> On Thu, May 10, 2018 at 11:44:14AM -0700, Steve Edwards wrote:
>> I receive an INVITE/SDP containing:
>>
>> m=audio 11310 RTP/AVP 3 0 101
>>
>> which I interpret as gsm, ulaw, rfc2833.
>>
>> and I reply with an OK/SDP containing:
>>
>> m=audio 15884 RTP/AVP 0 3 101
>>
>> which I interpret as ulaw, gsm, rfc2833.
>>
>> How can I tell which codec was actually used for the call?
On Fri, 11 May 2018, Daniel Tryba wrote:
> AFAIK this is undetermined. The callee can send either ulaw or gsm,
> unless the caller wants to narrow it down to 1 codec, see
> https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4317#section-2.2
>
> Most of the time the callee will pick the first (so in this case ulaw).
> But there are media gateways out there that choose g711[au] above
"more
> complex" codecs regardless order in SDP. My prefer PSTN provider will
> always prefer alaw if offered since that will prevent transcoding on
> their side if the call goes to ISDN/POTS, but AMR if the call goes to
> VoLTE.
So, without examining the RTP, you cannot tell which codec was actually
used?
In the above example, even though the INVITE/SDP says they prefer gsm over
ulaw and the OK/SDP says I prefer ulaw over gsm, they can choose to use
gsm or ulaw?
Can it be asymmetrical? They send gsm and I send ulaw?
--
Thanks in advance,
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https://www.linkedin.com/in/steve-edwards-4244281