The more obvious question is:
How does it know there is no more bandwidth available? As a signalling proxy, surely it
has no visibility of the RTP usages or requirements.
I guess if it counted all the complete INVITE-> OK dialogues and the SDP codec used it
could estimate usage? But the RTP/media path could be different in each case of these so
again the same question as above......
Neill...;o)
----- Original Message ----
From: Henning Westerholt <henning.westerholt(a)1und1.de>
To: users(a)openser.org; yanlin <yanlin(a)fortinet.com>
Sent: Tuesday, 3 April, 2007 10:41:31 AM
Subject: Re: [Users] does openser support QoS ?
On Tuesday 03 April 2007 11:15, yanlin wrote:
Hi,
does openser support some kind of QoS ?
like, band width management, when there has no more usable bandwidth, then
new INVITE should be rejected.
Hi Yanlin,
if the bandwith is exceeded, no new INVITEs will get to the server and will
timeout. :-) The "pike" module does some kind of DOS protection, but this is
also no real QoS.
There was a discussion two weeks ago about this topic on devel (the topic
was "rand function in config file"), Klaus suggested some kind of bandwith
management module there. But at the moment such a module don't exist in
OpenSER.
Cheers,
Henning
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