Hey,

OK, so after further research, I found that the trouble was not in fact in the transaction, the trouble was with fix_nated_contact();

So I setup a spiral SIP path. I have a public server that is used by a bunch of different phones, and I have a alg server ( one public and one private).

The public server often handles NATed users and the private alg server handles NAT for a particular user set ( the users on that particular network) .

The trouble is that the ALG does not rewrite the contact, rather it adds a Route: header with Record-Route. The trouble was the public server was calling fix_nated_contact on these users' requests, so when it came back and the last route header was parsed, the packet could not be delivered because the fix_nated_contact was changing the contact to the alg proxy server.

I added a custom header called "X-Ignore-NAT", and when I do the nat tests ( nac_uac_test ), I also check that the X-Ignore-NAT header was not present.

So I misdiagnosed the problem that I described in my message. I did my traces on the end point, so when I did not see the final packet arrive to the device, I thought it was being reabsorbed.

Is the custom header I used a good solution?

David

On 10-07-08 07:04 AM, Klaus Darilion wrote:


Am 08.07.2010 00:53, schrieb David:
Hey,

I do not do anything IP level forwarding. All my forwarding is done
using Kamailio. It looks like what I am doing is called hairpin routing.

I think the correct term is "spiral" - at least the RFC uses this term.

How do you forward the request - t_relay()? If yes, then tm module should treat the request as a new transaction.

Post a trace (you can rewrite IP addresses):
ngrep -t -q -W byline -d any -P "" port 5060 or 5061

regards
Klaus


Thanks,

David

On 2010-07-07 18:48, Timo Reimann wrote:
Hi,


David wrote:
I have setup two Kamailio servers, my INVITEs will go through server A,
which forwards to server B which forwards it back to server A.

This is intential, the trouble is when the packet comes back through
server B, nothing has changed so TM sees it as a retransmission.

The difference between the first time through and the second time is the
port 5061 instead of 5060.
If you forward the INVITE from B to A SIP-wise (e.g., by calling
forward()) a new Via header should be added which prevents the spiraled
INVITE message from being considered a retransmission on A.

Do you perform forwarding on a lower level, like IP?


Cheers,

--Timo


_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users


_______________________________________________
SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list
sr-users@lists.sip-router.org
http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users

Reply via email to