| Author |
Message |
ColdGin
Vonage Forum Evangelist


Joined: Oct 03, 2005
Posts: 423
|
If you experience any problems with your Vonage service, and are connecting through a firewall, be sure the following ports are allowed to and from the phone adapter.
Phone Adapters Internet ports:
SIP ports 5060 through 5061 using UDP protocol NTP port 123 using UDP protocol TFTP port 69 using UDP protocol DNS port 53 using UDP protocol RTP ports 10,000 through 20,000 using UDP protocol
If you try and forward any of those ports, especially the RTP ports (the actual phone audio) you will probably have problems. |
|
|
|
|
 |
sonickat
Vonage Forum Associate


Joined: Jan 09, 2006
Posts: 10
|
|
|
|
 |
blutarsky
Vonage Forum Senior


Joined: Sep 06, 2005
Posts: 75
|
you need to NOT forward any ports at all.
you are running clients connecting to the outside net. this is wholly different than running a server on your internal lan, where you would have to forward ports to the interal server machine to allow external clients to connect.
for running the client, or several clients, on the internal net you need not setup any forwarding of ports. *if* you were to forward any of the ports, the definition of port forwarding would be to route that external port to a single internal ip. by doing this you would necessarily make it so that only that one internal machine received any traffic for teamspeak. if you have any port forwarding setup for anything related to teamspeak, remove it. additionally, you should not ever have to place your box in the dmz to run a client like teamspeak. the very nature of teamspeak is such that you can have a number of clients behind a nat'd firewall/router and as long as it doesn't block outgoing packets (which the rtp300 does not do) you will be fine with teamspeak. |
|
|
|
|
 |
sonickat
Vonage Forum Associate


Joined: Jan 09, 2006
Posts: 10
|
So what your saying it the router is broke? Because I CAN connect if i take the router out of the equation and with the router set to factory default between the modem and my PCs I can not connect to the TS service.
When I DMZ I can connect. When I port forward I can connect but I loose phone service. |
|
|
|
|
 |
sonickat
Vonage Forum Associate


Joined: Jan 09, 2006
Posts: 10
|
| blutarsky wrote: | you need to NOT forward any ports at all.
you are running clients connecting to the outside net. this is wholly different than running a server on your internal lan, where you would have to forward ports to the interal server machine to allow external clients to connect.
for running the client, or several clients, on the internal net you need not setup any forwarding of ports. *if* you were to forward any of the ports, the definition of port forwarding would be to route that external port to a single internal ip. by doing this you would necessarily make it so that only that one internal machine received any traffic for teamspeak. if you have any port forwarding setup for anything related to teamspeak, remove it. additionally, you should not ever have to place your box in the dmz to run a client like teamspeak. the very nature of teamspeak is such that you can have a number of clients behind a nat'd firewall/router and as long as it doesn't block outgoing packets (which the rtp300 does not do) you will be fine with teamspeak. |
Else where someone mentioned that what may be happening on the server side is a reply is coming back from a different IP then the initial packet is being sent to - essentially the NAT on my router tosses those packets since it doesnt know where to send them. Does it make sense then that by DMZ a PC o rby forwarding ports I can connect but if I dont I cant connect? |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
| Goto page Previous 1, 2
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |
All times are GMT - 5 Hours | |