mat101 wrote:
ael wrote:I should clarify one point: When I wrote "Trying to ping other ip numbers results in 'Destination Host Unreachable'" I meant that I am unable to ping other ip numbers within the range 10.1.1.* - I can successfully ping world-reachable ip numbers.On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 05:56:59AM -0800, mat101 wrote:I have a DSL 302G D-link modem and I've been trying to get Ekiga voip working on ubuntu 8.10 without any luck, and I was wondering whether anyone might be able to solve this problem. I have tried setting NAT Rule Entries for various ip numbers I thought might be the fixed ip of my router (tried 10.1.1.1, 10.1.1.10, etc.) and included the requisite Ekiga ports in the NAT Rule Entries (3478-3479, 5000-5100, 1720), but still no sound or video.Not quite sure what you mean above: are you trying to follow the Ekiga-behind-a-NAT-router instructions on the wiki? If you don't know the ip address of your router, I don't understand how you can reach it to change the settings.Irrespective of the NAT Rule Entries I've used, running Ekiga's druid and clicking 'Detect NAT Type' always results in the detection of a 'Symmetric NAT' and Ekiga's suggestion to change it to a 'Cone NAT'. I've never been able to obtain a Cone NAT.That means that your trigger rule (if you have one) isn't firing. The whole point of the trigger is to open a small local "CONE" for the ekiga traffic. IIRC ekiga will call this something like a "restricted CONE".I attempted to get my router ip number by running cmd.exe/ipconfig on XP (another partition on the same computer system) and obtained the following output: Ethernet adapter Local Area Connection: Connection-specific DNS Suffix . : IP Address. . . . . . . . . . . . : 10.1.1.10 Subnet Mask . . . . . . . . . . . : 255.0.0.0 Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : 10.1.1.1Your router is *almost* certainly the gateway. What happens if you ping that address? Do the router LEDS flash? Can you point a browser there and see anything? Who set up your router: not you?Some sites claim the above ipconfig output indicates my router ip number is 10.1.1.1, and yet other sites claim it is 10.1.1.10. Some have even suggested my router ip number should be 192.168.15.1. This is all very confusing.Indeed. What about using wireshark to find out what is going on? Or just type "route"? (On ubuntu, maybe that is sudo route?) ael _______________________________________________ ekiga-list mailing list ekiga-list gnome org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/ekiga-list Additionally, when I use an alternative voip program on my ubuntu system with this modem (e.g. sk*pe), I have no problem seeing and hearing the other person. This suggests that my modem is functioning and capable of conducting a voip interaction. But I prefer to use Ekiga on and not this other program. Help! |