forwarding beyond the server i did not try because this needs to happen on a server that does not have the local intranet ip addresses in them.
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On Wednesday, May 13, 2020, 04:07:31 PM PDT, David McGough via AllStarLink Discussion Groups noreply@community.allstarlink.org wrote:
David_McGough
May 13
This only works is the 8881xx and 789123 are on the same physical server, right??
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In Reply To
chris43
May 13
There may be a easy answer to my question (node numbers are fictional) Assume the node to host me inbound connections is 789123 and the port is 7000 Assume the inbound range I want to forward is 888100 thru 888199 The following is added to the dial-plan [radio-secure] exten => _8881xx,1,rpt,…
Previous Replies
chris43
May 13
There may be a easy answer to my question
(node numbers are fictional)
Assume the node to host me inbound connections is 789123 and
the port is 7000
Assume the inbound range I want to forward is 888100 thru
888199
The following is added to the dial-plan
[radio-secure]
exten => _8881xx,1,rpt,789123
with the allstarlink web page data for the node range 888100
thru 888199 set to port 7000 this will send all incoming calls for 888100 thru
888199 to my server for node 789123 and the server forwards them to internally
to node 789123
thus far this seems to work
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chris43
May 11
yes i was getting cores not responding.
allmon2 used to monitor it mostly does what i need.
i have plenty internet bandwidth at the hub and i can divide it onto several servers i even wrote a program to create the information for the rpt.conf file, but i tried to remove all of the comments and unused settings and i may have either left something out not put it in the correct place in the rpt.conf file. i have not done a 2 node on a server in a long time.
this weekend i may try this again
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wd6awp
ASL Admin
May 11
I use Allmon2 to manage my nodes rather than relying on allstarlink. Here’s my Allmon2 site if you not seen Allmon2 before.
The max nodes you can have on a server depends on many things. I’d say that 10 to 15 dahdi/pseudo nodes is about it on a reasonable ISP hosted VM. The main bottleneck seems to be with IAX registration keeping up. Might be able to get around that with my http registration method.
Where was the overload on the server you tried to build?
I’ve never tried to trim down a dahdi/pseudo node only server. But the obvious place to start would be limiting the loadable modules. No need for simpleUSB, USBradio, chanVoter… etc. See modules.conf. Also you don’t need courtesy tones, ID’ers… that sort of thing.
chris43
May 11
microwave is very busy not a lot of bandwidth available.
also it is easier to look for any external problems in one place when they occur.
Part of the reason for for having them register is so that people can see their status so having them register at the fiber internet point bypasses that.
that being said i did try to build a node they would not register (the actual; node was already registered but accept (intercept) inbound for many nodes, and then connect to the hub node, with all the nodes it overloaded the processor, so i reduced it to 1/3 it worked but it did not pass audio. this was accomplished by using different port numbers in the allstar web page that the nodes actually use to talk locally.
i was trying to put in the minimum information in the rpt.conf and may have left something needed out.
what do you think the maximum number of pseudo nodes i can have?
what would be the minimum information needed for a pseudo node in the rpt.conf?
thanks again
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wd6awp
ASL Admin
May 11
How about this?
- Make all nodes private node numbers except the hub.
- Put all the public node numbers on the hub. Configure each as dahdi/pseudo.
- On your www.allstarlink.org server settings page set all ports to the hub’s port.
- Connect the private nodes to the appropriate public node.
Having 31 nodes on the same server might have IAX registration problems. If so let me know I have an idea for that, too.
Having said this, are you really sure you have such limited bandwidth? Each connection is less than 150kb.
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