Have a look at
the "/etc" dir in the gnugk
installation dir. There you find some example configs like
this:
## ## This example shows how to use the gatekeeper as an H.323 proxy. ## ## Suppose the host of the gatekeeper has three network interfaces: ## ## WAN: ADSL IP ## LAN1: IP=10.0.1.1 Network=10.0.0.0/8 ## LAN2: IP=192.168.0.1 Network= 192.168.0.0/16 ## ## Endpoints may register with the gatekeeper from WAN, LAN1 or LAN2. ## For calls from WAN to WAN or LAN1/LAN2 to LAN1/LAN2, ## the gatekeeper only routes the call signalling as a normal gatekeeper. ## If a call comes from WAN to LAN1/LAN2, or vice versa, the gatekeeper ## routes all traffic between caller and callee (proxy mode). ## ## A proxy gatekeeper is usually register with a parent gatekeeper as a ## gateway. See child.ini for the configuration. ## [Gatekeeper::Main] Fourtytwo=42 TimeToLive=600 [RoutedMode] GKRouted=1 H245Routed=1 CallSignalPort=1721 CallSignalHandlerNumber=2 RemoveH245AddressOnTunneling=1 DropCallsByReleaseComplete=1 SupportNATedEndpoints=1 Q931PortRange=30000-39999 H245PortRange=40000-49999 [Proxy] Enable=1 InternalNetwork=10.0.0.0/8,192.168.0.0/16 T120PortRange=50000-59999 RTPPortRange=50000-59999 [GkStatus::Auth] rule=allow # EOF -- by cwhuang
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: openh323gk-users-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:openh323gk-users-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Fabio Viracao Gesendet: Dienstag, 20. Juli 2004 22:55 An: openh323gk-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Betreff: GNUGK
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