Steve Prior
2007-Jan-31 19:14 UTC
[asterisk-users] Which Java FastAGI implementation has the most "market share"?
When I was looking for a Java FastAGI interface for Asterisk I came across asterisk-java first and didn't realize there was more than one out there. It seems to work fine and I've got my first project working with it, but I was wondering which Java FastAGI implementation is the most popular and how they compare against each other. So I'm aware of: asterisk-java JastAGI OrderlyCalls Any comments on who the front runner is and why? Steve
Kate Kretz
2007-Feb-04 21:02 UTC
[asterisk-users] Which Java FastAGI implementation has the most "market share"?
Steve, keep me in touch please ? We are also looking for moving all our activities to java platform. Let me know if You'll find/test something like asterisk2billing written in java ? Cheers, Kate On 2/1/07, Steve Prior <sprior@geekster.com> wrote:> > When I was looking for a Java FastAGI interface for Asterisk I came > across asterisk-java first and didn't realize there was more than one > out there. It seems to work fine and I've got my first project working > with it, but I was wondering which Java FastAGI implementation is the > most popular and how they compare against each other. > > So I'm aware of: > asterisk-java > JastAGI > OrderlyCalls > > Any comments on who the front runner is and why? > > > Steve > _______________________________________________ > --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- > > asterisk-users mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20070204/f9fe43f5/attachment.htm
Matthew Rubenstein
2007-Feb-05 06:01 UTC
[asterisk-users] Which Java FastAGI implementation has the most "market share"?
On Mon, 2007-02-05 at 04:46 -0700, asterisk-users-request@lists.digium.com wrote:> > Date: Sun, 04 Feb 2007 23:35:46 -0500 > From: Steve Prior <sprior@geekster.com> > Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] Which Java FastAGI implementation has > the most "market share"? > To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion > <asterisk-users@lists.digium.com> > Message-ID: <45C6B422.2060707@geekster.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > > Kate Kretz wrote: > > Steve, keep me in touch please ? > > We are also looking for moving all our activities to java platform. > > > > Let me know if You'll find/test something like asterisk2billing > written > > in java ? > > I haven't received any feedback at all on the relative use of the java > options, but I'm pretty happy with the way a little project turned > out > in asterisk-java. > > My project was to see how well asterisk-java would work in > combination > with Lumenvox to create a speech enabled AGI, so just for kicks I've > ported their Pizza ordering demo to Java using it. In the process > I've > been working with Lumenvox to fix the couple of problems which turned > up > as a result of this experiment, and use an asterisk-java code change > which is available in their latest svn. > > Sometime soon my code will be made available most likely through the > Lumenvox site so others can use it as a starting point. > > Overall I'll say that I really like using Java to control such a dial > plan. In this particular case the output is a simple pizza order > which > I've modeled as a plain old Java object (POJO), so once the dial plan > has built up the object it can simply be passed to whatever back end > (possibly J2EE) code which processes the transaction without regard > for > the user interface that created it. Sounds very maintainable to me. > I > did the development/test right in the Eclipse IDE and could use the > debugger when necessary - I've got to believe that's better than > trying > to trace through a regular dial plan. > > I also really like the fact that aside from sound files and just a > couple of lines of dial plan code to call the Java, all the actual > Java > code is running in a different server box so I'm keeping the load > down > on my Asterisk box and have flexibility in where I deploy things.The real advantage in choosing an AGI (or CGI or ...) platform/language is *reusing* the existing code that already runs on that platform, with minimal porting to the platform in that language. How much does a Java application, net/bean, or modern (1.4-6.x) class have to be revised to make it work with asterisk-java as FastAGI instead of, say, AGI, CGI, commandline, browser JVM, or other execution environment/UI?> Steve > > > > > Cheers, > > Kate >-- (C) Matthew Rubenstein
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