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Advanced SIP Features
Q-SYS Quantum Level 1 Training (Online) : SIP Telephony
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CERTIFICATION STEPS COMPLETED
Certification Steps Completed
1 ) Best Practices in Gain Structure
21m 15s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 1)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 2)
5m 7s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 3)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 4)
5m 48s
Assessment
2 ) AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System
28m 8s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 1)
6m 13s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 2)
6m 25s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 3)
5m 26s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 4)
10m 4s
Assessment
3 ) Advanced Digital Video
27m 23s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 1)
5m 17s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 2)
9m 56s
Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
5m 6s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 4)
7m 4s
Assessment
4 ) VOIP Telephony
24m 23s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 1)
7m 19s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 2)
7m 2s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 3)
6m 43s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 4)
3m 19s
Assessment
5 ) Analog Telephony (POTS)
21m 32s
Analog Telephony (Part 1)
8m 16s
Analog Telephony (Part 2)
7m 3s
Analog Telephony (Part 3)
6m 13s
Assessment
6 ) Q-SYS Networking I
40m 20s
Quantum Networking (Part 1)
9m 13s
Quantum Networking (Part 2)
7m 2s
Quantum Networking (Part 3)
10m 23s
Quantum Networking (Part 4)
6m 10s
Quantum Networking (Part 5)
7m 32s
Assessment
7 ) Introduction to Q-SYS Control
34m 56s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 1)
6m 23s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 2)
4m 25s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 3)
10m 45s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 4)
6m 40s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 5)
6m 43s
Assessment
8 ) Q-SYS Networking II
46m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 1)
7m 48s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 2)
4m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 3)
8m 20s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 4)
9m 51s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
8m 49s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 6)
7m 12s
Assessment
9 ) SIP Telephony
46m 22s
Basic SIP Telephony
19m 56s
Advanced SIP Features
9m 14s
SIP Registration with Avaya
7m 7s
Advanced SIP Registration for CUCM
5m 31s
SIP Trunking with CUCM
4m 34s
Assessment
10 ) Control Troubleshooting
9m 52s
Troubleshooting Control Programming
9m 52s
Assessment
Transcript
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Transcript
Advanced SIP Features
9m 14s
00:08
Hi everyone, today our topic with be SIP telephony and some basic scenarios.
00:13
In some of our previous SIP telephony training we have discussed the basics of SIP
00:18
and how we configure the core to register with various types of systems.
00:22
In this lecture we are going to specifically focus on some of
00:25
the advanced features that the core provides for different situations.
00:29
As a quick refresh above we see a generic SIP network.
00:33
We have the core, a PC running a softphone, a SIP proxy like for example Cisco Call Manager,
00:40
and a connection out to the larger PSTN network.
00:43
In your implementation you may have more devices than this like network switches,
00:48
routers, and firewalls.
00:50
In this example we are registering to the SIP proxy and the proxy will respond with an
00:55
‘OK’ message once we are registered properly.
00:58
Now let’s dive into some things that can happen.
01:02
Let’s change things up a bit.
01:04
Let’s add a firewall between the core and the SIP proxy.
01:08
The SIP messaging still has to get through the firewall and to the proxy
01:12
but the firewall can introduce some problems.
01:15
On this diagram we’ve added some example IP addresses to the diagram.
01:20
The firewall has an inside private IP address that the rest of the world can’t reach
01:25
and also an outside public IP address.
01:28
The core will still be configured to register to the IP address of the SIP proxy,
01:33
in this case 10.2.1.1, but how does the firewall impact what happens next?
01:39
Moving away from the diagram for a second here we see a typical registration message from a core.
01:45
In a few places we see the SIP Proxy address of 10.2.1.1
01:50
and we also see a ‘Contact’ line that has the IP address of the core 192.168.0.1.
01:57
The firewall will pass this message to the proxy and the proxy will respond.
02:02
However, there’s going to be a problem.
02:03
We’ve told the proxy to respond to us at 192.168.0.1.
02:09
The SIP proxy on the other side of the firewall doesn’t know about that IP address.
02:14
Some firewalls will modify SIP messages so that the response can get back to us but some will not.
02:20
In that case we may never see a response
02:23
come back since it was sent to an address the proxy can’t reach.
02:27
How do we resolve this?
02:29
Let’s talk about our first feature of this lecture.
02:32
That’s STUN.
02:34
STUN stands for Session Traversal of
02:38
User Datagram Protocol [UDP] Through Network Address Translators [NATs]).
02:44
That’s a mouthful!
02:46
The simple version is that STUN allows a system to find out the outside address of the firewall
02:51
so that SIP messages and calls can get back to us.
02:55
Here we see the settings on the core for our softphones.
02:58
By default STUN is disabled. Let’s enable it.
03:04
Now we have STUN enabled and we see a new box to the right.
03:08
By default this box will be blank.
03:11
A STUN server is a server that will respond to a STUN message and send back
03:16
information to us containing the
03:18
outside IP address of the firewall so we can use it for future messages.
03:22
Here we have used a Google server that is commonly used.
03:26
It’s possible that another STUN server could be used as well.
03:30
Now if we went back and looked at a new Register messages with STUN enabled.
03:34
We’d see something different. Our contact address has changed to 10.1.1.1.
03:40
If we go back to our diagram we’ll note that this was the outside IP address of our firewall.
03:46
Now our proxy can send messages back to an
03:49
IP address it can reach and the firewall will forward them to us.
03:53
This doesn’t just impact registration. It also impacts calls as well.
03:58
Let’s take a look at a real wireshark capture.
04:01
Going all the way back to our earlier SIP trainings
04:04
we remember that RTP contains the audio stream.
04:08
In order for both sides to talk to each other the RTP stream should flow in both directions.
04:14
Here we can see that there’s only one RTP stream going out. We don’t see one coming back.
04:20
Why is that?
04:21
Think back to our SIP messages.
04:24
In the Register message we had a ‘Contact’ header.
04:27
In other SIP messages we recall that they contain SDP which has the parameters to set up our audio.
04:35
Here is a snippet of a SIP message showing the SDP info.
04:39
We have a number of fields here but the one we are interested in is the ‘c=‘ line.
04:44
This contains the IP address that the proxy is supposed to send audio back to,
04:48
in this case the core.
04:50
However, if we didn’t enable STUN that IP address is going to be the IP address of the core.
04:56
As we noted before the proxy can’t reach that address because of the firewall
05:00
so our audio is just getting lost in the network right now.
05:04
If we enable STUN that IP address will change to the outside address
05:08
of the firewall and we should get audio both directions again.
05:12
If you are behind a firewall and see issues with Registration
05:16
or Audio try enabling STUN and see what happens.
05:21
There’s another flag on the core you may have wondered about and that’s the Hold flag.
05:26
Some systems use an older method of putting a call on hold that doesn’t with the core.
05:31
The symptoms of this are that when a call is put on hold and then taken off hold
05:36
the audio never starts back up.
05:38
By default hold is enabled and that’s the normal way we do things.
05:42
This is what this looks like in a call flow.
05:45
We see that initially on our call we had RTP flowing in both directions
05:50
but after the call was put on hold we don’t start sending RTP again.
05:55
This is because when the call was put on hold we were told to send audio to
05:59
0.0.0.0 as an IP address
06:02
and then when the call is taken off hold we are given a new IP address.
06:06
Unfortunately this method is not supported by the core and we end up with one-way audio.
06:13
If we go back and change Hold to disabled we ignore this and our call will work normally again.
06:20
If you are having issues with one-way audio after a call is put on hold
06:24
this can be something to try.
06:27
Another feature you may have wondered about.
06:29
We have flag on the core called ‘Insecure Ciphers’. What does that mean?
06:34
It really only applies if we are using TLS and SRTP.
06:38
‘Ciphers’ are encryption methods.
06:40
It’s basically our method of encrypting our call.
06:44
If you think about secure websites it’s very similar.
06:47
When we use encryption both sides need to agree on what encryption method they are using.
06:52
As technology has advanced the need for more secure encryption has as well.
06:57
This is where this flag comes in.
06:59
The details don’t really matter here but
07:01
if you were to open a call in Wireshark or your sip.txt log
07:05
and open a SIP message with TLS and SRTP turned on you’d see a list of lines like this.
07:11
These are encryption methods that can be used. In our firmware we’ve turned off some of the
07:17
more insecure methods of encryption by default so that everything is encrypted more strongly.
07:22
However, some providers have not updated their own systems and still use older encryption.
07:28
Here we’ve enabled the insecure ciphers flag.
07:31
This will allow those older encryption methods to be used.
07:35
If you are having trouble with TLS and SRTP
07:38
it might be worth a try to enable this flag and see if it helps.
07:43
Next we have the ‘Domain Based Calling’ flag. What does this do?
07:48
Some SIP providers or proxies do additional verification
07:51
to see if you are allowed to Register or make calls by looking at the domain name.
07:55
By default the core doesn’t use the domain name for all fields in the SIP messaging.
08:00
Let’s enable this flag and see what happens.
08:03
First thing we should notice is that the Domain field which is normally optional is now required.
08:08
In order to use this flag we must have a domain entered.
08:12
Enter a domain and save the configuration. Now let’s look at what that did.
08:17
First up we have a Register message with the flag disabled.
08:21
We can see the domain present in the From and To line but not the top Register line.
08:27
Now with the flag enabled we see that the top line has changed to include the domain as well.
08:32
This lets our proxy know that this endpoint is from that domain.
08:37
Here we see a call without the flag enabled. Only the From line has the domain in it.
08:43
The applies to the invite as well. Here we see that the From,
08:48
To, and upper INVITE line all have the domain in them.
08:52
This lets the proxy know that our call is coming from a domain it recognizes.
08:56
This mostly applies to hosted SIP solutions but can be present in other situations as well.
09:02
That’s it for now on more advanced SIP features in the core.
09:06
These flags can help with more unusual situations that you may run into.
Downloads and Links
Advanced SIP Features
9m 14s
Click here to download "Advanced SIP Features" video
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