> *Sent:* Tuesday, July 18, 2017 10:20 AM
> *To:* Simon Perreault
> *Cc:* voiceops@voiceops.org
> *Subject:* Re: [VoiceOps] Tool To Test for SIP ALGs
>
>
>
> Awesome, do you allow the public to use this tool? Is it based on
> opensource software, or what?
>
>
>
&g
Hello,
On 18.07.17 16:00, Colton Conor wrote:
> Anyone have a tool that a technician or customer could put on a
> computer on a customer's network, and it will tell them if a SIP ALG
> was disabled or enabled? Or if their network was suitable for SIP
> traffic?
>
> We started deploying some Ubiqu
Le 2017-07-18 à 10:19, Colton Conor a écrit :
> Awesome, do you allow the public to use this tool?
Some of this tool's functions are indeed exposed to the public. Anyone
can use this to check their network's VoIP-readiness (including presence
of a SIP ALG) and the quality of their connection to th
In my experience, mainly Polycom and Adtran, most SIP devices send
packets with a source port 5060.SIP ALG preserves the source port
but regular NAT changes the source port (maybe not for the first device)
just like NAT for any other service.
On 07/18/2017 10:00 AM, Colton Conor wrote:
An
TELCHEMY or <http://www.telchemy.com/custportal>
www.telchemy.com/custportal to open a ticket
Skype: acaiozzo
From: VoiceOps [mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org] On Behalf Of Colton Conor
Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2017 10:20 AM
To: Simon Perreault
Cc: voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re:
Awesome, do you allow the public to use this tool? Is it based on
opensource software, or what?
On Tue, Jul 18, 2017 at 9:08 AM, Simon Perreault
wrote:
> Le 2017-07-18 à 10:00, Colton Conor a écrit :
> > Anyone have a tool that a technician or customer could put on a computer
> > on a customer
Le 2017-07-18 à 10:00, Colton Conor a écrit :
> Anyone have a tool that a technician or customer could put on a computer
> on a customer's network, and it will tell them if a SIP ALG was disabled
> or enabled? Or if their network was suitable for SIP traffic?
We developed Jive View for this very p
Anyone have a tool that a technician or customer could put on a computer on
a customer's network, and it will tell them if a SIP ALG was disabled or
enabled? Or if their network was suitable for SIP traffic?
We started deploying some Ubiquiti Unifi USG routers, and discovered that
they had SIP ALG