•
You need to subscribe with an ITSP for telephone connection. The ISP and ITSP may be part of the same
company.
Note
•
VoIP communication using the V-SIPGW16 card may deteriorate depending on the ITSP being used.
•
VoIP communication using the V-SIPGW16 card may deteriorate depending on the network conditions.
DNS (Domain Name System)
A DNS server normally provides the name resolution service for your PC. As domain names are alphabetic,
they are easier to remember. The Internet, however, is based on IP addresses. Therefore, every time a domain
name is used, a DNS server must translate the name into the corresponding IP address, and vice versa. For
example, the domain name
www.example.com
may be translated to
192.0.34.166
. If one DNS server does
not know how to translate a particular domain name, it asks another one, and so on, until the correct IP address
is returned.
NAT Traversal
When NAT/NAPT (Network Address Port Translation) is enabled, the router translates a local IP address from
the PBX into a global IP address. However, the router with NAT enabled does not translate local IP addresses
stored in SIP messages into global IP addresses.
Therefore, the address which the SIP Server recognises as the destination IP address to reply to is actually
the local IP address of the PBX, not the global IP address of the router. Therefore, if the SIP Server receives
a SIP message from the PBX and sends a message back to the PBX using the address stored in the SIP
message, the packet information will not reach the PBX.
STUN Servers function to solve the global IP address problem under certain NAT conditions, for example, in
case of full duplex communication. A STUN Server, used alongside the SIP Server, finds out the global IP
address of the router with NAT enabled. With the STUN feature enabled, the packet information sent by the
SIP Server is able to "traverse" NAT and reach the PBX.
The settings can be configured to specify whether to enable the NAT Traversal feature for each ISP/ITSP. In
addition, the NAT Traversal method can be selected from "STUN" and "Fixed IP Address". For details, refer
to "9.9 PBX Configuration—[1-1] Configuration—Slot—V-SIPGW—Shelf Property" in the PC Programming
Manual.
The V-SIPGW16 card may require the NAT Traversal feature to be enabled to connect to the WAN via a router.
The following diagram illustrates how VoIP communication is enabled between the V-SIPGW16 card and the
SIP Server (SIP Receiver) via a router with NAT enabled.
Installation Manual
353
8.3.1 IP Telephony Service
Summary of Contents for KX-NS1000
Page 40: ...40 Installation Manual 1 4 Data Security ...
Page 76: ...76 Installation Manual 2 3 3 System Capacity ...
Page 108: ...108 Installation Manual 3 1 3 Using CTI Applications ...
Page 267: ...the priority Installation Manual 267 5 8 3 Setting LLDP Parameters ...
Page 312: ...312 Installation Manual 5 12 Automatic Configuration of Mailboxes ...
Page 318: ...318 Installation Manual 6 2 Methods of Stacking PBXs ...
Page 332: ...332 Installation Manual 7 1 6 Troubleshooting by Error Log ...
Page 400: ...400 Installation Manual 8 6 26 WAN Port Mirroring ...
Page 414: ...414 Installation Manual 9 3 7 PCMPR Software File Version 004 1xxxx ...