Hi,
I've been looking into the optimum, current, hardware to setup Vicidial in a production environment and am looking for some advice from the experts!
I have looked at the Dell and HP rack servers which are comparable hardware. The HP server is similar in price when you look at the link below but that does not include the SAS hard disks or the extra 1Gb of RAM to bring it to the 2GB included with the Dell.
Both have dual integrated Ethernet cards and PCI SAS controllers - any tips on whether these could cause IRQ latency problems?
They also have 15,000RPM SAS disks with dual core xenons and I would run them with 2Gb of RAM in each machine.
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/sm ... 48235.html
http://www.vcconnect.co.uk/The_PowerEdge_860.htm
I would look to buy 5 of these in total (3 Asterisk/Vicidial servers, 1 database and 1 webserver, though I may move 1Gb of RAM from the web server to the database server). These would be mounted in a rack with a dedicated PSU and connected to a gigabit Ethernet switch.
It's also quite likely that I would get a single quad E1 card with echo cancellation for one of the servers if we need to connect to PRI lines, otherwise I'd get cheaper hardware cards for each of the asterisk/vicidial servers. (would the X100P still match up to this hardware?)
I would greatly appreciate any tips on the hardware selections I've made if anyone has experience with these or similar models of Dell/HP hardware.
Also, when reading Asterisk: TFOT there is a great deal of the early chapters devoted to discussing hardware optimisation for asterisk machines including removing any IRQ devices using the BIOS. Any ideas about how that might apply to the servers above or will APIC control in the kernel be the place to look for this activity for these machines?
In total I would expect these machines to support around 60 concurrent users with full call recording. External dialling would take place over IAX2 trunks using GSM with internal users on a/ulaw.
I'm not completely sure how to hook the internal users up yet due to the following considerations:
- the existing PCs have onboard sound cards which are untested. I saw that enjay had to purchase PCI sound cards to get an acceptable sound quality in 1 installation.
- Do hardware phones offer significant improvements in sound quality (even if you’re using cheap analogue phones with ATAs/Channel banks) or can you obtain the same voice quality by using high quality PC headsets?
Any advice you can give me on my plan would be greatly appreciated!
Kind regards,
Henry