At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?
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@JohnnyBeGood said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
@JKnott said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
However, first get rid of one of the of the NATs.
Can you please elaborate more on this?
Sorry, I had you confused with moikerz, who said one of his customers had double NAT.
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You'll have to filter on the phone IP address, not MAC address.
MAC filtering works fine, provided a router isn't in the way. I frequently filter on MACs.
@JKnott The Diagnostics > Packet capture page DOES NOT support filtering on MAC address. Had you continued reading you would have seen me say that everything could be captured and subsequently filtered by MAC address in wireshark.
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@Derelict said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
You'll have to filter on the phone IP address, not MAC address.
MAC filtering works fine, provided a router isn't in the way. I frequently filter on MACs.
@JKnott The Diagnostics > Packet capture page DOES NOT support filtering on MAC address. Had you continued reading you would have seen me say that everything could be captured and subsequently filtered by MAC address in wireshark.
It does here. From the text below the host address box:
"This value is either the Source or Destination IP address, subnet in CIDR notation, or MAC address.
Matching can be negated by preceding the value with "!". Multiple IP addresses or CIDR subnets may be specified. Comma (",") separated values perform a boolean "AND". Separating with a pipe ("|") performs a boolean "OR".
MAC addresses must be entered in colon-separated format, such as xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx or a partial address consisting of one (xx), two (xx:xx), or four (xx:xx:xx:xx) segments."That sure looks like it can capture MAC addresses to me.
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Lol. I do this all day every day and have never used that.
Ahh. Added in 2.4.0. Cool.
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@JKnott said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
I'll have to look again tomorrow.
I just did that. I captured my phone's traffic, using a Wireshark MAC filter. Like you, I see the ESP protocol listed for the WiFi calling packets. However, you can see at the left, ">" that you can click on to reveal more info. Going down through that info, I can see a VLAN ID 1, priority 3, so they're giving priority to the calls.
Then further down, I see UDP and UDP Encapsulation of IPSec Packets and so on through the rest of the frame.Bottom line, WiFi calling, along with VoLTE, use UDP to encapsulate IPSec, as I mentioned above.
BTW, another thing I see is some NAT keep alive packets.
So, you have to compare when it works with when it doesn't to see if there are any differences.
Also, it would be helpful if you attached the actual packet capture files, rather than a screen capture, so that we can see what's actually happening.
Incidentally, one reason for using UDP is that it makes it easy to move calls between the cell and WiFi networks. If it wasn't used, the IPSec connection would break when moving between networks.
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@Derelict said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
Lol. I do this all day every day and have never used that.
Ahh. Added in 2.4.0. Cool.
It would be nice if they added MAC addresses to firewall rules. With IPv6, it's pretty much needed with privacy addresses.
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pf doesn't support filtering on MAC addresses at all.
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@Derelict said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
pf doesn't support filtering on MAC addresses at all.
Yep, that's the problem. IPTables, as used on Linux, does.
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@JKnott said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
@Derelict said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
pf doesn't support filtering on MAC addresses at all.
Yep, that's the problem. IPTables, as used on Linux, does.
Yes, as everyone is aware.
I do not personally think moving to layer 2 filtering is the correct solution to filtering outbound sourced from IPv6 privacy addresses. Trusted and untrusted segments makes more sense to me. Especially since, as you are obviously aware, MAC addresses can be easily spoofed so no real security is gained there.
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@JKnott said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
It would be nice if they added MAC addresses to firewall rules. With IPv6, it's pretty much needed with privacy addresses.
Ok, so I tried to compare when I can dial and when I can't but could not see any difference and what is interesting when its working I do not see ESP protocol.
Other screenshot of pfTop is when I i'm on the call it creates connection to .233
When I can't make call over the Wi-Fi I turn it off place the call and it goes through after that when I turrn Wi-Fi on call goes through.Can someone please compare packet_capture.zip logs?
packet_capture.zip -
compare what zips?
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Attached file to the post. Forum software makes it not that visible.
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I fixed that for you ;)
In the one you say doesn't work see ESP out to
OrgName: Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon WirelessNo responses.
But in the one you say works, don't see any ESP.. I would guess you missed capturing the actual data.
I see some talk to samsung something, and google - nothing other in that so called working sniff. Like your call actually went out over cell vs wifi.
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UDP/4500 is performing the same functionality as ESP. It is known as NAT Traversal, or NAT-T.
I would totally expect that for an IPsec client like wifi calling behind a NAT router. It's the same as those micro-cells. They IPsec to home base and all comms are over that too.
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Pretty sure your talking to the OP there Derelict.. I am quite aware of what ESP and Port 4500 are ;)
My point was there is only 443 traffic in his so called working pcap, and non of it was to what could be a wifi calling system either.. So either his sniff missed when the call was placed, or it didn't go over wifi like he thinks it did.
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@JohnnyBeGood said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
when its working I do not see ESP protocol.
Yeah, just commenting on that ^
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Yeah there was no ESP or NAT-T anything, NO anything really when he says it works - a https session to google and one to like *.push.samsungsomething.. Only thing I could make out in the cert - the hello didn't contain actual sni.
Where sure isn't he making a wifi call
So he either missed the traffic with his sniff, or his phone used cell to make the call.
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I have attached a capture of a WiFi call, so the OP can see what he should be looking for. It contains both the NAT keepalive and actual IPSec traffic, which is identified by ESP, but is in fact a UDP packet encapsulating ESP.
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^ exactly there is 2 way communication there ;) Kind of a given for any sort of call to be going on...
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@johnpoz said in At times WiFi calling and sending SMS doesn't work?:
Where sure isn't he making a wifi call
Here's the video I made showing what I was doing https://youtu.be/q-iVQqJ_wA0
Am I doing something wrong?