Hi Danielok, thanks for feedback. Indeed, 3.0+ is far more improved than what was in openser/kamailio 1.0 to 1.5 in respect to tcp, therefore anyone facing heavy tcp needs should consider this 3.0+.
Just to let you know I followed your advice and we deployed kamailio 3.0.1.We are still doing several tests, but I can say already we don't have anymroe errors with tcp connections ...
CheersPascal
On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 6:04 PM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,I have seen clients sending registration over UDP requiring to be contacted via TCP.
On 03/11/2010 05:58 PM, Iñaki Baz Castillo wrote:
2010/3/11 Pascal Maugeri<pascal.maugeri@gmail.com>:
This must be present in the initial SUBSCRIBE. However if the clientDoes such NOTIFY go to a TCP registered user? Of course if there isDo you mean that the user is sending "transport=tcp" in his Contact header ?
not an existing TCP connection between Kamailio and the final natted
user then it's not possible to send such NOTIFY.
is behind NAT and uses TCP it's required some way to mantain the
keepalive in the router, if not a future NOTIFY could not arrive. A
common approach is the client sending some TCP data through the
existing connection (i.e.<CRLF><CRLF> as defined in defat-oubound,
now RFC XXXX).
To be sure it registers via TCP check the configuration of the phone and watch the sip traffic with ngrep (or ethereal) to see the transport layer protocol.
Connecting from server to a client behind nat is possible only if you have port forwarding on your nat box to phone IP address. Therefore, if the phone connects via tcp it must keep the connection open. If for some reason it closes, it must re-open it. Otherwise it becomes unreachable.
In the server side there are lot of tcp options to tune the behavior and optimize. I do suggest using version 3.0 for a much improved TCP architecture and implementation (including asynchronous tcp -- in case you deal with lot of tcp connections, then this saves you).
http://www.kamailio.org/dokuwiki/doku.php/core-cookbook:3.0.x#tcp_parameters
Worth to mention as well that you can change the value of tcp parameters at runtime without need to restart (e.g., connecting timeout, send timeout, etc) using sercmd.
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla
Kamailio SIP Router Masterclass, Berlin, March 22-26, 2010
* http://www.asipto.com/index.php/sip-router-masterclass/