x7fffee8bdddc) at km_val.c:95
#3 0x00007f3eac2dd141 in db_print_values (_c=0x7f3eaca8a6d0,
_b=0x2170b0c "'INVITE','95ffcd055e0f78f7d5d397020e89288d3a0fe8be','1695671811','69de-4a5-2272014164728-******-0-91.***.***.***','200','OK','2014-03-27 17:47:29','**********','**********@**.***.***.***','**.***.***."..., _l=65379, _v=<value optimized out>, _n=15, val2str=0x7f3eac6fffa0 <db_mysql_val2str>) at db_ut.c:318
#4 0x00007f3eac2d8a90 in db_do_insert_cmd (_h=0x7f3eaca8a6d0, _k=<value optimized out>, _v=0x7f3ea9489ce0, _n=15, val2str=0x7f3eac6fffa0 <db_mysql_val2str>, submit_query=0x7f3eac6faed0 <db_mysql_submit_query>, mode=0)
at db_query.c:224
#5 0x00007f3eac2d8e00 in db_do_insert (_h=<value optimized out>, _k=<value optimized out>, _v=<value optimized out>, _n=<value optimized out>, val2str=<value optimized out>, submit_query=<value optimized out>)
at db_query.c:249
#6 0x00007f3ea92696a9 in acc_db_request (rq=0x7f3e9d2f5ab0) at acc.c:407
#7 0x00007f3ea9271472 in acc_onreply (t=<value optimized out>, type=<value optimized out>, ps=<value optimized out>) at acc_logic.c:453
#8 tmcb_func (t=<value optimized out>, type=<value optimized out>, ps=<value optimized out>) at acc_logic.c:541
#9 0x00007f3eab4288ad in run_trans_callbacks_internal (cb_lst=<value optimized out>, type=512, trans=0x7f3e9852f350, params=0x7fffee8be030) at t_hooks.c:290
#10 0x00007f3eab428a94 in run_trans_callbacks_with_buf (type=<value optimized out>, rbuf=0x7f3e9852f410, req=<value optimized out>, repl=<value optimized out>, flags=<value optimized out>) at t_hooks.c:336
#11 0x00007f3eab45a01a in relay_reply (t=<value optimized out>, p_msg=<value optimized out>, branch=0, msg_status=200, cancel_data=0x7fffee8be3d0, do_put_on_wait=1) at t_reply.c:1884
#12 0x00007f3eab45ad86 in reply_received (p_msg=0x7f3eaca45940) at t_reply.c:2374
#13 0x0000000000456d54 in do_forward_reply (msg=0x7f3eaca45940, mode=<value optimized out>) at forward.c:799
#14 0x000000000049f4be in receive_msg (
buf=0x8d9e80 "SIP/2.0 200 OK\r\nVia: SIP/2.0/UDP ***.**.*.*;branch=z9hG4bKfd8f.a6cf4dd7.0\r\nVia: SIP/2.0/UDP **.***.***.***:5060;rport=5060;branch=z9hG4bK-884-1395938848-3723-175\r\nFrom: \"**********\"<sip:**********@91. <sip:**********@91.%22...,%20len=%3cvalue%20optimized%20out> "..., len=<value optimized out>, rcv_info=0x7fffee8be690) at receive.c:272
#15 0x0000000000532326 in udp_rcv_loop () at udp_server.c:557
#16 0x0000000000467a7a in main_loop () at main.c:1638
#17 0x000000000046a912 in main (argc=<value optimized out>, argv=<value optimized out>) at main.c:2566
Regards,
Igor.
De : Igor Potjevlesch [ <mailto:igor.potjevlesch@gmail.com> mailto:igor.potjevlesch@gmail.com]
Envoy? : samedi 29 mars 2014 14:28
? : <mailto:miconda@gmail.com> miconda@gmail.com; 'Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List'
Objet : RE: [SR-Users] Crash on REGISTER
Hello Daniel,
Thank you for your answer.
I still not understand why I got the following output when I try to launch GDB:
[?]
Reading symbols from /usr/local/sbin/kamailio...done.
[New Thread 28294]
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/db_mysql.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/f9/f94a798d840b8956b6972d3be7dcd92dae5087
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libsrdb2.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/78/5a53c27df430a7875621f7089560958eb5d2cb
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libsrdb1.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/65/74d76438ee2576d6aaa449f75ec7d6450ac559
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/mi_fifo.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6b/6850df300ce539377de8ab2af64b3000a5ab74
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libkmi.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/98/e264222ea1a4a713f63513ce7c397fd8e4bedf
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/kex.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/f4/bec7e2c6007bb0efd68c99a84417b2197c320d
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libkcore.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/9b/627ac3a6c1c44e20e719deabe84e39e1468765
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libsrutils.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/a6/8fa172f0c0b5b97a2fe6885d801370fb89e117
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/corex.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/76/5a1e313d85ba61a74c012341b73807f59b89bf
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/tm.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/2c/3f3f1094a3c35ce6954443300212c2b9efb451
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/tmx.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/2d/4f8243f194fa8a1063b41654c8886b3b1d5a7e
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/sl.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/6f/d6ace1b8ffbc1286d12cbf09c4eea4eb5d2b01
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/rr.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/ab/bb45487abe9e0cf6c260ca8537f5255d371ff8
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/pv.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/8f/5cf186f49cfa5271a85ca58e80ef136d170577
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/maxfwd.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/5f/af21abd98e3ca547997812692bfb6272d809e6
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/usrloc.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/f0/7f53999b3b013bd6a616a2e2d4cc3b47e9a928
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/registrar.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/3a/f0c8124aec2fb0159744aa73c3f7113d228eb6
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/textops.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/61/2e8b3bbab757306390e6d49f3b21a7c00abc17
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/siputils.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/17/4bd4d8ce91bd6c771d367219d69fb5562719bc
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/xlog.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/87/4b54e90716f64f24a17c922ed18083b634cccb
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/sanity.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/63/2b7d4655c887f420f16aa5925a2b2e95cc4dbd
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/ctl.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/41/e2c79915f69dd54d62628fc6417f5acc1620e3
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/cfg_rpc.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/4e/3880373e838a62a10be608e82977c2eaf3b276
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/mi_rpc.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/5f/f873ca84eff68f2315ad624581c744ea902a3d
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libbinrpc.so.0
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/4c/4d114463bd547a445e0db7d869ed0752fa488e
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/acc.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/d5/7ceb6fd1c1ffa20fbd7aab33ca50f847eb890b
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/carrierroute.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/d8/238971e9cb2f2b1b3fb60db91d108eefd59502
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/libtrie.so.1
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/7f/00c5048fd670cf0330dafa33bfd7603250e416
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/exec.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/f7/23bb68b67a3c3e5a241e45ec452cb54f3e9783
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/userblacklist.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/5b/3301014781cf0a7bc56f4ebf0c470225ce0c6e
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/sqlops.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/38/a0106b49be571e852ca9ec1e042dc711ae805f
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/auth.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/99/a7a3d4e156be10224b9fc053e76e2d8f9ff809
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/auth_db.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/55/8e3539fcdb2aa57308ab96417f5de7cc749b31
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/permissions.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/4a/b7e6b16143276c415691d48fb7df64d39dca09
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/alias_db.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/5c/79f2557110461e082abcb5bae95330c1a4a76d
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/domain.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/a2/6f7d1f6a60ee44c30297e0713d427215e76bc8
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/nathelper.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/63/a7efa969f3c854159b55f7c854839b22d901af
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/rtpproxy.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/ec/cfe9baae971b9b2f11b5942f315ad1581ab19b
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/group.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/b7/b1046f47b7074e91aea5b68e1682310b6dbe2c
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/avpops.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/28/cb10a07dfe4223217b9cbfa574f8d719e50b3c
Missing separate debuginfo for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/uri_db.so
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/a0/51e3de366ad40570889b61235d1d953f013e93
Missing separate debuginfo for
Try: yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='*-debug*' install /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/80/1b9608daa2cd5f7035ad415e9c7dd06ebdb0a2
[?]
Loaded symbols for /usr/local/lib64/kamailio/modules/uri_db.so
Reading symbols from /lib64/libnss_files.so.2...(no debugging symbols found)...done.
Loaded symbols for /lib64/libnss_files.so.2
Core was generated by `/usr/local/sbin/kamailio -P /var/run/kamailio.pid -m 256 -M 64'.
Program terminated with signal 11, Segmentation fault.
#0 0x00000030f2230f30 in escape_string_for_mysql () from /usr/lib64/mysql/libmysqlclient.so.16
Missing separate debuginfos, use: debuginfo-install glibc-2.12-1.80.el6.x86_64 keyutils-libs-1.4-4.el6.x86_64 krb5-libs-1.9-33.el6.x86_64 libcom_err-1.41.12-12.el6.x86_64 libconfuse-2.6-2.el6.rf.x86_64 libselinux-2.0.94-5.3.el6.x86_64 mysql-libs-5.1.61-4.el6.x86_64 nss-softokn-freebl-3.12.9-11.el6.x86_64 openssl-1.0.0-20.el6_2.5.x86_64 zlib-1.2.3-27.el6.x86_64
Is that make sense for you?
Regards,
Igor.
De : sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org <mailto:sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org> [mailto:sr-users-bounces@lists.sip-router.org] De la part de Daniel-Constantin Mierla
Envoy? : vendredi 28 mars 2014 19:22
? : Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List
Objet : Re: [SR-Users] Crash on REGISTER
Hello,
it is recommended to use the latest 4.0.x, which is 4.0.6 at this moment. There was a fix to registrar module that might be the reason of the issue you faced.
On the other hand, the backtrace is important, send the output of:
bt full
Cheers,
Daniel
On 28/03/14 19:10, Igor Potjevlesch wrote:
Hello,
I experienced an issue yesterday.
I move a customer to Kamailio 4.0.4 (previously he was on an old SER instance without issue).
He uses the same SIP account for connecting two IPBX (same platform, same firmware).
When the second REGISTER came on Kamailio and, may be 500ms/1s after (I have sufficient time to see 200 OK (2 bindings) on Wireshark), Kamailio crash with coredump generated.
I know that I must analyse the coredump but I hope that could be a known issue.
In addition, when I try to run ?gdb? on the core files, I got the following:
Core was generated by `/usr/local/sbin/kamailio -P /var/run/kamailio.pid -m 256 -M 64'.
Program terminated with signal 11, Segmentation fault.
#0 0x00000030f2230f30 in escape_string_for_mysql () from /usr/lib64/mysql/libmysqlclient.so.16
Missing separate debuginfos, use: debuginfo-install glibc-2.12-1.80.el6.x86_64 keyutils-libs-1.4-4.el6.x86_64 krb5-libs-1.9-33.el6.x86_64 libcom_err-1.41.12-12.el6.x86_64 libconfuse-2.6-2.el6.rf.x86_64 libselinux-2.0.94-5.3.el6.x86_64 mysql-libs-5.1.61-4.el6.x86_64 nss-softokn-freebl-3.12.9-11.el6.x86_64 openssl-1.0.0-20.el6_2.5.x86_64 zlib-1.2.3-27.el6.x86_64
I guess that I?m missing packages to troubleshoot.
Many thanks.
Regards,
Igor.
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
<mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
<http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.com
http://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
Kamailio World Conference - April 2-4, 2014, Berlin, Germany
http://www.kamailioworld.com
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------------------------------
Message: 18
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 12:36:01 -0400
From: info@vintageelectronics.ca
To: miconda@gmail.com, "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: [SR-Users] (no subject)
Message-ID: <53399971.6010009@vintageelectronics.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Daniel,
Can you simply reply back and state if your blog entry is actual or not
and should be followed or not?
Thank you
On 03/30/2014 02:32 PM, info@vintageelectronics.ca wrote:
> Daniel:
>
> Following up.
>
> Thank you!
>
> On 03/28/2014 08:29 PM, info@vintageelectronics.ca wrote:
>> Daniel,
>>
>> Following up.
>>
>> Thanks
>> ve
>>
>> On 03/27/2014 04:44 PM, info@vintageelectronics.ca wrote:
>>> Daniel,
>>>
>>> I found your writeup at
>>> http://kb.asipto.com/kamailio:skype-like-service-in-less-than-one-hour
>>> and tried to follow it.
>>> Jitsi would not connect even though it is running in the same box as
>>> Kamailio set up exactly as the linked page suggested.
>>> No firewalls exist between them.
>>>
>>> It connects fine over TCP and works, it also connects fine over UDP
>>> but cannot send/receive text messages and voice does not work.
>>> But over TLS it never connects, and never times out - it just sits
>>> there connecting.
>>>
>>> I tried changing the port ## for TLS from 5060 to 5061 etc and even
>>> creating an SRV record on the local DNS server for this LAN, but
>>> nothing worked.
>>>
>>> Can you suggest any troubleshooting steps?
>>>
>>> Thank you!
>>> ve
------------------------------
Message: 19
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 20:06:50 +0300
From: Mihai Marin <marinmihai@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: [SR-Users] rls, rls_get_by_service_uri(): match not found
Message-ID:
<CACKuv4WJqAQcJJwsiTxunn602BA-nd=33STMzrFSJ4xggG_ekA@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Hello Sirs,
I'm trying from some days to make RLS work but without success. I checked
every character from kamailio.cfg, xml files from xcap but I can't find the
problem and I'm out of ideas.
My problem is the the subscribe is not done => 0 notifications with status.
I think the key error is that:
DEBUG: rls [subscribe.c:125]: rls_get_by_service_uri(): match not found,
service-uri = [sip:bob@93.187.138.214]
2(29025) DEBUG: rls [subscribe.c:125]: rls_get_by_service_uri(): match not
found, service-uri = [sip:bob@93.187.138.214]
2(29025) DEBUG: rls [subscribe.c:125]: rls_get_by_service_uri(): match not
found, service-uri = [sip:bob@93.187.138.214]
2(29025) DEBUG: rls [subscribe.c:279]: rls_get_service_list(): service uri
sip:alice@93.187.138.214 not found in rl document for user
sip:bob@93.187.138.214
Request:
SUBSCRIBE sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214 SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/WS kvvj9i9uhvbp.invalid;branch=z9hG4bK4622972 Max-Forwards: 69
To: <sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214> From: "Bob Test"
<sip:bob@93.187.138.214>;tag=e9144sdk2v
Call-ID: 52k3b9gheoj6gk2vmjlrr0 CSeq: 81 SUBSCRIBE Expires: 300 Event:
presence Contact:
<sip:v8jmlmeu@kvvj9i9uhvbp.invalid;transport=ws>;reg-id=1;+sip.instance="<urn:uuid:152abb8b-085d-4ca5-b658-4ecb38d1b79f>";expires=60000
Supported: eventlist Accept: multipart/related, application/pidf+xml,
application/rlmi+xml, application/rpid+xml Allow-Events: refer, presence,
presence.winfo, xcap-diff, conference Require: recipient-list-subscribe
Allow: INVITE, ACK, CANCEL, BYE, MESSAGE, OPTIONS, NOTIFY, PRACK, UPDATE,
REFER User-Agent: JsSIP 0.3.7 Content-Length: 0
Receive:
NOTIFY sip:v8jmlmeu@188.215.94.132:25702;transport=ws SIP/2.0 Via:
SIP/2.0/WS 93.187.138.214:5040;branch=z9hG4bKf43b.cc179644000000000000000000000000.0
To: <sip:bob@93.187.138.214>;tag=e9144sdk2v From: <
sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214>;tag=67d32ce551425daaac3772fa02abe99f-daa0
CSeq: 1 NOTIFY Call-ID: 52k3b9gheoj6gk2vmjlrr0 Content-Length: 394
User-Agent: kamailio (4.2.0-dev3 (x86_64/linux)) Max-Forwards: 70 Event:
presence Contact: <sip:rls@93.187.138.214> Subscription-State:
active;expires=300 Require: eventlist Content-Type:
multipart/related;type="application/rlmi+xml";start="<1396291389.sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214.834374984>";boundary="TnOoxHgwMlltoGjpMlgd1kNc"
--TnOoxHgwMlltoGjpMlgd1kNc Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary Content-ID:
<1396291389.sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214.834374984> Content-Type:
application/rlmi+xml;charset="UTF-8" <?xml version="1.0"?> <list uri="
sip:bob-list@93.187.138.214" xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rlmi"
version="1" fullState="true"> <resource uri="sip:alice@93.187.138.214"/>
</list> --TnOoxHgwMlltoGjpMlgd1kNc--
I have 2 users: bob & alice.
Alice xcap files:
<resource-lists xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists">
<list name="Default">
<display-name>All Contacts</display-name>
<entry xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists" uri="
sip:bob@93.187.138.214">
<display-name>bob</display-name>
</entry>
</list>
</resource-lists>
<rls-services xmlns:rl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists"
xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rls-services">
<service uri="sip:alice-list@93.187.138.214">
<resource-list>
http://93.187.138.214:5060/xcap-root/resource-lists/users/sip:alice@93.187.138.214/index/~~/resource-lists/list%5B@name=%22Default%22%5D
</resource-list>
<packages>
<package>presence</package>
</packages>
</service>
</rls-services>
Bob xcap files:
<resource-lists xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists">
<list name="Default">
<display-name>All Contacts</display-name>
<entry xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists" uri="
sip:alice@93.187.138.214">
<display-name>alice</display-name>
</entry>
</list>
</resource-lists>
<rls-services xmlns:rl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists"
xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rls-services">
<service uri="sip:bob@93.187.138.214">
<resource-list>
http://93.187.138.214:5060/xcap-root/resource-lists/users/sip:bob@93.187.138.214/index/~~/resource-lists/list%5B@name=%22Default%22%5D
</resource-list>
<packages>
<package>presence</package>
</packages>
</service>
</rls-services>
And, global file:
<xcap-caps xmlns='urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xcap-caps'>
<auids>
<auid>rls-services</auid>
<auid>pidf-manipulation</auid>
<auid>xcap-caps</auid>
<auid>resource-lists</auid>
<auid>pres-rules</auid>
<auid>org.openmobilealliance.pres-rules</auid>
<auid>org.openmobilealliance.user-profile</auid>
<auid>org.openmobilealliance.pres-content</auid>
</auids>
<extensions>
</extensions>
<namespaces>
<namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rls-services</namespace>
<namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pidf</namespace>
<namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:xcap-caps</namespace>
<namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:resource-lists</namespace>
<namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:pres-rules</namespace>
<namespace>urn:oma:xml:xdm:user-profile</namespace>
<namespace>urn:oma:xml:prs:pres-content</namespace>
</namespaces>
</xcap-caps>
KAMAILIO log is here: http://pastebin.com/4XGSCPkc
Kamailio route presence from config is here: http://pastebin.com/LYSr5yPz
What I'm doing wrong? Are xml configured properly?
Thank you.
Best regards,
Mihai M
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Message: 20
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 14:55:15 -0400 (EDT)
From: Slava Bendersky <volga629@networklab.ca>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Message-ID:
<328612725.2285585.1396292115456.JavaMail.zimbra@skillsearch.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello Pedro,
Here SDP from asterisk. Asterisk it just don't know where to send traffic.
Sip peer on asterisk connects no issue.
[voice]
type=peer
host=kamailio ip
defaultuser=1300
fromuser=1300
user=1300
secret=test
permit=local subnet
disallow=all
allow=ulaw
dtmfmode=rfc2833
context=voicemailbox
canreinvite=no
insecure=port,invite
qualify=yes
directrtpsetup=no
-- Incorrect password '' for user '1200' (context = default)
-- <SIP/1200-00000004> Playing 'vm-incorrect-mailbox.gsm' (language 'en')
Retransmitting #9 (no NAT) to 10.237.236.207:5060:
SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.207;branch=z9hG4bKf682.cc9d98383fa97727d9968596f24c2c0a.0;received=10.237.236.207
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.212:64609;branch=z9hG4bK-d8754z-f319541e694ad32f-1---d8754z-
Record-Route: <sip:10.237.236.207;lr=on>
From: "Slava Bendersky"<sip:1200@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=6358d712
To: <sip:120@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=as3b53c4ae
Call-ID: YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.
CSeq: 2 INVITE
Server: Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
Allow: INVITE, ACK, CANCEL, OPTIONS, BYE, REFER, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, INFO, PUBLISH
Supported: replaces, timer
Session-Expires: 1800;refresher=uas
Contact: <sip:120@10.237.236.207:5062>
Content-Type: application/sdp
Require: timer
Content-Length: 183
v=0
o=root 1990993471 1990993471 IN IP4 10.237.236.207
s=Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
c=IN IP4 10.237.236.207
t=0 0
m=audio 15070 RTP/AVP 0
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=ptime:20
a=sendrecv
---
Retransmitting #10 (no NAT) to 10.237.236.207:5060:
SIP/2.0 200 OK
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.207;branch=z9hG4bKf682.cc9d98383fa97727d9968596f24c2c0a.0;received=10.237.236.207
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.212:64609;branch=z9hG4bK-d8754z-f319541e694ad32f-1---d8754z-
Record-Route: <sip:10.237.236.207;lr=on>
From: "Slava Bendersky"<sip:1200@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=6358d712
To: <sip:120@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=as3b53c4ae
Call-ID: YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.
CSeq: 2 INVITE
Server: Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
Allow: INVITE, ACK, CANCEL, OPTIONS, BYE, REFER, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, INFO, PUBLISH
Supported: replaces, timer
Session-Expires: 1800;refresher=uas
Contact: <sip:120@10.237.236.207:5062>
Content-Type: application/sdp
Require: timer
Content-Length: 183
v=0
o=root 1990993471 1990993471 IN IP4 10.237.236.207
s=Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
c=IN IP4 10.237.236.207
t=0 0
m=audio 15070 RTP/AVP 0
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000
a=ptime:20
a=sendrecv
---
[Mar 31 14:44:25] WARNING[1834]: chan_sip.c:4259 retrans_pkt: Retransmission timeout reached on transmission YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI. for seqno 2 (Critical Response) -- See https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/SIP+Retransmissions
Packet timed out after 32000ms with no response
[Mar 31 14:44:25] WARNING[1834]: chan_sip.c:4288 retrans_pkt: Hanging up call YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI. - no reply to our critical packet (see https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/SIP+Retransmissions).
[Mar 31 14:44:25] WARNING[2801][C-0000000e]: app_voicemail.c:10590 vm_authenticate: Couldn't read username
Scheduling destruction of SIP dialog 'YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.' in 32000 ms (Method: INVITE)
set_destination: Parsing <sip:10.237.236.207;lr=on> for address/port to send to
set_destination: set destination to 10.237.236.207:5060
Reliably Transmitting (no NAT) to 10.237.236.207:5060:
BYE sip:1200@10.237.236.212:64609;transport=UDP SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.207:5062;branch=z9hG4bK7b8eba54
Route: <sip:10.237.236.207;lr=on>
Max-Forwards: 70
From: <sip:120@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=as3b53c4ae
To: "Slava Bendersky"<sip:1200@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=6358d712
Call-ID: YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.
CSeq: 102 BYE
User-Agent: Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
X-Asterisk-HangupCause: No user responding
X-Asterisk-HangupCauseCode: 18
Content-Length: 0
---
<--- SIP read from UDP:10.237.236.207:5060 --->
SIP/2.0 481 Call/Transaction Does Not Exist
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.207:5062;branch=z9hG4bK7b8eba54
To: "Slava Bendersky"<sip:1200@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=6358d712
From: <sip:120@networklab.loc;transport=UDP>;tag=as3b53c4ae
Call-ID: YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.
CSeq: 102 BYE
Accept-Language: en
Content-Length: 0
<------------->
--- (8 headers 0 lines) ---
Really destroying SIP dialog 'YTk2YTBlYjQzYzJiZDQ4OTRkMmI3Nzk1NGU0ZDg1NTI.' Method: INVITE
Reliably Transmitting (no NAT) to 10.237.236.207:5060:
OPTIONS sip:10.237.236.207 SIP/2.0
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.237.236.207:5062;branch=z9hG4bK51a7f1ef
Max-Forwards: 70
From: "asterisk" <sip:1300@networklab.loc>;tag=as7232ca20
To: <sip:10.237.236.207>
Contact: <sip:1300@10.237.236.207:5062>
Call-ID: 46ea55704ee7005705c98d9106904470@networklab.loc
CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
User-Agent: Asterisk PBX 12.0.0
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:44:35 GMT
Allow: INVITE, ACK, CANCEL, OPTIONS, BYE, REFER, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, INFO, PUBLISH
Supported: replaces, timer
Content-Length: 0
Slava.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Pedro Ni?o" <nino.pedro@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 9:51:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
So, the problem is that calls made from a direct connected user, falls to voicemail? Even if the other user is online?
All the users are on the same asterisk server? Or using a trunk outside?
As a test, tried to register to the asterisk server directly and test the call?
That's why I was asking to elaborate, and show a bit more about the call flow behavior... A small text diagram and desired behavior would be useful
El mar 31, 2014 8:13 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
Hello Olle,
Overlap is disabled on asterisk. I more wonder about this message.
Mar 31 08:40:20 dsm01 /usr/sbin/kamailio[6101]: WARNING: sanity [sanity.c:833]: check_parse_uris(): sanity_check(): check_parse_uris(): failed to parse From uri
Because from direct connected network, call failing to voicemail.
Slva.
From: "Olle E. Johansson" < oej@edvina.net >
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List" < sr-users@lists.sip-router.org >
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2014 3:33:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] message 484
Hi!
I guess this is a poorly configured Asterisk server that has "Allowoverlap" enabled.
A 484 is used for overlap dialing. The server says "I need more digits to complete this call".
/O
On 31 Mar 2014, at 02:30, Pedro Ni?o < nino.pedro@gmail.com > wrote:
<blockquote>
I think this is the correct behavior, as asterisk server is complaining about the address/request not containing all the necesary data to process the message
Can you please elaborate with a bit more of detail? Also can use tools like sngrep, tcpdump (or wireshark) to have a better view of the complete call flow.
Maybe that way we can help.
El mar 29, 2014 1:59 AM, "Slava Bendersky" < volga629@networklab.ca > escribi?:
<blockquote>
Hello Everyone,
How to correct message 484
Is need use txt module to fill string with correct information ?
<--- SIP read from UDP: 192.168.100.145:5060 --->
SIP/2.0 484 Address Incomplete
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 192.168.100.145:5062;branch=z9hG4bK5ec564e6
From: "asterisk" < sip:1300@networklab.loc >;tag=as0a530a8d
To: < sip:192.168.100.145 >;tag=b27e1a1d33761e85846fc98f5f3a7e58.93df ---> This line ins question.
Call-ID: 631e893f75da720865e8468132884367@networklab.loc
CSeq: 102 OPTIONS
Contact: < sip:1300@192.168.100.145:5062 >;expires=3600
Server: kamailio (4.1.2 (x86_64/linux))
Content-Length: 0
Slava.
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
_______________________________________________
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sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
</blockquote>
_______________________________________________
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sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
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Message: 21
Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2014 09:44:38 +1000
From: jay binks <jaybinks@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: [SR-Users] Kamailio on Android
Message-ID:
<CAO47Hpc11+UhuHWffeySVORMT5c_odwy0Aym1f0h3cU0u5fj1Q@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
I realise this is a little left field,
but has anyone compiled kamailio to run on Android ?
( and rtpproxy etc if you know )
would be really handy if there was some experience here.
--
Sincerely
Jay
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------------------------------
Message: 22
Date: Tue, 01 Apr 2014 01:06:01 -0400
From: Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
To: "SIP Router - Kamailio (OpenSER) and SIP Express Router (SER) -
Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>,
business@lists.kamailio.org
Subject: [SR-Users] Social Configuration module for Kamailio released
Message-ID: <533A4939.3020301@evaristesys.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
For immediate release:
ATLANTA, GA (1 April 2014)--Evariste Systems LLC, an Atlanta-based
consultancy and software vendor specialising in Kamailio-based VoIP
infrastructure solutions for the ITSP (Internet Telephony Service
Provider) market, has announced the public release of its groundbreaking
"Social Configuration" module for the Kamailio open-source SIP server
and SIP proxy.
Evariste principal Alex Balashov explained:
"It's no secret that writing Kamailio configuration in its embedded
scripting language is complex. Social Configuration integrates with
Twitter and Facebook to allow tens of thousands of people to write a
config simultaneously through social networks, over a variety of devices
and media, including PCs, tablets, smartphones and SMS. This lets Kamailio
users harness the benefits of crowdsourcing."
Continued Balashov: "The process begins when the Kamailio administrator
writes the desired intentions of their setup--yes, in natural English
prose. This isn't for propellerheads.
The module sends this to our proprietary QNLP (quantum natural language
parsing) server, which splits these desiderata into Business Action
Items (BAIs). These are then sent out to participating Facebook and
Twitter users via our expansive middleware, and the users return their
piecemeal script implementations, which are usually one line of code or
less. These are consolidated back into a fully functional Kamailio
configuration."
Brooks Bridges, Director of Engineering at Evariste, explained how
Social Configuration handles reconciliation of conflicting implementations
from across the Twittersphere and Facebook:
"This is really the heart of the technology. It's handled via a deeply
recursive, Rails-based social A/B testing and multiple-choice polling
system. It uses hashtags, trending and RSS and stuff. The days of merge
conflicts with unified diffs are gone! Throw out your legacy version
control, 'cause this is Conflict Resolution 2.0: The Feed!"
Another frequently asked question lingered: assembling the contributions
in a particular order. On this topic, Balashov offered a surprising
answer:
"Plot twist: that's social, too! Twitter is an infinitely dynamic
collaboration platform. The question isn't so much 'what can social
networks do for us?' as 'what can't they do?' You can see that there
are many strata of social clouds here: cumulus, stratus, cirrus--we've
got all the clouds!"
"Xzibit would make it easier to understand for the layman," chortled
Balashov as he shifted his position slightly.
"The whole process uses infinitely differential recursion manifolds.
It's like: 'Yo dawg, I heard you like crowds, so we put a crowd in your
crowd, so you can crowd while you crowd', you know? All stages of the
process happen simultaneously and in real time. It's consensus-driven
development by a Committee of the Ultimate."
Balashov also stated that total development time for Social Configuration
was only three days, rather than the thousands of man-hours normally
required to develop complex technology. When asked how this was possible,
he deferred to Bridges:
Bridges explained:
"It's all because we embraced the Agile Full Vapour method at our company.
Maybe you've heard of it.
Classic Agile and 'customer-driven development' says 'release early,
fail often'. That wasn't enough for us. Agile Full Vapour is Agile
extended to its logical maximum. Our slogan here at Evariste Engineering
is 'Release Too Early, Fail More Often'. And stand-ups? Ain't nobody got
time for that. We've done away with all team communication or collaboration
of any kind. We've slashed overhead to a new level, and the numbers speak
for themselves. We get three thousand percent more out of our developers
than anyone, anywhere else."
Balashov concurred, gesturing to the Evariste office "Vapour Board":
"I really don't know how legacy Agile companies get anything done!"
Initial reactions to the new technology from inside the VoIP community
were positive.
Sean McCord, Vice President of Wholesale Hashtag and viral marketing expert
at Atlanta-based social media anaytics giant CyCORE Systems, agreed
that Social Configuration is an essential leap forward for the Kamailio
ecosystem:
"The Social Configuration module heralds the long-overdue marriage of
Kamailio with the Social Web, the biggest trend of the Internet in this
millenium so far, and probably for the rest of the millenium. Everyone
knows that the wisdom of crowds is greater than the wisdom of one."
On the broader theme of Kamailio's ascendancy to the mainstream of the
Social Web, McCord said:
"Anyway, the whole reason Kamailio hasn't gone viral so far is due to
lack of network effects. We have planking, owling, Grumpy Cat, so why
not Kamailio? Kamailio's imagery is green like Philosoraptor. What's
stopping it from going big like Philosoraptor? No network effects, no
multiplier--that is, until now."
J.R. Richardson, Chief Technology Officer of Dallas-based Ntegrated
Solutions, reported positive results from his initial testing:
"Down here in Texas, we're a real social bunch. But I always felt so
lonely writing Kamailio script by myself. I don't even know what I'm
doing half the time. But now, with this Social Configuration business,
the whole neighborhood can help out!"
John Knight, Chief Engineer at Ringfree Communications in Hendersonville,
North Carolina, also spoke highly of the new social technology:
"It's great! The config just writes itself! But the best part for me,
as a civically conscious businessman, is the economic boost. It's a
much better employment opportunity for stay-at-home moms in Appalachia
than Mechanical Turk. I'm paying out 2 cents per core function call,
4 cents per modparam, 10 cents per Record-Route parameter, and 5 cents
per module function invocation. Stimulate this economy!"
Carlos Alvarez, an international business consultant at The Himley
Dock Table Agency, a Phoenix, Arizona-area think tank focused on
sociology of the World Wide Web, was keen to note that the technology
brought forth by Evariste was far more than just a different way of
implementing Kamailio solutions.
"We were talking with Evariste about building an XMPP server and selling
it to Facebook for $20 billion, but that train left the station. It was
a blessing in disguise, though, because it told us that we weren't thinking
big enough. Social Configuration is way more transformative."
Asked further about what it meant, Alvarez said:
"This is going to have implications way beyond esoteric programming.
A crowdsourced config is nothing like an individual's config; it's
e-cosmopolitanism, it's Humanity 2.0. It will open up the floor to
new kinds of first movers and lead to new assumptions about how
scripts of all kinds should be written.
It's going to challenge established notions of what it means to program,
and it will make the playing field more level by disintermediating the
supply chain of session initiation. A lot of middlemen are going to hurt.
One does not simply program the program anymore; the program programs
you, too. It programs all of us. For the first time, request routes and
SRV load balancing are part of a living, breathing organism. And that's
worth way more than an XMPP server. That's disruption right there."
After a moment's thought, Alvarez added:
"I can probably flip it to Facebook for at least $3 trillion in Zuckerberg
funny money--whoops, did I say that? I meant Facebook stock."
The transformative impact forecasted by Alvarez is seemingly borne out
in the enthusiasm for Social Configuration shown around the world by a
variety of societal constituencies not traditionally thought to be
associated with software development and telecommunications.
Jakub Klausa, a self-described member of an "anarcho-syndicalist reading
group" in Wroclaw, Poland, confidently offered a hypothesis about the`
new era brought forth by Social Configuration:
"Let's start with the deeply-ingrained assumption of Kamailio consultant
or trainer as 'teacher', as a purveyor of knowledge that he has and you
don't," said Klausa.
"That's a very oppressive, authoritarian construction. It's quite
presumptuous and dehumanising. Oh, does the Kamailio 'expert', His
Royal Highness, deign to 'teach' us, to 'share' what he knows with
the little people? Oh, thank you, massa', thank you!" lamented Klausa.
"You see, it's not so much about what the consultants and self-anointed
mailing list demigods can 'teach' us. It's more about what we can all
learn from each other! Social Configuration is a tool that finally
allows us, the workers, the so-called 'newbies', to take the power
of Kamailio into our hands and master our own destiny. It's time to
put a knife through the tyranny of 'expertise' and 'knowledge'."
The Chairman of the Plenary Session of the Central Committee of the
Revolutionary Communist Party of Poland, Magdalena Boksa, issued the
following communiqu? from the party's headquarters, thought to be
located in an underground bunker beneath a Starbucks:
Social Configuration empowers the revolutionary vanguard
of the activated, class-conscious proletariat to commandeer
the machinery of Kamailio, in order to advance a scientific
understanding of the objective laws of motion of the
capitalist system, together with the tension of its internal
contradictions, in keeping with the essential truth of
dialectical materialism.
The global imperialist division of labour, as revealed by
V.I. Lenin in Selected Works, Vol. 1, shall meet its end
through the thunderous destruction of the petit-bourgeois
monopoly on knowledge-as-capital and the extraction of
surplus value from it. Through the dogma of Social Configuration,
the means of production in Information Technology shall be
socialised among the working class, distributed according to
the principle of "from each according to his ability, to each
according to his need".
When asked about the revolutionary potential of Social Configuration,
a young student member of the RCP-Poland Youth Brigade concurred
with Comrade Boksa's recitation:
"?Venceremos! ?No pasar?n! ?Hasta la victoria siempre!"
The impact of Social Configuration has even played out on a national, and
perhaps global level of significance. A brief statement from the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea read:
Social Configuration of Red Star SER [as it is known inside
North Korea] is consistent with the teachings of Kim Il-Sungism
and Kim Jong-Ilism. Great Leader Kim Jong-Un, Supreme Commander
of the Korean People's Army, First Secretary of the Workers' Party
of Korea, will chart the glorious course to the maximum realisation
of its full military and civil potential in all spheres of public
and private life. It will boost the resilience of our prosperous
socialist nation in the face of a continual onslaught by the
imperialist menace and its ROK puppet regime.
Motivated by chronic energy shortages, the secretive North Korean state
has been rumoured to be working on a Kamailio-based personal VoIP
appliance that is--the first of its kind--powered not by conventional
electricity, but by The Juche Idea.
Social Configuration has also garnered attention from scholars attentive
to the role of gender, race and privilege in the configuration scripting
process.
Moriah Trostler, a resident feminist scholar at the Phoenix,
Arizona-based Scorpion Bay Institute of Gender Studies, gave some
insight into the ways that Social Configuration potentially broadens
the inclusiveness of the Kamailio tapestry:
"If people would check their cisprivilege and open their eyes, they
would see that Kamailio, and SIP itself, is full of oppressive,
psychologically violent gendered constructions. For instance, there is
the infamous 'loose routing vs. strict routing' dichotomy, which is
clearly a dark, sadomasochistic allegory for capricious--dare I say
schizophrenic?--sexual humiliation. It's a lurid invitation to
indulge the prurient whims of the boss-with-secretary."
Trostler gave another example:
"And From and To 'tags'? Please, the idea of ownership of another's
corporeal being, of branding--tagging--like cattle, is transparent.
That's straight out of the Larry Flint smut-peddling playbook. And what's
more, all this makes use of 'globally unique identifiers', the signature
scent of industrial alienation--an anonymising, dystopian, Kafkaesque
labyrinth. This has all the markers of masculinised depersonalisation.
Need I go on?"
Trostler went on: "Social Configuration opens the door to speaking truth
to some of these discriminatory, alienating, gendered mental categories
in which brogrammers think. Finally, women can write the Kamailio config
as they might have written it, without compromising their identity or
their dignity. Maybe we can even make some headway in influencing the
male-dominated IETF standards process."
Asked to summarise the impact of emergent minority voices and critical
discourse enabled by Social Configuration, Fred Posner, a literary
theorist based in Gainesville, Florida, offered the following comments:
"The larger power of Social Configuration is essentially meta. It
offers a new language, a new word-prism through which to look at
the neosemiotic discursive space of SIP express routing. It's about
reader as text, and text as reader, and the joy and wonder of their
sizzling interplay."
"It is evocative of Nietzsche," said Posner, gesturing to an open manhole
cover on a busy Jacksonville thoroughfare.
"If you stare too long into the Kamailio configuration, it, in turn,
stares back into you! But now it speaks with a palpable collective voice,
giving shape--definition!--to a bold, muscular subtext of configuration
as culture, and culture as configuration. It is a semantic fusion of coder
as critic, and critic as coder. Without knowing it--and it was
inconceivable
that they could have known it--Evariste has set into motion a wondrous,
intricate and mesmerising ballet, a shower of sparks, a thrifty, yet
spirited rejoinder to the supposed futility of poststructuralist
rationalism.
As we speak, a new 'Social Text' is being written!"
Alistair Cunningham, a physicist from the University of Cambridge,
provided an appraisal from a different angle:
"Social Configuration, as interpreted by Balashov, embodies the
kind of nonlinear thinking that is noticeably missing in software. At
first glance, it does seem to invite a deafening cacophany, an
undifferentiated chaos. But if one phase-shifts it slightly, the shadows
of mathematical signatures emerge, waiting to be unlocked. The quantum
resonance of social entropy doing its work gives us valuable clues into
the origins of the universe at the sub-particle level."
Asked about what Evariste has in store next, Balashov was
uncharacteristically tight-lipped:
"I can't say too much. But I can tell you it's big. Though he doesn't
know it yet, we're even going to hire Leif Madsen for this, because
the database is going to be at least 6 GB. That's almost a byte for
every person on the planet. Definitely Big Data territory."
Pressed for details, Balashov said:
"Okay, okay, but this is all I'm going to say. I've got three words for
you: IMS With Friends. It's a proprietary mash-up of Snapchat in the
front, Hadoop in the back, and a DIAMETER billing interface in the
middle. What could possibly go wrong?"
--
Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0670
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
------------------------------
Message: 23
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 22:24:36 -0700
From: Kelvin Chua <kelchy@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Cc: business@lists.kamailio.org
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Social Configuration module for Kamailio
released
Message-ID:
<CAMF97-dqjime0NUd6_KXWnJWTFLpzxXa8EMZ+va3PD3w82s3nw@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Where do we sign-up? Is there an April 1st special promo code? lol :D
Kelvin Chua
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 10:06 PM, Alex Balashov
<abalashov@evaristesys.com>wrote:
> For immediate release:
>
> ATLANTA, GA (1 April 2014)--Evariste Systems LLC, an Atlanta-based
> consultancy and software vendor specialising in Kamailio-based VoIP
> infrastructure solutions for the ITSP (Internet Telephony Service
> Provider) market, has announced the public release of its groundbreaking
> "Social Configuration" module for the Kamailio open-source SIP server
> and SIP proxy.
>
> Evariste principal Alex Balashov explained:
>
> "It's no secret that writing Kamailio configuration in its embedded
> scripting language is complex. Social Configuration integrates with
> Twitter and Facebook to allow tens of thousands of people to write a
> config simultaneously through social networks, over a variety of devices
> and media, including PCs, tablets, smartphones and SMS. This lets Kamailio
> users harness the benefits of crowdsourcing."
>
> Continued Balashov: "The process begins when the Kamailio administrator
> writes the desired intentions of their setup--yes, in natural English
> prose. This isn't for propellerheads.
>
> The module sends this to our proprietary QNLP (quantum natural language
> parsing) server, which splits these desiderata into Business Action
> Items (BAIs). These are then sent out to participating Facebook and
> Twitter users via our expansive middleware, and the users return their
> piecemeal script implementations, which are usually one line of code or
> less. These are consolidated back into a fully functional Kamailio
> configuration."
>
> Brooks Bridges, Director of Engineering at Evariste, explained how
> Social Configuration handles reconciliation of conflicting implementations
> from across the Twittersphere and Facebook:
>
> "This is really the heart of the technology. It's handled via a deeply
> recursive, Rails-based social A/B testing and multiple-choice polling
> system. It uses hashtags, trending and RSS and stuff. The days of merge
> conflicts with unified diffs are gone! Throw out your legacy version
> control, 'cause this is Conflict Resolution 2.0: The Feed!"
>
> Another frequently asked question lingered: assembling the contributions
> in a particular order. On this topic, Balashov offered a surprising
> answer:
>
> "Plot twist: that's social, too! Twitter is an infinitely dynamic
> collaboration platform. The question isn't so much 'what can social
> networks do for us?' as 'what can't they do?' You can see that there
> are many strata of social clouds here: cumulus, stratus, cirrus--we've
> got all the clouds!"
>
> "Xzibit would make it easier to understand for the layman," chortled
> Balashov as he shifted his position slightly.
>
> "The whole process uses infinitely differential recursion manifolds.
> It's like: 'Yo dawg, I heard you like crowds, so we put a crowd in your
> crowd, so you can crowd while you crowd', you know? All stages of the
> process happen simultaneously and in real time. It's consensus-driven
> development by a Committee of the Ultimate."
>
> Balashov also stated that total development time for Social Configuration
> was only three days, rather than the thousands of man-hours normally
> required to develop complex technology. When asked how this was possible,
> he deferred to Bridges:
>
> Bridges explained:
>
> "It's all because we embraced the Agile Full Vapour method at our company.
> Maybe you've heard of it.
>
> Classic Agile and 'customer-driven development' says 'release early,
> fail often'. That wasn't enough for us. Agile Full Vapour is Agile
> extended to its logical maximum. Our slogan here at Evariste Engineering
> is 'Release Too Early, Fail More Often'. And stand-ups? Ain't nobody got
> time for that. We've done away with all team communication or collaboration
> of any kind. We've slashed overhead to a new level, and the numbers speak
> for themselves. We get three thousand percent more out of our developers
> than anyone, anywhere else."
>
> Balashov concurred, gesturing to the Evariste office "Vapour Board":
>
> "I really don't know how legacy Agile companies get anything done!"
>
> Initial reactions to the new technology from inside the VoIP community
> were positive.
>
> Sean McCord, Vice President of Wholesale Hashtag and viral marketing expert
> at Atlanta-based social media anaytics giant CyCORE Systems, agreed
> that Social Configuration is an essential leap forward for the Kamailio
> ecosystem:
>
> "The Social Configuration module heralds the long-overdue marriage of
> Kamailio with the Social Web, the biggest trend of the Internet in this
> millenium so far, and probably for the rest of the millenium. Everyone
> knows that the wisdom of crowds is greater than the wisdom of one."
>
> On the broader theme of Kamailio's ascendancy to the mainstream of the
> Social Web, McCord said:
>
> "Anyway, the whole reason Kamailio hasn't gone viral so far is due to
> lack of network effects. We have planking, owling, Grumpy Cat, so why
> not Kamailio? Kamailio's imagery is green like Philosoraptor. What's
> stopping it from going big like Philosoraptor? No network effects, no
> multiplier--that is, until now."
>
> J.R. Richardson, Chief Technology Officer of Dallas-based Ntegrated
> Solutions, reported positive results from his initial testing:
>
> "Down here in Texas, we're a real social bunch. But I always felt so
> lonely writing Kamailio script by myself. I don't even know what I'm
> doing half the time. But now, with this Social Configuration business,
> the whole neighborhood can help out!"
>
> John Knight, Chief Engineer at Ringfree Communications in Hendersonville,
> North Carolina, also spoke highly of the new social technology:
>
> "It's great! The config just writes itself! But the best part for me,
> as a civically conscious businessman, is the economic boost. It's a
> much better employment opportunity for stay-at-home moms in Appalachia
> than Mechanical Turk. I'm paying out 2 cents per core function call,
> 4 cents per modparam, 10 cents per Record-Route parameter, and 5 cents
> per module function invocation. Stimulate this economy!"
>
> Carlos Alvarez, an international business consultant at The Himley
> Dock Table Agency, a Phoenix, Arizona-area think tank focused on
> sociology of the World Wide Web, was keen to note that the technology
> brought forth by Evariste was far more than just a different way of
> implementing Kamailio solutions.
>
> "We were talking with Evariste about building an XMPP server and selling
> it to Facebook for $20 billion, but that train left the station. It was
> a blessing in disguise, though, because it told us that we weren't thinking
> big enough. Social Configuration is way more transformative."
>
> Asked further about what it meant, Alvarez said:
>
> "This is going to have implications way beyond esoteric programming.
> A crowdsourced config is nothing like an individual's config; it's
> e-cosmopolitanism, it's Humanity 2.0. It will open up the floor to
> new kinds of first movers and lead to new assumptions about how
> scripts of all kinds should be written.
>
> It's going to challenge established notions of what it means to program,
> and it will make the playing field more level by disintermediating the
> supply chain of session initiation. A lot of middlemen are going to hurt.
> One does not simply program the program anymore; the program programs
> you, too. It programs all of us. For the first time, request routes and
> SRV load balancing are part of a living, breathing organism. And that's
> worth way more than an XMPP server. That's disruption right there."
>
> After a moment's thought, Alvarez added:
>
> "I can probably flip it to Facebook for at least $3 trillion in Zuckerberg
> funny money--whoops, did I say that? I meant Facebook stock."
>
> The transformative impact forecasted by Alvarez is seemingly borne out
> in the enthusiasm for Social Configuration shown around the world by a
> variety of societal constituencies not traditionally thought to be
> associated with software development and telecommunications.
>
> Jakub Klausa, a self-described member of an "anarcho-syndicalist reading
> group" in Wroclaw, Poland, confidently offered a hypothesis about the`
> new era brought forth by Social Configuration:
>
> "Let's start with the deeply-ingrained assumption of Kamailio consultant
> or trainer as 'teacher', as a purveyor of knowledge that he has and you
> don't," said Klausa.
>
> "That's a very oppressive, authoritarian construction. It's quite
> presumptuous and dehumanising. Oh, does the Kamailio 'expert', His
> Royal Highness, deign to 'teach' us, to 'share' what he knows with
> the little people? Oh, thank you, massa', thank you!" lamented Klausa.
>
> "You see, it's not so much about what the consultants and self-anointed
> mailing list demigods can 'teach' us. It's more about what we can all
> learn from each other! Social Configuration is a tool that finally
> allows us, the workers, the so-called 'newbies', to take the power
> of Kamailio into our hands and master our own destiny. It's time to
> put a knife through the tyranny of 'expertise' and 'knowledge'."
>
> The Chairman of the Plenary Session of the Central Committee of the
> Revolutionary Communist Party of Poland, Magdalena Boksa, issued the
> following communiqu? from the party's headquarters, thought to be
> located in an underground bunker beneath a Starbucks:
>
> Social Configuration empowers the revolutionary vanguard
> of the activated, class-conscious proletariat to commandeer
> the machinery of Kamailio, in order to advance a scientific
> understanding of the objective laws of motion of the
> capitalist system, together with the tension of its internal
> contradictions, in keeping with the essential truth of
> dialectical materialism.
>
> The global imperialist division of labour, as revealed by
> V.I. Lenin in Selected Works, Vol. 1, shall meet its end
> through the thunderous destruction of the petit-bourgeois
> monopoly on knowledge-as-capital and the extraction of
> surplus value from it. Through the dogma of Social Configuration,
> the means of production in Information Technology shall be
> socialised among the working class, distributed according to
> the principle of "from each according to his ability, to each
> according to his need".
>
> When asked about the revolutionary potential of Social Configuration,
> a young student member of the RCP-Poland Youth Brigade concurred
> with Comrade Boksa's recitation:
>
> "?Venceremos! ?No pasar?n! ?Hasta la victoria siempre!"
>
> The impact of Social Configuration has even played out on a national, and
> perhaps global level of significance. A brief statement from the Ministry
> of Foreign Affairs of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea read:
>
> Social Configuration of Red Star SER [as it is known inside
> North Korea] is consistent with the teachings of Kim Il-Sungism
> and Kim Jong-Ilism. Great Leader Kim Jong-Un, Supreme Commander
> of the Korean People's Army, First Secretary of the Workers' Party
> of Korea, will chart the glorious course to the maximum realisation
> of its full military and civil potential in all spheres of public
> and private life. It will boost the resilience of our prosperous
> socialist nation in the face of a continual onslaught by the
> imperialist menace and its ROK puppet regime.
>
> Motivated by chronic energy shortages, the secretive North Korean state
> has been rumoured to be working on a Kamailio-based personal VoIP
> appliance that is--the first of its kind--powered not by conventional
> electricity, but by The Juche Idea.
>
> Social Configuration has also garnered attention from scholars attentive
> to the role of gender, race and privilege in the configuration scripting
> process.
>
> Moriah Trostler, a resident feminist scholar at the Phoenix,
> Arizona-based Scorpion Bay Institute of Gender Studies, gave some
> insight into the ways that Social Configuration potentially broadens
> the inclusiveness of the Kamailio tapestry:
>
> "If people would check their cisprivilege and open their eyes, they
> would see that Kamailio, and SIP itself, is full of oppressive,
> psychologically violent gendered constructions. For instance, there is
> the infamous 'loose routing vs. strict routing' dichotomy, which is
> clearly a dark, sadomasochistic allegory for capricious--dare I say
> schizophrenic?--sexual humiliation. It's a lurid invitation to
> indulge the prurient whims of the boss-with-secretary."
>
> Trostler gave another example:
>
> "And From and To 'tags'? Please, the idea of ownership of another's
> corporeal being, of branding--tagging--like cattle, is transparent.
> That's straight out of the Larry Flint smut-peddling playbook. And what's
> more, all this makes use of 'globally unique identifiers', the signature
> scent of industrial alienation--an anonymising, dystopian, Kafkaesque
> labyrinth. This has all the markers of masculinised depersonalisation.
> Need I go on?"
>
> Trostler went on: "Social Configuration opens the door to speaking truth
> to some of these discriminatory, alienating, gendered mental categories
> in which brogrammers think. Finally, women can write the Kamailio config
> as they might have written it, without compromising their identity or
> their dignity. Maybe we can even make some headway in influencing the
> male-dominated IETF standards process."
>
> Asked to summarise the impact of emergent minority voices and critical
> discourse enabled by Social Configuration, Fred Posner, a literary
> theorist based in Gainesville, Florida, offered the following comments:
>
> "The larger power of Social Configuration is essentially meta. It
> offers a new language, a new word-prism through which to look at
> the neosemiotic discursive space of SIP express routing. It's about
> reader as text, and text as reader, and the joy and wonder of their
> sizzling interplay."
>
> "It is evocative of Nietzsche," said Posner, gesturing to an open manhole
> cover on a busy Jacksonville thoroughfare.
>
> "If you stare too long into the Kamailio configuration, it, in turn,
> stares back into you! But now it speaks with a palpable collective voice,
> giving shape--definition!--to a bold, muscular subtext of configuration
> as culture, and culture as configuration. It is a semantic fusion of coder
> as critic, and critic as coder. Without knowing it--and it was
> inconceivable
> that they could have known it--Evariste has set into motion a wondrous,
> intricate and mesmerising ballet, a shower of sparks, a thrifty, yet
> spirited rejoinder to the supposed futility of poststructuralist
> rationalism.
> As we speak, a new 'Social Text' is being written!"
>
> Alistair Cunningham, a physicist from the University of Cambridge,
> provided an appraisal from a different angle:
>
> "Social Configuration, as interpreted by Balashov, embodies the
> kind of nonlinear thinking that is noticeably missing in software. At
> first glance, it does seem to invite a deafening cacophany, an
> undifferentiated chaos. But if one phase-shifts it slightly, the shadows
> of mathematical signatures emerge, waiting to be unlocked. The quantum
> resonance of social entropy doing its work gives us valuable clues into
> the origins of the universe at the sub-particle level."
>
> Asked about what Evariste has in store next, Balashov was
> uncharacteristically tight-lipped:
>
> "I can't say too much. But I can tell you it's big. Though he doesn't
> know it yet, we're even going to hire Leif Madsen for this, because
> the database is going to be at least 6 GB. That's almost a byte for
> every person on the planet. Definitely Big Data territory."
>
> Pressed for details, Balashov said:
>
> "Okay, okay, but this is all I'm going to say. I've got three words for
> you: IMS With Friends. It's a proprietary mash-up of Snapchat in the
> front, Hadoop in the back, and a DIAMETER billing interface in the
> middle. What could possibly go wrong?"
>
>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov - Principal
> Evariste Systems LLC
> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
> Suite 106
> Decatur, GA 30030
> United States
> Tel: +1-678-954-0670
> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
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Message: 24
Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2014 11:52:45 +0530
From: Wingsravi R <wingsravi777@gmail.com>
To: Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com>, "Kamailio (SER) -
Users Mailing List" <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Intermittent Audio/video call
Message-ID:
<CAJRwe0FeLF2UB-sVRLjnpi7Ds_WR-39NRcbmp1iYBojCmknhfg@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Dear Daniel,
Thank you for the Reply,
Ya i analysed the SIP traces of both the calls, it seems like everything is
fine.
Please find the tcpdump based SIP trace attachments of both Worked and Not
worked Video call for your better understanding.
Please help me in resolving the issue.
Regards,
Ravi
On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 7:25 PM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com
> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> sip trace of a call with problems can show if something is wrong with the
> signaling. You can take it on kamailio server with:
>
> ngrep -d any -qt -W byline port 5060
>
> Cheers,
> Daniel
>
>
> On 21/03/14 07:45, Wingsravi R wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> I am working on Kamailio server (V 4.1.2) with RTPproxy (1.2.1)
> integrated, in a standalone intranet infrastructure (no any connection with
> internet).
> I have a strange behavior with my set-up here is :
> --> Audio/Video calls are just go fine with only kamailio server (Without
> running RTPproxy instance). But with the same script and set-up sometimes
> i'm experiencing one-way audio/video !!.
> What could be the reason for this behavior ? Is it a NAT problem ? How
> can i solve this issue ?
>
> --> I was just suspecting it as NAT problem and installed RTPproxy
> server, with this all the audio/video calls are going fine.
>
> But i'm curious to know about this intermittent audio/video calls that
> too without any changes to Kamailio configuration and my set-up.
>
> Please below find the attachment for kamailio config file.
>
> Please anybody help me in resolving this issue.
>
> Any help will greatly appreciate.
>
> Regards,
> Ravi
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing listsr-users@lists.sip-router.orghttp://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> --
> Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.comhttp://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda
> Kamailio World Conference - April 2-4, 2014, Berlin, Germanyhttp://www.kamailioworld.com
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
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Message: 25
Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2014 12:12:10 +0500
From: Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Dimension a kamailio server
Message-ID:
<CALByW_EfyEErBgFg-e82RiDkR6N9ihBt=g4VBg_i1dtCdh48hA@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Thanks a lot Pedro.
Just one question? Do we have module for Mongodb? how do i use it?
Rizwan Khan
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 5:52 AM, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com> wrote:
> As Alex said, I/O and calls per second (CPS) is Dependant on what type of
> design you are using.
>
> As a tip, mysql is good for small to medium sizes, but begin to choke at
> 1000 of concurrent connections. but in a scalable size like you are
> planning, I would recommend to make a design with resilience and high
> availability, with mongodb or postgres as db back end.
>
> There are some good examples on internet about enabling multiple kamailio
> server with high availability configuration, using heartbeat and some other
> scripts.
>
> A nice design would be:
>
> 2 or more kamailio servers, maybe virtual or physical, with high
> availability configuration (if one goes down, the other takes all the load)
>
> 2 or more DB servers, also with high availability design.
>
> At least 10G connection, server and switch (for the call flow you're
> expecting) remember to make estimation for calls established, and codec
> used, (using g711, rtp audio might come up to 80kbps, so like 120.000 calls
> is the top for a 10G connection)
>
> Also separate vlan for calls and server control, too.
>
> Just my 2 cents
> El mar 28, 2014 11:58 AM, "Rizwan Khan" <rizkhan@gmail.com> escribi?:
>
> Thanks Alex.
>>
>> What are the components that I should take into account. Based on answer
>> in another thread I will be using SIP trunk with an NGN to route the
>> outside traffic (other than SIP-SIP).
>>
>> I'll have NATed clients so I'll need the media proxy or rtp proxy as
>> well. What about their dimensioning? I am sorry if some questions are
>> really naive. I am new to all this and trying to get hold of the whole
>> technology stack.
>>
>> Rizwan
>> On Mar 28, 2014 3:41 PM, "Alex Balashov" <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> 1. Kamailio does not handle RTP, so audio is not a scaling factor at all;
>>>
>>> 2. The only scaling factors are transactional memory (TM) and any dialog
>>> state you are keeping;
>>>
>>> 3. Without I/O wait from external sources, Kamailio can handle a
>>> practically infinite amount of concurrent calls and CPS. But, most
>>> practical applications of Kamailio require database backing;
>>>
>>> 4. Therefore, performance and throughput will depend almost entirely on
>>> the database you are using for database backing, and any tuning on its
>>> settings. This certainly includes the CDRs and storage, and getting the
>>> most performance out of your database is outside the domain of your
>>> question (or this list);
>>>
>>> 5. A quad-core host with 8 GB of RAM should be more than sufficient for
>>> Kamailio itself to meet your needs. But most of the answers to your
>>> question don't have much to do with Kamailio.
>>>
>>> -- Alex
>>>
>>> On 03/28/2014 06:36 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>>>
>>> HI Guys,
>>>>
>>>> can you refer me to some resources which help me dimension the hardware
>>>> for a setup.
>>>>
>>>> Total users will be 20,000. What percentage should i assume for
>>>> concurrent audio and video calls? What is the standard practice? How
>>>> does this all map to the cpu, ram and storage etc. given that I will be
>>>> storing the cdrs as well.
>>>>
>>>> In the futute this setup should be scalable so that it should support
>>>> 200,000+ users within a span of 6-8 months. What would be the ideal
>>>> architecture?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>>
>>>> Rizwan Khan
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Alex Balashov - Principal
>>> Evariste Systems LLC
>>> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
>>> Suite 106
>>> Decatur, GA 30030
>>> United States
>>> Tel: +1-678-954-0670
>>> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>
>>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
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Message: 26
Date: Tue, 01 Apr 2014 03:16:13 -0400
From: Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Dimension a kamailio server
Message-ID: <3f8abe15-54c8-46d0-a5ee-359734b87500@email.android.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
All modules are listed here:
http://kamailio.org/docs/modules/4.1.x/
On 1 April 2014 03:12:10 GMT-04:00, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com> wrote:
>Thanks a lot Pedro.
>
>Just one question? Do we have module for Mongodb? how do i use it?
>
>Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
>On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 5:52 AM, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
>> As Alex said, I/O and calls per second (CPS) is Dependant on what
>type of
>> design you are using.
>>
>> As a tip, mysql is good for small to medium sizes, but begin to choke
>at
>> 1000 of concurrent connections. but in a scalable size like you are
>> planning, I would recommend to make a design with resilience and high
>> availability, with mongodb or postgres as db back end.
>>
>> There are some good examples on internet about enabling multiple
>kamailio
>> server with high availability configuration, using heartbeat and some
>other
>> scripts.
>>
>> A nice design would be:
>>
>> 2 or more kamailio servers, maybe virtual or physical, with high
>> availability configuration (if one goes down, the other takes all the
>load)
>>
>> 2 or more DB servers, also with high availability design.
>>
>> At least 10G connection, server and switch (for the call flow you're
>> expecting) remember to make estimation for calls established, and
>codec
>> used, (using g711, rtp audio might come up to 80kbps, so like 120.000
>calls
>> is the top for a 10G connection)
>>
>> Also separate vlan for calls and server control, too.
>>
>> Just my 2 cents
>> El mar 28, 2014 11:58 AM, "Rizwan Khan" <rizkhan@gmail.com> escribi?:
>>
>> Thanks Alex.
>>>
>>> What are the components that I should take into account. Based on
>answer
>>> in another thread I will be using SIP trunk with an NGN to route
>the
>>> outside traffic (other than SIP-SIP).
>>>
>>> I'll have NATed clients so I'll need the media proxy or rtp proxy as
>>> well. What about their dimensioning? I am sorry if some questions
>are
>>> really naive. I am new to all this and trying to get hold of the
>whole
>>> technology stack.
>>>
>>> Rizwan
>>> On Mar 28, 2014 3:41 PM, "Alex Balashov" <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> 1. Kamailio does not handle RTP, so audio is not a scaling factor
>at all;
>>>>
>>>> 2. The only scaling factors are transactional memory (TM) and any
>dialog
>>>> state you are keeping;
>>>>
>>>> 3. Without I/O wait from external sources, Kamailio can handle a
>>>> practically infinite amount of concurrent calls and CPS. But, most
>>>> practical applications of Kamailio require database backing;
>>>>
>>>> 4. Therefore, performance and throughput will depend almost
>entirely on
>>>> the database you are using for database backing, and any tuning on
>its
>>>> settings. This certainly includes the CDRs and storage, and getting
>the
>>>> most performance out of your database is outside the domain of your
>>>> question (or this list);
>>>>
>>>> 5. A quad-core host with 8 GB of RAM should be more than sufficient
>for
>>>> Kamailio itself to meet your needs. But most of the answers to your
>>>> question don't have much to do with Kamailio.
>>>>
>>>> -- Alex
>>>>
>>>> On 03/28/2014 06:36 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>>>>
>>>> HI Guys,
>>>>>
>>>>> can you refer me to some resources which help me dimension the
>hardware
>>>>> for a setup.
>>>>>
>>>>> Total users will be 20,000. What percentage should i assume for
>>>>> concurrent audio and video calls? What is the standard practice?
>How
>>>>> does this all map to the cpu, ram and storage etc. given that I
>will be
>>>>> storing the cdrs as well.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the futute this setup should be scalable so that it should
>support
>>>>> 200,000+ users within a span of 6-8 months. What would be the
>ideal
>>>>> architecture?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>
>>>>> Rizwan Khan
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>list
>>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Alex Balashov - Principal
>>>> Evariste Systems LLC
>>>> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
>>>> Suite 106
>>>> Decatur, GA 30030
>>>> United States
>>>> Tel: +1-678-954-0670
>>>> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>list
>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>list
>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>
>>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>list
>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>
>>
>
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>_______________________________________________
>SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
Sent from my Nexus 10, with all the figments of autocorrect that might imply.
Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0670
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
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------------------------------
Message: 27
Date: Tue, 01 Apr 2014 03:18:17 -0400
From: Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Dimension a kamailio server
Message-ID: <003092a5-5a79-4460-9196-f6415e90fac9@email.android.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Also, MongoDB is not a relational database like MySQL or PostgreSQL. The choice to use a schemaless/NoSQL database vs. an RDBM must be rooted entirely in the type of data you're storing and how you want to store it. These concepts are not freely interchangeable.
On 1 April 2014 03:16:13 GMT-04:00, Alex Balashov <abalashov@evaristesys.com> wrote:
>All modules are listed here:
>
>http://kamailio.org/docs/modules/4.1.x/
>
>
>
>On 1 April 2014 03:12:10 GMT-04:00, Rizwan Khan <rizkhan@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>>Thanks a lot Pedro.
>>
>>Just one question? Do we have module for Mongodb? how do i use it?
>>
>>Rizwan Khan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 5:52 AM, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com>
>>wrote:
>>
>>> As Alex said, I/O and calls per second (CPS) is Dependant on what
>>type of
>>> design you are using.
>>>
>>> As a tip, mysql is good for small to medium sizes, but begin to
>choke
>>at
>>> 1000 of concurrent connections. but in a scalable size like you are
>>> planning, I would recommend to make a design with resilience and
>high
>>> availability, with mongodb or postgres as db back end.
>>>
>>> There are some good examples on internet about enabling multiple
>>kamailio
>>> server with high availability configuration, using heartbeat and
>some
>>other
>>> scripts.
>>>
>>> A nice design would be:
>>>
>>> 2 or more kamailio servers, maybe virtual or physical, with high
>>> availability configuration (if one goes down, the other takes all
>the
>>load)
>>>
>>> 2 or more DB servers, also with high availability design.
>>>
>>> At least 10G connection, server and switch (for the call flow you're
>>> expecting) remember to make estimation for calls established, and
>>codec
>>> used, (using g711, rtp audio might come up to 80kbps, so like
>120.000
>>calls
>>> is the top for a 10G connection)
>>>
>>> Also separate vlan for calls and server control, too.
>>>
>>> Just my 2 cents
>>> El mar 28, 2014 11:58 AM, "Rizwan Khan" <rizkhan@gmail.com>
>escribi?:
>>>
>>> Thanks Alex.
>>>>
>>>> What are the components that I should take into account. Based on
>>answer
>>>> in another thread I will be using SIP trunk with an NGN to route
>>the
>>>> outside traffic (other than SIP-SIP).
>>>>
>>>> I'll have NATed clients so I'll need the media proxy or rtp proxy
>as
>>>> well. What about their dimensioning? I am sorry if some questions
>>are
>>>> really naive. I am new to all this and trying to get hold of the
>>whole
>>>> technology stack.
>>>>
>>>> Rizwan
>>>> On Mar 28, 2014 3:41 PM, "Alex Balashov"
><abalashov@evaristesys.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> 1. Kamailio does not handle RTP, so audio is not a scaling factor
>>at all;
>>>>>
>>>>> 2. The only scaling factors are transactional memory (TM) and any
>>dialog
>>>>> state you are keeping;
>>>>>
>>>>> 3. Without I/O wait from external sources, Kamailio can handle a
>>>>> practically infinite amount of concurrent calls and CPS. But, most
>>>>> practical applications of Kamailio require database backing;
>>>>>
>>>>> 4. Therefore, performance and throughput will depend almost
>>entirely on
>>>>> the database you are using for database backing, and any tuning on
>>its
>>>>> settings. This certainly includes the CDRs and storage, and
>getting
>>the
>>>>> most performance out of your database is outside the domain of
>your
>>>>> question (or this list);
>>>>>
>>>>> 5. A quad-core host with 8 GB of RAM should be more than
>sufficient
>>for
>>>>> Kamailio itself to meet your needs. But most of the answers to
>your
>>>>> question don't have much to do with Kamailio.
>>>>>
>>>>> -- Alex
>>>>>
>>>>> On 03/28/2014 06:36 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> HI Guys,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> can you refer me to some resources which help me dimension the
>>hardware
>>>>>> for a setup.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Total users will be 20,000. What percentage should i assume for
>>>>>> concurrent audio and video calls? What is the standard practice?
>>How
>>>>>> does this all map to the cpu, ram and storage etc. given that I
>>will be
>>>>>> storing the cdrs as well.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the futute this setup should be scalable so that it should
>>support
>>>>>> 200,000+ users within a span of 6-8 months. What would be the
>>ideal
>>>>>> architecture?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Rizwan Khan
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
>mailing
>>list
>>>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Alex Balashov - Principal
>>>>> Evariste Systems LLC
>>>>> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
>>>>> Suite 106
>>>>> Decatur, GA 30030
>>>>> United States
>>>>> Tel: +1-678-954-0670
>>>>> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>>list
>>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>>list
>>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>
>>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>>list
>>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
>list
>>sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>>http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>--
>Sent from my Nexus 10, with all the figments of autocorrect that might
>imply.
>
>Alex Balashov - Principal
>Evariste Systems LLC
>235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
>Suite 106
>Decatur, GA 30030
>United States
>Tel: +1-678-954-0670
>Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>_______________________________________________
>SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
>sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
>http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
Sent from my Nexus 10, with all the figments of autocorrect that might imply.
Alex Balashov - Principal
Evariste Systems LLC
235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
Suite 106
Decatur, GA 30030
United States
Tel: +1-678-954-0670
Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
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------------------------------
Message: 28
Date: Tue, 01 Apr 2014 10:11:34 +0200
From: Rainer Piper <rainer.piper@soho-piper.de>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Dimension a kamailio server
Message-ID: <533A74B6.7010902@soho-piper.de>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed"
My next project is ...
Setting up a MySQL 5.6 plus 4x MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3 in memory data node
to increase the data throughput
Like this one:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/de/images/cluster-components-1.png
Regards
Rainer
Am 01.04.2014 09:12, schrieb Rizwan Khan:
> Thanks a lot Pedro.
>
> Just one question? Do we have module for Mongodb? how do i use it?
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 5:52 AM, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com
> <mailto:nino.pedro@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> As Alex said, I/O and calls per second (CPS) is Dependant on what
> type of design you are using.
>
> As a tip, mysql is good for small to medium sizes, but begin to
> choke at 1000 of concurrent connections. but in a scalable size
> like you are planning, I would recommend to make a design with
> resilience and high availability, with mongodb or postgres as db
> back end.
>
> There are some good examples on internet about enabling multiple
> kamailio server with high availability configuration, using
> heartbeat and some other scripts.
>
> A nice design would be:
>
> 2 or more kamailio servers, maybe virtual or physical, with high
> availability configuration (if one goes down, the other takes all
> the load)
>
> 2 or more DB servers, also with high availability design.
>
> At least 10G connection, server and switch (for the call flow
> you're expecting) remember to make estimation for calls
> established, and codec used, (using g711, rtp audio might come up
> to 80kbps, so like 120.000 calls is the top for a 10G connection)
>
> Also separate vlan for calls and server control, too.
>
> Just my 2 cents
>
> El mar 28, 2014 11:58 AM, "Rizwan Khan" <rizkhan@gmail.com
> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>> escribi?:
>
> Thanks Alex.
>
> What are the components that I should take into account. Based
> on answer in another thread I will be using SIP trunk with an
> NGN to route the outside traffic (other than SIP-SIP).
>
> I'll have NATed clients so I'll need the media proxy or rtp
> proxy as well. What about their dimensioning? I am sorry if
> some questions are really naive. I am new to all this and
> trying to get hold of the whole technology stack.
>
> Rizwan
>
> On Mar 28, 2014 3:41 PM, "Alex Balashov"
> <abalashov@evaristesys.com <mailto:abalashov@evaristesys.com>>
> wrote:
>
> 1. Kamailio does not handle RTP, so audio is not a scaling
> factor at all;
>
> 2. The only scaling factors are transactional memory (TM)
> and any dialog state you are keeping;
>
> 3. Without I/O wait from external sources, Kamailio can
> handle a practically infinite amount of concurrent calls
> and CPS. But, most practical applications of Kamailio
> require database backing;
>
> 4. Therefore, performance and throughput will depend
> almost entirely on the database you are using for database
> backing, and any tuning on its settings. This certainly
> includes the CDRs and storage, and getting the most
> performance out of your database is outside the domain of
> your question (or this list);
>
> 5. A quad-core host with 8 GB of RAM should be more than
> sufficient for Kamailio itself to meet your needs. But
> most of the answers to your question don't have much to do
> with Kamailio.
>
> -- Alex
>
> On 03/28/2014 06:36 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>
> HI Guys,
>
> can you refer me to some resources which help me
> dimension the hardware
> for a setup.
>
> Total users will be 20,000. What percentage should i
> assume for
> concurrent audio and video calls? What is the standard
> practice? How
> does this all map to the cpu, ram and storage etc.
> given that I will be
> storing the cdrs as well.
>
> In the futute this setup should be scalable so that it
> should support
> 200,000+ users within a span of 6-8 months. What would
> be the ideal
> architecture?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) -
> sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov - Principal
> Evariste Systems LLC
> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
> Suite 106
> Decatur, GA 30030
> United States
> Tel: +1-678-954-0670 <tel:%2B1-678-954-0670>
> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
> mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
> mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
> list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
*Rainer Piper*
NOC - +49 (0)228 97167161 - sip.soho-piper.de
NOC - +49 (0)2247 9064188 - sip.tele33.de - sip.tefonix.de - D293
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Message: 29
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 15:27:34 +0200
From: "Zappasodi Daniele" <D.Zappasodi@selta.it>
To: <sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: [SR-Users] SIP - WebRTC gateway
Message-ID:
<14A9059A37EF9A45BC2520DE64C30F6002F65BD4@slttex002.seltatel.local>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Hello,
I'm figuring out the best approach to deploy a bridge between Websocket\Webrtc and SIP\rtp.
Can Kamailio (+mediaproxy-ng or something else) operate as a full Webrtc\SIP gateway (signaling, audio or video transcoding, ICE and so on)?
Some months ago I found the architecture described here http://www.kamailio.org/wiki/devel/rtcweb_breaker that proposes to introduce a new RTCWeb
Breaker.
Is it just a proposal or is Kamailio moving following this approach?
If Kamailio really requires a RTCWeb Breaker, what are the main issues against using Doubango webrtc2sip with Kamailio? Performance? Interoperability? License? ...
Thanks
Daniele
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Message: 30
Date: Tue, 01 Apr 2014 10:07:55 +0200
From: Rainer Piper <rainer.piper@soho-piper.de>
To: "Kamailio (SER) - Users Mailing List"
<sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
Subject: Re: [SR-Users] Dimension a kamailio server
Message-ID: <533A73DB.9050304@soho-piper.de>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed"
My next project is ...
Setting up a MySQL 5.6 plus 4x MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3 in memory data node
to increase the data throughput
Like this one:
Komponenten von MySQL Cluster
Regards
Rainer
Am 01.04.2014 09:12, schrieb Rizwan Khan:
> Thanks a lot Pedro.
>
> Just one question? Do we have module for Mongodb? how do i use it?
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 5:52 AM, Pedro Ni?o <nino.pedro@gmail.com
> <mailto:nino.pedro@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> As Alex said, I/O and calls per second (CPS) is Dependant on what
> type of design you are using.
>
> As a tip, mysql is good for small to medium sizes, but begin to
> choke at 1000 of concurrent connections. but in a scalable size
> like you are planning, I would recommend to make a design with
> resilience and high availability, with mongodb or postgres as db
> back end.
>
> There are some good examples on internet about enabling multiple
> kamailio server with high availability configuration, using
> heartbeat and some other scripts.
>
> A nice design would be:
>
> 2 or more kamailio servers, maybe virtual or physical, with high
> availability configuration (if one goes down, the other takes all
> the load)
>
> 2 or more DB servers, also with high availability design.
>
> At least 10G connection, server and switch (for the call flow
> you're expecting) remember to make estimation for calls
> established, and codec used, (using g711, rtp audio might come up
> to 80kbps, so like 120.000 calls is the top for a 10G connection)
>
> Also separate vlan for calls and server control, too.
>
> Just my 2 cents
>
> El mar 28, 2014 11:58 AM, "Rizwan Khan" <rizkhan@gmail.com
> <mailto:rizkhan@gmail.com>> escribi?:
>
> Thanks Alex.
>
> What are the components that I should take into account. Based
> on answer in another thread I will be using SIP trunk with an
> NGN to route the outside traffic (other than SIP-SIP).
>
> I'll have NATed clients so I'll need the media proxy or rtp
> proxy as well. What about their dimensioning? I am sorry if
> some questions are really naive. I am new to all this and
> trying to get hold of the whole technology stack.
>
> Rizwan
>
> On Mar 28, 2014 3:41 PM, "Alex Balashov"
> <abalashov@evaristesys.com <mailto:abalashov@evaristesys.com>>
> wrote:
>
> 1. Kamailio does not handle RTP, so audio is not a scaling
> factor at all;
>
> 2. The only scaling factors are transactional memory (TM)
> and any dialog state you are keeping;
>
> 3. Without I/O wait from external sources, Kamailio can
> handle a practically infinite amount of concurrent calls
> and CPS. But, most practical applications of Kamailio
> require database backing;
>
> 4. Therefore, performance and throughput will depend
> almost entirely on the database you are using for database
> backing, and any tuning on its settings. This certainly
> includes the CDRs and storage, and getting the most
> performance out of your database is outside the domain of
> your question (or this list);
>
> 5. A quad-core host with 8 GB of RAM should be more than
> sufficient for Kamailio itself to meet your needs. But
> most of the answers to your question don't have much to do
> with Kamailio.
>
> -- Alex
>
> On 03/28/2014 06:36 AM, Rizwan Khan wrote:
>
> HI Guys,
>
> can you refer me to some resources which help me
> dimension the hardware
> for a setup.
>
> Total users will be 20,000. What percentage should i
> assume for
> concurrent audio and video calls? What is the standard
> practice? How
> does this all map to the cpu, ram and storage etc.
> given that I will be
> storing the cdrs as well.
>
> In the futute this setup should be scalable so that it
> should support
> 200,000+ users within a span of 6-8 months. What would
> be the ideal
> architecture?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rizwan Khan
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) -
> sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov - Principal
> Evariste Systems LLC
> 235 E Ponce de Leon Ave
> Suite 106
> Decatur, GA 30030
> United States
> Tel: +1-678-954-0670 <tel:%2B1-678-954-0670>
> Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/, http://www.alexbalashov.com/
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
> mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users
> mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing
> list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org <mailto:sr-users@lists.sip-router.org>
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
*Rainer Piper*
NOC - +49 (0)228 97167161 - sip.soho-piper.de
NOC - +49 (0)2247 9064188 - sip.tele33.de - sip.tefonix.de - D293
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