[OpenSIPS-Users] 3.1 - Mid_Registrar - AOR throttling with WebRTC failing

Mark Allen mark at allenclan.co.uk
Fri Aug 21 13:16:22 EST 2020


What am I looking for?

INVITE from Asterisk to Opensips looks fine. Contact info from "location"
matches that seen in console for web phone.

Problem seems to be that the address is not recognised as a web socket
rather than a host name. It's not NATed but tried fix_nated_register() and
fix_nated_contact() but it made no difference.

On Fri, 21 Aug 2020, 13:23 Slava Bendersky via Users, <
users at lists.opensips.org> wrote:

> Please check contact header.
>
> volga629
>
> ------------------------------
> *From: *"Mark Allen" <mark at allenclan.co.uk>
> *To: *"OpenSIPS users mailling list" <users at lists.opensips.org>
> *Sent: *Friday, August 21, 2020 8:08:18 AM
> *Subject: *Re: [OpenSIPS-Users] 3.1 - Mid_Registrar - AOR throttling
> with        WebRTC failing
>
> I've not received any feedback on this regarding whether or not what I'm
> doing should be working. Trying to find a workaround has just led to a
> number of dead-ends. Can anyone please help me with this?
> We are using mid-registrar with AOR Throttling talking to
> Asterisk/FreePBX. We have OpenSIPS 3.1 running on Debian Buster. For SIP
> phones, physical and softphones, connected on our LAN, all works fine.
> Where we hit problems is with WebRTC phones.
>
> WebRTC phone registers via mid-registrar without a problem. However, a
> call coming from Asterisk (e.g. extension --> extension) fails with an
> error like:
>
>   476 Unresolvable destination
>
> ...and a syslog entry...
>
>   ERROR:core:sip_resolvehost: forced proto 6 not matching sips uri
>   CRITICAL:core:mk_proxy: could not resolve hostname:
> "cfdtugr3cntl.invalid"
>   ERROR:tm:uri2proxy: bad host name in URI <sips:11023 at cfdtugr3cntl.invalid
> ;rtcweb-breaker=yes;transport=wss>
>   ERROR:tm:t_forward_nonack: failure to add branches
>
> We can get calls to WebRTC from Asterisk working via OpenSIPS if we are
> only using registration throttling. As this establishes a 1:1 relationship,
> by using add_path_received() we get Asterisk to include a Route which
> bypasses the resolvehost problem. However, with multiple endpoints
> registered to a single OpenSIPS AOR with AOR throttling, this workaround
> obviously won't work. How can I set up OpenSIPS so that we can have
> multiple endpoints, including WebRTC ones, registered to a single OpenSIPS
> AOR and have calls successfully reach the WebRTC phones?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, 3 Aug 2020 at 08:44, Mark Allen <mark at allenclan.co.uk> wrote:
>
>> I don't know if anyone has had a chance to look at my problem but I
>> wonder if at least I could get an opinion on the following:
>> 1 - Should I be seeing the path saved in the appropriate column in the
>> "location" table?
>> 2 - Am I using mid_registrar_save() and mid_registrar_lookup() with path
>> support correctly in my script?
>> 3 - have I correctly understood how to combine WebRTC with mid-registrar
>> module, path, and AOR throttling so that it should work for calls
>> originating from the main registrar?
>>
>> I'm stuck on how to move forward with this
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Mark
>>
>> Relevant code snippets...
>>
>> loadmodule "mid_registrar.so"
>> modparam("mid_registrar", "mode", 2) /* 0 = mirror / 1 = ct / 2 = AoR */
>> modparam("mid_registrar", "outgoing_expires", 3600)
>>
>> add_path_received();
>> $avp(returncode) = mid_registrar_save("location","p0v");
>> switch ($avp(returncode)) {
>>     case 1:
>>         route(resolve_registrar);
>>         $ru = "sip:" + $avp(main_registrar) + ":5060";
>>         t_on_failure("1");
>>         t_relay();
>>         break;
>>     case 2:
>>         break;
>>     default:
>> }
>>
>> if (!mid_registrar_lookup("location")) {
>>     t_reply(404, "Not Found");
>>     exit;
>> }
>>
>>
>> NB - route(resolve_registrar) sets the variable $avp(main_registrar) to
>> the IP address of the Asterisk server
>>
>> On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 at 09:16, Mark Allen <mark at allenclan.co.uk> wrote:
>>
>>> We are working on a test setup, hoping to move to a production system in
>>> mid-August. We want to use mid-registrar AOR throttling. Users will connect
>>> through OpenSIPS using a combination of SIP and WebRTC endpoints,
>>> registering to an extension on an Asterisk main-registrar...
>>>
>>>               +----------+
>>> <SIP>    ---> |          |      +----------+
>>> <SIP>    ---> | OpenSIPS | ---> | Asterisk |
>>> <WebRTC> ---> |          |      +----------+
>>>               +----------+
>>>
>>> Multiple SIP phones (hardware or softphones) registering via an OpenSIPS
>>> 3.1 mid_registration AOR is working fine. A call to the extension number on
>>> Asterisk results in all mid-registered SIP extensions ringing and when one
>>> answers, the other devices register a missed call. So far, so good.
>>>
>>> With 3.0 - we had a problem with WebRTC "phones" (even when just using
>>> mid_registrar in "mirroring" mode). Webphone could register and call other
>>> phones without a problem. However, calls to the WebPhone failed - there was
>>> a problem with the WebSocket addressing giving "476 Unresolvable
>>> destination" when the call originates from the main registrar - e.g. one
>>> extension calling another. The /var/log/syslog entry said...
>>>
>>>   ERROR:core:sip_resolvehost: forced proto 6 not matching sips uri
>>>   CRITICAL:core:mk_proxy: could not resolve hostname:
>>> "4xp44jxl0qq0.invalid"
>>>   ERROR:tm:uri2proxy: bad host name in URI <sips:11001 at
>>> 4xp44jxl0qq0.invalid;rtcweb-breaker=yes;transport=wss>
>>>   ERROR:tm:t_forward_nonack: failure to add branches
>>>
>>> Stas Kobar gave me a way to resolve this -
>>> http://lists.opensips.org/pipermail/users/2020-July/043443.html  As we
>>> were using 3.0, I used the "path" module and  "add_path_received()" to
>>> handle this for WebRTC. This worked for a single device registered to an
>>> address. However, as far as I could see, using "path" effectively bypassed
>>> the "contact" address held in the OpenSIPS "location" table so it didn't
>>> work for AOR throttling.
>>>
>>> I was hoping that, with mid_registrar on 3.1 baking in path support, I
>>> could just use "mid_registrar_save('location','p0v')" to store the WebRTC
>>> destination path in the "location" table. Then, with a call to the WebRTC
>>> endpoint from the main registrar, "mid_registrar_lookup('location')" would
>>> use the stored path from the "location" table to send traffic on to the
>>> WebRTC phone and it would work fine with AOR throttling. However, that's
>>> not happening, and looking at the "location" table, no path seems to
>>> be being stored.
>>>
>>> If I register a WebRTC "phone" first, the path is included on the
>>> registration SIP message sent from OpenSIPS to Asterisk. If I then register
>>> additional SIP phones on OpenSIPS, AOR throttling works, because, when the
>>> call originates from Asterisk it includes the "route" HF that points to the
>>> WebRTC destination. However, if a SIP phone registers first, Asterisk
>>> doesn't get the WebRTC path, so calls fail to reach the WebRTC destination
>>> because it tries to use the first registered SIP phone's path.
>>>
>>> So - 2 questions really...
>>>
>>> 1 - Can I use AOR throttling with WebRTC (I can't guarantee that the
>>> WebRTC endpoint will be the first to register or that there will only be
>>> one WebRTC endpoint)
>>>
>>> 2 - If the answer to 1 is yes, what am I doing wrong?
>>>
>>> Relevant code snippets...
>>>
>>> loadmodule "mid_registrar.so"
>>> modparam("mid_registrar", "mode", 2) /* 0 = mirror / 1 = ct / 2 = AoR */
>>> modparam("mid_registrar", "outgoing_expires", 3600)
>>>
>>> add_path_received();
>>> $avp(returncode) = mid_registrar_save("location","p0v");
>>> switch ($avp(returncode)) {
>>>     case 1:
>>>         route(resolve_registrar);
>>>         $ru = "sip:" + $avp(main_registrar) + ":5060";
>>>         t_on_failure("1");
>>>         t_relay();
>>>         break;
>>>     case 2:
>>>         break;
>>>     default:
>>> }
>>>
>>> if (!mid_registrar_lookup("location")) {
>>>     t_reply(404, "Not Found");
>>>     exit;
>>> }
>>>
>>>
>>> NB - route(resolve_registrar) sets the variable $avp(main_registrar) to
>>> the IP address of the Asterisk server
>>>
>>
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