Table of Contents

Proposed Solutions for Testing Voice Traffic

When you have two Ubuntu systems in different locations, you can test voice traffic using several approaches. Below are three main methods:

1. Set Up a SIP Server and SIP Clients

Asterisk-based Setup

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install asterisk

Configure Extensions:Edit Asterisk configuration files (usually sip.conf and extensions.conf) to create SIP extensions for both systems.

sudo apt-get install linphone

Test Calls:Register the SIP client with the Asterisk server and initiate a call.Use tools such as Wireshark to capture RTP packets, analyzing jitter, delay, and packet loss.

Monitoring Tools

Wireshark:Capture and analyze RTP streams.

RTP Analysis Tools:Tools like rtpdump can help in examining the RTP stream details.

2. Use SIPp for Automated SIP Testing

SIPp is a powerful tool to simulate SIP calls and generate voice traffic:

Installation

Install SIPp on your Ubuntu system:

sudo apt-get install sipp

Scenario Scripts

SIPp comes with built-in scenarios (e.g., uac.xml) to simulate SIP call flows, including media exchange.

Command Example

To simulate a basic SIP call:

sipp -sf uac.xml [remote_IP] -s 100

Adjust the parameters as needed for your test.

3. Other Approaches

VoIP Monitoring Tools:Consider using tools such as VoIPmonitor for in-depth analysis of latency, jitter, and packet loss.

Direct Softphone Testing:Run softphones (like Linphone or Ekiga) on both systems for simple call tests, then use system-level tools (e.g., netstat or tc with netem) to simulate various network conditions.

Summary

Asterisk + Linphone:Ideal for setting up a full SIP environment to test manual call setups and monitor media traffic.

SIPp:Useful for automated testing and performance metrics.

Monitoring Tools:Wireshark and VoIPmonitor help you analyze the quality of RTP streams and network performance.

Choose the approach that best suits your testing needs, whether you prefer a hands-on manual test or automated performance testing.

Feel free to ask for further details or configuration examples!