Hi, Can someone guide me to a WEBSER that is in-alignment with current SER-2.0?
I find myself hacking away serweb-0.9.6 to deal with older subscriber with aliases tables while running multiple SER-2.0 with a newer table setup. If a developer has a WEBSER that already works with 2.0 data tables, or there is a 2.0-ready webser in CVS tree, please advise me by EMAIL how to get it. This will move us closer to a complete bundle.
After serweb, I hope to move onward to the media server.
..mike..
At 01:49 AM 2/14/2008, you wrote:
All, We started this thread few months ago. Havn't seen any progress since then. Is this still alive.
Thank you, -Jai
On Fri, Dec 7, 2007 at 1:05 PM, Mike Trest - Personal <mailto:Mike@trest.comMike@trest.com> wrote: Greger, et. al., I like your idea enough to volunteer as a tester + documentation writer. I do a lot of tech and user writing. Active in VoIP since the beginning. I am active VoIP engineer and developer. Also PSTN & VoIP network designer-builder. I have my own private machines, network, and VoIP gateway resources. Prefer CentOS or FC* ..mike..
Hi guys, I have been playing with the following idea: Create a ready-to-run OS image with everything that is needed for http://iptel.orgiptel.org apps pre-installed + a complete
installation of:
- SER 2.0 (release)
- rtpproxy
- SEMS
- SERweb
- maybe sipsak, some monitoring tools, etc
The idea is to create a small script 'config_iptelorg' for configuring the installation to your needs. You should then be able to download the ready image, boot it, go through the script and have an up and running http://iptel.orgiptel.org proxy and app server
just like the
http://iptel.orgiptel.org free SIP service in maybe 10-15
minutes. This way you
could host a SIP service for your own domain with close to no setup at all.
Some questions to you:
- Is there any interest for this at all?
- I was thinking about using Ubuntu 7.10 server as the OS. Any
thoughts/preferences?
- Should the image be an Amazon EC3 image (you could use
http://www.rightscale.comhttp://www.rightscale.com and get it
running in no time with 10
run-hours free) or should it be a VMware appliance to be run with free VMware Player?
- Other suggestions/comments?
I could need some help with this, anyone interested in lending me a hand? (could be anything, documentation, testing, installation, etc) g-)
Serusers mailing list mailto:Serusers@lists.iptel.orgSerusers@lists.iptel.org http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers
Serusers mailing list Serusers@lists.iptel.org http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers
Hi, the serweb from CVS head is ready to work with 2.0. So you cold either download it from CVS or use debian package that we also have. Unfotunately I do not remember URL of package repository. Pavel, could you remind it?
regards Karel
Mike Trest - Personal napsal(a):
Hi, Can someone guide me to a WEBSER that is in-alignment with current SER-2.0?
I find myself hacking away serweb-0.9.6 to deal with older subscriber with aliases tables while running multiple SER-2.0 with a newer table setup. If a developer has a WEBSER that already works with 2.0 data tables, or there is a 2.0-ready webser in CVS tree, please advise me by EMAIL how to get it. This will move us closer to a complete bundle.
After serweb, I hope to move onward to the media server.
..mike..
At 01:49 AM 2/14/2008, you wrote:
All, We started this thread few months ago. Havn't seen any progress since then. Is this still alive.
Thank you, -Jai
On Fri, Dec 7, 2007 at 1:05 PM, Mike Trest - Personal <Mike@trest.com mailto:Mike@trest.com> wrote:
Greger, et. al., I like your idea enough to volunteer as a tester + documentation writer. I do a lot of tech and user writing. Active in VoIP since the beginning. I am active VoIP engineer and developer. Also PSTN & VoIP network designer-builder. I have my own private machines, network, and VoIP gateway resources. Prefer CentOS or FC* ..mike.. >Hi guys, >I have been playing with the following idea: >Create a ready-to-run OS image with everything that is needed for >iptel.org <http://iptel.org> apps pre-installed + a complete installation of: >* SER 2.0 (release) >* rtpproxy >* SEMS >* SERweb >* maybe sipsak, some monitoring tools, etc > > >The idea is to create a small script 'config_iptelorg' for >configuring the installation to your needs. You should then be able >to download the ready image, boot it, go through the script and have >an up and running iptel.org <http://iptel.org> proxy and app server just like the >iptel.org <http://iptel.org> free SIP service in maybe 10-15 minutes. This way you >could host a SIP service for your own domain with close to no setup at all. > >Some questions to you: >* Is there any interest for this at all? >* I was thinking about using Ubuntu 7.10 server as the OS. Any >thoughts/preferences? >* Should the image be an Amazon EC3 image (you could use >http://www.rightscale.com and get it running in no time with 10 >run-hours free) or should it be a VMware appliance to be run with >free VMware Player? >* Other suggestions/comments? > >I could need some help with this, anyone interested in lending me a >hand? (could be anything, documentation, testing, installation, etc) >g-) _______________________________________________ Serusers mailing list Serusers@lists.iptel.org <mailto:Serusers@lists.iptel.org> http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers
Serusers mailing list Serusers@lists.iptel.org http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers
Serusers mailing list Serusers@lists.iptel.org http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers