Summary: | ASTERISK-21803: transcoding from silk to g711 constantly print the message "lintosilk_frameout: encoding XXX samples" | ||
Reporter: | Victor Gonzalez (victorpy) | Labels: | |
Date Opened: | 2013-05-21 16:23:14 | Date Closed: | 2013-05-22 18:48:36 |
Priority: | Minor | Regression? | |
Status: | Closed/Complete | Components: | Codecs/General |
Versions: | 11.3.0 | Frequency of Occurrence | Constant |
Related Issues: | |||
Environment: | CentOS Linux release 6.0 (Final), kernel 2.6.32-71.el6.i686, arch i686, processor Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.00GHz | Attachments: | |
Description: | downloaded the codec_silk-11.0_1.0.0-pentium4m_32.tar.gz from http://downloads.digium.com/pub/telephony/codec_silk/asterisk-11.0/x86-32/
Whenever a call is being translated from silk to g711 a message indicating ">lintosilk_frameout: encoding XXX samples" constantly appears. I triyed with silk8, silk12 and silk16. In all cases the message appears. This message appears even when the asterisk is not in minimal verbose mode. | ||
Comments: | By: Rusty Newton (rnewton) 2013-05-21 18:33:45.143-0500 Do you mean this message spams the console even when VERBOSE and DEBUG are set to 0? Can you provide the output of "core show settings" ? Thanks! By: Victor Gonzalez (victorpy) 2013-05-22 09:08:25.447-0500 No, sorry, my bad. I set the debug level to 0 but the verbosity high to 9. I need to see some other verbose messages that are that high in verbosity, but the constant message wont let me see it in the console. I was hoping that there was a way to turn off the message. But for now is not possible i think. Im try to solve this in digium forum, but nobody could give an answer. The only answer was "submit an issue", sorry for the inconvenience. I will close the issue Sorry again! By: Rusty Newton (rnewton) 2013-05-22 18:48:28.622-0500 No worries. With a verbosity level that high you will see quite a bit of spam depending on whats happening in Asterisk. For example a lot of times when I'm triaging issues on here, about the highest I'll go is 5, which is still pretty high. 5 gets just about everything usually. Thanks! |