ICMP I would have noticed right away. I thought we were screaming into the void 
until at last I found those packets. Something was clearly consuming my UDP, 
and replying with a rejection message in TCP, not ICMP. It made zero sense. 
Interestingly, the client just called and said all functionality has been 
restored.

 

-Kent

 

From: VoiceOps <voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> On Behalf Of Nathan Anderson via 
VoiceOps
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 11:47 AM
To: voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area)

 

"but I did get TCP rejections to my inbound UDP packets"

 

?

 

Did you mean you got ICMP messages back from some router on their network in 
response to the UDP transmissions you were sending?  Not TCP, surely...

 

-- Nathan

 

From: VoiceOps [ <mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> 
mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org] On Behalf Of Kent A via VoiceOps
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 7:55 AM
To:  <mailto:voiceops@voiceops.org> voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area)

 

I too have a customer in the same area with the same exact problem. However 
they are doing SIP over UDP, and initially inbound SIP packets from my server 
headed to  the client at frontier were getting rejections. I could see their 
SIP packets, but they never got mine, but I did get TCP rejections to my 
inbound UDP packets. Frontier rolled a truck, the tech said there was nothing 
he could do and he would escalate to Tier II. As soon as his truck left the 
parking lot, SIP was working in both directions, but this new RTP situation was 
now present. Never received a callback from Tier II, but it’s clear they were 
able to “unblock” SIP packets that they suddenly started blocking. Would love 
to know if a VPN gets around this whole mess. 

 

-Kent 

 

 

From: VoiceOps < <mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> 
voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> On Behalf Of Nathan Anderson via VoiceOps
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 10:45 AM
To:  <mailto:voiceops@voiceops.org> voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area)

 

Assuming I understood the original problem description accurately, I don't see 
how a lossy trunk somewhere could explain 100% loss of *just* RTP and only in 
*one* specific direction with *zero* impact to any other internet traffic.  
You'd think that at least some RTP frames would manage to squeak by every once 
in a while, and that these users would have complaints about other 
non-voice-related things also not working as well.

 

Of course, the TLS would only make it impossible for the RXing carrier to peer 
into the SIP signalling to see details about the RTP session set-up.  So if 
they're doing something more brain-dead to UDP in general, TLSing the SIP isn't 
going to work around that.  Taking one of your affected customers and 
encapsulating the whole enchilada -- SIP, RTP, and all -- within a VPN would 
actually be a pretty interesting experiment...

 

-- Nathan

 

From: VoiceOps [ <mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> 
mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org] On Behalf Of Jim Rodgers via VoiceOps
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 7:09 AM
To: Mike Hammett
Cc:  <mailto:voiceops@voiceops.org> voiceops@voiceops.org
Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area)

 

We use SIP TLS. I don't think they're intentionally blocking voice traffic, I 
think there's something broken inside their network that needs to be fixed 
(lossy link somewhere?).

 

The issue is getting anyone there to recognize the issue and want to fix it.

 

Jim

 

On Fri, Mar 8, 2024 at 5:32 AM Mike Hammett <voice...@ics-il.net 
<mailto:voice...@ics-il.net> > wrote:

I don't trust last mile networks to reliably deliver SIP calls. I usually end 
up putting them into VPNs, TLS, etc.



-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
 <http://www.ics-il.com> http://www.ics-il.com



Midwest Internet Exchange
 <http://www.midwest-ix.com> http://www.midwest-ix.com

 


  _____  


From: "Jim Rodgers via VoiceOps" < <mailto:voiceops@voiceops.org> 
voiceops@voiceops.org>
To:  <mailto:voiceops@voiceops.org> voiceops@voiceops.org
Sent: Thursday, March 7, 2024 11:16:23 AM
Subject: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area)

Beginning early yesterday, we're seeing dropped voice rtp traffic to some of 
our business customers in the Los Angeles metro area on Frontier Comm broadband 
fiber. The voice udp stream is leaving our data center and never making it to 
the Frontier fiber customer. It's not all of our customers, only random ones. 
We've sniffed the traffic on our side and see the voice rtp stream leave our 
data center but then sniffing on our customer's side the traffic never arrives 
(multiple Frontier fiber customers with this issue, not just one).

 

Switching the customer over to an alternate Internet connection resolves the 
issue.

 

Frontier frontline customer support doesn’t get it and they just want to roll a 
tech out for an issue that’s deeper inside their network.

 

We have packet captures of both sides (our DC and your customer) showing the 
voice rtp stream leaving our DC and never showing up at the fiber customer.

 

This doesn’t seem to be affecting every fiber customer in the Frontier 
footprint, it just seems to be random customers.

 

Anyone else experiencing this issue? Any thoughts on who to contact on the 
Frontier side to get it resolved and/or get some eyes on it?

 

Thanks for the help.

 

Jim


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