Ditto what Nick said. Both will likely work for you equally well. The split of OpenSER into Kamailio and OpenSIPS was a personality issue between the main developers that didn't really please the wider user community.
(Not trying to start a flame war, but that's how it felt from here.) Mark On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 1:02 PM, David J. <da...@styleflare.com> wrote: > Nick, > > All are used; SIP-Router is really just kamailio; But in terms of OpenSIP's > vs Kamailio they are virtually the same software. > > As far as performance goes; I think they are about even. You will notice > some differences for example OpenSIPs has a B2B module that you wont find in > Kamailio; that is used for certain scenarios like topology hiding; if that > is important to you then that maybe a reason to go with opensips. > > They both support common DB access like mysql, postgres. > > Each installation has their own criteria, but in terms of scale, both > projects are used in carrier grade deployments. And in some cases both are > used for various reasons in the same network. > > Hope that helps answer some of your questions. > > > > On 8/14/11 10:41 PM, Nick Khamis wrote: >> >> Hello Everyone, >> >> I can only imagine how many times this question has come up since post >> 2008. Please forgive >> my reoccurring of the issue. >> >> We are looking to provide carrier grade sip services to our clients >> world wide. What we need is a >> lightweight, robust and scalable solution that will allow us to >> terminate sip calls to our different carriers. >> Performance, and high throughput are factors very important to my >> employer. Features such as caller >> authentication, database back-end, load balancing, and >> interoperability with asterisk are things we are >> interested in, as was offered using OpenSER. >> >> With three+ open source proxy servers available on the net puts us in >> a situation where we have more >> solutions to choose from, at the same time wish the features from one >> were available in the other, and >> vice versa. >> >> With this in mind, we will have to fall back to other factors such as >> the most reliable, proven and active >> projects. As mentioned, we would choose functional stability over >> endless features that we will never use >> and that add to the projects fingerprint... >> >> I understand that all three projects are forks from OpenSER, people >> would naturally like to know what >> differentiates one from the other. >> >> Thanks in Advance, >> >> Nick Khamis >> Toronto Hydro Telecom >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Users mailing list >> Users@lists.opensips.org >> http://lists.opensips.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > Users@lists.opensips.org > http://lists.opensips.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users > _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.opensips.org http://lists.opensips.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users