<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 5:51 PM, Roger Marquis <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:marquis@roble.com">marquis@roble.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">
Tried asterisk-gui but it doesn't manage provisioning or have much of a<br>
dialplan front-end. Tried porting FreePBX (thanks to Doug Barton) but it<br>
has so much RedHat-specific code that we gave up on it. I really don't<br>
want to install the Linux image that FreePBX seems to need but am running<br>
out of options. In my experience software that is not written to work on<br>
multiple OSs is always buggier and riskier than software written (and<br>
tested) cross-platform. We are looking for good software, whether OSS or<br>
proprietary does not matter as long as it works on vanilla Asterisk and<br>
runs on several Unix and Linux OSs. So my questions:<br>
<br>
1) Does anyone know of a good cross-platform web manager for Asterisk?<br>
All we really need is handset provisioning, dialplan, and voicemail<br>
editing.<br></blockquote><div><br>If that's all you want, it seems like webmin would be adequate. IIRC, there was also an asterisk plugin for webmin but I haven't tried since 1.4 was new and it wasn't that great then. I just $EDITOR otherwise for stuff, and have a CDR web frontend.<br>
<br>Out curiosity, have you tried this? <a href="http://www.freepbx.org/support/documentation/installation/install-process-for-freebsd">http://www.freepbx.org/support/documentation/installation/install-process-for-freebsd</a><br>
<br>Seems out of date but might be a good starting place.<br></div></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Adam Vande More<br>