On 25/11/2012, at 1:23 PM, Tiago Geada <tiago.ge...@gmail.com> wrote:

> linux does sort this out and asterisk listens in both interfaces. however 
> asterisk connects and tells remote end to send rtp back at the same IP  where 
> sip is going trough...
> 
> remote end does try to send  it but gets stopped in a firewall.. thus if 
> asterisk did present a different  IP to recieve RTP in its SIP header, this 
> would not happen!
> 
> 

I think this is outside of asterisk's natural ability

You may need a proxy server in between you and the Cisco to achieve this if you 
can't change the firewall.

http://forums.asterisk.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=84018

Have you tried making the preferred route to these addresses go out eth1, thus 
getting the required address?

Ultimately seems odd the firewall allows access in but not out, guessing you 
have no control over that? 

Good luck

Cheers Duncan 


> On 23 November 2012 19:39, Duncan Turnbull <dun...@e-simple.co.nz> wrote:
>> 
>> On 24/11/2012, at 2:19 AM, Tiago Geada <tiago.ge...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hello Folks, I am looking for a way that makes asterisk tell remote SIP 
>>> party that the IP where they will send RTP is not the same as the one I am 
>>> comunicating via SIP
>>> 
>>> Can this be done anyhow?
>>> 
>>> I can try and explain:
>>> 
>>> We have placed a asterisk box in our partners office.
>>> 
>>> It has eth0 with IP 172.16.1.10 and eth1: 10.34.18.250
>>> 
>>> linux has its routes set so it can comunicate with several networks in 
>>> their offices.
>>> 
>>> now there is a cisco call manager that we need to communicate with. 
>>> Normally via our IP 172.16.1.10, however seems that this cisco uses some 
>>> sort of 'directmedya=yes' and sets both ends speaking RTP with themselves.
>>> 
>>> There are some extensions in cisco that have a network 10.134.0.0/16 that 
>>> we can only comunicate via eth1
>>> 
>>> thus when calling cisco (always via eth0) sometimes we need to say that OUR 
>>> IP to recieve RTP is not 172.16.1.10, but 10.34.18.250
>> 
>> This is a routing issue, not asterisk I think. You are saying you route to 
>> cisco via eth0, it sets up connections to its end points and then drops out 
>> of the media flow, but the end points have no route to the eth0 address so 
>> they fail
>> 
>> Linux usually sorts this out and asterisk replies on the address of the 
>> interface it sends out with. So for the most part the response in my 
>> experience if its going out eth1 should use the eth1 ip address.
>> 
>> If you can get to it via eth0 and thats the preferred route then it will 
>> have the eth0 address. If so why can't you change your routing table to use 
>> eth1 when you need to go to the cisco then you will have the right address 
>> and the far extensions can respond to you correctly
>> 
>> Or change the cisco network endpoints so they can successfully access your 
>> address on eth0
>> 
>> 
>>> can this be done?
>>> --
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