Chris Harvey
2005-Mar-22 14:24 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Nat and firewall port forwarding - is it really required?
I have a question which I'm sure has been asked before but my research has yet to find it. I have Asterisk running on a Linux server but in order to get it to connect I needed to punch a hole in my firewall on port 5060 for it to receive the registration responses from broadvoice. If I run sjphone as a softclient on my home PC I do not need to punch that same hole and it works just fine. I'm confused as to why. I compared the logs of the softphone compared to Asterisk and noticed some differences but simply cannot get Asterisk to work without the port forwarding. The phone doesn't have STUN setup so I'm not sure how it's getting through the firewall and working without a hole yet Asterisk cannot. Chris --------------------------------------------------------------- The most important tool in your toolbox is the question "why?". -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20050322/06e94b77/attachment.htm
Chris Harvey
2005-Mar-22 19:58 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Nat and firewall port forwarding - is it really required?
I have a question which I'm sure has been asked before but my research has yet to find it. I have Asterisk running on a Linux server but in order to get it to connect I needed to punch a hole in my firewall on port 5060 for it to receive the registration responses from broadvoice. If I run sjphone as a softclient on my home PC I do not need to punch that same hole and it works just fine. I'm confused as to why. I compared the logs of the softphone compared to Asterisk and noticed some differences but simply cannot get Asterisk to work without the port forwarding. The phone doesn't have STUN setup so I'm not sure how it's getting through the firewall and working without a hole yet Asterisk cannot. Chris --------------------------------------------------------------- The most important tool in your toolbox is the question "why?".