Naptr windows
The time of the record creation in Epoch seconds format. For valid values for extensible attributes, see the following information. For how to search extensible attributes, see the following information.
The time of the last DNS query in Epoch seconds format. This value can be in unicode format. This parameter specifies the order in which the NAPTR rules are applied when multiple rules are present. Valid values are from 0 to inclusive , in bit unsigned integer format. The preference field determines the order NAPTR records are processed when multiple records with the same order parameter are present. Refer to RFC for the field syntax details.
A bit unsigned integer that represents the duration, in seconds, for which the record is valid cached. Zero indicates that the record should not be cached. This unambiguously specifies the SRV record. Why the heck does everything telephony-related suck when it comes to the internet? Does the telephony world suffer through this and not use any kind of automated setup, infrastructure as code? Sadly I know the answer to these questions. Since a Go program is generating the PowerShell commands, this is fine.
No good. Maybe using terminal or any tools maybe and further i'd like to do it using java so if any piece of code will very helpful.
Here's an abbreviated summary of how to select the transport protocol and resolve the SIP server address. In hindsight the SIP protocol designers should probably have left the whole SIP server address resolution alone and let implementers use standard IP load balancing and failover mechanisms. Because SIP clients don't all support SRV records, again in my experience less than half, using such records is better than nothing but is not a great solution for failover or load balancing.
To query for them you can use the command line tool dig and specify the type of query using the -t switch. For example:.
You can refer to some of the 3gpp standards Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. Asked 9 years ago. Active 1 year, 11 months ago.
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