Lot of questions, lots of variables, but I'll touch base on a few things. 5-10 concurrent calls is hardly anything. A plain T1 will more than handle that, even at ulaw or alaw (non)compression. Throw in a decent codec, and 10 calls won't even put a dent in your T1. Heck, it'd handle all 20 users in your main office, and the 5 users in your remote office with G729, no problem.
How reliable is the remote office's DSL connection? I'd make sure you have a static ip for it (dynamic ips are just slightly problematic, especially if you have slightly flaky service, coupled with a slightly flaky modem). If it's reliable, then just keep that. What's the connection speed? Need to know the upload and download. If it's ADSL, then the upload will be a fraction of the download, and will be the limiting factor. Since I don't know your specific setup, I can't tell you specifically what to do. I'll make some guesses though. Keep DSL. No need to use VPN just for asterisk. Make sure each end has a static ip (dynamic ip will work, but is harder to setup and more prone to errors). Have each asterisk box register to the other. For normal incoming and outgoing calls, just have the asterisk box at that particular location handle it (no need for the remote office to connect to the main office's asterisk box, then call out via iax or sip for a long-distance phone call). You can create "local" extensions that when dialed, will ring a person on the other asterisk box. I.e., a user at the main office can dial 2001, and get a user at the remote office. If you deal with call queues you can group users from both offices together, no problem. A T1 or a point to point connection at the remote office would work, but is probably unecessary. If their DSL connection is flaky and unreliable, then start looking at both options. I'd probably go with whichever is cheapest, be sure to factor in equipment costs (you can generally lease equipment with a T1 line, but not with a point to point connection). As far as server specs, if all it's going to run is asterisk, then that's overkill even if it was handling all the calls. If you think you need that much server but are on a budget, then get one setup for dual processors but with just one installed, and less ram but that has room to add more. If budget's not a problem, I say go for it! That system should last you for quite a while. As for QOS, sorry I can't help you there. You could get a cheap router that has QOS built-in, or run a separate low-end server just for QOS. Personally my asterisk box also serves as my nat server, so I just run QOS directly on it. It's probably not something you want to do in an office environment, but it's better than no QOS at all. Hopefully someone else will give you some good advice on QOS equipment. Joseph Tanner On 3/7/06, Jason Adams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hey Everyone, > > We are in the works of planning a new * installation for our company. We > have 20 users in our main office and 5 users in a remote office a couple of > states away. Our call volume for the main office will be anywhere from 5-10 > concurrent calls. The remote office will have about 3 heavy users with two > users making calls occasionally. > > Right now we have an existing PBX. We have a T-1/PRI coming into the main > office and a DSL connection at the remote office. We have a Cisco 2610/PIX > 501 at the main office a cheesy linksys router at the remote site. > > We are planning on purchasing new Cisco IP phones for everyone. > > My main question is this: What type of hardware/network design would be > best for this situation? Would a full T-1 at the remote site work with a > VPN between the offices? Or would a higher bandwidth DSL work with a VPN? > Or should we move to a Point-to-Point connection? What type of hardware > would be best for the end-to-end communication in regards to QoS? I know > the PIX 501 doesn't support it. > Would it be best to have two * servers in each office or for that call > volume at the remote office does it make sense? I was thinking of a Dell > Power Edge server with 4GB of ram and a dual processor.. is that enough? > > Sorry for all the questions! > > > > - Jason > _______________________________________________ > --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- > > Asterisk-Users mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > > > _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- Asterisk-Users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users