On 14 Jan 2010, at 10:08, --[ UxBoD ]-- wrote:
> running Asterisk 1.6.2.0 and have started to see in messages:
>
> [Jan 14 05:43:43] NOTICE[29231] chan_sip.c: Peer '100' is now
> Lagged. (4007ms / 3000ms)
> [Jan 14 07:20:37] NOTICE[29231] chan_sip.c: Peer '100' is now
> Lagged. (4007ms / 3000m
Hi,
running Asterisk 1.6.2.0 and have started to see in messages:
[Jan 14 05:43:43] NOTICE[29231] chan_sip.c: Peer '100' is now Lagged. (4007ms /
3000ms)
[Jan 14 05:43:53] NOTICE[29231] chan_sip.c: Peer '100' is now Reachable. (9ms /
3000ms)
[Jan 14 05:44:02] NOTICE[29231] chan_sip.c: Peer '100
Low bandwidth is another possibility, but I'd have though that any
connection slow enough to generate that much latency wouldn't be usable
for VoIP in the first place.
Ishfaq Malik wrote:
> Cheers Rob, I was thinking it was due to a low bandwidth connection at
> the other end but from what you're
Cheers Rob, I was thinking it was due to a low bandwidth connection at
the other end but from what you're saying it sounds like this is not the
case.
Rob Hillis wrote:
> 800ms is horrendous lag for a VoIP connection. If I were you, I'd be
> investing some time in finding out why the lag is so
800ms is horrendous lag for a VoIP connection. If I were you, I'd be
investing some time in finding out why the lag is so great. Even if I
do a ping to a UK address, I'm getting pings of no more than 300ms from
Australia. Unless you've got multiple satellite connections in the path
(in which cas
Oh, I forgot to mention, the customer can make outbound calls from this
extension. Just calls cannot be routed back even though the IP Address
and port are in the realtime cache.
Ishfaq Malik wrote:
> Hi There
>
> I have an extension which is in a different country and is constantly
> lagged (a
Hi There
I have an extension which is in a different country and is constantly
lagged (about 800ms). When anyone tries to call this extension we get a
No route to destination message.
Now I would have thought that the server should be able to find a route
to the destination seeing as the peer