Skype - 2.0 Guía de usuario Pagina 10

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Page 10 IT Administrators Guide
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Are allowed by your specic Group Policy Object (GPO)
Only a very small percentage of Skype users in your network (if any) become supernodes,
mainly because the majority of users have no public IP address. You can also deliberately
prevent your users from becoming supernodes by using your Skype GPO Editor. For more
information, please see 2.4 Skype client configuration and policies.
Relay nodes are nodes outside your network. They relay media and signalling information
between nodes that otherwise cant reach each other, normally because of rewall
permissions or problems traversing NAT. Relay nodes aren’t party to the communication
content and can’t view or decipher it.
Figure 1: Skype uses three kinds of peer nodes – ordinary nodes, supernodes, and relay nodes.
Our web-based Skype Manager is used for account management.
2.1.2 Operation
To see how Skype works and how it can be optimized for your network, we will look at
how call establishment (common to voice, IM and video sessions) works. Under normal
circumstances, a Skype client is an ordinary node in the P2P network. When Skype starts
up, the node binds listening sockets for random high (higher than 1024) TCP and UDP
ports. This is on port 443 for TCP/UDP and port 80 for TCP. It also uses UDP 443 to test
network connectivity.
The Skype client needs TCP connectivity for signalling information. It strongly prefers UDP
connectivity for stream (voice/video/le transfer) communications. If UDP is unavailable,
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