[SGVLUG] Asterisk
Mike Fedyk
mfedyk at mikefedyk.com
Fri Sep 29 15:27:59 PDT 2006
SIP is much like Active FTP, you need to open a range of ports to your
asterisk server, and tell asterisk to use that port range. check
/etc/asterisk/rtp.conf
Before you buy grandstream, let me suggest a low-end linksys phone. You
will not regret it, and grandstream is quite bad in its reliability,
sound quality and quality of firmware releases. check voip-info.org for
grandstream for a long list of bugs. I especially like the SPA-941 and
SPA-942, but the low-end SPA-901 is nice as well.
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/Linksys
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/Grandstream
I have had mixed success using QoS traffic control on the Debian 2.6.8
kernel with the two scripts linked below (with surprisingly better
results with CBQ than HTB). I would get some degraded sound quality
unless I reserved a portion of bandwidth for VoIP instead of allowing
the CBQ or HTB priority to work automatically. There are of course a
few more things I need to try, so don't think it can't be done. It is
probably a good idea to have a dedicated connection used for voip if
you're using consumer level connections like DSL or Cable.
http://mikefedyk.com/wondershaper-pkt-size-classes
http://mikefedyk.com/wondershaper-pkt-size-classes-htb
I have had good service with voxee, bad with teliax and terrible with
terravon. You should have multiple outgoing providers in case something
happens, and have a rock solid incoming provider. Unfortunately, I
haven't found a provider that is more reliable than my vonage or POTS
line at my house. Admittedly I haven't been looking recently, but that
is where I'm at now.
Hope this helps.
Mike
Don Saxton wrote:
> I have had pretty good success setting up and using asterisk with a
> fxo card I got from x100p.com Last week I was on the east coast and
> could use a iax softphone, idefisk from asteriskguru.com
>
> I working with someone in Kona, HI to set up another pbx there. We
> will connect those pbxs to one in SF through IAX. I think the first
> hard phones we will try will be Grandstream. One goal is to export the
> technology to a bunch of non-profits strung out over the US, Canada
> and then other parts of the developed world. The point is to improve
> their communications and ability to work together.
>
> One problem that I haven't dealt with effectively is to choose some
> sip to pots and pots to sip providers. Does anyone have any guidance?
>
> Another problem is SIP. It seems to easily connect on 5060 but have
> problems in the RTP port range. Has someone found a good diagnostic tool?
>
>
>
>
>
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