Greg,
This is a ref to SER. Apparently this functionality has been added to the new pre-release version. I did find some talk about it in the release notes. I couldn¹t find any specific documentation. Admittedly I don¹t understand the layout of SER¹s site very well as I haven¹t spent much time there.
-- TR
On 1/15/07 8:33 PM, "Greg Fausak" lgfausak@gmail.com wrote:
In the text below I quote Kerker 'SER does support DNS failover.'. Is this ser or openser? Where can I read more about this?
-g
On Jan 15, 2007, at 10:40 AM, Klaus Darilion wrote:
Staffan,
Kerker Staffan wrote:
...
Now, if I disable one of the Gateways, I hang every second call. OpenSER does
not
try the second A record address if the first doesn't answer. How can I solve
this? Shouldn't OpenSER fail over to the second A record listed in the NAPTR
=> SRV
resolving? Or will OpenSER continue to resend all SIP INVITES until timers
fire? Would
it help if the proxy recieved an ICMP port/destination unreachable from the
network? Is
there anyway to get around this? In the other direction, from POTS to sip,
the PGW2200
nicely switches over to the second of my two OpenSER servers if I shut one of
them down. These servers have the same DNS entries (but for another SIP domain, NAPTR =>
SRV => 2x A record).
Yes, OpenSER or for that matter every transaction stateful proxy should
do RFC 3263 based fail-over. But as you can imagine this is pretty
complex to implement and that's why openser does not support it yet, it
is listed on the development roadmap. The newest release of SER does
support DNS failover.
Users mailing list Users@openser.org http://openser.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users