From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Received: from srv1.stroeder.com (srv1.stroeder.com [213.240.180.113]) by mail.toke.dk (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 5FB037C77C7 for ; Fri, 8 Jan 2021 17:08:05 +0100 (CET) Authentication-Results: mail.toke.dk; dkim=pass (1536-bit key) header.d=stroeder.com header.i=@stroeder.com header.b=kH3Qfn2z DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=simple/simple; d=stroeder.com; s=stroeder-com-20201114; t=1610122084; bh=WCxHXP92z5DnOvlRs5BTnMGM9NfpHF8isXscC0xE2CE=; h=To:From:Subject:Date:From; b=kH3Qfn2z/tOmRXS5ghLJR2JzPJtYspsoH770RTMBJadWydMunICHalc5J9xA4kC0+ AxgeGCfAgmoz+CPRooaSjfw4rR5sz6Uvhz+ofSVoI4Zt/r8ol0KDxLTY25TaOG6XdX cS0cou6Sb+88xHsIHflksSLR2tmvZymg6vKSOOmRUGqquZYPviuoZlAhl945ebdzsL LfjGRlgFt+aDhlkeb+CvytrcjubPbnDApffjZKey7RDRzJRCHEN7AzNSpqu To: "galene@lists.galene.org" From: =?UTF-8?Q?Michael_Str=c3=b6der?= Message-ID: <6f88f2e0-7b06-953d-ed8b-53481381a0f0@stroeder.com> Date: Fri, 8 Jan 2021 17:08:04 +0100 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.6.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Language: en-US Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID-Hash: YGBI6TEJ2U3QUXYUARZPUZ3FYFEZ65AV X-Message-ID-Hash: YGBI6TEJ2U3QUXYUARZPUZ3FYFEZ65AV X-MailFrom: michael@stroeder.com X-Mailman-Rule-Misses: dmarc-mitigation; no-senders; approved; emergency; loop; banned-address; member-moderation; nonmember-moderation; administrivia; implicit-dest; max-recipients; max-size; news-moderation; no-subject; suspicious-header X-Mailman-Version: 3.3.2 Precedence: list Subject: [Galene] STUN and TURN List-Id: =?utf-8?q?Gal=C3=A8ne_videoconferencing_server_discussion_list?= Archived-At: List-Archive: List-Help: List-Post: List-Subscribe: List-Unsubscribe: HI! I've noticed that the README now also contains an STUN config example. So I wonder whether using stun: and turn: URLs in the ICE config make sense. Do the browsers prefer STUN-trickled addresses over relaying via TURN if both are configured. I'd like to avoid the TURN stream relaying burden for clients using a "normal" open Internet connection at home. Ciao, Michael.