Colin Anderson
2006-May-25 15:42 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
We have a large install of 360's running rev 4.1 with zero problems. I did another, smaller install couple weeks ago with 40 360's running rev 5.3. In both cases, the install was identical, same Asterisk version, same dialplan, everything the same except the differences were: 1. Different firmware rev 2. Different physical LAN Guess what? On the smaller install, lockups and reboots. Emailing Snom, I got this response: "The mentioned behaviour occured under certain network conditions and should have been fixed with V5.5 which is -though its Beta state- the last verified stable and reliable version: snom360: http://fox.snom.com/download/snom360-5.5b-beta-SIP-j.bin I would not recommend to downgrade since you would be loosing some functionality" Changing firmware revs did not help, so that left the LAN. I looked long and hard at the LAN and it was basically narrowed down to the switches. In this smaller install, several cheapo Dlink ($30) switches de-aggregate a Cisco Catalyst switch. What I noticed was that any phone plugged direcly into the Catalyst did *not* lock up or reboot. Any phone plugged into the crap switches experienced the lockup. So now we are down to the cheap switches themselves. We are nuking the Dlink switches and replacing them with 3com workgroup switches, same as what we use in the large install to good effect, and I fully expect the problem to dissapear. It's unfortunate that Snoms have a propensity to freak out in certain environments but I don't think it would preclude me from using Snom in the future. As long as one is aware of this issue, it should be easy enough to work around.
Remco Barende
2006-May-26 01:11 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
> Changing firmware revs did not help, so that left the LAN. > > I looked long and hard at the LAN and it was basically narrowed down to the > switches. In this smaller install, several cheapo Dlink ($30) switches > de-aggregate a Cisco Catalyst switch. What I noticed was that any phone > plugged direcly into the Catalyst did *not* lock up or reboot. Any phone > plugged into the crap switches experienced the lockup. So now we are down to > the cheap switches themselves. We are nuking the Dlink switches and > replacing them with 3com workgroup switches, same as what we use in the > large install to good effect, and I fully expect the problem to dissapear. > > It's unfortunate that Snoms have a propensity to freak out in certain > environments but I don't think it would preclude me from using Snom in the > future. As long as one is aware of this issue, it should be easy enough to > work around.Thanks for your input! Previously I was using Nortel 10/100 switches, I replaced them some weeks ago with 3C16479 gbit switches. The phones are connected directly to the gbit switches. By coincidence I dit notice on one phone that in a split second a message appeared 'Ethernet cable disconnected'. Because I have cable unplug set to ignore the conversation was not interrupted and the conversation could continue. But that still doesn't solve the occasional lockup. One phone was giving me *lots* more reboots than others but that was due to it running firmware 6.0.4 without having the ramdisk converted to jffs. Apparently the firmware didn't like that at all or just runs out of memory and decides to reboot.
Guido Hecken
2006-May-26 01:34 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
> > I looked long and hard at the LAN and it was basically narrowed down tothe> switches. In this smaller install, several cheapo Dlink ($30) switches > de-aggregate a Cisco Catalyst switch. What I noticed was that any phone > plugged direcly into the Catalyst did *not* lock up or reboot. Any phone > plugged into the crap switches experienced the lockup. So now we are downto> the cheap switches themselves. We are nuking the Dlink switches and > replacing them with 3com workgroup switches, same as what we use in the > large install to good effect, and I fully expect the problem to dissapear.We had the same problems with some cheap LevelOne Switches. The Snoms rebooted during a call, calls dropped etc. Replacing the switches was the solution. Guido
Dr. Michael J. Chudobiak
2006-May-26 05:35 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
> I looked long and hard at the LAN and it was basically narrowed down to the > switches. In this smaller install, several cheapo Dlink ($30) switches > de-aggregate a Cisco Catalyst switch. What I noticed was that any phone > plugged direcly into the Catalyst did *not* lock up or reboot. Any phone > plugged into the crap switches experienced the lockup. So now we are down to > the cheap switches themselves. We are nuking the Dlink switches and > replacing them with 3com workgroup switches, same as what we use in the > large install to good effect, and I fully expect the problem to dissapear.So does anyone have any theories as to what the technical difference between a "good" switch and a "bad" or "cheapo" switch actually is? Lower latency? Better grounding? More cowbell? - Mike
Andrew D Kirch
2006-May-26 06:13 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
Dr. Michael J. Chudobiak wrote:>> Blaming the 3com switch is very likely to be the wrong root cause. >> High probability the 3com was not configured properly for the phone. > > Just curious - what configuration issues did you have in mind? > > - MikeReplacing it with a Catalyst? Andrew
Colin Anderson
2006-May-26 07:11 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
>More cowbell?Shit, you owe me a new keyboard! Funniest thing I've *ever* read on the list. I've experienced the auto-negotiate issue with Snom's before. I forgot to mention that we make it part of our standard install to force 100baseT-full. I've also noticed the Catalyst does the spanning-tree thing and waits up to 30 seconds before enabling the port - this can cause problems with Snoms because they boot before the Catalyst enables the port, causing registration to fail. Then you warm-boot the Snom and everything's OK. One last interesting tidbit: We have a *lot* of Dell Dimensions with super craptastic embedded Ethernet. They will auto negotiate with a Snom (plugged into the PC port) to 100baseT full, but then you can't ping or TX past the phone itself. Oddly enough, it gets an IP from our DHCP server OK. Forcing the Dell to 100baseT full, half, or even 10 full works 100% of the time. This never happens on any kind of decent Ethernet card like an 82557 chip or 3com. If we have an Optiplex, it *just works*
asterisk@anime.net
2006-May-28 12:56 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
On Fri, 26 May 2006, Guido Hecken wrote:> We had the same problems with some cheap LevelOne Switches. > The Snoms rebooted during a call, calls dropped etc. > Replacing the switches was the solution.A switch should NEVER cause ANY device to lockup, ever. Period. If a phone locks up / reboots due to something a switch sends, then the phone is faulty. -Dan
Guido Hecken
2006-May-29 01:28 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
> On Fri, 26 May 2006, Guido Hecken wrote: > > We had the same problems with some cheap LevelOne Switches. > > The Snoms rebooted during a call, calls dropped etc. > > Replacing the switches was the solution. > > A switch should NEVER cause ANY device to lockup, ever. Period. > If a phone locks up / reboots due to something a switch sends, then the > phone is faulty. >Okay, it shouldn't reboot if not told to do so but a switch with e.g. corrupt mac tables can bring your whole network down and the phone has no chance too. However, if the SNOMS still reboot with the follwing settings attached, I would also think of a possible bug in the firmware. Setup/Advanced Detect Ethernet Cable Unplug: off Action on Ethernet cable replug: ignore Guido
Denis Smirnov
2006-May-29 08:02 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] Snom firmwares suck <--additional datapoint to consider
On Thu, May 25, 2006 at 04:42:57PM -0600, Colin Anderson wrote: CA> I looked long and hard at the LAN and it was basically narrowed down to the CA> switches. In this smaller install, several cheapo Dlink ($30) switches What switches you mean? How they named? -- JID: ds@im.seiros.ru ICQ: 58417635 (please, use jabber, if you can) http://freesource.info/