<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)">Hi,</div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)">MixMonitor(filename.extension[,options[,command]])</div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)"><br></div><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:tahoma,sans-serif;font-size:small;color:rgb(0,0,102)">you can run a shell command that moves the file to its final location, after being written on ramdisk. This seems the simple way to do it</div></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On 9 October 2015 at 11:53, jg <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:webaccounts173@jgoettgens.de" target="_blank">webaccounts173@jgoettgens.de</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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<div dir="ltr">I am planning to move Asterisk from physical server
to a VM on a ESXi host.
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<div>VMware datastore / VM's will be stored on the shared
storage on the NAS (NSF). I might get Synology NAS.</div>
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<div>Do you store call live recording on the NAS? There would be
around 60 concurrent calls recording at the same time and it
may cause network bottleneck.</div>
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<div>There will be other VM's stored on the NAS like Windows
Servers, Linux Servers, Database, etc.</div>
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60 concurrent alls sounds like a lot. I'd work with a RAM-disk and
some post-processing to be safe. I have a low priority background
task that moves finished sound files to a file server and converts
them to mp3. The software that accesses the audio looks for both
formats at both places. I think it is generally a good idea to
handle file issues outside of Asterisk.<span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888"><br>
<br>
jg<br>
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