Scott, I was interested in that as well, it was in my original post.  I’m 
considering that and the SMSEagle; both are from Europe.  I can’t find too much 
on them from a real world war stories perspective, but there has been mention 
of the FoxBox on nanog in years past, so there are some users out there.

I am not going the Microtik+cell modem route that Faisal mentioned in his reply 
post because the intent is to tie the SMS alerting into other systems using 
some form of API, and both FoxBox and SMSEagle make that incredibly easy by 
having a simple http interface for sending texts, or a full API if you need to 
do two way.  The nagios plugin (and Zabbix too) are super simple since it’s 
just HTTP POST to send the alerts.

FoxBox claims it will work on Verizon networks because of the 3G support, but 
that doesn’t leave me with a comfortable feeling, so if we buy in, we’d 
probably get accounts from a GSM carrier for it, although I can’t find whether 
or not AT&T, etc. offer machine accounts, and I would not want to pay $50/mo 
per device just to send random texts.

I did get an off list reply from someone who let me know that our existing 
OpenGear devices (cell+ethernet console servers that run linux) have the 
ability to send SMS using a utility already present in the OS install.  Since 
we already have those in every location we’d also be putting an SMS gateway, 
I’m going to investigate if we could put a cgi script or something similar on 
them to accomplish the same goal with no additional equipment.

David




On 1/7/16, 3:34 PM, "NANOG on behalf of Scott Fisher" <nanog-boun...@nanog.org 
on behalf of littlefish...@gmail.com> wrote:

>Does anyone having experience getting this to work on US networks?
>
>http://www.smsfoxbox.it/en/foxbox-lx800-gateway-100.html/
>
>I am interested on getting this working with our Nagios notifications.
>
>On Wed, Jan 6, 2016 at 9:40 PM, John Levine <jo...@iecc.com> wrote:
>>>Thanks for those pointers. The "mega bill" problem is one I have to avoid. 
>>>We used to use ISDN as backup to T1 circuits,
>>>but had to abandon that after some wayward fail-overs resulted in $5000 
>>>phone bills. I'll check the plan overage terms
>>>carefully!
>>
>> Sounds like an excellent application for a $10/mo prepaid plan on
>> something like Tracfone.  If disaster strikes and you need a lot of
>> data one month, you can add extra credit directly from the phone.
>>
>
>
>
>-- 
>Scott

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