well put dan! I really don't understand why you would bother bringing this
to our attention at all Henning.
On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 11:12 PM, Dan Pascu <dan(a)ag-projects.com> wrote:
I fail to see what worries you if all is fine and dandy in paradise. Don't
mind us, we are just a bunch of loonies with weird ideas anyway.
On Friday 14 November 2008, Henning Westerholt wrote:
Hello all,
recently some statement came to my attention that "there is a common
consent that the current design/architecture of [..] OpenSER (inherited
from SER) is no longer able to deliver and to meet the present
requirements and demands".
I don't want to argue that much about this opinion, in fact the demands
to a Voice over IP solution depends very much on the certain setup. But
i want to share some details from my experiences in developing and
operating a big VoIP infrastructure here at 1&1.
We've about 2 million customers on our platform, that uses over 5
million individual numbers and terminate about 1 billion minutes per
month. We're able to provide a good service with the actual
architecture of OpenSER without any real problems. Of course there is
always some room for improvements, but so far the main challenges we
faced were not in the scalability or performance areas. More important
issues are e.g. the inherent complexity of the SIP protocol and the
maintainance of a good quality assurance and integration process.
We started some years ago with OpenSER 0.9.5, which we then extended a
lot in house. For example we implemented more than 25 own modules, a
own path implementation, did a lot of bug fixing and workarounds for
certain problems we've found. We're able to reduce this amount of
proprietary code a lot in the past, because of progress in the OpenSER
development, intregration of our "key" modules and a lot of other
contributions. We're using now something between OpenSER 1.3 and
Kamailio 1.4 with only a few private extensions.
So in my opinion the actual design of our server is not "[..] an
inevitable dead-end that needs to be avoided.". I rather think that
we'll be able with continuing improvements to tackle the upcoming
challenges well, especially as we will work together in the future with
the SER developers in improving important areas of this software.
But this is just my personal opinion, everybody is of course free to
have their own position.
With best regards,
Henning Westerholt
--
Dan
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