as far as i know, mediaproxy by AG Projects it's also kernel based
forwarding, so i don't understand what is the reasons to use another
mediaproxy let's say mediaproxy-ng.
dani
On Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 5:54 PM, aft <aftnix(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 8:42 PM, Richard Fuchs
<rfuchs(a)sipwise.com> wrote:
On 04/02/13 10:02, aft wrote:
Daemon installation failed with the following :
call.c:15:27: fatal error: xmlrpc_client.h: No such file or directory
Check out the list of dependencies in the debian/control file. One of
them is libxmlrpc-c3 (from
http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/).
Thanks for the reply. I have successfully built it.
What is this kernel based forwarding? why its
useful?
It provides better performance than doing it through the daemon, less
CPU overhead and lower jitter.
I was actually asking How it works? I mean when there is kernel based
forwarding is enabled, what does the daemon do compared to when the kernel
based forwarding is not enabled?
If i want do some modifications on rtp packets and intend to use kernel
based forwarding then where should i put my code? in daemon part or
the xtable module given there?
I was confused about the architecture of the package. When there is no
kernel
based forwarding, Then the daemon should work like a simple udp relay. But
when there is kernel based forwarding, if the packets never comes up
to the userland,
then what does daemon do in that scenario?
Does this mediaproxy-ng supports repacketization
of rtp packets?
No that's not supported yet.
cheers
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-aft
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