I figured it out from asteriskguru.org. If you are using kernel 2.6 enter the following command '#make linux26', before doing '#make install'. and also do ./configure. Hope it will help someone else.
On 12/29/07, Gordon Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Fri, 28 Dec 2007, Steve Totaro wrote: > > > Gordon Henderson wrote: > >> On Fri, 28 Dec 2007, Steve Totaro wrote: > >> > >> > >>> broadband Voice wrote: > >>> > >>>> On 12/27/07, *broadband Voice* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >>>> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> I am using Asterisk and A2billing Calling Card Platform and after > >>>> the 6th call the quality starts to degrade. The way it set up is > >>>> the user calls into the system then dial out so I have 12 > channels > >>>> being used up but 6 active calls. Here are my specs Asterisk > >>>> SVN-branch-1.4-r79142 on a i686 running Linux Fedora 6, Pentium 4 > >>>> Hyper-Threading, 64 bit, 1GB of RAM, 80 GB Sata Drive, bandwidth > 4 > >>>> Mbps (1300GB/Throughput) burstable to 100Mbps. > >>>> > >>>> I am planning on upgrading to Intel Core 2 Duo with a clock speed > >>>> of 1.8GHZ and 2GB Ram. Does anyone have similar situation or > >>>> advice? Thanks. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>> Your system should be able to handle that volume easily. > >>> > >>> What are you using for PSTN connectivity? > >>> > >>> I have heard of people having issues with Hyperthreading. That could > be > >>> a problem, although I have never had any issues myself. > >>> > >>> What does top look like? > >>> > >>> When I had a similar issue (voice quality while running monitor on > over > >>> seventy calls) I found a small Linux CLI app, I cannot remember the > name > >>> of it but it would give IO stats (I think it may be named IOStat or > >>> something similar) and I could see right where the bottleneck was > >>> (obviously disc IO but I was able to see exactly where the breaking > >>> point was). That may help identify something. > >>> > >> > >> Try: > >> > >> vmstat 1 > >> > >> IIRC, iostat is a *BSD type utility, but it's been many years since I > >> touched BSD! > >> > >> It is possible to graph disk IO as well as network packet IO if > required > >> using (eg) MRTG. > >> > >> Gordon > >> > >> > > > > > http://www.linuxquestions.org/linux/articles/Jeremys_Magazine_Articles/Hunting_I_O_Bottlenecks_with_iostat > > Ah, intersting, so I was about to suggest it might be a distro thing, but > digging deeper, I find there is an iostat for Debian - under the generic > package "sysstat" which is why I've never found it in the past. > > The iostat I remember for BSD had a screen/curses interface, but scrolling > might help you see trends. > > Cheers, > > Gordon > > _______________________________________________ > --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 >
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