[Freeswitch-users] Best way to start with Freeswitch

Matt Klein mklein at nmedia.net
Mon Mar 31 13:10:52 PDT 2008


lighttpd

Agree 100%.

Low overhead I've seen over apache etc.

m


On Mon, 31 Mar 2008, Mark Crane wrote:

> You want a fast webserver...take a look at:
> http://www.lighttpd.net/
>
> "lighttpd powers several popular Web 2.0 sites like
> YouTube, wikipedia and meebo. Its high speed
> io-infrastructure allows them to scale several times
> better with the same hardware than with alternative
> web-servers." - quote from website.
>
> Mark
>
>
> --- kokoska rokoska <kokoska.rokoska at post.cz> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> Brian West napsal(a):
>>>
>>> On Mar 29, 2008, at 7:57 AM, kokoska rokoska
>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi all!
>>>>
>>>> I'm very new to Freeswitch and thus I'm looking
>> for advices/hints for
>>>> painless start :-)
>>>
>>> Nothing is painless.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> I have a lot of experience with Asterisk and
>> OpenSER, but the philosophy
>>>> od Freeswitch differs...
>>>>
>>>
>>> Thats an understatement.  ;)
>>>
>>>
>>>> What is going on:
>>>> I like to deploy PBX/Switch for a lot of SIP
>> users wich registers with
>>>> it and - also - with larg number of SIP gateways
>> the PBX/Switch should
>>>> regester with. Users population/gateways/call
>> routing have to be dynamic
>>>> (database-driven, like I'm accustomed form
>> Asterisk and OpenSER) with
>>>> quite standard features
>> (conditional/unconditional forwarding,
>>>> voice-mail, call-waiting, resource limits etc.)
>> and especially with good
>>>> over-all performance.
>>>>
>>>> Like i red in docs, dynamic SIP users could by
>> done with mod_xml_curl
>>>> directory but I like to ask: Is it "fast enough"?
>>>
>>> Direct DB in my opinion is a very bad idea.  With
>> xml_curl you can
>>> interface to just about anything and cluster it up
>> and fail over rather
>>> easily with http gets.  And no it's NOT slow, that
>> depends on how fast
>>> your web server and db are... trust me it can
>> scream if you do it correctly.
>>>
>>
>> This question is a little bit off-topic, but I try
>> it :-)
>>
>> I have very limited experiences with webservers, so
>> can you recommend me
>> fast enough webserver and underlying tehnology?
>>
>> For idea proof-of-concept I can use Apache +
>> mod_php, but for production
>> use I'm affraid it will be nearly useless because of
>> PHP is interpreted
>> and thus very slow.
>> So what is - by your mean - good technology to start
>> with? Java +
>> Tomcat? Or is there a way how to utilize my "basic"
>> knowlege of "C"
>> without writting my own webserver? :-)
>>
>> Have a nice day, best regards,
>>
>> kokoska.rokoska
>>
>>
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