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<TITLE>Re: [Freeswitch-users] Freeswitch and Openser</TITLE>
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<FONT SIZE="4"><FONT FACE="Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial"><SPAN STYLE='font-size:11pt'>Well this is just me opining here, but if I were to rate each platform heres how I would rate them<BR>
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FreeSwitch<BR>
ease-of-maintain: Excellent<BR>
ease-of-implement: Excellent<BR>
scalability: Very Good<BR>
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(Open)Ser<BR>
ease-of-maintain:good<BR>
ease-of-implement:Need a PHD in OpenSer Scripting<BR>
scalability: Excellent<BR>
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FreeSwitch is easy to maintain and configure/implement the configurations are straight forward, there are tons of examples on how to set up call routing and technology connections (ie: SIP, Jingle, whatever), and in Performance has already proven it can handle very high call setups/sec (> 500) and a very high concurrent call count (in no-media mode as a B2BUA > 2500 concurrent call legs) I use it in a Outbound Call center environment and would have to guess that the number of concurrent calls would shoot up if we not beating it todeath on with that type of traffic.<BR>
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OpenSER is extremely Scaleable... And can litterally handled 1000s of call setups per second, but major drawback is the configurations... There is a very high learning curve and it forces to you learn how SIP works you must script out each step of the way... There are tools to help with this but they only get you close, you still have to tweak them out for most installions...<BR>
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Both platforms offer different methods for accessing a DataBase backend for dynamic/realtime configuration updates, CDR collection etc... <BR>
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K<BR>
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<HR ALIGN=CENTER SIZE="3" WIDTH="95%"><B>From: </B>Pete Kay <petedao@gmail.com><BR>
<B>Reply-To: </B><freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org><BR>
<B>Date: </B>Thu, 10 Apr 2008 19:46:34 -0700<BR>
<B>To: </B><freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org><BR>
<B>Subject: </B>[Freeswitch-users] Freeswitch and Openser<BR>
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Hi all,<BR>
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I am currently evaluating either using Freeswitch or Openser for my SIP server. I am trying to look for information that can tell me the difference between the two in terms of ease-of-maintain, ease-of-implement, and scalability. If you have such kind of information, would you please share with me? <BR>
<BR>
Thank you very much for your input.<BR>
<BR>
Best Regards,<BR>
Pete<BR>
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