This is false. The IP in the Contact header must be
routable by the
SIP hop from the top Record-Route header in the reply.
The carrier (and it seems that they have a PROXY also) must be able to
route to their adjacent SIP hop, which is your public IP (the IP in
the second Record-Route header).
It seems that the carrier is not taking into account that they might
interface with other proxies.
Most likely, your carrier expects to interface with a simple SIP UA,
not with another proxy. This is a pretty common setup for most of the
carriers, although many new carrier implementations are taking care of
the proxy to proxy calls.
It would be helpful to see the ACK that is sent by the carrier in
response to your 200ok (after you fix your config and you have your
private IP listed in the Record-Route header).
-ovidiu
On Sat, Jan 15, 2022 at 12:33 PM Chad <ccolumbu(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
Hmm, I don't think you are right that the Contact header can be a private IP even if
the RR is correct.
I did some research on it and I found several places saying it must be a routable IP
which is what the carrier also said.
"The Contact header contains the SIP URI where the client wants to be contacted for
subsequent requests. That means that
the host part of the URI must be globally reachable by anyone.
If your contact contains a private IP (behind a NAT?) then it is wrong, because other
peers cannot reach you with that."
--
^C
On 1/15/22 9:05 AM, Ovidiu Sas wrote:
> You have a different problem then.
> Having private IPs in Contact is fine. You need to lose route the
> calls (kamailio will add two Record-Route headers) and the origination
> server will set the RURI to the private IP from Contact, but it will
> send the in-dialog requests to the public IP of kamailio. This has
> nothing to do with virtual IPs.
> Maybe you have a buggy client that doesn't do proper loose routing.
>
> -ovidiu
>
> On Sat, Jan 15, 2022 at 11:50 AM Chad <ccolumbu(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Ovidiu,
>> Thank you again for your response.
>> One is public (an internet IP) and one is private (a 10.x ip).
>> Apparently this is a known problem with virtual IPs, it does not work.
>> When the asterisk server responds to the invite it sends a contact header with
the private IP and Kamailio does not
>> rewrite it to the advertised public IP. So the originating server sees the
private IP in the Contact header and tries to
>> send the traffic to the 10.x IP (which is non-routable) and the call dies.
>> I have been trying things for a long time to fix this (years) what you are saying
will not fix it because of the virtual
>> IPs.
>> If it was a normal IP it would work fine. It has something to do with the routing
table and how mhomed detects networks.
>>
>> --
>> ^C
>>
>>
>> On 1/15/22 8:36 AM, Ovidiu Sas wrote:
>>> Hello Chad,
>>>
>>> The floating IPs that you have, are they both private IPs or one
>>> private IP and the other one a public IP?
>>>
>>> If you have to two floating private IPs, then you need a config like this:
>>> listen=FLOATING_UDP_PRIVATE1 advertise PUBLIC_UDP_IP
>>> listen=FLOATING_UDP_PRIVATE2
>>>
>>> In the config, before relaying the initial INVITE you need to detect
>>> the direction of the call and set $fs accordingly:
>>> if (CAL_FROM_PRIVATE_TO_PUBLIC) {
>>> $fs = udp:FLOATING_UDP_PRIVATE1
>>> }
>>> else {
>>> $fs = udp:FLOATING_UDP_PRIVATE2
>>> }
>>>
>>> If you have a floating private IPs and a floating public IP, then you
>>> need a config like this:
>>> listen=FLOATING_UDP_PRIVATE
>>> listen=FLOATING_UDP_PUBLIC
>>>
>>> There should be no need to force the socket, but if you do, there's no
>>> harm (actually it's better and faster).
>>>
>>> Hope this clarifies things and helps,
>>> -ovidiu
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jan 15, 2022 at 9:48 AM Chad <ccolumbu(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Ovidiu,
>>>> Thank you for your response.
>>>>
>>>> I have done that, in addition to the linux ip_nonlocal_bind I have also
set the Kamailio ip_free_bind=1 and it does not
>>>> work.
>>>> Here are my relevant config lines:
>>>> listen=LISTEN_UDP_PRIVATE advertise MY_PUBLIC_IP:5060
>>>> listen=LISTEN_UDP_PUBLIC
>>>>
>>>> mhomed=1
>>>> ip_free_bind=1
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> In my /etc/sysctl.conf I have (yes I applied it with sysctl -p, and I
have been using it for a long time and have
>>>> rebooted as well):
>>>> net.ipv4.ip_nonlocal_bind=1
>>>> --
>>>> ^C
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 1/15/22 4:55 AM, Ovidiu Sas wrote:
>>>>> Hello Chad,
>>>>>
>>>>> You can add a listen directive to your config for the virtual IPs
>>>>> (both public and private) and then you don't need to manually
modify
>>>>> any headers or use force_send_socket().
>>>>> You need to enable non local IP binding so kamailio can start on the
>>>>> server that doesn't have the virtual IP:
>>>>> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_nonlocal_bind
>>>>> To make the change permanent, edit your sysctl.conf file and enable
it there:
>>>>> net/ipv4/ip_nonlocal_bind = 1
>>>>>
>>>>> Regards
>>>>> Ovidiu Sas
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, Jan 15, 2022 at 4:16 AM Chad <ccolumbu(a)hotmail.com>
wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> We are looking for some help (possibly a paid consultant) to help
us with our Kamailio setup.
>>>>>> To keep this as short as possible: we use Kamailio as a NAT proxy
to bridge our external IP and our private IP asterisk
>>>>>> servers (via dispatcher).
>>>>>> However both the external IP and the internal IP that the
Kamailio server uses are virtual IPs created by keepalived.
>>>>>> Because of that neither mhomed nor fix_nated_contact work, and we
use force_send_socket to direct the traffic.
>>>>>> We run linux Debian 10 for the OS.
>>>>>> Also we do not use a DB at all, everything is done with local
config files.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The problem is that when traffic goes out the Contact header has
a private IP in it, like:
>>>>>> Contact: <sip:##########@10.10.10.###]:5060>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There are 2 possible solutions to this:
>>>>>> 1. Make changes to linux, keepalived and/or Kamailio so that
Kamailio recognize the virtual IPs so that mhomed and
>>>>>> fix_nated_contact work as usual.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2. Create a manual header rewrite system.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If solution #2:
>>>>>> What we need to do is create a way to rewrite the contact header
to the external IP on the way out, and on the way back
>>>>>> rewrite it back to the internal server that the call is already
connected to.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Not sure if we will need to store those paths on the server or if
we can do some kind of cheat with another persistant
>>>>>> header like P-Preferred-Identity or P-Asserted-Identity (i.e.
store the internal IP in the name field or something).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If anyone out there know of a way to do this or wants to give it
a try please reach out to me.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thank you all for your time.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> ^C
>>>>>> Chad
>>>>>>
>>>>>> __________________________________________________________
>>>>>> Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions
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only to the sender!
>>>>>> Edit mailing list options or unsubscribe:
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https://lists.kamailio.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> VoIP Embedded, Inc.
>>>>>
http://www.voipembedded.com
>>>>>
>>>>> __________________________________________________________
>>>>> Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions
>>>>> * sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org
>>>>> Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only
to the sender!
>>>>> Edit mailing list options or unsubscribe:
>>>>> *
https://lists.kamailio.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>
>