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Open source PBXes: free flexibility

Capable IP PBXes from Pingtel, Digium are free for the downloading, but require admin expertise to use effectively

By Wayne Rash
January 28, 2005
 

One great thing about the open source movement is that if there’s a feature of any kind that someone somewhere needs, it will be made available for everyone. As a result, the open source PBXes tested here are feature-filled Swiss Army knives of communications solutions.

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Like other open source products, these PBXes don’t necessarily cost anything to obtain. That doesn’t mean, however, there aren’t costs involved with getting these phone systems running. Phone hardware is still required, and the expertise to turn the software into something you can use in your enterprise doesn’t come cheap. Open source product support comes from the community itself, so you’ll need to know where to look and who to ask to get what you need.

If that doesn’t work for your company, both Pingtel and Digium will provide support and services for a reasonable cost. If you’re willing to invest some time and thought in picking the right product, getting the right plug-ins and options, and training someone on your staff to manage the PBX, you can save a lot of money and very likely get a solution that exactly fits your needs.

Asterisk V1.0.3

Digium calls Asterisk the first open source PBX. In reality, it’s a lot more than a PBX: It also takes on the functions of a media server, a protocol gateway, and a conference bridge. It goes beyond VoIP, too, supporting other types of digital communications and even POTS systems.

Asterisk can be installed on anything that will run Linux with kernel Version 2.4 or later. It will also run on FreeBSD Unix and on Mac OS X, and another version will run on coLinux under Microsoft Windows, although its functionality is limited.

As you’d expect for a product that supports such a wide variety of hardware, you can add a lot to the Asterisk system in terms of infrastructure and software. Because it’s open source, there’s also a wealth of applications that add functions to Asterisk, such as support for a variety of phone interfaces or concentrators and media gateway services such as outboard conferencing.

You’ll probably need to add at least some of those functions. Although Asterisk is fully functional when you download it, the base product doesn’t include many of the interfaces and capabilities — such as graphical management interfaces — available from third parties.

This observation is not to suggest that Asterisk is missing features — far from it. Most of the features are present in basic form, so you’ll be making management changes, adds, moves, and the like by editing a text file. As long as you can use a Linux text editor, follow some basic instructions, and deal with a set of configuration files that are reasonably intuitive, there’s little else you’ll need.

Although management via text-file editing is far from sexy, it is effective, fast, and reduces mouse-related carpal tunnel exposure. Dealing directly with configuration files, though, requires more admin expertise than using a GUI, and that may limit Asterisk’s usefulness at some companies.

For the test, the Digium engineers and I created a somewhat atypical phone network. It included a series of SIP-based phones, along with analog phones, MGCP (Media Gateway Control Protocol) and H.323 phones, SCCP (Signaling Connection Control Part) phones, and phones using several other digital protocols.

We installed the PBX software on a pair of mismatched, low-end Pentium desktop computers, each equipped with Ethernet adapters and a four-way T1 adapter. Two of the T1 lines linked the PBXes; two of the other T1 lines from one of the PBXes went to the analog phones.

The low-end desktop PCs were used to test Digium’s claim that you don’t need anything special to bring up its PBX. In reality, you’d be out of your mind to do this, because phone service is critical for most companies. Your phone system should be installed on some nicely redundant, server-quality platforms. The Asterisk installation proved its point, though — it requires no fancy hardware.

With this setup, I could call any phone on the network from any other phone. Call quality remained good, and all PBX features (including standards such as automatic call distribution, voice mail services, and call queuing) were available. Some features were phone-dependent — you won’t suddenly get advanced calling features on plain analog phones — but the basics were there for every phone.


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Digium Asterisk V1.0.3

Digium, digium.com

Good  7.4
criteria score weight
Features 8 30%
Management 7 30%
Scalability 8 20%
Implementation 6 10%
Value 7 10%

Cost:
No cost to download Asterisk software; support available from Digium for $150 per hour.

Platforms:
Linux with 2.4, 2.6 kernel; Free BSD; Mac OS X

Bottom Line:
Asterisk is the classic open source solution. You can get the basics just by downloading it, but you’ll need to know what you’re doing to install it. Plus, you’ll need to find hardware and software support for uses other than phones with direct Ethernet connections via SIP. The real cost may come in training a staffer — or hiring someone — to integrate all of the pieces

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



Pingtel SIPxchange v. 2.4

Pingtel, pingtel.com

Good  7.9
criteria score weight
Features 8 30%
Management 8 30%
Scalability 8 20%
Implementation 7 10%
Value 8 10%

Cost:
$1,000 per CPU, including support and some commercial plug-ins; sipX software available as free download

Platforms:
Red Hat Linux 7.3

Bottom Line:
Pingtel brings all of the good things about open source to the table, adding some IP PBX features you can’t easily get otherwise. You’ll still need a lot of expertise to get this product up and running. Graphical tools are a boon for administrators and make basic tasks, such as configuring users once they’re added, easier to accomplish. SIPxchange is worth its price.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



 


 
Wayne Rash is an InfoWorld senior contributing editor.
 

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