[asterisk-users] asterisk on mini-itx

Ioan Biris ioan at allo.com
Sun Mar 11 22:58:12 MST 2007


Hi ,

 

  We have done exactly that . fan less , VIA processor ,  flash card ,
firewall.

 

http://www.allo.com/products/micropbx.php

 

   We sell wholesale.

 

Ioan at allo.com

 

  _____  

From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Mail Lists
Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2007 11:41 PM
To: asterisk-users at lists.digium.com
Subject: [asterisk-users] asterisk on mini-itx

 

Hello, 

I'm trying to put together a low cost - low powers PBX appliance for several
customers. I have purchased a couple of the soekris net4801 boards and have
asterisk up and running on them fine but they just don't quite cut it in the
processing power department. I've been able to get about 10 simultaneous SIP
calls with simple ulaw (no encoding decoding). While this might be OK for a
very small business or home I just don't think it leaves a lot of overhead
to do anything else. 

I've had a look around and I think I have settled on one of the VIA EPIA
fanless boards. Does anyone have any experience with these running asterisk
as far as performance and reliability is concerned? Has anyone run asterisk
with any compressed codecs on this setup? 

I am going to TRY to run the system from flash memory one way or another - I
realize the hoops I might have to jump through to prevent a large number of
read/write cycles but I'd really like to have the whole thing solid state...
Maybe someone has a better idea regarding program storage? 

Also, I would really like to run this as a router/firewall appliance as well
so that that the box can sit on a public IP if the client only has one. For
this reason I kind of have my heart set on openbsd. The routing and firewall
utilities on openbsd are very simple to configure and easy to use. Does
anyone know what limitations asterisk might have on openbsd (besides lack of
zaptel.. ) ? I have run asterisk 1.2.? on openbsd before and found it worked
pretty well. 

Failing that I suppose I would settle for running the routing/firewalling on
linux. I've just found the linux networking tools very awkward up until now
- perhaps someone know of a linux distribution - or tool  - that makes
routing/firewall/NAT as painless as on openbsd? Maybe I just need to sit
down for a day and learn the tool properly ;) 

Anyways, 

I know there are  a lot of questions in here but perhaps someone has done
one or all of these things? 

Thanks for any advice or warnings!


Steve Glaus


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