[OpenSER-Users] newbie questions
Alex Balashov
abalashov at evaristesys.com
Wed Feb 6 07:23:51 CET 2008
Doug,
Doug McLetchie wrote:
> For inbound calls (calls coming from another carrier to my big expensive
> gateway & destined for a specific PBX), I'd like my gateway to send the
> call to the proxy, who will determine which PBX to send the call to, and
> then send the call to to correct PBX via the Gateway. I don't
> understand how to set up OpenSER to send the call via the Gateway. If I
> provision the static ip address of the PBX in the proxy, won't it try to
> send directly to that IP address instead of sending it to the Gateway?
> I think that the feature that I'm looking for is something like an
> outbound proxy, for the proxy. (does that make sense?)
OpenSER can certainly do what you are trying to accomplish.
SIP routing is done by URI, which consists of a "user" part and a
"domain" part. The "user" part is the number (or alphanumeric
identification, in the case of pure-VoIP peering) and the "domain" part
is the IP "place" at which the "user" part is reachable.
When you route a call to some URI, what you are really saying is, "Here,
domain, you must know what to do with this 'user' part - i.e. have
reachability information for it (a SIP contact bound from a
registration, for example)."
A proxy by itself isn't enough. If you need to reach these PBXs, you
clearly need to know how to reach them. This requires a SIP registrar
somewhere, so that the PBXs can register against it and say, "Here, you
can reach me at such and such IP and port." Or, I suppose, you can
define these contacts statically with a database interface from the
proxy, in which case you don't need to use a registrar.
I don't know what this Big Expensive Gateway is, but if it's something
like a Session Border Controller, it should be able to forward SIP
REGISTER requests to your proxy/registrar. Or do they register against
the gateway?
Either way, you can perform this resolution with OpenSER.
The problem you *might* run into is sending the same logical call leg
back to the Gateway. Depending on what it is, it may not like that and
perceive a call routing loop, because the call that went through it to
the proxy is the "same" call (in terms of SIP Call-ID, and other things
that make up a logical call "leg") that is now being sent back around to
it. This problem is often solved with the introduction of a
back-to-back user agent which can re-originate a different call leg.
--
Alex Balashov
Evariste Systems
Web : http://www.evaristesys.com/
Tel : (+1) (678) 954-0670
Direct : (+1) (678) 954-0671
Mobile : (+1) (706) 338-8599
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