Detección interrupción RTP VOS3000 Accurate monitoreo de medios en cuatro modos
La detección interrupción RTP VOS3000 es uno de los mecanismos más críticos del mapping gateway para garantizar la calidad y la eficiencia de las llamadas VoIP en producción. Cuando el flujo RTP (Real-Time Transport Protocol) que transporta el audio de una llamada se interrumpe inesperadamente — por fallas de red, desconexión del gateway o problemas de NAT — la llamada puede quedar en estado zombi sin audio para ninguna de las partes. VOS3000 ofrece cuatro modos de detección que permiten desde ignorar el problema hasta colgar automáticamente la llamada afectada, liberando recursos y evitando CDRs con duraciones infladas. ¿Necesita ayuda con esta configuración? Contáctenos por WhatsApp: +8801911119966.
En redes VoIP de alta densidad, especialmente en entornos de wholesale donde miles de llamadas concurrentes atraviesan múltiples gateways y operadores, la interrupción del flujo RTP es un evento frecuente. Las llamadas sin audio consumen canales concurrentes, generan CDRs con duraciones que no reflejan comunicación real y degradan la experiencia del usuario final. Según el manual de administración del mapping gateway (§2.5.1.1, pág. 87-89, apartado Media Parameters), VOS3000 proporciona un mecanismo robusto para detectar y responder a estas interrupciones de manera automática según la estrategia que el operador defina para cada gateway de forma independiente.
Table of Contents
📋 Los Cuatro Modos de Detección Interrupción RTP
VOS3000 proporciona cuatro modos distintos de detección, cada uno diseñado para un escenario operativo diferente. La selección del modo se configura de forma independiente para cada mapping gateway, lo que permite aplicar estrategias diferentes según el comportamiento de cada carrier.
🔹 Modo
🔹 Nombre
🔹 Comportamiento
🔹 Caso de Uso
0
None (Ninguno)
No detecta interrupciones RTP
Entornos de prueba o tráfico interno confiable
1
Detect Only (Solo Detectar)
Detecta pero no realiza ninguna acción
Monitoreo estadístico interno
2
Detect and Report (Detectar e Informar)
Detecta y genera alarma visible en NOC
Monitoreo activo con notificación
3
Detect and Hang Up (Detectar y Colgar)
Detecta y termina la llamada automáticamente
Recuperación automática de recursos
🔍 Modo None — Sin Detección
Cuando el parámetro está configurado en modo None, el softswitch ignora completamente las interrupciones del flujo RTP. Si el audio deja de fluir, la llamada permanece activa hasta que una de las partes cuelga o se agota el session timer. Este modo es apropiado para entornos donde las interrupciones son extremadamente raras, como redes internas cerradas con gateways de alta confiabilidad. Detección Interrupción RTP
⚠️ Advertencia: En modo None, las llamadas sin audio pueden permanecer activas indefinidamente si el session timer no está configurado. Esto consume canales concurrentes innecesariamente y genera CDRs con duraciones infladas. Para la mayoría de entornos de producción se recomienda al menos el modo Detect and Report. Detección Interrupción RTP
🔹 Aspecto
🔹 Comportamiento en Modo None
Detección RTP
Completamente deshabilitada
Llamada sin audio
Permanece activa hasta colgar manual o timeout
Impacto en CDR
Duración inflada — se factura tiempo sin comunicación
Consumo de recursos
Canal concurrente ocupado innecesariamente
📊 Modo Detect Only — Detección Sin Acción
En el modo Detect Only, VOS3000 monitorea activamente el flujo RTP y detecta cuando se interrumpe, pero no realiza ninguna acción automática. La detección se registra internamente para fines estadísticos y puede utilizarse con las herramientas de monitoreo del sistema para generar reportes de calidad. Este modo es útil cuando el operador desea recopilar datos sobre la frecuencia de interrupciones sin afectar las llamadas. Para configuración de monitoreo avanzado, consulte nuestra guía de monitoreo y alarmas.
🔔 Modo Detect and Report — Detección con Notificación
El modo Detect and Report genera una alarma visible en el sistema de monitoreo del VOS3000 client cuando se detecta una interrupción RTP. Esto permite a los operadores del NOC recibir alertas en tiempo real sobre llamadas afectadas, facilitando la identificación proactiva de problemas de red. La llamada permanece activa a pesar de la alarma, por lo que las partes pueden reanudar la comunicación si la interrupción es temporal. Para entender mejor el sistema de alarmas, consulte nuestra guía de monitoreo. ¿Necesita asesoría? Escríbanos por WhatsApp: +8801911119966.
🔹 Modo
🔹 Detección
🔹 Acción Automática
🔹 Notificación
🔹 CDR
None
No
Ninguna
No
Duración inflada
Detect Only
Sí
Ninguna
Solo registro interno
Duración inflada
Detect and Report
Sí
Ninguna
Alarma visible en NOC
Duración inflada
Detect and Hang Up
Sí
Termina la llamada
CDR registrado
Duración precisa
📞 Modo Detect and Hang Up — Recuperación Automática
El modo Detect and Hang Up es la opción más robusta y la más recomendada para entornos de producción de alta densidad. Cuando se detecta una interrupción RTP, VOS3000 termina automáticamente la llamada enviando un mensaje BYE a ambas partes, liberando canales concurrentes y recursos de medios, y generando un CDR con la duración real de la comunicación. Para entender cómo estos eventos se registran en los CDRs, consulte nuestra guía de análisis de CDR. Para problemas de llamadas sin audio, vea también VOS3000 No Media Hangup.
⚙️ Configuración Paso a Paso – Detección Interrupción RTP
Para configurar la detección interrupción RTP VOS3000 en un mapping gateway, siga estos pasos. La configuración se realiza de forma independiente para cada gateway. Para más detalles sobre la configuración de gateways, consulte nuestra guía de configuración de gateways.
🔹 Paso
🔹 Acción
🔹 Detalle
1
Abrir mapping gateway
Gateway > Mapping Gateway en el cliente VOS3000
2
Localizar RTP Interrupt Detection
Sección Media Parameters, §2.5.1.1, pág. 87
3
Seleccionar modo
None, Detect Only, Detect and Report, o Detect and Hang Up
4
Configurar timeout RTP
Segundos sin RTP antes de considerar interrupción
5
Guardar configuración
Aplicar cambios al gateway
6
Verificar con pruebas
Simular interrupción RTP y verificar comportamiento
📈 Impacto en la Facturación y Precisión de CDRs
La elección del modo de detección tiene un impacto directo en la precisión de los registros de facturación. Cuando una llamada pierde audio pero permanece activa (modos None, Detect Only o Detect and Report), el CDR continúa acumulando duración hasta que la llamada se termina por otro medio. Esto resulta en CDRs con duraciones mayores al tiempo real de comunicación. El modo Detect and Hang Up resuelve este problema terminando la llamada en el momento de la detección. Para más información, consulte nuestra guía del sistema de facturación.
🔹 Escenario
🔹 Sin Detección (None)
🔹 Con Detect and Hang Up
Llamada de 3 min con RTP interrumpido a los 30 seg
CDR registra 3 minutos
CDR registra 30 segundos
Sobrecoste al cliente
5x más de lo real
Facturación precisa
Disputa de facturación
Probable
Minimizada
🛠️ Solución de Problemas Comunes – Detección Interrupción RTP
Los siguientes problemas y soluciones le ayudarán a optimizar la configuración. Para problemas relacionados con audio, consulte nuestra guía de solución de eco y retardo.
🔹 Problema
🔹 Causa Probable
🔹 Solución
Llamadas se cortan prematuramente
Timeout RTP demasiado corto
Aumentar timeout a 30-60 seg
Llamadas sin audio permanecen activas
Modo configurado como None
Cambiar a Detect and Hang Up
Falsas detecciones en redes con alta latencia
Latencia variable excede el timeout
Ajustar timeout según latencia de red
No se detectan interrupciones
Media proxy puede enmascarar interrupciones
Verificar configuración de media proxy
Cortes con codecs con supresión de silencio
VAD (G.729 Annex B) no envía paquetes en silencio
Deshabilitar VAD o aumentar timeout
🔗 Recursos Relacionados – Detección Interrupción RTP en VOS3000
❓ Preguntas Frecuentes sobre la Detección Interrupción RTP en VOS3000
¿Qué es la detección interrupción RTP en VOS3000?
Es una función del mapping gateway de VOS3000 que monitorea el flujo de paquetes RTP durante una llamada activa. Cuando se detecta que los paquetes RTP han dejado de llegar durante un período configurable, el sistema puede tomar acciones que van desde registrar el evento hasta terminar automáticamente la llamada. Esta función está documentada en la sección §2.5.1.1 (pág. 87-89) del manual de administración y se configura de forma independiente para cada mapping gateway, permitiendo estrategias diferentes según el comportamiento de cada carrier conectado a la plataforma.
¿Cuál es la diferencia entre Detect and Report y Detect and Hang Up?
En modo Detect and Report, VOS3000 detecta la interrupción y genera una alarma visible en el sistema de monitoreo del NOC, pero la llamada permanece activa — las partes pueden seguir sin audio hasta que cuelguen manualmente. En modo Detect and Hang Up, VOS3000 detecta la interrupción y termina inmediatamente la llamada enviando BYE a ambas partes, liberando recursos y generando un CDR con la duración real. El modo Detect and Hang Up es el recomendado para producción wholesale porque garantiza CDRs precisos y evita el consumo innecesario de canales concurrentes. Detección Interrupción RTP
¿Qué valor de timeout RTP debo configurar?
Un valor típico para entornos de producción es de 30 a 60 segundos — permite tolerar pausas breves en el audio sin generar falsas detecciones, pero es suficientemente corto para identificar interrupciones reales. En redes con alta latencia o enlaces satelitales, puede ser necesario aumentar el timeout a 90 o 120 segundos. El valor óptimo debe determinarse mediante pruebas en su entorno específico, ajustando según la frecuencia de falsos positivos y la velocidad de detección deseada.
¿Puede la detección causar cortes de llamadas legítimas?
Sí, si el timeout RTP está configurado con un valor demasiado bajo, las pausas naturales en la conversación pueden ser detectadas erróneamente como interrupciones RTP. Esto es más probable cuando se utilizan codecs con supresión de silencio (VAD) como G.729 Annex B, donde los períodos de silencio no generan paquetes RTP. Para evitar este problema, asegúrese de que el timeout sea suficientemente largo (mínimo 30 segundos) y considere deshabilitar la supresión de silencio en los gateways cuando utilice el modo Detect and Hang Up.
¿Cómo afecta el media proxy a la detección de interrupciones RTP?
Cuando el media proxy está habilitado, el flujo RTP pasa a través del servidor VOS3000 en lugar de fluir directamente entre los endpoints. Esto puede facilitar la detección de interrupciones porque VOS3000 ve los paquetes de ambos lados. Sin embargo, si el media proxy está en modo bypass, los paquetes RTP no pasan por el servidor y la detección puede no funcionar correctamente. Siempre verifique la configuración del media proxy al implementar esta función.
¿Es recomendable usar el mismo modo para todos los gateways?
No necesariamente. La detección se configura por mapping gateway, lo que permite usar modos diferentes según el comportamiento de cada carrier. Un gateway con un carrier de alta calidad puede usar Detect and Report para monitoreo pasivo, mientras que un gateway con un carrier propenso a interrupciones puede usar Detect and Hang Up para recuperación automática. Esta flexibilidad permite optimizar la estrategia de monitoreo para cada interconexión de forma independiente.
🚀 Soporte Profesional
La configuración correcta de la detección interrupción RTP es fundamental para mantener la calidad del servicio, la precisión de la facturación y la eficiencia del uso de recursos en su plataforma VoIP. Nuestro equipo de especialistas puede ayudarle a seleccionar e implementar el modo óptimo para cada gateway. Contáctenos por WhatsApp: +8801911119966.
Desde la configuración inicial hasta la optimización avanzada de calidad de servicio y monitoreo de alarmas, proporcionamos soporte experto para operadores en Colombia, Perú y toda Latinoamérica. Escríbanos hoy al +8801911119966 y proteja la calidad de cada llamada en su red.
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For professional VOS3000 installations and deployment, VOS3000 Server Rental Solution:
VOS3000 No Media Hangup: Smart Auto-Disconnect for Ghost Calls
In wholesale VoIP operations, few problems are as insidious and costly as ghost calls — calls that remain connected in SIP signaling but have no RTP media flowing. These phantom sessions silently consume concurrent call capacity, inflate CDR durations, and generate billing disputes that erode customer trust. The VOS3000 no media hangup feature, configured through the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME system parameter documented in VOS3000 Manual Section 4.3.5.2, provides a Smart automatic disconnect mechanism that monitors RTP streams and terminates calls when media stops flowing for a configurable period.
This comprehensive guide explains what ghost calls are, how they impact your VoIP business, and how to configure VOS3000 no media hangup to automatically clean up dead call sessions. Whether you are dealing with NAT timeout issues, endpoint crashes, or one-way audio scenarios that leave zombie calls on your server, this guide covers the complete configuration, testing, and troubleshooting process. For professional assistance with VOS3000 ghost call prevention, contact us on WhatsApp at +8801911119966.
Table of Contents
What Are Ghost Calls in VoIP?
A ghost call is a VoIP session that remains established in SIP signaling but has no active RTP media stream. The SIP dialog is still valid — the call appears as “answered” and “connected” in the system — but no voice packets are flowing between the endpoints. From the VOS3000 softswitch perspective, the call slot is occupied, the CDR timer is running, and the session counts against your concurrent call limit, but there is no actual voice communication happening.
Ghost calls are particularly dangerous because they are invisible to the caller and callee. Neither party is aware that a call session is still open on the server. The SIP signaling path may have been maintained through keepalive messages or simply because neither side sent a BYE message, while the RTP media path has completely died. The result is a zombie call that wastes resources and corrupts billing data until someone or something terminates it.
Why Ghost Calls Are a Serious Problem
Ghost calls create multiple layers of problems for VoIP operators:
Wasted concurrent call capacity: Every ghost call occupies a license slot that could be used for a real call. During network instability events, hundreds of ghost calls can accumulate, exhausting your concurrent call capacity and blocking legitimate traffic
Incorrect billing: CDR records show the full duration from answer to disconnect, including the period when no media was flowing. Customers are billed for dead air time, leading to disputes and chargebacks
Inflated CDR durations: Ghost calls can last for hours because neither endpoint sends a BYE. CDR records show extremely long call durations with no corresponding voice activity, distorting traffic analytics
Billing disputes: When customers analyze their CDRs and find calls lasting hours with no conversation, they dispute the charges. Resolving these disputes consumes time and damages business relationships
Resource exhaustion: Each ghost call maintains state in the VOS3000 media relay, consuming memory and processing resources that should be available for active calls
Understanding the root causes of ghost calls is essential for effective prevention. Ghost calls typically occur when the SIP signaling path survives while the RTP media path fails. This section covers the most common causes and their telltale symptoms.
👻 Cause
📋 Description
🔍 Symptom in CDR
⚠️ Impact Level
Network connectivity loss
Internet link failure between VOS3000 and one endpoint; SIP path via alternate route but RTP direct path broken
Call duration extends far beyond normal; no media packets during outage window
High — multiple simultaneous ghost calls during outage
NAT timeout
NAT device drops RTP pinhole mapping due to inactivity; SIP signaling on separate pinhole survives
One-way audio progressing to no audio; call remains connected indefinitely
Medium — affects specific endpoint pairs behind NAT
Endpoint crash or reboot
IP phone, gateway, or softphone crashes without sending SIP BYE or CANCEL
CDR shows call starting normally then continuing for extended period with no media
Medium — sporadic occurrence depending on endpoint stability
One-way audio scenario
Media flows in one direction only; one endpoint sends RTP but the other cannot receive or respond
Asymmetric RTP; one direction shows zero packets in capture
Medium — common with firewall and NAT misconfigurations
Firewall state table overflow
Firewall drops RTP session state due to table overflow; SIP session on different port survives
Sudden media loss during peak traffic; call remains in signaling state
High — affects many calls simultaneously during peak hours
Codec renegotiation failure
Re-INVITE for codec change fails on media path but succeeds on signaling path
Call connected with initial codec, then media stops after re-INVITE
Low — rare but difficult to diagnose
SIP ALG interference
Router SIP ALG modifies SDP in ways that break RTP path while keeping SIP signaling functional
Call answers but no RTP flows from the start; stays connected until timeout
Medium — common with consumer-grade routers
How VOS3000 No Media Hangup Works
The VOS3000 no media hangup feature provides an automatic mechanism to detect and terminate ghost calls. When enabled, VOS3000 continuously monitors the RTP media stream for each active call. If no RTP packets are received for the duration specified by the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME parameter, VOS3000 automatically sends a SIP BYE message to terminate the call and close the session.
The monitoring process works at the media relay level. When VOS3000 operates in Media Proxy mode, all RTP packets pass through the VOS3000 server. The media relay component tracks RTP packet reception for each active call session. If the RTP stream for a call stops — meaning no RTP packets are received on either the caller or callee media port for the configured timeout period — the system considers the call dead and initiates automatic disconnect by sending a SIP BYE to both endpoints.
This Smart detection mechanism is fundamentally different from the SIP session timer. The session timer operates at the SIP signaling layer and detects when SIP re-INVITE or UPDATE refreshes fail. The no media hangup operates at the RTP media layer and detects when voice packets stop flowing, regardless of whether the SIP signaling path is still alive. For details on the session timer mechanism, see our VOS3000 session timer 32-second drop guide.
The Auto-Disconnect Process Step by Step
When VOS3000 detects that no RTP media has been received for a call within the configured timeout, the following sequence occurs:
RTP monitoring: The VOS3000 media relay continuously tracks RTP packet reception for every active call session
Timeout detection: When no RTP packets are received for SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME seconds on a call, the media relay flags the session as dead
BYE generation: VOS3000 generates a SIP BYE request for the affected call and sends it to both the caller and callee endpoints
Session teardown: The SIP dialog is terminated, media relay ports are released, and the call session state is cleaned up
CDR closure: The CDR record is finalized with the disconnect time and appropriate cause code, recording the actual duration the call remained active
VOS3000 No Media Hangup Detection Flow:
1. Call established (SIP 200 OK received and ACKed)
2. RTP media proxy active — packets flowing in both directions
3. RTP stream stops (no packets received from either endpoint)
4. Timer starts: counting seconds since last RTP packet received
5. Timer reaches SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME seconds — call flagged as ghost
6. VOS3000 sends SIP BYE to both endpoints
7. Call session terminated, media ports released, CDR closed
Key Requirement: Media Proxy mode must be active for RTP monitoring.
Direct media bypass mode does NOT support no media hangup detection.
For help configuring Media Proxy mode to support no media hangup detection, refer to the VOS3000 system parameter documentation or contact your system administrator.
Configuring SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME in VOS3000
The SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME parameter is the core configuration for the VOS3000 no media hangup feature. It defines the number of seconds VOS3000 waits without receiving any RTP packets before automatically disconnecting the call. This parameter is configured in the VOS3000 softswitch system parameters, as documented in VOS3000 Manual Section 4.3.5.2.
Navigating to the Configuration
To configure SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME, follow these steps:
Log in to VOS3000: Access the VOS3000 client application with an administrator account
Navigate to System Parameters: Go to Operation Management > Softswitch Management > Additional Settings > System Parameter
Locate SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME: Search for the parameter name in the system parameter list
Set the timeout value: Enter the desired number of seconds (see configuration values table below)
Save and apply: Save the parameter change — the setting takes effect for new calls; existing calls use the previous value
⚙️ Parameter Value
📝 Behavior
🎯 Use Case
⚠️ Consideration
0
No media hangup disabled — ghost calls never auto-disconnected
When relying entirely on SIP session timer for call cleanup
Ghost calls will persist indefinitely without session timer
30
Disconnect after 30 seconds of no RTP media
Aggressive cleanup for high-capacity systems where every slot counts
May disconnect legitimate calls with long silent periods (hold, mute)
60
Disconnect after 60 seconds of no RTP media
Balanced setting for most wholesale VoIP deployments
Good balance between cleanup speed and legitimate silence tolerance
90
Disconnect after 90 seconds of no RTP media
Conservative setting for environments with frequent short silent periods
Ghost calls may persist up to 90 seconds before cleanup
120
Disconnect after 120 seconds of no RTP media
Very conservative; maximum tolerance for silent periods
Long ghost call duration before disconnect; wastes more capacity
180+
Extended timeout beyond typical recommendations
Special scenarios with very long expected silence (intercom systems, paging)
Not recommended for general VoIP; ghost calls linger too long
VOS3000 SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME Configuration:
Navigation: Operation Management > Softswitch Management
> Additional Settings > System Parameter
Parameter: SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME
Type: Integer (seconds)
Default: 0 (disabled)
Recommended: 60 seconds for most wholesale deployments
IMPORTANT:
- Value of 0 disables the feature entirely
- Applies only to new calls after the parameter is saved
- Existing calls continue with the previously active setting
- Media Proxy mode MUST be enabled for this feature to function
Setting the Appropriate Timeout
Choosing the right value for SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME requires balancing two competing concerns. A timeout that is too short risks disconnecting legitimate calls where one or both parties are silent for an extended period — for example, during a hold, mute, or a natural pause in conversation. A timeout that is too long allows ghost calls to waste concurrent call capacity and inflate CDR durations before they are finally cleaned up.
The key insight is that RTP packets are normally sent continuously during a VoIP call, even when the parties are silent. This is because most codecs — including G.711, G.729, and G.723 — generate RTP packets containing silence or comfort noise data. Even when both parties are completely silent, RTP packets continue to flow at the codec’s packetization rate (typically every 20ms or 30ms). The only time RTP stops flowing on a legitimate call is when there is a genuine network or endpoint failure.
However, some codecs and configurations implement silence suppression (also called Voice Activity Detection or VAD), which stops sending RTP packets during silent periods. If your deployment uses VAD-enabled codecs, you must set SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME high enough to accommodate the longest expected silence period. For most deployments without VAD, a 60-second timeout provides an excellent balance between rapid ghost call cleanup and tolerance for legitimate call scenarios.
No Media Hangup vs Session Timer: Critical Differences
VOS3000 provides two separate mechanisms for detecting and cleaning up dead calls: the no media hangup feature and the SIP session timer. Understanding the differences between these two mechanisms is essential for proper configuration and avoiding the common confusion between them.
📊 Aspect
👻 No Media Hangup
⏱️ Session Timer
Protocol layer
RTP media layer
SIP signaling layer
What it monitors
RTP packet reception — whether media is flowing
SIP re-INVITE/UPDATE refresh — whether signaling session is alive
Detection method
No RTP packets received for X seconds
SIP session refresh fails (re-INVITE timeout)
Trigger condition
Media path failure while SIP signaling may still be alive
SIP signaling path failure; both signaling and media are dead
Typical timeout
30-120 seconds (configurable via SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME)
32 seconds default drop after session refresh failure
Parameter
SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME
Session-Expires header and Min-SE in SIP messages
Catches ghost calls?
Yes — detects calls with dead media but live signaling
No — session timer refresh requires signaling to fail; ghost calls have live signaling
Media Proxy required?
Yes — must proxy media to monitor RTP
No — operates purely in SIP signaling layer
Best for
Detecting ghost calls where media dies but signaling survives
Detecting total signaling failure where both SIP and RTP are dead
The critical takeaway is that the session timer alone cannot catch ghost calls. When a call becomes a ghost — media is dead but SIP signaling is still alive — the session timer refresh succeeds because the SIP path is functional. Only the no media hangup feature can detect this specific condition because it monitors the RTP stream independently of the SIP signaling state. For complete call cleanup, both mechanisms should be configured together. Learn more about the session timer in our VOS3000 session timer 32-second drop guide.
Media Proxy Mode Interaction with No Media Hangup
The VOS3000 no media hangup feature has a critical dependency on Media Proxy mode. Because the detection mechanism works by monitoring RTP packet reception at the media relay level, the media proxy must be active for each call that you want to monitor. If calls are established in direct media bypass mode — where RTP flows directly between endpoints without passing through the VOS3000 server — the no media hangup feature cannot detect ghost calls because the server never sees the RTP packets.
🔧 Media Mode
👻 No Media Hangup
📝 RTP Visibility
⚠️ Notes
Media Proxy (Relay)
✅ Fully functional
All RTP packets pass through VOS3000; full monitoring capability
Recommended mode for ghost call detection
Media Bypass (Direct)
❌ Not functional
RTP flows directly between endpoints; VOS3000 cannot monitor packets
Ghost calls will NOT be detected in bypass mode
Mixed Mode
⚡ Partially functional
Only proxied calls are monitored; bypassed calls are invisible
Inconsistent ghost call detection across your traffic
To ensure complete ghost call detection, configure your VOS3000 system to use Media Proxy mode for all calls. This means setting the appropriate media relay configuration for your gateways and ensuring that calls are not falling through to direct media bypass. The tradeoff is slightly higher server resource consumption, as the media relay must process and forward every RTP packet. However, the benefit of automatic ghost call cleanup far outweighs the marginal increase in CPU and bandwidth usage for most deployments.
Detecting Ghost Calls in CDR: Identifying the Patterns
Even with no media hangup configured, you should regularly audit your CDR records to identify ghost call patterns. Ghost calls leave distinctive signatures in CDR data that can be detected through analysis. Early detection of ghost call patterns helps you identify network issues, endpoint problems, and configuration gaps before they cause significant billing disputes.
🔍 CDR Pattern
👻 Indicates
📊 Typical Values
✅ Action
Very long duration with zero billed amount
Ghost call that was eventually cleaned up by no media hangup
Duration: 60-300 seconds; Billed: $0.00
Verify no media hangup is working; check if timeout is appropriate
Unusually long duration with near-zero billed amount
Ghost call with minimal media before timeout
Duration: hundreds of seconds; Billed: fractions of a cent
Reduce SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME if too many calls affected
Multiple calls from same endpoint with identical long durations
Systematic endpoint or network issue causing repeated ghost calls
Duration: matches SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value consistently
Investigate the specific endpoint; check NAT, firewall, and network path
Calls that end exactly at the no media hangup timeout
No media hangup is actively cleaning up ghost calls
Duration: matches SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME + initial media period
Feature is working correctly; investigate root cause of media loss
Disproportionate ACD (Average Call Duration) for specific routes
Route-level network issues causing ghost calls
ACD significantly higher than expected for the destination
Check the vendor/gateway for that route; test media path quality
Spike in concurrent call count without corresponding traffic increase
Accumulating ghost calls during a network event
Concurrent calls near license limit; CDR shows many long-duration calls
Verify no media hangup is enabled; check Media Proxy mode is active
Using Current Call Monitor for Real-Time Detection
VOS3000 provides a real-time Current Call monitor that shows all active calls on the system. During a network event, you can use the Current Call monitor to identify ghost calls in real time:
Open Current Call: Navigate to Operation Management > Call Management > Current Call
Sort by duration: Click the duration column to sort calls from longest to shortest
Identify anomalies: Calls with unusually long durations, especially from the same endpoint or gateway, are likely ghost calls
Check media status: If available, observe whether the media relay shows active RTP for each call
Manual disconnect: You can manually disconnect suspected ghost calls from the Current Call interface
Regular monitoring of the Current Call screen helps you identify ghost call patterns early and confirm that your SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME configuration is working effectively.
Recommended Timeout by Call Type – VOS3000 no media hangup
Different call scenarios have different tolerance levels for silence periods, and the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value should be set according to the most sensitive call type in your deployment. The following table provides recommended timeout values based on common VoIP call types and their expected media behavior.
📞 Call Type
⏱️ Recommended Timeout
💡 Reasoning
⚠️ Risk of Too Short
Wholesale termination
30-60 seconds
High call volume; every slot matters; minimal silence expected
Brief holds during IVR transfer could be disconnected
Retail VoIP
60-90 seconds
End users may mute or hold; need more tolerance for natural silence
Users on hold may be disconnected unexpectedly
Call center / IVR
90-120 seconds
IVR menus and queue hold times create extended silence periods
Callers in queue may be dropped while waiting for agent
PBX hold music should generate RTP; silence may indicate real problem
VAD-enabled endpoints
120-180 seconds
Voice Activity Detection suppresses RTP during silence; needs longer timeout
Normal silent conversation gaps will trigger disconnect
Emergency services
120+ seconds (or disable)
Never disconnect emergency calls; silence may be critical situation
Disconnecting emergency calls is dangerous and may violate regulations
If your VOS3000 deployment handles multiple call types, set SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME to accommodate the most sensitive call type that requires the longest silence tolerance. Alternatively, consider separating different call types onto different VOS3000 instances or prefixes with different configurations. For guidance on optimizing timeout settings for your specific traffic mix, contact us on WhatsApp at +8801911119966.
Use Case: Preventing Billing Disputes from Ghost Calls
One of the most impactful applications of the VOS3000 no media hangup feature is preventing billing disputes. Consider a scenario common in wholesale VoIP: a carrier routes 10,000 calls per day through a vendor gateway. During a 2-hour network instability event, 200 calls lose their RTP media path but remain connected in SIP signaling. Without no media hangup, these 200 ghost calls persist until the endpoints time out or the session expires — potentially lasting 4-6 hours each.
The CDR records show 200 calls with durations of 4-6 hours each. When the billing system calculates charges based on these CDR durations, the customer is billed for 800-1200 hours of call time that had no actual voice communication. When the customer reviews their invoice and CDR records, they find hundreds of calls with extremely long durations and dispute the entire batch of charges. The dispute resolution process consumes significant staff time, and the carrier often has to issue credits to maintain the business relationship.
With VOS3000 no media hangup configured with SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME set to 60 seconds, each ghost call is detected and terminated within 60 seconds of media loss. The 200 ghost calls generate CDR records showing durations of approximately 60 seconds instead of 4-6 hours. The total billed time is reduced from 800-1200 hours to approximately 3.3 hours, and the customer’s CDR shows reasonable call durations that match actual usage. Billing disputes are minimized, and the carrier’s revenue integrity is maintained.
For a complete understanding of VOS3000 billing and how CDR records are generated, see our VOS3000 billing system guide.
Use Case: Freeing Up Concurrent Call Capacity During Network Issues
Concurrent call capacity is a finite and valuable resource in any VOS3000 deployment. Your VOS3000 license determines the maximum number of simultaneous calls the system can handle, and every ghost call consumes one of these precious slots. During network instability events, ghost calls can accumulate rapidly, potentially exhausting your concurrent call capacity and blocking legitimate traffic.
Consider a VOS3000 system licensed for 2,000 concurrent calls during normal operation. The system typically handles 1,500-1,800 concurrent calls during peak hours, leaving 200-500 slots of headroom. A network event causes media loss on 500 calls, but SIP signaling survives on 400 of them. Without no media hangup, those 400 ghost calls remain connected indefinitely, reducing available capacity to 1,600 slots. When peak hour traffic arrives, the system hits the 2,000-call license limit with 400 ghost calls consuming capacity, and legitimate calls start failing with 503 Service Unavailable.
With VOS3000 no media hangup enabled, those 400 ghost calls are automatically terminated within 60 seconds of media loss. The 400 call slots are immediately freed up and available for legitimate traffic. The system maintains its full capacity for real calls, and the network event passes without any impact on call completion rates. This Smart automatic cleanup ensures that your concurrent call capacity is always available for genuine traffic, not wasted on zombie sessions.
Troubleshooting: Legitimate Calls Being Disconnected
The most common problem encountered with VOS3000 no media hangup is legitimate calls being incorrectly disconnected. This happens when the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value is set too low for the actual silence patterns in your call traffic. When legitimate calls are disconnected, users experience unexpected call drops, and the CDR shows the disconnect reason as “no media” rather than a normal call termination.
Symptoms of Incorrect Disconnection
Users report unexpected call drops: Callers complain that calls are disconnected during normal conversation, especially during pauses or hold periods
CDR shows no media disconnect code: The CDR disconnect reason indicates no media timeout rather than a normal BYE from an endpoint
Drops correlate with silence periods: Call drops tend to happen during IVR menus, hold periods, or natural conversation pauses
Issue affects specific call types: Only certain routes or endpoints are affected, typically those with VAD enabled or those that generate silence during normal operation
Resolving Incorrect Disconnection
Increase SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME: The most direct solution is to increase the timeout value. If calls are being disconnected at 30 seconds, try 60 seconds. If 60 seconds is too aggressive, try 90 seconds
Check for VAD-enabled endpoints: If any endpoints use Voice Activity Detection, RTP stops during silence. Either disable VAD on those endpoints or increase the timeout to accommodate silence periods
Verify Media Proxy is correctly configured: In rare cases, Media Proxy misconfiguration can cause the server to miss RTP packets that are actually flowing. Verify that the media relay is processing packets correctly using packet capture
Analyze specific affected calls: Use SIP trace and RTP capture to examine the calls being disconnected. Confirm that RTP truly stops before the timeout, or whether the monitoring is incorrectly reporting no media
Consider per-route configuration: If only certain routes or endpoints are affected, consider whether you can isolate those calls and apply different settings
For help diagnosing and resolving no media hangup disconnection issues, see our VOS3000 audio troubleshooting guide or contact us on WhatsApp at +8801911119966.
Configuration and Testing Checklist (VOS3000 no media hangup)
Use this checklist to ensure your VOS3000 no media hangup configuration is complete and working correctly before relying on it in production. Each step should be verified and documented.
✅ Step
📋 Action
📝 Details
⚠️ Important
1
Verify Media Proxy mode is active
Check that calls are being proxied, not bypassed, in the media relay configuration
No media hangup does NOT work in bypass mode
2
Set SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME
Navigate to Softswitch Management > System Parameter and set the timeout value in seconds
Start with 60 seconds; adjust based on your call types
3
Test with a legitimate call
Place a normal test call and verify it stays connected during normal conversation
Ensure the timeout does not affect normal calls
4
Test ghost call detection
Simulate a ghost call by establishing a call and then blocking RTP on one endpoint
Call should disconnect within SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME seconds of RTP loss
5
Verify CDR records
Check that CDR shows correct disconnect reason for the auto-disconnected call
CDR should show no media timeout as the disconnect cause
6
Test with hold/mute scenario
Place a call, put one side on hold, and verify the call stays connected
Hold music should generate RTP; if not, timeout may trigger
7
Monitor Current Call during peak
Watch the Current Call screen during peak hours for ghost call accumulation
Concurrent call count should not spike abnormally during network events
8
Audit CDR for ghost call patterns
After 24 hours, review CDR for calls matching ghost call patterns (long duration, zero billing)
Ghost call patterns should be eliminated or significantly reduced
9
Configure session timer as backup
Ensure SIP session timer is also configured for total signaling failure scenarios
No media hangup + session timer = complete call cleanup coverage
10
Document configuration
Record SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value, Media Proxy mode, and session timer settings
Essential for future troubleshooting and configuration audits
VOS3000 No Media Hangup Configuration Summary:
Step 1: Verify Media Proxy mode is active for all call paths
Step 2: Set SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME = 60 (recommended starting value)
Step 3: Save system parameter changes
Step 4: Test with legitimate call — verify no false disconnects
Step 5: Simulate ghost call — verify auto-disconnect works
Step 6: Check CDR records for correct disconnect reason
Step 7: Monitor Current Call during peak hours
Step 8: Audit CDR after 24 hours for ghost call patterns
Step 9: Configure SIP session timer as additional safety net
Step 10: Document all settings for future reference
Both no media hangup AND session timer should be configured
for complete protection against dead calls.
FAQ: VOS3000 No Media Hangup
1. What is no media hangup in VOS3000?
No media hangup is a VOS3000 feature that automatically disconnects calls when the RTP media stream stops flowing. It monitors RTP packet reception for each active call through the media relay. When no RTP packets are received for the duration specified by the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME parameter, VOS3000 sends a SIP BYE to terminate the call. This Smart mechanism prevents ghost calls — calls that remain connected in SIP signaling but have no active voice media — from wasting concurrent call capacity and corrupting CDR billing records. The feature is documented in VOS3000 Manual Section 4.3.5.2 and requires Media Proxy mode to be active for RTP monitoring.
2. What is the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME parameter?
SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME is a VOS3000 softswitch system parameter that defines the number of seconds the system waits without receiving any RTP packets before automatically disconnecting a call. The parameter is configured in Operation Management > Softswitch Management > Additional Settings > System Parameter. A value of 0 disables the feature entirely. Common production values range from 30 to 120 seconds, with 60 seconds being the recommended starting point for most wholesale VoIP deployments. The parameter only takes effect for new calls after it is saved; existing calls continue with the previously active value.
3. How do ghost calls affect VoIP billing?
Ghost calls have a direct and damaging impact on VoIP billing accuracy. When a call becomes a ghost — SIP signaling remains connected but RTP media stops — the CDR timer continues to run. The CDR records the full duration from call answer to eventual disconnect, including potentially hours of dead air time. The billing system calculates charges based on these inflated CDR durations, resulting in customers being billed for time when no voice communication was actually happening.
This leads to billing disputes, credit requests, and damaged business relationships. The VOS3000 no media hangup feature addresses this by automatically terminating ghost calls within the configured timeout, keeping CDR durations accurate and proportional to actual media activity. For more on billing accuracy, see our VOS3000 billing system guide.
4. What is the difference between no media hangup and session timer?
No media hangup and the SIP session timer are two distinct call cleanup mechanisms in VOS3000 that operate at different protocol layers and detect different failure conditions. No media hangup operates at the RTP media layer — it monitors whether voice packets are flowing and disconnects calls when media stops. The session timer operates at the SIP signaling layer — it uses periodic SIP re-INVITE or UPDATE messages to verify that the SIP signaling path is alive and disconnects calls when the session refresh fails. The critical difference is that ghost calls typically have live SIP signaling but dead RTP media.
The session timer cannot detect ghost calls because the SIP refresh succeeds, while no media hangup can detect them because it monitors the media stream independently. Both mechanisms should be configured together for complete call cleanup coverage.
5. Why are legitimate calls being disconnected by no media hangup?
Legitimate calls are typically disconnected by the no media hangup feature when the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value is set too short for the actual silence patterns in your call traffic. The most common cause is endpoints using Voice Activity Detection (VAD), which stops sending RTP packets during silent periods. If VAD is enabled and a caller pauses for longer than SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME seconds, the system interprets the silence as a dead call and disconnects it.
Other causes include long IVR menu pauses, extended hold times without hold music generating RTP, and network jitter causing temporary RTP gaps. The solution is to increase SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME to a value that accommodates the longest expected legitimate silence period, disable VAD on endpoints, or ensure that hold music and IVR prompts generate continuous RTP output.
6. How do I detect ghost calls in CDR records?
Ghost calls leave distinctive patterns in CDR records that can be identified through analysis. The most obvious indicator is a call with an unusually long duration but a zero or near-zero billed amount — this suggests the call had no actual media flowing. Other patterns include: multiple calls from the same endpoint with identical durations matching the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME value; calls that end exactly at the no media hangup timeout plus the initial media period; and disproportionate Average Call Duration (ACD) for specific routes compared to expected values. To detect ghost calls systematically, sort your CDR by duration in descending order and review the top results.
Look for calls that are significantly longer than the typical ACD for their destination, especially if they cluster around specific endpoints, gateways, or time periods. For monitoring best practices, see our VOS3000 system parameters guide.
7. Does no media hangup work with media bypass mode in VOS3000?
No, the VOS3000 no media hangup feature does not work when calls are in media bypass (direct) mode. The feature relies on the media relay component to monitor RTP packet reception for each active call. In bypass mode, RTP media flows directly between the two endpoints without passing through the VOS3000 server, so the system has no visibility into whether packets are being exchanged. Without access to the RTP stream, the no media hangup timer cannot detect when media stops flowing.
For this reason, you must configure Media Proxy (relay) mode on your VOS3000 gateways and trunks if you want ghost call detection. In a mixed-mode deployment where some calls use proxy and others use bypass, only the proxied calls benefit from no media hangup protection, while bypassed calls remain vulnerable to ghost call accumulation.
Conclusion – VOS3000 no media hangup
Ghost calls are a persistent threat to VoIP operations, silently consuming concurrent call capacity, inflating CDR durations, and generating billing disputes that erode customer confidence. The VOS3000 no media hangup feature, configured through the SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME system parameter, provides a Smart and effective solution by automatically detecting and terminating calls when RTP media stops flowing.
Key takeaways from this guide:
Ghost calls occur when SIP signaling survives but RTP media dies — they are invisible to both parties and persist until explicitly terminated
SS_NOMEDIAHANGUPTIME controls the auto-disconnect timeout — set it to 60 seconds for most wholesale deployments; 0 disables the feature
Media Proxy mode is required — the feature only works when VOS3000 is proxying RTP media, not in bypass mode
No media hangup and session timer serve different purposes — configure both for complete call cleanup coverage
Choose your timeout carefully — too short disconnects legitimate calls; too long wastes capacity on ghost calls
Monitor CDR patterns regularly — ghost call signatures in CDR data reveal network issues before they cause major problems
By implementing VOS3000 no media hangup with the appropriate timeout for your traffic patterns, you can eliminate ghost calls, protect billing accuracy, and ensure that your concurrent call capacity is always available for genuine voice traffic. For professional VOS3000 configuration and support, visit VOS3000 downloads or contact us on WhatsApp at +8801911119966.
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