best solution would be to return quad card buy 4 single port cards put 4
servers instead of one ... but i guess this is only possible it you had a
time machine ...
On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 2:44 PM, Matthew Fredrickson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Carles Pina i Estany wrote:
Hello,
We have
i have HEARD asterisk wasn't made with the idea to run on multi-core
processors in mind .. the result was that it uses one core all the time ..so
one single P4 3.4 GHZ would perform better than a far more newser quad one.
but i might be wrong. but one thing for sure check hardware compatibility
Just curious, are you recording these calls because that is around the
I/O threshold for audio issues when recording all calls.
100% right, all recording should (its a must actually) be done in ram drive
then copied to disk later. an asterisk server that do recording should have
enough ram to
top says asterisk 1.2.25 is using multiple cores:
Cpu0 : 2.7% us, 9.3% sy, 0.0% ni, 87.7% id, 0.0% wa, 0.3% hi, 0.0%
si
Cpu1 : 1.7% us, 4.0% sy, 0.0% ni, 94.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0% hi, 0.0%
si
Cpu2 : 1.3% us, 4.3% sy, 0.0% ni, 94.3% id, 0.0% wa, 0.0% hi, 0.0%
si
Cpu3 :
I advise using different servers for
different tasks (with redundancy obviously).
i would really appreciate it if you gave me some hints about making
recording run on another server.
___
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Asterisk was indeed written with the intention to run on
multi-core systems, and should utilize extra cores just fine.
Matthew Fredrickson
Software/Firmware Engineer
Digium, Inc.
well, i guess i was wrong ... or maybe i had outdated information
vicidial has something similar in a way that you can schedule a callback ...
maybe you can download it get a closer look at the code, it connects to
asterisk thru asterisk-perl module.
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 8:13 PM, Eric Fort [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm presently working on a project to
external ip for an internal server ? sounds too dangerouse to me.
i would suggest you put the server back to local lan use a router to hold
your external ip do port forwarding to internal servers. it will solve
your dilema keep your server safe.
___
you surely are using port forwarding right now, something like this:
wan(5061) -you_router_here--
lan(5061)---Asterisk_box_1(5061)
so you only need to add this :
wan(5062) -you_router_here--
lan(5061)---Asterisk_box_2(5061)
just tell your provider that second
with digium cards i would use:
#sudo asterisk -r
once inside cli :
dialer1*CLI zap show status
Description Alarms IRQbpviol
C4
T2XXP (PCI) Card 0 Span 1 RED0
0
T2XXP (PCI) Card 0 Span 2 RED0
0
dialer1*CLI
so RED is an ALARM
i suggest you get a copy of asterisknow, install it on a spare machine,
configure it using the web interface, if it works compare the config files
between the two machines and you will be done.
___
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well, maybe ou're on the wrong list (talkin sendmail in an asterisk list
!!!) you're better in sendmail's list.
anyway, you need to modify sendmail.cf file, just a few tweaks it will be
ok. you will need a smarthost, what is a smarthost ? thats an smtp server
that is allowed to send mail to the
i believe your problem is at the hardware/driver/provider level so you will
be looking at the :
zaptel.conf zapata.conf files
i don't know if this will help but here is my config for a E1 euroISDN line:
zaptel.conf
span=1,0,0,ccs,hdb3 # First E1 Port
span=2,0,0,ccs,hdb3 #
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