In case the local telecom wants to send/receive media to/from specific IPs
and this can’t be provided by twilio, you will need to look into
rtpengine/rtpproxy in order to relay the media as well.
On Thu, 22 Jul 2021 at 03:46, Fred Posner <fred(a)palner.com> wrote:
Hi Nick,
This type of use case would be perfect for Kamailio. You can use many of
the available modules such as dispatcher, drouting, etc to accomplish this
(or even just a simple call in the request route).
Kamailio just handles SIP, so unless you use an program such as rtpengine,
no media is relayed— it would flow directly from the carrier to twilio.
-- Fred
(via mobile)
Matrix: @fred:matrix.lod.com
On Jul 21, 2021, at 9:22 PM, Nick Hurlburt <nick(a)techmatters.org> wrote:
Hello all,
My name is Nick Hurlburt, and work with a nonprofit tech organization that
provides a software platform for child helplines around the world. I am a
new user to Kamailio, and I'm interested in figuring out if my use case is
appropriate, getting some tips on how to go about it, and possibly
enlisting some expert help.
Our service is built on top of Twilio, but we are working in some
countries where Twilio doesn't have phone numbers. So in those areas, we
are working with local telecoms on ways to integrate using a SIP
connection. In one particular example, the telecom company can send SIP
INVITEs but can only address them to a static IP. However, Twilio needs to
receive the invite addressed to a fully-qualified domain name (eg,
example-setup.sip.twilio.com). The idea arose to use Kamailio as a proxy
to accept the static IP-addressed request and then rewrite the request to
pass it along to a domain name. Then once the connection is established
between the two endpoints, the media can flow directly between them.
I have a software engineering background but still coming up to speed when
it comes to VoIP technology. I'd be interested in:
- does this sound like a good use case for Kamailio?
- is there any specific documentation you could point me to for this use
case? (I have been looking at the Kamailio documentation, but a quick
pointer could save a lot of time in digging through it)
- if anyone from the community would be open to helping us develop a
prototype/proof-of-concept instance of this, especially if you're open to
contributing to a nonprofit on a volunteer or discounted rate, I'd love to
talk more
Thank you,
Nick
__________________________________________________________
Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions
* sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org
Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only to
the sender!
Edit mailing list options or unsubscribe:
*
https://lists.kamailio.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
__________________________________________________________
Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions
* sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org
Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only to
the sender!
Edit mailing list options or unsubscribe:
*
https://lists.kamailio.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
--
Regards,
David Villasmil
email: david.villasmil.work(a)gmail.com
phone: +34669448337