Hi Daniel, not evaluation, but if you use it in production then you are required to buy a OS support contract. We however have standardised on Sun hardware which includes support for Solaris 11 in our production environment. So, yes a good point you make if you are going to be using in production on non-sun hardware you will need to pay Oracle ;(
cheers Jason On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 7:46 AM, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <mico...@gmail.com > wrote: > > On 8/28/12 6:09 PM, Jason Penton wrote: > > No. We use solaris11. > > > IIRC, solaris 11 was free for evaluation purposes, has that changed? > > BTW, since mainstream opensolaris was discontinued, anyone knows what is > the best derivative (if that is at all)? > > Cheers, > Daniel > > > But yes on any hardware > On Aug 28, 2012 5:56 PM, "Daniel-Constantin Mierla" <mico...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> On 8/28/12 10:33 AM, Jason Penton wrote: >> >> Hey Daniel, >> >> We use Solaris virtualisation and it works great. The zones (VMs per se) >> are lightweight, easy to administer and rock solid. >> >> btw, common misconceptions are that you need sun (oracle) hardware and >> that the os is not free. These are both false. >> >> >> so you use opensolaris, I guess, and then it can be any intel/amd arch >> server (e.g., dell, hp)? >> >> Cheers, >> Daniel >> >> >> cheers >> Jason >> >> On Tue, Aug 28, 2012 at 9:59 AM, Carsten Bock <cars...@ng-voice.com>wrote: >> >>> Hi Daniel, >>> >>> here's from my personal experience: >>> Our setup at ng-voice is a little weird sometimes: We've rented some >>> virtual servers at a german provider (who uses Xen). On these virtual >>> servers we've installed OpenVz, which for us is absolutely great, if >>> you are just working with Linux-Servers. While Xen is a rather >>> complete virtualization, OpenVz is lightweight and comes in handy, if >>> you just want to logically separate servers. We've got each IMS >>> component (P-/I-/S-CSCF, HSS, Application-Servers, Databases) running >>> on a dedicated OpenVz Container, which is really great. We've even got >>> a CentOs-Container running on a Debian OpenVz, which is started >>> "on-demand" in order to build RPM-Packages. With OpenVz you can even >>> move Containers from one host to another, theoretically with zero >>> downtime (doesn't work with SEMS, don't know about other software). >>> For our IMS-setup, we work with RTP-Relaying, which works great within >>> virtualization, i cannot complain. >>> >>> At another customer (a fibre provider in Germany), we're running all >>> the infrastructure on Xen-only. An infrastructure provider takes care >>> of the administration, but those servers run poorly (RTP-Relaying is >>> okay but everything else is really slow). >>> >>> Conclusion for me: VoIP on virtual servers can work great, but the >>> virtualization infrastructure needs to be administered properly which >>> may not be an easy task, if you are new in this subject. >>> >>> Kind regards, >>> Carsten >>> >>> 2012/8/28 Daniel-Constantin Mierla <mico...@gmail.com>: >>> > Hello, >>> > >>> > just asking to see your experience deploying sip platforms on virtual >>> > systems. So far I was running Kamailio in virtual machines and no >>> problems, >>> > but I insisted that media servers to be on physical machines. Lately >>> is more >>> > pressure from the market to go everything virtual. >>> > >>> > So the question is more about having everything on virtual systems, >>> proxy >>> > and media server, where the media server can deal with transcoding, >>> > conference rooms and IVRs. >>> > >>> > Any strong comments pro or against? >>> > >>> > What is your preferred virtualization system for such deployments? >>> > >>> > Cheers, >>> > Daniel >>> > >>> > -- >>> > Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.com >>> > http://twitter.com/#!/miconda - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda >>> > Kamailio Advanced Training, Berlin, Nov 5-8, 2012 - >>> http://asipto.com/u/kat >>> > >>> > >>> > _______________________________________________ >>> > SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list >>> > sr-users@lists.sip-router.org >>> > http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Carsten Bock >>> CEO (Geschäftsführer) >>> >>> ng-voice GmbH >>> Schomburgstr. 80 >>> D-22767 Hamburg / Germany >>> >>> http://www.ng-voice.com >>> mailto:cars...@ng-voice.com >>> >>> Office +49 40 34927219 <%2B49%2040%2034927219> >>> Fax +49 40 34927220 <%2B49%2040%2034927220> >>> >>> Sitz der Gesellschaft: Hamburg >>> Registergericht: Amtsgericht Hamburg, HRB 120189 >>> Geschäftsführer: Carsten Bock >>> Ust-ID: DE279344284 >>> >>> Hier finden Sie unsere handelsrechtlichen Pflichtangaben: >>> http://www.ng-voice.com/imprint/ >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list >>> sr-users@lists.sip-router.org >>> http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users >>> >> >> This email is subject to the disclaimer of Smile Communications (PTY) Ltd. >> at http://www.smilecoms.com/disclaimer >> >> >> >> -- >> Daniel-Constantin Mierla - >> http://www.asipto.comhttp://twitter.com/#!/miconda - >> http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda >> Kamailio Advanced Training, Berlin, Nov 5-8, 2012 - http://asipto.com/u/kat >> >> This email is subject to the disclaimer of Smile Communications (PTY) Ltd. >> at http://www.smilecoms.com/disclaimer > > > > -- > Daniel-Constantin Mierla - http://www.asipto.comhttp://twitter.com/#!/miconda > - http://www.linkedin.com/in/miconda > Kamailio Advanced Training, Berlin, Nov 5-8, 2012 - http://asipto.com/u/kat > > This email is subject to the disclaimer of Smile Communications (PTY) Ltd. at http://www.smilecoms.com/disclaimer
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