It's not clear, you made an account 'on your computer': did you create an account on the website, from a browser, or are you running linphone there, too, and is it logging you in or not?

The phone app, is android? iOS? and [important] which version?

then, what are you doing? the wizard comes up, you chose something like "existing linphone account" and enter the credentials?

anyway, there is a way to know more: in the phone app, you can go to settings => advanced , and switch on debugging. After that, you can go to 'About', and there should be two buttons: send log, reset log. I cannot guarantee the switch and buttons are always in the same place

if you found all that, then what you can do, is reset log, try to log in until you are getting the 'cannot connect to server' message, then send log.

what happens next, the linphone app compresses the log, *sends* it to a linphone server, the server returns a link to the uploaded log, linphone app copies it to the clipboard and starts a 'share' intent so some options like bluetooth, mail etc. may come up. Choosing mail would be a way to get to see the link, but you should have it in your clipboard, so you could paste it in a browser, looks a bit like this: https://www.linphone.org:444//tmp/1234567890abcdef_abcdef1234567890.gz , this would download your log again and you'd need something that can extract .gz compression. It's terrible on several levels: because your logs leave your device before you can read them yourself (maybe a save locally option has been added meanwhile: it should), anybody who intercepts the link, can read them, and you might be tempted to post the link on this public mailing list (as opposed to waiting for a Belledonne Communications team member to get in touch), and since the log isn't anonymized and logs the login process, the information can be sensitive. But, on the upside, that log is great for debugging, and would in all likelihood reveal what exactly the linphone app is trying to do when it says it cannot reach the server.

One very simple and probable explanation: the way to contact the linphone server and verify auth data, and also the exact server address and port, have changed at some point: an older app trying to sign you in, would fail and react in exactly this way.

Which doesn't have to be the only possible cause, but if it is, then the easiest fix would be getting ideally the newest version.

Other things to check first: do you have a firewall app, and forgot to whitelist the newly installed linphone app, does your phone require you to grant the app the network permission, and the dialog didn't come up or you missed it?

For a broader view on the changed-API scenario, you could have a look at the thread of the [resolved] issue that brought me here:

https://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/linphone-users/2025-05/msg00020.html

(in-thread navigation comes under the mail). Note that I had already looked at my logs, and also edited & anonymized them by hand before sharing, but the answer from the team would point to a somewhat technical last-resort way of using the remote provisioning mechanism to provide credentials to an app that doesn't take them in any other way.

J.


On Sat, 16 Aug 2025, radar--- via Linphone-users wrote:


Hello,
I installed the linphone app. Already created a linphone account on my 
computer. now on the
phone and trying to login. message says, "Failed to query the server. Please 
try again later.
Same message yesterday. have tried to login on the phone app multiple times 
yesterday and
today... I went to settings, apps, linphone and cleared cache and storage.... 
tried again...
still the same message.

is linphone still in business?
or what else could be wrong?

thanks in advance



_______________________________________________
Linphone-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/linphone-users

Reply via email to