If you're going to do this many channels, you should be talking to multiple sip
peers (different IPs) with multiple sip routers, in multiple locations, with at
least a gig connection at each one. Plan on having lots of problems, and have
the capacity to allow those problems to occur without hurting everything else.
Ex: if all the sudden you're forced to handle the media for a thousand active
channels (this happens), the bandwidth required for that could max out your
70mbit connection. Yes, 70mbit, only 70-80mbit is possible over a fast-ethernet
connection, depending on what layer you're counting at anyway...
32kbps/channel x 1000 != 32mbps when it hits the wire
Jai Rangi wrote:
> Issues like? Can you please give an example? Definitely we would like to
> work around all those issues.
>
> -Jai
>
>
> On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 11:48 AM, Joe Antkowiak <jantkowiak@netigent.net>wrote:
>
>> just because you don't deal with the pstn directly, doesn't mean you won't
>> have
>> issues with the pstn.
>>
>> Jai Rangi wrote:
>>> Trixter,
>>> Thank you for your comments,
>>> We are not dealing with PSTN on our side, we are true VoIP.
>>> Re: Bandwidth, we have upto 100mb. Yes we WILL NOT be doing any media on
>> our
>>> network which is real bandwidth killer. Re: cpu and and other limits we
>>> have built our system on horizontal scalable architecture, fully
>> redundant
>>> and load balanced system, that includes firewall, SIP router, Asterisk
>>> servers, Database servers etc.
>>>
>>> During our crash test, my server was sleeping until 2500 channels. So I
>> am
>>> not really worried upto 5000 channels and from there I can easily expand
>> my
>>> capacity. Our target is to do the expansion as soon as we reach the
>> 40-50%
>>> utilization of the resources. For companies who has more that 200
>> channels
>>> on each DID I think it will be worth for them to deal directly with
>> Lavel3,
>>> XO, Quest or Verizon directly.
>>>
>>> Yes, I agree that every unlimited has a limit in terms of capacity and
>>> resources and we are not exception. But I am positive that we can be good
>>> resource for small to mid size businesses.
>>>
>>> -Jai
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 10:11 AM, Trixter aka Bret McDanel <
>>> trixter@0xdecafbad.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Thu, 2008-08-14 at 09:47 -0700, Jai Rangi wrote:
>>>>> All,
>>>>>
>>>>> I want to take community opinion on this.
>>>>> Would there be enough interest if I can offer Unlimited channels, non
>>>>> metered DID at $8-$11 (Depending on the volume commitment) per month.
>>>>> Target is to sell atleast 10000 DIDs in one to 2 months of time
>>>>> frame.
>>>>>
>>>>> Any comment would be appreciated.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you,
>>>>> -Jai
>>>>>
>>>> I think people would like it, but there would be some apprehension about
>>>> it. The pstn carrier has a finite amount of channels available for that
>>>> exchange. You only have so much bandwidth, even if you never touched
>>>> the media the provider only has so much bandwidth. Then there is the
>>>> CDR processing, route processing, etc - cpu resources are finite,
>>>> although you can add more just like you can add more pstn and inet
>>>> capacity.
>>>>
>>>> So would $8-11 cover all of those costs and allow you to really do
>>>> unlimited service? What if someone ran some application that generated
>>>> hundreds of thousands of calls? Or even a few that just did hundreds?
>>>>
>>>> Granted if you did 10k DIDs at $8 that is $80k/mo. And lets say that
>>>> 10% did above average traffic of say 150 average channels, that is still
>>>> 15,000 channels that would have to be maintained give or take (I really
>>>> am just pulling numbers out of thin air). You would certainly be able
>>>> to afford the cpu and bandwidth costs, which will require more than
>>>> 1Gbps (I always discount bandwidth both because of atm padding and
>>>> because you never want it 100%), but the carrier may not be able to
>>>> handle that channel load, and some of the call centers I have seen
>>>> traffic on, 150 channels is low, some do thousands at a time, which
>>>> would skew that slightly (even though its an average over the top 10%
>>>> users).
>>>>
>>>> In general from what I have seen, most "unlimited" plans have some type
>>>> of limit burried somewhere in their user agreement/tos, this is because
>>>> capacity is finite and they do not want to go overboard with capacity
>>>> and lose money. On a slight tangent, I just wish that carriers who
>>>> didnt offer real unlimited would stop advertising it as such, * or not
>>>> to indicate some obscure definition of "unlimited"...
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Trixter http://www.0xdecafbad.com Bret McDanel
>>>> Belfast +44 28 9099 6461 US +1 516 687 5200
>>>> http://www.trxtel.com the phone company that pays you!
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
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