Your problems seems to be concerned to the RTP part of the comunication...
as SIP pointed, where should the clients send the RTP traffic? To 127.0.0.1
(Your Asterisk IP)? I don't think so... ;)
So, from what I see and understand from Your explanation, You have two
choices:
1- bind Asterisk to an external IP like SER (can be the same IP), but in
another port;
2- try to include in Your design a RTP-Proxy application (rtproxy or
mediaproxy are good choices).
Edson.
-----Original Message-----
From: serusers-bounces(a)lists.iptel.org [mailto:serusers-
bounces(a)lists.iptel.org] On Behalf Of John Breen
Sent: quinta-feira, 24 de maio de 2007 00:15
To: SIP
Cc: serusers(a)lists.iptel.org
Subject: Re: [Serusers] Ser + Asterisk on the same box??
SIP wrote:
Your biggest issue, bar none, is using the
loopback address for
anything externally-facing. 127.0.0.1 is called a loopback address for
a reason -- it never leaves the host itself. Just how do you expect
the SIP phones to be able to contact a 127.0.0.1 address when that
address is, in essence, themselves?
There's something inherently flawed in your design.
Let's back up and explain, in detail, what it is exactly you're trying
to do, and why you feel the 127.0.0.1 address should be part of this
equation? Perhaps we can suggest something if we know what you're
trying to do.
There's a very simple reason. Asterisk and SER are on the same
machine. So the traffic from SER to asterisk doesn't need to leave the
box. This is why I'm using the loopback interface - there's no need to
use the real world one.
--
Regards,
John Breen
HGA IT&T Solutions
Tel: 08 63113000
Fax: 08 63113144
http://www.hgait.net.au
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