On 25/03/16 18:50, Diane Trout wrote:
> On Friday, March 25, 2016 07:29:23 AM Daniel Pocock wrote:
>> On 25/03/16 00:49, Diane Trout wrote:
>>> would either of these be decent projects?
>>>
>>> A jabber/jingle echo server would be really helpful for testing. There
>>> were
>>> rumors of one but it disappeared.
>>
>> That would be interesting, there are also some ideas in Redmine about an
>> RTC service probe:
>>
>> https://project.freertc.org/projects/rtc-server-probe-development/issues
>>
>> I would like to track your suggestion as a Redmine issue too. Do you
>> believe it should be implemented as a standalone project or as a module
>> to run inside a Prosody server instance?
>
> I think it should act like a client, so it should work with any XMPP server.
> I'd found several useful SIP test services, but nothing for XMPP
>
SIP and XMPP servers can actually have "client" code inside them. This
can be a useful way of utilizing the infrastructure of the server, e.g.
it already runs as a daemon all the time, it already has logging code
and it already has transports that other clients can connect to.
A true, standalone client process is also valid though. To make it
clear for a GSoC student we should probably just pick one approach or
the other and then put it in the issue list.
> music@iptel.org (connect plays music)
> http://thetestcall.blogspot.com/ (Several addresses, several functions)
> http://bluejeans.com/111 can be used to setup a video call test.
>
There is another one for SIP:
http://sip5060.net/test-calls/
> Probably the minimal implementation would either send a test pattern or send
> back a transformed video stream and record then play back sound.
>
> Diane
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