Administrator’s Guide - SoundPoint® IP / SoundStation® IP

Optimization

The phone can filter incoming RTP packets arriving on a particular port by IP address. Packets arriving from a non-negotiated IP address can be discarded.

The phone can also enforce symmetric port operation for RTP packets: packets arriv- ing with the source port set to other than the negotiated remote sink port can be rejected.

The phone can also jam the destination transport port to a specified value regardless of the negotiated port. This can be useful for punching through firewalls. When this is enabled, all RTP traffic will be sent to the specified port and will be expected to arrive on that port as well. Incoming packets are sorted by the source IP address and port, allowing multiple RTP streams to be multiplexed.

The RTP port range used by the phone can be specified. Since conferencing and multi- ple RTP streams are supported, several ports can be used concurrently. Consistent with RFC 1889, the next higher odd port is used to send and receive RTCP.

 

Configuration file:

Specify whether to filter incoming RTP packets by IP

Central

sip.cfg

address, whether to require symmetric port usage, whether

 

to jam the destination port and specify the local RTP port

(boot

 

 

range start.

server)

 

 

• For more information, refer to 4.6.1.10.3.1 RTP <RTP/

 

 

 

 

> on page 124.

 

 

 

 

Web Server

Specify whether to filter incoming RTP packets by IP

 

(if enabled)

address, whether to require symmetric port usage, whether

 

 

to jam the destination port and specify the local RTP port

 

 

range start.

 

 

Navigate to: http://<phoneIPAddress>/netConf.htm#rt

Local

 

Changes are saved to local flash and backed up to <Ethernet

 

 

address>-phone.cfg on the boot server. They will perma-

 

 

nently override global settings unless deleted through the

 

 

Reset Local Config menu selection.

 

 

 

 

Local Phone User

None.

 

Interface

 

 

 

 

4.2.2 Working with Network Address Translation

The phone can work with certain types of network address translation (NAT). The phone’s signaling and RTP traffic use symmetric ports (the source port in transmitted packets is the same as the associated listening port used to receive packets) and the external IP address and ports used by the NAT on the phone’s behalf can be config- ured on a per-phone basis.

78

Copyright © 2006 Polycom, Inc.

Page 86
Image 86
Polycom 1725-11530-200 Rev A1 manual Working with Network Address Translation