10-05-2018 12:59 AM
Dear Community members ,
Hope you all are doing great in your life and professional jobs .
I am having an issue with the Call manager version 10.5 and 3rd party GSM Gateway (Sip trunk).
We have an extension 6876 that suppose to call to outside network (national / international ) number when pressing *7.
Also the outside network can call to my network (GSM Sim number ) which should direct the call to my voip extension at CUCM .
Now we tested the call from the Voip extension at CUCM to call PSTN numbers its working .
Also We can call from PSTN to GSM gateway (Cell number at GSM Gateway ) it directs the call to Voip extension just fine .
Our problem is when ever the call is established between PSTN / CUCM extension we can hear only one way audio .
The participant on CUCM can hear the voice of PSTN guy but the PSTN number never hear the guy on CUCM audio .
no matter who calls whom .
Notes:
Thanks and willing to hear from you guys .
Regards
Mansour
10-05-2018 03:03 AM
One way audio is happening mostly because of:
I can't see any other logical reason why you'll have one way audio.
10-05-2018 03:21 AM
10-05-2018 03:31 AM
Hi,
Is CUCM and this GSM Gateway are located on the same LAN? If that's the case, it is not firewall and not network routes.
If not, keep checking this thing.
By the way, at first I thought this GSM gateway is already located on PSTN side, and not yours.
And not, you cannot tell CUCM what is the IP address of the RTP card of your GSM gateway, as it is not necessary. Because your GSM gateway should present this IP address by itself when making the SDP negotiation. So please check also the SDP messages and see if your gateway presenting the correct IP address (1.1.1.2) in the SDP.
Besides that, the issue can be on the GSM gateway itself that can result of miss-configurations.
So I would also put some Wireshark capture on a test phone (using spanning to PC port) and see if the phone is sending back RTP packets, and if so... where. If it does send the RTP correctly to the relevant IP, I would check the GSM gateway somehow (like captures if possible) as it is the gateway that's connected to the PSTN as much as I understand. Maybe the issue is that the GSM gateway cannot send the RTP from the VoIP card to the IP addresses of the PSTN.
10-05-2018 04:01 AM
10-05-2018 04:37 AM
If you didn't enable MTP on the SIP trunk towards the GSM gateway, the RTP flow will come directly from the phones towards the GSM gateway. If you did enable MTP, the RTP flow will be: Cisco Phone -> CUCM -> GSM Gateway -> PSTN.
So according the above statement, connect a PC to a Cisco phone to its PC port, and enable the "Span to PC Port". Open Wireshark on this PC, and make the following filter: sip || rtp (rtp is the most important of course). Then you'll see the packets incoming from the GSM gateway, and you must see the opposite packet flow, so just check if those packets are being transmitted to the correct destination IP address.
10-05-2018 06:38 AM
10-05-2018 07:34 AM
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