diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'configs')
-rw-r--r-- | configs/sip.conf.sample | 22 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/configs/sip.conf.sample b/configs/sip.conf.sample index 901e99fce..6cb294581 100644 --- a/configs/sip.conf.sample +++ b/configs/sip.conf.sample @@ -58,12 +58,18 @@ ; 1. Asterisk checks the SIP From: address username and matches against ; names of devices with type=user ; The name is the text between square brackets [name] -; 2. Asterisk checks the IP address (and port number) that the INVITE +; 2. Asterisk checks the From: addres and matches the list of devices +; with a type=peer +; 3. Asterisk checks the IP address (and port number) that the INVITE ; was sent from and matches against any devices with type=peer ; ; Don't mix extensions with the names of the devices. Devices need a unique ; name. The device name is *not* used as phone numbers. Phone numbers are ; anything you declare as an extension in the dialplan (extensions.conf). +; +; When setting up trunks, make sure there's no risk that any From: username +; (caller ID) will match any of your device names, because then Asterisk +; might match the wrong device. ; ; Note: The parameter "username" is not the username and in most cases is ; not needed at all. Check below. In later releases, it's renamed @@ -446,6 +452,20 @@ srvlookup=yes ; Enable DNS SRV lookups on outbound calls ; and more readable because you don't have to write the parameters in two places ; (note that the "port" is ignored - this is a bug that should be fixed). ; +; Note that a register= line doesn't mean that we will match the incoming call in any +; other way than described above. If you want to control where the call enters your +; dialplan, which context, you want to define a peer with the hostname of the provider's +; server. If the provider has multiple servers to place calls to your system, you need +; a peer for each server. +; +; Beginning with Asterisk version 1.6.2, the "user" portion of the register line may +; contain a port number. Since the logical separator between a host and port number is a +; ':' character, and this character is already used to separate between the optional "secret" +; and "authuser" portions of the line, there is a bit of a hoop to jump through if you wish +; to use a port here. That is, you must explicitly provide a "secret" and "authuser" even if +; they are blank. See the third example below for an illustration. +; +; ; Examples: ; ;register => 1234:password@mysipprovider.com |