> > 0) if its just a warning, how to get it fixed? >> > > It doesn't really need to. A 'warning' is like saying "here's something > you should be aware of." > > Personally, I prefer to resolve all warnings so there is less cruft to > sift through when something actually does go wrong. > > I see
> > 1) checked, it is not exist. is it exist by default? >> > > I don't know about your version of Asterisk. > > Im using AsteriskNow lastest version 2.0.2 > > 2) what directory it should be? >> > > Unless you (or your package maintainer) has been fiddling about, it should > be in the same directory as all of your other Asterisk configuration files: > sip.conf, iax.conf, extensions.[conf|ael], etc. > already checked. files for asterisk are on /etc/asterisk directory but theres no users.conf > > 3) im root >> > > Glad to meet you. > > :D > If you meant the user running Asterisk is root, this is a less than > optimal situation that can lead to really big problems. Why? Steve please explain. > 4) the file doesn't exist >> > > At a minimum, 'touch /etc/asterisk/users.conf' may make the warning go > away. You should read up a bit to see if the features of users.conf make > sense for your environment. > I'll read it again > Personally, I set up my Asterisk installs so they only load the modules > I'm actually using by specifying 'autoload=no' and explicitly loading the > modules I want in modules.conf. I still need to learn more. I've just experimenting asterisk from yesterday, but I'll try to examine what modules i need to load :-) thank you
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