Am 16.11.2012 um 18:08 schrieb Michael L. Young:
> - Original Message -
>
>> From: "Felix Vazquez"
>> To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
>> Sent: Friday, November 16, 2012 11:20:46 AM
>> Subject: [asterisk-users] Intruder
>
>> I a
I created my own Whitelist and Blacklist system. When I make an
outgoing call, the number is automatically added to my Whitelist
database and I can add numbers to the Blacklist manually or by pressing
the *.
You can use this for incoming/outgoing calls however you want to setup
your extensions
- Original Message -
> From: "Felix Vazquez"
> To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
> Sent: Friday, November 16, 2012 11:20:46 AM
> Subject: [asterisk-users] Intruder
> I am in the asterisk CLI and can see an unidentified caller trying
> the make calls out of
Hi Felix,
ngrep -W byline port 5060|grep -B1 "INVITE sip"
Markus
Am 16.11.2012 17:50, schrieb Ruben Rögels:
Hi Felix,
you have several things to check:
netstat -a -n --udp --tcp
will show you connections and connection attempts on network layer level.
You have to look for incoming connecti
Hi Felix,
you have several things to check:
netstat -a -n --udp --tcp
will show you connections and connection attempts on network layer level.
You have to look for incoming connections to port 5060 and if the call
has been established for connections on your rtp ports. (see rtp.conf).
If you
I am in the asterisk CLI and can see an unidentified caller trying the make
calls out of the asterisk system. How do I stop them? How do I identify them
and how can I see how the go in?
This is an example of what I would see:
NOTICE[4098]: chan_sip.c:20063 handle_request_invite: