[Serusers] Is there something weird about this INVITE ?

SIP sip at arcdiv.com
Fri Jul 27 04:24:18 CEST 2007


One of our clients, using a Nokia E90, is having problems connecting to 
anything. 

His INVITE looks like this:

U 123.236.98.24:55031 -> 11.22.33.44:5060
INVITE sip:1747XXXXXXX at our.proxy.com;user=phone SIP/2.0.
Route: <sip:our.proxy.com;lr;transport=UDP>.
Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 
192.168.1.229:5060;branch=z9hG4bK3e89pocn1m7mkuiefdjljsj;rport.
From: <sip:1101XXXXXXX at our.proxy.com>;tag=ls57mprkkdhc7kku07de.
To: <sip:1747XXXXXXX at our.proxy.com;user=phone>.
Contact: <sip:1101XXXXXXX at 123.236.98.24:55045;transport=UDP>.
Supported: 100rel,sec-agree.
CSeq: 980 INVITE.
Call-ID: pyBXpNNeoIcFBM7qVqVKrBneC2kxeM.
Allow: INVITE,ACK,BYE,CANCEL,REFER,NOTIFY,OPTIONS,PRACK.
Expires: 120.
Privacy: none.
User-Agent: Nokia RA-6 V 07.24.0.3.
P-Preferred-Identity: sip:1101XXXXXXX at our.proxy.com.
Max-Forwards: 70.
Proxy-Authorization: Digest 
qop=auth,realm="our.proxy.com",nonce="46a713c0c887788778a731de0355c04db1896d23",algorithm=MD5,username="1101XXXXXXX",cnonce="0dad64affaabb2fa9c93611ec864e363",nc=00000001,uri="sip:1747XXXXXXX at our.proxy.com;user=phone",response="197f8a8b4b3d39281a147c2d9d2b6a28".
Content-Type: application/sdp.
Accept: application/sdp.
Content-Length: 447.
.
v=0.
o=Nokia-SIPUA 63353630343979125 63353630343979125 IN IP4 123.236.98.24.
s=-.
c=IN IP4 123.236.98.24.
t=0 0.
m=audio 49152 RTP/AVP 96 0 8 97 18 98 13.
a=sendrecv.
a=ptime:20.
a=maxptime:200.
a=fmtp:96 mode-change-neighbor=1.
a=fmtp:18 annexb=no.
a=fmtp:98 0-15.
a=rtpmap:96 AMR/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:97 iLBC/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:18 G729/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:98 telephone-event/8000/1.
a=rtpmap:13



The server received this packet, but never responds to it. It simply 
never sends a reply. It's as though it doesn't recognise this as a 
proper INVITE.

The ONLY thing I noticed about this that's completely non-standard, is 
that every other packet seems to have this period after it (indicating, 
perhaps, the end of a line... I don't know enough about the display of 
ngrep to tell). This INVITE does not. It goes almost immediately into 
the next packet, and it's almost as though this one never ends.

Has anyone seen this before? Is there anything weird about this INVITE 
that would cause SER to ignore it?


N.



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