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run_log.freeswitch |
== USAGE == Start the freeswitch daemon with /etc/rc.d/freeswitch. Add 'freeswitch' to DAEMONS in /etc/rc.conf and it will start at boot time. All configuration is done in /etc/freeswitch/. /usr/bin/fs_cli will bring up the console to freeswitch once it's running. == SUPPORT == See http://wiki.freeswitch.org for up-to-date configuration documentation. Official (paid) support available through http://freeswitch.org or consulting at freeswitch dot org. #freeswitch on Freenode IRC network. == DESCRIPTION == From http://freeswitch.org: Welcome To FreeSWITCH The World's First Cross-Platform Scalable FREE Multi-Protocol Soft Switch FreeSWITCH is a scalable open source cross-platform telephony platform designed to route and interconnect popular communication protocols using audio, video, text or any other form of media. It was created in 2006 to fill the void left by proprietary commercial solutions. FreeSWITCH also provides a stable telephony platform on which many telephony applications can be developed using a wide range of free tools. FreeSWITCH was originally designed and implemented by Anthony Minessale with the help of Brian West and Michael Jerris. All 3 are former developers of the popular Asterisk open source PBX. The project was initiated to focus on several design goals including modularity, cross-platform support, scalability and stability. Today, many more developers and users contribute to the project on a daily basis. We support various communication technologies such as Skype, SIP, H.323 and GoogleTalk making it easy to interface with other open source PBX systems such as sipXecs, Call Weaver, Bayonne, YATE or Asterisk. FreeSWITCH supports many advanced SIP features such as presence/BLF/SLA as well as TCP TLS and sRTP. It also can be used as a transparent proxy with and without media in the path to act as a SBC (session border controller) and proxy T.38 and other end to end protocols. FreeSWITCH supports both wide and narrow band codecs making it an ideal solution to bridge legacy devices to the future. The voice channels and the conference bridge module all can operate at 8, 12, 16, 24, 32 or 48 kilohertz and can bridge channels of different rates. The G.729 codec is also available under a commercial license. FreeSWITCH builds natively and runs standalone on several operating systems including Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, BSD and Solaris on both 32 and 64 bit platforms. FreeSWITCH supports FAX, both over audio and T.38, and can gateway between the two. Our developers are heavily involved in open source and have donated code and other resources to other telephony projects including openSER, sipXecs, The Asterisk Open Source PBX and Call Weaver. == FEATURES == From http://wiki.freeswitch.org/wiki/Specsheet: Possible Uses * Rating & Routing Server * Transcoding B2BUA * IVR & Announcement Server * Conference Server * Voicemail Server * SBC (Session Border Controller) * Basic Topology Hiding Session Border Controller * Zaptel, Sangoma, Rhino, PIKA Hardware Support (Analog and PRI), and Khomp Brazilian telephony hardware manufacturer * Fax server * T.38 gateway, termination, and origination mode * T.30 to T.38 and T.38 to T.30 gateway See also: mod_spandsp And, of course, a PBX Features * Centralized User/Domain Directory (directory.xml) * Nano Second CDR granularity * Call recording (In Stereo caller/callee left/right) * High Performance Multi-Threaded Core engine * Configuration via cURL to your HTTP server (mod_xml_curl). * XML Config files for easy parsing. * Protocol Agnostic * ZRTP support for transparent RTP based key exchange and encryption * Configurable RFC 2833 Payload type * Inband DTMF generation and detection. * Software based Conference (no hardware requirement) * Wideband Conferencing * Media / No Media modes * Proper ENUM/ISN dialing built in * Detailed CDR in XML * Radius CDR * Subscription server * Shared Line Appearances * Bridged Line Appearances * Enterprise/Carrier grade Eventing Engine. (XML Events, Name Value Events, Multicast Events) * Loadable File formats and streaming * Stream to and play from Shoutcast and Icecast * Multi-lingual Speech Phrase Interface * ASR/TTS support (native and via MRCP) * Basic IP/PBX features * Automated Attendant * Custom Ring Back Tones (early_media) * XML-RPC support * Multiple format CDRs supported * SQL Engine provides session persistence * Thread Isolation * Parallel Hunting * Serial Hunting * Mozilla Public License * Support * Paid support available * Free support via IRC & E-mail * Many supported codecs * CELT (32 kHz ahd 48 kHz) * G.722.1 (wideband) * G.722.1C (wideband 32 kHz) * G.722 (wideband) * G.711 * G.726 (16k, 24k, 32k, 48k) AAL2 and RFC 3551 * G.723.1 (passthrough) * G.729AB (Requires a license unless using passthrough) * AMR (passthrough) * iLBC * Speex (narrow and wideband) * LPC-10 * DVI4 (ADPCM) 8 kHz and 16 kHz * SILK * Video Codecs (passthrough): * Theora * H.261 * H.263 * H.264 * MP4 * More Codec Information: http://wiki.freeswitch.org/wiki/Codecs * Live Migration of calls from one FreeSWITCH box to another. See http://wiki.freeswitch.org/wiki/Freeswitch_HA Applications * Voicemail * Multitenancy - Enterprise/Carrier configuration * Time of Day Greetings * Urgent Message Tagging * E-mail Delivery * Playback and Rerecord messages before delivery. * Keys are templates so you can rearrange to fit your needs. * Callback support from inside voicemail. * Podcast of Voicemail (RSS) * Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) * Support for Queues (via mod_fifo or mod_callcenter) * Parking (via mod_fifo) * Conference * Software based Conferencing without any hardware requirements. * Wideband conferences. * Multiple on-demand or scheduled conferences with entry/exit announcements * Play files into the conference or a single member. * Relationships * TTS integration * Transfers * Outbound Calling * Configurable Key Lay * Volume, Gain and Energy level per call. * Bridge to Conference transition * Multi Party outbound dialing. * Inbound Call Center Queues * RSS Reader * Fax endpoint, gateway and passthrough mode. * T.30 (G.711) Audio Fax (via mod_spandsp) formerly known as mod_fax. * T.38 faxing (gateway, endpoint and passthrough) Protocols * SIP * UDP, TCP, SCTP and TLS transports for full SIP compliance. * IPv6 Support * SIP Session timers * RTP Timers * RFC 3263 (SRV and NAPTR) * SRTP via SDES (Works with Polycom, Snom, Linksys and Grandstream) * Blind SIP Registration * STUN Support * Jitter buffer * NAT Support * Distributed SIP registrations * Late Codec Negotiation * Multiple SIP registrations per user account. * Multitenancy - Multiple SIP UAs * SIP Reinvites. * Can act as an SBC (Session Border Controller) * Manage Presence * SIP/SIMPLE (can gateway to other chat protocols) * SIP Multicast Paging support for Linksys and Snom * Intercom/AutoAnswer support. * Call features like Call Hold (Re-INVITE), Blind Transfer (REFER), Call Forward (302), etc. * Jingle * Interop with Google Talk, Google Voice, and Telepathy * H.323 with mod_opal (opalvoip.org) * mod_h323 - H.323 Endpoint module based on the h323plus library. * mod_skinny - Skinny Call Control Protocol (SCCP) Languages * JavaScript (Using the SpiderMonkey JavaScript engine.) * ODBC Support from inside your JavaScript * Extendable modules for JavaScript * Tone Generation * Python * Perl * Lua Cross Platform * Builds native on Windows in MSVC * Builds on Mac OS X, Linux, Solaris and *BSD. * Minimum/Recommended System Requirements * 32-bit OS (64-bit recommended) * 512MB RAM (1GB recommended) * 50MB of Disk Space * System requirements depend on your deployment needs. We recommend you plan for 50% duty cycle. Performance * Tested under load for over 100 hours * 10,000,000+ calls * At rates exceeding 50 CPS * Performance will vary depending on application. You will need to test for your particular situation.