Thanks for the answers. I have to read those more carefully, when I'm properly
awake and concentrated, but it sounds as if this might be of help.
Kindest regards
Julien
Music was my first love and it will be my last (John Miles)
FIND MY WEB-PROJECT AT:
http
No, your setup is not unusual for a client.
If you are not happy with your router, you can set it to Ethernet bridge
mode (if it's DSL over ATM transport, that's RFC1483). Then your PC
behind it can hold the public Layer 3 interface, but the DSL modem will
still do the ATM/G.DMT stuff.
Julien
The short answer to your question--assuming it is the right question to
be asking--is that Linux comes with a built-in NAT infrastructure as
part of its packet filter ("netfilter"). The utility "iptables" is used
to manage it. Simple example:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
iptab
I'm not completely sure about the things my router can do. It's from the
telephone company and it's supposed to do a lot of stuff. I've just heard,
that windows people could solve such things. After all my setup isn't too
strange or rare? Or is it for running asterisk?
Kndest regards and than
I'm using gtalk.
So I can try to configure my router (it's got a lot of javascript :-) ) to
forward 5222 to my server and the same thing backwards?
Thanks for responding so fast!
Kindest regards
Julien
Music was my first love and it will be my last (John Miles)
==
...@lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-boun...@lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Julien
Claassen
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 12:32 PM
To: asterisk users mailinglist
Subject: [asterisk-users] NAT router for Linux
Hello everyone!
This is my problem: I try to do gtalk, but my asterisk server uses the
local
If you set the 'bindaddr' to your private IP address, the Gtalk
connection from your Asterisk server to my Gtalk client (running on
Windows) works fine. That's at least what we've tested together
Julien, right?
If the STUN packets are properly exchanged between Asterisk and the
Gtalk client you'r
Hello everyone!
This is my problem: I try to do gtalk, but my asterisk server uses the local
IP 127.0.0.1 or perhaps the 192.168.*.*.
Now I've heard, that a NAT router can help there. I was told it's the way
the windows-world does the trick, when they sit behind a
router/phonebox/modem. Do