I've read and tried a LOT of sample config's for sip.conf and extensions.conf and no matter what I do I get registration error's when trying to get SJphone registered to my * server. I have a XP VMware host with Redhat 9 / * as a guest. The SJphone is on the host XP trying to register with the guest Redhat/* server. Any suggestions? I think I'm just missing something stupid. thanks ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A.G. Edwards & Sons' outgoing and incoming e-mails are electronically archived and subject to review and/or disclosure to someone other than the recipient. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20040303/c01c2312/attachment.htm
Steven Critchfield
2004-Mar-03 11:47 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie
On Wed, 2004-03-03 at 12:34, Jennings, Mike wrote:> I've read and tried a LOT of sample config's for sip.conf and > extensions.conf and no matter what I do I get registration error's > when trying to get SJphone registered to my * server. I have a XP > VMware host with Redhat 9 / * as a guest. The SJphone is on the host > XP trying to register with the guest Redhat/* server. > > Any suggestions? I think I'm just missing something stupid.You could have used the $300 to buy a cheap computer to run asterisk on bare hardware. Thats the first problem. Second problem is lacking details, as in error messages, when you ask a question. -- Steven Critchfield <critch@basesys.com>
> I've read and tried a LOT of sample config's for sip.conf and > extensions.conf and no matter what I do I get registration error's when > trying to get SJphone registered to my * server. I have a XP VMware host > with Redhat 9 / * as a guest. The SJphone is on the host XP trying to > register with the guest Redhat/* server. > > Any suggestions? I think I'm just missing something stupid.I'm used to the idea of using VMWare so that the adult operating system is the host, and the toxic delinquent is the guest, rather than vice versa, as you have it, so this may not pertain. Check routing!!! Do you have network connectivity between the host and guest *generally*? How do you have your networking set up? When Linux is the host, guests can be set up in a variety of configurations -- NAT, bridge, etc. With Linux as the host, routed can be somewhat cranky at routing from your host LAN to NATted VMs. Can you ping your host from the guest? This may not be an Asterisk issue at all. It might be a networking issue.
Jennings, Mike
2004-Mar-04 07:41 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Re: VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie
Thanks for the response. I realize that I should do some more debugging and include error messages in my questions. As far as routing, the host can ping the guest. I'm using bridge mode in VMware. I'm going to try and debug SIP while I try and connect and see if I get an error with *. SJphone was just saying that there was an "unknown error" when trying to do a SIP registration. From: Jim Rosenberg <jr@amanue.com> To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie Reply-To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> I've read and tried a LOT of sample config's for sip.conf and > extensions.conf and no matter what I do I get registration error's when > trying to get SJphone registered to my * server. I have a XP VMware host > with Redhat 9 / * as a guest. The SJphone is on the host XP trying to > register with the guest Redhat/* server. > > Any suggestions? I think I'm just missing something stupid.I'm used to the idea of using VMWare so that the adult operating system is the host, and the toxic delinquent is the guest, rather than vice versa, as you have it, so this may not pertain. Check routing!!! Do you have network connectivity between the host and guest *generally*? How do you have your networking set up? When Linux is the host, guests can be set up in a variety of configurations -- NAT, bridge, etc. With Linux as the host, routed can be somewhat cranky at routing from your host LAN to NATted VMs. Can you ping your host from the guest? This may not be an Asterisk issue at all. It might be a networking issue. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A.G. Edwards & Sons' outgoing and incoming e-mails are electronically archived and subject to review and/or disclosure to someone other than the recipient. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20040304/1720c2e2/attachment.htm
Jennings, Mike
2004-Mar-17 08:45 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] RE: VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie
I got SJphone to work and even a Cisco 7940 to connect to * inside VMware. -----Original Message----- From: Jennings, Mike Sent: Thursday, March 04, 2004 8:42 AM To: 'asterisk-users@lists.digium.com' Subject: Re: VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie Thanks for the response. I realize that I should do some more debugging and include error messages in my questions. As far as routing, the host can ping the guest. I'm using bridge mode in VMware. I'm going to try and debug SIP while I try and connect and see if I get an error with *. SJphone was just saying that there was an "unknown error" when trying to do a SIP registration. From: Jim Rosenberg <jr@amanue.com> To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] VMware, * and SJphone ... newbie Reply-To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> I've read and tried a LOT of sample config's for sip.conf and > extensions.conf and no matter what I do I get registration error's when > trying to get SJphone registered to my * server. I have a XP VMware host > with Redhat 9 / * as a guest. The SJphone is on the host XP trying to > register with the guest Redhat/* server. > > Any suggestions? I think I'm just missing something stupid.I'm used to the idea of using VMWare so that the adult operating system is the host, and the toxic delinquent is the guest, rather than vice versa, as you have it, so this may not pertain. Check routing!!! Do you have network connectivity between the host and guest *generally*? How do you have your networking set up? When Linux is the host, guests can be set up in a variety of configurations -- NAT, bridge, etc. With Linux as the host, routed can be somewhat cranky at routing from your host LAN to NATted VMs. Can you ping your host from the guest? This may not be an Asterisk issue at all. It might be a networking issue. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A.G. Edwards & Sons' outgoing and incoming e-mails are electronically archived and subject to review and/or disclosure to someone other than the recipient. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20040317/e22cafb4/attachment.htm