Hello, I am looking for a gnomemmeeting setup for my environment and just started with VOIP. I have in mind several options, but I am not sure, which one is the most promissing one to follow....and most likely there are much smarter and better ones.
If this is the wrong list, please let me know, if you know a more appropriate one. Here is my environment: I have an H323 gateway or proxy (Cisco proxy?) which is not under my control and where I can register one fixed IP address for my number. When I run gnomemeeting on my workstation and enter there under Edit/Preferences/H323 Settings/Gateway/Proxy Settings everything works. Nothing else to setup, no authentication etc. I dial h323:<number> to call and receive calls when my number is dialed. When I am away from my workstation, I would like to call and receive calls on a laptop with dynamic DNS (running gnomemeeting). I have full control over the laptop. The workstation is still up and running, i.e. I can use it to forward or redirect calls. I am wondering, what you think about these options (or if you have better ones): 1) My assumption here is that ports 1718-1720 are used for the communication with the Cisco proxy (that is what I have seen with ohphone): Use my workstation to forward all openh323 communication from Cisco proxy to laptop and visa versa. Forward the ports 1719 and 1718 from the workstation to the laptop using an ssh tunnel: laptop$ ssh -A -R 1718:laptop:1718 -l rdorsch -N workstation Then I would need to forward all packets to port 1720 of the workstation to the Cisco proxy. Note that the workstation is not doing NAT for the laptop, so doing this might be not trivial. 2) Setup gnu gatekeeper at my workstation as proxy and let it forward all calls to and from the cisco proxy. Can gnu gatekeeper do this? I saw that I can setup gnu gatekeeper as proxy, but can gnu gatekeeper use the Cisco proxy itself? 3) Use call forwarding of gnomemeeting on my workstation to receive calls on my laptop. Not sure if that works and how I would forward calls from the laptop to the Cisco proxy. 4) I think X and/or KDE habe options to forward sound. I could experiment with these, but I think VOIP developed for a good reason their own codecs ;-) Any comments or hints are welcome. Many thanks. Rainer -- Rainer Dorsch Alzentalstr. 28 D-71083 Herrenberg 07032-919495 Icq: 32550367 _______________________________________________ GnomeMeeting-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnomemeeting-list
