Hello,
On 11/29/11 9:35 AM, Uri Shacked wrote:
hi,
both methods run the same cfg file.
when i run kamailio i get the following output and syslog running (i
like it...)
when i run the /etc/init.d/kamailio start i do not get this output and
can't follow the debug on line...
[root@kamailiolabroute /]# kamailio
loading modules under
/usr/local/lib/kamailio/modules_k/:/usr/local/lib/kamailio/modules/
0(12605) WARNING: <core> [socket_info.c:1275]: WARNING: fix_hostname:
could not rev. resolve 10.2.0.55
0(12605) WARNING: <core> [socket_info.c:1275]: WARNING: fix_hostname:
could not rev. resolve 172.16.60.161
0(12605) WARNING: <core> [socket_info.c:1275]: WARNING: fix_hostname:
could not rev. resolve 10.2.0.55
0(12605) WARNING: <core> [socket_info.c:1275]: WARNING: fix_hostname:
could not rev. resolve 172.16.60.161
Listening on
udp: 127.0.0.1:5060 <http://127.0.0.1:5060>
udp: 10.2.0.55:5060 <http://10.2.0.55:5060>
udp: 172.16.60.161:5060 <http://172.16.60.161:5060>
tcp: 127.0.0.1:5060 <http://127.0.0.1:5060>
tcp: 10.2.0.55:5060 <http://10.2.0.55:5060>
tcp: 172.16.60.161:5060 <http://172.16.60.161:5060>
Aliases:
tcp: localhost:5060
tcp: localhost.localdomain:5060
udp: localhost:5060
udp: localhost.localdomain:5060
Above output is not sent to syslog, but printed to terminat. The init.d
script suppresses the output to terminal from application, printing the
messages from the script itself.
Cheers,
Daniel
On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:45 PM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla
<miconda(a)gmail.com <mailto:miconda@gmail.com>> wrote:
On 11/27/11 4:14 PM, Alex Balashov wrote:
On 11/27/2011 09:56 AM, Uri Shacked wrote:
hi,
what is the differebt when i start kamailio with the
command "kamailio"
only, or using "/etc/init.d/kamailio start ?
using the first one gets me to see the log running...
second one does
not....
and with the second one i can configure the memory usage
and so....
how do i make them do the same?
These parameters are in a defaults file that, depending on
your distribution, goes either in /etc/sysconfig/kamailio or
/etc/default/kamailio. It is sourced by the init script.
/etc/init.d/kamailio is just a wrapper around kamailio. As Alex
said, /etc/init.d/kamailio takes some parameters from different
files (a matter of OS distro) and passes them to kamailio as
command line parameters.
You can see what parameters can be passed to kamailio via command
line with'kamailio -h' -- this will print also the path to default
configuration file.
When you simply run kamailio, it will load the default
configuration file, with no other command line parameters.
If you have different output, means that either the init.d script
is using another config file (passed with -f) or it has command
line parameters that overwrite the values from config file.
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla --
http://www.asipto.com
<http://www.asipto.com/>
Kamailio Advanced Training, Dec 5-8, Berlin:
http://asipto.com/u/kat
http://linkedin.com/in/miconda --
http://twitter.com/miconda
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--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla --
http://www.asipto.com
Kamailio Advanced Training, Dec 5-8, Berlin:
http://asipto.com/u/kat
http://linkedin.com/in/miconda --
http://twitter.com/miconda