Dear All, Thanks for taking the time to read this. I have been presented with a massive task. I'm not an asterisk expert, but I do know my way around a linux server and infrastructure, and I know when things are not done correctly. A large number of minutes are routed every month, (1m+) and I wish to do this in the most efficient way possible. I've been presented with three linux servers, all in varying states of upkeep, and I've decided, instead of attempting to clean the systems I'm presented with, it is better for me to build a stable platform for asterisk to be migrated onto. This makes my question two fold. 1 What steps should I take, or consider, if I wish to migrate an existing asterisk installation, without it being offline for too long 2 What steps should I look out for, if I wish to move to a MySQL backed for the configuration files, so that I can remove the systems dependence on local configuration. My long term plan is to introduce MySQL to be the backend for the configuration and call log data and put this machine behind a load balancer, so that in due course, when I need to add more machines to handle the load, I will have no need to reconfigure asterisk, or build new configurations, and if I keep the base OS install uniform, I should in theory be able to deploy more asterisk boxes very fast behind a load balancer to increase the capacity of my "VoIP Farm" with minimal work. *VoIP farm is my term, please do not use it in any presentations to the powers that be inside your organisation - If you wish to do so please send ?10(ten) via paypal to my email address which is clearly displayed in the email headers!* Also, in theory, it allows for testing of new configuration, without having to change the configuration on multiple machines at the same time. Which is always a good thing. Any help an advice, or questions are most welcome, as I wish to turn this mountain into a mole hill, a very stable, and expandable mole hill! Thank you for your time, Mr Gabriel
Voip Farm , Voip Farm , Voip Farm. Sending you 30USD, which is now worth less than 30 yens.. ;) -----Original Message----- From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com [mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Gabriel - IP Guys Sent: April-02-09 7:39 AM To: asterisk-users at lists.digium.com Subject: [asterisk-users] Mountain ahead of me! Dear All, Thanks for taking the time to read this. I have been presented with a massive task. I'm not an asterisk expert, but I do know my way around a linux server and infrastructure, and I know when things are not done correctly. A large number of minutes are routed every month, (1m+) and I wish to do this in the most efficient way possible. I've been presented with three linux servers, all in varying states of upkeep, and I've decided, instead of attempting to clean the systems I'm presented with, it is better for me to build a stable platform for asterisk to be migrated onto. This makes my question two fold. 1 What steps should I take, or consider, if I wish to migrate an existing asterisk installation, without it being offline for too long 2 What steps should I look out for, if I wish to move to a MySQL backed for the configuration files, so that I can remove the systems dependence on local configuration. My long term plan is to introduce MySQL to be the backend for the configuration and call log data and put this machine behind a load balancer, so that in due course, when I need to add more machines to handle the load, I will have no need to reconfigure asterisk, or build new configurations, and if I keep the base OS install uniform, I should in theory be able to deploy more asterisk boxes very fast behind a load balancer to increase the capacity of my "VoIP Farm" with minimal work. *VoIP farm is my term, please do not use it in any presentations to the powers that be inside your organisation - If you wish to do so please send ?10(ten) via paypal to my email address which is clearly displayed in the email headers!* Also, in theory, it allows for testing of new configuration, without having to change the configuration on multiple machines at the same time. Which is always a good thing. Any help an advice, or questions are most welcome, as I wish to turn this mountain into a mole hill, a very stable, and expandable mole hill! Thank you for your time, Mr Gabriel _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
Hi, To make a load balanced asterisk servers requires some knowledge .... you can google it and figure it out. But if you ask on this group then most likely it'd be better if you hire someone. Also your term VOIP Farm can be used by anyone unless you register it as a trademark in every country ... and then get the trademark and then prove it in court ... seriously -> no normal country will trademark two words out of the regular vocabulary Martin On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 6:39 AM, Gabriel - IP Guys <Gabriel at impactteachers.com> wrote:> Dear All, > > Thanks for taking the time to read this. I have been presented with a massive task. I'm not an asterisk expert, but I do know my way around a linux server and infrastructure, and I know when things are not done correctly. A large number of minutes are routed every month, (1m+) and I wish to do this in the most efficient way possible. > > I've been presented with three linux servers, all in varying states of upkeep, and I've decided, instead of attempting to clean the systems I'm presented with, it is better for me to build a stable platform for asterisk to be migrated onto. This makes my question two fold. > > 1 ? ? ? What steps should I take, or consider, if I wish to migrate an existing asterisk installation, without it being offline for too long > > 2 ? ? ? What steps should I look out for, if I wish to move to a MySQL backed for the configuration files, so that I can remove the systems dependence on local configuration. > > My long term plan is to introduce MySQL to be the backend for the configuration and call log data and put this machine behind a load balancer, so that in due course, when I need to add more machines to handle the load, I will have no need to reconfigure asterisk, or build new configurations, and if I keep the base OS install uniform, I should in theory be able to deploy more asterisk boxes very fast behind a load balancer to increase the capacity of my "VoIP Farm" with minimal work. > > *VoIP farm is my term, please do not use it in any presentations to the powers that be inside your organisation - If you wish to do so please send ?10(ten) via paypal to my email address which is clearly displayed in the email headers!* > > Also, in theory, it allows for testing of new configuration, without having to change the configuration on multiple machines at the same time. Which is always a good thing. Any help an advice, or questions are most welcome, as I wish to turn this mountain into a mole hill, a very stable, and expandable mole hill! > > Thank you for your time, > Mr Gabriel > > _______________________________________________ > -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- > > asterisk-users mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > ? http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users >
Heck, There goes General Electric General Motors Headline News General Dynamics General Instruments All trademarks of their respective companies. Not to mention run together words like Voicepulse. Cary Hi, seriously -> no normal country will trademark two words out of the regular vocabulary Martin
Hello, I want to set up a Voip Farm (c) (tm) (patent pending) but don't know how to do it. Please help. Oh, the irony :) Cheers Jean-Michel. 2009/4/2 Gabriel - IP Guys <Gabriel at impactteachers.com>:> Dear All, > > Thanks for taking the time to read this. I have been presented with a massive task. I'm not an asterisk expert, but I do know my way around a linux server and infrastructure, and I know when things are not done correctly. A large number of minutes are routed every month, (1m+) and I wish to do this in the most efficient way possible. > > I've been presented with three linux servers, all in varying states of upkeep, and I've decided, instead of attempting to clean the systems I'm presented with, it is better for me to build a stable platform for asterisk to be migrated onto. This makes my question two fold. > > 1 ? ? ? What steps should I take, or consider, if I wish to migrate an existing asterisk installation, without it being offline for too long > > 2 ? ? ? What steps should I look out for, if I wish to move to a MySQL backed for the configuration files, so that I can remove the systems dependence on local configuration. > > My long term plan is to introduce MySQL to be the backend for the configuration and call log data and put this machine behind a load balancer, so that in due course, when I need to add more machines to handle the load, I will have no need to reconfigure asterisk, or build new configurations, and if I keep the base OS install uniform, I should in theory be able to deploy more asterisk boxes very fast behind a load balancer to increase the capacity of my "VoIP Farm" with minimal work. > > *VoIP farm is my term, please do not use it in any presentations to the powers that be inside your organisation - If you wish to do so please send ?10(ten) via paypal to my email address which is clearly displayed in the email headers!* > > Also, in theory, it allows for testing of new configuration, without having to change the configuration on multiple machines at the same time. Which is always a good thing. Any help an advice, or questions are most welcome, as I wish to turn this mountain into a mole hill, a very stable, and expandable mole hill! > > Thank you for your time, > Mr Gabriel > > _______________________________________________ > -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- > > asterisk-users mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > ? http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > >-- Jean-Michel Hiver - Synapse co-founder & CTO GSM +262 692 828 070