Thank you for the information.
As a B2BUA, can I use Vovida? Anybody has successfully deployed Vovida with
SER for a Prepaid scenario? Or Vovida is a bad idea?
I am having second thoughts about Asterisk B2BUA, as the resource
consumption is gonna be much higher and I'm not gonna make use of all the
features. All I want is just make SIP to PSTN calls and Bill them properly.
Also, when it comes to scalability, Asterisk is not the best isn't it?
Any other alternative solution compared to the above 2 solutions? Can I do
something using SEMS? Or is there any recommended commercial, not so
expensive B2BUA products out there? Any advise would be much appreciated ;)
From: sip [mailto:sip@arcdiv.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 5:08 PM
To: Shafraz Thawfeek; serusers(a)lists.iptel.org
Cc: serusers(a)iptel.org
Subject: Re: [Serusers] SER + Prepaid with Radius AAA.
You are correct. There are several workarounds for this, but for the most
part, what you need is some sort of B2BUA functionality. Essentially, the
call needs to go through a UAS that DOES keep track. The new SEMS is
supposed to have some of this functionality, although I don't know much
about it. Some people use Asterisk (with Asterisk B2BUA). We ended up
writing our own Asterisk B2BUA as the Asterisk B2BUA code from sourceforge
had things in it we neither wanted nor used and their patches never seem to
be up to date on the later versions of Asterisk (current code out there
works in a guaranteed way only for Asterisk 1.2.1, though it wasn't until
after 1.2.9.1 that we had to seriously rewrite the patch). The sourceforge
code works, though, for earlier versions of Asterisk, and is an excellent
starting place if you've little desire to write the whole thing yourself.
The concept of using Asterisk is pretty simple: call gets forwarded from
SER to an Asterisk AGI program (C, Perl, etc) that does all the magic. The
easiest way is to do a balance check when the call comes in to determine the
cost of the outgoing call and check how much time a person has left on the
call based on how much money is in their account. Then, just set up an
Asterisk Dial command with the appropriate timeout and let the server take
care of the rest. There are tricks to this, of course. Unless you're
somehow updating call credit and call timeout on the fly, you'll need to
limit the incoming calls to one at a time for each account, or it's easy for
someone to call with multiple phones and rob you of cash.
N.
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 12:27:27 +0530, Shafraz Thawfeek wrote
Hello All,
Its really feels nice to have joined the list. I'm in the process of
deploying
a SER based solution for prepaid users. We're using a FreeRadius
based billing solution from a provider. If I'm not mistaken, SER is not
aware of the call state, what this means to me is, in case the user account
on the radius runs out of credit, SER will not know about it and will not be
able to disconnect the call. Am I correct on this?
If I am correct, I would like to know what would be the workaround for
this?
I'm I am wrong, then I would like to know on how we could get the call
disconnection working?
I have a Nextone which would be sitting in front of the SER and acting as
a Mirror
Proxy for SER. The purpose of this is to overcome NAT traversal
issues and free SER from that. Nextone doesn't understand or talk radius.
SER will be the registrar and handle AAA. The user call will be sent back
into the Nextone and then terminated from there. SER will not be handling
media. If to get my disconnect upon credit exhaust scenario working, what
changes should I introduce into my existing network model?
Thank you.
Shaf.