Within a few days, I'll have a matrix out to the list with some
hardware profiles of various machines that people are using. It
won't be a chart of "what do I need?" per se, but it should give
you
an idea of what other people are doing and if it's successful.
Reminder to those of you who haven't submitted: please send in your
hardware profiles to me by Tuesday, and I will anonymize and re-send
to the list in a distilled format.
I have again included the questions I need answered below.
JT
>Hi-
>
>I'm almost embarrassed to ask the following simple question, following
John's
>excellent and rigorous bandwidth analysis (see earlier thread):
>
>I have a straightforward Asterisk application, IVR-only (no connections
>between channels). It will simply decode DTMF's and speak prompts
(probably
>A-Law encoded) on a number of E1 circuits simultaneously.
>
>Realistically, how many 30-channel E1's can I support with, for example,
a
>Pentium III 1.4 GHz? I want to build an 8 E1 (240 channel) system - do I
>need more horsepower than this?
>
>Thanks
>Scott Stingel
>
>Scott M. Stingel
>Emerging Voice Technology Inc.
>Palo Alto, California and London, England
>URL: www.evtmedia.com
>
>Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2003 00:27:30 -0700
>To: asterisk-users-lists.digium.com
>From: John Todd <jtodd@loligo.com>
>Subject: Hardware Survey: your configurations
>
>
>
>The most frequent question on the list and from associates seems to
>be "What kind of hardware and processing power will I need to put
>together for an Asterisk server?" Of course, there is no easy
>answer to that question because of the number of variables that one
>must take into account when constructing a system.
>
>When no good algorithm exists for building an estimate, the next
>best thing one can do is look at previous examples in order to build
>at least an idea of what has been done before that is known to work.
>To this end, I'd like to gather some of your experiences with
>hardware and Asterisk implementations, and provide them a permanent
>place to live so that new users can refer to at least a list of
>known examples before they clutter up the list or IRC channel with
>the same questions and the receive the same replies.
>
>SEND REPLIES TO ME, PERSONALLY. I will condense in one week and
>reply back to the list with a histogram or something, and put it on
>my website. I will make all replies anonymous unless you wish to be
>identified in the summary. I may extend this survey in the future
>if it is successful.
>
>JT
>
>
>----------------------------
>Asterisk Hardware Survey v.20030625.1
>
>1) What architecture:
> (i386, sparc, ppc, etc)
>
>2) How many processors:
>
>
>3) What mhz processors:
>
>
>4) What processor type:
> (Intel P4, AMD, UltraSparc, G4, etc.)
>
>5) Complete only if you have Digium or other Zap-like cards:
>
> a) What is your total port capacity?
> (Meaning if you had 2 T100P cards, this would be "48"
as an example)
>
> b) How many channels do you "normally" see used?
> (Give a guess of how many channels are up as a daily "used
>hours" average, excluding dead hours where there is no activity)
>
> c) What is your daily peak # of channels used?
> (Again, guesses are OK.)
>
>
>6) Do you have IP-based channels?
> ("Yes" if you are using SIP, H323, etc.)
>
>7) What is the most-often used codec?
> (G.711, G.729, Speex, ILBC, etc.)
>
>8) How many IP-based channels do you normally have open?
>
>9) How many IP-based channels do you have at peak usage times?
>
>10) Are you happy with the performance of the system with the specs above?
>
>11) Tell us your experiences with the configuration you have.