Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX
-
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
If I were to guess, I would guess that @aaronstuder was talking about a single Vultr instance/fusionpbx instance going down, and thus taking out 11 clients.
I haven't had a single instance go down on Vultr since I started using it. Just some reboots during upgrades in NYC location.
With the way freeswitch and domains are setup, and with the single backup, it would still be easier to restore than FreePBX.
You could run 11 FusionPBX instances on $5 vultr machines. In fact Debian 8 would require less resources than the sangoma Linux distro
-
@bigbear I downloaded the ISO, I just need to find some time to try it out. I do like the fact that it is based on FreeSwitch, which seems to be used by a lot of the big players. (Flowroute for example)
-
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@stuartjordan said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Is there many people using Fusion PBX in production? is that much of a comparison compared to Freepbx? GUI looks slightly nicer than Freepbx.
There are a lot of people using it. In telecom people don't share and recommend much because everyone, even your small no-name itsp guy, all perceive themselves to be in competition.
And again, my focus is on getting more options for single tenant every day phone system installs.
It's true. It's rare for PBX / VoIP people to talk to each other. ML is rare in that we have several "competitors" talking openly with each other.
Along that thinking I've been wandering if I could negotiate to get my calling rates available for ML members without them coming through my sub account.
I have 2 million minutes of usage per month but if all ML usage was pooled with a Telnyx I bet it could be twice that. Thereby giving everyone a .005 to .007 rate.
Sam model as my wholesale hardware pricing.
Then think about the fact that we could recommend a true FOSS pbx against FreePBX, a wholesale rate vs SIPStation and discounted Yealink phones.
Something along the spirit of Lets Encrypt.
But from that point still continue to encourage other companies to release their pbx as FOSS.
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
If I were to guess, I would guess that @aaronstuder was talking about a single Vultr instance/fusionpbx instance going down, and thus taking out 11 clients.
I haven't had a single instance go down on Vultr since I started using it. Just some reboots during upgrades in NYC location.
With the way freeswitch and domains are setup, and with the single backup, it would still be easier to restore than FreePBX.
You could run 11 FusionPBX instances on $5 vultr machines. In fact Debian 8 would require less resources than the sangoma Linux distro
Yup, same here. Vultr uptime is great. Makes Azure look downright silly.
-
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear I downloaded the ISO, I just need to find some time to try it out. I do like the fact that it is based on FreeSwitch, which seems to be used by a lot of the big players. (Flowroute for example)
Best to spin up Debian 8 on Vultr and run the Jessie script.
I'm working on outlining that onto a very simple single page specific to a Vultr. There is no documentation on Twilio, Telnyx or flowroute so I thought I would add that.
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear I downloaded the ISO, I just need to find some time to try it out. I do like the fact that it is based on FreeSwitch, which seems to be used by a lot of the big players. (Flowroute for example)
Best to spin up Debian 8 on Vultr and run the Jessie script.
I'm working on outlining that onto a very simple single page specific to a Vultr. There is no documentation on Twilio, Telnyx or flowroute so I thought I would add that.
Good deal. I want to test this as well. We will see how my schedule is (and if I get Internet access back at home.)
-
FusionPBX uses the same terminology as FreeSWITCH for Gateways (trunks) and so this is documented at the following links.
Twilio
https://www.twilio.com/blog/2013/03/trying-out-the-twilio-sip-noun-using-freeswitch.htmlFlowroute
https://freeswitch.org/confluence/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=2883692Many providers
https://freeswitch.org/confluence/display/FREESWITCH/Providers+ITSPs -
@markjcrane said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
FusionPBX uses the same terminology as FreeSWITCH for Gateways (trunks) and so this is documented at the following links.
Twilio
https://www.twilio.com/blog/2013/03/trying-out-the-twilio-sip-noun-using-freeswitch.htmlFlowroute
https://freeswitch.org/confluence/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=2883692Many providers
https://freeswitch.org/confluence/display/FREESWITCH/Providers+ITSPsI saw those @markjcrane but a lot of guys will abandon this if they can't get through a first install.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Do you mean if a Datacenter fails? Because that would affect FreePBX or FusionPBX the same.
My point is all your eggs are in one basket. Anything (Bad Update, Human Error, etc) could cause all 11 tenants to fail. At least with different VM's you only made one customer crash
-
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
The handy thing is that when the PBX goes down, the customers can't call you!
Yeah, because surely there cell phones don't work lmao...
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear I downloaded the ISO, I just need to find some time to try it out. I do like the fact that it is based on FreeSwitch, which seems to be used by a lot of the big players. (Flowroute for example)
Best to spin up Debian 8 on Vultr and run the Jessie script.
That's what I did... Very easy
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear I downloaded the ISO, I just need to find some time to try it out. I do like the fact that it is based on FreeSwitch, which seems to be used by a lot of the big players. (Flowroute for example)
Best to spin up Debian 8 on Vultr and run the Jessie script.
I'm working on outlining that onto a very simple single page specific to a Vultr. There is no documentation on Twilio, Telnyx or flowroute so I thought I would add that.
Looking forward to it!
-
@aaronstuder said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Do you mean if a Datacenter fails? Because that would affect FreePBX or FusionPBX the same.
My point is all your eggs are in one basket. Anything (Bad Update, Human Error, etc) could cause all 11 tenants to fail. At least with different VM's you only made one customer crash
You clearly do not understand the design here.
@bigbear is looking at selling a platform as a service (PaaS) with his design. This is nothing like you wanting to find the latest free thing that you can run for yourself and make money.
The margins in this business are tiny. I wish @bigbear all the luck in the world, but it is not a market I would ever try to get into. In fact @bigbear is only even in the market because of prior work and existing client base.
The market I am after are the single instance phone systems that I can implement for a client and then either walk away or maintain based on the client's desire.
It is a completely different thing.
All of that said, where the hell would you expect a solution to be hosted? Do you think RingCentral or 8x8 do not have a huge failure domain when a datacenter goes down? If you think not, then you need to go back and look at the huge AWS outage and Level3 outages in the last 12 months and compare that to the reports of services down from RingCentral and 8x8 customers.
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@jaredbusch said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
I will certainly look into this, but It has to be stupid simple if it is going to be something I recommend.
It sounds great for you because you want to run something MT and have the skill to back it up.
That is not how the majority of people buy into phone systems though. Also, I have zero desire to be a phone provider.
I recommend, assist, and implement. I do not run it, there is no market there for new companies IMO.
I mean new "VoIP Providers" come out every day it seems like.
Also I know you will figure out twice as much as me in half the time if you give FusionPBX a go @JaredBusch. lol
Just need the time to do so. Will probably get to it this week.
-
@jaredbusch said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@aaronstuder said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Do you mean if a Datacenter fails? Because that would affect FreePBX or FusionPBX the same.
My point is all your eggs are in one basket. Anything (Bad Update, Human Error, etc) could cause all 11 tenants to fail. At least with different VM's you only made one customer crash
You clearly do not understand the design here.
@bigbear is looking at selling a platform as a service (PaaS) with his design. This is nothing like you wanting to find the latest free thing that you can run for yourself and make money.
The margins in this business are tiny. I wish @bigbear all the luck in the world, but it is not a market I would ever try to get into. In fact @bigbear is only even in the market because of prior work and existing client base.
The market I am after are the single instance phone systems that I can implement for a client and then either walk away or maintain based on the client's desire.
It is a completely different thing.
All of that said, where the hell would you expect a solution to be hosted? Do you think RingCentral or 8x8 do not have a huge failure domain when a datacenter goes down? If you think not, then you need to go back and look at the huge AWS outage and Level3 outages in the last 12 months and compare that to the reports of services down from RingCentral and 8x8 customers.
I have no interest in running a hosting company and no intent to profit from this. My previous comments may have lead you to believe that. When I brought up "flowroute for pbx" up I was thinking about approaching someone like onsip to allow a bring-your-own-trunks account.
Just wanted to clarify that.
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@stuartjordan said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Is there many people using Fusion PBX in production? is that much of a comparison compared to Freepbx? GUI looks slightly nicer than Freepbx.
There are a lot of people using it. In telecom people don't share and recommend much because everyone, even your small no-name itsp guy, all perceive themselves to be in competition.
And again, my focus is on getting more options for single tenant every day phone system installs.
It's true. It's rare for PBX / VoIP people to talk to each other. ML is rare in that we have several "competitors" talking openly with each other.
Along that thinking I've been wandering if I could negotiate to get my calling rates available for ML members without them coming through my sub account.
I have 2 million minutes of usage per month but if all ML usage was pooled with a Telnyx I bet it could be twice that. Thereby giving everyone a .005 to .007 rate.
Sam model as my wholesale hardware pricing.
Then think about the fact that we could recommend a true FOSS pbx against FreePBX, a wholesale rate vs SIPStation and discounted Yealink phones.
Something along the spirit of Lets Encrypt.
But from that point still continue to encourage other companies to release their pbx as FOSS.
I have said many, many times that the margins are so tiny here. But if you feel you can live with them, I can completely get behind a model like this.
The primary reason that I object to the RingCentral & 8x8 model is because of the per seat cost just being stupid compared to a 1 off dedicated install with no limits (FreePBX or FusionPBX or whatever).
I mean the monthly cost for a system should come in extremely low. A FreePBX system on Vultr costs 1 hour per month in maintenance generally. It will be even less with FreePBX 14 and the new auto updater functionality.
So assuming a rate of $150/hour & $6 for the Vultr instance, the monthly recurring before services is $156. If you divide that out to someone with say 20 phones you get a cost of $7.80 per extension.
With the new auto updater, I think it will honestly remove all need for monthly maintenance. Moving service to a break/fix model only. So then you end up with a cost of only $6 per month and 20 phones costing basically nothing at $0.30 per extension.
-
@stuartjordan said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Is there many people using Fusion PBX in production? is that much of a comparison compared to Freepbx? GUI looks slightly nicer than Freepbx.
That's the History of Asterisk. Pretty GUI's, with much less stable/scalable code on the back end
-
@bigbear said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@jaredbusch said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@aaronstuder said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@scottalanmiller said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
Do you mean if a Datacenter fails? Because that would affect FreePBX or FusionPBX the same.
My point is all your eggs are in one basket. Anything (Bad Update, Human Error, etc) could cause all 11 tenants to fail. At least with different VM's you only made one customer crash
You clearly do not understand the design here.
@bigbear is looking at selling a platform as a service (PaaS) with his design. This is nothing like you wanting to find the latest free thing that you can run for yourself and make money.
The margins in this business are tiny. I wish @bigbear all the luck in the world, but it is not a market I would ever try to get into. In fact @bigbear is only even in the market because of prior work and existing client base.
The market I am after are the single instance phone systems that I can implement for a client and then either walk away or maintain based on the client's desire.
It is a completely different thing.
All of that said, where the hell would you expect a solution to be hosted? Do you think RingCentral or 8x8 do not have a huge failure domain when a datacenter goes down? If you think not, then you need to go back and look at the huge AWS outage and Level3 outages in the last 12 months and compare that to the reports of services down from RingCentral and 8x8 customers.
I have no interest in running a hosting company and no intent to profit from this. My previous comments may have lead you to believe that. When I brought up "flowroute for pbx" up I was thinking about approaching someone like onsip to allow a bring-your-own-trunks account.
Just wanted to clarify that.
Thanks for the clarification.
-
@jaredbusch said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
With the new auto updater, I think it will honestly remove all need for monthly maintenance. Moving service to a break/fix model only. So then you end up with a cost of only $6 per month and 20 phones costing basically nothing at $0.30 per extension.
I'm kind of nervous about the auto-updater. Although it hasn't happened to me yet (knock on wood), I have read stories on the FreePBX forums where an update breaks something horribly. I normally at least read through the forums to see if any recent module update breaks anything.
-
@fuznutz04 said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
@jaredbusch said in Replacing FreePBX with FusionPBX:
With the new auto updater, I think it will honestly remove all need for monthly maintenance. Moving service to a break/fix model only. So then you end up with a cost of only $6 per month and 20 phones costing basically nothing at $0.30 per extension.
I'm kind of nervous about the auto-updater. Although it hasn't happened to me yet (knock on wood), I have read stories on the FreePBX forums where an update breaks something horribly. I normally at least read through the forums to see if any recent module update breaks anything.
Vultr snapshots has saved me countless times since I started messing around with FreePBX.
For that reason if you have s few clients (not sure if that is your situation) deploying MT really makes all the sense in the world. You can easily scale it to a redundant multi-server deployment if you are worried about uptime. But really that's more for hundreds of tenants and thousands of endpoints.