iax.conf 21 KB

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  1. ;!
  2. ;! Automatically generated configuration file
  3. ;! Filename: iax.conf (/etc/asterisk/iax.conf)
  4. ;! Generator: Manager
  5. ;! Creation Date: Wed Jun 10 11:30:56 2015
  6. ;!
  7. ; Inter-Asterisk eXchange driver definition
  8. ;
  9. ; This configuration is re-read at reload
  10. ; or with the CLI command
  11. ; reload chan_iax2.so
  12. ;
  13. ; General settings, like port number to bind to, and
  14. ; an option address (the default is to bind to all
  15. ; local addresses).
  16. ;
  17. [general]
  18. bindport=4569
  19. ;bindport=4569 ; bindport and bindaddr may be specified
  20. ; ; NOTE: bindport must be specified BEFORE
  21. ; bindaddr or may be specified on a specific
  22. ; bindaddr if followed by colon and port
  23. ; (e.g. bindaddr=192.168.0.1:4569)
  24. ;bindaddr=192.168.0.1 ; more than once to bind to multiple
  25. ; ; addresses, but the first will be the
  26. ; ; default
  27. ;
  28. bindaddr = 0.0.0.0
  29. ; Set iaxcompat to yes if you plan to use layered switches or
  30. ; some other scenario which may cause some delay when doing a
  31. ; lookup in the dialplan. It incurs a small performance hit to
  32. ; enable it. This option causes Asterisk to spawn a separate thread
  33. ; when it receives an IAX DPREQ (Dialplan Request) instead of
  34. ; blocking while it waits for a response.
  35. ;
  36. ;iaxcompat=yes
  37. ;
  38. ; Disable UDP checksums (if nochecksums is set, then no checkums will
  39. ; be calculated/checked on systems supporting this feature)
  40. ;
  41. ;nochecksums=no
  42. ;
  43. ;
  44. ; For increased security against brute force password attacks
  45. ; enable "delayreject" which will delay the sending of authentication
  46. ; reject for REGREQ or AUTHREP if there is a password.
  47. ;
  48. ;delayreject=yes
  49. ;
  50. ; You may specify a global default AMA flag for iaxtel calls. It must be
  51. ; one of 'default', 'omit', 'billing', or 'documentation'. These flags
  52. ; are used in the generation of call detail records.
  53. ;
  54. ;amaflags=default
  55. ;
  56. ; ADSI (Analog Display Services Interface) can be enabled if you have
  57. ; (or may have) ADSI compatible CPE equipment
  58. ;
  59. ;adsi=no
  60. ;
  61. ; Perform an SRV lookup on outbound calls
  62. ;
  63. ;srvlookup=yes
  64. ;
  65. ; You may specify a default account for Call Detail Records in addition
  66. ; to specifying on a per-user basis
  67. ;
  68. ;accountcode=lss0101
  69. ;
  70. ; You may specify a global default language for users.
  71. ; Can be specified also on a per-user basis
  72. ; If omitted, will fallback to english
  73. ;
  74. ;language=en
  75. ;
  76. ; This option specifies a preference for which music on hold class this channel
  77. ; should listen to when put on hold if the music class has not been set on the
  78. ; channel with Set(CHANNEL(musicclass)=whatever) in the dialplan, and the peer
  79. ; channel putting this one on hold did not suggest a music class.
  80. ;
  81. ; If this option is set to "passthrough", then the hold message will always be
  82. ; passed through as signalling instead of generating hold music locally.
  83. ;
  84. ; This option may be specified globally, or on a per-user or per-peer basis.
  85. ;
  86. ;mohinterpret=default
  87. ;
  88. ; This option specifies which music on hold class to suggest to the peer channel
  89. ; when this channel places the peer on hold. It may be specified globally or on
  90. ; a per-user or per-peer basis.
  91. ;
  92. ;mohsuggest=default
  93. ;
  94. ; Specify bandwidth of low, medium, or high to control which codecs are used
  95. ; in general.
  96. ;
  97. bandwidth = low
  98. ;
  99. ; You can also fine tune codecs here using "allow" and "disallow" clauses
  100. ; with specific codecs. Use "all" to represent all formats.
  101. ;
  102. allow=alaw,ulaw,g729,gsm,g722,g726,speex ; same as bandwidth=high
  103. ;disallow=g723.1 ; Hm... Proprietary, don't use it...
  104. disallow = lpc10 ; Icky sound quality... Mr. Roboto.
  105. ;allow=gsm ; Always allow GSM, it's cool :)
  106. ;
  107. ; You can adjust several parameters relating to the jitter buffer.
  108. ; The jitter buffer's function is to compensate for varying
  109. ; network delay.
  110. ;
  111. ; All the jitter buffer settings are in milliseconds.
  112. ; The jitter buffer works for INCOMING audio - the outbound audio
  113. ; will be dejittered by the jitter buffer at the other end.
  114. ;
  115. ; jitterbuffer=yes|no: global default as to whether you want
  116. ; the jitter buffer at all.
  117. ;
  118. ; forcejitterbuffer=yes|no: in the ideal world, when we bridge VoIP channels
  119. ; we don't want to do jitterbuffering on the switch, since the endpoints
  120. ; can each handle this. However, some endpoints may have poor jitterbuffers
  121. ; themselves, so this option will force * to always jitterbuffer, even in this
  122. ; case.
  123. ;
  124. ; maxjitterbuffer: a maximum size for the jitter buffer.
  125. ; Setting a reasonable maximum here will prevent the call delay
  126. ; from rising to silly values in extreme situations; you'll hear
  127. ; SOMETHING, even though it will be jittery.
  128. ;
  129. ; resyncthreshold: when the jitterbuffer notices a significant change in delay
  130. ; that continues over a few frames, it will resync, assuming that the change in
  131. ; delay was caused by a timestamping mix-up. The threshold for noticing a
  132. ; change in delay is measured as twice the measured jitter plus this resync
  133. ; threshold.
  134. ; Resyncing can be disabled by setting this parameter to -1.
  135. ;
  136. ; maxjitterinterps: the maximum number of interpolation frames the jitterbuffer
  137. ; should return in a row. Since some clients do not send CNG/DTX frames to
  138. ; indicate silence, the jitterbuffer will assume silence has begun after
  139. ; returning this many interpolations. This prevents interpolating throughout
  140. ; a long silence.
  141. ;
  142. ;
  143. ; jittertargetextra: number of milliseconds by which the new jitter buffer
  144. ; will pad its size. the default is 40, so without modification, the new
  145. ; jitter buffer will set its size to the jitter value plus 40 milliseconds.
  146. ; increasing this value may help if your network normally has low jitter,
  147. ; but occasionally has spikes.
  148. ;
  149. jitterbuffer = no
  150. forcejitterbuffer = no
  151. ;maxjitterbuffer=1000
  152. ;maxjitterinterps=10
  153. ;resyncthreshold=1000
  154. ;jittertargetextra=40
  155. ; Minimum and maximum amounts of time that IAX peers can request as
  156. ; a registration expiration interval (in seconds).
  157. ; minregexpire = 60
  158. ; maxregexpire = 60
  159. ;
  160. ; Enable IAX2 encryption. The default is no.
  161. ;
  162. ; encryption = yes
  163. ;
  164. ; Force encryption insures no connection is established unless both sides support
  165. ; encryption. By turning this option on, encryption is automatically turned on as well.
  166. ;
  167. ; forceencryption = yes
  168. ; This option defines the maximum payload in bytes an IAX2 trunk can support at a given time.
  169. ; The best way to explain this is to provide an example. If the maximum number of calls
  170. ; to be supported is 800, and each call transmits 20ms frames of audio using ulaw
  171. ; ((8000hz / 1000ms) * 20ms * 1 byte per sample = 160 bytes per frame), the maximum load
  172. ; in bytes is (160 bytes per frame) * (800 calls) = 128000 bytes total. Once this limit is
  173. ; reached, calls may be dropped or begin to lose audio. Depending on the codec in use and
  174. ; number of channels to be supported this value may need to be raised, but in most cases the
  175. ; default value is large enough.
  176. ;
  177. ; trunkmaxsize = 128000 ; defaults to 128000 bytes, which supports up to 800 calls of ulaw
  178. ; ; at 20ms a frame.
  179. ; With a large amount of traffic on IAX2 trunks, there is a risk of bad voice quality when
  180. ; allowing the Linux system to handle fragmentation of UDP packets. Depending on the size of
  181. ; each payload, allowing the O/S to handle fragmentation may not be very efficient. This
  182. ; setting sets the maximum transmission unit for IAX2 UDP trunking. The default is 1240 bytes
  183. ; which means if a trunk's payload is over 1240 bytes for every 20ms it will be broken into
  184. ; multiple 1240 byte messages. Zero disables this functionality and let's the O/S handle
  185. ; fragmentation.
  186. ;
  187. ; trunkmtu = 1240 ; trunk data will be sent in 1240 byte messages.
  188. ; trunkfreq sets how frequently trunk messages are sent in milliseconds. This value is 20ms by
  189. ; default, which means the trunk will send all the date queued to it in the past 20ms. By
  190. ; increasing the time between sending trunk messages, the trunk's payload size will increase as
  191. ; well. Note, depending on the size set by trunkmtu, messages may be sent more often than
  192. ; specified. For example if a trunk's message size grows to the trunkmtu size before 20ms is
  193. ; reached that message will be sent immediately.
  194. ;
  195. ; trunkfreq=20 ; How frequently to send trunk msgs (in ms). This is 20ms by default.
  196. ; Should we send timestamps for the individual sub-frames within trunk frames?
  197. ; There is a small bandwidth use for these (less than 1kbps/call), but they
  198. ; ensure that frame timestamps get sent end-to-end properly. If both ends of
  199. ; all your trunks go directly to TDM, _and_ your trunkfreq equals the frame
  200. ; length for your codecs, you can probably suppress these. The receiver must
  201. ; also support this feature, although they do not also need to have it enabled.
  202. ;
  203. ; trunktimestamps=yes
  204. ;
  205. ; IAX helper threads
  206. ; Establishes the number of iax helper threads to handle I/O.
  207. iaxthreadcount = 8
  208. ; Establishes the number of extra dynamic threads that may be spawned to handle I/O
  209. iaxmaxthreadcount = 10
  210. ;
  211. ; We can register with another IAX server to let him know where we are
  212. ; in case we have a dynamic IP address for example
  213. ;
  214. ; Register with tormenta using username marko and password secretpass
  215. ;
  216. ;register => marko:secretpass@tormenta.linux-support.net
  217. ;
  218. ; Register joe at remote host with no password
  219. ;
  220. ;register => joe@remotehost:5656
  221. ;
  222. ; Register marko at tormenta.linux-support.net using RSA key "torkey"
  223. ;
  224. ;register => marko:[torkey]@tormenta.linux-support.net
  225. ;
  226. ; Sample Registration for iaxtel
  227. ;
  228. ; Visit http://www.iaxtel.com to register with iaxtel. Replace "user"
  229. ; and "pass" with your username and password for iaxtel. Incoming
  230. ; calls arrive at the "s" extension of "default" context.
  231. ;
  232. ;register => user:pass@iaxtel.com
  233. ;
  234. ; Sample Registration for IAX + FWD
  235. ;
  236. ; To register using IAX with FWD, it must be enabled by visiting the URL
  237. ; http://www.fwdnet.net/index.php?section_id=112
  238. ;
  239. ; Note that you need an extension in you default context which matches
  240. ; your free world dialup number. Please replace "FWDNumber" with your
  241. ; FWD number and "passwd" with your password.
  242. ;
  243. ;register => FWDNumber:passwd@iax.fwdnet.net
  244. ;
  245. ; Through the use of the res_stun_monitor module, Asterisk has the ability to detect when the
  246. ; perceived external network address has changed. When the stun_monitor is installed and
  247. ; configured, chan_iax will renew all outbound registrations when the monitor detects any sort
  248. ; of network change has occurred. By default this option is enabled, but only takes effect once
  249. ; res_stun_monitor is configured. If res_stun_monitor is enabled and you wish to not
  250. ; generate all outbound registrations on a network change, use the option below to disable
  251. ; this feature.
  252. ;
  253. ; subscribe_network_change_event = yes ; on by default
  254. ;
  255. ; You can disable authentication debugging to reduce the amount of
  256. ; debugging traffic.
  257. ;
  258. authdebug = yes
  259. ;
  260. ; See https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/IP+Quality+of+Service for a description of these parameters.
  261. ;tos=ef
  262. ;cos=5
  263. ;
  264. ; If regcontext is specified, Asterisk will dynamically create and destroy
  265. ; a NoOp priority 1 extension for a given peer who registers or unregisters
  266. ; with us. The actual extension is the 'regexten' parameter of the registering
  267. ; peer or its name if 'regexten' is not provided. More than one regexten
  268. ; may be supplied if they are separated by '&'. Patterns may be used in
  269. ; regexten.
  270. ;
  271. ;regcontext=iaxregistrations
  272. ;
  273. ; If we don't get ACK to our NEW within 2000ms, and autokill is set to yes,
  274. ; then we cancel the whole thing (that's enough time for one retransmission
  275. ; only). This is used to keep things from stalling for a long time for a host
  276. ; that is not available, but would be ill advised for bad connections. In
  277. ; addition to 'yes' or 'no' you can also specify a number of milliseconds.
  278. ; See 'qualify' for individual peers to turn on for just a specific peer.
  279. ;
  280. autokill = yes
  281. ;
  282. ; codecpriority controls the codec negotiation of an inbound IAX call.
  283. ; This option is inherited to all user entities. It can also be defined
  284. ; in each user entity separately which will override the setting in general.
  285. ;
  286. ; The valid values are:
  287. ;
  288. ; caller - Consider the callers preferred order ahead of the host's.
  289. ; host - Consider the host's preferred order ahead of the caller's.
  290. ; disabled - Disable the consideration of codec preference altogether.
  291. ; (this is the original behaviour before preferences were added)
  292. ; reqonly - Same as disabled, only do not consider capabilities if
  293. ; the requested format is not available the call will only
  294. ; be accepted if the requested format is available.
  295. ;
  296. ; The default value is 'host'
  297. ;
  298. ;codecpriority=host
  299. ;
  300. ; allowfwdownload controls whether this host will serve out firmware to
  301. ; IAX clients which request it. This has only been used for the IAXy,
  302. ; and it has been recently proven that this firmware distribution method
  303. ; can be used as a source of traffic amplification attacks. Also, the
  304. ; IAXy firmware has not been updated for at least 18 months, so unless
  305. ; you are provisioning IAXys in a secure network, we recommend that you
  306. ; leave this option to the default, off.
  307. ;
  308. ;allowfwdownload=yes
  309. ;rtcachefriends=yes ; Cache realtime friends by adding them to the internal list
  310. ; just like friends added from the config file only on a
  311. ; as-needed basis? (yes|no)
  312. ;rtsavesysname=yes ; Save systemname in realtime database at registration
  313. ; Default = no
  314. ;rtupdate=yes ; Send registry updates to database using realtime? (yes|no)
  315. ; If set to yes, when a IAX2 peer registers successfully,
  316. ; the ip address, the origination port, the registration period,
  317. ; and the username of the peer will be set to database via realtime.
  318. ; If not present, defaults to 'yes'.
  319. ;rtautoclear=yes ; Auto-Expire friends created on the fly on the same schedule
  320. ; as if it had just registered? (yes|no|<seconds>)
  321. ; If set to yes, when the registration expires, the friend will
  322. ; vanish from the configuration until requested again.
  323. ; If set to an integer, friends expire within this number of
  324. ; seconds instead of the registration interval.
  325. ;rtignoreregexpire=yes ; When reading a peer from Realtime, if the peer's registration
  326. ; has expired based on its registration interval, used the stored
  327. ; address information regardless. (yes|no)
  328. ;parkinglot=edvina ; Default parkinglot for IAX peers and users
  329. ; This can also be configured per device
  330. ; Parkinglots are defined in features.conf
  331. ;
  332. ; The following two options are used to disable call token validation for the
  333. ; purposes of interoperability with IAX2 endpoints that do not yet support it.
  334. ;
  335. ; Call token validation can be set as optional for a single IP address or IP
  336. ; address range by using the 'calltokenoptional' option. 'calltokenoptional' is
  337. ; only a global option.
  338. ;
  339. ;calltokenoptional=209.16.236.73/255.255.255.0
  340. ;
  341. ; By setting 'requirecalltoken=no', call token validation becomes optional for
  342. ; that peer/user. By setting 'requirecalltoken=auto', call token validation
  343. ; is optional until a call token supporting peer registers successfully using
  344. ; call token validation. This is used as an indication that from now on, we
  345. ; can require it from this peer. So, requirecalltoken is internally set to yes.
  346. ; requirecalltoken may only be used in peer/user/friend definitions,
  347. ; not in the global scope.
  348. ; By default, 'requirecalltoken=yes'.
  349. ;
  350. requirecalltoken = no
  351. ;
  352. ;
  353. ; These options are used to limit the amount of call numbers allocated to a
  354. ; single IP address. Before changing any of these values, it is highly encouraged
  355. ; to read the user guide associated with these options first. In most cases, the
  356. ; default values for these options are sufficient.
  357. ;
  358. ; The 'maxcallnumbers' option limits the amount of call numbers allowed for each
  359. ; individual remote IP address. Once an IP address reaches it's call number
  360. ; limit, no more new connections are allowed until the previous ones close. This
  361. ; option can be used in a peer definition as well, but only takes effect for
  362. ; the IP of a dynamic peer after it completes registration.
  363. ;
  364. ;maxcallnumbers=512
  365. ;
  366. ; The 'maxcallnumbers_nonvalidated' is used to set the combined number of call
  367. ; numbers that can be allocated for connections where call token validation
  368. ; has been disabled. Unlike the 'maxcallnumbers' option, this limit is not
  369. ; separate for each individual IP address. Any connection resulting in a
  370. ; non-call token validated call number being allocated contributes to this
  371. ; limit. For use cases, see the call token user guide. This option's
  372. ; default value of 8192 should be sufficient in most cases.
  373. ;
  374. ;maxcallnumbers_nonvalidated=1024
  375. ;
  376. ; The [callnumberlimits] section allows custom call number limits to be set
  377. ; for specific IP addresses and IP address ranges. These limits take precedence
  378. ; over the global 'maxcallnumbers' option, but may still be overridden by a
  379. ; peer defined 'maxcallnumbers' entry. Note that these limits take effect
  380. ; for every individual address within the range, not the range as a whole.
  381. ;
  382. ;[callnumberlimits]
  383. ;10.1.1.0/255.255.255.0 = 24
  384. ;10.1.2.0/255.255.255.0 = 32
  385. ;
  386. ; The shrinkcallerid function removes '(', ' ', ')', non-trailing '.', and '-' not
  387. ; in square brackets. For example, the caller id value 555.5555 becomes 5555555
  388. ; when this option is enabled. Disabling this option results in no modification
  389. ; of the caller id value, which is necessary when the caller id represents something
  390. ; that must be preserved. This option can only be used in the [general] section.
  391. ; By default this option is on.
  392. ;
  393. ;shrinkcallerid=yes ; on by default
  394. ;
  395. ; Trust callerid delivered over DUNDi/e164
  396. ;
  397. ;
  398. ;[dundi]
  399. ;type=user
  400. ;dbsecret=dundi/secret
  401. ;context=dundi-e164-local
  402. ;
  403. ; Further user sections may be added, specifying a context and a secret used
  404. ; for connections with that given authentication name. Limited IP based
  405. ; access control is allowed by use of "permit" and "deny" keywords. Multiple
  406. ; rules are permitted. Multiple permitted contexts may be specified, in
  407. ; which case the first will be the default. You can also override caller*ID
  408. ; so that when you receive a call you set the Caller*ID to be what you want
  409. ; instead of trusting what the remote user provides
  410. ;
  411. ; There are three authentication methods that are supported: md5, plaintext,
  412. ; and rsa. The least secure is "plaintext", which sends passwords cleartext
  413. ; across the net. "md5" uses a challenge/response md5 sum arrangement, but
  414. ; still requires both ends have plain text access to the secret. "rsa" allows
  415. ; unidirectional secret knowledge through public/private keys. If "rsa"
  416. ; authentication is used, "inkeys" is a list of acceptable public keys on the
  417. ; local system that can be used to authenticate the remote peer, separated by
  418. ; the ":" character. "outkey" is a single, private key to use to authenticate
  419. ; to the other side. Public keys are named /var/lib/asterisk/keys/<name>.pub
  420. ; while private keys are named /var/lib/asterisk/keys/<name>.key. Private
  421. ; keys should always be 3DES encrypted.
  422. ;
  423. ;
  424. ; NOTE: All hostnames and IP addresses in this file are for example purposes
  425. ; only; you should not expect any of them to actually be available for
  426. ; your use.
  427. ;
  428. ;
  429. ;[markster]
  430. ;type=user
  431. ;context=default
  432. ;context=local
  433. ;auth=md5,plaintext,rsa
  434. ;secret=markpasswd
  435. ;setvar=ATTENDED_TRANSFER_COMPLETE_SOUND=beep ; This channel variable will
  436. ; cause the given audio file to
  437. ; be played upon completion of
  438. ; an attended transfer.
  439. ;dbsecret=mysecrets/place ; Secrets can be stored in astdb, too
  440. ;transfer=no ; Disable IAX native transfer
  441. ;transfer=mediaonly ; When doing IAX native transfers, transfer
  442. ; only media stream
  443. ;jitterbuffer=yes ; Override global setting an enable jitter buffer
  444. ; ; for this user
  445. ;maxauthreq=10 ; Set maximum number of outstanding AUTHREQs waiting for replies. Any further authentication attempts will be blocked
  446. ; ; if this limit is reached until they expire or a reply is received.
  447. ;callerid="Mark Spencer" <(256) 428-6275>
  448. ;deny=0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0
  449. ;accountcode=markster0101
  450. ;permit=209.16.236.73/255.255.255.0
  451. ;language=en ; Use english as default language
  452. ;encryption=yes ; Enable IAX2 encryption. The default is no.
  453. ;keyrotate=off ; This is a compatibility option for older versions of
  454. ; ; IAX2 that do not support key rotation with encryption.
  455. ; ; This option will disable the IAX_COMMAND_RTENC message.
  456. ; ; default is on.
  457. ; ;
  458. ;
  459. ; Peers may also be specified, with a secret and
  460. ; a remote hostname.
  461. ;
  462. ;[dynamichost]
  463. ;host=dynamic
  464. ;secret=mysecret
  465. ;mailbox=1234 ; Notify about mailbox 1234
  466. ;inkeys=key1:key2
  467. ;peercontext=local ; Default context to request for calls to peer
  468. ;defaultip=216.207.245.34
  469. ;callerid="Some Host" <(256) 428-6011>
  470. ;
  471. ;
  472. ;[biggateway]
  473. ;type=peer
  474. ;host=192.168.0.1
  475. ;context=*
  476. ;secret=myscret
  477. ;trunk=yes ; Use IAX2 trunking with this host
  478. ;timezone=America/New_York ; Set a timezone for the date/time IE
  479. ;
  480. ;
  481. ; Friends are a short cut for creating a user and
  482. ; a peer with the same values.
  483. ;
  484. ;[marko]
  485. ;type=friend
  486. ;host=dynamic
  487. ;regexten=1234
  488. ;secret=moofoo ; Multiple secrets may be specified. For a "user", all
  489. ;secret=foomoo ; specified entries will be accepted as valid. For a "peer",
  490. ;secret=shazbot ; only the last specified secret will be used.
  491. ;context=default
  492. ;permit=0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0
  493. ;
  494. ; With immediate=yes, an IAX phone or a phone on an IAXy acts as a hot-line
  495. ; which goes immediately to the s extension when picked up. Useful for
  496. ; elevator phones, manual service, or other similar applications.
  497. ;
  498. ;[manual]
  499. ;type=friend
  500. ;host=dynamic
  501. ;immediate=yes ; go immediately to s extension when picked up
  502. ;secret=moofoo ; when immediate=yes is specified, secret is required
  503. ;context=number-please ; we start at the s extension in this context
  504. ;
  505. language = en
  506. minregexpire = 60
  507. maxregexpire = 1200