-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
yeah, I know. Mediaproxy does this as far as I know, but I fear it's
just to slow for larger installation. I currently think of openSBC to do
this, but it seems to be a bit unstable. I read about a patch for
rtpproxy to send rtp-timeouts through a unix sock to a application. So
this could be a way to solv my problem without introducing a slow proxy.
http://osdir.com/ml/linux.debian.packages.voip.devel/2006-04/msg00170.html
regards
Helmut
Jerome Martin schrieb:
| As far as I know, nope.
| However, the much slower and bloated (in my opinion) mediaproxy does
| exactly this and even more in terms of "billing safeties".
|
| On Thu, 2008-01-10 at 16:11 +0100, Helmut Kuper wrote:
| Hello,
|
| does anybody know, if openser+rtpproxy are able to detect rtp-timeouts
| and react on them? It would be good for billing.
|
| regards
| Helmut
|>
_______________________________________________
Users mailing list
Users(a)lists.openser.org <mailto:Users@lists.openser.org>
http://lists.openser.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
| *Jérôme Martin **| **LongPhone*
| *Responsable Architecture Réseau*
| 122, rue la Boetie | 75008 Paris
| Tel : +33 (0)1 56 26 28 44
| Fax : +33 (0)1 56 26 28 45
| Mail : *jmartin*(a)longphone.fr
| Web :
www.longphone.com <http://www.longphone.com>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (MingW32)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla -
http://enigmail.mozdev.org
iD8DBQFHhkmO4tZeNddg3dwRAu/kAKCzTN6gOHVzL/ESFslGg3t0I4uorACfZjR5
N0xaNCwh9VVNfytdfUU9h8E=
=K+er
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----