It seems that you are not understanding * architecture well.
As I know zaptel is required for analog FXO/FXS cards from digium and
libpri for T1/E1 cards. But they have nothing to do with VoIP, which is
SIP, IAX ...
I have never ran asterisk on OBSD, but I believe it works (I mean
asterisk only, no zaptel and libpri)
Shohrukh
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't know for sure how you did it. But I been working with
Asterisk+Zaptel+Libpri here in UK
both for personnal and commercial VOIP applications. My success so far on the
BSDs is with FreeBSD
and never had any single damn problem. I have and reviewed the specs of digium
over and over again
that zaptel is the device driver for the NIC card that talks to the kernel. If
you claimed that
you made OpenBSD run asterisk, then that is something worthwhile to talk about.
But as I could
see, your setup is making your machine connecting to some other machine
elsewhere. Well, in my
opinion it would be nice if one could put zaptel+libpri+asterisk under one box
just as a typical
pabx.
FYI, I do not used softphones and I prefer hardphones.
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 10:39:59AM -0000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| If zaptel won't work in openbsd, there is no way for asterisk be installed.
Hence, no chance for
| any SIP protocol to work. But in case you want to get SIP running on the
BSDs, I suggest you go
| over to FreeBSD.
I've been running a PBX with Asterisk and OpenBSD for quite some time
now. I'm very happy with the resulting uptime and functionality. I've
used an IAX softphone (LoudHush, MacOSX payware) and a few hardware
SIP phones. It connects to a SIP provider in the Netherlands to
connect to the rest of the world. No zaptel in my (sparc64) machine.
I would also like a softphone (preferably IAX based, but SIP would be
fine too I suppose) in the OpenBSD ports tree, but not having one does
not make Asterisk on OpenBSD useless.
Cheers,
Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd
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