Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX
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@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
FreePBX is what most of us use and recommend in situations like these. But you have to be certain you are getting a Hosted PBX, not Hosted VoIP. A Hosted PBX is dedicated to you, it's a PBX hosted on your behalf. Hosted VoIP is shared, you are just another user on a platform already handling other people.
We currently have an instance of FreePBX hosted on our behalf by the provider who also provides us with the SIP trunks / holds the phone numbers etc. We don't share that with anyone.
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
FreePBX is what most of us use and recommend in situations like these. But you have to be certain you are getting a Hosted PBX, not Hosted VoIP. A Hosted PBX is dedicated to you, it's a PBX hosted on your behalf. Hosted VoIP is shared, you are just another user on a platform already handling other people.
We currently have an instance of FreePBX hosted on our behalf by the provider who also provides us with the SIP trunks / holds the phone numbers etc. We don't share that with anyone.
Ah, you violated a basic rule of bundling, your PBX should never be from the same company that has the phone numbers or trunks. For basic business protection, just like Registrar and DNS providers, those should always be two discrete entities or else you create a huge, expected extortion risk.
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
FreePBX is what most of us use and recommend in situations like these. But you have to be certain you are getting a Hosted PBX, not Hosted VoIP. A Hosted PBX is dedicated to you, it's a PBX hosted on your behalf. Hosted VoIP is shared, you are just another user on a platform already handling other people.
We currently have an instance of FreePBX hosted on our behalf by the provider who also provides us with the SIP trunks / holds the phone numbers etc. We don't share that with anyone.
This is many levels of wrong, from designed to housed, to SIP provider servicing. . .
If you ever want to leave this supplier you have to fight this vendor for everything you've setup, and hope and pray it's able to be installed somewhere else with ease.
A separation of services hear would help relieve of lot of this setup fiasco.
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@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
This is completely a vendor, not a platform, problem.
Agree and I have mentioned as much previously. I'm in no position to make the decision on moving off this provider. Hence wanting to see alternative solutions / implementation. I'm trying to be better informed when the times comes to look at alternatives.
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@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Don't confused the location of hosting with the location of a provider. What difference does it make if your provider is in the US?
I'm saying I can't use a provider in the US that can't host our local phone numbers.
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@jaredbusch said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
I am not sure I would recommend FreePBX for this. I would lean more towards having him treat the sub companies as a true separate tenant.
This is the sort of thing I'm looking to hear / learn.
@jaredbusch said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
FusionPBX (based on FreeSwitch) is a solid mutli-tenant solution.
I had a quick play with installing FusionPBX in the past. However haven't actually use it in live calls.
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@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Ah, you violated a basic rule of bundling,
Not my doing They are not someone I would have used.
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The main aim of this thread is for me to learn more on what would have been the recommended solution for this particular scenario if one we to set up a phone system servicing that many sites. Let say 10 to 20 brands with multiple sites each.
Something that is more manage than having over a hundred phone system to manage. Ideally share as much of the config as possible. So if corporate decide on something it doesn't have to be changed on multiple systems.
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
This is completely a vendor, not a platform, problem.
Agree and I have mentioned as much previously. I'm in no position to make the decision on moving off this provider. Hence wanting to see alternative solutions / implementation. I'm trying to be better informed when the times comes to look at alternatives.
If you can't move off of the provider, then you've provided your own answer. There is no possible alternative.
Basically you are saying "I must use this provider" and then asking "what's an alternative provider."
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Ah, you violated a basic rule of bundling,
Not my doing They are not someone I would have used.
At least none of this is your problem. Whoever is making all these decisions obviously wants things as they are.
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@scottalanmiller I believe he is saying he doesn't have the final decision; but at least as some weight when it comes to the conversation.
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
The main aim of this thread is for me to learn more on what would have been the recommended solution for this particular scenario if one we to set up a phone system servicing that many sites. Let say 10 to 20 brands with multiple sites each.
Right, and the top recommendation, long before you pick a platform, is picking the business architecture of your providers. Hence why we were giving that. The PBX is trivial compared to the provider, especially since your main problems here are from the provider, not the PBX.
Is FreePBX ideal for you? Probably not. Are your problems caused by FreePBX? No, they are from the provider.
So while it may not feel like it, we are actually addressing your original question and issues moreso than what you are wanting as an answer.
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@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Basically you are saying "I must use this provider" and then asking "what's an alternative provider."
We all agree the current system is a problem. So I'm not talking about that anymore. I'm asking what if I were given this to start fresh. What systems (FreePBX / Fusion) would you use. How would you structure it? What would you need to provide those features.
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@360col said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Basically you are saying "I must use this provider" and then asking "what's an alternative provider."
We all agree the current system is a problem.
Sort of, we all agree that the vendor you can't change is a problem. How much can you change if you can't change the vendor of the thing in question?
I'm unclear what can be changed. If you are locked to one vendor, then it comes down to what that vendor offers.
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I want to steer this thread back to my original question. That is how would one setup a system that provides those features starting from a clean slate. Please ignore I ever mention about the current system. That part is done and dusted! This is purely for my learning and for other who may have the same questions as I am now.
Let say I will get SIP trunks from a provider and then setup myself a system that does the rest.
From what I've learned so far from this and the other thread is that. FreePBX & FusionPBX are 2 potential options.
FreePBX: not true multi tenant with many limitations (for this screnario)
FusionPBX: True multi tenant. However not as well know used. Documentation are not good.
What other options are out there that wold have those features?
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So beyond the scenes, FreePBX is Asterisk. Abd FusionPBX is FreeSwitch. Each is the leader for that specific platform
There arent many other open kernels to work from. So most other options are very similar to these.
So these tend to be the big options as anyone else will be a near clone of these.
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Hi Scott and Mark,
I have couple customer looking for about 800 VoIP extension in California, I need some recommendation good infrastructure setup, I really appreciate for your suggestion and recommendation.
Q1. Hosting Provider recommendation
1 .AWS
2. vultr
3. Digital ocean
4- Dedicated server( colocation)
Note: of course everyone agreed to pay less as long as have minimum downtime for better call qualityQ2.Fusion Server infrastructure option
1.Separate database Server
server 1 - Fusion application
Seever 2 - postscript databaseNOTE: Of course I should have a good bandwidth between two server
- Load Balancer option
Load Balancer point to Server 1- App1 and Server 2- App 2 and these two app server point to a Database server(postscript database)
Note: The load balancer is a single point of failure; if it goes down, your whole service can go down. A high availability (HA) setup is an infrastructure without a single point of failure. To learn how to implement an HA setup, you can read this section of How To Use Floating IPs.
- Master-Slave Database Replication
Note: The application accessing the database must have a mechanism to determine which database nodes it should send an update and read requests to Updates to slaves are asynchronous, so there is a chance that their contents could be out of date If the master fails, no updates can be performed on the database until the issue is corrected and does not have built-in failover in case of failure of a master node
- load balance the caching servers, in addition to the application servers, and use database replication in a single environment.
Note:This environment still has two single points of failure (load balancer and master database server), but it provides the all of the other reliability and performance benefits that were described in each section above.
- IF you recommned any other setup to start for two new customer and of cource i can scale it later.
Q3. Do i need to setup kamailio or opensips and what is the advantage to have it now?
Thank you so much in advance for you help and support.
- Load Balancer option
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@alimrahimi said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Q1. Hosting Provider recommendation
1 .AWS
2. vultr
3. Digital ocean
4- Dedicated server( colocation)
Note: of course everyone agreed to pay less as long as have minimum downtime for better call qualityDedicated server would not make sense. High cost and no benefit, given the size, unless you already have it for other reasons. At 800 extensions, you can run this on less than $20/mo on a cloud provider, likely only $10. And then you have things ready to spin up a spare instance when needed.
Vultr has consistently been the "go to" player here. AWS doesn't allow ISO uploads and is overly expensive. DO traditionally doesn't allow ISO uploads, and doesn't perform up to par with Vultr. Vultr is your best value, performance, and features.
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@alimrahimi said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
Q2.Fusion Server infrastructure option
1.Separate database Server
server 1 - Fusion application
Seever 2 - postscript databaseNOTE: Of course I should have a good bandwidth between two server
You typically do separate app and database servers when you are mixing apps and/or going to large scale. This is not large scale at all. You are well within the range of any tiny PBX. Adding this will likely just hurt performance, add risk, add complexity, and add cost. At this small scale, I don't see any benefits to the separation.
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@alimrahimi said in Best architecture / recommendation for multi sites (separate business) Cloud VOIP PBX:
- Load Balancer option
Load Balancer point to Server 1- App1 and Server 2- App 2 and these two app server point to a Database server(postscript database)
Note: The load balancer is a single point of failure; if it goes down, your whole service can go down. A high availability (HA) setup is an infrastructure without a single point of failure. To learn how to implement an HA setup, you can read this section of How To Use Floating IPs.
HA doesn't mean you have or don't have a single point of failure. HA is exactly what it sounds like "availability rates that are significantly higher than standard." HA is determined by how many "nines" you get of availability, how that is achieved is not a factor in whether something is HA or not. In fact, many "fully redundant" solutions are actually the opposite, "low availability", because many redundancy mechanisms add risk rather than removing it.
Load balancing is not an appropriate mechanism for voice calls and does not make sense here.
It looks like you are taking diagrams from web applications, not PBX servers. These designs are not appropriate approaches for a PBX.
- Load Balancer option