Douglas Garstang wrote: >>Also be sure that you have a very redundant network configuration. >>Too often I see people spend a great deal of time and money to get >>redundant servers when their switches, firewalls, routers, etc are not >>even capable of handling a failed network element. > > You can achieve this at the application level.
How do you do that when your single network connection is gone? When considering redundancy it is essential that you have no single point of failure. Depending on how far you want to go, this means right from your dual-box asterisk setup to dual diesel-generators and two multi-homed datacenters. /Per Jessen, Zürich -- http://www.spamchek.com/ - your spam is our business. _______________________________________________ Sign up now for AstriCon 2007! September 25-28th. http://www.astricon.net/ --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