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stotaro at totarotechn...
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:05 pm    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 1:55 PM, Eve-Ellen Cole <ecole at mail.plymouth.edu> wrote:
Quote:




Hi,



I am planning to deploy an Asterisk system to supply 4-6,000 students with
voicemail capabilities. The system will be set up with non-DIDs, route
incoming calls to voicemail, then send an email notification. Anyone with
some ideas on how I should go about spec'ing the server this use?



- Eve Ellen

Strictly VM? How are the calls going to arrive? How many
simultaneous accesses, both leaving messages and retrieving (highest
peak).

I believe Vonage uses Asterisk for their VM (not sure where I heard that).

Thanks,
Steve Totaro
Back to top
stotaro at totarotechn...
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Mar 18, 2008 9:12 pm    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

I did basically the same thing via T1 on the Definity. It took a bit
of tinkering on the Definity to get the coverage path right.

For your use, I would go for a RAID 5, dual power supply box with
quite a bit of storage. RAM and CPU should not be an issue with
anything new. I would go with a T1/E1 card with more than one port
just for future possible growth or options. Echo cancellation is
probably not needed but if in the budget, it can never hurt (never say
never, seldomly or rarely I guess is more appropriate). I would
probably go with an HP DL380.

The dialplan should be very simple. It should actually be pretty fun project.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 3:15 PM, Eve-Ellen Cole <ecole at mail.plymouth.edu> wrote:
Quote:



I have an Avaya Definity G3R. Calls to students will be routed through the
G3R, to the Asterisk system so the caller can leave a message. I'm not sure
how many channels I'll really need, but I expect no more than 23
simultaneous calls. In fact, maybe no more than 10 simultaneously.



-----Original Message-----
From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Steve Totaro
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 3:05 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] capacity

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 1:55 PM, Eve-Ellen Cole <ecole at mail.plymouth.edu>
wrote:
Quote:




Hi,



I am planning to deploy an Asterisk system to supply 4-6,000 students
with
Quote:
voicemail capabilities. The system will be set up with non-DIDs, route
incoming calls to voicemail, then send an email notification. Anyone
with
Quote:
some ideas on how I should go about spec'ing the server this use?



- Eve Ellen

Strictly VM? How are the calls going to arrive? How many
simultaneous accesses, both leaving messages and retrieving (highest
peak).

I believe Vonage uses Asterisk for their VM (not sure where I heard that).

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

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bwentdg at pipeline.com
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 6:11 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

You Said "I would probably go with an HP DL380."
would you share what drew you to that particular box ?

When i looked at their WEB page there was something like 9 different
RAID Controllers you could chose from.
Seemed hideously confusing to con fig one just to get a price quote on it.
Please share your experience
Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
I did basically the same thing via T1 on the Definity. It took a bit
of tinkering on the Definity to get the coverage path right.

For your use, I would go for a RAID 5, dual power supply box with
quite a bit of storage. RAM and CPU should not be an issue with
anything new. I would go with a T1/E1 card with more than one port
just for future possible growth or options. Echo cancellation is
probably not needed but if in the budget, it can never hurt (never say
never, seldomly or rarely I guess is more appropriate). I would
probably go with an HP DL380.

The dialplan should be very simple. It should actually be pretty fun project.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 3:15 PM, Eve-Ellen Cole <ecole at mail.plymouth.edu> wrote:

Quote:

I have an Avaya Definity G3R. Calls to students will be routed through the
G3R, to the Asterisk system so the caller can leave a message. I'm not sure
how many channels I'll really need, but I expect no more than 23
simultaneous calls. In fact, maybe no more than 10 simultaneously.



-----Original Message-----
From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Steve Totaro
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 3:05 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] capacity

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 1:55 PM, Eve-Ellen Cole <ecole at mail.plymouth.edu>
wrote:
Quote:




Hi,



I am planning to deploy an Asterisk system to supply 4-6,000 students
with
Quote:
voicemail capabilities. The system will be set up with non-DIDs, route
incoming calls to voicemail, then send an email notification. Anyone
with
Quote:
some ideas on how I should go about spec'ing the server this use?



- Eve Ellen

Strictly VM? How are the calls going to arrive? How many
simultaneous accesses, both leaving messages and retrieving (highest
peak).

I believe Vonage uses Asterisk for their VM (not sure where I heard that).

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

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asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
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rjoffe at yahoo.com
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 8:38 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron
Back to top
stotaro at totarotechn...
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 9:36 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

I usually just call my guy at CDW and give him my needs, he is a
former techie gone sales. He puts together a quote and emails it to
me for approval.

I find HP server are very robust and rock solid at a decent price
point (IBM as well). I like the 380 because you get six hot swap scsi
bays and redundant power supplies in a 2u profile, also, Digium and
Sangoma T1 cards have never given me an issue.

Many on this list love Supermicro, I have yet to try them but I will
in the near future. I have not heard a single complaint, only rave
reviews.

I guess my original point was going for redundancy as far as storage
and power supplies with your dollar, not the fastest proc or maxed out
RAM that will not be needed. Regardless of the actual hardware or
RAID setup, that is the angle I suggest you take. 4k - 6k students
will require quite a bit of storage.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron





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rjoffe at yahoo.com
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 9:51 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

On Wednesday 19 March 2008 10:36, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

Steve,

My purpose was to try to point out that Raid 5 has deficiencies, and I would
not recommend a Raid 5 set.

With the disk sizes available today (both SATA and SAS), Raid 10 or multiple
Raid 1 sets have many advantages.

Ron
Back to top
drew at oanda.com
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 11:01 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

Having ventured high enough and far enough to view the curvature of the
Earth and having stayed up late enough long enough (why do disks only
fail at the weekend?) to rebuild and restore RAID 5 sets, I proffer the
following (not so) Humble Opinion .....

Dual power supplies, two thumbs up

but RAID 5 is only good for reducing storage costs on large volumes of
data. It reduces performance and reliability over RAID 1. Don't put the
OS on RAID 5 unless you like rebuilding servers from bare metal. It's
much easier to rebuild and restore the data on RAID 5 sets if the OS is
already up and running.

Your OS and other system critical files (Asterisk) should be on RAID 1
for performance, redundancy and cost reasons.

More disks = higher cost and higher chance of failure.

Asterisk in general does not need much disk storage. The minimum drive
size available in a new server tends to be overkill. Two drives as RAID
1 gives you redundancy and performance. Adding a third drive for RAID 5
adds cost, increases complexity and reduces reliability just to add
storage capacity that you don't really need. (but the reseller WILL make
more money and impress you with their command of the big words and
acronyms on the spec sheet.)

If and only if you need to store many hundreds of gigs of data (eg.
recording a very large volume of calls) then RAID 5 becomes useful (or
RAID 10 or RAID n). You should add this "bulk storage" IN ADDITION TO
the mirrored pair holding the OS.

regards,

Drew
Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

I usually just call my guy at CDW and give him my needs, he is a
former techie gone sales. He puts together a quote and emails it to
me for approval.

I find HP server are very robust and rock solid at a decent price
point (IBM as well). I like the 380 because you get six hot swap scsi
bays and redundant power supplies in a 2u profile, also, Digium and
Sangoma T1 cards have never given me an issue.

Many on this list love Supermicro, I have yet to try them but I will
in the near future. I have not heard a single complaint, only rave
reviews.

I guess my original point was going for redundancy as far as storage
and power supplies with your dollar, not the fastest proc or maxed out
RAM that will not be needed. Regardless of the actual hardware or
RAID setup, that is the angle I suggest you take. 4k - 6k students
will require quite a bit of storage.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:

Quote:
On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron





_______________________________________________
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asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



_______________________________________________
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asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
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--
Drew Gibson

Systems Administrator
OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com
Back to top
stotaro at totarotechn...
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 11:15 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

RAID arguments (preference really) aside, 4k - 6k worth of student
voicemails is going to require quite a bit of storage space.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 12:01 PM, Drew Gibson <drew at oanda.com> wrote:
Quote:
Having ventured high enough and far enough to view the curvature of the
Earth and having stayed up late enough long enough (why do disks only
fail at the weekend?) to rebuild and restore RAID 5 sets, I proffer the
following (not so) Humble Opinion .....

Dual power supplies, two thumbs up

but RAID 5 is only good for reducing storage costs on large volumes of
data. It reduces performance and reliability over RAID 1. Don't put the
OS on RAID 5 unless you like rebuilding servers from bare metal. It's
much easier to rebuild and restore the data on RAID 5 sets if the OS is
already up and running.

Your OS and other system critical files (Asterisk) should be on RAID 1
for performance, redundancy and cost reasons.

More disks = higher cost and higher chance of failure.

Asterisk in general does not need much disk storage. The minimum drive
size available in a new server tends to be overkill. Two drives as RAID
1 gives you redundancy and performance. Adding a third drive for RAID 5
adds cost, increases complexity and reduces reliability just to add
storage capacity that you don't really need. (but the reseller WILL make
more money and impress you with their command of the big words and
acronyms on the spec sheet.)

If and only if you need to store many hundreds of gigs of data (eg.
recording a very large volume of calls) then RAID 5 becomes useful (or
RAID 10 or RAID n). You should add this "bulk storage" IN ADDITION TO
the mirrored pair holding the OS.

regards,

Drew




Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

I usually just call my guy at CDW and give him my needs, he is a
former techie gone sales. He puts together a quote and emails it to
me for approval.

I find HP server are very robust and rock solid at a decent price
point (IBM as well). I like the 380 because you get six hot swap scsi
bays and redundant power supplies in a 2u profile, also, Digium and
Sangoma T1 cards have never given me an issue.

Many on this list love Supermicro, I have yet to try them but I will
in the near future. I have not heard a single complaint, only rave
reviews.

I guess my original point was going for redundancy as far as storage
and power supplies with your dollar, not the fastest proc or maxed out
RAM that will not be needed. Regardless of the actual hardware or
RAID setup, that is the angle I suggest you take. 4k - 6k students
will require quite a bit of storage.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:

Quote:
On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron





_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



--
Drew Gibson

Systems Administrator
OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com




_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
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drew at oanda.com
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 11:33 am    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

Our office averages around 1.5MB / mailbox, call it 10MB for rounding.

6,000 x 10MB = 60GB (n'est pas?)

2 x 250GB drives, mirrored, should cover that and the system quite nicely.

regards,

Drew

Disclaimer: Most of our employees are programmers so probably don't have
any friends to call and leave messages! Smile

Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
RAID arguments (preference really) aside, 4k - 6k worth of student
voicemails is going to require quite a bit of storage space.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 12:01 PM, Drew Gibson <drew at oanda.com> wrote:

Quote:
Having ventured high enough and far enough to view the curvature of the
Earth and having stayed up late enough long enough (why do disks only
fail at the weekend?) to rebuild and restore RAID 5 sets, I proffer the
following (not so) Humble Opinion .....

Dual power supplies, two thumbs up

but RAID 5 is only good for reducing storage costs on large volumes of
data. It reduces performance and reliability over RAID 1. Don't put the
OS on RAID 5 unless you like rebuilding servers from bare metal. It's
much easier to rebuild and restore the data on RAID 5 sets if the OS is
already up and running.

Your OS and other system critical files (Asterisk) should be on RAID 1
for performance, redundancy and cost reasons.

More disks = higher cost and higher chance of failure.

Asterisk in general does not need much disk storage. The minimum drive
size available in a new server tends to be overkill. Two drives as RAID
1 gives you redundancy and performance. Adding a third drive for RAID 5
adds cost, increases complexity and reduces reliability just to add
storage capacity that you don't really need. (but the reseller WILL make
more money and impress you with their command of the big words and
acronyms on the spec sheet.)

If and only if you need to store many hundreds of gigs of data (eg.
recording a very large volume of calls) then RAID 5 becomes useful (or
RAID 10 or RAID n). You should add this "bulk storage" IN ADDITION TO
the mirrored pair holding the OS.

regards,

Drew




Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

I usually just call my guy at CDW and give him my needs, he is a
former techie gone sales. He puts together a quote and emails it to
me for approval.

I find HP server are very robust and rock solid at a decent price
point (IBM as well). I like the 380 because you get six hot swap scsi
bays and redundant power supplies in a 2u profile, also, Digium and
Sangoma T1 cards have never given me an issue.

Many on this list love Supermicro, I have yet to try them but I will
in the near future. I have not heard a single complaint, only rave
reviews.

I guess my original point was going for redundancy as far as storage
and power supplies with your dollar, not the fastest proc or maxed out
RAM that will not be needed. Regardless of the actual hardware or
RAID setup, that is the angle I suggest you take. 4k - 6k students
will require quite a bit of storage.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:

Quote:
On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron





_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



--
Drew Gibson

Systems Administrator
OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com




_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



--
Drew Gibson

Systems Administrator
OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com
Back to top
stotaro at totarotechn...
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 12:21 pm    Post subject: [asterisk-users] capacity Reply with quote

I use standard wav (most compatible with players) so about a meg a minute.

In my experience, most people (users) use their voicemail similar to
email, they keep everything. Especially love struck college kids. I
think Asterisk has a soft limit of 1,000 (maybe it is 999) messages as
the max per inbox that can be changed in source.

I suppose if you limit the max time allowed and the max inbox limit
it might help but I think your 60GB estimate would be quite low in the
real world.

BUT, that is based on when I was in college and I was one of the very
few to have my own cell phone (dating myself a bit). So in the real
world, I am not sure how much use the system would actually see.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 12:33 PM, Drew Gibson <drew at oanda.com> wrote:
Quote:
Our office averages around 1.5MB / mailbox, call it 10MB for rounding.

6,000 x 10MB = 60GB (n'est pas?)

2 x 250GB drives, mirrored, should cover that and the system quite nicely.

regards,

Drew

Disclaimer: Most of our employees are programmers so probably don't have
any friends to call and leave messages! Smile





Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
RAID arguments (preference really) aside, 4k - 6k worth of student
voicemails is going to require quite a bit of storage space.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 12:01 PM, Drew Gibson <drew at oanda.com> wrote:

Quote:
Having ventured high enough and far enough to view the curvature of the
Earth and having stayed up late enough long enough (why do disks only
fail at the weekend?) to rebuild and restore RAID 5 sets, I proffer the
following (not so) Humble Opinion .....

Dual power supplies, two thumbs up

but RAID 5 is only good for reducing storage costs on large volumes of
data. It reduces performance and reliability over RAID 1. Don't put the
OS on RAID 5 unless you like rebuilding servers from bare metal. It's
much easier to rebuild and restore the data on RAID 5 sets if the OS is
already up and running.

Your OS and other system critical files (Asterisk) should be on RAID 1
for performance, redundancy and cost reasons.

More disks = higher cost and higher chance of failure.

Asterisk in general does not need much disk storage. The minimum drive
size available in a new server tends to be overkill. Two drives as RAID
1 gives you redundancy and performance. Adding a third drive for RAID 5
adds cost, increases complexity and reduces reliability just to add
storage capacity that you don't really need. (but the reseller WILL make
more money and impress you with their command of the big words and
acronyms on the spec sheet.)

If and only if you need to store many hundreds of gigs of data (eg.
recording a very large volume of calls) then RAID 5 becomes useful (or
RAID 10 or RAID n). You should add this "bulk storage" IN ADDITION TO
the mirrored pair holding the OS.

regards,

Drew




Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
And I can post a link that shows a bunch of guys think the earth is
flat with a 5/10 google ranking also (like the barf guys).
http://www.alaska.net/~clund/e_djublonskopf/Flatearthsociety.htm

I usually just call my guy at CDW and give him my needs, he is a
former techie gone sales. He puts together a quote and emails it to
me for approval.

I find HP server are very robust and rock solid at a decent price
point (IBM as well). I like the 380 because you get six hot swap scsi
bays and redundant power supplies in a 2u profile, also, Digium and
Sangoma T1 cards have never given me an issue.

Many on this list love Supermicro, I have yet to try them but I will
in the near future. I have not heard a single complaint, only rave
reviews.

I guess my original point was going for redundancy as far as storage
and power supplies with your dollar, not the fastest proc or maxed out
RAM that will not be needed. Regardless of the actual hardware or
RAID setup, that is the angle I suggest you take. 4k - 6k students
will require quite a bit of storage.

Thanks,
Steve Totaro

On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:38 AM, Ron Joffe <rjoffe at yahoo.com> wrote:

Quote:
On Tuesday 18 March 2008 22:12, Steve Totaro wrote:
Quote:
For your use, I would go for a RAID 5

I would highly recommend against a raid 5 set. I can give you more details if
you are interested, but these guys have most if it down : www.baarf.com see
the link on the left on "why should I not use Raid 5"

Ron





_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



_______________________________________________
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asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users



--
Drew Gibson

Systems Administrator
OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com




_______________________________________________
-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com --

asterisk-users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
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Drew Gibson

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OANDA Corporation
www.oanda.com


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