On Tue, 17 Oct 2006 08:08:32 -0400 Nathan Hawkins utsl@quic.net wrote:
I'm testing Polycom 601's with 2.0.1 firmware and Mediaproxy. I haven't noticed any problems with hold at all, so I haven't looked into whether it's using 0.0.0.0 or not. I supposed it's possible that that parameter doesn't actually work, and Mediaproxy just works with it.
I think though, that what you're describing below, where it resumes from hold with 0.0.0.0 as the address, is a firmware bug. The Polycom should definitely not be doing that. That's going to break all kinds of things.
hmm, guess i missunderstood - should the media direction parameter also be marked when "on hold" is "started" or only at the end when we resume the call that was on hold? Currently, Polycom sets IP 0.0.0.0 at the beginning of the hold, no media path direction is set. When the call is resumed later, the polycom sets the correct "sendrecv"-parameter (Which i didn't recognize earlier, sorry). However, if i understood rfc3264 the polycom should mark the media stream as sendonly on the beginning of the hold...
To clarify what i'm talking about i've attached the whole sip-debug of two calls, the first call is sent on hold when a second call comes and resumed after the second call has ended(1111111801 calls 2222222804 and it answers, then 0891234567 calls 2222222804 and 1111111801 is set on hold and resumed later). Openser runs on .98, which also serves the rtpproxy. .97 is a asterisk-gateway.
Thanks for the input Christian
What firmware version are you running?
Nathan
Benko wrote:
Hmm, actually this parameter is set to 0(default). However, in practice it still uses the old standard(rfc2543). There's no media direction parameter in the sdp-message sent by the polycom for some reason, although the manual states to do so (firmware 2.0.1). Is it possible to force this somehow?
regards christian
On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 19:58:33 -0400 Nathan Hawkins utsl@quic.net wrote:
There's an option for the Polycom phones to switch the hold behaviour.
Set voIpProt.SIP.useRFC2543hold to 0, and it should use RFC3264 rules for signalling hold instead of 0.0.0.0.
Benko wrote:
Hello!
I'm having a issue with NAT and rtpproxy. Usually my setup works fine with natted clients, the Connection Information is overwritten with the IP of the rtpproxy and audio passes through in both directions. However, today i came across a problem where the Polycom 501 sets a outgoing ip of 0.0.0.0 instead of the private ip after resuming a call that was on hold(actually, the other party is invited again) - and the force_rtp_proxy ()-command on openser left the ip untouched instead of overwriting it with the rtpproxy-ip. As a result the person that was on hold had audio but the polycom user (with the "wrong" ip) hadn't.
The false ip left aside, is it expected behaviour of force_rtp_proxy to not touch 0.0.0.0?
Just out of curiosity - does someone know the "on hold"-problem with polycoms?
thx christian
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